SORT BY:

LIST ORDER
THREAD
AUTHOR
SUBJECT


SEARCH

IPS HOME


    [Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

    RE: Whether iFCP and FCIP have being approved by IETF??



    > Hi,
    >   I know that iSCSI has been aproved not long ago.
    >   But Whether iFCP and FCIP have being approved by IETF??
    >   if not,when will the two protocol will be approved?
    >   thanks.
    
    Yes, several months ago ...
    
    From:	The IESG [iesg-secretary@ietf.org]
    Sent:	Monday, January 20, 2003 1:16 PM
    Cc:	RFC Editor; Internet Architecture Board; ips@ece.cmu.edu
    Subject:	Protocol Action: FC Frame Encapsulation to Proposed Standard
    
    
    
     The IESG has approved publication of the following Internet-Drafts as
     Proposed Standards:
    
    
       o FC Frame Encapsulation <draft-ietf-ips-fcencapsulation-08.txt>
    
       o Fibre Channel Over TCP/IP (FCIP) <draft-ietf-ips-fcovertcpip-12.txt> 
    
       o iFCP - A Protocol for Internet Fibre Channel Storage Networking
           <draft-ietf-ips-ifcp-13.txt>
    
    
     This document is the product of the IP Storage Working Group.
     The IESG contact persons are Scott Bradner and Allison Mankin.
       
     Technical Summary
    
    The Fibre Channel (CC) frame encapsulation document specifies the 
    common format and a procedure for the measurement and calculation of 
    frame transit time through the IP network. This specification is used
    by the other two protocols (and any others in future).
    
    The Fibre Channel over TCP/IP (FCIP) 
    
    The iFCP specification document specifies the 
    encapsulation of frames among FC storage area networks (SANs) through 
    gateways that are interconnected with TCP/IP networks. 
    
    
    Two significant steps were taken by with Fibre Channel technology with
    these protocols: adoption of TCP transport between the devices and
    clients (or gateways in the case of iFCP), and adoption of strong 
    security threat models and mandatory to implement encryption and 
    integrity. The TCP usage provides congestion avoidance, which is needed 
    since the "bus" is a network and congestion and usage are less 
    predictable than they were in the pre-IP-storage technology.
    
    The security threat models and requirements are provided in these 
    drafts as the primary, but with more detail in the document Securing 
    Block Storage Protocol over IP (a misnomer, since TCP is the transport, 
    of course :). A detailed configuration of required usage for IPsec and
    IKE is described, along with motivation.
       
     Working Group Summary
    
    There was strong Working Group Consensus for these documents, and
    they had strong consensus from the industry, community and IETF Last 
    Calls
       
       
     Protocol Quality
       
    These documents were reviewed for the IESG by Elizabeth Rodriguez 
    and Allison Mankin. Implementations are known to be interoperating.
    
    RFC Editor Note:
    
    RFC Editor, Please place the following note at the beginning of 
    Section 5.1, FC Frame Content, of draft-ietf-ips-fcencapsulation,
    and at the beginning of APPENDIX F - FC FRAME FORMAT, of 
    draft-ietf-ips-fcovertcpip.
    
    	NOTE: All uses of the words "character" or "characters" in 
    	this section refer to 8bit/10bit link encoding wherein each 
    	8 bit "character" within a link frame is encoded as a 10 bit 
    	"character" for link transmission. These words do not refer to 
    	ASCII, Unicode, or any other form of text characters, although
          octets from such characters will occur as 8 bit "characters" 
    	for this encoding. This usage is employed here for consistency
          with the ANSI T11 standards that specify Fibre Channel.
    


Home

Last updated: Thu Apr 24 04:19:22 2003
12543 messages in chronological order