Re: [mpls] working group last call on draft-ietf-mpls-ldp-igp-sync-bcast-00.txt

Wenhu Lu <wenhu.lu@ericsson.com> Tue, 02 March 2010 20:24 UTC

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From: Wenhu Lu <wenhu.lu@ericsson.com>
To: Greg Mirsky <gregimirsky@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, 02 Mar 2010 15:24:27 -0500
Thread-Topic: [mpls] working group last call on draft-ietf-mpls-ldp-igp-sync-bcast-00.txt
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Subject: Re: [mpls] working group last call on draft-ietf-mpls-ldp-igp-sync-bcast-00.txt
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Hi Greg,
I don't quite understand your question. Were you proposing a different method to handle the "cut-edge"?
Would you elaborate a bit ?
Thanks,
-wenhu

________________________________
From: Greg Mirsky [mailto:gregimirsky@gmail.com]
Sent: Monday, March 01, 2010 5:55 PM
To: Wenhu Lu
Cc: mpls@ietf.org
Subject: Re: [mpls] working group last call on draft-ietf-mpls-ldp-igp-sync-bcast-00.txt

Hi Wenhu,
if "cut-edge" is optimization, why not just propose to advertise link to broadcast network as stub until LDP has converged? That would not require the change in SPF and will work.

Regards,
Greg

On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 5:49 PM, Wenhu Lu <wenhu.lu<http://wenhu.lu>@ericsson.com<http://ericsson.com>> wrote:
Hi Greg,
Glad we finally converged.
A few more inline.

________________________________
From: Greg Mirsky [mailto:gregimirsky@gmail.com<mailto:gregimirsky@gmail.com>]
Sent: Monday, March 01, 2010 5:02 PM

To: Wenhu Lu
Cc: mpls@ietf.org<mailto:mpls@ietf.org>
Subject: Re: [mpls] working group last call on draft-ietf-mpls-ldp-igp-sync-bcast-00.txt

Hi Wenhu,

yes, I stay corrected. The RFC 5443 states that only affected link to be maxed. In case of the whole node coming up it will be applied to all node links and thus work for any iIGP interface type.
  If only one link, then IGP convergence over the broadcast interface might precede LDP. But then, if link B-PE2 is up, B's interface to the broadcast segment is not the "cut-edge" because alternative path PE2-D-C exists. Would you agree?
[luw] Yes, that's correct. Our method works in both "cut-edge" and "non-cut-edge" scenarios.
Regards,
-wenhu

Regards,
Greg

On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 4:33 PM, Wenhu Lu <wenhu.lu<http://wenhu.lu>@ericsson.com<http://ericsson.com>> wrote:
Hi Greg,
Inline.

________________________________
From: Greg Mirsky [mailto:gregimirsky@gmail.com<mailto:gregimirsky@gmail.com>]
Sent: Monday, March 01, 2010 4:28 PM

To: Wenhu Lu
Cc: mpls@ietf.org<mailto:mpls@ietf.org>
Subject: Re: [mpls] working group last call on draft-ietf-mpls-ldp-igp-sync-bcast-00.txt

Hi Wenhu,

I think that you are overlooking the fact that B advertises at LSInfinity its ALL links, including to PE2 in your diagram.
[luw] No, not all links, but only the affected link.
Please double check RFC5443 section 2, third paragraph, quoted below:
In detail: when LDP is not "fully operational" (see below) on a given
   link, the IGP will advertise the link with maximum cost to avoid any
   transit traffic over it.

Best regards,
-wenhu



 Thus, as I understand OSPF, there's no way A will select B for its path to PE2. Yes, you've found another way "to slice the cake" but, as I've mentioned, the main issue is when to advertise the real IGP cost being handled by both documents identically.

Regards,
Greg

On Mon, Mar 1, 2010 at 4:15 PM, Wenhu Lu <wenhu.lu<http://wenhu.lu>@ericsson.com<http://ericsson.com>> wrote:
Hi Greg,
"I don't think that A has or can to do anything." - that's exactly my point. i.e. A cannot manipulate its cost to favor C or B.
Now B can't either !
If you increase B's cost (to the LAN) to LSInfinity, it still doesn't change A's decision.
"A->B->PE2" is still shorter than "A->C->D->PE2".

The traffic thus will be directed to B, hence the traffic loss.

Regards,
-wenhu

________________________________
From: Greg Mirsky [mailto:gregimirsky@gmail.com<mailto:gregimirsky@gmail.com>]
Sent: Monday, March 01, 2010 3:32 PM
To: Wenhu Lu
Cc: mpls@ietf.org<mailto:mpls@ietf.org>

Subject: Re: [mpls] working group last call on draft-ietf-mpls-ldp-igp-sync-bcast-00.txt

Hi Wenhu,
I've snipped text to leave only your question for further discussion.



[luw] Let me ask a simple question. In the following diagram, let's assume the link cost is 10 everywhere.

                          |
                          |    +---+           +---+
                          |----| B |-----------|PE2|
                          |    +---+           +---+
        +---+    +---+    |                      |
        |PE1|----| A |----|                      |
        +---+    +---+    |                      |
                          |    +---+    +---+    |
                          |----| C |----| D |----+
                          |    +---+    +---+

 Originally the primary LSP from PE1 to PE2 is "PE1-A-B-PE2". The backup LSP is "PE1-A-C-D-PE2".
Now after B's link to the broadcast network (that connects A, B, and C) restores to UP from being DOWN,
"A" wants the traffic continues to flow through the backup path "PE1-A-C-D-PE2" for a while, so that it gains
time to recover the primary LSP(s).
With the RFC5443 method, could you let me know what "A" should do to keep traffic from flowing through "B"?

Regards,
-wenhu

I don't think that A has or can to do anything. Per RFC 5443, as well as per your work, it is responsibility of up-and-coming node to try not to disturb existing topology. The node B can, per RFC 5443, advertise its link to the broadcast network (DR in OSPF) with LSInfinity (I'd prefer divide it in half but that's me). The real problem, and RFC 5443 clearly acknowledges this, is when the node B can advertise the real IGP cost (irrespective of type of its IGP interface). Yes, the delay timer is a workaround and sort of a "black magic". The LDP End-of-Lib, as both documents point out, is better and more appropriate trigger.

Regards,
Greg