Hi all,

In general, I believe that distinguishing between different terms for "service 
model" is useful.

Actually, I would suggest to align the terminology in 
draft-ietf-l3sm-l3vpn-service-model accordingly, e.g., by using the term 
"Customer Service Model" in the L3SM WG. For instance, the title of 
draft-ietf-l3sm-l3vpn-service-model-12 "YANG Data Model for L3VPN service 
delivery" is quite inconsistent with the use of the term "service delivery" in 
draft-wu-opsawg-service-model-explained. It would be good to avoid confusion.

Despite the discussion in 
https://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/opsawg/current/msg04486.html, the draft 
still contains the wording "all of the parameters". I continue to believe that 
a wording such as "the parameters" would be more consistent with the rest of 
the document talking about operator-specific augmentations etc.

The document, in particular in Section 6.1, could better distinguish between 
the terms "module" and "model", if an alignment with 
draft-ietf-netmod-yang-model-classification is the objective. One example where 
the terminology is not entirely consistent is the sentence "add an additional 
example of a Network Service YANG model as shown in Figure 4". That figure 
actually shows modules.

Apparently Section 6.4 refers to MEF 55. I wonder why the specification MEF 55 
is not referenced. Also, I believe the terminology in Section 6.4 may have to 
be reviewed. For instance, MEF apparently uses the term reference points 
("Management Interface Reference Point") instead of "interface" in MEF 55. 

Editorial nit: s/to/two/ in "The service model may divided into to categories"

Michael


-----Original Message-----
From: netmod [mailto:netmod-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Adrian Farrel
Sent: Wednesday, September 07, 2016 11:44 AM
To: ops...@ietf.org
Cc: draft-wu-opsawg-service-model-explai...@ietf.org; netmod@ietf.org
Subject: [netmod] New revision of draft-wu-opsawg-service-model-explained

Hi,

[Copying NETMOD, but suggest all discussions are held on OPSAWG list]

We updated our document to (hopefully) make some stuff clearer...

- We are not trying to piss on draft-ietf-netmod-yang-model-classification!
   Actually, that is an important reference, but its approach is slightly 
   different. We have beefed up our discussion of the relationship with that
   draft. Our belief is that the two drafts are complementary and that our
   work should not delay the completion of the NETMOD draft.

- The distinction between a "service model" and a "service model" (sic) has
   become unclear. We have introduced the terms "customer service model"
   and "service delivery model", explained what these are, and shown mappings
   of other work to these terms. We would propose, if these terms are clear 
   and acceptable, that new work adopt these terms, but we do not suggest
   that it is necessary to go and change existing mature work.

- There was some discussion around "what do you mean by a service?" We
   have tried to tidy our text about this, but could probably use help.

As always, comments, rotten fruit, and constructive input would be welcome.

Cheers,
Adrian (for the authors)
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> A New Internet-Draft is available from the on-line Internet-Drafts
directories.
> 
>         Title           : Service Models Explained
> 
> Abstract:
>    The IETF has produced a considerable number of data models in the
>    YANG modelling language.  The majority of these are used to model
>    devices and they allow access for configuration and to read
>    operational status.
> 
>    A small number of YANG models are used to model services (for
>    example, the Layer Three Virtual Private Network Service Model
>    produced by the L3SM working group).
> 
>    This document briefly sets out the scope of and purpose of an IETF
>    service model, and it shows where a service model might fit into a
>    Software Defined Networking architecture or deployment.
> 
> The IETF datatracker status page for this draft is:
> https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-wu-opsawg-service-model-explained/

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