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May 2001
- 45 participants
- 43 discussions
35.4 NCC PGP Key exchange procedure Low prio
35.5 NCC Implement PGP for hm Low prio
36.5 Chair Assignment window applied on infrastructure Proposed change
36.6 AP Collect arbitrators Taken care of.
36.7 NCC Keep lir-wg updated on pre RIR address space changes Db-wg
presentation
37.1 WG Further discuss restoring the transparency Ntr
38.2 NCC Implement changes to the form while taking into account the
comments from the WG In progress
38.3 WG Reopen policy discussion - do we need a major revision of RIPE 185
RIPE 40
38.4 AC Consider how to coordinate Address prediction work Work launced
38.5 NCC Implement 34.6 LIR-ALLOCATED
38.6 NCC Propose PI policy to the WG Ongoing
39.1 NCC Better metrics & more relevant stats
39.2 NCC Suggest procedure and possible policy changes
39.3 NCC Call for AC nominations
39.4 Chairs Define & divide work
39.5 Chairs Beta test 6 weeks deadline for proposals
1
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Dear lir-wg,
I am sorry for submitting the draft minutes to you at such a late stage, it
is partly due to the fact that I myself got the minutes rather late, partly
due to my own lack of time to go trough them.
Hans Petter
---------
Draft Minutes
Tuesday 23 January 2001.
Scribe: RIPE NCC Hostmaster - Geoff Charters, Roger Arcilla
Hans Petter Holen (HPH) opens the meeting by describing the way
policies are developed in this region. Policies are developed in open
forums (LIR-WG in the RIPE region). The Address Council (AC) oversees
the process and gives resommendations to the ICANN board. He asks the
audience to give input to the AC. He also stresses that the AC are elected
by
the regional policy foras like the lir-wg and that we are not there to make
policy ourselves, but merely to oversee the policy making in the regions.
(http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/archive/ripe-38/presentations.html#LIR)5
HPH introduces the members of the AC: There are 3 members from the
APNIC region, 3 from the ARIN region, 3 from the RIPE region (see
http://www.aso.icann.org/ac/)
Sabine Jaumes term is ending. At the RIPE 38 plenary session
elections will take place.
HPH describes how the AC operates: The AC makes an effort not only
to attend open policy forums and other events in the recpetive region, but
also
to gather input trough special input foras.
The AC and the RIRs have recently sent out a call for nominations for
a vacant ICANN board seat. Nominations can be submitted by anyone.
There is also a possibility to express support for nominees.
In order to keep the geographic diversity on the ICANN board, the new
board member cannot come from Europe or the Asian Pacific region.
Address allocation policies are developed in a bottom-up manner in
each region. How is global policy developed? Is a proposal first
discussed in each region and then coordinatd between the RIRs? This
can be a long process. Do we need to create a gobal mechanism? Is
there more co-ordination necessary between the RIRs or the regional open
policy forums? What are global issues, what are regional?
HPH reports from the workshop the AC had with the RIRs and IANA in
Brisbane in November 2000. It was a very productive and effective
workshop. The role of the AC was discussed. Is the AC too active or
not active enough?
An action was placed on the RIR's to compare regional policies. The
goal is not to produce the same policies - but to find the differences.
There might reasons for different policies.
The general issue on how to take care of resource (IP addresses, ASNs).
Is it a public resource that need to be protected or should it be market
driven or auctioned?
The AC is committed to be more proactive in informing the community
about their acivities by creating a publically archived mailing list
which is used for AC meeting agendas, minutes and policy discussions.
Only about 5 people in the audience looked at the ASO web site. HPH
encourgaes everyone to follow the developments.
One achievement during last year was the discussion related to address
space needed for GPRS. This has been taken up in all regions and is
being handled in a consistent way. Up til now, address requirements
for the GPRS infrastructure has been discussed. Further discussions
need to take addresses for handsets into account.
Many of these developments address issues listed by the Ad hoc group.
The Ad hoc group will present its final report to ICANN shortly and
will then be closed.
The RIRs submitted a document to the AC and to ICANN listing criteria
to be used by ICANN when approving emerging RIR. According the ASO MoU
it is ICANN that makes the final decision about the approval of a new
RIR.
One important criteria is strong support from within the region of the
emerging RIR.
Similar to the RIPE LIR-WG there are open policy forums in the ARIN
and APNIC regions.
HPH wonders if this was a useful overview of AC activities and asks
for feedback. What should be on the AC's list of actions for 2001?
The audience feels this was useful.
Mark McFadden wants the AC to do more. In particular: there is a lot
of discussion about scarcity of IPv4 addresses and ASNs. A lot of work
is done in an uncoordinated way. Wants the AC to co-ordinate this.
Spreaded activities all over the world, wants the AC to combine this
work. He is not suggesting that they do the work themselves.
He also wants the AC be more active in globalising addressing policies.
He also feels that RFC2050 should be revised, the AC should not do
this, but another group. It is out of date and incomplete.
Randy Bush agrees with Marks second point, it would be nice to have
policies/procedures more aligned.
To the first point, this work is ongoing in the IETF. The only useful
addition one could be to compile and bundle this work for people who
do not have the time to follow all developments.
Mark points out that there is engineering work being done outside the
IETF, the AC could play a role in this.
Wilfried Woeber would like to share some of his experiences with this
'flying circus': sometimes one finds out that one was part of a feedback
loop. Requirement to interact with different people and groups, this
is a good thing about the Internet industry self-regulation. On the
issue of global policy, thinks the AC did a good start by asking the
RIRs to look at each other policies and define which ones are
different and why. Then this could be given back to the communities
asking if they want to keep it the way, because they are used to this
and it doesn't harm or if they want to put energy in it to try to make
them more aligned.
Carsten Schiefner wonders if there a transition plan from the
established RIRs to the emerging RIRs.
HPH explains that this is done in a bottom-up manner: ISPs in the area
cannot be forced to either stay or move, they have to show support.
Randy wonders if there will be competition between the RIRs?
Mirjam: No, RIRs operate in geographic regions, it has been working
well so far, they are not proposals on the table to change this.
Juergen Rauschenbach notes that the IPv6 policy document still
pending, because one of the communities did not agree. He wonders if
additional RIRs will impose even more delay on these kinds of issues.
Mirjam explains that policies are in place so that IPv6 operations are
not delayed through that. SubTLAS are handed out. ARIN community set
up a working group to look into the policy.
Richard Jimmerson from ARIN reports from the status of the ARIN
IPv6-WG.
Juergen suggests to implement regional policies if one of the regional
communities cannot make a decision to go along with the others.
Mirjam urges everybody to try to develop globally consistent
allocation policy for IPv6. The RIRs are still committed to that. She
reminds the audience that the fact that some of the IPv4 allocation
policies have not been aligned has created constant criticism. Lets
try to avoid this in IPv6.
Paul Mylotte: Presentation on global address forecast
(http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/archive/ripe-38/presentations.html#LIR)
Juergen believes that both methods are flawed
1. method: H-Ratio has not taken into account
Even though there are 400 million addresses still available it will be
hard to push density above 116 million addresses used, currently
density at about 105 - 110 millions
2. method: good numbers if the growth is staying stable. There are
more factors: mobile devices, address needs in China etc.
Scott Markus also comments on method 2: not on the total numbers
allocated, but on the growth itself; change in the change, no change
in the base. Geoff Huston for instance calculates 7% of addresses
allocated
Mark MacFadden acknowledges that substantial work has been done in a
number of areas. Personally he believes the H-ratio is
questionable. He would like to see some harmony between the work that
is going on. They all relate to different things, difficult to
compare. We need to bring this information together. The AC should
take on this work.
Scott agrees with Mark. There was a discussion among the RIRs
themselves to put more effort into this, will make the base data more
widely available and put more work into this.
Leos Vegoda: presentation
(http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/archive/ripe-38/presentations.html#LIR)
Wilfried wonders if we really want to go into a lot of details
for such small amount of address space? Should there be a standard
size of address space where one is entitled to have one without any
questions asked?
Joao believes that this would mean a shift from assignments based on
actual need to more simplification.
Gerd is in favour of giving people public addresses instead of private
addresses if they don't want it. He would be happy to give everyone
a /29. This would make life easier for people and would also pushes the
deployment of IPv6.
John Klensin notes that these kind of limits (/29 in this case) seem
to be made up by magic. He advocates to be careful with looking at
these numbers and to draw conclusions from them or to assume all kinds
of things that might not be valid in the future.
PaulW points out that this proposal has also global implications. In
the APNIC region there is very rapid deployment of cable and ADSL in a
number of countries. Any decision that is made here, will be used and
seen as a precedent in other regions. This will increase the usage
rate significantly. He suggests to still have it dependend on the
network and the application, not on the technology. An assignment of
a /29 to all cable and ADSL customers seem to be very dangerous and
not at all necessary.
HPH proposes to introduce a separate assignment window for
infrastructure. Maybe together with some safeguard to review this once
a year or so. Discussion will be continued on the mailing list.
Finally the ASO General Assembly Meeting was announced to be held in
San Francisco on 4 April 2001.
1
0
Hi,
Following a presentation by Guy Vegoda at the Tools BOF at RIPE37 of an
IP Management Tool, interest was expressed in the development
of an Open Source version of such a tool and we used the lirwg
list to draw up Requirements for this. We have now produced some rough
specifications for this tool that we will present at the upcoming
Tools WG tomorrow.
We will target as users 'The Hostmaster staff of Local Internet
Registries which are Customers of the RIPE NCC and who need to manage
their IP Allocations and Assignments and the requests for same that
they send to the RIPE NCC'.
We would now like the help of such potential users to refine these
specifications into something that the RIPE NCC and interested developers
can go away and implement.
So, if you're interested by such a tool, please come along to the
RIPE39 Tools WG tomorrow at 16h00 in the Europa Auditorium.
Thanks.
--
Manuel Valente - Software Manager - RIPE NCC
------------------------------------------------------------------
Draft of Specifications for an IP Management Tool
Manuel Valente, Leo Vegoda, Maldwyn Morris
RIPE NCC
swcontact(a)ripe.net
20010419
0. Introduction
Following a presentation of an IP Management Tool by Guy Vegoda at the
Tools BOF at RIPE 38 [1], interest was expressed in the development of
an Open Source version of such a tool and we drew up Requirements (qv)
1. General Points
Open Source:
We will release this software under the LGPL licence [2].
We use this instead of GPL [3] because this means we will remain able
to using non-GPL'ed libraries, should that prove necessary.
The RIPE NCC is happy to support this project, but of course its Open
Source nature means anyone else can use the code to begin their own
Open Source project. We are also happy about that.
IPV6:
We would be foolish not to consider the possibility of using this tool
for managing IPV6 addresses and writing it such that this is possible,
but we think it will be useful even if it does not and do not consider
IPV6 support a requirement.
2. Definitions:
Parties :
RIPE NCC: The European Regional Internet Registry, which grants IPV4
address allocations to its customers, the LIRs.
LIR: A customer of the RIPE NCC which interracts with the RIPE NCC in order
to make IPV4 address assignments to their LIRCustomers from the LIR's
IPV4 address allocation.
LIR Customer: A person or organisation which wants to receive IPV4 address
assignments.
LIR Hostmaster: A person working for a LIR whose job it is to make IPV4
address assignments to the LIR Customers.
Registered IPV4 Address Information:
There are two forms of IPV4 address information which are registerd by
the RIPE NCC and which are stored in the RIPE Whois Database: IPV4
Address allocations and IPV4 Address assignments.
IPV4 Address allocations: A range of IPV4 addresses from which the RIPE NCC
allows a certain LIR to make IPV4 Address assignments to their LIRCustomers.
IPV4 Address assignments: A range of IPV4 addresses from a LIR's IPV4 Address
allocations which the RIPE NCC and the LIR allows a certain LIRCustomer
to use on the Internet.
Interactions:
I1: LIR Customer Assignment Request:
An LIRCustomer asks their LIR for an IPV4 Address assignment and the
LIR replies.
Composed of:
I1.1: LIRCustomer communicates request for IPV4 Address assignment to LIR
I1.2: LIRHostmaster evaluates request
I1.3: LIRHostmaster queries LIRCustomer about request
I1.4: LIRHostmaster actions request
I1.5: LIRHostmaster informs LIRCustomer of request outcome
I1.6: LIRHostmaster completes request for LIR Customer
I2: LIR Assignment Request: An LIR asks the RIPE NCC for approval of an
IPV4 Address assignment and the RIPE NCC replies.
I2.1: LIRHostmaster formulates query
I2.2: LIRHostmaster sends request to NCC
I2.3: LIRHostmaster handles response
I2.4: LIRHostmaster completes request
I3: LIR Allocation Request: An LIR asks the RIPE NCC for an IPV4 Address
allocation and the RIPE NCC replies.
I3.1: LIRHostmaster formulates query
I3.2: LIRHostmaster sends request to NCC
I3.3: LIRHostmaster handles response
I3.4: LIRHostmaster completes request
I4: LIRH Manages Customers
I4.1: LIRHostmaster composes report(s) of info on one customer
I4.2: LIRHostmaster composes report(s) on all customers
I4.3: Creation of new customer
I4.3: Update customer info
I4.3: Delete customer
I5: LIRH Manages LIR's Assignments
I5.1: LIRHostmaster composes report of all assignments
I5.2: LIRHostmaster composes report on a specific assignment
I6: LIRH Manages LIR's Allocations
I6.1: LIRHostmaster composes report of all allocations
I6.2: LIRHostmaster composes report on a specific allocation
3. IPMT Functional Breakdown
The functions the IPMT tool must provide, divided per Interaction.
I1: LIR Customer Assignment Request:
I1.1. LIRCustomer communicates request for IPV4 Address assignment to LIR
IPMT:
F1: receive the LIR Customer Assignment Request
F2: store request info
F3: LIR Hostmaster sees new request
I1.2 LIRHostmaster evaluates request
IPMT:
F4: Check request correctly formatted and I1.5: Deny if not
F5: Check request valid and I1.5: Deny if not
F6: Check LIR Customer valid and I1.5: Deny if not
I1.3: LIRHostmaster queries LIRCustomer about request
IPMT:
F7: Get more info from LIR Customer regarding request
F8: update request info
F9: -> I1.2: Evaluate
I1.4: LIRHostmaster actions request
F11: Need to ask RIPE to perform request ? -> I2 if so
F12: Check request
F13: Update request info
F14: Check other info concerning assignments
F15: Update other info based on request
I1.5: LIRHostmaster informs LIRCustomer of request outcome
F16: Communicate request outcome and info to LIR Customer
I1.6: LIRHostmaster fills in customer request
F17: Generate info about request, possible with F7
4. Implementation proposals
?? LIR Hostmaster interracts with IPMT via a GUI.
?? IPMT GUI will have HTML form range of elements ( text, buttons,
single-line text, multi-line text, radio buttons, check boxes ).
I1.1 LIRCustomer communicates request for IPV4 Address assignment to LIR
F1: receive the LIR Customer Assignment Request
?? LIR Customer sends request :
- via html form
- by snailmail/phone/other & LIRH fills in a GUI form
- by email to designated address
- address served by mail robot ?
- FORGET for now - too complex ?
- LIRH uses CLI to fill in
- Other LIR fills in using IPMT via API
F2: store request info
?? Store in 'LIR Customer request' record in DB
?? Request record:
Request id
LIR Customer email address
date
raw request info - from LIR customer comm.s
LIRH ID - 'request owner'
F3: LIR Hostmaster sees new request
?? IPMT 'fetch next request' button to show next LIR Customer Request in GUI
- wait queue...
- IPMT perfroms F4,F5,F6
I1.2 LIRHostmaster evaluates request
F4: Check request correctly formatted and I1.5: Deny or I1.6 if not
IPMT parses 'LIR Customer Request' record, extracts and stores in it:
LIR customer id
request size in num of IP addresses
request category: ??
status: ??
IPMT informs LIR Hostmaster if parse fails
F5: Check request valid and I1.5: Deny or I1.6 if not
?? IPMT checks 'LIR Customer request' record
?? I1.3 if more info needed OK
?? IPMT sets 'checked' flag
F6: Check LIR customer valid and I1.5: Deny or I1.6 if not
IPMT looks up LIR customer info
?? LIR customer info stored in a DB
?? 'LIR customer' record
LIR customer id
customer email addresses and other contact info.
request ids of previous requests
total space size of assignments
- enough info to make Whois DB person object ?
IPMT informs LIR Hostmaster if customer not valid
I1.3: LIRHostmaster queries LIRCustomer about request
F7: Get more info from LIR customer regarding request
?? LIR Hostmaster uses IPMT to compose and send email to LIR customer
?? LIR customer reply automatically added to 'customer request' record
or LIRH can use IPMT to do this ( e.g. : enter phone conversation )
?? IPMT 'action needed' button to show customer reply received
F8: update request info
LIR Hostmaster updates 'customer' and 'customer request' records
F9: -> I1.2: Evaluate
I1.4: LIRHostmaster actions request
F11: Need to ask RIPE to perform request ? -> I2 if so
IPMT Check LIR Assignment window vs size of request
- force insert of NCC# ticket number of approval if it's needed
- need access to LIR Assignment window
reports to LIR Hostmaster
F12: Check request
IPMT examines request record vs customer and LIR assignment and allocation records
?? assignment records
- in whois ??:
- or IPMT stores this locally
- or LIR's records ?? via defined API ??
ipv4 range
- IPMT makes _suggestion_
- allow choice of methods by config file as debatable
- what methods are there ?
netname
- IPMT makes _suggestion_
?? allocation records
- in whois ??:
- or IPMT stores this locally
- or LIR's own records ?? via defined API ??
ipv4 range
F13: Update request info
?? IPMT generates assignment addresses from 'customer request' record
and assignment and allocation records
LIR Hostmaster agrees or alters assignment addresses
F14: Check other info concerning assignments
- too varied so LIR to implement - IPMT provides I4,5,6 to
allow LIRH access to info it has
?? LIR workflow stats
?? LIR Hostmaster stats
?? LIR infrastructure updates
?? LIR customer billing
F15: Update other info based on request
IPMT stores assignment addresses in 'customer request' record
I1.5: LIRHostmaster informs LIRCustomer of request outcome
F16: Communicate request outcome and info to customer
LIR Hostmaster uses IPMT to compose and send email to customer
Update 'customer request' record
I2: LIR Assignment Request: An LIR asks the RIPE NCC for approval of an
IPV4 Address assignment and the RIPE NCC replies.
I2.1: LIRHostmaster formulates query
F20: LIRH uses IPMT to produce a filled-out 141 Form.
Gets data from customer, request and assignment records
I2.2: LIRHostmaster sends request to NCC
F21: Send request to RIPE-NCC by e-mail
I2.3: LIRHostmaster handles response
F22: Check response of RIPE-NCC and resent request if necessary -> repeat F20
I2.4: LIRHostmaster completes request
F23: Update customer, request and assignment records.
I3: LIR Allocation Request: An LIR asks the RIPE NCC for an IPV4 Address
allocation and the RIPE NCC replies.
I3.1: LIRHostmaster formulates query
F30: Gets data from assignment and allocation records and fills out
pro-forma request to RIPE-NCC.
I3.2: LIRHostmaster sends request to NCC
F31: Send request by e-mail.
I3.3: LIRHostmaster handles response
F32: Check response of RIPE-NCC and resent request if necessary -> repeat F30
I3.4: LIRHostmaster completes request
F33: Update assignment and allocation records
1
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