nanog mailing list archives

Re: IGP choice


From: Mark Tinka <mark.tinka () seacom mu>
Date: Thu, 22 Oct 2015 21:58:25 +0200



On 22/Oct/15 21:35, Dave Bell wrote:

I'm unsure if this is a serious argument, but its such a poor point
today. Everything has to be connected to a level 2 in IS-IS. If you
want a flat area 0 network in OSPF, go nuts. As long as you are
sensible about what you put in your IGP, both IS-IS and OSPF scale
very well.

The differences between the two protocols are so small, that people
really grasp at straws when 'proving' that one is better over the
other. 'IS-IS doesn't work over IP, so its more secure'. 'IS-IS uses
TLVs so new features are quicker to implement'. While these may be
vaguely valid arguments, they don't hold much water. If you don't
secure your routers to bad actors forming OSPF adjacencies with you,
you're doing something wrong.Who is running code that is so bleeding
edge that feature X might be available for IS-IS, but not OSPF?

Chose whichever you and your operational team are most comfortable
with, and run with it.

OSPFv3 scaled better than OSPFv2 in 2008. But multi-AF support for
OSPFv3 was only developing then, so that was not a viable replacement
for OSPFv2.

OSPFv2 should scale better in 2015 (I say "should" because more routers
now have x86-based control planes, but I don't run OSPF so I'm hand-waving).

You're right, a single Level-2 domain in IS-IS is akin to a single Area
0 in OSPF. But those "so small" differences between the protocols in
2008 meant I was less eager to try the single area with OSPF than I was
the single level with IS-IS.

Mark.


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