Re: [Int-area] [Iotops] Last Call: Moving TPC.INT and NSAP.INT infrastructure domains to historic

Brian E Carpenter <brian.e.carpenter@gmail.com> Thu, 07 April 2022 21:32 UTC

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To: Toerless Eckert <tte@cs.fau.de>, last-call@ietf.org, int-area@ietf.org, iotops@ietf.org, liaison-coordination@iab.org
References: <164867508759.15594.2523981628049164116@ietfa.amsl.com> <Yk6w/Dga2GhGo/im@faui48e.informatik.uni-erlangen.de>
From: Brian E Carpenter <brian.e.carpenter@gmail.com>
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Date: Fri, 08 Apr 2022 09:32:28 +1200
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Subject: Re: [Int-area] [Iotops] Last Call: Moving TPC.INT and NSAP.INT infrastructure domains to historic
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Toerless,

I've seen no evidence that nsap.int is used by anyone anywhere for anything.

If there was any use for it, I'm sure it would have been migrated to nsap.arpa
a long time ago.

Regards
    Brian

On 07-Apr-22 21:38, Toerless Eckert wrote:
> [ Disclaimer: Cc some more mailing list in the hope that it would help to reach
> more technical and administrative contributors to the specific aspects asked for
> IETF than those who can afford to track an IETF wide list such as last-call.]
> 
> 0. Confused
> 
> I am really confused about the email, because the subject refers to making domain
> infrastructures historic, whereas the text asks for making RFCs historic. I am
> commenting on the ask to make RFCs historic.
> 
> 1.  RFC1706 from Informational to Historic (DNS NSAP Resource Records)
> 
> Back in the 80th/90th when i was working on CLNP (and IAB until after Kobe too ? ;-)),
> i already found it quite difficult back then to figure out how much CLNP was actually used,
> and seemingly most use was in closed industrial environments, although those
> deployments sometimes even just used TP4 over Ethernet, but (AFAIR) still with
> NSAPs. My ability to vet if or how much CLNP or in a broader sense NSAP are
> in active use in any closed networks has not become better. Even less so any
> possible use of RFC1706. So, what to do in the absence of knowledge but often
> reconfirmed fear of unknown usage... ?
> 
> 1.a)
> Given how CLNP/X.233 is to the best of my understanding an active/enforced
> standard at ISO/OSI and ITU-T, it would certainly be useful to consider bringing
> the suggested change to the attention of those SDO through our liaison mechanism.
> Any positive feedback from their side would be extremely helpful.
> 
> Short of getting real insight into how relevant/irrelevant NSAP really are today
> in badly visible environment, i think we do not win anything by changing status
> from informational to historic. Instead, we are assuming that we know something.
> Which i think we don't. In which case we should just keep it as is.
> 
> 1.b)
> 
> Personally i am saying that i wish for RFC1706 not be moved to historic,
> because to me historic not only means not--used, but also technically-obsolete,
> and given how NSAP are variable length, IPv6 is not, and many proposals in the IETF
> have argued for variable length addressing at the network layer to better solve
> problems, my opinion is that we should move something like this only to historic
> when we have something equal or better. E.g.: after we have updated IPv6 to
> also support variable length addresses.
> 
> 2.) RFC1528 from Experimental to Historic
> 
> I am not aware of a better, interoperable standard solution for remote printing (or should
> i say Internet FAX ?). Instead it feels to me as if every printer vendor has started
> its own proprietary remote-printing cloud-service. I hope i am wrong (pointers please),
> but if not, then i fear this decade old experiment is still the best we have ?
> 
> See 1.b) about arguing to changing status for something where there is no new
> evidence of there being something better and/or the mechanism being technically
> flawed (as opposed to just not being enough in the interest of vendors attempting
> to create monopolistic silos...)
> 
> Cheers
>      Toerless
> 
> On Wed, Mar 30, 2022 at 02:18:07PM -0700, The IESG wrote:
>> -----
>> Please note: This is a second IETF LC.
>>
>> This isn't really a document (or at least a document that does anything).
>> The "IESG Statement on Designating RFCs as Historic" (https://www.ietf.org/about/groups/iesg/statements/designating-rfcs-historic-2014-07-20/ ) says that:
>> "The current process, then, of moving an RFC to Historic status is to follow one of these, depending upon the level of documentation and discussion of the documentation required:
>> 1: [...]
>> 2: "An individual or a working group posts an Internet Draft containing an explanation of the reason for the status change. The I-D is discussed and iterated as usual for I-Ds. At some point, it is sent to an appropriate AD to request publication. The AD creates a status-change document, with an explanation that points to the I-D. The I-D and the status-change are then last-called together, after which the IESG evaluates and ballots on both." [...]
>> 3: "As #2 above, except that the I-D might also contain other information. In this case, after IESG approval the I-D is sent to the RFC Editor. When the RFC is published, the status-change document is changed to point to the RFC instead of the I-D." [...]
>>
>> This last call is *just* for the status change document (https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/status-change-int-tlds-to-historic), which is just a supporting document for https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-davies-int-historic/ (which does the actual work and explains stuff).
>> Basically, this is process-wonkey - please read https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-davies-int-historic/ instead, it's much more useful an interesting...
>>
>>
>> ----
>>
>> The IESG has received a request from an individual participant to make the
>> following status changes:
>>
>> - RFC1706 from Informational to Historic
>>      (DNS NSAP Resource Records)
>>
>> - RFC1528 from Experimental to Historic
>>      (Principles of Operation for the TPC.INT Subdomain: Remote Printing --
>>      Technical Procedures)
>>
>> The supporting document for this request can be found here:
>>
>> https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/status-change-int-tlds-to-historic/
>>
>> 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
>> last-call@ietf.org mailing lists by 2022-04-27. Exceptionally, comments may
>> be sent to iesg@ietf.org instead. In either case, please retain the beginning
>> of the Subject line to allow automated sorting.
>>
>> The affected documents can be obtained via
>> https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc1706/
>> https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc1528/
>>
>> IESG discussion of this request can be tracked via
>> https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/status-change-int-tlds-to-historic/ballot/
>>
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
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