Hi Anoop,
thank you for your comments and the suggested text. To clarify the extent
of the update, would the following accurately reflect the change in
Introduction you're proposing:
OLD TEXT:
   VXLAN is typically deployed in data centers interconnecting
   virtualized hosts of a tenant.  VXLAN addresses requirements of the
   Layer 2 and Layer 3 data center network infrastructure in the
   presence of VMs in a multi-tenant environment, discussed in section 3
   [RFC7348], by providing Layer 2 overlay scheme on a Layer 3 network.
NEW TEXT:
  One use of VXLAN is in data centers interconnecting
  VMs of a tenant.  VXLAN addresses requirements of the
   Layer 2 and Layer 3 data center network infrastructure in the
   presence of VMs in a multi-tenant environment, discussed in section 3
   of [RFC7348], by providing Layer 2 overlay scheme on a Layer 3 network.
   Another use is as an encapsulation for EVPN [RFC 8365].

  In the remainder of this document the terms VM and End Station
  are used interchangeably.

If my understanding of the proposed update is correct, I'd be glad to use
it (adding RFC 8365 as Informational reference).  Should note that in the
draft we never used "End Station". Perhaps the last sentence is not
required.

What do you think?

Regards,
Greg

On Tue, Dec 18, 2018 at 10:08 AM Anoop Ghanwani <an...@alumni.duke.edu>
wrote:

> I would change the introduction to the following to mention the use of
> VXLAN by BGP EVPN.
>
> Thanks,
> Anoop
>
> ==
>
>    "Virtual eXtensible Local Area Network" (VXLAN) [RFC7348] provides
>    an encapsulation scheme that allows building an overlay network by
>    decoupling the address space of the attached virtual hosts from that
>    of the network.
>
>   One use of VXLAN is in data centers interconnecting
>   VMs of a tenant.  VXLAN addresses requirements of the
>    Layer 2 and Layer 3 data center network infrastructure in the
>    presence of VMs in a multi-tenant environment, discussed in section 3
>    of [RFC7348], by providing Layer 2 overlay scheme on a Layer 3 network.
>    Another use is as an encapsulation for EVPN [RFC 8365].
>
>   In the remainder of this document the terms VM and End Station
>   are used interchangeably.
>
>    In the absence of a router in the overlay, a VM can communicate with
>    another VM only if they are on the same VXLAN segment.  VMs are
>    unaware of VXLAN tunnels as a VXLAN tunnel is terminated on a VXLAN
>    Tunnel End Point (VTEP) (hypervisor/TOR).  VTEPs (hypervisor/TOR) are
>    responsible for encapsulating and decapsulating frames exchanged
>    among VMs.
>
> On Wed, Dec 12, 2018 at 6:02 AM Jeffrey Haas <jh...@pfrc.org> wrote:
> >
> > BESS Working Group members,
> >
> > https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-bfd-vxlan-04
> >
> > BFD has finished working group last call on BFD for Vxlan and is about
> ready
> > to request publication as an RFC.  A last minute comment suggested that
> we
> > should consider inviting comment from your working group for expertise.
> >
> > We will be leaving the last call open until December 21 to leave time for
> > final comments.
> >
> > -- Jeff (for BFD)
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > BESS mailing list
> > BESS@ietf.org
> > https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/bess
>
> _______________________________________________
> BESS mailing list
> BESS@ietf.org
> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/bess
>
_______________________________________________
BESS mailing list
BESS@ietf.org
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/bess

Reply via email to