Mohammad,
  Agree, the information models for these two proposals are very similar.

It appears that the ODL model offers some additional flexibility in that 
direction attributes are
attached to Classifiers and Directives rather than Policies in the Openstack 
model.

Maybe the authors can comment on other differences and their motivation?

Is there any plan to merge these two models and create a common model?  Is 
there a group
within OpenStack actively working on this?  Will this work be done within 
OpenStack or OpenDaylight?


-          Louis

From: Mohammad Banikazemi [mailto:m...@us.ibm.com]
Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2014 9:20 PM
To: OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
Cc: OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [neutron][policy] Integrating network policies and 
network services


Louis, We are still working on the details of the new contract based model. To 
get an idea please refer to the original project google document [1] and look 
under the section titled
Use Cases: 3-tier Application with Security Policies where policies are 
described through a provider/consumer relationship. The contract model is 
similar to the model being worked out by a similarly named project in 
OpenDaylight. You can find more information on the contract model there [2].

Best,

Mohammad


[1] 
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1ZbOFxAoibZbJmDWx1oOrOsDcov6Cuom5aaBIrupCD9E/edit#heading=h.gebyoou6khks
[2] 
https://wiki.opendaylight.org/view/Project_Proposals:Application_Policy_Plugin

[Inactive hide details for "Louis.Fourie" ---03/18/2014 03:23:05 PM---Mohammad, 
  Can you share details on the contract-based po]"Louis.Fourie" ---03/18/2014 
03:23:05 PM---Mohammad,   Can you share details on the contract-based policy 
model?

From: "Louis.Fourie" <louis.fou...@huawei.com>
To: "OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)" 
<openstack-dev@lists.openstack.org>,
Date: 03/18/2014 03:23 PM
Subject: Re: [openstack-dev] [neutron][policy] Integrating network policies and 
network services

________________________________



Mohammad,
  Can you share details on the contract-based policy model?
-          Louis

From: Mohammad Banikazemi [mailto:m...@us.ibm.com]
Sent: Friday, March 14, 2014 3:18 PM
To: OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions)
Subject: [openstack-dev] [neutron][policy] Integrating network policies and 
network services


We have started looking at how the Neutron advanced services being defined and 
developed right now can be used within the Neutron policy framework we are 
building. Furthermore, we have been looking at a new model for the policy 
framework as of the past couple of weeks. So, I have been trying to see how the 
services will fit in (or can be utilized by) the policy work in general and 
with the new contract-based model we are considering in particular. Some of the 
I like to discuss here are specific to the use of service chains with the group 
policy work but some are generic and related to service chaining itself.

If I understand it correctly, the proposed service chaining model requires the 
creation of the services in the chain without specifying their insertion 
contexts. Then, the service chain is created with specifying the services in 
the chain, a particular provider (which is specific to the chain being built) 
and possibly source and destination insertion contexts.

1- This fits ok with the policy model we had developed earlier where the policy 
would get defined between a source and a destination policy endpoint group. The 
chain could be instantiated at the time the policy gets defined. (More 
questions on the instantiation below marked as 1.a and 1.b.) How would that 
work in a contract based model for policy? At the time a contract is defined, 
it's producers and consumers are not defined yet. Would we postpone the 
instantiation of the service chain to the time a contract gets a producer and 
at least a consumer?

1.a- It seems to me, it would be helpful if not necessary to be able to define 
a chain without instantiating the chain. If I understand it correctly, in the 
current service chaining model, when the chain is created, the 
source/destination contexts are used (whether they are specified explicitly or 
implicitly) and the chain of services become operational. We may want to be 
able to define the chain and postpone its creation to a later point in time.

1.b-Is it really possible to stand up a service without knowing its insertion 
context (explicitly defined or implicitly defined) in all cases? For certain 
cases this will be ok but for others, depending on the insertion context or 
other factors such as the requirements of other services in the chain we may 
need to for example instantiate the service (e.g. create a VM) at a specific 
location that is not known when the service is created. If that may be the 
case, would it make sense to not instantiate the services of a chain at any 
level (rather than instantiating them and mark them as not operational or not 
routing traffic to them) before the chain is created? (This leads to question 3 
below.)

2- With one producer and multiple consumers, do we instantiate a chain (meaning 
the chain and the services in the chain become operational) for each consumer? 
If not, how do we deal with using the same source/destination insertion context 
pair for the provider and all of the consumers?

3- For the service chain creation, I am sure there are good reasons for 
requiring a specific provider for a given chain of services but wouldn't it be 
possible to have a generic "chain" provider which would instantiate each 
service in the chain using the required provider for each service (e.g., 
firewall or loadbalancer service) and with setting the insertion contexts for 
each service such that the chain gets constructed as well? I am sure I am 
ignoring some practical requirements but is it worth rethinking the current 
approach?

Best,

Mohammad_______________________________________________
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