[Hipsec] [Fwd: WG Action: Host Identity Protocol (hip)]

Gonzalo.Camarillo@ericsson.com (Gonzalo Camarillo) Wed, 24 March 2004 09:30 UTC

From: Gonzalo.Camarillo@ericsson.com
Date: Wed, 24 Mar 2004 09:30:02 +0000
Subject: [Hipsec] [Fwd: WG Action: Host Identity Protocol (hip)]
Message-ID: <4061A638.1050902@ericsson.com>
X-Date: Wed Mar 24 09:30:02 2004

FYI.

Gonzalo

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: WG Action: Host Identity Protocol (hip)
Date: Wed, 24 Mar 2004 09:52:48 -0500
From: The IESG <iesg-secretary@ietf.org>
To: IETF-Announce: ;
CC: David Ward <dward@cisco.com>,        Gonzalo Camarillo 
<gonzalo.camarillo@ericsson.com>

A new IETF working group has been formed in the Internet Area.  For 
additional
information, please contact the Area Directors or the WG Chairs.

Host Identity Protocol (hip)
-----------------------------

Current Status: Active Working Group

Chair(s):
David Ward <dward@cisco.com>
Gonzalo Camarillo <gonzalo.camarillo@ericsson.com>

Internet Area Director(s):
Thomas Narten <narten@us.ibm.com>
Margaret Wasserman <margaret@thingmagic.com>

Internet Area Advisor:
Margaret Wasserman <margaret@thingmagic.com>

Mailing Lists:
General Discussion: hipsec@honor.trusecure.com
To Subscribe: hipsec-request@honor.trusecure.com
In Body: With a subject line: subscribe
Archive: http://honor.trusecure.com/pipermail/hipsec/

Description of Working Group:

The Host Identity Protocol (HIP) provides a method of
separating the end-point identifier and locator roles of
IP addresses. It introduces a new Host Identity (HI)
name space, based on public keys. The public keys are
typically, but not necessarily, self generated.

The specifications for the architecture and protocol
details for these mechanisms consist of:

         draft-moskowitz-hip-arch-05.txt (at RFC editor) and
         draft-moskowitz-hip-08.txt (soon -09.txt)

There are five publicly known, interoperating
implementations, some of which are open source.

Currently, the HIP base protocol works well with any pair
of co-operating end-hosts. However, to be more useful
and more widely deployable, HIP needs some support from
the existing infrastructure, including the DNS, and a new
piece of infrastructure, called the HIP rendezvous
server.

+-------------------------------------------------------+
| The purpose of this Working Group is to define the    |
| minimal infrastructure elements that are needed for   |
| HIP experimentation on a wide scale.                  |
+-------------------------------------------------------+

In particular, the objective of this working group is to
complete the base protocol specification, define one or
more DNS resource records for storing HIP related data,
to complete the existing work on basic mobility and
multi-homing, and produce Experimental RFCs for these.

Note that even though the specifications are chartered
for Experimental, it is understood that their quality and
security properties should match the standards track
requirements. The main purpose for producing
Experimental documents instead of standards track ones
are the unknown effects that the mechanisms may have on
applications and on the Internet in the large.

It is expected that there will be a roughly parallel,
though perhaps considerably broader, IRTF Research Group
that will include efforts both on developing the more
forward looking aspects of the HIP architecture and on
exploring the effects that HIP may have on the applications
and the Internet.

The following are charter items for the working group:

1) Complete the HIP base protocol specification.
   Starting point: draft-moskowitz-hip-08.txt (or newer)

2) Complete the basic mobility and multi-homing support for HIP.
   Starting point: draft-nikander-hip-mm-01.txt (or newer)

While this work partially overlaps the work in Mobile
IP and Multi6 Working Groups, it is very different in
the sense that is based on the Experimental HIP
specification, and cannot function without it.

3) Define one or more new DNS Resource Records for
   storing HIP related data, such as Host Identifiers and
   Host Identity Tags (HITs). This task explicitly
   excludes the task of defining reverse DNS entries
   based on HITs.

4) Define a basic HIP rendezvous mechanism.

   A basic HIP rendezvous server allows mobile and
   non-mobile HIP hosts to register their current IP
   addresses at the server. Other hosts can then send
   the initial I1 packets to the rendezvous server, which
   forwards the packets to the HIP host's current address.

   This task explicitly excludes solving more general
   problems, such as the referral problem. Also excluded
   is the problem of finding the right rendezvous server.
   It is expected that the DNS records will be used for that.

   The Working Group bases all the work on the HIP achitecture
   specification (as defined above).

Goals and Milestones:

Mar 04 WG LC on the base protocol specification
Mar 04 First version of the HIP basic mobility and multi-homing 
mechanism specification.
Mar 04 First version of the HIP DNS resource record(s) specification.
Apr 04 Complete the base protocol specification and submit it to the 
IESG for
	Experimental
Apr 04 First version of the HIP basic rendezvous mechanism specification.
Aug 04 WG LC on the HIP DNS resource record(s) specification.
Sep 04 Submit the HIP DNS resource record(s) specification to the IESG 
for Experimental.Nov 04 WG LC on the HIP basic mobility and multi-homing 
specification.
Nov 04 WG LC on the basic HIP rendezvous mechanism specification.
Dec 04 Submit the HIP basic mobility and multihoming specification to 
the IESG for
	Experimental.
Dec 04 Submit the basic HIP rendezvous mechanism specification to the 
IESG for
	Experimental.
Jan 05 Recharter or close the WG.




 

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