Hello Gyan,

Amplifying what you have said.....

There is no reason why SR-MPLS shouldn't work over an IPv6 only infrastructure. 
So long as every node is MPLS capable, SR-MPLS should not require IPv4 to be 
enabled.

                                                                               
Ron




Juniper Business Use Only
From: Gyan Mishra <hayabusa...@gmail.com>
Sent: Sunday, September 8, 2019 3:20 AM
To: Robert Raszuk <rob...@raszuk.net>
Cc: Srihari Sangli <ssan...@juniper.net>; SPRING WG List <spring@ietf.org>; 
6...@ietf.org; Zafar Ali (zali) <z...@cisco.com>; Rob Shakir 
<ro...@google..com>; Ron Bonica <rbon...@juniper.net>; Tarek Saad 
<tsaad....@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [spring] Beyond SRv6.

As an operator of a Tier 1 provider with massive mpls networks I think our 
traditional bread and butter "mpls" will be around for a very very long time as 
is IPv4 if not longer.

Most all service provider cores run greater then or equal to MTU 9000 mpls 
cores to account for mpls overhead shims being tacked on plus edge overhead 
from possible GRE tunneling or IPSEC so in general making  the core the maximum 
Jumbo MTU supported by most vendors at 9216 is what is generally done out in 
the field.

So for SRv6 support of multiple or many EH insertions is really a non issue for
most operators.

>From reading through all the discussion threads the SR insertion is two fold 
>one being for FRR capabilities using Ti-LFA or remote LFA tunnel so end up 
>requiring double EH insertions on the Ingress PE tunnel head end SRv6 source 
>node and then second scenario being a possible EH insertions occurrence on 
>intermediate nodes.  I have not read through the drafts or RFC regarding 
>Ti-LFA with SR but since that is an IGP extension I am guessing an opaque LSA 
>and is not the traditional MPLS FRR link/node/path protection that adds an 
>additional mpls shim so not sure why an EH insertion needs to occur for 
>Ti-LFA.  Can someone clarify that use case for me.  Also the EH insertion on 
>intermediate node what is the use case or reason for that.  My guess is it's 
>for special use case of stitching SRv6 domains together.  Please clarify.

I do agree with some of the other operators on the marketing hype and push for 
SR-MPLS and SRv6 is not for every service provider as goes the mantra ..."if 
it's not broken..don't try to fix it..leave it alone" and I think you can 
definitely say that for MPLS as it has had a SOLID run for service providers 
since the 90's ever since ATM and frame relay were put to rest so I don't think 
that it's going away any time soon.

I think it would be a serious mistake and sad state of affairs for vendors to 
push SR-MPLS and SRv6 and stop development and support of MPLS as that would 
really pigeon hole all operators into one technology which does not fit the 
bill for every use case out there.

The mention of SR-MPLS pulling support for IPv6 and forcing operators to go 
with SRv6 is a wrong move for vendors and would really limit operators with 
flexibility to chose based on their use case to stay with traditional mpls or 
go with with SR-MPLS or SRv6 only if necessary with their unique use case 
warrants.

I think SR-MPLS and SRv6 should be marketed by vendors and the industry as yet 
another tool in our operator "design toolbox" to use as we see fit or not use 
but not be forced into it.

There are particular use cases for SR-MPLS for migration from existing LDP and 
the downside of having state maintained in the core is not a downside as the P 
and PE nodes have to be provisioned anyway so their is no savings in pulling 
mpls LDP/mLDP with SR-MPLS "Sr-prefer" and ditching LDP.

I think the major use case for SR-MPLS and SRv6 is coloring per-vrf TE feature 
for L3 VPNs steering without adding complexity of adding ibgp loopback egress 
PE FEC next hop to traffic engineer L3 VPN traffic.  That is a unique use case 
and not every major service provider has that requirement so if you don't their 
really is no need to jump on the SR band wagon and you can stay put with the 
tried and true mpls that has been around for decades and is not going away any 
time soon.

SRv6 has a more ubiquitous all encompassing use case that could serve for MPLS 
core replacement or on the public internet or for enterprise network traffic 
engineering of flows between data centers or access to data center and an 
alternative to SD WAN application based routing solutions.  But here as well 
the use case benefit has to exist.  Nobody wants to be forced into it if it's 
unnecessary added complexity.

My 2 1/2 cents

Regards,

Gyan Mishra
Verizon Communications
Cell- 301 502-1347

Sent from my iPhone

On Sep 6, 2019, at 10:17 AM, Robert Raszuk 
<rob...@raszuk.net<mailto:rob...@raszuk.net>> wrote:
I don't think so.

In OAM packets are on purpose made huge - even up to MTU to make sure real 
customer packets can go through or to detect and diagnose MTU issues. So adding 
SRH to it is nothing one can call inefficient.

Wrong tree :)

Cheers,
R.

On Fri, Sep 6, 2019 at 4:14 PM Srihari Sangli 
<ssan...@juniper.net<mailto:ssan...@juniper.net>> wrote:

On 06/09/19, 4:32 PM Robert Raszuk from 
rob...@raszuk.net<mailto:rob...@raszuk.net> said >

Not really. Only SR OAM packets may need it. Is that a real problem ?

Thanks for clarification. Like Ron pointed out before, its inefficient encoding.

srihari...
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