Hi Folks, We need to get this resolved. If you have an opinion on this, please speak up. If I don't hear anything about this then I will assume that "0 responses" = "0 interest" and we'll ask Rainer to keep the mapping as part of syslog-protocol.
Thanks, Chris On Tue, 3 Feb 2004, Rainer Gerhards wrote: > Hi WG, > > I had a recent off-list discussion regarding transport mappings. This > discussion targeted the quite important point what transport mappings > are good for - and wether or not -protocol should contain an UDP > transport mapping. > > My position is that -protocol should NOT contain any transport mapping > and that there should be a short RFC outlining how -protocol is to be > mapped on UDP transport. Just as it is done in RFC3080 and 3081 for > BEEP. I would like to do this, because this will make crystal-clear that > -protocol is transport ignorant. This is the comment I received (poster > requested to remain anonymous): > > > I'm a bit doubtful about doing that > > as it would > > allow people to do syslog-protocol/tcp, or > > syslog-protocol/sctp, etc. In > > one sense, I'd prefer to not open that opportunity as various > > factions may > > start doing things their own way which would not promote > > interoperability. > > Perhaps one company would choose to implement > > syslog-protocol/soap while > > another implements syslog-protocol/http. If we do this, I'll probably > > insist that syslog-protocol/udp be a REQUIRED implementation > > and others > > are OPTIONAL. > > I think this is an very important comment in regard to the overall > design. I think it is of advantage to facilitate the creation of other > transport mappings, as for example is currently being discussed for SNMP > inform messages. I agree that it makes it easy to "abuse" -protocol to > create non-standard transport mappings. > > On the other hand, those doing this would most probably do it anyhow, > just not only with their own transport but with their own message > format, too. I think even if a vendor goes ahead and creates > syslog-protocol/tcp, this is advantagous over him creating just a plain > TCP implementation with a different message format. And as a reminder, > this is current state of the art, there ARE many syslog/raw tcp > implementations in the wild. So the lack of a standard way to do it > obviously did not stop the implementation. I think it is an advantage if > such non-standard implementations at least abide to the same message > format. > > I would deeply appreciate all feedback from the WG on this important > topic. > > Rainer > > >