Hi Hent,

Thank you for your comments.  I would like to provide feedback based on the 
scenario and type of this document.

The approach in this document is aimed at network scenarios where the required 
number of NRPs is not too high. As an operator,  we believe such scenario would 
be typical for many deployment of NRP, so we propose it. It utilizes existing 
technology and information without the need for extensions to control 
protocols, which is its advantage, isn't it?  In this scenario, the approach 
has no issue of not-scaling, nor is half-baked. As an operator, we think this 
approach is practical and effective.  Based on this consideration, the type of 
this document is informative. 

You mentioned that TEAS may come up with some new solutions for larger scale 
NRPs, but this attempt requires new protocol extensions and some time in terms 
of standards and deployment. Come back to the scenario above, the solution 
proposed in my draft already meet the practical requirements, so we should 
document this solution for those who need it. 

I hope my explanation can clarify your concerns.

Thank you!

Best regards
Chongfeng
 
From: Henk Smit
Date: 2024-01-12 20:31
To: Chongfeng Xie; Les Ginsberg (ginsberg); jmh; Acee Lindem; TEAS WG; lsr
Subject: Re: [Lsr] [Teas] Fwd: Working Group Last Call for "Applicability of 
IS-IS Multi-Topology (MT) for Segment Routing based Network Resource Partition 
(NRP)" - draft-ietf-lsr-isis-sr-vtn-mt-06
From the draft: 
=== 
> The mechanism described in this document is considered useful for network 
> scenarios in which 
> the required number of NRP is small, as no control protocol extension is 
> required. For network 
> scenarios where the number of required NRP is large, more scalable solution 
> would be needed, 
> which may require further protocol extensions and enhancements. 
  
So the proposed draft is about a solution that doesn't scale (well). 
And then later, we might get another solution that does scale (better). 
Then we'll end up with two solutions for one problem. One bad solution, and one 
(hopefully) better solution. 
  
If that is the case, then I suggest we wait a bit, and see what else the TEAS 
workgroup comes up with. 
I rather have one good solution than two half-baked. Or even one good and one 
half-baked. Less is more. 
  
henk. 
  
On 01/11/2024 4:40 AM CET Chongfeng Xie <[email protected]> wrote: 
  
  
  
Hi Les, 
  
Thanks for your comments. 
  
This is an informational document which describes the applicability of existing 
IS-IS MT mechanisms for building SR based NRPs. All the normative references 
are either RFCs or stable WG documents. It is true that some informative 
references are individual documents, while they just provide additional 
information related to this topic, thus would not impact the stability and 
maturity of the proposed mechanism. 
  
The text you quoted from draft-ietf-teas-nrp-scalability are about the 
considerations when the number of NRP increases, how to minimize the impact to 
the routing protocols (e.g. IGP). While as described in the scalability 
considerations section of this document, the benefit and limitation of using 
this mechanism for NRP are analyzed, and it also sets the target scenarios of 
this mechanism: 
  
     “The mechanism described in this document is considered useful for network 
scenarios in which the required number of NRP is small” 
  
Thus it is clear that this solution is not recommended for network scenarios 
where the number of required NRP is large. 
  
Please note section 3 of draft-ietf-teas-nrp-scalability also mentioned that: 
  
      “The result of this is that different operators can choose to deploy 
things at different scales.” 
  
And 
  
      “In particular, we should be open to the use of approaches that do not 
require control plane extensions and that can be applied to deployments with 
limited scope.” 
  
 According to the above text, we believe the mechanism described in this 
document complies to the design principles discussed in 
draft-ietf-teas-nrp-scalability and provides a valid solution for building NRPs 
in a limited scope. 
  
 Hope this solves your concerns about the maturity and scalability of this 
mechanism. 
  
 Best regards, 
  
Chongfeng 
  
  
From: Les Ginsberg \(ginsberg\) 
Date: 2024-01-11 08:21 
To: Joel Halpern; Acee Lindem; [email protected]; [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [Lsr] [Teas] Fwd: Working Group Last Call for "Applicability of 
IS-IS Multi-Topology (MT) for Segment Routing based Network Resource Partition 
(NRP)" - draft-ietf-lsr-isis-sr-vtn-mt-06 
(NOTE: I am replying to Joel’s post rather than the original last call email 
because I share some of Joel’s concerns – though my opinion on the merits of 
the draft is very different.
Also, I want to be sure the TEAS WG gets to see this email.)
 
I oppose Last Call for draft-ietf-lsr-isis-sr-vtn-mt.
 
It is certainly true, as Joel points out, that this draft references many 
drafts which are not yet RFCs – and in some cases are not even WG documents. 
Therefore, it is definitely premature to last call this draft.
 
I also want to point out that the direction TEAS WG has moved to recommends 
that routing protocols NOT be used as a means of supporting NRP.
 
https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-teas-nrp-scalability-03.html#name-scalabliity-design-principl
 states:
 
“…it is desirable for NRPs to have no more than small impact (zero being 
preferred) on the IGP information that is propagated today, and to not required 
additional SPF computations beyond those that are already required.”
 
https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-teas-nrp-scalability-03.html#name-scalabliity-design-principl
 states:
 
“The routing protocols (IGP or BGP) do not need to be involved in any of these 
points, and it is important to isolate them from these aspects in order that 
there is no impact on scaling or stability.”
 
Another draft which is referenced is 
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-dong-lsr-sr-enhanced-vpn/ - which is not 
a WG document and – based on the recommendations in 
draft-ietf-teas-nrp-scalability – I would argue that the IGPs should NOT be 
extended as proposed in this draft. So if a WG adoption call were to initiated 
for draft-dong-lsr-sr-enhanced-vpn, I would oppose it.
 
This then puts draft-ietf-lsr-isis-sr-vtn-mt in the position of publishing 
information about a solution which the IETF is discouraging. I do not know why 
the IETF would want to do this.
 
If, despite all of the above, at some point it is judged not premature to 
publish this draft, I think the draft should at least include statements 
indicating that this approach is not a recommended deployment solution.
 
   Les
 
 
From: Lsr <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Joel Halpern
Sent: Wednesday, January 10, 2024 3:22 PM
To: Acee Lindem <[email protected]>; [email protected]; [email protected]
Subject: Re: [Lsr] [Teas] Fwd: Working Group Last Call for "Applicability of 
IS-IS Multi-Topology (MT) for Segment Routing based Network Resource Partition 
(NRP)" - draft-ietf-lsr-isis-sr-vtn-mt-06
 
Given that the documents that provide the basic definitions needed for this are 
still active Internet Drafts, it seems premature to last call this document.
As a lesser matter, it seems odd that draft-ietf-teas-ietf-network-slices, 
which defines the terms needed to understand this draft, is an Informative 
reference.
Yours,
Joel
PS: I considered not writing this email, as it seems quite reasonable to use MT 
to support what I expect NRPs to be.  So in principle I think the document is a 
good idea.
On 1/10/2024 6:12 PM, Acee Lindem wrote:
Note that we are last calling this informational document relating to IS-IS 
deployment of NRPs using multi-topology. If you have comments, please send them 
to the LSR list. 
 
Thanks,
Acee


Begin forwarded message:
 
From: Acee Lindem <[email protected]>
Subject: Working Group Last Call for "Applicability of IS-IS Multi-Topology 
(MT) for Segment Routing based Network Resource Partition (NRP)" - 
draft-ietf-lsr-isis-sr-vtn-mt-06
Date: January 8, 2024 at 5:50:21 PM EST
To: Lsr <[email protected]>
 
This begins a two week LSR Working Group last call for the “Applicability of 
IS-IS Multi-Topology (MT) for Segment Routing based Network Resource Partition 
(NRP)”. Please express your support or objection prior to Tuesday, January 
23rd, 2024. 

Thanks,
Acee
 


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