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Routing and Forwarding Separation

Routing and Forwarding Separation. Prepared by Tricci So Nortel Networks. Objectives. Describes the differences between routing and forwarding Describes the benefits of separating the routing process from the forwarding process Recommendations to TGs. What is Routing?.

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Routing and Forwarding Separation

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  1. Routing and Forwarding Separation Prepared by Tricci So Nortel Networks Tricci So – Nortel Networks

  2. Objectives • Describes the differences between routing and forwarding • Describes the benefits of separating the routing process from the forwarding process • Recommendations to TGs Tricci So – Nortel Networks

  3. What is Routing? • The process of determining what usable path(s) (or what usable “route(s)”) that frames may take from source to destination • Information is compiled into a “routing table”, which maps the required destination to one or more egress interface(s) • Routing table either created manually (i.e. “statically”) or by using a routing protocol (i.e. “dynamically”) and shall be maintained to reflect the latest network topology • Routing is the process to establish the routing table (network topology) through the support of routing protocol(s), routing algorithm(s) and metric(s), the routing topology information will then be converted to the forwarding table to support the forwarding process • One or more routing protocols can be used to build the routing table Network ID Cost Next Hop Example of Routing Table 13 3 09:00:1a:b2:c0:e1 Tricci So – Nortel Networks

  4. What is Forwarding? • The process of examining addressing information in a newly arrived frame and then sending it (or “forwarding” it) along the path that was determined by the routing process. • Forwarding is accomplished by looking up the forwarding table and then based on the addressing information, deciding on which egress interface to send the frame. • Forwarding examples: • Forwarding “unicast” frame via “destination” address matching in the unicast forwarding table • Forwarding “multicast” frame via “source + destination” addresses matching and incoming interface filtering in the multicast forwarding table Network ID Dest. Addr Next Hop I/F Addr. Example of Forwarding Table 13 08:01:36:a4:9b:f2 09:00:1a:b2:c0:e1 Tricci So – Nortel Networks

  5. Separate Routing & Forwarding Processing • Routing & Forwarding Separation Advantages: • decouple the forwarding processing from routing processing • minimize impact of routing processing on forwarding performance • allow the independent routing and forwarding design evolution Control Path Processing Network/Routing Topology Processing Routing Algorithm & Metric Routing / Signaling Routing Table Network Policies Data Path Processing & Frame Forwarding Lookup Forwarding Table Classifier Frame Scheduler Data Path Processing Tricci So – Nortel Networks

  6. Recommendations • TGs should take the approach of designing the system architecture by separating the routing from forwarding processing to enable better system performance and evolvable network solutions. • Define a generic protocols and forwarding mechanism that can support different routing protocols that support various ESS Mesh network deployment scenarios. Tricci So – Nortel Networks

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