Re: [spring] I-D Action: draft-ietf-spring-srv6-network-programming-10.txt

Greg Mirsky <gregimirsky@gmail.com> Fri, 28 February 2020 16:44 UTC

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From: Greg Mirsky <gregimirsky@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 28 Feb 2020 08:44:34 -0800
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To: Robert Raszuk <robert@raszuk.net>
Cc: John Scudder <jgs=40juniper.net@dmarc.ietf.org>, SPRING WG <spring@ietf.org>, 6man WG <ipv6@ietf.org>
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Subject: Re: [spring] I-D Action: draft-ietf-spring-srv6-network-programming-10.txt
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Hi Robert,
thank you for you consideration. Pablo and I had discussed references to
OAM in the SRv6 network programming draft. Pablo and authors kindly agreed
to remove all references to OAM and draft-ietf-6man-spring-srv6-oam. As we
are discussing the network programming
draft, draft-ietf-6man-spring-srv6-oam is in WGLC at 6man. My intention was
to work with the authors of SRv6 OAM draft on documenting its relationship
with PSP. Would that make sense?

Regards,
Greg



On Fri, Feb 28, 2020 at 8:37 AM Robert Raszuk <robert@raszuk.net> wrote:

> Greg,
>
> I agree. Moreover I would suggest to add such text that PSP endpoint
> behaviours should or must not be set for any OEM packets. Would that help ?
>
> Thx,
> R.
>
>
>
> On Fri, Feb 28, 2020 at 5:22 PM Greg Mirsky <gregimirsky@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> Hi Robert,
>> you've asked about a possible operational drawback of PSP. I think that
>> for OAM PSP has decremental effect on the usefulness of performance
>> measurements as there's no obvious information to identify the path a
>> packet traversed.
>>
>> Regards,
>> Greg
>>
>> On Fri, Feb 28, 2020 at 2:55 AM Robert Raszuk <robert@raszuk.net> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi John,
>>>
>>> > I have an additional observation, or question, about Dan’s scenario.
>>> Almost all communication is bidirectional.
>>> > Presumably this means a router that’s the tail end of an SRv6 path in
>>> one direction is the head end in the other.
>>>
>>> While your observation is correct that most TCP connections are bidir SR
>>> in a lot of cases can operate only in one direction. Needless to say it can
>>> also be used with UDP streaming.
>>>
>>> To extend Ketan's OTT video example let me observe that in a lot of
>>> transactions queries from clients are tiny and do not TE capabilities while
>>> responses are huge and bursty and may indeed benefit from special handling.
>>>
>>> Sure if you think of applications like VPNs than you are right ..
>>> regardless of the size of the packets proper tagging must occur in either
>>> direction - but this is just one use of SRv6 perhaps not even the major
>>> one.
>>>
>>> - - -
>>>
>>> Now as one friend just asked me offline - putting all IPv6 dogmas aside
>>> - what is the technical issue with removing previously applied extension
>>> header from the packet within a given operator's network ? What breaks when
>>> you do that ?
>>>
>>> Thx,
>>> R.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 10:11 PM John Scudder <jgs=
>>> 40juniper.net@dmarc.ietf.org> wrote:
>>>
>>>> I have an additional observation, or question, about Dan’s scenario..
>>>> Almost all communication is bidirectional. Presumably this means a router
>>>> that’s the tail end of an SRv6 path in one direction is the head end in the
>>>> other. Doesn’t a head end need to add an SRH? If I’ve gotten that right,
>>>> then we can extend Ron’s list with one more item. That is, apparently the
>>>> ultimate segment endpoint:
>>>>
>>>> • Can process a SID, received as an IPv6 DA, on the fast path
>>>> • Cannot process an SRH on receipt, even if Segments Left equal 0, on
>>>> the fast path.
>>>> • Can add an SRH on transmission, on the fast path
>>>>
>>>> Even though strictly speaking the second and third bullet points aren’t
>>>> mutually exclusive, it’s a little difficult to imagine a real router that
>>>> would have both these properties simultaneously. Perhaps I’m not being
>>>> creative enough in imagining deployment scenarios? Since this scenario is
>>>> claimed as an important reason this problematic feature is needed, it would
>>>> be great if someone who understands it would elucidate, thanks.
>>>>
>>>> One further point, Ron says “I wonder whether it is a good idea to
>>>> stretch the IPv6 standard to accommodate IPv6-challenged devices.” I also
>>>> wonder this, especially because these devices will have a relatively
>>>> limited lifetime in the network.[*] I don’t find the cost/benefit
>>>> attractive of making a permanent detrimental change to the IPv6
>>>> architecture to accommodate a temporary deployment issue.
>>>>
>>>> Regards,
>>>>
>>>> —John
>>>>
>>>> --------------------------------------------------------------------
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>>> ipv6@ietf.org
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>>>
>>