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RE: [RPRWG] CRC check in each node?




 
My two cents worth:
 
As mentioned in a previous email, I agree that it is preferable not to
regenerate the payload CRC at intermediate nodes to allow a real end-to-end
protection of the payload.
Then a separate CRC is required for the destination address and TTL counter,
so non-routable frames can be discarded.
 
One Ethernet encasulation protocol already defined with a separate header
CRC is GFP (Generic Framing Procedure). It is pushed both in T1X1 and ITU-T.
I think it deserves a second look at, and could maybe serve as a base with a
new RPR header we define. The frame mapped version with a modified ring mode
header may be close to what we need.
 
The latest GFP copy can be downloaded at:
 
 <ftp://ftp.t1.org/T1X1/X1.5/1x150243.doc> File name: 1x150243.doc
http://www.t1.org/filemgr/FileList.taf?Directory=t1x1%5Cx1.5
<http://www.t1.org/filemgr/FileList.taf?Directory=t1x1%5Cx1.5&ShowTitle=New%
20T1X1.5%20Files> &ShowTitle=New%20T1X1.5%20Files
 
GFP as is would work fine for SONET and OTN PHY's. To work with Ethernet
PHY's it may be possible to make the frame "Ethernet-like" by just adding a
PA and SFD?
 
Regards,
Fredrik Olsson
Agilent Technologies
 

-----Original Message-----
From: Nader Vijeh [mailto:nader@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Friday, June 22, 2001 12:25 PM
To: ieee 802.17 list
Subject: RE: [RPRWG] CRC check in each node?


I agree with Harry on not discarding packets with bad CRC. Not only carriers
will not like this, but it also goes against the fact that MAC is not
actually "receiving" packets in transit. Packet discard due to CRC error is
defined as part of the "receive function" in the 802 MACs.
 
To answer Mike's question on Ethernet MACs, they all have a "promiscuous"
mode that allows them to receive all packets on the media, this mode is
normally used in bridges, allowing the bridge to make the decision on
forwarding.

-----Original Message-----
From: Harry Peng [mailto:hpeng@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Friday, June 22, 2001 10:03 AM
To: ieee 802.17 list
Subject: RE: [RPRWG] CRC check in each node?



Ray, Mike, Raj, Angela: 


There are two issues here: 
1) If there is only one CRC that covers the ring header (DA) and the
payload, then you don't 
   known if the error occurred in the header (un-routable packet) or in the
payload. 
   If the TTL is also covered by the CRC then the only way TTL can remove
packet 
   is because the DA is unknown to all the stations on the ring. This TTL is
rather useless. 

   all error packets must be discarded. 

   This violate the Transparent Lan Service model. Error packet is delivered
to the 
   customer for SLA reasons. Any packet discarded will have to be able to be
validate 
   at the receive end. Keeping statistics on the ring becomes a big scaling
problem. 

   This also prevents any of you out there who want to do transparent
mapping. 
  
2) in the cut through mode, error packet are delivered to its destination
which may 
   decide to discard or not and keep stats accordingly. 

   In cut-through the header will have to processed for source removal,
destination strip, 
   and TTL processing. 

   In either case, Adding a ring header error checking can be used to
validate the correctly 
   of the header. If the packet is routable, forward it. 

   For store and forward mode, you can check if the packet CRC is correct
and discard the packet depending on the 
   configuration of the MAC and the service the box is offering. 

Recommendation: 
   Header error checking is valuable, there is an error floor rate for any
transmission medium. 

   For all possible services that the ring can offer, and for RPR to be  
   payload agnostic then it shall not drop any error packet. Unless a header
error is detected. 
   Un-routable packet is a given, there is not much one can do but to
discard it! 
   Remove un-routable packet so it does not circulate on the ring forever. 


Regards, 

Harry 
   
   



-----Original Message----- 
From: Ray Zeisz [ mailto:Zeisz@xxxxxxxx <mailto:Zeisz@xxxxxxxx> ] 
Sent: Friday, June 22, 2001 7:23 AM 
To: 'Mike Takefman'; Raj Sharma 
Cc: 'Angela T. Faber'; ieee 802.17 list 
Subject: RE: [RPRWG] CRC check in each node? 



There are plenty of Ethernet switches that operate in (gasp!) cut-through 
mode.  These switches propagate CRC errored frames because they switch from 
one port to another after only receiving the MAC header.  The original 
Ethernet switch (Kalpana) operated this way...and received a lot of 
criticism.  From my perspective, it appears that most of the Ethernet switch

industry is moving away from this and not propagating CRC errors.  This is 
largely due to the fact that the industry is moving away from shared bus 
architectures. 

Today, most Ethernet MACs and Network Processors have control bits that 
allow you to selectively receive or discard packets that are CRC errored, 
too long or runt (too short).  

I believe that Raj mentioned some services that require errored packets to 
be delivered at the Orlando meeting.  Maybe he could tell us more about 
these and what the errored packets provide to the end station. 


FYI: IBM has a patent for adaptively running in cut-through or 
store-and-forward based on the bit error ratio over a period of time, on a 
per link basis. 

Ray Zeisz 

LVL7 Systems 
http://www.LVL7.com <http://www.LVL7.com>  
(919) 865-2735 




-----Original Message----- 
From: Mike Takefman [ mailto:tak@xxxxxxxxx <mailto:tak@xxxxxxxxx> ] 
Sent: Thursday, June 21, 2001 9:05 PM 
To: Raj Sharma 
Cc: 'Angela T. Faber'; ieee 802.17 list 
Subject: Re: [RPRWG] CRC check in each node? 



Raj, 

It is not clear to me that the ttl has to be within the packet, and 
protected by the crc. There are successful implementations that 
have the ttl protected outside of the packet. There are advantages 
to doing this in terms of the complexity of the implementation. 

I do come down on the camp of removing the packet from the ring 
once there is corruption. There is no reason to waste BW with 
a packet that will be dropped once it is received. 

I would be interested to know if there are any Ethernet MAC/ 
Switch chips sets that do not drop CRC errored packets 
when received or any that do it selectively.  I would be interested 
in understanding the mechanism for differentiating drop behaviour 
to understand if it belongs in the transit path. 

cheers, 

mike 


Raj Sharma wrote: 
> Angela, 
>  
> This is an intesting question and is sort of the tip of an iceberg 
> (pardon the cliché - I feel the answer to this question is loaded) 
>  
> There are fundamentally 2 issues here. Misrouting of packets due 
> to errors and corruption of the payload. 
>  
> IMHO, packets whose headers are corrupted must be discarded 
> in order to prevent misrouting. The question is whether the misrouting 
> prevention is limited between RPR MACs or to the ultimate destination 
> entity connected to a RPR MAC. I am assuming that a RPR MAC has 
> multiple clients. 
>  
> Certain services require persistent delivery of frames. Such services 
> will make their won decision on what to do with corrupted frames. 
> For these services it may require that corrupted frames be still delivered

> to the specific MAC client. 
>  
> Now, it maybe of significant value in debugging networks and from 
> an operational perspective to know over which span on the ring the 
> frame got corrupted. Hence CRC recomputation at every node may 
> have some value from an operational perspective. Also, since the TTL 
> field is part of the frame CRC recomputation cannot be avoided at least 
for 
> the header. 
>  
> raj 
>  
>  
> 
>      -----Original Message----- 
>      From: Angela T. Faber [ mailto:afaber@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
<mailto:afaber@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> ] 
>      Sent: Thursday, June 21, 2001 12:44 PM 
>      To: ieee 802.17 list 
>      Subject: [RPRWG] CRC check in each node? 
> 
>      Folks 
>       
>      One question regarding CRC check: are we assuming CRC will be checked

at every node (as the frame is 
>      forwarded) or it will be checked only at the destination/source node?

>      My initial thought on this is that, if we don't do it at every node, 
than how do we remove the frame from ring if the 
>      source and destination addresses are corrupted? On the other hand I 
assume that if every node checks it, more 
>      time is spent with forwarding it.... 
>       
>      Any insights are welcomed. 
>      Thanks! 
>       
>      Angela 
>