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inter-domain framework
hi adrian
scanning section 2.3 on LSP stitching and in particular the following
part of it
"LSP stitching can be used in support of inter-domain TE LSPs. In
particular, an LSP segment may be used to achieve connectivity
between any pair of LSRs within a domain. The ingress and egress of
the LSP segment could be the edge nodes of the domain in which case
connectivity is achieved across the entire domain, or they could be
any other pair of LSRs in the domain."
i came with the following question why the LSP tail-end can not
terminate on a node outside of the head-end domain ? the definition as
it reads to me precludes to stitch an inter-area LSP segment (starting/
ending at the ingress/egress node of an AS) as part of an inter-AS LSP
segment for instance; this case does not seem to be covered and i fail
to see what specifically forbids such construction ... in case of
agreement, i would be please to provide the appropriate piece of text
note: modelling LSP segment as TE link is a consequence of establishing
them (as currently stated) within a single TE domain but there is no
apparent reason why further use of LSP segment must be restricted now on
to such construction
<http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/draft-ietf-ccamp-inter-domain-framework-04.txt>
Network Working Group Adrian Farrel
IETF Internet Draft Olddog Consulting
Proposed Status: Informational
Expires: January 2006 Jean-Philippe Vasseur
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Arthi Ayyangar
Juniper Networks
July 2005
A Framework for Inter-Domain MPLS Traffic Engineering
draft-ietf-ccamp-inter-domain-framework-04.txt
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Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005). All Rights Reserved.
Abstract
This document provides a framework for establishing and controlling
Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) and Generalized MPLS (GMPLS)
Traffic Engineered (TE) Label Switched Paths (LSPs) in multi-domain
networks.
For the purposes of this document, a domain is considered to be any
collection of network elements within a common sphere of address
management or path computational responsibility. Examples of such
domains include IGP areas and Autonomous Systems.
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Contents
1. Introduction ............................................... 3
1.1. Nested Domains ......................................... 3
1.2. Conventions used in this document ...................... 4
2. Signaling Options .......................................... 4
2.1. LSP Nesting ............................................ 4
2.2. Contiguous LSP ......................................... 5
2.3. LSP Stitching .......................................... 5
2.4. Hybrid Methods ......................................... 6
2.5. Control of Downstream Choice of Signaling Method ....... 6
3. Path Computation Techniques ................................ 6
3.1. Management Configuration ............................... 7
3.2. Head End Computation ................................... 7
3.2.1. Multi-Domain Visibility Computation ................ 7
3.2.2. Partial Visibility Computation ..................... 7
3.2.3. Local Domain Visibility Computation ................ 8
3.3. Domain Boundary Computation ............................ 8
3.4. Path Computation Element ............................... 9
3.4.1. Multi-Domain Visibility Computation ................ 9
3.4.2. Path Computation Use of PCE When Preserving
Confidentiality ................................... 10
3.4.3. Per-Domain Computation Servers .................... 10
3.5. Optimal Path Computation .............................. 10
4. Distributing Reachability and TE Information .............. 11
5. Comments on Advanced Functions ............................ 12
5.1. LSP Re-Optimization ................................... 12
5.2. LSP Setup Failure ..................................... 13
5.3. LSP Repair ............................................ 13
5.4. Fast Reroute .......................................... 14
5.5. Comments on Path Diversity ............................ 15
5.6. Domain-Specific Constraints ........................... 15
5.7. Policy Control ........................................ 16
5.8. Inter-domain OAM ...................................... 16
5.9. Point-to-Multipoint ................................... 16
5.10. Applicability to Non-Packet Technologies ............. 17
6. Security Considerations ................................... 17
7. IANA Considerations ....................................... 17
8. Acknowledgements .......................................... 17
9. Intellectual Property Considerations ...................... 17
10. Normative References ..................................... 18
11. Informational References ................................. 18
12. Authors' Addresses ....................................... 20
13. Full Copyright Statement ................................. 20
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1. Introduction
The Traffic Engineering Working Group has developed requirements for
inter-area and inter-AS MPLS Traffic Engineering in [INTER-AREA] and
[INTER-AS].
Various proposals have subsequently been made to address some or all
of these requirements through extensions to the RSVP-TE and IGP
(ISIS, OSPF) protocols and procedures.
This document introduces the techniques for establishing Traffic
Engineered (TE) Label Switched Paths (LSPs) across multiple domains.
In this context and within the remainder of this document, we
consider all source-based and constraint-based routed LSPs and refer
to them interchangeably as "TE LSPs" or "LSPs".
The functional components of these techniques are separated into the
mechanisms for discovering reachability and TE information, for
computing the paths of LSPs, and for signaling the LSPs. Note that
the aim of this document is not to detail each of those techniques
which are covered in separate documents referenced from the sections
of this document that introduce the techniques, but rather to propose
a framework for inter-domain MPLS Traffic Engineering.
Note that in the remainder of this document, the term "MPLS Traffic
Engineering" is used equally to apply to MPLS and GMPLS traffic.
Specific issues pertaining to the use of GMPLS in inter-domain
environments (for example, policy implications of the use of the Link
Management Protocol [LMP] on inter-domain links) these are covered in
separate documents such as [GMPLS-AS].
For the purposes of this document, a domain is considered to be any
collection of network elements within a common sphere of address
management or path computational responsibility. Examples of such
domains include IGP areas and Autonomous Systems. Wholly or partially
overlapping domains (e.g. path computation sub-domains of areas or
ASs) are not within the scope of this document.
1.1. Nested Domains
Nested domains are outside the scope of this document. It may be that
some domains that are nested administratively or for the purposes of
address space management can be considered as adjacent domains for
the purposes of this document, however the fact that the domains are
nested is then immaterial.
In the context of MPLS TE, domain A is considered to be nested within
domain B if domain A is wholly contained in Domain B, and domain B is
fully or partially aware of the TE characteristics and topology of
domain A.
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1.2. Conventions used in this document
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
2. Signaling Options
Three distinct options for signaling TE LSPs across multiple domains
are identified. The choice of which options to use may be influenced
by the path computation technique used (see section 3), although some
path computation techniques may apply to multiple signaling options.
The choice may further depend on the application to which the TE LSPs
are put and the nature, topology and switching capabilities of the
network.
A comparison of the usages of the different signaling options is
beyond the scope of this document and should be the subject of a
separate applicability statement.
2.1. LSP Nesting
Hierarchical LSPs form a fundamental part of MPLS [RFC3031] and are
discussed in further detail in [HIER]. Hierarchical LSPs may
optionally be advertised as TE links. Note that a hierarchical LSP
that spans multiple domains cannot be advertised in this way because
there is no concept of TE information that spans domains.
Hierarchical LSPs can be used in support of inter-domain TE LSPs.
In particular, a hierarchical LSP may be used to achieve connectivity
between any pair of LSRs within a domain. The ingress and egress of
the hierarchical LSP could be the edge nodes of the domain in which
case connectivity is achieved across the entire domain, or they could
be any other pair of LSRs in the domain.
The technique of carrying one TE LSP within another is termed LSP
nesting. A hierarchical LSP may provide a TE LSP tunnel to transport
(i.e. nest) multiple TE LSPs along a common part of their paths.
Alternatively, a TE LSP may carry (i.e. nest) a single LSP in a
one-to-one mapping.
The signaling trigger for the establishment of a hierarchical LSP may
be the receipt of a signaling request for the TE LSP that it will
carry, or may be a management action to "pre-engineer" a domain to be
crossed by TE LSPs that would be used as hierarchical LSPs by the
traffic that has to traverse the domain. Furthermore, the mapping
(inheritance rules) between attributes of the nested and the
hierarchical LSPs (including bandwidth) may be statically
pre-configured or, for on-demand hierarchical LSPs, may be dynamic
according to the properties of the nested LSPs. Even in the dynamic
case inheritance from the properties of the nested LSP(s) can be
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complemented by local or domain-wide policy rules.
Note that a hierarchical LSP may be constructed to span multiple
domains or parts of domains. However, such an LSP cannot be
advertised as a TE link that spans domains. The end points of a
hierarchical LSP are not necessarily on domain boundaries, so nesting
is not limited to domain boundaries.
Note also that the IGP/EGP routing topology is maintained unaffected
by the LSP connectivity and TE links introduced by hierarchical LSPs
even if they are advertised as TE links. That is, the routing
protocols do not exchange messages over the hierarchical LSPs, and
LSPs are not used to create routing adjacencies between routers.
During the operation of establishing a nested LSP that uses a
hierarchical LSP, the SENDER_TEMPLATE and SESSION objects remain
unchanged along the entire length of the nested LSP, as do all other
objects that have end-to-end significance.
2.2. Contiguous LSP
A single contiguous LSP is established from ingress to egress in a
single signaling exchange. No further LSPs are required to be
established to support this LSP so that hierarchical or stitched LSPs
are not needed.
A contiguous LSP uses the same Session/LSP ID along the whole of its
path (that is, at each LSR). The notions of "splicing" together
different LSPs, or of "shuffling" Session or LSP identifiers is not
considered.
2.3. LSP Stitching
LSP Stitching is described in [STITCH].
In the LSP stitching model separate LSPs (referred to as a TE LSP
segments) are established and are "stitched" together in the data
plane so that a single end-to-end label switched path is achieved.
The distinction is that the component LSP segments are signaled as
distinct TE LSPs in the control plane. Each signaled TE LSP segment
has a different source and destination.
LSP stitching can be used in support of inter-domain TE LSPs. In
particular, an LSP segment may be used to achieve connectivity
between any pair of LSRs within a domain. The ingress and egress of
the LSP segment could be the edge nodes of the domain in which case
connectivity is achieved across the entire domain, or they could be
any other pair of LSRs in the domain.
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The signaling trigger for the establishment of a TE LSP segment may
be the establishment of the previous TE LSP segment, the receipt of
a setup request for TE LSP that it plans to stitch to a local TE LSP
segment, or may be a management action.
LSP segments may be managed and advertised as TE links.
2.4. Hybrid Methods
There is nothing to prevent the mixture of signaling methods
described above when establishing a single, end-to-end, inter-domain
TE LSP. It may be desirable in this case for the choice of the
various methods to be reported along the path, perhaps through the
RRO.
If there is a desire to restrict which methods are used, this MUST be
signaled as described in the next section.
2.5. Control of Downstream Choice of Signaling Method
Notwithstanding the previous section, an ingress LSR MAY wish to
restrict the signaling methods applied to a particular LSP at domain
boundaries across the network. Such control, where it is required,
may be achieved by the definition of appropriate new flags in the
SESSION-ATTRIBUTE object or the Attributes Flags TLV of the
LSP_ATTRIBUTES object [ATTRIB]. Before defining a mechanism to
provide this level of control, the functional requirement to control
the way in which the network delivers a service must be established
and due consideration must be given to the impact on
interoperability since new mechanisms must be backwards compatible,
and care must be taken to avoid allowing standards-conformant
implementations each supporting a different functional subset such
that they are not capable of estbalishing LSPs.
3. Path Computation Techniques
The discussion of path computation techniques within this document is
limited significantly to the determination of where computation may
take place and what components of the full path may be determined.
The techniques used are closely tied to the signaling methodologies
described in the previous section in that certain computation
techniques may require the use of particular signaling approaches and
vice versa.
Any discussion of the appropriateness of a particular path
computation technique in any given circumstance is beyond the scope
of this document and should be described in a separate applicability
statement.
Path computation algorithms are firmly out of scope of this document.
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3.1. Management Configuration
Path computation may be performed by offline tools or by a network
planner. The resultant path may be supplied to the ingress LSR as
part of the TE LSP or service request, and encoded by the ingress LSR
as an ERO on the Path message that is sent out.
There is no reason why the path provided by the operator should not
span multiple domains if the relevant information is available to the
planner or the offline tool. The definition of what information is
needed to perform this operation and how that information is
gathered, is outside the scope of this document.
3.2. Head End Computation
The head end, or ingress, LSR may assume responsibility for path
computation when the operator supplies part or none of the explicit
path. The operator MUST, in any case, supply at least the destination
address (egress) of the LSP.
3.2.1. Multi-Domain Visibility Computation
If the ingress has sufficient visibility of the topology and TE
information for all of the domains across which it will route the LSP
to its destination then it may compute and provide the entire path.
The quality of this path (that is, its optimality as discussed in
section 3.5) can be better if the ingress has full visibility into
all relevant domains rather than just sufficient visibility to
provide some path to the destination.
Extreme caution must be exercised in consideration of the
distribution of the requisite TE information. See section 4.
3.2.2. Partial Visibility Computation
It may be that the ingress does not have full visibility of the
topology of all domains, but does have information about the
connectedness of the domains and the TE resource availability across
the domains. In this case, the ingress is not able to provide a fully
specified strict explicit path from ingress to egress. However, for
example, the ingress might supply an explicit path that comprises:
- explicit hops from ingress to the local domain boundary
- loose hops representing the domain entry points across the network
- a loose hop identifying the egress.
Alternatively, the explicit path might be expressed as:
- explicit hops from ingress to the local domain boundary
- strict hops giving abstract nodes representing each domain in turn
- a loose hop identifying the egress.
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These two explicit path formats could be mixed according to the
information available resulting in different combinations of loose
hops and abstract nodes.
This form of explicit path relies on some further computation
technique being applied at the domain boundaries. See section 3.3.
As with the multi-domain visibility option, extreme caution must be
exercised in consideration of the distribution of the requisite TE
information. See section 4.
3.2.3. Local Domain Visibility Computation
A final possibility for ingress-based computation is that the ingress
LSR has visibility only within its own domain, and connectivity
information only as far as determining one or more domain exit points
that may be suitable for carrying the LSP to its egress.
In this case the ingress builds an explicit path that comprises just:
- explicit hops from ingress to the local domain boundary
- a loose hop identifying the egress.
3.3. Domain Boundary Computation
If the partial explicit path methods described in sections 3.2.2 or
3.2.3 are applied then the LSR at each domain boundary is responsible
for ensuring that there is sufficient path information added to the
Path message to carry it at least to the next domain boundary (that
is, out of the new domain).
If the LSR at the domain boundary has full visibility to the egress
then it can supply the entire explicit path. Note however, that the
ERO processing rules of [RFC3209] state that it SHOULD only update
the ERO as far as the next specified hop (that is, the next domain
boundary if one was supplied in the original ERO) and, of course,
MUST NOT insert ERO subobjects immediately before a strict hop.
If the LSR at the domain boundary has only partial visibility (using
the definitions of section 3.2.2) it will fill in the path as far as
the next domain boundary, and will supply further domain/domain
boundary information if not already present in the ERO.
If the LSR at the domain boundary has only local visibility into the
immediate domain it will simply add information to the ERO to carry
the Path message as far as the next domain boundary.
Domain boundary path computations are performed independently from
each other. Domain boundary LSRs may have different computation
capabilities, run different path computation algorithms, apply
different sets of constraints and optimization criteria, and so
forth, which might result in path segment quality which is
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unpredictable to and out of the control of the ingress LSR. A
solution to this issue lies in enhancing the informaiton signaled
during LSP setup to include a larger set of constraints and to
include the paths of related LSPs (such as diverse protected LSPs)
as described in [GMPLS-E2E].
It is also the case that paths generated on domain boundaries may
produce loops. Specifically, the paths computed may loop back into a
domain that has already been crossed by the LSP. This may, or may not
be a problem, and might even be desirable, but could also give rise
to real loops. This can be avoided by using the recorded route (RRO)
to provide exclusions within the path computation algorithm, but in
the case of lack of trust between domains it may be necessary for the
RRO to indicate the previously visited domains. Even this solution is
not available where the RRO is not available on a Path message. Note
that when an RRO is used to provide exclusions, and a loop-free path
is found to be not available by the computation at a downstream
border node, crankback [CRANKBACK] may enable an upstream border node
to select an alternate path.
3.4. Path Computation Element
The computation techniques in sections 3.2 and 3.3 rely on topology
and TE information being distributed to the ingress LSR and those
LSRs at domain boundaries. These LSRs are responsible for computing
paths. Note that there may be scaling concerns with distributing the
required information - see section 4.
An alternative technique places the responsibility for path
computation with a Path Computation Element (PCE) [PCE]. There may be
either a centralized PCE, or multiple PCEs (each having local
visibility and collaborating in a distributed fashion to compute an
end-to-end path) across the entire network and even within any one
domain. The PCE may collect topology and TE information from the same
sources as would be used by LSRs in the previous paragraph, or though
other means.
Each LSR called upon to perform path computation (and even the
offline management tools described in section 3.1) may abdicate the
task to a PCE of its choice. The selection of PCE(s) may be driven by
static configuration or the dynamic discovery.
3.4.1. Multi-Domain Visibility Computation
A PCE may have full visibility, perhaps through connectivity to
multiple domains. In this case it is able to supply a full explicit
path as in section 3.2.1.
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3.4.2. Path Computation Use of PCE When Preserving Confidentiality
Note that although a centralized PCE or multiple collaborative PCEs
may have full visibility into one or more domains, it may be
desirable (e.g to preserve confidentiality) that the full path is not
provided to the ingress LSR. Instead, a partial path is supplied (as
in section 3.2.2 or 3.2.3) and the LSRs at each domain boundary are
required to make further requests for each successive segment of the
path.
In this way an end-to-end path may be computed using the full network
capabilities, but confidentiality between domains may be preserved.
Optionally, the PCE(s) may compute the entire path at the first
request and hold it in storage for subsequent requests, or it may
recompute each leg of the path on each request or at regular
intervals until requested by the LSRs establishing the LSP.
It may be the case that the centralized PCE or the collaboration
between PCEs may define a trust relationship greater than that
normally operational between domains.
3.4.3. Per-Domain Computation Elements
A third way that PCEs may be used is simply to have one (or more) per
domain. Each LSR within a domain that wishes to derive a path across
the domain may consult its local PCE.
This mechanism could be used for all path computations within the
domain, or specifically limited to computations for LSPs that will
leave the domain where external connectivity information can then be
restricted to just the PCE.
3.5. Optimal Path Computation
There are many definitions of an optimal path depending on the
constraints applied to the path computation. In a multi-domain
environment the definitions are multiplied so that an optimal route
might be defined as the route that would be computed in the absence
of domain boundaries. Alternatively, another constraint might be
applied to the path computation to reduce or limit the number of
domains crossed by the LSP.
It is easy to construct examples that show that partitioning a
network into domains, and the resulting loss or aggregation of
routing information may lead to the computation of routes that are
other than optimal. It is impossible to guarantee optimal routing in
the presence of aggregation / abstraction / summarization of routing
information.
It is beyond the scope of this document to define what is an optimum
path for an inter-domain TE LSP. This debate is abdicated in favor of
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requirements documents and applicability statements for specific
deployment scenarios. Note, however, that the meaning of certain
computation metrics may differ between domains (see section 5.6).
4. Distributing Reachability and TE Information
Traffic Engineering information is collected into a TE Database (TED)
on which path computation algorithms operate either directly or by
first constructing a network graph.
The path computation techniques described in the previous section
make certain demands upon the distribution of reachability
information and the TE capabilities of nodes and links within domains
as well as the TE connectivity across domains.
Currently, TE information is distributed within domains by additions
to IGPs [RFC3630], [RFC3784].
In cases where two domains are interconnected by one or more links
(that is, the domain boundary falls on a link rather than on a node),
there SHOULD be a mechanism to distribute the TE information
associated with the inter-domain links to the corresponding domains.
This would facilitate better path computation and reduce TE-related
crankbacks on these links.
Where a domain is a subset of an IGP area, filtering of TE
information may be applied at the domain boundary. This filtering may
be one way, or two way.
Where information needs to reach a PCE that spans multiple domains,
the PCE may snoop on the IGP traffic in each domain, or play an
active part as an IGP-capable node in each domain. The PCE might also
receive TED updates from a proxy within the domain.
It could be possible that an LSR that performs path computation (for
example, an ingress LSR) obtains the topology and TE information of
not just its own domain, but other domains as well. This information
may be subject to filtering applied by the advertising domain (for
example, the information may be limited to FAs across other domains,
or the information may be aggregated or abstracted).
Before starting work on any protocols or protocol extensions to
enable cross-domain reachability and TE advertisement in support of
inter-domain TE, the requirements and and benefits must be clearly
established. This has not been done to date. Where any cross-domain
reachability and TE information needs to be advertised, consideration
must be given to TE extensions to existing protocols such as BGP, and
how the information advertised may be fed to the IGPs. It must be
noted that any extensions that cause a significant increase in the
amount of processing (such as aggregation computation) at domain
boundaries, or a significant increase in the amount of information
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flooded (such as detailed TE information) need to be treated with
extreme caution and compared carefully with the scaling requirements
expressed in [INTER-AREA] and [INTER-AS].
5. Comments on Advanced Functions
This section provides some non-definitive comments on the constraints
placed on advanced MPLS TE functions by inter-domain MPLS. It does
not attempt to state the implications of using one inter-domain
technique or another. Such material is deferred to appropriate
applicability statements where statements about the capabilities of
existing or future signaling, routing and computation techniques to
deliver the functions listed should be made.
5.1. LSP Re-Optimization
Re-optimization is the process of moving a TE LSP from one path to
another, more preferable path (where no attempt is made in this
document to define "preferable" as no attempt was made to define
"optimal"). Make-before-break techniques are usually applied to
ensure that traffic is disrupted as little as possible. The Shared
Explicit style is usually used to avoid double booking of network
resources.
Re-optimization may be available within a single domain.
Alternatively, re-optimization may involve a change in route across
several domains or might involve a choice of different transit
domains.
Re-optimization requires that all or part of the path of the LSP be
re-computed. The techniques used may be selected as described in
section 3, and this will influence whether the whole or part of the
path is re-optimized.
The trigger for path computation and re-optimization may be an
operator request, a timer, information about a change in
availability of network resources, or a change in operational
parameters (for example bandwidth) of an LSP. This trigger MUST be
applied to the point in the network that requests re-computation and
controls re-optimization and may require additional signaling.
Note also that where multiple mutually-diverse paths are applied
end-to-end (i.e. not simply within protection domains - see section
5.5) the point of calculation for re-optimization (whether it is PCE,
ingress, or domain entry point) needs to know all such paths before
attempting re-optimization of any one path. Mutual diversity here
means that a set of computed paths have no commonality. Such
diversity might be link, node, SRLG or even domain disjointedness
according to circumstances and the service being delivered.
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It may be the case that re-optimization is best achieved by
recomputing the paths of multiple LSPs at once. Indeed, this can be
shown to be most efficient when the paths of all LSPs are known, not
simply those LSPs that originate at a particular ingress. While this
problem is inherited from single domain re-optimization and is out of
scope within this document, it should be noted that the problem grows
in complexity when LSPs wholly within one domain affect the
re-optimization path calculations performed in another domain.
5.2. LSP Setup Failure
When an inter-domain LSP setup fails in some domain other than the
first, various options are available for reporting and retrying the
LSP.
In the first instance, a retry may be attempted within the domain
that contains the failure. That retry may be attempted by nodes
wholly within the domain, or the failure may be referred back to the
LSR at the domain boundary.
If the failure cannot be bypassed within the domain where the failure
occurred (perhaps there is no suitable alternate route, perhaps
rerouting is not allowed by domain policy, or perhaps the Path
message specifically bans such action), the error MUST be reported
back to the previous or head-end domain.
Subsequent repair attempts may be made by domains further upstream,
but will only be properly effective if sufficient information about
the failure and other failed repair attempts is also passed back
upstream [CRANKBACK]. Note that there is a tension between this
requirement and that of confidentiality although crankback
aggregation may be applicable at domain boundaries.
Further attempts to signal the failed LSP may apply the information
about the failures as constraints to path computation, or may signal
them as specific path exclusions [EXCLUDE].
When requested by signaling, the failure may also be systematically
reported to the head-end LSR.
5.3. LSP Repair
An LSP that fails after it has been established may be repaired
dynamically by re-routing. The behavior in this case is either like
that for re-optimization, or for handling setup failures (see
previous two sections).
Fast Reroute may also be used (see below).
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5.4. Fast Reroute
MPLS Traffic Engineering Fast Reroute ([FRR]) defines local
protection schemes intended to provide fast recovery (in 10s of
msecs) of fast-reroutable packet-based TE LSPs upon link/SRLG/Node
failure. A backup TE LSP is configured and signaled at each hop, and
activated upon detecting or being informed of a network element
failure. The node immediately upstream of the failure (called the PLR
- Point of Local Repair) reroutes the set of protected TE LSPs onto
the appropriate backup tunnel(s) and around the failed resource.
In the context of inter-domain TE, there are several different
failure scenarios that must be analyzed. Provision of suitable
solutions may be further complicated by the fact that [FRR] specifies
two distinct modes of operation referred to as the "one to one mode"
and the "facility back-up mode".
The failure scenarios specific to inter-domain TE are as follows:
- Failure of a domain edge node that is present in both domains.
There are two sub-cases:
- The PLR and the MP are in the same domain
- The PLR and the MP are in different domains.
- Failure of a domain edge node that is only present in one of the
domains.
- Failure of an inter-domain link.
Although it may be possible to apply the same techniques for FRR to
the different methods of signaling inter-domain LSPs described in
section 2, the results of protection may be different when it is the
boundary nodes that need to be protected, and when they are the
ingress and egress of a hierarchical LSP or stitched LSP segment. In
particular, the choice of Point of Local Repair (PLR) and Merge Point
(MP) may be different, and the length of the protection path may be
greater. These use of FRR techniques should be explained further in
applicability statements or, in the case of a change in base
behavior, in implementation guidelines specific to the signaling
techniques.
Note that after local repair has been performed, it may be desirable
to re-optimize the LSP (see section 5.1). If the point of
re-optimization (for example the ingress LSR) lies in a different
domain to the failure, it may rely on the delivery of a PathErr or
Notify message to inform it of the local repair event.
It is important to note that Fast Reroute techniques are only
applicable to packet switching networks because other network
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technologies cannot apply label stacking within the same switching
type. Segment protection [SEG-PROT] provides a suitable alternative
that is applicable to packet and non-packet networks.
5.5. Comments on Path Diversity
Diverse paths may be required in support of load sharing and/or
protection. Such diverse paths may be required to be node diverse,
link diverse, fully path diverse (that is, link and node diverse), or
SRLG diverse.
Diverse path computation is a classic problem familiar to all graph
theory majors. The problem is compounded when there are areas of
"private knowledge" such as when domains do not share topology
information. The problem can be resolved more efficiently (e.g.
avoiding the "trap problem") when mutually resource disjoint paths
can be computed "simultaneously" on the fullest set of information.
That being said, various techniques (out of the scope of this
document) exist to ensure end-to-end path diversity across multiple
domains.
Many network technologies utilize "protection domains" because they
fit well with the capabilities of the technology. As a result, many
domains are operated as protection domains. In this model, protection
paths converge at domain boundaries.
Note that the question of SRLG identification is not yet fully
answered. There are two classes of SRLG:
- those that indicate resources that are all contained witin one
domain
- those that span domains.
The former might be identified using a combination of a globally
scoped domain ID, and an SRLG ID that is administered by the domain.
The latter requires a global scope to the SRLG ID. Both schemes,
therefore, require external administration. The former is able to
leverage existing domain ID administration (for example, area and AS
numbers), but the latter would require a new administrative policy.
5.6. Domain-Specific Constraints
While the meaning of certain constraints, like bandwidth, can be
assumed to be constant across different domains, other TE constraints
(such as resource affinity, color, metric, priority, etc.) may have
different meanings in different domains and this may impact the
ability to support DiffServ-aware MPLS, or to manage pre-emption.
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In order to achieve consistent meaning and LSP establishment, this
fact must be considered when performing constraint-based path
computation or when signaling across domain boundaries.
A mapping function can be derived for most constraints based on
policy agreements between the Domain administrators. The details of
such a mapping function are outside the scope of this document, but
it is important to note that the default behavior MUST either be
that a constant mapping is applied or that any requirement to apply
these constraints across a domain boundary must fail in the absence
of explicit mapping rules.
5.7. Policy Control
Domain boundaries are natural points for policy control. There is
little to add on this subject except to note that a TE LSP that
cannot be established on a path through one domain because of a
policy applied at the domain boundary, may be satisfactorily
established using a path that avoids the demurring domain. In any
case, when a TE LSP signaling attempt is rejected due to
non-compliance with some policy constraint, this SHOULD be reflected
to the ingress LSR.
5.8. Inter-domain OAM
Some elements of OAM may be intentionally confined within a domain.
Others (such as end-to-end liveness and connectivity testing) clearly
need to span the entire multi-domain TE LSP. Where issues of
confidentiality are strong, collaboration between PCEs or domain
boundary nodes might be required in order to provide end-to-end OAM,
and a significant issue to be resolved is to ensure that the
end-points support the various OAM capabilities.
The different signaling mechanisms described above may need
refinements to [LSPPING], and [BFD-MPLS], etc., to gain full
end-to-end visibility. These protocols should, however, be considered
in the light of confidentiality requirements.
Route recording is a commonly used feature of signaling that provides
OAM information about the path of an established LSP. When an LSP
traverses a domain boundary, the border node may remove or aggregate
some of the recorded information for confidentiality or other policy
reasons.
5.9. Point-to-Multipoint
Inter-domain point-to-multipoint (P2MP) requirements are explicitly
out of scope of this document. They may be covered by other documents
dependent on the details of MPLS TE P2MP solutions.
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5.10. Applicability to Non-Packet Technologies
Non-packet switching technologies may present particular issues for
inter-domain LSPs. While packet switching networks may utilize
control planes built on MPLS or GMPLS technology, non-packet networks
are limited to GMPLS.
On the other hand, some problems such as Fast Re-Route on domain
boundaries (see section 5.4) may be handled by the GMPLS technique of
segment protection [GMPLS-SEG] that is applicable to both packet and
non-packet switching technologies.
The specific architectural considerations and requirements for
inter-domain LSP setup in non-packet networks are covered in a
separate document [GMPLS-AS].
6. Security Considerations
Requirements for security within domains are unchanged from [RFC3209]
and [RFC3473], but requirements for inter-domain security are, if
anything, more significant.
Authentication techniques identified for use with RSVP-TE can only
operate across domain boundaries if there is coordination between the
administrators of those domains.
Confidentiality may also be considered to be security factors.
Applicability statements for particular combinations of signaling,
routing and path computation techniques are expected to contain
detailed security sections.
7. IANA Considerations
This document makes no requests for any IANA action.
8. Acknowledgements
The authors would like to extend their warmest thanks to Kireeti
Kompella for convincing them to expend effort on this document.
Grateful thanks to Dimitri Papadimitriou, Tomohiro Otani and Igor
Bryskin for their review and suggestions on the text.
9. Intellectual Property Considerations
The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to
pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has
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draft-ietf-ccamp-inter-domain-framework-04.txt July 2005
made any independent effort to identify any such rights. Information
on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be
found in BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an
attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of
such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this
specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at
http://www.ietf.org/ipr.
The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement
this standard. Please address the information to the IETF at
ietf-ipr@ietf.org.
10. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC3031] Rosen, E., Viswanathan, A. and R. Callon,
"Multiprotocol Label Switching Architecture", RFC 3031,
January 2001.
[RFC3209] Awduche, et al, "Extensions to RSVP for LSP Tunnels",
RFC 3209, December 2001.
[RFC3473] Berger, L., Editor "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label
Switching (GMPLS) Signaling - Resource ReserVation
Protocol-Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE) Extensions",
RFC 3473, January 2003.
[RFC3667] Bradner, S., "IETF Rights in Contributions", BCP 78,
RFC 3667, February 2004.
[RFC3668] Bradner, S., Ed., "Intellectual Property Rights in IETF
Technology", BCP 79, RFC 3668, February 2004.
11. Informational References
[RFC3630] Katz, D., Yeung, D., Kompella, K., "Traffic Engineering
Extensions to OSPF Version 2", RFC 3630, September 2003
[RFC3784] Li, T., Smit, H., "IS-IS extensions for Traffic
Engineering", RFC 3784, June 2004.
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draft-ietf-ccamp-inter-domain-framework-04.txt July 2005
[ATTRIB] A. Farrel, D. Papadimitriou, JP. Vasseur, "Encoding of
Attributes for Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS)
Label Switched Path (LSP) Establishment Using RSVP-TE",
draft-ietf-mpls-rsvpte-attributes, work in progress.
[BFD-MPLS] R. Aggarwal and K. Kompella, "BFD For MPLS LSPs", work
in progress.
[CRANKBACK] Farrel, A., et al., "Crankback Signaling Extensions for
MPLS Signaling", draft-ietf-ccamp-crankback,
work in progress.
[EXCLUDE] Lee et all, Exclude Routes - Extension to RSVP-TE,
draft-ietf-ccamp-rsvp-te-exclude-route, work in
progress.
[FRR] Ping Pan, et al, "Fast Reroute Extensions to RSVP-TE
for LSP Tunnels", draft-ietf-mpls-rsvp-lsp-fastreroute,
work in progress.
[GMPLS-AS] Otani, T., Kumaki, K., and Okamoto, S., "GMPLS Inter-AS
Traffic Engineering Requirements",
draft-otani-ccamp-interas-GMPLS-TE, work in progress.
[GMPLS-E2E] Lang, J.P., Rekhter, Y., Papadimitriou, D., Editors,
"RSVP-TE Extensions in support of End-to-End
GMPLS-based Recovery",
draft-lang-ccamp-gmpls-recovery-e2e-signaling, work in
progress.
[HIER] Kompella K., Rekhter Y., "LSP Hierarchy with
Generalized MPLS TE", draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-hierarchy,
work in progress.
[INTER-AREA] Le Roux, Vasseur et Boyle, "Requirements for support of
Inter-Area and Inter-AS MPLS Traffic Engineering",
draft-ietf-tewg-interarea-mpls-te-req, work in
progress.
[INTER-AS] Zhang, R., Vasseur, JP. et al, "MPLS Inter-AS Traffic
Engineering requirements",
draft-ietf-tewg-interas-mpls-te-req, work in progress.
[LSPPING] Kompella, K., et al., " Detecting Data Plane Liveliness
in MPLS", draft-ietf-mpls-lsp-ping, work in progress.
[OVERLAY] G. Swallow et al, "GMPLS RSVP Support for the Overlay
Model", draft-ietf-ccamp-gmpls-overlay, work in
progress.
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[PCE] Ash, G., Farrel, A., and Vasseur, JP., "Path
Computation Element (PCE) Architecture",
draft-ietf-pce-architecture, work in progress.
[SEG-PROT] Berger, L., Bryskin, I., Papadimitriou, D. and Farrel,
A., "GMPLS Based Segment Recovery",
draft-ietf-ccamp-gmpls-segment-recovery, work in
progress.
[STITCH] Ayyangar, A., and Vasseur, JP., "LSP Stitching with
Generalized MPLS TE",
draft-ietf-ccamp-lsp-stitching, work in progress.
12. Authors' Addresses
Adrian Farrel
Old Dog Consulting
EMail: adrian@olddog.co.uk
Jean-Philippe Vasseur
Cisco Systems, Inc.
300 Beaver Brook Road
Boxborough , MA - 01719
USA
Email: jpv@cisco.com
Arthi Ayyangar
Juniper Networks, Inc
1194 N.Mathilda Ave
Sunnyvale, CA 94089
USA
Email: arthi@juniper.net
13. Full Copyright Statement
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005). This document is subject
to the rights, licenses and restrictions contained in BCP 78, and
except as set forth therein, the authors retain all their rights.
This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
"AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET
ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE
INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Farrel, Vasseur and Ayyangar Page 20