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Re: Last Call: <draft-ietf-mif-current-practices-09.txt> (Current Practices for Multiple Interface Hosts) to Informational RFC

2011-04-25 12:07:24
At 09:38 28-03-2011, The IESG wrote:
The IESG has received a request from the Multiple Interfaces WG (mif) to
consider the following document:
- 'Current Practices for Multiple Interface Hosts'
  <draft-ietf-mif-current-practices-09.txt> as an Informational RFC

The IESG plans to make a decision in the next few weeks, and solicits
final comments on this action. Please send substantive comments to the
ietf(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org mailing lists by 2011-04-11. Exceptionally, comments 
may be

I missed the Last Call deadline. This I-D is worth reading if the person is interested in multiple-interface solutions implemented in some widely used operating systems.

In Section 2.3.1:

  "On hosts with per-interface DNS server lists, different mechanisms
   are used to determine which DNS server is contacted for a given
   query.  In most cases, the first DNS server listed on the "primary"
   interface is queried first, with back off to other servers if an
   answer is not received."

This can result in the application trying to connect to the wrong destination node (Section 4.1 of draft-ietf-mif-problem-statement-13).

In Section 3.1.3:

  "Depending on the network configuration, applications in reasearch In
   Motion (RIM) BlackBerry devices [BLACKBERRY] can use can use direct
   TCP/IP connectivity or different application proxys to establish
   connections over the wireless network."

There is a typo for "Research".  See also "can use".

In Section 3.2.1.3:

  "Windows uses a host-wide "effective" server list for an actual query,
   where the effective server list may be different for different names.
   In the list of DNS server addresses, the first server is considered
   the "primary" server, with all other servers being secondary."

I suggest using "preferred" and avoid "primary" or "secondary" when discussing DNS servers in this context.

In Section 3.2.1.3:

  "The Internet Systems Consortium (ISC) DHCP Client [ISCDHCP] and its
   derivative for OpenBSD [OPENBSDDHCLIENT] can be configured with
   specific instructions for each interface.  However, each time new
   configuration data is received by the host from a DHCP server,
   regardless of which interface it is received on, the DHCP client
   rewrites the global configuration data, such as the default routes
   and the DNS server list (in /etc/resolv.conf) with the most recent
   information received.  Therefore, the last configured interface
   always become the primary one.  The ISC DHCPv6 client behaves
   similarly.:

That rewrite can be overridden for OpenBSD dhclient ( http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq6.html#DHCPclient ).

Regards,
-sm

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