Mesh of Multiple DAG servers - Results from TISDAG
RFC 2968, “Mesh of Multiple DAG servers - Results from TISDAG”, is an Informational document published in October 2000 by L. Daigle, T. Eklof. The canonical text is published by the RFC Editor.
Abstract
This document defines the basic principle for establishing a mesh, that interoperating services should exchange index objects, according to the architecture of the mesh (e.g., hierarchical, or graph-like, preferably without loops!). The Common Indexing Protocol (CIP) is designed to facilitate the creation not only of query referral indexes, but also of meshes of (loosely) affiliated referral indexes. The purpose of such a mesh of servers is to implement some kind of distributed sharing of indexing and/or searching tasks across different servers. So far, the TISDAG (Technical Infrastructure for Swedish Directory Access Gateways) project has focused on creating a single referral index; the obvious next step is to integrate that into a larger set of interoperating services. This memo provides information for the Internet community.
What “Informational” means
Published for the general information of the community. It does not define an IETF standard and carries no standards-track status.
The canonical text of RFC 2968 is hosted at rfc-editor.org. Available in TXT,HTML.
- RFC 2967 TISDAG - Technical Infrastructure for Swedish Directory Access Gateways
- RFC 2969 Wide Area Directory Deployment - Experiences from TISDAG
- RFC 2966 Domain-wide Prefix Distribution with Two-Level IS-IS
- RFC 2970 Architecture for Integrated Directory Services - Result from TISDAG
- RFC 2965 HTTP State Management Mechanism
- RFC 2971 IMAP4 ID extension
- RFC 2964 Use of HTTP State Management
- RFC 2972 Context and Goals for Common Name Resolution