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Thinosi Working Group P.R.Furniss
INTERNET DRAFT Consultant
October 1993
Octet sequences for upper-layer OSI
to support basic communications applications
Status of this Memo
This draft document is part of the work of the IETF Thinosi Working
Group. It is intended to submit it to the IAB standards track.
Distribution of this memo is unlimited. Comment on this draft should
be sent to the thinosi mailing list: thinosi@ulcc.ac.uk. Requests to
join this list should be sent to thinosi-request@ulcc.ac.uk.
This document is an Internet-Draft. Internet-Drafts are working
documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its Areas,
and its Working Groups. Note that other groups may also distribute
working documents as Internet-Drafts.
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months.
Internet-Drafts may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other
documents at any time. It is not appropriate to use Internet-Drafts
as reference material or to cite them other than as a "working draft"
or "work in progress."
To learn the current status of any Internet-Draft, please check the
1id-abstracts.txt listing contained in the Internet-Drafts Shadow
Directories on ds.internic.net, nic.nordu.net, ftp.nisc.sri.com, or
munnari.oz.au.
The filename of this document in the Internet-Draft directories is
draft-ietf-thinosi-cookbook-01.txt.
Abstract
This document specifies those elements of the OSI upper-layer
protocols (Session, Presentation and ACSE) needed to support
applications with "basic communications requirements". These include
OSI application protocols such as X.400 P7 and Directory Access
Protocol, and "migrant" protocols, originally defined for use over
other transports.
The upper-layer protocol elements are specified in this document as
the particular octet sequences that comprise an "envelope" around the
application protocol's data. It therefore independent, as a document,
from the OSI base standards, although an implementation based on this
document will be able to interwork with an implementation based on the
base standard, when both are being used to support an appropriate
application protocol.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction .......................................................3
2. General ............................................................3
2.1 Subdivisions of "basic communication applications"...............3
2.2 Conformance and interworking.....................................5
2.3 Relationship to other documents..................................5
3. Contexts and titles ................................................6
3.1 The concepts of abstract and transfer syntax.....................6
3.2 Use of presentation context by cookbook applications.............7
3.3. Processing Presentation-context-definition-list.................7
3.4 Application context..............................................8
3.5 APtitles and AEqualifiers........................................8
4. What has to be sent and received ...................................10
4.1. Sequence of OSI protocol data units used........................10
4.2. Which OSI fields are used.......................................11
4.3. Encoding methods and length fields..............................12
4.3.1 Session items..................................................13
4.3.2 ASN.1/BER items (Presentation and ACSE)........................13
4.4. BER Encoding of values for primitive datatypes..................14
4.5. Unnecessary constructed encodings...............................14
5. Notation ...........................................................14
6. Octet sequences ....................................................16
6.1. Connection request message......................................16
6.2. Successful reply to connection setup............................18
6.3. Connection rejection............................................20
6.4. Data-phase TSDU.................................................20
6.5. Closedown - release request....................................21
6.6. Closedown - release response....................................22
6.7. Deliberate abort................................................23
6.8. Provider abort..................................................24
6.9. Abort accept....................................................24
7. References .........................................................24
8. Other notes ........................................................25
9. Author's Address ...................................................26
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1. Introduction
The upper-layer protocols of the OSI model are large and complex,
mostly because the protocols they describe are rich in function and
options. However, for support of most applications, only a limited
portion of the function is needed and the protocol elements needed can
be expressed more simply.
This memo describes the protocol elements required by the OSI upper
layers when supporting a connection-oriented application with only
basic communication requirements - that is to create a connection,
optionally negotiate the data representation, send/receive data, close
a connection and abort a connection. Optionally, data may be sent on
the connection establishment, closing and abort messages.
The protocol elements for the OSI upper layer protocols (i.e. Session,
Presentation and Association Control Service Element (ACSE) needed to
support such an application are a subset of the full protocols defined
in the International Standards ([ISO8326, ISO8327, ISO8822, ISO8823,
ISO8649, ISO8650]). Such a protocol subset can be specified in a
profile, which references the base standards and states which parts
are relevant. Such a profile specification cannot be understood
without reference to the base standards.
In this memo, the protocol elements needed are specified in terms of
the octet sequences that comprise the 'envelope' around the
application data. This memo can be regarded as an informal re-
specification of the relevant parts of the upper-layer protocols. An
implementation based on this memo will be able to interwork with an
implementation based directly on the full standards when both are
supporting a basic communication application. (The "full"
implementation will exhibit only part of its potential behaviour,
since the application will only invoke part).The envelope and its
enclosing data form a Transport Service Data Unit (TSDU) that can be
passed via the OSI Transport Service [ISO8072] (which in turn may be
supported as specified in [RFC1006] or any class of the OSI Transport
Protocol [ISO8073]).
2. General
2.1 Subdivisions of "basic communication applications"
Distinctions can be made within the "basic communication
applications", as defined above, based on how much use they make of
the OSI upper-layer services. In particular:
a) whether application data is sent on the connection
establishment, close and abort, or only during "date phase" on
an established connection;
b) whether the application data is of only one kind (abstract
syntax) and one format (transfer syntax) or more than one (i.e.
how much use is made of the Presentation layer syntax
negotiation and identification features)
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These distinctions potentially allow further subsetting, but a large
part of the protocol will be the same. In this memo, four groups of
supported application are considered, based on these distinctions. All
groups have "basic communications requirements" in requiring only
connection, data transfer and (perhaps) orderly release of
connection.The four groups are:
Group I : applications which send data only on an established
connection, and use a single abstract and transfer syntax.
Group II : applications which send data on connection
establishment and release and use a single abstract and transfer
syntax.
Group III applications that send data of only one kind (one
abstract syntax) on the connection, but which have more than one
format (transfer syntax) specified (they use the Presentation
context negotiation facility)
Group IV applications that will send data of several kinds on
the connection (and which much therefore distinguish on each
write which kind is being sent)
Group III applications are equivalent to Group I (or possibly Group
II) after the establishment exchange has negotiated the particular
transfer syntax that will be used on the connection.
Possible examples of the Groups are:
Group I: Application protocols designed for use over transport-
level protocols. Typically these are non-OSI protocols
"migrated" to an OSI environment. X Window System protocol is an
example.
Group II: OSI-originated protocols with simple requirements,
including many of the ROSE-based ones, such as Directory Access
Protocol.
Group III: Protocols that can be treated as Group I, but for
which more than one encoding of the data is known, such as a
standardised one and a system-specific one - all implementations
understand the standard encoding, but Presentation layer
negotiation allows like-implementations to use their internal
encoding for transfer, without loss of general interworking. The
same could apply to OSI protocols.
Group IV: OSI protocols with multiple abstract syntaxes (but
with each individual message from a single abstract syntax) that
do not use any of the special Session functional units - X.400
P7 is an example.
Some of the OSI protocols that are not included are those that use
more than one abstract syntax in a single message (such as FTAM or
Transaction Processing) or use Session functional units (RTSE-based
protocols, Virtual Terminal).
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2.2 Conformance and interworking
The protocol elements specified in this memo correspond to the kernel
functional units of Session, Presentation and ACSE, and the duplex
functional unit of Session.
The octet sequences given below are derived from the specifications in
the International Standards for the protocols Session [ISO8327],
Presentation [ISO8822] and ACSE [ISO8650]. The intention of this memo
is to summarise those specifications, as applicable to the supported
application groups, so that an implementation could be developed
without direct reference to the original standards, but capable of
interworking with implementations that had made direct reference. The
OSI standards (especially Presentation) allow considerable flexibility
in the encoding of the protocol data units. Accordingly, this memo
defines particular octet sequences to be sent, and describes the
variations that can be expected in data received from an
implementation based directly on the OSI standards, rather than on
this cookbook. It is intended that an implementation that sends these
sequences and that is capable of interpreting the variations described
will be fully able to interwork with an implementation based directly
on the OSI standards. An implementation that is only capable of
interpreting the octet sequences specified in this memo for
transmission may not be able to interwork with standards-based
implementations.
The intent is to be able to interwork with conformant implementations
in support of the relevant application (or group of applications).
Some of the OSI standards have conformance requirements that go beyond
that necessary for successful interworking, including detection of
invalid protocol. Tests for conformance sometimes go beyond the strict
conformance requirements of the standard. Consequently an
implementation based on this memo may or may not be able to formally
claim conformance to the International Standard. It may be able to
legitimately claim conformance, but fail a conformance test, if the
test is over-specified. (Efforts are being made to correct this, but
in the meantime, the target is interworking with conformant
implementations.)
2.3 Relationship to other documents
The flexibility allowed in the Session, Presentation and ACSE
standards is restricted in the Common Upper-Layer Requirements Part 1
[CULR-1] ). This is a proposed International Standardised Profile
(pdISP 11188-1) that can be assumed to be obeyed by most
implementations. This memo applies the restrictions of CULR-1,
especially where these concern maximum sizes of fields and the
like.Points where advantage is taken of a CULR-1 limitation are noted.
Additional parts of CULR are under development. Part 3 [CULR-3] covers
the protocol elements needed for "basic communications applications",
and is being developed in (informal) liaison with this memo. CULR-3 is
presented as a normal profile, largely consisting of prescribed
answers to the questions in the PICS (Protocol Implementation
Conformance Statement) of the three protocols.CULR-3 does not make the
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distinction between the four Groups.An implementation of this memo (at
least if it supported Group IV) would be able to claim conformance to
CULR-3, with the possible exception of any more-than-interworking
conformance requirements inherited by CULR-3 from the base standards.
An extension [XTI/mOSI] to the X/Open Transport Interface [XTI] is
shortly to be published as a preliminary specification. This defines
an API to the OSI upper-layers, again as appropriate to a basic
communications application. XTI/mOSI would be usable as an interface
to support applications in groups I, II and III, and possibly group
IV.
3. Contexts and titles
3.1 The concepts of abstract and transfer syntax
OSI includes the concepts of "abstract syntax" and "transfer syntax".
These are terms for the content (abstract syntax) and format "on-the-
line" (transfer syntax) of the protocol elements. The combination of
an abstract syntax and transfer syntax is called a presentation
context.
Application protocols devised explictly under OSI auspices have used
ASN.1 for the definition of the abstract syntax, and nearly all use
the Basic Encoding Rules applied to the ASN.1 to define the transfer
syntax. However, there is no such requirement in OSI in general or in
OSI Presentation, and still less is there any requirement to change
the representation of existing application protocols to ASN.1 (for
their definition) or BER (for their transmission). It is not generally
realised (even in OSI circles) that all communicating applications, in
all environments, are using some form of these, although under
different names and without the explicit identification that the OSI
Presentation provides. OSI separates the identification of the content
and format of the data from the addressing.
Formal specifications of non-OSI application protocols (such as
TELNET, FTP, X Windows System) generally do not use ASN.1, but will
invariably be found to define abstract and transfer syntaxes. For a
less formalised protocol used between similar systems, the abstract
syntax may be defined simply in programming language structures, and
the transfer syntax determined by how some compiler represents this in
memory.
The OSI Presentation protocol requires that "names" be assigned to the
abstract and transfer syntaxes of the application data that is
carried. The names are always object identifiers ("oid"): globally
unique names assigned hierarchically. Presentation supports the
negotiation of a transfer syntax for a particular abstract syntax -
several can be offered and one selected.
This transfer syntax negotiation facility may be especially useful for
non-ASN.1 syntaxes where there is more than one representation
available (perhaps differing in byte-ordering or character code). In
such a case, on the connection establishment, all of the transfer
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syntaxes supported by the initiatior are offered, and any one of these
accepted by the responder, at its own choice. If the two systems share
some "native" format they can negotiate that, avoiding transformation
into and out of a more general format that is used for interworking
with unlike systems. The same applies to an ASN.1-defined abstract
syntax, but in practice non-BER encodings of ASN.1 are rare.
3.2 Use of presentation context by cookbook applications
An application protocol not originally specified with OSI Presentation
in mind (a "migrant" protocol) will not normally need to identify the
abstract and transfer syntaxes being used - they are known by some
other means (effectively inferred from the addressing). A generic
(anonymous, if you like) name for both syntaxes can be used and [CULR-
3] defines object identifiers for "anonymous" abstract and transfer
syntax names (currently called "default", but this is expected to
change).
In some cases object identifier names will be assigned for the
syntaxes of a migrant application protocol. If these exist, they
should be used. However, since the processing required will be the
same, it will be legitimate to offer both the generic and specific
names, with the responder accepting the specific (if it knew it) and
the generic if the specific were not known - this will provide a
migration option if names are assigned to the syntaxes after
implementations are deployed using the generic names.
For abstract syntaxes defined in ASN.1 object identifier names will
have been assigned to the abstract syntax with the specification. This
name MUST be used to identify the abstract syntax. The transfer syntax
will most often be the Basic Encoding Rules (BER) object id, but
alternatives (e.g. Packed Encoding Rules) are possible.
For group III and group IV applications, specific object identifier
names must be used for all the abstract and transfer syntaxes. If
these names are not assigned with the specification (e.g. if the
specification not in ASN.1) they can be assigned by whoever needs them
- ideally the "owner" of the syntax specification.
3.3. Processing Presentation-context-definition-list
In Presentation context negotiation on connection establishment the
initiator sends a list (the presentation context definition list) of
the abstract syntaxes it intends to use, each with a list of transfer
syntaxes. Each presentation context also has an integer identifier. To
build the reply, a responder has to examine this list and work out
which of the offered presentation contexts will be accepted and which
(single) transfer syntax for each. The responder sends back the reply
field, the Presentation-context-definition-result-list, in the accept
message. The result list contains the same number of result items as
the definition-list proposed presentation-contexts. They are matched
by position, not by the identifiers (which are not present in the
result-list). An acceptance also includes the transfer syntax accepted
(as there can be several offered). This can be copied from the
definition list.
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For the group I, group II and group III cases, only the ACSE and one
application-data P-context will be used and all other contexts
rejected. For the group IV case, several presentation contexts will be
accepted.
However, even for group I applications there may be synonyms for an
application-data Presentation-context. Unknown synonyms are rejected.
The reply shown in 6.2 includes a rejection (It can therefore not be
the reply to the connection request shown in 6.1, since that has only
two items in the definition list.)
In all cases, the connection responder must identify and keep the
presentation context identifiiers (called pcid's here) for all the
accepted presentation contexts. These are integers (odd integers, in
this case). CULR-1 limits them to no greater than 32767, but they will
usually be <= 255 (so taking up one octet).
A presentation context is sometimes used (i.e. data is sent using it)
before the negotiation is complete. As will be seen in section 6, in
these cases, the transfer syntax name sometimes appears with the
integer identifier.
3.4 Application context
The Association Control Service Element also exchanges the name
(another Object Identifier) of the application context, which
identifies what the communication is all about, again independently of
the naming and addressing. As for the syntaxes, although some name
must be present in the protocol, a generic name can be used for
applications that do not have a specific name assigned. (This will
almost certainly be a group I application - if a specific name is
assigned, it MUST be used.) The only negotiation allowed is that the
reply may be different from that sent by the initiator. CULR-3
provides a generic application context name (i.e. assigns an object
identifier).
3.5 APtitles and AEqualifiers
In addition to the addressing constructs (transport address and
possibly session and presentation selectors), the communicating
application entities have names - Application-Entity titles (AEtitle).
These are carried by ACSE as two fields -the Application-process
titles (APtitle) and the Application-entity qualifier (AEqualifier).
The AEtitle is compound, and the APtitle consists of all but the last
element, which is the AEqualifier. (This explanation can be run
backwards). There are two non-equivalent forms. AP-titles and AE-
titles can be Directory Name or an Object Identifier. AE-qualifiers
can be Relative Distinguished Name (RDN) or an integer - the forms
must match, since the AE-qualifier is the last component of the AP-
title. In practice, the Directory form is likely to be the only one
seen for a while.
Use of the these names is rather variable. This cookbook proposes that
implementations should be able to handle any value for the partner's
names, and set (as initiator) its own names. This is primarily to
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facilitate OSI:non-OSI relaying (e.g. X/osi:X/tcp), allowing the names
of the end-system to be carried to the relay, where they can be
converted into hostnames, and the lower-layer address determined. OSI
assumes that name-to-address lookup is possible (via the Directory or
other means), but does not assume address-to-name will work. Thus the
calling AE-title is needed if the responder is to know who the
initiator is. However, most protocols work perfectly well without
these names being included.
As for their encoding, a RDN will almost always be a single attribute
value assertion, with the attribute defined either by the Directory
standard [ISO9594 = X.500], or in [Internet/Cosine Schema][RFC1274].
Using the notation defined below, the encoding of an RDN using a
Directory-defined standard attribute is:
31 80 {1 - RDN, [SET OF]
30 80 {2 - AttributeValueAssertion, [SEQUENCE]
06 03 5504yy -- OID identifying an attribute named in
-- the Directory standard
-- which one is determined by yy
13 La xxxxxx -- [Printable string]
-- could be T61 string, with tag 14
00 00 }2 - end of AVA
00 00 }1 - end of RDN
The most likely attributes for an RDN have the following hex values
for yy
CommonName 03
Country 06
Locality 07
State/Province 08
Organisation 0A
OrganisationUnit 0B
For non-Directory attributes, the object id name must be substituted
(thus changing the immediately preceeding length)
If there are multiple attribute value assertions in the RDN, the group
between {2 and 2} is repeated (with different attributes). Order is
not significant.
The encoding of a [Directory] Name for the AP-titles is the RDNs
(high-order first) within
30 80 {1 - [SEQUENCE] Name
-- put the RDN encodings here
00 00 }1
An Object Identifier AP-title is encoded as a primitive (see below),
with the "universal" tag for an object identifier, which is 6. The
integer AE-qualifer uses the universal tag for an integer, which is 2.
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4. What has to be sent and received
4.1. Sequence of OSI protocol data units used
OSI defines its facilities in terms of services but these are abstract
constructs (they do not have to correspond to procedure calls) - the
significant thing is the transmission of the resulting protocol data
unit (PDU). The PDU at each layer carries (as user data) the PDU of
the layer above. The different layers follow different conventions for
naming the pdus. This section gives an overview of the sequence of
PDUs exchanged - the details of these are given in section 6.
The requirements of the application are to create a
connection(strictly an association for the application-layer in OSI,
but called a connection here), to send and receive data and to close
the connection. The PDUs used are thus:
To create connection :
First create transport-level connection
Initiator sends the message defined in 6.1, which is Session
CONNECT carrying Presentation CONNECT request [CP] carrying
ACSE A-ASSOCIATE request [AARQ] optionally carrying
application data.
Responder replies with the message defined in 6.2, which is
Session ACCEPT carrying Presentation CONNECT response [CPA]
carrying ACSE response [AARE] optionally carrying application
data.
- If the responder rejects the attempt, the reply will be
Session REJECT. This is defined in 6.3, where the REJECT
carries no user data. A received REJECT may carry
Presentation, ACSE and application data, although 6.3 shows
only how to reject at Session level..
To send/receive data on an connection
send the message defined in 6.4, which is an empty Session
GIVE-TOKEN followed by Session S-DATA carrying Presentation P-
DATA [TD] containing the application data (The GIVE-TOKEN is
just two octets required by Session for some backwards
compatibility)
To close connection gracefully
One side sends the message defined in 6.5, which is Session
FINISH carrying P-RELEASE request carrying A-RELEASE request
[RLRQ] optionally carrying application data (This side may now
receive, but not send data)
The other side replies with the message defined in 6.6, which
is Session DISCONNECT carrying P-RELEASE response carrying A-
RELEASE response [RLRE] optionally carrying application data
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First side disconnects transport connection on receiving the
reply
To close connection abruptly but also send application data
Send the message defined in 6.7, which is Session ABORT
carrying Presentation U-ABORT [ARU] carry ACSE U-ABORT [ABRT]
carrying application data (delivery not guaranteed)
On receiving Session ABORT, disconnect transport
To close connection abruptly
- Either send the message defined in 6.8, which is Session ABORT
carrying nothing;
Or, just disconnect at transport level
A group I application is assumed (by definition) not to send data on
the establishment and release exchanges, a group II application will.
It would be possible to use the abort-with-data facility with a group
I to send a (possibly non-standardised) error message for diagnostic
purposes.
A special rule is used if a release collision occurs (i.e. FINISH+P-
RELEASE+RLRQ received after sending the same): the side that initiated
the original upper-layer connection waits and the other side replies
with the DISCONNECT etc.
4.2. Which OSI fields are used
There are a number of fields (parameters) in the pdus involved. These
can be categorised by what is needed to support applications (of a
particular Group) in general - a field may be "useful", "send-only",
"fixed", "fixed with default", "internal" or "not important". Even
those that are not important may be received from another
implementation, but since the application has no use for them, they
can be ignored. If an implementation is intended to support only a
particular application, it may be able to downgrade the "useful" to
"not important"
The text below describes the processing that is required for each
category and which fields are in each category.
"Useful" - when sending, the implementation SHOULD be able to set any
(legal) value of these fields (via the upper interface from the
application or via some configuration or lookup mechanism) and SHOULD
pass received values for the Calling values to the application (for
specific applications, these fields may be either required or
unnecessary.)
AARQ:
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Called application-process title
Called application-entity qualifier
Calling application-process title
Calling application-entity qualifier
"Send-only" - the implementation MUST be able to set any value of
these, but can ignore any received value. Both are octet strings.
Presentation selector (up to 4 octets, limited by CULR-1)
Session selector (up to 16 octets, limited by base standard)
"Fixed" (constant for all applications)
abstract and transfer syntax identifiers for presentation
context for ACSE
Version numbers - 2 for session, 1 for Presentation and ACSE
"Fixed with default" - the value is specific to the application. For
non-ASN.1 abstract syntaxes (group I or group II only) applications,
the anonymous values assigned by the OIW minimal OSI profile [CULR-3]
can be used. The CULR-3 default application context can be used where
a proper context name is neither available nor needed.
Application context
CULR-3 default is {1 0 11188 3 3}
Abstract syntax identifier for application data
CULR-3 anonymous name is {1 0 11188 3 1 1}
Transfer syntax identifier for application data
CULR-3 anonymous name is {1 0 11188 3 2 1}
"Internal" - an arbitrary value can be sent; a received value must be
stored for use in sending.
Presentation context identifiers for ACSE and the application
data (always odd integers)
"Not important" - any legal received value for the other fields MUST
be received (i.e. the pdu is parsed successfully), but can then be
ignored. There is no requirement (in this cookbook) to check the
existence, value or internal format of these fields.
All other fields (which includes a large number of session
fields)
4.3. Encoding methods and length fields
Both Session and ASN.1/BER [ISO8824, ISO8825] use a type-length-value
structure for their encodings, but different ones. Presentation
protocol and ACSE protocol use the ASN.1/BER encoding and consequently
a Presentation PDU containing an ACSE PDU can be constructed or parsed
as if it were a single structure.
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All the protocols contain pdu fields with a compound structure. If one
of these is being ignored it may be necessary (for BER, not session)
to determine the lengths of its components to find the length of the
ignored field.
Many of the lengths in the specification below will vary, dependent on
the values of the fields.
4.3.1 Session items
The type field of a session item is always a single octet.
For session items, given a particular length, there is no flexibility:
If the length is less than 255, represent as one octet
If the length is greater, represent as three octets, first is
0xFF, next two are the length, high-order octet first.
(Some "real" implementations are known to use the second encoding in
all cases. This is wrong, but should only concern conformance
testers.)
4.3.2 ASN.1/BER items (Presentation and ACSE)
The type field for ASN.1-BER is the tag. Although it is possible for
large tags (>30) to be multi-octet, there are no large tags in the
protocols involved in this memo. Bit 6 (0x20) of the tag octet is 1 if
the item is constructed (i.e. the value is itself one or more ASN.1
BER items) or 0 if it is primitive.
There is considerable flexibility, at senders option, in how lengths
are represented in BER. There are three forms: short, long and
indefinite.
Short (usable only if the length is less than 127) : one octet
Long (usable for *any* length) : first octet has the top bit
set, the rest is a count of how many octets are holding the
length value; that many subsequent octets hold the length. A
long length may use more than the minimum number of octets (so
0x8400000001 is a valid representation of length 1)
Indefinite (usable only for the length of a compound field) :
the single octet is 0x80, then one or more items (their tag-
length-values) and finally two octets of 0x00 (equivalent to tag
and length of zero).
To be able to interwork generally, an implementation must be able to
handle any of these forms when receiving.
The encodings specified in the octet sequences below use indefinite
length for all constructed items with a few exceptions. This slightly
increases the number of octets sent, but means that the length of a
varying field (e.g. user data, or a varying object identifier) affects
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only the length of the item itself, and not the enclosing lengths. It
is thus possible to use the octet sequences as templates interspersed
by the varying fields.
It is important to note that this choice of indefinite (which is
equivalent to the "Canonical Encoding Rules" variant of BER) applies
only to the Presentation and ACSE protocols themselves. It does not
apply to ASN.1/BER encoded application data. The processing required
of application data may suggest alternative "best" options.
4.4. BER Encoding of values for primitive datatypes
The following ASN.1 primitive datatypes are used in the thinosi
stack..
Integers are encoded in twos-complement, high-order first. Unlike
lengths, they must be encoded in the minimum number of octets (no
leading 00 padding).
Object Identifiers have a rather peculiar, but compressed encoding:
Combine the first two integers of the OID into one element by
multiplying the first (always 0, 1 or 2) by 40, and add the
second.
Each element (that one, and each subsequent integer in the OID
taken on its own), is a taken as a binary number and divided
into 7-bit "bytes". This is apportioned into bits 1-7 of the
minimum number of octets. Bit 8 is one for all octets of the
sequence except the last. (This means that elements of less than
127 are single octet integers.)
Printable Strings - as if in ISO 646 (ASCII)
OCTET STRING - just put the octets there
4.5. Unnecessary constructed encodings
BER allows the sender to break some items (such as OCTET STRINGS,
character strings) into several pieces (i.e. as constructed encoding)
or send them as primitive. CULR-1 requires that this is only done to
one level. The pieces of both OCTET STRING and character string are
tagged as if they were OCTET STRING - they have the tag 04. This memo
does not include any of these optional constructions, but they may be
received in interworking.
5. Notation
The constructs are shown in their tag - length - value form. All
numbers are in hexadecimal. Comments are preceded by a '-' character.
Multiple '-' mean the comment is more than just information.
The tag column contains one of:
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single fixed octets.
* in the tag field indicates one or more pdu fields (possibly
constructed) that may be received but are not sent. If received
they can be ignored.
! indicates the tag is defined elsewhere.
. is a place holder for the column.
? preceding the tag value indicates that the field is not always
present - the comment will explain.
The length column contains one of
explicit value
Ls - a length according to session rules which depends on the
total size of the value (usually constructed)
La - a length according to BER rules
. is a placeholder
yy is exactly one octet (i.e. one hex digit per y) holding part
of the length
The value column contains one of
the hex value
xxxxxx - value of varying length (sometimes constructed)
{n - (n = number) the start of a constructed value
n - (n=number) the end of the constructed value with the
corresponding number. (The number is sometimes omitted on the
innermost nest of construction)
yy - as part of a value - a variable value, each y represents
one hex digit
? a value, possibly constructed that may be received but is not
sent. It may be ignored if received
Note that all presentation lengths may be received in one of the
alternative forms. All constructed lengths are shown in indefinite
form. If a received length is definite, the corresponding end item
(which will be shown here as 00 00 }n) will become . . }n.
In the comments, the notation {n} refers to the constructed item
bracketed by the {n, }n fields.
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6. Octet sequences
6.1. Connection request message
- CONNECT SPDU
0D Ls {1 - "SI" value for CONNECT = 13
* Ls ? - Connection Identifier
05 06 {2 - Connect/Accept Item
13 01 00 - protocol options (probably mandatory)
* Ls ?
16 01 02 -- version number (bottom bit = v1, next bit =v2.
-- may get offers of either or both
* Ls ?
. . }2 - End Connect/Accept Item
14 02 0002 - Session User Requirements (functional units)
- Id (20), length (always 2), duplex fu only.
-- On receipt, other bits may be set
-- check that the 2 bit is set
* Ls ? - we do not send any Calling Session Selector
?34 Ls xxxx -- Called Session Selector (i.e. the other end's)
-- up to 16 octets - you must set what the other side
-- demands. - May be anything characters, binary etc.
- {3} disappeared in editing
C1 Ls {4 -- User Data, Identifier=193. if length is > 512,
-- then identifier is 194 (hex C2) instead
- CP - P-CONNECT-RI PPDU. Everything below is in ASN.1 BER
31 80 {5 - [SET]
--- Mode-selector (the {6} group) could possibly
--- come after everything else {7}
--- This will probably only be done by
--- evil-minded conformance testers
A0 80 {6 - Mode-selector [0] IMPLICIT SET
80 01 01 - [0] IMPLICIT INTEGER {normalmode(1)}
00 00 }6
A2 La {7 - [2] unnamed IMPLICIT SEQUENCE
* La ?
?82 La xxxx - [2] Called-presentation-selector
- CULR says maximum length is 4
-- must be what the other side wants
A4 80 {8 - [4] Presentation-context-definition-list
--- items (the outer SEQUENCEs) within the {8} list may
--- be in any order.
30 80 {9 - [SEQUENCE]
02 01 01 -- Defines pcid for ACSE; received value will be
-- a one or two octet odd integer
06 04 52010001 - [OID] for ACSE abstract syntax
30 80 { - [SEQUENCE]
06 02 5101 - [OID] Transfer syntax name is BER
00 00 } - end t-s list
00 00 }9 - end acse pctx defn
30 80 {10 - [SEQUENCE]
02 01 03 -- [INTEGER] Defines pcid for application data;
-- received value will be a one or two octet odd
-- integer
06 La xxxxxx - [OID] object identifier name of application abstract
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- syntax (if CULR-3 default is used, this line is
- 06 06 28CC64030101)
30 80 {11
06 La xxxxxx - [OID] t-s name for application data
- (if CULR-3 default is used, this line is
- 06 06 28CC64030201)
-- will be several of these if multiple t-s offered
-- (application is Group III)
-- all will have the same tag 06
00 00 }11 - end transfer syntax list for application p-ctx
00 00 }10 - end application pctx definition
-- if multiple presentation contexts are offered, (Group
-- IV), the {10} SEQUENCE will repeat appropriately
-- if multiple contexts are to be accepted, all the pcid's
-- must be remembered
00 00 }8 - end of p-ctx-def-list
* La ?
61 80 {12 - [APPLICATION 1] User-data - Fully-encoded
30 80 {13 - [SEQUENCE] PDV-list
02 01 01 -- [INTEGER], value is acse pcid
A0 80 {14 - [0] Single-ASN1
- ACSE A-ASSOCIATE request APDU - AARQ
60 80 {15 - [APPLICATION 0] - AARQ
* La ? - protocol version defaults to 1 (only one defined)
A1 80 { - [1] Application-context
06 La xxxxxx -- object identifier name of application context
- (if CULR-3 default is used, this line is
- 06 05 28CC640303)
00 00 }
-- Called application process title {16} and application
-- entity qualifier may or may not be needed (see 3.4)
?A2 80 {16 - [2] Called Application-Process title
?! La xxxxxx -- see 3.5 - either a Directory Name or an oid
?00 00 }16 - end Called APtitle
?A3 80 {17 - [3] Called Application-Entity Qualifier
?! La xxxxxx -- see 3.5
?00 00 }17
* La ?
Calling AP-title and AE-qualifier may or may not be needed.
?A6 80 {18 - [6] Calling Application-Process title
?! La xxxxxx -- see 3.5
?00 00 }18
?A7 80 {19 - [7] Calling Application-Entity Qualifier
?! La xxxxxx -- see 3.5
?00 00 }19
* La ?
-- the user information field may or may not be required
-- (not required for Group I)
?BE 80 {20 - [30] IMPLICIT SEQUENCE
?08 80 {21 - [EXTERNAL]
??06 La xxxxxx -- [OID] This is the oid identifying the transfer
-- syntax used for the user data.
-- It is (almost certainly) required even if only
-- one transfer syntax was proposed.
?02 01 03 - [INTEGER] this is the pcid for the application data
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?A0 La xxxxxx -- [0] single-ASN.1-type - the application data
-- (see paragraph at end of this section below}
?00 00 }21 - end of EXTERNAL
-- conceivably there may be several EXTERNALS, probably in
-- different presentation contexts (different pcids)
?00 00 }20 - end of user information field
00 00 }15 - end of AARQ
00 00 }14 - end of single-ASN-type
00 00 }13 - end of PDV-list
00 00 }12 - end of Presentation User-data
00 00 }7 - end of third element of CP-type SET
00 00 }5 - end of CP-type
. . }4 - end of session user data
. . }1 - end of CONNECT SPDU
The application data carried in the EXTERNAL is shown (as A0 La xxxx)
assuming it is a single-ASN.1 type, which it often will be for group
II (since these tend to be OSI applications). The xxxx will be the BER
encoding of the application pdu (probably something like Z-BIND or Y-
INITIALIZE). The length may be indefinite.
If the application data is not a single ASN.1 type, but is an octet-
aligned value, the A0 La xxxx is replaced by 81 La xxxx, where xxxx is
the value. In this case the length must be definite (unless an
"unecessary" constructed encoding is used.)
Identical considerations apply to the other EXTERNALs carried in the
ACSE pdus.
6.2. Successful reply to connection setup
If the connection attempt is succesful, the following is sent to the
initiator on a T-DATA.
This accept contains an item {9} in the presentation-context-result-
list which is the rejection of some presentation context that was
offered. This is included to show such a rejection. It is NOT included
if this is the reply to the connect in 6.1.
0E Ls {1 - ACCEPT SPDU
* Ls ?
05 06 {2 - Connect/Accept Item
13 01 01 - Protocol Options
* Ls ?
16 01 02 - version number (this shows version 2 only)
-- if version 2 was not offered, omit all of {2}
* Ls ?
. . }2 - End Connect/Accept Item
14 02 0002 - Session User Requirements (functional units)
- duplex fu only (kernel is automatic)
* Ls ?
C1 Ls {3 -- User Data.( tag is C2 if length > 512 )
- CPA - P-CONNECT response
31 80 {4 - [SET]
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-- again, Mode-selector could come at the end
A0 80 { - Mode-selector [0], length=3
80 01 01 - normal mode - [0], length=1, value=1
A2 80 {5 - [2] SEQUENCE (unnamed)
* La ?
A5 80 {6 - [5] P-context-definition-result-list
-- following result items are in the order corresponding
-- to the pctx-definition-list in the connect
-- this example assumes that was ACSE, user, rubbish
-- with rubbish rejected
30 80 {7 - [SEQUENCE] result item for acse
80 01 00 -- [0] result, value 0 is acceptance
81 02 5101 - [1] accepted transfer syntax name = BER
- note that this has an implicit tag, not 06
00 00 }7 - end result item for acse p-ctx
30 80 {8 - [SEQUENCE] result item for application-data pctx
80 01 00 - [0] value 0 is acceptance
81 La xxxxxx - [1] oid for transfer syntax, as on defintion list
-- if there were several (groupIII) , the one you
-- liked most
00 00 }8 - end result item for app-data p-ctx
-- next SEQUENCE is a rejection of a third pctx
30 80 {9 - [SEQUENCE] result item for a rejected pctx
80 01 02 -- [0] result, value 2 is provider rejection
82 01 00 - [2] reason, value 0 is reason-not-specified
-- there are other reasons, but let's keep it simple
00 00 }9 - end result item for rejected pctx
00 00 }6 - end p-ctx-def-result-list
* La ?
61 80 {10 - [APPLICATION 1] User-data, Fully-encoded
30 80 {11 - [SEQUENCE] PDV-list
02 01 01 -- [INTEGER] value is pcid for ACSE, as stored from
-- the pctx-definition-list on the P-CONNECT request
A0 80 {12 - [0] single-ASN1-type
- A-ASSOCIATE response APDU - AARE
61 80 {13 - [APPLICATION 1] identifies AARE
* La ?
A1 80 {14 - [1] Application-context
06 La xxxxxx - [OID] name of application context
- usually the same as on AARQ, can differ
00 00 }14
A2 03 {15 - [2] result
02 01 00 - [INTEGER] value 0 means accepted
00 00 }15
A3 80 {16 - [3] result-source-diagnostic
- (curiously, a non-optional field)
A1 80 {17 - [1] acse-service-user
02 01 00 - [INTEGER] value 0 = null ! (why no implicit tag)
00 00 }17 - end acse-service-user
00 00 }16 - end result source diagnostic
* La ?
-- the user information field may or may not be required
- (not used for Group I)
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?BE 80 {20 - [30] IMPLICIT SEQUENCE
?08 80 {21 - [EXTERNAL]
-- the transfer-syntax oid is not present this time
?02 01 03 - [INTEGER] this is the pcid for the application data
?A0 La xxxx -- [0] single-ASN1-type (see note at end of 6.1)
?00 00 }21 - end of EXTERNAL
-- conceivably there may be several EXTERNALS, probably in
-- different presentation contexts (different pcids)
?00 00 }20 - end of user information field
00 00 }13 - end AARE
00 00 }12 - end single-asn1-type
00 00 }11 - end PDV-list
00 00 }10 - end Presn user-data
00 00 }5 - end [2] implicit sequence in cpa
00 00 }4 - end CPA-type set
. . }3 - end session userdata
. . }1 - end ACCEPT SPDU
6.3. Connection rejection
Refusal is at session-level, but by session user, with no reason
given. This is a compromise avoiding making unfounded accusations of
(session) protocol misbehaviour. If the implementation finds it does
not like the received message, it is not essential to attempt to
communicate with the partner why, though this may be helpful if the
reason is correctly identified. (In most cases, a wise implementor
will make sure an error message goes somewhere or other).
0C 03 {1 - REFUSE SPDU
* Ls ?
32 01 00 - rejected by SS-user, no reason
. . }1
The far-end may send interesting things explaining why you are not
getting interworking. If this is a session reason, the reason code
will one octet between 81 and 86. If the rejection is higher than
session, this will be carried on S-REFUSE (so first octet is still 0C)
and the higher pdu will appear as part of the reason code, which will
start with 02. (The only remaining code is 01 = user congestion).
6.4. Data-phase TSDU
This is the core of the skinny stack. The lengths shown use a
particular set of choices for indefinite and definite lengths that
means that the application data length only affects one field. Making
the two earlier indefinite lengths definite would require more
calculation - adding 4 octets after the application data is assumed to
be quicker. This header is also designed to be 20 octets long, thus
maintaining 4-byte alignment between transport and application
buffers. Implementations are recommended to use this encoding. It is
possible to rapidly match incoming data against it - if there is no
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mismatch until the length field, the location of the beginning of the
data can be determined without further analysis.
SPDUs
01 00 . - S-GIVE-TOKEN - required by basic concatenation
- but no parameters
01 00 . - S-DATA - no parameters - what follows is User
- Information, not User Data, so is not included in the
- SPDU length fields
- P-DATA PPDU - TD (why TD ? Typed-data id TTD !)
61 80 {1 - User-data [APPLICATION 1]
30 80 {2 - [SEQUENCE] PDV-list
02 01 03 - [INTEGER] pcid for application data, P-CONNECT PPDU
- remembered by both sides
81 83yyyyyy xxxxxx -- [1] octet-aligned presentation data value(s)
-- length of length (3 octets) then three octets yyyyyy
-- for the length of the user data xxxxxx
00 00 }2 - End-of-contents for end of PDV-list
00 00 }1 - End-of-contents for end of Presentation User-data
If the application data is in ASN.1, and a single ASN.1 value is being
sent on the TSDU, the same header can be used except for the tag on
the presentation data values, which becomes A0 (= [0], constructed).
If there are multiple data values to be sent, this header can be
expanded in several ways:
a) if there are several ASN.1 values from the same presentation
context, they can be concatenated and treated as an octet-
aligned value (using the header as shown above, with tag 81 (or
A1 - I think its primitive) or each ASN.1 value can be an item
(tagged A0), one after the other
b) if the data values are from different presentation contexts
(group IV), each is in its own {2} group within the {1}.
On receipt, for the simple octet-aligned case, the data value may
itself have a constructed encoding - this will make the tag A1, and it
will contain elements each tagged 04 (OCTET STRING). According to
CULR-1, these elements are primitive (otherwise they would be 24 of
course).
6.5. Closedown - release request
When all is done, and you want to close down gracefully, send this on
T-DATA.
- FINISH SPDU
09 10 {1 - 9 identifies FINISH
* Ls ? - No Transport Disconnect item
- default is release Transport-connection
C1 0E {2 - User data (code 193)
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- P-RELEASE req/ind PPDU (has no name)
61 80 {3 - [APPLICATION 1], user data, fully-encoded
30 80 {4 - [SEQUENCE] PDV-list
02 01 01 -- pcid for ACSE, remembered from setup
A0 80 {5 - [0] single asn.1-type
- A-RELEASE request APDU - RLRQ
62 80 {6 - [APPLICATION 2] identifies RLRQ
80 01 00 - [0] reason, value 0 means normal
* La ?
-- the user information field may or may not be required
- ( not required for Group I)
?BE 80 {7 - [30] IMPLICIT SEQUENCE
?08 80 {8 - [EXTERNAL]
-- the transfer-syntax oid is not present this time
?02 01 03 - [INTEGER] this is the pcid for the application data
?A0 La xxxxx -- [0] single-ASN.1-type application data
-- (see note at end of 6.1)
?00 00 }8 - end of EXTERNAL
-- conceivably there may be several EXTERNALS, probably in
-- different presentation contexts (different pcids)
?00 00 }7 - end of user information field
00 00 }6 - end of RLRQ
00 00 }5 - end of single asn.1-type
00 00 }4 - end of PDV-list
00 00 }3 - end of Presentation User-data
. . }2 - end of session user data
. . }1 - end of FINISH SPDU
6.6. Closedown - release response
On receiving a FINISH, you send this to tell the other end it is all
over
- Session DISCONNECT SPDU
0A 10 {1 - SI=10, DISCONNECT
C1 0E {2 - User data (tag = C2 if length >512)
- P-RELEASE rsp PPDU
61 80 {3 - [APPLICATION 1], user data, fully-encoded
30 80 {4 - [SEQUENCE] PDV-list
02 01 01 -- [INTEGER] pcid for ACSE, remembered from setup
A0 80 {5 - [0] single asn.1-type
- A-RELEASE response APDU - RLRE
63 80 {6 - [APPLICATION 3] identifies RLRE
80 01 00 - [0] reason, value 0 means normal
* La ?
-- the user information field may or may not be required
- (not required for Group I)
?BE 80 {7 - [30] IMPLICIT SEQUENCE
?08 80 {8 - [EXTERNAL]
-- the transfer-syntax oid is not present this time
?02 01 03 - [INTEGER] this is the pcid for the application data
?A0 La xxxxx -- [0] single-ASN.1-type application data
-- (see note at end of 6.1)
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?00 00 }8 - end of EXTERNAL
-- conceivably there may be several EXTERNALS, probably in
-- different presentation contexts (different pcids)
?00 00 }7 - end of user information field
00 00 }6 - end of RLRE
00 00 }5 - end of single asn.1-type
00 00 }4 - end of PDV-list
00 00 }3 - end of Presentation userdata
. . }2 - end of session userdata
. . }1 - end of DISCONNECT SPDU
6.7. Deliberate abort
It is not clear whether this is any use - just clearing the Transport
connection will be more effective. It goes on T-DATA, but asks for the
far-side to close the T-connection.
- Session ABORT SPDU
19 15 {1 - SI of 25 is ABORT
11 01 03 - Transport Disconnect PV, code 17
-- value = '...00011'b means please
-- release T-conn, user abort
* Ls ?
C1 11 {2 - Session User Data
- P-U-ABORT PPDU - ARU
A0 80 {3 - [0] implicit sequence for normal mode
A0 80 {4 - [0] presentation-context-identifier-list
30 80 {5 - [SEQUENCE]
02 01 01 - [INTEGER]pcid for ACSE
06 02 5101 - [OID] for acse transfer syntax = BER
00 00 }5
-- there will be one {6} group for each application
-- presentation context that is used in this message
-- if there is no user data, the {6} group can be
-- omitted
30 80 {6
02 01 03 - [INTEGER] pcid for application data
06 La xxxxxx - [OID] transfer syntax for application data
00 00 }6
00 00 }4 - end of presentation-context-identifier-list
61 80 {7 - [APPLICATION 1], user data, fully-encoded
30 80 {8 - [SEQUENCE] PDV-list
02 01 01 - [INTEGER] pcid for ACSE as on CP PPDU
A0 05 {9 - [0] single asn.1-type
- A-ABORT APDU - ABRT
64 80 {10 - [APPLICATION 4] identifies ABRT
80 01 01 - [0] value 1 is acse-service-provider
-- the user information field may or may not be required
?BE 80 {11 - [30] IMPLICIT SEQUENCE
?08 80 {12 - [EXTERNAL]
-- the transfer-syntax oid is not present this time
-- (according to CULR-1)
?02 01 03 - [INTEGER] this is the pcid for the application data
?A0 La xxxxx -- [0] single-ASN.1-type application data
-- (see note at end of 6.1)
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?00 00 }12 - end of EXTERNAL
-- conceivably there may be several EXTERNALS, probably in
-- different presentation contexts (different pcids)
?00 00 }11 - end of user information field
00 00 }10 - end of ABRT
00 00 }9 - end of single asn.1-type
00 00 }8 - end of PDV-list
00 00 }7 - end of Presentation user-data
00 00 }3 - end of ARU-PPDU
. . }2 - end of session user-data
. . }1 - end of ABORT SPDU
6.8. Provider abort
Generated when an internal error occurs (i.e. something has gone
mildly (?) wrong in the cookbook implementation). Rather than accuse
anyone of protocol errors, we just abort at session.
ABORT SPDU
19 03 {1 - SI=25 = ABORT SPDU
11 01 09 - Transport Disconnect PV, code 17
-- value = '...01001'b release T-conn
-- no reason
* Ls ?
. . }1
6.9. Abort accept
If a Session abort (of any kind) is sent, it is possible that the far-
end will send back an abort accept. If this happens, disconnect the
transport. (The abort messages above do not propose that the transport
connection be reused, and in this case, an abort accept is just the
far-end passing the transport-disconnect initiative back.) This
session message need never be sent - just disconnect transport on
receiving an abort.
ABORT ACCEPT SPDU
1A 00 . - SI=26 = ABORT ACCEPT SPDU, no parameters
7. References
[CULR-1] Working draft 13 of Common upper layer requirements - Part 1
: basic connection-oriented requirements; EWOS. (A later draft will be
proposed as ISP 11188/1)
[CULR-3] Draft of Common Upper-layer requirements - Part 3: Minimal
OSI upper layers facilities (A later draft will be proposed as ISP
11188/3)
[ISO8072] Information processing systems - Open Systems
Interconnection - Transport service definition; ISO, 1986.
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[ISO8073] Information processing systems - Open Systems
Interconnection - Transport protocol specification; ISO, 1986.
[ISO8326] Information processing systems - Open Systems
Interconnection - Basic connection oriented session service
definition; ISO, 1987. (or review copy of revised text = ISO/IEC
JTC1/SC21 N4657, April 1990)
[ISO8327] Information processing systems - Open Systems
Interconnection - Basic connection oriented session protocol
specification; ISO, 1987. (or review copy of revised text = ISO/IEC
JTC1/SC21 N4656, April 1990)
[ISO8649] Information processing systems - Open Systems
Interconnection - Service definition for the Association Control
Service Element; ISO, 1989
[ISO8650] Information processing systems - Open Systems
Interconnection - Protocol specification for the Association Control
Service Element; ISO, 1989
[ISO8822] Information processing systems - Open Systems
Interconnection - Connection-oriented presentation service definition;
ISO, 1989
[ISO8823] Information processing systems - Open Systems
Interconnection - Connection-oriented presentation protocol
specification; ISO, 1989
[ISO8824] Information technology - Open Systems Interconnection -
Specification of Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1), ISO/IEC 1990
[ISO8825] Information technology - Open Systems Interconnection -
Specification of Basic Encoding Rules for Abstract Syntax Notation
One, ISO/IEC 1990
[RFC1006] ISO transport services on top of the TCP; Rose M.T, Cass
D.E, 1987
[ISO9594] Information technology - Open Systems Interconnection - The
Directory; ISO/IEC, 1990
[RFC 1274] The Internet and Cosine Schema; Kille, S.H., 1992
8. Other notes
The Session, Presentation and ACSE standards have been the subject of
considerable amendment since their first publication. The only one
that is significant to this cookbook is Session addendum 2, which
specifies session version 2 and unlimited user data. There are plans
to produce new editions of these standards, incorporating all the
amendments, published in early 1994.
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INTERNET DRAFT ThinOSI upper-layers cookbook October 1993
The coding choices made in the cookbook are (nearly) those made by the
"Canonical Encoding Rules", which are a form of Basic Encoding Rules
with no optionality, specified in an amendment to ISO/IEC 8825
(currently a new part of 8825 at Draft International Standard status,
but likely to be folded into a new edition of 8825). A defect report
has been proposed against Presentation and ACSE, suggesting that a
note to the protocol specifications recommend use of the canonical
encoding options when sending, and then optimising for this on
receipt.
9. Author's Address
Peter Furniss
Peter Furniss Consultants
58 Alexandra Crescent
Bromley, Kent BR1 4EX
UK
Phone & fax +44 81 313 1833
Email: P.Furniss@ulcc.ac.uk
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