Here is proposed text on multi-homing of NVEs
<section title="Multi-Homing of NVEs">
<t>
NVEs may be multi-homed. That is, an NVE may have more than one IP
address associated with it on the underlay network. Multihoming
happens in two different scenarios. First, an NVE may have
multiple interfaces connecting it to the underlay. Each of those
interfaces will typically have a different IP address, resulting
in a specific Tenant Address (on a specific VN) being reachable
via more than one underlay IP address. Second, a specific tenant
system may be reachable through more than one NVE. In both cases,
the mapping tables in NVEs need to support one-to-many mappings
and enable a sending NVE to (at a minimum) be able to fail over
from one IP address to another, should an NVE become unreachable
via a specific underlay IP address.
</t>
<t>
Multi-homing is needed to support important use cases. First, a
bare metal server may have multiple uplink connections to either
the same or different NVEs. Having only a single physical path to
an upstream NVE, or indeed, having all traffic flow through a
single NVE would be considered unacceptable in highly-resilient
deployment scenarios that seek to avoid single points of
failure. Morever, in today's networks, the availability of
multiple paths would require that they be useable in an
active-active fashion (e.g., for load balancing).
</t>
</section>
Comments?
Thomas
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