Network Working Group
Request for Comments: 2729
Category: Informational
P. Bagnall
R. Briscoe
A. Poppitt
BT
December 1999

Taxonomy of Communication Requirements

for Large-scale Multicast Applications

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 © The Internet Society (1999). All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

The intention of this memo is to define a classification system for the communication requirements of any large-scale multicast application (LSMA). It is very unlikely one protocol can achieve a compromise between the diverse requirements of all the parties involved in any LSMA. It is therefore necessary to understand the worst-case scenarios in order to minimize the range of protocols needed. Dynamic protocol adaptation is likely to be necessary which will require logic to map particular combinations of requirements to particular mechanisms. Standardizing the way that applications define their requirements is a necessary step towards this. Classification is a first step towards standardization.

Table of Contents

   1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
   2. Definitions of Sessions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
   3. Taxonomy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
     3.1. Summary of Communications Parameters . . . . . . . . 4
     3.2. Definitions, types and strictest requirements. . . . 5
       3.2.1. Types  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
       3.2.2. Reliability  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
         3.2.2.1. Packet Loss  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
         3.2.2.2. Component Reliability  . . . . . . . . . . . 8
       3.2.3. Ordering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
       3.2.4. Timeliness . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
       3.2.5. Session Control  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13
       3.2.6. Session Topology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16
       3.2.7. Directory  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17
       3.2.8. Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17
         3.2.8.1. Security Dynamics  . . . . . . . . . . . . .23
       3.2.9. Payment & Charging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .24
   4. Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25
   5. References   . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25
   6. Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .26
   7. Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27

1. Introduction

This taxonomy consists of a large number of parameters that are considered useful for describing the communication requirements of LSMAs. To describe a particular application, each parameter would be assigned a value. Typical ranges of values are given wherever possible. Failing this, the type of any possible values is given. The parameters are collected into ten or so higher level categories, but this is purely for convenience.

The parameters are pitched at a level considered meaningful to application programmers. However, they describe communications not applications - the terms '3D virtual world', or 'shared TV' might imply communications requirements, but they don't accurately describe them. Assumptions about the likely mechanism to achieve each requirement are avoided where possible.

While the parameters describe communications, it will be noticed that few requirements concerning routing etc. are apparent. This is because applications have few direct requirements on these second order aspects of communications. Requirements in these areas will have to be inferred from application requirements (e.g. latency).

The taxonomy is likely to be useful in a number of ways:

  1. Most simply, it can be used as a checklist to create a requirements statement for a particular LSMA. Example applications will be classified [bagnall98] using the taxonomy in order to exercise (and improve) it
  1. Because strictest requirement have been defined for many parameters, it will be possible to identify worst case scenarios for the design of protocols
  1. Because the scope of each parameter has been defined (per session, per receiver etc.), it will be possible to highlight where heterogeneity is going to be most marked
  1. It is a step towards standardization of the way LSMAs define their communications requirements. This could lead to standard APIs between applications and protocol adaptation middleware
  1. Identification of limitations in current Internet technology for LSMAs to be added to the LSMA limitations memo [limitations]
  1. Identification of gaps in Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) working group coverage

This approach is intended to complement that used where application scenarios for Distributed Interactive Simulation (DIS) are proposed in order to generate network design metrics (values of communications parameters). Instead of creating the communications parameters from the applications, we try to imagine applications that might be enabled by stretching communications parameters.

2. Definition of Sessions

The following terms have no agreed definition, so they will be defined for this document.

Session

a happening or gathering consisting of flows of information related by a common description that persists for a non-trivial time (more than a few seconds) such that the participants (be they humans or applications) are involved and interested at intermediate times. A session may be defined recursively as a super-set of other sessions.

Secure session

a session with restricted access

A session or secure session may be a sub and/or super set of a multicast group. A session can simultaneously be both a sub and a super-set of a multicast group by spanning a number of groups while time-sharing each group with other sessions.

3. Taxonomy

3.1 Summary of Communications Parameters

Before the communications parameters are defined, typed and given worst-case values, they are simply listed for convenience. Also for convenience they are collected under classification headings.

      Reliability  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2.1
         Packet loss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2.1.1
            Transactional
            Guaranteed
            Tolerated loss
            Semantic loss
         Component reliability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2.1.2
            Setup fail-over time
            Mean time between failures
            Fail over time during a stream
      Ordering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2.2
         Ordering type
      Timeliness . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2.3
         Hard Realtime
         Synchronicity
         Burstiness
         Jitter
         Expiry
         Latency
         Optimum bandwidth
         Tolerable bandwidth
         Required by time and tolerance
         Host performance
         Fair delay
         Frame size
         Content size
      Session Control  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2.4
         Initiation
         Start time
         End time
         Duration
         Active time
         Session Burstiness
         Atomic join
         Late join allowed ?
      
         Temporary leave allowed ?
         Late join with catch-up allowed ?
         Potential streams per session
         Active streams per sessions
      Session Topology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2.5
         Number of senders
         Number of receivers
      Directory  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2.6
         Fail-over time-out (see Reliability: fail-over time)
         Mobility
      Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2.7
         Authentication strength
         Tamper-proofing
         Non-repudiation strength
         Denial of service
         Action restriction
         Privacy
         Confidentiality
         Retransmit prevention strength
         Membership criteria
         Membership principals
         Collusion prevention
         Fairness
         Action on compromise
      Security dynamics  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2.8
         Mean time between compromises
         Compromise detection time limit
         compromise recovery time limit
      Payment & Charging . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3.2.9
         Total Cost
         Cost per time
         Cost per Mb

3.2 Definitions, types and strictest requirements

The terms used in the above table are now defined for the context of this document. Under each definition, the type of their value is given and where possible worst-case values and example applications that would exhibit this requirement.

There is no mention of whether a communication is a stream or a discrete interaction. An attempt to use this distinction as a way of characterizing communications proved to be remarkably unhelpful and was dropped.

3.2.1 Types

Each requirement has a type. The following is a list of all the types used in the following definitions.

   Application Benchmark

This is some measure of the processor load of an application, in some architecture neutral unit. This is non-trivial since the processing an application requires may change radically with different hardware, for example, a video client with and without hardware support.

Bandwidth Measured in bits per second, or a multiple of.

   Boolean

Abstract Currency

An abstract currency is one which is adjusted to take inflation into account. The simplest way of doing this is to use the value of a real currency on a specific date. It is effectively a way of assessing the cost of something in "real terms". An example might be 1970 US$. Another measure might be "average man hours".

Currency - current local

   Data Size

Date (time since epoch)

   Enumeration
   
   Fraction

Identifiers

A label used to distinguish different parts of a communication

   Integer
   
   Membership list/rule

Macro

A small piece of executable code used to describe policies

   Time

3.2.2 Reliability

3.2.2.1 Packet Loss
   Transactional

When multiple operations must occur atomically, transactional communications guarantee that either all occur or none occur and a failure is flagged.

      Type:                  Boolean
      Meaning:               Transactional or Not transaction
      Strictest Requirement: Transactional
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Bank credit transfer, debit and credit must
                             be atomic.
      NB:                    Transactions are potentially much more
                             complex, but it is believed this is
                             an application layer problem.
   
   Guaranteed

Guarantees communications will succeed under certain conditions.

      Type:                  Enumerated
      Meaning:               Deferrable - if communication fails it will
                             be deferred until a time when it will be
                             successful.
                             Guaranteed - the communication will succeed
                             so long as all necessary components are
                             working.
                             No guarantee - failure will not be
                             reported.
      Strictest Requirement: Deferrable
      Example Application:   Stock quote feed - Guaranteed
      Scope:                 per stream
      NB:                    The application will need to set parameters
                             to more fully define Guarantees, which the
                             middleware may translate into, for example,
                             queue lengths.
   
   Tolerated loss

This specifies the proportion of data from a communication that can be lost before the application becomes completely unusable.

      Type:                  Fraction
      Meaning:               fraction of the stream that can be lost
      Strictest Requirement: 0%
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Video - 20%
   
   Semantic loss

The application specifies how many and which parts of the communication can be discarded if necessary.

      Type:                  Identifiers, name disposable application
                             level frames
      Meaning:               List of the identifiers of application
                             frames which may be lost
      Strictest Requirement: No loss allowed
      Scope:                 per stream
      
      Example Application:   Video feed - P frames may be lost, I frames
                             not
3.2.2.2. Component Reliability
   Setup Fail-over time

The time before a failure is detected and a replacement component is invoked. From the applications point of view this is the time it may take in exceptional circumstances for a channel to be set- up. It is not the "normal" operating delay before a channel is created.

      Type:                  Time
      Strictest Requirement: Web server - 1 second
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Name lookup - 5 seconds

Mean time between failures

The mean time between two consecutive total failures of the channel.

      Type:                  Time
      Strictest Requirement: Indefinite
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Telephony - 1000 hours

Fail over time during a stream

The time between a stream breaking and a replacement being set up.

      Type:                  Time
      Strictest Requirement: Equal to latency requirement
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   File Transfer - 10sec

3.2.3. Ordering

   Ordering type

Specifies what ordering must be preserved for the application

      Type:                  {
                               Enumeration timing,
                               Enumeration sequencing,
                               Enumeration causality
                             }
      
      Meaning:               Timing - the events are timestamped
                               Global
                               Per Sender
                               none
                             Sequencing - the events are sequenced in
                             order of occurrence
                               Global
                               Per Sender
                               none
                             Causality - the events form a graph
                             relating cause and effect
                               Global
                               Per Sender
                               none
      Strictest Requirement: Global, Global, Global
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Game - { none, per sender, global } (to
                             make sure being hit by bullet occurs
                             after the shot is fired!)

3.2.4. Timeliness

   Hard real- time

There is a meta-requirement on timeliness. If hard real-time is required then the interpretation of all the other requirements changes. Failures to achieve the required timeliness must be reported before the communication is made. By contrast soft real- time means that there is no guarantee that an event will occur in time. However statistical measures can be used to indicate the probability of completion in the required time, and policies such as making sure the probability is 95% or better could be used.

      Type:                  Boolean
      Meaning:               Hard or Soft realtime
      Strictest Requirement: Hard
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Medical monitor - Hard
   
   Synchronicity

To make sure that separate elements of a session are correctly synchronized with respect to each other

      Type:                  Time
      Meaning:               The maximum time drift between streams
      Strictest Requirement: 80ms for human perception
      Scope:                 per stream pair/set
      Example Application:   TV lip-sync value 80ms
      NB:                    the scope is not necessarily the same as
                             the session. Some streams may no need to be
                             sync'd, (say, a score ticker in a football
                             match
   
   Burstiness

This is a measure of the variance of bandwidth requirements over time.

      Type:                  Fraction
      Meaning:               either:
                               Variation in b/w as fraction of b/w for
                               variable b/w communications
                             or
                               duty cycle (fraction of time at peak b/w)
                               for intermittent b/w communications.
      Strictest Requirement: Variation = max b/w Duty cycle ~ 0
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Sharing video clips, with chat channel -
                             sudden bursts as clips are swapped.
                             Compressed Audio - difference between
                             silence and talking
      NB:                    More detailed analysis of communication
                             flow (e.g. max rate of b/w change or

Fourier Transform of the b/w requirement) is possible but as complexity increases usefulness and computability decrease.

   Jitter

Jitter is a measure of variance in the time taken for communications to traverse from the sender (application) to the receiver, as seen from the application layer.

      Type:                  Time
      Meaning:               Maximum permissible time variance
      Strictest Requirement: <1ms
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   audio streaming - <1ms
      NB:                    A jitter requirement implies that the
                             communication is a real-time stream.  It
                             makes relatively little sense for a file
                             transfer for example.
   
   Expiry

This specifies how long the information being transferred remains valid for.

      Type:                  Date
      Meaning:               Date at which data expires
      Strictest Requirement: For ever
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   key distribution - now+3600 seconds (valid
                             for at least one hour)
   
   Latency

Time between initiation and occurrence of an action from application perspective.

      Type:                  Time
      Strictest Requirement: Near zero for process control apps
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Audio conference 20ms
      NB:                    Where an action consists of several
                             distinct sequential parts the latency
                             budget must be split over those parts. For
                             process control the requirement may take
                             any value.
   
   Optimum Bandwidth

Bandwidth required to complete communication in time

      Type:                  Bandwidth
      Strictest Requirement: No upper limit
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Internet Phone 8kb/s
   
   Tolerable Bandwidth

Minimum bandwidth that application can tolerate

      Type:                  Bandwidth
      Strictest Requirement: No upper limit
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Internet phone 4kb/s

Required by time and tolerance

Time communication should complete by and time when failure to complete renders communication useless (therefore abort).

      Type:                  {
                               Date - preferred complete time,
                               Date - essential complete time
                             }
      Strictest Requirement: Both now.
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Email - Preferred 5 minutes & Essential in
                             1 day
      NB:                    Bandwidth * Duration = Size; only two of
                             these parameters may be specified. An API
                             though could allow application authors to
                             think in terms of any two.
   
   Host performance

Ability of host to create/consume communication

      Type:                  Application benchmark
      Meaning:               Level of resources required by Application
      Strictest Requirement: Full consumption
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Video - consume 15 frames a second
      NB:                    Host performance is complex since load,
                             media type, media quality, h/w assistance,
                             and encoding scheme all affect the

processing load. These are difficult to predict prior to a communication starting. To some extent these will need to be measured and modified as the communication proceeds.

   Frame size

Size of logical data packets from application perspective

      Type:                  data size
      Strictest Requirement: 6 bytes (gaming)
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   video = data size of single frame update
   
   Content size

The total size of the content (not relevant for continuous media)

      Type:                  data size
      Strictest Requirement: N/A
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   document transfer, 4kbytes

3.2.5. Session Control

   Initiation

Which initiation mechanism will be used.

      Type:                  Enumeration
      Meaning:               Announcement - session is publicly
                                 announced via a mass distribution
                                 system
                             Invitation - specific participants are
                                 explicitly invited, e.g. my email
                             Directive - specific participants are
                                 forced to join the session
      Strictest Requirement: Directive
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Corporate s/w update - Directive
   Start Time

Time sender starts sending!

      Type:                  Date
      Strictest Requirement: Now
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   FTP - at 3am
   
   End Time
   
      Type:                  Date
      Strictest Requirement: Now
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   FTP - Now+30mins
   
   Duration

(end time) - (start time) = (duration), therefore only two of three should be specified.

      Type:                  Time
      Strictest Requirement: - 0ms for discrete, indefinite for streams
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   audio feed - 60mins
   
   Active Time

Total time session is active, not including breaks

      Type:                  Time
      Strictest Requirement: equals duration
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Spectator sport transmission
   
   Session Burstiness

Expected level of burstiness of the session

      Type:                  Fraction
      Meaning:               Variance as a fraction of maximum bandwidth
      Strictest Requirement: =bandwidth
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   commentary & slide show: 90% of max
   Atomic join

Session fails unless a certain proportion of the potential participants accept an invitation to join. Alternatively, may be specified as a specific numeric quorum.

      Type:                  Fraction (proportion required) or int
                             (quorum)
      Strictest Requirement: 1.0 (proportion)
      Example Application:   price list update, committee meeting
      Scope:                 per stream or session
      NB:                    whether certain participants are essential
                                    is application dependent.

Late join allowed ?

Does joining a session after it starts make sense

      Type:                  Boolean
      Strictest Requirement: allowed
      Scope:                 per stream or session
      Example Application:   game - not allowed
      NB:                    An application may wish to define an
                             alternate session if late join is not
                             allowed

Temporary leave allowed ?

Does leaving and then coming back make sense for session

      Type:                  Boolean
      Strictest Requirement: allowed
      Scope:                 per stream or session
      Example Application:   FTP - not allowed

Late join with catch-up allowed ?

Is there a mechanism for a late joiner to see what they've missed

      Type:                  Boolean
      Strictest Requirement: allowed
      Scope:                 per stream or session
      Example Application:   sports event broadcast, allowed
      NB:                    An application may wish to define an
                             alternate session if late join is not
                             allowed

Potential streams per session

Total number of streams that are part of session, whether being consumed or not

      Type:                  Integer
      Strictest Requirement: No upper limit
      Scope:                 per session
      Example Application:   football match mcast - multiple camera's,
                             commentary, 15 streams
   
   Active streams per sessions  (i.e. max app can handle)

Maximum number of streams that an application can consume simultaneously

      Type:                  Integer
      Strictest Requirement: No upper limit
      Scope:                 per session
      Example Application:   football match mcast - 6, one main video,
                             four user selected, one audio commentary

3.2.6. Session Topology

Note: topology may be dynamic. One of the challenges in designing adaptive protocol frameworks is to predict the topology before the first join.

   Number of senders

The number of senders is a result the middleware may pass up to the application

      Type:                  Integer
      Strictest Requirement: No upper limit
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   network MUD - 100
   
   Number of receivers

The number of receivers is a results the middleware may pass up to the application

      Type:                  Integer
      Strictest Requirement: No upper limit
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   video mcast - 100,000

3.2.7. Directory

   Fail-over timeout (see Reliability: fail-over time)
   
   Mobility

Defines restrictions on when directory entries may be changed

      Type:                  Enumeration
      Meaning:               while entry is in use
                             while entry in unused
                             never
      Strictest Requirement: while entry is in use
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   voice over mobile phone, while entry is in
                             use (as phone gets new address when
                             changing cell).

3.2.8. Security

The strength of any security arrangement can be stated as the expected cost of mounting a successful attack. This allows mechanisms such as physical isolation to be considered alongside encryption mechanisms. The cost is measured in an abstract currency, such as 1970 UD$ (to inflation proof).

Security is an orthogonal requirement. Many requirements can have a security requirement on them which mandates that the cost of causing the system to fail to meet that requirement is more than the specified amount. In terms of impact on other requirements though, security does potentially have a large impact so when a system is trying to determine which mechanisms to use and whether the requirements can be met security will clearly be a major influence.

   Authentication Strength

Authentication aims to ensure that a principal is who they claim to be. For each role in a communication, (e.g. sender, receiver) there is a strength for the authentication of the principle who has taken on that role. The principal could be a person, organization or other legal entity. It could not be a process since a process has no legal representation.

      Type:                  Abstract Currency
      Meaning:               That the cost of hijacking a role is in
                             excess of the specified amount. Each role
                             is a different requirement.
      
      Strictest Requirement: budget of largest attacker
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   inter-governmental conference
   
   Tamper-proofing

This allows the application to specify how much security will be applied to ensuring that a communication is not tampered with. This is specified as the minimum cost of successfully tampering with the communication. Each non-security requirement has a tamper-proofing requirement attached to it.

Requirement: The cost of tampering with the communication is in excess of the specified amount.

      Type:                  {
                               Abstract Currency,
                               Abstract Currency,
                               Abstract Currency
                             }
      Meaning:               cost to alter or destroy data,
                             cost to replay data (successfully),
                             cost to interfere with timeliness.
      Scope:                 per stream
      Strictest Requirement: Each budget of largest attacker
      Example Application:   stock price feed
   
   Non-repudiation strength

The non-repudiation strength defines how much care is taken to make sure there is a reliable audit trail on all interactions. It is measured as the cost of faking an audit trail, and therefore being able to "prove" an untrue event. There are a number of possible parameters of the event that need to be proved. The following list is not exclusive but shows the typical set of requirements.

1. Time 2. Ordering (when relative to other events) 3. Whom 4. What (the event itself)

There are a number of events that need to be provable. 1. sender proved sent 2. receiver proves received 3. sender proves received.

      Type:                  Abstract Currency
      Meaning:               minimum cost of faking or denying an event
      Strictest Requirement:  Budget of largest attacker
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Online shopping system
   Denial of service

There may be a requirement for some systems (999,911,112 emergency services access for example) that denial of service attacks cannot be launched. While this is difficult (maybe impossible) in many systems at the moment it is still a requirement, just one that can't be met.

      Type:                  Abstract Currency
      Meaning:               Cost of launching a denial of service
                             attack is greater than specified amount.
      Strictest Requirement: budget of largest attacker
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   web hosting, to prevent individual hackers
                             stalling system.
   
   Action restriction

For any given communication there are a two actions, send and receive. Operations like adding to members to a group are done as a send to the membership list. Examining the list is a request to and receive from the list. Other actions can be generalized to send and receive on some communication, or are application level not comms level issues.

      Type:                  Membership list/rule for each action.
      Meaning:               predicate for determining permission for
                             role
      Strictest Requirement: Send and receive have different policies.
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   TV broadcast, sender policy defines
                             transmitter, receiver policy is null.
      NB:                    Several actions may share the same
                             membership policy.
   
   Privacy

Privacy defines how well obscured a principals identity is. This could be for any interaction. A list of participants may be obscured, a sender may obscure their identity when they send. There are also different types of privacy. For example knowing two messages were sent by the same person breaks the strongest type of privacy even if the identity of that sender is still unknown. For each "level" of privacy there is a cost associated with violating it. The requirement is that this cost is excessive for the attacker.

      Type:                  {
                               Abstract Currency,
                               Abstract Currency,
                               Abstract Currency,
                               Abstract Currency
                             }
      Meaning:               Level of privacy, expected cost to violate
                             privacy level for:-
                             openly identified - this is the unprotected
                                 case
                             anonymously identified  - (messages from
                                 the same sender can be linked)
                             unadvertised (but traceable) - meaning that
                                 traffic can be detected and traced to
                                 it's source or destination, this is a
                                 breach if the very fact that two
                                 specific principals are communicating
                                 is sensitive.
                             undetectable
      Strictest Requirement: All levels budget of attacker
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Secret ballot voting system
                             openly identified - budget of any
                                 interested party
                             anonymously identified - zero
                             unadvertised - zero
                             undetectable - zero
   
   Confidentiality

Confidentiality defines how well protected the content of a communication is from snooping.

      Type:                  Abstract Currency
      Meaning:               Level of Confidentiality, the cost of
                             gaining illicit access to the content of a
                             stream
      Strictest Requirement:  budget of attacker
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Secure email -  value of transmitted
                             information
   
   Retransmit prevention strength

This is extremely hard at the moment. This is not to say it's not a requirement.

      Type:                  Abstract Currency
      Meaning:               The cost of retransmitting a secure piece
                             of information should exceed the specified
                             amount.
      Strictest Requirement: Cost of retransmitting  value of
                             information
      Scope:                 per stream
   
   Membership Criteria

If a principal attempts to participate in a communication then a check will be made to see if it is allowed to do so. The requirement is that certain principals will be allowed, and others excluded. Given the application is being protected from network details there are only two types of specification available, per user, and per organization (where an organization may contain other organizations, and each user may be a member of multiple organizations). Rules could however be built on properties of a user, for example does the user own a key? Host properties could also be used, so users on slow hosts or hosts running the wrong OS could be excluded.

      Type:                  Macros
      Meaning:               Include or exclude
                                users (list)
                                organizations (list)
                                hosts (list)
                                user properties (rule)
                                org properties (rule)
                                hosts properties (rule)
      Strictest Requirement: List of individual users
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   Corporate video-conference - organization
                             membership
   
   Collusion prevention

Which aspects of collusion it is required to prevent. Collusion is defined as malicious co-operation between members of a secure session. Superficially, it would appear that collusion is not a relevant threat in a multicast, because everyone has the same information, however, wherever there is differentiation, it can be exploited.

      Type:                  {
                               Abstract Currency,
                               Abstract Currency,
                               Abstract Currency
      
                             }
      Meaning:               time race collusion - cost of colluding
                             key encryption key (KEK) sharing - cost of
                             colluding
                             sharing of differential QoS (not strictly
                             collusion as across sessions not within
                             one) - cost of colluding
      Strictest Requirement: For all threats cost attackers
                             combined resources
      Scope:                 per stream
      Example Application:   A race where delay of the start signal may
                             be allowed for, but one participant may
                             fake packet delay while receiving the start
                             signal from another participant.
      NB:                    Time race collusion is the most difficult
                             one to prevent. Also note that while these
                             may be requirements for some systems this
                             does not mean there are necessarily
                             solutions. Setting tough requirements may
                             result in the middleware being unable to
                             create a valid channel.
   
   Fairness

Fairness is a meta-requirement of many other requirements. Of particular interest are Reliability and Timeliness requirements. When a communication is first created the creator may wish to specify a set of requirements for these parameters. Principals which join later may wish to set tighter limits. Fairness enforces a policy that any improvement is requirement by one principal must be matched by all others, in effect requirements can only be set for the whole group. This increases the likelihood that requirements of this kind will fail to be met. If fairness if not an issue then some parts of the network can use more friendly methods to achieve those simpler requirements.

      Type:                  Level of variance of the requirement that
                             needs to be fair. For example, if the
                             latency requirement states within 2
                             seconds, the level of fairness required may
                             be that variations in latency are not more
                             than 0.1s. This has in fact become an issue
                             in online gaming (e.g. Quake)
      Meaning:               The variance of performance with respect to
                             any other requirement is less than the
                             specified amount.
      Scope:                 per stream, per requirement
      Example Application:   Networked game, latency to receive
                             positions of players must be within 5ms for
                             all players.
   
   Action on compromise

The action to take on detection of compromise (until security reassured).

      Type:                  Enumeration
      Meaning:               warn but continue
                             pause
                             abort
      Scope:                 Per stream
      Strictest Requirement: pause
      Example Application:   Secure video conference - if intruder
                             alert, everyone is warned, but they can
                             continue while knowing not to discuss
                             sensitive matters (cf. catering staff
                             during a meeting).
3.2.8.1. Security Dynamics

Security dynamics are the temporal properties of the security mechanisms that are deployed. They may affect other requirements such as latency or simply be a reflection of the security limitations of the system. The requirements are often concerned with abnormal circumstances (e.g. system violation).

Mean time between compromises

This is not the same as the strength of a system. A fairly weak system may have a very long time between compromises because it is not worth breaking in to, or it is only worth it for very few people. Mean time between compromises is a combination of strength, incentive and scale.

      Type:                  Time
      Scope:                 Per stream
      Strictest Requirement: indefinite
      Example Application:   Secure Shell - 1500hrs

Compromise detection time limit

The average time it must take to detect a compromise (one predicted in the design of the detection system, that is).

      Type:                  Time
      Scope:                 Per stream
      Strictest Requirement: Round trip time
      Example Application:   Secure Shell - 2secs

Compromise recovery time limit

The maximum time it must take to re-seal the security after a breach. This combined with the compromise detection time limit defines how long the system must remain inactive to avoid more security breaches. For example if a compromise is detected in one minute, and recovery takes five, then one minute of traffic is now insecure and the members of the communication must remain silent for four minutes after detection while security is re-established.

      Type:                  Time
      Scope:                 Per stream
      Strictest Requirement: 1 second
      Example Application:   Audio conference - 10 seconds

3.2.9. Payment & Charging

   Total Cost

The total cost of communication must be limited to this amount. This would be useful for transfer as opposed to stream type applications.

      Type:                  Currency
      Meaning:               Maximum charge allowed
      Scope:                 Per user per stream
      Strictest Requirement: Free
      Example Application:   File Transfer: comms cost must be < 1p/Mb
   
   Cost per Time
   
                             This is the cost per unit time. Some
                             applications may not be able to predict the
                             duration of a communication. It may be more
                             meaningful for those to be able to specify
                             price per time instead.
      Type:                  Currency per timeS
   
      Scope:                 Per user per stream
      Strictest Requirement: Free
      Example Application:   Video Conference - 15p / minute
   
   Cost per Mb

This is the cost per unit of data. Some communications may be charged by the amount of data transferred. Some applications may prefer to specify requirements in this way.

      Type:                  Currency per data size
      Scope:                 Per user per stream
      Strictest Requirement: Free
      Example Application:   Email advertising - 15p / Mb

4. Security Considerations

See comprehensive security section of taxonomy.

5. References

   [Bagnall98]   Bagnall Peter, Poppitt Alan, Example LSMA
                 classifications, BT Tech report,
                 <URL:http://www.labs.bt.com/projects/mware/>
   
   [limitations] Pullen, M., Myjak, M. and C. Bouwens, "Limitations of
                 Internet Protocol Suite for Distributed Simulation in
                 the Large Multicast Environment", RFC 2502, February
                 1999.
   
   [rmodp]       Open Distributed Processing Reference Model (RM-ODP),
                 ISO/IEC 10746-1 to 10746-4 or ITU-T (formerly CCITT)
                 X.901 to X.904. Jan 1995.
   
   [blaze95]     Blaze, Diffie, Rivest, Schneier, Shimomura, Thompson
                 and Wiener, Minimal Key Lengths for Symmetric Ciphers
                 to Provide Adequate Commercial Security, January 1996.

6. Authors' Addresses

Peter Bagnall
c/o B54/77 BT Labs
Martlesham Heath
Ipswich, IP5 3RE
England

   EMail: pete@surfaceeffect.com
   Home page: http://www.surfaceeffect.com/people/pete/

Bob Briscoe
B54/74 BT Labs
Martlesham Heath
Ipswich, IP5 3RE
England

   Phone: +44 1473 645196
   Fax:   +44 1473 640929
   EMail: bob.briscoe@bt.com
   Home page: http://www.labs.bt.com/people/briscorj/

Alan Poppitt
B54/77 BT Labs
Martlesham Heath
Ipswich, IP5 3RE
England

   Phone: +44 1473 640889
   Fax:   +44 1473 640929
   EMail: apoppitt@jungle.bt.co.uk
   Home page: http://www.labs.bt.com/people/poppitag/

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