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30th RIPE Meeting

Meeting Plenary Minutes

DRAFT

                                RIPE 30
                      Stockholm, 18 - 20 May 1998
                            Plenary Session 


   Chair: Rob Blokzijl
   Scribe: Mirjam Kuehne

 - 1. - Opening

      Rob Blokzijl opened the plenary session of the 30th RIPE meeting.

 - 2. - Adoption of the agenda

      The agenda was approved as advertised. These minutes follow the
      agenda.

 - 3. - Minutes RIPE 29

      The minutes of RIPE 29 were approved as they had been circulated before
      the meeting. No comments/additions.

 - 4. - From the chair 
      
      The Chair reported on the status of the investigation into setting up
      a new Regional Registry, in addition to RIPE NCC, ARIN and APNIC. The
      new registry should cover the Russian Federation and a number of
      neighbouring countries. See RIPE-167 for the details.

      The Chair repeated that the guiding principles as laid down in RIPE
      167 were:

	 + broad concensus in the communities concerned

	 + a reasonable geographical coverage (i.e. more than one country)

	 + an open process, involving the RIPE NCC community at large.

      The Chair concluded that none of these requirements have been met.
      Therefore, the creation of a 4th Regional IP Registry, as described in
      RIPE 167 is no longer foreseen.

      The historical special relationship between the RIPE NCC and RosNIIROS
      will be revisited.

 - 5. - Ed Kern: Multihoming with NATs 

      http://www.academ.com/nanog/feb1998/nat/index.html

 - 6. - Yakhov Rekther: IPv4  now, IPv6 when ready 

        Slides available here.

 - 7. - Randy Bush: BGP AS Origin Authentication with DNS 


        http://psg.com/~randy/980519.ripe/
        draft-bates-bgp4-nlri-orig-verif-00.txt

 - 8. - Bob Hinden: Ipng Overview and Status 

        http://playground.sun.com/ipng/presentations/IPv6-RIPE.ppt

      Questions:

        Sean Doran: Who decides who is a transit provider?
        Bob: the Regional Internet Registries
        DFK pointed out that the RIR's  don't know how to do this at the 
        moment. Bob: easier to determine who is not a transit ISP.

        Bob explained that it is very important that all assignments are
	publicly registered in a DB. And that the RIR's can ask the TLA
	holders for more information.

        The proposed procedure is very similar to the slow start procedure
	currently in place for Ipv4 allocations.  You initially only get a
	small piece. After 9 months the ISP has to prove that the address
	space has been used effectively. 90% Must be used before additional
	address space can be requested.

        Status: address format and specifications are almost draft standard.
        Work on the router specs is in progress. 
        There are many implementations being worked on for both, hosts and
	routers.  Even MS has released a prototype for Windows NT together
	with source code. 

        The Ipv6 backbone 6bone is deployed well.

        Deployment timetable ( Bob's perspective)
          1997-1998: product deployment continues, protocols refined based
	             on experiences
          1998-1999: Ipv6 appears in user systems as part of SW upgrades,
	             users try out Ipv6
          1999-2000: organisations start converting to Ipv6, translate to
	             Ipv4 at organisational boundaries

        More info:
          http://playground.sun.com/ipng/
          http://www.6bone.net/


 - 9. - Carl Malamud: The Internet Atlas 

      See also: http://not.invisible.net/talks/RIPE30/
      (Caution: the HTML was put together for a talk from local disk
       and makes agressive bandwidth assumptions. But, so does the Atlas. :)

      The Internet Atlas BOF consisted of a 80 minute presentation on
      cartography and the Internet by Carl Malamud, followed by 45
      minutes of general discussion on the topic.  The BOF looked
      at several hundred maps from the Internet and from sources
      as diverse as Marshall Island stick maps and ancient petroglyphs.
      A three-year strategy was outlined for construction of an Internet
      Atlas and a variety of short-term efforts were proposed.

      Questions:

         Frode Greisen: The net is changing so quickly, how can you map it?
         Carl: it is mainly expanding. But yes, it has a dynamic aspect, and
	       the maps will be on the net and be dynamically generated.


 - 10. - Reports from the RIPE WG's

      MBONE-WG
      --------
      Chair:     Thomas Telkamp replaced Kurt Kayser who couldn't make it to
                 this meeting
      Scribe:    Felix Kugler
      Attendees: 41

      The following items were discussed:

         - status EU MBONE 
         - DANTE migration to align with TEN-34
         - Pruning: start action to detect non-pruners

         - MPEG-LB audio coding (Martin Sieler)
	   -impressive quality at 64 kbps

         - AMSIX multicast experiments
	   -ongoing, separate VLAN now
	   -how to exchange multicast traffic?
	   -MBGP

      Routing-WG
      ----------
      Chair:     Joachim Schmitz
      Scribe:    Ambrose Magee
      Attendees: 74

      Topics:
         - RPSL implementation
           - Merit & RIPE NCC in phase II according to transition plan
	   - 'Progress Report on Transition to RPSL' by David Kessens
	   - Tutorial & Information at RIPE 31

         - Routing Registry Security
	   - PGP secured submission method (details to be worked on)
	   - Internet draft 'RPS security' (David Kessens reported)

         - Internet Routing Tools + Analysis

         - 'Interdomain Routing Statistic' by Craig Labovitz

         - BGP AS Origin Authentication with DNS

	 - Internet draft presented by Randy Bush 
           (draft-bates-bgp4-nlri-orig-verif-00.txt)

      ACTIONS:
         RIPE29.R1 on Gerald Winters, Joachim Schmitz and RIPE NCC to provide 
                   definition of Internet Routing Registry (IRR) and  AUP
         RIPE29.R3 on RIPE NCC (Joao Damas) to implement PGP in the RIPE DB
         RIPE30.R1 on the RIPE NCC (Joao Damas) to implement aut-num
	           authentication
         RIPE30.R2 on RIPE NCC, Joachim Schmitz and Wilfried Woeber to
	           organise RPSL tutorials for RIPE 31

      DB Security Task Force
      ----------------------
      Chair: Joachim Schmitz

      This is not a RIPE WG, just a small task force. It has been set up one
      year ago and has met several times. There has been good progress, a set
      of requirements were identified.

      Topics:
        - Implementation of PGP
          It has been decided not to copy Merits 'PGP-FROM' attribute. The
	  task force also does not want to copy the 'PGP-KEY' object from the
	  RPS authentication draft. They propose to specify a 'PGP-ID' object
	  along the lines of this draft.

        - The RPS security drafts have been discussed 
          (draft-ietf-rps-auth-01)
          (the rps-dist draft is currently being worked on, 
          not yet released)

      ACTIONS:
         RIPE30.DBSTF1: draft a specification for PGP implementation within
	                2 weeks
         RIPE30.DBSTF2: to give feedback to RPS security draft

      Next meetings are planned in conjunction with NANOG, IETF, RIPE

      DB-WG
      -----
      Chair:     Wilfried Woeber
      Scribe:    Eamonn McGuinness
      Attendees: 61

      Reports on:
         - RIPE DB general update and status
         - RIPE DB consistency efforts
         - RPSL capable whoisd
         - RPSL transition of Merit and RIPE NCC to phase II of transition plan

      Please read rps-dist and rps-auth drafts: 
      - draft-ietf-rps-auth-01
      - (the rps-dist draft is currently being worked on, 
         not yet released)

      There was a proposal from SURFnet to allow to be referenced in admin-c 
      attributes. No consensus was found (please see actions and please give
      input).

      ACTIONS:
      R30.DB1 on Ronald van der Pol to summarise their proposal to allow role 
              objects in admin-c attributes
      R30.DB2 on the RIPE NCC to clearly document the use of contact
              information in the RIPE dB
      R30.DB3 on David Kessens to circulate proposal about DNS style tagging 
              of nic-hdl's
      R30.DB4 on Ambrose Magee to publish URL for consistency report on the
              DB-WG mailing list for a sneak preview before it will be
	      published to a broader community

      PGP-* authentication proposal: send to DB, Routing and LIR-WG mailing
      lists. See if consensus can be reached and have the proposal implemented
      by RIPE31 in alpha version to be commented on by community.


      DNS-WG
      ------
      Chair: Ruediger Volk

      Randy Bush reported from the IETF on interoperability  tasks (notify, 
      dynamic updates). WG gave recommendations and suggestions on the 
      draft from Hans Niklassen. Ruediger mentioned that there were a few new
      versions of BIND.

      TLD-WG & RIPE CENTR 
      -------------------
      Chair: Marcel Schneider replaced Niall O'Reilly who couldn't attend this 
             meeting
      Scribe: Vittore Casarosa

      Minutes from last WG meeting were not available yet; this will be
      discussed at next meeting.

      Fay Howard gave a report on the RIPE CENTR activities.

      Marcel Schneider made a proposal on a new whois distribution:
      He feels that the data in the domain registries must be protected more
      than other sets of data (inetnum routing). When the data is misused the
      domain registry is usually not concerned; the owner of the data is the
      one who should take necessary steps. AUP or contracts are needed for use
      of domain related data.These contracts should be given to all parties
      that get the data, so that they all know the AUP.

      Marcel suggested three possible options to proceed:
         - CENTR to set up a draft contract (CENTR had unfortunately no time
	   yet to discuss this.)
         - RIPE NCC to provide the data from the RIPE DB
         - do some further study first, the contracts need to be set up in the 
           individual registries, some of them had to remove entire set of
	   data they are responsible from the RIPE DB to prevent misuse

      Comments and Questions:

      Randy Bush articulated his concerns. The proposal sounds like making
      selling and misusing the data official. What is now misuse will then be
      officially be given to third parties. The data should be private, should
      not be given to search engines etc.

      There seems to be some misunderstanding about what data is actually
      concerned, because various sets of data are stored in the RIPE DB and
      other types of archives at the RIPE NCC. Daniel Karrenberg clarified
      that all data sent to the RIPE NCC in relation with IP address space or
      AS number requests (addressing plans etc.) are totally confidential and
      will not be published on any public database. Only data registered in
      the RIPE database, which is a publicly available DB, is public!

      Ipv6-WG
      -------
      Chair:     Thomas Trede
      Scribe:    Gert Doering
      Attendees: 43

      Minutes  from last meeting are still missing.

      Reports: 
        - David Kessens reported on the 6bone registry deployment
        - Bob Hinden gave a summary of the status of the IETF Ipng-WG and
	  the Ipv6 specifications. He also summarised the 'allocation-rules'
	  draft (see presentation in plenary session)
        - no further input from the audience on new manufacturers
	  implementations (see list of current implementations in Bob Hindens
	  presentation)

      Mirjam Kuene reported on the current point of view from the RIPE NCC on
      the Ipv6 developments. The RIPE NCC has not received any questions or
      requirements from the membership for Ipv6 address space. The RIPE NCC
      is also in close contact about the allocation rules with the other
      regional registries, IANA and the authors of the draft. 

      No input from other WG's was received. 

      EOF Tutorial
      ------------
      Chair: (Peter Lothberg)

      Henk Smit from Cisco Europe gave a full-day tutorial about ISIS. The
      audience was very satisfied with getting some in-depth view on  the
      protocol. The EOF-WG wants to continue, mainly by giving more technical
      seminars and tutorials in conjunction with the RIPE Meeting.

      Input on the form and content is welcome

      LIR-WG 
      ------
      Chair:     Mike Norris
      Scribe:    Pepa Tejedor
      Attenders: 100

      RIPE NCC
        - growth (more than 6 Million hosts in  European hostcount)
        - staffing (new internal structure at RIPE NCC, Paula Caslav now
	  manager of Registration Services, Mirjam Kuehne head of external
	  services)
        - workload (1-2 days response time)
        - training (2 LIR courses per month, more courses planned, professional 
          trainer will be hired)
        - plans (one hostmaster staff will be dedicated to inaddr and DNS
	  issues)

      ARIN
        - structure staff (Executive Board with 7 members, Advisory Board
	  with 15 members, new staff members)
        - migrating DB (from Ingres to Oracle)
        - 340 clients

      APNIC
        - structure, staff
        - migrating DB
        - ticketing system
        - will take over inaddr service (has been done by Telstra so far)

      Address Space allocations
        - large LIRs experience problems with current policy (/16 maximum
          allocation, 90% usage before next allocation) wrt. to internal
	  route aggregation
        - options: allocate more than a /16, revise 90% usage rule, take
	  growth rate of LIRs into account?
        - proposal for RIPE31

      Consistency & Auditing (Paula Caslav, see presentation in WG)
        - ripe-170
        - audit samples (10% didn't respond - keep in mind that LIRs
	  with little contact where audited first)
        - results (will be published)
        - problems & solutions (new and old LIR have a completely different
	  set of problems, training and education activity will be stepped up)

      Ipv6 Allocations
        - docs close soon
        - preliminary rules for allocation

      Registry Hierarchy
        - consequence of classless assignment (make classless assignments and 
          aggregate inetnum objects if possible)
        - Sub-LIR's
        - normal chain of accountability

      Future
        - new chair
        - review tasks (proposal has been sent to LIR-WG mailing list)
        - statistics (hosts/domain ration much lower than a few years ago


      ANTI-SPAM-BoF 
      Chair: John Martin
      -------------

      - No formal meeting took place
      - A new charter was presented to form a new WG
      - not so much technical issues, because they are been taken care off 
        somewhere else
      - work items:
          - code of conduct to which ISP's might agree
          - set up a Center for European Network Abuse Resolution (CENAR)
          - RIPE NCC might be involved in providing admin services, not
	    clear yet
      - James Aldridge was proposed as chairman

      The WG was approved with these two work items and the chairmanship of 
      James Aldridge.

      http://www.staff.EU.net/jhma/anti-spam/charter.html


      Netnews-WG
      ----------
      Chair:     Felix Kugler
      Scribe:    John Crain
      Attendees: 33

      1. Review of actions:

         A27.N1 Tool support for News servers - ongoing
         A29.N1 Update charter on WG WWW server - done
         A29.N2 Update Newsbone document and related WWW pages - open
         A29.N3 group sync: information about maintainers and
                reference servers - moved to A30.N5
         A29.N4 group sync: collect data and edit info page - moved to A30.N5
         A29.N5 "News admins guide" - dead

      2. Newsbone status report

	 Web page presented with News servers offering online monitoring. Seven
	 of the servers are fully compliant with Newsbone. 

      3. Overview of monitoring tools

         5 types of news server software observed on backbone. A table was
         presented showing known monitoring/statistical tools. inflow and
         diablo-stats now have "surf-support". Volunteers for work on inflow:

         A30.N1 Felix Kugler to update inflow package with funcionality to
	        limit output to a subset of feeds
         A30.N2 Kai Siering to update inflow package with outflow-plot script

      4. News flowmaps

         Kai Siering is now working on this project. Current software to
         collect data is resource-intensive and needs a rewrite. Consensus that
         using "inpaths"-data from Freenix would be most favourable. Results
	 will be presented as flowmaps with underlying geographical maps in
	 GIF format.
         Missing server coordinates are a big problem. LOC-records in DNS are
         the ideal solution, but not widely deployed currently. 

         A30.N3 Kai Siering to proceed with work on collect software and
                processing of flowmaps
         A30.N4 Felix Kugler to work on the coordinate problem

      5. Group list maintenance

         Gerhard Winkler presented his prototype script. Lack of distinction
         between moderated/unmoderated groups which is considered very
         important. Synchronization should be based on checkgroup-type group
         lists wherever possible. Better contacts to people maintaining
         fundamental Usenet resources are urgently needed. 

         A30.N5 Jonas Luster to improve prototype and to care for better access
                to Usenet resources. 

      6. QOS improvements

         A 1'000'000 byte article size limit on the backbone was accepted. 
         No consensus on a proposed limit to 10 crossposts on the backbone. 

         A30.N6 Felix Kugler to study effects of various crosspost limits

      7. Jonas Luster gave an ad-hoc summary about the forthcoming Usenet
         format draft, the so-called "RFC 1036 grandson".

 -11.- Report from the RIPE NCC (Daniel Karrenberg)

       For the presentation slides, see:
       http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-30/pres/nccrep/

       Questions:

          Q: Are you planning to publish the results of the auditing on a
	     public web site?
          A: Yes, but only the statistics, not results of particular audits

          Q: (Mike Norris) Do we check if domain names registered in the RIPE
	     DB actually exist?
          A: Daniel answered that we are seeing the TLD administrators sending
	     their data to the RIPE DB. Therefore we assume the domains
	     exist.

          Q: (Christian Panigl) Is the TT project aware of the ToS (type of
	     services) discussion or any ways of trying to be not honest with
	     the data? 
          A: We addressed the possible cheating. There are various ways to 
             prevent this (one way would do to put a test traffic box at the
	     customer site to double check).

 - 12. - Next Meetings: 

       RIPE 31: September 23-25 1998, Edinburgh
       RIPE 32: January 27-29 1999, Amsterdam
       RIPE 33: May 26-28 1999, TBA

       Two offers to host a RIPE Meeting: one in Faro, Portugal and one in
       Berlin, Germany.

 - 13. -  A.O.B.

       More than 240 people registered for this meeting.
       We all thank KTH for their hospitality and especially Lars-Johan Liman
       and his colleagues for providing these excellent facilities!!!!

 - 14. Close



 

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