Network Working Group A. Farrel (Ed.)
Internet-Draft Huawei Technologies
Intended status: BCP L. Andersson
Expires: July 24, 2010 Ericsson Inc.
D. Ward
Juniper Networks
M. Betts
January 24, 2010
IETF Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS)
Transport Profile (MPLS-TP) Document Process
draft-ietf-mpls-tp-process-05.txt
Status of this Memo
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Abstract
The decision to develop a Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS)
Transport Profile (MPLS-TP) in cooperation between the IETF and the
ITU-T is document in RFC 5317 as the decision of the Joint Working
Team on MPLS-TP.
This document provides additional detail of the processes for the
development of IETF RFCs on MPLS-TP. It provides an adaptation of the
IETF working group process; identifies the expected participation in
the process by the ITU-T; and clarifies the rules and conventions
regarding MPLS-TP documents.
This document does not specify any ITU-T process; ITU-T activities
will be done according to ITU-T process/rules.
This document does not specify or modify the normal IETF working
group process. It is limited to the specific adaptations of that
process to facilitate the cooperation agreement between the IETF and
the ITU-T on MPLS-TP, and to ensure a good and consistent document
review across the two organizations.
This document is a product of a joint Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF) / International Telecommunication Union Telecommunication
Standardization Sector (ITU-T) effort to include an MPLS Transport
Profile within the IETF MPLS and PWE3 architectures to support the
capabilities and functionalities of a packet transport network.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction ................................................... 4
1.1. Terminology ................................................ 4
1.1.1. IETF Terms and Abbreviations ........................... 5
1.1.2. ITU-T Terms and Abbreviations .......................... 6
1.2. Purpose, Intent, and Procedures for Cooperation on MPLS-TP . 6
1.3. A Note on the MPLS-TP Interoperability Design Team ......... 8
2. Adaptation of the IETF Working Group Process ................... 8
2.1. IETF Consensus and Mailing Lists ........................... 9
2.2. Communications with the ITU-T .............................. 9
2.3. Adapted IETF Working Group Process ........................ 10
2.3.1. Flow Chart ............................................ 10
2.3.2. The IETF MPLS-TP Process .............................. 12
2.4. Naming Conventions for MPLS-TP Documents .................. 16
2.5. Boilerplate Text For Inclusion in MPLS-TP Documents ....... 16
2.5.1. Abstract .............................................. 17
2.5.2. Introduction .......................................... 17
2.5.3. Recognition of IETF Consensus for Informational RFCs .. 17
3. Expectations on ITU-T Participation in the Process ............ 17
3.1. Working Group Document Review ............................. 18
3.2. Working Group Last Call and Document Approval ............. 18
3.3. Non-Response to Liaisons .................................. 21
4. Guidelines For MPLS-TP work in the ITU-T ...................... 21
5. IANA Considerations ........................................... 22
6. Security Considerations ....................................... 22
7. Acknowledgments ............................................... 22
8. References .................................................... 22
8.1. Normative References ...................................... 22
8.2. Informative References .................................... 22
Authors' Addresses ............................................... 23
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1. Introduction
The IETF and ITU-T have entered into an agreement to develop the
Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) Transport Profile (MPLS-TP).
This agreement is known as the Joint Working Team on MPLS-TP (JWT)
Agreement and is documented in [RFC5317]. The agreement states that
MPLS-TP will be documented in IETF RFCs, and assumes that there will
be close cooperation with the ITU-T in reviewing these RFCs. This
cooperation will include review of the work at all stages of
drafting.
This document provides additional detail of the processes for the
development of IETF RFCs on MPLS-TP as follows.
o It Provides an adaptation of the IETF working group process, with
respect to how the IETF will take input from the ITU-T on MPLS-TP
topics.
o It identifies the expected participation by the ITU-T in the
document development process, noting that the ITU-T has committed
to responding promptly to IETF working group last calls in a way
that may require the ITU-T to develop responses via
correspondence.
o It clarifies the rules regarding MPLS-TP documents.
This document does not specify or modify the normal IETF working
group process. It is limited to the specific adaptations of that
process to facilitate the cooperation agreement between the IETF and
the ITU-T on MPLS-TP, and to ensure a good and consistent document
review across the two organizations.
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
Although this document is not a protocol specification, this language
is used for clarity and decisiveness.
This document is a product of a joint Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF) / International Telecommunication Union Telecommunication
Standardization Sector (ITU-T) effort to include an MPLS Transport
Profile within the IETF MPLS and PWE3 architectures to support the
capabilities and functionalities of a packet transport network.
1.1. Terminology
This section includes a number of terms and abbreviations that are
used in this document. The section is split into two subsection:
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IETF terms and ITU-T terms.
1.1.1. IETF Terms and Abbreviations
o JWT - Joint Working Team, a team with participants with experience
from standards development in the IETF and the ITU-T.
Note: The JWT is not part of either the IETF or ITU-T, but a group
that has been set up to facilitate cooperation on MPLS-TP between
the two organizations.
o JWT decision - A set of recommendations on the procedural approach
to the development of MPLS-TP made by the JWT and documented in
[RFC5317].
o JWT agreement - The agreement between IETF and ITU-T based on the
JWT decision to jointly develop MPLS-TP according IETF processes.
o JWT documents - The set of documents envisioned in the JWT
decision [RFC5317].
o MPLS-TP documents - The following sets of documents are counted as
MPLS-TP documents:
* Individual Internet-Drafts that address the MPLS-TP problem
space.
* Working group Internet-Drafts that address the MPLS-TP problem
space.
* Internet-Drafts that are considered for publication as RFCs by
the IESG and that address the MPLS-TP problem space.
* Internet-Drafts that are approved for publication as RFCs by
the IESG and that address the MPLS-TP problem space.
* Published RFCs that address the MPLS-TP problem space.
* ITU-T Recommendations and draft Recommendations in various
stages of development that address the MPLS-TP problem space.
Documents that originate from the IRTF RFC stream or the
Independent Submission Stream are not considered as MPLS-TP
documents.
o MPLS-TP mailing list - An IETF mailing list (mpls-tp@ietf.org)
established specifically for the discussion of MPLS-TP issues
within the IETF. The MPLS-TP list is the mailing list that is
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usually used to decide consensus on MPLS-TP issues (although other
IETF mailing lists, such as WG lists, may be used). This is an
open mailing list with publicly available archives.
o MPLS-TP responsible working group chair - An IETF MPLS working
group chair assigned responsibility for the IETF MPLS-TP effort
by the IETF Routing Area Directors.
o MPLS-TP responsible AD - An IETF Routing Area Director with
management responsibility for the MPLS-TP effort.
o IETF liaison to the ITU-T on MPLS - An individual assigned
responsibility by the IAB for managing the liaison relationship
to the ITU-T in regard of all issues concerning MPLS, including
MPLS-TP.
o Contribution - Within the IETF, a contribution is any submission
to the IETF intended by the Contributor for publication as all or
part of an Internet-Draft or RFC, and any statement made within
the context of an IETF activity. Such statements include oral
statements in IETF sessions as well as written and electronic
communications. For more information on the IETF definition of a
contribution see [RFC5378].
1.1.2. ITU-T Terms and Abbreviations
o Ad Hoc Team on MPLS-TP (ahtmplstp) - A team established by Study
Group 15 of the ITU-T to coordinate the work on MPLS-TP within the
ITU-T and to act as a focal point for communication with the IETF
about MPLS-TP.
o Ad Hoc Team on MPLS-TP mailing list - An ITU-T mail exploder
(ahmpls-tp@lists.itu.int) established specifically for the
discussion and coordination of the MPLS-TP effort within the
ITU-T.
o Contribution - Within the ITU-T, a contribution is a document that
is submitted to the ITU-T to advance work on the development of a
Recommendation or to propose the development of a new
Recommendation.
o Recommendation - A Recommendation is an ITU-T standards document.
1.2. Purpose, Intent, and Procedures for Cooperation on MPLS-TP
The purpose and objectives of the development activity on MPLS-TP is
described in [RFC5317]. The JWT decision includes the recognition
that the design authority for MPLS (including MPLS-TP) is the IETF.
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At the same time, the JWT decision recognises the role of the ITU-T
in providing input (especially input to the requirements statements)
to the development process for MPLS-TP. There is also a clear
statement of expectation that the ITU-T's opinions will be heard
within the IETF and must be properly considered during the
development of MPLS-TP documents.
It should be noted that other related technologies (espeically those
for core MPLS and pseudowire deployments) do not fall within this
cooperation agreement. The IETF will continue to develop Internet
technologies as before and welcomes particpation from all
individuals. Where such developments overlap with MPLS-TP such that
they are important to the work on MPLS-TP, they will form part of the
cooperation project.
The development of standards for MPLS-TP is, therefore, carried out
within the IETF according to IETF process and with strong input from
the ITU-T. This input takes three forms (see also Section 2.2):
o Active participation.
All interested parties are encouraged to participate in the
development of MPLS-TP standards within the IETF through the
normal IETF process. In short, this involves the generation and
documentation of new ideas as Internet-Drafts, and the discussion
of work in progress through the IETF mailing lists. The IETF is
not a membership organisation, and the mailing lists are open.
o Informal communication.
It is recognised that discussions about MPLS-TP will take place
within the Questions and Study Groups of the ITU-T. In order to
speed up the development process and ensure smooth communications,
the ITU-T is requested to make informal (i.e., email)
communications to the IETF whenever any issues or questions
arise. Informal communication can be sent by any individual or
rapporteur of a Question as an email to the MPLS-TP mailing list.
The chairs of the Ad Hoc Team on MPLS-TP may also summarise
discussions within the ITU-T (especially those on the Ad Hoc Team
on MPLS-TP mailing list) and communicate them to the IETF via
email.
o Formal communication.
The formal liaison process with the IETF is described in [RFC4052]
and [RFC4053]. The process will be used for ensuring that specific
progress steps are check-pointed and recorded, and for making sure
that appropriate responses are generated in a timely manner.
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Formal liaison communications may be marked as "For Action," "For
Comment," or "For Information" depending on the level of feedback
that is required. Where formal liaison communication is indicated
in this document, the type of liaison that is advised in each
instance is also indicated.
The objective of cooperation between the IETF and ITU-T is to ensure
full participation of interested parties to make sure that all
opinions are heard with the intention of producing sound and stable
MPLS-TP documentation. It is understood that the neither the IETF nor
the ITU-T can be in a position to block the work of the other body
within its areas of authority. In the context of this document, this
means that the ITU-T cannot block IETF work on MPLS-TP against the
IETF consensus view.
Part of this process must be the understanding that all IETF
documentation (including RFCs) can be revised or extended according
to normal IETF procedures. Therefore, it is not a requirement that
the first version of any RFC be perfect for all time (we do not need
to "boil the ocean"); the initial aim of the work is to provide
documentation of MPLS-TP as it is initially developed and deployed.
Fundamental to understanding the process described in the rest of
this document and to participating in the MPLS-TP development process
is a working knowledge of the procedures of the IETF. Readers needing
clarification of the IETF procedures are invited to read [RFC2026],
[RFC4677], and [RFC4929]. Further clarification and guidance can be
obtained from the MPLS-TP responsible working group chair, the MPLS-
TP responsible AD, and the IETF liaison to the ITU-T on MPLS.
The ITU-T may also develop Recommendations to document MPLS-TP. The
JWT decision recognises that these Recommendations must not contain
normative definitions of MPLS-TP (these are captured solely in IETF
RFCs). Recommendations on MPLS-TP will be provided for review by the
IETF to ensure conformance with the previous point and to verify that
the material is consistent across MPLS-TP. The process for producing
and reviewing Recommendations is out of scope for this document.
1.3. A Note on the MPLS-TP Interoperability Design Team
The MPLS Interoperability Design Team (the MEAD team) was a design
team established within the IETF with participants with experience
from standards development for MPLS and transport networks. The MEAD
team was chartered to coordinate the development of MPLS-TP within
the IETF and to create the initial document set before the work was
taken to the IETF working groups in the usual way.
The MEAD team was also responsible for coordinating cooperation with
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the ITU-T on the Internet-Drafts it was working on.
The MEAD team completed its work and was closed in October 2009.
2. Adaptation of the IETF Working Group Process
The IETF working group processes as defined in RFC 2026 [RFC2026] are
adapted as described in this section solely for the purpose of the
MPLS-TP work. These adaptations do not apply to any other topic or
work within the IETF.
2.1. IETF Consensus and Mailing Lists
The IETF works according to a 'rough consensus' model, where working
group chairs determine the consensus after discussions on the mailing
lists. This is also applicable to the MPLS-TP work. The MPLS-TP
mailing list exists to focus all IETF discussions on MPLS-TP and to
avoid congesting other relevant working group mailing lists. All
technical discussion on MPLS-TP SHOULD be directed to the MPLS-TP
list, but other working group mailing lists SHOULD be notified when
appropriate so that individuals can participate in the discussions on
the MPLS-TP list.
Consensus activities (such as a working group last call) MUST be
started on an working group mailing list, but the MPLS-TP responsible
working group chair SHOULD direct discussions to the MPLS-TP list and
SHOULD direct that consensus will be judged on that list. The working
group chair MAY direct discussion and consensus to a specific working
group mailing list.
2.2. Communications with the ITU-T
A most important part of this process is the information exchange
between the IETF and ITU-T. This information exchange consists of
two equally important pieces.
o Informal information exchange
This is done primarily by e-mail to the relevant mailing lists.
Information sent to the ITU-T MUST be sent to the Ad Hoc Team on
MPLS-TP mailing list. Information sent to the IETF MUST be sent to
the MPLS-TP mailing list.
o Formal information exchange
In addition to the informal information exchange, a formal
information exchange is accomplished by liaison correspondence
between the two organisations. Exchange of liaisons makes it
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possible to follow the request/response exchange between the
organisations in more detail, and to obtain an official view of
each organisation's position on any topic.
Formal liaisons SHOULD include tracking numbers in their subject
lines to facilitate easy coordination of responses with the
requests to which they are associated.
2.3. Adapted IETF Working Group Process
2.3.1. Flow Chart
The flow chart below describes the adaption of the working group
process. The flow chart and the process as described in Section 2.3.2
are equally normative.
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.............
: Ind Docs :
.............
|
|(1)
v
+---------------+
| WG Process |
+---------------+
| ^ ind-00, ind-01, etc
| | |
| | |(2)
| | |
| +-------+
(3)| review
|
v
+-----------------+
| Poll for WG Doc |
+-----------------+
|
|(4)
v
+-------------+ (5) +-------+
+---------->| WG Doc |---------->| ITU-T |
| +-------------+ +-------+
| | ^ wg-00, wg-01, etc |
| | | | |
| | | |(7) |(6)
| | | | |
(11)| (8)| +------+-<--------------+
| | review
| v
| +-----------------+
+----| WG Last Call |
+-----------------+
| ^ |
(9)| |(10) |(12)
v | |
+---------+ |
| ITU-T | |
+---------+ |
v
+---------------+
| Req for Pub |
+---------------+
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2.3.2. The IETF MPLS-TP Process
This section describes the development for MPLS-TP documents. It sets
out the process that is illustrated by the flow chart in Section
2.3.1. The numbered arrows in the flow chart are described as
numbered steps in the process in the list below.
Individual MPLS-TP documents can take different paths through the
this process. Although the different paths through the flow chart are
given as options, it is always possible for a particular MPLS-TP
Internet-Draft to be adopted as a working group draft. This is done
on the guidance of the MPLS-TP responsible working group chair and in
cooperation with the relevant working group chairs and the document
editors/authors.
1. Independent Documents through Working Group Processing
Internet-Drafts MAY be introduced by their authors to describe
any aspect of MPLS-TP. This option results in the document being
discussed and reviewed by the appropriate IETF working group as
determined by the working group chairs. The normal IETF process
will be applied, and the authors will revise the document (step
2) until it is adopted as a working group draft (see step 3).
Any individual or group of individuals can create an Internet-
Draft through this step.
2. Authors of independent documents SHOULD solicit comments on the
MPLS-TP mailing list and on any appropriate IETF working group
mailing lists.
The authors SHOULD revise the documents according to comments
received from all sources, or explain why no changes been made.
3. If an MPLS-TP document seems mature enough to become a working
group document, a poll is done on the MPLS-TP mailing list and
the appropriate working group mailing list to determine whether
there is consensus to adopt the document as a working group
document.
Which working group a document goes into is decided jointly by
the MPLS-TP responsible working group chair and the chairs of the
target working group.
4. If the document is accepted as a working group document the
working group takes over the revision control of the document.
Normal IETF working group process SHALL apply. All IETF
discussions about the document MUST now be held on the MPLS-TP
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mailing list with notifications sent to the relevant IETF working
group mailing list.
5. When a document is accepted as a working group document, a
liaison MUST be sent to the ITU-T to inform them of the progress.
This liaison SHOULD be "for comment", but if the document is not
yet in a fit state for review the liaison MAY be "for
information". No response to this liaison is required.
An email to the Ad Hoc Team on MPLS-TP mailing list MUST be sent
in parallel with the liaison.
Each time an MPLS-TP document under working group control is
revised a note SHOULD be sent to the Ad Hoc Team on MPLS-TP
mailing list, and a liaison SHOULD be sent to the ITU-T to inform
them of the progress of the document. This liaison SHOULD be "for
comment" to allow for further review by the ITU-T, but MAY be
"for information" if the document is not in a fit state for
review or if there is no change in substance of the document
since the previous liaison. No response to these liaisons is
required.
The IETF working group MAY solicit input from the ITU-T at any
time by sending a liaison for comment.
6. At any time, it is possible for ITU-T participants to send review
comments on any MPLS-TP document. Such comments SHOULD be sent as
comments to the MPLS-TP mailing list according to normal IETF
process.
Additionally, this step provides for communication from ITU-T
Study Groups or Questions (see Section 3.2). These communications
may be unsolicited or in response to a request from the IETF
(step 5), and MAY be informal information exchanges or formal
information exchanges (see Section 2.2). Such exchanges (informal
or formal) SHOULD be accompanied by an email to the MPLS-TP
mailing list from the Ad Hoc Team on MPLS-TP chairs.
The document editors and the working group MUST give due
consideration to the issues raised in the communications from the
ITU-T, and SHOULD attempt to make suitable changes to the MPLS-TP
document or MUST otherwise explain why no change is being made.
Formal information exchanges MUST receive a response if
requested. The IETF liaison to the ITU-T on MPLS is responsible
for ensuring that this step is completed.
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7. Editors of working group documents SHOULD solicit comments on the
MPLS-TP mailing list and on any appropriate IETF working group
mailing lists. Comments SHOULD also be solicited from the ITU-T
as "early review" using a liaison for comment (step 5). Comments
from the ITU-T may, therefore, be solicited or unsolicited and
are handled as described for step 6.
The authors SHOULD revise the documents according to comments
received from all sources.
Note that most comments that lead to updates of working group
documents are a result of spontaneous individual reviews and
comments from the individual participants in the MPLS-TP effort
according to normal IETF process.
8. When an MPLS-TP document is deemed mature enough, a working group
last call is initiated following normal IETF process. The working
group chairs are responsible for judging when to initiate this
last call.
9. When a working group last call is initiated for any MPLS-TP
document the following actions MUST be taken.
* A liaison for action containing a request for participation in
the working group last call MUST be sent to the appropriate
ITU-T Study Groups and Questions.
The Ad Hoc Team on MPLS-TP chairs are expected to verify that
all the Study Groups and Questions within the ITU-T that need
to respond to the working group last call are aware that it has
been issued.
* A notification that the working group last call is taking place
MUST be sent to the Ad Hoc Team on MPLS-TP mailing list and to
the MPLS-TP mailing list.
10. The ITU-T is REQUIRED to respond to the liaison in step 9 using a
liaison within the time indicated in the liaison (see Section
3.2). This deadline will usually be set according to the timeline
of the working group last call.
The ITU-T response MUST either include comments to be taken under
consideration by the working group along with other last call
comments, or provide a statement that the ITU-T has no comment.
The latter case SHALL be interpreted as ITU-T support for the
publication of the document as an RFC.
The working group and document editors MUST fully address any
comments received from the ITU-T via liaison under this step
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either making the requested changes, or discuss the changes with
the ITU-T to reach a consensus position on the MPLS-TP mailing
list. The Rapporteur of the question that generated the liaison
statement is responsible for ensuring that the ITU participants
have visibility and input to the IETF WG comment resolution
process. If the changes are not as requested by the ITU liaison
the Rapporteur who was responsible for the generation of the
original liaison should generate another liaison statement
indicating if the resolution of the comments is acceptable to the
ITU-T.
11. According to normal IETF process, if the last call comments are
substantial the document MUST be returned to the working group
for revision and discussion. This MUST involve further
communication with the ITU-T (step 5) to clarify or resolve
issues raised during ITU-T review if they are handled other than
as requested by the ITU-T.
The working group last call (step 8) MAY be repeated multiple
times for revisions of the document. As is normal IETF process,
the working group chairs MAY issue subsequent working group last
calls for the entire document or MAY limit them to only the
updated text. In the latter case, further comments from within
the IETF or from the ITU-T SHOULD be limited as instructed by the
working group chair.
Note that, according to normal IETF process, if the last call
comments are minor, they SHOULD be addressed by the document
editors in coordination with the working group chairs and with
notification to the MPLS-TP mailing list.
12. When all last call comments have been addressed or responded to
and all necessary working group last calls have been held, the
working group chairs of the owning working group with assistance
of the MPLS-TP responsible working group chair will request
publication of the document as an RFC following normal IETF
process.
Once this request for publication is sent, the document will be
handled as any other IETF document with individual comments made
during IETF last call, and with IESG review following. Therefore,
after this point there is no further scope for ITU-T experts to
influence the development of the document other than as
individual contributors.
Note that if these later stages in the publication process cause
significant changes to the document, it MAY be fully or partially
returned to the working group, in which case some form of WG last
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call with ITU-T consultation MUST take place following from step
8 as outlined above.
2.4. Naming Conventions for MPLS-TP Documents
To make it easier to search in the IETF Internet-Draft repositories,
the following rules MUST be followed for naming the MPLS-TP Internet-
Draft.
o All MPLS-TP Internet-Draft MUST include the sequence "mpls-tp"
in the filename.
o Individual MPLS-TP Internet-Draft MUST be named according to
this format:
draft-name-mpls-tp-topic-??.txt
"name" is the last name of the main editor, or an acronym
indicating the last names of the set of editors.
"topic" indicates the content of the draft, e.g. "oam-framework".
"??" indicates a two digit version number, starting with "00".
o MPLS working group documents MUST be named as follows:
draft-ietf-mpls-tp-topic-??.txt
"topic" indicates the content of the draft, e.g. "oam-framework".
"??" indicates a two digit version number, starting with "00".
o MPLS-TP documents from other working groups MUST be named
according to this format:
draft-ietf-wgname-mpls-tp-topic-??.txt
"wgname" is the acronym for any working group chartered to do
MPLS-TP work, e.g. pwe3 or ccamp.
"topic" indicates the content of the draft, e.g. "oam-framework".
"??" indicates a two digit version number, starting with "00".
2.5. Boilerplate Text For Inclusion in MPLS-TP Documents
In order to clarify the status of MPLS-TP documents within the IETF,
the following boilerplate text is included in Internet-Drafts.
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2.5.1. Abstract
In the Abstract of each MPLS-TP Internet-Draft, as the final
paragraph, the following text is included:
This document is a product of a joint Internet Engineering Task
Force (IETF) / International Telecommunication Union
Telecommunication Standardization Sector (ITU-T) effort to include
an MPLS Transport Profile within the IETF MPLS and PWE3
architectures to support the capabilities and functionalities of a
packet transport network.
2.5.2. Introduction
Somewhere within the Introduction section of each MPLS-TP Internet-
Draft, the following text is included:
This document is a product of a joint Internet Engineering Task
Force (IETF) / International Telecommunication Union
Telecommunication Standardization Sector (ITU-T) effort to include
an MPLS Transport Profile within the IETF MPLS and PWE3
architectures to support the capabilities and functionalities of a
packet transport network.
2.5.3. Recognition of IETF Consensus for Informational RFCs
In order to allow the ITU-T to make normative references to
Informational RFCs, the documents need to progress through IETF last
call and have the weight of IETF consensus. This will be recorded in
the published RFC using text added by the RFC Editor.
To make sure that the RFC Editor is reminded to do this, the
following two paragraphs are included before the Introduction section
of an Informational MPLS-TP Internet-Draft.
This Informational Internet-Draft is aimed at achieving IETF
Consensus before publication as an RFC and will be subject to an
IETF Last Call.
[RFC Editor, please remove this note before publication as an RFC
and insert the correct Streams Boilerplate to indicate that the
published RFC has IETF Consensus.]
3. Expectations on ITU-T Participation in the Process
The IETF looks for input from the ITU-T at two key points in the
process described in Section 2.
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o Steps 5 and 6 : Review of Working Group Documents
o Steps 9 and 10 : Working Group Last Call and Document Approval
This section briefly describes what the IETF expects to happen on the
ITU-T side at these interaction points.
3.1. Working Group Document Review
The ITU-T may provide input to documents that are being developed by
IETF working groups. They are open for informal and formal comment by
the ITU-T and its participants.
As shown by step 5 in the process described in Section 2, the IETF
will notify the ITU-T of the existence of such documents and will
normally inform the ITU-T of new revisions. The ITU-T is not
required to respond to these communications.
The IETF may also request review or discussion of working group
documents. The ITU-T is required to respond to this type of
communication if it is a formal liaison (step 6) within the deadline
set by the liaison (see Section 3.3). In this case, it should either
send a liaison response with comments and questions, or it should
acknowledge the liaison from the IETF saying that there are no
questions or comments at this time. The latter type of response will
not be taken by the IETF to imply any form of support for the
document unless it is explicitly expressed.
Additionally, the ITU-T may send unsolicited communications on a
working group document as either informal or formal communications
(step 6). Formal communications may request a response from the IETF.
However, ITU-T participants are encouraged to bring their comments
and questions to the MPLS-TP mailing list directly, because this will
be more efficient and conforms to the normal IETF process. Comments
received in this way will be treated in the same way any as other
individual comments received on IETF documents.
3.2. Working Group Last Call and Document Approval
A working group last call is issued when a working group document is
close to being ready for publication as an RFC. The intention is to
make sure that there are no important pieces missing, that technical
details are correct, and that there is consensus within the working
group for moving forward. Consensus for MPLS-TP documents is judged
on the designated mailing list (normally the MPLS-TP mailing list) by
the chairs of the working group that has developed the document in
association with the MPLS-TP responsible working group chair.
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During working group last call for all MPLS-TP documents the ITU-T
will always be consulted about the content of the documents. The
purpose of this step (step 9) is to ensure that the documents
address the needs and requirements of the ITU-T participants.
A formal communication will be made to the ITU-T to make it aware
that an IETF working group last call has been started and requesting
review and comment. According to the JWT decision, the ITU-T is
required to respond to a liaison about a working group last call
within the time set in announcing the working group last call. ITU-T
participants need to be aware that this step in the process
represents their last chance to influence the document from within
the ITU-T, and the liaison response needs to contain all issues and
comments - there will not be any scope to raise further concerns at a
later date.
The chair of an IETF working group that starts a working group last
call will send a liaison to the ITU-T announcing the working group
last call. A message will also be sent to the Ad Hoc Team on MPLS-TP
mailing list.
The IETF will make a best effort attempt to target the ITU-T Study
Groups and Questions that should be involved in responding to the
working group last call. However, the ITU-T must make sure that the
appropriate entities within the ITU-T participate in responding to
the working group last call. The ITU-T Ad Hoc Team on MPLS-TP
coordinates the development of the ITU-T response to the working
group last call.
The response to a working group last call should be unambiguous and
as detailed as possible. The liaison response is not intended to
start a conversation for clarification. It is intended to make clear
statements of technical issues to be addressed and to propose
resolutions for those issues. Acceptable responses include:
o No issues found. The ITU-T supports publication of the Internet-
Draft as an RFC in its current form.
o Minor issues found or questions raised. Please consider fixes to
these issues or respond to these questions before publication of
the Internet-Draft as an RFC.
o Major issues found. Please address these issues and allow the
ITU-T to review the resolution (possibly during a further working
group last call) before proceeding to publication of the Internet-
Draft as an RFC.
For the avoidance of doubt, the following guidance has been provided
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by the ITU-T to its Rapporteurs:
During the final stages of development (e.g., Working Group last
call) the IETF will send a liaison to ITU-T for action.
At this stage the experts of the ITU-T must make a judgement if
the draft being reviewed is a suitable basis for a normative
reference from an ITU-T Recommendation. The group must reach a
consensus on this opinion.
A liaison to indicate support for the IETF to approve the draft
should contain the following text:
The experts of Qx have reviewed draft-xxxx by correspondence and
either:
- Have no concerns with the IETF proceeding with approval;
or
- Request that the following changes are made before the IETF
approves the draft.
Exceptionally, if consensus to support approval of the draft
cannot be reached, a response liaison must be sent indicating
that consensus could not be reached by correspondence and that
the matter will be addressed at the next SG (or interim)
meeting.
If the ITU-T is unable to reach consensus, the working group may
proceed to reach its own consensus on the document on the
understanding that it may be necessary to revise the document later
when ITU-T consensus is reached.
Note that, as described in Section 1.2, the cooperation process is
designed to ensure constructive consideration and resolution of all
issues raised by the ITU-T without blocking the progress of the
IETF's work on MPLS-TP. It is expected that discussion of major
issues raised at this stage of the process will be conducted on the
MPLS-TP mailing list and through appropriate communication with the
ITU-T. It is further expected that such issues will be resolved
through technical evaluation and rough consensus judged as normal for
the IETF process. In the event that agreement between the IETF and
ITU-T cannot be reached on some technical point, the JWT will be
convened to seek a resolution.
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3.3. Non-Response to Liaisons
The liaison relationship between the IETF and the ITU-T is founded on
the understanding that each party will respond in a timely and
appropriate manner to the other party's liaisons so long as
reasonable notice is given.
Failure to respond by a deadline properly expressed in a liaison must
not be used to cause deadlock or to block advancement of work. Such
failures shall be assumed to represent accidental errors or
oversights and shall be brought to the attention of the management of
the body that has failed to respond.
In extreme cases, the JWT is empowered to convene itself to resolve
issues of failed communications.
4. Guidelines For MPLS-TP work in the ITU-T
These guidelines apply to progressing work on MPLS-TP in the ITU-T.
Any member of the ITU-T may send an MPLS-TP contribution to a ITU-T
Study Group or Question.
Before the ITU-T initiates any new work (i.e., items not previously
identified by the JWT) based on such contributions the ITU-T shall
send a liaison to the IETF. The message will go to the IETF
liaison to the ITU-T on MPLS, the MPLS-TP responsible working
group chair, and the MPLS-TP responsible AD. They are responsible
for sending a consolidated response from the IETF, but may
delegate the work of writing the response.
The IETF must respond to such liaisons according to the deadline
in the liaison. Acceptable responses include:
o Acknowledgement of receipt and agreement that the ITU-T is
clear to proceed with the work described.
o Request that the work described be transferred from the ITU-T to
the IETF in the form of an Internet-Draft to form part of the
MPLS-TP work in the IETF.
o Request that the work be put on hold until specific issues have
been resolved. In the event that this response is seen as
blocking of ITU-T work, the JWT may be convened to seek a
resolution.
Note that the process described in this section is conformant to the
Change Process for Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) and
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Generalized MPLS (GMPLS) Protocols and Procedures [RFC4929].
5. IANA Considerations
There are no requests for IANA action in this document.
6. Security Considerations
This document defines a process adaptation for the cooperation
between the IETF and the ITU-T and thus does not introduce any new
security considerations.
The successful development of MPLS-TP standards that are consistent
across the industry is an essential component to ensuring the
security and stability of MPLS networks.
7. Acknowledgments
Thanks to Eric Gray who helped with grammar and useful comments.
Thanks to Tom Petch who spent time trying to sort out what the
document said, and who sent comments that helped clarify the
document. Thanks to the participants of ITU-T Study Group 15 who
provided review and comments on an early version of this text.
Thanks to Ben Niven-Jenkins for discussions.
8. References
8.1. Normative References
[RFC2026] Bradner, S., "The Internet Standards Process -- Revision
3", BCP 9, RFC 2026, October 1996.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
8.2. Informative References
[RFC4052] Daigle, L., Ed., and Internet Architecture Board, "IAB
Processes for Management of IETF Liaison Relationships",
BCP 102, RFC 4052, April 2005.
[RFC4053] Trowbridge, S., Bradner, S., and F. Baker, "Procedures for
Handling Liaison Statements to and from the IETF", BCP
103, RFC 4053, April 2005.
[RFC4677] Hoffman, P. and Harris, S., "The Tao of IETF: A Novice's
Guide to the Internet Engineering Task Force", RFC 4677,
September 2006.
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[RFC4929] Andersson, L. and Farrel, A., "Change Process for
Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) and Generalized MPLS
(GMPLS) Protocols and Procedures", BCP 129, RFC4929, June
2007.
[RFC5317] Bryant, S. and L. Andersson, "Joint Working Team (JWT)
Report on MPLS Architectural Considerations for a
Transport Profile", RFC 5317, February 2009.
[RFC5378] Bradner, S., and Contreras, J., "Rights Contributors
Provide to the IETF Trust", BCP 78, RFC 5378, November
2008.
Authors' Addresses
Loa Andersson
Ericsson Inc
Email: loa.andersson@ericsson.com
David Ward
Juniper Networks
Email: dward@juniper.net
Malcolm Betts
Email: malcolm.betts@rogers.com
Adrian Farrel
Huawei Technologies
Email: adrian.farrel@huawei.com
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