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RE: [RRG] GSE?



 
Hi Mayutan, Robin,

	Isn't the Six-One proposal by Christian Vogt an enhancement of the
GSE. 
	http://www.watersprings.org/pub/id/draft-vogt-rrg-six-one-01.txt
	
	Correct me if I am wrong.

You are exactly correct.  I still encourage folks to read GSE independently,
just so you have some perspective on Christian's changes.

Also, some of the work that Ran Atkinson has done has been in part derived
from GSE.

		
		GSE seems to have been developed briefly around 1997.  I
understand
		that applying it to IPv6 as used today would involve major
changes
		in routers, host stacks and some or all applications.
		
		There may well be some major attractions in doing this, if
it could
		be done, but it sounds like a radical thing on which to bet
the
		future of the Net.


Welcome to the IRTF.  Our job is research.  No job too large, no change
unthinkable.

		
		Could you or someone else put together a proposal and link
to it
		from the RRG wiki?  An 8 page summary and analysis document
would be
		good too.


Others should feel free to step up here.  I'm trying to remain neutral.

		
		A crucial part of this would be the time-frame for
transitioning the
		current IPv6 system to whatever it is you are planning, and
then
		having a transition plan for most end-users from IPv4 to the
new system.
		
		I think it would also be good to explain why you would
prefer to do
		this in a hurry for IPv6 - due to whatever urgency you or
other
		people might think about the IPv4 scaling problem - rather
than
		fixing the IPv4 problem with a map-encap scheme and then
being able
		to take more time on whatever it is you propose for IPv6.


I'm not in a hurry to do anything.  There's no need.  I'd much rather Get It
Right.  Whatever we do here is forever.

		
		I haven't read enough to know how it provides multihoming
and
		portability (of the ESD part of the address) when changing
ISPs.


The ESD would be a constant when changing ISPs.  That's the whole point.
Identifiers are decoupled from locators.

		
		So how does the Routing Goop and STP get set when the packet
leaves
		the site for another?  Does a router change them or does the
sending
		host have to get it right.  Does there need to be a mapping
function
		and consequently a mapping database to determine what to set
these
		to, since the ESD is what uniquely identifies the
destination host?


Presumably set by a router when you exit the subnet and/or the site.  Yes,
there needs to be a mapping database to determine destination RG and ESD.
One might reasonably extend DNS to do this.  No mapping database is needed
in the site's local routers as they would presumably be configured with the
RG or learn it via some other management mechanism such as SNMP, DHCP, the
IGP, or your favorite NMS.

		
		What lead to the demise of GSE ten years ago?


I wasn't directly involved, but my read was that it was politics.  Because
it modified v6, it was unacceptable to those that felt that v6 was perfect.
We seem to be over that now...

Regards,
Tony


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