Hi,

Seems like we have interests in post socket discussion. It does not really 
matter if post socket discussion helps milestone 2 or 3 or both. It is a good 
input for TASPs ( specially for an usable completion of milestone 3).

Hence we are requesting Brian to resubmit the post socket draft addressing TAPS 
wg.

BR

Zahed



From: Taps [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Michael Welzl
Sent: den 16 november 2016 11:10
To: Tommy Pauly <[email protected]>
Cc: Brian Trammell <[email protected]>; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Taps] draft-trammell-post-sockets

in line:

Sent from my iPhone

On 16 Nov 2016, at 19:07, Tommy Pauly 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi Michael,

I definitely agree that the current Post draft is not the fulfillment of the 
charter item 3. My point was that it is not necessarily out of scope, and the 
work it is looking into may very well be a necessary part of satisfying the 
charter.

agree,




I had read the second charter item as listing out the pieces of functionality 
that are required for TAPS to provide, rather than how these pieces should be 
exposed. Perhaps the API work is somewhere split between 2 and 3? I can 
certainly see it either way.

yes that's what i mean - it offers good inout to both in fact



Another point is that the Post draft is still in quite early stages. As 
discussed today, I'd like to write up the approach I presented today as a 
draft, and that could get folded into Post, since I think it requires a 
Post-style API in order to be used. I think there is a lot of detail yet to add 
about how to select and use protocols and paths and options internally to the 
connection implementation.

sounds good to me!  - note that there's also a draft on happy-eyeballing, not 
presented this time but still active

cheers
michael




Thanks!
Tommy

On Nov 16, 2016, at 6:25 PM, Michael Welzl 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Hi Tommy,

Being part of the discussions after the meeting, I completely agree. However, 
to me, saying X matches charter item Y is rather premature at this stage.

This draft presents a few services, which, as was discussed during the meeting,
1) overlap quite a lot with draft-mcquistin-taps-low-latency-services  (good!).
2) match very nicely to the services we already have in e.g. the minset draft  
(good!).
(with some small differences that we also discussed - one being message 
dependencies).


I see this draft as very good input but I’d like to do things one by one.
As you know I also agree with this statement of yours:

"I am concerned that if we do not aggressively and creatively try to minimize 
and unify the interfaces applications use for networking, we will end up with 
still more ossification of the stack”

so yes, this will definitely happen, but it’s clearly part of charter item 2, 
and here this (and the other) draft are great input!

However, while an API can be part of item 3, the relationship to item 3 all in 
all isn’t so clear: the draft does not really address much of what item 3 says. 
It doesn't explain much along the lines of selecting and engaging a protocol; 
it doesn’t explain how incremental deployment will work; it doesn’t explain how 
to discover which protocols are available for the selected service.

Again, I’m not saying an API (which is part of what this draft provides) is out 
of scope of item 3, but then item 3 should probably be approximately 3 drafts 
(I also have nothing against that  :)  but this is not my decision). It’s just 
that there’s a LOT still missing here, so let’s not jump the gun and do things 
step by step, as the charter also prescribes: "Work on this document will begin 
when the TAPS Transport Services have been specified."

Let me be clear, with “step by step” I’m by no means saying we should slow 
things down - and as I said before I see a lot of value in this draft!
My concern is just about mapping drafts to charter items.

Very useful input, yes; in scope of charter item 3: maybe, to some degree, but 
at this point more useful as input to item 2 IMO.

Cheers,
Michael


On Nov 16, 2016, at 4:12 PM, Tommy Pauly 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Based on the discussions we had with several folks after the meeting, the 
feeling was that the some of the Post Sockets API approach probably was in 
scope for the third item of the TAPS charter.

Here's that item for reference:

"3) Specify experimental support mechanisms to provide the Transport
Services identified in work item 2. This document will explain
how to select and engage an appropriate protocol and how to
discover which protocols are available for the selected service
between a given pair of end points. Further, it will provide a
basis for incremental deployment. Work on this document will
begin when the TAPS Transport Services have been specified."

Here's my take for why the post-sockets effort is in scope:

1. I believe that choosing the correct path/protocol stack for a connection, 
taking into account both client preferences and system policy, requires some 
API support beyond a socket. We need several things beyond traditional sockets. 
One is to allow for multipath and fast-open semantics, which can be shimmed 
onto sockets, but require significant changes that make them incompatible with 
traditional adopters. Another aspect is the point I brought up in my 
presentation today: we need support for multiple options that may be attempted 
and selected (between protocols, interfaces, and endpoints), and this more 
complex setup is not compatible with a single-five-tuple single-interface 
socket abstraction. These requirements seem important for "how to select and 
engage an appropriate protocol", which is in the charter.

2. The charter mentions that the third phase "will provide a basis for 
incremental deployment". If I try to imagine how we can allow new protocol 
development to provide functionality in a non-disruptive manner, it seems most 
tractable to (a) define an API layer that provides the minimal subset in a way 
that is compatible both with existing deployments and future goals; (b) move 
clients to adopt said API layer as a common abstraction; and (c) incrementally 
add more logic for protocol selection and modifications underneath this stable 
level. This is the approach we've taken in our deployments, and it has worked 
well for enabling new features. If Post Sockets is the correct expression of 
the minimal subset that can lift up the API and allow TAPS to add more smarts 
to the stack, it would seem we would have addressed the work item.

The work TAPS has done so far to catalog the protocol options we see in 
existing transports is (while tedious) very important, and I think leads to the 
conclusion that a carefully considered API is required to go forward. I am 
concerned that if we do not aggressively and creatively try to minimize and 
unify the interfaces applications use for networking, we will end up with still 
more ossification of the stack. Today, things are ossified around TCP when 
applications use sockets. If we simply add options for the features we think 
should be added for TAPS, we still end in ossification if it boils down to "all 
apps that use the API in a certain manner always get protocol A". I hope that 
with an architecture like Post Sockets, we can distill the essential patterns 
of communication between endpoints so far that they can indeed grow along with 
future network protocol innovations.

Thanks,
Tommy


On Nov 16, 2016, at 10:48 AM, Brian Trammell 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Hi, all,

Looking at where we are in the agenda, we're not going to get to talk about 
Post Sockets in the meeting in Seoul today. As most of the properties of the 
API are already being discussed during Colin's presentation, this isn't that 
big a deal. However, if anyone who has read draft-trammell-post-sockets would 
like to talk to us about it here in Seoul, please drop me a line.

To answer Zahed's question at the beginning of the meeting: we didn't call this 
draft-trammell-taps-post-sockets because it's not clear that it's really in 
scope for TAPS. It presents a radically changed replacement in the abstract for 
the sockets API. However, if the working group is interested in continuing to 
discuss it, we're happy to resubmit as draft-trammell-taps-post-sockets if it 
makes things easier to follow. :)

Cheers,

Brian

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