W dniu 26.01.2017 o 07:45, Jouni
Korhonen pisze:
Hi Jouni,Reviewer: Jouni Korhonen Review result: Not Ready Disclaimer: I have not followed recent DHC discussions to the extent that the existence this document was new to me. Issues: My issues with the document are the following. First, it actually updates a great deal of RFC3315 (Section 21.1) while there is RFC3315bis in progress. Why the DHCPv6 part of this document is not directly contributed to RFC3315bis work? There's even author overlap so there must be a good reason. Second, if there is a reason to keep the content of this document separate from RFC3315 body of work, at least this specification should then target to update RFC3315bis and not RFC3315. First of all, thanks for doing the review. I will leave it up to the authors to provide further details on this, but with my shepherd hat on, let me explain that this omission was made on purpose. The decision was made to not update 3315 and not bundle this into 3315bis on purpose. If we did that, then every DHCP server would HAVE to support IPSec. This would make implementation, certification and deployment much more complex and this is something we wanted to avoid. With the current approach, operators can be specific whether they need relay server security (by requiring their vendors to support both 3315 and this document) or not (just 3315). This is also explained in the write-up: (16) Will publication of this document change the status of any existing RFCs? Are those RFCs listed on the title page header, listed in the abstract, and discussed in the introduction? If the RFCs are not listed in the Abstract and Introduction, explain why, and point to the part of the document where the relationship of this document to the other RFCs is discussed. If this information is not in the document, explain why the WG considers it unnecessary. No. Even though this I-D introduces changes to RFC3315, the WG doesn't want to enforce IPsec encryption on every DHCPv6 server. Therefore it does not update RFC3315. Also, I'd like to clarify that 3315bis is not a wildcard that bundles every RFC related to DHCPv6 ever published. This document is 133 pages long and that size causes difficulties moving the work forward. We're thinking what are the things we can take out of it, rather what else we could add. The previous argument still stands here. We want to have the core spec and an additional RFC that people can point to when they require secure server-relay communication. If that explanation is not acceptable for you, how do you propose to structure the text and possibly add updates 2131/3315 to achieve the goal or being a non-mandatory feature? I'll let the authors comment on the nits. Again, thanks for the review. It's good to receive one that shakes things up a bit once in a while :) Tomek Other smaller nits: o This document updates both RFC3315(bis) and RFC1542. Those are not reflected in the document title page and abstract. o I would separate the new recommendation text for DHCPv4 and DHCPv6 into their own respective section. Having just a one-liner statement "also applies to DHCPv4 [RFC1542].." is kind of confusing in a middle of very DHCPv6 specific text. I recon the DHCPv4 section would be short, but definitely more clear in that way. o Although it should be obvious, but I would explicitly point it out in the Security Considerations that the security model here is hop-by-hop. If there are multiple relays then there will be multiple IPsec tunnels as well. o Section 14: s/section 14,/Section 14, o
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