At the #IETF123 hackathon, it is now the presentation of the results, by the various groups.
At the #IETF123 hackathon, it is now the presentation of the results, by the various groups.
I2ICF : something about controlling devices, such moving robots (but no demo, alas, just a video on YouTube).
NASR : a network that can follow certain policy rules such as "must take this path", "must use PQ encryption", "must use a vetted operator", etc.
C'est pas franchement caca, l'encryption PQ ?
Mouseworld: creating a twin network (for testing/evaluation) from the formal description of an actual network.
Like many modern projects, se a lot of stuff (GraphDB, Camel, Chimera, Kubernetes, OpenStack...)
ILNP (location/identifier separation protocol) :
Performance tests between IETF in Madrid and the author's home, when the connectivity changes. It works. (On FreeBSD.)
First hackathon for the SCONE project. Communication between applications and network elements to learn about ate-limiting and adjust. (With people from, among others, Tiktok and YouTube)
Authenticating a Python scraper. (Two libraries, crawl4ai and scrapy). Adding a signature to the HTTP request send to the browser which will scrape.
Homomorphic encryption, now, at the #IETF123 hackathon. Always black magic for me.
RPP, the future registry<->registrar protocol (after EPP). Because the cool kids no longer know XML and TCP (so, JSON and HTTPS everywhere).
Most code during the hackathon was on RPP<->EPP proxies.
New authenticated encryption algorithm, HiAE, implemented at the hackathon. Code in C, Zig and Go. Performance measurements.
[Note about Zig: it was also used in the RPP project.]
PacketScope, written in eBPF, for performance analysis of traffic.
"Manual enrollment of a huge swarm of tiny robots" This hackathon project looks a bit frightening.
"Selfie attack"? It really exists?
Generating test code for protocols by a LLM reading the RFCs. Cool project. (Unlike what many people claim, AI can be useful.)
Post-quantum cryptography in X.509 (certificates). More and more code work.
Thread ( no relationship with Meta's Threads) is a mesh protocol for small things.
Among the achievements at #IETF123 hackathon, a border router, and delegation of downloads to a machine which stays awake (50 % energy saving).
A space for Bonfire maintainers and contributors to communicate