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North American Network Operators Group Date Prev | Date Next | Date Index | Thread Index | Author Index | Historical Re: Open Standards vs IOPS etc
At 6:34 -0500 1/18/98, Sean Donelan wrote: >There are currently several different organizations working on various >measurement and performance 'standards' for the Internet and IP-related >networks. > >IETF has created a couple of working groups working on benchmarking >and metrics. > >IOPS says they plan to be a point of contact for developing various >industry-wide technical procedures. > >ATIS/T1 (an ANSI standards organization) is developing two vital Internet >performance standards and three technical reports. Actually, a fair bit was done in ANSI already. I was a member of a different ANSI committee, X3, had a digital communications performance working group, X3S35, which produced two standards, X3.102 User-oriented data communications performance parameters X3.141 Measurement methods for the above (basically statistical techniques) The architecture in these standards was the basis of CCITT X.140, and the CCITT X.130-139 parameter family for circuit-switched and packet-switched performance. In turn, these fed into the ANSI T1 committee cited by Sean; the focus of this committee was telecommunications rather than data network. Most of these working groups, and a late 1970s effort on the Federal Telecommunications Standards Committee (FED-STD-1033) that preceded them, were chaired by Neal Seitz of the NTIA. > >ANX, The Automotive Network Exchange, has documented several requirements >including metrics for service quality. > >Bellcore has some Internet related work in their new GR standards. > >And, of course while it doesn't develop anything formal, NANOG has >occasional presentations from various other industry organizations. > >Most of the above have said in their press releases they are working >with other standards bodies, but it isn't very clear how much inter- >organizational communications actual occurs. > >And I suspect there are a few more I don't know about. It would be >nice if this work could be consolidated into one place. I, for one, >don't have the time or the money to even attempt active involvement >in half these groups. > > >>>Since you suggest IOPS as a body to track this issue, what do people think >>>about IOPS as a pseudo-standards group. This also came up at the December >>>IETF when Curtis suggested that draft-berkowitz-multirqmt document would >>>not be necessary since IOPS had a draft on the same subject. The IDR WG >>>seemed very sceptical of having a small closed body fill that role. How do >>>people see IOPS meshing with NANOG and the operational side of IETF? >>> >> >>I have a little bit of a problem when people refer to IOPS as a >>"standards organization." A "standards" body needs to be open. >> >>Is IOPS an open group? No. >> >>Can anyone in the Internet community participate? No, they have to >>be a member of the collective, and pay a membership fee ranging from >>between US$9500 to US$25000. >> >>IOPS is free to define all of the operations guides that they desire, >>but it can't really be referred to as a "standards organization" since >>it is a private club. :-/ >-- >Sean Donelan, Data Research Associates, Inc, St. Louis, MO > Affiliation given for identification not representation
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