In-line comments 

Thanks 

Gyan

Sent from my iPhone

> On Oct 3, 2019, at 12:25 PM, Ron Bonica 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> Fernando,
> 
> Someone should. I think that the expertise to do this is in 6man.
> 
>                                  Ron
> 
> 
> Juniper Business Use Only
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Fernando Gont <[email protected]> 
> Sent: Wednesday, October 2, 2019 3:11 PM
> To: Ron Bonica <[email protected]>; SPRING WG List <[email protected]>
> Subject: Re: [spring] draft-ietf-spring-srv6-network-programming - IPv6 
> Addresses and SIDs
> 
>> On 1/10/19 23:30, Ron Bonica wrote:
>> Authors,
>> 
>>  
>> 
>> The document should include a discussion of the relationship between
>> IPv6 addresses and SIDs. For example:
>> 
>>  
>> 
>>  * From what address space can SIDs be drawn? Link local? Multicast? ULA?
>>  * Can a locator be longer than 64 bits? If so, how can the rest of the
>>    /64 be used?
> 
> I'm not saying that this shouldn't be done or that it is a bad idea, but I'm 
> curious if is anybody looking at this from a higher level?  (these seems 
> pretty architectural to me)
> 
> Thanks,
> --
> Fernando Gont
> SI6 Networks
> e-mail: [email protected]
> PGP Fingerprint: 6666 31C6 D484 63B2 8FB1 E3C4 AE25 0D55 1D4E 7492
> 
> 

[Gyan] The SRv6 SID format is below:

So from an IPv6 data plane forwarding perspective the fixed length 64 bit 
Locator is copied hop by hop into the destination address of the IPv6 header to 
the tail end FEC destination egress PE and during failover Ti-LFA kicks in 
additional EH is inserted {violating RFC 8200} at the PLR NNHOP to the similar 
to RLFA PQ node.

So with SRV6 native traffic engineering the locator is either the physical IP 
on ingress interface along each hop or loopback along each hop and so is either 
a GUA or ULA but not LL or multicast address is what I understand from a 
technical standpoint.

From everything I have read the SID is fixed at 64 bit length maximum but I 
guess you can have a smaller then 64 bit locator.

I am working on getting this setup in the lab now so that will really help 
understand the real world implementations.

SRv6 SID format:

128-bits Segment IDs can be used and allocated for different purposes, for 
example:
• The first 64 bits can be used to direct traffic to a specific node in the 
network – the “main body” of the program
• The next 32 bits can be used to enforce some actions on the traffic – the 
“function”part
• The remaining 32 bits can be used to pass some additional information – the 
“argument” part
128-bit SRv6 SID
Locator: routed to the node performing the function Function: any possible 
function
Flexible bit-length selection

> 
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