Hi Greg, all,

Having this discussion is by its own sufficient to justify why we need to amend 
rfc6291 with terms that reflect recent needs/usages in a manner that can be 
easily and generally visible to the target audience.

For example, Michael indicated that he wished he had a better name for "Virtual 
In-Band OAM" (I still don’t digest what does that mean actually). I also 
indicated that I wished I had terms for the following when I edited RFC 9451:

  *   β€œOAM packet that exclusively includes OAM data”
  *   β€œOAM packet that includes user data”

I think that we can leverage some definition entries in various documents out 
there (detnet, for example) when this makes sense. Some of the existing terms, 
although used in RFCs, fail to unambiguously convey the intended meaning. I 
don’t think it is problematic to acknowledge that fact and consider alternate 
terms.

Of course, this is a cross-WG effort and a pre-requisite I expect for it is 
that the authors commit in soliciting the feedback from relevant WGs.

I don’t think it is premature to consider adopting this work here in OPSAWG. As 
you know, the content is not frozen given that this is simply a call for 
adoption, not a Last Call.

Cheers,
Med

De : OPSAWG <opsawg-boun...@ietf.org> De la part de Greg Mirsky
EnvoyΓ© : mardi 16 avril 2024 10:11
Γ€ : Carlos Pignataro <cpign...@gmail.com>
Cc : OPSAWG <opsawg@ietf.org>
Objet : Re: [OPSAWG] πŸ”” WG Adoption Call for 
draft-pignataro-opsawg-oam-whaaat-question-mark-03

Dear Carlos,
thank you for making my point even clearer. I do believe that a term may have 
interpretation in different scopes - a document, a series of documents, or 
across all IETF documents. RFC 9551 established the interpretation of terms for 
all DetNet OAM documents. The document under discussion, 
draft-pignataro-opsawg-oam-whaaat-question-mark, as I understand its intention, 
is to establish the scope across all IETF documents. That, IMHO, imposes on the 
decision already made by the DetNet WG (and, AFAICS, shared by several other 
WGs). That is why I consider the WG AP premature and encourage the authors to 
reach out across the WG and Area boundaries to socialize the document more 
before taking any steps to progress it.

Regards,
Greg

On Tue, Apr 16, 2024 at 4:52β€―AM Carlos Pignataro 
<cpign...@gmail.com<mailto:cpign...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Greg,

Repeating something does not make it so…

You had argued that those were definitions only within the context of DetNet, 
and each context can have different ones. You really cannot have it both ways. 
This is confusing.

I-Ds follow causality β€” lots of things were approved to then be corrected.

In-band β€” out-of-band β€” what do they really mean when…

There is no β€œband”



C

Thumb typed by Carlos Pignataro.
Excuze typofraphicak errows


On Apr 15, 2024, at 09:03, Greg Mirsky 
<gregimir...@gmail.com<mailto:gregimir...@gmail.com>> wrote:
ο»Ώ
Hi Carlos,
I have to repeat that the definitions of terms "in-band OAM", "out-of-band 
OAM", and "on-path telemetry"
   In-band OAM:  an active OAM method that is in band within the
      monitored DetNet OAM domain when it traverses the same set of
      links and interfaces receiving the same QoS and Packet
      Replication, Elimination, and Ordering Functions (PREOF) treatment
      as the monitored DetNet flow.

   Out-of-band OAM:  an active OAM method whose path through the DetNet
      domain may not be topologically identical to the path of the
      monitored DetNet flow, its test packets may receive different QoS
      and/or PREOF treatment, or both.

   On-path telemetry:  on-path telemetry can be realized as a hybrid OAM
      method.  The origination of the telemetry information is
      inherently in band as packets in a DetNet flow are used as
      triggers.  Collection of the on-path telemetry information can be
      performed using in-band or out-of-band OAM methods.

have been adopted by DetNet WG, approved by IESG and published as part of RFC 
9551<https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/rfc9551/>. I believe that a constructive 
approach would be to use the already accepted terminology, not to attempt to 
negate what has already been achieved in building up the IETF dictionary, 
particularly in the OAM area.

Regards,
Greg

On Mon, Apr 15, 2024 at 2:00β€―PM Carlos Pignataro 
<cpign...@gmail.com<mailto:cpign...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Dear Greg,

Thank you for the input.

It appears that much of what you write below was already discussed at 
https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/opsawg/IVQzSSU_kvGgopCyCp-8oqK_xmg/

Am I to understand you might be keen on continuing using "in-band OAM" with 
different meanings depending on the WG or context?

Please find some follow-ups inline below:

On Sun, Apr 14, 2024 at 10:49β€―AM Greg Mirsky 
<gregimir...@gmail.com<mailto:gregimir...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Dear All,
I've read the latest version of the draft, Please find my notes and questions 
below:

  *   All SDOs that standardize methods and/or protocols in the field of OAM 
recognize that, in the FCAPS network management model, OAM is addressing the 
'F' and 'P', i.e., Fault Management and Performance Monitoring methods and 
protocols. Furthermore, OAM is understood as a collection of various methods 
and protocols, rather than a single protocol, method, or tool. Hence, it seems 
like the document must use the same more granular approach in characterizing 
this or that OAM mechanism, including the possible variance in the application 
of that mechanism.
CMP: This document intends to Update RFC 6291, a product of the IETF about OAM 
language usage, with support from its lead editor.

  *   I was under the impression that the discussion about the unfortunate 
choice of the original extended form of IOAM, "In-band OAM", has been put to 
rest with the agreement to extend it as "In-situ OAM". Why bring that 
discussion back? To revisit the decision of the IPPM WG? If so, then, as I 
imagine, that must be discussed in the IPPM WG.
CMP: Not really, as explained in the draft already, clearly. See 
https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/opsawg/jREEH1sFOZ-uxZNky-RTggpxkuk/

  *   "Within the IETF, the terms "in-band" and "out-of-band" cannot be 
reliably understood consistently and unambiguously." That is a very strong and 
powerful statement that, in my opinion, requires serious analysis. For example, 
a survey of the IETF community that undoubtedly demonstrates the existence of 
multiple confronting interpretations that cannot be resolved by a mere 
wordsmithing. Can the authors cite such a survey and its results?

CMP: The document already contains that analysis. It explains why those terms 
cannot be reliably understood consistently and unambiguously.

  *   And closely following that statement "the terms are not self-defining any 
more and cannot be understood by someone exposed to them for the first time" 
seems to break the very foundation of IETF TAO - learn, learn, and learn. I 
find the expectation of a first-comer to any IETF discussion to be able to 
fully master all the dictionary and terminology of that group to be, in my 
experience, a misguided. Through years, I've been suggesting anyone interested 
in joining and contributing to IETF work to first read (drafts, RFCs) and, most 
of all, the mail archive. Probably, I've been wasting their time..
CMP: I am not sure I follow what you mean here -- but, (1) 
https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-tenoever-tao-retirement-03.html (2) 
**There is no band**!!!!


  *   The following passage brings additional question:
The guidance in this document is to avoid the terms "*-band" and instead find 
finer-granularity descriptive terms. The definitions presented in this document 
are for use in all future IETF documents that refer to OAM, and the terms 
"in-band OAM" and "out-of-band OAM" are not to be used in future documents.

     *   Is such an overreaching scope of the OPSAWG WG in its charter?
CMP: That is a question for the chairs, but this document originating in opsawg 
will need to have ietf-wide review...

  *   I found a number of references to DetNet OAM that, regrettably, 
misinterpreted documents approved by DetNet WG and some already published as 
RFCs. I can only encourage an open communication between the proponents of this 
work and the DetNet WG rather than an attempt to force something foreign to the 
essence of Deterministic Networking and the application of OAM in DetNet.
  *   It appears that the term "Combined OAM", introduced in this document, 
allows for a combination of "Non-Path Congruent OAM" with "Equal-QoS-Treatment 
OAM". If that is the case, what do you see as the value of using such "combined 
OAM"?
  *   In my reading of Section 3 and references to RFC 7799, I find it getting 
close to benign misinterpretation of RFC 7799:

     *   Firstly, RFC 7799 appropriately discusses OAM methods and metrics, 
i.e., elements of OAM. Hence, because of, what seems like, a misunderstanding 
of how OAM is composed, the document dismisses RFC 7799 even though that is the 
fundamental document with 16 references by IETF documents and more by documents 
in other SDOs.
     *   In the definition of the "Compound OAM" it is suggested that a 
combination of Active and Hybrid OAM methods or of Passive and Hybrid OAM 
methods are distinct examples of Compound OAM. If that is the intention, how to 
reconcile that with the definition of a Hybrid OAM method in RFC 7799:
   Hybrid Methods are Methods of Measurement that use a combination of
   Active Methods and Passive Methods, to assess Active Metrics, Passive
   Metrics, or new metrics derived from the a priori knowledge and
   observations of the stream of interest.
It does appear, that unless this document updates or obsoletes RFC 7799, a 
combination of Active and Hybrid or Passive and Hybrid methods will still be a 
Hybrid OAM method. Actually, according to the following assesment:
[RFC7799] adds to the confusion by describing "passive methods" as "out of 
band". Following the guidelines of this document, OAM may be qualified 
according to the terms described in Sections 2 and 3 of this document, and the 
term "out of band OAM" is not to be used in future documents.
updating RFC 7799 is the intention of this document. Or am I missing something 
here?

CMP: All of these seem to have been already discussed.


As the conclusion. Although the document is well-written, I don't find it 
addressing a real problem, nor offering a viable, useful solution. Hence, I 
consider this WG AP utterly premature given that the proposal was not at all 
socialized outside OPSAWG group.

CMP: This is a WG Adoption, Greg...

I hope that the WG Chairs and Responcible AD will discuss the situation with 
the leadership of IPPM WG, as well as DetNet, MPLS, BFD, BESS, BIER WGs (to 
name some) that are actively developing, enhancing OAM methods and protocols 
and could be affected by this proposal.

CMP: Hopefully we catch all those mis-uses in time!!!

Carlos.


Regards,
Greg


On Wed, Apr 10, 2024 at 1:06β€―PM Henk Birkholz 
<henk.birkholz@ietf.contact<mailto:henk.birkholz@ietf.contact>> wrote:
Dear OPSAWG members,

this email starts a call for Working Group Adoption of

> https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-pignataro-opsawg-oam-whaaat-question-mark-03.html

ending on Thursday, May 2nd.

As a reminder, this I-D summarizes how the term "Operations,
Administration, and Maintenance" (OAM) is used currently & historically
in the IETF and intends to consolidate unambiguous and protocol agnostic
terminology for OAM. The summary includes descriptions of narrower
semantics introduced by added qualifications the term OAM and a list of
common capabilities that can be found in nodes processing OAM packets.

The chairs acknowledge a positive poll result at IETF119, but there has
not been much discussion on the list yet. We would like to gather
feedback from the WG if there is interest to further contribute and
review. As a potential enabler for discussions, this call will last
three weeks.

Please reply with your support and especially any substantive comments
you may have.


For the OPSAWG co-chairs,

Henk

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