hsmit@cisco.com (Henk Smit) writes:
"There were also non-technical considerations. Many people felt that it was better that the IETF have complete control over the OSPF protocol design rather than depend on an ISO committee whose goals, namely to produce a routing protocol for the OSI protocol stack, were somewhat different."(2)
This is all history, and should not be a reason for you to pick one protocol over the other. The IETF has become what OSI was (and even worse). Right now there are active OSPF *and* IS-IS workgroups. The IETF can extend IS-IS as much as is needed.
We should also point out that the IETF is now an OSI liason organization and can make contributions to the ISO process. Further, given the technical expertise of the folks working in the IETF, the effective death of CLNP, and the fact that a significant proportion of the systems running IS-IS are actually doing so to forward IP, any contributions made by the IETF will be taken very seriously by ISO. Regards, Tony Li IS-IS WG co-chair