From: RJ Atkinson [mailto:rja(_at_)extremenetworks(_dot_)com]
Given that the IESG ignored inputs from some number of
people noting that the RFC in question was actually deployed
[1], it seems doubtful that it would be worthwhile for any of
the operators who have deployed NAT+PT to travel to an IETF
for the purpose of commenting in person.
Did the mountain come even for Muhammad?
It seems to me that there is an unhelpful attitude in the IETF that it is the
maypole around which the rest of the Internet must dance. If we want to be
influential we have to accept the fact that there are other stakeholders
involved and we must have a strategy for influencing them if our work is to be
deployed.
More than one person in the operator community now
refers to the "IVTF" rather than IETF, because of the
perception that the large vendors and professional
standards-goers dominate IETF processes and IESG decisions
and that network operators [2] are mostly ignored.
I think that's off the mark. There are some large vendors but the individuals
who attend are not necessarily able to influence their employer and there are
many significant stakeholders that are not present. Some people attend the IETF
to win battles they have already lost at home.
Case in point: NAT PT, it can hardly escape notice that many vociferous NAT-PT
opponents are employed by a company that makes a NAT-PT product. Presumably the
marketting side of the company put the feature in because they talk to their
customers at the operators.
It seems a bit of hubris for one to insist that
operators must come to IETF given the history of IETF and
IESG ignoring many operator inputs for much of the past decade.[3]
We have to go and talk to the operators, and much more.
More importantly we have to listen to them. If an operator turns up at IETF
there is no real opportunity for them to even put their case. The meeting is
simply not structured in a way to facilitate that.
I would suggest that the best way to lead deployment of IPv6 would be to hold a
workshop and invite the IAB, the ADs of the affected areas, the operators, the
vendors and whatever other stakeholders exist or might be able to evangelize.
At the end of the workshop issue a press release endorsed by the likes of Vint
Cerf, Tim Berners-Lee and co to the effect that it is believed that significant
progress has been made on a deployment plan.
The main bit of operator input that has been undertaken
by IETF has been NetConf (basically standardising an
equivalent to the then already deployed, albeit then
proprietary, JunOS Script). That was done because of the
recommendation from the IAB Network Management Workshop held
in Reston earlier this decade (which itself was a bit of IAB
outreach, rather than IESG/IETF outreach). Rather than
demanding that operators come to IETF as if supplicants,
particularly given the history, some would prefer to see the
IETF/IESG engage in more outreach to the operational
community
I agree in principle, but not that the IESG can do this. Clearly it is not
going to happen if the job is given to the IESG given its current workload.
Either this has to be done by the IAB or some new board.
Giving the job to the IAB is most attractive in my view, talking and listening
to outside parties would greatly enhance the influence of the IAB inside the
IETF.
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