Hi Robert, thank you for your the most detailed review and helpful comments. I'll prepare -13 version based on your suggestions. Please find my responses, notes in-lined and tagged GIM>>
Regards, Greg On Wed, Jan 11, 2017 at 7:48 AM, Robert Sparks <[email protected]> wrote: > Reviewer: Robert Sparks > Review result: Ready with Nits > > I am the assigned Gen-ART reviewer for this draft. The General Area > Review Team (Gen-ART) reviews all IETF documents being processed > by the IESG for the IETF Chair. Please treat these comments just > like any other last call comments. > > For more information, please see the FAQ at > <https://trac.ietf.org/trac/gen/wiki/GenArtfaq>. > > Document: draft-ietf-mpls-residence-time-12 > Reviewer: Robert Sparks > Review Date: 2017-01-10 > IETF LC End Date: 2017-01-17 > IESG Telechat date: 2017-02-02 > > Summary: Ready (with nits) for publication as a Proposed Standard > > I have two primary comments. I expect both are rooted in the authors > and working group knowing what the document means instead of seeing > what > it says or doesn't say: > > 1) The document is loose with its use of 'packet', and where TTLs > appear when > they are discussed. It might be helpful to rephrase the text that > speaks > of RTM packets in terms of RTM messages that are encoded as G-ACh > messages and > not refer to packets unless you mean the whole encapsulated packet > with MPLS > header, ACH, and G-ACh message. > GIM>> Will use "message" as you've suggested. Indeed, interchangeable use of packet and message does confuse. > > 2) Since this new mechanic speaks in terms of fractional nanoseconds, > some > discussion of what trigger-point you intend people to use for taking > the > precise time of a packet's arrival or departure seems warranted. (The > first and > last bit of the whole encapsulated packet above are going to appear at > the > physical layer many nanoseconds apart at OC192 speeds if I've done the > math > right). It may be obvious to the folks discussing this, but it's not > obvious > from the document. If it's _not_ obvious and variation in technique > is > expected, then some discussion about issues that might arise from > different > implementation choices would be welcome. > GIM>> G.8013, formerly Y.1731, does not require or define when a time stamp must be taken. The document only indicates during which process time been taken, e.g.: TxTimeStampf: Timestamp at the transmission time of ETH-DM frame RxTimeStampf: Timestamp at the time of receiving frame with ETH-DM request information. What is important for quality of measurement is for an implementation to be reading and writing in timestamp at the same stage of processing the RTM packet and avoiding queuing/de-queuing in order to avoid impact of jitter caused by queuing/de-queuing. > > The rest of these are editorial nits: > > It would help to pull an overview description of the difference > between > one-step and two-step much earlier in the document. I suggest in the > overview > in section 2. Otherwise, the reader really has to jump forward and > read section > 7 before section 3's 5th bullet makes any sense. > GIM>> Will try. > > In section 3, "IANA will be asked" should be made active. Say "This > document > asks IANA to" and point to the IANA consideration section. Apply > similar > treatment to the other places where you talk about future IANA > actions. > GIM>> Will make changes accordingly. > > There are several places where there are missing words (typically > articles or > prepositions). You're less likely to end up with misinterpretations > during the > RFC Editor phase if you provide them before the document gets that far > in the > process. The spots I found most disruptive were these (this is not > intended to > be exhaustive): > > Section 3: "set 1 according" -> "set to 1 according" > Section 3: "the Table 19 [IEEE..." -> "Table 19 of [IEEE..." > Section 4.2: "Detailed discussion of ... modes in Section 7." > -> "Detailed discussion of ... modes appears > in Section 7." > Section 10: "most of" -> "most of all" > GIM>> Thank you, will make the changes. > > In Setion 3.1 at "identity of the source port", please point into the > document > that defines this identity and its representation. I suspect this is a > pointer > into a specific section in IEEE.1588.2008]. > GIM>> Will add the reference.
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