Thanks Greg for your comments. Please see inline, I have added some replies 
below inline with <RG3>…

From: Greg Mirsky <gregimir...@gmail.com>
Date: Thursday, November 19, 2020 at 12:28 PM
To: Mach Chen <mach.c...@huawei.com>
Cc: Tianran Zhou <zhoutian...@huawei.com>, Rakesh Gandhi (rgandhi) 
<rgan...@cisco.com>, spring <spring@ietf.org>, IPPM Chairs 
<ippm-cha...@ietf.org>, spring-cha...@ietf.org <spring-cha...@ietf.org>, Tommy 
Pauly <tpa...@apple.com>, IETF IPPM WG (i...@ietf.org) <i...@ietf.org>
Subject: Re: [ippm] Call for adoption: draft-gandhi-ippm-twamp-srpm and 
draft-gandhi-ippm-stamp-srpm
Hi Mach,
thank you for your email. I've added my understanding of what has been proposed 
in-line tagged GIM>>.

Regards,
Greg

On Wed, Nov 18, 2020 at 11:41 PM Mach Chen 
<mach.c...@huawei.com<mailto:mach.c...@huawei.com>> wrote:
Hi Tianran, Rakesh and Greg,
 Please see some responses inline with [Mach]…
From: ippm [mailto:ippm-boun...@ietf.org<mailto:ippm-boun...@ietf.org>] On 
Behalf Of Tianran Zhou
Sent: Thursday, November 19, 2020 1:33 PM
To: Rakesh Gandhi (rgandhi) 
<rgandhi=40cisco....@dmarc.ietf.org<mailto:40cisco....@dmarc.ietf.org>>; Greg 
Mirsky <gregimir...@gmail.com<mailto:gregimir...@gmail.com>>
Cc: spring <spring@ietf.org<mailto:spring@ietf.org>>; IPPM Chairs 
<ippm-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:ippm-cha...@ietf.org>>; 
spring-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:spring-cha...@ietf.org>; Tommy Pauly 
<tpauly=40apple....@dmarc.ietf.org<mailto:40apple....@dmarc.ietf.org>>; IETF 
IPPM WG (i...@ietf.org<mailto:i...@ietf.org>) 
<i...@ietf.org<mailto:i...@ietf.org>>
Subject: Re: [ippm] Call for adoption: draft-gandhi-ippm-twamp-srpm and 
draft-gandhi-ippm-stamp-srpm
 Hi Rakesh and Greg,
I may not very clear about the context. Please allow me to jump in.
It seems both of you make some valid point.
Please see in line with <ZTR>.
Cheers,
Tianran
From: spring [mailto:spring-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Rakesh Gandhi 
(rgandhi)
Sent: Wednesday, November 18, 2020 7:41 AM
To: Greg Mirsky <gregimir...@gmail.com<mailto:gregimir...@gmail.com>>
Cc: spring <spring@ietf.org<mailto:spring@ietf.org>>; IPPM Chairs 
<ippm-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:ippm-cha...@ietf.org>>; 
spring-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:spring-cha...@ietf.org>; Tommy Pauly 
<tpauly=40apple....@dmarc.ietf.org<mailto:tpauly=40apple....@dmarc.ietf.org>>; 
IETF IPPM WG (i...@ietf.org<mailto:i...@ietf.org>) 
<i...@ietf.org<mailto:i...@ietf.org>>
Subject: Re: [spring] [ippm] Call for adoption: draft-gandhi-ippm-twamp-srpm 
and draft-gandhi-ippm-stamp-srpm
 Hi Greg,
Thank you for your review and discussions on the drafts. This will help improve 
the work on this important work.
Please see replies inline with <RG>..

 From: Greg Mirsky <gregimir...@gmail.com<mailto:gregimir...@gmail.com>>
Date: Tuesday, November 17, 2020 at 5:27 PM
To: Rakesh Gandhi (rgandhi) <rgan...@cisco.com<mailto:rgan...@cisco.com>>
Cc: Tommy Pauly 
<tpauly=40apple....@dmarc.ietf.org<mailto:tpauly=40apple....@dmarc.ietf.org>>, 
IPPM Chairs <ippm-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:ippm-cha...@ietf.org>>, 
spring-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:spring-cha...@ietf.org> 
<spring-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:spring-cha...@ietf.org>>, IETF IPPM WG 
(i...@ietf.org<mailto:i...@ietf.org>) <i...@ietf.org<mailto:i...@ietf.org>>, 
spring <spring@ietf.org<mailto:spring@ietf.org>>
Subject: Re: [ippm] Call for adoption: draft-gandhi-ippm-twamp-srpm and 
draft-gandhi-ippm-stamp-srpm
Hi Rakesh, WG Chairs, and All,
I've read the responses to my detailed comments. I don't think that only adding 
references will solve the problems with the documents. If authors are 
interested in addressing my comments, we can start working on solving them one 
by one.
 <RG> As mentioned in previous replies, we can add references for the 
well-known terms “Links”, “Congruent Paths”, “SR Path”. If you prefer, we can 
define them here. For Zero checksum field, we can add a reference for the RFC 
6936 in Security section and also add some text for it. Will be happy to work 
with you to address these.
 But I am very much concerned with the technical value of these drafts. And 
here's why I feel that the proposed documents don't provide a sound technical 
solution to the task of direct loss measurement. Please find my reasoning 
explaining my opinion of the *-twamp-srpm and *-stamp-srpm:

  *   What is being proposed in these drafts?
Drafts *-twamp-srpm and *-stamp-srpm propose a new protocol to support direct 
packet loss measurements. Note, that RFC 6374 includes a method for direct loss 
measurement in MPLS networks that is applicable to the SR-MPLS environment. 
Also, draft-ietf-ippm-stamp-option-tlv defines an extension to RFC 8762 STAMP, 
the Direct Measurement TLV, that supports the direct packet loss measurement. 
STAMP and all its extensions are applicable in IPv6 networks and, thus, can be 
used in the SRv6 domain.
 <RG> As mentioned in previous replies, both RFC 6374 (in Section 4.2) and ITU 
Y.1731 (in Section 8.1) define stand-alone messages for collecting TX and RX 
counters for direct-mode loss measurement. TWAMP/STAMP messages defined in the 
drafts are equivalent of them that take advantage of the widely deployed TWAMP 
protocol and as well this same protocol can be deployed in 
IPv4/IPv6/MPLS/SRv6/EVPN/etc. networks.
 <ZTR> I think RFC6374 for MPLS and Y.1731 make some noise here. The point is 
if we need a new direct packet loss measurement for STAMP, when STAMP already 
defined a Direct Measurement TLV 
(https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-ietf-ippm-stamp-option-tlv). If current 
Direct Measurement TLV cannot fulfill some use case requirement, then how about 
proposing a new TLV.
 [Mach] Given that TWAMP does not support TLV, I assume that the discussions 
are mainly about draft*-stamp-srpm.
GIM>> You've brought a very good question on how the return path, in case 
required by the Sender Control Code, introduced in 
draft-gandhi-ippm-twamp-srpm, is specified? As you've pointed out, RFC 5357 
does not use TLV extensions. Should I assume that the return path, if required, 
provisioned through the management plane? I think that that requires 
clarification.

<RG3> Here the return SR path may be dynamic and can often change (when ingress 
nodes re-compute SR paths). Using controller based signaling/provisioning for 
it defeats the purpose of overcoming scale limitations and using TWAMP Light.
 [Mach] In the case of direct packet loss measurement, 
draft-gandhi-ippm-stamp-srpm assumes that marking-based solution (which can 
address the packet out-ordering issue) is used, hence the block number is 
introduced. The block number is used to correlate the counters from the sender 
and reflector. The current direct loss measurement TLV may just apply to the 
scenario without packet out-ordering.
GIM>> I agree with your observation on the purpose of the Block Number field in 
both TWAMP-Light and STAMP documents. In my understanding, the new protocol may 
be also used to collect counters generated by methods other than Alternate 
Marking. In that case, I assume, the value of Block Number may not convey any 
information.

<RG3> When TX and RX counters are collected by the TWAMP Light and STAMP based 
probe message defined in this draft, it’s block number carried in the message 
provides the context for the counters to be able to correlate the TX and RX 
counters to measure the traffic loss “at the Sender when the response is 
received”.
 [Mach] In addition, whether to keep it as current design or to define a new 
TLV for direct loss measurement can be debatable.
GIM>> I agree with you. And that what I am proposing - review the requirements, 
agree on requirements, and review the proposed solution based on these 
requirements.

<RG3> Please see the previous reply sent:
As TWAMP Light does not have a TLV, we need to define a stand-alone message for 
direct-mode LM. STAMP is just the same message but fixed length, so this way 
both can interoperate and also we can leverage the message for both of these 
protocols.

For STAMP direct-mode LM TLV approach, some technical details are in the draft 
as well:

   The STAMP message with a TLV for "direct measurement" can be used for
   combined Delay + Loss measurement 
[I-D.ietf-ippm-stamp-option-tlv<https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-gandhi-ippm-stamp-srpm-00#ref-I-D.ietf-ippm-stamp-option-tlv>].
   However, in order to use only for loss measurement purpose, it
   requires the node to support the delay measurement messages and
   support timestamp for these messages (which may also require clock
   synchronization for one-way delay).  Furthermore, for hardware-based counter 
collection
   for direct-mode loss measurement, the optional TLV based processing
   adds unnecessary overhead (as counters are not at well-known
   locations).
 How the proposed method of direct packet loss is related to TWAMP light and 
STAMP?
There's no apparent technical relationship between *-twamp-srpm and TWAMP 
Light, or *-stamp-srpm drafts and STAMP. Drafts do not extend or re-use the 
basic mechanisms defined for  TWAMP-Test and/or STAMP in their respective 
specifications. Rather than that, drafts introduce a new query-response mode 
and new formats of test packets that are decisively different from the formats 
defined in respective specifications. As a result, the new protocols are 
required to use different from used by TWAMP Light tr STAMP test session UDP 
port numbers on the responder. And that is another clear indication that the 
proposed mechanism represents a new protocol, neither extends TWAMP Light 
and/or STAMP nor updates their specifications.
<RG> As mentioned in previous replies, other than timestamp vs. counter and 
it’s format, the messages and processing of them are the same for delay and 
direct-mode loss measurement.

  *   Is there any advantage in introducing a dedicated packet format for the 
direct packet loss in STAMP comparing to using the Direct Measurement TLV 
extension?
Though it appears the using a dedicated packet format instead of TLV is more 
efficient, but the dedicated for the direct loss measurement format is likely 
to precede one or even two TLVs, Node Address TLV and Path TLV, defined in 
draft-gandhi-ippm-stamp-srpm. As a result, processing of the new packet with 
TLVs is unlikely to be more efficient and reduce the processing delay, than if 
using the Direct Measurement TLV as defined in draft-ietf-ippm-stamp-option-tlv.
<RG> As mentioned in previous replies, this is explained in Section 1 of the 
draft-gandhi-spring-stamp-srpm<https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-gandhi-spring-stamp-srpm/>.
 For link loss measurement (direct-mode), there is no TLV required for example. 
For direct-mode loss measurement in SR networks, it would typically be forward 
direction packet loss measurement (and not bidirectional).
•         What are the potential benefits of specifying the return path in the 
new test packet's Sender Control Code?
Using the Sender Control Code may require the use of the additional TLV that 
carries the return path information, Path TLV. If the ability to control the 
return path is required that can be achieved by augmenting the STAMP YANG data 
model (draft-ietf-ippm-stamp-yang) rather than including the Path TLV in each 
test packet. Hence, there seem no technical requirements to introduce the 
Sender Control Code field in the Base STAMP format defined in RFC 8762.
<RG> Per session basis between different sender nodes and this reflector node, 
some senders will request the replies in-band (e.g. for two-way mode). Sessions 
are provisioned on the Sender nodes and reflector simply reflects based on the 
received test-packet (e.g. for a bidirectional SR path). This is also similar 
to as described Section 3.1 in RFC 6374, top of page 22. There is no need to 
create a such state for each session on the reflector node and create a scale 
limitation. Recall that we are trying to avoid the scale limitation by 
eliminating the Control protocol signaling.
<ZTR> I find some value to include the path TLV in wire. As Rakesh mentioned, 
this can reduce the reflector configuration. But I am not convinced to 
introduce the sender control code field. It seems to me, the presence of path 
TLV indicates the bidirectional congruent path. Vise versa.
[Mach] Regarding how to specify the return path, the draft defines two ways to 
achieve that, one is to use control code to direct whether the reflected Test 
should be along the reverse path of a bidirectional path, this applies to both 
TWAMP (no TLV mechanisms) and STAMP. At the same time, in the case of STAMP, it 
also defines the return path TLV to explicitly specify the return path, which 
bring more options to specify the return path. Therefore, I see benefit of the 
two ways.
GIM>> I think you've pointed to some vagueness in the definition of a mechanism 
used to define the return path. My understanding is that if a response 
required, the Return Path TLV must be present in a test packet. But, if TLVs 
are not used for TWAMP-like direct loss measurement, why not use the same 
method to control the return path? I believe that consistency is a good quality 
of a protocol (yes, I see *-twamp-srpm and *-stmp-srpm as a single protocol 
only presented as different entities).

<RG3> Yes, it is the intention to be consistent between the two drafts. TWAMP 
Light and STAMP are using the same method using the “Sender control code”. 
Obviously STAMP provides additional capability to specify Return Path via TLV. 
Both drafts explain the methods used.

Thanks,
Rakesh

 Best regards,
Mach
 What is the relationship between the *-srpm drafts and BFD?
Some text in the *-srpm drafts suggest that the proposed method can be used to 
monitor for the loss of a path continuity. That may be viewed as an alternative 
to the BFD protocol method for the detection of a network failure. If the 
discussion of Loopback mode and monitoring of liveness remain in the drafts, it 
seems logical that the BFD WG and BFD WG's Chairs be made aware of the 
proposals. I didn't take the liberty of adding BFD WG or its Chairs. I believe 
that decision to be made by the Chairs of IPPM And SPRING WGs.
 <RG> As mentioned in previous replies, STAMP/TWAMP test messages are also used 
today for synthetic packet loss measurement which can be also used to 
detect/monitor connection loss (performance metric). The draft simply 
highlights this obvious metric. This is also very similar to what is described 
in ITU Y.1731, Section 7.1.
 Thanks,
Rakesh
Regards,
On Sun, Nov 15, 2020 at 10:10 PM Greg Mirsky 
<gregimir...@gmail.com<mailto:gregimir...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Hi Rakesh,
thank you for your prompt response, much appreciated. I'll carefully read your 
responses. Looking forward to the continued discussion.
 Regards,
Greg
 On Sun, Nov 15, 2020 at 10:07 PM Rakesh Gandhi (rgandhi) 
<rgan...@cisco.com<mailto:rgan...@cisco.com>> wrote:
Hi Greg,
 Thank you for your review comments. As mentioned in the IPPM session today, 
the email response was sent as attachments, see archive blow:
https://mailarchive.ietf.org/arch/msg/ippm/J503n-B2yOxF0urcHtGQKnqCRDE/
 I am attaching them in word documents for the convenience. We can address your 
comments below in the next revision of the document.
 Thanks,
Rakesh
From: Greg Mirsky <gregimir...@gmail.com<mailto:gregimir...@gmail.com>>
Date: Friday, November 13, 2020 at 10:09 AM
To: Rakesh Gandhi (rgandhi) <rgan...@cisco.com<mailto:rgan...@cisco.com>>
Cc: Tommy Pauly 
<tpauly=40apple....@dmarc.ietf.org<mailto:40apple....@dmarc.ietf.org>>, IPPM 
Chairs <ippm-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:ippm-cha...@ietf.org>>, 
spring-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:spring-cha...@ietf.org> 
<spring-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:spring-cha...@ietf.org>>, IETF IPPM WG 
(i...@ietf.org<mailto:i...@ietf.org>) <i...@ietf.org<mailto:i...@ietf.org>>
Subject: Re: [ippm] Call for adoption: draft-gandhi-ippm-twamp-srpm and 
draft-gandhi-ippm-stamp-srpm
Hi Rakesh,
thank you for your response to my review. Please find my follow-up notes 
in-lined below under the GIM>> tag.
I hope you've found more detailed comments in the attachments (re-attached for 
your convenience). I'm looking forward to reading your responses to the 
detailed comments of all four drafts.
Regards,
Greg
On Tue, Nov 10, 2020 at 8:11 AM Rakesh Gandhi (rgandhi) 
<rgan...@cisco.com<mailto:rgan...@cisco.com>> wrote:
Thank you Greg for taking time for thoroughly reviewing the documents and 
providing the comments.  Attached please find the email replies to your review 
sent earlier.  The replies are copied inline below for convenience, tagged with 
<RG00>.
From: ippm <ippm-boun...@ietf.org<mailto:ippm-boun...@ietf.org>>
Date: Monday, November 9, 2020 at 11:48 AM
To: Tommy Pauly 
<tpauly=40apple....@dmarc.ietf.org<mailto:40apple....@dmarc.ietf.org>>
Cc: IPPM Chairs <ippm-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:ippm-cha...@ietf.org>>, 
spring-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:spring-cha...@ietf.org> 
<spring-cha...@ietf.org<mailto:spring-cha...@ietf.org>>, IETF IPPM WG 
(i...@ietf.org<mailto:i...@ietf.org>) <i...@ietf.org<mailto:i...@ietf.org>>
Subject: Re: [ippm] Call for adoption: draft-gandhi-ippm-twamp-srpm and 
draft-gandhi-ippm-stamp-srpm
Dear WG Chairs, Authors, and IPPM WG community,
I've reviewed these drafts and have some comments to share. Below, please find 
my thoughts on whether these drafts can be adopted. More specific comments on 
each pair of drafts (TWAMP-related and STAMP-related draft and its accompanying 
draft targetted to the SPRING WG) are in the attached documents.
Usually, the bar for the adoption of a document can be evaluated by answers to 
these three questions:
•  Is the document(s) reasonably well-written
I've got surprised that the drafts don't use the terminology from RFCs 
4656/5357 and RFC 8762, and introduce their own terminology for Session-Sender 
and Session-Reflector. Also, many terms, e.g., Links, "congruent paths", are 
used in the documents without proper definitions. Other than that both drafts 
are readable and reasonably well-written.
<RG00> We can change Sender to Session-Sender and Reflector to 
Session-Reflector if it helps.
GIM>> I believe that the consistency in terminology between the core RFC and 
what is intended as its extension is not only helpful to a reader but, to the 
best of my understanding, is required for IETF specifications.
<RG00> There are many existing RFCs that use term Link (e.g. RFC 5613, 5340, 
8330, etc.) and term Congruent Path (e.g. RFC 5921, 6669) without defining 
them. I suspect it is because these are well-known terms. Having said that, we 
can add a reference for them if it helps.
GIM>> Thank you for listing these RFCs. I think I need to clarify my questions. 
While a reference to any of RFCs you've mentioned, I don't think that will 
address my concern. In reviewed documents, "Link" is capitalized while 
referenced RFCs used the lower case form for the term "link". Can these be used 
interchangeably? Do they refer to the same network object?
Now I'll try to illustrate my concern with using the term "congruent path" in 
these drafts (using ASCII-art):
                       C---------D
                     /                 \
            A----B                   E-----F
                     \                  /
                     G------------H
Consider an SR tunnel from A to F that traverses the network as A-B-C-D-E-F. 
From the definition of "congruent" as "two figures or objects are congruent if 
they have the same shape and size, or if one has the same shape and size as the 
mirror image of the other", path A-B-G-H-E-F is congruent to the SR tunnel. But 
a packet of an active OAM intended to monitor a flow over the SR tunnel is 
out-of-band and will not produce any meaningful measurement. Of course, for the 
case of the extensions in drafts, direct loss measurement can be performed, as 
information collected from node F. So, this example, in my opinion, illustrates 
two of my concerns:

  *   using a congruent path for an active OAM protocol may produce information 
that does not reflect the condition experienced by the monitored flow. It seems 
that the terminology should reflect the fundamental requirement for using 
active OAM to maintain the test packets in-band with the monitored flow.
  *   there are no technical requirements to justify using in-band active OAM 
protocol for direct packet loss measurement. As demonstrated in this example, 
direct packet loss can be performed using an out-of-band mechanism, e.g., SNMP 
queries, Netconf notifications based on YANG data model.


  *   Does the document solve a real problem?
No, it appears that  both TWAMP and STAMP drafts  define a new performance 
measurement protocol for the purpose of combining OWAMP/TWAMP and STAMP 
functionality in the respective drafts, and adding the ability to collect 
counters of "in-profile" packets. I couldn't find sufficient technical 
arguments for using a PM protocol instead of, for example, extending the 
existing OAM mechanisms like ICMP multi-part message extension per RFC 4884.
 <RG00> There is a requirement to measure performance delay as well as 
synthetic and direct-mode packet loss in segment-routing networks. OWAMP and 
TWAMP protocols are widely deployed for performance delay and synthetic packet 
loss measurement today. I am not sure extending ICMP for LM is a good option 
here.
GIM>> I agree with the requirements you've listed (though the SPRING WG OAM 
requirements 
document<https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-spring-sr-oam-requirement-03> 
has been abandoned and expired 3+ years ago). I believe that there's no 
sufficient technical reason to use OWAMP/TWAMP/STAMP for exclusive direct 
packet loss measurement.

  *   Is the proposed solution technically viable?
There are too many unaddressed aspects, particularly the risk introduced by the 
protocols on network security, to comprehensively evaluate the proposed 
solutions.
 <RG00> About your comment on zero checksum, this is described in Security 
section in RFC 6936. We will add reference to this RFC in our Security Section 
as well. This is only specific to the UDP port locally provisioned in the 
domain by the operator for STAMP or TWAMP Light. Other than this, I did not 
find any other security related issue in your review.
GIM>> I don't think that a mere reference sufficiently explains why the use of 
zero UDP checksum in IPv6 header is not decremental, does not create a security 
risk for the protocol.
 Thanks,
Rakesh
 Regards,
Greg
On Fri, Oct 30, 2020 at 11:35 AM Tommy Pauly 
<tpauly=40apple....@dmarc.ietf.org<mailto:40apple....@dmarc.ietf.org>> wrote:
Hello IPPM,
For the past few meetings, we’ve had updates on the work in the SPRING WG that 
was using STAMP and TWAMP. Since those documents ended up making extensions to 
the base protocols, the chairs of SPRING and IPPM decided that it would be best 
to split the documents and track the IPPM extension work in the IPPM WG.
 As such, we are starting a Working Group call for adoption for 
draft-gandhi-ippm-twamp-srpm and draft-gandhi-ippm-stamp-srpm.
 The documents are here:

https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-gandhi-ippm-stamp-srpm-00
https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-gandhi-ippm-twamp-srpm-00

The related SPRING documents are here:

https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-gandhi-spring-stamp-srpm-03
https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-gandhi-spring-twamp-srpm-11
 Please provide your feedback on these documents, and state whether or not you 
believe the IPPM WG should adopt this work by replying to this email. Please 
provide your feedback by the start of the IETF 109 meeting week, on Monday, 
November 16.
 Best,
Tommy & Ian
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