hi, I fully agree with Yi Yang. As far as I see we are mixing concepts.
Service Chains can be unidirectional or bidirectional and can also be symmetric or asymmetric. On the other hand SFs can be stateless or stateful and can be transparent or not transparent (e.g. of non transparent an HTTP proxy). As far as I understand from previous emails, what some of you is saying is that having a stateful SF (some of you call it symmetric) implies having a symmetric chain and in line with Yi Yang, I would say this is not right. A stateful chain implies this SF will have a reverse path, but not that the complete chain must be symmetric. I mean, the SF does not need the packet to traverse through the same SFs in both chain directions, but to get both the reply and the answer and in some cases even all the flows related to the same subscriber. I agree with Yi Yang and Tim when saying it would be good having a stateful property in the SF to ensure there is a reverse path traversing this SF, but not to ensure there is a symmetric chain, SFP or RSP. Best regards, Juanma El nov. 11, 2016 2:00 AM, "Yang, Yi Y" <[email protected]> escribió: I think you’re confusing the symmetry a stateful SF requires and symmetric chain. We can still create symmetric chains even if every SF in these chains is stateless. So I think Tim’s proposal is ok, you can mark a SF stateful by other property such as “stateful”, using “symmetric” here will make people confused. You can let SFC consider this when your chain includes such a stateful SF and create RSP. Let me make an example. SF1 ------------à SF2-----------------àSF3 (stateless) (stateful) (stateless) For such RSP, reverse RSP must include this SF2 because it is stateful. SF4------------àSF2-------------------àSF5 (stateless) (stateful) (stateless) You can refer to https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7665 and extend it if it didn’t consider your use case J From: Brady Allen Johnson [mailto:[email protected]<http://ericsson.com>] Sent: Thursday, November 10, 2016 8:47 PM To: Swati Deshpande <[email protected]<http://serro.com>>; Yang, Yi Y <[email protected]<http://intel.com>> Cc: Diego Jesus Granados Lopez <[email protected]<http://ericsson.com>>; [email protected]<http://lists.opendaylight.org>; Tim Rozet <[email protected]<http://redhat.com>> Subject: Re: [sfc-dev] Deprecating SFC, SFP, and RSP symmetric fields I agree. You have to ask the question: Why would a Service Chain be symmetric? Answer: Because one or several Service Functions in that chain need both uplink and downlink packets. So, as Swati mentioned, instead of putting the burden on the Operator to know about the Service Functions, configure the symmetric property on the Service Function, and let SFC create the reverse/symmetric Service Chain internally when needed. This change simplifies the SFC configuration. Regards, Brady On 10/11/16 13:34, Swati Deshpande wrote: As an Abstract object , SF can be in symmetric SFC or asymmetric SFC. If we think of use cases, there is one category of SFs, that can function only when set up in symmetric SFC, and second category of SF that can function in both symmetric as well as asymmetric SFC. So the real question is "Do we put onus on operator to know about category of SFs being deployed and set up SFC accordingly? Or do we derive symmetric nature of SFC based on category of SF being deployed in the chain. If we want to make life easy for operators and also give them control, by default symmetric nature of SFC can be derived from SF category and additional control can be added on SFC to override the default behavior. Regards, Swati On Thu, Nov 10, 2016 at 5:28 PM, Yang, Yi Y <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: But a SF can be in symmetric chain, it also can be in asymmetric chain, symmetric or asymmetric is for chain or path, not for SF. It is really weird a bit if you say a SF is symmetric or asymmetric. From: Swati Deshpande [mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] Sent: Thursday, November 10, 2016 7:45 PM To: Diego Jesus Granados Lopez <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> Cc: Yang, Yi Y <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; Brady Allen Johnson <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> Subject: Re: [sfc-dev] Deprecating SFC, SFP, and RSP symmetric fields Agree with Diego, Symmetric nature of SFC should be determined based on type of SF used in the chain. SF types dpi, firewall , NAT, need to see both forward and reverse flows hence SFC built using such SFs would need to be symmetric. If any one SF in a SFC has symmetric path requirement, RSP should be symmetric. Regards, Swati On Thu, Nov 10, 2016 at 4:59 PM, Diego Jesus Granados Lopez <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: Hi, Not really following your point on this. I think the contrary: SF having a symmetric flag makes all the sense, but it would be desirable that SFP don't have it. E.g. think of the header enrichment service function type: it would be great if any HE vendor could specify whether his HE SF is symmetric or not (e.g. Ericsson sells the "Ericsson HE"; it is a transparent HE SF that don't need symmetry, hence it is a not-symmetric SF"; another vendor sells the "OtherVendor HE", that is a proxy, and defines its SF as symmetric). From the SFC operator standpoint, he simply choses a HE SF among all the vendors building SFs belonging to the header enrichment type and defines the path, and it is SFC what determines whether the symmetric RSP is needed or not depending on the SFs part of it. This way, we simplify operation (i.e. the operator choses a HE based on business needs, but never needs to think about symmetry) and prevent configuration mistakes (e.g. the operator configuring a SFP as not symmetric but including a SF which needed the symmetric path). I could think of the same reasoning being applicable for other SF types: dpi... Best regards, Diego -----Original Message----- From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> [mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On Behalf Of Yang, Yi Y Sent: jueves, 10 de noviembre de 2016 12:06 To: Brady Allen Johnson <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> Subject: Re: [sfc-dev] Deprecating SFC, SFP, and RSP symmetric fields I think SFP can keep it, others can remove it, it doesn't make sense for a SF to have a symmetric flag. -----Original Message----- From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> [mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On Behalf Of Brady Allen Johnson Sent: Thursday, November 10, 2016 6:42 PM To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> Subject: [sfc-dev] Deprecating SFC, SFP, and RSP symmetric fields Currently there is a symmetric field in the SFC, SFP, and RSP data models. I will deprecate these fields now in Carbon. Instead of defining this in one of [SFC, SFP, RSP] a chain will be symmetric if it has an SF whose SF-type has the symmetry flag set to true. The SF-type symmetry field was also added in Beryllium. It was always confusing what it meant if there is some combination of symmetric values for the SFC, SFP, and RSP. That is, what if SFC:symmetric is true, SFP:symmetric is false, and RSP:symmetric is true? Or some similar combination? Currently, a reverse RSP is created if the SFP symmetric field is true. This will still be the case in Carbon, but we will also check the SF-types as explained above. In Nitrogen, we'll remove the SFP symmetric field check. I've already updated the SFC Carbon Release Plan to mention these deprecated fields. Regards, Brady _______________________________________________ sfc-dev mailing list [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> https://lists.opendaylight.org/mailman/listinfo/sfc-dev _______________________________________________ sfc-dev mailing list [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> https://lists.opendaylight.org/mailman/listinfo/sfc-dev _______________________________________________ sfc-dev mailing list [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> https://lists.opendaylight.org/mailman/listinfo/sfc-dev
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