What about an IRC meeting on this topic 11/19 at 9 p.m. PST ? This is 2 p.m in Japan and 6 a.m CET on the 20th. It is not ideal but i suspect we will have interest in participating from both Europe and Asia. I volunteer myself and Nachi Ueno na...@ntti3.com (the author of the BGP MPLS blueprint) as agenda organizers; please drop us a note if you intend to attend and wether you would like to present something to the group.
Pedro. On Nov 7, 2013, at 11:27 AM, Rochelle.Grober <rochelle.gro...@huawei.com> wrote: > > > From: Pedro Roque Marques [mailto:pedro.r.marq...@gmail.com] > Colin, > "The nice thing about standards is that there are so many of them to choose > from." > > For instance, if you take this Internet Draft: > http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-l3vpn-end-system-02 which is based on > RFC4364. > > It has already been implemented as a Neutron plugin via OpenContrail > (http://juniper.github.io/contrail-vnc/README.html); With this implementation > each OpenStack cluster can be configured as its own Autonomous System. > > There is a blueprint > https://blueprints.launchpad.net/neutron/+spec/neutron-bgp-mpls-vpn > that is discussing adding the provisioning of the autonomous system and > peering to Neutron. > > Please note that the work above does interoperate with 4364 using option B. > Option C is possible but not that practical (as an operator you probably > don't want to expose your internal topology between clusters). > > If you want to give it a try you can use this devstack fork: > https://github.com/dsetia/devstack. > You can use it to interoperate with a standard router that implements 4364 > and support MPLS over GRE. Products from cisco/juniper/ALU/huwawei etc do. > > I believe that the work i'm referencing implements interoperability while > having very minimal changes to Neutron. It is based on the same concept of > neutron virtual network and it hides the BGP/MPLS functionality from the user > by translating policies that establish connectivity between virtual networks > into RFC 4364 concepts. > Please refer to: > https://blueprints.launchpad.net/neutron/+spec/policy-extensions-for-neutron > > Would it make sense to have an IRC/Web meeting around interoperability with > RFC4364 an OpenStack managed clusters ? I believe that there is a lot of work > that has already been done there by multiple vendors as well as some carriers. > > +1 And it should be scheduled and announced a reasonable time in advance > developers can plan to participate. > > --Rocky > > Pedro. > > On Nov 7, 2013, at 12:35 AM, Colin McNamara <co...@2cups.com> wrote: > I have a couple concerns that I don’t feel I clearly communicated during the > L3 advanced features session. I’d like to take this opportunity to both > clearly communicate my thoughts, as well as start a discussion around them. > > Building to the edge of the "autonomous system" > The current state of neutron implementation is functionally the l2 domain and > simple l3 services that are part of a larger autonomous system. The routers > and switches northbound of the OpenStack networking layer handled the > abstraction and integration of the components. > Note, I use the term “Autonomous System” to describe more then the notion of > BGP AS, but more broadly in the term of a system that is controlled within a > common framework and methodology, and integrates with a peer system that > doesn’t not share that same scope or method of control > These components that composed the autonomous system boundary implement > protocols and standards that map into IETF and IEEE standards. The reasoning > for this is interoperability. Before vendors utilize IETF for > interoperability at this layer, the provider experience was horrible (this > was my personal experience in the late 90’s). > > Wednesdays discussions in the Neutron Design Sessions > A couple of the discussions, most notably the extension of l3 functionality > fell within the scope of starting the process of extending Neutron with > functionality that will result (eventually) in the ability for an OpenStack > installation to operate as it’s own Autonomous System. > The discussions that occurred to support L3 advanced functionality > (northbound boundary), and the QOS extension functionality both fell into the > scope of Northbound and Southbound boundaries of this system. > My comments in the session > My comments in the session, while clouded with jet-lag were specifically > around two concepts that are used when integrating other types of systems > 1. In a simple (1-8) tenant environment integration with a northbound AS is > normally done in a PE-CE model that generally centers around mapping dot1q > tags into the appropriate northbound l3 segments and then handling the > availability of the L2 path that traverses with port channeling, MLAG, STP, > Etc. > 2. In a complex environment (8+ for discussion) different Carrier Supporting > Carrier (CSC) methods defined in IETF RFC 4364 Section 10 type A, B or C are > used. These allow the mapping of segregated tenant networks together and > synchronizing between distributed systems. This normally extends the tagging > or tunneling mechanism and then allows for BGP to synchronize NLRI > information between AS’s. > These are the standard ways of integrating between carriers, but also > components of these implementations are used to integrate and scale inside of > a single web scale data center. Commonly when you scale beyond a certain > physical port boundary (1000is edge ports in many implementations, much > larger in current implementations) the same designs for C2C integrations are > used to create network availability zones inside a web scale data center. > Support of these IETF and IEEE standard integrations are necessary for brown > field installations > In a green field installation, diverging from IETF and IEEE standards on the > north bound edge while not a great idea, can result in a functional > implementation. In a brown field implementation where OpenStack Neutron will > be integrated into an existing network core. This boundary layer is where we > move from a controlled system into a distributed system. The cleanly > integrate into this system, IETF and IEEE protocols and standards have to be > followed. > > <8DB71B56-CDE5-42D5-870E-CF94157510F8.png>When we diverge from this standards > based integration at the north edge of our autonomous system we lose the > ability to integrate without introducing major changes (and risk), into our > core. In my experience this is sufficient to either slow or stall adoption. > This is a major risk, that I believe can be mitigated. > My thoughts on mitigating this risk > We need to at least map and track the relevant IETF RFC’s that define the > internet standards for integration at the AS boundary. I know that many of > the network vendor developers that contribute to Neutron have access to > people who both have deep knowledge of these standards, and also participate > in the IETF working groups. I would hope that these resources could be > leveraged to at least give a sanity check, at best ensure a compliant > northbound interface to other systems. > Side benefit of engaging IETF members in this discussion > The other side benefit of this is that inventions inside of Neutron can also > be communicated as standards to the rest of the world in the form of net new > RFC’s. In OVS this has already happened, as OVS has emerged to be a common > component in many network devices, and the need to establish and reference a > common standard has risen it’s head. I would think that inventions within > Neutron would follow this same path. > > Regards, > Colin > Colin McNamara > People | Process | Technology > -------------------------------------------- > Mobile: 858-208-8105 > Twitter: @colinmcnamara > Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/colinmcnamara > Blog: www.colinmcnamara.com > Email: co...@2cups.com > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > OpenStack-dev mailing list > OpenStack-dev@lists.openstack.org > http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev > > _______________________________________________ > OpenStack-dev mailing list > OpenStack-dev@lists.openstack.org > http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
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