Thanks, Ali.

Yes, I think this should be explicit in the spec. I’d also suggest being 
explicit about what “ignore the rest” means. It could mean one of two things —

1. Don’t pay attention to the extra ones for purposes of computing the local 
forwarding table, but store them and propagate them.
2. Also don’t store or propagate them.

I’m guessing option 2 is better in this case. The problem with propagating them 
is sometimes implementations reorder things, so you could end up with 
inconsistency in the network.

—John

On Oct 8, 2020, at 2:42 PM, Ali Sajassi (sajassi) 
<saja...@cisco.com<mailto:saja...@cisco.com>> wrote:



Hi John,

Sorry for the delay.

The answer to your 1st question is no and the answer to your 2nd question is 
that the receiver should pick the first one in the list and ignore the rest. If 
it helps, I can add couple of lines to that affect to the corresponding section.

Cheers,
Ali

From: John Scudder <j...@juniper.net<mailto:j...@juniper.net>>
Date: Thursday, October 8, 2020 at 11:12 AM
To: 
"draft-ietf-bess-evpn-inter-subnet-forward...@ietf.org<mailto:draft-ietf-bess-evpn-inter-subnet-forward...@ietf.org>"
 
<draft-ietf-bess-evpn-inter-subnet-forward...@ietf.org<mailto:draft-ietf-bess-evpn-inter-subnet-forward...@ietf.org>>
Cc: BESS <bess@ietf.org<mailto:bess@ietf.org>>
Subject: Second try: Router's MAC Extended Community in 
draft-ietf-bess-evpn-inter-subnet-forwarding
Resent-From: <alias-boun...@ietf.org<mailto:alias-boun...@ietf.org>>
Resent-To: Cisco Employee <saja...@cisco.com<mailto:saja...@cisco.com>>, 
<ssa...@cisco.com<mailto:ssa...@cisco.com>>, 
<stho...@cisco.com<mailto:stho...@cisco.com>>, 
<jdr...@juniper.net<mailto:jdr...@juniper.net>>, 
<jorge.raba...@nokia.com<mailto:jorge.raba...@nokia.com>>
Resent-Date: Thursday, October 8, 2020 at 11:12 AM

Hi Authors,

I haven’t seen a reply to this message from almost a month ago, trying again. 
Even if you are still debating the answer amongst yourselves, it would be 
comforting to me to receive a reply to the effect of “we’re still thinking 
about this and will get back to you by $date”.

Thanks,

—John


Begin forwarded message:

From: "John G. Scudder" <j...@juniper.net<mailto:j...@juniper.net>>
Subject: Router's MAC Extended Community in 
draft-ietf-bess-evpn-inter-subnet-forwarding
Date: September 10, 2020 at 9:27:31 AM EDT
To: 
draft-ietf-bess-evpn-inter-subnet-forward...@ietf.org<mailto:draft-ietf-bess-evpn-inter-subnet-forward...@ietf.org>
Cc: BESS <bess@ietf.org<mailto:bess@ietf.org>>

Hi Authors,

I just went through draft-ietf-bess-evpn-inter-subnet-forwarding to look for 
answers to two questions:

1. Can a router advertise multiple different Router’s MAC values? If yes, what 
is the receiver supposed to do?
2. Assuming the answer to question 1 is “no”, what is the receiver supposed to 
do if it receives multiple Router’s MAC Extended Communities (with different 
values) anyway, for example due to a bug or configuration error? This is a very 
real possibility since many BGP implementations allow policy to produce 
arbitrary communities.

Thanks,

—John

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