The DHC WG met twice in Orlando. Thanks to Barr Hibbs for taking notes for these minutes. The first meeting was a one hour meeting in which the failover protocol was discussed. The second meeting was used for discussion of general DHCP issues. The failover meeting included a ten minute overview of the protocol, ten minutes of collecting questions and the remainder of the meeting addressed the collected questions. Kim Kinnear (cisco) presented an overview of the current protocol draft spec, the protocol status and recent developments. The draft is progressing and identified problems are being hammered out. There are two implementations (which are not yet interoperable). The draft authors feel that there is not widespread understanding of the current draft. Bernie Volz (Process Software) gave a brief review of the RUTS BOF meeting (which is addressing the issue of developing a new transaction-oriented internet protocol). After the overview, a list of questions were collected. The list has been posted to the dhcp-serve@bucknell.edu mailing list. The remainder of the meeting was used to generate answers to questions 1-4 and 7. The other questions will be discussed on the dhcp-serve list. The second WG meeting included discussion of various DHCP issues. Bernie Volz began with a summary of the LDAP schema developers' meeting held in November. The attendees developed objectives and initial schema model, common objects and a containment hierarchy. The group considered coordination with the Desktop Management Task Force (DMTF). The next step will be to write a draft describing the proposed schema. Several old drafts were resurrected. Mark Stapp (cisco) reviewed the status of the "DHCP-DNS Interaction" draft, which he will revise to address the open issue of name disambiguation. The draft will then go back to the WG for standards track review. Pratik Gupta (IBM) revived the "Domain Search" option. Two issues arose: how to encode multiple domains in a single option and should the option go into the current option space or the new ("futures panel") option space. The WG consensus was to specify multiple options through length-encoded encapsulation and to include the option in the current option space. The specifics of the encapsulation mechanism will be coordinated with the data representation standards being developed by the futures panel. Ralph Droms (Bucknell) reviewed the "User Class" option. Two issues will be moved to the mailing list: syntax and semantics for encoding multiple classes in the option and how can a DHCP server tell the client what classes are available to choose from. A follow up draft, specifying rules for address assignment using the "User Class" option, was discussed. The WG consensus was to review this draft for acceptance as an informational RFC. Erik Guttman (Sun) discussed the most recent revision of the "SLP Server" option draft. One issue about a flag byte to override local configuration with the configuration in the DHCP message was raised and will be discussed further on the mailing list. Burcak Beser (3COM) discussed the use of the vendor class identifier by VoIP equipment. WG input was that the vendor class identifier may be appropriate to identify the vendor of the equipment. Erik Guttman suggested SLP may be a better mechanism for providing more individualized configurations through a bootfile. Ralph Droms and Bill Arbaugh (Univ. of Pennsylvania) reviewed revisions to the authentication protocol draft. Peter Ford (Microsoft) expressed concern that the current draft over-specifies the protocol by prescribing some details of the implementation. The WG discussed the issue of privacy in the client identifying itself to a server before learning the identity of the server; after a short discussion, the current protocol was found to allow "server-first" identification if the client leaves any identification out of the DISCOVER and the servers are configured to respond to anonymous DISCOVER messages with an OFFER that includes some identification of the server. Finally, there was a request for an example specification of a version of the authentication protocol using PK technology. Mike Carney (Sun) gave a brief review of the activities of the futures panel and the current draft. Updates to the draft will be posted soon for final discussion at the next WG meeting. Kim Kinnear gave a brief summary of the failover protocol meeting. Finally, Ryan Troll (CMU) summarized the current state of the IPv4 autoconfiguration drafts and asked for WG input as to handling of the drafts - BCP vs. STD? The conversation will continue on the mailing list.