Hi Martin,

See inline for some comments.

On 8/27/20, 6:35 AM, "spring on behalf of Martin Horneffer" 
<spring-boun...@ietf.org on behalf of m...@lab.dtag.de> wrote:

    Hello everyone,

    may I come back the the question below? Or rather let me update it a little:

    In case an SR-MPLS path is broken, should a node rather drop the packet, 
    or forward it?

    This can happen whenever the IGP points to a certain next hop, but that 
    neither supplies a valid SID, nor allows LDP-stitching for whatever 
    reason. For PUSH as well as for CONTINUE.

    We have been using MPLS transport and a BGP free core since about two 
    decades now, using LDP. In the analog case, LDP creates "unlabelled" 
    entries in the LFIB, does the equivalent of a POP operation and forwards 
    the packet to the next-hop as chosen by the IGP.

    This behavior obviously breaks any traffic that relies on a service 
    label, but it can protect some traffic.
    In our case a huge percentage of all traffic still is public IPv4. This 
    needs MPLS only for a transport label, be it LDP or SR-MPLS. If this 
    traffic gets forwarded unlabelled, it follows an IGP default route to a 
    central device, where it is 1) redirected to the correct destination and 
    2) counted in a way that operators can quickly see whether and where 
    this kind of failure occurs at some point in the network.

[TS]: The SR Path may be composed of multiple SIDs (i.e. label stack) -- where 
the top SID destination is not the SR Path endpoint.. I sense from "gets 
forwarded unlabelled " as you will discard the full label stack (?) and forward 
the packet unlabeled to the central device? Or are you encapsulating the 
remaining MPLS packet over IP and IP routing packet to the central device to be 
inspected? In either case, I expect somehow the packet to be ultimately 
delivered to the original SR Path endpoint/egress?

    After more operational experience and several internal discussions we 
    agreed that we want packets to be forwarded unlabelled rather than 
    dropped. Anyone to share, or oppose this position?
[TS]: again, I'm not clear on when you say "forward unlabelled" - do you mean 
packets will follow the top SID's the IP IGP route? Or are you peaking into the 
destination IP (public IPv4) of packet encapsulated in MPLS to determine how to 
forward it?

Regards,
Tarek

    Best regards, Martin


    Am 31.01.20 um 16:50 schrieb Martin Horneffer:
    > Hello everyone,
    >
    > again it seems the interesting questions only show up when applying 
    > something to the live network...
    >
    > We ran into something that poses a question related to RFC8660: What 
    > is the exact meaning of section 2.10.1, "Forwarding for PUSH and 
    > CONTINUE of Global SIDs", when the chosen neighbor doesn't provide a 
    > valid MPLS path?
    >
    > The relevant sections reads:
    >
    >       -  Else, if there are other usable next hops, use them to forward
    >          the incoming packet.  The method by which the router "R0"
    >          decides on the possibility of using other next hops is beyond
    >          the scope of this document.  For example, the MCC on "R0" may
    >          chose the send an IPv4 packet without pushing any label to
    >          another next hop.
    >
    > Does the part "send an IPv4 packet without pushing any label" apply to 
    > PUSH and CONTINUE, or just to PUSH?
    > Does R0 have to validate that neighbor N can correctly process to 
    > packet? Or can it forward the packet regardless?
    >
    > The reason for asking is that we are now seeing issues similar to ones 
    > we had when starting with LDP based MPLS about two decades ago: 
    > traffic being black holed even though a path to the destination 
    > exists, because the MPLS path is interrupted somewhere in the middle.
    >
    > With LDP we know the case of LFIBentries called "unlabelled". While 
    > this does break connectivity for many kinds of service, e.g. those 
    > relying on an additional service labels, it still works for plain 
    > IP(v4) traffic. In our cases, this works perfectly fine for all 
    > internal routing and control traffic. And even for IPv4 traffic that 
    > gets collected by a central router that injects a default route.
    >
    > However, depending on the exact interpretation of the above paragraph, 
    > an implementor might feel obliged to chose the next paragraph:
    >
    >       -  Otherwise, drop the packet.
    >
    > Which is, at least in our case, very unfortunate...
    >
    > Any advice or opinion appreciated!
    >
    >
    > Best regards, Martin
    >
    >
    >
    >
    > _______________________________________________
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    > spring@ietf.org
    > https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/spring

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