SRv6 Capable NOS and Devices
Jeff Tantsura
jefftant.ietf at gmail.com
Sun Jan 16 00:23:35 UTC 2022
+1 Mark
There’s no modern silicon that doesn’t support MPLS (and is capable of imposing at least 3 labels). There’s 0 additional price for vendors to enable MPLS on their devices. The rest is subject to vendors’ licensing and is completely artificial.
SR-MPLS uses MPLS data-plane and requires no changes to silicon, since head-end might be required to push more labels (TE, BSIDs, services)one needs to pay attention - (RFC8491/8476) allow signaling of MSD (maximum SID depth) if centralized controller/PCE is used for path computation.
LDP after all the years of bug fixing is still a crappy protocol, moving to SR-MPLS makes all the sense.
Cheers,
Jeff
> On Jan 15, 2022, at 11:50, Mark Tinka <mark at tinka.africa> wrote:
>
>
>
>> On 1/15/22 19:22, Colton Conor wrote:
>>
>> True, but in general MPLS is more costly. It's available on limited
>> devices, from limited vendors. Infact, many of these vendors, like
>> Extreme, charge you if you want to enable MPLS features on a box.
>
> Well, I don't entirely agree.
>
> Pretty much all chips shipping now, either custom or merchant silicon, will support MPLS. Whether the vendor chooses to implement it in code or not is a whole other matter.
>
> If you need MPLS, chances are you can afford it. If you don't, then you don't have to worry about it.
>
> For Extreme, are you referring to before or after they picked up Brocade?
>
> There is MPLS available in a number of cheap software suites. Even Mikrotik provides MPLS support. Whether it works or not, I can't tell you.
>
> VyOS supports is too. Whether it works or not, I can't tell you.
>
> But I think we are long past the days of "MPLS is expensive".
>
> Mark.
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