VCARDDAV | G. Salgueiro |
Internet-Draft | J. Clarke |
Intended status: Standards Track | P. Saint-Andre |
Expires: March 30, 2013 | Cisco Systems |
September 28, 2012 |
vCard KIND:device
draft-salgueiro-vcarddav-kind-device-03
This document defines a value of "device" for the vCard KIND property so that the vCard format can be used to represent computing devices such as appliances, computers, or network elements (e.g., a server, router, switch, printer, sensor, or phone).
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Version 4 of the vCard specification [RFC6350] defines a new "KIND" property to specify the type of entity that a vCard represents. During its work on the base vCard4 specification, the VCARDDAV Working Group defined values of "individual", "org", "group", and "location" for the KIND property. Additionally, [RFC6473] has defined a value of "application" for the KIND property to represent software applications.
During working group discussion of the document that became [RFC6473], consideration was given to defining a more general value of "thing", but it was decided to split "thing" into software applications and hardware devices and to define only the "application" value at that time. Since then, use cases for device vCards have emerged. Therefore, this document complements [RFC6473] by defining a value of "device" for the KIND property to represent computing devices such as appliances, computers, or network elements. In this context, the concept of a device is constrained to computing devices and thus is distinct from purely mechanical devices such as elevators, electric generators, etc. that cannot communicate in any way over a network.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", and "NOT RECOMMENDED" are appropriate when valid exceptions to a general requirement are known to exist or appear to exist, and it is infeasible or impractical to enumerate all of them. However, they should not be interpreted as permitting implementors to fail to implement the general requirement when such failure would result in interoperability failure.
When the KIND property has a value of "device", the vCard represents a computing device such as an appliance, a computer, or a network element (e.g., a server, router, switch, printer, sensor, or phone). More formally, a "device" is functionally equivalent to the "device" object class used in the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol [RFC4519] as derived from the Open Systems Interconnection model [X.521] [X.200]. However, whereas [X.521] specifies that devices are "physical" elements, a device in this context can also be virtual such as a virtual machine running within another physical element. As one example of the "device" KIND, vCards can be embedded into devices at manufacturing time such that basic information such as serial number, support email, and documentation URL can be retrieved upon initial deployment. This vCard can be modified after the device is deployed to contain user-specified data about the device's characteristics. The vCard data can therefore be used for both asset tracking and operational purposes.
A device MAY contain a number of embedded vCards for varying purposes. For example, a device could contain one or more of the following vCard instances:
When a device contains vCards other than its KIND:device vCard, those vCards MUST be linked together with RELATED (see the definition of the RELATED organizational property in Section 6.6.6 of [RFC6350]). In this manner, the vCard for the device itself can be easily distinguished from vCards referring to the vendor organization, device administrator, and installed applications.
The following base properties make sense for vCards that represent devices (this list is not exhaustive, and other properties might be applicable as well):
Although it might be desirable to define a more fine-grained taxonomy of devices (e.g., a KIND of "device" with a subtype of "router" or "computer"), such a taxonomy is out of scope for this document.
The following is an example of a router device that contains both manufacturing details (e.g., the UID is a serial number) as well as post-deployment attributes and uses the XML representation of vCard described in [RFC6351]. This vCard points to another, related vCard that contains the details of an administrative contact for the device.
<vcard xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:vcard-4.0"> <kind><text>device</text></kind> <fn> <parameters> <type><text>x-model-name</text></type> </parameters> <text>RTR1001</text> </fn> <fn><text>core-rtr-1.example.net</text></fn> <url><uri>http://www.example.com/support/index.html</uri></url> <email><text>support@example.com</text></email> <email> <parameters> <type><text>x-local-support</text></type> </parameters> <text>network-support@example.net</text> </email> <impp><uri>xmpp:core-rtr-1@example.net</uri></impp> <related> <parameters> <type><text>contact</text></type> </parameters> <uri>urn:uuid:5CEF1870-0326-11E2-A21F-0800200C9A66</uri> </related> <logo><uri>http://www.example.com/images/logo.png</uri></logo> <geo><uri>geo:35.82,-78.64</uri></geo> <tz><text>America/New_York</text></tz> <rev><timestamp>20120104T213000Z</timestamp></rev> <uid><uri>urn:uuid:00CCFB88-155F-40F6-B9D9-B04D134860C0</uri></uid> <serial-number xmlns='http://example.org/profiles/serial-number'> FTX1234ABCD </serial-number> <note> <parameters> <type><text>x-contract-number</text></type> </parameters> <text>1234567</text> </note> <mac xmlns='http://example.org/profiles/mac'> 00-00-5E-00-00-01 </mac> <sw-version xmlns='http://example.org/profiles/sw-version'> 2.1.5 </sw-version> </vcard>
The IANA is requested to add "device" to the registry of property values for vCard4. In conformance with Section 10.2.6 of [RFC6350], the registration is as follows, where the reference is to RFCXXXX.
[[NOTE TO RFC EDITOR: Please change XXXX to the number assigned to this specification, and remove this paragraph on publication.]]
Use of vCards to represent devices is not envisioned to introduce security considerations beyond those specified for vCards in general as described in [RFC6350].
[RFC6350] | Perreault, S., "vCard Format Specification", RFC 6350, August 2011. |
[RFC2119] | Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. |
[RFC4519] | Sciberras, A., "Lightweight Directory Access Protocol (LDAP): Schema for User Applications", RFC 4519, June 2006. |
[RFC6351] | Perreault, S., "xCard: vCard XML Representation", RFC 6351, August 2011. |
[RFC6473] | Saint-Andre, P., "vCard KIND:application", RFC 6473, December 2011. |
[X.200] | International Telecommunications Union, "Information Technology - Open Systems Interconnection - Basic Reference Model: The Basic Model", ITU-T Recommendation X.521, ISO Standard 9594-7, February 2001. |
[X.521] | International Telecommunications Union, "Information Technology - Open Systems Interconnection - The Directory: Selected Object Classes", ITU-T Recommendation X.200, ISO Standard 7498-1, July 1994. |
[IEEE.802.1AR] | Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, "Secure Device Identity", IEEE 802.1AR, 2009. |