Thanks Thomas. I will accept your suggestion about allocating UDP port approach 
on ASBR-d to save IP address space.  However,  if the operators want to use 
IANA assigned VXLAN fixed port,  the IP address allocating approach maybe still 
should be used. So do you think we should provide two options(allocating UDP 
port or independant IP address for each remote PE on ASBR-d) and one of the 
options will to be a default choice?
weiguo
________________________________________
From: BESS [[email protected]] on behalf of [email protected] 
[[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, July 24, 2015 15:58
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [bess] comments on draft-hao-bess-inter-nvo3-vpn-optionc

Hi Weiguo,

Haoweiguo :
> Thomas:
>> Having to configure as many IPs on ASBR-d as there are PEs in the WAN
>> seems to me as being a very strong drawback. I think that it would be
>> better to use a combination of one ore more ASBR-d IP address and
>> multiple destination UDP ports, to reduce the configuration overhead on
>> ASBR-d related to having multiple addresses. With multiple UDP ports one
>> IP will be enough for large number of PEs (e.g among the 64k possible
>> ports, you can easily take a few thousands and cover a deployment with
>> thousands of PEs).  For an MPLS-over-GRE encap, you could use the GRE
>> Key field instead. The only encap which I think cannot be addressed this
>> way and would thus require multiple IP destination addresses would be
>> NVGRE (because it already uses the GRE Key field).
>
> [weiguo]: For VXLAN encapsulation, the destination UDP port is fixed, so it's 
> hard for us to allocate different UDP port for each remote PE.

While an IANA assigned port is available as a default, nothing prevents
a box from mapping a range of UDP ports so that any port in this range
is processed as VXLAN.    As long as you have a way to let the sender
know about which port to use, this is fine.  The good news is that
draft-rosen-idr-tunnel-encaps introduces a way to advertise which port
to use when the port is other than the standard.

>   Because normally remote PEs number is not so large, so the IP addresses on 
> ASBR-d won't consume so much.

Networks with thousands of PEs are not uncommon, and this is a number
high enough to make allocating and configuring all these IPs a
significant drawback.   By comparison playing with UDP ports is cheap
and easy.

-Thomas


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