Re: SPAM-LOW: Re: [802.21] SPAM-LOW: Re: [802.21] Issue #6 Which operator should we expose in IEs? (doc: 21-06-0667-00-0000_Comment Assignments)
I disagree.
The whole point of having a standardized media independent way of conducting
handover was to make it so that each of the technologies could have a single
model to write to, 802.21, instead of creating different proprietary models
of there own, each for different technologies. What you propose then would
be to have 3GPP2 write one method of identifying networks and negotiating
handover among various technologies, 3GPP creating a different method,
802.16 creating another, 802.11 creating another, etc.... And it does not
sound to me like any of them would be interoperable.
It sounds to me like you are endorsing having each industry segment create
its own methodology which, once again, create multiple non-standardized
methods for conducting handover. Please correct me if I misunderstand.
If all you wanted was some payload 'hooks' then none of 802.21 is really
necessary. You could have just gone to each of the technology specific
standards bodies and asked for the hooks. 802.21 only exists to create a
common, standardized method to use those hooks. 802.21 is glue language; the
common language that each of the other bodies writes to. So 802.21 has to
create the common interface for that action. That means mapping and
presenting information elements like network identifiers in some common
manner so that other technologies, other implementations will have a common
understanding and can create MS and network behavioral models that can
achieve similar and consistent handover results.
Just my opinion.
Thanks,
Phillip Barber
Chief Scientist
Broadband Wireless Solutions
Huawei Technologies Co., LTD.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Qiaobing Xie" <Qiaobing.Xie@motorola.com>
To: "Phillip Barber" <pbarber@BROADBANDMOBILETECH.COM>
Cc: <STDS-802-21@listserv.ieee.org>
Sent: Wednesday, June 07, 2006 1:27 PM
Subject: SPAM-LOW: Re: [802.21] SPAM-LOW: Re: [802.21] Issue #6 Which
operator should we expose in IEs? (doc: 21-06-0667-00-0000_Comment
Assignments)
Being a "Placeholder" means some secondary stds body (for example an
cellular and non-cellular network owner/operator association that wants
to build a cross-tech mega roaming/handover service network based on
802.21 technology) will have to step in after the completion of 802.21
spec and define and manage their own operator/owner namespace.
Interoperability would thus be guaranteed within that association.
I don't see how 802.21 alone can accomplish network interoperability
without the involvement of the actual owners/operators anyway.
regards,
-Qiaobing
Phillip Barber wrote:
> You could do it, but I would not expect interoperability. That is to say,
> there would be no consistent presentation of information, so no Mobile
> Station behavior could be standardized because information is not
> reliably/consistently provided. If you don't care about interoperability
> you could simply create a generic payload delivery method and let vendors
> stuff whatever proprietary info into those payloads that they care to.
>
> Thanks,
> Phillip Barber
> Chief Scientist
> Broadband Wireless Solutions
> Huawei Technologies Co., LTD.
>
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Qiaobing Xie"
> <Qiaobing.Xie@MOTOROLA.COM>
> To: "Subir Das" <subir@RESEARCH.TELCORDIA.COM>
> Cc: <STDS-802-21@listserv.ieee.org>
> Sent: Wednesday, June 07, 2006 11:27 AM
> Subject: SPAM-LOW: Re: [802.21] Issue #6 Which operator should we expose
> in IEs? (doc: 21-06-0667-00-0000_Comment Assignments)
>
>
> Why not simply define it as a 802.21 placeholder/container
> "Owner/Operator Info" IE containing an unrestricted character string and
> let the actual operators/owners/partners associations (like the current
> GSMA) to decide whatever most suitable for their then business model to
> put in there.
>
> regards,
> -Qiaobing
>
> Subir Das wrote:
>
>> Phillip Barber wrote:
>>
>>> I would tend to agree. The mere identification that there is a roaming
>>> agreement--that is to say the identification of a Visited CSN (with
>>> appropriate AAA) with a roaming agreement to a Mobile Subscriber's Home
>>> CSN--is available may very well be adequate.
>>
>>
>> I would also agree. But why does MS need to know the Visited AAA? Corner
>> case: where L1/L2 and L3/L4 operators are different in a visited network
>> (assuming Home Network has roaming agreement with both of them), which
>> operator's information should be exposed? Anyone or both of them?
>>
>>> As for identification of Visited CSNs that have a roaming agreement with
>>> a given Home CSN, the list may be presented over-the-air or in a
>>> configuration file in the MS, with periodic update. For some networks,
>>> over-the-air does not present too much of a problem, when the list is
>>> small. For other networks, the list of roaming CSN IDs could be huge
>>> making over-the-air impractical, so configuration files that receive
>>> periodic update are used.
>>> Thanks,
>>> Phillip Barber
>>> Chief Scientist
>>> Broadband Wireless Solutions
>>> Huawei Technologies Co., LTD.
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>>
>>> *From:* McCann, Stephen <mailto:stephen.mccann@ROKE.CO.UK>
>>> *To:* Gupta, Vivek G <mailto:vivek.g.gupta@INTEL.COM> ; Phillip
>>> Barber <mailto:pbarber@BROADBANDMOBILETECH.COM> ;
>>> ajayrajkumar@LUCENT.COM <mailto:ajayrajkumar@LUCENT.COM> ;
>>> Junghoon Jee <mailto:jhjee@ETRI.RE.KR>
>>> *Cc:* STDS-802-21@listserv.ieee.org
>>> <mailto:STDS-802-21@listserv.ieee.org>
>>> *Sent:* Wednesday, June 07, 2006 9:53 AM
>>> *Subject:* RE: [802.21] Issue #6 Which operator should we expose
>>> in IEs? (doc: 21-06-0667-00-0000_Comment Assignments)
>>>
>>> Dear all,
>>> I would add a word of caution to this, as within IEEE 802.11u we
>>> have assumed that in the future
>>> there should be no reliance on the association between the SSID
>>> and the access service provider,
>>> even though it is used in this fashion at the moment. The SSID
>>> should only be considered as a hint
>>> and does not always indicate who or what you are connecting to.
>>> Currently there are contractual agreements between operators
>>> (which can vary based on who they
>>> are - there is no standardised format as far as I know.) From an
>>> 802.21 perspective, the roaming
>>> agreement itself is not important to the mobile terminal. It's the
>>> fact that one exists that is important.
>>> Hence I think that 802.21 should not worry too much about how
>>> roaming agreements are expressed.
>>> Kind regards
>>> Stephen
>>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> *From:* stds-802-21@ieee.org [mailto:stds-802-21@ieee.org] *On
>>> Behalf Of *Gupta, Vivek G
>>> *Sent:* Wednesday, June 07, 2006 3:11 PM
>>> *To:* Phillip Barber; ajayrajkumar@lucent.com; Junghoon Jee
>>> *Cc:* STDS-802-21@listserv.ieee.org
>>> *Subject:* RE: [802.21] Issue #6 Which operator should we
>>> expose in IEs? (doc: 21-06-0667-00-0000_Comment Assignments)
>>>
>>> Seems like we may need two operator identifiers to cover the
>>> general case.
>>>
>>> How are roaming agreements expressed? Are they relevant to
>>> only Core Service Providers or to Access Service Providers as
>>> well?
>>>
>>> Is this information useful to a MS from a handover decision
>>> making perspective…and are operators generally amenable to
>>> making this available?
>>>
>>> Best Regards
>>>
>>> -Vivek
>>>
>>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>>
>>> *From:* stds-802-21@ieee.org [mailto:stds-802-21@ieee.org] *On
>>> Behalf Of *Phillip Barber
>>> *Sent:* Monday, June 05, 2006 12:25 PM
>>> *To:* ajayrajkumar@lucent.com; Junghoon Jee
>>> *Cc:* STDS-802-21@listserv.ieee.org
>>> *Subject:* Re: [802.21] Issue #6 Which operator should we
>>> expose in IEs? (doc: 21-06-0667-00-0000_Comment Assignments)
>>>
>>> I would say:
>>>
>>> Access Service Provider - characterized by providing L1&L2
>>> level access and may include some authentication (device
>>> authentication; L1&L2 and some L3&L4 capabilities
>>> negotiation; L1&L2 authentication). Access Service Network
>>> ID is usually analogous to Operator ID in 802.16 or
>>> infrastructure based SSID in 802.11. It tells you who you
>>> are connecting to, but not necessarily who is
>>> authenticating your use.
>>>
>>> Core Service Provider- characterized by providing L3&L4
>>> level access and almost certainly includes AAA
>>> authentication (perhaps device authentication; certainly
>>> user/account authentication; some L3&L4 capabilities
>>> negotiation). Calling this 'Mobility Service Provider' is
>>> really a misnomer. Calling it the Mobility Service
>>> Provider is a legacy distinction based on regulatory and
>>> marketing, not technical functional. On a technical level,
>>> if PMIP, then yes, HA will be in the Core Service Network.
>>> But the FA is in the Access Service Network and all actual
>>> mobility activity occurs in the ASN, not the CSN. And of
>>> course the CSN may very well be a visited CSN, perhaps
>>> even likely. Only rationale for calling the CSN the
>>> Mobility Service Provider is that the Mobile Station
>>> acquires its IP address from the CSN, if PMIP. If no PMIP
>>> (CMIP anyone?), it is even clearer. Anyway, mobility
>>> occurs in the Access Service Network, not the Core Service
>>> Network. Better to make the distinction based on who
>>> validates capabilities and authenticates. All should be
>>> viewed from the perspective/perception of the Mobile
>>> Station. CSN ID is more analogous to ITU E.212 MCC + MNC.
>>> MCC + MNC is not great, but it may be regulated anyway.
>>> May be required to be transmitted to meet regulatory
>>> requirements. Definitely should stay away from using NAI
>>> over the air. NAI can be huge; very expensive over the
>>> air. And ASN ID and CSN ID could very well be the same for
>>> many networks, especially 802.11 and 802.16 fixed/nomadic
>>> networks.
>>>
>>> My two cents.
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Phillip Barber
>>> Chief Scientist
>>> Broadband Wireless Solutions
>>> Huawei Technologies Co., LTD.
>>>
>>> ----- Original Message -----
>>>
>>> *From:* Ajay Rajkumar <mailto:ajayrajkumar@lucent.com>
>>>
>>> *To:* Junghoon Jee <mailto:jhjee@ETRI.RE.KR>
>>>
>>> *Cc:* STDS-802-21@listserv.ieee.org
>>> <mailto:STDS-802-21@listserv.ieee.org>
>>>
>>> *Sent:* Monday, June 05, 2006 1:10 PM
>>>
>>> *Subject:* Re: [802.21] Issue #6 Which operator should we
>>> expose in IEs? (doc: 21-06-0667-00-0000_Comment Assignments)
>>>
>>> Junghoon Jee wrote:
>>>
>>> In my view, "core network operator" loosely can be
>>> interpreted as the
>>> "mobility service provider", i.e., the operator that owns
>>> the user.
>>>
>>> Junghoon>> For clarification, the more accurate
>>> interpretation about the feature of the mobility service
>>> provider is its having a mobility management entity like
>>> HA in case of MIP.
>>>
>>> [Ajay] I guess you are treating the "core network
>>> operator" as the "core transport operator", whereas, I was
>>> in fact treating "core operator" as the "home operator"
>>> including owning HA in case of MIP.
>>>
>>> However, if one has to look at the most general case of
>>> the entities
>>> involved in providing a service to an end host they would
>>> be as follows:
>>>
>>> - Access Service Provider
>>> - Mobility Service Provider
>>> - "Services" Provider
>>>
>>> Junghoon>> Well, I am not so sure about the above
>>> categorization.
>>> I am more inclined to the definition from the IETF draft
>>> that was indicated from the previous message. :-)
>>>
>>> Each of the above typically has some level of
>>> Authentication/Authorization functionality and depending
>>> on the the
>>> network some of these AA functionalities may be optional
>>> at an implementation/deployment level.
>>>
>>> Also, these Authentication/Authorization functions could
>>> be delegated to an independent entity. However, in the
>>> current networks typically this
>>> is not delegated. Bottomline, the most general case could
>>> involve six independent entities.
>>>
>>> Considering that AA functionality may be integrated by the
>>> provider, three entities may still be involved.
>>>
>>> Junghoon>> Back to the main issue of which operator
>>> information we would expose in IEs...
>>> I am not still questioning to myself about the feasibility
>>> and effectiveness of exposing the _core_ operator's
>>> information to IEs.
>>> How can a MIH Information Server gather the core
>>> operators' information depending on the varying mobile
>>> nodes and can pick up the right information for a specific
>>> mobile node? Do we have to depend on the seed information
>>> like NAI in case of AAA?
>>> Moreover, what benefit can a mobile node expect by
>>> receiving the core operator's information in terms of
>>> seamless handover?
>>>
>>>
>>> Any thoughts?
>>>
>>> Best Regards,
>>> -Junghoon
>>>
>>
>