Anycast-Only Gateways in EVPN Asymmetric IRB

TL&DR: Making this work in a multi-vendor environment is bound to be great fun.

In the previous blog post, I described how ARP works in an EVPN asymmetric IRB environment where the PE devices share an anycast MAC/IP address in addition to a unicast MAC/IP address. Today, let’s see how well things work if the PE devices have only the anycast MAC/IP address:

Packet forwarding in an EVPN asymmetric IRB design using only anycast gateways

Packet forwarding in an EVPN asymmetric IRB design using only anycast gateways

read more add comment

Worth Reading: AI Enthusiasts Against AI Skeptics

Charity Majors wrote an excellent article describing AI enthusiasts in a race against time and AI skeptics in a race against entropy. Fair warning: its very first sentence triggered an acute case of PTSD:

I recently attended a talk where one of the presenters made some pretty…astonishing claims about what they had achieved by the pure, uncut power of vibe coding.

I’ve seen way too many presentations making “astonishing claims” about the unlimited unicorn-driven powers of OpenFlow, SDN, OpenDaylight, or Ansible.

read more add comment

ARP with Anycast Gateways in EVPN Asymmetric IRB

TL&DR: The deeper we dig, the curiouser it gets.

In previous blog posts, I described the ARP issues in EVPN environments, starting with centralized routing, and then asymmetric IRB with unicast (per-leaf-switch) first-hop gateways. Of course, no self-respecting vendor would tell you to do that; anycast gateways are all the rage these days.

As always, anycast gateways could mean different things, depending on which vendor documentation you read ;)

  1. Active-active VRRP (one device is the active VRRP gateway, but all devices listen to the VRRP MAC address).
  2. Shared MAC+IP address beside device-specific unicast MAC and IP addresses.
  3. Shared MAC+IP address with no PE-specific IP address.
read more add comment

AI in Networking with Andrew Yourtchenko

I always wanted to find someone who is more positive about AI than I am, while having solid “can deliver working stuff at scale” credentials. Andrew Yourtchenko definitely fits the bill. I first met him (online) when he was still an engineer in Cisco TAC, and when we finally met in person, he was busy automating the deployment of Cisco Live networking infrastructure. He was also instrumental in bringing us closer to ubiquitous IPv6 deployment with Happy Eyeballs.

read more see 1 comments

Goodbye, Leaf-and-Spine Networks?

Of course not

A friend of mine sent me links to a new paper published by AWS engineers, and an associated LinkedIn post which claims:

We got lean, resilient, massive aggregation fabrics that provide 33% better throughput with 69% fewer routers, savings 27% of costs, cutting power usage by 40%, and reducing CO2 emissions.

The obvious question one should ask after reading the hyperventilated Radical Network Redesign blog post is thus: is this the end of leaf-and-spine networks? Of course not. Let’s go into the details.

read more see 2 comments
Sidebar