Matthew,

The update that include the resolutions to Aijun's comments has been uploaded: 
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-bess-bgp-sdwan-usage/

Thank you very much for closing the WGLC.

Linda

From: Matthew Bocci (Nokia) <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, October 29, 2025 4:27 AM
To: Linda Dunbar <[email protected]>; Aijun Wang 
<[email protected]>; 'Chongfeng Xie' <[email protected]>; 'bess' 
<[email protected]>
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [bess] Re: WG Last Call for draft-ietf-bess-bgp-sdwan-usage

Hi Linda

I have not seen any comments resulting from the Mplify liaison.

I believe the WG LC can now be closed. Are you going to post a new version of 
the draft when the window reopens, incorporating the changes you proposed to 
Aijun?

Thanks

Matthew


From: Linda Dunbar 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Tuesday, 28 October 2025 at 00:43
To: Matthew Bocci (Nokia) 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>, Aijun Wang 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>, 'Chongfeng Xie' 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>, 'bess' 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: RE: [bess] Re: WG Last Call for draft-ietf-bess-bgp-sdwan-usage

CAUTION: This is an external email. Please be very careful when clicking links 
or opening attachments. See the URL nok.it/ext for additional information.


Matthew,

We have addressed all of the comments from the WGLC. Have you got any comments 
from the Liaison to Mplify?

Are there anything else to be done before closing the WGLC?

Thanks, Linda

From: Matthew Bocci (Nokia) 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Sent: Friday, September 26, 2025 4:51 AM
To: Aijun Wang <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; 
Linda Dunbar <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; 
'Chongfeng Xie' <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; 'bess' 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [bess] Re: WG Last Call for draft-ietf-bess-bgp-sdwan-usage

Authors

Please can you respond to these WGLC comments.

Note that a liaison was recently sent to the Mplify Alliance (formerly MEF) 
asking for comments on a number of SDWAN drafts (see 
https://datatracker.ietf.org/liaison/2066/). I will therefore keep this WGLC 
open for a couple more weeks in case there are any further comments.

Best regards

Matthew

From: Aijun Wang <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Tuesday, 9 September 2025 at 04:11
To: 'Linda Dunbar' 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>, 'Chongfeng 
Xie' <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>, Matthew Bocci 
(Nokia) <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>, 'bess' 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: RE: [bess] Re: WG Last Call for draft-ietf-bess-bgp-sdwan-usage

CAUTION: This is an external email. Please be very careful when clicking links 
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Hi, Linda:

I recommended also that this document could refer to section 6 of 
https://www.mplify.net/resources/mplify-119-universal-sd-wan-edge-implementation-agreement/
 as mentioned 
https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/bess/kUyUXe8myckcwJRjv2NoXFVaigQ/ in by 
Najem.
Such contents describes more clearly the motivation of standard protocol that 
can be applied in SD-WAN scenarios.

Regarding to your responses, I have still the following comments/suggestions:


Section 3.1 of the current draft is not the framework and the scenarios 
described in section 3.2/3.3/3.4 doesn't get the key necessaries of the 
standard protocol.

Should "Scenario #3" be clarified also into the "Scenario #2", although the 
scenario is different, the solution is similar.  I suggest to remove the 
scenario #3, because it is uncommon for the PEs to utilize the SD-WAN 
technology.

Section 4 should be actually "Provisioning Requirements", not "Model"? it 
determines what contents should be delivered via the BGP protocol, right?

If you want to keep section 6 of the "SD-WAN forwarding model", it is OK.  For 
simplicity, removing the section 6.3? is there any extra requirements for the 
BGP protocol, when compared it with section 6.2 for "Hybrid underlay SD-WAN"?


Best Regards

Aijun Wang
China Telecom

From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Linda Dunbar
Sent: Tuesday, September 9, 2025 5:40 AM
To: Aijun Wang <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; 
'Chongfeng Xie' <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; 
'Matthew Bocci (Nokia)' 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>;
 'bess' <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [bess] Re: WG Last Call for draft-ietf-bess-bgp-sdwan-usage

Aijun,

The BGP described in this document is the iBGP instance that controls the 
SD-WAN overlay, not the underlay BGP sessions. In this model, the SD-WAN 
controller includes the Route Reflector function, distributing overlay routes 
and tunnel attributes to edge sites. While sites normally connect to a single 
SD-WAN controller, using BGP for the overlay still provides clear benefits in 
scalability, policy distribution, and interoperability that proprietary 
solutions cannot match.

Here are the responses to your other comments:

The document focus on the "BGP Usage for SD-WAN Overlay Networks", then, can we 
remove the  section 6 of "SD-WAN Forwarding Model" which focuses mainly on the 
forwarding plane, not BGP usage?

[Linda] Section 6 should remain because, while the draft focuses on BGP as the 
control plane, it is important to show how the attributes BGP distributes (such 
as tunnel parameters and colors) are actually applied in the SD-WAN forwarding 
plane. Many BGP RFCs include forwarding-plane context for clarity-for example, 
RFC 4271 (BGP-4) describes how NEXT_HOP affects forwarding, RFC 4364 (BGP/MPLS 
IP VPNs) explains how BGP routes map to MPLS label forwarding, and RFC 7432 
(EVPN) details how BGP-distributed information drives Ethernet data-plane 
behavior. Removing Section 6 would make the usage description incomplete.

Should the document introduce first the scenario, and requirements, and then 
the BGP controlled SD-WAN? That is to say, put the current section 3.1 after 
the section 3.2/3.3/3.4?

[Linda] The reason Section 3.1 introduces the BGP-controlled SD-WAN framework 
first is to establish the control-plane context before diving into detailed 
scenarios and requirements. This ordering follows the style of many BGP-related 
RFCs, where the control-plane architecture is introduced early and then 
illustrated by scenarios and requirements. That said, we can certainly revisit 
the section ordering if the WG feels that leading with scenarios (Sections 
3.2/3.3/3.4) and then returning to the BGP framework would improve readability.

Should the authors review again the current "requirements" with the section 5, 
and evaluate again whether the section 5 meets the current "requirements"? for 
example, can the "Zero Touch Provisioning" is accomplished via the BGP 
protocol? If not, I suggest to remove such requirements.
[Linda] We agree that requirements should be aligned with what BGP can 
realistically provide. While Zero Touch Provisioning (ZTP) is not delivered by 
BGP alone, our approach uses BGP to exchange the IPsec-related parameters, 
under the assumption that the Route Reflector already has a trusted 
relationship with the edge for basic configuration and route exchange. This 
allows the IKEv2 negotiation step to be eliminated, which in turn simplifies 
and accelerates the process of achieving ZTP for IPsec establishment.
How about adding the following sentence at the end of Section 4.3 (IPsec 
Related Parameters Provisioning):
"This mechanism supports the ZTP requirement outlined in Section 3.1.4 by 
enabling IPsec tunnels to be provisioned without IKEv2 negotiation."

As I known, current SD-WAN deployment is mainly implemented via the vendor's 
proprietary protocol, because the complex policy requirements. Can the authors 
explain more the benefits that depends on BGP, instead of the proprietary 
protocol to accomplish the similar aim? And, if we need still the controller, 
why don't use the proprietary protocol, instead of extending the BGP protocol?

[Linda] The document already addresses this point in Section 5.1 (Rationale for 
Using BGP as the Control Plane for SD-WAN). While proprietary protocols have 
been common in early SD-WAN deployments, BGP provides significant advantages: 
it is a well-understood, widely deployed standard, scales through mechanisms 
like route reflection, and enables interoperability across multi-vendor 
environments. The controller remains necessary for centralized policy 
distribution, but extending BGP allows us to achieve this using an open 
protocol rather than relying on proprietary mechanisms. We can make sure 
Section 5.1 is more clearly cross-referenced earlier in the draft, so readers 
do not miss this rationale.

Thank you,

Linda

From: Aijun Wang <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Sent: Monday, September 8, 2025 1:51 AM
To: 'Chongfeng Xie' <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; 
'Matthew Bocci (Nokia)' 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>;
 'bess' <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: RE: [bess] Re: WG Last Call for draft-ietf-bess-bgp-sdwan-usage

Hi, Chongfeng:

The standard BGP protocol can certainly unlock the customer to one specific 
SD-WAN service provider.
But given the scenario in this document depends on the SD-WAN controller, it is 
unrealistic that the different sites of one customer connect to different 
SD-WAN controllers.
Normally, these sites of the customer will connect one SD-WAN controller, then, 
the advantage of BGP protocol, when compared with the prosperity protocol, is 
not very convinced.

Best Regards

Aijun Wang
China Telecom

From: Chongfeng Xie [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, September 8, 2025 1:35 PM
To: Aijun Wang <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; 
Matthew Bocci (Nokia) 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>;
 bess <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [bess] Re: WG Last Call for draft-ietf-bess-bgp-sdwan-usage



Hi Aijun,
For point 4 you raised, I think current proprietary protocol-based 
implementations have limited deployment scale, in addition, for users are bound 
to a specific service provider, it constrains users' choices. Therefore, It is 
necessary to propose new alternative solutions.

Best regards
Chongfeng


From: Aijun Wang<mailto:[email protected]>
Date: 2025-09-08 12:09
To: 'Matthew Bocci \(Nokia\)'<mailto:[email protected]>; 
'BESS'<mailto:[email protected]>
CC: 
draft-ietf-bess-bgp-sdwan-usage<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [bess] Re: WG Last Call for draft-ietf-bess-bgp-sdwan-usage
Hi, All:

I have reviewed roughly this document, and have the following comments before 
its publication:

1)    The document focus on the "BGP Usage for SD-WAN Overlay Networks", then, 
can we remove the  section 6 of "SD-WAN Forwarding Model" which focuses mainly 
on the forwarding plane, not BGP usage?
2)    Should the document introduce first the scenario, and requirements, and 
then the BGP controlled SD-WAN? That is to say, put the current section 3.1 
after the section 3.2/3.3/3.4?
3)    Should the authors review again the current "requirements" with the 
section 5, and evaluate again whether the section 5 meets the current 
"requirements"? for example, can the "Zero Touch Provisioning" is accomplished 
via the BGP protocol? If not, I suggest to remove such requirements.
4)    As I known, current SD-WAN deployment is mainly implemented via the 
vendor's proprietary protocol, because the complex policy requirements. Can the 
authors explain more the benefits that depends on BGP, instead of the 
proprietary protocol to accomplish the similar aim? And, if we need still the 
controller, why don't use the proprietary protocol, instead of extending the 
BGP protocol?

Answering the above questions, and make the above adjustment, can convince the 
reader better and make the document's motivation more clearly.


Best Regards

Aijun Wang
China Telecom
From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Matthew Bocci (Nokia)
Sent: Wednesday, August 27, 2025 7:05 PM
To: BESS <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: [bess] WG Last Call for draft-ietf-bess-bgp-sdwan-usage

This email begins a working group last call for 
draft-ietf-bess-bgp-sdwan-usage-26 - BGP Usage for SD-WAN Overlay 
Networks<https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-bess-bgp-sdwan-usage/>

Please review the draft and send any comments to the BESS WG list, including 
whether (or not) you support publishing this draft as an informational RFC.

A bit of background: the draft was previously sent to the IESG but was returned 
to the working group after extensive review/discussion and due to some concerns 
that it was not in charter at the time. The BESS WG charter has recently been 
clarified.

This WG last call ends on Wednesday 10th September.

Matthew



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