Hello all,

Gunter Van De Velde and myself have submitted a first version of
our new draft regarding sparse Link-State flooding in dense topologies.

You can find the new draft here:
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-hsmit-lsr-isis-dnfm/


Abstract

   This document describes a technology extension to reduce link-state
   flooding in highly resilient dense networks.  It does this by using
   simple and backwards-compatible extensions to reduce the number of
   adjacencies over which link-state flooding takes place.

   "IS-IS Sparse Link-State Flooding" is an extension to the IS-IS
   routing protocol.

   It is relatively easy to understand and implement.
   It is backwards compatible.
   It requires no per-node configuration.
It uses a distributed algorithm, therefor no centralized computations are required.
   No complex computations are required on each node in the network.
   The algorithm has no requirements for the network topology.
It can be deployed in a redundant way to improve robustness and convergence-times.


The element that distinguishes this algorithm from other proposals is
the fact that it uses a new TLV in IIHs to signal suppression of flooding between two adjacent routers. A network has an "anchor", which will function
as the root of the tree that forms the flooding topology. Each router
will request, via its IIHs, to flood only over an adjacency to another
router that is closer to the anchor. More details are in the draft.

Although the algorithm isn't overly complex, we might not have been
100% succesful yet in writing down the perfect description and explanation.
All suggestions, comments and questions are welcome.

Thanks in advance,

Gunter & henk.

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