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RFC 1632:
A Revised Catalog of Available X

 







Network	Working	Group					     A.	Getchell
Request	for Comments: 1632	  Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
FYI: 11							     S.	Sataluri
Obsoletes: 1292					  AT&T Bell Laboratories
Category: Informational						 Editors
								May 1994


	  A Revised Catalog of Available X.500 Implementations

Status of this Memo

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

Abstract

   This	document is the	result of a survey that	gathered new or	updated
   descriptions	of currently available implementations of X.500,
   including commercial	products and openly available offerings. This
   document is a revision of RFC 1292. We contacted each contributor in
   RFC 1292 and	requested an update and	published the survey template in
   several mailing lists and obtained new product descriptions.

   This	document contains detailed description of twenty six (26) X.500
   implementations - DSAs, DUAs, and DUA interfaces.

1.  Introduction

   This	document catalogs currently available implementations of X.500,
   including commercial	products and openly available offerings.  For
   the purposes	of this	survey,	we classify X.500 products as,

   DSA
	A DSA is an OSI	application process that provides the Directory
	functionality,

   DUA
	A DUA is an OSI	application process that represents a user in
	accessing the Directory	and uses the DAP to communicate	with a
	DSA, and

   DUA Interface
	A DUA Interface	is an application process that represents a user
	in accessing the Directory using either	DAP but	supporting only
	a subset of the	DAP functionality or a protocol	different from
	DAP to communicate with	a DSA or DUA.



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RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			May 1994


   Section 2 of	this document contains a listing of implementations
   cross referenced by keyword.	 This list should aid in identifying
   implementations that	meet your criteria.

   To compile this catalog, the	IDS Working Group solicited input from
   the X.500 community by surveying several Internet mailing lists,
   including:  iso@nic.ddn.mil,	isode@nic.ddn.mil, osi-ds@cs.ucl.ac.uk,
   and ietf-ids@umich.edu. We also contacted many people by telephone
   and sent the	template to several individuals	and mailed a floppy disk
   containing the survey template to a person who did not have Internet
   access.

   Readers are encouraged to submit comments regarding both the	form and
   content  of	this  memo.  New submissions are welcome.  Please direct
   input to  the  Integrated  Directory	 Services  (IDS)  Working  Group
   (ietf-ids@umich.edu)	 or  to	 the editors.  IDS will	produce	new ver-
   sions of this document when a sufficient number of changes have  been
   received.  This will	be determined by the IDS chairpersons.

1.1  Purpose

   The Internet	has experienced	a steady growth	in X.500 piloting
   activities.	This document hopes to provide an easily accessible
   source of information on X.500 implementations for those who	wish to
   consider X.500 technology for deploying a Directory service.

1.2  Scope

   This	document contains descriptions of both free and	commercial X.500
   implementations.  It	does not provide instructions on how to	install,
   run,	or manage these	implementations.  The descriptions and indices
   are provided	to make	the readers aware of available options and thus
   enable more informed	choices.

1.3 Disclaimer

   Implementation descriptions were written by implementors and	vendors,
   and not by the editors. We worked with the description authors to
   ensure uniformity and readability, but can not guarantee the	accuracy
   or completeness of the descriptions,	or the stability of the
   implementations.

1.4  Overview

   Section 1 contains introductory information.

   Section 2 contains a	list of	keywords, their	definitions, and a cross
   reference of	the X.500 implementations by these keywords.



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RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			May 1994


   Section 3 contains the X.500	implementation descriptions.

   Section 4 has a list	of references.

   Section 6 lists the editors'	addresses.

1.5  Acknowledgments

   The creation	of this	catalog	would not have been possible without the
   efforts of the description authors and the members of the IDS Working
   Group.  Our special thanks to the editors of	RFC 1292, Ruth Lang and
   Russ	Wright who helped us get started and made key suggestions that
   enabled us to learn from their experience. We also acknowledge and
   appreciate the efforts of Ken Rossen	in obtaining six descriptions.

2.  Keywords

   Keywords are	abbreviated attributes of the X.500 implementations.
   The list of keywords	defined	below was derived from the
   implementation descriptions themselves.  Implementations were indexed
   by a	keyword	either as a result of: (1) explicit, not implied,
   reference to	a particular capability	in the implementation
   description text, or	(2) input from the implementation description
   author(s).

2.1  Keyword Definitions

   This	section	contains keyword definitions.  They have been organized
   and grouped by functional category.	The definitions	are ordered
   first alphabetically	by keyword category, and second	alphabetically
   by implementation name within keyword category.


2.1.1  Availability


   Available via FTP
	Implementation is available using FTP.

   Commercially	Available
	This implementation can	be purchased.

   Free
	Available at no	charge,	although other restrictions may	apply.

   Limited Availability
	Need to	contact	provider for terms and conditions of
	distribution.



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RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			May 1994


   Source
	Source code is available, potentially at an additional cost.


2.1.2  Conformance with	Proposed Internet Standards

   These RFCs specify standards	track protocols	for the	Internet
   community.  Implementations which conform to	these evolving proposed
   standards have a higher probability of interoperating with other
   implementations deployed on the Internet.

   RFC-1274
	Implementation supports	RFC 1274:  Barker, P., and S. Kille, The
	COSINE and Internet X.500 Schema, University College, London,
	England, November 1991.

   RFC-1276
	Implementation supports	RFC 1276:  Kille, S.,  Replication and
	Distributed Operations extensions to provide an	Internet
	Directory using	X.500, University College, London, England,
	November 1991.

   RFC-1277
	Implementation supports	RFC 1277:  Kille, S.,  Encoding	Network
	Addresses to support operation over non-OSI lower layers,
	University College, London, England, November 1991.

   RFC-1485
	Implementation supports	RFC 1485: Kille, S., A String
	Representation of Distinguished	Names, ISODE Consortium, July
	1993.

   RFC-1487
	Implementation supports	RFC 1487: Yeong, W., T.	Howes, and S.
	Kille, X.500 Lightweight Directory Access Protocol, July 1993.


2.1.3  Consistence with	Informational and Experimental Internet	RFCs

   These RFCs provide information to the Internet community and	are not
   Internet standards. Compliance with these RFCs is not necessary for
   interoperability but	may enhance functionality.

   RFC-1202
	Implementation supports	RFC 1202: Rose,	M. T., Directory






IDS Working Group					        [Page 4]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			May 1994


	Assistance Service. February 1991.

   RFC-1249
	Implementation supports	RFC 1249: Howes, T., M.	Smith, and B.
	Beecher, DIXIE Protocol	Specification, University of Michigan,
	August 1991.

   RFC-1275
	Implementation supports	RFC 1275:  Kille, S., Replication
	Requirements to	provide	an Internet Directory using X.500,
	University College, London, England, November 1991.

   RFC-1278
	Implementation supports	RFC 1278:  Kille, S., A	string encoding
	of Presentation	Address, University College, London, England,
	November 1991.

   RFC-1279
	Implementation supports	RFC 1279:  Kille, S., X.500 and	Domains,
	University College, London, England, November 1991.

   RFC-1484
	Implementation supports	RFC 1484: Kille, S., Using the OSI
	Directory to achieve User Friendly Naming, ISODE Consortium,
	July 1993.


2.1.4  Implementation Type


   API
	Implementation comes with an application programmer's interface
	(i.e., a set of	libraries and include files).

   DSA Only
	Implementation consists	of a DSA only.	No DUA is included.

   DSA/DUA
	Both a DSA and DUA are included	in this	implementation.

   DUA Interface
	Implementation is a DUA-like program that uses either DAP, but
	supporting only	a subset of the	DAP functionality, or uses a
	protocol different from	DAP to communicate with	a DSA or DUA.

   DUA Only
	Implementation consists	of a DUA only.	No DSA is included.




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RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			May 1994


   LDAP
	DUA interface program uses the Lightweight Directory Access
	Protocol (LDAP).


2.1.5  Internetworking Environment


   CLNS
	Implementation operates	over the OSI ConnectionLess Network
	Service	(CLNS).

   OSI Transport
	Implementation operates	over one or more OSI transport
	protocols.

   RFC-1006
	Implementation operates	over RFC-1006 with TCP/IP transport
	service.  RFC-1006 is an Internet Standard.

   X.25
	Implementation operates	over OSI X.25.


2.1.6  Pilot Connectivity


   DUA Connectivity
	The DUA	can be connected to the	pilot, and information on any
	pilot entry looked up.	The DUA	is able	to display standard
	attributes and object classes and those	defined	in the COSINE
	and Internet Schema.

   DSA Connectivity
	The DSA	is connected to	the DIT, and information in this DSA is
	accessible from	any pilot DUA.


2.1.7  Miscellaneous


   Included in ISODE
	DUAs that are part of ISODE.

   Limited Functionality
	Survey states that the implementation has some shortcomings or
	intended lack of functionality,	e.g., omissions	were part of the
	design to provide an easy-to-use user interface.



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RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			May 1994


   Motif
	Implementation provides	a Motif-style X	Window user interface.

   Needs ISODE
	ISODE is required to compile and/or use	this implementation.

   OpenLook
	Implementation provides	an OpenLook-style X Window user
	interface.

   X Window System
	Implementation uses the	X Window System	to provide its user
	interface.


2.1.8 Operating	Environment


   386
	Implementation runs on a 386-based platform.

   Bull
	Implementation runs on a Bull platform.

   CDC
	Implementation runs on a CDC MIPS platform.

   DEC ULTRIX
	Implementation runs under DEC ULTRIX.

   DEC Vax OpenVMS
	Implementation runs on a DEC VAX platform running OpenVMS.

   HP
	Implementation runs on an HP platform.

   IBM PC
	Implementation runs on a PC.

   IBM RISC
	Implementation runs on IBM's RISC UNIX workstation.

   ICL
	Implementation runs on an ICL platform.

   Macintosh
	Implementation runs on a Macintosh.




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RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			May 1994


   Multiple Vendor Platforms
	Implementation runs on more than one hardware platform.

   Sequent
	Implementation runs on a Sequent platform.

   SNI
	Implementation runs on a Siemens Nixdorf platform.

   Solbourne
	Implementation runs on a Solbourne platform.

   Sun
	Implementation runs on a Sun platform.

   Tandem
	Implementation runs on a Tandem	platform.

   UNIX
	Implementation runs on a generic UNIX platform.

   Wang
	Implementation runs on a Wang RISC platform.

2.2  Implementations Indexed by	Keyword

   This	section	contains an index of implementations by	keyword.  You
   can use this	list to	identify particular implementations that meet
   your	chosen criteria.

   The index is	organized as follows: keywords appear in alphabetical
   order; implementations characterized	by that	keyword	are listed
   alphabetically as well.  Note that a	"*" is used to indicate	that the
   particular implementation, or feature of the	implementation,	may not
   be available	at this	time.

   For formatting purposes, we have used the following abbreviations for
   implementation names: BULL S.A. (Bull X500-DS and X500-DUA),	DEC
   X.500 DSA (DEC X.500	Directory Server), DEC X.500 Admin (DEC	X.500
   Administration Facility), HP	X.500 DD (HP X.500 Distributed
   Directory), LDAP (University	of Michigan LDAP Implementation), OSI
   Access & Dir	(OSI Access and	Directory), and	Traxis (Traxis
   Enterprise Directory).








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RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			May 1994


   386					 CLNS

	PathWay	Messaging		      Bull S.A.
	PC-DUA				      DEC X.500	DSA
	UCOM X.500			      DEC X.500	Admin
					      DIR.X
   API					      HP X.500 DD
					      HP X.500 DUA
	Bull S.A.			      OSI Access & Dir
	Custos				      PathWay Messaging
	DEC X.500 DSA			      Traxis
	DEC X.500 Admin			      UCOM X.500
	DIR.X				      Wang OPEN/services
	HP X.500 DD			      XT-DUA
	HP X.500 DUA			      XT-QUIPU
	LDAP
	OSI Access & Dir		 Commercially Available
	QUIPU
	Traxis				      Bull S.A.
	UCOM X.500			      DEC X.500	DSA
					      DEC X.500	Admin
   Available via FTP			      DIR.X
					      Directory	500
	Custos				      HP X.500 DD
	DE				      HP X.500 DUA
	DOS-DE				      OSI Access & Dir
	LDAP				      PathWay Messaging
	ldap-whois++			      PC-DUA
	maX.500				      Traxis
	Xdi				      UCOM X.500
					      Wang OPEN/services
   Bull					      XT-DUA
					      XT-QUIPU
	Bull S.A.
	UCOM X.500			 DEC ULTRIX
	XT-DUA
	XT-QUIPU			      DEC X.500	DSA
					      DEC X.500	Admin
   CDC					      LDAP
					      ldap-whois++
	OSI Access & Dir		      UCOM X.500

					 DEC VAX OpenVMS

					      DEC X.500	DSA
					      DEC X.500	Admin





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RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			May 1994


   DSA Connectivity			 DUA Interface

	DIR.X				      DE
	OSI Access & Dir		      DOS-DE
	PathWay	Messaging		      LDAP
	QUIPU				      ldap-whois++
	UCOM X.500			      maX.500
	XT-QUIPU			      OSI Access & Dir
					      Pathway Messaging
   DSA Only				      PC-DUA
					      QuickMailDUA
	DEC X.500 DSA			      Wang OPEN/services
	XT-QUIPU
					 DUA Only
   DSA/DUA
					      DEC X.500	Admin
	Bull S.A.			      HP X.500 DUA
	Custos				      MXLU
	DIR.X				      PC-Pages
	Directory 500			      Xdi
	HP X.500 DD			      XLU
	OSI Access & Dir		      XT-DUA
	PathWay	Messaging
	QUIPU				 Free
	Traxis
	UCOM X.500			      Custos
	Wang OPEN/services		      DE
					      DOS-DE
   DUA Connectivity			      LDAP
					      ldap-whois++
	DIR.X				      maX.500
	LDAP				      MXLU
	maX.500				      QUIPU
	MXLU				      Xdi
	OSI Access & Dir		      XLU
	PathWay	Messaging
	PC-DUA				 HP
	PC-Pages
	QUIPU				      DIR.X
	UCOM X.500			      HP X.500 DD
	Xdi				      HP X.500 DUA
	XLU				      LDAP
	XT-DUA				      *Traxis
					      Wang OPEN/services
					      XT-DUA
					      XT-QUIPU





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RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			May 1994


   IBM PC				 Limited Functionality

	DOS-DE				      Custos
	LDAP				      Wang OPEN/services
	OSI Access & Dir		      Xdi
	PathWay	Messaging
	PC-DUA				 Macintosh
	PC-Pages
	Traxis				      LDAP
	Wang OPEN/services		      maX.500
					      PathWay Messaging
   IBM RISC				      *Traxis

	DIR.X				 Motif
	LDAP
	*Traxis				      DEC X.500	Admin
	UCOM X.500			      MXLU
	Wang OPEN/services		      UCOM X.500
	XT-DUA				      XT-DUA
	XT-QUIPU
					 Multiple Vendor Platforms
   ICL
					      Custos
	*XT-DUA				      DE
	XT-QUIPU			      DOS-DE
					      LDAP
   Included In ISODE			      MXLU
					      PathWay Messaging
	DE				      PC-Pages
					      QUIPU
   LDAP					      UCOM X.500
					      Xdi
	DE				      XLU
	DOS-DE				      XT-DUA
	LDAP				      XT-QUIPU
	ldap-whois++
	maX.500				 Needs ISODE
	OSI Access & Dir
	*Pathway Messaging		      Custos
	PC-DUA				      DE
	*PC-Pages			      MXLU
					      QuickMailDUA
   Limited Availability			      Xdi
					      XLU
	PC-Pages
	QuickMailDUA





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RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			May 1994


   OpenLook				 RFC-1249

	UCOM X.500			      OSI Access & Dir
	XT-DUA
					 RFC-1274
   OSI Transport
					      DE
	Bull S.A.			      DEC X.500	DSA
	Custos				      DEC X.500	Admin
	DEC X.500 DSA			      DOS-DE
	DEC X.500 Admin			      LDAP
	DIR.X				      maX.500
	HP X.500 DD			      OSI Access & Dir
	HP X.500 DUA			      QuickMailDUA
	PathWay	Messaging		      QUIPU
	PC-Pages			      Traxis
	QUIPU				      UCOM X.500
	Traxis				      Xdi
	Wang OPEN/services		      XT-DUA
	XT-DUA				      XT-QUIPU
	XT-QUIPU
					 RFC-1275
   RFC-1006
					      OSI Access & Dir
	Bull S.A.			      QUIPU
	Custos
	DEC X.500 DSA			 RFC-1276
	DEC X.500 Admin
	DIR.X				      OSI Access & Dir
	Directory 500			      QUIPU
	LDAP				      XT-QUIPU
	OSI Access & Dir
	PathWay	Messaging		 RFC-1277
	PC-Pages
	QUIPU				      DEC X.500	DSA
	Traxis				      DEC X.500	Admin
	UCOM X.500			      DIR.X
	Wang OPEN/services		      OSI Access & Dir
	XT-DUA				      PathWay Messaging
	XT-QUIPU			      QUIPU
					      UCOM X.500
   RFC-1202				      XT-DUA
					      XT-QUIPU
	OSI Access & Dir
	PathWay	Messaging






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RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			May 1994


   RFC-1278				 Sequent

	DEC X.500 DSA
	DEC X.500 Admin			 UCOM X.500
	OSI Access & Dir
	PathWay	Messaging		 SNI
	QUIPU
	UCOM X.500			      DIR.X
	XT-DUA
	XT-QUIPU			 Solbourne

   RFC-1279				      XT-DUA
					      XT-QUIPU
	OSI Access & Dir
	QUIPU				 Source
	UCOM X.500
	XT-QUIPU			      DE
					      LDAP
   RFC-1484				      MXLU
					      QUIPU
	DE				      Xdi
	DOS-DE				      XLU
	*LDAP
	*maX.500			 Sun
	QUIPU
	Xdi				      Custos
	XT-DUA				      Directory	500
	XT-QUIPU			      LDAP
					      ldap-whois++
   RFC-1485				      OSI Access & Dir
					      PathWay Messaging
	LDAP				      QuickMailDUA
	maX.500				      QUIPU
	QUIPU				      Traxis
	XT-QUIPU			      UCOM X.500
					      Xdi
   RFC-1487				      XT-DUA
					      XT-QUIPU
	DE
	DOS-DE				 Tandem
	LDAP
	ldap-whois++			      UCOM X.500
	maX.500
	PC-DUA
	QUIPU






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RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			May 1994


   UNIX

	Custos
	DE
	ldap-whois++
	MXLU
	QUIPU
	UCOM X.500
	Xdi
	XLU

   Wang

	Wang OPEN/services

   X Window System

	MXLU
	OSI Access & Dir
	Xdi
	XLU
	XT-DUA

   X.25

	Bull S.A.
	DEC X.500 DSA
	DEC X.500 Admin
	DIR.X
	Directory 500
	HP X.500 DD
	HP X.500 DUA
	OSI Access & Dir
	PathWay	Messaging
	QUIPU
	Traxis
	UCOM X.500
	Wang OPEN/services
	XT-DUA
	XT-QUIPU











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RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			May 1994


3.  Implementation Descriptions

   In the following pages you will find	descriptions of	X.500
   implementations listed in alphabetical order.  In the case of name
   collisions, the name	of the responsible organization, in square
   brackets, has been used to distinguish the implementations.	Note
   that	throughout this	section, the page header reflects the name of
   the implementation, not the date of the document.  The descriptions
   follow a common format, as described	below:

   NAME
	The name of the	X.500 implementation and the name of the
	responsible organization.  Implementations with	a registered
	trademark indicate this	by appending "(tm)", e.g., GeeWhiz(tm).

   KEYWORDS
	A list of the keywords defined in Section 2 that have been used
	to cross reference this	implementation.

   ABSTRACT
	A brief	description of the application.	 This section may
	optionally contain a list of the pilot projects	in which the
	application is being used.

   COMPLIANCE (applicable only for DSAs	and DUAs)
	A statement of compliance with respect to the 1988 CCITT
	Recommendations	X.500-X.521 [CCITT-88],	specifically Section 9
	of X.519, or the 1988 NIST OIW Stable Implementation Agreements
	[NIST-88].

   CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS
	A statement of compliance with respect to the several proposed
	Internet Standards.

   CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL RFCs
	A statement of compliance with respect to the several
	informational and experimental Internet	RFCs.

   INTEROPERABILITY
	A list of other	DUAs and DSAs with which this implementation can
	interoperate.

   PILOT CONNECTIVITY
	Describes the level of connectivity it can offer to the	pilot
	directory service operational on the Internet in North America,
	and to pilots co-ordinated by the PARADISE project in Europe.
	Levels of connectivity are: Not	Tested,	None, DUA Connectivity,
	and DSA	Connectivity.



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RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			May 1994


   BUGS
	A warning on known problems and/or instructions	on how to report
	bugs.

   CAVEATS AND GENERAL LIMITATIONS
	A warning about	possible side effects or shortcomings, e.g., a
	feature	that works on one platform but not another.

   INTERNETWORKING ENVIRONMENT
	A list of environments in which	this implementation can	be used,
	e.g., RFC-1006 with TCP/IP, TP0	or TP4 with X.25.

   HARDWARE PLATFORMS
	A list of hardware platforms on	which this application runs, any
	additional boards or processors	required, and any special
	suggested or required configuration options.

   SOFTWARE PLATFORMS
	A list of operating systems, window systems, databases,	or
	unbundled software packages required to	run this application.

   AVAILABILITY
	A statement regarding the availability of the software (free or
	commercially available), a description of how to obtain	the
	software, and (optionally) a statement regarding distribution
	conditions and restrictions.

   DATE	LAST UPDATED or	CHECKED
	The month and year within which	this implementation description
	was last modified.





















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RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog		       Bull S.A.


NAME

   X500-DS
   X500-DUA
   Bull	S.A.


KEYWORDS

   API,	Bull, CLNS, Commercially Available, DSA/DUA, OSI Transport,
   RFC-1006, X.25

ABSTRACT

   X500-DS and X500-DUA	are integral part of the large Bull OSI	offer.
   Although based on the DCE/GDS (Distributed Computing
   Environment/Global Directory	Service) of OSF, these two products may
   be installed	and used without DCE environment.  X500-DS is designed
   to implement	both the DUA and the DSA functions, whilst X500-DUA only
   provides the	DUA functions.

   The X500-DUA	package	contains:

   - The standards APIs	XOM (X/Open OSI-Abstract-Data Manipulation API)
     and XDS (X/Open Directory Service API) for	the development	of
     portable applications,
   - A core DUA	to translate all user's	requests (bind,	read, list,
     compare, modify, modifyRDN, search, add, remove, unbind ...) into
     the DAP protocol used for communication with distant DSAs,
   - The OSI standard protocols	(ASN.1,	ROSE, ACSE, Presentation and
     Session) for communication	with the distant DSAs. The interface
     with the low layers of the	stack being XTI. RFC-1006 is supported
     under XTI or the Session,
   - A DUA Cache to improve performances when accessing	remote DSAs,
   - A management application for configuration	of the product,
     controlling the operations	and managing logs and traces,
   - A user application	for the	manipulations of the database entries.


   The X500-DS package contains:

   - All components of the X500-DUA,
   - A core DSA	to process all requests	received from distant DUAs
     through DAP protocol or from distant DSAs through DSP protocol.
     It	supports the referral, chained and multi-casting modes of
     operation,	access control lists, simple authentication,
     management	of knowledge information (for distribution, shadows and
     copies of sub-trees),



IDS Working Group				               [Page 17]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog		       Bull S.A.


   - A management application for managing the schema information
     (creation,	deletion and modification of object classes and	of
     attribute types, management of the	rules of the DIT),
   - A C-ISAM database.


COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   Compliant with EWOS and OIW Agreements

   Strong authentication in X.509 is not yet implemented. (Password
   scheme is currently used.)

   Consists of both DUA	and DSA	implementation according to the	88 CCITT
   X.500 and ISO 9594 standard.	The X/Open standard XDS	and XOM
   interface libraries are also	provided.  When	the product is installed
   with	the DCE	environment, XDS and XOM interfaces are	also used to
   access DCE/CDS (Local Cell Directory	Service) transparently.	A GDA
   (Global Directory Agent) serves then	as the gateway between the DCE
   CDS and GDS.

   It is planned to support full 1992 extensions in the	products for
   1995.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   [No information provided--Ed.]

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   [No information provided--Ed.]

INTEROPERABILITY

   This	implementation of DAP and DSP can interoperate with other X.500
   implementations from	other Cebit demo participants including	IBM, HP,
   ICL,	Siemens-Nixdorf, etc. It also interoperates with ISODE QUIPU.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   [No information provided--Ed.]

BUGS

   [No information provided--Ed.]






IDS Working Group				               [Page 18]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog		       Bull S.A.


CAVEATS	AND GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   [No information provided--Ed.]

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   OSI TP4 with	CLNP (WAN - LAN) OSI TP0, 2 & 4	with X.25 (WAN)	RFC-1006
   with	TCP/IP Either BSD sockets or XTI can be	used to	access the
   transports Through XTI, both	OSI and	TCP/IP protocols are possible on
   the same machine, thus permitting to	build a	Directory Service
   distributed on OSI and TCP/IP networks.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   DPX/2, DPX/20

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   Unix	BOS2, Unix BOSX, AIX

AVAILABILITY

   4 Q 93

   Please contact:

      Daniel Monges
      Tel: + (33)  76 39 75 00 ext. 7449
      Fax: + (33)  76 39 78 56
      e-mail: D.Monges@frec.bull.fr

DATE LAST UPDATE or CHECKED

   November 25th, 1993

















IDS Working Group				               [Page 19]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog     Control Data Systems Inc.


NAME

   OSI Access and Directory
   Control Data	Systems	Incorporated.


KEYWORDS

   API,	CLNS, CDC, Commercially	Available, DSA Connectivity, DSA/DUA,
   DUA Connectivity, DUA Interface, IBM	PC, LDAP, RFC-1006, RFC-1202,
   RFC-1249, RFC-1274, RFC-1275, RFC-1276, RFC-1277, RFC-1278, RFC-1279,
   Sun,	X Window System, X.25

ABSTRACT

   OSI Access and Directory includes several DUAs and a	QUIPU based DSA
   (originally based on	version	6.6) with enhancements.	The DUA/DSA
   enhancements	include:

   - Directory API based on the	X.400 API.
   - Support for X.400 objects including those to support
     MHS use of	Directory to support MHS Routing.
   - Integration with Control Data's MailHub (X.400 MHS) products.
   - X Windows,	curses and command line	based DUA interfaces on	UNIX.
     These interfaces support the full set of Directory	operations.
   - Windows 3.x interface on PCs.
   - A DUA daemon that provides	Directory access for applications.
   - LDAP 2.0 and 3.0 support.
   - Directory synchronization tools for synchronizing most PC/Mac/Dec
     mail directories with X.500.
   - Enhanced photo attribute support.
   - ACL enhancements.
   - Hash indexing for fast string search.
   - DIXIE, DAD	and PH.X500 support.
   - SNMP based	monitoring and management of DSAs.


   Control Data	Systems	offers complete	integration services to	design,
   plan, install, configure, tailor and	maintain X.500 services.  These
   services may	include	the preparation	of customer unique DUAs	and
   tools for X.500 integration,	synchronization, operational control and
   management. OSI Access and Directory	is in production use at	several
   government, commercial and academic sites. Some sites are supporting
   Directories in excess of 120,000 entries.







IDS Working Group				               [Page 20]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog     Control Data Systems Inc.


COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   OSI Access and Directory complies with the 1988 CCITT Recommendations
   X.500-X.521 [CCITT-88] and the 1988 NIST OIW	Stable Implementation
   Agreements [NIST-88]. OSI Access and	Directory only supports	simple
   authentication or no	authentication.	OSI Access and Directory
   complies with all static and	dynamic	requirements of	X.519. OSI
   Access and Directory	can act	as a first-level DSA.

   OSI Access and Directory will support some 1993 X.500 extensions in
   1994	with full support in 1995/1996.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   OSI Access and Directory is compliant with the following RFCs: [RFC
   1274], [RFC 1276], and [RFC 1277].

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   OSI Access and Directory is compliant with the following RFCs: [RFC
   1202], [RFC 1249], [RFC 1275], [RFC 1278], and [RFC 1279].

   OSI Access and Directory also supports the required objects,
   attributes and attribute syntaxes for MHS use of Directory to support
   MHS Routing.

INTEROPERABILITY

   OSI Access and Directory was	tested against HP, DEC,	ISODE Consortium
   and Wollongong implementations at the COS Interoperability Test Lab
   in May 1993.	The OSINET Interoperability Tests were used. Please
   refer OSINET	for test results. OSI Access and Directory has also been
   informally tested at	trade shows with implementations from UNISYS and
   Retix.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   OSI Access and Directory is connected via DSAs and DUAs to the PSI
   White Pages Project.	OSI Access and Directory provides the base
   routing tree	for the	MHS Use	of Directory pilot (Longbud) on	the
   Internet.

BUGS

   Control Data	Systems	provides complete software maintenance services
   with	products.





IDS Working Group				               [Page 21]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog     Control Data Systems Inc.


CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   [No information provided--Ed.]

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   RFC1006 with	TCP/IP,	TP4 with CNLS, TP0 with	X.25.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   OSI Access and Directory runs on all	MIPS and SUN SPARC platforms.
   Windows based DUAs available	with OSI Access	and Directory run on
   Windows 3.x compatible IBM PCs.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   Distributed and supported for Sun OS	version	4.1.x, Sun Solaris 2.x
   and Control Data EP/IX (Control Data's MIPS based OS). Other
   platforms are pending. TP4 connectivity on SUN OS requires SUN OSI.

AVAILABILITY

   Commercially	available from:

	   Control Data	Systems	Inc.
	   Network Solutions, ARH290
	   4201	Lexington Avenue North
	   Arden Hills,	MH 55126-6198 U.S.A.

	   1-800-257-OPEN (U.S.	and Canada)
	   1-612-482-6736 (worldwide)
	   FAX:	1-612-482-2000 (worldwide)
	   EMAIL: info@cdc.com
		    or
	   s=info;p=cdc;a=attmail;c=us

DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   November 22nd, 1993












IDS Working Group				               [Page 22]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			  Custos


NAME

   Custos
   National Institute of Standards and Technology


KEYWORDS

   API,	Available via FTP, DSA/DUA, Free, Limited Functionality,
   Multiple Vendor Platforms, Needs ISODE, OSI Transport, RFC-1006, Sun,
   UNIX

ABSTRACT

   The implementation consists of a set	DUA library routines, a	terminal
   interface, and a DSA. The implementation was	developed in C on Sun
   SPARCstations under SunOS 4.1.1. All	underlying services are	provided
   by the ISODE	development package. The development package is	also
   used	for encoding and decoding ASN.1	data as	well as	for other data
   manipulation	services. Using	the ISODE package the implementation can
   be run over both TCP/IP and OSI protocols.

   The DSA provides full support for both DAP and DSP protocols,
   conformant with ISO 9594 / CCITT X.500 standards. The DIB is
   maintained using a locally developed	relational database system. The
   interface to	the database system consists of	a set of sql-like C
   functions.  These are designed to allow straightforward replacement
   of the local	database system	with a more powerful commercial	system.
   To achieve better performance several options are supported that
   permit loading of selected portions of the database in core.	When
   these options are selected data can be retrieved more quickly from in
   core	tables;	all modifications to the DIB are directly reflected in
   the in core tables and the database.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   Custos is fully compliant with the 1988 Standard with the following
   omissions:

   - Search request decomposition
   - Modify Entry operation
   - Modify RDN	operation
   - Abandon operation
   - Strong Authentication
   - Schema checking






IDS Working Group				               [Page 23]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			  Custos


   There are no	present	plans to extend	Custos to include the 1992 X.500
   extensions.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   [No information provided--Ed.]

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   [No information provided--Ed.]

INTEROPERABILITY

   Have	successfully interoperated with	QUIPU and OSIWARE over the DAP.
   No DSP interoperability testing has been done.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   Limited DUA and DSA connectivity to PSI White Pages Project.

BUGS

   Bugs	may be reported	to the general discussion list,
   x500@osi.ncsl.nist.gov.

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   No limitations on file sizes, etc. The only side effects to creating
   large files should be in the	area of	performance. Specifically,
   optimization	requires loading parts of the DIB in core so greater
   memory requirements will be necessary for achieving better
   performance with a large database. Any platform the implementation
   can be ported to (generally any platform ISODE can be ported	to)
   should support all features.

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   RFC-1006; TP4/CLNP (SunLinkOSI) over	802 and	X.25 (SunLink X.25).

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   It's	only been run on Sun 3 and SPARC, but there are	no known reasons
   why it shouldn't run	on any hardware	running	the ISODE software.








IDS Working Group				               [Page 24]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			  Custos


SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   It requires UNIX and	the ISODE software package. It's been developed
   and tested with ISODE version 7.0 and Sun OS	version	4.1.1. Uses a
   locally developed relational	DBMS that should be easily replaceable
   with	commercially available relational systems.

AVAILABILITY

   Custos, the NIST implementation of X.500, the OSI Directory,	is
   available for anonymous ftp from osi.ncsl.nist.gov (129.6.48.100)
   using the convention	(user name = anonymous,	password = ident). The
   software is available in two	forms: a tar file and a	compressed tar
   file.

      ./pub/directory/CustosRel_0.2.tar
      ./pub/directory/CustosRel_0.2.tar.Z

   Note: permissions on	the directory ./pub/directory are set so that
   you will be able to "get" files whose names you can provide.	However,
   you will not	be able	to "ls"	the contents of	the directory.

DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   March 5th, 1993


























IDS Working Group				               [Page 25]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			      DE


NAME

   DE

KEYWORDS

   Available via FTP, DUA Interface, Free, Included in ISODE, LDAP,
   Multiple Vendor Platforms, Needs ISODE, RFC-1274, RFC-1484, RFC-1487,
   Source, UNIX


ABSTRACT

   DE (Directory Enquiries) is intended	to be a	simple-to-use DUA
   interface, suitable for the naive user, and suitable	for running as a
   public access dua.  it will work on any terminal.  The user is
   presented with a series of (verbose)	prompts	asking for person's
   name; department; organization; country.  There is extensive	on-line
   help.  The matching algorithms are such that	near matches are
   presented to	the user before	less good matches.

   A lot of development	has been done on the interface since it	was
   first described in RFC1292.	The most significant enhancement has
   been	to add power searching - this allows a user to search for an
   entry even when they	do not know the	name of	the organisation in
   which the person works - you	still have to specify the country.  DE
   now provides	UFN style searching.  It is now	possible to search
   locality entries.  DE now uses slightly different search algorithms
   depending on	whether	it is accessing	part of	the Directory mastered
   by a	Quipu DSA - Quipu DSAs tend to use lots	of replication and so
   encourage searching.	 An experimental feature is intended to	give the
   user	more feedback on the likely response time to a query - DE
   maintains a database	of past	information availability and DSA
   responsiveness.  Translations exist into at least 4 different
   languages.

   DE runs over	ISODE DAP and University of Michigan LDAP.  There is a
   version of DE, called DOS-DE, which has been	ported to DOS, and this
   uses	LDAP.

   DE was funded by the	COSINE PARADISE	project, and DE	is used	as the
   PARADISE public access dua.	You can	test the software by telnet to
   128.86.8.56 and logging in as dua --	no password required.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   N/A




IDS Working Group				               [Page 26]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			      DE


CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   [RFC	1274] and [RFC 1487]

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   [RFC	1484].

INTEROPERABILITY

   N/A

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   N/A (This is	more a DUA rather than an interface question). The
   interface is	widely used in the global pilot.

BUGS

   Doesn't handle aliases well when power searching.

   Send	bug reports to:

	p.barker@cs.ucl.ac.uk
	helpdesk@paradise.ulcc.ac.uk

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   DE tries to cater well for the general case,	at the expense of not
   dealing with	the less typical.  The main manifestation of this is
   that	the current version does not handle searching under localities
   very	well.

   It is not possible to display photographs or	reproduce sound
   attributes.

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   As for ISODE.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   As for ISODE.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   As for ISODE.




IDS Working Group				               [Page 27]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			      DE


AVAILABILITY

   The software	is openly available as part of ISODE-8.0.  An enhanced
   version is available	as part	of the PARADISE	project	upgrade.

   Both	these versions are available by	FTP from
   <ftp.paradise.ulcc.ac.uk>, as src/isode-8.tar.Z and src/isode-
   paradise.tar.Z.

   The very latest code	will be	made available with the	ISODE Consortium
   release of ISODE.  It is hoped it will be freely available to all.

   Contact:
	helpdesk@paradise.ulcc.ac.uk
	p.barker@cs.ucl.ac.uk

DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   March 12th, 1993
































IDS Working Group				               [Page 28]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			 DEC DSA


NAME

   DEC X.500 Directory Server
   Digital Equipment Corporation


KEYWORDS

   API,	CLNS, Commercially Available, DEC ULTRIX, DEC VAX OpenVMS, DSA
   Only, OSI Transport,	RFC-1006, RFC-1274, RFC-1277, RFC-1278,	X.25

ABSTRACT

   The DEC X.500 Directory Server product provides a high performance
   Directory System Agent implemented according	to the 1993 edition of
   ISO/IEC 9594	and the	CCITT X.500 series of Recommendations.

   Specific features provided include:

   (1) Integrated multi-protocol support allowing concurrent DAP and DSP
       access over OSI and TCP/IP (using RFC1006) protocols.
   (2) Indexed database	supports high-performance searching and
       sophisticated matching including	approximate match.
   (3) Based on	the 1993 edition Extended Information Models.
   (4) Support for chaining and	referrals in support of	a distributed
       Directory Information Base.
   (5) Support for the 1993 edition Simplified Access Control scheme.
   (6) Configurable schema based on the	1993 edition (including
       attributes, object classes, structure rules, name forms).
   (7) Support for a simple Shadowing protocol to enhance read
       availability.
   (8) Remote management facilities to configure and control DSAs and log
       significant events.
   (9) Provides	the X/OPEN XDS/XOM Application Program Interface so that
       customers can construct their own DUA applications.


   For Directory User Agent facilities see the associated entry	for the
   DEC X.500 Administration Facility

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   Conformance with respect to clause 9.2 of ISO/IEC 9594-5:1993:

   (1)	Supports the directoryAccessAC (DAP) and directorySystemAC (DSP)
	application contexts.
   (2)	The DSA	is capable of acting as	a first-level DSA.
   (3)	Chaining is supported.



IDS Working Group				               [Page 29]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			 DEC DSA


   (4)	Bind security levels of	simple (unprotected password) and none
	are supported.
   (5)	All attribute types defined in ISO/IEC 9594-6:1993 are supported
	except for 1993	edition	supertypes and collective attributes and
	EnhancedSearchGuide.  Customers	can define new attribute types.
	UNIVERSAL STRING is not	supported for attributed based on
	DirectoryString.
   (6)	All object classes defined in ISO/IEC 9594-7:1993 are supported.
	Customers can define new object	classes.
   (7)	The following operational attributes are supported:
		   governingStructureRule
		   createTimestamp
		   modifyTimestamp
		   myAccessPoint
		   superiorKnowledge
		   supplierKnowledge
		   consumerKnowledge
		   specificKnowledge
		   dseType
		   PrescriptiveACI
   (8)	Dynamic	modification of	object class is	permitted
   (9)	A subset of Simplified Access Control is supported.
   (10)	All name forms defined in ISO/IEC 9594-7:1993 are supported.
	Customers can defined new name forms and structure rules.


   The X.500 Directory Server is compatible with and interworks	with
   1988	edition	DUAs and DSAs.	It is implemented to conform to	relevant
   NIST	OIW and	EWOS agreements	and the	X.500 Implementors Guide.

   For details contact Digital.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   Supports RFC	1006, RFC 1274,	and RFC	1277.

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   RFC 1278.

INTEROPERABILITY

   All interoperability	test results will be available on request from
   Digital. Interoperability testing is	being undertaken using the
   harmonized OSIone X.500 test	suite to which both OSInet and EurOSInet
   have	been key contributors.





IDS Working Group				               [Page 30]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			 DEC DSA


PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   Digital is actively involved	in both	public and private pilots of
   X.500.

BUGS

   [No information provided--Ed.]

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   [No information provided--Ed.]

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   The DEC X.500 Directory Service V1.0	operates over:

   * RFC 1006 over TCP/IP on ULTRIX platforms.
   * OSI TP0, TP2 and TP4 over CLNS and	CONS as	appropriate on ULTRIX
     and OpenVMS platforms


HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   The DEC X.500 Directory Service V1.0	runs on:

   * VAX processors supported by OpenVMS
   * RISC processors supported by ULTRIX


SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   The DEC X.500 Directory Service V1.0	runs on:

   * OpenVMS/VAX V5.5-2	or later running DECnet-VAX Extensions V5.4
   * ULTRIX/RISC V4.2 or later running DECnet/OSI for ULTRIX, V5.1 or
     later.


   For availability on other hardware and software platforms please
   contact Digital.

AVAILABILITY

   The DEC X.500 Directory Service is commercially available from
   Digital Equipment Corporation.  For further information please
   contact your	local Digital office, or:




IDS Working Group				               [Page 31]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			 DEC DSA


	Gail Shlansky, Product Manager:
	   Tel:	+1 508 486 5138
	   email: gail.shlansky@lkg.mts.dec.com

	Digital	Equipment Corporation
	Networks and Communications Engineering
	550 King Street
	Littleton, MA. 01460-1289
	USA

DATE LAST UPDATED

   August 2nd, 1993






































IDS Working Group				               [Page 32]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog     DEC X.500 Admin.	Facility


NAME

   DEC X.500 Administration Facility
   Digital Equipment Corporation


KEYWORDS

   API,	CLNS, Commercially Available, DEC ULTRIX, DEC VAX OpenVMS, DUA
   Only, Motif,	OSI Transport, RFC-1006, RFC-1274, RFC-1277, RFC-1278,
   X.25

ABSTRACT

   The DEC X.500 Administration	Facility product provides both command
   line	and Motif interfaces to	manage the information stored in the
   X.500 directory.

   Specific features provided include:

   (1) Multi-protocol support allowing DAP access over OSI and
       TCP/IP (using RFC1006) protocols.
   (2) Driven off the same configurable	schema information as the DEC
       X.500 Directory Service.
   (3) Supports	command	line and OSF Motif interface styles.
   (4) Provides	access to all X.500 services.


   Specific features of	the OSF	Motif interface	include:

   (1) Supports	two ways of accessing directory	information, either by
       browsing	the directory tree or by searching.
   (2) Easy-to-use search based	on customer-extensible set of predefined
       filters.
   (3) Window layouts and text fully extensible, based on the schema, to
       support customer-defined	object classes and attributes.
   (4) Easy-to-use forms based method for creating and modifying entries
       that simplifies use of the X.500	services.


   See also the	entry for the DEC X.500	Directory Service.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   Conformance with respect to clause 9.1 of ISO/IEC 9594-5:1993:

   (1) Supports	the all	operations of the directoryAccessAC application
       context.



IDS Working Group				               [Page 33]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog     DEC X.500 Admin.	Facility


   (2) Bind security levels of none and	simple (unprotected passwords).


CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   Supports RFC	1006, RFC 1274,	and RFC	1277.

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   RFC 1278.

INTEROPERABILITY

   Interoperability test results will be available on request from
   Digital. Interoperability testing is	being undertaken using the
   harmonized OSIone X.500 test	suite to which both OSInet and EurOSInet
   have	been key contributors.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   Digital is actively involved	in both	public and private pilots of
   X.500.

BUGS

   [No information provided--Ed.]

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   [No information provided--Ed.]

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   The DEC X.500 Administration	Facility operates over:

   * RFC 1006 over TCP/IP on ULTRIX platforms.
   * OSI TP0, TP2 and TP4 over CLNS and	CONS as	appropriate on
     ULTRIX and	OpenVMS	platforms


HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   The DEC X.500 Administration	Facility V1.0 runs on:

   * VAX processors supported by OpenVMS
   * RISC processors supported by ULTRIX





IDS Working Group				               [Page 34]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog     DEC X.500 Admin.	Facility


SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   The DEC X.500 Administration	Facility V1.0 runs on:

   * OpenVMS/VAX V5.5-2	or later running DECnet-VAX Extensions V5.4
   * ULTRIX/RISC V4.2 or later running DECnet/OSI for ULTRIX, V5.1 or
     later.


   For availability on other hardware and software platforms please
   contact Digital.

AVAILABILITY

   The DEC X.500 Administration	Facility is commercially available from
   Digital Equipment Corporation.  For further information please
   contact your	local Digital office, or:

	Gail Shlansky, Product Manager:
	   Tel:	+1 508 486 5138
	   email: gail.shlansky@lkg.mts.dec.com

	Digital	Equipment Corporation
	Networks and Communications Engineering
	550 King Street
	Littleton, MA. 01460-1289
	USA

DATE LAST UPDATED

   August 2nd, 1993




















IDS Working Group				               [Page 35]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			   DIR.X


NAME

   DIR.X (tm) V3.0
   Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme AG


KEYWORDS

   API,	CLNS, Commercially Available, DSA Connectivity,	DSA/DUA, DUA
   Connectivity, HP, IBM RISC, OSI Transport, RFC-1006,	RFC-1277, SNI,
   X.25

ABSTRACT

   DIR.X is the	Siemens	Nixdorf	X.500 product on which the OSF DCE/GDS
   (Distributed	Computing Environment/Global Directory Service)	is
   based.  It supports full DUA	and DSA	functionality for globally
   unique identification and location of objects in a network. It also
   provides functions to answer	queries	(both yellow-page and white-
   page) about objects and attribute information. The software
   implements full DAP and DSP protocols specified in X.519. The
   required ACSE, ROSE,	Presentation, Session and RFC-1006 protocol
   implementations are also included. It also supports RFC-1277.

   Additional features include proprietary Replication and Access
   Control, Caching, Tree-handling utilities and (Remote)
   Administration.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   Consists of both DUA	and DSA	implementations	according to the CCITT
   X.500 (1988)	and ISO	9594 standard. The X/Open standard APIs	for XDS
   and XOM are provided. The XDS interface can also be used to access
   the OSF DCE/CDS (DCE	local Cell Directory Service) transparently.

   DIR.X has been successfully conformance tested. PICS	and PCTRs are
   available for all tested protocols: DSA/DAP,	DUA/DAP, Presentation,
   ACSE	and Session embedded in	X.500.

   Compliant with EWOS Agreements (which are being harmonized with OIW
   Agreements).

   Strong authentication according to X.509 and	an XDS/XOM convenience
   library will	be included in the next	version	(Q2 1994). Support for
   X.500 (1993)	is planned for Q4 1994.






IDS Working Group				               [Page 36]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			   DIR.X


CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   [No information provided--Ed.]

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   [No information provided--Ed.]

INTEROPERABILITY

   This	implementation of DAP and DSP has successfully interoperated
   with	the X.500 implementations from ICL, UNISYS, E3X	and ISODE.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   Several DIR.X DSAs are connected to the European X.500 pilot	network
   PARADISE. (DUA and DSA connectivity.)

BUGS

   Problems and	bug-report e-mail address: dirx-info@mch.sni.de

CAVEATS	AND GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   The software	is highly portable and without any general limitations.

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   OSI TP4 with	CLNP OSI TP0, 2	& 4 with X.25 RFC-1006 with TCP/IP

   DIR.X can use either	BSD sockets or XTI/TLI to access the Transport
   Service.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   SNI's hardware platforms, IBM's RS/6000 and Hewlett Packard's HP9000
   among others.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   SINIX (UNIX System V	Release	4), OSF/1.1, AIX 3.1, HP-UX. A port to
   Windows-NT is planned for Q2	1994.

AVAILABILITY

   DIR.X can be	delivered as a binary product or as source to OEM
   customers.  The DIR.X product is commercially available from:




IDS Working Group				               [Page 37]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			   DIR.X


	   Siemens Nixdorf Informationssysteme
	   SNI BU BA NM	12
	   D-81739 Munich
	   Germany

   Please contact:

	   Gianni Rabaioli
	   Tel:	+49 89 636 41095
	   Fax:	+49 89 636 45860
	   e-mail: Giovanni.Rabaioli@mch.sni.de

DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   November 26th, 1993




































IDS Working Group				               [Page 38]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog		   Directory 500


NAME

   Directory 500 (tm)
   OSIware / Infonet Software Solutions


KEYWORDS

   Commercially	Available, DS/DUA, RFC-1006, Source, Sun, X.25

ABSTRACT

   Directory 500 (D500)	is a comprehensive implementation of the CCITT
   X.500 recommendations. D500 is comprised of two major components
   which are responsible for manipulating the data in the OSI Directory.
   They	are the	Directory User Agent (DUA) and the Directory System
   Agent (DSA).

   The DUA is the interface between the	OSI Directory and those	users
   wishing access to the Directory's information. Users	make their
   requests through the	DUA. When forwarding user's requests to	the OSI
   Directory, the protocol used	is known as the	Directory Access
   Protocol (DAP).

   The DSA will	negotiate with other, remote DSAs to obtain requested
   information or to update remote DIBs. DSAs use the Directory	System
   Protocol (DSP) to forward and answer	these requests.	The DSA	supports
   chaining and	referrals.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   All X.500 1988 operations are supported along with all Object Classes
   specified in	X.521 and all Attribute	Types specified	in X.520.

   Implementation plans	include	upgrades to support the	1992 extensions
   to X.500 in 1994. Please check with OSIware / Infonet Software
   Solutions for availability dates.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   [No information provided--Ed.]

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   [No information provided--Ed.]






IDS Working Group				               [Page 39]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog		   Directory 500


INTEROPERABILITY

   Tested with QUIPU. Other interoperability information not available
   at this time.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   [No information provided--Ed.]

BUGS

   None	known at this time.

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   None	known at this time.

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   RFC1006 with	TCP/IP

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   Any Sun SPARC with 16 MB memory, 40 MB free disk Please enquire if
   interested in other platforms such as: SCO Unix, AIX

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   Sun OS 4.1.x. Runs over TCP/IP, or X.25 (SunNet X.25	Version	7
   required)

AVAILABILITY

   Directory 500 is commercially as executable object code or as source
   code	form from:
	 OSIware / Infonet Software Solutions
	 4400 Dominion Street, Suite 210
	 Burnaby, BC  V5G 4G3
	 CANADA

	 Sales & Information: 604436-2922
	 Fax:  604/436-3192

DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   November 21st, 1993





IDS Working Group				               [Page 40]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			  DOS-DE


NAME

   DOS-DE
   University of Bath


KEYWORDS

   Available via FTP, DUA Interface, Free, IBM PC, LDAP, Multiple Vendor
   Platforms, RFC-1274,	RFC-1484, RFC-1487

ABSTRACT

   DOS-DE (DOS Directory Enquiries) is intended	to be a	simple-to-use
   DUA interface suitable for the naive	user.  It is an	MS-DOS port of
   the standard	UNIX DE	implementation - see the entry on DE for full
   details.  (All of the features DE are supported apart from the
   experimental	`Quality of Service' code).

   The user is presented with a	series of (verbose) prompts asking for
   person's name; department; organization; country.  There is extensive
   on-line help.  The matching algorithms are such that	near matches are
   presented to	the user before	less good matches.  `Power searching' is
   also	available - this allows	a user to search for an	entry even when
   they	do not know the	name of	the organisation in which the person
   works - you still have to specify the country.  DOS-DE provides UFN
   style searching.  It	is also	possible to search locality entries.
   DOS-DE uses slightly	different search algorithms depending on whether
   it is accessing part	of the Directory mastered by a Quipu DSA - Quipu
   DSAs	tend to	use lots of replication	and so encourage searching.

   DOS-DE runs over the	University of Michigan LDAP.

   DE was funded by the	COSINE PARADISE	project.  DOS-DE was developed
   by Andy Powell at the University of Bath.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   N/A

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   [RFC	1274] and [RFC 1487]

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   [RFC	1484].




IDS Working Group				               [Page 41]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			  DOS-DE


INTEROPERABILITY

   N/A

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   N/A

BUGS

   Doesn't handle aliases well when power searching.

   Send	bug reports to:

	      A.Powell@bath.ac.uk

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   DOS-DE tries	to cater well for the general case, at the expense of
   not dealing with the	less typical.  The main	manifestation of this is
   that	the current version does not handle searching under localities
   very	well.

   It is not possible to display photographs or	reproduce sound
   attributes.

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   University of Michigan LDAP.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   IBM PC/AT/XT	and compatibles.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   LDAP	for MS-DOS running over	the NCSA Telnet	stack or SUN's PCNFS
   version 4.1 or Novell's LAN Workplace (LWP).

AVAILABILITY

   The software	is openly available by FTP from	ftp.bath.ac.uk,	as
   pub/x500/dosde.zip.

   The very latest code	will be	made available with the	ISODE Consortium
   release of ISODE.  It is hoped it will be freely available to all.

   Contact:



IDS Working Group				               [Page 42]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			  DOS-DE


	      A.Powell@bath.ac.uk

DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   March 18th, 1993














































IDS Working Group				               [Page 43]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog  HP X.500 Dist. Dir.	Products


NAME

   HP X.500 Distributed	Directory Products
   Hewlett Packard


KEYWORDS

   API,	CLNS, Commercially Available, DSA/DUA, DUA only, HP, OSI
   Transport, X.25

ABSTRACT

   HP X.500 Distributed	Directory. Its main components are:

       DUA, and	DUA Interface,
       DSA and DIB support,
       X.500 Address Lookup,
       X/Open Application Tool Kit API (XAT) for XDS/XOM Interface,
       X.500 High Level	API (X5HLAPI) for XDS/XOM Interface.

   HP X.500 DUA. Its main components are:

       DUA, and	DUA Interface,
       X.500 Address Look-up,
       X/Open Application Tool Kit API (XAT) for XDS/XOM Interface,
       X.500 High Level	API (X5HLAPI) for XDS/XOM Interface.

   HP X.500 Distributed	Directory is based on the 1988 CCITT X.500
   standard.  HP X.500 can be used for accessing names and electronic
   mail	addresses for multi-vendor messaging backbone networks.	HP X.500
   can also be used for	the development	of networked applications
   requiring distributed directory functionality.

   HP OpenMail users can access	the enterprise wide HP X.500 distributed
   directory directly from the HP OpenMail user	interface, and select
   X.500 addresses for mailing.	HP-UX Sendmail users can access
   electronic mail addresses from a X.500 server over a	TCP/IP network.

   Users of non-HP e-mail systems can access data stored in the	X.500
   Directory using X.500 Address Look-up. X.500	Address	Look-up	has an
   easy	to use interface, and phonetic search capability.

   HP X.500 Distributed	Directory includes a complete multi-threaded DUA
   and DSA. The	X.500 DIB is built on a	database which has been
   optimized for X.500 performance. HP X.500 contains full support for
   DAP and DSP protocols.




IDS Working Group				               [Page 44]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog  HP X.500 Dist. Dir.	Products


   Data	Shadowing and security access control of HP X.500 Distributed
   Directory allow higher performance, and easier management of	its DIB
   database in a global	environment.

   HP X.500 Distributed	Directory has menu driven administration and
   user	interface tools. The tools simplify directory configuration and
   data	retrieval. It supports X/Open X.500 APIs (XDS and XOM),	and high
   level APIs on top of	XDS to allow developers	to write their own X.500
   based applications.

   HP X.500 Distributed	Directory supports comprehensive tracing and
   logging facilities for quick	diagnosis and resolution of problems. HP
   also	provides a rich	set of troubleshooting tools to	check the
   interoperability of the network at various layers of	the OSI	stack.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   HP X.500 Distributed	Directory complies with	the following standards:

     CCITT X.501:  The Directory - Models
     CCITT X.509:  The Directory - Authentications Framework*
     CCITT X.511:  The Directory - Abstract Service Definition
     CCITT X.518:  The Directory - Procedures for Distributed Operations
     CCITT X.519:  The Directory - Protocol Specifications
     CCITT X.520:  The Directory - Selected Attribute Types
     CCITT X.521:  The Directory - Selected Object Classes
     CCITT X.219:  Remote Operations - Model, Notation and Service
   Definition
     CCITT X.229:  Remote Operations - Protocol	Specifications

     *x.509 describes simple and strong	authentication.	HP X.500
      Distributed Directory supports simple authentication. Strong
      authentication is	not supported in the current release due to
      limited market demand.

   HP X.500 Distributed	Directory will comply with NIST	and EWOS
   directory functional	profiles. Based	on factors such	as market needs
   and NIST recommendations, HP	will implement subsets of 1992 CCITT
   functionality in a phased approach.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   [No information provided--Ed.]

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   [No information provided--Ed.]




IDS Working Group				               [Page 45]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog  HP X.500 Dist. Dir.	Products


INTEROPERABILITY

   HP has done some unofficial interoperability	testing. HP would
   welcome suggestions on priorities for vendor	interoperability
   testing.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   [No information provided--Ed.]

BUGS

   [No information provided--Ed.]

LIMITATIONS

   HP X.500 Distributed	Directory supports up to 30 DSA	connections at
   one time. This limit	could be increased in the future if needed.

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   HP X.500 Distributed	Directory resides on an	OSI stack, and can be
   used	in 802.3 LAN, or X.25 CLNS or CONS environment.	HP is
   investigating implementing X.500 for	the TCP/IP environment.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   HP X.500 Distributed	Directory is available on HP 9000 Series 800
   family of high performance servers which are	scalable platform.

   The HP X.500	Address	Look-up	facility is also available for the HP
   9000	Series 300 and Series 700 for customers	who have purchased the
   X.500 product.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   HP X.500 Distributed	Directory requires the following software
   environment:

   - HP-UX Operating System 8.0	or later
   - OSI Transport Services/9000 for the Series	800
   - HP	Lan Link or HP X.25 product
   - Network Tracing and Logging
   - ANSI C compiler (for the HP/XDS API)







IDS Working Group				               [Page 46]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog  HP X.500 Dist. Dir.	Products


AVAILABILITY

   HP X.500 Distributed	Directory is commercial	available. The product
   can be ordered through HP Sales offices. The	ordering numbers are:

       P/N J2152A
       HP X.500	Distributed Directory/9000 for the Series 800.
       Product contains	DSA server and DUA client.

       P/N J2153A
       HP X.500	DUA/9000 for the Series	800.
       Product contains	only DUA client.

DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   August 16th,	1993.



































IDS Working Group				               [Page 47]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog    Univ. of Mich. LDAP Imple.


NAME


   University of Michigan LDAP Implementation


KEYWORDS

   API,	Available via FTP, DEC ULTRIX, DUA Connectivity, DUA Interface,
   Free, HP, IBM PC, IBM RISC, LDAP, Macintosh,	Multiple Vendor
   Platforms, RFC-1006,	RFC-1274, RFC-1484, RFC-1485, RFC-1487,	Source,
   Sun

ABSTRACT

   LDAP	is the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol.  It gives	X.500
   access to platforms that have only TCP/IP access, using simplified
   BER encoding	of many	X.500 data elements.  LDAP is currently	a
   proposed Internet Standard.	The LDAP server	is an intermediate
   protocol server that	communicates with Internet clients on one side
   using the simple TCP-based LDAP protocol and	an X.500 DSA on	the
   other side using the	Directory Access Protocol (DAP).  A subset of
   the X.500 DAP is exported to	the clients through the	LDAP protocol.

   The U-M LDAP	distribution contains the following components:

   - LDAP server
   - LDAP client library, including both synchronous and asynchronous APIs
   - Lightweight BER library, including	an API that supports
     a printf/scanf-like interface
   - Various LDAP client programs, including a finger daemon (xfingerd),
     gopher to X.500 gateway (go500gw),	command-line DUA (ud), e-mail
     query server (rcpt500), and an X.500 mailer (mail500)


COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   The U-M LDAP	distribution is	a complete implementation of the LDAP
   protocol.  The LDAP protocol	does not support access	to all X.500
   features and	operations.  The operations supported are bind,	search,
   compare, add, delete, modify, modify	RDN, and abandon.  Note	that
   read	and list operations can	be emulated using the search operation.
   Size	and time limits	may be specified, as may alias dereferencing and
   searching, but all X.500 service controls are not supported.







IDS Working Group				               [Page 48]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog    Univ. of Mich. LDAP Imple.


CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   Compliant with [RFC 1485], [RFC 1487], and [RFC 1274].

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   Preliminary support is included for [RFC 1484].

INTEROPERABILITY

   The current implementation of the LDAP server is known to work with
   the QUIPU DSA and DAP library.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   DUA connectivity should be possible to all pilots, though only
   AARNET, PARADISE, and PSI White Pages Project have actually been
   tried.

BUGS

   Bug reports should be sent to bug-ldap@umich.edu.

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   None, aside from those mentioned above under	completeness.

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   LDAP	clients	use TCP	to communicate with the	LDAP server.  The LDAP
   server normally uses	RFC 1006 with TCP/IP to	communicate with the
   DSA,	though any other transport mechanism for DSA communication
   supported by	ISODE should be	possible.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   The LDAP server is known to run on Sun 3 and	Sun 4 platforms	DEC's,
   HP's, and RS	6000's.	 The LDAP client libraries and some clients have
   been	ported to the Macintosh	and the	PC.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   The LDAP server and clients are known to run	under and SunOS	4.1.x,
   ULTRIX, HP-UX, and AIX.  The	LDAP client libraries also work	under
   Macintosh System 6.0	or higher and MS-DOS 5.0.






IDS Working Group				               [Page 49]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog    Univ. of Mich. LDAP Imple.


AVAILABILITY

   This	software is openly available.  It may be obtained by anonymous
   FTP from terminator.rs.itd.umich.edu	in the x500 directory.
   Documentation on the	LDAP and lightweight BER libraries is provided
   in the form of man pages distributed	with the source	code.  More
   information can be obtained from ldap-support@umich.edu.

   This	software was developed at the University of Michigan by	Tim
   Howes with help from	Mark Smith and Bryan Beecher, as well as many
   others around the Internet.	It is subject to the following
   copyright.

   Copyright (c) 1993 Regents of the University	of Michigan.  All rights
   reserved.  Redistribution and use in	source and binary forms	are
   permitted provided that this	notice is preserved and	that due credit
   is given to the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor.	The name of the
   University may not be used to endorse or promote products derived
   from	this software without specific prior written permission. This
   software is provided	``as is'' without express or implied warranty.

DATE LAST UPDATED OR CHECKED

   March 13th, 1993



























IDS Working Group				               [Page 50]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog		    ldap-whois++


NAME

   ldap-whois++


KEYWORDS

   Available via FTP, DEC ULTRIX, DUA Interface, Free, LDAP, RFC-1487,
   Sun,	UNIX

ABSTRACT

   ldap-whois++	is a dua interface that	implements the IETF WNILS draft
   whois++ proposal using the LDAP libraries developed by the University
   of Michigan.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   N/A

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   RFC 1487

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   IETF	WNILS WG Whois++ Architecture Draft.

INTEROPERABILITY

   N/A

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   There are a number of servers running across	the Internet.

BUGS

   None	reported.

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   Based on an early draft of the Whois++ Architecture Document	so there
   may be some inconsistencies with the	latest draft.

   It is considered a "beta" release due to the	volatility of the
   whois++ work.  Once there is	a whois++ RFC then a real release will
   be made.



IDS Working Group				               [Page 51]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog		    ldap-whois++


INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   N/A

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   DEC RISC, SUN RISC

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   ULTRIX 4.3, SunOS 4.1.x

AVAILABILITY

   Available via anonymous ftp from ftp.adelaide.edu.au	as
   pub/whois/whois++beta.tar.Z.

DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   August 3rd, 1993































IDS Working Group				               [Page 52]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			 maX.500


NAME

   University of Michigan maX.500 Macintosh DUA	Interface

KEYWORDS

   Available via FTP, DUA Connectivity,	DUA Interface, Free, LDAP,
   Macintosh, RFC-1274,RFC-1484, RFC-1485, RFC-1487


ABSTRACT

   maX.500 is a	Directory User Agent for Apple Macintosh.  It is
   currently at	version	2.0, which uses	the Lightweight	Directory Access
   Protocol (LDAP) over	TCP/IP to access The Directory.	 maX.500 can be
   used	to search for, view, create, delete, and modify	entries.  It
   supports viewing of textual information, playing of audio, and
   viewing of black and	white (fax) and	color (JPEG) images.

   maX.500 is a	native Macintosh application, and as such has a	friendly
   interface.  It requires System Software version 6.0.5 or later and
   Apple's MacTCP control panel.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   maX.500 works over LDAP, and	is subject to LDAP's limitations.  The
   X.500 bind, search, compare,	add, delete, abandon, and modify
   operations are used by maX.500.  Size and time limits may be
   specified, as may alias dereferencing and searching.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   Compliant with [RFC 1485], [RFC 1487], and [RFC 1274].

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   Preliminary support is included for [RFC 1484] (same	as U-M LDAP).

INTEROPERABILITY

   maX.500 2.0 is known	to work	with the U-M LDAP server.  It has been
   used	successfully with the QUIPU DSA	and others.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   DUA connectivity should be possible to all pilots, though only
   AARNET, PARADISE, and PSI White Pages Project have actually been
   tried.



IDS Working Group				               [Page 53]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			 maX.500


BUGS

   Bug reports should be sent to max500-bugs@umich.edu.

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   maX.500 does	not support modification of "photo" (fax), "jpegPhoto",
   or "audio" attributes.  Modify RDN is also unsupported.

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   maX.500 is an LDAP client, and as such is uses TCP to communicate
   with	the  LDAP server.  Apple's MacTCP control panel	is required on
   the Macintosh.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   maX.500 runs	on Apple Macintosh Plus	or later computers.  It	requires
   1MB of RAM.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   maX.500 requires Apple System Software 6.0.5	or later (System 7
   preferred) and MacTCP 1.1 or	later (1.1.1 preferred).

AVAILABILITY

   This	software is openly available.  It may be obtained by anonymous
   FTP from terminator.rs.itd.umich.edu	in the x500 directory.	More
   information can be obtained from ldap-support@umich.edu.

   This	software was developed at the University of Michigan by	Mark
   Smith with help from	Tim Howes and many others around the Internet.
   It is subject to the	following copyright:
     Copyright (c) 1993	Regents	of the University of Michigan.	All
     rights reserved.  Redistribution and use in binary	forms is
     permitted provided	that this notice is preserved and that due
     credit is given to	the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor. The
     name of the University may	not be used to endorse or promote
     products derived from this	software without specific prior	written
     permission. This software is provided ``as	is'' without express or
     implied warranty.

DATE LAST UPDATED OR CHECKED

   July	26th, 1993





IDS Working Group				               [Page 54]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			    MXLU


NAME

   MXLU
   Brunel University, UK


KEYWORDS

   DUA Connectivity, DUA Only, Free, Motif, Multiple Vendor Platforms,
   Needs ISODE,	Source,	UNIX, X	Window System

ABSTRACT

   MXLU	(Motif/X LookUp) is an X.500 DUA interface for the X Window
   System using	Motif.

   Ported from the Athena widgets version, MXLU	can be configured for
   many	different styles of interaction. Example configurations	are
   provided for	single window and multiple window use.

   MXLU	implements the `User-Friendly Naming' search strategy and also
   has a form-filling search mode. Asynchronous	directory operations are
   used.

   Full	user friendly add and modify functions are provided, with the
   ability to tailor the modify	screen to present simple subsets of the
   available attributes.

   Can also be configured as a bibliographic search tool for use with
   the ABDUX Project bibliographic DSAs.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   88 Standard compliant: Strong authentication	not yet	implemented.  No
   plans for support of	the 1992 Standard.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   No plans at present.

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   No plans at present.

INTEROPERABILITY

   Tested with ISODE-8.0




IDS Working Group				               [Page 55]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			    MXLU


PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   DUA Connectivity: The interface is in use in	the UK Academic
   Directory Pilot.

BUGS

   Bugs	should be reported to x500@brunel.ac.uk.

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   Does	not support modification of all	known attribute	syntaxes.  In
   particular, ACLs and	O/R addresses are not catered for.

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   As ISODE.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   Most	UNIX machines.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   UNIX
   Motif 1.1 >
   ISODE/QUIPU (version	8.0 >)

AVAILABILITY

   Sources are freely available	for commercial or non-commercial use.
   Binaries for	SunOs 4.1.3 are	also available from Brunel, to simplify
   installation	on sites that do not already use ISODE.

	FTP site: src.brunel.ac.uk
	Directory: /x500
	Source code files: mxlu-1.1.tar.Z query-1.1.tar.Z
	Binary file: mxlubin-1.1.tar.Z

   Contacts.

   Postal Address:
	Andrew Findlay
	Computing and Media Systems
	Brunel University
	Cleveland Road
	Uxbridge, Middlesex
	UB8 3PH



IDS Working Group				               [Page 56]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			    MXLU


	UK

   E-mail: x500@brunel.ac.uk.

   Fax:	+44 895	32806 (Andrew Findlay)

   Telephone: +44 895 203066 (Andrew Findlay)

DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   March 10th, 1994








































IDS Working Group				               [Page 57]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog	       PathWay Messaging


NAME

   PathWay Messaging


KEYWORDS

   386,	CLNS, Commercially Available, DSA Connectivity,	DSA/DUA, DUA
   Connectivity, DUA Interface,	IBM PC,	LDAP, Macintosh, Multiple Vendor
   Platforms, OSI Transport, RFC-1006, RFC-1202, RFC-1277, RFC-1278,
   Sun,	X.25

ABSTRACT

   PathWay Messaging Services is a full	X.400 MTA and X.400-Internet
   gateway that	includes an integrated X.500 DSA/DUA. It supports full
   DUA and DSA functions as well as full DAP and DSP protocols specified
   in X.519. The DSA may be used exclusively for enterprise-wide
   messaging, or as a general purpose X.500 DSA. The product has
   successfully	participated in	OSInet X.500 I-Lab interoperability
   tests.

   PathWay Messenger is	an email application for desktop class machines
   with	a limited functionality	DUA Light Weight Client	that provides
   access (per RFC 1202, Directory Assistance Service -	support	for LDAP
   is planned) over TCP/IP to the X.500	DSA/DUA	included with PathWay
   Messaging Services.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   PathWay Messaging Services is a complete implementation of the 1988
   X.500 Recommendations with the exception of strong authentication as
   outlined in X.509.  It is conformant	to NIST, EWOS, and UK GOSIP
   Directory profiles. It provides network through application layer
   protocol support, with support for all attribute types, syntaxes, and
   object classes defined in X.520 and X.521. Support for 1992
   extensions to X.500 is planned for future release as	is support for
   X/Open Object Management (OM) and X/Open Directory Services (XDS)
   standards.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   PathWay Messaging Services' X.500 supports the following Internet
   Proposals: [RFC 1277].







IDS Working Group				               [Page 58]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog	       PathWay Messaging


CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   PathWay Messaging Services' X.500 supports the following Internet
   Proposals: [RFC 1202] and [RFC 1278].

INTEROPERABILITY

   PathWay Messaging Services has undergone successful interoperability
   testing with	Control	Data, DEC, HP, and the ISODE Consortium	using
   EurOSInet test suites.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   Tested DUA and DSA connectivity with	PARADISE and PSI White Pages
   Project.

BUGS

   Send	bug reports to:
       prod-eng@twg.com

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   [No information provided--Ed.]

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   RFC1006 with	TCP/IP,	TP4 with CNLS, TP0/2 or	TP4 with X.25.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   PathWay Messaging Services runs on all models of Sun	SPARC and
   generic 386/486 systems.  PathWay Messenger (email with lightweight
   DUA)	also runs on Macintosh,	and on IBM PC/AT and compatibles.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   PathWay Messaging Services supports SunOS 4.1.2, Solaris 1.0.1, and
   SunSoft INTERACTIVE UNIX. PathWay Messenger also supports SCO, MacOS
   and MS-Windows.











IDS Working Group				               [Page 59]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog	       PathWay Messaging


AVAILABILITY

   PathWay Messaging is	commercially available from:

	The Wollongong Group, Inc.
	1129 San Antonio Road
	Palo Alto, CA 94303 USA

	Sales and Information: (415) 962 7100
	FAX: (415) 969-5547

DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   July	27th, 1993





































IDS Working Group				               [Page 60]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			  PC-DUA


NAME

   PC-DUA
   NEXOR


KEYWORDS

   386,	Commercially Available,	DUA Connectivity, DUA Interface, IBM PC,
   LDAP, RFC-1487

ABSTRACT

   PC-DUA provides a MS	Windows	based user interface to	the X.500
   Directory.

   Features include:

   - Searching
   - Directory Browser - to enable user	to identify directory entry
   - History - allowing	quick access to	previously referenced parts
     of	the DIT.
   - User Friendly Name	(UFN) based searching
   - Hypertext-like navigation.
   - Friendly names for	attribute labels.
   - Intelligent choice	of entries to display when moving to a new
     location in the DIT.
   - O-line hypertext help.


COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   Compliant with LDAP.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   The following are supported:	RFC 1487

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   [No information provided--Ed.]

INTEROPERABILITY

   PC-DUA has interoperated with LDAP 2.0 and 3.0 beta distributions.






IDS Working Group				               [Page 61]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			  PC-DUA


PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   Full	DUA connectivity to the	PARADISE and PSI White Pages X.500
   Pilots.

BUGS

   No known bugs.  Support is given via	phone or email to
   "support@nexor.co.uk"

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   None.

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   WinSock based TCP/IP	stacks

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   386 PC WITH 4MGBYTES	RAM

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   MS WINDOWS 3.1

AVAILABILITY

   PC-DUA is commercial	software.  For more details contact:

	NEXOR
	8 Faraday Building
	Highfields Science Park
	Nottingham
	NG7 2QP
	UK

	DN:		c=GB@o=NEXOR Ltd
	Telephone:	+44 602	520500
	Fax:		+44 602	520519
	E-Mail:		sales@nexor.co.uk


DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   August 6th, 1993





IDS Working Group				               [Page 62]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			PC-Pages


NAME

   PC-Pages
   Brunel University, UK


KEYWORDS

   DUA Connectivity, DUA Only, IBM PC, LDAP, Limited Availability,
   Multiple Vendor Platforms, OSI Transport, RFC-1006

ABSTRACT

   PC-Pages is a MS-DOS	based X.500 DUA	interface. It is currently only
   available for MS-Windows; a DOS character mode interface is being
   prepared.

   Features include:

   - "Form" based searching.
   - Supports the User Friendly	Name (UFN) specification (RFC 1484).
   - Powerful query engine.
   - Tailorable	entry display -	display	only those attributes required.
   - Integrates	with the WhiteMail X.400 user agent. Hooks are provided
     to	allow integration with other user agents.
   - Directory browsing.
   - Support for JPEG photo attributes.
   - Modify directory entries.
   - Add directory entries.
   - Delete directory entries.
   - Rebind to a configured DSA.
   - Some support for configuration of DAP service parameters.


   Two versions	of PC-Pages are	currently available. One supports DAP
   over	CONS or	DAP over RFC-1006, and has data	entry and modification
   facilities.	The other supports LDAP	and has	a more advanced	user
   interface including a tree-browser, but does	not yet	have data entry
   and modification.

   A version in	the form or a Windows DLL (Dynamic Link	Library) is
   being prepared, for incorporation into other	products such as mail
   agents.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   88 Standard compliant: Strong authentication	not yet	implemented.  No
   plans for support of	the 1992 Standard.



IDS Working Group				               [Page 63]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			PC-Pages


CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   [No information provided--Ed.]

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   [No information provided--Ed.]

INTEROPERABILITY

   Tested with Quipu 8.0.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   DUA Connectivity: The interface is in use in	the UK Academic
   Directory Pilot.

BUGS

   Bugs	should be reported to x500@brunel.ac.uk.

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   Does	not support display or modification of all known attribute
   syntaxes. In	particular: ACLs and O/R addresses.

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   RFC1006 with	TCP/IP.	TP4 with CONS. A NetBIOS gateway to the
   previously listed protocols.	LDAP using Winsock.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   PC-Pages for	Windows	requires an IBM	PC compatible with 286 or
   higher, 2mb+	memory.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   Windows 3.0 or 3.1 running in Standard or Enhanced mode.  WhiteStack
   1.1,	provided by the	Edinburgh University Computing Service.

AVAILABILITY

   Free	to UK Academic Community, and to some other communities	subject
   to certain restrictions. Commercial derivatives exist.  Please send
   queries to:





IDS Working Group				               [Page 64]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			PC-Pages


   Postal:
	Andrew Findlay
	Computing and Media Services
	Brunel University
	Cleveland Road
	Uxbridge, Middlesex
	UB8 3PH
	UK

   E-mail: x500@brunel.ac.uk.

   Fax:	+44 895	32806 (Andrew Findlay)

   Telephone: +44 895 203066 (Andrew Findlay)

DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   March 10th, 1994

































IDS Working Group				               [Page 65]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog		       QuickMail


NAME

   QuickMail/X.500 Interface (DUA Interface)
   NASA


KEYWORDS

   DUA Interface, Limited Availability,	Needs ISODE, RFC-1274, Sun

ABSTRACT

   The NASA QuickMail/X.500 Interface program is a program which
   translates QuickMail	name service requests into X.500 requests and
   returns the results from the	DSA to the QuickMail user.  This system
   allows QuickMail users  the ability to find non-QuickMail users' or
   non-local QuickMail users' addresses, while retaining the normal
   QuickMail lookup interface.	The program speaks QuickMail name
   service protocol on one side, and DAP on the	other.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   [Same as dish] -- does not support strong authentication.  No support
   for 1992 extensions needed.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   RFC 1274 supported to the extent that we use	provided schema	to store
   QuickMail addresses.

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   [No information provided--Ed.]

INTEROPERABILITY

   Works with Quipu (ISODE 8.0,	ICR1)

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   Connected to	PSI WPPP, PARADISE.  Other projects may	use data if they
   are connected to either of these DSAs.

BUGS

   No known bugs.  Default QuickMail name service lookup time out of 10
   seconds may be too fast for some DSAs to respond to.




IDS Working Group				               [Page 66]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog		       QuickMail


CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   Requires the	Columbia AppleTalk Package (CAP	6.0) to	work.

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   EtherTalk or	IPTalk on the Macintosh	side, any ISODE	supported
   environment on the X.500 side.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   Known to run	on Sun 4/470

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   SunOS 4.1.1 and 4.1.3 can be	used to	host the package.  Additionally
   may need SunLink OSI	7.0.1, Sunlink X.25 7.0.  ISODE	8.0 or ISODE
   Consortium Release 1	needed to provide DAP support.

AVAILABILITY

   Limited availability.  For more details contact,
      Peter Yee
      MS 233-18
      NASA Ames	Research Center
      Moffett Field, CA	94035-1000
      (415) 604-3812
      (415) 604-6999 (FAX)
      yee@atlas.arc.nasa.gov

DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   February 18th, 1993


















IDS Working Group				               [Page 67]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog  QUIPU (ISODE Con. Rel. 1.0)


NAME

   QUIPU (ISODE	Consortium Release 1.0)
   ISODE Consortium


KEYWORDS

   API,	DSA Connectivity, DSA/DUA, DUA Connectivity, Free, Multiple
   Vendor Platforms, OSI Transport, RFC-1006, RFC-1274,	RFC-1275, RFC-
   1276, RFC-1277, RFC-1278, RFC-1279, RFC-1484, RFC-1485, RFC-1487,
   Source, Sun,	UNIX, X.25

ABSTRACT

   This	implementation is a source release derived from	the earlier
   openly available version of QUIPU, and will be used as base
   technology for products by a	number of vendors. The release comprises
   of a	DSA, and a number of sample DUAs which may be used in
   conjunction with the	DSA.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   The DSA is aligned to the 1988 ISO IS and the NIST OIW Directory
   Implementors	Guide Version 1, with the following exceptions:

   - Strong authentication is not implemented (but hooks are
     provided for use with two packages).
   - QUIPU does	not enforce the	bounds constraints on attributes,
     filters or	APDU size.
   - T.61 string formatting characters are not rejected.
   - If	a DN is	supplied with no password in an	unprotected simple bind,
     QUIPU does	not always check to see	if the DN exists. If the DSA
     connected to can say authoritatively the DN does not exist, the
     association is rejected. However, if a chain operation is required
     to	check the DN, the bind IS allowed.
   - When comparing attributes of UTCtime syntax, if the seconds field
     is	omitted, QUIPU does not	perform	the match correctly (i.e., the
     seconds field in the attribute values should be ignored, but are
     not).
   - QUIPU always supplies the optional	Chaining argument
     "originator" even if the CommonArgument "requestor" is used.
   - QUIPU always supplies the optional	Chaining argument "target"
     even if the base object in	the DAP	arguments is the same.
   - The object	class "without an assigned object identifier" is
     not recognised unless the "alias" object class is also present.
   - Non Specific Subordinate References are never followed by a QUIPU
     DSA, but they are passed on correctly to the client if generated.



IDS Working Group				               [Page 68]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog  QUIPU (ISODE Con. Rel. 1.0)


   Compliance with X.500(1993) standards is planned. DAP and replication
   (DISP) will be available in March 1994. Other 1993 features,	with the
   exception of	DOB, but including security features will be available.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   [RFC	1485], [RFC 1487], [RFC	1274], [RFC 1276], [RFC	1277].

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   [RFC	1484], [RFC 1275], [RFC	1278], [RFC 1279].

INTEROPERABILITY

   Interoperability with several other DSAs has	been demonstrated in
   pilot operation and at the COS X.500	Interoperability Lab, enhancing
   interoperability results from the earler versions of	QUIPU.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   Connectivity	to the global research pilot (PARADISE etc.) has been
   demonstrated. It is expected	that this system will be used
   extensively in a wide range of pilot	activities.  DUA Connectivity,
   and DSA Connectivity.

BUGS

   Bugs	should be reported to <bug-quipu@isode.com>

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   None

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   The IC R1.0 release is application level code, and assumes vendor
   provided lower layers. It provides the following modules with support
   for a range of APIs to handle associated lower layers:

   - RFC 1006 (vendor supplied TCP/IP using sockets or TLI)
   - Transport service (vendor supplied	transport, which may be	any
     class and use any network service.	TLI, XTI and various
     vendor-specific APIs).
   - TP0 (Vendor supplied X.25 or CONS using NTI and various vendor
     specific APIs).






IDS Working Group				               [Page 69]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog  QUIPU (ISODE Con. Rel. 1.0)


HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   Reference platform is SUN SPARC.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   Reference OS	is SUNOS 4.1.3.	It is also known to run	on various other
   UNIX	platforms.

AVAILABILITY

   Available to	members	of the ISODE Consortium. Membership is open to
   any organisation. Also available under licence (zero	cost) to all
   non-commercial research organisations. Contact:

	ISODE Consortium
	Headquarters
	PO Box 505
	London
	SW11 1DX
	UK

	Phone: +44-71-223-4062
	Fax:   +44-71-223-3846

	Email:	<ic-info@isode.com>


DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   August 11th,	1993




















IDS Working Group				               [Page 70]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog   Traxis Enterprise Directory


NAME

   Traxis Enterprise Directory
   Angeli Systems Corporation


KEYWORDS

   API,	CLNS, Commercially Available, DSA/DUA, HP, IBM PC, IBM RISC,
   Macintosh, OSI Transport, RFC-1006, RFC-1274, Sun, X.25

ABSTRACT

   The Traxis Enterprise Directory has multiple	components in a	three
   layer architecture. The individual components of the	Traxis family
   are building	blocks which can be assembled in a flexible, modular way
   to build complex systems.

   At the enterprise level, is a distributed directory stored and
   managed by Traxis Directory Engines (TDEs). At the workgroup	level
   Traxis Directory Hubs (TDHs)	provide	the means to integrate and
   connect Traxis Directory Engines to the wide	variety	of real	world
   applications	and systems which prevail in network environments. The
   TDE and the TDH support the myriad of client	applications, including
   messaging and business applications,	which require services from the
   Traxis directory.

   At the desktop level, the Traxis Desktop Client (TDC) provides a
   common set of facilities which simplify and enable communications,
   object manipulation,	and results management as required between the
   Traxis Directory Hub	and applications. These	capabilities, which
   include full	access and management of the directory,	are provided to
   applications	through	XDS++, the Traxis object oriented API. The
   Traxis Desktop Client also supports industry	standard client	software
   interfaces such as Microsoft	MAPI, Apple OCE, CMC and VIM, through
   Compatibility Modules which map the standard	API into XDS++.	Through
   these APIs the Traxis Desktop Client	supports applications of all
   kinds on PC,	Macintosh, and UNIX systems.

   Angeli supplied Traxis applications include the Traxis Administrative
   Console management station, the Traxis Global Browser general
   directory tool, the Traxis Operator Assistance high-speed look-up,
   the Traxis Data Base	Gateway, the Traxis Import Export Utility and
   more.

   The Traxis Directory	Engine includes	an X.500 DSA. The Traxis
   Directory Hub includes an X.500 DUA.




IDS Working Group				               [Page 71]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog   Traxis Enterprise Directory


COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   Traxis Directory Engine DSA is CCITT-1988 compliant with extended
   security and	access control.	Supports access	control	on User, Entry,
   and Attribute levels. DIB or	subtree	administrative manager
   supported. Supports simple authentication with encrypted password.

   NIST	OIW Stable Implementation Agreements [NIST-88] compliant.

   Support for February	14, 1993 CCITT X.500 planned. X.509 in first
   half	of 1994. Replication and Administrative/Information Model in
   second half of 1994.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   Traxis conforms to RFC1274 which documents COSINE interoperability.

   LDAP	(RFC 1487) is planned for inclusion in a later release of Traxis
   if market demand requires it.

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   Traxis does not conform to the QUIPU	RFC Internet Proposals cited.
   As noted elsewhere, Traxis is fully compatible with QUIPU
   operationally but does not use the cited RFCs in its	internal
   operations.

INTEROPERABILITY

   Traxis has been extensively tested for interoperability with	ISODE
   QUIPU Version 8. Traxis Directory Engine (DSA) will serve DISH or
   other QUIPU DUAs using DAP. Traxis Directory	Hub interoperates with
   QUIPU DSA. All directory access functions and their chained
   equivalents are interoperable.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   PARADISE DUA/DSA connectivity tested.

BUGS

   Problems may	be reported to support@angeli.com.

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   None.





IDS Working Group				               [Page 72]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog   Traxis Enterprise Directory


INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   Traxis Directory Hub	to Traxis Directory Engine (or any DSA)
   communication via RFC1006 over TCP/IP, OSI TP4 with CLNS, and OSI TP0
   with	X.25. Traxis Desktop Client to Traxis Directory	Hub via	SPX/IPX
   or TCP/IP. Other LAN	protocols supported in 1994.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   Traxis Directory Hub	and Traxis Directory Engine:
     Sun and PC	currently supported. IBM RS/6000, HP 9000, and others in
     1994.
   Traxis Desktop Client and applications:
     PC	currently supported; Macintosh in 1994.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   Traxis Directory Hub	and Traxis Directory Engine:
     All Sun platforms with Sun	OS 4.1.3 currently supported, Solaris
     2.x in 1994. Industry standard PC platforms with SCO Open Desktop
     V3	currently supported.  Other UNIX platforms in 1994. Windows NT
     in	1994.
   Traxis Desktop Client and applications:
     PC	with Windows 3.1 currently supported. Macintosh	Systems	6 and 7,
     UNIX Motif, DOS, X	Windows, and others planned for	1994.

AVAILABILITY

   The Traxis Enterprise Directory is commercially available from:

      Angeli Systems Corporation
      1659 Eleventh Street
      Santa Monica, CA 90404
      +1 310 392 3000
      +1 310 392 4700 FAX

      info@angeli.com

DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   November 23rd, 1993










IDS Working Group				               [Page 73]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog		      UCOM.X 500


NAME

   UCOM.X 500 (tm) - E3.X [DSA and DUA]


KEYWORDS

   386,	API, Bull, CLNS, Commercially Available, DEC ULTRIX, DSA
   Connectivity, DSA/DUA, DUA Connectivity, IBM	RISC, Motif, Multiple
   Vendor Platforms, OpenLook, RFC-1006, RFC-1274, RFC-1277, RFC-1278,
   RFC-1279, Sequent, Sun, Tandem, UNIX, X.25

ABSTRACT

   UCOM.X 500 includes a Directory System Agent	(DSA), various directory
   access APIs and Directory User Agents (DUAs). UCOM.X	500 is a product
   based on PIZARRO, the research prototype developed at INRIA by
   Christian Huitema's team, and commercialized	by TS-E3X, a member of
   the France Telecom group.

   Characteristics of the DSA are:

   - The DAP and DSP protocols are provided conformant with X.500 (88).
   - The DIB is	maintained in ASN.1 encoded format in the Unix file
     system.  Utilities	are provided to	load and dump the DIB from and
     to	ASCII text files.
   - The DIT structure is held in main memory. Frequently used attributes
     may be held in inverted tables in memory to speed up searches.
   - Knowledge management: knowledge on	managed	domains	is stored in
     UCOM.X specific attributes	of the DSA entries.
   - Schema: The X.500 (88), X.400 (88)	and most of the	Cosine and
     Internet Schema are supported. Object class and attribute
     definitions are enforced.	Users may define their own.
   - Simple authentication is provided;	strong authentication and
     signed operations are being tested	operationally through TS-E3X's
     participation in PASSWORD,	a VALUE	project	with aim to pilot a
     European security infrastructure for network applications.
   - Access control: private mechanisms	are provided to	allow access
     control lists to be specified for parts of	the DIT, to control
     modifications, and	to specify access restrictions on attributes.
   - Management: a UCOM.X DSA object has been defined to allow
     operational parameters of the DSA to be managed via DAP.
     Administration utilities are provided to, e.g., generate usage
     statistics	and periodically update	the database from various data
     sources including a knowledge discovery tool.


   The product offers a	C language API conformant to X/Open's X/DS



IDS Working Group				               [Page 74]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog		      UCOM.X 500


   specification, and a	C++ API	(for release 10/93).

   The DUAs include a graphical	directory browser with powerful	search
   functionality for OpenLook and Motif, and a full-screen curses-based
   interface with full DAP functionality.

   TS-E3X's strategy for UCOM.X500 is three-fold: Firstly, to use it as
   the directory service for Spheris, France Telecom's range of
   electronic mail products based on X.400 (88)	(release mid '94).
   Secondly, to	offer it to third parties developing specific
   applications	using X.500: current applications include a distributed
   application to control document transfer in a large French hospital
   and distributed applications	management in the French Post Office;
   planned uses	include	office applications for	control	of document
   circulation (workflow) and cooperative document editing. Thirdly, to
   offer it to telecomms operators such	as France Telecom for
   application in network management. UCOM.X 500 is used extensively by
   French research centers involved in PARADISE.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   UCOM.X 500 conforms to X.500	(88) as	specified in paragraph 9 of
   X.519.

   Development of the product based on X.500 (93) is planned for '94
   with	release	of a product conformant	to the principal extensions at
   the end of '94. Emphasis is being placed on the shadowing protocol,
   the schema and access control.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   The COSINE and Internet Schema (RFC 1274) is	supported with minor
   exceptions.

   The string representation of	PSAPs and their	internal encoding
   conforms to RFC 1277.

   The string representation of	DNs will migrate to the	Internet RFC
   1485	definition.

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   RFC 1279 (X.500 and Domains)	is supported. The string representation
   of PSAPs and	their internal encoding	conforms to RFC	1278.

   AFRO	(algorithme francais de	recherche optimise), the search	/ name
   resolution algorithm	proposed by UCOM.X 500,	differs	from the UFN
   algorithm principally in that it attempts to	optimize by performing



IDS Working Group				               [Page 75]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog		      UCOM.X 500


   read	operations before resorting to searches	in order to exploit the
   name	error information.

INTEROPERABILITY

   Through UCOM.X 500's	use in the French PARADISE pilot,
   interoperability has	been informally	but extensively	tested with
   Quipu and other implementations.

   Detailed interoperability tests  with Quipu,	Marben and  Siemens/Bull
   DIR/X are being conducted by	 the PARADISE OIFP (Operational
   Interworking) team at INRIA Rocquencourt, France.

   The product	is currently also undergoing  formal tests for
   conformance to the CTS2  DSA/DAP and	 ACSE/Presentation/Session
   specifications  at the  French OSI conformance test centre.


PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   DSA and DUA connectivity to the PARADISE pilot.

BUGS

   UCOM.X 500 is a commercial product. As such,	it is supported	and bugs
   are fixed when detected. Bug	reports	can be sent to our support team
   via electronic mail.

CAVEATS	AND GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   The DIT structure and inverted attribute tables are stored in main
   memory. The recommended main	memory size for	a DSA is 1 kb per node,
   i.e., 10 Mb for a database of 10,000	objects. The current recommended
   maximum is a	database size of the order of 100,000 objects.

   Of the selected attribute types defined in X.500 (88), the
   searchGuide attribute is not	supported ; neither are	the following
   attributes from the Cosine and Internet Schema (RFC 1274):
   OtherMailbox, MailPreferenceOption and the various quality
   attributes.

   The X/DS API	supports the Basic Directory Contents (BDCP), the MHS
   Directory User (MDUP) and the Strong	Authentication (SAP) packages
   with	minor limitations. A proprietary mechanism for defining	new
   classes and attributes is offered. Asynchronous operations and
   multiple concurrent sessions	are not	supported. Whilst referral may
   be handled automatically, continuation references are not.




IDS Working Group				               [Page 76]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog		      UCOM.X 500


INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   UCOM.X 500 includes a transport stack for TP0 with TCP/IP (RFC 1006)
   and X.25.  The stack	has been ported	to SunNet OSI for TP4 with CLNP.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   UCOM.X 500 can easily be ported to any UNIX machine.	It currently
   runs	on: Sun	3 and 4, IBM RS	6000, DEC ULTRIX (Vax and Mips), 386-
   based PCs, Bull DPX/2 and DPX/20, Sequent, Tandem and others.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   UCOM.X 500 is portable to any UNIX-like operating system. It	has been
   ported to: UNIX SVR3	and SVR4, SUN OS 4, AIX, SCO Unix, Interactive
   Unix, ULTRIX, HP-UX,	Dynix (Sequent), BOS (Bull) and	others.

   Ports to the	following are planned: OS/2 ('94), Windows 3 ('94).

   The product does not	make use of an external	DBMS for the information
   base.

AVAILABILITY

   UCOM.X is commercially available. For further information contact:

	 Pascal	Duchamp, International Sales

	 Address: TS-E3X, Le Capitole 44, avenue des Champs Pierreux,
			   99029 Nanterre Cedex, France
	 Tel:	   (+33) 1-46-14-50-00
	 Fax:	   (+33) 1-46-14-58-16
	 Email:	C=FR;A=atlas;P=e3x;O=e3x;OU1=paris;S=duchamp
		duchamp@paris.e3x.fr

     or: Laurence Puvilland, Marketing
	 Email:	C=fr;A=atlas;P=e3x;O=e3x;OU1=paris;S=puvilland
		puvilland@paris.e3x.fr

     or: Ascan Woermann, R&D
	 Email:	C=fr;A=atlas;P=e3x;O=e3x;S=Woermann
		woermann@e3x.fr


DATE LAST UPDATED

   July, 1993




IDS Working Group				               [Page 77]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog	      Wang OPEN/services


NAME

   Wang	OPEN/services (tm)
   Wang	Laboratories, Inc.


KEYWORDS

   CLNS, Commercially Available, DSA/DUA, DUA Interface, HP, IBM PC, IBM
   RISC, Limited Functionality,	OSI Transport, RFC-1006, Wang, X.25

ABSTRACT

   Wang's X.500	products are a part of our OPEN/services product whose
   main	features include the following:

   X.500 directory - Contains information about	organizations,
   individuals,	and distribution lists.	The directory is the primary
   vehicle by which users of OPEN/office, Wang's X.400 electronic mail
   product, address mail.

   Authentication Services - Verifies the login	name and password of
   each	user logging into OPEN/services.

   International support - Provides character translation tables so that
   users can display screens containing	international characters and use
   international collating sequences.

   Object management - Greatly increases the integration between
   OPEN/services, OPEN/office and other	Windows-based applications.

   Activity logging - Records the activities of	OPEN/services. This
   information can be useful for monitoring the	OPEN/services processes
   and for troubleshooting.

   Database management - Provides utilities that validate and reorganize
   the OPEN/services databases including the Directory Information Base
   (DIB).

   OPEN/services includes a DSA, a DUA,	and a DUA interface all	rolled
   into	one product. (The DUA interface	protocol is private.)

   Wang	OPEN/services consists of two parts: software installed	on a
   server and software installed on PC clients on a LAN. The client or
   end-user software enables users to log in and log out; change the
   login password; use the OPEN/services directory; and	perform	various
   actions, such as open and print, on files in	the Wang
   OPEN/applications and in certain third-party	applications including



IDS Working Group				               [Page 78]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog	      Wang OPEN/services


   Microsoft Windows File Manager. The server consists of the DSA, the
   DUA,	the Directory Information Base,	the service administration
   programs such as login authentication, the database management
   utilities, and activity logging.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   Wang	OPEN/services complies with the	1988 CCITT Recommendations
   X.500-X.521 [CCITT-88] with the following exceptions. Whole tree
   searches are	not supported, nor does	the product support chained
   adding, modifying, or deleting. Simple authentication is supported,
   but strong authentication is	not.

   In the future, the 1992 extensions to the X.500 standard will be
   supported by	Wang OPEN/services.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   None	are supported at the present time.

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   None	are supported at the present time.

INTEROPERABILITY

   The interoperability	of OPEN/services with other X.500 products is
   untested.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   Pilot connectivity between OPEN/services and	the AARNET project, NADF
   Pilot Project, NIST Pilot Project, PARADISE,	and PSI	White Pages
   Project has not been	attempted.

BUGS

   To report problems with Wang	OPEN/services, contact your local Wang
   sales office, your Wang authorized reseller or call your regional
   support center. (In the USA,	the number is 404-432-9001).

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   None







IDS Working Group				               [Page 79]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog	      Wang OPEN/services


INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   Wang	OPEN/services currently	runs in	the following environments:
   RFC1006 with	TCP/IP,	TP4 with CNLS, TP0 with	X.25 and SLIP.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   Server Requirements

   Installing Wang OPEN/services Server	requires the following hardware:
   a Wang RISC Series Server 220 or greater, or	an IBM RISC
   System/6000(tm) with	a minimum of 32	MB of memory, or a Hewlett-
   Packard 9000	Series 800 system with a minimum of 32 MB of memory. For
   each	system a minimum of 20 MB of free disk space in	a file system is
   required.

   Client Requirements

   Installing OPEN/services for	Windows	requires the following hardware:
   a 386/SX CPU	or later, at least 4 MB	of memory, a hard disk drive
   with	at least 2.5 MB	of disk	space, and a VGA monitor. A pointing
   device is not required to run OPEN/services but is strongly
   recommended.

   Network Requirements

   OPEN/services has the following network requirements: 802.3 or 802.5
   LAN,	network	interface cards	(NICs) to support TCP/IP on client PCs,
   Ethernet or token ring adapters on the servers, and optionally X.25
   cards on the	servers.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   Server Requirements

   Installing Wang OPEN/services Server	requires the following software:
   AIX Operating System, release 3.2.3 or later, with bundled support
   for the TCP/IP protocol suite, or HP-UX Operating System, Release 9.0
   or later.

   Client Requirements

   OPEN/services for Windows requires the following software: Microsoft
   MS-DOS(tm) Operating	System,	Release	5.0 or later and Microsoft
   Windows 3.1 or later.






IDS Working Group				               [Page 80]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog	      Wang OPEN/services


AVAILABILITY

   Wang	OPEN/services is commercially available	from:

      Wang Laboratories, Inc.
      1	Industrial Avenue
      Lowell, Massachusetts 01851
      Phone: 508-967-6114
      FAX: 508-967-1105

   To obtain OPEN/services, contact your local Wang sales office, your
   Wang	authorized reseller or call 1-800-NEW-WANG.

DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   December 6th, 1993



































IDS Working Group				               [Page 81]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			     Xdi


NAME

   Xdi - DUA
   Bellcore


KEYWORDS

   Available via FTP, DUA Connectivity,	DUA Only, Free,	Limited
   Functionality, Multiple Vendor Platforms, Needs ISODE, RFC-1274,
   RFC-1484, Source, Sun, UNIX,	X Window System

ABSTRACT

   Xdi is a Directory User Agent (DUA) for the X Window	System.	 In
   addition to providing a user-friendly interface, it supports
   Directory interactions of different levels of complexity. Users can
   select different window screens to browse, search and modify	the
   Directory.  There are two different search screens for name based
   search and attribute	based search. It is simple to use for novice
   users but is	also useful for	more advanced users to formulate complex
   search filters.  Xdi	also supports "user-friendly naming" in	many
   cases so that users are not required	to know	X.500 naming format.


COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   88 standard compliant: Delete and Add operations, and strong
   authentication not implemented. There are no	facilities to modify the
   RDNs	of entries.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   RFC 1274 is supported.

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   RFC 1484 is supported.

INTEROPERABILITY

   Believed to be interoperable	with other DSAs. Only tested against
   ISODE/QUIPU DSAs.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   DUA Connectivity




IDS Working Group				               [Page 82]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			     Xdi


BUGS

   Send	bug reports to sywuu@thumper.bellcore.com

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS


INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   Same	as ISODE.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   This	software has been tested on SUN4. It is	expected that the
   software is portable	to SUN3	and other UNIX machines.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   Xdi is expected to run on ISODE (release 7.0	upwards) in UNIX
   environment.	 The 'xdi' directory has been designed to fit directly
   into	the ISODE source tree. Xdi requires X11R4, the associated Xt
   toolkit and Athena widget libraries.	 Also see the operating
   environments	of ISODE.

AVAILABILITY

   The Xdi software is available via anonymous FTP from
   thumper.bellcore.com	in file	pub/xdi.tar.Z. Source code and
   executables can be freely distributed or modified for non-commercial
   and non-profit use provided that all	copyright notices, permission
   and nonwarranty notice included in the software distribution	remain
   intact.

   For further information contact Sze-Ying Wuu	at
   sywuu@thumper.bellcore.com.

DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   March 18th, 1993












IDS Working Group				               [Page 83]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			     XLU


NAME

   XLU
   Brunel University, UK


KEYWORDS

   DUA Connectivity, DUA Only, Free, Multiple Vendor Platforms,	Needs
   ISODE, Source, UNIX,	X Window System


ABSTRACT

   XLU (X LookUp) is an	X.500 DUA interface for	the X Window System.

   XLU can be configured for many different styles of interaction.
   Example configurations are provided for single window and multiple
   window use.

   XLU implements the `User-Friendly Naming' search strategy and also
   has a form-filling search mode. Asynchronous	directory operations are
   used.

   Full	user friendly add and modify functions are provided, with the
   ability to tailor the modify	screen to present simple subsets of the
   available attributes.

COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   88 Standard compliant: Strong authentication	not yet	implemented.  No
   plans for support of	the 1992 Standard.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   No plans at present.

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   No plans at present.

INTEROPERABILITY

   [No information provided--Ed.]







IDS Working Group				               [Page 84]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			     XLU


PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   DUA Connectivity: The interface is in use in	the UK Academic
   Directory Pilot.

BUGS

   Bugs	should be reported to x500@brunel.ac.uk.

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   [No information provided--Ed.]

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   As ISODE.

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   Most	UNIX machines.

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   UNIX
   MIT X11R5 libraries
   ISODE/QUIPU (version	8.0 >)

AVAILABILITY

   Sources are freely available	for commercial or non-commercial use.
   Contacts.

   Postal Address:
	Andrew Findlay
	Computing and Media Systems
	Brunel University
	Cleveland Road
	Uxbridge, Middlesex
	UB8 3PH
	UK

   E-mail: x500@brunel.ac.uk.

   Fax:	+44 895	32806 (Andrew Findlay)

   Telephone: +44 895 203066 (Andrew Findlay)





IDS Working Group				               [Page 85]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			     XLU


DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   March 1st, 1993
















































IDS Working Group				               [Page 86]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			  XT-DUA


NAME

   XT-DUA
   NEXOR


KEYWORDS

   Bull, CLNS, Commercially Available, DUA Connectivity, DUA Only, HP,
   IBM RISC, ICL, Motif, Multiple Vendor Platforms, OpenLook, OSI
   Transport, RFC-1006,	RFC-1274, RFC-1277, RFC-1278, RFC-1484,
   Solbourne, Sun, X Window System, X.25

ABSTRACT

   XT-DUA provides a X-Windows based user interface to the X.500
   Directory.  Both Motif and OpenLook styles are supported.

   Browsing features include:

   - Passing of	user address information to the	XT-MUA X.400 user agent.
   - History - allowing	quick access to	previously referenced parts of
     the DIT.
   - Customizable entry	display	- allowing subsets of attributes be
     displayed when showing an entry.
   - User Friendly Name	(UFN) based searching
   - Hypertext-like navigation.
   - Support for application entities e.g. startup of ftam session.
   - User defined name for attribute labels.
   - Support for photo and audio attributes.
   - Attribute value on	scanline.
   - Intelligent choice	of entries to display when moving to a new
     location in the DIT.


   Management features include:

   - Creation of new entries.
   - Modification of existing entries (including RDN) -	based on
     Quipu EDB format.
   - Deletion of entries.
   - Friendly editor of	modifying Quipu	ACLs.
   - Rebinding - authenticated and to named DSA.
   - Full configuration	of DAP request parameters







IDS Working Group				               [Page 87]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			  XT-DUA


COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   Compliant with X.500(88), and NIST SIA version 2 except X.509 strong
   authentication not implemented (under development).

   NEXOR is committed to migrate XT-DUA	to the 1992 standards.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   The following are supported:	RFC 1274 and RFC 1277.

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   The following are supported:	UFN [RFC 1484] and RFC 1278.

INTEROPERABILITY

   XT-DUA has interoperated with all DSAs used in the PARADISE pilot.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   Full	DUA connectivity to the	PARADISE and PSI White Pages X.500
   Pilots.

BUGS

   No known bugs.  Support is given via	phone or email to
   "support@nexor.co.uk"

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   None.

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   OSI TP4 with	CLNP, OSI TP0 with X.25	or CONS, and RFC 1006 with
   TCP/IP

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

      Sun
      Solbourne
      IBM RS/6000
      Bull DPX 6000
      HP Apollo	9000






IDS Working Group				               [Page 88]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			  XT-DUA


SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

      SunOs 4.1.x
      AIX 3.2
      HP-UX 9.01
      Windows 3.1 (over	LDAP)

   Other ports planned include SCO Unix	and ICL	DRS6000.

AVAILABILITY

   XT-DUA is commercial	software.  For more details contact:

	XT-DUA Sales
	NEXOR
	8 Faraday Building
	Highfields Science Park
	Nottingham
	NG7 2QP
	UK

	DN:		c=GB@o=NEXOR Ltd
	Telephone:	+44 602	520500
	Fax:		+44 602	520519
	E-Mail:		sales@nexor.co.uk


DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   August 2nd, 1993





















IDS Working Group				               [Page 89]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			XT-QUIPU


NAME

   XT-QUIPU
   NEXOR


KEYWORDS

   Bull, CLNS, Commercially Available, DSA Connectivity, DSA Only, HP,
   IBM RISC, ICL, Multiple Vendor Platforms, OSI Transport, RFC-1006,
   RFC-1274, RFC-1276, RFC-1277, RFC-1278, RFC-1279, RFC-1484, RFC-1485,
   Solbourne, Sun, X.25

ABSTRACT

   XT-QUIPU is an X.500(88) DSA.  Characteristics of the DSA are:

   - Full DAP access
   - Full DSP access
   - Support for X.400,	X.500, and RFC 1274 attributes and
     object classes
   - Approximate match based on	Soundex.
   - Flexible schema management
   - RFC 1276 Replication
   - Attribute level access control
   - Search and	list access control
   - Knowledge management mapped onto DIT
   - Attribute inheritance
   - Caching
   - Remote management


COMPLIANCE (applicable only for	DSAs and DUAs)

   Compliant with X.500(88), and NIST SIA version 2 except X.509 strong
   authentication not implemented (under development).

   NEXOR is committed to migrate XT-QUIPU to the 1992 standards.

CONFORMANCE WITH PROPOSED INTERNET STANDARDS

   The following are supported:	String DN format [RFC 1485], RFC 1274,
   RFC 1276, and RFC 1277.

CONSISTENCE WITH INFORMATIONAL AND EXPERIMENTAL	RFCs

   The following are supported:	UFN [RFC 1484],	RFC 1278, and RFC 1279.




IDS Working Group				               [Page 90]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			XT-QUIPU


INTEROPERABILITY

   XT-QUIPU interoperates will all DSAs	used in	the PARADISE pilot.

PILOT CONNECTIVITY

   XT-QUIPU DSAs are fully connected to	the PARADISE and PSI White Pages
   X.500 Pilots.

BUGS

   No known bugs.  Support is given via	phone or email to
   "support@nexor.co.uk"

CAVEATS	and GENERAL LIMITATIONS

   None.

INTERNETWORKING	ENVIRONMENT

   OSI TP4 wtih	CLNP
   OSI TP0 with	X.25 or	CONS
   RFC 1006 with TCP/IP

HARDWARE PLATFORMS

   Sun
   Solbourne
   IBM RS/6000
   Bull	DPX 6000
   ICL DRS/6000
   HP Apollo 9000

SOFTWARE PLATFORMS

   SunOs 4.1.x
   AIX 3.2
   DRS/NX 6000
   HP-UX 9.01

   Other ports planned include SCO Unix.

AVAILABILITY

   XT-QUIPU is commercial software.  For more details contact:






IDS Working Group				               [Page 91]

RFC 1632		     X.500 Catalog			XT-QUIPU


	XT-QUIPU Sales
	NEXOR
	8 Faraday Building
	Highfields Science Park
	Nottingham
	NG7 2QP
	UK

	DN:	   c=GB@o=NEXOR	Ltd
	Telephone: +44 602 520500
	Fax:	   +44 602 520519
	E-Mail:	   sales@nexor.co.uk


DATE LAST UPDATED or CHECKED

   August 2nd, 1993


































IETF IDS Working Group				               [Page 92]

INTERNET-DRAFT						      March 1994


4. References


    [CCITT-88]	CCITT, "Data Communications Networks Directory",
		Recommendations	X.500-X.521, Volume VIII - Fascicle
		VIII.8,	IXth Plenary Assembly, Melbourne, November 1988.

    [NIST-88]	National Institute of Standards	and Technology,	"Stable
		Implementation Agreements for Open Systems
		Interconnection	Protocols", Version 2 Edition 1, NIST
		Special	Publication 500-162, December 1988.

    [RFC 1202]	Rose, M., "Directory Assistance	Service", RFC 1202,
		Performance Systems International, Inc., February 1991.

    [RFC 1249]	Howes, T., Smith, M., and B. Beecher, "DIXIE Protocol
		Specification",	RFC 1249, University of	Michigan, August
		1991.

    [RFC 1274]	Barker,	P., and	S. Kille, "The COSINE and Internet X.500
		Schema", RFC 1274, University College, London, England,
		November 1991.

    [RFC 1275]	Kille, S., "Replication	Requirements to	provide	an
		Internet Directory using X.500," RFC 1275, University
		College, London, England, November 1991.

    [RFC 1276]	Kille, S.,  "Replication and Distributed Operations
		extensions to provide an Internet Directory using
		X.500",	RFC 1276, University College, London, England,
		November 1991.

    [RFC 1277]	Kille, S.,  "Encoding Network Addresses	to support
		operation over non-OSI lower layers", RFC 1277,
		University College, London, England, November 1991.

    [RFC 1278]	Kille, S., "A string encoding of Presentation Address",
		RFC 1278, University College, London, England, November
		1991.

    [RFC 1279]	Kille, S., "X.500 and Domains",	RFC 1279, University
		College, London, England, November 1991.

    [RFC 1484]	Kille, S., "Using the OSI Directory to achieve User
		Friendly Naming", RFC 1484, ISODE Consortium, July 1993.

    [RFC 1485]	S. Kille, "A String Representation of Distinguished




IETF IDS Working Group				               [Page 93]

INTERNET-DRAFT						      March 1994


		Names",	RFC 1485, ISODE	Consortium, July 1993.

    [RFC 1487]	Yeong, W., Howes, T., and S. Kille, "X.500 Lightweight
		Directory Access Protocol", RFC	1487, Performance
		Systems	International, University of Michigan, ISODE
		Consortium, July 1993.

    [RFC 1488]	Howes, T., Kille, S., Yeong, W., and C.	Robbins, "The
		X.500 String Representation of Standard	Attribute
		Syntaxes", RFC 1488, University	of Michigan, ISODE
		Consortium, Performance	Systems	International, NeXor
		Ltd., July 1993.

5. Security Considerations

   Security issues are not discussed in	this memo.

6.  Editors' Addresses

   Arlene F. Getchell
   Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
   National Energy Research Supercomputer Center
   P.O.	Box 5509, L-561
   Livermore, CA 94551

   Phone: (510)	423-6349
   EMail: getchell@es.net
   X.400: s=getchell;p=esnet;a=	;c=us;


   Srinivas R. Sataluri
   AT&T	Bell Laboratories
   Room	1C-429,	101 Crawfords Corner Road
   P.O.	Box 3030
   Holmdel, NJ 07733-3030

   Phone: (908)	949-7782
   EMail: sri@qsun.att.com













IETF IDS Working Group				               [Page 94]

 

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