[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
New rev of WG document following WGLC (draft-ietf-ipdvb-ar-05.txt)
The Editors of the WG draft draft-ietf-ipdvb-ar have now completed the
corrections that resulted from the WGLC and a new I-D will shortly be
issued. A summary of the changes is provided below. The I-D will then be
sent to the IESG with a request to publish as an Informational RFC.
best wishes,
Gorry and Marie-Jose.
---
WG-05 (following WGLC)
* Fixed security issues noted by George Gross.
* Added text on Mobility, topology changes with AR cache.
* To be consistent with RFC4326, NPA = ULA address indicated by the
D-bit, whereas MAC means IEEE-style address. I've reworked the text
to make this clearer. Also made all "NPA/MAC" into "MAC/NPA".
* Added notes on AR caches when used in mobile/ST topology changes.
* Also note a mistake to section (iii) which was confusing about L2
multicast addresses, this now reads:
" (iii) IP and other protocols may view sets of L3 multicast
addresses as link-local. This may produce unexpected results
if frames with the corresponding multicast L2 addresses are
distributed to systems in a different L3 network or
multicast scope (see sections 3.2 and 5.6)"
* Section 2, Added:
MAC Address: A 6 byte link layer address of the format described by
the Ethernet IEEE 802 standard (see also NPA).
* Section 3, Revised bullet into two points:
A scalable architecture that may support large numbers of systems
within the MPEG-2 network [RFC4259].
A method for transmission of AR information from an AR Server to
clients that minimise the transmission cost (link local multicast,
is preferable to subnet broadcast).
* Section 3, changed "context" to "scope".
* Section 4.3. Revised wording on T Stream v. TS Logical Channel.
* Section 5.4. 2nd para, added (mapping the IP address to the L2
address)
* Added:
The default parameters specified in RFC 2461 for the ND protocol can
introduce interoperability problems (e.g. a failure to resolve when
the link RTT exceed 3 seconds) and performance degradation
(duplicate ND messages with a link RTT > 1 second) when used in
networks were the link RTT is significantly larger than experienced
by Ethernet LANs. Tuning of the protocol parameters (e.g.
RTR_SOLICITATION_INTERVAL) is therefore recommended when using
network links with appreciable delay (Section 6.3.2 of [RFC2461]).
---