BFD is binary. Service OAM 802.3ag / ITU-T Y.1731 generates time series
data that talks to service reliability and SLA. OAM offers interface shut
and fault propagation as well, which means it's both an observability tool
and an operational one. BFD is just not the thing for measuring the
reliability of network services.


On Wed, Jan 8, 2025, 5:20 PM David Zimmerman via NANOG <nanog@nanog.org>
wrote:

> Hi, all.  BFD is well known for what it brings to the table for improving
> link failure detection; however, even at a reasonably athletic 300ms
> Control rate, you're not going to catch a significant percentage of
> brownout situations where you have packet loss but not a full outage.  I'm
> trying to:
>
>
>
>    1. find any formal or semi-formal writing about quantification of
>    BFD's effectiveness.  For example, my mental picture is a 3D graph where,
>    for a given Control rate and corresponding Detection Time, the X axis is
>    percentage of packet loss, the Y axis is the Control/Detection timer tuple,
>    and the Z axis is the likelihood that BFD will fully engage (i.e., missing
>    all three Control packets).  Beyond what I believe is a visualization
>    complexity needing some single malt scotch nearby, letting even a single
>    Control packet through resets your Detection timer.
>    2. ask if folks in the Real World use BFD towards this end, or have
>    other mechanisms as a data plane loss instrumentation vehicle.  For
>    example, in my wanderings, I've found an environment that offloads the
>    diagnostic load to adjacent compute nodes, but they reach out to
>    orchestration to trigger further router actions in a full-circle cycle
>    measured in *minutes*.  Short of that, really aggressive timers
>    (solving through brute force) on BFD quickly hit platform limits for scale
>    unless perhaps you can offboard the BFD to something inline (e.g. the Ciena
>    5170 can be dialed down to a 3.3ms Control timer).
>
>
>
> Any thoughts appreciated.  I'm also pursuing ways of having my internal
> "customer" signal me upon their own packet loss observation (e.g. 1% loss
> for most folks is a TCP retransmission, but 1% loss for them are crying
> eyeballs and an escalation).
>
>
>
> -dp
>
>
>

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