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RE: Last Call: <draft-ietf-ccamp-rfc5787bis-05.txt>

2012-08-23 10:33:00
Thanks for the reply. If I understand correctly, this means that the SCN 
topology must match the transport topology when applying OSPF for ASON routing. 
 This is because the Local TE Router Identifier and the Remote TE Router 
Identifier in the Local and Remote TE Router ID sub-TLV are the same as the TE 
Router ID in the TE Router Address TLV. If this is correct, then I think the 
draft should state the assumption that the SCN topology and transport plane 
topology are aligned. It’s an important assumption to state since management 
systems of SDH/OTN networks have topologies of the transport network in non-IP 
address formats (esp. TL-1 TIDs) and these need to be mapped to TE Router IDs 
in the SCN space when this draft is applied.  I assume it implies that there 
should be a single SCN or non-overlapping IP address spaces if there are 
multiple SCNs, for a given transport topology otherwise the SCN topology 
representing the transport topology could have duplicate identifier values.

 

Stephen

 

From: Acee Lindem [mailto:acee(_dot_)lindem(_at_)ericsson(_dot_)com] 
Sent: 21 August, 2012 17:23
To: Ong, Lyndon
Cc: ietf(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org; Shew, Stephen; 
draft-ietf-ccamp-rfc5787bis(_dot_)all(_at_)tools(_dot_)ietf(_dot_)org; Andrew 
G. (Andy) Malis
Subject: Re: Last Call: <draft-ietf-ccamp-rfc5787bis-05.txt> 

 

Hi Stephen, Lyndon, 

Andy and I have had discussions with the CCAMP chairs and AD. We have come to 
the conclusion that we cannot merely change the name space for the advertised 
TE Router ID since this would imply a change to the GMPL model for setting up 
LSPs. In GMPL, the LSP endpoints are in the Signaling Control Network (SCN) and 
this cannot be changed without a distinct model for ASON LSP establishment 
complete with the specification of the changes to path computation, RSVP path 
signaling, and RSVP Explicit Route Object (ERO) handling. In essence, this 
change would add a level of indirection from the SNPP to the SCN. In the 
context of this draft, we are not going to deviate from the GMPLS LSP model 
and, hence, will not incorporating the suggested changes. 

Thanks,

Acee 

On Aug 17, 2012, at 7:58 PM, Ong, Lyndon wrote:





(Submitted on behalf of Stephen Shew)

 

I would like to raise an issue with draft-ietf-ccamp-rfc5787bis-05.txt.  The 
issue does not affect the proposed sub-TLVs or their semantics, so it would not 
affect an implementation. I believe some statements in the document should be 
edited to avoid confusion over ASON terminology as defined in ITU-T 
Recommendation G.8080, for which I am editor.

 

It concerns the definition of “ASON reachability” which changed during the 
course of the document from being a transport plane address, the SubNetwork 
Point Pool (SNPP) space, to the Signalling Control Network (SCN) address space. 
 I think the root of the issue is that the visibility of the three address 
spaces described in ASON (G.8080) is not always made clear when discussing 
using OSPF for ASON Routing.  Section 3 of G.8080 states that:

There are three categories of identifiers used for ASON routing

   (G7715.1): transport plane names, control plane identifiers for

   components, and Signaling Communications Network (SCN) addresses.

 

In -03 of the document, the term SNPP was used. This is the SubNetwork Point 
Pool space that describes the data plane and is defined in G.8080 Section 10.  
It names the subnetwork (and/or containing subnetworks) to which Subnetwork 
Points (SNPs) are scoped. From G.8081: “The SNP is an abstraction that 
represents an actual or potential underlying connection point (CP) (or 
connection termination point (CTP)) or an actual or potential termination 
connection point (TCP) or trail termination point (TTP). Several SNPs (in 
different subnetwork partitions) may represent the same TCP or CP."

 

In concrete terms, an SNPP would name an OTN switch, and an SNP would be a 
label identifying an ODU0.  For the topology of the transport plane, SNPP and 
SNPP link names are used.  Path computation is performed over such a topology.  
If a path can be computed between two SNPPs, they are reachable in ASON terms. 
For example, and ingress OTN switch for an ODU1 connection that terminates on 
an egress OTN switch.

 

The Signalling Control Network (SCN) is a separate network over which control 
messages are sent. It has a topology independent of the transport plane.  Path 
computation on the SCN address space is used to connect SCN address.  SDH/OTN 
networks often have a separate IP network as the SCN network and the topology 
of the SCN network does not have to follow the topology of the transport 
network.

 

ASON Control Plane Component identifiers are the third name space and identify 
routing and signalling instances.  It is expected that they form adjacencies 
over the SCN.  The topology of the adjacencies is independent of the SCN and 
transport plane topologies.  “Reachability” between two control plane 
components would be some sequence of adjacencies.  It is entirely possible to 
have two separate control planes running over the same SCN network, or one 
control plane that uses several SCNs.  For example, imagine some OSPF instances 
whose adjacencies were all targeted and each adjacency traversed a separate 
private IP network.  The OSPF instances would need to identified by a common 
address space so that they are distinguished from each other, but the TE 
interfaces could have overlapping IPv4 values because they would be in 
different private IP network spaces.

 

What makes the discussion of “TE router ID” confusing is that as applied to a 
transport network, every node gets a “TE router ID” and so it can be used in 
the transport topology for path computation.  In that sense it is “reachable” 
in the dataplane.  However, it is also (I think) an address that is implicitly 
in the SCN space in some implementations and so it takes on a dual meaning of 
“reachability” at the IP layer as in the sentence from the I-D “This TLV 
specifies a stable OSPF TE node IP address, i.e., the IP address is always 
reachable when there is IP connectivity to the associated OSPF TE node.”.  If a 
router were instantiated without any routing protocols, as in one form of 
Software Defined Networks (SDNs), an identifier would be needed for the node 
itself so that path computation in a centralized controller could form the 
router data plane topology.

 

Suggested changes to the draft are:

In section 3, third paragraph:  "In the context of OSPF Traffic Engineering 
(TE), an ASON transport node corresponds to a unique OSPF TE node.  An OSPF TE 
node is uniquely identified by the TE Router Address TLV [RFC3630]. In this 
document, this TE Router Address is referred to as the TE Router ID, which is 
in the ASON SCN name space."  However, G.8080 distinguishes between the 
transport node and its associated control plane components, esp. the Routing 
Controller.  It is the control plane component that is accessed through the SCN 
rather than the transport node itself.

I propose changing the statement to say: "In this document, this TE Router 
Address is referred to as the TE Router ID, which is in the ASON SNPP name 
space.”

Alternatively, we could just delete the sentence “In this document, this TE 
Router Address is referred to as the TE Router ID, which is in the ASON SNPP 
name space.”.

 

In section 4, first paragraph, reachability of endpoints in the transport plane 
is described as follows:

"In ASON, reachability refers to the set of endpoints reachable in the 
transport plane by an associated ASON transport node.  Reachable entities are 
identified in the ASON SCN name space."  As discussed above, only the control 
plane components are accessed through the SCN, not the transport nodes 
themselves.  Entities that are reachable in the transport plane are identified 
through ASON SNPPs rather than ASON SCN addresses.  Therefore I suggest 
removing the second sentence completely so that it reads simply "In ASON, 
reachability refers to the set of endpoints reachable in the transport plane by 
an associated ASON transport node. “

 

Finally, in section 6.2, first paragraph following the format diagram, it is 
stated:  "If it is not included in a Node Attribute TLV or a value of 0 is 
specified for the Local TE Router Identifier, the Note Attribute TLV will not 
be used for determining ASON SCN reachability." 

Again, the text should be edited to make the distinction between transport 
plane and SCN clearer, I suggest modifying the statement to refer to "ASON 
reachability" rather than "ASON SCN reachability".  The statement would read as 
follows (also correcting the spelling of the TLV):

"If it is not included in a Node Attribute TLV or a value of 0 is specified for 
the Local TE Router Identifier, the Node Attribute TLV will not be used for 
determining ASON reachability."

 

Stephen Shew

 

-----Original Message-----

From: ietf-announce-bounces(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org 
[mailto:ietf-announce-bounces(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org] On Behalf Of The IESG

Sent: Friday, July 20, 2012 11:19 AM

To: IETF-Announce

Cc: ccamp(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org

Subject: Last Call: <draft-ietf-ccamp-rfc5787bis-05.txt> (ASON Routing for 
OSPFv2 Protocols) to Proposed Standard

 

 

The IESG has received a request from the Common Control and Measurement Plane 
WG (ccamp) to consider the following document:

- 'ASON Routing for OSPFv2 Protocols'

  <draft-ietf-ccamp-rfc5787bis-05.txt> as Proposed Standard

 

The IESG plans to make a decision in the next few weeks, and solicits final 
comments on this action. Please send substantive comments to the 
ietf(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org mailing lists by 2012-08-17. Exceptionally, comments 
may be sent to iesg(_at_)ietf(_dot_)org instead. In either case, please retain 
the beginning of the Subject line to allow automated sorting. This is a four- 
week last call period because it spans the IETF-84 meeting.

 

Abstract

 

   The ITU-T has defined an architecture and requirements for operating

   an Automatically Switched Optical Network (ASON).

 

   The Generalized Multiprotocol Label Switching (GMPLS) protocol suite

   is designed to provide a control plane for a range of network

   technologies including optical networks such as time division

   multiplexing (TDM) networks including SONET/SDH and Optical Transport

   Networks (OTNs), and lambda switching optical networks.

 

   The requirements for GMPLS routing to satisfy the requirements of

   ASON routing, and an evaluation of existing GMPLS routing protocols

   are provided in other documents.  This document defines extensions to

   the OSPFv2 Link State Routing Protocol to meet the requirements for

   routing in an ASON.

 

   Note that this work is scoped to the requirements and evaluation

   expressed in RFC 4258 and RFC 4652 and the ITU-T Recommendations

   current when those documents were written.  Future extensions of

   revisions of this work may be necessary if the ITU-T Recommendations

   are revised or if new requirements are introduced into a revision of

   RFC 4258. This document obsoletes RFC 5787 and updates RFC 5786.

 

 

 

The file can be obtained via

http://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-ccamp-rfc5787bis/

 

IESG discussion can be tracked via

http://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-ccamp-rfc5787bis/ballot/

 

No IPR declarations have been submitted directly on this I-D.

 

 

Stephen Shew | Director, Standards
sshew(_at_)ciena(_dot_)com <mailto:jdoe(_at_)ciena(_dot_)com>  | 3500 Carling 
Ave. | Ottawa CANADA K2H 8E9
Direct +1.613.670.3211

 

 

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