Albrecht,
I guess you are right and it is indeed mainly the technology ownership issue.

To the best of my recollection the BFD WG hss tried to cooperate with IEEE 
802.1, but these attempts have failed.

At the same time I think there is a difference in the overall attitude with 
regard to OAM between IETF and IEEE 802.1.

The former seems to consider OAM sessions (and, specifically, BFD) as "helpers" 
for some other protocols (e.g., routing): these sessions are usually set up 
when the "client protocol" peers establish a peering relationship, and failure 
of the OAM session is an indication of failure of the peering relationship of 
the client protocol (see RFC 5882 for details).

The latter seems to treat OAM mainly as providing indications (alarms) to the 
operator.

My 2c.

Thumb typed by Sasha Vainshtein

From: Schwarz Albrecht (ETAS/ESY1)
Sent: Saturday, June 8, 11:47
Subject: RE: Direct BFD over Ethernet?
To: Jeffrey Haas, Stewart Bryant
Cc: Alexander Vainshtein, rtg-bfd@ietf.org


Thanks Sasha, Jeff & Stewart for your reply! OK, understood, more a technology 
ownership question (IEEE 802 vs IETF) than a technical issue. Running BFD 
directly over Ethernet would (at least) require to assign an Ethertype 
codepoint 
(https://www.iana.org/assignments/ieee-802-numbers/ieee-802-numbers.xml ) for 
BFD. But BFD-over-Ethernet seems to be then in direct competition with the IEEE 
802.1ag defined OAM capabilities (guess the Connectivity Fault Management 
protocols), i.e., the IEEE Continuity Check protocol.. My rough understanding. 
Thanks again! Albrecht -----Original Message----- From: Jeffrey Haas Sent: 07 
June 2019 13:56 To: Stewart Bryant Cc: Alexander Vainshtein ; Schwarz Albrecht 
(ETAS/ESY1) ; Rtg-bfd@ietf.org Subject: Re: Direct BFD over Ethernet? On Fri, 
Jun 07, 2019 at 12:20:30PM +0100, Stewart Bryant wrote: > > +1 > > However if 
you really want BFD, you only need a lightweight IP > implementation to carry 
it. During the work for BFD for LAG, IETF already went a bit too close to 
stepping into IEEE territory. Raw BFD over Ethernet would not be received very 
well by that organization, I think. (Even if it'd be trivial to specify.) -- 
Jeff


___________________________________________________________________________

This e-mail message is intended for the recipient only and contains information 
which is 
CONFIDENTIAL and which may be proprietary to ECI Telecom. If you have received 
this 
transmission in error, please inform us by e-mail, phone or fax, and then 
delete the original 
and all copies thereof.
___________________________________________________________________________

Reply via email to