IAB workshop on the Next Era of Network Management Operations (NEMOPS)
An Internet Architecture Board Workshop

Webpage: https://datatracker.ietf.org/group/nemopsws/about/

## Introduction

The IAB organized a workshop in June 2002 to establish a dialog between 
network operators and protocol developers, and to guide IETF when 
working on network management protocols. The outcome of that workshop 
was documented in the "Overview of the 2002 IAB Network Management 
Workshop" [RFC3535] which identified 14 operator requirements for 
consideration in future network management protocol design and related 
data models, along with some recommendations for the IETF.

Those requirements were instrumental in developing first the NETCONF 
protocol (in the NETCONF Working Group) [RFC6241], the associated YANG 
data modeling language (in the NETMOD Working Group) [RFC7950], 
RESTCONF [RFC8040], and most recently CORECONF [I-D.ietf-core-comi].

It has been more than 20 years since that IAB workshop, and it is time 
to evaluate what has been achieved since the original workshop and what 
recommendations and requirements have changed or still need to be 
addressed. This new workshop aims to discuss the following key topics:

  • Review the outcomes and results of the 2002 workshop (current 
    deployments, state of the art) and identify any operational 
    barriers that prevent these technologies from being widely 
    implemented (limitations, hurdles).

  • Sketch new requirements for future network management operations in 
    a collaborative manner with the industry, network operators, and 
    protocol engineers.

  • Develop a plan of action and recommendations for the IETF.

## Review of the 2002 Workshop Outcomes

The first focus of the IAB NEMOPS workshop will be to assess the 
recommendations and requirements documented in RFC3535 in terms of 
specification completeness, deployment, and utilization. This workshop 
will also assess to what extent the RFC3535 recommendations were 
driving network management efforts within the IETF and influencing 
other Standards Development Organizations' (SDOs) activities.

Discussion topics will include, but are not limited to:

  • What do implementations and deployments look like today?

  • What issues did operators encounter during implementation?

  • What IETF network management standards are operators deploying 
    today?

  • How are existing IETF network management standards insufficient for 
    operators' needs?

  • What additional features or requirements do operators feel need to 
    be standardized (possibly by the IETF)?

  • What alternative (i.e., non-IETF) solutions are being deployed that 
    better fit operators' needs?

  • What recommendations and requirements from RFC3535 have received 
    little or no implementation or deployment?

## Laying a path for the future of Network Management

Since the 2002 IAB workshop, network topologies have become 
significantly more complex since the 2002 IAB workshop, as have both 
router and host technologies. Assuming this trend will continue, this 
workshop's ambition is to lay a new directional foundation for the 
continued future of network management protocols by gathering new input 
on what new issues network operators and network management 
implementers are facing.

Discussion topics will include, but are not limited to:

  • Tooling, open source, experimentation, proof of concept, multi-
    vendor interoperability test (e.g., EANTC), and system integration

  • Data consistency to support richer observability (Data & Knowledge)

  • Integration issues with the business layer

  • Automation, orchestration, and autonomy

Recommendations that may come out of this effort should be helpful to 
the standardization development organizations including the IETF and 
the IRTF, as well as the global industry's implementers, operational 
groups, and other entities.

## Out of scope topics

A workshop dedicated to management techniques related to encrypted 
networks [RFC9490] and another dedicated to the environmental impact of 
Internet applications and systems [RFC9547] have recently been held. 
These topics are, therefore, out of scope for this workshop. Topics 
that are clearly in the scope of NMRG in the IRTF for long-term 
research are also out of scope.

## Pre-Workshop Information Gathering & Outreach

In 2002, many network operators attended IETF meetings and participated 
in network management protocol discussions. Direct IETF participation 
from network operators has since decreased, with many operators 
focusing on conferences that are more central to their needs (RIPE, 
NANOG, APRICOT, AutoConn, etc.).

Under this effort, we expect some workshop participants to stimulate an 
outreach effort to attract opinions and interest by visiting these 
other venues and running information and requirement-gathering 
sessions. This series of outreach efforts will result in workshop 
position papers that will provide valuable summarized feedback to the 
online NEMOPS Workshop.

The mailing list nemops-inter...@iab.org will be used for outreach 
events at other conferences, general announcements, and related 
discussions before (and after) the workshop.

## Workshop

Interested participants in the workshop are invited to submit position 
papers on the workshop topics. There are no restrictions on the format. 
Participants can choose their preferred format, including Internet-
Drafts, text- or word-based documents, or papers formatted similarly to 
academic publication venues. Submission as PDF is preferred. Paper size 
is not limited, but brevity is encouraged. Interested participants who 
have published relevant academic papers may submit these as a position 
paper, optionally with a short abstract explaining their interest and 
the paper’s relevance to the workshop. The workshop itself will be 
focused on discussions based on the position paper topics received.

All inputs submitted and considered relevant will be published on the 
workshop website. The organizers will issue invitations based on the 
submissions received. Sessions will be organized according to content, 
and not every accepted submission or invited attendee will have an 
opportunity to present; the intent is to foster an active discussion 
and not simply to have a sequence of presentations. The workshop may 
also include breakout sessions. A workshop report covering all 
submissions and discussions will be published afterward.

The workshop will be by invitation only. Those wishing to attend should 
submit a position paper to address the above topics and questions. 
Position papers from those not planning to participate in the workshop 
themselves are also encouraged.

The online workshop would likely be three 2-3h sessions spread over the 
week based on submissions and the availability of the invited 
participants.

## Logistics

This workshop will be held online.

  • Initial submissions Due: 2024-10-16 AOE
  • Invitations Issued by: 2024-11-13
  • Workshop Dates : 2024-12-03, 2024-12-04, 2024-12-05
  • Workshop Times: 15:00-18:00 UTC
  • Program Committee: Wes Hardaker, Qin Wu, Suresh Krishnan, Benoît 
    Claise, Mohamed Boucadair, Mahesh Jethanandani, Dhruv Dhody, Kent 
    Watsen, Warren Kumari

Feel free to contact the Program Committee with any further questions: 
nemops-workshop...@iab.org.

_______________________________________________
OPSAWG mailing list -- opsawg@ietf.org
To unsubscribe send an email to opsawg-le...@ietf.org

Reply via email to