nanog mailing list archives

RE: So Philip Smith / Geoff Huston's CIDR report becomes worth a good hard look today


From: Vitkovský Adam <adam.vitkovsky () swan sk>
Date: Fri, 15 Aug 2014 08:10:35 +0000

It looks great though I would not want to troubleshoot the RIB to FIB programing errors unless there's a note somewhere 
saying what abbreviation to search for in FIB.
The other think that comes to mind is that the more specifics could have different backup next-hops programed. 

adam
From: NANOG [mailto:nanog-bounces () nanog org] On Behalf Of Brett
Frankenberger
Sent: Thursday, August 14, 2014 4:50 AM

On Wed, Aug 13, 2014 at 07:53:45PM -0400, Patrick W. Gilmore wrote:
you mean your vendor won't give you the knobs to do it smartly
([j]tac tickets open for five years)?  wonder why.

Might be useful if you mentioned what you considered a "smart" way to
trim the fib. But then you couldn't bitch and moan about people not
understanding you, which is the real reason you post to NANOG.

Optimization #1 -- elimination of more specifics where there's a less specific
that has the same next hop (obviously only in cases where the less specific is
the one that would be used if the more specific were left out).

Example: if 10.10.4.0/22 has the same next hop as 10.10.7.0/24, the latter can
be left out of TCAM (assuming there's not a 10.10.6.0/23 with a different
next hop).

Optimization #2 -- concatenation of adjacent routes when they have the
same next hop

Example: If 10.10.12.0/15 and 10.10.14.0/15 have the same next hop, leave
them both out of TCAM and install 10.10.14.0/14

Optimization #3 -- elimination of routes that have more specifics for their
entire range.

Example: Don't program 10.10.4.0/22 in TCAM is 10.10.4.0/23,
10.10.6.0/24 an 10.10.7.0/24 all exist

Some additional points:

-- This isn't that hard to implement.  Once you have a FIB and primitives for
manipulating it, it's not especially difficult to extend them to also maintain a
minimal-size-FIB.

-- The key is that aggregation need not be limited to identical routes.
Any two routes *that have the same next hop from the perspective of the
router doing the aggregating* can be aggregated in TCAM.  DFZ routers have
half a million routes, but comparatively few direct adjacencies.
So lots of opportunity to aggregate.

-- What I've described above gives forwarding behavior *identical* to
unaggregated forwarding behavior, but with fewer TCAM entries.
Obviously, you can get further reductions if you're willing to accept different
behavior (for example, igoring more specifics when there's a less specific,
even if the less specific has a different next hop).

(This might or might not be what Randy was talking about.  Maybe he's
looking for knobs to allow some routes to be excluded from TCAM at the
expense of changing forwarding behavior.  But even without any such things,
there's still opportunity to meaningfully reduce usage just by handling the
cases where forwarding behavior will not change.)

     -- Brett


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