Magnus,

 

I sincerely appreciate your interest and this note!

 

> I don't quite understand why you are requesting a status change of ICE

 

However the arguments stated by the WG co-chairs and by you here are
procedural in nature, whereas the facts are some cause for serious
concern, and I will just mention a few facts:

 

RFC 3489 (STUN) was also presented as a NAT traversal solution back in
2003, but <draft-ietf-behave-rfc3489bis-07> now clearly admits that
"STUN is not a NAT traversal solution by itself. Rather, it is a tool to
be used in the context of a NAT traversal solution. This is an important
change from the previous version of this specification (RFC 3489), which
presented STUN as a complete solution."

http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-behave-rfc3489bis-07.txt

My guess is, in plain English, RFC 3489 turned out just NOT to be an
acceptable solution as it was hoped to be. 

 

The excellent I-D <draft-ietf-sipping-nat-scenarios-07> shows the ICE
call flow with two endpoints behind two NAT (Fig. 22 on page 38) require
66 messages just for the SIP INVITE!

http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-sipping-nat-scenarios-07.
txt 

What happens if the two endpoints are in different ISPs that have NAT of
their own in addition to the ones in Fig. 22?

What happens if one would try ICE along a P2PSIP route with say 5-8
hops? Would there be hundreds of messages? What is the likelihood for
failure?

 

By contrast with such approaches based on hope and faith, the BEHAVE WG
has produced work based on real measurements and tools to do the
measurements, such as

 

"NAT Classification Test Results"

 

"Application Design Guidelines for Traversal through Network Address
Translators" 

The measurements for hole punching are reported in

"Peer-to-Peer Communication Across Network Address Translators" 

http://www.brynosaurus.com/pub/net/p2pnat/

 

I am also a believer in ICE and have actually urged Jonathan Rosenberg
to do this work and he has given his best. Now that we have ICE-17
version, it is in the best interest of the industry and the IETF to make
it an experimental RFC, but not yet a standard so that:

 1. Independent, compliant implementations will be developed,

 2. Testing in events such as SIPit,

 3. Reporting the results, such as reported for the "hole punching"
above.

 

What happens if indeed hole punching proves to be the far more effective
approach?

 

The industry can ill afford a new series of RFC[ICE]-bis and all the
years it takes to move from believing to measuring and proving. I am
sure IETF procedures were meant in this spirit (though I am not good in
producing the right quotes).

 

Thanks again for your attention to this concern about ICE. 

Also my apology to all the anguish to the numerous contributors to the
ICE related I-Ds, but writing test tools and reporting measurements is
the right way to go.

 

Henry

 

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Magnus Westerlund [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Wednesday, July 18, 2007 1:11 AM
To: Henry Sinnreich
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [email protected]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [BEHAVE] Re: ICE deployment data before LC for RFC

 

Henry Sinnreich skrev:

> Following some discussions and soul searching, the best approach for

> ICE-17 for LC would be to _go ahead and make it an experimental RFC_.

> 

> This would support the development of interoperable implementations,
the

> collection of deployment data and also hopefully open source code.

> 

> Though I have full faith in ICE, following the practices that made the

> IETF successful take precedent here, I believe.

> 

> This is a change from the attached that I wrote on 7/16/2007.

> 

> Note: We can only hope the proliferation of SBC in VoIP service
provider

> networks will not make these concerns and ICE for SIP a moot issue,
but

> this is another topic.

 

Henry,

 

I don't quite understand why you are requesting a status change of ICE? 

To me it appears that ICE is almost finished spec. It has been 

implemented, used and feedback has been influencing the protocol. It is 

definitly one of the better examples of current IETF work that actually 

has running code. Sure, the implementations may not be fully updated yet


to the latest draft version. But I think it is safe to say that ICE 

works in the intended core cases. If there are some corner cases where 

it fails, that may be. But that is not information we will have until 

really large scale deployement or someone makes very extensive tests.

 

I think the IETF and the Internet has much more benefit from a standards


track solution than any of the risks existing with ICE of today.

 

And to be clear, proposed standard is allowed to be published without a 

single implementation exists. It might not be good practice, but it is 

allowed by our process. And as I said before ICE has had enough 

implementation that I am very confortable in balloting YES for it when 

it appears on the IESGs table.

 

Cheers

 

Magnus Westerlund

 

IETF Transport Area Director & TSVWG Chair

----------------------------------------------------------------------

Multimedia Technologies, Ericsson Research EAB/TVM/M

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