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Non-Terminal Room (was: [93all] IETF 93 Network Information – Prague, Czech Republic)
2015-07-18 15:39:29
Hello,
Please note that this terminal room has no terminals[...]
In the interest of sanity, and in a continuing quest to kill all
oxymorons, we should really not call it a terminal room then.
As an hommage to John Backus, the "Non-Terminal Room" comes to mind.
Greetings,
Stefan Winter
, PCs, or other user-accessible machines. It is simply a place to get power,
wired Internet access, help desk support, or print documents.
When using the Ethernet connections in the Terminal Room, IPv4 addressing is
provided via DHCP. Please use Dynamic Auto-configuration for IPv6. A
stateless DHCPv6 server or RDNSS will provide network information. To cut
down on the mess, ethernet cables have not been installed to every seat in
the Terminal Room. If you need a cable, please ask at the Help Desk.
Please note that at the request of the IETF Chair, demonstrations are no
longer permitted in the Terminal Room.
=== Help Desk ===
A help desk is being provided and will be staffed the following hours:
|| Sunday || 16:00 to 19:00 ||
|| Monday || 8:00 to 20:00 ||
|| Tuesday || 8:00 to 18:00 ||
|| Wednesday || 8:00 to 20:00 ||
|| Thursday || 8:00 to 20:00 ||
|| Friday || 8:00 to 15:00 ||
== NOC and Ticketing ==
There are several ways to communicate with the NOC staff.
* Submit a new trouble ticket via the
http://tickets.meeting.ietf.org/newticket interface. Filling in the following
fields: "My MAC Address", "My Current Location", and "My OS" may expedite
ticket processing. If you have an existing account on http://tools.ietf.org
you can use your established credentials (email address and tools password)
to log in at http://tickets.meeting.ietf.org/login .
* Send an email to tickets(_at_)meeting(_dot_)ietf(_dot_)org with as much
detail regarding your issue and configuration as possible.
* If you're on site and need direct network assistance (i.e - you have no
network) please go to the helpdesk, which is located in the Terminal Room.
* Use the Jabber room at noc @ jabber.ietf.org to report issues or
communicate with the NOC.
You can also use trac to review outstanding tickets before reporting an issue
or to update outstanding tickets.
=== External Connectivity ===
The IETF 93 network connects to the Internet via a 10Gb/s link provided by
CZ.NIC and a 1Gb/s link from Dial Telecom. The IETF uses 31.133.128.0/18,
31.130.224.0/20 and 130.129.0.0/16 for IPv4 and 2001:67c:1230::/46,
2001:67c:370::/48 and 2001:df8::/32 for IPv6. We are supplying bandwidth for
the conference space, as well as wireless and wired connections in the guest
rooms.
== Meeting Room Wireless ==
An 802.11 a/g/n/ac wireless network is provided throughout the venue on both
the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands, in conjunction with IPv4 and IPv6 addressing options.
The main “ietf” wireless network is now encrypted; when prompted for
credentials, enter ietf for both the username and password.
Here’s a quick summary of the new network layout:
|| SSID || Description
|| Encrypted || Frequencies || IP Versions
||
|| ietf || Our default network
|| yes || 5Ghz only || v4 and v6
||
|| ietf-legacy || For legacy and unencrypted use
|| no || 2.4 and 5Ghz || v4 and v6 ||
|| ietf-2.4ONLY || An encrypted network for 2.4Ghz users ||
yes || 2.4Ghz only || v4 and v6 ||
|| ietf-v6ONLY || For users wanting a pure IPv6
|| yes || 5Ghz only || v6 only ||
|| ietf-nat64 || IPv6 stack with NAT64 to access IPv4 resources || yes
|| 5Ghz only || v6 with NAT64 & DNS64 ||
|| eduroam || educational users
|| yes || 2.4 and 5Ghz || v4 and v6
||
All networks marked as encrypted will offer layer 2 security. This is done
using WPA enterprise with 802.1X (PEAP or TTLS) authentication and AES or
TKIP encryption. As usual, we are all using the same credentials (user
“ietf”, password “ietf”), yet each user will get unique session encryption
keys. Our Radius authentication servers use a certificate that you can verify
by going to this page:
https://www.ietf.org/registration/MeetingWiki/wiki/92net
See the following archived email from Chris Elliot for an in-depth
explanation of the changes made to the wireless configuration.
http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/92all/current/msg00009.html
Note: Some users are having problems using Intel Centrino cards and the IETF
network. Please see https://tickets.meeting.ietf.org/wiki/CentrinoIssue
== Guest Room Access ==
The IETF Network is being extended to the guest rooms in the Hilton. *Note*
that while we are using the IETF meeting network for Internet connectivity,
we are using the hotel's infrastructure (Ruckus access points) for the
delivery to the guest rooms, so there are limits to the improvements we can
effect. We recommend using the wired connection if you experience poor
connectivity in your guest room.
Wired:
IPv4 and IPv6 and provided via the wired connection in your room. Due
to architectural limitations, inbound TCP connections from the Internet may
not be available on the in-room wired connection.
Wireless:
In the guest room areas you should find the “ietf-hotel” SSID. This
network is 2.4GHz/5GHz and is being delivered via the Hilton's Ruckus access
points. We encourage heavy users and/or those having poor coverage to use the
wired connection.
== Support ==
If you have trouble using any of the Public or Guest Room services, please
try to switch to the hotel SSIDs ("hhonors") or the hotel wired port. If
that doesn’t work, please contact the Hilton support as listed in your room.
If things are working fine on the hotel offerings but not on the IETF
SSIDs/ports, please do contact us in the Terminal Room (Amsterdam) or via
tickets @ meeting.ietf.org and we’ll be glad to help!
== Printing ==
There is a printer in the Terminal Room and is available to all IETF users.
The printer is an HP Officejet Pro 8620 and is accessible via LPD, Bonjour,
standard TCP/IP on port 9100. The hostname for it is
term-printer.meeting.ietf.org.
|| Name || Model || Capabilities || IPv4 Address|| IPv6 Address || Notes ||
Drivers ||
||term-printer.meeting.ietf.org || HP Officejet Pro 8620 || Inkjet w/Duplexer
|| 31.133.128.18 || 2001:67c:370:128:a65d:36ff:fe32:44ba || Bonjour name: //
term-printer // ||
[http://support.hp.com/us-en/product/HP-Officejet-Pro-8620-e-All-in-One-Printer-series/5367611/drivers
Printer Drivers] ||
=== Instructions for Mac OS X using Bonjour auto-setup (DNS-Based Service
Discovery) ===
(Note that this method is not available if you have configured an explicit
DNS search list. Please see below for
[https://tickets.meeting.ietf.org/wiki/IETF91network#InstructionsforMacOSXusingmanualconfiguration
the manual configuration instructions].
1. Open System Preferences -> Print & Fax -> "+" below printer list
2. Choose "Default" in the top-menu.
3. You should see the printers discovered by Bonjour. Pick the right one.
4. Enjoy hassle-free printing.
=== Instructions for Mac OS X using manual configuration ===
1. Open System Preferences -> Print & Fax -> "+" below printer list
2. Select the "IP" icon at the top of window
3. Select the "HP Jetdirect - Socket" from the drop down
4. Enter "term-printer.meeting.ietf.org" in the Address field. Leave the
Queue field blank.
5. ''Print Using'' should autopopulate
6. Click Add
=== Instructions for Windows 7===
1. If you haven't printed on the selected printer before, you may need to
download and install the driver using one of the links above.
2. When you come to the installer page asking you to choose the "Network
Type" -- choose "Wired (Ethernet)."
3. If you get the "Unable to Find the Printer" page, simply enter the IP
address of the printer {31.133.128.18} in the box in the bottom-right corner
and click "Search."
4. Ignore the "The Printer and Computer are Connected to Different Routers"
message and select "Next."
5. The driver will finish it's installation and you *should* see a
"Successful Network Installation" message.
6. The fax feature is *NOT* enabled, so you may cancel the fax installation
portion.
7. Registering the printer is not necessary.
8. You're printer is now ready to use, and you can find it by going to
''Start -> Devices and Printers''. No need to print a test page.
=== Instructions for Windows using HP printing framework ===
1. Download HP Universal Print Driver for Windows (see above)
2. Select "Dynamic installation" and wait until all drivers are copied (takes
about 5-10 minutes)
3. Add printers by using their IP addresses in "control panel" appearing when
select Start -> Settings -> Printers & faxes -> "HP Universal Printing PS" ->
Properties
=== HP Eprint
1. Find the printer's email address on a label pasted to the printer.
2. Email the document to that address.
3. Retrieve your print out from the Terminal Room
=== Scanning Services ===
1. In a browser (Firefox appears to be the only browser that renders the
pages properly) go to: http://term-printer.meeting.ietf.org/
2. Select the "Scan" tab located at the top of the page.
3. Select Document Type "PDF" in the drop-down menu
4. Place pages to be scanned face-up in the page feeder on top of the printer.
5. Press "Start Scan" on the web page.
6. Once the Scan has completed a window to the right will display the PDF
contents of the scan.
7. Using the scroll bar in the Image Preview - Scroll to the right and select
the "Download" button
== Services ==
The following network services are provided:
|| Service || Address ||
Notes
||
|| SMTP || smtp.meeting.ietf.org || Will
provide SMTP relay for anything within the IETF network ||
|| NTP || ntp.meeting.ietf.org || A
stratum 2 time service is provided via IPv4 and IPv6 unicast ||
|| DNS || ns1.meeting.ietf.org ns2.meeting.ietf.org || Validating
recursive resolvers. The domain name is meeting.ietf.org. ||
These services are being provided from both of the following servers:
31.130.229.6 / [2001:67c:370:229::6]
or
31.130.229.7 / [2001:67c:370:229::7]
== Geolocation ==
There is a geolocation feed published here: http://noc.ietf.org/geo/google.csv
Geolocation service for temporary networks is often hit or miss.
Suggestions/assistance is welcomed.
== MAC Privacy @IETF93 ==
After doing MAC Privacy trials at IETF91 in Honolulu and IETF92 in Dallas, we
are transitioning to this being a standard service on the IETF network. It
will operate on the all the IETF meeting networks, so no special SSID will be
broadcast. Users participating in the service will be assigned a shorter DHCP
lease. Note that this time there is also support for some mobile devices.
Instructions and tools to automatically randomize the MAC address used by the
Wi-Fi interface of your device can be found (for several OSes) at:
* https://oruga.it.uc3m.es/802-privacy/index.php/MAC_address_change_tutorial
More information about the IEEE 802 Privacy group and instructions about how
to join the discussion list can be found at the IEEE 802 Privacy SG site:
* http://www.ieee802.org/PrivRecsg/
== Thanks ==
The terminal room and IETF network are made possible by the generous
contributions by a number of companies and by the tireless efforts of our
volunteer team. If you see any of these people in the halls, please be sure
to thank them for all their work!
Contributors:
* Juniper Networks
* Cisco
Connectivity:
* CZ.NIC
* Dial Telecom
Volunteers:
* Hirochika Asai (WIDE)
* Joe Clarke (Cisco)
* Chris Elliott
* Bill Fenner (Arista)
* Joel Jaeggli (Fastly)
* Bill Jensen (University of Wisconsin –Madison)
* Hans Kuhn (NSRC)
* Warren Kumari (Google)
* Lucy Lynch (NSRC)
* Jim Martin (Internet Systems Consortium)
* Ryo Nakamura (WIDE - in absentia)
* Karen O'Donoghue (ISOC)
* Clemens Schrimpe
* Bjoern A. Zeeb
Staff:
* Aaron Nelson
* James Dishongh
* Colin Doyle
* Nick Kukich
* Edward !McNair
* Con Reilly
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93all mailing list
93all(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/93all
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