Re: last call comments for draft-ietf-6man-stable-privacy-addresses-06

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Further to that, ifindexes of tunnels and PPP sessions can change dynamically as the bearer connection goes up and down, even if the interface has the same name and authenticated identity.  That raises the interesting question of whether even the interface name is stable, as on many systems it is pure chance if the same name-identity mapping repeats itself.

If you want a stable address, you want to use something that actually has the exact stability properties you require, and interface indexes and names are seldom what you actually need.

Andrew


On Thu, Apr 25, 2013 at 7:00 PM, t.p. <daedulus@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
----- Original Message -----
From: "Christian Huitema" <huitema@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: "Fernando Gont" <fgont@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>; "SM" <sm@xxxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: "RJ Atkinson" <rja.lists@xxxxxxxxx>; <ietf@xxxxxxxx>
Sent: Tuesday, April 23, 2013 6:02 PM

<snip>

Instead, the draft goes into great details on how to actually implement
the random number generator. Apart from not being necessary, some of
these details are wrong. For example, the suggested algorithm includes
an "interface index," but different operating systems have different
ways of enumerating interfaces, and the variations in enumeration could
end up violating the "stable address" property.

<tp>

The ifIndex, as it appears in the IF-MIB is not stable; it can change
on each and every re-boot of a system, depending on the order in which
modules are loaded.  It remains the same only until the next re-boot. I
do not know what impact this has on the ipi6_ifindex as used in the
IPv6 API, whether that in turn is unstable.

(This is a property of the IF-MIB and is a reason why the YANG
equivalent
has used a name to index the interface table and not the index value,
which may give the users of the YANG module, also currently in Last
Call, an interesting migration problem).

So if you want a stable address, perhaps you should not use the
interface index.

Tom Petch

</tp>
I would suggest reworking the draft to separate a normative section,
effectively a variation of the 3 lines paragraph above, and an
informational section, the current specification of the algorithm as
"an example of a way to achieve this result if the operating system
meets certain condition, like stable interface identifiers."

I would also explain the inherent issues that have to be solved, e.g.,
swapping interfaces, or enabling multi-homed hosts. And I would observe
that the DAD problem cannot be solved ina  reliable way.

-- Christian Huitema






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