My comment was a review comment, that the word was being used in a way that wasn't consistent with its dictionary definition (something with a short lifetime, quite irrespective of birth/death processes) or common usage (at least in my context). At this point, the draft has been sent to the RFC Editor, so to my mind this discussion is mostly moot. If in your other drafts you are pointing people to a glossary in the architecture document (which I imagine you already are) and the architecture document defines the term as you are using it, you have probably done enough.
> On Mar 24, 2016, at 11:07 AM, Gunter Van De Velde > <[email protected]> wrote: > > I am ok nowadays with using the terminology “Ephemeral”, although for a > non-natve speaker it is non-trivial exotic word, particular if the intended > usage doesn’t 100% reflect the Webster dictionary intended meaning. > > It is only about a year ago i started reading up on i2rs and discovered this > particular terminology, and at the time a google search on this terminology > was not very conclusive and resulted to some confusion. > I understand very well the confusion at play here from non-native english > speaker perspective. > > Adding text to explain the context in which the term Ephemeral is > useful/advised. fwiw now that i am used to seeing ‘Ephemeral' as > non-permanent config across reboot, i’m adapted its intended purpose… > > Is the goal to explain the intended meaning in each draft/rfc mentioning it? > > Be well, > G/ > >> On 24 Mar 2016, at 18:02, Susan Hares <[email protected] >> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: >> >> Hi all: >> >> <wg chair hat on> >> The draft-ietf-i2rs-architecture document has been approved as an RFC. In >> the review, the OPS-DIR review indicated that “ephemeral” meant more than >> “does not survive a reboot”. They have asked the I2RS working group if >> replacing “ephemeral” with non-persistent (across power on/off or reboot >> cycles) would be a better choice. >> >> What do you think – leave at it at “ephemeral” or change to “non-persistent >> (across power on/off or reboot cycles) ? We will have a 1 week call on >> >> This would mean every place that “ephemeral” is listed, the authors would >> replace with “non-persistent”. In the first instance, we will indicate >> “non-persistent (across power on/off or reboot cycles). >> >> <wg chair hat off> >> >> As the author, I think we are better to define ephemeral at the beginning as >> “non-persistent (across power on /off or reboot). Changing the definition >> at this point, I suspect will simply confuse people. >> >> Sue Hares >> >> _______________________________________________ >> OPS-DIR mailing list >> [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> >> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ops-dir >> <https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ops-dir> > _______________________________________________ > OPS-DIR mailing list > [email protected] > https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ops-dir
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