Hi IDR WG, We have a draft that was on WGLC which introduces the usage of Route Targets on Internet address families to allow automated filtering of gateway routes. I raised a concern on a potential issue happening when Route Target constraint is deployed on these sessions.
Internet address families don't use RTs today, and are propagated following the BGP propagation rules. When applying an RT and when having RTC deployed on the session (RTC not being family aware), propagation of Internet routes that don't have an RT may be stopped because of the behavior defined in draft-ietf-idr-rtc-no-rt. This will so break the existing default behavior of Internet SAFIs. We would like to get IDR's feedback on this topic. Thanks, Stephane BESS co-chair -----Original Message----- From: Adrian Farrel <[email protected]> Sent: jeudi 4 juin 2020 19:31 To: [email protected] Cc: [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected] Subject: Closing on Stephane's open issue with draft-ietf-bess-datacenter-gateway Hi, John and I had a chat today about what we perceive is Stephane's open issue. What we think the concern is is that we are using RTs in conjunction with normal (i.e., non-VPN) routes. We do this to allow gateways to filter their imports based on the RT that applies to the SR domain that it serves. An option was to use the Route Origin extended community instead. RFC 4360, which introduces both the Route Target and the Route Origin extended communities and gives some guidance. Loosely expressed, the RT says which routers should import, the RO says which routers have advertised. In both cases, the text suggests that "One possible use of the community is specified in RFC4364" which implies that there are other acceptable uses. 4364 implies that the RO is used "to uniquely identify the set of routes learned from a particular site." That is (my words), to apply a filter on top of the RT to prevent re-import by a site of routes that match the RT and that were advertised by other entry points to the site. Indeed, the RO would seem to be used (in the 4364 case) only when the RT is also in use. We appreciate that the distinction is pretty delicate, but we think we are right to use RT in this case because we are filtering to import, not to avoid importing. Furthermore, if we used the RO then, to be consistent with 4364, we would still be using the RT anyway. That, we think, disposes of the "RT or RO?" question. Now, we can go back to the original formulation of the question: is it OK to use RT with "non-VPN IP addresses"? Well, we consulted around a bit privately amongst some BGP experts, and we couldn't find anyone to say it was actually a problem. And (of course) no one raised the issue in WG last call - but Matthew might claim that is because the document was only lightly reviewed, and Stephane might claim that this is because he had already raised the point. Obviously, some of the authors know a bit about BGP, and Eric was a lead author on 4364 and drove a lot of the details of what we wrote. Two points in closing: - If someone can show that we break something, we will have to fix it. - If the chairs want to run this point past IDR and BESS explicitly, that would be fine. Hope this helps. Best, Adrian _______________________________________________ BESS mailing list [email protected] https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/bess
