Advertising Generic Information in IS-IS
draft-ietf-isis-genapp-04
Revision differences
Document history
Date | Rev. | By | Action |
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2012-08-22
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04 | (System) | post-migration administrative database adjustment to the No Objection position for Robert Sparks |
2012-08-22
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04 | (System) | post-migration administrative database adjustment to the No Objection position for Peter Saint-Andre |
2012-08-22
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04 | (System) | post-migration administrative database adjustment to the No Objection position for Jari Arkko |
2012-08-22
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04 | (System) | post-migration administrative database adjustment to the No Objection position for Tim Polk |
2012-08-22
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04 | (System) | post-migration administrative database adjustment to the No Objection position for Dan Romascanu |
2012-08-22
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04 | (System) | post-migration administrative database adjustment to the Yes position for Adrian Farrel |
2012-08-22
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04 | (System) | post-migration administrative database adjustment to the No Objection position for Gonzalo Camarillo |
2011-04-13
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04 | (System) | IANA Action state changed to RFC-Ed-Ack from Waiting on RFC Editor |
2011-04-13
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04 | (System) | IANA Action state changed to Waiting on RFC Editor from In Progress |
2011-04-13
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04 | (System) | IANA Action state changed to In Progress from Waiting on Authors |
2011-04-13
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04 | (System) | IANA Action state changed to Waiting on Authors from In Progress |
2011-04-13
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04 | Amy Vezza | State changed to RFC Ed Queue from Approved-announcement sent. |
2011-04-12
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04 | (System) | IANA Action state changed to In Progress |
2011-04-12
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04 | Cindy Morgan | IESG state changed to Approved-announcement sent |
2011-04-12
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04 | Cindy Morgan | IESG has approved the document |
2011-04-12
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04 | Cindy Morgan | Closed "Approve" ballot |
2011-04-12
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04 | Stewart Bryant | Approval announcement text changed |
2011-04-12
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04 | Stewart Bryant | Approval announcement text regenerated |
2011-04-12
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04 | Stewart Bryant | Ballot writeup text changed |
2011-04-01
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04 | Wesley Eddy | [Ballot Position Update] New position, No Objection, has been recorded |
2011-03-17
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04 | Cindy Morgan | Removed from agenda for telechat |
2011-03-17
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04 | Tim Polk | [Ballot comment] I support Lars' discuss. Deployment of advanced IS-IS security mechanisms (e.g., RFC 5310 authentication) is something I personally advocate. However, if an IS-IS … [Ballot comment] I support Lars' discuss. Deployment of advanced IS-IS security mechanisms (e.g., RFC 5310 authentication) is something I personally advocate. However, if an IS-IS deployment were to deploy these mechanisms solely to support advertisement of some generic information this may exacerbate any performance implications for the IS-IS deployment and could be used to launch denial of service attacks. That is, deploying IS-IS security mechanisms *because* of the generic information would be costly for the IS-IS implementation and would violate the usual precept of "security commensurate with need". I think a paragraph in the security considerations that addresses this issue would be appropriate. |
2011-03-17
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04 | Tim Polk | [Ballot Position Update] Position for Tim Polk has been changed to No Objection from Discuss |
2011-03-17
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04 | Cindy Morgan | Ballot writeup text changed |
2011-03-17
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04 | Jari Arkko | [Ballot Position Update] Position for Jari Arkko has been changed to No Objection from Discuss |
2011-03-16
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04 | Ron Bonica | [Ballot comment] I share Lars' allergy to using routing protocols to transport generic information. Maybe we should start thinking about a generic information transport protocol. |
2011-03-15
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04 | Ralph Droms | [Ballot Position Update] New position, No Objection, has been recorded |
2011-03-15
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04 | Stewart Bryant | Ballot writeup text changed |
2011-03-15
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04 | Dan Romascanu | [Ballot comment] I dislike overloading protocols with exchanges of information that do not relate to the protocol functionality. However, at this phase, if the working … [Ballot comment] I dislike overloading protocols with exchanges of information that do not relate to the protocol functionality. However, at this phase, if the working group was chartered to do this work, I can accept such an extention as the GENINFO advertising of generic information. Separating it in a generic advertising extension rather than consuming from the expensive TLV space for each extension not related to routing is the right thing to do. Maybe the introduction should say something about the motivation for such a generic container within IS-IS and make possible recommendations of what future extensions using this container should include (or should not include). |
2011-03-15
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04 | Dan Romascanu | [Ballot Position Update] Position for Dan Romascanu has been changed to No Objection from Discuss |
2011-03-15
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04 | Dan Romascanu | [Ballot discuss] Most of the items in my original DISCUSS were addressed with edits which I find fully acceptable. Thanks for addressing these. I still … [Ballot discuss] Most of the items in my original DISCUSS were addressed with edits which I find fully acceptable. Thanks for addressing these. I still am left with my first issue which I would like to see discussed by the IESG and maybe addressed before approving the document. I dislike overloading protocols with exchanges of information that do not relate to the protocol functionality. However, at this phase, if the working group was chartered to do this work, I can accept such an extention as the GENINFO advertising of generic information. However, in this specific case I do not see anything in the IS-IS WG charter that indicates that this work is within the WG goals. On the contrary the phrase 'The IS-IS Working Group is chartered to document current protocol implementation practices and improvements, as well as to propose further extensions to be used within the scope of IS-IS and IP routing.' may be read as saying the generic information advertising is not within the scope. I do not even see the document on the Goals and Milestones list. Does it hide under another name? Is there any other record about this item being reviewed and approved by the IESG as a chartered item? Maybe the introduction should say something about the need for such a generic container within IS-IS and possible recommendations of what future extensions using this container should include (or should not include). |
2011-03-07
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04 | Cindy Morgan | Placed on agenda for telechat - 2011-03-17 |
2010-12-12
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04 | Adrian Farrel | [Ballot comment] Thank you for this draft, it is a necessary addition to the IS-IS family and for your work to address my Discusses and … [Ballot comment] Thank you for this draft, it is a necessary addition to the IS-IS family and for your work to address my Discusses and Comments. I have two small, non-blocking Comments remaining that could be looked at if the authors continue to work on the document. I think that the RFC Editor will ask you to jiggle the content/section- headings slightly. They have a preference for seeing Section 1 named "Introduction". --- This Comment moved from the Discuss... I feel a bit of a lack discusion of backwards compatibility. You need to cover how a legacy implementation will react to seeing the new GENINFO TLV (a reference to an existing RFC will do), and then consider how this will apply to the utility of the extension (for example, if all speakers participating in the IS-IS instance must be upgraded - I think they will because otherwise they will not see the flags fields in the new TLV). It would be helpful to add a brief statement in Section 4 along the lines of: "According to the rules of [RFC4971] a legacy implementation receiving a GENINFO TLV will ..." |
2010-12-12
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04 | Adrian Farrel | [Ballot Position Update] Position for Adrian Farrel has been changed to Yes from Discuss |
2010-12-07
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04 | Peter Saint-Andre | [Ballot Position Update] Position for Peter Saint-Andre has been changed to No Objection from Discuss |
2010-11-16
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04 | Gonzalo Camarillo | [Ballot Position Update] Position for Gonzalo Camarillo has been changed to No Objection from Discuss |
2010-11-10
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04 | (System) | Sub state has been changed to AD Follow up from New Id Needed |
2010-11-10
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04 | (System) | New version available: draft-ietf-isis-genapp-04.txt |
2010-10-07
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04 | Cindy Morgan | State changed to IESG Evaluation::Revised ID Needed from IESG Evaluation by Cindy Morgan |
2010-10-07
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04 | Robert Sparks | [Ballot Position Update] Position for Robert Sparks has been changed to No Objection from Discuss by Robert Sparks |
2010-10-07
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04 | Jari Arkko | [Ballot discuss] I support the publication of this document and I think it is a good and proper addition to the ISIS protocol. However, I … [Ballot discuss] I support the publication of this document and I think it is a good and proper addition to the ISIS protocol. However, I have a specific technical concern. Section 6 says: The IS-IS WG of the IETF acts as the authority to determine whether information proposed to be advertised in IS-IS LSPs falls under this definition. But then Section 8 says: Registration procedure is "Specification Required" as defined in [RFC5226] If we are expecting to verify that the information falls under the right category, then Specification Required does not appear to be the right IANA rule. Or am I missing something? |
2010-10-07
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04 | Jari Arkko | [Ballot Position Update] New position, Discuss, has been recorded by Jari Arkko |
2010-10-06
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04 | Ron Bonica | [Ballot Position Update] New position, Abstain, has been recorded by Ron Bonica |
2010-10-06
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04 | Tim Polk | [Ballot discuss] The sole statement in the security considerations: This document raises no new security issues for IS-IS. I don't think that is quite … [Ballot discuss] The sole statement in the security considerations: This document raises no new security issues for IS-IS. I don't think that is quite true, albeit in a rather cyclic manner. First, I believe that the use of IS-IS as a transport does have security implications that need to be considered when specifying a new geninfo application ID. It would be helpful to describe the limitations implied by this transport, and when additional security mechanisms can be employed to extend the scope. For example, the standard IS-IS cleartext password might be insufficient for some types of data, requiring deployment of RFC 5304 or 5310 authentication mechanisms. Second, deployment of advanced IS-IS security mechanisms (e.g., RFC 5310 authentication) is something I personally advocate. However, if an IS-IS deployment were to deploy these mechanisms solely to support advertisement of some generic information this may exacerbate any performance implications for the IS-IS deployment and could be used to launch denial of service attacks. That is, deploying IS-IS security mechanisms *because* of the generic information would be costly for the IS-IS implementation and would violate the usual precept of "security commensurate with need". I think a paragraph or two (total) in the security considerations that addresses both these issues would be appropriate. |
2010-10-06
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04 | Tim Polk | [Ballot comment] I support Lars' discuss, |
2010-10-06
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04 | Tim Polk | [Ballot discuss] The sole statement in the security considerations: This document raises no new security issues for IS-IS. I don't think that is quite … [Ballot discuss] The sole statement in the security considerations: This document raises no new security issues for IS-IS. I don't think that is quite true, albeit in a rather cyclic manner. First, I believe that the use of IS-IS as a transport does have security implications that need to be considered when specifying a new geninfo application ID. It would be helpful to describe the limitations implied by this transport, and when additional security mechanisms can be employed to extend the scope. For example, the standard IS-IS cleartext password might be insufficient for some types of data, requiring deployment of RFC 5304 or 5310 authentication mechanisms. Deployment of advanced IS-IS security mechanisms (e.g., RFC 5310 authentication) is something I personally advocate. However, if an IS-IS deployment were to deploy these mechanisms to support advertisement of generic information this may exacerbate any performance implications for the IS-IS deployment and could be used to launch denial of service attacks. That is, deploying IS-IS security mechanisms for the generic information would be costly for the IS-IS implementation and would violate the usual precept of "security commensurate with need". I think a paragraph or two (total) in the security considerations that addresses both these issues would be appropriate. |
2010-10-06
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04 | Tim Polk | [Ballot discuss] Assuming that Lars' clarification (no impact on IS-IS) is implemented, I would agree with the sole statement in the security considerations: This … [Ballot discuss] Assuming that Lars' clarification (no impact on IS-IS) is implemented, I would agree with the sole statement in the security considerations: This document raises no new security issues for IS-IS. However, I believe that the use of IS-IS as a transport does have security implications that need to be considered when specifying a new geninfo application ID. It would be helpful to describe the limitations implied by this transport, and when additional security mechanisms can be employed to extend the scope. For example, the standard IS-IS cleartext password might be insufficient for some types of data, requiring deployment of RFC 5304 or 5310 authentication mechanisms. It should also be noted that if the applications forces deployment of additional security mechanisms (e.g., RFC 5310 authentication) this may exacerbate any performance implications for the IS-IS deployment. I think a paragraph or two (total) in the security considerations that addresses these issues would be appropriate. |
2010-10-06
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04 | Tim Polk | [Ballot Position Update] New position, Discuss, has been recorded by Tim Polk |
2010-10-06
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04 | Robert Sparks | [Ballot comment] I support Dan's discuss points. The document could better motivate the need for a generic container. Could it explicitly call out the existing … [Ballot comment] I support Dan's discuss points. The document could better motivate the need for a generic container. Could it explicitly call out the existing messages that would have been candidates for the use of this mechanism if it existed at the time? Would it make sense to add text reinforcing that elements not understanding this TLV would ignore-but-flood? |
2010-10-06
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04 | Robert Sparks | [Ballot discuss] What is the current status of isis-mi? How stable is it? (Specifically, how likely is it that changes there would cause this document … [Ballot discuss] What is the current status of isis-mi? How stable is it? (Specifically, how likely is it that changes there would cause this document to have to return to the working group later?). I agree with other's suggestion that isis-mi should be a normative reference. |
2010-10-06
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04 | Robert Sparks | [Ballot Position Update] New position, Discuss, has been recorded by Robert Sparks |
2010-10-06
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04 | Russ Housley | [Ballot Position Update] New position, No Objection, has been recorded by Russ Housley |
2010-10-06
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04 | Dan Romascanu | [Ballot discuss] 1. I dislike overloading protocols with exchanges of information that do not relate to the protocol functionality. However, at this phase, if the … [Ballot discuss] 1. I dislike overloading protocols with exchanges of information that do not relate to the protocol functionality. However, at this phase, if the working group was chartered to do this work, I can accept such an extention as the GENINFO advertising of generic information. However, in this specific case I do not see anything in the IS-IS WG charter that indicates that this work is within the WG goals. On the contrary the phrase 'The IS-IS Working Group is chartered to document current protocol implementation practices and improvements, as well as to propose further extensions to be used within the scope of IS-IS and IP routing.' may be read as saying the generic information advertising is not within the scope. I do not even see the document on the Goals and Milestones list. Does it hide under another name? Is there any other record about this item being reviewed and approved by the IESG as a chartered item? 2. I am confused by the recommendation in 3.2: > The use of additional levels of subTLVs is discouraged due to the inherent inefficiency in encoding introduced because the parent subTLV must encode the nested subTLV length. While this inefficiency is small (one additional octet), it may be sufficient to extend the total information about a single application object beyond the carrying capacity of a single GENINFO TLV. Given that each Application ID can utilize the full range of subTLV codepoints (0 to 255) without conflict with any other application, the need to be frugal in the use of APPSUBTLV codepoints is greatly reduced. The last phrase confuses me, as it seems to go against the rest of the paragraph. I would suggest a clear explanation at this point. 3. In section 3.3 - it would be useful to explain what a 'public document' is. Is this the same as what RFC 5226 considers a 'public specification' or is this something else? 4. In Section 6: > The applicability statement above is expected to cover some information currently being advertised by IS-IS in previously defined TLVs. It is expected and seen as desirable that an effort be made to migrate the advertisement of such information to utilize the procedures defined in this document. Are there any examples? From an operational deployment point of view how would the exchange of information be migrated from advertising in exiting previoulsy defined TLVs to an Application ID in the new General Info TLV? 5. I disgree with the claim made in the Security Considerations section that 'This document raises no new security issues for IS-IS'. I believe that when defining new applications that exchange generic information using IS-IS there is a risk that the basic protocol exchange be impacted and this needs to be mentioned. 6. The process required in the IANA Consideration section is not fully in tune with the statement made in section 6: > The IS-IS WG of the IETF acts as the authority to determine whether information proposed to be advertised in IS-IS LSPs falls under this definition. Is it supposed that the IS-IS WG will stay active for a long period of time to make determination whether new requests fall or not within the categories covered by IS-IS Decision process? What process will the WG follow - ask for an RFC to be writte for each request? To me the process defined in Section 8 seems to be sufficient - the "Specification Required" procedure as defined in [RFC5226] implies the nomination of a Designated Expert, and while writing an RFC is the best specification the procedure can expect, documents published outside of the RFC path can also serve the purpose. |
2010-10-06
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04 | Dan Romascanu | [Ballot Position Update] New position, Discuss, has been recorded by Dan Romascanu |
2010-10-06
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04 | Gonzalo Camarillo | [Ballot discuss] Abstracts should not have normative language. This has been pointed out at the COMMENT level but I think this is a DISCUSS-level concern. |
2010-10-06
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04 | Gonzalo Camarillo | [Ballot Position Update] New position, Discuss, has been recorded by Gonzalo Camarillo |
2010-10-05
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04 | Adrian Farrel | [Ballot discuss] Thank you for this draft, it is a necessary addition to the IS-IS family. I look forward to moving to a "Yes" ballot … [Ballot discuss] Thank you for this draft, it is a necessary addition to the IS-IS family. I look forward to moving to a "Yes" ballot when we have cleared up a number of minor points. Discuss updated after emails with the authors. --- Section 2 In order to minimize the impact advertisement of GENINFO may have on the operation of routing, such advertisements MUST occur in the context of a non-zero instance of the IS-IS protocol as defined in [I-D.ietf-isis-mi]. Exceptions to this restriction MAY be allowed subject to restrictions discussed later in this document. In Section 5, this is presented as: Advertisement of GENINFO therefore MUST occur in the context of a non-zero instance of the IS-IS protocol as defined in [I-D.ietf-isis-mi]. Exceptions to this policy MAY be allowed only when there exists a standards track RFC which defines the application. If you say "MUST" I don't think you can allow a variation using "MAY". Suggest... Section 2 OLD In order to minimize the impact advertisement of GENINFO may have on the operation of routing, such advertisements MUST occur in the context of a non-zero instance of the IS-IS protocol as defined in [I-D.ietf-isis-mi]. Exceptions to this restriction MAY be allowed subject to restrictions discussed later in this document. NEW In order to minimize the impact advertisement of GENINFO may have on the operation of routing, such advertisements MUST occur in the context of a non-zero instance of the IS-IS protocol as defined in [I-D.ietf-isis-mi] except where the rules for the use of the zero instance set out later in this document are followed. END Section 5 OLD Advertisement of GENINFO therefore MUST occur in the context of a non-zero instance of the IS-IS protocol as defined in [I-D.ietf-isis-mi]. Exceptions to this policy MAY be allowed only when there exists a standards track RFC which defines the application. NEW Advertisement of GENINFO MUST occur in the context of a non-zero instance of the IS-IS protocol as defined in [I-D.ietf-isis-mi] except when the use in the zero instance is defined in a Standards Track RFC. END --- 3.3. Standardization Requirements GENINFO is intended to advertise information on behalf of applications whose operations have been defined in public documents. GENINFO is NOT intended to be used for proprietary or experimental purposes. The public document MUST include a description of the subTLV allocation policy. I support the intent of this text, but I don't think it is clear. For example, an experimental RFC is a public document. A proprietary use may be documented in a public document. Since the rgeistration rules are "Specification Required", I suggest you refer to this directly, and re-state what "Specification Required" means. --- I feel a bit of a lack discusion of backwards compatibility. You need to cover how a legacy implementation will react to seeing the new GENINFO TLV (a reference to an existing RFC will do), and then consider how this will apply to the utility of the extension (for example, if all speakers participating in the IS-IS instance must be upgraded - I think they will because otherwise they will not see the flags fields in the new TLV). It would be helpful to add a brief statement in Section 4 along the lines of: "According to the rules of [RFC4971] a legacy implementation receiving a GENINFO TLV will ..." --- Section 10.2 [I-D.ietf-isis-mi] looks like it is used as a normative reference in Section 2. |
2010-10-05
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04 | Sean Turner | [Ballot comment] 1) Never seen 2119 language in Abstract. Is this allowed by the RFC editor? 2) Spell out LSP on first occurrence. 3) Sec … [Ballot comment] 1) Never seen 2119 language in Abstract. Is this allowed by the RFC editor? 2) Spell out LSP on first occurrence. 3) Sec 2: It's odd that there are requirements in the overview section. Could this be reworked? 4) Sec 3 (and the rest of the document): RFC 5305 refers to sub-TLV not subTLV. This document should align with 5305. 5) Sec 3.1: It would be nice if you assigned a word for the Flags: S (Scope), D (Down), I, and V. It would be nice to assign a word to for "I" and "V" too. How about Ipv4 for "I" and ipV6 for "V". 6) Sec 3.2: RFC 5035 has to following text about ignoring unknown sub-TLVs: "Unknown sub-TLVs are to be ignored and skipped upon receipt." Does this draft want to use 2119 language to in fact require they be ignored? 7) Sec 3.2: r/AND/and 8) Sec 3.3: r/NOT/not 9) Sec 7: r/IS-IS/IS-IS [RFC1195]. |
2010-10-05
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04 | Sean Turner | [Ballot Position Update] New position, No Objection, has been recorded by Sean Turner |
2010-10-04
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04 | Adrian Farrel | [Ballot comment] I don't think it is helpful to use RFC 2119 language in the Abstract. --- I think that the RFC Editor will ask … [Ballot comment] I don't think it is helpful to use RFC 2119 language in the Abstract. --- I think that the RFC Editor will ask you to jiggle the content/section- headings slightly. They have a preference for seeing Section 1 named "Introduction". --- A few acronyms need to be expanded on first use: - TLV - PDU --- Section 3.1 Application ID An identifier assigned to this application via the GENINFO-REG. What is the "GENINFO-REG"? How about: Application ID An identifier assigned to this application via the registration procedures described in Section 8. --- Section 3.2 The scope of the codepoints used in such subTLVs is defined by the GENINFO TLV codepoint AND the Application ID i.e. the subTLV codepoints are private to the application. The uppercase word "AND" has not definition. Suggest The scope of the codepoints used in such subTLVs is defined by the combincation of the GENINFO TLV codepoint and the Application ID, i.e. the subTLV codepoints are private to the application. |
2010-10-04
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04 | Adrian Farrel | [Ballot discuss] Thank you for this draft, it is a necessary addition to the IS-IS family. I look forward to moving to a "Yes" ballot … [Ballot discuss] Thank you for this draft, it is a necessary addition to the IS-IS family. I look forward to moving to a "Yes" ballot when we have cleared up a number of minor points. --- Section 2 In order to minimize the impact advertisement of GENINFO may have on the operation of routing, such advertisements MUST occur in the context of a non-zero instance of the IS-IS protocol as defined in [I-D.ietf-isis-mi]. Exceptions to this restriction MAY be allowed subject to restrictions discussed later in this document. In Section 5, this is presented as: Advertisement of GENINFO therefore MUST occur in the context of a non-zero instance of the IS-IS protocol as defined in [I-D.ietf-isis-mi]. Exceptions to this policy MAY be allowed only when there exists a standards track RFC which defines the application. If you say "MUST" I don't think you can allow a variation using "MAY". --- Section 3 o Minimize the number of codepoints required Does the GENINFO solution actually reduce the number of codepoints required? I think you still need the same number because the same number of things have to be identified. Maybe o Minimize the number of top-level codepoints required --- Section 3.1 Do you need a registry for the Flags? --- 3.3. Standardization Requirements GENINFO is intended to advertise information on behalf of applications whose operations have been defined in public documents. GENINFO is NOT intended to be used for proprietary or experimental purposes. The public document MUST include a description of the subTLV allocation policy. I support the intent of this text, but I don't think it is clear. For example, an experimental RFC is a public document. A proprietary use may be documented in a public document. Since the rgeistration rules are "Specification Required", I suggest you refer to this directly, and re-state what "Specification Required" means. --- I feel a bit of a lack discusion of backwards compatibility. You need to cover how a legacy implementation will react to seeing the new GENINFO TLV (a reference to an existing RFC will do), and then consider how this will apply to the utility of the extension (for example, if all speakers participating in the IS-IS instance must be upgraded - I think they will because otherwise they will not see the flags fields in the new TLV). And this leads me to worry about Section 6. The applicability statement above is expected to cover some information currently being advertised by IS-IS in previously defined TLVs. It is expected and seen as desirable that an effort be made to migrate the advertisement of such information to utilize the procedures defined in this document. In principle, this is fine, but I wonder how this change could be made for deployed devices. --- Section 10.2 [I-D.ietf-isis-mi] looks like it is used as a normative reference in Section 2. |
2010-10-04
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04 | Adrian Farrel | [Ballot Position Update] New position, Discuss, has been recorded by Adrian Farrel |
2010-10-04
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04 | Lars Eggert | [Ballot comment] (Non-actionable comment: I will likely abstain on this document even when the above change is made. The reason is that I'm allergic against … [Ballot comment] (Non-actionable comment: I will likely abstain on this document even when the above change is made. The reason is that I'm allergic against the current trend of adding kitchen-sink options that turn all kinds of formerly purpose-built protocols info generic "information exchange" mechanisms.) |
2010-10-04
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04 | Lars Eggert | [Ballot discuss] I'm missing a crystal clear statement in a very visible spot that the content exchanged in GENINFO TLVs MUST NOT alter the behavior … [Ballot discuss] I'm missing a crystal clear statement in a very visible spot that the content exchanged in GENINFO TLVs MUST NOT alter the behavior or operation of the IS-IS protocol and/or state machine. In other words, GENINFO is not a tool for a vendor to extended IS-IS in non-interoperable ways. The document does hint that this is the intent in a few places; I'm simply asking for making this very, very clear. |
2010-10-04
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04 | Lars Eggert | [Ballot Position Update] New position, Discuss, has been recorded by Lars Eggert |
2010-10-01
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04 | Peter Saint-Andre | [Ballot comment] The abstract says "SHOULD be advertised" and "SHOULD be used", but conformance language does not belong in the abstract. Please unpack acronyms on … [Ballot comment] The abstract says "SHOULD be advertised" and "SHOULD be used", but conformance language does not belong in the abstract. Please unpack acronyms on first use (TLV, PDU, LSP, etc.). |
2010-10-01
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04 | Peter Saint-Andre | [Ballot discuss] Section 5 states that "flooding of information not directly related to the use of the IS-IS protocol in support of routing degrades the … [Ballot discuss] Section 5 states that "flooding of information not directly related to the use of the IS-IS protocol in support of routing degrades the operation of the protocol." Therefore I think the Security Considerations section needs to discuss the possibility of denial of service attacks, preferably with reference to RFC 4732. |
2010-10-01
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04 | Peter Saint-Andre | [Ballot Position Update] New position, Discuss, has been recorded by Peter Saint-Andre |
2010-09-15
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04 | Stewart Bryant | Placed on agenda for telechat - 2010-10-07 by Stewart Bryant |
2010-09-15
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04 | Stewart Bryant | State changed to IESG Evaluation from Waiting for AD Go-Ahead by Stewart Bryant |
2010-09-15
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04 | Stewart Bryant | [Ballot Position Update] New position, Yes, has been recorded for Stewart Bryant |
2010-09-15
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04 | Stewart Bryant | Ballot has been issued by Stewart Bryant |
2010-09-15
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04 | Stewart Bryant | Created "Approve" ballot |
2010-08-23
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04 | Cindy Morgan | State changed to Waiting for AD Go-Ahead from In Last Call by Cindy Morgan |
2010-08-16
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04 | Sam Weiler | Request for Last Call review by SECDIR Completed. Reviewer: Radia Perlman. |
2010-08-13
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04 | Cindy Morgan | Last call sent |
2010-08-13
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04 | Cindy Morgan | State changed to In Last Call from Last Call Requested by Cindy Morgan |
2010-08-13
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04 | Cindy Morgan | Last Call began 2010-08-06, and is scheduled to end 2010-08-20. See http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/ietf-announce/current/msg07756.html |
2010-08-11
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04 | Michelle Cotton | IANA Last Call Comments: IANA has a single question about the IANA Actions in this document. IANA understands that there are two actions that need … IANA Last Call Comments: IANA has a single question about the IANA Actions in this document. IANA understands that there are two actions that need to be completed upon approval of this document. First, in the TLV Codepoints Registry located at: http://www.iana.org/assignments/isis-tlv-codepoints the following assignment must be added to the registry: Type Description IIH LSP SNP ---- ----------------------------------- --- --- --- 251 Generic Information n y n Second, IANA understands that a new registry must be created for Application Identifiers which may be used in the new Generic Information TLV. IANA Question: would it be acceptable to make this new registry a part of the collection of registries located at: http://www.iana.org/assignments/isis-tlv-codepoints ? IANA understands that the name of the new registry would be: Application Identifiers for the Generic Information TLV The reference would be the approved document and the registration procedure would be Specification required. The new registry would have four values: ID Description Allowed in Reference Instance Zero === ========================== ================= =============== ID will always be an unsigned 16-bit number between 0 and 65535. Allowed in Instance Zero is always either the letter "Y" or "N". The only initial value in this registry is the number 0 which should simply be marked "reserved." IANA understands that these are the only actions required upon approval of this document. |
2010-08-07
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04 | Sam Weiler | Request for Last Call review by SECDIR is assigned to Radia Perlman |
2010-08-07
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04 | Sam Weiler | Request for Last Call review by SECDIR is assigned to Radia Perlman |
2010-08-06
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04 | Stewart Bryant | Last Call was requested by Stewart Bryant |
2010-08-06
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04 | Stewart Bryant | State changed to Last Call Requested from Publication Requested::AD Followup by Stewart Bryant |
2010-08-06
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04 | (System) | Ballot writeup text was added |
2010-08-06
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04 | (System) | Last call text was added |
2010-08-06
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04 | (System) | Ballot approval text was added |
2010-07-08
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04 | (System) | Sub state has been changed to AD Follow up from New Id Needed |
2010-07-08
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03 | (System) | New version available: draft-ietf-isis-genapp-03.txt |
2010-06-28
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04 | Stewart Bryant | State Changes to Publication Requested::Revised ID Needed from Publication Requested by Stewart Bryant |
2010-06-28
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04 | Stewart Bryant | This is a well written draft and I only have one comment: This draft needs text to define the IANA criteria for allocating Application Identifiers … This is a well written draft and I only have one comment: This draft needs text to define the IANA criteria for allocating Application Identifiers and for the allocation of Application specific subTLVs. The authors need to review RFC5226 section 4.1 and to update the IANA section to state the IANA policy that the WG intended for these codepoints. The authors may wish to consider whether an Application Identifier specification should independently set the policy for the subTLV allocation, or whether this document should set a policy or an element of a policy that covers all subTLVs The draft also needs text to describe the information that IANA are required to record in the AI and subTLV registry. |
2010-06-28
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04 | Stewart Bryant | Note field has been cleared by Stewart Bryant |
2010-03-31
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04 | Adrian Farrel | Responsible AD has been changed to Stewart Bryant from Ross Callon |
2010-03-15
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04 | Ross Callon | PROTO write up for: draft-ietf-isis-genapp-02.txt by Chris Hopps. Shepherding WG-Chair: Chris Hopps (chopps@rawdofmt.org) Q1) Have the chairs personally reviewed this version … PROTO write up for: draft-ietf-isis-genapp-02.txt by Chris Hopps. Shepherding WG-Chair: Chris Hopps (chopps@rawdofmt.org) Q1) Have the chairs personally reviewed this version of the Internet Draft (ID), and in particular, do they believe this ID is ready to forward to the IESG for publication? A1) Yes. Q2) Has the document had adequate review from both key WG members and key non-WG members? Do you have any concerns about the depth or breadth of the reviews that have been performed? A2) Adequately reviewed. Q3) Do you have concerns that the document needs more review from a particular (broader) perspective (e.g., security, operational complexity, someone familiar with AAA, etc.)? A3) No concerns. Q4) Do you have any specific concerns/issues with this document that you believe the ADs and/or IESG should be aware of? For example, perhaps you are uncomfortable with certain parts of the document, or have concerns whether there really is a need for it. In any event, if your issues have been discussed in the WG and the WG has indicated it that it still wishes to advance the document, detail those concerns in the write-up. A4) No concerns. 5) How solid is the WG consensus behind this document? Does it represent the strong concurrence of a few individuals, with others being silent, or does the WG as a whole understand and agree with it? A5) Strong Consensus. 6) Has anyone threatened an appeal or otherwise indicated extreme discontent? If so, please summarise the areas of conflict in separate email to the Responsible Area Director. A6) No. 7) Have the chairs verified that the document adheres to all of the ID Checklist items ? A7) Yes. 8) Is the document split into normative and informative references? Are there normative references to IDs, where the IDs are not also ready for advancement or are otherwise in an unclear state? (note here that the RFC editor will not publish an RFC with normative references to IDs, it will delay publication until all such IDs are also ready for publication as RFCs.) A8) Yes. 9) What is the intended status of the document? (e.g., Proposed Standard, Informational?) A9) Proposed Standard. ** Technical Summary Increasing use of IS-IS for the flooding of information not directly used by the primary protocol function has created a need for a generalized method for incorporating said new information without impacting the primary IS-IS protocol function. This specification provides this method. ** Working Group Summary There consensus was strong for this specification. Discussions regarding this specification primarily involved which extensions the specification would apply to. ** Protocol Quality There are currently no implementations of this specification. This specification is required to be in place so that new applications may then utilize it in their design. |
2010-03-15
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04 | Ross Callon | Draft Added by Ross Callon in state Publication Requested |
2010-01-06
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02 | (System) | New version available: draft-ietf-isis-genapp-02.txt |
2008-12-22
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04 | (System) | Document has expired |
2008-06-21
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01 | (System) | New version available: draft-ietf-isis-genapp-01.txt |
2007-10-31
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00 | (System) | New version available: draft-ietf-isis-genapp-00.txt |