Cheers,
Lyndon
-----Original Message-----
From: owner-ccamp@ops.ietf.org [mailto:owner-ccamp@ops.ietf.org] On
Behalf Of Dimitri.Papadimitriou@alcatel.be
Sent: Thursday, July 06, 2006 11:12 AM
To: Acee Lindem
Cc: ccamp@ops.ietf.org; owner-ccamp@ops.ietf.org
Subject: Re: Comments on
draft-dimitri-ccamp-gmpls-ason-routing-ospf-00.txt
acee - see inline
Acee Lindem <acee@cisco.com>
Sent by: owner-ccamp@ops.ietf.org
06/07/2006 18:36
To: Dimitri PAPADIMITRIOU/BE/ALCATEL@ALCATEL
cc: ccamp@ops.ietf.org
Subject: Re: Comments on
draft-dimitri-ccamp-gmpls-ason-routing-ospf-00.txt
Dimitri,
Here are my comments on the subject document:
General - Describe the relationship of OSPF areas to ASON RAs.
Section 6.1 references OSPF area ID but the relationship
is implied.
[dp] point taken (i guess we did not do a sufficiently good job in RFC
4258 and in the eval doc. as still some questioning remains about
information map)
Section 3.2 - The length calculation is simply wrong. You
really don't know how many prefixes you've got until you've
parsed them.
[dp] which length are you referring to ? the prefix or the sub-TLV ?
The TLV length, the nonesense below:
The Length is set to Sum[n][4 + #32-bit words/4] where n is the
number of local prefixes included in the sub-TLV.
[dp] 4 x n as defined in the node i-d is ok - why not this one
Section 5.1 - RFC 3620 specifies that the Link-ID Sub-TLV
specifies the router-id. Why do you need the remote router-id
in this sub-TLV? Could the 5.2 sub-TLV satisfy the
requirement?
[dp] it is not the router_id but the TE router_ID
[dp] the issue is that there is no more a there is no more a 1:1
relationship between the Router_ID and the TE Router_ID in the present
context
I surmised that. Why wouldn't the link ID be the remote TE router ID in
this case? The advertising router seems irrelevant from a TE standpoint.
[dp] because the router_id is not linked on a 1:1 basis to the TE
router_id when space is per TE_router_id you need to seggregate this
information
Section 6.0 - You should NOT need to change OSPF flooding rules.
In other words, I don't see the need to specify the following:
The Opaque TE LSA re-origination is governed as follows:
- If the target interface is associated to the same area as the
one associated with the receiving interface, the Opaque LSA MUST
NOT be re-originated out that interface.
- If a match is found between the Advertising Router ID in the
header of the received Opaque TE LSA and one of the Router ID
belonging to the area of the target interface, the Opaque LSA
MUST NOT be re-originated out that interface.
- If these two conditions are not met the Opaque TE LSA MAY be re-
originated.
Rather you should specify rules for importing/exporting information
between OSPF instances at different levels.
[dp] your proposal is thus to revise these as import/export rules ?
in order to prevent having specific flooding rules between levels the
point was to not expand too much on the communication process (inside
the entity) between level adjacent RCs but if this makes you more
confortable i can revise as import/export rules
The existing RFC 3620 TE opaque LSAs are area scoped LSAs. Area scoped
LSAs have very well defined flooding rules and, IMHO, you should not be
trying to roll-your-own flooding rules for this application. Just think
what a mess we'd have if every party proposed an opaque LSA also
proposed some flooding hack for their opaque LSA type.
[dp] i don't have any issue to express LSA processing with import and
export rules (even if there is nothing in 3640 to pass LSA between
routing
instance)
Section 6.1 While an RA is completely contained within a single
parent layer RA. A given RA may have multiple child RAs.
Hence, the election algorithm is broken.
[dp] to make it clear this is not an "election" process
At a minimum,
you must advertise all your child areas. Also, you MUST state
that reachability is a precondition for considering a router
eligible to pass information between levels.
[dp] upper not lower (it is a discovery from a given to an upper parent
viewpoint, where a child has a unique parent)
I get from RFC 4258 that a child RA will be contained within a single
parent RA. However, no where do I that a parent RA can have a single
child RA. So, if a single RC in a parent RA has multiple child RAs, you
need to advertise more than one area ID.
[dp] the parent is unique why multiple parent area id
Also, you did not address the requirement for reachability. What if the
RA becomes partitioned or the advertising RC goes down without
withdrawing its advertisements.
You MUST deal
this - it is simply broken the way it is.
[dp] situation is the same as with a single ABR case, in case of
multiple RC's you are expected to be aware of the broken RC -
Finally, since this is going to require advertisement of more
than a single area-ID, please allocate a separate opaque LSA
for ASON purposes.
[dp] having clarified the above is that still needed ?
You only clarified that it is wrong.
[dp] not sure to capture your point - but ok -
Section 6.2 - Are you suggesting a single area ID or an area ID
path (similar to the BGP AS path)?
[dp] the former
I guess this may work if you
always advertise you own area ID when redistributing between
areas (relying on the fact that a child area is completely
contained by its parent). I'm going to think more about this
encourage others to do the same.
General: Have you considered aggregation?
[dp] at which level - reachability can be aggregated for inst.
Than the rules for aggregation should be specified.
[dp] can add base guidelines if needed
Thanks,
Acee
Thanks,
Acee