Hi,

Thanks for your comment.
Pls find some inline replies

Brgds,

Stephane

From: mpls [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of ???(??)
Sent: Thursday, July 05, 2018 05:34
To: [email protected]
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: [mpls] Comments on draft-ietf-mpls-spring-entropy-label

Hi all,

I have the following comments and hope it' s not too late.

1. In fact, RFC6790 doesn't require intermediate routers to have the capability 
of performing EL-based load-balancing mechanism. Instead, it just provides an 
entropy in the MPLS packet which may be available for intermediate routers to 
perform load-balancing.  In contrast, the recommended approach as defined in 
draft-ietf-mpls-spring-entropy-label requires the ingress of a given SR-TE path 
to take into account the ERLD capability of all intermediate routers on that 
path. However, in the loose explicit route case, those intermediate routers 
that the explicit path traverses may change over time due to IGP convergence or 
there may exist multiple ECMPs from one segment towards the next segment. That 
would make the ELI/EI imposition decision much complex. I personally believe 
that the principle used in RFC6790 would make the implementation and deployment 
much easier and therefore should be kept.

[SLI] Using SRTE and label stacking is not different from nested LSP. Each 
tail-end of a segment should be ELC to ensure that it can pop the ELI/EL if the 
ingress decides to push it. The current text does not mandate anything 
regarding the analysis of transit nodes. It says without using normative 
language that the implementation may try to find the minimum ERLD along the 
path. But behaving as RFC6790 is for sure simpler and is compliant.


2. It said in section 4 that "

   The Entropy Readable Label Depth (ERLD) is defined as the number of

   labels a router can both:



   a.  Read in an MPLS packet received on its incoming interface(s)

       (starting from the top of the stack).



   b.  Use in its load-balancing function.
:

However, it said later that:


 To advertise an ERLD value, a SPRING router:



   o  MUST be entropy label capable and, as a consequence, MUST apply

      the dataplane procedures defined in 
[RFC6790<https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6790>].



   o  MUST be able to read an ELI/EL which is located within its ERLD

      value.



   o  MUST take into account this EL in its load-balancing function.

Why should intermediate routers be required to meet the first requirement (e.g. 
the ELC as defined in RFC6790 ) if they would never be used as an LSP egress?
[SLI] If they are pure transit for a node SID, there is no need for them to 
advertise the ERLD.

3. Section 5 introduces the MSD concept. I wonder whether this concept is 
aligned with the MSD concept as defined in the PCEP-SR draft or the MSD concept 
as defined in the IGP-MSD draft. In PCEP-SR draft, it said "

The "Maximum SID Depth" (1

   octet) field (MSD) specifies the maximum number of SIDs (MPLS label

   stack depth in the context of this document) that a PCC is capable of

   imposing on a packet.



In the IGP-MSD draft, it said "

MSD of type 1 (IANA Registry), called Base MSD is used to signal the

   total number of SIDs a node is capable of imposing, to be used by a

   path computation element/controller.  "



If I understand it correctly, the MSD in this draft==the MSD in PCEP-SR 
draft==the Base MSD (i.e., the MSD of type 1), No?

[SLI] Today, the two IGP drafts does not seem to agree on the definition

ISIS says:” Base MPLS Imposition MSD (BMI-MSD) signals the total number of MPLS
   labels a node is capable of imposing, including all
   service/transport/special labels.”

OSPF says:” MSD of type 1 (IANA Registry) is used to signal the number of SIDs a
   node is capable of imposing, to be used by a path computation
   element/controller and is only relevant to the part of the stack
   created as the result of the computation.”

MSD is just MSD is defines a maximum number of labels to be pushed. This is the 
definition we use and it is compliant with the one used in PCEP-SR:

“The "Maximum SID Depth" (1
   octet) field (MSD) specifies the maximum number of SIDs (MPLS label
   stack depth in context of this document) that a PCC is capable of
   imposing on a packet.”

As we also say: “This includes any kind of labels (service, entropy, 
transport...).”, we are compliant with the BMI-MSD defined in IS-IS.



Best regards,
Xiaohu

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