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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.  From our
standpoint it is compelling for many reasons, not the least of which is
the fact that it is part of our currently shipping product. I suspect
that is the case with some other TC members. From a OASIS TC standpoint
it is compelling in that there is a published spec, and we should
respect it as much as possible. Additionally the spec has been
demonstrated to have some level of interoperability.

This should not be a debate about which approach is superior. I would
have had no problem with using any number of different approaches, had
they been put forth earlier in the process. The question should be what
is going to move the industry forward to adopting a provisioning
standard. I can't see how issuing a completely different spec is going
to accomplish that. If the SPML 2.0 spec is a complete rewrite of the
1.0 spec, why would anyone adopt it? What confidence would they have
that SPML 3.0 would not come out and be totally different from 2.0?

Jeff Bohren
Product Architect
OpenNetwork Technologies, Inc

Try the industry's only 100% .NET-enabled identity management software.
Download your free copy of Universal IdP Standard Edition today. Go to
www.opennetwork.com/eval.



-----Original Message-----
From: Gearard Woods [mailto:gewoods@us.ibm.com]
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2003 2:16 PM
To: Jeff Bohren
Cc: provision@lists.oasis-open.org
Subject: RE: [provision] Discussion and analysis of SPML 2.0 submission
from IBM






Jeff,
I have to admit that I only glanced at your submission, assuming it was
the same approach you had propsed on the list some time ago.  Looking at
it now, it does indeed offer a lot of benefits over SPML 1.0.  It
appears to be incomplete though and I'd like to see a more thorough
example if you have one.  For example, I'd like to see how something
like the Liberty profile schema is imported, more information on the
"name" attribute in your search request would be useful ("CommonName\cn"
looks strange to me). I'm also not sure that I understand the object
reference example.  It would be useful to see the modified SPML core
schema for this so that I can understand exactly how it would work.

Of course, I still have an issue with the SPML-specific schema language.
You know my complaints:
- The language is incompatible with Web Services tools, or XML tools for
that matter - XML Spy won't generate a sample SPML document for you as
an example, off-the-shelf schema compilers such as Castor won't
recognize it.
- The approach flies in the face of accepted Web Services practices and
the use of SPML schema essentially gets in the way of the XML Schema.
If a user is to describe their data in XML Schema, what's the point of
SPML schema?
- The identifier mechanisms are clumsy and is much better handled using
standard XML namespaces and URIs.
- The schema language is still directory-oriented and is not an XML
schema language.  This is true also of DSMLv1 of course but it
introduces difficulties when dealing with XML.  For example, in your
object reference example (and as I said I may not understand this
properly), you define:
   ...
    <attributeDefinition name="role"
type="urn:oasis:names:tc:SPML:1:1#Identifier"/>
   ...
   <objectClassDefinition name = "role">
    <memberAttributes>
      <attributeDefinitionReference name = "cn" required = "true" />
      <attributeDefinitionReference name = "description" />
      <attributeDefinitionReference name = "password" />
    </memberAttributes>
  </objectClassDefinition>
   ...

The problem here of course is that the "type" of the role attribute is
not a role but an "identifier".  This is handled much better in XML
schema languages that have strong typing and relate closely to their
resultant XML representation.

If backward compatibility is an issue, and I'm not sure how much of a
problem it could be at this point, then consider that the
WS-Provisioning proposal can easily transport SPML 1.0 schema and data.
To me, this approach offers a number of benefits including the tool
compatibility and Web Services emphasis that SPML lacks.  As an example
of how an SPML1.0 schema might be expressed in WS-Provisioning:

   <wsp:ProvisioningTarget
xmlns:wsp="urn:ibm:names:ws:provisioning:0.1:core">
      <wsp:identifier name="xyz123"/>
         <wsp:schema>
            <spml:schema xmlns:spml="urn:oasis:names:tc:SPML:1:0"
xmlns:dsml="urn:oasis:names:tc:DSML:2:0:core">
               <spml:providerIdentifier providerIDType =
"urn:oasis:names:tc:SPML:1:0#URN">

<spml:providerID>urn:oasis:names:tc:SPML</spml:providerID>
               </spml:providerIdentifier>
               <spml:schemaIdentifier schemaIDType =
"urn:oasis:names:tc:SPML:1:0#GenericString">
                  <spml:schemaID>standard</spml:schemaID>
               </spml:schemaIdentifier>
               <spml:attributeDefinition name="objectclass"/>
               <spml:attributeDefinition name="cn"/>
               <spml:attributeDefinition name="uid"/>
               ...
               <spml:objectClassDefinition name="person">
                   <spml:memberAttributes>
                      <spml:attributeDefinitionReference
name="objectclass" required="true"/>
                      <spml:attributeDefinitionReference name="cn"
required="true"/>
                      <spml:attributeDefinitionReference name="uid"/>
                      ...
                   </spml:memberAttributes>
               </spml:objectClassDefinition>
            </spml:schema>
     </wsp:schema>
    </wsp:ProvisioningTarget>

If the SPML 1.0 had many compelling features that we could not afford to
lose then tacking on support for XML Schema and XML data would be a
worthwhile exercise.  However, this is not really the case and the
retrofitting is going to result in a cumbersome specification that will
be difficult to understand and implement. Gerry




|---------+---------------------------->
|         |           "Jeff Bohren"    |
|         |           <jbohren@opennetw|
|         |           ork.com>         |
|         |                            |
|         |           12/02/2003 07:27 |
|         |           AM               |
|---------+---------------------------->

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

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




Gerry,

I have already proposed an enhancment to SPML to allow for arbitrary XML
to be used as provisioning data (see the OpenNetwork proposal for more
details). This requires no encodings or transformations and allows XSD
to be used to define the structure of the XML data. This also has the
advantage of being fully backwards compatible with SPML 1.0.

Why does this not meet your requirements for the transport of XML data?

Jeff Bohren
Product Architect
OpenNetwork Technologies, Inc

Try the industry's only 100% .NET-enabled identity management software.
Download your free copy of Universal IdP Standard Edition today. Go to
www.opennetwork.com/eval.



-----Original Message-----
From: Gearard Woods [mailto:gewoods@us.ibm.com]
Sent: Tuesday, December 02, 2003 1:35 AM
To: Jeff Bohren
Cc: provision@lists.oasis-open.org
Subject: RE: [provision] Discussion and analysis of SPML 2.0 submission
from IBM






Jeff,
I think you might not be remembering our original proposal correctly. We
have always advocated the use of a target object to hold schema.  I
plucked the following segment from an e-mail in the list archives dated
February 28th of this year:

...
      <complexType name="ProvisioningTargetSchema">
            <sequence>
                  <any namespace="##other" minOccurs="0"
maxOccurs="unbounded"/>
            </sequence>
      </complexType>

      <element name="ProvisioningTarget">
            <complexType name="ProvisioningTargetType">
                  <sequence>
                        <element name="identifier"
type="tns:ProvisioningIdentifier" minOccurs="1" maxOccurs="1"/>
                        <element name="schema"
type="tns:ProvisioningTargetSchema" minOccurs="0" maxOccurs="1"/>
                  </sequence>
            </complexType>
      </element>
...

You'll find this almost verbatim in our submission.  It was never a
suggested that the target schema had to be embedded in WSDL.

As far as the portions of the SPML that should be kept, as I said
earlier, and as you well know, our problems go to the heart of the spec.
The SPML-specific schema language is unsatisfactory for a number of
reasons that we've discussed at length already.  The schema then
dictates the data model - that XML-unfriendly attribute-value data model
that we have also discussed at length already.  The schema and data
model then impact the operational interface.

I don't want to suggest that we at an impasse but I do think that any
proposals based on the SPML schema language will not come close to
satisfying our requirements.  The SPML must allow the use of XML Schema
as the target schema language, at a minimum.  Not as a tacked on
band-aid but as a first-class schema language.  It must also provide for
the transport of XML data as XML data - no wierd transformations or
encodings.  The reasons for these requirements are obvious and
particularly imperative in a Web Services context.  Fixing these demands
a major overhaul of SPML 1.0. Gerry



|---------+---------------------------->
|         |           "Jeff Bohren"    |
|         |           <jbohren@opennetw|
|         |           ork.com>         |
|         |                            |
|         |           12/01/2003 05:47 |
|         |           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,

It would be helpful to make a proposal of what parts of the current SPML
1.0 specification should be kept as is and what should be replaced or
modified. That way we can have a useful discussion on the mail list
leading up to the next face to face.

For instance you originally insisted that the only acceptable way to
represent the meta-data of the provisioning target (i.e. the
provisioning
schema) was to represent it in XML Schema in WSDL so that client could
be auto-generated. Now in your WS-Provisioning submission that approach
is not taken. Instead the client gets the schema using a
"FetchTargetRequest", and processes the "FetchTargetResponse" in order
to read the schema. Since you have already abandoned a pure WSDL
approach for representing schema, why could that not be merged into the
current SPML schema mechanism?

Jeff Bohren
OpenNetwork Technologies



             -----Original Message-----
             From: Gearard Woods [mailto:gewoods@us.ibm.com]
             Sent: Mon 12/1/2003 4:42 PM
             To: Jeff Bohren
             Cc: provision@lists.oasis-open.org
             Subject: RE: [provision] Discussion and analysis of SPML
2.0 submission from IBM







             I think it's fair to say that the submission is intended to
act as a
             statement of direction, indicating the form that we would
like to see the
             SPML take.  We've been quite clear about the fundamental
problems that we
             have with the current approach and on many occasions have
pointed out that
             these issues need to be addressed at the foundations of the
SPML.
             Reconciling the SPML1.0's schema and data models with the
direction
             detailed in our submission is not trivial.  It is certainly
not a
             cut-and-paste exercise.  The question to me is what
portions of the SPML
             can be retained to meet our needs.  At present those are
few.



             |---------+---------------------------->
             |         |           "Jeff Bohren"    |
             |         |           <jbohren@opennetw|
             |         |           ork.com>         |
             |         |                            |
             |         |           11/25/2003 06:56 |
             |         |           AM               |
             |---------+---------------------------->

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

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

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





             The IBM Proposal looks to be a very good specification on
it's own merits,
             but has no compatiblity with the current SPML 1.0
specification. What
             exactly is IBM proposing? Is IBM proposing the the current
SPML
             specification be wholesale replaced with the IBM proposed
specification? Or
             is IBM proposing this as input into the SPML 2.0
specification?

             If IBM is proposing this as input rather than a wholesale
replacement, what
             parts does IBM feel are appropriate to incorporate into the
SPML 2.0?


             Jeff Bohren
             Product Architect
             OpenNetwork Technologies, Inc

             Try the industry's only 100% .NET-enabled identity
management software.
             Download your free copy of Universal IdP Standard Edition
today. Go to
             www.opennetwork.com/eval.

                   -----Original Message-----
                   From: Darran Rolls [mailto:Darran.Rolls@waveset.com]
                   Sent: Tuesday, November 25, 2003 9:46 AM
                   To: provision@lists.oasis-open.org
                   Subject: [provision] Discussion and analysis of SPML
2.0 submission
                   from IBM

                   As you are no doubt aware, IBM has submitted a
specification document
                   to the PSTC for consideration as content and
requirements for SPML
                   Version 2.0.  This submission can be found at [1]. Do
you have
                   questions regarding the intent, status or content of
this submission?

                   [1]
http://www.oasis-open.org/archives/provision/200310/msg00001.html






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