Page created for the IETF 90, July 20 - 26 2014, in Toronto.
DIME
DIME work has concentrated recently on the Diameter Overload topic (DOIC) and we spend over half of the meeting to resolve issues and discuss next steps to achieve complete solution (the base solution does not include agent overload details as it was agreed early in the process dedicate I-D for it). We aim to complete the base solution before IETF91. To achieve this we are going to have one or more interim meetings (one tentatively face to face).
Since IETF89 we have two new RFCs (7155, 7156). The Diameter application design guidelines has just been sent to IETF for publication. The rest of the meeting time was spent on the other three WG I-Ds and on a new proposal on new datatypes for Diameter.
The discussion on the new datatypes continues in the mailing list but the proposal as such was well received. It was also approved to add new milestones for Diameter overload concerning the agent overload case and rate abatement algorithm specifications.
DNSOP
Since the last meeting, DNSOP has successfully rechartered, so we spent some time this week in other WGs explaining the new charter to people, especially that we are now allowed to take on light protocol work and help define more extensive protocol efforts. Additionally, the working group has submiited 4 drafts to the IESG for publication since IETF89, and we're trying to ship three or four additional drafts to the IESG before the next meeting.
The meeting included a lively discussion surrounding three drafts that touched on various aspects of scaling the distribution of DNS zone data, particularly at the root (never a controversial topic before...). The outcome is further discussion in two different directions. The work on DNSSEC Validator Requirements will be adopted in the near future, and should be ready for WGLC around the time of the next meeting.
We also discussed a newly revived draft on IPv6 reverse DNS that got some encouragement, so we expect that to be formally adopted at some point.
RADEXT
RADEXT had again a decently full agenda. We are in a state that all current chartered milestones are close to completion. Three documents are waiting for the proto write-up, one in RFC Editor's queue, and two WG IDs doing good progress. Recent efforts have been completing the transport security suite for RADIUS and as a newer effort retrofit fragmentation support into RADIUS protocol (as well as packet sizes beyond 4K).
The new prominent work that was already tentatively agreed to be included into the charter as new milestones include CoA proxying (does not work today across realms) and making sense of RADIUS datatypes similar way as Diameter has (includes rearranging the IANA attribute registry as well to include datatype column). Another discussion the WG had related to moving RFC6614 (TLS for RADIUS) from Experimental to Standards Track. Implementations exists and there is a need for other Standards Tracks documents to reference to it. We also had a recap of the old issue populating identities to EAP (the discussion will continue).
OPSEC
Light agenda with 3 main topics. One presenter responsible for two of the slots did not show up. The time was filled in with ISOC providing a presentation about Routing Security Manifesto and requesting operators to sign it.
NETCONF
Chartered items:
Non-Chartered items:
NETMOD
The NETMOD meeting in Toronto (Monday 09:00-11:30) was attended by about 100 people.
The meeting did run out of time to discuss several proposed new data models. Discussions should continue on the mailing list. It may be necessary to allocate two meeting slots in upcoming IETF meetings or to focus the meeting time more clearly on infrastructure related topics and data model related topics.
6renum -
bmwg - Met with 24 participating locally. Many new participants who prepared good quality drafts, resulting in useful discussion. The WG re-chartered in the interim since IETF-89, and all chartered items progressed at this meeting. In particular, the SIP device Benchmarking drafts have reached AD review, and the BGP dataplane convergence draft should reach that state very soon. The next steps will be to formally adopt WG drafts for the charter milestones and begin WGLC for those considered mature, such as Traffic Management function benchmarking (where there will be cross area review from AQM WG participants). The chairs reminded participants that we are encouraged to obtain input from the operations community, possibly at their group meetings.
create you own -
The content of this page was last updated on 2014-07-24. It was migrated from the old Trac wiki on 2022-12-19.