One document matched: draft-gredler-rtgwg-igp-label-advertisement-00.txt
Routing Area Working Group H. Gredler
Internet-Draft Juniper Networks, Inc.
Intended status: Standards Track February 18, 2013
Expires: August 22, 2013
Advertising MPLS labels in IGPs
draft-gredler-rtgwg-igp-label-advertisement-00
Abstract
Historically MPLS label distribution was driven by session oriented
protocols. In order to obtain a particular routers label binding for
a given destination FEC one needs to have first an established
session with that node.
This document describes a mechanism to distribute FEC/label mappings
trough flooding protocols. Flooding protocols publish their objects
for an unknown set of receivers, therefore one can efficiently scale
label distribution for use cases where the receiver of label
information is not directly connected.
Application of this technique are found in the field of backup (LFA)
computation, Label switched path stitching, traffic engineering and
egress link load balancing.
Requirements Language
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].
Status of this Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute
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Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.
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."
This Internet-Draft will expire on August 22, 2013.
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Copyright Notice
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. Motivation and Applicability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2.1. Explicit One hop tunnels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2.2. Egress ASBR Link Selection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.3. Explicit Path Routing through Label Stacking . . . . . . . 6
2.4. Stitching MPLS Label Switched Path Segments . . . . . . . . 7
3. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
4. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
5. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
6. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
6.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
6.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Author's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
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1. Introduction
MPLS label allocations are predominantly distributed by using the LDP
[RFC5036], RSVP [RFC5151] or labeled BGP [RFC3107] protocol. All of
those protocols have in common that they are session oriented, which
means that in order to learn the Label Information database of a
particular router one needs to have a direct control-plane session
using the given protocol.
There are a couple of interesting use cases where the consumer of a
MPLS label allocation may not be adjacent to the router having
allocated the label. Bringing up an explicit session using existing
label distribution protocols between the non-adjacent label allocator
and the label consumer is the existing remedy for this dilemma.
Depending on the application, retrieval and setup of forwarding state
of such >1 hop label allocations may only be transient. As such
configuring and un-configuring the explicit session is an operational
burden and therefore should be avoided.
2. Motivation and Applicability
It may not be immediate obvious, however introduction of Remote LFA
[I-D.ietf-rtgwg-remote-lfa] technology has implied important changes
for an IGP implementation. Previously the IGP had a one-way
communication path with the LDP module. The IGP supplies tracking
routes and LDP selects the best neighbor based upon FEC to tracking
routes exact matching results. Remote LFA changes that relationship
such that there is a bi-directional communication path between the
IGP and LDP. Now the IGP needs to learn about if a label switched
path to a given destination prefix has been established and what the
ingress label for getting there is. The IGP needs to push that label
for the tracking routes of destinations beyond a remote LFA neighbor.
Since the IGP now creates forwarding state based on label information
it may make sense to distribute label by the IGP as well. This
section lists example applications of IGP distribution of MPLS
labels.
2.1. Explicit One hop tunnels
Deployment of Loop free alternate backup technology RFC 5286
[RFC5286] results in backup graphs whose coverage is highly dependent
on the underlying Layer-3 topology. Typical network deployments
provide backup coverage less than 100 percent (see RFC 6571 Section
4.3 for Results [RFC6571]) for IGP destination prefixes.
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By closer examining the coverage gaps from the referenced production
network topologies, it becomes obvious that most topologies lacking
backup coverage are close to ring shaped topologies (Figure 1).
+-----+
| D |
+-----+
/ \
/ M1 \ M4 >= (M1 + M2 + M3)
/ \
+-----+ +-----+
| PLR | | H |
+-----+ +-----+
\ /
\ M2 / M3
\ /
+-----+
| E |
+-----+
Figure 1: Coverage gap analysis
The protection router (PLR) evaluates if {E -> H -> D} is a viable
backup path. Because the metric M4 {H -> MD} is higher than the sum
of the original primary path and the backup path, this particular
path would result in a loop and therefore is rejected.
Remote LFA [I-D.ietf-rtgwg-remote-lfa] has introduced the notion of
"remote" LFA neighbor. Router 'H' is the remote LFA neighbor where
backup traffic can get tunneled to.
Now consider that the remote LFA neighbor would advertise a label for
FEC 'D", which has the semantics that H will POP the label and
forward to the destination node 'D'. This is done irrespective of
the underlying IGP metric 'M4' it is a 'strict forwarding' label.
The PLR router can now construct a label stack where the outermost
label provides transport to router 'H'. The next label on the MPLS
stack is the IGP learned 'strict forwarding label' label. Note that
the label 'strict forwarding' semantics are similar to a 1-hop ERO
(Explicit route object). The PLR router can now program a backup
path irrespective of the undesirable underlying layer-3 topology.
2.2. Egress ASBR Link Selection
In the ingress router 'S' is facing a dilemma (Figure 2). Router S
receives a BGP route from all of its 4 upstream routers. Using
existing mechanism the provider owning AS1 can control the loading of
its direct links *to* its ASBR3 and ASBR4, however it cannot control
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the load of the links beyond the ASBRs, except manually tweaking the
BGP import policy and filtering out a certain prefix. It would be be
more desirable to have visibility of all four BGP paths and be able
to control the loading of those four paths using Weighted ECMP. Note
that the computation of the 'Weight' percentage and the component
doing this computation (Network embedded/SDN) is outside the scope of
this document.
If all the ASes would be under one common administrative control then
the network operator could deploy a forwarding hierarchy by using
[RFC3107] to learn about the remote-AS BGP nexthop addresses and
associated labels. An ingress router 'S' would then stack the
transport label to its local egress ASBR and the remote ASBR supplied
label. In reality it is hard to convince a peering AS to deploy
another protocol just in order to easier control the egress load on
the WAN links for the ingress AS.
A 'strict forwarding' paradigm would solve this problem: An Egress
ASBR (e.g. ASBR 3 and 4) allocates a strict forwarding label toward
all of its peering ASes and advertises it into its local IGP. The
forwarding state of all those labels is to POP off the label and
forward to the respective interface. The ingress router 'S' then
builds a MPLS label stack by combining its local transport label to
ASBR3 or ASBR4 with the IGP learned label pointing to the remote-AS
ASBR.
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-------------traffic-flow--------->
<-----------signaling-flow---------
:
: AS3
: +-------+
AS1 _:___+ ASBR3 |
/ : +-------+
+-------+ :
| ASBR1 | : AS4
+-------+ : +-------+
/ \_:___+ ASBR4 |
/ : +-------+
/ :
+-----+ :
| S | :
+-----+ : AS5
\ : +-------+
\ _:___+ ASBR5 |
\ / : +-------+
+-------+ :
| ASBR2 | : AS6
+-------+ : +-------+
\_:___+ ASBR6 |
: +-------+
:
Figure 2: Egress ASBR Link selection
2.3. Explicit Path Routing through Label Stacking
IGP advertised strict forwarding labels can be utilized for
constructing simple EROs via virtue of the MPLS label stack. In a
classical traffic engineering problem (Figure 3) is illustrated. The
best IGP path between {S,D} is {S, R3, R4, D}. Unfortunately this
path is congested. It turns out that the links {R1, R4} and {R2, R4}
do have some spare capacity. In the past a C-SPF calculation would
have passed the ERO {S, R1, R4, R2, D} down to RSVP for signaling.
The conceptional problem with RSVP signaled paths is that they cannot
by shared with other nodes in the network. Hence all potential
ingress routers need to setup their "private" ERO path and allocate
network signaling resources and forwarding state.
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+----+ +----+
| R1 +---------+ R2 |
+----+ 2 +----+
/ \ | \
/ 2 \ | \ 2
/ \ | \
+-----+ \ | +-----+
| S | \ 5 | 5 | D |
+-----+ \ | +-----+
\ \ | /
\ 1 \ | / 1
\ \ | /
+----+ +----+
| R3 +---------+ R4 |
+----+ 1 +----+
Figure 3: Explicit Routing using Label stacking
Consider now every router along the path does advertise a strict
forwarding label for its direct neighbor. Router S could now
construct a couple of paths for avoiding the hot links without
explicitly signaling them.
o {S, R1, R2, D}
o {S, R1, R4, D}
o {S, R1, R4, R2, D}
Note that not every hop in the ERO needs to be unique label in the
label stack. This is undesired as existing forwarding technology has
got upper limits how much labels can get pushed on the label stack.
In fact an existing tunnel (LDP tunnel {S, R1, R2} an be reused.for
certain path segments.
2.4. Stitching MPLS Label Switched Path Segments
One of the shortcomings of existing traffic-engineering solutions is
that existing label switched paths cannot get advertised and shared
by many ingress routers in the network. In the example network
(Figure 4) a LSP with an ERO of {R4, R2, R6} has been established in
order to utilize two unused north / south links. The only way to
attract traffic to that ERO is to advertise the LSP as a forwarding
adjacency. This causes loss of the original path information which
might be interesting for a potential router which might wants to use
this LSP for backup purposes and have all fate-sharing and bandwidth
utilization figures.
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+----+ +----+ +----+
| R1 +---------+ R2 +---------+ R5 |
+----+ 2 +----+ 2 +----+
/ \ | \ \
/ 2 \ | \ \ 2
/ \ | \ \
+----+ \ | \ +----+
| S | \ 5 | 5 \ 5 | D |
-----+ \ | \ +----+
\ \ | \ /
\ 1 \ | \ / 1
\ \ | \ /
+----+ +----+ +----+
| R3 +---------+ R4 |---------+ R6 |
+----+ 1 +----+ 1 +----+
Figure 4: Advertising path segments
The IGP on R4 can now advertise the LSP segment by advertising its
ingress label and optionally pass the original ERO, such that any
upstream router can do their fate-sharing computations.
3. Acknowledgements
Thanks to Yakov Rehkter for his useful comments.
4. IANA Considerations
This memo includes no request to IANA.
5. Security Considerations
This document does not introduce any change in terms of IGP security.
It simply proposes to flood existing information gathered from other
protocols via the IGP.
6. References
6.1. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC3107] Rekhter, Y. and E. Rosen, "Carrying Label Information in
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BGP-4", RFC 3107, May 2001.
[RFC5036] Andersson, L., Minei, I., and B. Thomas, "LDP
Specification", RFC 5036, October 2007.
[RFC5151] Farrel, A., Ayyangar, A., and JP. Vasseur, "Inter-Domain
MPLS and GMPLS Traffic Engineering -- Resource Reservation
Protocol-Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE) Extensions",
RFC 5151, February 2008.
[RFC5286] Atlas, A. and A. Zinin, "Basic Specification for IP Fast
Reroute: Loop-Free Alternates", RFC 5286, September 2008.
[RFC6571] Filsfils, C., Francois, P., Shand, M., Decraene, B.,
Uttaro, J., Leymann, N., and M. Horneffer, "Loop-Free
Alternate (LFA) Applicability in Service Provider (SP)
Networks", RFC 6571, June 2012.
6.2. Informative References
[I-D.ietf-rtgwg-remote-lfa]
Bryant, S., Filsfils, C., Previdi, S., Shand, M., and S.
Ning, "Remote LFA FRR", draft-ietf-rtgwg-remote-lfa-01
(work in progress), December 2012.
Author's Address
Hannes Gredler
Juniper Networks, Inc.
1194 N. Mathilda Ave.
Sunnyvale, CA 94089
US
Email: hannes@juniper.net
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