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revised requirements draft



Hi all,

Thomas and Sean asked me to make some edits to the -02 requirements
draft, drawing on what consensus I could see from the list archives
(including Michael Py's rolling summary of issues, which was very
handy).

What follows below is a candidate -03 draft. Here's a summary of the
pertinent diffs; comments most welcome. Note that this draft has not
been sent to the rfc editor yet, so if people have comments I'll
harvest the diffs paragraph by paragraph and make changes appropriately.

|3.1.7 Impact on DNS
|
|   Multi-homing solutions either MUST be compatible with the observed
|   dynamics of the current DNS system, or the solutions MUST have
|   demonstrate that the modified name resolution system required to
|   support them are readily deployable.

New section, based on suggestions from Christian Huitema and RJ
Atkinson. Brian Carpenter included a requirement that a proposed
solution should include an analysis of its impact on the DNS, which
I omitted since it seems inherent in 3.1.7 that analysis is required.

|3.1.8 Packet Filtering
|
|   Multihoming solutions MUST NOT preclude filtering packets with forged
|   or otherwise inappropriate source IP addresses at the administrative
|   boundary of the multi-homed site.
|

  3.2.6 Cooperation between Transit Providers

     A multihoming strategy MAY require cooperation between a site and its
|   transit providers, but MUST NOT require cooperation (relating
|   specifically to the multi-homed site) directly between the transit
|   providers.

The phrase in brackets was added. This makes the grammar horrible; sorry
about that.

|3.2.7 Multiple Solutions

|   There MAY be more than one approach to multi-homing, provided all
|   approaches are orthogonal (e.g.  each approach addresses a distinct
|   segment or category within the site multi-homing problem.  Multiple
|   solutions will incur a greater management overhead within the IESG,
|   however, and the adopted solutions SHOULD attempt to cover as many
|   multi-homing scenarios as possible.

This covers, I think, the issue raised by Christian, and is based on his
text with suggestions from RJ Atkinson and Rob Rockell.

  4. Security Considerations

|   A multihomed site MUST NOT be more vulnerable to security breaches
|   than a traditionally IPv4-multihomed site.

This requirement has become weaker, but more reasonable (suggested by
Eliot Lear, Rob Rockell).

There was an additional requirement suggested by Christian about single
points of failure in topologies involving home agents, but I see he
offered to drop the requirement since it didn't stimulate a lot of
conversation.

The remaining contentious point that I can find is with section 3.1.2:

3.1.2 Load Sharing

    By multihoming, a site MUST be able to distribute both inbound and
    outbound traffic between multiple transit providers.  This
    requirement is for concurrent use of the multiple transit providers,
    not just the usage of one provider over one interval of time and
    another provider over a different interval.

I didn't see clear consensus on this point. My personal opinion is that
we should keep it, since it's an operational necessity in the current
network and I don't see how deployment of a new new multihoming
strategy could proceed without it.

Complete draft follows.


Joe


Site Multihoming in IPv6 (multi6)                               B. Black
Internet-Draft                                           Layer8 Networks
Expires: November 26, 2002                                       V. Gill
                                                          AOL Time Warner
                                                                 J. Abley
                                                                      MFN
                                                             May 28, 2002


           Requirements for IPv6 Site-Multihoming Architectures
              draft-ietf-multi6-multihoming-requirements-03

Status of this Memo

    This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with
    all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026.

    Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
    Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups.  Note that
    other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-
    Drafts.

    Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
    and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
    time.  It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
    material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."

    The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://
    www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.

    The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
    http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.

    This Internet-Draft will expire on November 26, 2002.

Copyright Notice

    Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

    Site-multihoming, i.e.  connecting to more than one IP service
    provider, is an essential component of service for many sites which
    are part of the Internet.  Existing IPv4 site-multihoming practices,
    described in a companion draft [1], provides a set of capabilities
    that must be accommodated by the adopted site-multihoming
    architecture in IPv6, and a set of limitations that must be overcome,
    relating in particular to scalability.

    This document outlines a set of requirements for a new IPv6 site-
    multihoming architecture.

1. Introduction

    Current IPv4 site-multihoming practices have been added on to the
    CIDR architecture [2], which assumes that routing table entries can
    be aggregated based upon a hierarchy of customers and service
    providers [1].

    However, it appears that this hierarchy is being supplanted by a
    dense mesh of interconnections [9].  Additionally, there has been an
    enormous growth in the number of multihomed sites.  For purposes of
    redundancy and load-sharing, the multihomed address blocks, which are
    almost always a longer prefix than the provider aggregate, are
    announced along with the larger, covering aggregate originated by the
    provider.  This contributes to the rapidly-increasing size of the
    global routing table.  This explosion places significant stress on
    the inter-provider routing system.

    Continued growth of both the Internet and the practice of site-
    multihoming will seriously exacerbate this stress.  The site-
    multihoming architecture for IPv6 should allow the routing system to
    scale more pleasantly.

2. Terminology

    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 [4].

    A "site" is an entity autonomously operating a network using IP and,
    in particular, determining the addressing plan and routing policy for
    that network.  This definition is intended to be equivalent to
    "enterprise" as defined in [3].

    A "transit provider" operates a site which directly provides
    connectivity to the Internet to one or more external sites.  The
    connectivity provided extends beyond the transit provider's own site.
    A transit provider's site is directly connected to the sites for
    which it provides transit.

    A "multihomed" site is one with more than one transit provider.
    "Site-multihoming" is the practice of arranging a site to be
    multihomed.

    The term "re-homing" denotes a transition of a site between two
    states of connectedness, due to a change in the connectivity between
    the site and its transit providers' sites.

3. Multihoming Requirements

3.1 Capabilities of IPv4 Multihoming

    The following capabilities of current IPv4 multihoming practices MUST
    be supported by an IPv6 multihoming architecture.  IPv4 multihoming
    is discussed in more detail in [1].

3.1.1 Redundancy

    By multihoming, a site MUST be able to insulate itself from certain
    failure modes within one or more transit providers, as well as
    failures in the network providing interconnection among one or more
    transit providers.

    Infrastructural commonalities below the IP layer may result in
    connectivity which is apparently diverse sharing single points of
    failure.  For example, two separate DS3 circuits ordered from
    different suppliers and connecting a site to independent transit
    providers may share a single conduit from the street into a building;
    in this case backhoe-fade of both circuits may be experienced due to
    a single incident in the street.  The two circuits are said to "share
    fate".

    The multihoming architecture MUST accommodate (in the general case,
    issues of shared fate notwithstanding) continuity of connectivity
    during the following failures:

    o  Physical failure, such as a fiber cut, or router failure,

    o  Logical link failure, such as a misbehaving router interface,

    o  Routing protocol failure, such as a BGP peer reset,

    o  Transit provider failure, such as a backbone-wide IGP failure, and

    o  Exchange failure, such as a BGP reset on an inter-provider
       peering.


3.1.2 Load Sharing

    By multihoming, a site MUST be able to distribute both inbound and
    outbound traffic between multiple transit providers.  This
    requirement is for concurrent use of the multiple transit providers,
    not just the usage of one provider over one interval of time and
    another provider over a different interval.

3.1.3 Performance

    By multihoming, a site MUST be able to protect itself from
    performance difficulties directly between the site's transit
    providers.

    For example, suppose site E obtains transit from transit providers T1
    and T2, and there is long-term congestion between T1 and T2.  The
    multihoming architecture MUST allow E to ensure that in normal
    operation none of its traffic is carried over the congested
    interconnection T1-T2.  The process by which this is achieved MAY be
    a manual one.

    A multihomed site MUST be able to distribute inbound traffic from
    particular multiple transit providers according to the particular
    address range within their site which is sourcing or sinking the
    traffic.

3.1.4 Policy

    A customer may choose to multihome for a variety of policy reasons
    beyond technical scope (e.g.  cost, acceptable use conditions, etc.)
    For example, customer C homed to ISP A may wish to shift traffic of a
    certain class or application, NNTP, for example, to ISP B as matter
    of policy.  A new IPv6 multihoming proposal MUST provide support for
    site-multihoming for external policy reasons.

3.1.5 Simplicity

    As any proposed multihoming solution must be deployed in real
    networks with real customers, simplicity is paramount.  The current
    multihoming solution is quite straightforward to deploy and maintain.
    A new IPv6 multihoming proposal MUST NOT be substantially more
    complex to deploy and operate than current IPv4 multihoming
    practices.

3.1.6 Transport-Layer Survivability

    Multihoming solutions MUST provide re-homing transparency for
    transport-layer sessions; i.e.  exchange of data between devices on
    the multihomed site and devices elsewhere on the Internet may proceed
    with no greater interruption than that associated with the transient
    packet loss during the re-homing event.

    New transport-layer sessions MUST be able to be created following a
    re-homing event.

    Transport-layer sessions include those involving transport-layer
    protocols such as TCP, UDP and SCTP over IP.  Applications which
    communicate over raw IP and other network-layer protocols MAY also
    enjoy re-homing transparency.

3.1.7 Impact on DNS

    Multi-homing solutions either MUST be compatible with the observed
    dynamics of the current DNS system, or the solutions MUST have
    demonstrate that the modified name resolution system required to
    support them are readily deployable.

3.1.8 Packet Filtering

    Multihoming solutions MUST NOT preclude filtering packets with forged
    or otherwise inappropriate source IP addresses at the administrative
    boundary of the multihomed site.

3.2 Additional Requirements

3.2.1 Scalability

    Current IPV4 multihoming practices contribute to the significant
    growth currently observed in the state held in the global inter-
    provider routing system; this is a concern both because of the
    hardware requirements it imposes and also because of the impact on
    the stability of the routing system.  This issue is discussed in
    great detail in [9].

    A new IPv6 multihoming architecture MUST scale to accommodate orders
    of magnitude more multihomed sites without imposing unreasonable
    requirements on the routing system.

3.2.2 Impact on Routers

    The solution MAY require changes to IPv6 router implementations, but
    these changes must be either minor, or in the form of logically
    separate functions added to existing functions.

    Such changes MUST NOT prevent normal single-homed operation, and
    routers implementing these changes must be able to interoperate fully
    with hosts and routers not implementing them.

3.2.3 Impact on Hosts

    The solution MUST NOT destroy IPv6 connectivity for a legacy host
    implementing RFC 2373 [5], RFC 2460 [7], RFC 2553 [8] and other basic
    IPv6 specifications current in November 2001.  That is to say, if a
    host can work in a single-homed site, it must still be able to work
    in a multihomed site, even if it cannot benefit from site-
    multihoming.

    It would be compatible with this requirement for such a host to lose
    connectivity if a site lost connectivity to one transit provider,
    despite the fact that other transit provider connections were still
    operational.

    If the solution requires changes to the host stack, these changes
    MUST be either minor, or in the form of logically separate functions
    added to existing functions.

    If the solution requires changes to the socket API and/or the
    transport layer, it MUST be possible to retain the original socket
    API and transport protocols in parallel, even if they cannot benefit
    from multihoming.

    The multihoming solution MAY allow host or application changes if
    that would enhance session survivability.

3.2.4 Interaction between Hosts and the Routing System

    The solution MAY involve interaction between a site's hosts and its
    routing system; such an interaction MUST be simple, scaleable and
    securable.

3.2.5 Operations and Management

    It MUST be posssible for staff responsible for the operation of a
    site to monitor and configure the site's multihoming system.

3.2.6 Cooperation between Transit Providers

    A multihoming strategy MAY require cooperation between a site and its
    transit providers, but MUST NOT require cooperation (relating
    specifically to the multihomed site) directly between the transit
    providers.

3.2.7 Multiple Solutions

    There MAY be more than one approach to multihoming, provided all
    approaches are orthogonal (e.g.  each approach addresses a distinct
    segment or category within the site multihoming problem.  Multiple
    solutions will incur a greater management overhead within the IESG,
    however, and the adopted solutions SHOULD attempt to cover as many
    multihoming scenarios as possible.

4. Security Considerations

    A multihomed site MUST NOT be more vulnerable to security breaches
    than a traditionally IPv4-multihomed site.

References

    [1]  Abley, J., Black, B. and V. Gill, "IPv4 Multihoming Motivation,
         Practices and Limitations (work-in-progress)", I-D draft-ietf-
         multi6-v4-multihoming-00, June 2001.

    [2]  Fuller, V., Li, T., Yu, J. and K. Varadhan, "Classless Inter-
         Domain Routing (CIDR): an Address Assignment and Aggregation
         Strategy", RFC 1519, September 1993.

    [3]  Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, B., Karrenberg, D., de Groot, G. and E.
         Lear, "Address Allocation for Private Internets", RFC 1918,
         February 1996.

    [4]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
         Levels", RFC 2119, March 1997.

    [5]  Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing
         Architecture", RFC 2373, July 1998.

    [6]  Hinden, R., O'Dell, M. and S. Deering, "An IPv6 Aggregatable
         Global Unicast Address Format", RFC 2374, July 1998.

    [7]  Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6)
         Specification", RFC 2460, December 1998.

    [8]  Gilligan, R., Thomson, S., Bound, J. and W. Stevens, "Basic
         Socket Interface Extensions for IPv6", RFC 2553, March 1999.

    [9]  Huston, G., "Analyzing the Internet's BGP Routing Table",
         January 2001.


Authors' Addresses

    Benjamin Black
    Layer8 Networks

    EMail: ben@layer8.net


    Vijay Gill
    AOL Time Warner

    EMail: vijaygill9@aol.com

    Joe Abley
    MFN
    10805 Old River Road
    Komoka, ON  N0L 1R0
    Canada

    Phone: +1 519 641 4368
    EMail: jabley@mfnx.net

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