ENUM BoF Minutes from RIPE 48
| RIPE Meeting: |
48 |
| BoF: |
ENUM |
| Status: |
Final |
| Revision Number: |
1 |
Jim Reid started the session with the administrative matters that need to
be carried out to propose that the BoF be converted to a Working Group.
A charter was approved
http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-48/presentations/ripe48-enum-agenda.pdf
Kim Davies and Patrik Fältström were approved as chair and
co-chair
This will now be taken to the Plenary, where the transition must be endorsed.
RIPE NCC Update
Carsten Schiefner
RIPE NCC is running the Tier 0 Registry, the ENUM "root" zone
e164.arpa. There are six name servers, the primary located in Amsterdam.
There have been requests for 41 country codes, 4 non-geographical codes
and one unspecified code. 25 have been approved, 20 rejected, 1 pending
- awaiting ITU response. Since the last meeting there has been only one
request for non-geographical code for a mobile operator in Antarctica.
Interaction with the ITU is stable, previous issues having been resolved.
The ENUM RFC has been recently updated and published. The new RFC is
3761. The webpages will reflect that shortly.
Axel Pawlik has already announced at the NCC Services WG that RIPE NCC
plans to employ DNSMON for TLDs and to extend this service for the Tier-1
ENUM zones. We will publish more details as they follow.
Finally we have found some confusion regarding what is a country code
and what is not, this issue has been picked up and will be addressed.
Quinn Collier of BT asked whether RIPE NCC has numbers for how many
queries per second we are receiving? Carsten did not have this, but would
endeavour to supply this for the next session.
IETF ENUM News
Patrik Fältström.
RFC 3761 has been published. It was approved in December but was not
published until last Friday. The WG is now working on a couple of documents,
some are already published and some are close to last call. We are also
working on the RFC 3761 which is a how to use ENUM document, as we have
already found some problems which need to be ironed out. We will write
a HOWTO doc and then integrate it into the RFC.
Update from ETSI Plugtest
Patrick Guillemin from ETSI
http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-48/presentations/ripe48-enum-etsi.pdf
Jim Reid asked whether the outcome of the workshop, would be openly
published as an ETSI Document. Patrick said that it would be made available
to all the participants and any other interested parties. For privacy
reasons, parts of the report may need to be re-written to preserve anonymity.
Cost optimisation for Enterprise
ENUM
Andrzej Bartosiewicz
http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-48/presentations/ripe48-enum-cost-optimisation.pdf
Carsten Schiefner asked how often the optimisation DB is updated. Andrzej
said that he felt it was currently about once a month. His colleague is
working on the algorithm for the optimisation so currently it isn't completely
clear how often this should happen in the future. Jim Reid suggested that
we could use this as a first work item for the new ENUM WG and could help
with developing this. (Action on working group).
Update from USA
Scott Markus - US FCC - not speaking in an official capacity
In US Law we have no specific act that relates to ENUM. It depends on
what aspect of ENUM you are looking at to find a related Law. The FCC
is very pleased with the work RIPE and NCC have done for this.
Country code +1 is not a single country, it is 23 entities. The numbering
plan is the responsibility of the FCC, who has been trying to develop
a consensus between the code +1 participants. Trying to get a delegation
for the code +1 requires the agreement of all countries.
Daniel Karrenberg asked which countries were involved. Scott said it
included many different nations such as the US, Canada, Guam, Puerto Rica,
Jamaica, and other Caribbean countries.
Some of these entities don't have a numbering authority of their own
and pool resources. It is not so much a problem of consensus but getting
all the entities on the same page is hard. One possibility considered
is to delegate the portions of the country code +1 if a consensus cannot
be reached.
The FCC established an ENUM Forum to work on standards and deployment
factors for the US. A letter has been signed by all the appropriate parties
supporting the notion of involving a private corporation that would do
all the work. A Canadian entity has offered to operate the code +1. As
long as it is someone
who can do this on a fair and impartial basis and is technically competent
those involved would be happy.
Jim Reid asked about DNSSec and the issue of signing. Assuming DNSSec
is deployed in ENUM what would happen with the key for code +1? Scott
announced that his talk in the Plenary would address some of this, as
right now the effects are hard to pre-judge.
Mark McFadden enquired about the trials that have been carried out in
the US and whether there was government support. Scott indicated that
there was, though the time-consuming challenge is sorting out the various
administrative and legal affairs that need to be completed when involving
government agencies.
UK ENUM News
Tony Holmes BT
http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-48/presentations/ripe48-enum-uk.pdf
Patrik Fältström asked what interim measures would be put in
place, he said that he is getting complaints and is unsure how to answer
them. In Sweden it was decided to be able to immediately give out numbers.
Tony answered that he felt the UK government would not allow this.
Patrik pointed out that in Sweden there is effective number portability,
allowing users to switch to telephone companies that do support ENUM.
Tony answered that in the UK there is a different way of dealing with
number portability. As for how this would work with ENUM, Tony answered
that it has been accepted that
there cannot be barriers put up by telephone companies to stop use of
ENUM. This problem has been a key focus. Several methods of authentication
have been tried, some are secure, come are not.
Patrik said that in Sweden, it has been stated that you must be a Telco
to register a number in ENUM. If the Telco does not participate the user
has to use number portability. Tony emphasised that there are different
methods of authentication. ETSI had a workshop looking at this to point
out pros and cons of each. Maybe this is something that we could have
collaboration between this WG and ETSI and that could help.
Scott Markus commented that to him it seemed that getting a telephone
number registered in a third party registry does not necessarily require
portability. Tony said that some of the thinking that went into the work
in the UK was regarding authentication. It would not be acceptable to
allow a roadblock whereby a user who wants to use ENUM cannot.
Carsten Schiefner asked whether other trials have been examined to see
how they have dealt with authentication. Tony replied that this was the
reason why the ETSI Workshop was of interest as there are so many options
it is difficult to sort out the good and the bad.
Commercialising ENUM & VoIP
Paul Kane Inone
http://www.ripe.net/ripe/meetings/ripe-48/presentations/ripe48-enum-voip.pdf
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