RFC5328

From RFC-Wiki

Network Working Group A. Adolf Request for Comments: 5328 Micronas GmbH Category: Informational P. MacAvock

                                                         DVB Project
                                                      September 2008
          A Uniform Resource Name (URN) Namespace for
          the Digital Video Broadcasting Project (DVB)

Status of This Memo

This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

This document describes a Uniform Resource Name (URN) namespace for the Digital Video Broadcasting Project (DVB) for naming persistent resources defined within DVB standards. Example resources include technical documents and specifications, eXtensible Markup Language (XML) Schemas, classification schemes, XML Document Type Definitions (DTDs), namespaces, style sheets, media assets, and other types of resources produced or managed by DVB.

Introduction

The Digital Video Broadcasting Project (DVB) is an industry-led consortium of over 270 broadcasters, manufacturers, network operators, software developers, regulatory bodies and others in over 35 countries committed to designing global standards for the global delivery of digital television and data services. Services using DVB standards are available on every continent with a total of more than 100 million DVB receivers already deployed.

DVB would like to assign unique, permanent, location-independent names based on URNs for some resources it produces or manages. These URNs will be constructed according to the URN syntax defined in RFC2141.

This namespace specification is for a formal namespace to be registered according to the procedures set forth in RFC3406.

Specification Template

This section provides the information required to register a formal namespace according to the registration procedure defined in RFC3406. The URNs conform to the syntax defined in RFC2141.

Namespace ID:

  "dvb"

Registration Information:

  Version: 1
  Date: 2007-02-28

Declared registrant of the namespace:

  Name:           Peter MacAvock
  Title:          Executive Director, DVB Project Office
  Affiliation:    DVB Digital Video Broadcasting
  Address:        Ancienne Route 17a
                  CH-1218 Geneva
                  SWITZERLAND
  Phone:          +41 22 717 2719
  Email:          [email protected]

Declaration of structure:

  URNs assigned by DVB will have the following hierarchical
  structure based on the organizational structure of the DVB
  standards:
     urn:dvb:<NSS>
  where the syntax of "<NSS>" is specified in Section 2.2 of the URN
  Syntax requirements (RFC2141).
  The individual URNs will be assigned by DVB through the process of
  development of DVB standards.

Relevant ancillary documentation:

  None

Identifier uniqueness considerations:

  DVB will establish unique identifiers as appropriate.
  Uniqueness is guaranteed as DVB ensures through its
  standardization process that an assigned string is never
  reassigned.

Identifier persistence considerations:

  DVB is committed to maintaining the accessibility and persistence
  of all resources that are officially assigned URNs by the
  organization.

Process of identifier assignment:

  Assignment is limited to DVB and those authorities that are
  specifically designated by DVB.  DVB may designate portions of its
  namespace for assignment by other parties under its regime.

Process of identifier resolution:

  DVB will develop and maintain "URN catalogues" that map all
  assigned URNs to Uniform Resource Locators (URLs) specifically to
  enable Web-based resolution of named resources.  In the future, an
  interactive online resolution system may be developed to automate
  this process.  The latest information about DVB-defined metadata
  can always be found on the DVB website at:
     http://www.dvb.org/metadata
  DVB will authorize additional resolution services as appropriate
  and in-line with the DVB standardization process.

Rules for Lexical Equivalence:

  The "<NSS>" is case insensitive.

Conformance with URN Syntax:

  No special considerations.

Validation mechanism:

  None specified.  DVB will develop and maintain URN catalogues.
  The presence of a URN in a catalogue indicates that it is valid.

Scope:

  Global

Examples

The following examples are not guaranteed to be real. They are presented for pedagogical reasons only.

  urn:dvb:ipdc:esg:2005
  urn:dvb:cs:ZappingTypeCS:2001

Namespace Considerations

The urn:dvb namespace is used to identify metadata that is defined by DVB and describes DVB multimedia and interactive services. The registration of urn:dvb as a formal namespace enables the use and referencing of DVB XML fragments in other standards worldwide and enables those standards to leverage and build upon publicly available DVB metadata schemas and fragments.

These URNs are used to refer to, in conjunction with, and as part of commercial or public multimedia broadcast services. In most markets, these are under the control of a national regulator. So if a particular market chooses to use DVB services, in general, the regulator imposes compliance with the relevant DVB specifications to ensure interoperability and open competition in the marketplace.

URN assignment procedures:

  The individual URNs shall be assigned through the process of
  development of DVB standards by the Digital Video Broadcasting
  Project (DVB).  The latest information about DVB defined metadata
  can always be found at the owner's website at:
  http://www.dvb.org/metadata

URN resolution/delegation:

  The resolution and delegation shall be determined through the
  process of development of DVB standards by the Digital Video
  Broadcasting Project (DVB).
  Since the implementations envisaged cover a wide range of devices
  with quite different access methods and capabilities, no single
  resolution or delegation mechanism can be referenced in this
  document.
  Currently, 2 client system classes are covered by DVB
  specifications:
   o  A broadcast set-top box that only has a unidirectional,
      receive-only connection.  Hence, all DVB URNs need to be
      resolvable from the service discovery information received in
      the broadcast stream.
   o  A "home network end device" (HNED) that could be an IPTV set-
      top box, networked TV, or personal digital recorder with an
      Ethernet or Wireless Local Area Network (WLAN) connection to a
      home gateway device.
  Further device classes will be addressed as DVB standardization
  progresses.  The urn:dvb URNs must however remain valid.  DVB will
  define appropriate resolution/delegation mechanisms to ensure that
  DVB URNs remain valid for those new device classes as well.
  For the two above example device classes, 3 ways of conveying such
  resolution information are currently defined by DVB:
  o  Repeated, cyclic transmission of Resolution Authority Records
     (RAR) and Resolution Records (RR) as auxiliary data in digital
     TV broadcast streams over satellite, cable, or terrestrial
     transmissions according to [EN300468], [EN301192], and
     [TS102323].
  o  Repeated, cyclic multicast transmission of Resolution Records
     (RR) via the DVBSTP protocol according to [TS102034].
  o  Unicast delivery of Resolution Records (RR) in response to HTTP
     "GET /dvb/sdns" requests according to [TS102034].

Type of resources to be identified:

  Types of resources to be identified include XML schema definition
  files, classification schemes, and identification systems defined
  and openly published by DVB.  These resources being identified
  constitute a metadata system to describe digital multimedia
  broadcast services or content conveyed as part of such services.
  The latest DVB defined metadata can always be found at:
  http://www.dvb.org/metadata
  These metadata definitions are not entirely usable without
  knowledge of the DVB specifications listed in the Normative
  References section.  To make them generally useful for client
  platforms typically found in computer network environments today,
  XSLT transformations to HTML, or other common formats would be
  needed to enable rendering in a standard web browser.  On the
  other hand, it is expected that with the increasing overlap
  between the computer and multimedia worlds - e.g., with the
  forthcoming DVB file format definition - DVB metadata formats will
  get adopted in player implementations on PC platforms as well.

Type of services to be supported:

  Types of services supported include controlled term lookup in
  classification schemes and resolution of ids in identification
  systems.
  Concrete examples of these services include digital television
  services, (near) video on-demand services, and digital radio sound
  services.  Another example is interactive multimedia applications
  which are tied to audiovisual content.
  This might, e.g., be a quiz show where viewers can compete against
  the contestants on the show by picking multiple-choice answers
  with their remote control.  These end-user services are enabled by
  the metadata defined under the urn:dvb namespace.
  Another example is the web-portal site for the video-on-demand
  offering of an ISP.  The portal pages are likely to describe the
  content in terms of title, genre, parental guidance, cast, etc.
  The ISP might either publish the DVB format description on their
  web-portal site directly, or develop an XSLT transformation to
  obtain an HTML incarnation of the data.  In either case, a client
  device (in this example the home gateway or the ISP's web portal)
  will need to be able to resolve references to the urn:dvb
  namespace.  Describing multimedia content in DVB format is a
  likely choice since it provides rich information specially
  tailored to multimedia applications like television, movies,
  music, etc.  Furthermore, the DVB content descriptions for
  consumer terminals are, of course, compatible with the DVB
  Portable Content Format (PCF, defined in ETSI TS 102 523), which
  is used in content production environments so that propagation of
  content descriptions along the entire production chain is easily
  achieved.

Community Considerations

With the digitization of the audiovisual broadcasting technologies, television receiver platforms have become quite similar to personal computer equipment in terms of performance, resources, and interfaces. Hence, cross-use of content from the respective other platform (i.e., TV and PC) becomes interesting to consumers and service providers alike. Web pages can for instance today be viewed on a general purpose computer, a set-top box, and a mobile phone just the same. Audio/video broadcasting services are arriving on mobile phones today ("mobile TV"), and efforts are clearly visible to bring such services to personal computer platforms as well ("IPTV").

Hence, cross-linking between these two domains, the Internet/personal computer domain and the TV/broadcast domain is called for. Linking from broadcast domain metadata to Internet-based services is already enabled through the various URN and URI schemes established in the relevant DVB standards ([EN300468], [TS102323], and [TS102034]). Linking from Internet/web resources to DVB multimedia services is not yet possible in a well-defined way. Thus, a URN scheme is proposed for DVB defined metadata describing DVB services. As DVB issues its publications as international standards and has a well-defined compliance regime, this request is for a formal namespace.

Open assignment and use of identifiers within the namespace:

  With on-going development of DVB standards, DVB will establish
  requirements for assignment and use of identifiers within the DVB
  namespace.  Current identifier assignments can be inferred from
  the relevant DVB standards and from http://www.dvb.org/metadata.

Considerations for resolution server software:

  With on-going development of DVB standards, DVB will establish
  requirements and seek candidates for operating resolution servers
  as appropriate.
  Sources for resolution information can either be stand-alone
  resolution services, which are announced as part of the Service
  Discovery and Selection (SD&S), or data conveyed as part of the
  SD&S information itself.  To boot-strap the resolution process, a
  DVB client hence needs to discover an entry point (or set of) from
  which to obtain an initial Service Discovery and Selection XML
  record.
  By default, the actual service discovery information is provided
  on the IANA registered well-known port dvbservdsc (port number
  3937) via tcp and udp (see http://www.iana.org/assignments/port-
  numbers) on the IANA registered well-known multicast addresses
  224.0.23.14 (DvbServDisc on IPv4) and FF0X:0:0:0:0:0:0:12D
  (DvbServDisc on IPv6).
  As set forth in [TS102034], a list of non-default Service
  Discovery and Selection (SD&S) entry points addresses may also be
  provided via DNS based on the service location resource record
  (SRV RR) RFC2782.  The service name for DVB services is
  "_dvbservdsc", the protocol may be tcp or udp, while the rest of
  the name is the domain name maintained by DVB for service
  discovery.  This domain name is set to "services.dvb.org".  The
  DVB organization will maintain the services.dvb.org domain name
  for service discovery, and new service providers should register
  with DVB to add them to the DNS SRV list.

Considerations for resolution client software:

  With on-going development of DVB standards, DVB members will
  develop software implementations of its standards for various
  platforms.  Today, these platforms typically include Open Source-
  based platforms such as Linux.
  To resolve a urn:dvb name, a client needs to retrieve Service
  Discovery and Selection (SD&S) data since this either directly
  contains resolution data, or lists stand-alone resolution services
  from which Resolution Authority Records (RAR) can be retrieved.
  To obtain the initial Service Discovery and Selection (SD&S) XML
  record, a client must by default first join the IANA registered
  well-known multicast addresses 224.0.23.14 (DvbServDisc on IPv4)
  and/or FF0X:0:0:0:0:0:0:12D (DvbServDisc on IPv6) and try to
  obtain a boot-strap record from the IANA registered well-known
  port dvbservdsc (port number 3937) via tcp and udp (see
  http://www.iana.org/assignments/port-numbers).
  To discover non-default entry points addresses, [TS102034] defines
  that a list of Service Discovery and Selection (SD&S) entry points
  addresses may be acquired via DNS according to the service
  location resource record (SRV RR) RFC2782.  The service name is
  "_dvbservdsc"; the protocol may be tcp or udp, while the rest of
  the name is the domain name maintained by DVB for service
  discovery.  This domain name is set to "services.dvb.org".  So the
  lookup shall be either "_dvbservdsc._tcp.services.dvb.org" or
  "_dvbservdsc._udp.services.dvb.org".  This requires that the
  terminal support an SRV cognizant DNS client and in a way
  according to the specification in RFC2782.  The DVB organization
  will maintain the services.dvb.org domain name for service
  discovery.  HTTP servers will be found via the tcp protocol method
  whilst the multicast addresses will be found via the udp protocol
  method.

Security Considerations

There are no additional security considerations other than those normally associated with the use and resolution of URNs in general, which are described in RFC1737, RFC2141, and RFC3406.

This document registers a namespace for URNs. DVB may assign special meaning to certain of the characters of the Namespace Specific String in its specifications. Any security consideration resulting from such assignment is outside the scope of this document.

When URNs are resolved, i.e., translated from names to locations, the way the locations are used or accessed may require the resources to be authenticated. The information about the authentication of either the name or the resource to which it refers should be carried by separate information passed along with the URN rather than in the URN itself. The design of such resolution mechanisms by DVB for DVB URNs is guided by RFC2276 and such mechanisms will be published as DVB specifications.

IANA Considerations

This document defines a URN NID registration of "dvb". IANA has registered "dvb" in the URN Namespaces registry.

References

Note: The ETSI specifications listed below - as all ETSI standards -

     are available to the general public free of charge.  They are
     accessible by going to http://www.etsi.org and visiting the
     standards download page.  Select "Standards" from the
     navigation bar at the top, then choose "Download ETSI
     Standards" in the contents box on the left.  A "Publications
     Download Area" link occurs at the top of the body text).  The
     direct link to the downloads page is
     http://pda.etsi.org/pda/queryform.asp.  When clicking on the
     download link on the search results page, an email address is
     requested for the PDF download.  As being free-of-charge is
     funded by the European Commission, the email addresses are
     collected for statistical purposes only to demonstrate benefit
     to the general public.
     The ETSI specifications are normative references since the URNs
     are used to refer to, in conjunction with, and as part of
     commercial or public multimedia broadcast services.  In most
     markets, these are under the control of a national regulator.
     So if a particular market chooses to use DVB services, in
     general, the regulator imposes compliance with the relevant DVB
     specifications to ensure interoperability and open competition
     in the marketplace.  Some of the specifications also have "EN"
     status, which means that the European Commission has overridden
     any national regulations by mandating that if any commercial
     service is rolled out in Europe in the respective area, it must
     comply with the relevant DVB EN specification(s).  Apart from
     those legal implications, DVB has become a brand to which
     consumers link certain expectations with regard to the level of
     service and interoperability.  Of course, DVB wants to help
     manufacturers meeting those expectations by fostering
     interoperability.

Normative References

RFC2141 Moats, R., "URN Syntax", RFC 2141, May 1997.

RFC3406 Daigle, L., van Gulik, D., Iannella, R., and P. Faltstrom,

          "Uniform Resource Names (URN) Namespace Definition
          Mechanisms", BCP 66, RFC 3406, October 2002.

RFC2782 Gulbrandsen, A., Vixie, P., and L. Esibov, "A DNS RR for

          specifying the location of services (DNS SRV)", RFC 2782,
          February 2000.

[EN300468] European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI),

          "Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB); Specification for
          Service Information (SI) in DVB systems", October 2007.

[EN301192] European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI),

          "Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB); DVB specification for
          data broadcasting", November 2004.

[TS102323] European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI),

          "Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB); Carriage and signalling
          of TV-Anytime information in DVB transport streams",
          November 2005.

[TS102034] European Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI),

          "Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB); Transport of MPEG-2 TS
          Based DVB Services over IP Based Networks", October 2007.

Informative References

RFC1737 Sollins, K. and L. Masinter, "Functional Requirements for

          Uniform Resource Names", RFC 1737, December 1994.

RFC2276 Sollins, K., "Architectural Principles of Uniform Resource

          Name Resolution", RFC 2276, January 1998.

Authors' Addresses

Alexander Adolf Micronas GmbH Frankenthalerstrasse 2 D-81539 Munich GERMANY Tel: +49 89 54845 7203 Fax: +49 89 54845 7900 EMail: [email protected]

Peter MacAvock DVB Digital Video Broadcasting Ancienne Route 17a CH-1218 Geneva SWITZERLAND Tel: +41 22 717 2717 EMail: [email protected]

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