Lucy, does not change anything but I did a typo
I meant to say every tenant needs a different VXLAN UDP destination port for 
upstream + receive port for downstream on NVE

From: Lucy yong <lucy.y...@huawei.com<mailto:lucy.y...@huawei.com>>
Date: Tuesday 17 November 2015 at 11:54
To: Wim Henderickx 
<wim.henderi...@alcatel-lucent.com<mailto:wim.henderi...@alcatel-lucent.com>>, 
"thomas.mo...@orange.com<mailto:thomas.mo...@orange.com>" 
<thomas.mo...@orange.com<mailto:thomas.mo...@orange.com>>, BESS 
<bess@ietf.org<mailto:bess@ietf.org>>
Subject: RE: [bess] draft-hao-bess-inter-nvo3-vpn-optionc

For this to work every tenant needs a different VXLAN UDP destination 
port/receive port.

[Lucy] this is not right. For the traffic from DC ASBR -> NVE, only one UDP dst 
port is used; for the traffic from NVE-> DC ASBR, DC ASBR signaled UDP port 
number will be used. Tenant traffic is segregated by VNID, not UDP port. At an 
NVE, the traffic going toward the same remote PE will be encapsulated w/ VXLAN 
and the same UDP dst port number even the traffic may belong to different VNs. 
In short, tenant and UDP port are orthogonal; the solution just uses UDP port 
to indicate the outgoing mpls label for the packets at DC ASBR when it receives 
packets from NVEs.

Lucy

From: BESS [mailto:bess-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Henderickx, Wim (Wim)
Sent: Tuesday, November 17, 2015 11:49 AM
To: thomas.mo...@orange.com<mailto:thomas.mo...@orange.com>; BESS
Subject: Re: [bess] draft-hao-bess-inter-nvo3-vpn-optionc

— Snip —

No, the spec as it is can be implemented in its VXLAN variant with existing 
vswitches (e.g. OVS allows to choose the VXLAN destination port, ditto for the 
linux kernel stack).

(ToR is certainly another story, most of them not having a flexible enough 
VXLAN dataplane nor support for any MPLS-over-IP.)

WH> and how many ports simultaneously would they support? For this to work 
every tenant needs a different VXLAN UDP destination port/receive port.
There might be SW elements that could do some of this, but IETF defines 
solutions which should be implemented across the board HW/SW/etc. Even if some 
SW switches can do this, the proposal will impose so many issues in 
HW/data-plane engines that I cannot be behind this solution.

To make this work generically we will have to make changes anyhow. Given this, 
we better do it in the right way and guide the industry to a solution which 
does not imply those complexities. Otherwise we will stick with these specials 
forever with all consequences (bugs, etc).

- snip -

From: "thomas.mo...@orange.com<mailto:thomas.mo...@orange.com>" 
<thomas.mo...@orange.com<mailto:thomas.mo...@orange.com>>
Organization: Orange
Date: Tuesday 17 November 2015 at 01:37
To: Wim Henderickx 
<wim.henderi...@alcatel-lucent.com<mailto:wim.henderi...@alcatel-lucent.com>>, 
BESS <bess@ietf.org<mailto:bess@ietf.org>>
Subject: Re: [bess] draft-hao-bess-inter-nvo3-vpn-optionc

Hi Wim, WG,

2015-11-16, Henderickx, Wim (Wim):

2015-11-13, Henderickx, Wim (Wim):
Thomas, we can discuss forever and someone need to describe requirements, but 
the current proposal I cannot agree to for the reasons explained.

TM> Well, although discussing forever is certainly not the goal, the reasons 
for rejecting a proposal need to be thoroughly understood.
WH> my point is what is the real driver for supporting a plain VXLAN data-plane 
here, the use cases I have seen in this txt is always where an application 
behind a NVE/TOR is demanding option c, but none of the NVE/TOR elements.


My understanding is that the applications  are contexts where overlays are 
present is when workloads (VMs or baremetal) need to be interconnected with 
VPNs. In these contexts, there can be reasons to want Option C to reduce the 
state on ASBRs.

In these context, its not the workload (VM or baremetal) that would typically 
handle VRFs, but really the vswitch or ToR.

WH2> can it not be all cases: TOR/vswitch/Application. I would make the 
solution flexible to support all of these not?




2015-11-13, Henderickx, Wim (Wim):

TM> The right trade-off to make may in fact depend on whether you prefer:
(a) a new dataplane stitching behavior on DC ASBRs (the behavior specified in 
this draft)
or (b) an evolution of the encaps on the vswitches and ToRs to support 
MPLS/MPLS/(UDP or GRE)

WH> b depends on the use case

I don't get what you mean by "b depends on the use case".
WH> see my above comment. If the real use case is an application behind NVE/TOR 
requiring model C, than all the discussion on impact on NVE/TOR is void. As 
such I want to have a discussion on the real driver/requirement for option c 
interworking with an IP based Fabric.

Although I can agree than detailing requirements can always help, I don't think 
one can assume a certain application to dismiss the proposal.

WH> for me the proposal is not acceptable for the reasons explained: too much 
impact on the data-planes


I wrote the above based on the idea that the encap used in MPLS/MPLS/(UDP or 
GRE), which hence has to be supported on the ToRs and vswitches.
Another possibility would be service-label/middle-label/Ethernet assuming an L2 
adjacency between vswitches/ToRs and ASBRs, but this certainly does not match 
your typical DC architecture. Or perhaps had you something else in mind ?

WH> see above. The draft right now also requires changes in existing TOR/NVE so 
for me all this discussion/debate is void.

No, the spec as it is can be implemented in its VXLAN variant with existing 
vswitches (e.g. OVS allows to choose the VXLAN destination port, ditto for the 
linux kernel stack).

(ToR is certainly another story, most of them not having a flexible enough 
VXLAN dataplane nor support for any MPLS-over-IP.)

WH> and how many ports simultaneously would they support?

WH> and depending on implementation you don’t need to change any of the 
TOR/vswitches.

Does this mean that for some implementations you may not need to change any of 
the TOR/vswitches, but that for some others you may ?

WH> any proposal on the table requires changes, so for me this is not a valid 
discussion

See above, the proposal in the draft does not necessarily need changes in 
vswitches.



Let me take a practical example : while I can quite easily see how to implement 
the procedures in draft-hao-bess-inter-nvo3-vpn-optionc based on current 
vswitch implementations of VXLAN, the lack of MPLS/MPLS/(UDP, GRE) support in 
commonplace vswitches seems to me as making that alternate solution you suggest 
harder to implement.

WH> I would disagree to this. Tell me which switch/TOR handles multiple UDP 
ports for VXLAN ?

I mentioned _v_switches, and many do support a variable destination port for 
VXLAN, which is sufficient to implement what the draft proposes.

-Thomas













From: Thomas Morin <thomas.mo...@orange.com<mailto:thomas.mo...@orange.com>>
Organization: Orange
Date: Friday 13 November 2015 at 09:57
To: Wim Henderickx 
<wim.henderi...@alcatel-lucent.com<mailto:wim.henderi...@alcatel-lucent.com>>
Cc: "bess@ietf.org<mailto:bess@ietf.org>" <bess@ietf.org<mailto:bess@ietf.org>>
Subject: Re: [bess] draft-hao-bess-inter-nvo3-vpn-optionc

Hi Wim,

I agree on the analysis that this proposal is restricted to implementations 
that supports the chosen encap with non-IANA ports (which may be hard to 
achieve for instance on hardware implementations, as you suggest), or to 
context where managing multiple IPs would be operationally viable.

However, it does not seem obvious to me how the alternative you propose 
[relying on 3-label option C with an MPLS/MPLS/(UDP|GRE) encap] addresses the 
issue of whether the encap behavior is supported or not (e.g. your typical ToR 
chipset possibly may not support this kind of encap,  and even software-based 
switches may not be ready to support that today).

My take is that having different options to adapt to various implementations 
constraints we may have would have value.

(+ one question below on VXLAN...)

-Thomas


2015-11-12, Henderickx, Wim (Wim):
On VXLAN/NVGRE, do you challenge the fact that they would be used with a dummy 
MAC address that would be replaced by the right MAC by a sender based on an ARP 
request when needed ?


Is the above the issue you had in mind about VXLAN and NVGRE ?

WH> yes

I you don't mind me asking : why do you challenge that ?





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