Two recent drafts advocate for the use of faster LSP flooding speeds in IS-IS:

https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-decraene-lsr-isis-flooding-speed/
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ginsberg-lsr-isis-flooding-scale/

There is strong agreement on two key points:

1)Modern networks require much faster flooding speeds than are commonly in use 
today

2)To deploy faster flooding speeds safely some form of flow control is needed

The key point of contention between the two drafts is how flow control should 
be implemented.

https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-decraene-lsr-isis-flooding-speed/ 
advocates for a receiver based flow control where the receiver advertises in 
hellos the parameters which indicate the rate/burst size which the receiver is 
capable of supporting on the interface. Senders are required to limit the rate 
of LSP transmission on that interface in accordance with the values advertised 
by the receiver.

https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ginsberg-lsr-isis-flooding-scale/  
advocates for a transmit based flow control where the transmitter monitors the 
number of unacknowledged LSPs sent on each interface and implements a backoff 
algorithm to slow the rate of sending LSPs based on the length of the per 
interface unacknowledged queue.

While other differences between the two drafts exist, it is fair to say that if 
agreement could be reached on the form of flow control  then it is likely other 
issues could be resolved easily.

This email starts the discussion regarding the flow control issue.



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