DTNRG met on Monday Nov 8th 2010, at 1510 for one hour. DRAFT meeting minutes Agenda and meeting materials: https://datatracker.ietf.org/meeting/79/materials.html#wg-DTNRG Audio archive: (might move) http://79archive.dyndns.org/ietf79/ietf79-ch3-mon-noon2.mp3 1. Intro/Administrivia: - Kevin wasn't present, so just Stephen chaired - One presenter (Quinyu Zhang) couldn't make it at the last moment. (We re-ordered the presentations as a result.) - Document status: 6 I-Ds are ready to go for IESG "end-run" review (checks that we're not doing an end-run around IETF work); Prophet had changed so we asked for comments on the list and got none so we'll take that as a no-objection to the changes and go ahead; the IANA draft has gotten the ok from IRSG review. Action on Stephen to push ahead with these. - Stephen asked if other I-Ds are ready to go forward. Will ask the list again. - There are a few new DTN-related I-Ds just published, comments on those on the list are encouraged: draft-farrell-dtnrg-bpq draft-uehara-dtnrg-decentralized-probe-message draft-uehara-dtnrg-decentralized-probe-transport 2. Chinese space-DTN activities. Stephen presented the Chinese space-DTN activity slides on behalf of the authors. Contact the authors if you have questions. 3. Stephen presented N4C 2010 summer 2010 activities. It all more-or-less worked for the 6 week test (various things failed, but the DTN as a whole stayed up) and we had a bundle storm. More to follow after results are fully analysed. 4. Alex presented plans for a DTN2 2.8 release in early 2011. If you're interested in helping out get in touch with him. 5. Joerg presented some TCP CL issues. Some suggested improvements might overlap with other drafts (EDP etc.), others seemed to be simple improvements (including an overall length). Action is on Joerg to take those to the list as we finish up the TCP CL I-D. 6. Joerg presented slides on "floating content." This is a way to expire content based on how far its gotten from its (geographic) source and providing a new concept of location-related privacy. See the slides/paper for details. 7. Marc Blanchet presented and demonstrated Viagenie's new RFC 5050 implementation, which is now available for download from http://postellation.viagenie.ca/ as a beta version and includes an ms-windows version (as well as linux and mac). This is aimed to be trivial to install and use and has built-in support for HTTP, including for a streaming-mode of operation. [Since this is at least the 4th time someone has done HTTP/BP, and they mostly do almost the same thing, Simon (Viagenie), Joerg (Aalto) and Stephen/Alex (TCD) got together later in the week and agreed to push out an I-D describing a "unified" way to do HTTP/BP so that we can aim to move towards something that can interop.]