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Type: improvement
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <neale.ranns@cisco.com>
Change-Id: I487e698555545fce85d02d55deaaf7bb0007e388
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Instead of all clients directly RR sourcing the entry they are tracking,
use a deidcated 'tracker' object. This tracker object is a entry
delegate and a child of the entry. The clients are then children of the
tracker.
The benefit of this aproach is that each time a new client tracks the
entry it doesn't RR source it. When an entry is sourced all its children
are updated. Thus, new clients tracking an entry is O(n^2). With the
tracker as indirection, the entry is sourced only once.
Type: feature
Change-Id: I5b80bdda6c02057152e5f721e580e786cd840a3b
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I53ab8d17914e6563110354e4052109ac02bf8f3b
Signed-off-by: Paul Vinciguerra <pvinci@vinciconsulting.com>
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Change-Id: I09b8406168df4b6b28df3ede24ee839681be0195
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <neale.ranns@cisco.com>
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- single-hop BFD: attach a delegate to the appropriate adjacency
- multi-hop BFD [not supported yet]: attach a delegate to the FIB entry.
adjacency/fib_entry state tracks the BFD session state. when the state is down the object does not contribute forwarding hence and hence dependent objects will not use it.
For example, if a route is ECMP via two adjacencies and one of them is BFD down, then only the other is used to forward (i.e. we don't drop half the traffic).
Change-Id: I0ef53e20e73b067001a132cd0a3045408811a822
Signed-off-by: Neale Ranns <nranns@cisco.com>
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Change-Id: I7b51f88292e057c6443b12224486f2d0c9f8ae23
Signed-off-by: Damjan Marion <damarion@cisco.com>
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