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Recommendation to Use the Ethernet Control Word
RFC 8469

Revision differences

Document history

Date By Action
2020-04-11
(System) Received changes through RFC Editor sync (added Errata tag)
2019-08-19
Gunter Van de Velde Closed request for Last Call review by OPSDIR with state 'Overtaken by Events'
2019-08-19
Gunter Van de Velde Assignment of request for Last Call review by OPSDIR to Tim Wicinski was marked no-response
2018-12-19
(System)
Received changes through RFC Editor sync (changed abstract to 'The pseudowire (PW) encapsulation of Ethernet, as defined in RFC 4448, specifies that the use …
Received changes through RFC Editor sync (changed abstract to 'The pseudowire (PW) encapsulation of Ethernet, as defined in RFC 4448, specifies that the use of the control word (CW) is optional. In the absence of the CW, an Ethernet PW packet can be misidentified as an IP packet by a label switching router (LSR). This may lead to the selection of the wrong equal-cost multipath (ECMP) path for the packet, leading in turn to the misordering of packets. This problem has become more serious due to the deployment of equipment with Ethernet Media Access Control (MAC) addresses that start with 0x4 or 0x6. The use of the Ethernet PW CW addresses this problem. This document RECOMMENDS the use of the Ethernet PW CW in all but exceptional circumstances.

This document updates RFC 4448.')
2018-11-14
(System)
Received changes through RFC Editor sync (created alias RFC 8469, changed title to 'Recommendation to Use the Ethernet Control Word', changed abstract to 'The …
Received changes through RFC Editor sync (created alias RFC 8469, changed title to 'Recommendation to Use the Ethernet Control Word', changed abstract to 'The pseudowire (PW) encapsulation of Ethernet, as defined in RFC 4448, specifies that the use of the control word (CW) is optional. In the absence of the CW, an Ethernet PW packet can be misidentified as an IP packet by a label switching router (LSR). This may lead to the selection of the wrong equal-cost multipath (ECMP) path for the packet, leading in turn to the misordering of packets. This problem has become more serious due to the deployment of equipment with Ethernet Media Access Control (MAC) addresses that start with 0x4 or 0x6. The use of the Ethernet PW CW addresses this problem. This document RECOMMENDS the use of the Ethernet PW CW in all but exceptional circumstances.', changed standardization level to Proposed Standard, changed state to RFC, added RFC published event at 2018-11-14, changed IESG state to RFC Published, created updates relation between draft-ietf-pals-ethernet-cw and RFC 4448)
2018-11-14
(System) RFC published