Ron,

Let's say other RFC defines rules X,Y,Z.
Draft-ietf-spring-srv6-network-programming follows those RFCs and hence those 
rules.
You have a concern that no-one else is sharing on rule Y, and you are asking me 
to include a reminder saying that Y MUST be followed, but remain silent on X 
and Z.

What does this mean for X and Z? Does this mean that someone implementing 
draft-ietf-spring-srv6-network-programming can ignore X and Z? 

Hence, unless you provide a strong reason why such reminder only for Y is 
needed, I keep my position of agreeing with Bob, Darren and Kamran that such 
clarification should not be added. Its misleading In my opinion for X and Z. 
Please provide me an argument or a reason for it.

Thank you,
Pablo.

-----Original Message-----
From: Ron Bonica <[email protected]>
Date: Wednesday, 11 December 2019 at 21:37
To: "Pablo Camarillo (pcamaril)" <[email protected]>, Ron Bonica 
<[email protected]>, "Darren Dukes (ddukes)" 
<[email protected]>
Cc: SPRING WG <[email protected]>, Bob Hinden <[email protected]>, Mark Smith 
<[email protected]>
Subject: RE: [spring] SRv6 Network Programming and Link Local Source Addresses

    Pablo,
    
    I am happy to hear that you would not forward the packet. That is the 
correct behavior.
    
    Could we make that point clear in the draft? 
    
                                                                             Ron
    
    
    
    Juniper Business Use Only
    
    -----Original Message-----
    From: Pablo Camarillo (pcamaril) <[email protected]> 
    Sent: Wednesday, December 11, 2019 3:07 PM
    To: Ron Bonica <[email protected]>; Ron Bonica 
<[email protected]>; Darren Dukes (ddukes) <[email protected]>
    Cc: SPRING WG <[email protected]>; Bob Hinden <[email protected]>; Mark 
Smith <[email protected]>
    Subject: Re: [spring] SRv6 Network Programming and Link Local Source 
Addresses
    
    Ron,
    
    Ok. Let me try to be open-minded and understand why you have a concern that 
no-one else is sharing:
    
    I guess that your concern is that since we do not have a second FIB lookup, 
hence you believe that we would just cross-connect the packet. Is this correct?
    The fact that we set the egress adjacency as part of the End.X pseudocode 
does not mean that we skip the IPv6 processing, and as part of the IPv6 
processing we would not forward such packet.
    
    Thanks,
    Pablo.
    
    -----Original Message-----
    From: Ron Bonica <[email protected]>
    Date: Tuesday, 10 December 2019 at 00:03
    To: "Pablo Camarillo (pcamaril)" <[email protected]>, Ron Bonica 
<[email protected]>, "Darren Dukes (ddukes)" 
<[email protected]>
    Cc: SPRING WG <[email protected]>, Bob Hinden <[email protected]>, Mark 
Smith <[email protected]>
    Subject: RE: [spring] SRv6 Network Programming and Link Local Source 
Addresses
    
        Pablo,
        
        Let us agree to disagree.
        
        Chairs,
        
        Please do not close this issue.
        
                                  Ron
        
        
        
        Juniper Business Use Only
        
        -----Original Message-----
        From: spring <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Pablo Camarillo 
(pcamaril)
        Sent: Monday, December 9, 2019 10:16 AM
        To: Ron Bonica <[email protected]>; Darren Dukes 
(ddukes) <[email protected]>
        Cc: SPRING WG <[email protected]>; Bob Hinden <[email protected]>; 
Mark Smith <[email protected]>
        Subject: Re: [spring] SRv6 Network Programming and Link Local Source 
Addresses
        
        Ron,
        
        I agree with Bob, Darren and Kamran that the existing IPv6 processing 
rules are followed in Network Programming and do not need to be re-stated.
        
        Cheers,
        Pablo.
        
        -----Original Message-----
        From: spring <[email protected]> on behalf of Ron Bonica 
<[email protected]>
        Date: Friday, 6 December 2019 at 17:17
        To: "Darren Dukes (ddukes)" <[email protected]>
        Cc: SPRING WG <[email protected]>, Bob Hinden <[email protected]>, 
Mark Smith <[email protected]>
        Subject: Re: [spring] SRv6 Network Programming and Link Local Source 
Addresses
        
            Darren,
            
            If the draft adhered strictly to RFC 4291 and RFC 8200 in all other 
respects, I would agree with you and Bob. However, it doesn't.
            
            As it stands, the reader is left to guess when the draft adheres to 
previous specifications, but doesn't say so explicitly, and when it is taking 
liberties with previous specifications.
            
                                                                                
           Ron
            
            
            
            
            Juniper Business Use Only
            
            -----Original Message-----
            From: Darren Dukes (ddukes) <[email protected]> 
            Sent: Friday, December 6, 2019 10:53 AM
            To: Ron Bonica <[email protected]>
            Cc: Bob Hinden <[email protected]>; SPRING WG <[email protected]>; 
Mark Smith <[email protected]>
            Subject: Re: [spring] SRv6 Network Programming and Link Local 
Source Addresses
            
            Hi Ron, I agree with Bob here.
            
            Section 4.2 pseudocode simply says an implementation would use a 
predetermined egress adjacency instead of performing a FIB lookup to find one.  
            It specifies the SID processing, not the entire IPv6 data path.
            
            It has no text that would indicate RFC4291 text on link-local 
addresses and routers would not apply.
            
            As a side note, every routing header currently defined (even those 
now deprecated) do not re-state the RFC4291 text.
            
            Thanks,
              Darren
            
            
            > On Dec 2, 2019, at 10:58 AM, Ron Bonica 
<[email protected]> wrote:
            > 
            > Bob,
            > 
            > Before we debate presentation too much, we should let Pablo 
answer the original question. Will the packet be dropped or forwarded?
            > 
            > If the packet will be dropped, how is the reader of Section 4.2 
to know this? Normally, pseudocode is taken literally, and the pseudocode in 
Section 4.2 suggests that the packet will be forwarded.
            > 
            > One way to wiggle out of this problem is to include a sentence at 
the beginning of Section 4 saying, "When the following pseudocode contradicts 
RFC 4291 or 8200, RFCs 4291 and 8200 take precedence.
            > 
            >                                                                   
                                           
            > Ron
            > 
            > 
            > 
            > 
            > Juniper Business Use Only
            > 
            > -----Original Message-----
            > From: Bob Hinden <[email protected]>
            > Sent: Monday, December 2, 2019 10:47 AM
            > To: Ron Bonica <[email protected]>
            > Cc: Bob Hinden <[email protected]>; Mark Smith 
            > <[email protected]>; SPRING WG <[email protected]>
            > Subject: Re: [spring] SRv6 Network Programming and Link Local 
Source 
            > Addresses
            > 
            > Ron,
            > 
            >> On Dec 2, 2019, at 7:36 AM, Ron Bonica <[email protected]> 
wrote:
            >> 
            >> Bob,
            >> 
            >> Take a look at Section 4.2. The pseudocode is pretty specific.
            > 
            > Please explain.  I don’t see that.
            > 
            > Thanks,
            > Bob
            > 
            > 
            >> 
            >>                                           Ron
            >> 
            >> 
            >> 
            >> Juniper Business Use Only
            >> 
            >> -----Original Message-----
            >> From: Bob Hinden <[email protected]>
            >> Sent: Sunday, December 1, 2019 5:56 PM
            >> To: Ron Bonica <[email protected]>
            >> Cc: Bob Hinden <[email protected]>; Mark Smith 
            >> <[email protected]>; SPRING WG <[email protected]>
            >> Subject: Re: [spring] SRv6 Network Programming and Link Local 
Source 
            >> Addresses
            >> 
            >> Ron,
            >> 
            >>> On Dec 1, 2019, at 2:47 PM, Ron Bonica <[email protected]> 
wrote:
            >>> 
            >>> Mark, Bob,
            >>> 
            >>> Yes, I agree that routers should not forward packets with link 
local source addresses.
            >> 
            >> or Destination addresses.
            >> 
            >>> 
            >>> Pablo,
            >>> 
            >>> Maybe we should update section 4.2 of the network programming 
draft to reflect this?
            >> 
            >> I was thinking that unless network programming has text that 
might cause one to think it overrides the defined behavior from rfc4291 for 
link-local addresses, I am not sure it has to be mentioned.
            >> 
            >> Bob
            >> 
            >> 
            >>> 
            >>>                                                                
Ron
            >>> 
            >>> 
            >>> From: Mark Smith <[email protected]>
            >>> Sent: Sunday, December 1, 2019 5:31 PM
            >>> To: Bob Hinden <[email protected]>
            >>> Cc: Ron Bonica <[email protected]>; SPRING WG 
<[email protected]>
            >>> Subject: Re: [spring] SRv6 Network Programming and Link Local 
Source 
            >>> Addresses
            >>> 
            >>> 
            >>> 
            >>> On Mon, 2 Dec 2019, 08:35 Bob Hinden, <[email protected]> 
wrote:
            >>> Ron,
            >>> 
            >>>> On Nov 30, 2019, at 12:36 PM, Ron Bonica 
<[email protected]> wrote:
            >>>> 
            >>>> Pablo,
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> Consider the packet (SA,DA) (S3, S2, S1; SL) where:
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>>     • SA is link-local (fe80)
            >>>>     • DA, S3, S2, and S1 are all END.X
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> Section 4.2 suggests that this packet will be delivered over 
multiple hops to its destination, regardless of its link-local source address.
            >>> 
            >>> I would think that RFC2460 Section 2.5.6. "Link-Local IPv6 
Unicast Addresses” covers this:
            >>> 
            >>>  Link-Local addresses are for use on a single link.  Link-Local 
 
            >>> addresses have the following format:
            >>> 
            >>>  |   10     |
            >>>  |  bits    |         54 bits         |          64 bits        
   |
            >>>  
+----------+-------------------------+----------------------------+
            >>>  |1111111010|           0             |       interface ID      
   |
            >>>  
+----------+-------------------------+----------------------------+
            >>> 
            >>>  Link-Local addresses are designed to be used for addressing on 
a  
            >>> single link for purposes such as automatic address 
configuration,  
            >>> neighbor discovery, or when no routers are present.
            >>> 
            >>>  Routers must not forward any packets with Link-Local source or 
 
            >>> destination addresses to other links.
            >>> 
            >>> I think that's RFC4291.
            >>> 
            >>> RFC4007, "IPv6 Scoped Address Architecture" does too, more 
generally and probably more formally, in particular section 9, "Forwarding".
            >>> 
            >>> Regards,
            >>> Mark.
            >>> 
            >>> 
            >>> 
            >>> Bob
            >>> 
            >>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> Is this the case?
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>>                                                            Ron
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> 
            >>>> Juniper Business Use Only
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