Re: [Pce] Terminology for PCE-Initiated LSP (Was I-D Action: draft-ietf-pce-questions-02.txt)

"Adrian Farrel" <adrian@olddog.co.uk> Thu, 03 April 2014 16:42 UTC

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From: Adrian Farrel <adrian@olddog.co.uk>
To: 'Dhruv Dhody' <dhruv.ietf@gmail.com>, 'Julien Meuric' <julien.meuric@orange.com>
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Cc: pce@ietf.org
Subject: Re: [Pce] Terminology for PCE-Initiated LSP (Was I-D Action: draft-ietf-pce-questions-02.txt)
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Nice summary, Dhruv.
 
The reason why I didn't like "instantiate" was because it conveys (to me) more
force than "recommendation."
 
Of course "recommend instantiation" might be fine, and we could use it in both
documents.
 
Adrian
 
From: Pce [mailto:pce-bounces@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Dhruv Dhody
Sent: 03 April 2014 16:40
To: Julien Meuric
Cc: pce@ietf.org
Subject: Re: [Pce] Terminology for PCE-Initiated LSP (Was I-D Action:
draft-ietf-pce-questions-02.txt)
 
Hi Julien n All,
 
(1) Considering the definition of active PCE as per
http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-pce-questions-04#section-17
 
   An Active PCE is one that issues provisioning "recommendations" to
   the network.  These recommendations may be new routes for existing
   LSPs, or routes for new LSPs.
 
So active PCE allows delegation of LSP and PCE can make recommendations for new
routes. Further it also can recommend routes for new LSP (i.e. PCE-Initiated
LSP). 
 
IMO, so far this might be inline with other stateful I.D.s and would require
just some minor tweak perhaps.
 
So the first question to the WG would be - are we happy with these terms or
should be find new ones as Julien suggested?
 
(2) http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-pce-questions-04#section-20
says 'instantiate' as out of scope. 
 
And PCE-Initiated I.D.s use the word 'instantiate' to mean "recommend new LSP". 
So the second question would be - whats a right term for this? 
 
I hope the word-smiths in the WG can come up with something that we can build
consensus around. 
 
Regards,
Dhruv
 
 
 
On Thu, Apr 3, 2014 at 8:00 PM, Julien Meuric <julien.meuric@orange.com> wrote:
Hi all.

This thread started to tackle an interesting issue. More feedback would have
been much welcome.

Let me try to rephrase.
What we agree on: the WG (whatever its name) works on PCEP.
What may be discussed: is a PCE defined as "a path computation function" or as
"a deciding end of a PCEP session"?

The former being defined in RFC 4655, I believe "splitting hairs" avoids
ambiguity and moving forward with draft-ietf-pce-questions as it is would make
no harm. If noone objects, we will soon start a WG LC.

Back to the latter definition, we have started to identify this boundary by
introducing the phrases "passive PCE" (i.e. legacy definition) and "active PCE".
This looks like an oxymoron to refer to a "PCEP-based LSP coordinator", but PCE
is growing up, it is no longer as small as it used to be. Confusion is there,
but it is quite common for evolving technologies. Sometimes, I still struggle
with some people who understand MPLS as LDP-signalled only and leave MPLS-TE out
of MPLS; with some others to explain that an IGP-TE is not just a routing
protocol but a TED synchronization mechanism...

Bottom line: more than ever, we must make sure in our documents that the terms
are correctly defined and put some effort in avoiding the ambiguity related to
that vocabulary transition/extension.

Alternate path: should we be able to get consensus on a less ambiguous term, we
might search&replace all "active PCE" instances (the phrase is not RFC yet)...
[Chair hat off] Most of the "accurate" phrases I could think of are too long to
be successful, but I'm not a native speaker.

Regards,

Julien


Mar. 18, 2014 - Adrian Farrel:
Dhruv,
How right you are: a decision is needed and the WG should discuss it.

I suspect it will not help us to quote one draft or another, because we are
trying to converge on consensus from a variety of work-in-progress documents.

*The* crunch from my perspective is whether a PCE is a provisioning source or
not. Please note that this is a very different question from whether PCEP can be
used as a provisioning protocol.

RFC 4655 has:
    PCE: Path Computation Element.  An entity (component, application, or
    network node) that is capable of computing a network path or route
    based on a network graph and applying computational constraints.

The debate, I suppose, is about whether we stick with that definition, or
broaden it. I would personally prefer to draw boxes around functional
components. Thus, from my point of view, what is being discussed is a variant of
Figure 5 from RFC 4655. In that variant, the PCE is a component of the NMS, and
the NMS uses PCEP as the service request protocol. This vision keeps the concept
of a PCE as a simple computation engine, and allows all of the rest of the
function as before.

One might draw the following ASCII Art...

<font non-proportional>
          -----------------------------------
         |                  ------   -----   |
         | NMS             |LSP-DB| | TED |<-+----------->
         |                / ------   -----   |  TED synchronization
         |  -------------/    |        |     |  mechanism (for example,
         | | LSP         |    |        |     |  routing protocol)
         | | Coordinator |    v        v     |
         | |             |  --------------   |
         | |             |-|     PCE      |  |
         |  -------------   --------------   |
         |         |               |         |
         |    ---------------------------    |
         |   |    PCEP Protocol Engine   |   |
         |    ---------------------------    |
         |       |     A                     |
         |       |     |                     |
          -------+-----+---------------------
    Provisioning |     |Computation
         Request |     |Request/Response
                 V     V
                ----------    Signaling    ----------
               | Head-End |   Protocol    | Adjacent |
               |  Node    |<------------->|   Node   |
                ----------                 ----------
</font>

Now, draft-ietf-pce-pce-initiated-lsp currently says...

    A PCC or PCE indicates its ability to support PCE provisioned dynamic
    LSPs

And I think this is a little confused. I think it is referring to the use of
PCEP for provisioning LSPs.

Maybe I am splitting hairs, or maybe I am trying to ensure that new work remains
consistent with the architecture without preventing any of the new work.

In my opinion the use of terms in the new work has conflated what we implement
and sell as a PCE (wonderful, glowing marketing term), and what the functional
components are. This debate as one of the primary reasons why I started
draft-ietf-pce-questions, so I would clearly like to see it resolved.

Thanks,
Adrian


From: Pce [mailto:pce-bounces@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Dhruv Dhody
Sent: 18 March 2014 06:24
To:pce@ietf.org <mailto:To%3Apce@ietf.org> 
Subject: [Pce] Terminology for PCE-Initiated LSP (Was I-D Action:
draft-ietf-pce-questions-02.txt)

WG,
Regarding PCE-Initiated LSP.

(1)http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-pce-questions-04#section-20

use the term "suggest" or "recommend" LSP and considers "LSP Instantiation" as
out of scope.
(2)http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-pce-pce-initiated-lsp-00

http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ali-pce-remote-initiated-gmpls-lsp-03  (WG -00
yet to be posted)
http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-palle-pce-stateful-pce-initiated-p2mp-lsp-01
all use the term "LSP instantiation" for PCE-Initiated LSP.

We need to come to some consensus regarding this and use the same terminology
across WG documents.

Thoughts?

Dhruv


---------------------------------------------------------------
Dhruv Dhody
System Architect,
Huawei Technologies India Pvt. Ltd.,
Banagalore
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From: Adrian Farrel [mailto:adrian@olddog.co.uk]
Sent: 17 March 2014 17:11
To: Dhruv Dhody
Cc:pce@ietf.org <mailto:Cc%3Apce@ietf.org> ; 'Dhruv Dhody'
Subject: RE: [Pce] I-D Action: draft-ietf-pce-questions-02.txt
Sorry for the HTML, but I am hoping this thread can be closed soon.


You're killing me :-)
Hoping you are not red/green colourblind.

Look in line for [DD].

[Snipped to only the points for discussion]

* Sec 5.  How Do I Select Between PCEs?
Along with capability, you can also mention the PCE's preference for each
computation scope as carried in the PATH-SCOPE subtlv.

You are going to have to remind me, I'm afraid. Where is the PATH-SCOPE subtlv
defined?
I suppose I was considering that a PCC is only going to choose a PCE in its own
domain, but I can add a note.
[DD] Its in RFC5088, 5089, the idea being PCC should select the PCE in its own
domain which matches with the path computation scope (inter-area, inter-AS,
inter-layer) along with the capability.

Ah, ah, ah! I was busy thinking this was a PCEP sub-tlv.

OLD:
    When more then one PCE is discovered or configured, a PCC will need
    to select which PCE to use.  It may make this decision on any
    arbitrary algorithm (for example, first-listed, or round-robin), but
    it may also be the case that different PCEs have different
    capabilities, in which case the PCC will want to select the PCE most
    likely to be able to satisfy any one request.  The first requirement,
      of course, is that the PCE can compute paths for the relevant domain.
NEW:
    When more than one PCE is discovered or configured, a PCC will need
    to select which PCE to use.  It may make this decision on any
    arbitrary algorithm (for example, first-listed, or round-robin), but
    it may also be the case that different PCEs have different
    capabilities and path computation scope, in which case the PCC will
    want to select the PCE most likely to be able to satisfy any one request.
      The first requirement, of course, is that the PCE can compute paths for
      the relevant domain.

Yeah, OK for that. It duplicates the final sentence I added to this paragraph,
but it does no harm.

* Sec 20.  Comparison of Stateless and Stateful PCE
Can you have a re look at this wrt draft-ietf-pce-pce-initiated-lsp-00 is now a
WG draft.

Mutter!
Which document is right?
What specific issue are you raising?
[DD]http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-pce-questions-03#section-20  says
                               | Stateless |  Stateful |
       ------------------------+-----------+-----------+
       Passive                 |     1     |     2     |
       Active delegated LSPs   |     3     |     4     |
       Active suggest new LSPs |     5     |     6     |
         Active instantiate LSPs |     7     |     7     |

       7. These modes are out of scope for PCE as currently described.

Where does draft-ietf-pce-pce-initiated-lsp fits in, in my reading this was 7,
and thus I suggested it should not be out of scope.
If you agree, ignore below text.

Otherwise we have some confusion over the terms.

IMO 'Suggest new LSP' was same as PCE sends an update message triggering setup
of a new LSP in MBB fashion.
'Instantiate LSP' was PCE send an LSP initiate message to instantiate an LSP.
(7)
Maybe you can clarify what is your understanding of these terms.


OK, the difference I am trying to arrive at is whether the Active PCE can
*require* the establishment of an LSP, or whether it is *suggesting* it.

The difference is (IMHO) between an NMS or CLI that dictates what the LSR does,
and an Active PCE that requests the LSR to act.
More precisely, absent access controls, an LSR obeys the NMS, but an LSR can
implement policy to filter or modify requests from a PCE.

I realise that this view might not be popular with implementers of Active PCEs,
but I think that they are failing to distinguish between the blob of code they
are writing and naming "Company Foo's most Excellent Active PCE", and the
architectural components.  This, at least, is part of what I am trying to convey
in Section 19 of this document and in the ABNO document.

The bottom line, I think, is that a PCE is not a provisioning tool, it is a path
computation element. The fact that PCEP is used as a provisioning protocol does
not make the thing that does the provisioning into a PCE.

Of course, I don't want to go against consensus with this, but I do think it is
an important architectural principle. Thus, I have been looking for words that
suit both viewpoints...

For an Active PCE to "suggest new LSPs" or to "recommend new LSPs" as described
in Sections 19 and 20 allows, IMHO, an LSR to have a policy that says "always do
what is recommended" and so achieving PCE-initiated LSPs. Yet, these words also
allow a policy of "look both ways before crossing the road" which fits more
closely with my world-view.

>From my perspective "sending an update message to trigger setup of a new LSP in
MBB fashion" is no different from setting up any other LSP. First there was no
LSP, then there is one. So I think the distinction you are drawing doesn't work.

I hope that explains my motivation, and I believe the words in the draft fit
this explanation.

Cheers,
Adrian

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