Speaking as WG member:

For many of the new LSR WG documents, we are already included both OSPF and 
IS-IS encodings in a single document. Now, we have agreed that documents 
requiring simple BGP-LS changes will also include the BGP-LS encoding. Given 
this, I don't want to add another requirement for publication of a WG document. 
This would also add additional reviews to the document. You've all heard the 
expression "divide and conquer", while let me introduce the corollary, 
"consolidate and stagnate". 

Additionally, I agree with Yingzhen's comment that it is not clear that we want 
a separate YANG module for every OSPF/IS-IS feature. 

Thanks,
Acee

On 3/29/19, 4:33 AM, "Lsr on behalf of [email protected]" <[email protected] 
on behalf of [email protected]> wrote:

    
    Chris,
    
    One concern is simply one of scale: doing this will increase the size of 
the document.  At what point do things become sufficiently awkward that we want 
to have a separate, concurrent document.
    
    In other words, if the requirement is for concurrent delivery, is 
co-location really a requirement?
    
    Regards,
    Tony
    
    
    > On Mar 29, 2019, at 9:17 AM, Christian Hopps <[email protected]> wrote:
    > 
    > 
    > The base YANG modules for IS-IS and OSPF both include operational state 
to describe TLV data. During the discussion about OSPFv3's version of this 
data, I brought up the issue of when and how the base modules should be 
augmented to add new TLV types to the model, suggesting it be done inline and 
with the RFC that adds the new feature/functionality to the protocol.
    > 
    > I'll go farther here and say this should apply to all the YANG required 
for management of the new feature, and it should all be added inline with the 
feature (i.e., in the same draft). In other words new features/functionality 
should include the YANG augment required to manage said features/functionality.
    > 
    > This has been suggested/tried previously with SNMP with varying (low) 
levels of success. The difference here is 1) YANG additions (a new module 
perhaps just augmenting the base) is easy, whereas SNMP wasn't. Additionally, 
operators weren't using SNMP to fully manage functionality (e.g., not doing 
configuration) so a requirement for extra work was harder to justify. Operators 
*do* want to fully manage their networks/servers with YANG though.
    > 
    > The argument against this during the meeting was that it would create 
many small modules. I don't find this compelling (i.e., "so"? :)
    > 
    > Assume I'm an operator -- the actual consumer of this management stuff:
    > 
    > - If I'm going to use this new feature X, I need to be able to manage it. 
So I need it YANG for it. Not only do I need any new TLV data in the 
operational state, but I need the configuration and any other operational state 
right along with it. Otherwise each vendor has to add new YANG to their vendor 
modules, or the feature is useless to me. I can't use something if I can't turn 
it on.
    > 
    > - I don't care about having many smaller modules that augment the base 
module -- at all. Quite the opposite actually, when new functionality is 
accompanied by it's own module it provides me a simple way to see if that 
functionality is present as the module will be present in the YANG capabilities 
announced by the device.
    > 
    > I'd be interested in hearing reasons we (as a WG) shouldn't just expect a 
YANG module (even if it's small) to be included with drafts that add new 
functionality.
    > 
    > Thanks,
    > Chris.
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