Network Working Group Hegde
Internet-Draft Independent Consultant
Intended status: Informational Elkins
Expires: January 4, 2017 Inside Products
Raje
RABT
Chowdhary
NIXI
July 3, 2016

Remote Hubs in India
draft-hegde-remote-hubs-india-01

Abstract

This document describes the goals of having remote hubs and documents the experiences of organising remote hubs in India. It documents the experiences and suggest a possible framework for organising remote hubs in India. Remote participation has become easier with jabber rooms and audio streaming initially to now real-time video interaction.

Status of This Memo

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction

Remote hubs enable participaton without being physically at the meeting. Over the years, tools for IETF remote participation have become better. Starting with jabber and audio streaming initially, It has improved a lot and it is now possible to present remote using meetecho tools as well by providing enough notice to the meetecho team. In India remote participation is not new. There are instances of individuals remotely participating and contributing. The idea of remote hubs and its implementation pan India got traction with IICB (Indian IETF Capacity Building Program), a combined effort from Civil Societes, Academia, Organizations, Government, Individuals all participating and providing their support to build an ecosystem to carry IETF activities and spread awareness, engage researchers to contribute more towards IETF standard making process and build IETF labs for open source experimentation towards best practices. Remote Hubs are part of this framework for increased IETF contribution from Indian origin.

2. What is a remote hub ?

A remote hub is place where two or more people who are interested in the IETF gather and participate in the proceedings of the IETF. Proceedings in this context can mean seeing the presentations in a WG or presenting in a working group or attending any of the plenaries of the IETF. A remote hub can be set in someone one's home or office meeting room or some meeting room of a college or some other convenient place where people can congregate and discuss drafts, implementations and other issues related to the IETF. There can be multiple remote hubs in the same country and even the same city as long as there are interested people in hosting and participating in the IETF.

3. Why attend or host a remote hub ?

A remote hub is way for interested participants to come together and discuss drafts, implementations and standards related to the IETF. They are extension of the physical meeting in the IETF. Many times people cannot go to the IETF due to time, work or financial constraints. Also someone might be new to standards or unsure if they can participate in the IETF. Often academicians, protocol and software implementors and network engineers fall into these category.

Subscribing to the mailing lists and meeting up with the local network standards enthusiasts is a good way to initiate people into the community. It also serves as a good way to network and learn from senior and more experienced people in the community about IETF structure and rules (written and unwritten). Often, local hubs might have an interesting perspective to add to conversations eg. protocol security in authoritation governments, internationalisation of names and identifiers, performance of protocols in low-bandwidth or high-delay networks. Some of these perspectives might be underepresented in the IETF and remote hubs is a good way to include them in the conversation to make more robust, interoperable and scalable protocols.

For commercial organization, hosting remote hubs is a great way to facilitate engagement with the larger local as well as international community. It is also a great way to attract talent and showcase new technology to startups and students. Since IETF often works on new and upcoming technology especially in the applications layers such as WebRTC, HTTP/2.0 or websockets, it is a good way to test and gather feedback about specific implementations. For academic instituions, it is a great way for getting students involved in open source contributions and implementations of open standard and help them in understanding real world sceanrios of deployment of technology. For eg, the BCP series of RFCs document best current practices from real world experience.

4. Organization of Remote Hub

Most of the time, hosting or attending an IETF remote hub does not require much. You just need a comfortable space to follow discussions, a projector if it is a mid-sized or large group and a good high-speed network connection. More details follow in the sections below.

5. Mentors and Facilitators

Often the people attending the remote hub are new to the IETF (either to the IETF itself or to the subject matter of the Working Group). In such cases, having a facilitator who describes past work in the IETF (earlier drafts or RFCs or discussion/debates) might help give context to newer participants in the working group. It is also a good idea to mail the partcipants beforehand to check the agenda and ask them to read the drafts to be discussed at the meeting and if possible to follow the discussion on the mailing lists or read the archives.

6. Meeting Room

The meeting rooms should be comfortable and should have enough seating space for people signed up for the remote hub. In case of more than 5-6 people, it is good to have a signup page to estimate einterest, especially if people outside the organsation hosting the remote hub are interested. Please post directions to the venue and rooms well in advance in a meetup group or website so people know about the remote hub.

Educational insitutions such as IISC (Bangalore), Amity university(Delhi) and IITs (several cities), government/private research organisations such as CDAC and CSIR are particularly good locations to host remote hubs as there is a critical mass of students and academicians to support these. Also if industry experts join these hubs there is increased impetus for industry and academia co-operation.

7. Equipment requirements

A good internet connection (> 2Mbps) would be useful especially if there is video through meetecho. Please test the connection (for latency and bandwidth requirements) based on the meetecho link provided on the agenda page. if there are more than 3-4 people, you might also want to have a projectors and a microphone attached to the computer used to relay the discussion so people can participate in the WG. Also test the connection with the meetecho person in the WG room just before the WG meeting commences by giving them enough notice.

8. Requirement for attendees

Anyone who is interested in IETF activities can join in. That is the only real prerequisite. It might be useful for people new to the IETF to read the Tao of the IETF. It is also good to read the draft that are going to be discussed in the WG meeting. It is also useful to read the mailing list archives prior to the meeting as it may be referenced during the WG meeting. If you are a developer or can write code in addition to the WG group meeting, it might be possible to attend the IETF hackathon remotely. Another non-WG acttivity that people can attend in remote hub is the plenaries. Some venue might have restrictions on who can attend (such as employees or students), so it might be better to check ahead and register if necessary.

9. IETF central support of remote hubs

9.1. Web site

The IETF provides a wiki for every physical meeting of the IETF. There is a wiki link on that page that notes the remote hubs available for people to join in. This is not meant to be exhaustive but is indicate of the various remote hubs in various regiosn for specific WGs. There is a list of venues, with WGs they intend to follow and possibly any other information such as a sign up requirement. Some remote hubs (especially those in commercial establishments) may be closed to certain groups of people such as employees or students.

9.2. Email lists

Currently there is a mailing list for remote hubs in Bangalore. It can be accessed at https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf-hub-bangalore It is generally a good idea to announce the remote hub on the WG mailing list so other people from the region who are interested can join in. It is also a good idea to let the WG chair know about the remote hub partcipating in the WG. The remote hubs information should also be posted to the IETF wiki.

9.3. Regional hosts

There can potentially be regular recurring hosts for certain WGs and regions.

10. IANA Considerations

There are no IANA considerations.

11. Security Considerations

There are no security considerations.

12. Normative References

[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997.

Authors' Addresses

Vinayak Hegde Independent Consultant Bangalore, 560038 INDIA Phone: +91 94498 34401 EMail: vinayakh@gmail.com
Nalini Elkins Inside Products Carmel Valley, California 93924 United States Phone: +1 831 659 8360 EMail: nalini.elkins@insidethestack.com
Anand Raje RABT Kolkata, West Bengal India Phone: +91 98310 67348 EMail: anand@rabt.in
Harish Chowdhary NIXI Delhi, Delhi NCR India Phone: +91 84471 28832 EMail: harish@nixi.in