Hi all, Yesterday, the chairs asked about technical concerns on any of the data plane solution drafts. Here I am attaching mail thread containing technical discussions/concerns on the GPE draft from April 2015.
Based on this, I strongly suggest publishing GUE drafts only. Regards, Behcet ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: Behcet Sarikaya <[email protected]> Date: Wed, Apr 29, 2015 at 4:32 PM Subject: Re: [nvo3] NVO3 WG Adoption of draft-quinn-vxlan-gpe-04 To: "Larry Kreeger (kreeger)" <[email protected]> Cc: "Paul Quinn (paulq)" <[email protected]>, Benson Schliesser <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>, "[email protected]" <[email protected]> Is gpe talking about encapsulation of inner packets, i.e. data plane? If yes then it is like GUE. Then one would ask why do we need another GUE? Looking at the abstract which says changes to the VXLAN header I think the answer is no. I would understand a few flags like OAM that you defined as extensions to VXLAN. But I have trouble understanding next protocol field. I think VXLAN encapsulation does not need next protocol field because what is being encapsulated is completely defined in RFC7348. If in the future the need arises that something like NSH also needs to be defined then the best way to do is to.define RFC7348bis and add it there. Regards, Behcet On Wed, Apr 29, 2015 at 2:09 PM, Larry Kreeger (kreeger) <[email protected]> wrote: > Regarding Joe Touch's comment about explicitly NOT indicating IPv4 vs IPv6 > in the Next Protocol (only indicating IP), I don't see what the advantages > of doing this are. It seems more philosophical. > > By indicating IPv4/IPv6 in the next protocol, it allows implementations to > only make one decision before parsing the IP header. By doing two steps > NP->IP->IPv4/v6, it adds one more parsing step to the implementation, for > no gain that I can think of. > > As Diego pointed out earlier, there is already a precedent in Ethernet for > indicating the IP version in the next protocol from the layer below it. > > - Larry > > On 4/29/15 11:36 AM, "Behcet Sarikaya" <[email protected]> wrote: > >>On Wed, Apr 29, 2015 at 1:13 PM, Paul Quinn (paulq) <[email protected]> >>wrote: >>> >>>> On Apr 29, 2015, at 12:01 PM, Behcet Sarikaya <[email protected]> >>>>wrote: >>>> >>>> On Tue, Apr 28, 2015 at 5:03 PM, Behcet Sarikaya >>>><[email protected]> wrote: >>>>> Hi Benson, >>>>> >>>>> Joe Touch wrote this on intarea list: >>>>> >>>>> There is no reason for having the GUE header differentiate between >>>>> payload=IPv4 and payload=IPv6. The IP version is addressed by the >>>>> version field of the IP header. If GUE encapsulates both type of IP >>>>>the >>>>> same way (and it should), it should NOT differentiate between them in >>>>> its (GUE) header. >>>>> >>>>> >>>>> I think the same applies to gpe header. >>>>> >>>>> Plus the issues on the "NSH" protocol. >>>> >>>> Curiously if you look at the nsh draft, Section 3.2, >>>> >>>> NSH Base Header >>>> >>>> also has a next protocol field with the same encoding. >>>> >>>> Anybody understands what is going on? >>> >>> Yes, the concept is that you don't know what you want to carry via GPE. >>> Today it might be v4, v6, ethernet, NSH or something else. Tomorrow, >>>who knows? But more importantly, we need to enable that stacking to >>>occur. >>> >> >> >>Please convince not me but Joe Touch on v4 and v6 thing. >> >>> The format of NSH is orthogonal -- as is the format of Ethernet for >>>that matter. From an outer header (i.e. VXLAN-GPE or other) you need to >>>be able to identify the inner protocol. >>> >> >>Are we talking about VM-to-VM communication? I think that is what >>VXLAN was designed for. >> >>Regards, >> >>Behcet >>> Paul >>> > _______________________________________________ nvo3 mailing list [email protected] https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/nvo3
