Several people at the microphone at the GROW WG meeting in Toronto had 
suggested that we split 
the earlier document draft-sriram-route-leak-protection-00 into two parts:
 
(1) route leaks definition, and 

(2) route leaks solution proposal.

The first one is expected to be taken up in GROW, and 
the path for the second one was suggested to be IDR --> SIDR.
Accordingly, we have split our earlier single draft into two, with substantial 
revisions.
This (notification below) is the first of the two drafts that deals with route 
leaks definition. 
Your comments are welcome.

Since several people already expressed interest at the GROW meeting in Toronto 
(see meeting minutes), 

http://www.ietf.org/proceedings/90/minutes/minutes-90-grow
  
we would like to request the GROW chairs to post a request for WG adoption
of this problem definition draft. 
Also, I will be happy to present a brief update on this new version in 
Honolulu, 
if the GROW WG chairs can allocate some time in the agenda. 
Thank you.

Sriram
________________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, October 27, 2014 6:28 PM
To: Danny McPherson; Montgomery, Douglas; Eric Osterweil; Sriram, Kotikalapudi; 
Subject: New Version Notification for 
draft-sriram-route-leak-problem-definition-00.txt

A new version of I-D, draft-sriram-route-leak-problem-definition-00.txt
has been successfully submitted by Kotikalapudi Sriram and posted to the
IETF repository.

Name:           draft-sriram-route-leak-problem-definition
Revision:       00
Title:          Problem Definition and Classification of BGP Route Leaks
Document date:  2014-10-27
Group:          Individual Submission
Pages:          9
URL:            
http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-sriram-route-leak-problem-definition-00.txt
Status:         
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-sriram-route-leak-problem-definition/
Htmlized:       
http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-sriram-route-leak-problem-definition-00


Abstract:
   A systemic vulnerability of the Border Gateway Protocol routing
   system, known as 'route leaks', has received significant attention in
   recent years.  Frequent incidents that result in significant
   disruptions to Internet routing are labeled "route leaks", but to
   date we have lacked a common definition of the term.  In this
   document, we provide a working definition of route leaks, keeping in
   mind the real occurrences that have received significant attention.
   Further, we attempt to enumerate (though not exhaustively) different
   types of route leaks based on observed events on the Internet.  We
   aim to provide a taxonomy that covers several forms of route leaks
   that have been observed and are of concern to Internet user community
   as well as the network operator community.



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