Hi Haoyu,

Thanks. Per what I said below, neither do I understand what the document tries 
to solve nor do I understand the scope of the document.
The document introduces specific functions like iFIT nodes and iFIT 
applications but does not specify those. Fengwei Qin described that those 
indeed refer to a specific proprietary solution (i.e. 
draft-cheng-mpls-inband-pm-encapsulation): Is it this one 
https://www.huawei.com/en/press-events/news/2019/6/first-ifit-pilot-5g-transport-network-beijing-unicom-huawei?

Thanks, Frank

From: Haoyu Song <haoyu.s...@futurewei.com>
Sent: Freitag, 25. Oktober 2019 20:25
To: Frank Brockners (fbrockne) <fbroc...@cisco.com>; Joe Clarke (jclarke) 
<jcla...@cisco.com>
Cc: opsawg@ietf.org; opsawg-cha...@ietf.org
Subject: RE: Call for Adoption "draft-song-opsawg-ifit-framework"

Hi Frank,

The document specifically lists some issues and challenges when deploying the 
data plane on path telemetry techniques. Do you have any question on them and 
do you think anything is missing?
Also, I don’t agree that we have a very specific implementation in mind. 
Actually, we just discuss a very loose framework about it but we think a 
reasonable application would somehow follow such an architecture from high 
level. Do you find any unrealistic part or too specific part about this 
framework? Do think any specific topic should also be discussed in this draft?
We appreciate any feedbacks at this level of details which will help us 
substantially.
Thanks for pointing out some terms that we haven’t clearly defined. We’ll fix 
that in the next revision.

Best,
Haoyu

From: Frank Brockners (fbrockne) <fbroc...@cisco.com<mailto:fbroc...@cisco.com>>
Sent: Thursday, October 24, 2019 9:42 AM
To: Haoyu Song <haoyu.s...@futurewei.com<mailto:haoyu.s...@futurewei.com>>; Joe 
Clarke (jclarke) <jcla...@cisco.com<mailto:jcla...@cisco.com>>
Cc: opsawg@ietf.org<mailto:opsawg@ietf.org>; 
opsawg-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:opsawg-cha...@ietf.org>
Subject: RE: Call for Adoption "draft-song-opsawg-ifit-framework"

Just took a read through the document as well – and I can echo Joe’s comments.
The scope of the document is not clear, nor does one understand what problem 
iFIT would address and solve.
That said, the document seems to have a very specific implementation in mind, 
as it refers to specific things such “iFIT Applications”, “iFIT Nodes”, etc. – 
but none of things are defined in the document.

Cheers, Frank

From: OPSAWG <opsawg-boun...@ietf.org<mailto:opsawg-boun...@ietf.org>> On 
Behalf Of Haoyu Song
Sent: Mittwoch, 23. Oktober 2019 11:43
To: Joe Clarke (jclarke) <jcla...@cisco.com<mailto:jcla...@cisco.com>>
Cc: opsawg@ietf.org<mailto:opsawg@ietf.org>; 
opsawg-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:opsawg-cha...@ietf.org>
Subject: Re: [OPSAWG] Call for Adoption "draft-song-opsawg-ifit-framework"

Hi Joe,

Thank you for the detailed comments!

Let me try to explain the purpose of this draft better. Given the recent 
on-path data plane telemetry techniques and standard works, in this draft we 
discuss the deployment challenges and potential opportunities for applications. 
There is no such a document in IETF AFAIK and we feel it’s needed (also 
confirmed by some network operators who are interested in such techniques)

Most related standard proposals so far only defines the data plane protocol and 
lack considerations for a complete solution. To this end, we discuss various 
points that a solution should pay attention to and how these can be composed to 
support applications. Along with the discussion, we provide some examples and 
use cases to trigger new ideas.

We deliberately make iFIT an open framework and avoid introducing any new 
protocol and enforcing any specific approaches, because otherwise we are in 
danger to put unnecessary constraints on implementation approaches and hurt the 
possibility of innovation. While we mean to keep this document informational, 
we may consider to add more discussions on reference designs, operational 
experiences,  and best practices as you suggested.

Some points you raised below also deserves more detailed explanation, such as 
how to make an iFIT closed loop and how architecture and algorithm components 
can be composed to form such a loop. Perhaps a complete example can help to 
explain that. I’ll consider all this in future revisions.

In a sense, this document indeed aims to discuss the implementation, 
operational experiences, and best practices  of PBT, IOAM, and other similar 
techniques. We hope this document will trigger new drafts on management 
plane/control plane and innovative solutions.

Best regards,
Haoyu


From: Joe Clarke (jclarke) <jcla...@cisco.com<mailto:jcla...@cisco.com>>
Sent: Tuesday, October 22, 2019 3:48 PM
To: Haoyu Song <haoyu.s...@futurewei.com<mailto:haoyu.s...@futurewei.com>>
Cc: opsawg-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:opsawg-cha...@ietf.org>; 
opsawg@ietf.org<mailto:opsawg@ietf.org>
Subject: Re: Call for Adoption "draft-song-opsawg-ifit-framework"

The comments below are from me as an individual contributor.

I have read the latest revision of this document.  I still do not have a clear 
idea of what it is solving, TBH.  It doesn’t define a new protocol, yet it 
makes claims about an architecture that implies a protocol between devices, a 
controller, and applications (see the figure in section 2).  In Section 3.2, 
iFIT is referenced as having an ability to cache or send accumulated data.  I 
don’t see how a framework can do this.  Nor do I see how a framework can 
dynamically load new data probes as mentioned in Section 3.3.  If this were a 
controller with an application architecture and specifications for component 
interoperability, perhaps, but I do not see that in this document.

In Section4, the document mentions a closed-loop for iFIT applications whereby 
applications can manage iFIT closed loops on top of a controller.  But again, I 
don’t see how.  Do the applications make API calls?  What calls do they make?  
What makes it an “iFIT closed loop”?

Ultimately, the summary says that iFIT combines algorithmic and architectural 
schemes into the framework, but I don’t see where that is done in a specific, 
implementable way (e.g., in Section 3.1.2 you begin to describe how you can 
adaptively sample packets, but you talk about abstract signals to/from the 
controller).  Nor do I see how one would implement iFIT.  When I read the iFIT 
draft, I feel like I’m missing a normative chunk that explains how the various 
pieces of this framework are to interact in a well-specified manner.

It seems to me that perhaps a more useful document is one that focus on the 
implementation of PBT and/or IOAM, operational experiences, best practices, etc.

Joe

On Oct 21, 2019, at 14:34, Haoyu Song 
<haoyu.s...@futurewei.com<mailto:haoyu.s...@futurewei.com>> wrote:

Dear OPSAWG chairs,

The following draft has been extensively discussed and gone through six 
revisions. Network operators confirmed it is useful.
We believe the draft is mature enough to be adopted by the WG therefore we 
request the chairs to initiate the adoption call for this draft.
Thank you very much for the consideration!

https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-song-opsawg-ifit-framework/<https://nam03.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fdatatracker.ietf.org%2Fdoc%2Fdraft-song-opsawg-ifit-framework%2F&data=02%7C01%7Chaoyu.song%40futurewei.com%7Cecdbd9f104324ec1b15708d758a11229%7C0fee8ff2a3b240189c753a1d5591fedc%7C1%7C0%7C637075321128476200&sdata=VCAh2aHIscuFb9Jxsg5UF53zAs7OUZxXuS5I6bvzKzg%3D&reserved=0>

Best regards,
Haoyu

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