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X3S3.3/93-214
Draft Minutes - X3S3.3
176th Meeting
April 20-22, 1993
Penta Hotel, Orlando, Florida
Opening of Meeting:
Mr. Chapin opened the meeting at 10:00 AM of April 20. The
attendance list and meeting attendance record were circulated.
Mr. Taylor noted that the document register has been updated
substantially in the past several weeks. A paper copy will be
distributed sometime today.
The Seoul meeting has been moved up one week to September 13-23.
Due to the shift in schedule, X3S3.3 will have to submit a delegates
list to X3S3 next week. A delegates list was then circulated. If
the X3S3 meeting can be moved, the delegates list will also be
circulated at the next meeting.
Chairman and vice-chairman for X3S3.3 expire on July 27. If you or
your organization are willing to accept/fill the vice-chair
position, let Lyman know (Ed Taylor has resigned out of this
meeting). Vice-chair is responsible for distribution of documents,
which is the biggest overhead. SC6 documents (unless generated by
US or UK) are generated in paper only and therefore will always
have to be copied and distributed (at least for time being).
There are a fair amount of ballots which need to be dealt with at
this meeting. This afternoon will be devoted to ballot comments.
If ballot comments are completed by this afternoon, all of
Wednesday and Thursday will be devoted to Multicast and ECFF
discussions.
Approval of minutes:
93-18, Minutes from 174th meeting in Menlo Park, CA
No one had copies and therefore vote was deferred.
93-153, Minutes of Multicast Workshop in Arlington, VA
Questions were raised by Ed about de-enrollment and de-
allocation; Lyman referred him to 93-180 for
definition/explanation of each term. Dave Marlow
questioned why HSTP has an X under central/decentral. A
vote was deferred until the table characterizing each
protocol could be checked for accuracy.
Both minutes were held over for further review. Approval will be
Thursday during approval of output documents. The Chair asked and
got permission to proceed in absence of approved minutes from prior
meeting.
Ballot Responses:
In attendance:
Lyman Chapin (BBN)
Dave Katz (cisco Systems)
Cyndi Jung (3Com)
Bill Goodrick (Stricom - Army)
Margaret Loper (IST)
Eugene W. Geer (Bellcore)
Kevin L. Thompson (Mitre)
Samir Saad (AT&T Bell Labs)
Dave marlow (NSWC)
Phil Irey (NSWC)
Ed Taylor (IBM)
Steven C. Andersen (Paramax)
James Moulton (ONS)
Doug Montgomery (NIST)
Joel Snyder (DECUS)
Marc Cohn (Raychem)
The group recognized the ingenuity of Joel Snyder in providing a
long shoe string and making the appropriate hanging fixture for the
flip chart paper. Lyman Chapin proceeded to review the list of
Ballots and NB comments for consideration at this meting.
Ballots and NB Comments:
1. 8348/DAM5 93-103
2. 8348/PDAM7 93-105
3. 8473/PDAM7 93-104
4. 9542/PDAM2 93-106
5. 8473-1 2nd edition 93-143
(Chapin noted that this version only contains the
subnetwork independent functions; other parts will
contain the subnetwork dependent functions that used to
be contained within the base document)
There was a question on whether to hold this off until
the June meeting to allow members time to do a thorough
review. Jim Moulton suggested writing up a pseudo set of
comments for e-mail distribution and allow the members to
use that as a starting point. Chapin will take this as
an action item to do.
6. CLNP Multicast Scope Control 93-107
7. Defect Reports 10733/001-003 93-132
No one present was familiar with this item. Gene Geer
will get with the editor to get more background for the
group to make a decision.
8. Defect Report 10589/002 93-130
Chapin indicated that these defects were generated by the
10589 Editing Group and are most likely to be real
defects. Recommended that we just vote YES w/no
comments. Agreed!
9. Internet Society Liaison 93-148
Lyman outlined the background of the liaison initiative
with the Internet Community. The question for the group
is what kind of response to forward back. It would be
much better to have concrete proposals rather than to
just say "we should communicate back and forth".
One proposal that was floating in the London Meeting was
to let the technical work be done by the IETF similar to
the IEEE 802 procedures with ISO. Another alternative is
for ISO to refer to the Internet Standards. Chapin noted
that there is dislike within the Internet community for
the large number of checks and balances within the ISO
community which extend the time required to get standards
approved.
Also, it was noted that the Internet community is only
interested in Internet Routeing, Transport, and possibly
security.
Lyman - note that many people in London were in favor of
liaisons with the Internet community based on ISO CLNP
being adopted as the replacement for IP (i.e. TUBA).
Marlow suggested outlining a list of reasonable
activities to have done within the IETF that are IETF-
significant. Lyman will generate a first-pass listing and
scenarios for consideration. Will have available at our
June meeting.
10. NP (for comment) on CLNP Extensions 93-94
This is not an actual NP. Just being circulated for NB
comment. Options include support as-is, add flow
identifiers, etc. Any other options to consider?
Essentially this is headed for version 2 of CLNP.
It was agreed that the 32-bit time stamp needs more
definition.
Proposed response:
Circulate for Ballot
WRT base text attached, the time stamp is under-specified.
Specify same as IP time stamp.
Agreed! Document 93-196
11. 8602/DAM1 (PICS) 93-114
Ballot has not been issued at this point. There are no
apparent issues. Chapin recommended that we just authorize a
"YES" vote when the ballot is issued.
Agreed (Yes w/o comments).
12. 10736/DAM1 (Sec. Assoc. Estab) 93-13
Dave Marlow with get with Dale Walters to get input. Ballot
will close prior to next X3S3 meeting.
13. DIS 11577 (NLSP) 93-11
14. 9542 Five-year review
No problems indicated. Response will be "Yes w/o comment"
15. NP for 8073 non-blocking expedited 93-115
H. Lee proposed USA response of Yes to first 5 questions with
Lee as editor. No to last 2 questions (contribution available
or available within 90 days).
Approved!
16. 10737/PDAM1 (NCMS Management) 93-116
Gene Geer with get with Andy Knapp for further input.
17. PDTR 13594 (LL Security Model)
Dave Marlow will get input from Dale Walters.
Defect Reports:
1. 8073/076 93-108
Moulton recommended reject. Agreed.
Document 93-197
2. 8073/127 93-109
Agreed that the defect report is harmless. It also references
an earlier edition of 8073 (1988). Response is that US would
like to see defect cast in terms of the new edition of 8073 to
determine validity. Document 93-198.
3. 8073/148 93-110
Proposed USA Position will be to agree with Editor's proposed
disposition. Document 93-199.
Comments:
1. Transport Multipeer Service 93-188
2. Proposed amendment to 8072 for MPDT 93-189 and
93-124
3. ECFF Issues 93-190 and
SC6/N7969
4. Proposed progression of work on CL 93-183
transport multicast
Joint Meeting with Task Group 7:
Task Group Joint Meetings
Fred Burg indicated that a September '93 meeting would not be
required of TG7. Chapin indicated that TG3 agreed to cancel
its September meeting. If required, any agreements could be
reached by E-mail and forwarded to X3S3.
Also Fred noted June meeting dates. TG3 will meet Wednesday
thru Friday (2-4).
November 2-4 meeting will be moved to Boulder.
January '94 meeting has been volunteered for Tucson (Joel
Snyder). First Week (January 4-6).
CCITT Meeting Results (Helsinki)
Fred Burg reported. Significant output is the name change to
WTSC. CCITT and CCIR are being realigned. CCITT and part of
CCIR form Telecommunications Sector.
Fred noted the new format for contributions. Eliminate Roman
Numerals. Real name of contact person included in lower left
corner.
Normal method for approving recommendations is same as
accelerated approval procedures used previously. If SG agrees
that standard is ready, then it can be balloted immediately
and issued as recommendation. Must be pre-warned at previous
meeting. Two-thirds approval required.
Multicast Workshop (Marlow)
Minutes contained in 93-153. Major goal was to come up with
agreed-to terminology to sort out various projects. Noted
comments from Japan in which there was concern with
terminology (1 to N, N to 1, etc).
Further discussion will begin at 9:00 AM Wednesday April 21.
Wednesday, April 21
Multicast Discussion:
Document List for Multicast Discussion:
Arlington Workshop Minutes 93-153
Arlington Workshop Papers 93-175 thru 180
Explanation of Terms (Day) 93-105
Backup (FYI) 93/155-159,
161, 162, 164-
174, 9, 10
Last SC21 Work (Multipeer Add. to RM) 93-160
Services and Protocol
Marlow 8072 92-384
Marlow 8602 92-383
Moulton MPTS 93-125, 193, 194
Moulton MPTP 93-126
HSTS 92-381
HSTP 92-424
Thompson TP4 ext. (8073) 93-191, 192
ECFF
Guidelines 93-8
SC6 Summary 93-190
Lyman opened the discussion by reviewing the purpose/intent of the
Multicast Workshop.
+----+
| | <- This is the multicast "solution space."
+----+
The purpose of the workshop was to define the terms and taxonomy of
multicast and to identify where each of the multicast proposals
(i.e., TP4 ext., TP5, HSTP, 8602) fit in the multicast "solution
space". By characterizing each proposal using common terms and
taxonomy, we have a better understanding of what each proposal is
and what it is not.
At the Arlington workshop John Day gave a presentation on
architectural issues which established 3 phases: Enrollment,
Allocation, and Data Transfer (see 93-180 & 153 for details and
explanation of terms). These terms were briefly discussed.
Lyman then opened-up the discussion to the task group:
At the Arlington workshop, we used an analogy of that meeting to
explain the phases, and we focused on enrollment of that one
meeting. This bothered Fred Burg. He noted that a group is
associated with a list (finite or known), and in Arlington we used
one mailing list of X3S3.3 and how got created - it shouldn't have
been looked at in isolation. That mailing list involved some
enrollment activity, and that list was part of a much larger group,
X3S3. We focused too much on S33 list. Maybe that was wrong.
Jim Moulton gave the group his definition of the phases.
Enrollment establishes the state of the information that will
become shared when allocation begins. Allocation begins when the
first member grabs the shared information.
Lyman, at flip chart, defined the phases as follows:
Enrollment Allocation Data Transfer
+ creates the shared + establishes an + dimensions
state that makes it instance of a group
possible to embark conversation
upon Allocation
+ criterion based
Since there was much confusion in Arlington over what the
Enrollment phase actually was, Doug Montgomery was concerned that
we shouldn't draw the line too fine. Of course, everyone's
perspective on the phases will be skewed somewhat depending on
their view of the world and their model of multicast.
Jim Moulton wanted to know if we could reach agreement that these
indeed are the 3 phases of multicast and that, from now on, we will
describe multicast in these terms. Lyman noted that if you have a
multicast proposal on the table you have to understand the model
and feel comfortable with the model before you can accept to use
it.
A question was raised by Dave Marlow on Enrollment. He noted that
we can describe the CL multicast in terms of the model, but is it
useful? Lyman answered by saying "not for your corner of the
solution space." Enrollment is not so much a phase as it is a
state of where you are before Allocation begins. Doug Montgomery
agreed that the three phases are still a useful model for the CL
case. Enrollment describes what happens with the routers, etc.
Is the union of the cases we are interested in sufficiently close
to fit in this model? That's the question. We don't want the
model to preclude any progress being made on any one particular
model.
Steve Anderson thought the model was so new with new terms that SC6
would just argue about the model and terms and never make progress
(in Seoul). He was concerned that we would spend all of our time
teaching everyone the new terms and maybe we should modify just the
existing MPDT Addendum and work from there. Lyman pointed out that
we're already in that case. This architecture won't muddy the
water - there is no clear point of reference for multicast in SC6.
Dave Marlow stated that we should continue with the architecture
model; however, he doesn't think a service or protocol
specification should have to be documented that way. Lyman quoted
"Architectures are not ends in themselves." By buying into this
you will agree to defend and promote your proposal by these terms.
It will not be an evaluation criteria, just a tool.
Then what does this buy you? A common set of terms for
characterizing the protocols. Jim Moulton added, BTW Enrollment is
not something you see in a service specification. Fred Burg
concurred.
Marc Cohn was concerned that this architecture didn't cover the
hard architectural principles like error control and connectivity
(1xn, nxn, ...). Lyman referred him to 93-180. Jim Moulton
pointed out that this architecture doesn't solve the problems, it
identifies the problems. Remember, this is only a cut through the
solution space, we aren't expecting each proposal to cover
everything.
This architecture isn't a layered proposal, you can't take Fred's
Allocation and Marc's Data Transfer and combine them. Doug
Montgomery added that we should view this as a process taxonomy.
There are lots of issues that transcend this process model (e.g.,
1xn, nxn).
Steve Anderson was concerned that we're only looking at mechanisms
for protocols, and we should be focused on what the services are
(1xn, nxn, best effort, etc). Lyman noted that this is precisely
what we are doing. In fact, section 2.0 of 93-180 does just that.
Yes, there is a majority of mechanisms in the document right now.
But that is not to mean that protocols are the only thing we are
classifying. Jim Moulton added that since the Arlington meeting
focused mostly on protocols, the classification (in 93-153)
reflects that.
Dave Katz asked Steve what he would propose as an alternative?
Dave noted that we have a starting point, why not refine the model
and stop the pissing match.
We will continue to refine this model, but not let the architecture
take over. Lyman then asked how we want to proceed today? We can
continue to refine the model or accept the model and start
describing/discussing the services and protocols. We then went
around the room:
[Doug Montgomery] Good start, but not finished with the
architecture. Let's not turn this into a war of attrition
(e.g., XTP showed up 5 years ago!).
[S3.7 members] Seems more productive to go with the model that
continue pointless argument.
[Fred Burg] Refining terms from Arlington is useful, not to say
work should stop on protocols until it is finished though.
[Marc Cohn] Has had a hard time understanding the model -
thinks we should look at the 4 step rule in SC6 to determine how
to proceed with proposals. We should drive for progress in
areas that we understand. For more extensive multicast
proposals, we should look at a path to get there - there is not
just one discrete path we should follow. We should evaluate
each proposal on it's own merits. There are very complex
problems that need to be solved and require much more work. Our
role is to standardize solutions, not create solutions.
[Bill Goodrick] This group is fortunate to have Lyman as a
leader and negotiator.
[Jim Moulton] Framework is good starting point to help define
where proposals are going. It should not be over constraining
or broad. Let's not preclude discussion on proposals which
include complex issues. This model should not exclude any
proposal from being discussed. Proposal should be evaluated on
it's technical merit. Should not hold up simple solutions;
however, should not create a ton of service specifications which
are incompatible (goal). [Doug] We should beware of creating
too many multicast Transport protocols! Could be perceived
negatively by SC6 (i.e., short term, mid term, and long term
solutions all progressed). Don't want to create protocols that
no one will use.
[Margaret Loper] Agrees with everyone so far. Accept the model
and would like to move onto discussing services and protocols.
In the 1.5-2 years she's been participating in this group there
has been virtually no progress (wrt to Transport multicast).
Getting very frustrated with the counterproductive fights.
Would like to see us make progress for once. Also, would like
to see each proposal evaluated on it's own merits. We should
accept that not every application needs the same kind of
multicast so need to consider different types of protocols.
[Lyman] While that's true, we're not here to tailor standards
to specific environments. We are here to standardize protocols
that meet the requirements of the 95%, not the 5%.
[Samir Saad] Good starting point, but concerned about making
progress.
[Gene Geer] Good starting point.
[Steve Anderson] Believes that progress was made at the
Arlington meeting. Should look at what SC6 NBs have looked at
and want. Would like to put all services in a bucket and
painfully evaluate each one. Don't focus on abstractions, look
at users requirements. Recognize that there are other
activities (e.g., IETF, proprietary) in multicast and that they
will progress faster that we will. That our process is flawed
and someone else will get the 95% of the market and our standard
is a moot point.
[Kevin Thompson] Haven't been comfortable about model because
haven't understood implications. Still don't understand how it
applies to extending existing standards. Now, feels more
comfortable. Would like to discuss terms in 93-180 and refine
them this afternoon and move on from the discussion of the model
itself.
[Cyndi Jung] Not comfortable with Transport multicast, not sure
where ULA is going. Doesn't know how it will all hold together
(ISIS, IDRP). Not sure how everything will work with ISOC and
its implications. Not worried about Transport yet, terminology
not a problem. Like a bottoms up approach. If you don't have
Network layer stuff, what does Transport matter?
[Dave Katz] Taxonomy is important - there has to be a level
setting. If we ever hope to have a productive discussion, you
have to have a level field.
[Dave Marlow] Also worried about Network layer. Doesn't
understand how taxonomy applies to services. Would like to work
on something practical. Goals for Seoul - way to describe
services. If we can't do this in the U.S., how do we hope to do
it in SC6? Look at what we have.
[Phil Irey] Taxonomy is useful, don't want to see it get in the
way of progress.
What do we have and what are we taking to Seoul:
Network Layer Multicast
~ 8473
8473/PDAM7 (92-308)
scope control (start email thread)
~ 8348
8348/DAM5 (group network addresses - handle in June)
8348/PDAM7 (multicast network service - handled in 93-
202)
~ 9542
9542/PDAM2 (handled in 93-205)
~ 10589 (ISIS)
take advantage of existing work in Q5/7
~ 10747 (IDRP)
take advantage of existing work in IDMR/IETF
Transport Layer Multicast
~ Proposed progression (93-183)
CLTS (8072/Am?)
CLTP (8602/Am?)
~ Multicast Transport Service (93-189)
Cohn: 93-201
HSTS: 92-381
Moulton: 93-124, 125, 193, 194
~ Multicast Transport Protocol
HSTP: 92-424
Moulton: 93-126
Thompson: 93-191, 192
Multipeer Architecture
Terminology/Concepts: 93-180
Moulton: 93-175
Japan: 93-188
Multicast Workshop: 93-153
Lyman stated that he wanted to take a taxonomy paper, but 93-180
would have to be revised between now and June. Also need to work
on ISIS and IDRP (at the Network layer), but have no resources to
devote to it right now (worried). Joel Snyder said that some work
was going on in CCITT which could be useful; would have to be
reformatted though.
Ballot Responses (Continued):
8348/DAM5 (93-103)
All the major comments were from the UK - all issues were
resolved in London. Changes:
(1) Before London, group network addresses had mixed format (1
abstract syntax with 2 values). UK was unhappy - wanted mixed
format changed to Hex representation. French had similar
comment. So, no longer mixed format.
(2) UK asked that values reserved for future also be specified
(added table AY).
(3) Terminology change: unicast network addresses changed to
individual network addresses.
Dave Katz recognized that we will now need new encoding rules
for Hex abstract syntax. Lyman noted that this is a pandora's
box. We can push off until June because DAM ballot is 6 months.
We have time to figure it out but must start an email thread to
solve this before June.
8348/PDAM7 (93-105)
Changes: Added new Chapter 18 covering scope control.
Lyman asked whether it was intentional to describe multicast as
transfer instead of transmission? Dave Marlow could not
remember. French were working on definitions, but not sure if
that was one they worked on. Lyman suggested that we should
change transfer to transmission and make it a definition, not a
description (transmission is already used throughout anyway).
A question brought up in London was "Do you need additional
scope control over what address semantics provide?" Yes, we
anticipate the possibility. Start email thread: need to have
scope control mechanisms that operate other than what addresses
provide. Need concrete examples.
Do we want to use multipeer or multicast in this? Change
primitives in Annex A to multicast from multipeer (for
consistency).
Saved by procedure (unusual)! Can submit comments now and
submit additional comments to Seoul as late contribution. Scope
section needs to be wordsmithed.
Agreed, vote Yes with comments. Ballot comments on 8348/PDAM7
are contained in 93-202.
8473/PDAM7 (93-104)
Changes: scope control got pulled out in London. Lyman saved
PDAM ballot. French had questions on scope control that Dave
Marlow couldn't answer. The PDAM now only mentions scope
control as a service provided. Jim Moulton thinks we should
vote No with substantial comments.
~ Restore scope control (need worked-out examples: sending to
unknown group, but local policy prohibits sending outside of
a domain; requires that you know the address administrative
policy in a domain outside of your local domain).
Someone in London felt that scope control was routing and
outside the domain of 8473; believed that scope control
belongs in ES-IS and IS-IS. Need to find out from Dave Oran
what the source routing field and routing domain address are
expected to do. Source routing allows you to do tunneling.
Need to work on this between now and june
US comments on specific concepts for scope control are
contained in 93-107. Need an email thread on 93-107.
~ NSEL = 0 provides a means to do CLNP encapsulation. May want
a more generalized encapsulation scheme to provide a means to
tunnel using unicast addresses between sites. Response held
over to June.
~ Major specific values for section 6.14 Table 5, need new PDU
type code. U.S. suggests 11101.
~ Note on combining unicast and multicast should be taken out
(contact Joel Halpern). Should disallow group addresses in
source or destination or source routing field of a unicast
data transfer PDU.
Vote No with comments; ballot comments on 8473/PDAM7 are
contained in 93-203.
9542/PDAM2 (93-106)
Close to no changes at London meeting from Menlo Park meeting.
Dave Katz had editorial and organization comments on the
document. Dave Katz will work with Dave Marlow to create the
ballot comments.
Vote Yes with comments; comments are contained in 93-205.
Meeting Adjourned until 8:30 AM Thursday, April 22.
Thursday, April 22
Agenda: Multicast until 10:30, then short break and approve
documents.
Multicast:
Jim Moulton made a proposal for what to take to Seoul. He
suggested that we start email threads on 3 or 4 topics and then
turn them into contributions:
1 - Architecture model. Define the solution space we're trying
to solve; lay the ground work for other contributions (not an NP
to produce a multicast architecture - just a road map).
2 - Transport multicast service based on comments to N7445.
Will start with answers to 93-201 (Jim will start this thread).
3 - Separate threads on 4 proposals for protocols, i.e. 8602,
extensions to TP4, TP5, and HSTP.
Lyman suggested that the June meeting then be used to thoroughly
review what happened on each email thread. We will want to make
sure that each proposal is technically sound before sending it
forward. This will be the only way to gain confidence in SC6 for
any proposal.
Marc Cohn felt that the crux of the problem was moving the service
definition separately from protocol work. We should try to find
compromise. What are we going to do with ECFF as a NB - scrap it
and do just multicast, or continue it? Lyman suggested that maybe
we should gear the multicast thread to discuss that? Jim Moulton
opposed that idea. Lyman stated that we will not go to Seoul
without resolving that question; however, we have such a small
group at this meeting that any decision may not stick.
A suggestion was made by Marc Cohn to keep multicast and efficiency
together; after all, multicast is the primary efficiency mechanism.
We should try to resolve technical differences and move forward.
Jim Moulton noted that in multicast there is not one solution for
everyone. Doubt we will be able to combine the two and have
something out of the June meeting. Lyman warned the group that we
have to be careful what we progress, because we are already on the
edge.
Steve Anderson was concerned that if we don't keep multicast and
efficiency together we will have multiple amendments which will get
us no where. Any multicast which results from the combined work
will have degenerative modes which will cover all modes of
operation. Steve felt that for Seoul, we should input an
architecture document and comments against N7445. It is too late
to have a mutually agreed meta service definition.
Before we entertain any proposals, we need to get our act together.
Doug Montgomery noted that, for Seoul, we shouldn't send paper just
to send paper. Let's not loose site of the connectionless work;
let's finish this and there will be multicast in OSI! Then we can
take our time to carefully decide which proposals we want to send
forward.
Marc Cohn jumped in and stated that the world is dominated by
TCP/IP, OSI isn't here because we don't provide anything over and
above what the Internet offers. This is our chance to do something
new and lead. Lyman cautioned him that this is precisely one of
OSI's problems. We try to jump ahead and not recognize what
already exists and works. We don't listen to the research
community, the implementors, and industry.
There was consensus out of London on the 3 issues: QoS, efficiency,
and multicast. Marc Cohn felt this meant there was consensus to
pursue a combined effort. He stated that he was NOT tied to HSTP,
it was just a starting place. Lyman countered with the fact that
there is wide spread consensus that if you are going to add
anything to Transport, just add multicast.
Jim Moulton stated that he agreed with Steve! Just send an
architecture document and comments on the service definition.
Lyman cautioned that wouldn't frame the question sufficiently
enough to have a productive meeting in Seoul.
The issue of modifying existing standards was raised by Dave
Marlow.
The proposals on the table are all heading toward a specific
multicast solution. How do we define what should go forward?
Maybe it's not bad to take four proposals forward and just let SC6
know these are all points in the solution space and see what NBs
are interested in. We should have no problem discussing all the
proposals in Seoul; just let them know what the U.S. is looking at.
Agreed for Seoul:
~ Network Layer Multicast
~ CL Transport Multicast (8072/8602 + PICS - US should
support NP in Seoul)
~ CO Transport
multicast: sufficient agreement to have U.S. position
that there should be a CO Transport multicast - we
disagree on the semantics
new capabilities: have identified some of the things
that this might be (in U.S. and elsewhere)
ECFF ------------------------------------> new features
|
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
|
+---------------> multicast
After drawing the above figure on the flip chart, Lyman stated that
there was reason to draw a line (between new features and
multicast) and say that multicast is something that should be done
and new capabilities are things that need to be researched. No
consensus on what the new capabilities are and if they are ready to
be standardized.
Steve Anderson jumped in to say that there are people who support
that there needs to be more than just multicast work going on. In
London there was almost an NP approved to start this work. And
besides, the French are trying to start a NWI on efficiency. We
have to decide if we are going to support this work. After the
work starts, we can decide what the actual services will be.
Then Dave Marlow asked, what will we do if we have an NP to look at
new services? Will we vote No? It's not are there enough
advocates to do the work - it's are there enough advocates working
against it. (There are enough people working against doing work on
new services.)
Lyman suggested that if the two were split and both had NPs, there
would probably be no problem pursuing them in parallel.
Steve Anderson argued that HSTS is based on a real product which
has trial implementations, so it's not just a research problem.
But Lyman noted that there is no consensus as to if they need to
exist in a Transport protocol. Dave Marlow felt that there are
more research questions in CO multicast than in the new services.
It's not a question of research in these areas -it's a question of
should it be standardized.
Research means what should be the next evolutionary step for a
Transport protocol stated Lyman. Kevin Thompson didn't agree that
CO Transport multicast was a research problem, only parts are.
What ever happened to the 4 step process? Lyman answered by saying
that it's not gone, it's a political process to convince several
NBs that you really need to do work on something. It's not a plan
for submitting projects, it's a plan for doing our homework to
convince people of new work.
Jim Moulton suggested that we do both in parallel with the
provision that they will reach PDAM or DIS ballot at relatively the
same time. Then fold them together at the end. Lyman stated that
was disingenuous - it wouldn't happen. There are more people that
want to see multicast solved, even if it's a harder problem.
Multicast will progress faster than new capabilities.
Marc Cohn disagreed that they are separate. QoS and efficiency
will drive the new capabilities. We aren't going to escape solving
QoS for multicast, so why not solve it for the hard case? Lyman
noted that there is historical precedence to not solve QoS.
Dave Marlow jumped in as said that he was at the ECFF meeting in
London. The other contributions from NBs were mostly new
capabilities, not much pure multicast. Most NBs wanted new
capabilities. So do we have to split them off today? The French
want both; why not wait until Seoul and see what other NBs want to
do. Why should the U.S. drive the boat in separating the two? We
could participate but not serve as editor for them.
The other proposals are interesting but less real than what the
U.S. is proposing. There is very little chance that the other
proposals will ever be real products. They're just government
funded research/academic projects.
Jim Moulton felt that for Seoul, he didn't think there was any
chance of pursuing a project where multicast and new capabilities
were combined. There are two camps with differing opinions which
can't be resolved.
A silent member of the group spoke up. Bill Goodrick stated that
he didn't know how we can do anything without structure. There are
two views, why not let them go their separate ways? We aren't
going to make any progress like this, keeping them together. Lyman
noted that it would work if there weren't procurement consequences
down the line. Any decision we make will have a definite impact on
what we are going to pursue long term.
Again, Steve Anderson spoke up to say that there was not a
consensus that everyone wants CO multicast.
There are two proposals which do not depend on any other mechanism
and would rather not be linked to efficiency, stated Jim Moulton.
We would like to be convinced that any new combined work would
allow multicast to progress unencumbered from efficiency.
Lyman now believes that pure CO multicast will not garner enough
momentum to progress quickly (exact mirror or efficiency problem).
Jim Moulton continues by saying that multicast is a part you can
carve out and make progress on. It will not influence any work in
new capabilities area.
Do something that is widely applicable and of general use suggested
Doug Montgomery. Doesn't believe that there is a dire need for CO
multicast, so why split the work? Can't understand how the work
will proceed if it splits and doesn't see the need to split it.
Would rather see us progress an architecture document. We may very
well be dead in the water anyway.
Steve Anderson commented that if the CO transport service ended up
as multicast only, he would rather see extensions to existing
services rather than a new protocol. In principle, it probably
wouldn't be different from TP5 but more along the lines of TP4
extensions.
Approval of Output Documents and Ballot Responses:
93-196 (Comments on NP Ballot 8473 extensions)
Yes with project editor Lyman Chapin
6 Yes
7 No with comment that timestamp is under specified.
93-202 (Comments on 8348/PDAM 7)
Yes with comments
93-203 (Comments on 8473/PDAM 7)
No with comments
93-205 (Comments on 9542/PDAM 2)
Change "is required" to "shall"; add Lyman's text (modified in
real time).
Yes with comments
93-206 (Comments on 11577 - NLSP)
(NLSP)/combines CO and CL too much.
Hughes Aircraft comments (15H and 14H) are out because no real
savings. There may be additional comments, but will all be
minor; X3S3 will then decide if additional comments will be
accepted.
No unless majors are changed.
93-207 (Comments on 10736/DAM 1)
No unless major comments resolved.
93-208 (Comments on N7951)
14H (Hughes Aircraft comment) is gone since out of 93-206; add
major comment.
No unless major comments resolved.
93-209 (Comments on Defect Report 10733/003)
Response to 93-132.
Yes with comments.
93-18 (Minutes of 174th X3S3.3 Meeting in Menlo Park, CA -
January 5-7, 1993)
Approved as written.
93-153 (Minutes of the Multicast Workshop in Arlington, VA -
April 7-8, 1993)
Approved as written.
The members of task group 3 would like to express their
appreciation to Mr. Ed Taylor for serving as vice-chair for 3
years.
The meeting was adjourned at 12:00 PM.