Hi Greg, I am very much in support of end to end path assurance. And by assurance I mean not only e2e liveness but also e2e loss, delays, jitter etc ...
The main reason is that link layer failures (even if done on every link in the path) does not provide any information about transit via network devices. And those can be subject to packet drops, selective packet drops (brownouts), delays and jitter via box fabrics in distributed systems etc ... So to me even if e2e is slower then local link detection it still very much a preferred way to assure end to end path quality. Sure some of them is done at the application layer, but then it is done mainly for statistics and reporting. Doing it at network layer opens up possibilities to choose different path (quite likely via different provider) when original path experiences some issues or service degradation which with link by link failure detection is invisible to the endpoints. I think at the end of the day those two are not really competing solutions but complimentary. And of course end to end makes sense especially in deployments when you can have diverse paths end to end. Cheers Robert On Wed, Mar 19, 2025 at 4:58 AM Greg Mirsky <gregimir...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi Himanshu, > > Thank you for the presentation of > draft-karboubi-spring-sidlist-optimized-cs-sr > <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-karboubi-spring-sidlist-optimized-cs-sr/>. > If I understood your response to Ali correctly, the proposed mechanism is > expected to use more aggressive network failure detection than the link > layer. If that is correct, I have several questions about the multi-layer > OAM: > > - AFAIK link-layer failures are detected within 10 ms using a > connectivity check mechanism (CCM of Y.1731 or a single-hop BFD) with a 3.3 > ms interval. > - If the link failure is detectable within 10 ms, what detection time > for the path, i.e., E2E connection failure detection, is suggested? What > interval between test probes will be used in that case? > - Furthermore, even if the path converges around the link failure > before the local protection is deployed, the link failure will be detected, > and the protection mechanism will be deployed despite the Orchestrator > setting up its recovery path in the network. If that is correct, local > defect detection and protection are unnecessary overheads. Would you agree? > > > Regards, > > Greg > _______________________________________________ > BESS mailing list -- bess@ietf.org > To unsubscribe send an email to bess-le...@ietf.org >
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