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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: iSCSI: Case-sensitivity in iSCSI namesSensible decision. Case insensitive makes it hard for I18N on most languages (or simpler in the one like mine that has no case :-)) . And why is the recomendation 2 necessary? (just to kill iSCSI ? :-)) Julo Mark Bakke <mbakke@cisco.com> on 19-07-2001 00:18:23 Please respond to Mark Bakke <mbakke@cisco.com> To: Julian Satran/Haifa/IBM@IBMIL cc: John Hufferd/San Jose/IBM@IBMUS, "IPS <ips" Subject: Re: iSCSI: Case-sensitivity in iSCSI names Here are the new rules: - iSCSI names are case-sensitive. - iSCSI names are UTF-8 encoded. - iSCSI names are compared byte-for-byte; there is no need to translate them to upper or lower case. The above will keep iSCSI implementations simpler. Now, from the user side, we don't want to see conflicts like iqn.0.com.acme.foo42 and iqn.0.com.acme.Foo42 The above are technically not the same name to an iSCSI implementation. However, it would not be in anyone's best interest for acme.com to assign two names that are identical if they were both translated to lower case. So we need a few MUSTs, or at least SHOULDs, to make this easier on anyone having to type these in: - An iSCSI name MUST NOT be generated such that if converted to lower case, it conflicts with any other iSCSI name converted to lower case. - iSCSI names SHOULD be generated to use lower case of their appropriate character set. - An iSCSI implementation MAY accept an iSCSI name that, if converted to lower case, matches another iSCSI name that it recognized. The third rule depends on the first being implemented, and gives implementations the flexibility to do case-insensitive comparisons if they so choose. What do you think? Mark Julian Satran wrote: > > John, > > Case insesitive is bad for I18N > > Julo > > "John Hufferd" <hufferd@us.ibm.com> on 18-07-2001 08:53:56 > > Please respond to "John Hufferd" <hufferd@us.ibm.com> > > To: Mark Bakke <mbakke@cisco.com> > cc: IPS <ips@ece.cmu.edu> > Subject: Re: iSCSI: Case-sensitivity in iSCSI names > > Mark, > You are talking about things that are entered by administrators. They will > have a lot of finger checks. I do not see why we would like to encourage > admin problems by making these things Case Sensitive. Imagine, one > administrator trying to tell another over the phone, what the name should > be used. > > I would vote for Case insensitive names. > > . > . > . > John L. Hufferd > Senior Technical Staff Member (STSM) > IBM/SSG San Jose Ca > Main Office (408) 256-0403, Tie: 276-0403, eFax: (408) 904-4688 > Home Office (408) 997-6136 > Internet address: hufferd@us.ibm.com > > Mark Bakke <mbakke@cisco.com>@ece.cmu.edu on 07/17/2001 01:28:52 PM > > Sent by: owner-ips@ece.cmu.edu > > To: IPS <ips@ece.cmu.edu> > cc: > Subject: iSCSI: Case-sensitivity in iSCSI names > > We are attempting to wrap up all of the issues surrounding > the creation and comparison of iSCSI initiator and target > names. One of these is whether the names are case-sensitive. > > The last naming & discovery draft stated that the names are > case-insensitive; this was to allow better transcribability > in cases where names were communicated outside the automated > discovery processes. > > This comes at some expense, particularly since these names > are defined to allow UTF-8 encoding of international character > sets. Initiators and targets would have to include code to > compare these sets. > > To simplify implementation and interoperability, it has been > recommended that we make iSCSI names case-sensitive instead. > > I am fine with doing this, and I think that we could even > get some of the usability back by adding these rules: > > - iSCSI names MUST be case-sensitive, and compared strictly > byte-for-byte. > > - iSCSI names SHOULD be generated in a case-insensitive > manner. > > I'm not sure how to properly word the latter, but the intent > is that someone generating the names would not produce both: > > iqn.9.com.cisco.myiscsithing > > and > > iqn.9.com.cisco.MyIscsiThing > > since a user would be likely to confuse these. Again, it doesn't > affect the protocol itself, just its usability. > > Any thoughts? Will it hurt anyone's plans if iSCSI names were > case-sensitive? > > -- > Mark A. Bakke > Cisco Systems > mbakke@cisco.com > 763.398.1054 -- Mark A. Bakke Cisco Systems mbakke@cisco.com 763.398.1054
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