Close enough for me.
Joel

Tony Li wrote:

Hi all,

As the conversation has died down, I'm going to guess that we've converged. The consensus check can be found here: http://doodle.com/9sybb8dmk5phvp99

Please vote for or against these definitions:

locator    A locator is a name for a point of attachment within the
       topology at a given layer.  Objects that change their point
       of attachment(s) will need to change their associated
       locator(s).  By default, a locator refers to layer 3.  It
       is also possible to have locators at other layers.
       Locators may have other properties, such as their scope
       (local or global (default)) and their lifetime (ephemeral
       or permanent (default)).

identifier An identifier is the name of an object at a given layer;
       identifiers have no topological sensitivity, and do not
       have to change, even if the object changes its point(s) of
       attachment within the network topology.  Identifiers may
       have other properties, such as the scope of their
       uniqueness (local or global (default)), the probability of
       their uniqueness (statistical or absolute (default)), and
       their lifetime (ephemeral or permanent (default)).

address    An address is a name that is used as both an interface
       locator and an endpoint identifier.



Tony

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