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+Internet Research Task Force (IRTF) J. Hong
+Request for Comments: 9236 T. You
+Category: Informational ETRI
+ISSN: 2070-1721 V. Kafle
+ NICT
+ April 2022
+
+
+ Architectural Considerations of Information-Centric Networking (ICN)
+ Using a Name Resolution Service
+
+Abstract
+
+ This document describes architectural considerations and implications
+ related to the use of a Name Resolution Service (NRS) in Information-
+ Centric Networking (ICN). It explains how the ICN architecture can
+ change when an NRS is utilized and how its use influences the ICN
+ routing system. This document is a product of the Information-
+ Centric Networking Research Group (ICNRG).
+
+Status of This Memo
+
+ This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
+ published for informational purposes.
+
+ This document is a product of the Internet Research Task Force
+ (IRTF). The IRTF publishes the results of Internet-related research
+ and development activities. These results might not be suitable for
+ deployment. This RFC represents the consensus of the Information-
+ Centric Networking Research Group of the Internet Research Task Force
+ (IRTF). Documents approved for publication by the IRSG are not
+ candidates for any level of Internet Standard; see Section 2 of RFC
+ 7841.
+
+ Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
+ and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
+ https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9236.
+
+Copyright Notice
+
+ Copyright (c) 2022 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
+ document authors. All rights reserved.
+
+ This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
+ Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
+ (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
+ publication of this document. Please review these documents
+ carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
+ to this document.
+
+Table of Contents
+
+ 1. Introduction
+ 2. Terminology
+ 3. Background
+ 4. Implications of an NRS in ICN
+ 5. ICN Architectural Considerations for NRS
+ 5.1. Name Mapping Records Registration, Resolution, and Update
+ 5.2. Protocols and Semantics
+ 5.3. Routing System
+ 6. Conclusion
+ 7. IANA Considerations
+ 8. Security Considerations
+ 9. References
+ 9.1. Normative References
+ 9.2. Informative References
+ Acknowledgements
+ Authors' Addresses
+
+1. Introduction
+
+ Information-Centric Networking (ICN) is an approach to evolving the
+ Internet infrastructure to provide direct access to Named Data
+ Objects (NDOs) by names. In two common ICN architectures, Named Data
+ Networking (NDN) [NDN] and Content-Centric Networking (CCNx) [CCNx],
+ the name of an NDO is used directly to route a request to retrieve
+ the data object. Such direct name-based routing has inherent
+ challenges in enabling a globally scalable routing system,
+ accommodating producer mobility, and supporting off-path caching.
+ These specific issues are discussed in detail in Section 3. In order
+ to address these challenges, a Name Resolution Service (NRS) has been
+ utilized in the literature as well as the proposals of several ICN
+ projects [Afanasyev] [Zhang2] [Ravindran] [SAIL] [MF] [Bayhan].
+
+ This document describes the potential changes in the ICN architecture
+ caused by the introduction of an NRS and the corresponding
+ implication to the ICN routing system. It also describes ICN
+ architectural considerations for the integration of an NRS. The
+ scope of this document includes considerations from the perspective
+ of an ICN architecture and routing system when using an NRS in ICN.
+ A description of the NRS itself is provided in the companion NRS
+ design considerations document [RFC9138], which provides the NRS
+ approaches, functions, and design considerations.
+
+ This document represents the consensus of the Information-Centric
+ Networking Research Group (ICNRG). It has been reviewed extensively
+ by the Research Group (RG) members who are actively involved in the
+ research and development of the technology covered by this document.
+ It is not an IETF product and is not a standard.
+
+2. Terminology
+
+ Name Resolution Service (NRS): An NRS in ICN is defined as a service
+ that provides the function of translating a content name or a data
+ object name into some other information such as a routable prefix,
+ a locator, an off-path-cache pointer, or an alias name that is
+ more amenable than the input name to forwarding the object request
+ toward the target destination storing the NDO [RFC9138]. An NRS
+ is most likely implemented through the use of a distributed
+ mapping database system. The Domain Name System (DNS) may be used
+ as an NRS. However, in this case, the requirements of frequent
+ updates of NRS records due to the creations of a lot of new NDOs
+ and changes in their locations in the network need to be
+ considered.
+
+ NRS server: An NRS comprises the distributed NRS servers storing the
+ mapping records in their databases. NRS servers store and
+ maintain the mapping records that keep the mappings of content or
+ object name to some other information that is used for forwarding
+ the content request or the content itself.
+
+ NRS resolver: The client-side function of an NRS is called an NRS
+ resolver. The NRS resolver is responsible for initiating name
+ resolution request queries that ultimately lead to a name
+ resolution of the target data objects. NRS resolvers can be
+ located in the consumer (or client) nodes and/or ICN routers. An
+ NRS resolver may also cache the mapping records obtained through
+ the name resolution for later usage.
+
+ Name registration: In order to populate the NRS, the content names
+ and their mapping records must be registered in the NRS system by
+ a publisher who has access rights to at least one authoritative
+ NRS server or by a producer who generates named data objects. The
+ records contain the mapping of an object name to some information
+ such as other alias names, routable prefixes, and locators, which
+ are used for forwarding the content request. Thus, a publisher or
+ producer of content creates an NRS registration request and sends
+ it to an NRS server. On registration, the NRS server stores (or
+ updates) the name mapping record in the database and sends an
+ acknowledgement back to the producer or publisher that made the
+ registration request.
+
+ Name resolution: Name resolution is the main function of the NRS
+ system. It is performed by an NRS resolver, which can be deployed
+ on a consumer node or an ICN router. Resolvers are responsible
+ for either returning a cached mapping record (whose lifetime has
+ not expired) or alternatively sending a name resolution request
+ toward an NRS server. The NRS server searches for the content
+ name in its mapping record database and, if found, retrieves the
+ mapping record and returns it in a name resolution response
+ message to the NRS resolver.
+
+ NRS node: NRS servers are also referred to as NRS nodes that
+ maintain the name records. The terms are used interchangeably.
+
+ NRS client: A node that uses the NRS is called an NRS client. Any
+ node that initiates a name registration, resolution, or update
+ procedure is an NRS client; that is, NRS resolvers, ICN client
+ nodes, ICN routers, or producers can be NRS clients.
+
+3. Background
+
+ A pure name-based routing approach in ICN has inherent challenges in
+ enabling a globally scalable routing system, accommodating producer
+ mobility, and supporting off-path caching. In order to address these
+ challenges, an NRS has been utilized in proposals and literature of
+ several ICN projects as follows:
+
+ Routing scalability: In ICN, application names identifying content
+ are intended to be used directly for packet delivery, so ICN
+ routers run a name-based routing protocol to build name-based
+ routing and forwarding tables. Similar to the scalability
+ challenge of IP routing, if non-aggregatable name prefixes are
+ injected into the Default Route Free Zone (DFZ) of ICN routers,
+ they would be driving the uncontrolled growth of the DFZ routing
+ table size. Thus, providing the level of indirection enabled by
+ an NRS in ICN can be an approach to keeping the routing table size
+ under control. The NRS system resolves name prefixes that do not
+ exist in the DFZ forwarding table into globally routable prefixes
+ such as the one proposed in NDN [Afanasyev]. Another approach
+ dealing with routing scalability is the Multi-level Distributed
+ Hash Table (MDHT) used in NetInf [Dannewitz]. It provides name-
+ based anycast routing that can support a non-hierarchical
+ namespace and can be adopted on a global scale [Dannewitz2].
+
+ Producer mobility: In ICN, if a producer moves into a different name
+ domain that uses a different name prefix, the request for a
+ content produced by the moving producer with the origin content
+ name must be forwarded to the moving producer's new location.
+ Especially in a hierarchical naming scheme, producer mobility
+ support is much harder than in a flat naming scheme since the
+ routing tables in a broader area need to be updated to track the
+ producer movement. Therefore, various ICN architectures such as
+ NetInf [Dannewitz] and MobilityFirst [MF] have adopted NRS systems
+ to tackle the issues of producers whose location changes.
+
+ Off-path caching: In-network caching is a common feature of an ICN
+ architecture. Caching approaches can be categorized into on-path
+ caching and off-path caching, according to the location of caches
+ in relation to the forwarding path from the original content store
+ to a consumer. Off-path caching, sometimes also referred to as
+ content replication or content storing, aims to replicate a Named
+ Data Object in various locations within a network in order to
+ increase the availability of content, reduce access latency, or
+ both. These caching locations may not be lying along the content
+ forwarding path. Thus, finding off-path cached content requires
+ more complex forwarding procedures if a pure name-based routing is
+ employed. In order to support access to off-path caches, the
+ locations of replicas are usually advertised into a name-based
+ routing system or into an NRS as described in [Bayhan].
+
+ This document discusses architectural considerations and implications
+ of ICN when an NRS is utilized to solve such challenges facing a
+ name-based routing in ICN.
+
+4. Implications of an NRS in ICN
+
+ An NRS is not a mandatory part of an ICN architecture, as the
+ majority of ICN architectures uses name-based routing that avoids the
+ need for a name resolution procedure. Therefore, the utilization of
+ an NRS in an ICN architecture changes some architectural aspects at
+ least with respect to forwarding procedures, latency, and security,
+ as discussed below:
+
+ Forwarding procedure: When an NRS is included in an ICN
+ architecture, the name resolution procedure has to be included in
+ the ICN overall routing and forwarding architectural procedures.
+ To integrate an NRS into an ICN architecture, there are certain
+ things that have to be decided and specified such as where, when,
+ and how the name resolution task is performed.
+
+ Latency: When an NRS is included in an ICN architecture, additional
+ latency introduced by the name resolution process is incurred by
+ the routing and forwarding system. Although the latency due to
+ the name resolution is added, the total latency of individual
+ requests being served could be lower if the nearest copies or off-
+ path caches can be located by the NRS lookup procedure.
+ Additionally, there might be a favorable trade-off between the
+ name resolution latency and inter-domain traffic reduction by
+ finding the nearest off-path cached copy of the content. Finding
+ the nearest cache holding the content might significantly reduce
+ the content discovery as well as delivery latency.
+
+ Security: When any new component such as an NRS is introduced in the
+ ICN architecture, the attack surface may increase. Protection of
+ the NRS system itself against attacks such as Distributed Denial
+ of Service (DDoS) and spoofing or alteration of name mapping
+ records and related signaling messages may be challenging.
+
+5. ICN Architectural Considerations for NRS
+
+ This section discusses the various items that can be considered from
+ the perspective of ICN architecture when employing an NRS system.
+ These items are related to the registration, resolution, and update
+ of name mapping records, protocols and messages, and integration with
+ the routing system.
+
+5.1. Name Mapping Records Registration, Resolution, and Update
+
+ When an NRS is integrated in ICN architecture, the functions related
+ to the registration, resolution, and update of name mapping records
+ have to be considered. The NRS nodes maintain the name mapping
+ records and may exist as an overlay network over the ICN routers,
+ that is, they communicate to each other through ICN routers.
+ Figure 1 shows the NRS nodes and NRS clients connected through an
+ underlying network. The NRS nodes should be deployed in such a
+ manner that an NRS node is always available at a short distance from
+ an NRS client so that communication latency for the name registration
+ and resolution requested by the NRS client remains very low. The
+ name registration, name resolution, and name record update procedures
+ are briefly discussed below.
+
+ +------------+ +------------+
+ | NRS Node | | NRS Node |
+ +------------+ +------------+
+ | |
+ | |
+ +------------+ | | +------------+
+ | NRS Client |--------------------------------------| NRS Client |
+ +------------+ underlying network +------------+
+
+ Figure 1: NRS Nodes and NRS Clients Connected through an
+ Underlying Network
+
+
+ Name registration: Name registration is performed by the producer
+ (as an NRS client) when it creates a new content. When a producer
+ creates content and assigns a name from its name prefix space to
+ the content, the producer performs the name registration in an NRS
+ node. Name registration may be performed by an ICN router when
+ the ICN architecture supports off-path caching or cooperative
+ caching since involving an NRS may be a good idea for off-path
+ caching. The ICN routers with forwarder caches do not require
+ name registration for their cached content because they lie on the
+ path toward an upstream content store or producer. They will be
+ hit when a future request is forwarded to the content producer by
+ an ICN router lying downstream toward the ICN client node.
+ However, ICN routers performing off-path caching of content must
+ invoke the name registration procedure so that other ICN routers
+ can depend on name resolutions to know about the off-path cache
+ locations. If a content gets cached in many off-path ICN routers,
+ all of them may register the same content names in the same NRS
+ node, resulting in multiple registration actions. In this case,
+ the NRS node adds the new location of the content to the name
+ record together with the previous locations. In this way, each of
+ the name records stored in the NRS node may contain multiple
+ locations of the content. Assigning validity time or a lifetime
+ of each mapping record may be considered especially for the off-
+ path caching content and managing mobility.
+
+ Name resolution: Name resolution is performed by an NRS client to
+ obtain the name record from an NRS node by sending a name
+ resolution request message and getting a response containing the
+ record. In the name-based ICN routing context, the name
+ resolution is needed by any ICN router whose forwarding
+ information base (FIB) does not contain the requested name prefix.
+ Name resolution may also be performed by the consumer (especially
+ in the case where the consumer is multihomed) to forward the
+ content request in a better direction so that it obtains the
+ content from the nearest cache. If the consumer is single homed,
+ it may not bother to perform name resolution, instead depending on
+ either straightforward name-based routing or name resolution by an
+ upstream ICN router. In this case, the consumer creates the
+ content request packet containing the content name and forwards to
+ the nearest ICN router. The ICN router checks its FIB table to
+ see where to forward the content request. If the ICN router fails
+ to identify whether the requested content is reachable, it
+ performs name resolution to obtain the name mapping record and
+ adds this information to its FIB. The ICN router may also perform
+ name resolution even before the arrival of a content request to
+ use the name mapping record to configure its FIB.
+
+ Name record update: Name record update is carried out when a content
+ name mapping record changes, e.g., the content is not available in
+ one or more of the previous locations. The name record update
+ includes the substitution and deletion of the name mapping
+ records. The name record update may take place explicitly by the
+ exchange of name record update messages or implicitly when a
+ timeout occurs and a name record is deemed to be invalid. The
+ implicit update is possible when each record is accompanied by a
+ lifetime value. The lifetime can be renewed only by the
+ authoritative producer or node. The cached mapping records get
+ erased after the lifetime expires unless a lifetime extension
+ indication is obtained from the authoritative producer.
+
+5.2. Protocols and Semantics
+
+ In order to develop an NRS system within a local ICN network domain
+ or global ICN network domain, new protocols and semantics must be
+ designed and implemented to manage and resolve names among different
+ namespaces.
+
+ One way of implementing an NRS for CCNx is by extending the basic TLV
+ format and semantics [RFC8569] [RFC8609]. For instance, name
+ resolution and response messages can be implemented by defining new
+ type fields in the Interest and Content Object messages [CCNxNRS].
+ By leveraging the existing CCNx Interest and Content Object packets
+ for name resolution and registration, the NRS system can be deployed
+ with a few ICN protocol changes. However, because of confining the
+ changes to the basic ICN protocol and semantics, the NRS system may
+ not be able to exploit more flexible and scalable designs.
+
+ On the other hand, an NRS system can be designed independently with
+ its own protocol and semantics like the NRS system described in
+ [Hong]. For instance, the NRS protocol and messages can be
+ implemented by using a RESTful API, and the NRS can be operated as an
+ application protocol independent of the rest of the ICN protocol.
+
+5.3. Routing System
+
+ An NRS reduces the routing complexity of ICN architecture compared to
+ pure name-based routing. It does so by permitting the routing system
+ to update the routing table on demand with the help of name records
+ obtained from NRS. The routing system therefore needs to make name
+ resolution requests and process the information returned, such as a
+ prefix, a locator, an off-path-cache pointer, or an alias name,
+ obtained from the name resolution.
+
+ No matter what kind of information is obtained from the name
+ resolution, as long as it is in the form of a name, the content
+ request message in the routing system may be reformatted with the
+ obtained information. In this case, the content name requested
+ originally by a consumer needs to be involved in the reformatted
+ content request to check the integrity of the binding between the
+ name and the requested content. In other words, the information
+ obtained from the name resolution is used to forward the content
+ request, and the original content name requested by a consumer is
+ used to identify the content. Alternatively, the resolved
+ information may be used to build the routing table.
+
+ The information obtained from name resolution may not be in the form
+ of a name. For example, it may identify tunnel endpoints by IP
+ address and instead be used to construct an IP protocol tunnel
+ through which to forward the content request.
+
+6. Conclusion
+
+ A Name Resolution Service (NRS) is not a mandatory part in an ICN
+ architecture, as the majority of ICN architectures use name-based
+ routing that does not employ a name resolution procedure. However,
+ such name-based routing in ICN has inherent challenges in enabling a
+ globally scalable routing system, accommodating producer mobility,
+ and supporting off-path caching. In order to address these
+ challenges, an NRS system has been introduced in several ICN
+ projects. Therefore, this document describes how the ICN
+ architecture changes when an NRS is utilized and how this affects the
+ ICN routing system.
+
+ The document defines a few terminologies related to an NRS and
+ explains some inherent challenges of pure name-based routing in ICN
+ such as routing scalability, producer mobility, and off-path caching.
+ This document describes how the ICN architecture would change with
+ respect to procedures, latency, and security when an NRS is utilized.
+ According to the ICN architectural changes, this document describes
+ ICN architectural considerations for NRS such as the functions
+ related to the registration, resolution and update of name mapping
+ records, protocols and semantics to implement an NRS system, and the
+ routing system involving the name resolution.
+
+7. IANA Considerations
+
+ This document has no IANA actions.
+
+8. Security Considerations
+
+ When any new component such as an NRS is introduced in the ICN
+ architecture, the attack surface increases. The related security
+ vulnerability issues are discussed below:
+
+ Namespace security: In order to deploy an NRS system in ICN
+ architecture, ICN namespaces, which may be assigned by
+ authoritative entities, must be securely mapped to the content
+ publishers and securely managed by them. According to the ICN
+ research challenges [RFC7927], a new namespace can also provide an
+ integrity verification function to authenticate its publisher.
+ The issues of namespace authentication and the mapping among
+ different namespaces require further investigation.
+
+ NRS system security: An NRS requires the deployment of new entities
+ (e.g., NRS servers) to build distributed and scalable NRS systems.
+ Thus, the entities, e.g., an NRS server maintaining a mapping
+ database, could be the focus of attacks by receiving malicious
+ requests from innumerable adversaries comprising of Denial-of-
+ Service or Distributed-Denial-of-Service attacks. In addition,
+ NRS clients in general must trust the NRS nodes in other network
+ domains to some degree, and communication among them must also be
+ protected securely to prevent malicious entities from
+ participating in this communication. The history of name
+ resolution data requires to be stored and analyzed as in passive
+ DNS to uncover potential security incidents or discover malicious
+ infrastructures.
+
+ NRS protocol and message security: In an NRS system, the protocols
+ to generate, transmit, and receive NRS messages related to the
+ name registration, resolution, and record update should be
+ protected by proper security mechanisms. Proper security measures
+ must be provided so that only legitimate nodes can initiate and
+ read NRS messages. These messages must be secured by integrity
+ protection and authentication mechanisms so that unauthorized
+ parties cannot manipulate them when being forwarded through the
+ network. Security measures to encrypt these messages should also
+ be developed to thwart all threats to both security and privacy.
+ Numerous problems similar to the security issues of an IP network
+ and DNS can affect the overall ICN architecture. The DNS QNAME
+ minimization type of approach would be suitable for preserving
+ privacy in the name resolution process. Therefore, security
+ mechanisms such as accessibility, authentication, etc., for the
+ NRS system [RFC9138] should be considered to protect not only the
+ NRS system but also the ICN architecture overall.
+
+9. References
+
+9.1. Normative References
+
+ [RFC7927] Kutscher, D., Ed., Eum, S., Pentikousis, K., Psaras, I.,
+ Corujo, D., Saucez, D., Schmidt, T., and M. Waehlisch,
+ "Information-Centric Networking (ICN) Research
+ Challenges", RFC 7927, DOI 10.17487/RFC7927, July 2016,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7927>.
+
+ [RFC8569] Mosko, M., Solis, I., and C. Wood, "Content-Centric
+ Networking (CCNx) Semantics", RFC 8569,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC8569, July 2019,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8569>.
+
+ [RFC8609] Mosko, M., Solis, I., and C. Wood, "Content-Centric
+ Networking (CCNx) Messages in TLV Format", RFC 8609,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC8609, July 2019,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8609>.
+
+ [RFC9138] Hong, J., You, T., Dong, L., Westphal, C., and B. Ohlman,
+ "Design Considerations for Name Resolution Service in
+ Information-Centric Networking (ICN)", RFC 9138,
+ DOI 10.17487/RFC9138, December 2021,
+ <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9138>.
+
+9.2. Informative References
+
+ [Afanasyev]
+ Afanasyev, A., Yi, C., Wang, L., Zhang, B., and L. Zhang,
+ "SNAMP: Secure namespace mapping to scale NDN forwarding",
+ 2015 IEEE Conference on Computer Communications Workshops
+ (INFOCOM WKSHPS), DOI 10.1109/INFCOMW.2015.7179398, April
+ 2015, <https://doi.org/10.1109/INFCOMW.2015.7179398>.
+
+ [Bayhan] Bayhan, S., Ott, J., Kangasharju, J., Sathiaseelan, A.,
+ and J. Crowcroft, "On Content Indexing for Off-Path
+ Caching in Information-Centric Networks", ACM ICN,
+ DOI 10.1145/2984356.2984372, September 2016,
+ <https://doi.org/10.1145/2984356.2984372>.
+
+ [CCNx] "Cicn", <https://wiki.fd.io/view/Cicn>.
+
+ [CCNxNRS] Hong, J., You, T., and Y. Hong, "CCNx Extension for Name
+ Resolution Service", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft,
+ draft-hong-icnrg-ccnx-nrs-02, 2 July 2018,
+ <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-hong-icnrg-
+ ccnx-nrs-02>.
+
+ [Dannewitz]
+ Dannewitz, C., Kutscher, D., Ohlman, B., Farrell, S.,
+ Ahlgren, B., and H. Karl, "Network of Information (NetInf)
+ - An information-centric networking architecture",
+ Computer Communications vol. 36, issue 7,
+ DOI 10.1016/j.comcom.2013.01.009, April 2013,
+ <https://doi.org/10.1016/j.comcom.2013.01.009>.
+
+ [Dannewitz2]
+ Dannewitz, C., D'Ambrosio, M., and V. Vercellone,
+ "Hierarchical DHT-based name resolution for information-
+ centric networks", Computer Communications vol. 36, issue
+ 7, DOI 10.1016/j.comcom.2013.01.014, April 2013,
+ <https://doi.org/10.1016/j.comcom.2013.01.014>.
+
+ [Hong] Hong, J., Chun, W., and H. Jung, "Demonstrating a Scalable
+ Name Resolution System for Information-Centric
+ Networking", ACM ICN, DOI 10.1145/2810156.2812617,
+ September 2015, <https://doi.org/10.1145/2810156.2812617>.
+
+ [MF] Future Internet Architecture (FIA), "MobilityFirst",
+ <http://mobilityfirst.cs.umass.edu/>.
+
+ [NDN] NDN, "Named Data Networking", September 2010,
+ <https://www.named-data.net>.
+
+ [Ravindran]
+ Ravindran, R., Chakraborti, A., and A. Azgin, "Forwarding
+ Label support in CCN Protocol", Work in Progress,
+ Internet-Draft, draft-ravi-icnrg-ccn-forwarding-label-02,
+ 5 March 2018, <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/
+ draft-ravi-icnrg-ccn-forwarding-label-02>.
+
+ [SAIL] "Scalable and Adaptive Internet Solutions (SAIL)",
+ <https://www.sail-project.eu/>.
+
+ [Zhang2] Zhang, Y., Afanasyev, A., Burke, J., and L. Zhang, "A
+ Survey of Mobility Support in Named Data Networking",
+ Named Data Networking, Workshop on Name-Oriented Mobility:
+ Architecture, Algorithms and Applications (NOM), April
+ 2016.
+
+Acknowledgements
+
+ The authors would like to thank Dave Oran (ICNRG Co-chair) for very
+ useful reviews and comments, which helped to immeasurably improve
+ this document.
+
+Authors' Addresses
+
+ Jungha Hong
+ ETRI
+ Yuseung-Gu
+ 218 Gajeong-ro
+ Daejeon
+ 34129
+ Republic of Korea
+ Email: jhong@etri.re.kr
+
+
+ Tae-Wan You
+ ETRI
+ Yuseung-Gu
+ 218 Gajeong-ro
+ Daejeon
+ 34129
+ Republic of Korea
+ Email: twyou@etri.re.kr
+
+
+ Ved Kafle
+ NICT
+ Koganei
+ 4-2-1 Nukui-Kitamachi, Tokyo
+ 184-8795
+ Japan
+ Email: kafle@nict.go.jp