(Adding TEAS as it is where the VPN+ framework draft is discussed)

Hi Robert and Greg,

As discussed during the VPN+ presentation in TEAS at IETF 102, the scope is not 
the internet, as we know it would quite difficult or even impossible to achieve 
the required guarantee at the scope of internet.

And clearly the VPN overlays cannot provide the required guarantee, deep 
integration with the underlay resource would be necessary.

Another aspect we may take into consideration is the factor of 
overprovisioning. The current network only has one overprovisioning factor, 
which may not meet the requirement of different services/customers. With 
network slicing, it is possible to have different overprovisioning policy and 
factor in different slices.

Best regards,
Jie

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Robert Raszuk
Sent: Sunday, July 29, 2018 6:11 AM
To: Greg Mirsky <[email protected]>
Cc: Dongjie (Jimmy) <[email protected]>; [email protected]
Subject: Re: VPN security vs SD-WAN security

Hey Greg,

>
would not require global transit and likely be contained within access or, at 
most, metro domains.

That's news to me, but perhaps on the positive side :) I always think WAN .. 
really wide one !

The separation on "soft" vs "hard" guarantees is eventually all about amount of 
network robustness and level of over provisioning.  I sincerely hope it will 
not be yet another EVPN overlay over IP network just painted with different 
marketing colors.

Besides if any customer is serious and actually counts on those guarantees he 
better purchase two of such services coming from independent operators. That 
means that to be attractive financially cost of such premium service must not 
be higher then half of the p2p local fiber or cost of local access to closest 
IX ports + port subscription in a given MAN where non blocking IX fabric spans 
given geography.

It seems to me that at the end of the day the space for those operators wishing 
to offer hard network slicing is actually pretty narrow, but time will tell ...

Rgs,
r.


On Sat, Jul 28, 2018 at 9:34 PM, Greg Mirsky 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi Robert,
very much agree with all you're saying and find us in violent agreement on "C". 
Proactive performance monitoring, in my view as well, is the reasonable path to 
provide "soft" SLA and, to a degree, prevent oversubscription of the network. 
And that, as you've said, is one way to "assured/guaranteed global IP transit".
But I think that there will be demand for "hard" guarantees for URLLC 
applications. But these, in my view,
would not require global transit and likely be contained within access or, at 
most, metro domains. Because of the limited size of the domain, IntServ may 
work, though that may be not the most efficient technique. We shall find out.
Hence my view on slicing:

  *   different applications will have different requirements and use different 
degrees of isolation and guarantees;
  *   "soft" slices may not need much of additional standardization and use 
available VPN technologies in combination with PM OAM for SLA monitoring and 
assurance;
  *   "hard" slices would span within a single access and/or metro domain. 
Networking solutions likely will be coupled with architecture and interfaces 
developed in Multi-access Edge Computing (MEC).
Regards,
Greg

On Sat, Jul 28, 2018 at 6:02 AM, Robert Raszuk 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi Jie,

> (network slicing) is to provide the demanding services with guaranteed 
> performance in a converged network,


Foundation of converged IP network is based on statistical multiplexing of 
traffic demands. As such it is in its principle quite contradictory to 
"guaranteed" characteristics (performance, delays, jitter, drops -- you name 
it).

Application layers usually deal very well with all of the above I would state - 
normal characteristics of IP networks..

No doubt there will be those trying to offer some network slicing with 
guarantees and even those who will buy it. Just like today there are those who 
offer you L2 circuit between endpoints except such L2 circuit is an emulated 
one with zero OEM visibility to the IP infrastructure underneath.

Now the network slicing is clearly aiming for even more complexity under the 
hood. And that is not the only problem. The issue is cost. When SP is building 
the IP network the goal is to mux as many services on it as it simply results 
in given's SP revenue. Network slicing is promising as potentially just by 
configuration of few knobs they will be claiming guarantees as RFC says - 
except RFC will not likely tell you to stop over-provisioning.

Unless the idea is to use strict policing with dedicated queuing on active and 
back paths or do something like RSVP IntServ also on active and backup paths 
per customer - I really don't think you can really guarantee much. And if you 
do that the cost would likely grow really steep.

So what is IMO the solution for assured/guaranteed global IP transit:

*A*  get diversely routed  dark fiber paths between your POPs (can be 
unprotected) which btw today do not cost that much anymore
*B*  get diversely routed  optical channels alsol between your POPs (can be 
unprotected)

*C*  use N disjoined by design (single AS Internet providers between your 
end-points) + proper SD-WAN with active SLA monitoring

Clearly I am big supporter of *C* model for reasons discussed on this and few 
other recent threads.

I assume network slicing will try to get into be something between A/B & C but 
it is bounded up front with the cost of the two.

Many thx,
Robert.




On Sat, Jul 28, 2018 at 9:51 AM, Dongjie (Jimmy) 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hi Robert,

IMO the two approaches are targeting at different use cases and customers.

The former (network slicing) is to provide the demanding services with 
guaranteed performance in a converged network, while the latter (switching 
between multiple paralleled networks) provides the customer with the best 
performance that is available among those candidates. To me the latter is still 
some kind of best effort, and as Toerless said, it depends on the diversity you 
can have in the multiple networks.

And I agree with Stewart on “you always pay a price for better than best 
effort.”

Best regards,
Jie

From: rtgwg [mailto:[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>] On 
Behalf Of Robert Raszuk
Sent: Wednesday, July 25, 2018 8:24 PM
To: Acee Lindem (acee) <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

Subject: Re: VPN security vs SD-WAN security


True network slicing for IP networks means either waist of resources or very 
strict multi-level queuing at each hop and 100% ingress traffic policing. Yet 
while this has a chance to work during normal operation at the time of even 
regular failures this all pretty much melts like cheese on a good sandwich.

It is going to be very interesting to compare how single complex sliced network 
compares for any end to end robust transport from N normal simple IP backbones 
and end to end SLA based millisecond switch over between one and another on a 
per flow basis. Also let's note then while the former is still to the best of 
my knowledge a draft the latter is already deployed globally in 100s of 
networks.

Best,
R.


On Wed, Jul 25, 2018 at 1:21 PM, Acee Lindem (acee) 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:


From: rtgwg <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> on behalf 
of Stewart Bryant <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Date: Wednesday, July 25, 2018 at 5:55 AM
To: Robert Raszuk <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: Routing WG <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: Re: VPN security vs SD-WAN security




On 25/07/2018 10:40, Robert Raszuk wrote:
/* Adjusting the subject ... */

Hello
Stewart,

You have made the below comment in the other thread we are having:

Indeed, I would have expected this to be on a secure network of some sort 
either purely
private or some form of VPN. However, I am sure I read in your text that you 
were
considering using the Public Internet much in the way of SD-WAN.

Would you mind as extensively as you can expand on the above statement ?

Specifically on what basis do you treat say L2VPN or L3VPN of naked unencrypted 
packets often traveling on the very same links as this "bad" Internet traffic 
to be even slightly more secure then IPSEC or DTLS encrypted SD-WAN carried 
data with endpoints being terminated in private systems ?

Thx,
Robert

Robert, I think that you have to take it as read that an air traffic control 
SoF system is encrypting its packets. If it is not, then it is clearly not fit 
for purpose.

What concerns me is that an air traffic system is one of the most, if not the 
most, high profile targets in civil society. You get reminded of this each time 
you travel to IETF.

The thing about safety of flight traffic is that a sustained and effective DDoS 
attack has global impact in a way that few other such attacks have.

A VPN system ought to sustain resistance to such an attack better than the 
proposed system which treats the SoF traffic the same as regular traffic.

I guess you are making a case for your network slicing work 😉

Acee


- Stewart



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