Robert,
 
Thanks for the thoughtful comments.
 
You're right, MPLS-SR is not SRv6 and this is not the document to run a 
comparison or beauty contest. Nor is this the right document to use to consider 
making changes or additions to MPLS-SR to make it more like SRv6.
 
We should focus this document on describing how to carry MPLS-SR over UDP and 
the use cases for that.
 
I think your question about MTU discovery is a good one. We should look into 
that and reference RFC 4023.
 
Cheers,
Adrian
 
From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Robert Raszuk
Sent: 11 August 2017 20:23
To: Adrian Farrel
Cc: [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [mpls] FW: New Version Notification for 
draft-bryant-mpls-unified-ip-sr-01.txt
 
Sorry but forgot one more really useful advantage which your proposal is 
lacking ... 
 
D) 
 
In SRv6 when you traverse SR node you move the pointer from one SID to the next 
one. This allows you to maintain in the packet the entire history of functions 
executed on a given packet. Something which to the best of my knowledge we 
never had in the IP networks. Now how could you accomplish the same or even 
close to that with SR-MPLS analogy ? 
 
Cheers,
R.
 
On Fri, Aug 11, 2017 at 9:11 PM, Robert Raszuk <[email protected]> wrote:
Hi Adrian,
 
I see few so to say "challenges" with the proposal 
 
A) 
 
SRv6 SID is 128 bits where first 64 is the locator and remaining 64 is the 
function. So to "emulate" this directly with SR-MPLS you need for 1 SRv6 SID 
stack of 8 labels ! And some use cases of SRv6 already talk about using few 
SRv6 SIDs. Please show me the today's hardware which can consume in single pass 
and make sense of stack of say 32 mpls labels ... so here goes your 
"interchangeability". 
 
B) 
 
One of serious concerns with SRH insertion in transit as expressed by 6man was 
MTU. How does this proposal solves this at all if what you are doing here is 
taking nicely MTU discovered and negotiated IPv6 packet and adding mpls stack 
or tower + UDP + IPv/v6 encap to it ? How would end hosts now will get any 
awareness about this ?
 
C) 
 
One of the very nice applications for SRv6 is spray function with full 
multicast address transparency. Please kindly elaborate how are you going to 
map IPv4 or IPv6 multicast addresses into MPLS labels ?
 
- - - 
 
I think while it looks great on slides that now we will have two different ways 
to do SR on IP networks if you really focus to specific applications you will 
find a lot of them which are not going to be compatible with your proposal. So 
maybe instead trying to squeeze the balloon to fit the bottle we better 
collectively focus on making the balloon fly ? 
 
Kind regards,
Robert.
 
 
 
 
 
 
On Fri, Aug 11, 2017 at 8:53 PM, Adrian Farrel <[email protected]> wrote:
All,

The presentation of this draft in Prague seemed to be well received and we got
some comments that we have stated to act on in this revision.

One, non-technical request was to share the work with the SPRING working group,
and I have just done that.

At the meeting I noted that...
> The authors think this is in charter for MPLS
> But polish and discussion is needed before we ask for adoption

As this polish continues, I'd like to ask the list what they think of this work.
Is it going in the right direction? Is it work that you support?

Thanks,
Adrian

> ________________________________________
> From: [email protected]
> Sent: 11 August 2017 19:39:59 (UTC+00:00) Dublin, Edinburgh, Lisbon, London
> To: Stewart Bryant; John E Drake; Adrian Farrel
> Subject: New Version Notification for draft-bryant-mpls-unified-ip-sr-01.txt
>
> A new version of I-D, draft-bryant-mpls-unified-ip-sr-01.txt
> has been successfully submitted by Adrian Farrel and posted to the
> IETF repository.
>
> Name:           draft-bryant-mpls-unified-ip-sr
> Revision:       01
> Title:          A Unified Approach to IP Segment Routing
> Document date:  2017-08-11
> Group:          Individual Submission
> Pages:          16
> URL:
https://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-bryant-mpls-unified-ip-sr-
> 01.txt
> Status:
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-bryant-mpls-unified-ip-sr/
> Htmlized:       https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-bryant-mpls-unified-ip-sr-01
> Htmlized:
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-bryant-mpls-unified-ip-
> sr-01
> Diff:
https://www.ietf.org/rfcdiff?url2=draft-bryant-mpls-unified-ip-sr-01
>
> Abstract:
>    Segment routing is a source routed forwarding method that allows
>    packets to be steered through a network on paths other than the
>    shortest path derived from the routing protocol.  The approach uses
>    information encoded in the packet header to partially or completely
>    specify the route the packet takes through the network, and does not
>    make use of a signaling protocol to pre-install paths in the network.
>
>    Two different encapsulations have been defined to enable segment
>    routing in an MPLS network and in an IPv6 network.  While
>    acknowledging that there is a strong need to support segment routing
>    in both environments, this document defines a converged, unified
>    approach to segment routing that enables a single mechanism to be
>    applied in both types of network.  The resulting approach is also
>    applicable to IPv4 networks without the need for any changes to the
>    IPv4 specification.
>
>    This document makes no changes to the segment routing architecture
>    and builds on existing protocol mechanisms such as the encapsulation
>    of MPLS within UDP defined in RFC 7510.
>
>    No new procedures are introduced, but existing mechanisms are
>    combined to achieve the desired result.
>
>
>
>
>
> Please note that it may take a couple of minutes from the time of submission
> until the htmlized version and diff are available at tools.ietf.org.
>
> The IETF Secretariat

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