2012-10: Potential Areas for IETF/IEEE802 Coordination v02
slides-interim-2021-ietfieee-01-sessa-potential-areas-for-ietfieee802-coordination-v02-00
Meeting Slides | IETF-IEEE (ietfieee) IAB ASG Snapshot | |
---|---|---|
Date and time | 2021-12-31 17:00 | |
Title | 2012-10: Potential Areas for IETF/IEEE802 Coordination v02 | |
State | Active | |
Other versions | plain text | |
Last updated | 2022-06-10 |
slides-interim-2021-ietfieee-01-sessa-potential-areas-for-ietfieee802-coordination-v02-00
Potential Areas for IETF/IEEE802 Coordination 0. Revision History 0.0 Initial Revision - 9/4/2012 0.1 revised for the period between 9/5 and 10/29 0.2 revised according to input received on 01, still reflects the 9/5-10/29 time interval 1. IETF TRILL Fine-grained labeling and IEEE 802.1 tags 1.1 Description In the 7/25 f2f meeting Paul Unbehagen presented a brief summary of the IETF TRILL WG work on Fine-Grained Labeling which raises concerns about the use of the existing 0x8100 Ethertype. IEEE 802 suggested that new protocols should require new Ethertypes. Further discussions - the TRILL contributors agreed to get different Ethertypes. This needs to be confirmed in the revised I-Ds. 1.2 Relevant Documents 1.3 Owners - Ralph Droms 1.4 Action Items 2. IETF BFD and IEEE 802.1AX 2.1 Description In the 7/25 f2f meeting Norman Finn noted that drafts have been written (but not adopted in IETF WGs) for using BFD to detect Link Aggregation failures. Norman suggested that BFD is at the wrong layer for this, and suggested the following ways to avoid layer violations: - Invent and use a Layer 3 equivalent of LACP that fits routing and BFD - Use Ether OAM; work with 802.1 to invent a way to avoid needless configuration. - Encapsulate BFD below LinkAgg thus giving the world two ways to do exactly the same job The routing AD (Adrian Farrel) clarified by email that the IETF has no intention of working on modifications to or a replacement for LACP. The only work being undertaken in this area is the ability to run BFD on LAG members and report failures of individual members as a degradation of the link constructed from the LAG. Liaison statements were changed between the IEEE 802.1 and IETF BFD WGs. The BFD WG sent to the 802.1 WG a liaison on 9/25 https:// datatracker.ietf.org/liaison/1192/ setting out the progress and continuing the communication. The authors of the BFD for LAGs work have posted several updates, the latest at http://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-mmm-bfd-on-lags/ Note that this work is still currently not official BFD working group work. However, a re-charter of the BFD working group was considered by the IESG, reviewed by the IETF community, and advertised on the New Work mailing list on 10/16. This change in the charter was approved by the IESG on 10/25 and includes the following text: > 5. Provide one or more mechanisms to run BFD over Link Aggregation > Group Interfaces. ...and... > The working group will maintain a relationship with the KARP and MPLS > working groups, and will communicate with the IEEE with respect to BFD > over LAGs. ...so it is expected that the BFD working group will adopt a draft to work on soon, and that they will be in touch with 802.1 again in due course. 2.2 Relevant Documents https://datatracker.ietf.org/liaison/1192/ http://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-mmm-bfd-on-lags/ 2.3 Owners - Adrian Farrel, Norm Finn 2.4 Action Items 3. IETF NVO3 and IEEE 802.1 DCB 3.1. Description IEEE 802.1Qbg VDP might be used as the basis for the communication that NVO may need between an end system and an external box (e.g. bridge or router) doing the NVO encapsulation. Coordination will help determine if VDP is a suitable candidate and possibly to make any amendment needed in VDP for NVO usage. Status 10/26 ? not much progress. The NVO3 working group continues to work on architecture and requirements. It remains unclear whether a "new" encapsulation will be required. Many people consider that there are enough encapsulations in the world already. 3.2. Relevant Documents 3.3. Owners - Adrian Farrel, Pat Thaler 3.4. Action Items - Adrian to ensure that architecture and requirements are liaised to the appropriate part of IEEE. 4. IETF awareness of IEEE 802.1Q-2011 4.1. Description Many IETF drafts reflect knowledge of IEEE 802.1Q-2005 and ignore the evolution to IEEE 802.1Q-2011. There are two aspects of this. First, it leads to statements in IETF drafts about the capabilities of IEEE 802.1 bridging that are incorrect, often as part of the justification for new work. Many NVO drafts are an example of this. E.g. frequent references to the 12-bit VLAN ID not scaling without mention that the I-tag carries a 24-bit I-SID (backbone Service Instance Identifier) for networks needing a bigger scale. Secondly, it can lead to incompatibility between bridging using more recent capabilities of IEEE 802.1Q-2011 and protocols written based on IEEE 802.1Q-2005. 4.2. Relevant Documents 4.3. Owners - Dan Romascanu, Pat Thaler 4.4. Action Items - define a process to check whether references to IEEE 802 documents are being made to the latest document versions, unless justified differently in specific cases ? possibly at GenART review stage 5. Effect of virtualization on IEEE 802 architecture 5.1. Description At the 7/25 f2f meeting Glenn Parsons presented a brief overview of the IEEE Registration Authority Committee (RAC) mission, highlighting the current RAC policy on virtualization and asking what virtualization policy would reduce the consumption of EUI-48 addresses. Norman Finn suggested this could be an area of collaboration between the IETF and the IEEE 802. At the 9/5 virtual meeting Glenn Parsons reported that the action item from the last meeting on updating the IETF on virtualization at the Vancouver IETF Meeting (July/August, 2012) was completed. 5.2. Relevant Documents 5.3. Owners - Glen Parsons 5.4. Action Items - Ross Callon and Spencer Dawkins to discuss the relation and effects of virtualization on the IEEE 802 architecture with the IAB. 6. IETF EMU and IEEE 802.1X, 802.11 and 802.16 security based on EAP 6.1. Description - CLOSED (as discussed at the 9/5 virtual meeting) 6.2. Relevant Documents 6.3. Owners 6.4. Action Items 7. IETF Ethernet MIB, ADSL MIB and IEEE 802.3 7.1. Description In the transition process between the IETF and the IEEE the following documents were taken over by IEEE 802.3: RFC 2108 - Ethernet Repeater Devices RFC 3621 - Power Ethernet MIB RFC 3635 - Ethernet-like Interface Types RFC 3637 - Ethernet WAN Interface Sublayer RFC 4836 - Ethernet Medium Attachment Units (MAUs) RFC 4837 - Ethernet Passive Optical Networks (EPON) RFC 4878 - Operations, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM) Functions on Ethernet-Like Interfaces RFC 5066 - Ethernet in the First Mile Copper (EFMCu) Interfaces MIB The IF-CAP-STACK-MIB in RFC 5066 is generic and the IETF proposed to continue to be maintained by the IETF in a separate new document The IEEE 802.3 proposed to create an RFC that documents the issues related to the transition of the Ethernet MIB work to IEEE 802.3 similar to RFC 4663 which documents the transition of the Bridge MIB work to IEEE 802.1 - The OPSAWG was rechartered in October 2012 to include the two relevant documents 7.2. Relevant Documents - IEEE 802.3.1 Draft - http://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/opsawg/charter/ - TBD OPSAWG I-Ds 7.3. Owners - Benoit Claise, Dan Romascanu, Ed Beili (IETF), Howard Frazier (IEEE 802.3) 7.4. Action Items - Dan Romascanu will enter the Sponsor Ballot pool and enter a comment suggesting that the IEEE 802.3 take out the IEEE8023-IF-CAP-STACK-MIB from their document and refer the IF-CAP-STACK-MIB instead. - Ed Beili will write an I-D targeting standards track that obsoletes RFC 5066 and extract IF-CAP-STACK-MIB from RFC5056, with wording emphasizing the generic nature of this module - Ed Beili will write an I-D targeting informational RFC, similar to RFC 4663, with: a) Listing of all the RFCs obsoleted by the IEEE 802.3.1-2011 b) A table mapping the old IETF MIB names with the corresponding new IEEE ones c) Clarifications/rules on the IETF-IEEE interactions, mailing lists, reviews d) Clarifications on the intellectual property considerations The first version will be posted by Ed. Then Dan Romascanu and Howard Frazier will add IETF-IEEE interactions chapter. - Howard Frazier to add a EDITOR'S NOTE in the current IEEE MIB document, to explain the situation 8. IETF 6LOWPAN and IEEE 802.15 8.1. Description At the 9/5 virtual meeting Ralph Droms reported the new 802.15 Study Group should be aware of the work already taken place in the IETF 6LOWPAN Working Group. Ralph indicated he would take ownership of this item and ask Clint Powell to share the responsibility. He also indicated this would likely be an ongoing coordination effort. 8.2. Relevant Documents http://www.ieee802.org/15/pub/SCwng.html http://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/6lowpan/ 8.3. Owners: Ralph Droms, Clint Powell 8.4. Action Items 9. IETF PAWS WG and IEEE 802.1, 802.11, 802.15, 802.16, 802.22 9.1 Description At the 9/5 virtual meeting Bruce Kraemer volunteered that one of the IETF PAWS WG Chairs (Gabor Bajko) is active in 802.11. Dan Romascanu took an action item to clarify with Gabor Bajko and Pete Resnick if there are any action items that need to be taken immediately regarding coordination. Gabors answer was that the coordination between IETF PAWS and IEEE 802.11af, 802.19 and 802.22 was so far handled by him; Gabor presented periodic updates of PAWS to these IEEE 802 groups, and took their input back to PAWS. So far this type of coordination did the job, although in the future some of this interaction may need to be handled via the official channels. 9.2 Relevant Documents 9.3 Owners: Bruce Kraemer, Gabor Bajko 9.4 Action Items - clarify whether IEEE 802.11af, 802.19 and 802.22 are all the relevant groups within IEEE 802 that need coordination with PAWS, modify item title accordingly. 10. IETF IPPM and IEEE 802.16 Metrology Study Group 10.1 Description Coordinate future work in the IEEE 802.16 with existing work in the IETF 10.2 Relevant Documents http://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/ippm/ http://www.ieee802.org/16/sg/met/ https://datatracker.ietf.org/liaison/1195/ 10.3 Owners - Roger Marks 10.4 Action Items - IEEE 802.16 to send a statement to IETF IPPM WG informing them of the status of the activities of 802.16, and possibly asking for input Done (sent to IPPM with CC to LMAP list) 11. IETF Mobile IP and IEEE 802.16 HetNet Study Group 11.1. Description At the 7/25 f2f meeting Roger Marks presented a proposal for a new IEEE 802 WG to specify access network abstraction layer above IEEE 802 access technologies, noting that the work is related to some IETF WGs (e.g. DMM, MIF, NETEXT), and made the following recommendations: - IEEE 802 OmniRAN can close the gap and tie 802 devices into a family of standards within a heterogeneous IP network supporting evolving IETF standards - IEEE 802 and IETF should: * leverage each other's expertise * plan communications * identify commonalities * link solutions * organize a team to coordinate milestones and progress At the 9/5 virtual meeting Roger Marks indicated he would be the owner of this item. An action item was identified: Roger Marks to form a team to discuss coordination with possible input from Brian Haberman and Charlie Perkins. 11.2. Relevant Documents http://www.ieee802.org/16/sg/het/ 11.3. Owners - Roger Marks 11.4. Action Items - Roger Marks to form a team to discuss coordination with possible input from Brian Haberman and Charlie Perkins. 12. IETF HOKEY and IEEE 802.21 12.1. Description The HOKEY charter includes: Assistance to the 802.21a group in specifying the integration of EAP pre-authentication with IEEE 802.21a. The HOKEY Working Group shall perform tasks that are complementary to and do not duplicate work being done in IEEE 802.21a. Note: since July the HOKEY WG concluded. If there are any pending tasks they should be transferred to some other place in the IETF. At the 9/5 virtual meeting Dan Romascanu confirmed that the IETF HOKEY WG was concluded since the leadership meeting in July 2012. An action item was identified: Dan Romascanu to ask Subir Das to clarify whether IEEE 802.21 has any impending actions that might require the input from the concluded IETF HOKEY WG. The former chairs of HOKEY are still active IETF participants and would be able to help if needed. Subir responded that no further actions are required from the concluded HOKEY WG. Proposal: Close the item 12.2. Relevant Documents 12.3. Owners 12.4. Action Items - Dan Romascanu to ask Subir Das to clarify whether IEEE 802.21 has any impending actions that might require the input from the concluded IETF HOKEY WG - Done 13. IETF MIF and IEEE 802.21 13.1. Description - IETF MIF should not re-do the work that 802.21 has already done * 802.21 defines a Media Independent Services SAP (API) that provides most of the functionalities that MIF is looking for * 802.21 also defines low level Media Specific SAPs for the underlying access technologies - IETF MIF should identify requirements and make references to 802.21 SAPs where appropriate * If non-existing functionalities are identified both MIF and 802.21 should work together At the 5/9 virtual meeting Dan Romascanu took the action item to ask Subir Das to clarify what is required. Subir answered that the relevant discussions will take place at the November IEEE 802 plenary 13.2. Relevant Documents http://www.ieee802.org/21/ http://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/mif/ 13.3. Owners - Subir Das, Ralph Droms 13.4. Action Items - Subir Das to report back from discussions at the November IEEE Plenary 14. IETF IPFIX Information Elements for Data Link monitoring The IPFIX WG specifies a couple of data link Information Elements, to be added to http://www.iana.org/assignments/ipfix/ipfix.xml. Feedback from the IEEE on the Information Element specifications would be appreciated. Information Elements for Data Link Layer Traffic Measurement draft-ietf-ipfix-data-link-layer-monitoring-00 Abstract This document describes Information Elements related to data link layer. They are used by the IP Flow Information Export (IPFIX) protocol for encoding measured data link layer traffic information. 14.2. Relevant Documents - http://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-ipfix-data-link-layer- monitoring/ 14.3. Owners - Benoit Claise and the IPFIX chairs (Juergen Quittek <Quittek@neclab.eu>, Nevil Brownlee <n.brownlee@auckland.ac.nz>) 14.4. Action Items - IETF needs to receive feedback from the IEEE (3 meetings a year, almost at the same time as the IETF) - Send a liaison letter send it the liaison letter to 802.1 and/or 802.11 as soon as the WG Last Call starts Note: the process works better if the liaison is informally discussed before it's sent (contact: Eric Gray) - Benoit and Dan to determine: 802.1 and/or 802.11? looks like 802.1 only by now - Benoit and IPFIX chairs to synchronize the WGLC with the IEEE schedules 15. IETF RADIUS attributes for IEEE 802 networks The RADEXT WG specifies RADIUS attributes related to IEEE 802 network. Feedback from the IEEE on the attributes specifications would be appreciated. RADIUS Attributes for IEEE 802 Networks draft-ietf-radext-ieee802ext-02.txt Abstract RFC 3580 provides guidelines for the use of the Remote Authentication Dialin User Service (RADIUS) within IEEE 802 local area networks (LANs). This document proposes additional attributes for use within IEEE 802 networks, as well as clarifications on the usage of the EAP- Key-Name attribute, updating RFC 4072. The attributes defined in this document are usable both within RADIUS and Diameter. 15.2. Relevant Documents: http://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-radext-ieee802ext/ 15.3. Owners Bernard Adoba, the RADEXT chairs? (Jouni Korhonen <jouni.korhonen@nsn.com> and Mauricio Sanchez <mauricio.sanchez@hp.com>), and Benoit Claise 15.4. Action Items - Bernard Adoba sent the document to IEEE 802.1 and 802.11, and no feedback was received - This document will be revised by IETF85, and another WG Last Call will be performed - The RADEXT chairs to send a reminder about this document to IEEE 802.1 and IEEE 802.11, copy Eric Gay, and Dorothy. 16. IEEE802.1Q SRP (and Gen2 updates) and RSVP/SIP 16.1. Description 16.2. Relevant Documents 16.3. Owners - Path Thaler 16.4. Action Items - Pat to clarify scope with Michael Johas Teener 17. IEEE 802.1AS/1588 and NTP 17.1 Description 17.2 Relevant Documents 17.3 Owners - Pat Thaler 17.4 Action Items - Pat to clarify scope with Michael Johas Teener 18. 802.1AS/1588, 802.1Q time aware shaper(s) and RTP 18.1. Description 18.2. Relevant Documents 18.3. Owners - Pat Thaler 18.4. Action Items - Pat to clarify scope with Michael Johas Teener 19. Common OAM proposal 19.1. Description - proposal made by Tissa Senevirathne and a group of TRILL contributors at the IEEE 802.1 meetings in July and September to reuse the IEEE 802.1ag frame format for TRILL OAM. Needs coordination and architectural consistency with the IEEE 802.1 architecture and OAM practice. 19.2. Relevant Documents https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-trill-oam-req http://www.ieee802.org/1/files/public/docs2012/liaison-tissa-oam-ieee- trill-0912-v02.pptx 19.3. Owners - Ralph Droms, Norm Finn, Ben Mack-Crane 19.4. Action Items Follow-up on update of the TRILL OAM requirements document 20. Area Name 20.1. Description 20.2. Relevant Documents 20.3. Owners 20.4. Action Items 21. Area Name 21.1. Description 21.2. Relevant Documents 21.3. Owners 21.4. Action Items 22. Area Name 22.1. Description 22.2. Relevant Documents 22.3. Owners 22.4. Action Items 23. Area Name 23.1. Description 23.2. Relevant Documents 23.3. Owners 23.4. Action Items 24. Area Name 24.1. Description 24.2. Relevant Documents 24.3. Owners 24.4. Action Items