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[PEPPERMINT] Comparison of Requirements Documents
I've been taking a look at two requirements documents, the ESPP
Requirements and the Consolidated Provisioning Statement. I realize
(or have been told) that a new set of ESPP documents is coming out,
so I'll avoid getting into specifics. The goal is to have a
"Unified" (we've already used "Consolidated") requirements document
for the WG.
BTW, the documents I'm comparing are these:
http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-mule-peppermint-espp-requirements-00
http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-schwartz-peppermint-consolidated-provisioning-problem-statement-00
This comparison list is not very detailed, I wanted to identify the
topics that included in both and where the two requirements had
different emphasis. I don't think there is any outright
contradiction between the two.
Both documents describe a protocol running over SOAP/XML, WDSL, TLS
and HTTP and being easily integrated into the current provisioning
systems.
Both recognize that there a telephone number (E164) to URI mapping
happening, with NAPTR as a major vehicle (but not sole vehicle).
Both mention a need to make the transactions auditable, including logs.
Consolidated mentions multiple kinds of sources of data, ESPP refers
to multiple clients. This could be interpreted as an equivalent
statement.
ESPP explicitly states that operation is based on files (as opposed
to records). (I'd question the file name requirements based on this,
as well as a hard coded limit on the size limit.)
ESPP describes designing an efficient protocol, i.e., being able to
apply one set of data to many numbers. (But when I boiled the
requirements down, I didn't see this idea - maybe it was in the
protocol.)
ESPP has a specific data model in mind (which is being discussed in
recent mail), and a capacity of the order of the size of the PSTN
number range(s).
ESPP includes some protocol maintenance stuff (versioning numbers).
Consolidated has requirements on the database being addressable (any element).
Consolidated explicitly includes prefixs (for ranges) and min/max lengths.
Consolidated explicitly mentions numbers being reassigned and the
impact of that on database entries and responses.
Consolidated requires dip indications, temporal validity, number
"ownership" and other ancillary data.
Consolidated requires a catchall record, a \1 shorthand.
Consolidated has requirements on the transport as being end-to-end
only (no caching) and having flow control.
It's obvious that the two teams that developed the documents had
different emphasis on what to include in a list or requirements.
Even with the ESPP requirements document being rather mature (as well
as being accompanied by a protocol specification), there is a need to
combine the two documents. I don't believe that the result will be
radically different from either, just more complete.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
Edward Lewis +1-571-434-5468
NeuStar
Never confuse activity with progress. Activity pays more.
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Edward Lewis +1-571-434-5468
NeuStar
Never confuse activity with progress. Activity pays more.
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