Hi Yaakov and all:

Whereever Yaakov decides to place it I'll be there supporting the work. The 
draft itself is incredibly well-written and information-rich.
Note that there's also work in RAW that mentions SR operation DetNet related 
operations 
(draft-pthubert-raw-architecture<https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-pthubert-raw-architecture-05>).
 RAW has vested interest in intelligent forwarding decision, that would be the 
trademark vs. DetNet. With this draft, the forwarding is not based on Qbv 
schedule but the forwarder has some latitude as long as it matches the hop 
deadline. So RAW may be a good place.
And then there's 
draft-chen-detnet-sr-based-bounded-latency<https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-chen-detnet-sr-based-bounded-latency-01>.
 Ideally all these related items would progress in the same room.

Also a few notes on the draft itself:
- maybe use latency instead of delay; it would be nice to maybe define delay as 
something else, e.g., the delay representing the time the packet spends queued 
in one hop vs. the latency that is end to end?
- not sure the term green wave is well understood by the public here; the draft 
gives the impression that the TSN path is faster than the best effort and 
involves no queueing. For the most part that is untrue; the latency is bounded 
but for most flows it is longer than best effort. Best effort can be really 
fast with passthrough in an empty network. The problem is the long tail and 
possibly congestion loss. For TSN, there can be very special flows that will 
traverse the city with all the lights green, but usually there'll be queuing. 
The difference is that the queueing latency is constant and the overall latency 
is withing bounds.
- Time triggered is not the only TSN operation. I wonder what the draft would 
become with asynchronous shaper in mind. We designed (and as I must announce, 
patented as US9602420<https://patents.google.com/patent/US9602420>) a system 
very similar to the one proposed in the draft, but that is designed to adapt 
QoS depending on whether the packet is early or late vs. its schedule, and not 
tagging the schedule in the since the latency is considered end to end not hop 
by hop. The use case is slightly different since we apply this without a global 
controller and a provable guarantees all flows will meet the deadline - so not 
really detnet-, but more like a best effort that all flows meet their deadline 
in a stochastic environment. If Yaakov is interested, we can contribute on that 
aspect.

Good luck with the draft,

Pascal


From: detnet <detnet-boun...@ietf.org> On Behalf Of Tianran Zhou
Sent: jeudi 25 février 2021 9:14
To: Yaakov Stein <yaako...@rad.com>; det...@ietf.org; spr...@ietf.org; 
pce@ietf.org
Subject: Re: [Detnet] new draft on segment routing approach to TSN

Hi Yaakov,

This is an interesting topic.
After a quick review, there are several questions as follows:
1. It's clear to me to have a deadline for each packet. So that router can 
schedule the packet based on the urgency. But what's the motivation to split 
the end to end deadline to several local ones?
2. How to divide an end to end deadline into several local deadlines? Is there 
any example algorithm that could be used by the controller?
3. As far as I know, most devices do not support edf. I am not sure whether 
your proposal based on edf could really be useful.

Cheers,
Tianran


From: Pce [mailto:pce-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Yaakov Stein
Sent: Tuesday, February 23, 2021 9:14 PM
To: det...@ietf.org<mailto:det...@ietf.org>; 
spr...@ietf.org<mailto:spr...@ietf.org>; pce@ietf.org<mailto:pce@ietf.org>
Subject: [Pce] new draft on segment routing approach to TSN

All,

I would like to call your attention to a new ID 
https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-stein-srtsn-00.txt
which describes using a stack-based approach (similar to segment routing) to 
time sensitive networking.
It furthermore proposes combining segment routing with this approach to TSN
resulting in a unified approach to forwarding and scheduling.

The draft is information at this point, since it discusses the concepts and 
does not yet pin down the precise formats.

Apologies for simultaneously sending to 3 lists,
but I am not sure which WG is the most appropriate for discussions of this 
topic.

  *   DetNet is most relevant since the whole point is to control end-to-end 
latency of a time-sensitive flow.
  *   Spring is also directly relevant due to the use of a stack in the header 
and the combined approach just mentioned.
  *   PCE is relevant to the case of a central server jointly computing an 
optimal path and local deadline stack.
I'll let the chairs decide where discussions should be held.

Y(J)S

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