diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'docs/gettingstarted/developers/fib20/missing.rst')
-rw-r--r-- | docs/gettingstarted/developers/fib20/missing.rst | 110 |
1 files changed, 110 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/docs/gettingstarted/developers/fib20/missing.rst b/docs/gettingstarted/developers/fib20/missing.rst new file mode 100644 index 00000000000..c5aa51f6106 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/gettingstarted/developers/fib20/missing.rst @@ -0,0 +1,110 @@ +.. _missing: + +Missing Functionality +--------------------- + +A list of functionality that the FIB does not currently provide. + + +PIC Edge Backup Paths +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +FIB supports the concept of path 'preference'. Only paths that have +the best preference contribute to forwarding. Only once all the paths with +the best preference go down do the paths with the next best preference +contribute. + +In BGP PIC edge, BGP would install the primary paths and the backup +paths. With expectation that backups are only used once all primaries +fail; this is the same behaviour that FIB's preference sets provide. + +However, in order to get prefix independent convergence, one must be +able to only modify the path-list's load-balance map (LBM) to choose the +paths to use. Hence the paths must already be in the map, and +conversely must be in the fib_entry's load-balance (LB). In other +words, to use backup paths with PIC, the fib_entry's LB must include +the backup paths, and the path-lists LBM must map from the backups to +the primaries. + +This is change that is reasonably easy w.r.t. to knowing what to +change, but hard to get right and hard to test. + + +Loop Free Alternate Paths +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +Contrary to the BGP approach for path backups, an IGP could install a +loop free alternate (LFA) path to achieve fast re-route (FRR). + +Because of the way the LFA paths are calculated by the IGP an LFA backup +path is always paired with a primary. VPP FIB does not support this +primary-backup pair relationship. + +In intent of LFA FRR is/was to get below the magic 50ms mark. To do +this the expectation is/was that one would need in the forwarding +graph an object that represents a path's state. This object would be +checked for each packet being sent. If the path is up, the graph (an +adjacency since it's the IGP) for the primary path is taken, if it's +down the graph for the backup is taken. When a path goes down only +this indirection object needs to be updated to affect all +routes. Naturally, the indirection would incur a performance cost, but +we know that there are many performance-convergence trade-offs in a +FIB design. + +Should VPP's FIB support this feature? It all depends on the +50ms. LFA FRR comes from the era when routers ran on lower performance +CPUs and interface down was an interrupt. VPP typically has plenty of +gas but runs as a user space process. So, can it update all routes in +under 50ms on a meaty CPU and can the OS deliver the interface down +within the time requirements? I don't have the answers to either +question. + + +Extranets for Multicast +^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ + +When a unicast prefix is present in two different tables, then it +refers to a different set of devices. When the prefix is imported it +refers to the same set of devices. If the set of paths to reach the +prefix is different in the import and export table, it doesn't matter, +since they both refer to the same devices, so either set can be +used. Therefore, FIB's usual source preference rules can apply. The +'import' source is lower priority. + +When a multicast prefix is present in two different tables, then it's +two different flows referring to two different set of receivers. When +the prefix is imported, then it refers to the same flow and two +different sets of receivers. In other words, the receiver set in the +import table needs to be the super set of receivers. + +There are two ways one might consider doing this; merging the +path-lists or replicating the packet first into each table. + + +Collapsing +^^^^^^^^^^ + +Read :ref:`fastconvergence` + +Collapsing the DPO graph for recursive routes doesn't have to be an +all or nothing. Easy cases: + + +- A recursive prefix with only one path and a path-list that is not + popular, could stack directly on the LB of the via entry. +- A recursive prefix with only multiple paths and a path-list that is not + popular, could construct a new load balance using the choices + present in each bucket of its via entries. The choices in the new LB + though would need to reflect the relative weighting. + + +The condition of an non-popular path-list means that the LB doesn't +have an LB map and hence it needs to be updated for convergence to +occur. + +The more difficult cases come when the recursive prefix has labels +which need to be stack on the via entries' choices. + +You might also envision a global configuration that always collapses all +chains, which could be used in deployments where convergence is not a +priority. |