On 21/12/2015 14:47, Chris Bowers wrote:
Steward,

I don't agree with the initial statement that the technique forms two trees 
rooted at a single node.  The designation of the GADAG root plays an important 
role in computing the red and blue MRT trees.  However,  red and blue MRT trees 
are computed using forward SPFs rooted at each source, which follow the 
directed links on the GADAG and do not propagate past the GADAG root.  The net 
result of these computations can be viewed as producing red and blue MRT trees 
rooted at each destination.  In any case, these trees are not rooted at the 
GADAG root.
Ah, OK.

However the GADAG root can move, does that not have an impact on the repair topology? It sounds from the above as if it might since you say you say that the root sets a propagation limit.

- Stewart

Anil pointed out that the pseudo-code in draft-ietf-rtgwg-mrt-frr-algorithm 
didn't always make a clear distinction between the root of the forward SPF 
computation and the GADAG root, so we tried to clarify that in this set of 
changes.

https://github.com/cbowers/draft-ietf-rtgwg-mrt-frr-algorithm/commit/ada619050ec9d773b7919a1c622f068d5a5a5e88

Are there places in the architecture document where similar clarifications 
should be made?

Chris

-----Original Message-----
From: rtgwg [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Stewart Bryant
Sent: Friday, December 04, 2015 9:55 AM
To: [email protected]; [email protected]; Alvaro Retana 
<[email protected]>
Subject: Re: WGLC for draft-rtgwg-mrt-frr-architecture

Another couple of comments on this draft.

The technique you use of selecting a single node and forming two trees rooted 
at that node should really be noted up front in the summary.

A consequence of this is that when you add a node or when the root node fails 
the trees and hence the FRR paths may change. To some extent this happens in 
LFA and RLFA, although the changes will tend to be confined to a local region, 
whereas with MTR I think that the  node may move to a completely different 
region. If that is the case then that has an impact on the FRR traffic 
management. By way of comparison, NV is the least impacted by this approach and 
the SR approach is impacted as much as LFA, but has the option of correcting 
this will a little effort.

I think that there really needs to be some text on the matter in the 
architecture spec.

- Stewart

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