Hi Thomas,
> Sri Gundavelli <[email protected]> writes: > > > Couple of comments on Section 9.0 (Mobility): > > draft-ietf-6man-node-req-bis-05 > > > 1.) When Mobile IPv6 was designed, one important feature that made > > into the protocol is the support for Route Optimization. The > > ability for a mobile node to provide the information on the direct > > (non-anchor or non-triangular) path to a Correspondent Node. This > > was not possible in Mobile IPv4, as any change requirement to IPv4 > > did not make much sense. > > Actually, this explanation is not consistent with history. RO was not > added to MIP4 because there was no customer for the work. MIP has been > implemented and deployed in IPv4. But those using it had no need for > and didn't seem to have a business case for RO. There was an ID for RO > for MIP4 at one time, but the WG abandoned the draft when it became > clear no one had interest in actually deploying it. > > I think this point is very much worth noting. We can jump up and down > all day and say some feature is really cool and beneficial, but what > really matters is whether someone will actually deploy and use it, > based on the value they see. > > Also, deploying MIP is much more complicated than deploying other IPv6 > protocol features. You need an HA and associated AAA > infrastucture. This is just for base MIP, without even getting to RO. > > To date, I am not aware of any plans to deploy MIPv6. Sure, one can > argue that we have to get IPv6 deployed first, and then folk will use > MIPv6 as well, but I think that is also simplistic thinking. I believe > deploying and using MIPv6 (and the RO functionality specifically) is > still something we lack significant experience with. > > > This is one feature of Mobile IPv6 that stands out. > > Yes. But only for those who think MIPv6 is something they want to > use. > > I think the IPv4 experience with MIPv4 suggests that there are target > scenarios where MIP technology is quite useful, but at the same time, > there is no broad general need for MIP. The vast majority of the > Internet seems to be doing Just Fine without using MIP. I disagree with this. Maybe not MIPv6 itself but mobility protocols make up an important part of mobile phone technologies and they are heavily used. > > > The semantics of RO, say Type-II RH, is part of the basic IPv6 > > feature. Most IPv6 stacks have support for these options and in most > > cases the RO procedure as well. Given this, It is very important > > that the IPv6 Correspondent Node functionality is mandated on every > > IPv6 node. However, the Home Agent functionality on IPv6 routers, or > > the Mobile Node stack on a IPv6 node, can be optional, that is > > fine. But, its important that the end-points has natural RO support. > > I'm strongly opposed to mandating CN support for RO on general purpose > nodes (clients and servers) until: > > a) we have significant experience with the technology showing that it > works in practice (i.e, in significant operational deployments), and > > b) there is a more realistic sense that the technology would actually > get used, if it were available. > > MIP appears to (possibly) be a "nice to have" feature. But it is not a > critical part of IPv6. It is not the job of the IETF to broadly > mandate functionality that is not clearly necessary. Again, I disagree. Right now IPv6 itself does not look that attractive to the operators because there is no business case for it. IETF has developed sophisticated mobility protocols like MIPv6 that IETF should promote as part of promoting IPv6 saying that only with IPv6 you get all that is offered by MIPv6 including RO. I saw some slides online to this effect and applaud such efforts. As Raj said you can use techniques like dynamic HA allocation to reduce the need for RO in managed networks but in other cases RO is good to mandate, IMHO. Regards, Behcet -------------------------------------------------------------------- IETF IPv6 working group mailing list [email protected] Administrative Requests: https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ipv6 --------------------------------------------------------------------
