{"draft":"draft-ietf-anima-stable-connectivity-10","doc_id":"RFC8368","title":"Using an Autonomic Control Plane for Stable Connectivity of Network Operations, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM)","authors":["T. Eckert, Ed.","M. Behringer"],"format":["ASCII","HTML"],"page_count":"24","pub_status":"INFORMATIONAL","status":"INFORMATIONAL","source":"Autonomic Networking Integrated Model and Approach","abstract":"Operations, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM), as per BCP 161,\r\nfor data networks is often subject to the problem of circular\r\ndependencies when relying on connectivity provided by the network to\r\nbe managed for the OAM purposes.\r\n\r\nProvisioning while bringing up devices and networks tends to be more\r\ndifficult to automate than service provisioning later on. Changes in\r\ncore network functions impacting reachability cannot be automated\r\nbecause of ongoing connectivity requirements for the OAM equipment\r\nitself, and widely used OAM protocols are not secure enough to be\r\ncarried across the network without security concerns.\r\n\r\nThis document describes how to integrate OAM processes with an\r\nautonomic control plane in order to provide stable and secure\r\nconnectivity for those OAM processes. This connectivity is not\r\nsubject to the aforementioned circular dependencies.","pub_date":"May 2018","keywords":["autonomic networking","autonomous operation","self-management"],"obsoletes":[],"obsoleted_by":[],"updates":[],"updated_by":[],"see_also":[],"doi":"10.17487\/RFC8368","errata_url":null}