Report from the IAB Workshop on the Next Era of Network Management Operations (NEMOPS)
draft-iab-nemops-workshop-report-01
This document is an Internet-Draft (I-D) that has been submitted to the Internet Architecture Board (IAB) stream.
This I-D is not endorsed by the IETF and has no formal standing in the
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The information below is for an old version of the document.
| Document | Type |
This is an older version of an Internet-Draft that was ultimately published as RFC 9968.
|
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Authors | Wes Hardaker , Dhruv Dhody | ||
| Last updated | 2025-04-16 (Latest revision 2025-02-18) | ||
| RFC stream | Internet Architecture Board (IAB) | ||
| Formats | |||
| Stream | IAB state | Active IAB Document | |
| Consensus boilerplate | Unknown | ||
| IAB shepherd | Alvaro Retana |
draft-iab-nemops-workshop-report-01
Network Working Group W. Hardaker
Internet-Draft
Intended status: Informational D. Dhody
Expires: 23 August 2025 19 February 2025
Report from the IAB Workshop on the Next Era of Network Management
Operations (NEMOPS)
draft-iab-nemops-workshop-report-01
Abstract
The "Next Era of Network Management Operations (NEMOPS)" workshop was
convened by the Internet Architecture Board (IAB) from December 3-5,
2024 as a three-day online meeting. It builds on a previous 2002
workshop, the outcome of which was documented in RFC 3535 identifying
14 operator requirements for consideration in future network
management protocol design and related data models, along with some
recommendations for the IETF. Much has changed in the Internet’s
operation and technological foundations since then. The NEMOPS
workshop reviewed the past outcomes and discussed any operational
barriers that prevented these technologies from being widely
implemented. With the industry, network operators and protocol
engineers working in collaboration, the workshop developed a
suggested plan of action and network management recommendations for
the IETF and IRTF.
Note that this document is a report on the proceedings of the
workshop. The views and positions documented in this report were
expressed during the workshop by participants and do not necessarily
reflect IAB's views and positions.
About This Document
This note is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.
The latest revision of this draft can be found at
https://intarchboard.github.io/draft-iab-nemops-workshop-report/
draft-iab-nemops-workshop-report.html. Status information for this
document may be found at https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-iab-
nemops-workshop-report/.
Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at
https://github.com/intarchboard/draft-iab-nemops-workshop-report.
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Status of This Memo
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This Internet-Draft will expire on 23 August 2025.
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document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
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Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.1. About this workshop report content . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Outreach and Survey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3. Workshop Scope and Discussion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3.1. Session I: Past (lookback, analysis) . . . . . . . . . . 5
3.1.1. Reflections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3.1.2. Lessons to be Learned . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
3.1.3. Discussion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.2. Session II: Present (identified problems &
requirements) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.2.1. Operator Feedback . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.2.2. Survey . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.2.3. Discussion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3.3. Session III: Future (possible solutions, recommendations
and next steps) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3.3.1. Future Directions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
3.3.2. Discussion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
3.4. Key Takeaways . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
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3.4.1. Ecosystem conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
3.4.2. Protocol conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
3.4.3. Modeling conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
3.4.4. Standardization conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
3.4.5. Additional work needed . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Appendix A. Insights from Operator Feedback . . . . . . . . . . 18
A.1. General Insights . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
A.2. Data Models . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Appendix B. Key Recommendations from Operator Feedback . . . . . 20
Appendix C. Position Papers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Appendix D. Workshop Participants . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Appendix E. Workshop Program Committee . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
IAB Members at the Time of Approval . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
1. Introduction
The IAB organized a workshop in 2002 to establish a dialog between
network operators and protocol developers, and to guide the IETF's
work on network management protocols. The outcome of that workshop
was documented in the "Overview of the 2002 IAB Network Management
Workshop" [RFC3535] which identified 14 operator requirements and 11
recommendations for consideration in future network management
protocol design and related data models within the IETF.
Those requirements were instrumental in developing first the NETCONF
protocol (in the NETCONF Working Group) [RFC6241], the associated
YANG data modeling language (in the NETMOD Working Group) [RFC7950],
RESTCONF [RFC8040], and most recently CORECONF [I-D.ietf-core-comi].
The recent NEMOPS IAB workshop focussed on the following key tasks:
* Review the outcomes and results of the 2002 workshop (current
deployments, state of the art) and identify any operational
barriers that prevent these technologies from being widely
implemented (limitations, hurdles).
* Sketch new requirements for future network management operations
in a collaborative manner with the industry, network operators,
and protocol engineers.
* Develop a plan of action and recommendations for the IETF.
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1.1. About this workshop report content
The Internet Architecture Board (IAB) holds occasional workshops
designed to consider long-term issues and strategies for the
Internet, and to suggest future directions for the Internet
architecture. This long-term planning function of the IAB is
complementary to the ongoing engineering efforts performed by working
groups of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF).
This document is a report on the proceedings of the workshop. The
views and positions documented in this report are expressed during
the workshop by participants and do not necessarily reflect IAB's
views and positions.
Furthermore, the content of the report comes from presentations given
by workshop participants and notes taken during the discussions,
without interpretation or validation. Thus, the content of this
report follows the flow and dialogue of the workshop but does not
necessarily attempt to capture a consensus, unless stated otherwise.
2. Outreach and Survey
There has been a noticeable decline, since the last workshop, in the
direct participation of network operators in the IETF and its
associated discussions on network management protocols and
operations. Many operators prioritize operational conferences such
as RIPE, NANOG, APRICOT, LACNIC, AutoConn, etc over attending
standards development organizations (SDOs) like the IETF.
To address this, the IAB workshop's Program Committee (PC) planned
outreach initiatives to foster discussions and gather interest by
engaging with operators at these operational venues and conducting
information/requirement-gathering sessions. Participants were
encouraged to submit "position papers" or "expressions of interest"
to join the workshop. Additionally, a [SURVEY] was conducted to
collect valuable insights to inform the workshop.
The PC continued to engage with network operators after the workshop
to facilitate information sharing and gather their feedback, helping
to shape the next steps and outcomes of the workshop.
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3. Workshop Scope and Discussion
The workshop was organized across three days with all participants
contributing to one discussion per day. The workshop was organized
around three topic areas: "Session I: the Past (lookback and
analysis)" (Section 3.1), "Session II: Present (identified problems
and requirements)" (Section 3.2), and "Session III: Future (possible
solutions, recommendations and next steps)" (Section 3.3). The
program committee organized the paper submissions to fit these three
main themes in order to drive discussion during each of the slots.
During each discussion, the papers were presented sequentially and an
open discussion was held afterwards. On the last day, an additional
discussion on the key takeaways from the workshop and possible next
steps took place (Section 3.4).
3.1. Session I: Past (lookback, analysis)
The first day of the workshop focused on reflecting on the past by
reviewing the evolution of network management since the 2002
workshop, analyzing both the successes and the challenges encountered
along the way. The presentations covered a range of topics,
including reflections on the history of network management, lessons
learned from widely used tools, practices in constrained networks,
and the need to reconsider how network management models and
protocols are standardized within the IETF.
3.1.1. Reflections
The workshop began by reflecting on the IAB’s role in shaping the
evolution of network management away from CLI/SNMP/MIB technologies,
focusing on the context and key outcomes of the previous workshop, an
assessment of the current state of network management as a whole, and
an acknowledgement of some regrets in how network management
technologies developed in the last two decades (such as XML as the
data representation format). [SCHONWALDER] emphasized the need to
shift the focus from device-level configuration to network and
service-level configuration. Key properties highlighted for
effective network and service configurations included being
Composable (assembled out of modular configurations), Declarative
(define state while systems determine themselves how to implement
those goals), Reproducible (reliably and consistently recreated), and
Verifiable (asserting that the correct changes have been applied).
An operator’s perspective highlighted that the recommendations of
[RFC3535] (which led to the development of YANG and NETCONF) have
been successful in addressing device configuration in many, but not
all, environments. In certain areas, the advancements in semantics
and protocols for streaming telemetry have even surpassed the
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original scope of [RFC3535]. [LARSSON] cautioned against making
changes that could disrupt the ecosystem. The presentation
emphasized the need to prioritize service modeling in the IETF and
addressed the challenges of mapping to the Business Support Systems
(BSS) domain. It also stressed the importance of including the
operational state in service models to enable closed-loop automation
for end-to-end (E2E) services. Revisiting [RFC8309], which asserts
that the operational state of a service is not part of a customer
service model but can be achieved through extensions, was suggested.
Additionally, the lack of open-source NMS implementations, tools, and
device model implementations was identified as a significant barrier
to advancing standardization efforts. The IETF could play a key role
in fostering and enabling collaborations to address these challenges
including an off-box translation tool of the IETF device model to
vendor proprietary models.
3.1.2. Lessons to be Learned
[HARDAKER] emphasized that the success of Net-SNMP [NET-SNMP] was
driven by empowering users through simplicity. He stressed that the
focus should remain on ensuring ease of use and adaptability of the
protocols. Emphasis was placed on the two distinct audiences for
standardized network management protocols: toolkit vendors and system
operators. Their requirements for protocol simplicity differ, and it
is essential to address the needs of both to ensure success.
[BORMANN] presented an overview of the CORECONF architecture,
showcasing how model-driven network management techniques can be
applied to manage IoT devices (which is different from other network
management scenarios), with a focus on the unique characteristics of
constrained nodes. Some participants noted that the binary encoding
of CBOR has applications that extend beyond the IoT networks.
Drawing from the experience of OpenConfig [OPENCONFIG], [SHAKIR]
emphasized that protocol definition and data models cannot be done in
isolation. It must integrate lessons learned from implementation and
large-scale deployment. He highlighted the importance of enabling
quick iterations, shipping rapidly, embracing open-source, readily
available tools, adopting systems thinking driven by business
outcomes, and reusing existing technologies rather than developing
solutions exclusively for operator network management. A call was
made for IETF to rethink the approach to standardize data models and
the associated network management protocols under this guidance.
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3.1.3. Discussion
The Session I open discussion highlighted the divergence between
vendor implementations of YANG models and what is accessible via it,
particularly when compared to CLI. Questions were raised about how
to incorporate fast iteration and rapid changes within the
established IETF process and culture, especially in contrast to the
approach used by OpenConfig. Common challenges identified included
lack of tooling, performance issues at scale, the steep learning
curve for network management protocols/models/tools, initial
difficulty in moving away from CLI, and the backward compatibility of
models (versioning). Some participants suggested that the IETF
should focus on system-level APIs that address specific problems.
Additionally, the lack of simple tools for smaller networks operating
under tight timelines and budgets was emphasized. A key question
raised was whether the proliferation of protocols and languages
complicates adoption, and if converging on a single approach would
improve adoption. The existence of multiple schemas and protocols
beyond NETCONF, such as BMP and IPFIX, to address network management
challenges beyond configuration is an established reality. One
conclusion was that a mechanism was needed to interconnect and
harmonize these schemas to provide a cohesive and comprehensive
understanding of the data.
3.2. Session II: Present (identified problems & requirements)
The second day of the workshop concentrated on challenges and
emerging requirements for future network management operations. The
presentation emphasized the importance of validation, observability,
automation, and the need for agile, incremental development of both
network models and management protocols. A compilation of new
requirements is being maintained in
[I-D.boucadair-nmop-rfc3535-20years-later]. The final presentation
of the day provided a summary of the survey results and operator
feedback gathered from outreach events.
3.2.1. Operator Feedback
[KELLER] shared Deutsche Telekom’s perspective, emphasizing that
while YANG models perform well for provisioning, they currently fall
short in providing the operational stability required for validation.
Achieving fully closed-loop automated and autonomous networking will
require a greater focus on observability, particularly through
advancements in streaming telemetry with the "on-change" feature
[RFC9196].
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[JIMENEZ] discussed the challenges associated with the Software
Defined Networking (SDN) Transport Automation Platform, including
observability and analytics requirements, issues with data streaming,
scalability, diverse models in heterogeneous multi-vendor
environments, and mechanisms to secure the network management
protocols. The presentation also emphasized how advancements in AI
and machine learning, along with the potential adaptation of
protocols designed for constrained environments, could drive the next
evolution in network management.
Using YANG-Push as an example, [GRAF] highlighted how standards
development often fails to align with the needs of network operators,
the constraints of network vendors, and the integration requirements.
Most critically, it lacks an agile, incremental development process.
The presentation advocated for adopting an iterative approach to
standards development, focusing on delivering minimal viable products
as part of the process.
[CONTRERAS] emphasized reassessing deployment assumptions and
incorporating updated operator requirements. The authors are
addressing these aspects through
[I-D.boucadair-nmop-rfc3535-20years-later], leveraging feedback and
discussions from the workshop. Some key requirements, suggestions
and observations were highlighted:
* Network software implementations can only happen with a strong,
committed standardization effort, complemented by active
involvement in open-source projects that facilitate access to
code.
* Need to rationalize the device model space and avoid redundant
efforts. Unlike service and network models, IETF-defined device
models are not widely implemented.
* Define a reference approach/process for service exposure discovery
and API discovery.
* Outlines set of recommendations for core/key features, along with
appropriate justifications, that will help foster more
implementations that meet operators’ needs.
* There is a need for a reference specification to translate YANG-
based data into the knowledge graph (KG).
* Consider approaches to help YANG models scale.
* Consider programmatic approaches to ensure lossless mappings
between service/network/device data models.
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* Consider approaches to ensure reuse/consistent data structure
across various NM segments.
* Some networks have specific network management requirements such
as the need for asynchronous operations or constraints on data
compactness.
* There is a necessity to handle the heterogeneity of data,
configuration, and network management/requirements. Resolving
such issues could draw on insights from parallel technical fields
such as knowledge engineering practices and concepts associated
with Linked Data in the Semantic Web, areas where it is common to
manage problems of heterogeneity and data reconciliation across
various application domains.
* Consider having YANG as part of the protocol specification/change
where possible, or have the YANG document progress in parallel.
* Need to ease the integration of low-level/network-oriented
solutions with native "IT tooling"
* Ease exposure of libraries and host tools (e.g., yangkit) to ease
integration.
* Focus on tooling is needed, especially on the client side.
* Create an eco-system where data and networking engineers can
collaborate.
* The distinct approaches followed in both the compute and the
network environments to define suitable mechanisms for enabling an
efficient interplay, while highly automating the overall service
delivery procedure.
* The target application/applicability of a network management
approach should be documented.
* Readily available API specifications could be generalized from
YANG modules for fast development, prototyping, and validation.
3.2.2. Survey
As outlined in Section 2, the workshop program committee organized
outreach initiatives to gather direct feedback and conducted a
survey. [SURVEY-INSIGHTS] provided an overview of the respondents’
backgrounds, as well as insights into the most widely used tools,
protocols, and APIs for configuration, monitoring, and other network
operations. Notably, the survey revealed that Ansible and CLI are
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the most popular configuration tools, NetConf is the preferred
configuration protocol, and Prometheus and SNMP are widely used for
monitoring. The survey also captured feedback on network automation
and streaming telemetry. Issues and future requirements such as
scalability, performance, the need for easier mapping of various
models, tooling, management of legacy devices, collaboration with
open-source, and vendor-specific issues were highlighted.
Additionally, valuable insights from direct operator feedback were
also presented (see Appendix A).
3.2.3. Discussion
The Session II open discussion featured feedback from implementers,
highlighting the difficulty in moving to YANG and mapping to vendor
implementations and how divergence in the implementations creates
complexity and necessitates workarounds. Implementations need to
support standard models alongside native vendor models, which adds
complexity and leads to confusion. Challenges were highlighted in
mapping standard models to internal device models and legacy devices,
with some cases where mapping is not feasible at all (device-specific
knobs). The conversation also emphasized the importance of
developing open-source reference implementations, compliance and
interoperability testing for vendors, and better quality of vendor
implementation and documentation. The implementation and support of
multiple models (IETF, OpenConfig, and native) is an unavoidable
reality in network management. Additionally, since the services
offered by operators vary significantly, reaching a consensus on a
common service model within the IETF can be a challenging task. It
was also noted that the IETF should expedite the publication of
standards as well as consider gating them with multiple interoperable
implementations.
3.3. Session III: Future (possible solutions, recommendations and next
steps)
The final day of the workshop centred on exploring potential future
solutions and identifying key takeaways, recommendations, and next
steps. At the end of day three, to conclude the workshop the chairs
worked to summarize the key takeaways (see Section 3.4) that garnered
consensus among the participants.
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3.3.1. Future Directions
[CLAISE] highlighted the challenges of integrating data models across
different silos, protocols, and data structures, emphasizing the need
for a machine-readable approach to expose semantics. Additionally,
the related tools being developed and showcased in the IETF
Hackathons, along with the various challenges in mapping across
protocols and models, were discussed. A potential solution was
proposed using a knowledge graph based on the Semantic Web Stack,
along with the need to define a basic ontology for the networking
domain in an iterative manner (outside of RFCs). [WATSEN] recommends
prioritizing the following areas in four recommendations: (1) using
RESTCONF+JSON (including YANG-Push Lite) as a single protocol beyond
network management, (2) utilizing Network Management Datastore
Architecture (NMDA) model, (3) creating data model adapters (off-box
so that common standard models can be developed in parallel to the
required device "native" models), and (4) defining device protocol
adapters (with RESTCONF-like NBI for a common shared-by-all
repository). [WILTON] recommends reducing unnecessary complexity,
delivering timely solutions, fostering open collaboration between
vendors and operators, prioritizing simplicity, and converging to a
single model/protocol (though this was discussed as difficult to
accomplish). Practical suggestions include focusing on YANG-Push
Lite, introducing YANG 2.0 through incremental updates, developing
NETCONFv2, and managing IETF YANG models as code or APIs rather than
embedding them within RFCs.
3.3.2. Discussion
The Session III open discussion delved into the absence of NMDA in
OpenConfig and if the resulting complexity is needed, the history of
introducing gNMI in the IETF (whether RESTCONF offers any advantage
over it), and the challenges that building consensus on the common
ground takes time (without short-cutting the consensus building
process) and practicality of converging on a single protocol (and it
is practical). Emphasize off-box adapters, allowing vendors to
continue innovating and developing native models rapidly. One
suggestion that attracted a lot of discussions centred on developing
a standard model mapping to native models that could be maintained in
a common repository, enabling the community to assess coverage and
alignment. Further, the discussion explored alternative approaches
to YANG models within the IETF but outside of RFCs, such as
leveraging GitHub to accelerate the process (along with the
challenges associated with it), living documents within the WG
charter, and supporting academia to take up the open source efforts
such as device adapters. The discussion emphasized the need for
process experimentation, particularly at the working group or area
level where we could have consensus among the YANG/OPS community on
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how we iterate in WGs without IETF/RFC-wide changes but making sure
the operators are involved in the process. Conversations ensued
around questions asked such as "Is YANG applicable beyond network
management?" and "Can applications adopt YANG as a modelling language
to define their services?"
Some topics absent from the workshop discussions included tooling
(what is currently missing) and strategies to support tool
development (who pays, who develops, who maintains). The primary
focus of the discussion was on YANG and NETCONF/RESTCONF, while
several other network management protocols and techniques currently
used received less attention during the workshop. The discussion on
future directions prioritized improving existing solutions rather
than introducing entirely new ones (such as enabling intelligence in
network management). Some key recommendations made by operators
during outreach (Section 2) are listed in Appendix B.
3.4. Key Takeaways
At the end of the third day, the discussion turned to key takeaways
that have high-level consensus. These were live edited during the
last discussion of the workshop and anything that did not reach wide
consensus was moved into a "future considerations" list
(Section 3.4.5).
3.4.1. Ecosystem conclusions
The following takeaways try to document the general thinking of the
participants with respect to the entire Network Management ecosystem
as it exists today.
1. The current network management protocols, models and tools still
fail the ‘ease of use’ requirement. Participants noted that the
tools almost matter more than the protocols.
2. The overall ecosystem is still fragmented for both protocols and
data models. SNMP is still used extensively for monitoring, and
the CLI is still heavily relied on in many networks. Popular
protocols include SNMP, CLI, NETCONF, RESTCONF, gNMI, etc.
3. Documentation about the architecture and usage of the network
management ecosystem is lacking. More work is needed to create
general architecture documentation, deployment guides, tutorials,
training material, and getting-started guides.
4. Transitioning between network management frameworks is
challenging, just like it is for transitioning between other
protocols like IPv4 to IPv6.
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5. Model-driven network management is generally a success where it
has been implemented and is possible to use.
6. More easily usable network management tools for the operators are
needed. The lack of open-source tools is seen as a barrier to
adoption. Tools need good use cases, example flows and better
analysis of when and how they work and have been successful.
3.4.2. Protocol conclusions
The following conclusions came while discussing Network Management
protocols more specifically.
1. Netconf and YANG are not used much for monitoring tasks.
2. Netconf and YANG do not have full coverage on many devices.
3. Polling-based solutions are still frequently deployed. Push-
based solutions are often desired but are not yet widely
available.
3.4.3. Modeling conclusions
The following conclusions came while discussing Network Management
modeling more specifically.
1. Some YANG models can become too complex, though not as a fault of
the language itself.
2. Multi-vendor compatibility support is required.
3. Even vendor-specific features, not just standardized protocol
features, need to be exposed through network management models
and protocols for a network management ecosystem to be viable.
4. Greater support for service-level modeling is needed. Device
level modeling can be a building block to achieve a sufficient
service-level model, but is not a complete solution by itself.
5. Network configuration needs to be verifiable to ensure any
potential changes can be accepted by devices. Model translation
adapters (likely performed on the management station, not the end
device) may be the best path forward to simultaneously achieve
this and the goal of supporting one configuration set across a
diversity of devices with different internal models.
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3.4.4. Standardization conclusions
The following conclusions came while discussing the best ways to
standardize network management protocols and associated models.
1. A methodology of rapid model development procedures is needed to
ensure model deployment can keep pace with new feature
deployment. We need a solution that significantly increases the
speed and predictable timeline for developing and publishing
models within the IETF. New approaches and methods to make
models live outside of published RFCs should be explored. An
experiment should be started to test a new rapid development
approach.
2. Protocol and model complexity should be reduced to keep additions
and changes to a minimal set of agreed-upon core features.
3. More standardization focus is needed on the scalability of the
different roles of network management: monitoring, configuration,
notifications.
4. Enhancements to network management protocols and models need to
be backed by real-world operator use cases and expected adoption
by vendors. Vendors and operators will need to work together to
ensure these goals are appropriately met.
3.4.5. Additional work needed
Here we list the things that the group realized needed significantly
more attention in order to come to a conclusion.
1. Some saw NETCONF for configuration as being successful in some
larger-scale deployments. Although this statement is true in
some contexts, many operators indicated their need to rely on
other forms of access to manage their networks such as CLIs,
expect scripts, and other protocols. Work in this area is needed
to bring NETCONF into significantly greater deployment and
usability. Some participants see RESTCONF as a significant step
forward in solving this dilemma.
4. Informative References
[BLESS] Bless, R., "An Invariant for Future Resilient Network
Management Operations", November 2024,
<https://www.ietf.org/slides/slides-nemopsws-paper-an-
invariant-for-future-resilient-network-management-
operations-00.pdf>.
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[BORMANN] Bormann, C., "CORECONF: Managing IoT Devices with YANG
Models", November 2024, <https://www.ietf.org/slides/
slides-nemopsws-paper-coreconf-managing-iot-devices-with-
yang-models-00.pdf>.
[CLAISE] Claise, B., Graf, T., Keller, H., Voyer, D., Lucente, P.,
Lopez, D., Martinez-Casanueva, I., Peters, B., Fasano, P.,
Ran, P., Cheng, W., and M. Mackey, "Knowledge Graph
Framework for Network Operations", November 2024,
<https://www.ietf.org/slides/slides-nemopsws-paper-
knowledge-graph-framework-for-network-operations-00.pdf>.
[CONTRERAS]
Boucadair, M., Contreras, L. M., Gonzalez de Dios, O.,
Graf, T., Rahman, R., and L. Tailhardat, "RFC 3535, 20
Years Later: An Update of Operators Requirements on
Network Management Protocols and Modelling", October 2024,
<https://www.ietf.org/slides/slides-nemopsws-paper-
rfc3535-years-later-an-update-of-operators-requirements-
on-network-management-protocols-and-modelling-00.pdf>.
[ECKERT] Eckert, T. and M. Richardson, "Resilient Remote
Manageability of Wide-Area Network Infrastructures",
November 2024, <https://www.ietf.org/slides/slides-
nemopsws-paper-resilient-remote-managability-of-wide-area-
network-infrastructures-00.pdf>.
[FOROUGHI] Foroughi, P. and L. Ciavaglia, "Projecting Data Mesh to
Model-driven Telemetry: A Path to Data Ecosystem’s
Management Operations", November 2024,
<https://www.ietf.org/slides/slides-nemopsws-paper-
projecting-data-mesh-to-model-driven-telemetry-a-path-to-
data-ecosystems-management-operations-00.pdf>.
[GIRALT] Contreras, L. M., Schott, R., Randriamasy, S., Yang, R.,
and J. Ros-Giralt, "Towards a Unified Compute and
Communication Infrastructure for Application and Network
Management", November 2024, <https://www.ietf.org/slides/
slides-nemopsws-paper-towards-a-unified-compute-and-
communication-infrastructure-for-application-and-network-
management-00.pdf>.
[GRAF] Graf, T., Keller, H., Voyer, D., Lucente, P., Claise, B.,
Wilton, R., Huang-Feng, A., and P. Francois, "Agile
Incremental Driven Development for Network Management",
November 2024, <https://www.ietf.org/slides/slides-
nemopsws-paper-agile-incremental-driven-development-for-
network-management-01.pdf>.
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[GUDI] Gudi, M., Pelov, A., Toutain, L., and J. Bonnin, "Evolving
Network Management Architecture: Integrating CORECONF with
NETCONF for Efficient Telemetry and Management", November
2024, <https://www.ietf.org/slides/slides-nemopsws-paper-
evolving-network-management-architecture-integrating-
coreconf-with-netconf-for-efficient-telemetry-and-
management-00.pdf>.
[HARDAKER] Hardaker, W., "Lessons Learned from 30 Years of Net-SNMP",
November 2024, <https://www.ietf.org/slides/slides-
nemopsws-paper-lessons-learned-from-30-years-of-net-snmp-
00.pdf>.
[I-D.boucadair-nmop-rfc3535-20years-later]
Boucadair, M., Contreras, L. M., de Dios, O. G., Graf, T.,
Rahman, R., and L. Tailhardat, "RFC 3535, 20 Years Later:
An Update of Operators Requirements on Network Management
Protocols and Modelling", Work in Progress, Internet-
Draft, draft-boucadair-nmop-rfc3535-20years-later-06, 25
November 2024, <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/
draft-boucadair-nmop-rfc3535-20years-later-06>.
[I-D.ietf-core-comi]
Veillette, M., Van der Stok, P., Pelov, A., Bierman, A.,
and C. Bormann, "CoAP Management Interface (CORECONF)",
Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-core-comi-19,
3 November 2024, <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/
draft-ietf-core-comi-19>.
[JIMENEZ] Jiménez, J., "Managing IoT Devices with LwM2M", November
2024, <https://www.ietf.org/slides/slides-nemopsws-paper-
managing-iot-devices-with-lwmm-00.pdf>.
[KELLER] Warnke, N., Geib, R., Horneffer, M., and H. Keller,
"NEMOPS: RFC3535 and the forgotten word — Or Provisioning
is only a subset of Network Management", November 2024,
<https://www.ietf.org/slides/slides-nemopsws-nemops-
rfc3535-and-the-forgotten-word-00.pdf>.
[LARSSON] Larsson, K., Lambrechts, K., and I. Farrer, "RFC3535, 20
Years Later from an Operator's Perspective (Deutsche
Telekom)", November 2024, <https://www.ietf.org/slides/
slides-nemopsws-paper-rfc3535-years-later-from-an-
operators-perspective-deutsche-telekom-00.pdf>.
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[MARTINEZ] Martinez-Casanueva, I., "IAB NEMOPS Position Paper -
Telefonica", November 2024, <https://www.ietf.org/slides/
slides-nemopsws-paper-iab-nemops-position-paper-
telefonica-00.pdf>.
[NET-SNMP] "Net-SNMP", n.d., <http://www.net-snmp.org/>.
[OPENCONFIG]
"OpenConfig", n.d., <https://www.openconfig.net/>.
[RFC3535] Schoenwaelder, J., "Overview of the 2002 IAB Network
Management Workshop", RFC 3535, DOI 10.17487/RFC3535, May
2003, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc3535>.
[RFC6241] Enns, R., Ed., Bjorklund, M., Ed., Schoenwaelder, J., Ed.,
and A. Bierman, Ed., "Network Configuration Protocol
(NETCONF)", RFC 6241, DOI 10.17487/RFC6241, June 2011,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc6241>.
[RFC7950] Bjorklund, M., Ed., "The YANG 1.1 Data Modeling Language",
RFC 7950, DOI 10.17487/RFC7950, August 2016,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc7950>.
[RFC8040] Bierman, A., Bjorklund, M., and K. Watsen, "RESTCONF
Protocol", RFC 8040, DOI 10.17487/RFC8040, January 2017,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc8040>.
[RFC8309] Wu, Q., Liu, W., and A. Farrel, "Service Models
Explained", RFC 8309, DOI 10.17487/RFC8309, January 2018,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc8309>.
[RFC9196] Lengyel, B., Clemm, A., and B. Claise, "YANG Modules
Describing Capabilities for Systems and Datastore Update
Notifications", RFC 9196, DOI 10.17487/RFC9196, February
2022, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc9196>.
[SCHARF] Scharf, M., "Network Management Challenges for IP-based
Cyber-Physical Networks", November 2024,
<https://www.ietf.org/slides/slides-nemopsws-paper-
network-management-challenges-for-ip-based-cyber-physical-
networks-00.pdf>.
[SCHONWALDER]
Schönwälder, J., "Composable, Declarative, Reproducible,
Verifiable Network and Service Configurations", November
2024, <https://www.ietf.org/slides/slides-nemopsws-paper-
composable-declarative-reproducible-verifiable-network-
and-service-configurations-00.pdf>.
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[SHAKIR] Shakir, R., "Rethinking Standardisation of Network
Management", September 2024, <https://www.ietf.org/slides/
slides-nemopsws-paper-rethinking-standardisation-of-
network-management-00.pdf>.
[SURVEY] "Next Era of Network Management Operations (NEMOPS)
workshop survey", October 2024,
<https://ietf.iad1.qualtrics.com/jfe/form/
SV_9vQxBRiZqDntarc>.
[SURVEY-INSIGHTS]
"Insights from Operator Survey & Outreach", December 2024,
<https://datatracker.ietf.org/meeting/interim-2024-
nemopsws-02/materials/slides-interim-2024-nemopsws-02-
sessa-6-insights-from-operator-outreach-survey-03.pdf>.
[WATSEN] Watsen, K., "Four Thoughts for How to Improve Network
Management for Operators", November 2024,
<https://www.ietf.org/slides/slides-nemopsws-nemops-
position-paper-kent-watsen-00.pdf>.
[WILTON] Wilton, R. and N. Corran, "Device Network Management -
Current Status, and Future Direction", November 2024,
<https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/slides-nemopsws-paper-
device-network-management-current-status-and-future-
direction/>.
Appendix A. Insights from Operator Feedback
[TODO: Check if this is useful in the RFC or should be removed]
A.1. General Insights
1. In network deployments, operations are typically at the bottom of
the ladder. It's the most squeezed for time and resources.
Network engineers are not typically seasoned developers. The
development of needed in-house tools often takes years to
develop. There is a need for tools that are easy to use and just
work.
2. Vast majority of smaller operators use CLI and open source to
manage their networks.
3. There is debate fatigue. The protocol/model debate is a
recurring conversation. The problem isn’t going away.
4. It was suggested that other domains (e.g., K8N/automation) are
years ahead of the current network engineering stack.
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5. Support for multiple friendly, stable and feature rich libraries
for programming languages is needed. Many DevOps routines use
shell scripts, others use a high-level programming language. In
any case, on the client side, multiple programming languages are
used.
6. Screen scraping is both necessary and evil. This most often
occurs when interacting with a device having only a CLI.
7. It was noted that there could be an outreach to Academia to
establish programs to teach lessons using modern management
stacks, and then a new generation of engineers could be helping
to improve tooling and automation, with university (and/or IETF)
hackathons.
A.2. Data Models
1. In some network deployments, the focus is solely on service-level
models, such that device-level protocols and device-level models
are unimportant. This assumes the existence of a device
adaptation layer to transcode service-level models to device-
level models and conform to the device-specific protocol.
2. There is a need for solutions to not hide vendor-specific knobs.
Currently, vendors compete by differentiating their offerings in
unique ways. The reason why an Operator may choose a particular
vendor is because of its differentiating features. Whilst
standard models enable conformance, they must not hide the
vendor-specific knobs. YANG deviations are a partial solution to
not hiding vendor knobs.
3. It was emphasized that streaming telemetry requires picking a
model and sticking with it. It is quite a commitment and the
current environment makes the decision harder.
4. It was noted that IETF's focus should be on defining abstract/
service-level data models since it is the only thing the
community may ever agree on.
5. There was a point about navigating non-device-specific models
being difficult. If understood correctly, the Network Engineer
knows the CLI command but has trouble grepping for it in YANG
modules defined by SDOs.
6. There was a wish that IETF and OpenConfig models would merge.
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Appendix B. Key Recommendations from Operator Feedback
Various recommendations were made by the operators during the
outreach events. The key ones presented during the workshop were
(there were lot more collected):
* Everyone: Continue to focus on model-driven management as a means
to achieve automation.
* SDOs: Re-introduce “running code” as part of the specification
verification process.
* Operators: Be actively involved with the “running code” efforts.
* IETF: Recommend a solution stack for common use cases.
* Ambassadors: Evangelize the recommended solution stack for common
cases.
* Vendors: Support the recommended approach to solution stack for
common cases.
Appendix C. Position Papers
20 position papers were submitted to the workshop call for papers.
All papers are available at
https://datatracker.ietf.org/group/nemopsws/materials/
(https://datatracker.ietf.org/group/nemopsws/materials/).
This is the list of all papers:
* J Schönwälder: Composable, Declarative, Reproducible, Verifiable
Network and Service Configurations [SCHONWALDER]
* K. Larsson, K. Lambrechts, and I. Farrer: RFC3535, 20 Years
Later from an Operator’s Perspective (Deutsche Telekom) [LARSSON]
* W. Hardaker: Lessons Learned from 30 Years of Net-SNMP [HARDAKER]
* C. Bormann: CORECONF: Managing IoT Devices with YANG Models
[BORMANN]
* R. Shakir: Rethinking Standardisation of Network Management
[SHAKIR]
* N. Warnke, R. Geib, M. Horneffer, and H. Keller: NEMOPS:
RFC3535 and the forgotten word — Or Provisioning is only a subset
of Network Management [KELLER]
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* J. Jiménez, S. Mansfield, R. Rodriguez A., M. Pesonen, V.
Torvinen, and J. Karvonen: Evolving Challenges and Solutions in
Network Management [JIMENEZ]
* M. Boucadair, L. M. Contreras, O. Gonzalez de Dios, T. Graf,
R. Rahman, and L. Tailhardat: RFC 3535, 20 Years Later: An
Update of Operators Requirements on Network Management Protocols
and Modelling [CONTRERAS]
* T. Graf, H. Keller, D. Voyer, P. Lucente, B. Claise, R.
Wilton, A. Huang-Feng, and P. Francois: Agile Incremental Driven
Development for Network Management [GRAF]
* B. Claise, T. Graf, H. Keller, D. Voyer, P. Lucente, D.
Lopez, I. D. Martinez-Casanueva, B. Peters, P. Fasano, P.
Ran, W. Cheng, and M. Mackey: Knowledge Graph Framework for
Network Operations [CLAISE]
* K. Watsen: Four Thoughts for How to Improve Network Management
for Operators [WATSEN]
* R. Wilton and N. Corran: Device Network Management: Current
Status and Future Direction [WILTON]
* M. Gudi, A. Pelov, L. Toutain, and J.-M. Bonnin: Evolving
Network Management Architecture: Integrating CORECONF with NETCONF
for Efficient Telemetry and Management [GUDI]
* P. Foroughi and L. Ciavaglia: Projecting Data Mesh to Model-
driven Telemetry: A Path to Data Ecosystem’s Management Operations
[FOROUGHI]
* I. D. Martinez-Casanueva: IAB NEMOPS Position Paper - Telefonica
[MARTINEZ]
* J. Jiménez: Managing IoT Devices with LwM2M [JIMENEZ]
* L. M. Contreras, R. Schott, S. Randriamasy, R. Yang, and J.
Ros-Giralt: Towards a Unified Compute and Communication
Infrastructure for Application and Network Management [GIRALT]
* T. Eckert and M. Richardson: Resilient Remote Manageability of
Wide-Area Network Infrastructures [ECKERT]
* R. Bless: An Invariant for Future Resilient Network Management
Operations [BLESS]
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* M. Scharf: Network Management Challenges for IP-based Cyber-
Physical Networks [SCHARF]
Appendix D. Workshop Participants
The workshop participants were Alex Huang, Alexander Clemm, Alexander
PELOV, Benoit Claise, Boris Khasanov, Brad Peters (nbn), Carsten
Bormann, Chongfeng Xie, Cindy Morgan, Dan Voyer, Darren Loher, Dean
Bogdanovic, Dean Bogdanović, Dhruv Dhody, Diego Lopez, Ebben Aries,
Frank (Chong Feng), Holger Keller, Ian Farrer, Jaime Jimenez, James
Cumming, Janne Karvonen, Jason Sterne, Jiaming Ye, Jinming Li, John
Carson, Julien Maisonneuve, Jürgen Schönwälder, Kent Watsen, Kris
Lambrechts, Kristian Larsson, Laurent Ciavaglia, Laurent Toutain, Liz
Flynn, Luis M. Contreras (Telefonica), Mahesh Jethanandani, Manoj
Gudi, Martin Horneffer, Matthew Bocci, Med Boucadair, Michael Mackey,
Michael Richardson, Michael Scharf, Mikko Pesonen, Nacho Dominguez
(Telefonica), Naveen Achyuta, Nick Corran, Nils Warnke, Oscar
Gonzalez de Dios, Paolo Lucente, Parisa Foroughi, Per Andersson, Phil
Shafer, Qin Wu, Qiufang Ma, Raquel Rodriguez, Reshad, Reshad Rahman,
Rob Shakir, Rob Wilton, Roland Bless (KIT), Roland Schott, Rüdiger
Geib, Rui Zhuang, Ruibo Han, Sabine Randriamasy, Scott Mansfield
(Ericsson), Scott Robohn, Shengnan Yue, Suresh Krishnan, Thomas Graf,
Toerless Eckert, Wangbo, Warren Kumari, Wes Hardaker, Wim Henderickx,
Xue Yang, Y. Richard Yang, Yangbo, Yisong Liu, and Zhenqiang Li.
Appendix E. Workshop Program Committee
The workshop program committee members were Wes Hardaker (co-chair),
Dhruv Dhody (co-chair), Qin Wu, Suresh Krishnan, Benoît Claise,
Mohamed Boucadair, Mahesh Jethanandani, Kent Watsen, and Warren
Kumari.
IAB Members at the Time of Approval
Internet Architecture Board members at the time this document was
approved for publication were: TODO
Acknowledgments
TBD
Authors' Addresses
Wes Hardaker
Email: hardaker@isi.edu
Dhruv Dhody
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Email: dd@dhruvdhody.com
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