I am having trouble reconciling two of your comments.
In you rlast email you said that this is for "planed communities
represent the groups of customers peers an geographical and topological
related information". Planned communities is presumably a new behavior,
not existing behavior.
In this email you say that these are "already defined BGP communities".
You reference RFC 4384, which talks about several kinds of communities.
maybe you intend the regional or national communities mentioned as being
possible, but not defined, in that document. This document's
descriptions do not align well enough with RFC 4384 for me to say.
Let's be clear. The working group asked for an early review. The WG
now has my review, indicating that this document is unclear in multiple
regards and could use improvement.
It is now up to the WG and the chairs.
Yours,
Joel
On 2/28/18 6:22 AM, li zhenqiang wrote:
Hi Joel,
This is not for one operator, instead it is a common practice. Please
refer to RFC4384 and comments from Thomas who are from Swisscom.
One clarification for this doc is it is not to introduce any new BGP
communities but to report the already defined BGP communities related to
a traffic flow through IPFIX, thus the IPFIX collector can analyze the
traffic in BGP community granularity without running BGP protocol.
BGP community is a transitive attibute, thus the exporter can report all
the communities carried in the matching route entry, unless some BGP
communities are filtered by some routers.
Sure I can add some text in the doc to say the proper processing of the
exporter, something like what I said in the previous mail, do you think
it is ok and enough?
When the exporter, i.e. router, receives the templete to report
the communities, the exporter gets the information through BGP lookup
using the corresponding source or destination IP of a traffic flow.
Thank you for your comments.
Best Regards,
Zhenqiang Li
------------------------------------------------------------------------
li_zhenqi...@hotmail.com
*From:* Joel M. Halpern <mailto:j...@joelhalpern.com>
*Date:* 2018-02-28 10:13
*To:* li zhenqiang <mailto:li_zhenqi...@hotmail.com>; Dongjie
(Jimmy) <mailto:jie.d...@huawei.com>; gen-...@ietf.org
<mailto:gen-...@ietf.org>
*CC:* draft-ietf-opsawg-ipfix-bgp-community....@ietf.org
<mailto:draft-ietf-opsawg-ipfix-bgp-community....@ietf.org>; opsawg
<mailto:opsawg@ietf.org>
*Subject:* Re: Genart early review of
draft-ietf-opsawg-ipfix-bgp-community-04
Is this for one operator (still important, but not necessarily for
standardization) or are there several operators who have expressed
interest in this?
Yes, we do proactive standards. But the IDR group, for example, tends
to be very careful to see if interest is reflected in implementation.
In this case, given that what is proposed is a completely different use
of the BGP communities, I think at least more clarity that this is only
expected to be used for communities that match the purpose, and of how
and why the vendors would implement the router-side logic.
To get back to the points I made in the review:
1) The document needs to be much clearer that it is about new
communities whcih are expected to be defined for this use. It needs to
be clear if this is expected to be applied to communities put on by
other AS, or only to communities provided by routers of the collecting
AS. The later leads to understandable configuration. The former leads
to questions about hos the meaning will be known.
2) The document needs to be clear and explicit about what processing it
is expecting the router to provide, and how much configuration is
needed
to get the right things to happen.
Yours,
Joel
On 2/27/18 8:54 PM, li zhenqiang wrote:
> Hi Joel,
>
> This is Zhenqiang Li from China Mobile. The purpose of this doc
is not
> to report the well-known communities, but the operator planed
> communities represent the groups of the customers, peers,
> the geographical and topological related information as stated in
> RFC4384, which is a common practice and also used in our field
network.
>
> When the exporter, i.e. router, receives the templete to report the
> communities, the exporter gets the information through BGP lookup
using
> the corresponding source or destination IP of a traffic flow. The
> procedure for the exporter to get the community informaiton of a
traffic
> flow is the same as it gets the AS information.
>
> Best Regards,
> Zhenqiang Li
>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
> li_zhenqi...@hotmail.com
>
> *From:* Joel M. Halpern <mailto:j...@joelhalpern.com>
> *Date:* 2018-02-12 00:37
> *To:* Dongjie (Jimmy) <mailto:jie.d...@huawei.com>;
gen-...@ietf.org
> <mailto:gen-...@ietf.org>
> *CC:* draft-ietf-opsawg-ipfix-bgp-community....@ietf.org
> <mailto:draft-ietf-opsawg-ipfix-bgp-community....@ietf.org>;
> opsawg@ietf.org <mailto:opsawg@ietf.org>
> *Subject:* Re: Genart early review of
> draft-ietf-opsawg-ipfix-bgp-community-04
> This was a requested early review. You folks can do as you
deem best.
> From where I sit, it seems odd. Most well-known communities
do not
> fit
> the pattern of representing groups of sources or groups of
destinations.
> I presume the intent here is for this to be useful in some AS
other
> than
> the one originating the communities. Which makes it even
harder to see
> when it would apply.
> I presume this is driven by having found that it would have
helped in
> some real-world situation?
> I think the document would be helped by a clearer description of
> when it
> applies and what behavior is expected of the router (not just
"the same
> as that over there.")
> Yours,
> Joel
> On 2/11/18 1:32 AM, Dongjie (Jimmy) wrote:
> > Hi Joel,
> >
> > Thanks for your review comments. Please see my replies inline:
> >
> >> -----Original Message-----
> >> From: Joel Halpern [mailto:j...@joelhalpern.com]
> >> Sent: Saturday, February 10, 2018 1:27 AM
> >> To: gen-...@ietf.org
> >> Cc: draft-ietf-opsawg-ipfix-bgp-community....@ietf.org;
> opsawg@ietf.org
> >> Subject: Genart early review of
> draft-ietf-opsawg-ipfix-bgp-community-04
> >>
> >> Reviewer: Joel Halpern
> >> Review result: Not Ready
> >>
> >> This is an early gen-art review of
draft-ietf-opsawg-ipfix-bgp-04.
> >>
> >> The document is clear about what it is trying to do, and
> readable. It is not
> >> clear about how it expects this to actually work.
> >>
> >> However, I find the underlying concept confusing.
> >> 1) BGP Communities may sometimes represent subsets of
traffic.
> But usually
> >> they represent tagging intended to influence routing which is
> only indirectly
> >> related to meaningful subsets of traffic for TE
purposes. One
> may be able to
> >> make an argument that this could better enable monitoring the
> effects of some
> >> BGP communities. But the draft does not make that argument.
> >
> > This depends on how the BGP communities are used by the
> operators. Except some well-known communities, BGP
communities are
> used in a customized manner. In some cases, BGP communities
indicate
> the source and destination information of a group of traffic
flows.
> These are the major case this document is focusing on, as it
would
> be helpful for operator to collect the traffic statistics
based on
> BGP communities. Using BGP communities to influence routing is
> another popular use case. In that case, it may also be helpful to
> collect traffic statistic information related to the BGP
> communities, while the purpose may not be just for TE.
> >
> > 2) It is
> >> unclear what this actually expects the router to do in
> generating this
> >> information.
> >> Reading between the lines, it seems that what is desired
is for
> the router
> >> control process to go through the IPFIX collected information
> before it is
> >> exported, and add BGP community tags to the export
information.
> >> (Generating such information directly from the forwarding
plane
> would place
> >> significant load on the forwarding representation and
> processing, and on the
> >> control logic to generate FIB information.) Given that
off-line
> BGP information
> >> collection is a common practice, and that such information is
> common across
> >> the AS, it would actually seem simpler to perform such
> processing and
> >> aggregation offline rather than in the router.
> >
> > The behavior of a router would be similar to its behavior with
> the existing BGP relevant IEs, e.g. bgpSourceAsNumber,
> bgpDestinationAsNumber, bgpNextHopIPv4Address, etc. Basically
this
> is the aggregated traffic information collection model, in
which the
> router aggregates the collected traffic information based on
the IEs
> specified in the template, so that it can export much less
> information to the collector without losing the information the
> collector really cares about. Exporting aggregated traffic
> statistics has been widely used in the networks.
> >
> > Note that the purpose of this mechanism is to export the
> aggregated traffic statistics information at the granularity
> specified by BGP communities, while BMP can used to collect the
> detailed information of BGP RIBs and BGP events, IMO they are
> designed for different purposes. Although it is possible to
export
> all the non-aggregated traffic information to the collector,
and let
> the collector to correlate them with the BGP communities,
this can
> bring heavy burden to both the exporter and the collector.
> >
> >>
> >> If the IDR working group has not been consulted about this, I
> would strongly
> >> recommend working with them as to whether this is actually
> useful information
> >> to collect, and how and where to collect it. If the IDR
working
> group does not
> >> consider important to work on this, then that gives you
useful
> information in
> >> and of itself.
> >
> > The IDR WG has been notified about the LC of this document, so
> far there is no objection received from them. We would like to
> encourage IDR people to review and give feedbacks to help improve
> this document. Whether the new IEs are useful or not should be
> determined in the OPSAWG.
> >
> > Best regards,
> > Jie
> >
>
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