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- Network Working Group D. Johnson
- Request for Comments: 1297 Merit Network, Inc.
- January 1992
-
-
- NOC Internal Integrated Trouble Ticket System
- Functional Specification Wishlist
- ("NOC TT REQUIREMENTS")
-
- Status of the Memo
-
- This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does
- not specify an Internet standard. Distribution of this memo is
- unlimited.
-
- Abstract
-
- Professional quality handling of network problems requires some kind
- of problem tracking system, herein referred to as a "trouble ticket"
- system. A basic trouble ticket system acts like a hospital chart,
- coordinating the work of multiple people who may need to work on the
- problem.
-
- Once the basic trouble ticket system is in place, however, there are
- many extensions that can aid Network Operations efficiency.
- Information in the tickets can be used to produce statistical
- reports. Operator efficiency and accuracy may be increased by
- automating trouble ticket entry with information from the network
- Alert system. The Alert system may be used to monitor trouble ticket
- progress. Trouble tickets may be also used to communicate network
- health information between NOCs, to telcom vendors, and to other
- internal sales and engineering audiences.
-
- This document explores competing uses, architectures, and desirable
- features of integrated internal trouble ticket systems for Network
- and other Operations Centers.
-
- Introduction
-
- This RFC describes general functions of a Trouble Ticket system that
- could be designed for Network Operations Centers. The document is
- being distributed to members of the Internet community in order to
- stimulate discussions of new production-oriented operator-level
- application tools for network operations. Hopefully, this will
- result both in more ideas for improving NOC performance, and in more
- available tools that incorporate those ideas.
-
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- RFC 1297 NOC TT REQUIREMENTS January 1992
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- PURPOSES OF A NOC TROUBLE TICKET SYSTEM
-
- A good Network Operations Trouble Ticket System should serve many
- purposes:
-
- 1) SHORT-TERM MEMORY AND COMMUNICATION ("Hospital Chart"). The
- primary purpose of the trouble ticket system is to act as short-
- term memory about specific problems for the NOC as a whole. In a
- multi-operator or multi-shift NOC, calls and problem updates come
- in without regard to who worked last on a particular problem.
- Problems extend over shifts, and problems may be addressed by
- several different operators on the same shift. The trouble ticket
- (like a hospital chart) provides a complete history of the
- problem, so that any operator can come up to speed on a problem
- and take the next appropriate step without having to consult with
- other operators who are working on something else, or have gone
- home, or are on vacation. In single-room NOCs, an operator may
- ask out loud if someone else knows about or is working on a
- problem, but the system should allow for more formal communication
- as well.
-
- 2) SCHEDULING and WORK ASSIGNMENT. NOCs typically work with many
- simultaneous problems with different priorities. An on-line
- trouble ticket system can provide real time (or even constantly
- displayed and updated) lists of open problems, sorted by priority.
- This would allow operators to sort their work at the beginning of
- a shift, and to pick their next task during the shift. It also
- would allow supervisors and operators to keep track of the current
- NOC workload, and to call in and assign additional staff as
- appropriate.
-
- It may be useful to allow current priorities of tickets change
- according to time of day, or in response to timer alerts.
-
- 3) REFERRALS AND DISPATCHING. If the trouble ticket system is
- thoroughly enough integrated with a mail system, or if the system
- is used by Network Engineers as well as Network Operators, then
- some problems can be dispatched simply by placing the appropriate
- Engineer or Operator name in an "assigned to" field of the trouble
- ticket.
-
- 4) ALARM CLOCK. Typically, most of the time a trouble ticket is
- open, it is waiting for something to happen. There should almost
- always be a timer associated with every wait. If a ticket is
- referred to a phone company, there will be an escalation time
- before which the phone company is supposed to call back with an
- update on the problem. For tickets referred to remote site
- personnel, there may be other more arbitrary timeouts such as
-
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- "Monday morning". Tickets referred to local engineers or
- programmers should also have timeouts ("Check in a couple of days
- if you don't hear back from me"). A good trouble ticket system
- will allow a timeout to be set for each ticket. This alarm will
- generate an alert for that ticket at the appropriate time.
- Preferably, the system should allow text to be attached to that
- timer with a shorthand message about what the alert involves
- ("Remind Site: TT xxx") (The full story can always be found by
- checking the trouble ticket). These alerts should feed into the
- NOC's standard alert system.
-
- The Alarm Clock can also assist (or enforce!) administrative
- escalation. An escalation timer could automatically be set based
- on the type of network, severity of the problem, and the time the
- outage occurred.
-
- 5) OVERSIGHT BY ENGINEERS AND CUSTOMER/SITE REPRESENTATIVES. NOCs
- frequently operate more than one network, or at least have people
- (engineers, customer representatives, etc) who are responsible for
- subsets of the total network. For these individual
- representatives, summaries of trouble tickets can be filtered by
- network or by node, and delivered electronically to the various
- engineers or site representatives. Each of these reports includes
- a summary of the previous day's trouble tickets for those sites, a
- listing of older trouble tickets still open, and a section listing
- recurrent problems. These reports allow the site reps to keep
- aware the current outages and trends for their particular sites.
- The trouble ticket system also allows network access to the the
- details of individual trouble tickets, so those receiving the
- general reports can get more detail on any of their problems by
- referencing the trouble ticket number.
-
- 6) STATISTICAL ANALYSIS. The fixed-form fields of trouble tickets
- allow categorizations of tickets, which are useful for analyzing
- equipment and NOC performance. These include, Mean Time Between
- Failure and Mean Time to Repair reports for specific equipment.
- The fields may also be of use for generating statistical quality
- control reports, which allow deteriorating equipment to be
- detected and serviced before it fails completely. Ticket
- breakdowns by network a NOC costs to be apportioned appropriately,
- and help in developing staffing and funding models. A good
- trouble ticket system should make this statistical information in
- a format suitable for spreadsheets and graphics programs.
-
- 7) FILTERING CURRENT ALERTS. It would be possible to use network
- status information from the trouble ticket system to filter the
- alerts that are displayed on the alert system. For instance, if
- node XXX is known to be down because the trouble ticket is
-
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- currently open on it, the alert display for that node could
- automatically be acknowledged. Trouble tickets could potentially
- contain much further information useful for expert system analysis
- of current network alert information.
-
- 8) ACCOUNTABILITY ("CYA"), FACILITATING CUSTOMER FOLLOW-THROUGH,
- AND NOC IMAGE). Keeping user-complaint tickets facilities the
- kind of follow through with end-users that generates happy clients
- (and good NOC image) for normal trouble-fixing situations. But
- also, by their nature, NOCs deal with crises; they occasionally
- find themselves with major outages, and angry users or
- administrators. The trouble ticket system documents the NOC's
- (and the rest of the organization's) efforts to solve problems in
- case of complaints.
-
- FIXED FIELDS, FREE-FORM FIELDS, and TT CONFIGURATION
-
- Information in trouble tickets can be placed in either fixed or
- freeform fields. Fixed fields have the advantage that they can be
- used more easily for searches. A series of fixed fields also acts as
- a template, either encouraging or requiring the operators to fill in
- certain standard data. Fixed fields can facilitate data verification
- (e.g., making sure an entered name is in an attached contacts
- database, or verifying that a phone number consists of ten numeric
- characters). Fixed fields are also appropriate for data that is
- automatically entered by the system, such as the operator's login id,
- the name of the node that was clicked on if the trouble ticket is
- opened via an alert tool, or names and phone numbers that are
- automatically entered into the ticket based on other entries (e.g.,
- filling in a contact name and phone based on a machine name).
-
- Unfortunately, fixed fields work best where the problem-debugging
- environment is uniform, well-understood, and stable; that is, trouble
- tickets work best when their fields are well tailored to the specific
- problem at hand. It is easy to set up a large number of fields (or
- even required fields) that are irrelevant to a given problem; this
- slows down and confuses the operators. Adding structure and validity
- checking to a field tends to make the data more consistent and
- reliable, but it also tends to force the operators into longer
- procedures like menus to get the get the data accepted by the system.
- It also forces there to be more maintenance on those verification
- systems (adding new entries as they become new legal options), and in
- some ways it reduces the accuracy of the system by forcing operators
- to choose "canned" or authorized responses that may not always
- represent the situation accurately. Where statistical operational
- reports are a primary purpose of the trouble ticket system, several
- fixed fields may be appropriate. If the primary intent of the system
- is to keep notes for individual problems and to facilitate
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- communication between operators, then fixed fields may tend to be a
- hindrance. One reasonable guideline would be that fixed fields are
- used ONLY where they are automatically filled in by the larger
- system, or where the information in that field is explicitly used in
- a report or standard search procedure.
-
- Because of this close relationship between the structure of the
- ticket and the problem to be solved, it is very very useful to be
- able to define different ticket types for different classes of
- problems. This becomes even more true for those many NOCs whose
- staff are responsible for other types of operations: mainframe
- operations, workstation administration, help desk functions, or any
- of the other real-time response functions. Network operations to
- justify the expense of an operations center. This kind of operation
- makes economic sense, and is becoming more prevalent. In these kinds
- of situations it is vital that the same tools that are used for
- network operations also be available for the other operations. This
- means that the trouble ticket configurations need to be modifiable by
- local staff. Commercial RDBMS forms builder and report generator
- packages and "fourth-generation languages" offer a good start at
- this, although it is sometimes difficult to integrate full trouble
- ticket functionality through these systems.
-
- TROUBLE TICKET STRUCTURE
-
- 1) HEADERS. Inevitably, a trouble ticket begins with a number of
- fixed fields. These generally include:
-
- Time and Date of problem start.
- Initials or signon of the operator opening the ticket.
- Severity of the problem (possibly separating the "customer
- severity" and the "NOC priority", since these could be different).
- A one-line description of the problem for use in reports.
-
- There can be many other fixed fields for specific purposes. There
- may also be different kinds of tickets for different problems, where
- the ticket format differs mainly in fixed fields. These include:
-
- Who reported the problem? (Name, organization, phone,
- email address)
- Machine(s) involved.
- Network involved (for multi-network NOCs).
- User's machine address.
- Destination machine address.
- Next Action.
- Time and date for alarm on this ticket.
- Who should the ticket be dispatched to?
- Ticket "owner" (one person designated to be responsible overall).
-
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- 2) INCIDENT UPDATES. The main body of trouble tickets is usually a
- series of freeform text fields. Optimally, each of these fields is
- automatically marked with the time and date of the update, and with
- the signon of the operator making the update. Since updates are
- frequently recorded sometime after the problem is fixed, however, it
- is useful to allow the operators to override the current time stamp
- with the time the update was actually made. (In some
- implementations, both times will be kept internally).
-
- The first incident update usually is a description of the problem.
- Since the exact nature of the problem is usually not known when the
- ticket is first opened, this description may be complex and
- imprecise. For problems that are reported by electronic mail, it is
- useful to be able to paste the original message in the ticket,
- particularly if it contains cryptic or extensive information (such as
- a user's traceroute output). At least one such arbitrarily-long
- freeform field seems necessary to contain this kind of output,
- although it is better to allow arbitrarily long messages at any stage
- (e.g., so future complex messages can also be archived in the
- ticket).
-
- Subsequent update fields may be as simple as "Called site; no
- answer". Some systems allow these kinds of updates to be coded in
- fixed fields; most use freeform text.
-
- There should always be an indication of what the next action for this
- ticket ought to be. Again, this may be implemented as a special
- fixed field, or by convention of using the last line of text.
-
- Advanced systems may also need a facility to allocate the amount of
- time a ticket is open between multiple sources. A serious NOC will
- want to use its trouble ticket system to statistically track its
- performance on responding to problems. (e.g., Mean Time Between
- Failure and Mean Time To Repair reports). Frequently, though,
- repairs are stopped at the customer's request. ("It's not that
- important a machine and I don't feel like coming in--can you defer it
- until Monday Morning?"). In these cases the ticket needs to remain
- open, but there needs to be a notation that the ticket is now in
- "customer time" rather than "NOC time". The durations of "customer
- time" need to be excluded from MTBF and MTTR reports. Complicated
- repairs could move back and forth between "NOC time" "customer time"
- repeatedly. This probably implies that each Incident Update may have
- a time and date of status change, and that these status changes can
- be read and aggregated by by reporting programs.
-
- 3) RESOLUTION DATA. Once a problem is resolved, it is useful to
- summarize the problem for future statistical analysis. The following
- fields have been found to be useful:
-
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- - Time and Date of resulation (for outage duration).
- - Durations (can be calculated from time of resolution and
- incident report "customer/NOC time" stamps).
- - Resolution (one line of description of what happened, for
- reports).
- - Key component affected (for MTBF and similar reports).
- - Checked By -- a field for supervisors to sign off on ticket
- review.
- - Escalated to -- for reports on how many problems require
- non-NOC help.
- - Temp - a database field that can be used to store temporary
- "check marks" while making statistical investigations.
-
- USER, TROUBLE, and ENGINEERING Ticket System(s)
-
- The primary level of an Network Operations trouble ticket is the
- "problem" or "trouble": a single malfunctioning piece of hardware or
- software that breaks at some time, has various efforts to fix it, and
- eventually is fixed at some given time.
-
- The primary level of an Network Information Center ticket, however,
- might well be the "user complaint". A single network failure might
- well produce a large number of individual user phone calls and hence
- "user complaint" tickets. A NIC may want to use tickets to track
- each one of these calls, e.g., to make sure each user is informed and
- satisfied about the eventual resolution of the single hardware
- problem.
-
- In addition, NOCs (or Engineering Staffs) may want to track
- systematic problems. The staff may know, for instance, that a
- particular router is old and fragile, or that a particular section of
- their network doesn't have enough redundancy. It may be useful to
- open an "Engineering Ticket" on these known problems, providing a
- place to record history and notes about the problem, for use in
- further engineering or funding discussions.
-
- Even further "Meta" tickets could be described, having to do with
- such issues as whether the current trouble ticket fields, reports,
- and operation procedures were sufficient to handle current problems.
-
- It would be very convenient to be able to build all of these systems
- on the same platform, and to allow each type of ticket to easily
- reference other types. Multiple "user complaint" tickets, then,
- might might explicitly point to a single "trouble" ticket. Multiple
- trouble tickets representing independent failures would then point to
- a single "engineering" ticket, which described the systematic
- problem. Multiple engineering tickets could point to a single "meta"
- ticket, if appropriate.
-
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- ASSISTED ENTRY AND DATA VERIFICATION
-
- Data (particularly in fixed fields) is only useful for searching if
- it is entered in consistent formats. A trouble ticket system needs
- to help operators fill these fields with the correct format of
- information. This can be done using assisted entry (menus of
- acceptable choices), verification routines which check against
- internal lists or external databases (see next section), or other
- computer checking.
-
- Some database systems allow a customized "help" screen to be
- associated with each field, helping new (and experienced) operators
- by making context-sensitive trouble ticket system documentation
- available at every field.
-
- Very complicated help or operator-guidance systems can be built out
- of Expert System technology. This could be as simple as help
- screens, or help screens with database information inserted (e.g.,
- site contact names and phone numbers). Or it could involve hints to
- the operator, based on current network conditions. Or it might even
- ask the operator to run tests and to type in the results. (See
- EXPERT SYSTEMS, below).
-
- INTEGRATION
-
- To be maximally efficient and useful, a Trouble Ticket system needs
- to integrate well with most of the rest of the NOC tools. These
- include:
-
- 1) OPERATOR WINDOW ENVIRONMENT. A NOC Operator needs access to
- many pieces of information simultaneously, and therefore is well
- served by a good windowing environment. The Trouble Ticket system
- needs to run within this larger windowing system, so that the
- operator can debug, consult databases, use Email, field alerts,
- and keep an eye out for other emergencies while working on a
- trouble ticket. It is also useful to be able to run two trouble
- ticket sessions simultaneously, for example, to allow an operator
- to search for related tickets while he is in the middle of
- updating another ticket. Cut and Paste between these various
- screens is mandatory, to allow easy recording of technical details
- in the trouble tickets.
-
- 2) ALERT MONITORING SYSTEM. Trouble tickets are often opened in
- response to machine alerts; it ought to be easy to open a trouble
- ticket directly from the alert tool. When a ticket is opened this
- way, information about the alert and the machine involved ought to
- be automatically filled into the ticket. (There are various
- opinions about whether trouble tickets ought to be opened
-
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- automatically without operator intervention. This operator's
- opinion is that an operator acknowledgement should be required,
- but this point is debated enough that designers of a new system
- probably should support either option).
-
- The Alarm Clock feature of the trouble ticket system also
- generates alerts. These alerts ought to feed gracefully into the
- Alert Monitor system, so that the operators will get all of their
- alerts from one place.
-
- 3) DATABASE CONNECTIONS. A good trouble ticketing system will
- query NOC databases to automatically fill out trouble ticket
- fields where possible. This can be used for:
-
- - Filling out Network Operator information (e.g., phone number)
- based on the NetOp's signon id.
- - Filling in contact information based on machine name.
- - Filling in circuit numbers based on link description.
- - Filling in alarm clock or escalation time fields based on the
- machine or link name and on time of day.
- - Filling in machine serial numbers based on configuration database.
-
- 4) MACHINE QUERYABLE INFORMATION. It could also be possible for a
- trouble ticket system to make standard queries of the network
- itself when a trouble ticket is opened: e.g., the system could
- request and store current machine configurations whenever a ticket
- was opened for that machine. On some systems, hardware serial
- numbers are obtainable by software query directly to the machine.
-
- 5) ELECTRONIC MAIL. Problem notification often comes via
- electronic mail; it must be possible to easily open a ticket and
- include the original mail message within the ticket as part of the
- initial problem description. When extremely technical messages
- come in from network engineers, it is useful to allow those
- messages to be included verbatim, rather than forcing less
- technical network operators to rephrase the messages or to force
- them into predefined formats. Later update messages should also
- be easily includable. Possibly: tickets could be opened
- automatically for mail messages to certain mailboxes. A response
- system saying "Your request has been received and assigned ticket
- number ####" might be desirable.
-
- Information within trouble tickets must also be easily available
- (possibly just via the windowing system) for inclusion in Email
- messages to engineers and others.
-
- Scheduled (e.g., daily) reports must also be easily generated into
- the Email system.
-
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- 6) DISPATCHING AND NOTIFICATION SYSTEMS. An important real-time
- aspect of Network Operations is notifying users, technical
- contacts, and administrators of various classes of problems. The
- rules for who gets notified of what can be very arbitrary and
- complex, and can involve electronic mail, notices in computer
- conferences, automatic beeper pages, and synthesized voice
- announcements. It would be good for a trouble ticket system to
- provide for automatic (or operator initiated) notification of the
- appropriate channels for the current ticket (based on network,
- machine, severity of problem, duration of the problem, escalation
- guidelines, etc).
-
- Databases associated with the trouble ticket system may also have
- lists of specific people to contact about outages for particular
- machines. These "who to inform" lists can facilitate customized
- notification messages directly from the trouble ticket system.
-
- It may also be possible to dispatch experts directly from the
- trouble tickets system. IBM's ECCO system allows allows customers
- to directly dispatch Service Engineers from machine interactions.
- Many NOCs also use computer hooked to modems to automatically page
- engineers. This kind of dispatching should be available from
- within the trouble ticket system (along with an automatic note
- into the trouble ticket that the engineer has been dispatched).
-
- 7) OTHER TROUBLE TICKET SYSTEMS. When the NOC generates a trouble
- ticket, it often immediately calls up a telco or another Internet
- NOC, who proceed to open their own ticket. The Internet
- Engineering Task Force User Connectivity Working Group is also
- proposing a national trouble ticket tracking system, which would
- need updating from individual NOC trouble ticket systems. A
- state-of-the-art trouble ticket system could have provisions for
- transferring tickets and ticket information in and out of other
- such systems.
-
- 8) NETWORK ACCESS. Some older trouble ticket systems assumed that
- anyone with a need to access the information would obtain a signon
- and learn to use that system. The range of people with a need for
- trouble ticket information is now too great to allow this
- assumption. A good system now needs to be able to support network
- query for tickets and summary reports, as well as Email delivery
- of scheduled reports.
-
- 9) SUBROUTINE INTERFACE. To allow for ad-hoc and currently
- unanticipated needs, the trouble ticket system needs to support a
- full-function set of subroutine calls. These subroutines will
- allow construction of further trouble ticket functionality not yet
- specified.
-
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- 10) EXPERT SYSTEMS. Network debugging is a very promising area
- for expert system and artificial intelligence applications. But
- such an algorithm should require access to the alert monitoring
- system, configuration and change control systems, to the network
- itself, and also to the information in the trouble ticket system.
- A good future system then needs to make this information available
- (probably via the subroutine interface mentioned above), and to
- also allow the Network Operators to invoke the artificially
- intelligent debugging from within a trouble ticket (including its
- output as part of the ticket dialogue).
-
- 11) GRAPHICS/REPORT Capability. Statistical and graphical
- displays about trouble ticket data need to be compatible with
- tools used to generate reports, news letters, etc.
-
- OTHER CONSIDERATIONS:
-
- 1) INTERACTIVE SPEED. The system must be fast enough to be used
- interactively. NetOps need to answer questions over the phone in
- real time; good answers cannot be given if every query takes a
- couple of minutes. More importantly, the NetOps need the trouble
- ticket system in order to get information necessary to fix the
- network. If looking for old or currently-open tickets takes more
- than a few seconds, it won't be done. If updates take very long
- to make, then updates won't be recorded, or they will be recorded
- long after the event (with corresponding loss of accuracy). (Our
- Operators have asked for a single-line "update this ticket with
- this message" utility that would let them avoid even retrieving
- the ticket for simple updates!) Any time spent waiting reduces
- NetOp productivity and Network reliability.
-
- 2) BACKUPS AND RELIABILITY. The trouble ticket system is
- absolutely crucial to both immediate and long-term operation of
- the NOC. Good systems could back up all data several times an
- hour to an auxiliary processor. That processor should be
- accessible for immediate use in case of failure of the primary
- system.
-
- 3) HISTORY AND ARCHIVING. A trouble ticket system is a
- constantly-growing database system. Old tickets need to be
- removed from the system at some interval (a year? several years?)
- and archived. These archives should also be restorable for long-
- term history processing.
-
- 4) PRIVACY AND SECURITY. The ability to enter, append, and modify
- tickets should be controlled by id and password. Permissions
- should be specifiable on a per-field basis. General read access
- to tickets (or portions of tickets) also needs to be restricted,
-
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- or else NetOps will be reluctant to be full and candid in their
- reporting.
-
- UTILITY
-
- There are quite a few ideas in this "Wishlist". Ultimately, what an
- Operations Center needs is a totally integrated set of tools which
- completely model all of its activities, and which integrates cleanly
- with all backup, peer, and vendor NOCs. It is hard to imagine that
- this whole system could come out of a shrinkwrapped box, even without
- the local configuration. But most of these facilities do exist, now,
- in some system. Hopefully, this document will foster an ongoing
- discussion of ways in which NOC operator-level tools are used in real
- operations, and will encourage systems implementors and vendors to
- bring some of this functionality to the aid of real operations. It
- might even inspire current Operations Centers to add useful features
- to their current operations.
-
- Security Considerations
-
- This paper does not pose specific new security issues. The systems
- described herein would be host database applications, however, or
- even distributed host database applications. All of the normal
- security considerations for that kind of system would apply.
- Multiple classes of user access need to be specified for classes of
- ticket data. Possible security threats include disclosure of network
- information, disclosure of confidential material (e.g., circuit
- numbers or home phone numbers), and denial of service to the Network
- Operations Center leading to degradation of network service.
-
- Author's Address
-
- Dale S. Johnson
- Merit NOC
- 1075 Beal Avenue
- Ann Arbor, MI 48109-2112
-
- Phone: (313) 936-2270
-
- Email: dsj@merit.edu
-
- Discussion/comments may be sent to noc-tt-req@merit.edu. The list
- is maintained by noc-tt-req-request@merit.edu.
-
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