> On May 18, 2018, at 11:45 AM, Acee Lindem (acee) <[email protected]> wrote: >> There's actually nothing sub-optimal encoding-wise with option 2a or 2b. The >> drawback with option 2 is we have 2 different TLV structures, the registry >> can be shared though. > > I don’t think 2b is an option since it increases the IS-IS type/length size. > 2a would be viable but by the time you documented all the constraints and > what OSPF should do if they weren’t followed, you’d have negated any benefit.
Perhaps it was not-obvious but option 2 is only adjusting the type field. The length field would remain as it is for each protocol, and thus there's no issues with documenting new ways of handling TLVs for either protocol, just a way to share the sub-tlv registries. It's really the most simple option. Thanks, Chris. > > > If the WG really wants protocol convergence, everyone should move to OSPFv3 > since it has all the advantages of both protocols. ;^) > > Thanks, > Acee > > >> >> Thanks, >> Chris. >> >>> On May 18, 2018, at 10:29 AM, Acee Lindem (acee) <[email protected]> wrote: >>> >>> Hi Chris, >>> >>> Somehow, I lost the mail below and was only able to retrieve it from the >>> archive. Pardon my top posting. >>> >>> While I believe that sharing code points for values, e.g., IGP Algorithm >>> Type, is a good idea, I don’t necessarily think it is a good idea to merge >>> the TLV type registries. It seems to me it would be a poor trade-off to >>> impact optimal protocol encoding including implementation just so we can >>> have a combined IANA registry. It is extremely unlikely that OSPF and IS-IS >>> implementations will ever share a common TLV parsing library. >>> >>> Note that we did discuss this once before in the context of the OSPF and >>> IS-IS Tunnel Encapsulation drafts. I'd appreciate hearing what other WG >>> members feel with respect to this issue. >>> >>> Thanks, >>> Acee >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> Christian Hopps <[email protected]> Thu, 17 May 2018 21:07 UTC >>> >>> So in looking at the IANA requests inside the newly merged flex algorithm >>> draft I noticed that the document is creating 2 separate Flex Algorithm >>> Definition sub-tlvs Registries for IS-IS and OSPF with the initial content >>> described in sections: >>> >>> 6.1. ISIS Flexible Algorithm Exclude Admin Group Sub-TLV >>> 6.2. ISIS Flexible Algorithm Include-Any Admin Group Sub-TLV >>> 6.3. ISIS Flexible Algorithm Include-All Admin Group Sub-TLV >>> >>> 7.1. OSPF Flexible Algorithm Exclude Admin Group Sub-TLV >>> 7.2. OSPF Flexible Algorithm Include-Any Admin Group Sub-TLV >>> 7.3. OSPF Flexible Algorithm Include-All Admin Group Sub-TLV >>> >>> They are basically the same thing (indeed the later OSPF sections refer >>> back to the IS-IS sections), except for one detail AFAICT, the size of the >>> type and length fields. >>> >>> I think we may have some options here to make this a bit more elegant. >>> >>> 1. Share the same sub-TLV structure >>> a. using the OSPF sub-tlv structure (16 bit type and 16 bit len) for both >>> protocols >>> b. using the IS-IS sub-tlv structure (8 bit type and 8 bit len) for both >>> protocols >>> >>> 2. Use different structure with the same type field size of the >>> a. more constrained IS-IS 8 bit size >>> b. less constrained OSPF 16 bit size >>> >>> 3. Define and use some generic method to define shared TLVs like this where >>> the only actual difference is the size of the type and length fields. >>> >>> >>> 1, Creates a clean and simple standard, 1 TLV definition and 1 sub-TLV >>> registry. >>> >>> 1a, has the property that the length value in IS-IS can't normally exceed >>> an 8 bit value; however, sub-TLV length values are already constrained >>> beyond the field size as sub-TLVs may appear anywhere in the TLV. >>> >>> 1b, restricts both protocols to 256 types, and perhaps more importantly >>> restricts the sub-TLV length to 257 octets. This is handled all the time in >>> IS-IS using repeated TLVs, but not so much (ever?) in OSPF. >>> >>> >>> 2. Allows us to at least create a single IANA registry for the sub-tlv >>> types so we aren't duplicating them and their definitions for each protocol. >>> >>> >>> 3. Is interesting but probably requires some work outside of this document. >>> >>> >>> This document is serving as our guinea pig for how to merge work so I think >>> it's worth spending some effort on these types of details. >>> >>> Thanks, >>> Chris. >>> >> >
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