COMMISSION REGULATION (EU) No 1305/2014
of 11 December 2014
on the technical specification for interoperability relating to the telematics applications for freight subsystem of the rail system in the European Union and repealing the Regulation (EC) No 62/2006
(Text with EEA relevance)
Article 1
Subject matter
Article 2
Scope
Article 3
Update and reporting on technical documents
Article 4
Compliance with networks in non-EU countries
Article 5
Implementation
Article 6
Repeal
Article 7
Entry into force and application
ANNEX
1. INTRODUCTION
1.1.
Abbreviations
Abbreviation |
Definition |
ANSI |
American National Standards Institute |
CI |
Common Interface |
CR |
Change Request |
EC |
European Commission |
ERA |
European Railway Agency (also referred to as Agency) |
ERTMS |
European Rail Traffic Management System |
ETCS |
European Train Control System |
IM |
Infrastructure Manager |
ISO |
International Organisation for Standardisation |
LAN |
Local Area Network |
LCL |
Less than Container Loads |
LRU |
Lead Railway Undertaking |
ONC |
Open Network Computing |
OTIF |
Intergovernmental Organisation for International Carriage by Rail |
PVC |
Permanent Virtual Circuit |
RISC |
Rail Interoperability and Safety Committee |
RU |
Railway Undertaking |
TAF |
Telematics Applications for Freight |
TAP |
Telematics Applications for Passengers |
TCP/IP |
Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol |
TEN |
Trans European Network |
TSI |
Technical Specification for Interoperability |
WK |
Wagon Keepers |
WP |
Working Party organised by ERA |
1.2.
Reference Documents
Ref. No |
Document Reference |
Title |
Last Issue |
(1) |
Directive 2008/57/EC |
Directive 2008/57/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 17 June 2008 on the interoperability of the rail system within the Community (OJ L 191, 18.7.2008, p. 1). |
17.6.2008 |
(2) |
TAP TSI Regulation (EU) No 454/2011 |
Commission Regulation (EU) No 454/2011 of 5 May 2011 on the technical specification for interoperability relating to the subsystem ‘telematics applications for passenger services’ of the trans-European rail system (OJ L 123, 12.5.2011, p. 11). |
5.5.2011 |
(3) |
Directive 2012/34/EU |
Directive 2012/34/EU of the European Parliament and of the Council of 21 November 2012 establishing a single European railway area (OJ L 343, 14.12.2012, p. 32). |
21.11.2012 |
(4) |
ERA-TD-105 |
TAF TSI — ANNEX D.2: APPENDIX F — TAF TSI DATA AND MESSAGE MODEL. |
22.3.2013 |
(5) |
TAF TSI Regulation No 62/2006 |
Commission Regulation (EC) No 62/2006 of 23 December 2005 on the technical specification for interoperability relating to the telematics applications for freight subsystem of the trans-European conventional rail system (OJ L 13, 18.1.2006, p. 1). |
18.1.2006 |
(6) |
Commission Regulation (EU) No 280/2013 |
Commission Regulation (EU) No 280/2013 of 22 March 2013 amending Regulation (EC) No 62/2006 concerning the technical specification for interoperability relating to the telematics applications for freight subsystem of the trans-European conventional rail system (OJ L 84, 23.3.2013, p. 17). |
22.3.2013 |
(7) |
Commission Regulation (EU) No 328/2012 |
Commission Regulation (EU) No 328/2012 of 17 April 2012 amending Regulation (EC) No 62/2006 concerning the technical specification for interoperability relating to the telematic applications for freight subsystem of the trans-European conventional rail system (OJ L 106, 18.4.2012, p. 14). |
17.4.2012 |
(8) |
C(2010)2576 final |
Commission Decision of 29 April 2010 concerning a mandate to the European Railway Agency to develop and review Technical Specifications for Interoperability with a view to extending their scope to the whole rail system in the European Union. |
29.4.2010 |
(9) |
Directive 2004/49/EC |
Directive 2004/49/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 29 April 2004 on safety on the Community's railways and amending Council Directive 95/18/EC on the licensing of railway undertakings and Directive 2001/14/EC on the allocation of railway infrastructure capacity and the levying of charges for the use of railway infrastructure and safety certification (Railway Safety Directive) (OJ L 164, 30.4.2004, p. 44). |
28.11.2009 |
(10) |
Directive 2001/13/EC |
Directive 2001/13/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 26 February 2001 amending Council Directive 95/18/EC on the licensing of railway undertakings (OJ L 75, 15.3.2001, p. 26). |
26.2.2001 |
1.3.
Technical scope
1.4.
Geographical Scope
1.5.
Content of this TAF TSI
2. DEFINITION OF SUBSYSTEM AND SCOPE
2.1.
Function within the scope of the TSI
2.2.
Functions outside the scope of the TSI
2.3.
Overview of the subsystem description
2.3.1.
Involved Entities
2.3.2.
Considered Processes
2.3.3.
General remarks
3. ESSENTIAL REQUIREMENTS
3.1.
Compliance with the essential requirements
3.2.
Essential requirements aspects
3.3.
Aspects relating to general requirements
3.3.1.
Safety
3.3.2.
Reliability and availability
3.3.3.
Health
3.3.4.
Environmental protection
3.3.5.
Technical compatibility
3.4.
Aspects relating specifically to the Telematics Applications Subsystem for Freight
3.4.1.
Technical compatibility
3.4.2.
Reliability and availability
3.4.3.
Health
3.4.4.
Safety
4. CHARACTERISATION OF THE SUBSYSTEM
4.1.
Introduction
4.2.
Functional and technical specifications of the subsystem
4.2.1.
Consignment Note data
4.2.1.1.
Customer Consignment Note
4.2.1.2.
Consignment orders
4.2.2.
Path Request
4.2.2.1.
Preliminary remarks
4.2.2.2.
Path Request message
4.2.2.3.
Path Details message
4.2.2.4.
Path Confirmed message
4.2.2.5.
Path Details Refused message
4.2.2.6.
Path Cancelled message
4.2.2.7.
Path Not Available message
4.2.2.8.
Receipt Confirmation message
4.2.3.
Train Preparation
4.2.3.1.
General Remarks
4.2.3.2.
Train Composition message
4.2.3.3.
Train Ready message
4.2.4.
Train Running Forecast
4.2.4.1.
General Remarks
4.2.4.2.
Train Running Forecast message
4.2.4.3.
Train Running Information message and Train Delay Cause Message.
4.2.5.
Service Disruption Information
4.2.5.1.
General Remarks
4.2.5.2.
Train Running Interruption message
4.2.6.
Shipment ETI/ETA
4.2.6.1.
Preliminary remark
4.2.6.2.
ETI/ETA calculation
4.2.6.3.
Wagon ETI/ETA message
4.2.6.4.
Alert message
4.2.7.
Wagon Movement
4.2.7.1.
Preliminary Remarks
4.2.7.2.
Wagon Release Notice message
4.2.7.3.
Wagon Departure Notice message
4.2.7.4.
Wagon Yard Arrival message
4.2.7.5.
Wagon Yard Departure message
4.2.7.6.
Wagon Exception message
4.2.7.7.
Wagon Arrival Notice message
4.2.7.8.
Wagon Delivery notice message
4.2.8.
Interchange Reporting
4.2.8.1.
Preliminary remark
4.2.8.2.
Wagon Interchange Notice message
4.2.8.3.
Wagon Interchange Sub Notice message
4.2.8.4.
Wagon Received at Interchange message
4.2.8.5.
Wagon Refused at Interchange message
4.2.9.
Data Exchange for Quality Improvement
4.2.10.
The Main Reference Data
4.2.10.1.
Preface
4.2.10.2.
The Rolling Stock Reference Databases
4.2.10.3.
The Rolling Stock Operational Data
4.2.11.
Various Reference Files and Databases
4.2.11.1.
Reference Files
4.2.11.2.
Other Databases
Wagon and Intermodal unit Operational Database
Wagon Trip Plan Databases
4.2.11.3.
Additional Requirements on the Databases
4.2.12.
Networking & Communication
4.2.12.1.
General Architecture
4.2.12.2.
Network
4.2.12.3.
Security
4.2.12.4.
Encryption
4.2.12.5.
Central Repository
4.2.12.6.
Common Interface
4.3.
Functional and technical specifications of the interfaces
4.3.1.
Interfaces with the TSI Infrastructure
4.3.2.
Interfaces with the TSI Control/Command and Signalling
4.3.3.
Interfaces with the rolling stock subsystem
4.3.4.
Interfaces with the TSI operation and traffic management
4.3.5.
Interfaces with the Telematics Applications for Passenger Services
Interface |
Reference Telematics Applications for Freight TSI |
Reference Telematics Applications for passengers TSI |
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Train ready |
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Train running forecast |
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Train running information |
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Train running interrupted to RU |
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Handling of short term timetable data |
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Common Interface |
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Central Repository |
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Reference Files |
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4.4.
Operating rules
4.4.1.
Data quality
Accuracy:
Completeness:
Consistency:
Timeliness:
Data quality Metrics
4.4.2.
Operating the central repository
4.5.
Maintenance rules
4.6.
Professional qualifications
4.7.
Health and safety conditions
5. INTEROPERABILITY CONSTITUENTS
5.1.
Definition
5.2.
List of Constituents
5.3.
Constituents' Performances and Specifications
6. ASSESSMENT OF CONFORMITY AND/OR SUITABILITY FOR USE OF THE CONSTITUENTS AND VERIFICATION OF THE SUBSYSTEM
6.1.
Interoperability Constituents
6.1.1.
Assessment Procedures
6.1.2.
Module
6.1.3.
Subsystem Telematics Applications for Freight
7. IMPLEMENTATION
7.1.
Modalities of Application of this TSI
7.1.1.
Introduction
7.1.2.
Phase one — detailed IT specifications and master plan
7.1.3.
Phases 2 and 3 — Development and deployment
7.1.4.
Governance, roles and responsibilities
The Steering Committee
The Stakeholders
The Representative Bodies
7.2.
Change Management
7.2.1.
Change Management Process
7.2.2.
Specific Change Management Process for documents listed in Appendix I to this Regulation
Appendix I
List of technical documents
No |
Reference |
Title |
Version |
Date |
1 |
ERA-TD-100 |
TAF TSI — ANNEX A.5:FIGURES AND SEQUENCE DIAGRAMS OF THE TAF TSI MESSAGES |
2.0 |
17.10.2013 |
2 |
ERA-TD-101 |
TAF TSI — Annex D.2: Appendix A (Wagon/ILU Trip Planning) |
2.0 |
17.10.2013 |
3 |
ERA-TD-102 |
TAF TSI — Annex D.2: Appendix B — Wagon and Intermodal Unit Operating Database (WIMO) |
2.0 |
17.10.2013 |
4 |
ERA-TD-103 |
TAF TSI — Annex D.2: Appendix C — Reference Files |
2.0 |
17.10.2013 |
5 |
ERA-TD-104 |
TAF TSI — Annex D.2: Appendix E — Common Interface |
2.0 |
17.10.2013 |
6 |
ERA-TD-105 |
TAF TSI — Annex D.2: Appendix F — TAF TSI Data and Message Model |
2.0 |
17.10.2013 |
Appendix II
Glossary
Term |
Description |
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ACID |
Atomicity, Consistence, Isolation, Durability These are the four primary attributes ensured to any transaction: Atomicity. In a transaction involving two or more discrete pieces of information, either all of the pieces are committed or none are. Consistency. A transaction either creates a new and valid state of data, or, if any failure occurs, returns all data to its state before the transaction was started. Isolation. A transaction in process and not yet committed must remain isolated from any other transaction. Durability. Committed data is saved by the system such that, even in the event of a failure and system restart, the data is available in its correct state. The ACID concept is described in ISO/IEC 10026-1:1992 Section 4. Each of these attributes can be measured against a benchmark. In general, however, a transaction manager or monitor is designed to realise the ACID concept. In a distributed system, one way to achieve ACID is to use a two-phase commit (2PC), which ensures that all involved sites must commit to transaction completion or none do, and the transaction is rolled back. |
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Allocation body |
see IM. |
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Applicant |
means a railway undertaking or an international grouping of railway undertakings or other persons or legal entities, such as competent authorities under Regulation (EC) No 1370/2007 and shippers, freight forwarders and combined transport operators, with a public-service or commercial interest in procuring infrastructure capacity (Directive 2012/34/EU (3)). For Allocation body: see IM definition. |
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Block train |
A specific form of a direct train with only as much wagons as needed, running between two transhipment points without intermediate marshalling. |
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Booking |
The process of making a reservation for space on a means of transport for the movement of goods. |
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CA |
Certification Authority |
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CN-code |
8-digit Code list for products used by customs. |
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Combined road — rail transport |
Intermodal transport where the major part of the European journey is by rail and any initial and/or final legs carried out by road are as short as possible. |
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Consignee |
Party by whom the goods are to be received. Synonym: Goods receiver |
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Consignment |
Freight sent under a single contract of carriage. In combined transport, this term may be used for statistical purposes, to measure loading units or road vehicles. |
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Consignment note |
A document which evidence a contract for the transportation by a carrier of one consignment from a named place of acceptance to a named place of delivery. It contains details of the consignment to be carried. |
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Consignor |
Party which, by contract with a Service Integrator, consigns or sends goods with the carrier, or has them conveyed by him. Synonyms: Shipper, Goods sender. |
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Cooperation mode |
Mode of train operation where various RU cooperate under the leadership of one RU (LRU). Each involved RU contracts the needed path for the transport journey on its own. |
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COTS-product |
Commercially off-the-shelf products |
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Customer |
is the entity which has issued the consignment note to the Lead RU. |
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Departure date/time, actual |
Date (and time) of departure of means of transport. |
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Direct train |
A train with related wagons which runs between two transhipment points (initial source — final destination) without intermediate marshalling. |
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Duty holder |
Any individual or legal entity responsible for the risk which he imports onto the network, i.e. the RU. |
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Encryption |
Encoding of messages Decryption: converting encrypted data back into original form |
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Essential requirements |
Essential requirements means all the conditions set out in Annex III of the Directive 2001/16/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council (*1) which must be met by the Trans-European conventional rail system, the subsystems, and the interoperability constituents including interfaces. |
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ETA |
Estimated Time of Arrival. |
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ETH |
Estimated Time of Handover of a train from one IM to another. |
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ETI |
Estimated Time of Interchange of wagons from one RU to another. |
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Forecast Time |
Best estimate of arrival, departure or passing time of a train. |
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FTP |
File Transfer Protocol A protocol to transfer files between computer systems in the network TCP/IP. |
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Gateway |
Station within the journey of a train with Intermodal units, where the load changes the wagons. |
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GGP |
Gateway to Gateway Protocol See also IP |
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Gross weight of load |
Booked/actual total weight (mass) of goods, including packing but excluding the carrier's equipment. |
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Handling point |
Station where the RU may change the train composition, but where it remains responsible for the wagons, no change of responsibility. |
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Handover point |
Point where the responsibility changes from one IM to another. |
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Haulage |
Transport by road |
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Hirer |
Any individual or other legal entity designated as such by the keeper/owner of a wagon. |
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HS code |
6-digit Code list for products used by customs, identically to the first 6 digits of the CN Code. |
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HTTP |
Hypertext Transfer Protocol The client/server protocol used on connect to servers on the Web. |
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ICMP |
Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) Occasionally a gateway (see GGP) or destination host (see IP) will communicate with a source host, for example, to report an error in datagram processing. For such purposes this protocol, the Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP), is used. ICMP, uses the basic support of IP as if it were a higher level protocol, however, ICMP is actually an integral part of IP, and must be implemented by every IP module. ICMP messages are sent in several situations: for example, when a datagram cannot reach its destination, when the gateway does not have the buffering capacity to forward a datagram, and when the gateway can direct the host to send traffic on a shorter route. The Internet Protocol is not designed to be absolutely reliable. The purpose of these control messages is to provide feedback about problems in the communication environment, not to make IP reliable. There are still no guarantees that a datagram will be delivered or a control message will be returned. Some datagrams may still be undelivered without any report of their loss. The higher level protocols that use IP must implement their own reliability procedures if reliable communication is required. The ICMP messages typically report errors in the processing of datagrams. To avoid the infinite regress of messages about messages etc., no ICMP messages are sent about ICMP messages. Also ICMP messages are only sent about errors in handling fragment zero of fragmented datagrams. (Fragment zero has the fragment offset equal zero). |
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IM |
Infrastructure Manager means some body or firm responsible in particular for establishing, managing and maintaining railway infrastructure, including traffic management and control-command and signalling; the functions of the infrastructure manager on a network or part of a network may be allocated to different bodies or firms. Where the infrastructure manager, in its legal form, organisation or decision-making functions, is not independent of any railway undertaking, the functions referred to in Sections 2 and 3 of Chapter IV shall be performed respectively by a charging body and by an allocation body that are independent in their legal form, organisation and decision-making from any railway undertaking. (Directive 2012/34/EU (3)). |
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Infrastructure manager (IM) |
See IM |
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Interchange |
The Transfer of control from one railway company to another for practical operational and safety reasons. Examples are:
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Interchange point |
Location where the transfer of responsibility for the wagons of a train goes from one RU to another RU. Regarding a train running, the train is taken over from one RU by the other RU, which owns now the path for the next journey section. |
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Intermediate point |
Location which defines the start or end point of a journey section. This may be e. g. an interchange, handover or handling point. |
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Intermodal operator |
Any entity which concludes a multimodal transport contract and assumes the whole responsibility for the transport of intermodal loading units. |
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Intermodal Service Integrator |
Any body or undertaking, which has the contract with customers for the transport of Intermodal units. He is preparing waybills, managing capacity on block trains etc. |
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Intermodal terminal |
Location which provides the space, equipment and operational environment under which the loading units (freight containers, swap bodies, semi-trailers or trailers) transfer takes place. |
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Intermodal transport |
The movement of goods in one and the same loading unit or vehicle which uses successively several modes of transport without handling of the goods themselves in changing modes. |
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Intermodal Unit |
A Load Unit which can be transported by different modes e.g. container, swap body, semi-trailer, trailer. |
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Internet |
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Interoperability constituent |
means any elementary component, group of components, subassembly or complete assembly of equipment incorporated or intended to be incorporated into a subsystem upon which the interoperability of the Trans-European conventional rail system depends directly or indirectly. The concept of a constituent covers both tangible objects and intangible objects such as software. |
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IP |
The Internet Protocol The Internet Protocol (IP) is used for host-to-host datagram service in a system of interconnected networks. The network connecting devices are called Gateways. These gateways communicate between themselves for control purposes via a Gateway to Gateway Protocol (GGP). |
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Journey |
A ‘journey’ denotes the spatial forwarding of a loaded or empty wagon from the forwarding station to the destination station. |
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Journey section |
Is the part of the journey which takes place on one infrastructure sector of an infrastructure manager or Part of the journey from the entry handover point to the exit handover point of the infrastructure of one infrastructure manager. |
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Keeper |
The person, who being the owner or having the right to dispose of it, exploits a vehicle economically in a permanent manner as a means of transport and is registered as such in the Rolling Stock Register. |
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Lead Railway Undertaking |
Responsible RU, which organises and manages the transport line according to the customer's commitment. It is the single point of contact for the customer. If more than one Railway Undertaking is involved in the transport chain, the LRU is responsible for the co-ordination of the various Railway Undertakings. A customer may be especially for Intermodal transport an Intermodal service integrator. |
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Loco ID |
Unique identification number of a traction unit |
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LRU |
See Lead Railway Undertaking |
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MAY |
This word, or the adjective ‘OPTIONAL’, means that an item is truly optional. One vendor may choose to include the item because a particular marketplace requires it or because the vendor feels that it enhances the product while another vendor may omit the same item. An implementation which does not include a particular option MUST be prepared to interoperate with another implementation which does include the option, though perhaps with reduced functionality. In the same vein an implementation which does include a particular option. MUST be prepared to interoperate with another implementation which does not include the option (except, of course, for the feature the option provides). |
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Metadata |
Simply put, is data about data. It describes data, software services, and other components contained in the enterprise information systems. Examples of the types of metadata include standard data definitions, location and routing information, and synchronisation management for distributing shared data. |
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MUST |
This word, or the terms ‘REQUIRED’ or ‘SHALL’, mean that the definition is an absolute requirement of the specification. |
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MUST NOT |
This phrase, or the phrase ‘SHALL NOT’, means that the definition is an absolute prohibition of the specification. |
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NFS |
The Network File System (NFS) is a distributed file system protocol. The Network File System (NFS) protocol provides transparent remote access to shared file systems across networks. The NFS protocol is designed to be machine, operating system, network architecture, and security mechanism, and transport protocol independent. This independence is achieved through the use of Remote Procedure Call (RPC) primitives built on top of an external Data Representation (XDR). |
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Notified bodies |
The bodies which are responsible for assessing the conformity or suitability for use of the interoperability constituents or for appraising the EC procedure for verification of the subsystems. (Directive 91/440/EC(1)). |
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One Stop Shop (OSS) |
An international partnership between rail Infrastructure Managers providing a single point of contact for rail customers for the purposes of:
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Open Access mode |
Mode of train operation where only one RU is involved, which runs the train on various infrastructures. This RU contracts the needed paths with all involved IMs. |
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OSI |
Open Systems Interconnection Describes a communication protocol of open systems based on the OSI reference model. Open systems are capable of communicating independent of proprietary solutions. |
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OSI reference model |
Standard description of how messages should be transmitted between any two points in a network. The OSI model defines 7 layers of functions that take place at each end of a communication. These layers are the only internationally accepted framework of standards for communication. |
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OSS |
One Stop Shop |
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Path |
Path means the infrastructure capacity needed to run a train between two places over a given time-period (Route defined in time and space). |
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Path assembly |
Joining up of individual train paths to extend path in terms of time and space. |
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Path number |
Number of the defined train path |
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Peer-to-Peer |
The term ‘peer-to-peer’ refers to a class of systems and applications that employ distributed resources to perform a critical function in a decentralised manner. The resources encompass computing power, data (storage and content), network bandwidth, and presence (computers, human, and other resources). The critical function can be distributed computing, data/content sharing, communication and collaboration, or platform services. Decentralisation may apply to algorithms, data, and metadata, or to all of them. This does not preclude retaining centralisation in some parts of the systems and applications if it meets their requirements. |
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PKI |
Public key infrastructure |
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Place of delivery |
Place where the delivery happens (departure rail station to be given). a place where responsibility for the wagon is changed. |
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Place of departure |
Place from which a means of transport is scheduled to depart or has departed. |
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Place of destination |
Place at which the means of transport is due to arrive or has arrived. Synonym: Place of arrival |
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Pre-departure Period |
is the delta time before the scheduled time of departure. The pre-departure period starts at scheduled time of departure minus delta time and ends at the scheduled time of departure. |
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Primary data |
Basic data as reference data input for messages or as the basis for functionality and calculation of derived data. |
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Put into Service |
A procedure dependent on the technical approval of a wagon and a contract for use with a RU which allows commercial operation of the wagon. |
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Railway Undertaking (RU) |
Railway undertaking (Directive 2004/49/EC) (9): means railway undertaking as defined in Directive 2001/14/EC, and any other public or private undertaking, the activity of which is to provide transport of goods and/or passengers by rail on the basis that the undertaking must ensure traction; this also includes undertakings which provide traction only. |
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RAMS |
See Reliability, Availability, Maintainability, Safety. |
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RARP |
Reverse Address Resolution Protocol (RARP) |
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Release date/time |
Date/time when the goods are expected to be released or were released by the customer. |
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Release time for wagons |
Date and time when the wagons are ready to be pulled from the named place on the customer siding. |
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Reliability, Availability, Maintainability, Safety (RAMS) |
Reliability— The ability to start and continue to operate under designated operating conditions for a designated period expressed mathematically; Availability— The time in operation compared to the time out of service expressed mathematically; Maintainability— The ability of a system to be put back into service after a failure expressed mathematically; Safety— The probability of a hazardous event being initiated by the system expressed mathematically. |
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Reporting point |
Location on the train journey, where the responsible IM has to issue a ‘train running forecast message’ with TETA to the path contracted RU. |
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Repository |
A repository is similar to a database and data dictionary, however it usually encompasses a comprehensive information management system environment. It must include not only descriptions of data structures (i.e. entities and elements), but also metadata of interest to the enterprise, data screens, reports, programs, and systems. Typically it includes and internal set of software tools, a DBMS, a metamodel, populated metadata, and loading and retrieval software for accessing repository data. |
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RIV |
Regulations governing the reciprocal use of wagons in international traffic. Regulations governing the reciprocal use of loading tackle, container and pallets in international traffic. |
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Route |
The geographical way to be taken from a starting point to a point of destination. |
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Route section |
A part of a route |
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RPC |
Remote Procedure Call The RPC protocol is specified in the Remote Procedure Call Protocol Specification Version 2 (RFC1831). |
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RU |
See Railway Undertaking |
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Scheduled time of departure |
Date and Time of departure for which the path is requested. |
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Scheduled Timetable |
Chronologically defined occupation of rail infrastructure for a train movement on open line or in stations. Changes to the timetables will be supplied by the IM s at least 2 days before the commencement of the day when the train departs from its origin. This timetable applies to a specific day. Known in some countries as the Operational Timetable. |
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Service Provider |
Responsible carrier for this specific transport stage. Party who receives and handles the booking. |
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Shipment |
A package of goods from one consignor to one consignee, which is loaded in one or more complete intermodal loading units or which is loaded on one or more complete wagons. e.g.:
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Short notice path request |
Individual request for a path according Directive 2001/14/EC Article 23 due to additional transport demands or operational needs. |
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SHOULD |
This word, or the adjective ‘RECOMMENDED’, mean that there may exist valid reasons in particular circumstances to ignore a particular item, but the full implications must be understood and carefully weighed before choosing a different course. |
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SHOULD NOT |
This phrase, or the phrase ‘NOT RECOMMENDED’ mean that there may exist valid reasons in particular circumstances when the particular behaviour is acceptable or even useful, but the full implications should be understood and the case carefully weighed before implementing any behaviour described with this label. |
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SMTP |
Simple Mail Transfer Protocol |
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SNMP |
Simple Network Management Protocol |
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SQL |
Structured Query Language A language devised by IBM, then standardised by ANSI and ISO, which is used for creating, managing and retrieving data in relational databases. |
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Stakeholders |
Any person or organisation with a reasonable interest in train service delivery e.g.:
For Intermodal in addition:
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TCP |
Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) |
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Technical Specification for Interoperability |
means the specifications by which a subsystem or part subsystem is covered in order to meet the essential requirements and ensure the interoperability of the Trans-European conventional rail system. |
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TETA |
See Train Estimated Time of Arrival |
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Tracing |
Activity at request of finding and reconstructing the transport history of a given consignment, vehicle, equipment, package or cargo. |
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Tracking |
Activity of systematically monitoring and recording the present location and status of a given consignment, vehicle, equipment, package or cargo. |
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Train Estimated Time of Arrival |
Estimated Time of Arrival of a train at a specific point, e.g. handover point, interchange point, destination of the train. |
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Train path |
Train route defined in time and space. |
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Train Path/Slot |
A definition of a train's route in terms of time and the locations (marker points) at which it will originate and terminate along with details of those locations en-route at which it will either pass or call. The detail might also include any activities that the train will perform en-route for example train crew, locomotive or other consist changes. |
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Trans-European rail network |
Rail network as described in Annex 1 to the Directive 2001/16/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council (*1). |
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Transhipment |
The operation of moving intermodal loading units from one means of transport to another. |
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Trip plan |
For wagon or Intermodal unit shows the planned reference trip of the wagon/Intermodal unity. |
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TSI |
See Technical Specification for Interoperability |
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Tunnelling |
A process whereby private IP packets are encapsulated within a public IP packet. |
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UDP |
User Datagram Protocol Simple Traversal of User Datagram Protocol (UDP) through Network Address Translators (NATs) (STUN) is a lightweight protocol that allows applications to discover the presence and types of NATs and firewalls between them and the public Internet. It also provides the ability for applications to determine the public Internet Protocol (IP) addresses allocated to them by the NAT. STUN works with many existing NATs, and does not require any special behaviour from them. As a result, it allows a wide variety of applications to work through existing NAT infrastructure. |
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UIC |
UIC is the international railway union. |
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UITP |
UITP is the International Union for Public Transport. |
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UNIFE |
UNIFE is an organisation that takes care of the interests of the suppliers to the railway sector. Currently approximately 100 suppliers and subcontractors are directly represented and about 1 000 indirectly through national organisations. |
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Unit capacity used |
Code to indicate to which extent the equipment is loaded or empty. (e.g. full, empty, LCL). |
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Unit Load |
A number of individual packages bonded, palletised or strapped together to form a single unit for more efficient handling by mechanical equipment. |
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Unit train |
A freight train dispatched with only one consignment note and only one type of goods and composed of uniform wagons running from a consignor to a consignee without intermediate marshalling. |
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VPN |
Virtual Private Network The term Virtual Private Network has been used to describe almost any type of remote connectivity system, such as the public telephone network and Frame Relay PVCs. With the introduction of the Internet, VPN has become synonymous with remote IP-based data networking. Simply put, a VPN consists of two or more private networks that communicate securely over a public network. VPN can exist between an individual machine and a private network (client-to-server) or a remote LAN and a private network (server-to-server). The private networks are able to connect by tunnelling. A VPN commonly uses the internet as an underlying transport network, but encrypts the data being sent between a VPN client and VPN gateway to ensure that it cannot be read even if intercepted in transit. |
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Wagon load |
A unit load whereas the unit is a wagon. |
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Consignment order |
A subset of the consignment note which shows the relevant information for a RU, needed to carry on the transportation during its responsibility until handover to a next RU. Instruction for the transportation of a wagon consignment. |
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Waybill |
The document made out by the carrier or on behalf of the carrier evidencing the contract for the transport of cargo. |
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Web |
World wide Web: An internet service that links documents by providing hypertext links from server to server so a user can jump from document to related document no matter where it is stored on the internet. |
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XDR |
External Data Representation The XDR protocol is specified in External Data Representation Standard (RFC1832). XDR is a standard for the description and encoding of data. It is useful for transferring data between different computer architectures,. XDR fits into the ISO presentation layer, and is roughly analogous in purpose to X.409, ISO Abstract Syntax Notation. The major difference between these two is that XDR uses implicit typing, while X.409 uses explicit typing. XDR uses a language to describe data formats. The language can only be used only to describe data; it is not a programming language. This language allows one to describe intricate data formats in a concise manner. The alternative of using graphical representations (itself an informal language) quickly becomes incomprehensible when faced with complexity. The XDR language itself is similar to the C language. Protocols such as ONC RPC (Remote Procedure Call) and the NFS (Network File System) use XDR to describe the format of their data. The XDR standard makes the following assumption: that bytes (or octets) are portable, where a byte is defined to be 8 bits of data. A given hardware device should encode the bytes onto the various media in such a way that other hardware devices may decode the bytes without loss of meaning. |
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XML-RPC |
XML-RPC is an Extensible Mark-up Language-Remote Procedure Calling protocol that works over the Internet. It defines an XML format for messages that are transferred between clients and servers using HTTP. An XML-RPC message encodes either a procedure to be invoked by the server, along with the parameters to use in the invocation, or the result of an invocation. Procedure parameters and results can be scalars, numbers, strings, dates, etc.; they can also be complex record and list structures. This document specifies a how to use the Blocks Extensible Exchange Protocol (BEEP) to transfer messages encoded in the XML-RPC format between clients and servers. |
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XQL |
Extended Structured Query Language |