A new IETF working group has been formed in the Operations and Management Area. For additional information, please contact the Area Directors or the WG Chairs. Control and Provisioning of Wireless Access Points (capwap) ----------------------------------------------------------- Current Status: Active Working Group Chairs: Mahalingam Mani <mmani@avaya.com> Dorothy Gellert <dorothy.gellert@nokia.com> Operations and Management Area Director(s): Bert Wijnen <bwijnen@lucent.com> David Kessens <david.kessens@nokia.com> Operations and Management Area Advisor: Bert Wijnen <bwijnen@lucent.com> IEEE Liaison to IETF: Dorothy Stanley (dstanley@agere.com) Technical Advisor: Bob O'Hara (bohara@airespace.com) Mailing Lists: General Discussion: capwap@frascone.com. To Subscribe: http://mail.frascone.com/mailman/listinfo/capwap Archive: http://mail.frascone.com/pipermail/capwap/ Description: As the size and complexity of IEEE 802.11 wireless networks has increased, problems in the deployment, management, and usability of these networks have become evident. Access points (APs) typically require complex management at the IP level. As the number of APs increases, the number of devices requiring complex management increases, in some cases, doubling the number of IP devices requiring management in a provider's network. In addition, because APs have no visibility beyond their own cell, a variety of problems ensue in large scale 802.11 networks. Load balancing between APs, dead cell detection, and correlating patterns of usage between APs to detect attacks are difficult to impossible. Finally, because each AP acts as its own Network Access Server (NAS), a network provider is faced with the prospect of moving from a situation where the NAS is a few machines with dialup access in a machine room to a situation where hundreds or perhaps thousands of devices scattered across a wide geographic area have NAS functionality. Maintaining security on such a wide collection of devices is a difficult challenge. In recent attempts to solve these problems, various vendors have introduced products that redistribute the functionality of 802.11 APs in various ways. However, because the 802.11 access network functional architecture is incompletely specified, the network interfaces between network entities in different vendors' products are defined in incompatible ways. As a result, the protocols between the network entities in different products are not interoperable. Charter: As a first step, the CAPWAP Working Group will develop a problem statement and network architecture taxonomy describing the current set of approaches to providing more support for scalable 802.11 access networks. The problem statement will describe, at a high level, what the deployment, management, and usability concerns are with 802.11 networks based on the traditional autonomous AP architecture, and will link those concerns to specific technical aspects of the autonomous AP architecture. The network architecture taxonomy will: - Describe the current set of approaches (including the traditional autonomous AP architecture) to partitioning 802.11 access network functionality between network entities, - List what the interfaces between the network entities are in each approach, - At a functional level, describe what the protocols on the interfaces between the network entites in each approach do, - Describe the advantages and disadvantages of each approach for scalable 802.11 access network deployment and management. Additionally, the architecture document will contain a threat analysis that describes the security threats involved in each network architectural approach. Specific Working Group deliverables are: - A problem statement document, - A network architecture taxonomy document including threat analysis. Specific non-goals of this work are: - Any work requiring revising the 802.11 access network functional architecture The network architecture taxonomy document, when stable, will be discussed with IEEE 802 in order to validate and synchronize this work with the work in IEEE 802. This may result in merging the work with IEEE 802 documentation in which case it may not need to be published as an RFC. Such decision will be made in co-operation with IEEE. The CAPWAP WG will maintain a close working liaison with relevant working groups in IEEE 802.11 and IEEE 802.1. Working Group documents will be sent to an expert review board for review prior to submission to the IESG. In order to facilitate quick completion of this work, the Working Group charter will expire 6 months after it is approved by the IESG, at which time the Working Group can either petition the IESG for a continuation or recharter for further work on the interoperability problem. Goals and Milestones: Feb 2004: Last call for problem statement draft. Mar 2004: Discuss last call comments for problem statement at IETF 59. Mar 2004: Last Call for architecture description document. Apr 2004: Submit problem statement to IESG for publication approval. May 2004: Architecture document to expert review. Jun 2004: Stable Architecture document for review/sync-up with IEEE 802 Jul 2004: Discuss results of IEEE 802 review/sync-up Aug 2004: Close WG or Re-charter