QSPEC Template for the Quality-of-Service NSIS Signaling Layer Protocol
RFC 5975, “QSPEC Template for the Quality-of-Service NSIS Signaling Layer Protocol”, is an Experimental document published in October 2010 by G. Ash, A. Bader, C. Kappler, D. Oran. The canonical text is published by the RFC Editor.
Abstract
The Quality-of-Service (QoS) NSIS signaling layer protocol (NSLP) is used to signal QoS reservations and is independent of a specific QoS model (QOSM) such as IntServ or Diffserv. Rather, all information specific to a QOSM is encapsulated in a separate object, the QSPEC. This document defines a template for the QSPEC including a number of QSPEC parameters. The QSPEC parameters provide a common language to be reused in several QOSMs and thereby aim to ensure the extensibility and interoperability of QoS NSLP. While the base protocol is QOSM-agnostic, the parameters that can be carried in the QSPEC object are possibly closely coupled to specific models. The node initiating the NSIS signaling adds an Initiator QSPEC, which indicates the QSPEC parameters that must be interpreted by the downstream nodes less the reservation fails, thereby ensuring the intention of the NSIS initiator is preserved along the signaling path. This document defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet community.
What “Experimental” means
Describes a specification that is part of a research or development effort, published so the community can gain experience with it.
The canonical text of RFC 5975 is hosted at rfc-editor.org. Available in TXT,HTML.
- RFC 5974 NSIS Signaling Layer Protocol for Quality-of-Service Signaling
- RFC 5976 Y.1541-QOSM: Model for Networks Using Y.1541 Quality-of-Service Classes
- RFC 5973 NAT/Firewall NSIS Signaling Layer Protocol
- RFC 5977 RMD-QOSM: The NSIS Quality-of-Service Model for Resource Management in Diffserv
- RFC 5972 General Internet Signaling Transport State Machine
- RFC 5978 Using and Extending the NSIS Protocol Family
- RFC 5971 GIST: General Internet Signalling Transport
- RFC 5970 DHCPv6 Options for Network Boot