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Draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-02.txt:A doubt about "Downstream Mapping"

  • From: lidefeng <lidefeng@huawei.com>
  • Date: Fri, 09 May 2003 19:03:31 +0800

Hi,all,

In section "3.2. Downstream Mapping" of Draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping-02.txt,I
have some question concerning the handling of "Downstream Mapping".

In page 12,there is a paragraph as following:
"The notion of 'downstream router' and 'downstream interface' should
   be explained.  Consider an LSR X.  If a packet that was originated
   with TTL n>1 arrived with outermost label L at LSR X, X must be able
   to compute which LSRs could receive the packet if it was originated
   with TTL=n+1, over which interface the request would arrive and what
   label stack those LSRs would see.  (It is outside the scope of this
   document to specify how this computation is done.)  The set of these
   LSRs/interfaces are the downstream routers/interfaces (and their
   corresponding labels) for X with respect to L.  Each pair of
   downstream router and interface requires a separate Downstream
   Mapping to be added to the reply, and is given a unique DS Index "

What I am confused is whether LSR X needs to compute all the downstream LSR
until the TTL in the packet is decreased to 0,including those not directly
connect to LSR X,or only needs to compute those directly downstream LSR of
LSR X? If TTL n>1,then the packet can be received by LSR more than one hops
away,then, what should be included in the Downstream mapping?

Can anyone clarify it to me?

Thanks

Li Defeng