Hi Jeffrey. Thanks for all your input and consideration. As we discussed privately, I update the draft to align with our agreements.
I believe this draft us ready for WG adoption. Can we move it forward? Regards, Patrice Brissette Distinguished Engineer Cisco Systems From: Jeffrey (Zhaohui) Zhang <[email protected]> Date: Wednesday, October 8, 2025 at 14:21 To: Patrice Brissette (pbrisset) <[email protected]>, [email protected] <[email protected]>, [email protected] <[email protected]> Subject: RE: [bess] draft-mackenzie-bess-evpn-l3mh-proto Hi Patrice, A clarification on the “Tag ID” below. I meant the “Ethernet Tag ID” in the EVPN routes. e.g.: A MAC/IP Advertisement route type specific EVPN NLRI consists of the following: +---------------------------------------+ | RD (8 octets) | +---------------------------------------+ |Ethernet Segment Identifier (10 octets)| +---------------------------------------+ | Ethernet Tag ID (4 octets) | Thanks. Jeffrey Juniper Business Use Only From: Patrice Brissette (pbrisset) <[email protected]> Sent: Monday, October 6, 2025 10:29 AM To: Jeffrey (Zhaohui) Zhang <[email protected]>; [email protected]; [email protected] Subject: Re: [bess] draft-mackenzie-bess-evpn-l3mh-proto [External Email. Be cautious of content] Hi Jeffrey, Thanks for spending time on this draft. Please see my replies below. Regards, Patrice Brissette Distinguished Engineer Cisco Systems From: Jeffrey (Zhaohui) Zhang <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> Date: Wednesday, October 1, 2025 at 22:42 To: Patrice Brissette (pbrisset) <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>, [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>, [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> Subject: RE: [bess] draft-mackenzie-bess-evpn-l3mh-proto Hi Patrice, I have some comments/questions for the draft. When I first read it, I thought it was about using EVPN MH procedures along with all the L2 props – EVIs, MAC-VRFs, BDs, BTs, IRBs, etc. – among the MH PEs (and not involving other PEs at all) for the purpose of MH only. Everything will just work – what would be the purpose of this draft? Then I realized that, perhaps, while the EVPN MH-related routes are used, there are no L2 EVIs, MAC-VRFs, BDs, BTs, IRBs – it’s all L3. All the SYNC routes will lead to appropriate l3 states in the VRFs. Is that understanding correct? <Patrice> That’s correct. If so, I think it needs to be explicitly called at the very beginning – even in the abstraction. <Patrice> I can certainly add some precision in the abstraction Other comments: • I don’t think you need/should use/reference the procedures in the ac-aware bundling. Since it is l3-only and there are no MAC-VRFs/BDs/BTs, there is no need to involve the service models, but you can still use Tag ID in the routes to distinguish between different VLANs. That’s simpler than using the Attachment Circuit IDs. In fact, I see section 2.8 mentioning not using the AC ID – so why not just make the Tag ID the only way and not mention the ac-aware bundling at all? <Patrice> I’m not sure what tag-id you are referring to. Do you have a pointer to some document? • Initially, I was concerned about using the VRF RT by default for the sync routes. That means all other PEs will get the sync routes – even those not on the same MH ES. Then I realized that other PEs may not have negotiated the EVPN SAFI, so they would not get the routes even though the routes carry the VRF route target. It would be good to point that out. <Patrice> Fair point. Route target can also be programmed statically. • While writing the above bullet, I realized that there could be one set of MH PEs and another set of MH PEs, all peering with the same RR. In that case, they would get the sync routes unrelated to them, which is not ideal. I would have preferred the alternative method in Section 2.1 to be the default. Is there a reason for the current choice? <Patrice> It is always the tricky part of a default versus other options. Since it is a L3 solution, I believe using L3RT is appropriate. • A nit question – why do you say “Customer Subnet Route” instead of just “Customer Route”? <Patrice> Generally speaking, RT-5 is used to exchange subnet routes and that is the one learned from another protocol. It is different from the subnet of an L3 interface for instance. I don’t get the following, though: The synchronization over GRT is different. In that specific situation, an EVPN instance may be assigned to support non-VPN layer-3 services. The assignment is only serving the purpose of providing route targets as requested by [RFC7432]; where RT(s) are mandatory per EVPN route. <Patrice> GRT does not have route targets by EVPN requires some…. It mentions that an EVI is used only for the purpose of providing route targets in the case of GRT. But the sync routes will still have to be imported to or associated with the GRT, right? If one is concerned that GRT does not use route targets, I suppose it is more about the fact that route targets are not used to associate/import routes with/to the GRT. Getting a route target from an EVI will not solve that problem. If that is not a problem, then one can always just configure a route target for the GRT, w/o having to create an EVI. <Patrice> The required RT is for EVPN for the machinery to work… not for GRT per say…. We can discuss f2f on the one if you have more questions. Some nits about the following: This extension to [RFC9135] and to [RFC9136] brings EVPN based MC-LAG all-active multi-homing load-balancing to various services (L2 and L3) delivered by EVPN. Although this solution is also applicable to some L2 service use cases, (example Centralized Gateway) this document focuses on the L3VPN [RFC4364] use case to provide examples. “This extension” is not defined. Perhaps you meant “This document extends [RFC9135] and [RFC9136] procedures”. However, I don’t think you’re extending those procedures – you’re just using the 7432/9135/9136 procedures for this use case. <Patrice> Correct. “… to various services (L2 and L3) delivered by EVPN” is also confusing. We’re only talking about L3 services, right? The L3 services may not be delivered by EVPN either – it could be L3 VPN by rfc4364, or could be GRT using IGP. It’s not clear to me about the applicability to some l2 service use cases, but I notice that the title is “l3mh-proto”. <Patrice> I will address that in the next version. Thanks for pointing that out. Perhaps the following? This document adapts [RFC7432], [RFC9135] , and [RFC9136]’s all-active multi-homing procedures to L3 services. Thanks. Jeffrey Juniper Business Use Only From: Patrice Brissette (pbrisset) <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> Sent: Friday, September 5, 2025 4:55 PM To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>; [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> Subject: [bess] draft-mackenzie-bess-evpn-l3mh-proto Hi, We believe this draft is ready for WG adoption. How can we move it forward? Draft is here: https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-mackenzie-bess-evpn-l3mh-proto/<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https:/datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-mackenzie-bess-evpn-l3mh-proto/__;!!NEt6yMaO-gk!BfvVfZFDk4oxtmGOQYBn1qNobMTBaxW94-xl7-8KDHzpz_UXM9TYwQKVd_PeFXyzqG_EfYPvooFVMQUv$> Regards, Patrice Brissette Distinguished Engineer Cisco Systems
_______________________________________________ BESS mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]
