This is really not helpful, Fernando, and goes some way toward explaining why communication isn’t happening.
What I reacted to in Brian’s message is that he asked a really simple question that could be readily answered with a pointer to the text in the document where the answer is given. Since the response was instead to explain in email, that tells me that the spec is incomplete. Separately, Brian mentioned that there is an issue with RFC8200 that would require an update, that discussions had occurred around this, but then the work never happened. It’s reasonable to raise an objection to proceeding with work that depends on other work that hasn’t been done. What I objected to in Maojianwei’s comment is the notion that the document should pass last call to support the industry. No, the working group should do the work to address the objections that have been raised. If you find yourself explaining some concept that’s mentioned in the document using text that is not in the document and not in another document referenced by the document, the fix is not to just publish anyway, because it supports the industry. The fix is to update the document. A dozen or so +1s should not be taken seriously if the work has not been done and nobody wants to do it. > On Feb 27, 2020, at 6:11 AM, Fernando Gont <ferna...@gont.com.ar> wrote: > > On 27/2/20 07:27, Ted Lemon wrote: >> The IETF serves users, not “industry”. The IETF does not promote. Our job >> is to make the internet work interoperably. Brian has raised an objection >> that could be answered, but has not been. It is inappropriate to say that >> this document has passed last call. >> In my experience, when it is hard to get consensus in situations like this >> it is because there is a wish to not address a concern that has been raised, >> not because the concern could not be addressed or should not have been >> raised. It may feel unreasonable, and like an imposition, but it is not. It >> is part of the process. >> Rather than trying to steamroll over the objection, why not simply answer it? > > As a service to the community, let me explain: > > Essentially, and for some reason, they seem to be meaning to circumvent specs > and processes. > > One of their last inventions has been to pretend that IPv6 allows EH > insertion/deletion en-route, based on their reading of RFC8200. Based on a > curious interpretation of the text, they claim that each waypoint > (intermmediate router that received the packet because its address was set as > de Destination Address) can insert/remove EHs, and they claim that that's not > a violation of RFC8200. > > However, the PSP behavour doesn't even fit in that fictional interpretation > of RFC8200. > > What PSP does is that, given: > > ---- B ----- C > > > routers, when B realizes, after processing the SRH and setting the Dest Addr > to the last segment, SegmentsLeft==0, it removes the SRH. > > This case is not even covered by their fictional interpretation of RFC8200. > > Hence the question is avoided, u<because thye would have no option than > admiting they are violating RFC8200..unless... who knows... there might be > yet another curious interpretation of the spec that allows it. > > > It should eb evident here that the strategy is not really to follow IETF > process, gain consensus, formally update specs if/where needed, but rather > push whatever they publish, at whatever cost, ignoring the issues raised in > this wg, and circumventing IETF process. > > The fact that this behavior is allowed seems to be unfair with participants, > and a dis-service to the group. > > Thanks, > -- > Fernando Gont > e-mail: ferna...@gont.com.ar || fg...@si6networks.com > PGP Fingerprint: 7809 84F5 322E 45C7 F1C9 3945 96EE A9EF D076 FFF1 > > > _______________________________________________ spring mailing list spring@ietf.org https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/spring