Hi Linda,

> But it is not clear if NVA is responsible cross VNs communication, or L3 
> forwarding among NVEs across the underlay network?

For cross-VN communication, see Section 5.4 on Distributed Gateways, which also 
mentions inter-VN communication policies.  OTOH, that text does not point out 
that an NVA could configure the distributed gateway components; I agree that 
this should be noted.  Both use of a distributed gateway and use of an NVA to 
configure it ought to be optional (although an NVA is clearly well-suited to 
configuring distributed gateway as it's already configuring much of the needed 
info into the NVEs).

> IMHO, NVA is more close to DNS than to BGP. Instead of this "Federated NVAs", 
> why not examine today's DNS mechanism?

Because I'm rather short on "copious spare time."  If you have a concrete idea, 
feel free to elaborate ...

Thanks,
--David

From: Linda Dunbar [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Wednesday, October 30, 2013 7:00 PM
To: Thomas Narten; Black, David; 'Jon Hudson'; Larry Kreeger (kreeger); 
LASSERRE, MARC (MARC)
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Comments to draft-narten-nvo3-arch-01

David, Thomas, Jon, Larry, and Marc,

The revised 01 draft is much better than the 00 version. However, I still have 
some comments, especially to Section 6:

Section 6: NVA:

I think it is necessary to describe the types of content on NVA.
Is NVA only responsible for Inner-outer mapping for target within same VN?
It is clear that each NVA has mapping for many VNs. But it is not clear if NVA 
is responsible cross VNs communication, or L3 forwarding among NVEs across the 
underlay network?

Is NVA also responsible for providing inter-VN communication policies?

E.g. For data packets from "a" (VN#1) to "b" (VN#2), if the NVE to which "a" is 
attached behaves as a gateway, this NVE has to terminate the MAC header of the 
data packets from "a", replace with a different MAC header for VN#2, and then 
add the NVO3 outer header. Does NVA provide the information to the NVE about 
VN#2's MAC header?

It is very good that the draft acknowledges the current interface between 
Orchestration systems to Hypervisor. As a matter fact, some server vendors 
require our network equipment to adapt to their existing interface. (E.g. 
Microsoft System Center wants to use their existing interface to hypervisor as 
the interface to the switched based encapsulation nodes (NVE) as well).

IMHO, NVA is more close to DNS than to BGP. Instead of this "Federated NVAs", 
why not examine today's DNS mechanism?

Linda


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