Hi Alia,

please see inline:

On 10/22/15 19:00 , Alia Atlas wrote:
<no-hat>

The LFA and RLFA work both have the ability to use SRLG information, which
has only been available in the TE Opaque LSA.  That's not been considered a
problem.

it is a problem if the user does not want to use the link for MPLS traffic engineering. The reason is that any router receiving such TE Opaque LSA would automatically make the link part of the traffic engineering topology. RFC3630 clearly says that traffic engineering topology is described by TE Opaque LSAs and that such topology does not necessarily match the regular routed topology.


The TE Opaque LSA would be, presumably, required if SPRING is supported
which has no implications on whether RSVP-TE is enabled.

SPRING does not use TE Opaque LSA.


My question is what does an assumption about being "TE-enabled" mean?

means that the link is part of the traffic engineering topology.

What are the benefits of trying to change interpretations that have
existed for
at least 5+ years?

not sure what interpretation are you referring to, but RFC3630 is clear on what the TE Opaque LSAs are used for.

thanks,
Peter


Regards,
Alia
</no-hat>

On Thu, Oct 22, 2015 at 11:00 AM, Chris Bowers <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

    Peter,

    I would suggest making the text of the draft more explicit about the
    conditions under which a given link and set of attributes should be
    included in the TE Opaque LSA or the Extended Link Opaque LSA.
    RFC3630 is subject to interpretation on its own, and since it was
    written before the existence of the Extended Link Opaque LSA, it is
    not self-evident how to interpret it with respect to using this new
    LSA.   Clarifying the proposed rules for use of the TE Opaque LSA or
    the Extended Link Opaque LSA without relying on interpretations of
    3630 will be helpful.  It will help the WG evaluate the proposal
    overall and determine what, if any, backwards compatibility issues
    this proposal may cause with existing implementations.  It may also
    help future implementers avoid interoperability and backwards
    compatibility issues.

    As a concrete example, I think it would be useful to explicitly
    address the case of how to advertise a link that only supports LDP
    in the text of the draft.   Below is an example of a format that
    would clarify this.    From the response to my question below
    regarding LDP, I assume that a link that only supports LDP signaling
    and not RSVP-signaling would not be advertised in the TE Opaque
    LSA.  However, I am honestly not positive that this is what is intended.

    Format of proposed clarifying text:
    ------------------

    A link MUST NOT be advertised in the TE Opaque LSA under the
    following conditions:

    1) The link does not support RSVP-TE signaling.

    2) Another condition...

    A link MAY be advertised in the TE Opaque LSA under the following
    conditions:

    1) Another condition ...

    A link MUST NOT be advertised in the Extended Link Opaque LSA under
    the following conditions:

    1) Some other condition ....

    Thanks,
    Chris



    -----Original Message-----
    From: Peter Psenak [mailto:[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>]
    Sent: Wednesday, October 21, 2015 3:24 PM
    To: Chris Bowers <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>;
    Acee Lindem (acee) <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>;
    Shraddha Hegde <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>;
    OSPF WG List <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
    Subject: Re: [OSPF] Regarding draft-ppsenak-ospf-te-link-attr-reuse-00

    Hi Chris,

    On 10/21/15 21:44 , Chris Bowers wrote:
     > Peter,
     >
     > RFC3630 does not appear to restrict the use of the attributes it
    defines.   The term "TE extensions" may seem to imply some
    restriction, but the Applicability section of RFC3630 explicitly
    addresses this potential interpretation by saying that a more
    accurate designation is "extended link attributes".
     >
     > 1.1.  Applicability
     >
     >     Many of the extensions specified in this document are in
    response to
     >     the requirements stated in [5], and thus are referred to as
    "traffic
     >     engineering extensions", and are also commonly associated
    with MPLS
     >     Traffic Engineering.  A more accurate (albeit bland)
    designation is
     >     "extended link attributes", as the proposal is to simply add more
     >     attributes to links in OSPF advertisements.

    RFC3630 says:

         The extensions provide a way of describing the traffic engineering
         topology (including bandwidth and administrative constraints) and
         distributing this information within a given OSPF area.  This
         topology does not necessarily match the regular routed topology,

    above clearly indicates that if the link is advertised in TE Opaque
    LSA, it is part of the TE topology, otherwise it is not. That
    restricts the usage of the TE Opaque LSA to the links that are part
    of the TE topology.

     >
     > -------
     > Also, the response below uses the term "TE-enabled" which along
    with "TE-application" does not appear to have a precise definition
    in draft-ppsenak-ospf-te-link-attr-reuse-00.   Based on RFC 3630, it
    seems reasonable to say that a link is "TE-enabled" if the link is
    advertised in the TE Opaque LSA.  I don't think this is the meaning
    you intend, so to avoid confusion, I will use the term
    "RFC-3630-TE-enabled" to mean that the link is advertised in the TE
    Opaque LSA defined in RFC 3630.
     >
     > So can you clarify what "TE-enabled" or a "TE-application" means
    in your document?  I assume that it should mean that MPLS is
    enabled, but it is actually not clear to me if just having
    LDP-enabled on a link would qualify as being "TE-enabled" or not.

    TE-enabled means the link is part of the traffic engineering topology as
    described by RFC3630.

    thanks,
    Peter

     >
     > Thanks,
     > Chris
     >
     >
     > -----Original Message-----
     > From: Peter Psenak [mailto:[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>]
     > Sent: Wednesday, October 21, 2015 12:40 PM
     > To: Chris Bowers <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>>; Acee Lindem (acee) <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>>; Shraddha Hegde <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>>; OSPF WG List <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>>
     > Subject: Re: [OSPF] Regarding
    draft-ppsenak-ospf-te-link-attr-reuse-00
     >
     > Hi Chris,
     >
     > On 10/21/15 19:20 , Chris Bowers wrote:
     >> In my opinion the backwards compatibility problems introduced by
    this
     >> proposal outweigh potential gains.
     >
     > there is no backwards compatibility problem with the draft.
     >
     >>
     >> As a concrete example, there is at least one existing implementation
     >> of remote LFA where policy is used to select a backup tunnel
    that does
     >> not share an SRLG with the failed link.  This SRLG information is
     >> carried in the TE Opaque LSA.
     >
     > that is fine, you are free to do that if the link is TE enabled,
    there is no problem. If the link is not TE enabled and you use TE
    Opaque LSA to flood the SRLG data for such link, you are going
    against the current specification. There is no way to do that today,
    because any router that would receive such TE Opaque LSA must assume
    such link is TE enabled.
     >
     >>
     >> As it currently reads, I think the proposal in
     >>    draft-ppsenak-ospf-te-link-attr-reuse has the potential to break
     >> existing standards-compliant implementations.
     >
     > I don't believe so.
     >
     >>
     >> I might be OK with having the proposal only apply to sub-TLVs  that
     >> get defined in the future.  However, I think that taking TLVs
    that were
     >>    standardized over ten years ago, and selectively moving them or
     >> copying them to a different LSA based on a set of rules that is
     >> subject to interpretation is going to create confusion and
     >> interoperability headaches.
     >
     > What we propose is the way to advertise link attributes without
    making the link part of TE topology. We simply do not have a way to
    do that today. I do not see any problem in doing so, because we do
    not change anything on the TE Opaque LSA side, we are defining
    something new.
     >
     > thanks,
     > Peter
     >
     >>
     >> Chris
     >>
     >> *From:*OSPF [mailto:[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>] *On Behalf Of *Acee Lindem
     >> (acee)
     >> *Sent:* Wednesday, October 21, 2015 6:48 AM
     >> *To:* Shraddha Hegde <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>>; OSPF WG List
     >> <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>
     >> *Subject:* Re: [OSPF] Regarding
     >> draft-ppsenak-ospf-te-link-attr-reuse-00
     >>
     >> Hi Shraddha,
     >>
     >> *From: *OSPF <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]> <mailto:[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>>> on
     >> behalf of Shraddha Hegde <[email protected]
    <mailto:[email protected]>
     >> <mailto:[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>>
     >> *Date: *Wednesday, October 21, 2015 at 1:20 AM
     >> *To: *OSPF WG List <[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
    <mailto:[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>>>
     >> *Subject: *[OSPF] Regarding draft-ppsenak-ospf-te-link-attr-reuse-00
     >>
     >>      Hi All,
     >>
     >>      draft-ppsenak-ospf-te-link-attr-reuse-00 proposes moving and/or
     >>      copying TLVs from the TE Opaque LSA to the Extended Link
    Opaque LSA.
     >>      The draft lists the problems that the draft is trying to
    solve.  I
     >>      have reproduced that list of problems below, with each problem
     >>      followed by what I believe to be a better and simpler solution.
     >>
     >>          1.  Whenever the link is advertised in a TE Opaque LSA, the
     >> link
     >>
     >>              becomes a part of the TE topology, which may not
    match IP
     >> routed
     >>
     >>              topology.  By making the link part of the TE topology,
     >> remote
     >>
     >>              nodes may mistakenly believe that the link is available
     >> for MPLS
     >>
     >>              TE or GMPLS, when, in fact, MPLS is not enabled on
    the link.
     >>
     >>      To address this issue, we simply need to define a new
    sub-TLV in the
     >>      TE Link LSAto say whether MPLS/GMPLS/RSVP is enabled on the
    link
     >>      instead of moving the TLVs around into different LSAs.
     >>
     >>          2.  The TE Opaque LSA carries link attributes that are not
     >> used or
     >>
     >>              required by MPLS TE or GMPLS.  There is no
    mechanism in TE
     >>      Opaque
     >>
     >>              LSA to indicate which of the link attributes should be
     >> passed to
     >>
     >>              MPLS TE application and which should be used by
    OSPFv2 and
     >> other
     >>
     >>              applications.
     >>
     >>      OSPF database is a container and OSPF can use any of the
    LSAS for
     >>      its own use including the TE LSAs.As far as the TE database
    goes, it
     >>      contains data from TE LSAs as well as non-TE LSAs (Network LSA)
     >>      today so thereasoning described here doesn't make sense.
     >>
     >>          3.  Link attributes used for non-TE purposes is partitioned
     >> across
     >>
     >>              multiple LSAs - the TE Opaque LSA and the Extended Link
     >> Opaque
     >>
     >>              LSA.  This partitioning will require implementations to
     >> lookup
     >>
     >>              multiple LSAs to extract link attributes for a single
     >> link,
     >>
     >>              bringing needless complexity to the OSPFv2
    implementations.
     >>
     >>      There will be nodes in the network which will run older
    software
     >>      which send these attributes via TE LSAs so the problem of
    looking
     >>      into the TE LSAs for TE relatedinformation doesn't get
    solved with
     >>      this draft.  Rather it makes it more complicated. With this
    draft,
     >>      the multiple LSA lookup will only increase.An
    implementation will
     >>      first have to find if Extended link LSA contains the
    required info,
     >>      if not it will need to lookup the info in TE.LSA.
     >>
     >> The applications using the TE parameters for non-TE use-cases
    will use
     >> the OSPF Prefix/Link attributes for these use cases. Hence, there is
     >> no requirement to lookup the LSAs in multiple places. Backward
     >> compatibility will be covered in the specifications of these
    applications.
     >>
     >> Thanks,
     >>
     >> Acee
     >>
     >>      Looking up multiple LSAs for information is an
    implementation issue
     >>      and I am sure there will be implementations that will
    handle this
     >>      gracefully so that it doesn't cause
     >>
     >>      delays in critical paths. It doesn't seem reasonable to
    come up with
     >>      protocol extensions to solve implementation issues.
     >>
     >>      Rgds
     >>
     >>      Shraddha
     >>
     >>
     >>
     >> _______________________________________________
     >> OSPF mailing list
     >> [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
     >> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ospf
     >>
     >
     > .
     >

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