RFC2924: Accounting Attributes and Record Formats

Download in PDF format Download in text format

Related keywords:  (data) (integrated) (transport)





Network Working Group                                        N. Brownlee
Request for Comments: 2924                    The University of Auckland
Category: Informational                                        A. Blount
                                                         MetraTech Corp.
                                                          September 2000


                Accounting Attributes and Record Formats

Status of this Memo

   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this
   memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

   This document summarises Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) and
   International Telecommunication Union (ITU-T) documents related to
   Accounting.  A classification scheme for the Accounting Attributes in
   the summarised documents is presented.  Exchange formats for
   Accounting data records are discussed, as are advantages and
   disadvantages of integrated versus separate record formats and
   transport protocols.  This document discusses service definition
   independence, extensibility, and versioning.  Compound service
   definition capabilities are described.

Table of Contents

   1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   2
   2. Terminology and Notation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   3
   3. Architecture Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
   4. IETF Documents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
   4.1. RADIUS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
   4.1.1. RADIUS Attributes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
   4.2. DIAMETER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
   4.2.1. DIAMETER Attributes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
   4.3. ROAMOPS  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
   4.4. RTFM . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
   4.4.1. RTFM Attributes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
   4.5. ISDN MIB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  10
   4.5.1. ISDN Attributes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  10
   4.6. AToMMIB  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
   4.6.1. AToMMIB Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11



Brownlee & Blount            Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   4.7. QoS: RSVP and DIFFSERV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
   4.7.1. QoS: RSVP and DIFFSERV Attributes  . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
   5. ITU-T Documents  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
   5.1. Q.825: Call Detail Recording . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
   5.2. Q.825 Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  14
   6. Other Documents  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
   6.1. TIPHON: ETSI TS 101 321  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
   6.2. MSIX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
   7. Accounting File and Record Formats . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
   7.1. ASN.1 Records  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
   7.1.1. RTFM and AToMMIB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
   7.1.2. Q.825  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
   7.2. Binary Records . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
   7.2.1. RADIUS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
   7.2.2. DIAMETER . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
   7.3. Text Records . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  21
   7.3.1. ROAMOPS  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  21
   8. AAA Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  22
   8.1. A Well-defined Set of Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  22
   8.2. A Simple Interchange Format  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  23
   9. Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  23
   9.1. Record Format vs. Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
   9.2. Tagged, Typed Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
   9.2.1. Standard Type Definitions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  25
   9.3. Transaction Identifiers  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  26
   9.4. Service Definitions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  26
   9.4.1. Service Independence . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  27
   9.4.2. Versioned Service Definitions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  29
   9.4.3. Relationships Among Usage Events . . . . . . . . . . . . .  29
   9.4.4. Service Namespace Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  30
   10. Encodings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  30
   11. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  31
   12. References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  31
   13. Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  35
   14. Full Copyright Statement  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  36

1.  Introduction

   This document summarises IETF and ITU-T documents related to
   Accounting.  For those documents which describe Accounting Attributes
   (i.e. quantities which can be measured and reported), an Attribute
   Summary is given.  Although several of the documents describe
   Attributes which are similar, no attempt is made to identify those
   which are the same in several documents.  An extensible
   classification scheme for AAA Accounting Attributes is proposed; it
   is a superset of the attributes in all the documents summarised.





Brownlee & Blount            Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   Many existing accounting record formats and protocols [RAD-ACT]
   [TIPHON] are of limited use due to their single-service descriptive
   facilities and lack of extensibility.  While some record formats and
   protocols support extensible attributes [RAD-ACT], none provide
   identification, type checking, or versioning support for defined
   groupings of attributes (service definitions).  This document makes a
   case for well-defined services.

   Advantages and disadvantages of integrated versus separate record
   formats and transport protocols are discussed.  This document
   discusses service definition independence, extensibility, and
   versioning.  Compound service definition capabilities are described.

2.  Terminology and Notation

   The following terms are used throughout the document.

   Accounting Server
      A network element that accepts Usage Events from Service Elements.
      It acts as an interface to back-end rating, billing, and
      operations support systems.

   Attribute-Value Pair (AVP)
      A representation for a Usage Attribute consisting of the name of
      the Attribute and a value.

   Property
      A component of a Usage Event.  A Usage Event describing a phone
      call, for instance, might have a "duration" Property.

   Service
      A type of task that is performed by a Service Element for a
      Service Consumer.

   Service Consumer
      Client of a Service Element.  End-user of a network service.

   Service Definition
      A specification for a particular service.  It is composed of a
      name or other identifier, versioning information, and a collection
      of Properties.

   Service Element
      A network element that provides a service to Service Consumers.
      Examples include RAS devices, voice and fax gateways, conference
      bridges.





Brownlee & Blount            Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   Usage Attribute
      A component of a Usage Event that describes some metric of service
      usage.

   Usage Event
      The description of an instance of service usage.

3.  Architecture Model

   Service Elements provide Services to Service Consumers.  Before,
   while, and/or after services are provided, the Service Element
   reports Usage Events to an Accounting Server.  Alternately, the
   Accounting Server may query the Service Element for Usage Events.
   Usage events are sent singly or in bulk.

      +------------+       +-----------+              +------------+
      |  Service   |<----->|  Service  | Usage Events | Accounting |
      |  Consumer  |   +-->|  Element  |------------->|   Server   |
      +------------+   |   +-----------+              +------------+
                       |
      +------------+   |
      |  Service   |<--+
      |  Consumer  |
      +------------+

   Accounting Servers may forward Usage Events to other systems,
   possibly in other administrative domains.  These transfers are not
   addressed by this document.

4.  IETF Documents

   In March 1999 there were at least 19 Internet Drafts and 8 RFCs
   concerned with Accounting.  These are summarised (by working group)
   in the following sections.

4.1.  RADIUS

   The RADIUS protocol [RAD-PROT] carries authentication, authorization
   and configuration information between a Network Access Server (NAS)
   and an authentication server.  Requests and responses carried by the
   protocol are expressed in terms of RADIUS attributes such as User-
   Name, Service-Type, and so on.  These attributes provide the
   information needed by a RADIUS server to authenticate users and to
   establish authorized network service for them.

   The protocol was extended to carry accounting information between a
   NAS and a shared accounting server.  This was achieved by defining a
   set of RADIUS accounting attributes [RAD-ACT].



Brownlee & Blount            Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   RADIUS packets have a short header containing the RADIUS packet type
   and authenticator (sixteen octets) and length, followed by a sequence
   of (Type, Length, Value) triples, one for each attribute.

   RADIUS is very widely used, and a number of significant new
   extensions to it have been proposed.  For example [RAD-EXT] discusses
   extensions to implement the Extensible Authentication Protocol (EAP)
   and the Apple Remote Access Protocol (ARAP).  [RAD-TACC] discusses
   extensions to permit RADIUS to interwork effectively with tunnels
   using protocols such as PPTP and L2TP.

4.1.1.  RADIUS Attributes

   Each RADIUS attribute is identified by an 8-bit number, referred to
   as the RADIUS Type field.  Up-to-date values of this field are
   specified in the most recent Assigned Numbers RFC [ASG-NBR], but the
   current list is as follows:

   RADIUS Attributes [RAD-PROT]             36  Login-LAT-Group
                                            37  Framed-AppleTalk-Link
       1  User-Name                         38  Framed-AppleTalk-Network
       2  User-Password                     39  Framed-AppleTalk-Zone
       3  CHAP-Password
       4  NAS-IP-Address                    60  CHAP-Challenge
       5  NAS-Port                          61  NAS-Port-Type
       6  Service-Type                      62  Port-Limit
       7  Framed-Protocol                   63  Login-LAT-Port
       8  Framed-IP-Address
       9  Framed-IP-Netmask              RADIUS Accounting Attributes
      10  Framed-Routing                 [RAD-ACT]
      11  Filter-Id
      12  Framed-MTU                        40  Acct-Status-Type
      13  Framed-Compression                41  Acct-Delay-Time
      14  Login-IP-Host                     42  Acct-Input-Octets
      15  Login-Service                     43  Acct-Output-Octets
      16  Login-TCP-Port                    44  Acct-Session-Id
      17  (unassigned)                      45  Acct-Authentic
      18  Reply-Message                     46  Acct-Session-Time
      19  Callback-Number                   47  Acct-Input-Packets
      20  Callback-Id                       48  Acct-Output-Packets
      21  (unassigned)                      49  Acct-Terminate-Cause
      22  Framed-Route                      50  Acct-Multi-Session-Id
      23  Framed-IPX-Network                51  Acct-Link-Count
      24  State
      25  Class                          RADIUS Extension Attributes
      26  Vendor-Specific                [RAD-EXT]
      27  Session-Timeout
      28  Idle-Timeout                      52  Acct-Input-Gigawords



Brownlee & Blount            Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


      29  Termination-Action                53  Acct-Output-Gigawords
      30  Called-Station-Id                 54  Unused
      31  Calling-Station-Id                55  Event-Timestamp
      32  NAS-Identifier
      33  Proxy-State                       70  ARAP-Password
      34  Login-LAT-Service                 71  ARAP-Features
      35  Login-LAT-Node                    72  ARAP-Zone-Access
      73  ARAP-Security
      74  ARAP-Security-Data
      75  Password-Retry
      76  Prompt
      77  Connect-Info
      78  Configuration-Token
      79  EAP-Message
      80  Message-Authenticator

      84  ARAP-Challenge-Response
      85  Acct-Interim-Interval
      87  NAS-Port-Id
      88  Framed-Pool

   RADIUS Tunneling Attributes
   [RAD-TACC]

      64  Tunnel-Type
      65  Tunnel-Medium-Type
      66  Tunnel-Client-Endpoint
      67  Tunnel-Server-Endpoint
      68  Acct-Tunnel-Connection
      69  Tunnel-Password

      81  Tunnel-Private-Group-ID
      82  Tunnel-Assignment-ID
      83  Tunnel-Preference

      90  Tunnel-Client-Auth-ID
      91  Tunnel-Server-Auth-ID

4.2.  DIAMETER

   The DIAMETER framework [DIAM-FRAM] defines a policy protocol used by
   clients to perform Policy, AAA and Resource Control.  This allows a
   single server to handle policies for many services.  The DIAMETER
   protocol consists of a header followed by objects.  Each object is
   encapsulated in a header known as an Attribute-Value Pair (AVP).






Brownlee & Blount            Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   DIAMETER defines a base protocol that specifies the header formats,
   security extensions and requirements as well as a small number of
   mandatory commands and AVPs.  A new service can extend DIAMETER by
   extending the base protocol to support new functionality.

   One key differentiator with DIAMETER is its inherent support for
   Inter-Server communication.  Although this can be achieved in a
   variety of ways, the most useful feature is the ability to "proxy"
   messages across a set of DIAMETER servers (known as a proxy chain).

   The DIAMETER Accounting Extension document [DIAM-ACT] extends
   DIAMETER by defining a protocol for securely transferring accounting
   records over the DIAMETER base protocol.  This includes the case
   where accounting records may be passed through one or more
   intermediate proxies, in accordance with the 'referral broker' model.

   The DIAMETER accounting protocol [DIAM-ACT] defines DIAMETER records
   for transferring an ADIF record (see below).  It introduces five new
   attributes (480..485) which specify the way in which accounting
   information is to be delivered between DIAMETER servers.

4.2.1.  DIAMETER Attributes

   DIAMETER AVPs are identified by a 16-bit number defined in [DIAM-
   AUTH].  Since most of the AVPs found in that document were copied
   from the RADIUS protocol [RAD-PROT], it is possible to have both
   RADIUS and DIAMETER servers read the same dictionary and users files.

   The backward compatibility that DIAMETER offers is intended to
   facilitate deployment.  To this end, DIAMETER inherits the RADIUS
   attributes, and adds only a few of its own.

   In the list below attribute numbers which are used for RADIUS
   attributes but not for DIAMETER are indicated with a star (*).
   RADIUS attributes used by DIAMETER are not listed again here.

   The DIAMETER attributes are:

       4      (unassigned, *)
      17      (unassigned)
      21      (unassigned)
      24      (unassigned, *)
      25      (unassigned, *)
      27      (unassigned, *)
      32      (unassigned, *)
      33      (unassigned, *)
     280      Filter-Rule
     281      Framed-Password-Policy



Brownlee & Blount            Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


     480      Accounting-Record-Type
     481      ADIF-Record
     482      Accounting-Interim-Interval
     483      Accounting-Delivery-Max-Batch
     484      Accounting-Delivery-Max-Delay
     485      Accounting-Record-Number

     600      SIP-Sequence
     601      SIP-Call-ID
     602      SIP-To
     603      SIP-From

4.3.  ROAMOPS

   [ROAM-IMPL] reviews the design and functionality of existing roaming
   implementations.  "Roaming capability" may be loosely defined as the
   ability to use any one of multiple Internet service providers (ISPs),
   while maintaining a formal customer-vendor relationship with only
   one.  One requirement for successful roaming is the provision of
   effective accounting.

   [ROAM-ADIF] proposes a standard accounting record format, the
   Accounting Data Interchange Format (ADIF), which is designed to
   compactly represent accounting data in a protocol-independent manner.
   As a result, ADIF may be used to represent accounting data from any
   protocol using attribute value pairs (AVPs) or variable bindings.

   ADIF does not define accounting attributes of its own.  Instead, it
   gives examples of accounting records using the RADIUS accounting
   attributes.

4.4.  RTFM

   The RTFM Architecture [RTFM-ARC] provides a general method of
   measuring network traffic flows between "metered traffic groups".
   Each RTFM flow has a set of "address" attributes, which define the
   traffic groups at each of the flow's end-points.

   As well as address attributes, each flow has traffic-related
   attributes, e.g. times of first and last packets, counts for packets
   and bytes in each direction.

   RTFM flow measurements are made by RTFM meters [RTFM-MIB] and
   collected by RTFM meter readers using SNMP.  The MIB uses a
   "DataPackage" convention, which specifies the attribute values to be
   read from a flow table row.  The meter returns the values for each





Brownlee & Blount            Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   required attribute within a BER-encoded sequence.  This means there
   is only one object identifier for the whole sequence, greatly
   reducing the number of bytes required to retrieve the data.

4.4.1.  RTFM Attributes

   RTFM attributes are identified by a 16-bit attribute number.

   The RTFM Attributes are:

    0  Null
    1  Flow Subscript                Integer    Flow table info

    4  Source Interface              Integer    Source Address
    5  Source Adjacent Type          Integer
    6  Source Adjacent Address       String
    7  Source Adjacent Mask          String
    8  Source Peer Type              Integer
    9  Source Peer Address           String
   10  Source Peer Mask              String
   11  Source Trans Type             Integer
   12  Source Trans Address          String
   13  Source Trans Mask             String

   14  Destination Interface         Integer    Destination Address
   15  Destination Adjacent Type     Integer
   16  Destination Adjacent Address  String
   17  Destination AdjacentMask      String
   18  Destination PeerType          Integer
   19  Destination PeerAddress       String
   20  Destination PeerMask          String
   21  Destination TransType         Integer
   22  Destination TransAddress      String
   23  Destination TransMask         String

   26  Rule Set Number               Integer    Meter attribute

   27  Forward Bytes                 Integer    Source-to-Dest counters
   28  Forward Packets               Integer
   29  Reverse Bytes                 Integer    Dest-to-Source counters
   30  Reverse Packets               Integer
   31  First Time                    Timestamp  Activity times
   32  Last Active Time              Timestamp
   33  Source Subscriber ID          String     Session attributes
   34  Destination Subscriber ID     String
   35  Session ID                    String





Brownlee & Blount            Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   36  Source Class                  Integer    "Computed" attributes
   37  Destination Class             Integer
   38  Flow Class                    Integer
   39  Source Kind                   Integer
   40  Destination Kind              Integer
   41  Flow Kind                     Integer

   50  MatchingStoD                  Integer    PME variable

   51  v1                            Integer    Meter Variables
   52  v2                            Integer
   53  v3                            Integer
   54  v4                            Integer
   55  v5                            Integer

   65-127 "Extended" attributes
             (to be defined by the RTFM working group)

4.5.  ISDN MIB

   The ISDN MIB [ISDN-MIB] defines a minimal set of managed objects for
   SNMP-based management of ISDN terminal interfaces.  It does not
   explicitly define anything related to accounting, however it does
   define isdnBearerChargedUnits as

      The number of charged units for the current or last connection.
      For incoming calls or if charging information is not supplied by
      the switch, the value of this object is zero.

   This allows for an ISDN switch to convert its traffic flow data (such
   as Call Connect Time) into charging data.

4.5.1.  ISDN Attributes

   The relevant object in the MIB is the ISDN bearer table, which has
   entries in the following form:

   IsdnBearerEntry ::=
       SEQUENCE {
           isdnBearerChannelType           INTEGER,
           isdnBearerOperStatus            INTEGER,
           isdnBearerChannelNumber         INTEGER,
           isdnBearerPeerAddress           DisplayString,
           isdnBearerPeerSubAddress        DisplayString,
           isdnBearerCallOrigin            INTEGER,
           isdnBearerInfoType              INTEGER,
           isdnBearerMultirate             TruthValue,
           isdnBearerCallSetupTime         TimeStamp,



Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


           isdnBearerCallConnectTime       TimeStamp,
           isdnBearerChargedUnits          Gauge32
           }

4.6.  AToMMIB

   The "ATM Accounting Information MIB" document [ATM-ACT] describes a
   large set of accounting objects for ATM connections.  An
   administrator may select objects from this set using a selector of
   the form (subtree, list) where "subtree" specifies an object
   identifier from the AToMMIB.  For each subtree there is a table
   holding values for each ATM connection.  The required connections are
   indicated by setting bits in "list", which is an octet string.  For
   example, the set containing the number of received cells for the
   first eight ATM connections would be selected by
   (atmAcctngReceivedCells, 0xFF).

   The Connection-Oriented Accounting MIB document [ATM-COLL] defines a
   MIB providing managed objects used for controlling the collection and
   storage of accounting information for connection-oriented networks
   such as ATM.  The accounting data is collected into files for later
   retrieval via a file transfer protocol.  Records within an accounting
   file are stored as BER strings [ASN1, BER].

4.6.1.  AToMMIB Attributes

   Accounting data objects within the AToMMBIB are identified by the
   last integer in their object identifiers.

   The ATM accounting data objects are:

      1   atmAcctngConnectionType
      2   atmAcctngCastType
      3   atmAcctngIfName
      4   atmAcctngIfAlias
      5   atmAcctngVpi
      6   atmAcctngVci
      7   atmAcctngCallingParty
      8   atmAcctngCalledParty
      9   atmAcctngCallReference
     10   atmAcctngStartTime
     11   atmAcctngCollectionTime
     12   atmAcctngCollectMode
     13   atmAcctngReleaseCause
     14   atmAcctngServiceCategory
     15   atmAcctngTransmittedCells
     16   atmAcctngTransmittedClp0Cells
     17   atmAcctngReceivedCells



Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


     18   atmAcctngReceivedClp0Cells
     19   atmAcctngTransmitTrafficDescriptorType
     20   atmAcctngTransmitTrafficDescriptorParam1
     21   atmAcctngTransmitTrafficDescriptorParam2
     22   atmAcctngTransmitTrafficDescriptorParam3
     23   atmAcctngTransmitTrafficDescriptorParam4
     24   atmAcctngTransmitTrafficDescriptorParam5
     25   atmAcctngReceiveTrafficDescriptorType
     26   atmAcctngReceiveTrafficDescriptorParam1
     27   atmAcctngReceiveTrafficDescriptorParam2
     28   atmAcctngReceiveTrafficDescriptorParam3
     29   atmAcctngReceiveTrafficDescriptorParam4
     30   atmAcctngReceiveTrafficDescriptorParam5
     31   atmAcctngCallingPartySubAddress
     32   atmAcctngCalledPartySubAddress
     33   atmAcctngRecordCrc16

4.7.  QoS: RSVP and DIFFSERV

   As we move towards providing more than simple "best effort"
   connectivity, there has been a tremendous surge of interest in (and
   work on) protocols to provide managed Quality of Service for Internet
   sessions.  This is of particular interest for the provision of
   "Integrated Services", i.e. the transport of audio, video, real-time,
   and classical data traffic within a single network infrastructure.

   Two approaches to this have emerged so far:

   -  the Integrated Services architecture (intserv) [IIS-ARC], with its
      accompanying signaling protocol, RSVP [RSVP-ARC], and RSVP's
      Common Open Policy Service protocol, COPS [RAP-COPS]

   -  the Differentiated Services architecture (diffserv) [DSRV-ARC]

   RSVP is a signaling protocol that applications may use to request
   resources from the network.  The network responds by explicitly
   admitting or rejecting RSVP requests.  Certain applications that have
   quantifiable resource requirements express these requirements using
   intserv parameters [IIS-SPEC].

   Diffserv networks classify packets into one of a small number of
   aggregated flows or "classes", based on the diffserv codepoint (DSCP)
   in the packet's IP header.  At each diffserv router, packets are
   subjected to a "per-hop behavior" (PHB), which is invoked by the
   DSCP.  Since RSVP is purely a requirements signalling protocol it can
   also be used to request connections from a diffserv network [RS-DS-
   OP].




Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


4.7.1.  RSVP and DIFFSERV Attributes

   A set of parameters for specifying a requested Quality of Service are
   given in [IIS-SPEC].  These have been turned into accounting
   attributes within RTFM [RTFM-NEWA] and within the RSVP MIB [RSVP-
   MIB].

   The RTFM QoS attributes are:

        98      QoSService
        99      QoSStyle
       100      QoSRate
       101      QoSSlackTerm
       102      QoSTokenBucketRate
       103      QoSTokenBucketSize
       104      QoSPeakDataRate
       105      QoSMinPolicedUnit
       106      QoSMaxPolicedUnit

   The RSVP MIB contains a large number of objects, arranged within the
   following sections:

       General Objects
       Session Statistics Table
       Session Sender Table
       Reservation Requests Received Table
       Reservation Requests Forwarded Table
       RSVP Interface Attributes Table
       RSVP Neighbor Table

   The Session tables contain information such as the numbers of senders
   and receivers for each session, while the Reservation Requests tables
   contain details of requests handled by the RSVP router.  There are
   too many objects to list here, but many of them could be used for
   accounting.  In particular, RSVP Requests contain the specification
   of the service parameters requested by a user; these, together with
   the actual usage data for the connection make up an accounting record
   for that usage.

5.  ITU-T Documents

5.1.  Q.825: Call Detail Recording

   ITU-T Recommendation Q.825 specifies how CDRs (Call Detail Records)
   are produced and managed in Network Elements for POTS, ISDN and IN
   (Intelligent Networks).

   Uses of Call Detail information for various purposes are discussed.



Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   Each call produces one or more records describing events that
   occurred during the life of a call.  Data may be produced in real
   time (single CDRs), near real-time (blocks of CDRs), or as batch
   files of CDRs.

   The information model for Call Detail Recording is formally described
   in terms of an Entity-Relationship model, and an object model
   specified in terms of GDMO templates (Guidelines for the Definition
   of Managed Objects).  Note that this model includes the ways in which
   CDRs are transported from the (NE) Network Element where they are
   generated to the OS (Operations System) where they are used.

5.2.  Q.825 Attributes

   The following attributes are defined.  The explanations given are
   very brief summaries only, see [Q-825] for the complete text.

   1  accessDelivery
        Indicates that the call was delivered to the called subscriber

   2  accountCodeInput
        Account code (for billing), supplied by subscriber.

  78  additionalParticipantInfo
        (No details given)

   5  b-PartyCategory
        Subscriber category for called subscriber.

   4  bearerService
        Bearer capability information (only for ISDN calls).

  13  cDRPurpose
        Reason for triggering this Call Data Record.

  70  callDetailDataId
        Unique identifier for the CallDetailData object.

  79  callDuration
        Duration of call

   6  callIdentificationNumber
        Identification number for call; all records produced for this
        call have the same callIdenfificationNumber.

  73  callStatus
        Identifies whether the call was answered or not.




Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   9  calledPartyNumber
        Telephone number of the called subscriber (may be a
        "diverted-to" or "translated" number.

   7  callingPartyCategory
        Calling subscriber category.

   8  callingPartyNumber
        Telephone number of the calling party.

  10  callingPartyNumberNotScreened
        An additional, user-provided (not screened) number to the
        calling party.

  11  callingPartyType
        Calling subscriber type.

  74  carrierId
        Carrier ID to which the call is sent.

  12  cause
        Cause and location value for the termination of the call.

  14  chargedDirectoryNumber
        Charged directory number (where the charged participant
        element can't indicate the number).

  16  chargedParticipant
        Participant to be charged for the usage.

  15  chargingInformation
        Charging information generated by a Network Element which is
        capable of charging.

  17  configurationMask
        Time consumption, e.g. from B-answer to termination time,
        between partial call records, etc.

  18  conversationTime
        Time consumption from B-answer to end of call.

  19  creationTriggerList
        List of trigger values which will create Call Detail data
        objects.

  75  dPC
        Destination point code (for analysis purposes).




Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


  20  dataValidity
        Indicates that the NE is having problems, contents of the
        generated Call Detail record is not reliable.

  23  durationTimeACM
        Time consumption from seizure until received ACM.

  21  durationTimeB-Answer
        Time consumption from seizure until B-answer.

  22  durationTimeNoB-Answer
        Time from seizure to termination when no B-answer was
        received.

  25  exchangeInfo
        Identity of exchange where Call Detail record was generated.

  26  fallbackBearerService
        Fallback bearer capability information for a call.

  27  glare
        Indicates if a glare condition was encountered.

  31  iNServiceInformationList
        Contains information about the use of IN (Intelligent Network)
        services.

  32  iNSpecificInformation
        Contains information about the use of one IN service.

  33  iSUPPreferred
        Indicate whether an ISUP preference was requested.

  28  immediateNotificationForUsageMetering
        Indicates that the Call Detail records requires
        immediate data transfer to the Operations System.

  34  maxBlockSize
        Maximum number of Call Detail records in a block.

  35  maxTimeInterval
        Maximum latency allowable for near-real-time Call Detail
        data delivery.

  36  networkManagementControls
        Indicates which Traffic Management Control has affected
        the call.




Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


  37  networkProviderId
        Indicates the Network Provider for whom the CDR is generated.

  76  oPC
        Originating point code for a failed call (for analysis
        purposes).

  38  operatorSpecific1AdditionalNumber
  40  operatorSpecific2AdditionalNumber
  42  operatorSpecific3AdditionalNumber
        Operator-defined additional participant information.

  39  operatorSpecific1Number
  41  operatorSpecific2Number
  43  operatorSpecific3Number
        Operator-defined participant information.

  44  originalCalledNumber
        Telephone number of the original called party.

  45  partialGeneration
        Included if the CDR (Call Detail record) output is partial.
        Such CDRs have a field indicating their partial record number.

  77  participantInfo
        (No details given).

  46  percentageToBeBilled
        Percentage to be billed when normal billing rules are
        not to be followed.

  47  periodicTrigger
        Defines the intervals at which the CDR file should be created.

  48  personalUserId
        Internationally unique personal User Identity (for UPT calls).

  49  physicalLineCode
        Identifies the call subscriber's physical line.

  50  progress
        Describes an event which occurred during the life of a call.

  51  queueInfo
        Used to record usage of queueing resources with IN calls.






Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


  52  receivedDigits
        The digits dialed by the subscriber.  (Normally only included
        for customer care purposes).

  53  recordExtensions
        Information elements added by network operators and/or
        manufacturers in addition to the standard ones above.

6.  Other Documents

6.1.  TIPHON: ETSI TS 101 321

   TIPHON [TIPHON] is an XML-based protocol, carried by HTTP, which
   handles accounting and authorization requests and responses.

   The following are elements selected from TIPHON's DTD that are used
   for accounting.

   <!ELEMENT Currency (#PCDATA)> <!ELEMENT Amount (#PCDATA)>
       Identifies a numeric value.  Expressed using the period (.) as a
       decimal separator with no punctuation as the thousands separator.

   <!ELEMENT CallId (#PCDATA)>
       Contains a call's H.323 CallID value, and is thus used to
       uniquely identify individual calls.

   <!ELEMENT Currency (#PCDATA)>
       Defines the financial currency in use for the parent element.

   <!ELEMENT DestinationInfo type ( e164 | h323 | url | email |
                                    transport | international |
                                    national | network | subscriber |
                                    abbreviated | e164prefix )
       Gives the primary identification of the destination for a call.

   <!ELEMENT Increment (#PCDATA)>
       Indicates the number of units being accounted.

   <!ELEMENT Service EMPTY>
       Indicates a type of service being priced, authorized, or
       reported.  An empty Service element indicates basic Internet
       telephony service, which is the only service type defined by
       V1.4.2 of the specification.  The specification notes that "Later
       revisions of this standard are expected to specify more enhanced
       service definitions to represent quality of service,
       availability, payment methods, etc."





Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   <!ELEMENT DestinationInfo type ( e164 | h323 | url | email |
                                    transport | international |
                                    national | network | subscriber |
                                    abbreviated | e164prefix)
       Gives the primary identification of the source of a call.


   <!ELEMENT Timestamp (#PCDATA)>
       A restricted form of [ISO-DATE] that indicates the time at which
       the component was generated.

   <!ELEMENT TransactionId (#PCDATA)>
       Contains an integer, decimal valued identifier assigned to a
       specific authorized transaction.

   <!ELEMENT Unit (#PCDATA)>
       Indicates the units by which pricing is measured or usage
       recorded.  It shall contain one of the following values:
           s      seconds
           p      packets (datagrams)
           byte   bytes

   <!Element UsageDetail ( Service, Amount, Increment, Unit ) >
       Collects information describing the usage of a service.

6.2.  MSIX

   MSIX [MSIX-SPEC] is an XML-based protocol transported by HTTP that is
   used to make accounting service definitions and transmit service
   usage information.  As its service definitions are parameterized and
   dynamic, it makes no definition of services or attributes itself, but
   allows implementors to make their own.  It specifies only the base
   data types that attributes may take: STRING, UNISTRING, INT32, FLOAT,
   DOUBLE, BOOLEAN, TIMESTAMP.

7.  Accounting File and Record Formats

7.1.  ASN.1 Records

7.1.1.  RTFM and AToMMIB

   RTFM and AToMMIB use ASN.1 Basic Encoding Rules (BER) to encode lists
   of attributes into accounting records.  RTFM uses SNMP to retrieve
   such records as BER strings, thus avoiding having to have an object
   identifier for every object.






Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   AToMMIB carries this a stage further by defining an accounting file
   format in ASN.1 and making it available for retrieval by a file
   transfer protocol, thereby providing a more efficient alternative to
   simply retrieving the records using SNMP.

7.1.2.  Q.825

   A Q.825 Call Record is an ASN.1 SET containing a specified group of
   the Q.825 attributes.  Call records would presumably be encoded as
   BER strings before being collected for later processing.

7.2.  Binary Records

7.2.1.  RADIUS

   Radius packets carry a sequence of attributes and their values, as
   (Type, Length, Value) triples.  The format of the value field is one
   of four data types.

      string   0-253 octets

      address  32 bit value, most significant octet first.

      integer  32 bit value, most significant octet first.

      time     32 bit value, most significant octet first -- seconds
               since 00:00:00 GMT, January 1, 1970.  The standard
               Attributes do not use this data type but it is presented
               here for possible use within Vendor-Specific attributes.

7.2.2.  DIAMETER

   Each DIAMETER message consists of multiple AVP's that are 32-bit
   aligned, with the following format:

      0                   1                   2                   3
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
      |                           AVP Code                            |
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
      |          AVP Length           |     Reserved        |P|T|V|R|M|
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
      |                        Vendor ID (opt)                        |
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
      |                           Tag (opt)                           |
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
      |    Data ...
      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+



Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


      Code
         The AVP Code identifies the attribute uniquely.  If the Vendor-
         Specific bit is set, the AVP Code is allocated from the
         vendor's private address space.

         The first 256 AVP numbers are reserved for backward
         compatibility with RADIUS and are to be interpreted as per
         RADIUS [RAD-PROT].  AVP numbers 256 and above are used for
         DIAMETER, which are allocated by IANA.

      AVP Length
         A 16-bit field contains the total object length in bytes.
         Must always be a multiple of 4, and at least 8.

      AVP Flags
         P                      Protected bit
         T                      Tag bit
         V                      Vendor-ID bit
         R                      Reserved (MUST be set to 0)
         M                      Mandatory bit

7.3.  Text Records

7.3.1.  ROAMOPS

   ADIF (Accounting Data Interchange Format [ROAM-ADIF]) presents a
   general, text-based format for accounting data files, described in a
   straightforward BNF grammar.  Its file header contains a field
   indicating the default protocol from which accounting attributes are
   drawn.  If an attribute from another protocol is to be used, it is
   preceded by its protocol name, for example rtfm//27 would be RTFM's
   "forward bytes" attribute.  Comments in an ADIF file begin with a
   cross-hatch.

   Example: An ADIF file encoding RADIUS accounting data

        version: 1
        device: server3
        description: Accounting Server 3
        date: 02 Mar 1999 12:19:01 -0500
        defaultProtocol: radius

        rdate: 02 Mar 1999 12:20:17 -0500
        #NAS-IP-Address
        4: 204.45.34.12
        #NAS-Port
        5: 12
        #NAS-Port-Type



Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


        61: 2
        #User-Name
        1: fred@bigco.com
        #Acct-Status-Type
        40: 2
        #Acct-Delay-Time
        41: 14
        #Acct-Input-Octets
        42: 234732
        #Acct-Output-Octets
        43: 15439
        #Acct-Session-Id
        44: 185
        #Acct-Authentic
        45: 1
        #Acct-Session-Time
        46: 1238
        #Acct-Input-Packets
        47: 153
        #Acct-Output-Packets
        48: 148
        #Acct-Terminate-Cause
        49: 11
        #Acct-Multi-Session-Id
        50: 73
        #Acct-Link-Count
        51: 2

8.  AAA Requirements

8.1.  A Well-Defined Set of Attributes

   AAA needs a well-defined set of attributes whose values are to be
   carried in records to or from accounting servers.

   Most of the existing sets of documents described above include a set
   of attributes, identified by small integers.  It is likely that these
   sets overlap, i.e. that some of them have attributes which represent
   the same quantity using different names in different sets.  This
   suggests it might be possible to produce a single combined set of
   "universal" accounting attributes, but such a "universal" set does
   not seem worthwhile.

   The ADIF approach of specifying a default protocol (from which
   attributes are assumed to come) and identifying any exceptions seems
   much more practical.  We therefore propose that AAA should use the





Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 22]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   ADIF convention (or something like it) to identify attributes,
   together with all the sets of attributes covered by the [ASG-NBR]
   document.

8.2.  A Simple Interchange Format

   AAA needs a simple interchange file format, to be used for accounting
   data.  Several schemes for packaging and transporting such data have
   been described above.

   The SNMP-based ones fit well within the context of an SNMP-based
   network management system.  RTFM and AToMMIB provide ways to reduce
   the SNMP overhead for collecting data, and AToMMIB defines a complete
   file format.  Both provide good ways to collect accounting data.

   As an interchange format, however, ASN.1-based schemes suffer from
   being rather complex binary structures.  This means that one requires
   suitable tools to work with them, as compared to plain-text files
   where one can use existing text-based utilities.

   The binary schemes such as RADIUS and DIAMETER have simpler
   structures, but they too need purpose-built tools.  For general use
   they would need to be extended to allow them to use attributes from
   other protocols.

   From the point of view of being easy for humans to understand, ADIF
   seems very promising.  Of course any processing program would need a
   suitable ADIF input parser, but using plain-text files makes them
   much easier to understand.

   TIPHON's record format is specified by an XML DTD.  While XML
   representations have the advantages of being well-known, they are
   limited by XML's inability to specify type or other validity checking
   for information within the tags.  This situation will likely be
   improved by the XML Schema [XML-SCHM] efforts that are underway, but
   a stable reference is not yet available.

9.  Issues

   It is generally agreed that there is a need for a standard record
   format and transport protocol for communication between Service
   Elements and Accounting Servers.

   There is less agreement on the following issues:

      o  Separate or integral record format and transport protocol
      o  Standard set of base data types
      o  Service definitions: part of the protocol or separately defined



Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 23]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


      o  Service definition namespace management

   The following sections address these issues.

9.1.  Record Format vs. Protocol

   All known Internet-centric billing protocols to date have an integral
   record format.  That is, the collection of Properties that describe a
   Usage Event are specified as an integral part of the protocol,
   typically as a part of a "submit" message that is used to transmit a
   Usage Event from a Service Entity to an Accounting Server.

   It may be advantageous to define a record format that is independent
   of the transport protocol.  Such a record format should support both
   representation of individual records and records in bulk, as Usage
   Events are often aggregated and transmitted in bulk.

   A separate record format is useful for record archiving and temporary
   file storage.  Multiple transport protocols may be defined without
   affecting the record format.  The task of auditing is made easier if
   a standard file format is defined.  If a canonical format is used,
   bulk records may be hashed with MD5 [MD5] or a similar function, for
   reliability and security purposes.

                                  +------------+
                                  |  transport |
                                  |   header   |
            +------------+        +------------+
            |            |        |            |
            |   Usage    |        |   Usage    |
            |  Event(s)  |        |  Event(s)  |
            |            |        |            |
            |            |        |            |
            +------------+        +------------+
                                  |  trailer   |
                                  +------------+

            record format       transport protocol

   If the protocol is written such that it can transmit Usage Events in
   the record format, no record rewriting for transport is required.

9.2.  Tagged, Typed Data

   Record formats and protocols use a combination of data locality and
   explicit tagging to identify data elements.  Mail [RFC822], for
   instance, defines a header block composed of several Attribute-Value
   Pairs, followed by a message body.  Each header field is explicitly



Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 24]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   tagged, but the order of the AVPs is undefined.  The message body is
   not tagged (except with an additional preceding blank line), and is
   found through its position in the message, which must be after all
   header fields.

   Some record formats make no use of tags--data elements are identified
   only by their position within a record structure.  While this
   practice provides for the least amount of record space overhead, it
   is difficult to later modify the record format by adding or removing
   elements, as all record readers will have to be altered to handle the
   change.  Tagged data allows old readers to detect unexpected tags and
   to detect if required data are missing.  If the overhead of carrying
   explicit tags can be borne, it is advantageous to use explicitly
   tagged data elements where possible.

   An AVP approach has proven useful in accounting.  RADIUS [RADIUS]
   uses numeric data type identifiers.  ETSI's TIPHON [TIPHON] uses XML
   markup.

   For an AAA accounting record format, the authors suggest that each
   Property be named by a textual or numeric identifier and carry a
   value and a data type indicator, which governs interpretation of the
   value.  It may also be useful for each Property to carry a units of
   measure identifier.  The TIPHON specification takes this approach.
   TS 101 321 also carries an Increment field, which denominates the
   Property's Unit of Measure field.  Whether this additional
   convenience is necessary is a matter for discussion.

   It is not strictly necessary for each data record to carry data type,
   units of measure, or increments identifiers.  If this information is
   recorded in a record schema document that is referenced by each data
   record, each record may be validated against the schema without the
   overhead of carrying type information.

9.2.1.  Standard Type Definitions

   It is useful to define a standard set of primitive data types to be
   used by the record format and protocol.  Looking at the prior art,
   DIAMETER supports Data (arbitrary octets), String (UTF-8), Address
   (32 or 128 bit), Integer32, Integer64, Time (32 bits, seconds since
   1970), and Complex.  MSIX [MSIX-SPEC] supports String, Unistring,
   Int32, Float, Double, Boolean, and Timestamp.  SMIv2 [SMI-V2] offers
   ASN.1 types INTEGER, OCTET STRING, and OBJECT IDENTIFIER, and the
   application-defined types Integer32, IpAddress, Counter32, Gauge32,
   Unsigned32, TimeTicks, Opaque, and Counter64.






Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 25]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   An appropriate set would likely include booleans, 32 and 64 bit
   signed integers, 32 and 64 bit floats, arbitrary octets, UTF-8 and
   UTF-16 strings, and ISO 8601:1988 [ISO-DATE] timestamps.  Fixed-
   precision numbers capable of representing currency amounts (with
   precision specified on both sides of the decimal point) have proven
   useful in accounting record formats, as they are immune to the
   precision problems that are encountered when one attempts to
   represent fixed-point amounts with floating point numbers.

   It may be worthwhile to consider the datatypes that are being
   specified by the W3C's "XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes" [XML-DATA]
   document.  That document specifies a rich set of base types, along
   with a mechanism to specify derivations that further constrain the
   base types.

9.3.  Transaction Identifiers

   Each Usage Event requires its own unique identifier.

   It is expedient to allow Service Elements to create their own unique
   identifiers.  In this manner, Usage Events can be created and
   archived without the involvement of an Accounting Server or other
   central authority.

   A number of methods for creating unique identifiers are well known.
   One popular identifier is an amalgamation of a monotonically
   increasing sequence number, a large random value, a network element
   identifier, and a timestamp.  Another possible source of entropy is a
   hash value of all or part of the record itself.

   RFC 822 [MAIL], RFC 1036 [NEWS], and RFC 2445 [ICAL-CORE] give
   guidance on the creation of good unique identifiers.

9.4.  Service Definitions

   A critical differentiator in accounting record formats and protocols
   is their capability to account for arbitrary service usage.  To date,
   no accounting record format or protocol that can handle arbitrary
   service definitions has achieved broad acceptance on the Internet.

   This section analyzes the issues in service definition and makes a
   case for a record format and protocol with the capability to carry
   Usage Events for rich, independently-defined services.








Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 26]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


9.4.1.  Service Independence

   It is informative to survey a number of popular Internet protocols
   and document encodings and examine their capacities for extension.
   These protocols can be categorized into two broad categories--"fully
   specified" protocols that have little provision for extension and
   "framework" protocols that are incomplete, but provide a basis for
   future extension when coupled with application documents.

   Examples of fully-specified protocols are NTP [NTP], NNTP [NNTP],
   RADIUS Accounting [RAD-ACT], and HTML [HTML].

   Aside from leaving some field values "reserved for future use", all
   of Network Time Protocol's fields are fixed-width and completely
   defined.  This is appropriate for a simple protocol that solves a
   simple problem.

   Network News Transfer Protocol [NEWS-PROT] specifies that further
   commands may be added, and requests that non-standard implementations
   use the "X-" experimental prefix so as to not conflict with future
   additions.  The content of news is 7-bit data, with the high-order
   bit cleared to 0.  Nothing further about the content is defined.
   There is no in-protocol facility for automating decoding of content
   type.

   We pay particular attention to RADIUS Accounting [RAD-ACT].  Perhaps
   the second most frequently heard complaint (after security
   shortcomings) about RADIUS Accounting is its preassigned and fixed
   set of "Types".  These are coded as a range of octets from 40 to 51
   and are as follows:

         40      Acct-Status-Type
         41      Acct-Delay-Time
         42      Acct-Input-Octets
         43      Acct-Output-Octets
         44      Acct-Session-Id
         45      Acct-Authentic
         46      Acct-Session-Time
         47      Acct-Input-Packets
         48      Acct-Output-Packets
         49      Acct-Terminate-Cause
         50      Acct-Multi-Session-Id
         51      Acct-Link-Count

   These identifiers were designed to account for packet-based network
   access service.  They are ill-suited for describing other services.
   While extension documents have specified additional types, the base




Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 27]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   protocol limits the type identifier to a single octet, limiting the
   total number of types to 256.

   HTML/2.0 [HTML] is mostly a fully-specified protocol, but with W3C's
   HTML/4.0, HTML is becoming more of a framework protocol.  HTML/2.0
   specified a fixed set of markups, with no provision for addition
   (without protocol revision).

   Examples of "framework" protocols and document encodings are HTTP,
   XML, and SNMP.

   HTTP/1.1 [HTTP] is somewhat similar to NNTP in that it is designed to
   transport arbitrary content.  It is different in that it supports
   description of that content through its Content-Type, Content-
   Encoding, Accept-Encoding, and Transfer-Encoding header fields.  New
   types of content can be designated and carried by HTTP/1.1 without
   modification to the HTTP protocol.

   XML [XML] is a preeminent general-purpose framework encoding.  DTD
   publishing is left to users.  There is no standard registry of DTDs.

   SNMP presents a successful example of a framework protocol.  SNMP's
   authors envisioned SNMP as a general management protocol, and allow
   extension through the use of private MIBs.  SNMP's ASN.1 MIBs are
   defined, published, and standardized without the necessity to modify
   the SNMP standard itself.  From "An Overview of SNMP" [SNMP-OVER]:

      It can easily be argued that SNMP has become prominent mainly from
      its ability to augment the standard set of MIB objects with new
      values specific for certain applications and devices.  Hence, new
      functionality can continuously be added to SNMP, since a standard
      method has been defined to incorporate that functionality into
      SNMP devices and network managers.

   Most accounting protocols are fully-specified, with either a
   completely defined service or set of services (RADIUS Accounting) or
   with one or more services defined and provision for "extension"
   services to be added to the protocol later (TIPHON).  While the
   latter is preferable, it may be preferable to take a more SNMP-like
   approach, where the accounting record format and protocol provide
   only a framework for service definition, and leave the task of
   service definition (and standardization) to separate efforts.  In
   this manner, the accounting protocol itself would not have to be
   modified to handle new services.







Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 28]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


9.4.2.  Versioned Service Definitions

   Versioning is a naming and compatibility issue.  Version identifiers
   are useful in service definition because they enable service
   definitions to be upgraded without a possibly awkward name change.
   They also enable possible compatibility between different versions of
   the same service.

   An example could be the service definition of a phone call.  Version
   1 might define Properties for the start time, duration, and called
   and calling party numbers.  Later, version 2 is defined, which
   augments the former service definition with a byte count.  An
   Accounting Server, aware only of Version 1, may accept Version 2
   records, discarding the additional information (forward
   compatibility).  Alternately, if an Accounting Server is made aware
   of version 2, it could optionally still accept version 1 records from
   Service Elements, provided the Accounting Sever does not require the
   additional information to properly account for service usage
   (backward compatibility).

9.4.3.  Relationships Among Usage Events

   Accounting record formats and protocols to date do not sufficiently
   addressed "compound" service description.

   A compound service is a service that is described as a composition of
   other services.  A conference call, for example, may be described as
   a number of point-to-point calls to a conference bridge.  It is
   important to account for the individual calls, rather than just
   summing up an aggregate, both for auditing purposes and to enable
   differential rating.  If these calls are to be reported to the
   Accounting Server individually, the Usage Events require a shared
   identifier that can be used by the Accounting Server and other back-
   end systems to group the records together.

   In order for a Service Element to report compound events over time as
   a succession of individual Usage Events, the accounting protocol
   requires a facility to communicate that the compound event has
   started and stopped.  The "start" message can be implicit--the
   transmission of the first Usage Event will suffice.  An additional
   semaphore is required to tell the Accounting Server that the compound
   service is complete and may be further processed.  This is necessary
   to prevent the Accounting Server from prematurely processing compound
   events that overlap the end of a billing period.







Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 29]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   RADIUS Accounting has some provision for this sort of accounting with
   its "Acct-Multi-Session-Id" field.  Unfortunately, RADIUS
   Accounting's other shortcomings preclude it from being used in
   general purpose service usage description.

9.4.4.  Service Namespace Management

   "Framework" protocols, as previously mentioned, do not define
   complete schema for their payload.  For interoperability to be
   achieved, it must be possible for:

      (1) content definers to specify definitions without conflicting
          with the names of other definitions

      (2) protocol users to find and use content definitions

   Condition (1) can be readily managed through IANA assignment or by
   using an existing namespace differentiator (for example, DNS).

   Condition (2) is harder, and places considerable burden on the
   implementors.  Their clients and servers must be able, statically or
   dynamically, to find and validate definitions, and manage versioning
   issues.

   As previously mentioned, the XML specification provides no facility
   for DTD discovery or namespace management.  XML specifies only a
   document format, and as such does not need to specify support for
   more "protocol" oriented problems.

   For an accounting record format and protocol, an approach closer to
   SNMP's is useful.  SNMP uses an ISO-managed dotted-decimal namespace.
   An IANA-managed registry of service types is a possibility.  Another
   possibility, used by MSIX [MSIX-SPEC], is for Service Element
   creators to identify their services by concatenation of a new service
   name with existing unique identifier, such as a domain name.

   A standard record format for service definitions would make it
   possible for Service Element creators to directly supply accounting
   system managers with the required definitions, via the network or
   other means.

10.  Encodings

   It may be useful to define more than one record encoding.

   A "verbose" XML encoding is easily implemented and records can be
   syntactically verified with existing tools.  "Human-readable"
   protocols tend to have an edge on "bitfield" protocols where ease of



Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 30]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   implementation is paramount and the application can tolerate any
   additional processing required to generate, parse, and transport the
   records.

   A alternative "compressed" encoding that makes minimal use of storage
   and processing may be useful in many contexts.

   There are disadvantages to supporting multiple encodings.
   Optionally-supported multiple encodings mandate the requirement for
   capabilities exchange between Service Element and Accounting Server.
   Also, implementations can tend to "drift apart", with one encoding
   better-supported than another.  Unless all encodings are mandatory,
   implementors may find they are unable to interoperate because they
   picked the wrong encoding.

11.  Security Considerations

   This document summarises many existing IETF and ITU documents; please
   refer to the original documents for security considerations for their
   particular protocols.

   It must be possible for the accounting protocol to be carried by a
   secure transport.  A canonical record format is useful so that
   regeneration of secure record hashes is possible.

   When dealing with accounting data files, one must take care that
   their integrity and privacy are preserved.  This document, however,
   is only concerned with the format of such files.

12.  References

   [ACC-BKG]   Mills, C., Hirsch, G. and G. Ruth, "Internet Accounting
               Background", RFC 1272, November 1991.

   [ASG-NBR]   Reynolds, J. and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers", STD 2,
               RFC 1700, October 1994.

   [ASN1]      Information processing systems - Open Systems
               Interconnection - Specification of Abstract Syntax
               Notation One (ASN.1), International Organization for
               Standardization, International Standard 8824, December
               1987.

   [ATM-ACT]   McCloghrie, K., Heinanen, J., Greene, W. and A. Prasad,
               "Accounting Information for ATM Networks", RFC 2512,
               February 1999.





Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 31]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   [ATM-COLL]  McCloghrie, K., Heinanen, J., Greene, W. and A. Prasad, "
               Managed Objects for Controlling the Collection and
               Storage of Accounting Information for Connection-Oriented
               Networks", RFC 2513, February 1999.

   [BER]       Information processing systems - Open Systems
               Interconnection - Specification of Basic Encoding Rules
               for Abstract Notation One (ASN.1), International
               Organization for Standardization, International Standard
               8825, December 1987.

   [DIAM-ACT]  Arkko, J., Calhoun, P.R., Patel, P. and Zorn, G.,
               "DIAMETER Accounting Extension", Work in Progress.

   [DIAM-AUTH] Calhoun, P.R. and Bulley, W., "DIAMETER User
               Authentication Extensions", Work in Progress.

   [DIAM-FRAM] Calhoun, P.R., Zorn, G. and Pan, P., "DIAMETER Framework
               Document", Work in Progress.

   [DSRV-ARC]  Blake, S., Black, D., Carlson, M., Davies, E., Wang, Z.
               and W. Weiss, "An Architecture for Differentiated
               Services", RFC 2475, December 1998.

   [HTML]      Berners-Lee, T. and D. Connolly, "Hypertext Markup
               Language - 2.0", RFC 1866, November 1995.

   [HTTP]      Fielding, R., Gettys, J., Mogul, J. Frystyk, H. and T.
               Berners-Lee, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol--HTTP/1.1", RFC
               2068, January 1997.

   [ICAL-CORE] Dawson, F. and D. Stenerson, "Internet Calendaring and
               Scheduling Core Object Specification", RFC 2445, November
               1998.

   [IIS-ARC]   Braden, R., Clark, D. and S. Shenker, "Integrated
               Services in the Internet Architecture: an Overview", RFC
               1633, June 1994.

   [IIS-SPEC]  Shenker, S., Partridge, C. and R. Guerin, "Specification
               of Guaranteed Quality of Service", RFC 2212, September
               1997.

   [ISDN-MIB]  Roeck, G., "ISDN Management Information Base using
               SMIv2", RFC 2127, March 1997.






Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 32]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   [ISO-DATE]  "Data elements and interchange formats -- Information
               interchange -- Representation of dates and times", ISO
               8601:1988.

   [MAIL]      Crocker, D., "STANDARD FOR THE FORMAT OF ARPA INTERNET
               TEXT MESSAGES", STD 11, RFC 822, August 1982.

   [MD5]       Rivest, R., "The MD5 Message-Digest Algorithm", RFC 1321,
               April 1992.

   [MSIX-SPEC] Blount, A. and D. Young, "Metered Service Information
               Exchange 1.2", Work in Progress.

   [NEWS-MSGS] Horton, M. and R. Adams, "Standard for Interchange of
               USENET Messages", RFC 1036, December 1987.

   [NEWS-PROT] Kantor, B. and P. Lapsley, "Network News Transfer
               Protocol", RFC 977, February 1986.

   [NTP]       Mills, D., "Network Time Protocol (NTP)", RFC 958,
               September 1985.

   [Q-825]     "Specification of TMN applications at the Q3 interface:
               Call detail recording", ITU-T Recommendation Q.825, 1998.

   [RAD-ACT]   Rigney, C., "RADIUS Accounting", RFC 2866, June 2000.

   [RAD-EXT]   Rigney, C., Willats, W. and Calhoun, P., "RADIUS
               Extensions", RFC 2869, June 2000.

   [RAD-PROT]  Rigney, C., Willens, S., Rubens, A., and W. Simpson,
               "Remote Authentication Dial In User Service (RADIUS)",
               RFC 2865, June 2000.

   [RAD-TACC]  Zorn, G., Mitton, D. and A. Aboba, "RADIUS Accounting
               Modifications for Tunnel Protocol Support", RFC 2867,
               June 2000.

   [RAP-COPS]  Boyle, J., Cohen, R., Durham, D., Herzog, S., Rajan, R.
               and A. Sastry, "The COPS (Common Open Policy Service)
               Protocol", RFC 2748, January 2000.

   [ROAM-ADIF] Aboba, B. and D. Lidyard, "The Accounting Data
               Interchange Format (ADIF)", Work in Progress.

   [ROAM-IMPL] Aboba, B., Lu, J., Alsop, J., Ding, J. and W. Wang,
               "Review of Roaming Implementations", RFC 2194, September
               1997.



Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 33]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   [RS-DS-OP]  Bernet, Y., Yavatkar, R., Ford, P., Baker, F., Zhang, L.,
               Speer, M., Braden, R., Davie, B., Wroclawski, J. and E.
               Felstaine, "A Framework For Integrated Services Operation
               Over Diffserv Networks", Work in Progress.

   [RSVP-ARC]  Braden, R., Zhang, L., Berson, S., Herzog, S. and S.
               Jamin, "Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) Version 1
               Functional Specification", RFC 2205, September 1997.

   [RSVP-MIB]  Baker, F., Krawczyk, J. and A. Sastry, "RSVP Management
               Information Base using SMIv2", RFC 2206, September 1997.

   [RTFM-ARC]  Brownlee, N., Mills, C. and G. Ruth, "Traffic Flow
               Measurement: Architecture", RFC 2722, October 1999.

   [RTFM-MIB]  Brownlee, N., "Traffic Flow Measurement: Meter MIB",
               Measurement: Architecture", RFC 2720, October 1999.

   [RTFM-NEWA] Handelman, S., Brownlee, N., Ruth, G. and S. Stibler,
               "New Attributes for Traffic Flow Measurement", RFC 2724,
               October 1999.

   [SIP-PROT]  Handley, M., Schulzrinne, H., Schooler, E. and J.
               Rosenberg, "SIP: Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 2543,
               March 1999.

   [SMI-V2]    McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D. and J. Schoenwaelder,
               "Structure of Management Information Version 2 (SMIv2)",
               STD 58, RFC 2578, April 1999.

   [SNMP-OVER] "AN OVERVIEW OF SNMP V2.0", Diversified Data Resources,
               Inc., http://www.ddri.com, 1999.

   [TIPHON]    "Telecommunications and Internet Protocol Harmonization
               Over Networks (TIPHON); Inter-domain pricing,
               authorization, and usage exchange", TS 101 321 V1.4.2,
               December 1998.

   [XML]       Bray, T., J. Paoli, and C. Sperberg-McQueen, "Extensible
               Markup Language (XML) 1.0", W3C Recommendation, February
               1998.










Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 34]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


   [XML-DATA]  "XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes", W3C Working Draft 07
               April 2000, April 2000.

   [XML-SCHM]  "XML Schema Part 1: Structures", W3C Working Draft 7
               April 2000, April 2000.

13.  Authors' Addresses

   Nevil Brownlee
   Information Technology Systems & Services
   The University of Auckland

   Phone: +64 9 373 7599 x8941
   EMail: n.brownlee@auckland.ac.nz


   Alan Blount
   MetraTech Corp.
   330 Bear Hill Road
   Waltham, MA 02451

   EMail: blount@alum.mit.edu





























Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 35]

RFC 2924        Accounting Attributes and Record Formats  September 2000


14.  Full Copyright Statement

   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.

   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
   English.

   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Acknowledgement

   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
   Internet Society.



















Brownlee & Blount            Informational                     [Page 36]