nanog mailing list archives

Re: [NANOG] OSPF minutia, and, technote publication venues


From: "Chris Grundemann" <cgrundemann () gmail com>
Date: Mon, 5 May 2008 11:18:56 -0600

On Mon, May 5, 2008 at 10:07 AM, Paul Vixie <vixie () isc org> wrote:
scg () gibbard org (Steve Gibbard) writes:

 > > ... if each anycast cluster is really several servers, each using OSPF
 > > ECMP, then you can lose a server and still have that cluster advertising
 > > the route upstream, and only when you lose all servers in a cluster will
 > > that route be withdrawn.
 >
 > This is getting into minutia, but using multipath BGP will also accomplish
 > this without having to get the route from OSPF to BGP.  This simplifies
 > things a bit, and makes it safer to have the servers and routers under
 > independent control.

 i think the minutia is good, especially after a long weekend of layer 9
 threads.  my limited understanding of multipath bgp is that it's a global
 config knob for routers, not a per peer knob, and that it has disasterous
 consequences if the router is also carrying a full table and has many peers.

I am not sure what routers specifically are being discussed here, but
in JunOS you can enable multipath on a global, group or single
neighbor level, possibly eliminating your concern...

 also, in OSPF, ECMP is not optional, even though most BSD-based software
 routers don't implement it yet (since multipath routing is very new.)  so,
 we have been using OSPF for this, it just works out better.  i dearly do
 wish that something like a "service advertisement protocol" existed, that
 did what OSPF ECMP did, without a router operator effectively giving every
 customer the ability to inject other customer routes, or default routes.
 in that sense, i agree with your "safer... independent control" assertion.

 > But yes, Joe's ISC TechNote is an excellent document, and was a big help
 > in figuring out how to set this up a few years ago.

 and now for something completely different -- where in the interpipes could
 a document like that have been published, vs. ISC's web site?  the amount
 of red tape and delay involved in Usenix or IETF or IEEE or ACM are vastly
 more than most smart ops people are willing to put in.  where is the light /
 middle weight class, or is every organization or person who wants to publish
 this kind of thing going to continue to have the exclusive and bad choice of
 "blog it, or write an article for ;login:/ACM-Queue/Circle-ID, or write an
 academic paper and wait ten months"?  isn't this a job for... NANOG?
 --
 Paul Vixie

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-- 
Chris Grundemann
www.linkedin.com/in/cgrundemann

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