ECRIT R. Marshall
Internet-Draft J. Martin
Intended status: Standards Track TCS
Expires: January 24, 2015 B. Rosen
Neustar
July 23, 2014
A LoST extension to return complete and similar location info
draft-marshall-ecrit-similar-location-04
Abstract
This document introduces a new way to provide returned location
information in LoST responses that is either of a completed or
similar form to the original input civic location, based on whether
valid or invalid civic address elements are returned within the
findServiceResponse message. This document defines a new extension
to the findServiceResponse message within the LoST protocol [RFC5222]
that enables the LoST protocol to return a completed civic address
element set for a valid location response, and one or more suggested
sets of similar location information for invalid LoST responses.
These two types of civic addresses are referred to as either
"complete location" or "similar location", and are included as
compilation of ca type xml elements within the existing LoST
findServiceResponse message structure.
Status of This Memo
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This Internet-Draft will expire on January 24, 2015.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
2. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
3. Overview of Returned Location Information . . . . . . . . . . 5
4. Returned Location Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
5. Complete Location returned for Valid Location response . . . 7
6. Similar Location returned for Invalid Location response . . . 9
7. Relax NG schema . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
8. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
9. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
9.1. Relax NG Schema Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
9.2. LoST Namespace Registration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
10. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
11. Changes from Previous Versions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
11.1. Changes from draft-marshall-03 to -04 . . . . . . . . . 15
12. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
12.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
12.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
1. Introduction
The LoST protcol [RFC5222] supports the validation of civic location
information as input, by providing a set of validation result status
indicators. The current usefullness of the supported xml elements,
"valid", "invalid", and "unchecked", is limited, because while they
each provide an indication of validity for any one location element
as a part of the whole civic address, the mechanism is insufficient
in providing either the complete set of civic address elements that
the LoST server contains, or of providing alternate suggestions
(hints) as to which civic address is intended for use.
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Whether the input civic location is valid and missing information, or
invalid due to missing or wrong information during input, this
document provides a mechanism to return a complete set of civic
address elements for those valid or invalid cases.
This enhancement to the validation feature within LoST is required by
systems that rely on accurate location for processing in order to
increase the likelyhood that the correct and/or complete form of a
civic location becomes known in those cases where it is incomplete or
just plain wrong. One such use case is that of location based
emergency calling. The use of this protocol extension will reduce
user and system input errors, and will result in a higher level of
civic address matching, reducing the number of mismatch errors, where
a civic address that appears to be valid gets wrongly associated with
the physical location of the caller.
The structure of this document includes terminology, Section 2,
followed by a discussion of the basic elements involved in location
validation. The use of these elements, by way of example, is
discussed in an overview section, Section 3, with accompanying
rationale, and a brief discussion of the impacts to LoST, and its
current schema.
2. Terminology
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119],
with the important qualification that, unless otherwise stated, these
terms apply to the design of the Location Configuration Protocol and
the Location Dereferencing Protocol, not its implementation or
application.
The following terms are defined in this document:
Location: The term Location can be used to refer to either a civic
location or a geodetic location.
Geodetic Location: a geographic coordinate set of values that
describes a point within a defined geographic datum. For example,
a WGS84 referenced lattitude, longitude coordinate pair (2D), or
lattitude, longitude, and altitude (3D). Note: geodetic location
is defined here for context, but is not used elsewhere within this
document.
Civic Location: The term civic location applies to a set of one or
more civic address elements that are used in conjunction with each
other, and in accordance with a known ruleset to designates a
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place within a defined grid or basemap, The example used within
this document is a street address as defined in [RFC5139]
Civic Address: The term Civic Address is used interchangeably with
the term Civic Location within this document.
Street Address: The term Street Address is used to represent a
place, or location on a defined grid or map. While generally
equated to both terms, Civic Location and Civic Address, it is not
used within this document.
Civic Address Element: The term Civic Address Element is used within
this document to apply to an individual CAtype data descriptor,
for example, as is defined in [RFC4776]
Invalid: The status result of the unsuccessful attempt to match an
individual input data as part of a larger set of data that has
already been successfully matched and as shown by the [RFC5222]
defined xml named element
Valid: The status result of the successful attempt to match an
individual input data as part of a larger set of data that has
already also been successfully matched and shown by the [RFC5222]
defined xml named element
Invalid Location: A Civic Location that was included in a LoST
request and subsequently returned with one or more civic address
elements marked as invalid.
Valid Location: A Civic Location that was included in a LoST request
and subsequently returned with all civic address elements marked
as valid.
Complete Location: An expanded civic location that includes other
civic address elements in addition to the existing validated civic
address elements provided as input to a LoST server.
Similar Location: A suggested civic location that is comparatively
close to the civic location which was input, but which had one or
more invalid civic address elements returned by the LoST server.
Returned Location Information: A set of standard civic address
elements returned in a LoST response.
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3. Overview of Returned Location Information
This document describes an extension to LoST [RFC5222] to allow
additional location information to be returned in a
findServiceResponse for two different use cases.
When a LoST server is asked to validate a civic location, its goal is
to take the set of civic address elements provided as the location
information in the LoST request, and find a unique location in its
database that matches the information in the request. Uniqueness
might not require values for all possible elements in the civic
address that the database might hold. Further, the input location
information might not represent the form of location the users of the
LoST service prefer to have. As an example, there are LoST civic
address elements that could be used to define a postal location,
suitable for delivery mail as well as a municipal location suitable
for responding to an emergency call. While the LoST server might be
able to determine the location from the postal elements provided, the
emergency services would prefer that the municipal location be used
for any subsequent emergency call. Since validation is often
performed well in advance of an end-user placing an emergency call,
if the LoST server could return the preferred form of location (or
more properly, the municipal elements in addition to the postal
elements), those elements could be stored in a LIS and used in a
later emergency call.
Since a LoST server often contains more data than what is included
within a findService request, it is expected that this additional
location information, if present, SHOULD be returned within response
messages that contain valid civic address elements. For valid
location responses, where a LoST server contains additional location
information relating to that civic address, the findServiceResponse
message MAY return additional location information along with the
original validated civic address elements in order to form a complete
location based on local implementation policy.
In addition, this document describes the reuse of the same mechanism,
but for a different purpose: to supply similar location information
in the case where a LoST server response includes one or more civic
address elements marked as invalid, constituting an invalid location
response, offerring one or more suggested alternative address that
would consist of one or more valid locations.
LoST servers that implement this extension have no way to alert
clients that may not be aware of the extension's capabilities, other
than supplying the extended data set. It is expected that a LoST
client implementation that is not aware of this extension for
complete and/or similar location SHOULD be able to still receive the
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findServiceResponse data, while throwing away any extra complete or
similar location data.
In a valid location response, a LoST server returns a response to a
findService request that contains a set of civic address elements
marked valid, the location information in the findServiceResponse
message MAY be extended to include additional location information
specific for that location. As an example, the query might contain a
HNO (house number), RD (road name) and A3 (city) and a few more
caType elements, but might not contain A1 (state), PC (Postal Code)
CAtypes. The HNO, RD, STS, POD, and A3 civic address elements might
be sufficient enough to the LoST server to uniquely locate the
address specified in the request and thus be considered valid. Yet,
downstream entities might find it helpful to have the additional
country, A1 (state), and PC, (Postal Code), civic address elements
that are present within the LoST server, be included as part of a
complete location response. Since [RFC5222] currently does not have
a way for this additional location information to be returned in the
findServiceResponse, this document extends the LoST protocol so that
it can include a completeLocation element within the
findServiceResponse message, allowing for the representation of
complete location information.
An example showing complete location information supplied:
input address: 6000 15th Ave NW Seattle
complete location: 6000 15th Ave NW Seattle, WA 98105 US
By constrast, when invalid location is received from the LoST server,
with this extension, the same mechanism works as follows: if a LoST
server returns a response to a findService request that contains a
set of civic address elements with one or more labeled as invalid,
the location information in the findServiceResponse is extended to
include additional location information that it knows is specific for
that location. Differing results based on somewhat close input data
as used above, where the HNO, RD, STS, A1, and A3 civic address
elements are not sufficient to locate a unique address leads to an
invalid location result. This is the case, despite the fact that the
LoST server typically contains additional civic address elements
which could have resulted in a uniquely identifiable location if
additional data had been supplied with the query. Since [RFC5222]
currently does not have a way for this additional location
information to be returned in the findServiceResponse, this document
extends [RFC5222] so that the LoST findServiceResponse message can
include one or more similarLocation elements within the
findServiceResponse message representing similar civic locations.
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To show this, suppose that a slightly modified address as above is
inserted within a Lost findService request:
input address: 6000 15th Ave N Seattle, WA.
Different from the previous use case, this time we make the
assumption that the address is deemed "invalid" by the LoST server
because there is no such thing as "15th Ave N" within the LoST
server's data for the city of Seattle. However, we also happen to
know for this example that there are two addresses within the address
dataset that are "similar", when all parts of the address are taken
as a whole. These similar addresses that could be suggested to the
user are as follows:
similar address #1: 6000 15th Ave NW Seattle, WA 98107
similar address #2: 6000 15th Ave NE Seattle, WA 98105
This document proposes to include the above similar addresses as
civicAddress elements in the response to locationValidation. The
next section shows examples of the LoST request and response xml
message fragments for the above valid and invalid scenarios,
returning the complete or similar addresses, respectively:
4. Returned Location Information
The LoST server knows the data that is available internally, and can
determine which additional civic address elements can be provided
either as part of a complete location or a similar location. The
inclusion of either complete location or similar location is not
triggered by any message parameter, but is triggered based on whether
the returned location information is valid or invalid. It is not
turned on or off, but is implementation specific.
5. Complete Location returned for Valid Location response
Based on the example input request, returned location information is
provided in a findServiceResponse message when the original input
address is considered valid, but is missing some additional data that
the LoST server has.
See RFC????.
END Marshall, et al. Expires January 24, 2015 [Page 14] Internet-Draft Returned Location Extensions to LoST July 2014 10. Acknowledgements 11. Changes from Previous Versions 11.1. Changes from draft-marshall-03 to -04 o Revised the text in Section 1 to better describe how this extension can be useful (Bradner)- o Utilized RFC2119 language in the draft rather than removing the reference to it(Bradner) o Added some text to explain how notification of this extension is expected for those clients that are not aware of this extension could be notified (Bradner) o Modified security section text to include security considerations for both valid and invalid addresses used as input. (Stark) o Acknowledged: need for extension point RNG/detailed xml and examples (Stark) o Reworked terminology section and aligned with text based on comments (Stark) o General editorial cleanup 12. References 12.1. Normative References [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. [RFC5222] Hardie, T., Newton, A., Schulzrinne, H., and H. Tschofenig, "LoST: A Location-to-Service Translation Protocol", RFC 5222, August 2008. 12.2. Informative References [RFC4776] Schulzrinne, H., "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCPv4 and DHCPv6) Option for Civic Addresses Configuration Information", RFC 4776, November 2006. [RFC5139] Thomson, M. and J. Winterbottom, "Revised Civic Location Format for Presence Information Data Format Location Object (PIDF-LO)", RFC 5139, February 2008. Marshall, et al. Expires January 24, 2015 [Page 15] Internet-Draft Returned Location Extensions to LoST July 2014 Authors' Addresses Roger Marshall TeleCommunication Systems, Inc. 2401 Elliott Avenue 2nd Floor Seattle, WA 98121 US Phone: +1 206 792 2424 Email: rmarshall@telecomsys.com URI: http://www.telecomsys.com Jeff Martin TeleCommunication Systems, Inc. 2401 Elliott Avenue 2nd Floor Seattle, WA 98121 US Phone: +1 206 792 2584 Email: jmartin@telecomsys.com URI: http://www.telecomsys.com Brian Rosen Neustar 470 Conrad Dr Mars, PA 16046 US Email: br@brianrosen.net Marshall, et al. Expires January 24, 2015 [Page 16]