<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!-- edited with XMLSPY v5 rel. 3 U (http://www.xmlspy.com)
     by Daniel M Kohn (private) -->
<!DOCTYPE rfc SYSTEM "rfc2629.dtd">
<rfc category="std" docName="draft-ietf-alto-performance-metrics-27"
     ipr="trust200902">
  <?xml-stylesheet type='text/xsl' href='rfc2629.xslt' ?>

  <?rfc toc="yes" ?>

  <?rfc symrefs="yes" ?>

  <?rfc sortrefs="yes"?>

  <?rfc iprnotified="no" ?>

  <?rfc strict="yes" ?>

  <front>
    <title abbrev="ALTO Performance Cost Metrics">ALTO Performance Cost
    Metrics</title>

    <author fullname="Qin Wu" initials="Q." surname="Wu">
      <organization>Huawei</organization>

      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>101 Software Avenue, Yuhua District</street>

          <city>Nanjing</city>

          <region>Jiangsu</region>

          <code>210012</code>

          <country>China</country>
        </postal>

        <email>bill.wu@huawei.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Y. Richard Yang" initials="Y." surname="Yang">
      <organization>Yale University</organization>

      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>51 Prospect St</street>

          <city>New Haven</city>

          <region>CT</region>

          <code>06520</code>

          <country>United States of America</country>
        </postal>

        <email>yry@cs.yale.edu</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Young Lee" initials="Y." surname="Lee">
      <organization>Samsung</organization>

      <address>
        <email>young.lee@gmail.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Dhruv Dhody" initials="D." surname="Dhody">
      <organization>Huawei</organization>

      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>Leela Palace</street>

          <city>Bangalore</city>

          <region>Karnataka</region>

          <code>560008</code>

          <country>India</country>
        </postal>

        <email>dhruv.ietf@gmail.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Sabine Randriamasy" initials="S." surname="Randriamasy">
      <organization>Nokia Bell Labs</organization>

      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>Route de Villejust</street>

          <city>Nozay</city>

          <region/>

          <code>91460</code>

          <country>France</country>
        </postal>

        <email>sabine.randriamasy@nokia-bell-labs.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Luis Miguel Contreras Murillo" initials="L."
            surname="Contreras">
      <organization>Telefonica</organization>

      <address>
        <postal>
          <street/>

          <city>Madrid</city>

          <region/>

          <code/>

          <country>Spain</country>
        </postal>

        <email>luismiguel.contrerasmurillo@telefonica.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <date year="2022"/>

    <area>TSV Area</area>

    <workgroup>ALTO Working Group</workgroup>

    <keyword>RFC</keyword>

    <keyword>Request for Comments</keyword>

    <keyword>I-D</keyword>

    <keyword>Internet-Draft</keyword>

    <keyword>JavaScript Object Notation, Application-Layer Traffic
    Optimization</keyword>

    <abstract>
      <t>The cost metric is a basic concept in Application-Layer Traffic
      Optimization (ALTO), and different applications may use different types
      of cost metrics. Since the ALTO base protocol (RFC 7285) defines only a
      single cost metric (namely, the generic "routingcost" metric), if an
      application wants to issue a cost map or an endpoint cost request in
      order to identify a resource provider that offers better performance
      metrics (e.g., lower delay or loss rate), the base protocol does not
      define the cost metric to be used.</t>

      <t>This document addresses this issue by extending the specification to
      provide a variety of network performance metrics, including network
      delay, delay variation (a.k.a, jitter), packet loss rate, hop count, and
      bandwidth.</t>

      <t>There are multiple sources (e.g., estimation based on measurements or
      service-level agreement) to derive a performance metric. This document
      introduces an additional "cost-context" field to the ALTO "cost-type"
      field to convey the source of a performance metric.</t>
    </abstract>

    <note title="Requirements Language">
      <t>The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
      "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
      "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14
      <xref target="RFC2119"/><xref target="RFC8174"/> when, and only when,
      they appear in all capitals, as shown here.</t>
    </note>
  </front>

  <middle>
    <section anchor="secintro" title="Introduction">
      <t>Application-Layer Traffic Optimization (ALTO) provides a means for
      network applications to obtain network information so that the
      applications can identify efficient application-layer traffic patterns
      using the networks. Cost metrics are used in both the ALTO cost map
      service and the ALTO endpoint cost service in the ALTO base protocol
      <xref target="RFC7285"/>.</t>

      <t>Since different applications may use different cost metrics, the ALTO
      base protocol introduces an ALTO Cost Metric Registry (Section 14.2 of
      <xref target="RFC7285"/>) as a systematic mechanism to allow different
      metrics to be specified. For example, a delay-sensitive application may
      want to use latency related metrics, and a bandwidth-sensitive
      application may want to use bandwidth related metrics. However, the ALTO
      base protocol has registered only a single cost metric, i.e., the
      generic "routingcost" metric (Section 14.2 of <xref target="RFC7285"/>);
      no latency or bandwidth related metrics are defined in the base
      protocol.</t>

      <t>This document registers a set of new cost metrics (Table 1) to allow
      applications to determine "where" to connect based on network
      performance criteria including delay and bandwidth related metrics.</t>

      <figure>
        <artwork>
+--------------------+-------------+--------------------------------+
| Metric             | Definition  |  Semantics Based On            |
|                    | in this doc |                                |
+--------------------+-------------+--------------------------------+
| One-way Delay      | Section 3.1 | Base: [RFC7471,8570,8571]      |
|                    |             |  sum Unidirectional Delay      |
| Round-trip Delay   | Section 3.2 | Base: Sum of two directions    |
|                    |             |  from above                    |
| Delay Variation    | Section 3.3 | Base: [RFC7471,8570,8571]      |
|                    |             |  sum of Unidirectional Delay   |
|                    |             |         Variation              |
| Loss Rate          | Section 3.4 | Base: [RFC7471,8570,8571]      |
|                    |             |  aggr Unidirectional Link Loss |
| Residual Bandwidth | Section 4.2 | Base: [RFC7471,8570,8571]      |
|                    |             |  min Unidirectional Residual BW|
| Available Bandwidth| Section 4.3 | Base: [RFC7471,8570,8571]      |
|                    |             |  min Unidirectional Avail. BW  |
|                    |             |                                |
| TCP Throughput     | Section 4.1 | [I-D.ietf-tcpm-rfc8312bis]     |
|                    |             |                                |
| Hop Count          | Section 3.5 | [RFC7285]                      |
+--------------------+-------------+--------------------------------+
   Table 1. Cost Metrics Defined in this Document.
        </artwork>
      </figure>

      <t>The first 6 metrics listed in Table 1 (i.e., One-way Delay,
      Round-trip Delay, Delay Variation, Loss Rate, Residual Bandwidth, and
      Available Bandwidth) are derived from the set of traffic engineering
      performance metrics commonly defined in OSPF <xref target="RFC3630"/>,
      <xref target="RFC7471"/>; IS-IS <xref target="RFC5305"/>, <xref
      target="RFC8570"/>; and BGP-LS <xref target="RFC8571"/>. Deriving ALTO
      cost performance metrics from existing network-layer traffic engineering
      performance metrics, to expose to application-layer traffic
      optimization, can be a typical mechanism by network operators to deploy
      ALTO <xref target="RFC7971"/>, <xref target="FlowDirector"/>. This
      document defines the base semantics of these metrics by extending them
      from link metrics to end-to-end metrics for ALTO. The "Semantics Based
      On" column specifies at a high level how the end-to-end metric is
      computed from link metrics; the details will be specified in the
      following sections.</t>

      <t>The common metrics Min/Max Unidirectional Delay defined in
      [RFC7471,RFC8570,RFC8571] and Max Link Bandwidth defined in
      [RFC3630,RFC5305] are not listed in Table 1 because they can be handled
      by applying the statistical operators defined in this document. The
      metrics related with utilized bandwidth and reservable bandwidth (i.e.,
      Max Reservable BW and Unreserved BW defined in [RFC3630,RFC5305]) are
      outside the scope of this document.</t>

      <t>The 7th metric (the estimated TCP-flow throughput metric) provides an
      estimation of the bandwidth of a TCP flow, using TCP throughput
      modeling, to support use cases of adaptive applications <xref
      target="Prophet"/>, <xref target="G2"/>.</t>

      <t>The 8th metric (the hop count metric) in Table 1 is mentioned in the
      ALTO base protocol [RFC7285], but not defined, and this document defines
      it to be complete.</t>

      <t>These 8 performance metrics can be classified into two categories:
      those derived from the performance of individual packets (i.e., One-way
      Delay, Round-trip Delay, Delay Variation, Loss Rate, and Hop Count), and
      those related to bandwidth/throughput (Residual bandwidth, and Available
      Bandwidth, and TCP throughput). These two categories are defined in
      <xref target="secpktmetrics"/> and <xref target="secbwmetrics"/>
      respectively. Note that all metrics except Round-trip Delay are
      unidirectional. An ALTO client will need to query both directions if
      needed.</t>

      <t>The purpose of this document is to ensure proper usage of these 8
      performance metrics in the context of ALTO. This document follows the
      guideline defined in Section 14.2 of the ALTO base protocol <xref
      target="RFC7285"/> on registering ALTO cost metrics. Hence, it specifies
      the identifier, the intended semantics, and the security considerations
      of each one of the metrics specified in Table 1.</t>

      <t>The definitions of the intended semantics of the metrics tend to be
      coarse-grained, for guidance only, and they may work well for ALTO. On
      the other hand, a performance measurement framework, such as the IPPM
      framework, may provide more details in defining a performance metric.
      This document introduces a mechanism called "cost-context" to provide
      additional details, when they are available; see <xref
      target="sec2"/>.</t>

      <!--
      <t>Additionally, future versions of this document may define network
      metric values that stem from both measurements and provider policies
      such as many metrics related to end-to-end path bandwidth.</t>
     -->

      <t>Following the ALTO base protocol, this document uses JSON to specify
      the value type of each defined metric. See <xref target="RFC8259"/> for
      JSON data type specification. In particular, <xref target="RFC7285"/>
      specifies that cost values should be assumed by default as JSONNumber.
      When defining the value representation of each metric in Table 1, this
      document conforms to [RFC7285], but specifies additional, generic
      constraints on valid JSONNumbers for each metric. For example, each new
      metric in Table 1 will be specified as non-negative (&gt;= 0); Hop Count
      is specified to be an integer.</t>

      <t>An ALTO server may provide only a subset of the metrics described in
      this document. For example, those that are subject to privacy concerns
      should not be provided to unauthorized ALTO clients. Hence, all cost
      metrics defined in this document are optional; not all of them need to
      be exposed to a given application. When an ALTO server supports a cost
      metric defined in this document, it announces the metric in its
      information resource directory (IRD) as defined in Section 9.2 of <xref
      target="RFC7285"/>.</t>

      <t>An ALTO server introducing these metrics should consider related
      security issues. As a generic security consideration on the reliability
      and trust in the exposed metric values, applications SHOULD rapidly give
      up using ALTO-based guidance if they detect that the exposed information
      does not preserve their performance level or even degrades it. <xref
      target="secsecconsider"/> discusses security considerations in more
      detail.</t>

      <!-- <t>The definitions of a set of cost metrics can allow us to extend the
      ALTO base protocol (e.g., allowing output and constraints use different
      cost metrics), but such extensions are not in the scope of this
      document.</t> -->
    </section>

    <section anchor="sec2" title="Performance Metric Attributes">
      <t>The definitions of the metrics in this document are coarse-grained,
      based on network-layer traffic engineering performance metrics, for
      guidance only. A fine-grained framework specified in <xref
      target="RFC6390"/> requires that the fine-grained specification of a
      network performance metric include 6 components: (i) Metric Name, (ii)
      Metric Description, (iii) Method of Measurement or Calculation, (iv)
      Units of Measurement, (v) Measurement Points, and (vi) Measurement
      Timing. Requiring that an ALTO server provides precise, fine-grained
      values for all 6 components for each metric that it exposes may not be
      feasible or necessary for all ALTO use cases. For example, an ALTO
      server computing its metrics from network-layer traffic-engineering
      performance metrics may not have information about the method of
      measurement or calculation (e.g., measured traffic patterns).</t>

      <t>To address the issue and realize ALTO use cases, for metrics in Table
      1, this document defines performance metric identifiers which can be
      used in the ALTO protocol with well-defined (i) Metric Name, (ii) Metric
      Description, (iv) Units of Measurement, and (v) Measurement Points,
      which are always specified by the specific ALTO services; for example,
      endpoint cost service is between the two endpoints. Hence, the ALTO
      performance metric identifiers provide basic metric attributes.</t>

      <t>To allow the flexibility of allowing an ALTO server to provide
      fine-grained information such as Method of Measurement or Calculation,
      according to its policy and use cases, this document introduces context
      information so that the server can provide these additional details.</t>

      <section anchor="meta"
               title="Performance Metric Context: &quot;cost-context&quot;">
        <t>The core additional details of a performance metric specify "how"
        the metric is obtained. This is referred to as the source of the
        metric. Specifically, this document defines three types of
        coarse-grained metric information sources: "nominal", and "sla"
        (service level agreement), and "estimation".</t>

        <t>For a given type of source, precise interpretation of a performance
        metric value can depend on specific measurement and computation
        parameters.</t>

        <t>To make it possible to specify the source and the aforementioned
        parameters, this document introduces an optional "cost-context" field
        to the "cost-type" field defined by the ALTO base protocol (Section
        10.7 of <xref target="RFC7285"/>) as the following:</t>

        <figure>
          <artwork>            
    object {
      CostMetric   cost-metric;
      CostMode     cost-mode;
      [CostContext cost-context;]
      [JSONString  description;]
    } CostType;

    object {
      JSONString    cost-source;
      [JSONValue    parameters;]
    } CostContext;                   
    </artwork>
        </figure>

        <t>"cost-context" will not be used as a key to distinguish among
        performance metrics. Hence, an ALTO information resource MUST NOT
        announce multiple CostType with the same "cost-metric", "cost-mode"
        and "cost-context". They must be placed into different information
        resources.</t>

        <t>The "cost-source" field of the "cost-context" field is defined as a
        string consisting of only US-ASCII alphanumeric characters
        (U+0030-U+0039, U+0041-U+005A, and U+0061-U+007A). The cost-source is
        used in this document to indicate a string of this format.</t>

        <t>As mentioned above, this document defines three values for
        "cost-source": "nominal", "sla", and "estimation". The "cost-source"
        field of the "cost-context" field MUST be one registered in "ALTO Cost
        Source Registry" (Section 7).</t>

        <t>The "nominal" category indicates that the metric value is
        statically configured by the underlying devices. Not all metrics have
        reasonable "nominal" values. For example, throughput can have a
        nominal value, which indicates the configured transmission rate of the
        involved devices; latency typically does not have a nominal value.</t>

        <t>The "sla" category indicates that the metric value is derived from
        some commitment which this document refers to as service-level
        agreement (SLA). Some operators also use terms such as "target" or
        "committed" values. For an "sla" metric, it is RECOMMENDED that the
        "parameters" field provide a link to the SLA definition.</t>

        <t>The "estimation" category indicates that the metric value is
        computed through an estimation process. An ALTO server may compute
        "estimation" values by retrieving and/or aggregating information from
        routing protocols (e.g., <xref target="RFC7471"/>, <xref
        target="RFC8570"/>, <xref target="RFC8571"/>), traffic measurement
        management tools (e.g., TWAMP <xref target="RFC5357"/>), and
        measurement frameworks (e.g., IPPM), with corresponding operational
        issues. An illustration of potential information flows used for
        estimating these metrics is shown in Figure 1 below. <xref
        target="secopconsider"/> discusses in more detail the operational
        issues and how a network may address them. <figure>
            <artwork>
  +--------+   +--------+  +--------+
  | Client |   | Client |  | Client |
  +----^---+   +---^----+  +---^----+
       |           |           |
       +-----------|-----------+
      North-Bound  |ALTO protocol
    Interface (NBI)|
                   |
                +--+-----+  retrieval      +-----------+
                |  ALTO  |&lt;----------------| Routing   |
                | Server |  and aggregation|           |
                |        |&lt;-------------+  | Protocols |
                +--------+              |  +-----------+
                                        |
                                        |  +------------+
                                        |  |Performance |
                                        ---| Monitoring |
                                           |  Tools     |
                                           +------------+
Figure 1. A framework to compute estimation to performance metrics
          </artwork>
          </figure></t>

        <!--
      <t>
      A particular type of "estimation" is direct "import", which indicates that the metric value is imported directly from a specific existing protocol or system. Specifying "import" as the source instead of the more generic "estimation" may allow better tracking of information flow. For an "import" metric, it is RECOMMENDED that the "parameters" field provides details to the system from which raw data is imported.
      In particular, one may notice that the set of end-to-end metrics defined in Table 1 has a large overlap 
        with the set defined in [RFC8571], in the setting of IGP traffic 
        engineering performance metrics for each link
        (i.e., unidirectional link delay, min/max unidirectional link 
        delay, unidirectional delay variation, unidirectional link loss, 
        unidirectional residual bandwidth, unidirectional available bandwidth, 
        unidirectional utilized bandwidth). Hence, an ALTO server may use "import" to indicate that
        its end-to-end metrics are computed from link
        metrics imported from [RFC8571].
      </t>
    -->

        <t>There can be multiple choices in deciding the cost-source category.
        It is the operator of an ALTO server who chooses the category. If a
        metric does not include a "cost-source" value, the application MUST
        assume that the value of "cost-source" is the most generic source,
        i.e., "estimation".</t>
      </section>

      <section anchor="percentile" title="Performance Metric Statistics">
        <t>The measurement of a performance metric often yields a set of
        samples from an observation distribution (<xref
        target="Prometheus"/>), instead of a single value. A statistical
        operator is applied to the samples to obtain a value to be reported to
        the client. Multiple statistical operators (e.g., min, median, and
        max) are commonly being used.</t>

        <t>Hence, this document extends the general US-ASCII alphanumeric cost
        metric strings, formally specified as the CostMetric type defined in
        Section 10.6 of [RFC7285], as follows:</t>

        <t><list style="hanging">
            <t>A cost metric string consists of a base metric identifier (or
            base identifier for short) string, followed by an optional
            statistical operator string, connected by the ASCII character
            colon (':', U+003A), if the statistical operator string exists.
            The total length of the cost metric string MUST NOT exceed 32, as
            required by [RFC7285].</t>
          </list></t>

        <!--
      </t>
      <figure>
        <artwork>
          <![CDATA[
  <metric-identifier> ::= <metric-base-identifier> [ '-' <stat> ]
          ]]>            
        </artwork>
      </figure>
      <t>where &lt;stat&gt; MUST be one of the following: </t>
      -->

        <t>The statistical operator string MUST be one of the following:</t>

        <t><list style="hanging">
            <t hangText="cur:"><vspace blankLines="1"/> the instantaneous
            observation value of the metric from the most recent sample (i.e.,
            the current value). <vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t
            hangText="percentile, with letter 'p' followed by a number:"><vspace
            blankLines="1"/> gives the percentile specified by the number
            following the letter 'p'. The number MUST be a non-negative JSON
            number in the range [0, 100] (i.e., greater than or equal to 0 and
            less than or equal to 100), followed by an optional decimal part,
            if a higher precision is needed. The decimal part should start
            with the '.' separator (U+002E), and followed by a sequence of one
            or more ASCII numbers between '0' and '9'. Assume this number is y
            and consider the samples coming from a random variable X. Then the
            metric returns x, such that the probability of X is less than or
            equal to x, i.e., Prob(X &lt;= x), = y/100. For example,
            delay-ow:p99 gives the 99% percentile of observed one-way delay;
            delay-ow:p99.9 gives the 99.9% percentile. Note that some systems
            use quantile, which is in the range [0, 1]. When there is a more
            common form for a given percentile, it is RECOMMENDED that the
            common form be used; that is, instead of p0, use min; instead of
            p50, use median; instead of p100, use max. <vspace
            blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t hangText="min:"><vspace blankLines="1"/> the minimal value of
            the observations. <vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t hangText="max:"><vspace blankLines="1"/> the maximal value of
            the observations. <vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t hangText="median:"><vspace blankLines="1"/> the mid-point
            (i.e., p50) of the observations. <vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t hangText="mean:"><vspace blankLines="1"/> the arithmetic mean
            value of the observations. <vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t hangText="stddev:"><vspace blankLines="1"/> the standard
            deviation of the observations. <vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t hangText="stdvar:"><vspace blankLines="1"/> the standard
            variance of the observations. <vspace blankLines="1"/></t>
          </list></t>

        <t>Examples of cost metric strings then include "delay-ow",
        "delay-ow:min", "delay-ow:p99", where "delay-ow" is the base metric
        identifier string; "min" and "p99" are example statistical operator
        strings.</t>

        <t>If a cost metric string does not have the optional statistical
        operator string, the statistical operator SHOULD be interpreted as the
        default statistical operator in the definition of the base metric. If
        the definition of the base metric does not provide a definition for
        the default statistical operator, the metric MUST be considered as the
        median value.</t>

        <t>Note that RFC 7258 limits the overall cost metric identifier to 32
        characters. The cost metric variants with statistical operator
        suffixes defined by this document are also subject to the same overall
        32-character limit, so certain combinations of (long) base metric
        identifier and statistical operator will not be representable. If such
        a situation arises, it could be addressed by defining a new base
        metric identifier that is an "alias" of the desired base metric, with
        identical semantics and just a shorter name.</t>
      </section>
    </section>

    <!-- End of metric attributes -->

    <section anchor="secpktmetrics" title="Packet Performance Metrics ">
      <t>This section introduces ALTO network performance metrics on one way
      delay, round-trip delay, delay variation, packet loss rate, and hop
      count. They measure the "quality of experience" of the stream of packets
      sent from a resource provider to a resource consumer. The measures of
      each individual packet (pkt) can include the delay from the time when
      the packet enters the network to the time when the packet leaves the
      network (pkt.delay); whether the packet is dropped before reaching the
      destination (pkt.dropped); the number of network hops that the packet
      traverses (pkt.hopcount). The semantics of the performance metrics
      defined in this section are that they are statistics computed from these
      measures; for example, the x-percentile of the one-way delay is the
      x-percentile of the set of delays {pkt.delay} for the packets in the
      stream.</t>

      <section title="Cost Metric: One-Way Delay (delay-ow)">
        <section title="Base Identifier">
          <t>The base identifier for this performance metric is
          "delay-ow".</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Value Representation">
          <t>The metric value type is a single 'JSONNumber' type value
          conforming to the number specification of Section 6 of [RFC8259].
          The unit is expressed in microseconds. Hence, the number can be a
          floating point number to express delay that is smaller than
          microseconds. The number MUST be non-negative.</t>
        </section>

        <!--
        <t><list style="hanging">
            <t hangText="Metric name:">
              <vspace blankLines="1"/>One Way Delay<vspace blankLines="1"/>
            </t>

            <t hangText="Metric Identifier:">
              <vspace blankLines="1"/>owdelay<vspace blankLines="1"/>
            </t>
        </list></t>
        -->

        <section title="Intended Semantics and Use">
          <t>Intended Semantics: To specify the temporal and spatial
          aggregated delay of a stream of packets from the specified source to
          the specified destination. The base semantics of the metric is the
          Unidirectional Delay metric defined in [RFC8571,RFC8570,RFC7471],
          but instead of specifying the delay for a link, it is the (temporal)
          aggregation of the link delays from the source to the destination. A
          non-normative reference definition of end-to-end one-way delay is
          <xref target="RFC7679"/>. The spatial aggregation level is specified
          in the query context, e.g., provider-defined identifier (PID) to
          PID, or endpoint to endpoint, where PID is defined in Section 5.1 of
          [RFC7285].</t>

          <t>Use: This metric could be used as a cost metric constraint
          attribute or as a returned cost metric in the response.</t>

          <figure>
            <artwork>Example 1: Delay value on source-destination endpoint pairs

POST /endpointcost/lookup HTTP/1.1
Host: alto.example.com
Content-Length: 239
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcostparams+json
Accept: 
  application/alto-endpointcost+json,application/alto-error+json

{
  "cost-type": {
    "cost-mode":   "numerical",
    "cost-metric": "delay-ow"
  },
  "endpoints": {
    "srcs": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.2"
    ],
    "dsts": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89",
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34"
    ]
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>

          <figure>
            <artwork>
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Length: 247
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcost+json

{
  "meta": {
    "cost-type": {
      "cost-mode":   "numerical",
      "cost-metric": "delay-ow"
    }
  },
  "endpoint-cost-map": {
    "ipv4:192.0.2.2": {
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89":    10,
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34": 20
    }
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>

          <t>Note that since the "cost-type" does not include the "cost-source"
          field, the values are based on "estimation". Since the identifier
          does not include the statistical operator string component, the
          values will represent median values.</t>

          <t>Example 1a below shows an example that is similar to Example 1, but for IPv6.</t>

          <figure>
            <artwork>Example 1a: Delay value on source-destination endpoint pairs for IPv6

POST /endpointcost/lookup HTTP/1.1
Host: alto.example.com
Content-Length: 252
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcostparams+json
Accept: 
  application/alto-endpointcost+json,application/alto-error+json

{
  "cost-type": {
    "cost-mode":   "numerical",
    "cost-metric": "delay-ow"
  },
  "endpoints": {
    "srcs": [
      "ipv6:2001:db8:100::1"
    ],
    "dsts": [
      "ipv6:2001:db8:100::2",
      "ipv6:2001:db8:100::3"
    ]
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>

          <figure>
            <artwork>
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Length: 257
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcost+json

{
  "meta": {
    "cost-type": {
      "cost-mode":   "numerical",
      "cost-metric": "delay-ow"
    }
  },
  "endpoint-cost-map": {
    "ipv6:2001:db8:100::1": {
      "ipv6:2001:db8:100::2": 10,
      "ipv6:2001:db8:100::3": 20
    }
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>   
        </section>

        <section anchor="ccspec-ow"
                 title="Cost-Context Specification Considerations">
          <t>"nominal": Typically network one-way delay does not have a
          nominal value.</t>

          <t>"sla": Many networks provide delay-related parameters in their
          application-level SLAs. It is RECOMMENDED that the "parameters"
          field of an "sla" one-way delay metric include a link (i.e., a field
          named "link") providing an URI to the specification of SLA details,
          if available. Such a specification can be either free text for
          possible presentation to the user, or a formal specification. The
          format of the specification is out of the scope of this
          document.</t>

          <!--
          <t>"import": There can be multiple sources to import one-way delay. For example, if the import is from [RFC8571] (by using unidirectional link delay, min/max unidirectional link delay), it is RECOMMENDED that "parameters" provides "protocol" as a field and "RFC8571" as the value. During import, the server should be cognizant of potential issues when computing an end-to-end summary statistic from link statistics. Another example of an import source is the IPPM framework. For IPPM, it is RECOMMENDED that "parameters" provides "protocol" as a field and "ippm" as the value; see Section 4 of [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for additional fields which can be specified for "ippm" in "parameters".
          </t>
          -->

          <t>"estimation": The exact estimation method is out of the scope of
          this document. There can be multiple sources to estimate one-way
          delay. For example, the ALTO server may estimate the end-to-end
          delay by aggregation of routing protocol link metrics; the server
          may also estimate the delay using active, end-to-end measurements,
          for example, using the IPPM framework <xref target="RFC2330"/>.</t>

          <t>If the estimation is computed by aggregation of routing protocol
          link metrics (e.g., OSPF <xref target="RFC7471"/>, IS-IS <xref
          target="RFC8570"/>, or BGP-LS <xref target="RFC8571"/>)
          Unidirectional Delay link metrics, it is RECOMMENDED that the
          "parameters" field of an "estimation" one-way delay metric include
          the following information: (1) the RFC defining the routing protocol
          metrics (e.g., https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7471 for RFC7471
          derived metrics); (2) configurations of the routing link metrics
          such as configured intervals; and (3) the aggregation method from
          link metrics to end-to-end metrics. During aggregation from link
          metrics to the end-to-end metric, the server should be cognizant of
          potential issues when computing an end-to-end summary statistic from
          link statistics. The default end-to-end average one-way delay is the
          sum of average link one-way delays. If an ALTO server provides the
          min and max statistical operators for the one-way delay metric, the
          values can be computed directly from the routing link metrics, as
          [RFC7471,RFC8570,RFC8571] provide Min/Max Unidirectional Link
          Delay.</t>

          <t>If the estimation is from the IPPM measurement framework, it is
          RECOMMEDED that the "parameters" field of an "estimation" one-way
          delay metric includes the following information: the URI to the URI
          field of the IPPM metric defined in the IPPM performance metric
          <xref target="IANA-IPPM"/> registry (e.g.,
          https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/OWDelay_Active_IP-UDP-Poisson-Payload250B_RFC8912sec7_Seconds_95Percentile).
          The IPPM metric MUST be one-way delay (i.e., IPPM OWDelay* metrics).
          The statistical operator of the ALTO metric MUST be consistent with
          the IPPM statistical property (e.g., 95-th percentile).</t>

          <!--
          <t><list style="hanging">
              <t hangText="Method of Measurement or Calculation:"><vspace
              blankLines="1"/>See section 8.3 of
              [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for potential measurement method.<vspace
              blankLines="1"/></t>

              <t
              hangText="Measurement Point(s) with Potential Measurement Domain:"><vspace
              blankLines="1"/>See Section 4.1, Data sources for potential data sources.<vspace
              blankLines="1"/></t>

              <t hangText="Measurement Timing:"><vspace blankLines="1"/>See
              section 8.3.5 of [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for potential measurement
              timing considerations.<vspace blankLines="1"/></t>
          </list></t>
          -->
        </section>
      </section>

      <section title="Cost Metric: Round-trip Delay (delay-rt)">
        <section title="Base Identifier">
          <t>The base identifier for this performance metric is
          "delay-rt".</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Value Representation">
          <t>The metric value type is a single 'JSONNumber' type value
          conforming to the number specification of Section 6 of [RFC8259].
          The number MUST be non-negative. The unit is expressed in
          microseconds.</t>
        </section>

        <!--
        <t><list style="hanging">
            <t hangText="Metric name:">
              <vspace blankLines="1"/>Round Trip Time<vspace blankLines="1"/>
            </t>

           <t hangText="Metric Identifier:">
              <vspace blankLines="1"/>rtt<vspace blankLines="1"/>
            </t>
        </list></t>
        -->

        <section title="Intended Semantics and Use">
          <t>Intended Semantics: To specify temporal and spatial aggregated
          round-trip delay between the specified source and specified
          destination. The base semantics is that it is the sum of one-way
          delay from the source to the destination and the one-way delay from
          the destination back to the source, where the one-way delay is
          defined in Section 3.1. A non-normative reference definition of
          end-to-end round-trip delay is <xref target="RFC2681"/>. The spatial
          aggregation level is specified in the query context (e.g., PID to
          PID, or endpoint to endpoint).</t>

          <t>Note that it is possible for a client to query two one-way delays
          (delay-ow) and then compute the round-trip delay. The server should
          be cognizant of the consistency of values.</t>

          <t>Use: This metric could be used either as a cost metric constraint
          attribute or as a returned cost metric in the response.</t>

          <figure>
            <artwork> 
Example 2: Round-trip Delay of source-destination endpoint pairs

POST /endpointcost/lookup HTTP/1.1
Host: alto.example.com
Content-Length: 238
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcostparams+json
Accept: 
  application/alto-endpointcost+json,application/alto-error+json

{
  "cost-type": {
    "cost-mode":   "numerical",
    "cost-metric": "delay-rt"
  },
  "endpoints": {
    "srcs": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.2"
    ],
    "dsts": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89",
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34"
    ]
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>

          <figure>
            <artwork>
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Length: 245
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcost+json

{
  "meta": {
    "cost-type": {
      "cost-mode":   "numerical",
      "cost-metric": "delay-rt"
    }
  },
  "endpoint-cost-map": {
    "ipv4:192.0.2.2": {
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89":    4,
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34": 3
    }
  }
}

</artwork>
          </figure>
        </section>

        <!--
        <section title="Measurement Considerations">
          <t><list style="hanging">              
            <t hangText="Method of Measurement or Calculation:"><vspace
            blankLines="1"/>See section 4.3 of
            [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for potential measurement method. <vspace
            blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t
            hangText="Measurement Point(s) with Potential Measurement Domain:"><vspace
            blankLines="1"/>See section 4.1, Data sources.<vspace
            blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t hangText="Measurement Timing:"><vspace blankLines="1"/>See
            section 4.3.5 of [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for Measurement
            Timing. <vspace blankLines="1"/></t>
          </list></t>
        </section>
        
        <section title="Measurement Considerations and Parameters"> 

          <t>See Section 4 of [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for measurement considerations and parameters which may be specified in "parameters". Note that the "parameters" field is an optional field providing non-normative information.
          </t>
        </section>
        -->

        <section title="Cost-Context Specification Considerations">
          <t>"nominal": Typically network round-trip delay does not have a
          nominal value.</t>

          <t>"sla": See the "sla" entry in <xref target="ccspec-ow"/>.</t>

          <!--
          <t>"import": There can be multiple sources to import round-trip delay. If the import is from [RFC8571] (by using unidirectional link delay, min/max unidirectional link delay), it is RECOMMENDED that "parameters" provides "protocol" as a field and "RFC8571" as the value; see <xref target="ccspec-ow" /> for discussions on summing up link metrics to obtain end-to-end metrics. If the import is from the IPPM framework, it is RECOMMENDED that "parameters" provides "protocol" as a field and "ippm" as the value; see Section 4 of [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for additional fields which can be specified for "ippm" in "parameters".
          </t>
          -->

          <t>"estimation": See the "estimation" entry in <xref
          target="ccspec-ow"/>. For estimation by aggregation of routing
          protocol link metrics, the aggregation should include all links from
          the source to the destination and then back to the source; for
          estimation using IPPM, the IPPM metric MUST be round-trip delay
          (i.e., IPPM RTDelay* metrics). The statistical operator of the ALTO
          metric MUST be consistent with the IPPM statistical property (e.g.,
          95-th percentile).</t>

          <!--
          <t><list style="hanging">
              <t hangText="Method of Measurement or Calculation:"><vspace
              blankLines="1"/>See section 8.3 of
              [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for potential measurement method.<vspace
              blankLines="1"/></t>

              <t
              hangText="Measurement Point(s) with Potential Measurement Domain:"><vspace
              blankLines="1"/>See Section 4.1, Data sources for potential data sources.<vspace
              blankLines="1"/></t>

              <t hangText="Measurement Timing:"><vspace blankLines="1"/>See
              section 8.3.5 of [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for potential measurement
              timing considerations.<vspace blankLines="1"/></t>
          </list></t>
          -->
        </section>
      </section>

      <section title="Cost Metric: Delay Variation (delay-variation)">
        <!--
        <t><list style="hanging">
            <t hangText="Metric name:">
              <vspace blankLines="1"/>Packet Delay Variation<vspace blankLines="1"/>
            </t>

            <t hangText="Metric Identifier:">
              <vspace blankLines="1"/>pdv<vspace blankLines="1"/>
            </t>
        </list></t>
        -->

        <section title="Base Identifier">
          <t>The base identifier for this performance metric is
          "delay-variation".</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Value Representation">
          <t>The metric value type is a single 'JSONNumber' type value
          conforming to the number specification of Section 6 of [RFC8259].
          The number MUST be non-negative. The unit is expressed in
          microseconds.</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Intended Semantics and Use">
          <t>Intended Semantics: To specify temporal and spatial aggregated
          delay variation (also called delay jitter)) with respect to the
          minimum delay observed on the stream over the one-way delay from the
          specified source and destination, where the one-way delay is defined
          in Section 3.1. A non-normative reference definition of end-to-end
          one-way delay variation is <xref target="RFC3393"/>. Note that <xref
          target="RFC3393"/> allows the specification of a generic selection
          function F to unambiguously define the two packets selected to
          compute delay variations. This document defines the specific case
          that F selects as the "first" packet the one with the smallest
          one-way delay. The spatial aggregation level is specified in the
          query context (e.g., PID to PID, or endpoint to endpoint).</t>

          <t>Note that in statistics, variations are typically evaluated by
          the distance from samples relative to the mean. In networking
          context, it is more commonly defined from samples relative to the
          min. This definition follows the networking convention.</t>

          <t>Use: This metric could be used either as a cost metric constraint
          attribute or as a returned cost metric in the response.</t>

          <figure>
            <artwork>Example 3: Delay variation value on source-destination endpoint pairs

POST /endpointcost/lookup HTTP/1.1
Host: alto.example.com
Content-Length: 245
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcostparams+json
Accept: 
   application/alto-endpointcost+json,application/alto-error+json

{
  "cost-type": {
    "cost-mode":   "numerical",
    "cost-metric": "delay-variation"
  },
  "endpoints": {
    "srcs": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.2"
    ],
    "dsts": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89",
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34"
    ]
  }
}

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Length: 252
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcost+json

{
  "meta": {
    "cost-type": {
      "cost-mode":   "numerical",
      "cost-metric": "delay-variation"
    }
  },
  "endpoint-cost-map": {
    "ipv4:192.0.2.2": {
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89":    0,
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34": 1
    }
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>
        </section>

        <!--
        <section title="Measurement Considerations">
          <t><list style="hanging">
            <t hangText="Method of Measurement or Calculation:"><vspace
            blankLines="1"/>See Section 5.3 of
            [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for potential measurement method.<vspace
            blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t
            hangText="Measurement Point(s) with Potential Measurement Domain:"><vspace
            blankLines="1"/>See Section 4.1, Data sources for potential data sources.<vspace
            blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t hangText="Measurement Timing:"><vspace blankLines="1"/>See
            Section 5.3.5 of [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for Measurement
            Timing.<vspace blankLines="1"/></t>
         </list></t>
        </section>


        <section title="Measurement Considerations and Parameters"> 

          <t>See Section 5 of [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for measurement considerations and parameters which may be specified in "parameters". Note that the "parameters" field is an optional field providing non-normative information.
          </t>
        </section>
        -->

        <section title="Cost-Context Specification Considerations">
          <t>"nominal": Typically network delay variation does not have a
          nominal value.</t>

          <t>"sla": See the "sla" entry in <xref target="ccspec-ow"/>.</t>

          <!--
          <t>"import": There can be multiple sources to import delay variation. If the import is from [RFC8571] (by using unidirectional delay variation), it is RECOMMENDED that "parameters" provides "protocol" as a field and "RFC8571" as the value; see <xref target="ccspec-ow" /> for discussions on summing up link metrics to obtain end-to-end metrics. If the import is from the IPPM framework, it is RECOMMENDED that "parameters" provides "protocol" as a field and "ippm" as the value; see Section 4 of [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for additional fields which can be specified for "ippm" in "parameters".
          </t>
          -->

          <t>"estimation": See the "estimation" entry in <xref
          target="ccspec-ow"/>. For estimation by aggregation of routing
          protocol link metrics, the default aggregation of the average of
          delay variations is the sum of the link delay variations; for
          estimation using IPPM, the IPPM metric MUST be delay variation
          (i.e., IPPM OWPDV* metrics). The statistical operator of the ALTO
          metric MUST be consistent with the IPPM statistical property (e.g.,
          95-th percentile).</t>

          <!--
          <t><list style="hanging">
              <t hangText="Method of Measurement or Calculation:"><vspace
              blankLines="1"/>See section 8.3 of
              [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for potential measurement method.<vspace
              blankLines="1"/></t>

              <t
              hangText="Measurement Point(s) with Potential Measurement Domain:"><vspace
              blankLines="1"/>See Section 4.1, Data sources for potential data sources.<vspace
              blankLines="1"/></t>

              <t hangText="Measurement Timing:"><vspace blankLines="1"/>See
              section 8.3.5 of [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for potential measurement
              timing considerations.<vspace blankLines="1"/></t>
          </list></t>
          -->
        </section>
      </section>

      <section title="Cost Metric: Loss Rate (lossrate)">
        <!--
        <t><list style="hanging">
            <t hangText="Metric name:"><vspace blankLines="1"/>Packet
            loss<vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t hangText="Metric Identifier:">
              <vspace blankLines="1"/>pktloss<vspace blankLines="1"/>
            </t>
        </list></t>
        -->

        <section title="Base Identifier">
          <t>The base identifier for this performance metric is
          "lossrate".</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Value Representation">
          <t>The metric value type is a single 'JSONNumber' type value
          conforming to the number specification of Section 6 of [RFC8259].
          The number MUST be non-negative. The value represents the percentage
          of packet losses.</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Intended Semantics and Use">
          <t>Intended Semantics: To specify temporal and spatial aggregated
          one-way packet loss rate from the specified source and the specified
          destination. The base semantics of the metric is the Unidirectional
          Link Loss metric defined in [RFC8571,RFC8570,RFC7471], but instead
          of specifying the loss for a link, it is the aggregated loss of all
          links from the source to the destination. The spatial aggregation
          level is specified in the query context (e.g., PID to PID, or
          endpoint to endpoint).</t>

          <t>Use: This metric could be used as a cost metric constraint
          attribute or as a returned cost metric in the response.</t>

          <figure>
            <artwork>
Example 5: Loss rate value on source-destination endpoint pairs

POST /endpointcost/lookup HTTP/1.1
Host: alto.example.com
Content-Length: 238
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcostparams+json
Accept: 
  application/alto-endpointcost+json,application/alto-error+json

{
  "cost-type": {
    "cost-mode":   "numerical",
    "cost-metric": "lossrate"
  },
  "endpoints": {
    "srcs": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.2"
    ],
    "dsts": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89",
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34"
    ]
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>

          <figure>
            <artwork>
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Length: 248
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcost+json

{
  "meta": {
    "cost-type": {
      "cost-mode":   "numerical",
      "cost-metric": "lossrate"
    }
  },
  "endpoint-cost-map": {
    "ipv4:192.0.2.2": {
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89":    0,
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34": 0.01
    }
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>
        </section>

        <!--
        <section title="Measurement Considerations and Parameters">

          
          <t><list style="hanging">
            <t hangText="Method of Measurement or Calculation:"><vspace
            blankLines="1"/>See Section 2.6 of [RFC7680] for Measurement
            Method.<vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t
            hangText="Measurement Point(s) with Potential Measurement Domain:"><vspace
            blankLines="1"/>See Section 4.1 this document, Data sources.<vspace
            blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t hangText="Measurement Timing:"><vspace blankLines="1"/>See
            Section 2 and Section 3 of [RFC7680] for Measurement Timing.<vspace
            blankLines="1"/></t>

          </list></t>
        

          <t>See Section 4 of [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for measurement considerations and parameters which may be specified in "parameters". Note that the "parameters" field is an optional field providing non-normative information.</t>

        </section>
        -->

        <section title="Cost-Context Specification Considerations">
          <t>"nominal": Typically packet loss rate does not have a nominal
          value, although some networks may specify zero losses.</t>

          <t>"sla": See the "sla" entry in <xref target="ccspec-ow"/>..</t>

          <!--
          <t>"import": There can be multiple sources to import packet loss rate. If the import is from [RFC8571] (by using unidirectional link loss), it is RECOMMENDED that "parameters" provides "protocol" as a field and "RFC8571" as the value; see <xref target="ccspec-ow" /> for discussions on summing up link metrics to obtain end-to-end metrics. If the import is from the IPPM framework, it is RECOMMENDED that "parameters" provides "protocol" as a field and "ippm" as the value; see Section 4 of [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for additional fields which can be specified for "ippm" in "parameters".
          </t>
        -->

          <t>"estimation": See the "estimation" entry in <xref
          target="ccspec-ow"/>. For estimation by aggregation of routing
          protocol link metrics, the default aggregation of the average of
          loss rate is the sum of the link link loss rates. But this default
          aggregation is valid only if two conditions are met: (1) it is valid
          only when link loss rates are low, and (2) it assumes that each
          link's loss events are uncorrelated with every other link's loss
          events. When loss rates at the links are high but independent, the
          general formula for aggregating loss assuming each link is
          independent is to compute end-to-end loss as one minus the product
          of the success rate for each link. Aggregation when losses at links
          are correlated can be more complex and the ALTO server should be
          cognizant of correlated loss rates. For estimation using IPPM, the
          IPPM metric MUST be packet loss (i.e., IPPM OWLoss* metrics). The
          statistical operator of the ALTO metric MUST be consistent with the
          IPPM statistical property (e.g., 95-th percentile).</t>
        </section>
      </section>

      <section title="Cost Metric: Hop Count (hopcount)">
        <t>The hopcount metric is mentioned in <xref target="RFC7285"/>
        Section 9.2.3 as an example. This section further clarifies its
        properties.</t>

        <!--
        <t><list style="hanging">
            <t hangText="Metric name:">
              <vspace blankLines="1"/>Hop count<vspace blankLines="1"/>
            </t>

            <t hangText="Metric Identifier:">
              <vspace blankLines="1"/>hopcount<vspace blankLines="1"/>
            </t>
        </list></t>
        -->

        <section title="Base Identifier">
          <t>The base identifier for this performance metric is
          "hopcount".</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Value Representation">
          <t>The metric value type is a single 'JSONNumber' type value
          conforming to the number specification of Section 6 of [RFC8259].
          The number MUST be a non-negative integer (greater than or equal to
          0). The value represents the number of hops.</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Intended Semantics and Use">
          <!--          
          <t><list style="hanging">
            <t hangText="Metric Description:"><vspace blankLines="1"/> To
            specify the number of hops in the path between the source endpoint
            and the destination endpoint. The hop count is a basic measurement
            of distance in a network and can be exposed as Router Hops, in
            direct relation to the routing protocols originating this
            information. </t>

            <t hangText="Metric Representation:"><vspace blankLines="1"/>The metric value type is a single 'JSONNumber' type value conforming to the number specification [RFC8259], Section 6. The number MUST be an integer and non-negative.  <vspace blankLines="1"/></t>
          </list></t>
        -->

          <t>Intended Semantics: To specify the number of hops in the path
          from the specified source to the specified destination. The hop
          count is a basic measurement of distance in a network and can be
          exposed as the number of router hops computed from the routing
          protocols originating this information. A hop, however, may
          represent other units. The spatial aggregation level is specified in
          the query context (e.g., PID to PID, or endpoint to endpoint).</t>

          <t>Use: This metric could be used as a cost metric constraint
          attribute or as a returned cost metric in the response.</t>

          <figure>
            <artwork>
Example 4: hopcount value on source-destination endpoint pairs

POST /endpointcost/lookup HTTP/1.1
Host: alto.example.com
Content-Length: 238
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcostparams+json
Accept: 
  application/alto-endpointcost+json,application/alto-error+json

{
  "cost-type": {
    "cost-mode":   "numerical",
    "cost-metric": "hopcount"
  },
  "endpoints": {
    "srcs": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.2"
    ],
    "dsts": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89",
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34"
    ]
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>

          <figure>
            <artwork>
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Length: 245
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcost+json

{
  "meta": {
    "cost-type": {
      "cost-mode":   "numerical",
      "cost-metric": "hopcount"
    }
  },
  "endpoint-cost-map": {
    "ipv4:192.0.2.2": {
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89":    5,
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34": 3
    }
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>
        </section>

        <!--
        <section title="Measurement Considerations and Parameters">
          
            <t>The hop count can be calculated based on the number of routers from the 
              source endpoint through which data must
              pass to reach the destination endpoint. This count can be measured at the source
            endpoint by traceroute.</t>

            <t>Upon
            need, the traceroute can use UDP probe message or other
            implementations that use ICMP and TCP to discover the hop counts
            along the path from source endpoint to destination
            endpoint.</t>

        </section>
        -->

        <section title="Cost-Context Specification Considerations">
          <t>"nominal": Typically hop count does not have a nominal value.</t>

          <t>"sla": Typically hop count does not have an SLA value.</t>

          <!--
          <t>"import": There can be multiple sources to import hop count, such as from IGP routing protocols. 
          </t>
          -->

          <t>"estimation": The exact estimation method is out of the scope of
          this document. An example of estimating hopcounts is by importing
          from IGP routing protocols. It is RECOMMENDED that the "parameters"
          field of an "estimation" hop count define the meaning of a hop.</t>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>

    <section anchor="secbwmetrics"
             title="Throughput/Bandwidth Performance Metrics">
      <t>This section introduces four throughput/bandwidth related metrics.
      Given a specified source to a specified destination, these metrics
      reflect the volume of traffic that the network can carry from the source
      to the destination.</t>

      <section title="Cost Metric: TCP Throughput (tput)">
        <section title="Base Identifier">
          <t>The base identifier for this performance metric is "tput".</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Value Representation">
          <t>The metric value type is a single 'JSONNumber' type value
          conforming to the number specification of Section 6 of [RFC8259].
          The number MUST be non-negative. The unit is bytes per second.</t>
        </section>

        <!--
        <t><list style="hanging">
            <t hangText="Metric name:"><vspace
            blankLines="1"/>Throughput<vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t hangText="Metric Identifier:">
              <vspace blankLines="1"/>throughput<vspace blankLines="1"/>
            </t>
        </list></t>
        -->

        <section title="Intended Semantics and Use">
          <t>Intended Semantics: To give the throughput of a TCP
          congestion-control conforming flow from the specified source to the
          specified destination. The throughput SHOULD be interpreted as only
          an estimation, and the estimation is designed only for bulk
          flows.</t>

          <t>Use: This metric could be used as a cost metric constraint
          attribute or as a returned cost metric in the response.</t>

          <figure>
            <artwork>
Example 5: TCP throughput value on source-destination endpoint pairs

POST /endpointcost/lookup HTTP/1.1
Host: alto.example.com
Content-Length: 234
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcostparams+json
Accept: 
  application/alto-endpointcost+json,application/alto-error+json

{
  "cost-type": {
    "cost-mode":   "numerical",
    "cost-metric": "tput"
  },
  "endpoints": {
    "srcs": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.2"
    ],
    "dsts": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89",
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34"
    ]
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>

          <figure>
            <artwork>
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Length: 251
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcost+json

{
  "meta": {
    "cost-type": {
      "cost-mode":   "numerical",
      "cost-metric": "tput"
    }
  },
  "endpoint-cost-map": {
    "ipv4:192.0.2.2": {
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89":    256000,
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34": 128000
    }
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>
        </section>

        <!--
      <section title="Measurement Considerations and Parameters">

          
          <t><list style="hanging">
             <t hangText="Method of Measurement or Calculation:"><vspace
              blankLines="1"/>See Section 3.3 of [RFC6349] for Measurement
              Method.<vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

             <t
             hangText="Measurement Point(s) with Potential Measurement Domain:"><vspace
             blankLines="1"/>See Section 4.1 of this document.<vspace
            blankLines="1"/></t>

             <t hangText="Measurement Timing:"><vspace blankLines="1"/>Similar
             to RTT. See Section 4.3.5 of [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for
             Measurement Timing. <vspace blankLines="1"/></t>             
          </list></t>
          <t>See Section 3.3 of [RFC6349] for measurement
              method and parameters which may be specified in "parameters". Note that the "parameters" field is an optional field providing non-normative information.</t>

      </section> 
      -->

        <section title="Cost-Context Specification Considerations">
          <t>"nominal": Typically TCP throughput does not have a nominal
          value, and SHOULD NOT be generated.</t>

          <t>"sla": Typically TCP throughput does not have an SLA value, and
          SHOULD NOT be generated.</t>

          <!--
          <t>"import": Typically there is not a routing protocol through which one can import TCP throughput. If the import is from the IPPM framework, it is RECOMMENDED that "parameters" provides "protocol" as a field and "ippm" as the value; see Section 4 of [I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry] for additional fields which can be specified for "ippm" in "parameters".
          </t>
        -->

          <t>"estimation": The exact estimation method is out of the scope of
          this document. It is RECOMMENDED that the "parameters" field of an
          "estimation" TCP throughput metric include the following
          information: (1) the congestion-control algorithm; and (2) the
          estimation methodology. To specify (1), it is RECOMMENDED that the
          "parameters" field (object) include a field named
          "congestion-control-algorithm", which provides a URI for the
          specification of the algorithm; for example, for an ALTO server to
          provide estimation to the throughput of a Cubic Congestion control
          flow, its "parameters" includes a field
          "congestion-control-algorithm", with value being set to <xref
          target="I-D.ietf-tcpm-rfc8312bis"/>; for an ongoing congestion
          control algorithm such as BBR, a a link to its specification. To
          specify (2), the "parameters" includes as many details as possible;
          for example, for TCP Cubic throughout estimation, the "parameters"
          field specifies that the throughput is estimated by setting _C_ to
          0.4, and the Equation in Figure 8 of <xref
          target="I-D.ietf-tcpm-rfc8312bis"/> is applied; as an alternative,
          the methodology may be based on the NUM model <xref
          target="Prophet"/>, or the G2 model <xref target="G2"/>. The exact
          specification of the parameters field is out of the scope of this
          document.</t>
        </section>
      </section>

      <!-- TCP Throughput -->

      <section title="Cost Metric: Residual Bandwidth (bw-residual)">
        <!--
        <t><list style="hanging">
            <t hangText="Metric name:"><vspace blankLines="1"/>Residual
            Bandwidth<vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t hangText="Metric Identifier:">
              <vspace blankLines="1"/>residualbw<vspace blankLines="1"/>
            </t>
        </list></t>
        -->

        <section title="Base Identifier">
          <t>The base identifier for this performance metric is
          "bw-residual".</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Value Representation">
          <t>The metric value type is a single 'JSONNumber' type value that is
          non-negative. The unit of measurement is bytes per second.</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Intended Semantics and Use">
          <t>Intended Semantics: To specify temporal and spatial residual
          bandwidth from the specified source and the specified destination.
          The base semantics of the metric is the Unidirectional Residual
          Bandwidth metric defined in [RFC8571,RFC8570,RFC7471], but instead
          of specifying the residual bandwidth for a link, it is the residual
          bandwidth of the path from the source to the destination. Hence, it
          is the minimal residual bandwidth among all links from the source to
          the destination. When the max statistical operator is defined for
          the metric, it typically provides the minimum of the link capacities
          along the path, as the default value of the residual bandwidth of a
          link is its link capacity [RFC8571,8570,7471]. The spatial
          aggregation unit is specified in the query context (e.g., PID to
          PID, or endpoint to endpoint).</t>

          <t>The default statistical operator for residual bandwidth is the
          current instantaneous sample; that is, the default is assumed to be
          "cur".</t>

          <t>Use: This metric could be used either as a cost metric constraint
          attribute or as a returned cost metric in the response.</t>

          <figure>
            <artwork>
Example 7: bw-residual value on source-destination endpoint pairs

POST /endpointcost/lookup HTTP/1.1
Host: alto.example.com
Content-Length: 241
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcostparams+json
Accept: 
  application/alto-endpointcost+json,application/alto-error+json

{
  "cost-type": {
    "cost-mode":   "numerical",
    "cost-metric": "bw-residual"
  },
  "endpoints": {
    "srcs": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.2"
    ],
    "dsts": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89",
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34"
    ]
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>

          <figure>
            <artwork>
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Length: 255
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcost+json

{
  "meta": {
    "cost-type": {
      "cost-mode":   "numerical",
      "cost-metric": "bw-residual"
    }
  },
  "endpoint-cost-map": {
    "ipv4:192.0.2.2":  {
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89":       0,
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34": 2000
    }
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>
        </section>

        <!--
      <section title="Measurement Considerations and Parameters">
          <t><list style="hanging">       
            <t hangText="Method of Measurement or Calculation:"><vspace
            blankLines="1"/>residual Bandwidth is the Unidirectional residual
            bandwidth measured between two directly connected IS-IS neighbors
            or OSPF neighbors. See Section 4.5 of [RFC7810] for Measurement
            Method. <vspace blankLines="1"/></t>
            

            <t
            hangText="Measurement Point(s) with Potential Measurement Domain:"><vspace
            blankLines="1"/>See Section 4.1 of this document.<vspace
            blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t hangText="Measurement Timing:"><vspace blankLines="1"/>See
            Section 5 of [RFC7810] for Measurement Timing.<vspace
            blankLines="1"/></t>

          </list></t>
      </section> 
      -->

        <section title="Cost-Context Specification Considerations">
          <t>"nominal": Typically residual bandwidth does not have a nominal
          value.</t>

          <t>"sla": Typically residual bandwidth does not have an "sla"
          value.</t>

          <!--
          <t>"import": There can be multiple sources to import residual bandwidth. If the import is from [RFC8571] (by using unidirectional residual bandwidth), it is RECOMMENDED that "parameters" provides "protocol" as a field and "RFC8571" as the value. The server should be cognizant of issues when computing end-to-end summary statistics from link statistics. For example, the min of the end-to-end path residual bandwidth is the min of all links on the path. 
          </t>
        -->

          <t>"estimation": See the "estimation" entry in Section 3.1.4 on
          aggregation of routing protocol link metrics. The current ("cur")
          residual bandwidth of a path is the minimal of the residual
          bandwidth of all links on the path.</t>
        </section>
      </section>

      <!-- residual bandwidth -->

      <section title="Cost Metric: Available Bandwidth (bw-available)">
        <!--
        <t><list style="hanging">
            <t hangText="Metric name:"><vspace blankLines="1"/>Maximum
            Reservable Bandwidth<vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t hangText="Metric Identifier:">
              <vspace blankLines="1"/>maxresbw<vspace blankLines="1"/>
            </t>
        </list></t>
        -->

        <section title="Base Identifier">
          <t>The base identifier for this performance metric is
          "bw-available".</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Value Representation">
          <t>The metric value type is a single 'JSONNumber' type value that is
          non-negative. The unit of measurement is bytes per second.</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Intended Semantics and Use">
          <t>Intended Semantics: To specify temporal and spatial available
          bandwidth from the specified source to the specified destination.
          The base semantics of the metric is the Unidirectional Available
          Bandwidth metric defined in [RFC8571,RFC8570,RFC7471], but instead
          of specifying the available bandwidth for a link, it is the
          available bandwidth of the path from the source to the destination.
          Hence, it is the minimal available bandwidth among all links from
          the source to the destination.The spatial aggregation unit is
          specified in the query context (e.g., PID to PID, or endpoint to
          endpoint).</t>

          <t>The default statistical operator for available bandwidth is the
          current instantaneous sample; that is, the default is assumed to be
          "cur".</t>

          <t>Use: This metric could be used either as a cost metric constraint
          attribute or as a returned cost metric in the response.</t>

          <figure>
            <artwork>
  Example 8: bw-available value on source-destination endpoint pairs

POST /endpointcost/lookup HTTP/1.1
Host: alto.example.com
Content-Length: 244
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcostparams+json
Accept: 
  application/alto-endpointcost+json,application/alto-error+json

{
  "cost-type": { 
    "cost-mode":   "numerical",
    "cost-metric": "bw-available"
  },
  "endpoints": {
    "srcs": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.2"
    ],
    "dsts": [
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89",
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34"
    ]
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>

          <figure>
            <artwork>
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Length: 255
Content-Type: application/alto-endpointcost+json

{
  "meta": {
    "cost-type": {
      "cost-mode":   "numerical",
      "cost-metric": "bw-available"
    }
  },
  "endpoint-cost-map": {
    "ipv4:192.0.2.2": {
      "ipv4:192.0.2.89":       0,
      "ipv4:198.51.100.34": 2000
    }
  }
}
</artwork>
          </figure>
        </section>

        <!--
      <section title="Measurement Considerations and Parameters">
          <t><list style="hanging">         
            <t hangText="Method of Measurement or Calculation:"><vspace
            blankLines="1"/>Maximum Reservable Bandwidth is the bandwidth
            measured between two directly connected IS-IS neighbors or OSPF
            neighbors. See Section 3.5 of [RFC5305] for Measurement
            Method.<vspace blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t
            hangText="Measurement Point(s) with Potential Measurement Domain:"><vspace
            blankLines="1"/>See Section 4.1 this document for discussions.<vspace
            blankLines="1"/></t>

            <t hangText="Measurement Timing:"><vspace blankLines="1"/>See
            Section 3.5 of [RFC5305] and Section 5 of [RFC7810] for
            Measurement Timing.<vspace blankLines="1"/></t>         
          </list></t>
      </section>
      -->

        <section title="Cost-Context Specification Considerations">
          <t>"nominal": Typically available bandwidth does not have a nominal
          value.</t>

          <t>"sla": Typically available bandwidth does not have an "sla"
          value.</t>

          <!--
          <t>"import": There can be multiple sources to import maximum reservable bandwidth. For example, Maximum reservable bandwidth is defined by IS-IS/OSPF TE, and 
          measures the reservable bandwidth between two directly connected IS-IS neighbors or OSPF
          neighbors; see Section 3.5 of [RFC5305]. If the import is from [RFC8571] (by using unidirectional maximum reservable bandwidth), it is RECOMMENDED that "parameters" provides "protocol" as a field and "RFC8571" as the value. 
          </t>
        -->

          <t>"estimation": See the "estimation" entry in Section 3.1.4 on
          aggregation of routing protocol link metrics. The current ("cur")
          available bandwidth of a path is the minimum of the available
          bandwidth of all links on the path.</t>
        </section>

        <!-- cc consider -->
      </section>

      <!-- end of available bw -->
    </section>

    <section anchor="secopconsider" title="Operational Considerations">
      <t>The exact measurement infrastructure, measurement condition, and
      computation algorithms can vary from different networks, and are outside
      the scope of this document. Both the ALTO server and the ALTO clients,
      however, need to be cognizant of the operational issues discussed
      below.</t>

      <t>Also, the performance metrics specified in this document are similar,
      in that they may use similar data sources and have similar issues in
      their calculation. Hence, this document specifies common issues unless
      one metric has its unique challenges.</t>

      <section title="Source Considerations">
        <t>The addition of the "cost-source" field is to solve a key issue: An
        ALTO server needs data sources to compute the cost metrics described
        in this document, and an ALTO client needs to know the data sources to
        better interpret the values.</t>

        <t>To avoid too fine-grained information, this document introduces
        "cost-source" to indicate only the high-level type of data sources:
        "estimation", "nominal" or "lsa", where "estimation" is a type of
        measurement data source, "nominal" is a type of static configuration,
        and "sla" is a type that is more based on policy.</t>

        <t>For estimation, for example, the ALTO server may use log servers or
        the OAM system as its data source as recommended by <xref
        target="RFC7971"/>. In particular, the cost metrics defined in this
        document can be computed using routing systems as the data
        sources.</t>

        <!--
        Mechanisms defined in [RFC2681], [RFC3393],
        [RFC7679], [RFC7680], [RFC3630], [RFC3784], [RFC7471], [RFC7810],
        [RFC7752] and [I-D.ietf-idr-te-pm-bgp] that allow an ALTO Server to
        retrieve and derive the necessary information to compute the metrics
        that we describe in this document.</t>      
        -->
      </section>

      <section title="Metric Timestamp Consideration ">
        <t>Despite the introduction of the additional cost-context
        information, the metrics do not have a field to indicate the
        timestamps of the data used to compute the metrics. To indicate this
        attribute, the ALTO server SHOULD return HTTP "Last-Modified", to
        indicate the freshness of the data used to compute the performance
        metrics.</t>

        <t>If the ALTO client obtains updates through an incremental update
        mechanism <xref target="RFC8895"/>, the client SHOULD assume that the
        metric is computed using a snapshot at the time that is approximated
        by the receiving time.</t>
      </section>

      <section title="Backward Compatibility Considerations">
        <t>One potential issue introduced by the optional "cost-source" field
        is backward compatibility. Consider that an IRD which defines two
        cost-types with the same "cost-mode" and "cost-metric", but one with
        "cost-source" being "estimation" and the other being "sla". Then an
        ALTO client that is not aware of the extension will not be able to
        distinguish between these two types. A similar issue can arise even
        with a single cost-type, whose "cost-source" is "sla": an ALTO client
        that is not aware of this extension will ignore this field and
        consider the metric estimation.</t>

        <t>To address the backward-compatibility issue, if a "cost-metric" is
        "routingcost" and the metric contains a "cost-context" field, then it
        MUST be "estimation"; if it is not, the client SHOULD reject the
        information as invalid.</t>
      </section>

      <section title="Computation Considerations">
        <t>The metric values exposed by an ALTO server may result from
        additional processing on measurements from data sources to compute
        exposed metrics. This may involve data processing tasks such as
        aggregating the results across multiple systems, removing outliers,
        and creating additional statistics. There are two challenges on the
        computation of ALTO performance metrics.</t>

        <section title="Configuration Parameters Considerations">
          <t>Performance metrics often depend on configuration parameters, and
          exposing such configuration parameters can help an ALTO client to
          better understand the exposed metrics. In particular, an ALTO server
          may be configured to compute a TE metric (e.g., packet loss rate) in
          fixed intervals, say every T seconds. To expose this information,
          the ALTO server may provide the client with two pieces of additional
          information: (1) when the metrics are last computed, and (2) when
          the metrics will be updated (i.e., the validity period of the
          exposed metric values). The ALTO server can expose these two pieces
          of information by using the HTTP response headers Last-Modified and
          Expires.</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Aggregation Computation Considerations">
          <t>An ALTO server may not be able to measure the performance metrics
          to be exposed. The basic issue is that the "source" information can
          often be link level. For example, routing protocols often measure
          and report only per link loss, not end-to-end loss; similarly,
          routing protocols report link level available bandwidth, not
          end-to-end available bandwidth. The ALTO server then needs to
          aggregate these data to provide an abstract and unified view that
          can be more useful to applications. The server should consider that
          different metrics may use different aggregation computation. For
          example, the end-to-end latency of a path is the sum of the latency
          of the links on the path; the end-to-end available bandwidth of a
          path is the minimum of the available bandwidth of the links on the
          path; in contrast, aggregating loss values is complicated by the
          potential for correlated loss events on different links in the
          path</t>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>

    <section anchor="secsecconsider" title="Security Considerations">
      <t>The properties defined in this document present no security
      considerations beyond those in Section 15 of the base ALTO specification
      <xref target="RFC7285"/>.</t>

      <t>However, concerns addressed in Sections "15.1 Authenticity and
      Integrity of ALTO Information", "15.2 Potential Undesirable Guidance
      from Authenticated ALTO Information", and "15.3 Confidentiality of ALTO
      Information" remain of utmost importance. Indeed, TE performance is
      highly sensitive ISP information; therefore, sharing TE metric values in
      numerical mode requires full mutual confidence between the entities
      managing the ALTO server and the ALTO client. ALTO servers will most
      likely distribute numerical TE performance to ALTO clients under strict
      and formal mutual trust agreements. On the other hand, ALTO clients must
      be cognizant on the risks attached to such information that they would
      have acquired outside formal conditions of mutual trust.</t>

      <t>To mitigate confidentiality risks during information transport of TE
      performance metrics, the operator should address the risk of ALTO
      information being leaked to malicious Clients or third parties, through
      attacks such as the person-in-the-middle (PITM) attacks. As specified in
      "Protection Strategies" (Section 15.3.2 of <xref target="RFC7285"/>),
      the ALTO Server should authenticate ALTO Clients when transmitting an
      ALTO information resource containing sensitive TE performance metrics.
      "Authentication and Encryption" (Section 8.3.5 of <xref
      target="RFC7285"/>) specifies that "ALTO Server implementations as well
      as ALTO Client implementations MUST support the "https" URI scheme of
      <xref target="RFC7230"/> and Transport Layer Security (TLS) of <xref
      target="RFC8446"/>".</t>
    </section>

    <section anchor="ianaconsider" title="IANA Considerations">
      <t>IANA has created and now maintains the "ALTO Cost Metric Registry",
      listed in Section 14.2, Table 3 of <xref target="RFC7285"/>. This
      registry is located at
      &lt;https://www.iana.org/assignments/alto-protocol/alto-protocol.xhtml#cost-metrics&gt;.
      This document requests to add the following entries to “ALTO Cost Metric
      Registry”.</t>

      <figure>
        <artwork>
+-----------------+--------------------+
| Identifier      | Intended Semantics |
+-----------------+--------------------+
| delay-ow        | See Section 3.1    |
| delay-rt        | See Section 3.2    |
| delay-variation | See Section 3.3    |
| lossrate        | See Section 3.4    |
| hopcount        | See Section 3.5    |
| tput            | See Section 4.1    |
| bw-residual     | See Section 4.2    |
| bw-available    | See Section 4.3    |
+-----------------+--------------------+
</artwork>
      </figure>

      <t>This document requests the creation of the "ALTO Cost Source
      Registry". This registry serves two purposes. First, it ensures
      uniqueness of identifiers referring to ALTO cost source types. Second,
      it provides references to particular semantics of allocated cost source
      types to be applied by both ALTO servers and applications utilizing ALTO
      clients.</t>

      <t>A new ALTO cost source can be added after IETF Review <xref
      target="RFC8126"/>, to ensure that proper documentation regarding the
      new ALTO cost source and its security considerations have been provided.
      The RFC(s) documenting the new cost source should be detailed enough to
      provide guidance to both ALTO service providers and applications
      utilizing ALTO clients as to how values of the registered ALTO cost
      source should be interpreted. Updates and deletions of ALTO cost source
      follow the same procedure.</t>

      <t>Registered ALTO address type identifiers MUST conform to the
      syntactical requirements specified in Section 2.1. Identifiers are to be
      recorded and displayed as strings.</t>

      <t>Requests to add a new value to the registry MUST include the
      following information: <list style="symbols">
          <t>Identifier: The name of the desired ALTO cost source type.</t>

          <t>Intended Semantics: ALTO cost source type carry with them
          semantics to guide their usage by ALTO clients. Hence, a document
          defining a new type should provide guidance to both ALTO service
          providers and applications utilizing ALTO clients as to how values
          of the registered ALTO endpoint property should be interpreted.</t>

          <t>Security Considerations: ALTO cost source types expose
          information to ALTO clients. ALTO service providers should be made
          aware of the security ramifications related to the exposure of a
          cost source type.</t>
        </list></t>

      <t>This specification requests registration of the identifiers -
      "nominal", "sla", and "estimation" listed in the table below. Semantics
      for the these are documented in Section 2.1, and security considerations
      are documented in Section 6.</t>

      <figure>
        <artwork>
+------------+----------------------------------+----------------+
| Identifier | Intended Semantics               | Security       |
|            |                                  | Considerations |
+------------+----------------------------------+----------------+
| nominal    | Values in nominal cases; Sec. 2.1| Sec. 6         |
| sla        | Values reflecting service        | Sec. 6         |
|            | level agreement; Sec. 2.1        |                |
| estimation | Values by estimation; Sec. 2.1   | Sec. 6         |
+------------+----------------------------------+----------------+
</artwork>
      </figure>
    </section>

    <section title="Acknowledgments">
      <t>The authors of this document would also like to thank Martin Duke for
      the highly informative, thorough AD reviews and comments. We thank
      Christian Amsüss, Elwyn Davies, Haizhou Du, Kai Gao, Geng Li, Lili Liu,
      Danny Alex Lachos Perez, and Brian Trammell for the reviews and
      comments. We thank Benjamin Kaduk, Eric Kline, Francesca Palombini, Lars Eggert, 
      Martin Vigoureux, Murrary Kucherawy, Roman Danyliw, Zaheduzzaman Sarker, Éric Vyncke
      for discussions and comments that improve this document. </t>
    </section>
  </middle>

  <back>
    <references title="Normative References">
      <!-- 
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.5234.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.4627.xml"?>

      

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.7471.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.7752.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.7810.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.7680.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.2679.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.2681.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.3393.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.5305.xml"?>
      
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.6349.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.7679.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.8571.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.I-D.ietf-idr-te-pm-bgp.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.I-D.ietf-ippm-initial-registry.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.2818.xml"?>

    -->

      <!-- requirements words -->
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.2119.xml"?>      

      <!-- TE for OSPF -->
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.3630.xml"?>

      <!-- TE for ISIS -->
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.5305.xml"?>

      <!-- guidelines on new metrics -->
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.6390.xml"?>

      <!-- https change rfc 2818 to 7230 as 2818 is informational-->
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.7230.xml"?>

      <!-- alto base -->
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.7285.xml"?>
      
      <!-- OSPF TE metrics -->
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.7471.xml"?>
      
      <!-- iana -->
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.8126.xml"?>
      
      <!-- requirement words -->
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.8174.xml"?>

      <!-- JSON Data-->
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.8259.xml"?>      

      <!-- TLS 1.3 -->
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.8446.xml"?>      

      <!-- ISIS TE -->
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.8570.xml"?>      

      <!-- BGP-LS -->
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.8571.xml"?>      

      <!-- ALTO SSE -->
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.8895.xml"?>      

      <reference anchor="IANA-IPPM">
        <front>
          <title>Performance Metrics Registry,
          https://www.iana.org/assignments/performance-metrics/performance-metrics.xhtml</title>

          <author initials="" surname="IANA"/>

          <date year=""/>
        </front>
      </reference>

      <?rfc include="reference.I-D.ietf-tcpm-rfc8312bis.xml"?>
    </references>

    <references title="Informative References">
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.2330.xml"?>

      <!-- IPPM Framework -->

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.2681.xml"?>

      <!-- IPPM Round Trip Delay -->

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.3393.xml"?>

      <!-- IPPM Packet Delay Variation -->

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.5357.xml"?>

      <!-- TWAMP -->

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.7679.xml"?>

      <!-- IPPM One Way Delay -->

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.7971.xml"?>

      <!-- ALTO requirements -->

      <reference anchor="G2">
        <front>
          <title>On the Bottleneck Structure of Congestion-Controlled
          Networks</title>

          <author initials="J" surname="Ros-Giralt"/>

          <author initials="A" surname="Bohara"/>

          <author initials="S" surname="Yellamraju"/>

          <author initials="" surname="et. al."/>

          <date year="2020"/>
        </front>

        <seriesInfo name="ACM SIGMETRICS" value="2019"/>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="FlowDirector">
        <front>
          <title>Steering Hyper-Giants' Traffic at Scale</title>

          <author initials="E" surname="Pujol"/>

          <author initials="I" surname="Poese"/>

          <author initials="J" surname="Zerwas"/>

          <author initials="G" surname="Smaragdakis"/>

          <author initials="A" surname="Feldmann"/>

          <date year="2020"/>
        </front>

        <seriesInfo name="ACM CoNEXT" value="2020"/>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="Prometheus">
        <front>
          <title>Prometheus: A Next-Generation Monitoring System</title>

          <author initials="J" surname="Volz"/>

          <author initials="B" surname="Rabenstein"/>

          <date year="2015"/>
        </front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="Prophet">
        <front>
          <title>Prophet: Fast, Accurate Throughput Prediction with Reactive
          Flows</title>

          <author initials="K" surname="Gao"/>

          <author initials="J" surname="Zhang"/>

          <author initials="YR" surname="Yang"/>

          <date year="2020"/>
        </front>

        <seriesInfo name="ACM/IEEE Transactions on Networking" value="July"/>
      </reference>
    </references>
  </back>
</rfc>
