Re: [Ibnemo] [Sdn] Defining a Common Model for intent

"Susan Hares" <shares@ndzh.com> Fri, 05 June 2015 19:08 UTC

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From: "Susan Hares" <shares@ndzh.com>
To: "'PEDRO ANDRES ARANDA GUTIERREZ'" <pedroa.aranda@telefonica.com>, "'Zhoutianran'" <zhoutianran@huawei.com>, "'Bert Wijnen \(IETF\)'" <bwietf@bwijnen.net>, "'STUART VENTERS'" <stuart.venters@adtran.com>, <sdn@irtf.org>
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Subject: Re: [Ibnemo] [Sdn] Defining a Common Model for intent
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Pedro: 

I think you are right and I am wrong in this chain.  After your posts I think that role is really a constraint of intent.    

Intent ==: object (constraint), result (constraint), constraint (constraint). 

 Where the role's constraint actually impacts what possible objects, results or constraints an intent has. 

Sue 

-----Original Message-----
From: PEDRO ANDRES ARANDA GUTIERREZ [mailto:pedroa.aranda@telefonica.com] 
Sent: Friday, June 05, 2015 2:03 AM
To: Susan Hares; 'Zhoutianran'; 'Bert Wijnen (IETF)'; 'STUART VENTERS'; sdn@irtf.org
Cc: ibnemo@ietf.org
Subject: Re: [Ibnemo] [Sdn] Defining a Common Model for intent

Hi Sue,

Going back to the BGP-4 example and staying at the role level, does this chain really stand? I mean, there are things a user will never be able to do depending on (her|his) role. So, will s?he ever be able to express an intent for something s?he cannot control?

Just a bit of philosophy I fear :-)

/PA

---
Dr. Pedro A. Aranda Gutiérrez

Technology Exploration -
Network Innovation & Virtualisation
email: pedroa d0t aranda At telefonica d0t com Telefónica, Investigación y Desarrollo C/ D. Ramón de la Cruz,84
28006 Madrid, Spain

Fragen sind nicht da, um beantwortet zu werden.
Fragen sind da, um gestellt zu werden.
Georg Kreisler




El 04/06/15 17:13, "Susan Hares" <shares@ndzh.com> escribió:

>Bert and Tianran:
>
>If you link intent to role, I believe your diagram is:
>
>User --> intent --> role --> context
>
>I think role takes on an aspect of context.   What do you think?
>
>Sue
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: sdn [mailto:sdn-bounces@irtf.org] On Behalf Of Zhoutianran
>Sent: Thursday, June 04, 2015 8:27 AM
>To: Bert Wijnen (IETF); STUART VENTERS; sdn@irtf.org
>Cc: ibnemo@ietf.org
>Subject: Re: [Sdn] [Ibnemo] Defining a Common Model for intent
>
>Hi Bert,
>
>Thanks for you comments.
>I agree with you that we'd better just focus on the top layer.
>But I am sorry, what do you mean in the last sentence?
>"A role -based intent model? I guess it would just boil down in 
>different types of intent that fit with the specific role, right?"
>Could you give more information on this?
>
>Best,
>Terence
>
>________________________________________
>发件人: Bert Wijnen (IETF) [bwietf@bwijnen.net]
>发送时间: 2015年6月3日 21:08
>收件人: Zhoutianran; STUART VENTERS; sdn@irtf.org
>抄送: ibnemo@ietf.org
>主题: Re: [Ibnemo] [Sdn] Defining a Common Model for intent
>
>Hi all,
>
>I like the idea of (at least for now) stick to the problem of "intent" 
>for one layer (the top layer).
>Let us not boil the ocean and try to do everything that comes up. If we 
>are successful in doing a model for IBNEMO for the top layer, we can 
>then see if we want to go at more layers.
>
>A role -based intent model? I guess it would just boil down in 
>different types of intent that fit with the specific role, right?
>
>Bert
>
>
>On 03/06/15 11:44, Zhoutianran wrote:
>> Hi Stuart,
>>
>> Thanks for this deep thinking with a set of examples. It's really
>important to clarify this fuzzy intent.
>> I think all the concern and uncertainty is because of the layered
>thinking. We think intent is a relatively higher level nested.
>> What if we think about intent with differnet roles? Just like a 
>> relative
>detailed description in my "role based intent" email.
>> I think the essential of the role based intent is that there is only 
>> one
>intent layer which is always on the top. Intent is dedicated for 
>corresponding roles. One role will not call other roles interfaces.
>> Then we can try to find way to express intent for various roles.
>>
>>
>> Regards,
>> Terence
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: sdn [mailto:sdn-bounces@irtf.org] On Behalf Of STUART VENTERS
>> Sent: Wednesday, June 03, 2015 12:06 AM
>> To: sdn@irtf.org
>> Cc: 'Dave Hood'; ibnemo@ietf.org; Lifengkai (Fengkai); Zhoutianran; 
>> Xiayinben; Susan Hares
>> Subject: Re: [Sdn] Defining a Common Model for intent
>>
>>
>>
>> I have 2 cents to contribute for this fuzzy intent word and resulting 
>>data
>model.
>> Perhaps 'intent'  is just a relatively high level service request.
>> The problem with this definition is what is that 'relatively high level'
>appears to depend on your point of view.
>>
>> To help think about it, here's a long chain of command for the same
>action.
>> It is long for fun and so that anybody can find part of it that they
>recognize.
>>
>>
>> Chain of command:
>>
>> Investor says: make money
>> CEO says: make the network work
>> CIO says: give me bandwidths between sites A, B, and C Net engineer
>> says: I need these evc's to these endpoints Purchasing agent: Says 
>> use this product from this vendor Sales Person says: Here is the 
>> price and priority
>> Partitioner: divides the end to end circuit among administrative 
>> domains
>> Planner: picks the necessary resources to use, makes the truck rolls 
>> happen
>> Allocator: allocates the necessary bandwidth
>> Provisioner: decides what provisioning is necessary in each part of 
>> the path
>> Adaptor: tailors the provisioning to a specific box
>> Driver: pushes the provisioning into the forwarding tables Forwarding
>> engine: forwards according to the tables
>>
>> The Investor's statement at the top is clearly what and not how.
>> The forwarding engine's operations have a lot of how, but maybe 
>> little
>global view of what we are doing overall.
>>
>> If we say that the top is intent and the bottom is a is service request,
>>    who's to say where intent stops and service requests start?
>>
>> Perhaps  'intent' means a service request coming from a higher layer 
>> for
>refinement.
>>
>> That said, the data model for intent might/should be different at 
>> each
>level.
>> Since each level is processing the same request at different levels 
>> of
>detail, it might be similar at each level.
>> Perhaps the data model starts simple on top and gathers more and more
>detail as it gets lower ?
>> Maybe like a tree with the root at the top and leaves at the 
>> forwarding
>engines, except distributed.
>>
>> Perhaps a simple starting point near the top is a combination of 
>>entities,
>endpoints, and connections.
>>
>>
>> Regards,
>>
>> Stuart Venters
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> From: sdn [mailto:sdn-bounces@irtf.org] On Behalf Of Dave Hood
>> Sent: Tuesday, June 02, 2015 8:26 AM
>> To: Lifengkai (Fengkai); Susan Hares; sdn@irtf.org
>> Cc: Zhoutianran; Xiayinben; ibnemo@ietf.org
>> Subject: Re: [Sdn] Defining a Common Model for intent
>>
>> I agree that the context matters, Fengkai (and Susan in earlier 
>>response).
>What the I-D appears to be saying is that any interaction across an NBI 
>is
>intent: otherwise the app/tenant/customer wouldn't do it. That's the 
>root of my question from the beginning: how would we know what is *not* 
>intent?
>>
>> If I ask for some particular microscopically detailed configuration 
>> (a
>"how"), it's because I care, for some reason, about that level of detail.
>It
>is in fact part of my intent.
>>
>> In my IT example, I argue that intent need not be independent of 
>>protocols
>and ports, and that it need not be portable. Your response about 
>context appears to agree.
>>
>> So as best I can tell, we can say precisely what an intent is, and we
>can't say what an intent is not. If intent is just the latest buzzword, 
>which it certainly appears to be, can we just say so and leave it to 
>the marketing people?
>>
>> Dave
>>
>> From: Lifengkai (Fengkai) [mailto:lifengkai@huawei.com]
>> Sent: Tuesday, June 02, 2015 12:47 AM
>> To: Dave Hood; Susan Hares; sdn@irtf.org
>> Cc: Zhoutianran; Xiayinben; ibnemo@ietf.org
>> Subject: RE: [Sdn] Defining a Common Model for intent
>>
>> Hi Dave and all,
>>
>> Thanks for proposing the two valuable intent use cases.
>>
>> For the use case 2, I agree that the IT employee needs to include the
>details of ports/protocols into his/her intent descriptions, but those 
>may not be in the intent context scope of a non-IT employee. Have a 
>further consideration with this, different users of the network have 
>their own intent in a specific domain. Then the roles/actors of network 
>users, such as end users, application developers, tenant IT/network 
>administrators, operator network administrators, are valuable to be 
>identified and distinguished, thus fitting the intent requirements of 
>the network users with different roles.
>>
>> Any thoughts about this consideration?
>>
>>
>> Best Regards,
>> Fengkai
>>
>> From: sdn [mailto:sdn-bounces@irtf.org] On Behalf Of Dave Hood
>> Sent: Tuesday, June 02, 2015 1:38 AM
>> To: Susan Hares; sdn@irtf.org
>> Cc: Zhoutianran; Xiayinben; ibnemo@ietf.org
>> Subject: Re: [Sdn] Defining a Common Model for intent
>>
>> An excerpt from an email I sent on the ONF NBI list, which may 
>> contain
>some useful thoughts:
>>
>> I have always had trouble understanding what an intent really is, so 
>>I am
>looking forward to making the concept more precise.
>>
>> When I click a link on a web page, I express an intent to invoke 
>>whatever
>that link offers. Completely below the surface is a layer stack, 
>on-demand session establishment, DNS look-ups, server load balancers, 
>and any number of other technological features that are of no interest 
>to me. Why not use that as an example of intent?
>>
>> Better yet, we talk about negotiation and selection. Suppose I want 
>>to buy
>a widget. I probably already have some idea whether I want to go to 
>Amazon or EBay or somewhere else. Suppose it's Amazon. I search 
>Amazon's catalog and receive an offer of several widgets, some new, 
>some used, some with a choice of colour or other pertinent features. If 
>I see nothing I like, I may open a new browser window and check out 
>Best Buy or EBay (lots more hidden technology to make that happen!). 
>Maybe I come back to the Amazon page, having found nothing I liked 
>better somewhere else. Now I accept one of the offered widgets and go 
>through the checkout process.
>>
>> Do we agree that this is a fairly pure expression of intent as 
>> conceptualized in the paper? (If not, let's talk about making a Skype
>> call.)
>>
>> Ok, that's my intent as an internet user. Let's assume the network is 
>>all
>SDN of one kind or another. I invoke my intent through a GUI onto 
>software local to my PC, but I don't think we can call the PC an SDN controller.
>It's
>more an active mediator, a client to an SDN. As far as the network is 
>concerned, the client makes DNS queries and swaps opaque TCP packets 
>over a forwarding path that may already exist, or may need to be 
>learned and set up on demand. This is about right, because the session 
>content may well be encrypted end to end, and rightly.
>>
>> To the SDN controller, my intent is satisfied by directing DNS 
>>queries to
>a known DNS server somewhere, and ensuring IP connectivity for the 
>subsequent session. Hmmm. what happened to our intent-based NBI? The 
>SDN offered my PC a packet interface with the properties of knowing how 
>to recognize and route DNS queries specially, and general IP 
>connectivity. My PC accepted the service offer implicitly by offering 
>traffic to the data-plane interface. The network could be performing 
>associated auxiliary services such as usage-based billing (think 
>wireless roaming), so it's more than just a dumb pipe.
>>
>> If this is not a legitimate example of intent, it would be good to 
>> write
>the white paper in such a way that clearly excludes such cases.
>>
>> Use case 2: suppose I am a corporate IT employee, and suppose that my 
>> intent is to have an E-Line between two of my campi. I necessarily 
>> care about ports and protocols; talk about intent being portable and 
>> protocol independent continues to confuse me completely. How can I 
>> order an E-line without caring about such details? [Nor is this 
>> intent portable.]
>>
>> Obviously, an SDN controller is going to expose whatever actions and
>elements of information are germane to the service it offers, and if 
>ports and protocols are germane to the service, so be it.
>>
>> The SDN architecture, being recursive, models the north side of any
>controller as exposing an instance of an information model, customized 
>for the intended client/customer/app/user. That being the case, how do 
>we distinguish an NBI API that conveys intent (service: same thing?) 
>from one that does not?
>>
>> I have recently come to the view that granularity is the criterion by
>which an intent or service invocation is distinguished. Colloquially 
>speaking, a service invocation is a single invocation across the API: 
>give me E-Line. Now of course this turns into constraint negotiation, 
>offer and acceptance, but what happens across the API is effectively 
>one transaction.
>In contrast, what we might agree is *not* an intent or a service is the 
>manipulation of a granular information model, the explicit visibility 
>of multiple objects, how they are interrelated, their attributes, and 
>the like.
>>
>> .         Network as a single lump vs some non-trivial topology.
>>
>> .         Chauffeur vs driving a car. Legitimate reasons to choose one
>option or the other, but the level of granularity is quite different.
>Shall
>we agree that driving is too granular to be considered intent?
>>
>> This idea of granularity and detailed operations on the components 
>>(which
>of course may be complex entities themselves, virtualized into 
>simple-appearing lumps) seems to me to capture the essence of what 
>people are talking about when they say intent or service. I am not 
>comfortable with the way I am expressing it, so if this is a step in a 
>productive direction, or even if it's not, I welcome suggestions to 
>clarify the concept.
>>
>> Dave
>>
>> From: sdn [mailto:sdn-bounces@irtf.org] On Behalf Of Susan Hares
>> Sent: Saturday, May 30, 2015 1:02 PM
>> To: sdn@irtf.org
>> Cc: 'Zhoutianran'; 'Xiayinben'; ibnemo@ietf.org
>> Subject: [Sdn] Defining a Common Model for intent
>>
>> On this mail list, there has been a discussion of two types of 
>>information
>for Intent and Nemo:
>(http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/sdn/current/msg00646.html) :
>>
>> 1)      What information is needed to represent a service request,
>> 2)      How to represent and transport the information for a request.
>>
>> In order to define what information is needed to represent a 1) 
>> service
>request that signals Intent from an application to a controller, it is 
>important to define Intent, and provide a clear model of Intent.  Also, 
>in describing real use-cases it is important that one uses the same 
>definition and model for Intent in each use case.
>>
>> In the current forums examining Intent (ODL NIC, ODL Nemo, OF NBI and
>Keystone, OPNFV Movie, OpenStack) there is a realization that Intent 
>occurs at multiple layers.  The authors of draft-xia-ibnemo-icim have 
>created a definition for intent and a unified model for defining intent 
>which can handle 1 or multiple layers. The model suggest that:
>> 1)      A user has a intent that is expressed in a context.
>> 2)      Intent (usually) involves an object with a result, and
>>optionally
>includes operations toward that result.
>> 3)      Operations conditions perform actions within/modified by
>constraints.
>>
>> We believe this defines clearly what others are calling "pure intent"
>(objects + results) versus "constrained intent" (objects + operations +
>constraints).   The draft can be found at:
>https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-xia-ibnemo-icim/ .   The authors
>are
>looking for feedback on the concepts in the draft.
>>
>> Sue Hares
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> sdn mailing list
>> sdn@irtf.org
>> https://www.irtf.org/mailman/listinfo/sdn
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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>> Ibnemo@ietf.org
>> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ibnemo
>>
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