Hi Jeff, Yingzhen,

If there is space on the IETF 114 agenda, I'd like to give an update on this 
draft. 

Thanks,
Acee - "Breaker of Chains"

On 6/30/22, 4:54 PM, "Acee Lindem (acee)" <[email protected]> wrote:

    Hi Yingzhen, Jeff, 
    We should be good for making this a WG draft now. 
    Thanks,
    Acee

    On 6/30/22, 4:52 PM, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> 
wrote:


        A new version of I-D, draft-addogra-rtgwg-vrrp-rfc5798bis-11.txt
        has been successfully submitted by Acee Lindem and posted to the
        IETF repository.

        Name:           draft-addogra-rtgwg-vrrp-rfc5798bis
        Revision:       11
        Title:          Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) Version 3 for 
IPv4 and IPv6
        Document date:  2022-06-30
        Group:          Individual Submission
        Pages:          38
        URL:            
https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-addogra-rtgwg-vrrp-rfc5798bis-11.txt
        Status:         
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-addogra-rtgwg-vrrp-rfc5798bis/
        Html:           
https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-addogra-rtgwg-vrrp-rfc5798bis-11.html
        Htmlized:       
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-addogra-rtgwg-vrrp-rfc5798bis
        Diff:           
https://www.ietf.org/rfcdiff?url2=draft-addogra-rtgwg-vrrp-rfc5798bis-11

        Abstract:
           This document defines the Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP)
           for IPv4 and IPv6.  It is version three (3) of the protocol, and it
           is based on VRRP (version 2) for IPv4 that is defined in RFC 3768 and
           in "Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol for IPv6".  VRRP specifies an
           election protocol that dynamically assigns responsibility for a
           virtual router to one of the VRRP routers on a LAN.  The VRRP router
           controlling the IPv4 or IPv6 address(es) associated with a virtual
           router is called the VRRP Active Router, and it forwards packets sent
           to these IPv4 or IPv6 addresses.  VRRP Active Routers are configured
           with virtual IPv4 or IPv6 addresses, and VRRP Backup Routers infer
           the address family of the virtual addresses being carried based on
           the transport protocol.  Within a VRRP router, the virtual routers in
           each of the IPv4 and IPv6 address families are a domain unto
           themselves and do not overlap.  The election process provides dynamic
           failover in the forwarding responsibility should the Active Router
           become unavailable.  For IPv4, the advantage gained from using VRRP
           is a higher-availability default path without requiring configuration
           of dynamic routing or router discovery protocols on every end-host.
           For IPv6, the advantage gained from using VRRP for IPv6 is a quicker
           switchover to Backup Routers than can be obtained with standard IPv6
           Neighbor Discovery mechanisms.

           The VRRP terminology has been updated conform to inclusive language
           guidelines for IETF technologies.  This document obsoletes VRRP
           Version 3 [RFC5798].




        The IETF Secretariat




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