Jump to content

Federated Internet Registry Service: Difference between revisions

From ICANNWiki
No edit summary
Caterina (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 21: Line 21:
== References ==
== References ==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}
[[Category: Glossary]]

Revision as of 03:45, 3 August 2011

FIRS (Federated Internet Registry Service) is a distributed service for storing, locating and transferring information about Internet resources using LDAPv3.[1]

FIRS is intended to provide a distributed Whois-like information service, using the LDAPv3 specifications for the data-formatting and query-transport functions.

FIRS has a collection of specifications which define the following service elements: Namespace Rules, Schema Definitions, Query-Processing Rules.

Background

The original WHOIS service was intended to be a centralized repository of ARPANET resources and users. Eventually, many Whois resources sprung-up all over the world, only providing information about particular network resources under the control of a specific organization.

There was not a strict set of data-typing or formatting requirements. This resulted in different implementations providing different kinds of information. There were also problems with privacy and security.

Thus, FIRS was bourn out of a need for specifications that cumulatively define a structured and distributed information service, including an extensible framework and resource-specific definitions.

The Cross Registry Internet Service Protocol (CRISP) working group of the IETF is responsible for development of FIRS.

External links

References