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Subject: RE: [provision] Discussion and analysis of SPML 2.0 submission from IBM






Jeff,
I'd be very interested in seeing details of that compromise solution.
Thanks,
Gerry



|---------+---------------------------->
|         |           "Jeff Bohren"    |
|         |           <jbohren@opennetw|
|         |           ork.com>         |
|         |                            |
|         |           12/03/2003 07:35 |
|         |           AM               |
|---------+---------------------------->
  >------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|
  |                                                                                                                              |
  |       To:       <provision@lists.oasis-open.org>                                                                             |
  |       cc:                                                                                                                    |
  |       Subject:  RE: [provision] Discussion and analysis of SPML 2.0 submission from IBM                                      |
  >------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|




Gerry,

I am sorry that you feel that SPML 1.0 spec was railroaded through. The
SPML 1.0 effort took almost 2 years to reach an approved specification.
The effort include individuals from previous standardization efforts,
XRPM, ADPr, and ITML. The direction for the current spec was developed
with the participation and approval of IBM (although via a different
individual representative). When IBM changed direction and decided that
the effort needed to start over, the effort was delayed by several
months while the issue was discussed. IBM was given ample time to
present it's case. A committee vote was ultimately taken and the IBM
proposal to start over was rejected. The spec then went through the
proper OASIS review cycles and was approved first by the TC and then by
the required 15% of OASIS member organizations. To say that this was
"railroaded" is an unfair characterization.

You keep making the straw man argument that we "decided against a web
services approach". You apparently make this case based on the fact that
the provisioning meta-data is represented in a form other than XSD. Are
you claiming that any protocol that does not XSD to represent meta-data
is not taking a "web services approach"? If you want to argue that the
current approach is not appropriate for the provisioning domain, that is
legitimate debate. To argue that it is not "web service based" is not.

The current SPML data model seems to be the biggest point of contention.
It seems that the other issues are more tractable. If could put together
a compromise proposal where the current SPML spec was expanded to
support both the current data model and a data model similar to what is
proposed in WS-Provisioning, would that be acceptable? This would still
use the current SPML request/response model, but each of the verbs (add,
mod, del, get schema) would be expanded to support both the current
model and the model proposed in WS-Provisioning. This would support the
open ended data model that you want as well as the backwards
compatibility that I want. Would IBM be willing, in theory at least, to
support that as a compromise solution?


Jeff Bohren
Product Architect
OpenNetwork Technologies, Inc

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-----Original Message-----
From: Gearard Woods [mailto:gewoods@us.ibm.com]
Sent: Wednesday, December 03, 2003 2:18 AM
To: Jeff Bohren
Cc: provision@lists.oasis-open.org
Subject: RE: [provision] Discussion and analysis of SPML 2.0 submission
from IBM






Jeff,
We've had all these arguments before and we could go back and forth for
days on this.  The bottom line is that I feel the SPML 1.0 was
railroaded through for marketing purposes to make Catalyst.  The
official argument at the time against a Web Services approach was that
the committee would lose both credibility and an investment in work
already done.  You argued vigorously, almost violently, against what we
were trying to propose because, you said, directories are proven and our
approach wasn't.  Now here we are again, there is too much investment in
the current path and directories are proven.

I'll re-iterate my previous high-level arguments for the record:
- The SPML should interoperate seamlessly with Web Services
- The SPML should itself take advantage of, and be implemented using,
accepted Web Services standards
- The SPML should offer a Provisioniong model, not a directory model.
This point is very relevant at this juncture because had the SPML 1.0
offered a provisioning foundation we would now be discussing what a
richer provisioning model would look like rather than how we might cram
XML Schema and XML data into a directory protocol.

These things seem self-evident, just as the creation and refinement of
another directory protocol seems redundant.  Your roundup of
attribute/value protocols and products makes it clear that there are
plenty already but fails to mention that SPML is, in fact, crippled as
compared to the directory protocol is is based on, DSMLv2.  Your recent
e-mail on the search limitations indicate that you fully understand
this.  The roundup also fails to acknowledge that directory vendors are
putting a lot of thought into how to get around the very problems we are
discussing, initiatives such as XED illustrate this.  But here is a
protocol hot off the press that has all of the traditional directory
limitations and more built right in from the start.  You'll forgive me
if I don't consider the SPML1.0 to be an appropriate foundation for the
future of provisioning interfaces.  It's a good reflection of the past
though, I'll give you that. Gerry




|---------+---------------------------->
|         |           "Jeff Bohren"    |
|         |           <jbohren@opennetw|
|         |           ork.com>         |
|         |                            |
|         |           12/02/2003 05:53 |
|         |           PM               |
|---------+---------------------------->

>-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------|
  |
|
  |       To:       Gearard Woods/Irvine/IBM@IBMUS
|
  |       cc:       <provision@lists.oasis-open.org>
|
  |       Subject:  RE: [provision] Discussion and analysis of SPML 2.0
submission from IBM                                      |

>-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------|




Gerry,

I agree that we should be willing to consider all options for SPML 2.0.
I would be willing to consider just about anything including a total
rewrite if that is what is required to meet the requirements for 2.0.
But I am not going to support a total rewrite if the requirements can be
met with an approach that is backwards comatible with the current spec.
Of course we have not finalized the requirements so that decision can
not be made yet.

At highest level the SPML 1.0 spec is based around the concept that the
provisioning data is represented as a collection of attribute/values
rather than arbitrary XML. This is the approach taken by SAML as well as
SPML. It is also the approach taken by many of the currently
provisioning products in the market place. Many workflow, EAI, and BPA
products use this approach as well. And of course it is also how all
directory, meta-directory, and virtual-directory products work. Given
that, I don't think it is reasonable to characterize that approach as
"crippled" or "worthless".

My suggested compromise for SPML 2.0 is that the provisioning data be
represented as a collection of attribute/values plus arbitrary XML where
appropriate. Under this approach provisioning target developers are free
to use as much as needed from either model. People who already have
provisioning targets (as we do) don't have to be impacted. This approach
is not perfect, as compromises seldom are.

I have a hard time believing that not being able to represent provision
schema solely through XSD means that the spec has to be rewritten. It
seems that there should be a compromise somewhere in between. If not the
one I am suggesting, then perhaps another one.

Jeff Bohren
OpenNetwork Technologies

             -----Original Message-----
             From: Gearard Woods [mailto:gewoods@us.ibm.com]
             Sent: Tue 12/2/2003 6:21 PM
             To: Jeff Bohren
             Cc: provision@lists.oasis-open.org
             Subject: RE: [provision] Discussion and analysis of SPML
2.0 submission from IBM







             Jeff,
             You know the history of this debate as well as I do,
including the rush to
             demo at Catalyst in the face of the strenuous objections of
both ourselves
             and Microsoft.  Now you are using exactly the same
arguments as you used
             then.  We have committed to try to work with the committee
as part of the
             SPML 2.0 effort but if we are not to debate the merits of
different
             approaches now then there is no debate.  I'd like to point
out too that a
             radical departure from an earlier approach is not
unprecedented - an
             example close to your heart would be the fact that DSMLv2
is obviously a
             far cry from DSMLv1.

             I'm not saying that WS-Provisioning does not require that a
client retrieve
             the schema.  What I'm saying is that it doesn't get in the
way by imposing
             a proprietary schema language.  If you are using XML Schema
then you get
             XML Schema, not XML Schema shoehorned into another schema
language.

             In terms of the respect that SPML 1.0 deserves, in my book
that's something
             that results from being tested and implemented and found to
be thorough,
             robust and appropriate.  As you know we will not be
implementing it.  In
             terms of the utility that it represents, in any large scale
application,
             which the interop demo was not, the limitations of the spec
are crippling.
             It's encouraging to see that you recognize that there is
merely "some"
             level of interoparability because to claim interoperability
for a demo in a
             highly controlled environment with 10 simple attributes
would be
             overstating the case.

             If the committee is to try to build a provisioning standard
rather than
             another directory protocol, then it should not be built on
the SPML 1.0
             schema language, simple as that.  If you are prepared to
commit
             wholeheartedly to the use of XML Schema then let's dispense
with the SPML
             schema language altogether.  Sure, make it backward
compatible but with
             SPML 2.0 as a superset, not as a dependant specification.
             Gerry




             |---------+---------------------------->
             |         |           "Jeff Bohren"    |
             |         |           <jbohren@opennetw|
             |         |           ork.com>         |
             |         |                            |
             |         |           12/02/2003 12:30 |
             |         |           PM               |
             |---------+---------------------------->

>-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------|

               |
|
               |       To:       <provision@lists.oasis-open.org>
|
               |       cc:
|
               |       Subject:  RE: [provision] Discussion and analysis
of
SPML 2.0 submission from IBM                                      |

>-----------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------|





             Gerry,

             I will try to flesh out the examples more in the next
iteration of the
             OpenNetwork proposal. I should hopefully have that done
soon.

             I agree with you about the SPML Identifier. In retrospect a
pure urn
             based approach would have served better. I would like to
make that
             change in SPML 2.0 so as to allow for either the current
identifier
             approach or a URN approach.

             You seem to be implying that in WS-Provisioning an XSD
based tool could
             somehow use the provisioning target schema definition to do
something
             useful. The WS-Provisioning approach requires that the
client queries
             the service to get the provisioning schema, and parses the
result. For
             instance if you wanted to automatically generate client
code then you
             would have to create a WS-Provisioning specific tool to do
it. This is
             true with both proposals.

             Now whether SPML 1.0 had compelling features that make it
worth being
             backwards compatible with is certainly a matter of opinion.


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