Hi,

If you follow the discussions of the past several months, you should know that 
CRH is the foundation of SRm6. In my understanding, SRm6 is another IPv6 based 
Segment Routing, it was originally motivated to address the SRH header compress 
issue.
Technically, SRm6 works (it has the same concept of SR-MPLS), even if it may 
not support some functions that SRv6 has already supported, it can be extended 
to support them if we want.

But, as many people said, we already have SRv6, SR-MPLS over IP, the community 
has spent so many years of energy and efforts on them, most of the major 
vendors have implemented it, many SPs have deployed and begin to deploy it. 
Given this, do we really want to have another try to define a new solution that 
will provide the same functions as SRv6, SR-MPLS over IP? No doubt, it will 
take years, the same amount of energy and efforts.

Take a step back, assume SRm6 is also adopted, there will be two solutions for 
the community to choose; there will be interop issues between the two 
solutions. The vendors will have to support both to make different customers 
happy, more money will be spent and will be finally payed by the SPs/customers.

Do we really want this?

My two cents.

Best regards,
Mach

From: ipv6 [mailto:ipv6-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Zafar Ali (zali)
Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2020 3:02 PM
To: Ron Bonica <rbonica=40juniper....@dmarc.ietf.org>; Chengli (Cheng Li) 
<c...@huawei.com>; 6man <6...@ietf.org>; spring@ietf.org
Subject: CRH is not needed - Re: How CRH support SFC/Segment Endpoint option?

Hi,

It appears that some may have misunderstood the SRv6 solution and invented CRH.
It is good to clarify these points.

SRv6 offers the possibility to combine underlay and overlay instructions in a 
single SRH.
However,

  *   This is entirely optional
  *   If one would like to spread the source routed policy between multiple 
extension headers, one can use SRv6 to do this

     *   SRH to hold the topological endpoints
     *   Any combination of other extension headers to hold VPN and/or Service 
information. For example, SRH works seamlessly with NSH as documented in a WG 
document https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-spring-nsh-sr-02.

Claiming that a new data plane is needed to achieve this separation is false.

Claiming that CRH is needed to decrease the overhead of source-routed policy in 
IPv6 is incorrect, too. Many members of the SPRING working group have produced 
documents to extend the SRv6 solution for the specific purpose of minimizing 
the MTU overhead and/or supporting very long SID-lists on legacy hardware.

Also, CRH is just a re-engineering of SR-MPLS Data Plane with IPv6 Control 
Plane [RFC8663] and RFC8663 is an already productized, deployed, proven, and 
standardized solution.

6man took 6 years to define SRH. The 6man WG spent a lot of efforts (1000s of 
email, dozens of document revision, dozens of IETF presentations, control plan 
work that is adopted by multiple workgroups, etc.).

There is no need to define a new data plane, new control plane and associated 
management plane for the same purpose the IETF across multiple areas has worked 
for years.

Thanks

Regards … Zafar


From: ipv6 <ipv6-boun...@ietf.org<mailto:ipv6-boun...@ietf.org>> on behalf of 
Ron Bonica 
<rbonica=40juniper....@dmarc.ietf.org<mailto:rbonica=40juniper....@dmarc.ietf.org>>
Date: Friday, May 22, 2020 at 10:17 AM
To: "Chengli (Cheng Li)" <c...@huawei.com<mailto:c...@huawei.com>>, 6man 
<6...@ietf.org<mailto:6...@ietf.org>>, 
"spring@ietf.org<mailto:spring@ietf.org>" 
<spring@ietf.org<mailto:spring@ietf.org>>
Cc: "spring@ietf.org<mailto:spring@ietf.org>" 
<spring@ietf.org<mailto:spring@ietf.org>>
Subject: RE: How CRH support SFC/Segment Endpoint option?

Cheng,

The sole purpose of a Routing header is to steer a packet along a specified 
path to its destination. It shouldn’t attempt to do any more than that.

The CRH does not attempt to deliver service function information to service 
function instances. However, it is compatible with:

-          The Network Service Header (NSH)
-          The Destination Options header that precedes the Routing header

Both of these can be used to deliver service function information to service 
function instances.

                                                                                
                                     Ron




Juniper Business Use Only
From: Chengli (Cheng Li) <c...@huawei.com<mailto:c...@huawei.com>>
Sent: Friday, May 22, 2020 2:56 AM
To: 6man <6...@ietf.org<mailto:6...@ietf.org>>; 
spring@ietf.org<mailto:spring@ietf.org>; Ron Bonica 
<rbon...@juniper.net<mailto:rbon...@juniper.net>>
Cc: spring@ietf.org<mailto:spring@ietf.org>
Subject: How CRH support SFC/Segment Endpoint option?

[External Email. Be cautious of content]

Hi Ron,

When reading the CRH draft, I have a question about how CRH support SFC?

For example, we have a SID List [S1, S2, S3, S4, S5], and S3 is a SFC related 
SID, how to indicate that? By PSSI? [1]

But how to know which segment endpoint node/egress node should process this 
PSSI? At the beginning of the SRm6 design, this is described in [2]. But you 
deleted the containers [2].

Without that, I don’t really understand how SFC can be supported.


Best,
Cheng



[1]. 
https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-bonica-spring-sr-mapped-six-01#section-4.1<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https:/tools.ietf.org/html/draft-bonica-spring-sr-mapped-six-01*section-4.1__;Iw!!NEt6yMaO-gk!UD4vf0darQ9cskFhH1fJ9jwZJ-nIciQxgVnf1219YuyyaNcgvNdRUdkjwP15i-Xa$>
[2]. 
https://tools.ietf.org/rfcdiff?url2=draft-bonica-6man-seg-end-opt-04.txt<https://urldefense.com/v3/__https:/tools.ietf.org/rfcdiff?url2=draft-bonica-6man-seg-end-opt-04.txt__;!!NEt6yMaO-gk!UD4vf0darQ9cskFhH1fJ9jwZJ-nIciQxgVnf1219YuyyaNcgvNdRUdkjwNmXwyHT$>.


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