One document matched: draft-hain-ipv6-pi-addr-use-09.txt
Differences from draft-hain-ipv6-pi-addr-use-08.txt
Internet Draft T. Hain
Document: draft-hain-ipv6-pi-addr-use-09.txt Cisco
Expires: August 2006 February 2006
Application and Use of the IPv6 Provider Independent
Global Unicast Address Format
Status of this Memo
By submitting this Internet-Draft, each author represents that any
applicable patent or other IPR claims of which he or she is aware
have been or will be disclosed, and any of which he or she becomes
aware will be disclosed, in accordance with Section 6 of BCP 79.
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-
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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/1id-abstracts.html
The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
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This Internet-Draft will expire on August 1, 2006.
Abstract
This document discusses the expected use of the Provider Independent
address format discussed in the companion document GEO [1] in the
Internet. Several parties have expressed interest in using this
approach as a good fit for managing their networks. With the long
timeframe that the multi6 effort has taken, this approach provides a
scalable multi-homing approach for use in the interim. In addition
to covering implementations where it adds value in managing the
growth of the Internet routing tables, the document will discuss
implementations that should be avoided due to the negative impact on
the routing tables.
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 [2].
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Status of this Memo...............................................1
Abstract..........................................................1
Conventions used in this document.................................1
Introduction......................................................3
History...........................................................4
Site requirements to be provider independent and multi-home:......5
Site scale......................................................6
Current realities.................................................6
Service provider business issues................................6
Operational issues..............................................7
Applicability of the PI format....................................8
Overview of the IPv6 PI Address Format..........................9
Constructive implementations...................................10
Troublesome implementations....................................11
Fundamental Issues...............................................12
Routing issues.................................................12
Example 1:..................................................13
Example 2:..................................................14
Example 3:..................................................15
Exchange Issues..................................................15
Placement......................................................16
Engineering considerations.....................................18
Observations and Considerations..................................19
Address Selection..............................................19
Path Selection.................................................20
Partitioning...................................................21
Renumbering....................................................21
Relationship to telephony addressing model.....................21
General Considerations.........................................22
Recommendations..................................................23
RFC Editor Considerations........................................24
Security Considerations..........................................24
Relationship to the IETF Multi-6 WG multi-homing requirements....24
Redundancy –...................................................25
Load Sharing –.................................................25
Performance –..................................................25
Policy –.......................................................25
Simplicity –...................................................25
Transport-Layer Survivability –................................25
Impact on DNS –................................................26
Packet Filtering –.............................................26
Scalability –..................................................26
Impact on Routers –............................................26
Impact on Hosts –..............................................26
Interaction between hosts & routing system –...................26
Operations and Management –....................................26
Cooperation between Transit Providers –........................26
Multiple Solutions –...........................................27
References.......................................................28
Acknowledgments..................................................29
Author's Addresses...............................................29
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Introduction
This document discusses the application of the Provider Independent
(PI) global unicast address format for the IPv6 address assignment.
This address format is based on WGS-84 [3] derived geographic
location. Historically there have been many debates about the value
of geographic versus provider based allocation schemes. One
interesting observation about this debate is the overriding
assumption that the Internet will have to be built using one or the
other, rather than leveraging the strengths of each in context. The
intent here is not to reopen that debate, but to present the case
that with the multiple address capabilities of IPv6 the approaches
can be used in a complementary manner.
The protracted debate in the RIR policy discussions show that we are
no closer to consensus on a Provider Independent (PI) allocation
policy than we were five years ago. While the service provider
community continues to focus on the threat of routing table
meltdown, the global enterprise network managers continue pressing
the position that the current IPv6 Provider Aggregate (PA)
addressing scheme is unusable by anyone except Internet providers
trying to serve the household and small business market. It is clear
to all that additional mechanisms will be required to address the
needs of large multi-continent organizations, the difficult part is
defining who gets a routing slot and who does not in a globally
equitable manner.
The current PA focus on route aggregation, deals with the technical
problems of memory and CPU resource consumption when site
attachments conform to the model, but the other significant business
issues related to PI approaches remain open. In any case, a site
that is expressing an explicit global routing policy will have full-
length prefixes announced. The PI address format discussed here does
not remove that issue, instead it offers a PI approach for those
looking for something more than PA yet less than a global routing
slot.
Additional work is ongoing in the IETF to separate the roles of an
address as the identifier or locator. While this effort might
eventually provide alternatives for dealing with multi-homed
connections, its outcome is far from certain. Recent charter
adjustments have restricted its goals in an effort to achieve any
hope of consensus, and even if successful at this scaled back
capability the approach will require substantial retrofitting of
other aspects of Internet management and security that have been
built on the assumption that the roles are combined.
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It is frequently assumed that any address format that is not based
on provider aggregation will degenerate into the 'swamp' that came
to describe pre-CIDR IPv4, with the result that the routing table
grows unabated. The goal of this scheme is to allow sites to be
independent of any provider, while still allowing aggregation for
those who do not require explicit global routing policy. As a
result, there will need to be consistently applied rules for when a
prefix gets aggregated and when it doesn't. These will be discussed
in the recommendations section.
This document will highlight the operational configurations where
the PI geographic based addresses provide value in provider
independence, as well as those situations where they should be
avoided in favor of the provider aggregate mechanism.
History
Provider based address aggregation has its roots in the IPv4 routing
table growth limiting effort known as CIDR [4]. The basic premise is
that routing entries can be summarized in such a way that a large
number of sites, which subscribe to the same service provider,
generate a single entry in the global inter-provider routing
exchange, also known as the Default Free Zone (DFZ). While this
works well when sites connect to a single provider, it is inadequate
for providing a site with redundant access through multiple service
providers. Sites that expect redundant service through an arbitrary
number of service providers currently require the global routing
table to carry an explicit entry for the full-length prefix
allocated to the site. Traditionally this was accomplished by having
a site acquire an address allocation out of the pre-CIDR range of
the IPv4 address space, which remained provider independent. Lately
this process has evolved into simply arranging with each of the
service providers involved for multiple announcements of the
explicit prefix allocated to the site by one of those providers.
While the effect on the global routing table is the same in either
case, the act of 'punching holes' in provider aggregates increases
operational complexity, and makes it very difficult for a site to
disconnect from the service provider that allocated the address
prefix.
As noted, the prime motivation for CIDR deployment was reduction on
the size of the IPv4 routing table. Using BGP, the total size of the
table is a direct function of the number of address aggregates
within the Internet, where each entry describes a contiguous set of
subnets that share a common origin AS and a common reachability
policy. The mechanism, of aligning site allocations with the
provider they attached to, worked well for this purpose, but at the
same time was directly contrary to the needs of the site for
provider and routing policy independence. The primary operational
motivation for sites to connect to multiple providers and/or regions
is resiliency. Other factors that come into play are managing
overall cost, and optimizing performance or balancing load.
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Collectively these issues drive sites away from the nicely
structured single-connection hierarchical model that is the
foundation of IPv6 Provider Aggregatable [5] allocation. At the same
time, due to the evolving state of infrastructure deployments, the
concepts of geographic locality and least-cost locality often don't
match. The consequence of the collective situation is that no one
approach to address allocation will solve the entire set of route
scaling problems.
The goal of the PI address format described in GEO [1] is restoring
the integrity of PA prefix format for use by the single homed sites,
while simultaneously providing a scaleable approach for the growing
number of multi-homed sites. This is accomplished by relating one of
the IPv6 address prefixes of the multi-homed sites to an unambiguous
geographic reference point in a way that summarizes well over
physical distance. This is not an attempt to have routers understand
geography. Rather it is simply a mechanism to allocate address
prefixes to sites in a way that can be abstracted into a minimum
number of routing table entries for routers that are not directly
involved in the local topology. This approach has a strong advantage
over the IPv4 PI space (which is effectively randomly assigned) in
that there is a clear structure that allows for efficient
abstractions when the detail is unnecessary.
Site requirements to be provider independent and multi-home:
Several issues play into the reasons that sites insist on remaining
provider independent leading them to multi-home. Beyond the simple
uncertainty that any given service provider will still be in
business next month, there have been enough widespread outages of
various kinds of service over the years to show that trusting any
one provider (who is in turn dependent on device suppliers where a
single bug can lead to system-wide outages) is problematic. At the
same time, the cost of transmission circuits is low enough that it
is frequently less expensive to buy Internet access services from
two or more providers than to pay any one of them for premium
service (history has also shown that even these premium services
fail). So in addition to increasing the robustness of the Internet
access, these sites frequently end up with more bandwidth for use in
the normal case.
The details are being documented more completely in other current
works, but an overview of the requirements would include:
Operational reasons:
- Insulation from routing instability striking one upstream
provider.
- Insulation from local-loop/fiber cuts, or central office
equipment failures.
- Ability to reduce the points at which outages or packet loss can
occur.
- Ability to reduce the average number of hops between a network
and various important sites.
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Business reasons:
- Insulation from being held hostage by the ISP when billing or
other disputes occur.
- The negotiating leverage provided when service provider changes
are simply circuit installs and don't involve readdressing.
- Risk mitigation to investors and insurers who consider redundant
connectivity a business necessity.
- Reducing the overhead of continually changing explicitly
configured firewalls for inter-enterprise communication.
Site scale
There are differences between the global enterprise and the small
site / telecommuter in terms of multi-homing needs, but not in their
goals for provider independence and resiliency. From the perspective
that service providers generally prioritize customer restoration
(and sometimes the quality of the engineer working the incident) by
the size of the circuit, and it would appear that the lowest speed
circuits get the worst service. This leads to a state where those
with the smallest demand for bandwidth generally perceive the
greatest of need to multi-home for reliability.
Historically many service providers have used access capacity as a
rule-of-thumb in distinguishing the difference in multi-homing
requirements for these site types, but with the current deployments
of gigabit Ethernet over fiber-to-the-home, bandwidth has become an
insufficient measure of a multi-homed site's need to express an
explicit policy in the DFZ. As a generalization, the small site /
telecommuter simply wants to be always available and internally
defaults to any available providers, while the global enterprise
expresses an explicit prefix policy (for a variety of reasons
including traffic management) by participating in the global BGP
exchange. This generalization provides a natural (and more accurate)
delineation between the types of multi-homed sites, and the PI
mechanism described here exploits this operational characteristic to
limit table growth.
Current realities
Service provider business issues
During the push to deploy IPv4 CIDR, a disconnect developed within
the service provider community between the operational goal of
minimizing the table size through enforced aggregation, and the
business goal of giving the customer the services they demand. Over
the short term the demonstrable realities of the routing collapses
in 1994 and 1996 allowed the operations team to wield the upper
hand. In the end though, the self-indulgent business interests have
overridden the altruistic sentiments of the 'good of the Internet',
as organizations eventually realize that bringing money in the door
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will always trump the operational desire to limit growth. The effect
of this has been documented in recent studies [6], which show the
routing table growth returning to an exponential rate after a few
years of linear growth.
It is a fairly straightforward process to 'follow the money' and
realize that any service provider that wants to survive will
propagate a full-length prefix for a customer site into the DFZ. The
fundamental reality is that the site paying for service will refuse
to let any service provider dictate the business requirements, and
the service provider sales staff will respond to that by selling the
service that the customer is demanding (in this case, provider
independence).
Further, many service providers consider it a business obligation to
supply a full view of the Internet routing table to the customers
that request it for load balancing. To accomplish that, the entire
set of long prefixes has to be passed everywhere unless the provider
resorts to a default route to someone else. This means that with the
current routing technology, service providers will be accepting and
passing full length site prefixes as long as they are selling the
service of a full default-less view to their customers.
Operational issues
In the current Internet, service providers frequently have
conflicting operational objectives for handling traffic; in their
search to minimize internal costs, they look to hand off traffic as
quickly as possible. This is colloquially known as 'hot potato'
routing, where the holder of the packet is looking to dump it as
early as possible, while the potential receivers are looking to
avoid being dumped on as long as possible.
Since the routers understand policy as described through a longest-
match algorithm, the 'Dump Early' strategy wants to hear short
prefix lengths, while the 'Avoid Being Dumped On' model drives wide
distribution of the longest possible prefix. Given this situation it
is in the interest of the service provider whose customer is
attempting to influence incoming routes to propagate that multi-
homed site prefix as far as possible. The result of this is that
only traffic for customer sites will transit the boundary. At the
same time, the holders of the packets on the other side of the DFZ
would prefer to filter any long prefixes so they can simply dump
packets as quickly as possible.
The independent policy objective of a global enterprise network then
gets injected into this environment of provider conflict. The
protocol mechanism for assuring provider independence of a site's
specific policies is to distribute the full site prefix list into
the DFZ. Since the site's ISP as a receiver is interested in only
carrying traffic for that customer, propagating the full length site
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prefix is not only self-defensive against dumping, it is aligned
with their mutual business interests.
Applicability of the PI format
A fair question to ask is; if short prefixes through proxy
aggregation make no business sense, what mechanism will constrain
routing table growth? Currently a single routing protocol is
expected to sort all of the contradictory policies to arrive at a
perceived optimum from every perspective. In this conflicted
environment we are left with a single entity, the originating
Autonomous System (AS) number, which is the basis of the various
mechanisms used to describe a policy as applied to the listed set of
prefixes. There are currently around 22,000 AS numbers actively
distributed through the global routing system. Of these, ~ 8,800 are
the origin AS for a single IPv4 prefix. The set of AS's which are
origin for 4 or fewer prefixes is ~ 10,000. This means ~ 15% of the
AS's are origin for ~ 85% of the prefixes in the global IPv4 BGP
table. On average each AS originating 5 or more prefixes are
expressing policy for around 40 IPv4 prefixes. If the IPv4 prefix
allocations could be dynamically reclaimed and defragmented
completely along provider alignments, the size of the Internet
routing table could theoretically be reduced to around 10% of its
current size. This would effectively turn back the clock on routing
table size concerns by close to 10 years. While not a universal
solution, by using the IPv6 PI address format the overwhelming
majority of multi-homed organizations could do just that by using a
single ::/48 prefix (in effect defragmenting the prefix space), and
by taking this approach the number of prefixes with a common origin
AS would approach 1. Assuming the goal of constraining the routing
table growth is simple stability of the routing protocols; as the
average number of prefixes per origin moves from 40 toward 1,
aggregation of the explicit 'policy defining' PI addresses in the
DFZ becomes unnecessary. Uses of PI addresses that do not attempt to
define a global policy will be discussed in the subsequent section
on Exchanges.
Accomplishing the goal of limiting table growth would require a
slight modification to the registry policy on justification for an
AS number. Currently in order to be assigned an ASN, each requesting
organization must provide verification that it has one of the
following:
- A unique routing policy
- A multi-homed site
This leaves open the opportunity for every multi-homed site
(including telecommuters) to express a routing policy by injecting
their full prefix into the DFZ. The obvious question is how many
sites really want inbound policy control vs. simple path redundancy
and fail-over between their attached providers? Since the
fundamental requirement for an AS number in a PA context is really a
mechanism for expressing policy independent of the provider, the
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line about multi-homing becomes an IPv4 artifact and should be
removed.
Overview of the IPv6 PI Address Format
Details of the provider independent address format are provided in
the companion document GEO [1]. A high level overview is provided
here for local context.
Addresses defined with the Provider Independent format prefix xxxx
(IANA assigned) *ARE PORTABLE* between providers. At the same time
these addresses are *NOT PORTABLE* across changes in geographic
location. Entities that expect identifiers to be portable across
physical location moves MUST use alternatives such as Provider
Aggregatable prefixes or DNS names.
Provider Independent addresses are constructed using a bit
interleave of the WGS-84 based latitude and longitude of a site.
While the available 44-bit field allows for resolution of a grid
approximately 6.4 meters on a side, addressing privacy concerns may
require the allocation to be at 36-bits with the expectation that
site assignments in that 100 meter grid will be managed by the
smallest appropriate local jurisdiction. Accommodating areas of
dense population may require that the grid size be adjusted to allow
for more flexible assignments for multi-story buildings and business
centers with multiple independent sites per geographic grid. Actual
assignments within a geographic grid SHOULD be a local
jurisdictional issue (matching scope jurisdiction; building owner,
community board, local government, etc.), and independent of any
service provider. The only rule is that the allocation point MUST be
contained within its natural grid. If a locally administered grid
needs to be expanded to accommodate density, it MUST avoid or
otherwise coordinate use of any existing values that fall within its
new boundaries. One approach to accommodate density would be to
annex an uninhabitable adjacent region. It is not clear this will
really be necessary since the number of ::/48's available to a
multi-story building will typically exceed 1,000, with a minimum of
64 ::/64's per vertical meter of each 6.4 x 6.4m area, or 1.59
::/64's per cubic meter, 1km deep over the entire surface (see
Extended Resolution discussion in [1]). The existing PA registries
may choose to play a role in helping to coordinate the actual
assignments by providing a public database of the local
jurisdictional decisions.
Specification of the WGS-84 reference point SHOULD be the
responsibility of the local jurisdiction (who may defer to the
layer-1 service provider for process expediency), and SHOULD
represent the physical location of the demarcation point of the
layer-1 service. In the case where reference points overlap, the
local jurisdiction SHOULD provide coordination over the smallest
workable scope.
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In the case where the local jurisdiction also acts as a local
service provider to its tenants (ie: hotel, apartment, or high-rise
business complex) it MAY choose to allocate prefix lengths longer
than ::/48, as appropriate for the number and needs of its
customers. In any case the allocation MUST NOT exceed 64 bits in
length to preserve the Interface ID portion of the address, and
should be on the nibble boundaries of /52, /56, and /60 to align the
management of the dns reverse delegation with the address pool
forward delegation.
Constructive implementations
The geographic nature of the Provider Independent address format is
designed to allocate addresses to sites which aggregate well in
direct proportion to the physical distance from the site. It also
allows a locally connected site to easily change providers without
impacting the nodes or connections within a site.
In this context, one appropriate use of the Provider Independent
address format is a site connecting to multiple providers within a
constrained geographic scope such as a city (actual size depends on
the local cooperative interconnection between service providers).
When used in this way, only those routers providing service within
the scope need to know the details about the interconnections, and
the global routing table would see a single entry for that routing
scope.
Another appropriate use of the Provider Independent address format
is when a site will be switching service providers. By preferring
the Provider Independent address prefix for a period overlapping the
switch, a site may be able to maintain connections while the new
service is installed and the old removed.
A third appropriate use would be for an organization providing
global content services to provide clients with a proximity hint.
The longest match between the list returned from DNS and the PI
address of the client should provide the closest physical proximity
(though not necessarily the closest topological proximity). One
consideration is that for global load-balancing hints to work, all
nodes will need to know their PI address even if they never use it
in packets. One way to accomplish this would be by setting the
lifetime values in the Router Advertisement for the PI prefix to
Valid = Infinite / Preferred = Zero.
A related use recognizes that geography provides distinguished
meaning to the term 'home address'. Using a PI address with Mobile-
IPv6 [7], where the geographic based PI is 'home', the current
provider address would be the care-of address. In this case the
nodes are completely independent of provider in both allocation
mechanism and packet transport.
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Finally, as recognized in RFC 1887 [8], another appropriate use
would be for organizations that do not directly connect to or
participate in the global Internet (Zero-homed), but do have private
links with organizations that are connected. It is necessary for the
organization in the middle to be able to differentiate between any
privately connected sites and the public Internet, so each of the
privately connected sites need to use a unique addresses. This is
easiest to accomplish with a globally unique prefix, and since the
private site is not connected to an Internet provider, it is
unlikely they would be able to do so in a strictly PA environment.
While this is not intended to replace [9], by using the PI prefix,
there would be no ambiguity.
Troublesome implementations
The PI address format does not provide any benefit to the size of
the routing table for sites that require direct connections outside
their geographic region. As discussed earlier, these sites will
require the full ::/48 prefix to be carried globally, independent of
address format type, so if a remote circuit is intended for access
to customers of a specific provider, the prefix SHOULD come from the
PA space of that provider.
The Provider Independent address allocation mechanism SHOULD NOT be
used by a temporary access network (such as a dial point of
presence), because scaling routes to single-homed sites attached
this way are best addressed through provider based allocations
consistent with Provider Aggregatable [5]. The reasons for this are:
1) Temporary access endpoints can not expect to maintain higher-
layer connections between physical access events, and therefore
should be using a Provider Aggregatable allocation to minimize
their impact on the global routing system as they come and go.
2) The location of the intermittent endpoint is unknown, so the
address would have to be based on the access point location. If
such an access point were scaled to handle 10,000 attachments it
would have to subsume the neighboring addresses for the 2.5 km
square it is centered in. Since the currently deployed temporary
access points tend to be located in densely populated areas,
using them with geographic rather than provider based addresses
would have the maximum negative impact.
A site that is multi-homed by fixed and dial-based access will
decide between provider and geographic based addresses based on the
relationship between the access paths. If the two paths are to the
same provider then PA addressing is most appropriate. If the dial-
path were to a different provider than the fixed line, it would make
more sense to use the PI address, because the site would maintain
its prefix and active connections through the routing switch without
the need to globally punch a hole in either provider based
aggregate.
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Fundamental Issues
There are ongoing debates as to the fundamental problems created by
unconstrained routing table growth as the Internet topology
flattens. Some of the issues raised in these debates include:
Memory size for holding the ever-expanding table
Memory to CPU bandwidth for accessing the table contents
CPU speed in processing table updates
Convergence time as each event results in a burst of processing
Inconsistent inter-provider announcement policies
The volume of information stored with each prefix
Management of a distributed database with insufficient
concurrency controls
While it is clear there are many potential problems, any solutions
need to balance these against the costs of equipment capable of
solving them. Most service providers will say they want all of these
problems solved, but when it comes down to paying for hardware they
frequently compromise long-term growth in favor of short-term cost
control. As a result, any mechanism or policy needs to take the
inconsistency of hardware capabilities into account.
Routing issues
As noted earlier, the unstated business motivation of the service
provider is to push the longest possible prefix as far as possible.
The primary impact of this on routing becomes one of dealing with
the long prefixes of the set of sites expressing global policy. At
the same time the routing system needs to be capable of aggregating
all the multi-homed connections where the only policy is 'stay
connected within a region'.
While the basic mechanism described in GEO [1] is a bit interleave
of the WGS-84 latitude and longitude values, the prefix length used
by the routing protocols MAY be established on any bit boundary. At
the same time, the operational choices will naturally be limited by
the requirement for all service providers at that short prefix
boundary to have some mechanism for interconnect with all others for
traffic delivery. The result is that at some point in the hierarchy
all service providers for a scope have to agree on the boundary,
then share routes and traffic. It becomes an engineering tradeoff
between the size of the routing table, and the cost for maintaining
a large number of points where these interconnections occur.
From a site perspective
- on resiliency, there is a single address block that allows
connections to survive any shifts in routing due to provider
outages.
- on traffic management, the set of address blocks may influence
incoming behavior.
From a service provider perspective
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- each site is identified in a subset of its PA space, as well as
the PI prefix.
- on the DFZ, there will be multiple paths to any full length
::/48 PI prefix (the intent should be that multiple exist, else
PA is the right choice), and the shorter prefixes will identify
regional interconnections.
The 'hot potato' routing policies will assume a short prefix
represents a contiguous interconnection of providers in a given
region. To simplify the relationships between providers, it may be
necessary to separate the transit service between regions function
from the local service delivery function. This will help to contain
the longer prefixes to their region of applicability.
Example 1:
Network DEF provides transit services within Europe. For global
connectivity it subscribes to provider ABC. It has local transit
agreements with competitive service providers GHI and JKL. The
company XYZ is a customer of both DEF and JKL with offices in Paris
and Moscow. XYZ policy is to prefer the internal network to the
public network.
-------
| ABC |
-------
/ |
------ ------ ------
| DEF |-| GHI |-| JKL |
------ ------ ------
\ '-----------' /
------ ------
|XYZ-P|-----|XYZ-M|
------ ------
Route announcement between:
XYZ-P & XYZ-M - full PI and PA ::/48 of the each site
XYZ-P & DEF - full PI ::/48 of this site up; DEF explicit customers
::/0 down
XYZ-M & JKL - full PI ::/48 of this site up; JKL explicit customers
::/0 down
DEF & GHI explicit customers + xAE2:: of XYZ-P
DEF & JKL explicit customers (which includes XYZ)
JKL & GHI explicit customers + xBAC:: of XYZ-M
DEF & ABC xAE2:: up; x::/4 down
GHI & ABC xBAC:: up; x::/4 down
ABC & peers xA00::/7 out; explicit ::/16s from each
Nodes in the Paris office of XYZ would use the xAE2::/16 prefix when
talking to sites in the Moscow region, and conversely nodes in the
Moscow office would use the xBAC::/16 prefix when talking to sites
around Paris.
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If XYZ opens an office in New York, it would announce each of that
site's ::/48 prefixes to the other two sites, but that should not
extend beyond to DEF or JKL. Nodes within the XYZ network SHOULD NOT
use the US prefix to talk to nodes in Europe unless the internal
connection across the Atlantic is unavailable. In that case, only
the New York office nodes would be receiving the local PI prefix so
they might choose to use it. If the provider serving the New York
office were acquiring its allocation from ABC, the address selection
longest match would lead hosts to select PA.
Example 2:
ISP-1 prefers connections to region 2 via ISP-2, and accepts the
short aggregate over that path. ISP-3 has an arrangement with ISP-1
to provide service for its customers over a direct connection
between them, and announces it's PA prefix along with the PI
specifics of its customers.
Sub-scenario 1:
The Site uses its Provider Independent address. Customers of ISP-1
would use the path via ISP-3 due to the longer prefix announcement.
If the link between the Site and ISP-3 failed, ISP-3 would reroute
via ISP-4 due to the intra-region announcements. ISP-3 may choose to
stop announcing the Site prefix in this case, which would cause ISP-
1 to route via ISP-2 due to the short region prefix announcement.
Connections between ISP-1's customers and the Site would remain
intact during these rerouting events.
Sub-scenario 2:
For cost reasons the Site prefers ISP-4. Implementing the site's
preference would require them to use the prefixes from each
provider, and then via local policy order the selection rules
appropriately. Customers of ISP-1 would not be aware of the site's
preferences, and would use their own local policies when initiating
connections to decide between the values returned by DNS.
Connections between ISP-1's customers and the Site would drop if the
connection from ISP-4 to the Site, or ISP-2, failed.
------ | ------
|ISP-1 |------|-----|ISP-2 |-
------ | ------ \
\ | | \
\ | ------ \ ------
----|-----|ISP-3 |----|ISP-4 |
| ------ ------
| \ /
| ------
1 | 2 | Site |
| ------
Region Boundary
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Example 3:
Site-2 connects to ISP's 3 & 6, which announce the short scope
prefix to ISP's 2 & 5. None of the ISP's beyond 3 or 6 are
explicitly aware of Site-2.
|
ISP-1 ---- ISP-2 --|- ISP-3 -
| \_ | |/ | \
| \_ | _/| | Site-2
| \ | / | | /
ISP-4 ---- ISP-5 --|- ISP-6 –
/ |
Site-1 |->
Scope Boundary
If the link (or regional exchange) between ISP-3 & ISP-6 failed
causing a partition of the scope, specifics announced via ISP-5
could be used to heal.
Exchange Issues
Historically, exchange points have been used to optimize the number
and size of circuits needed to reach a group of peer networks. As
more of them are deployed, they also provide a degree of traffic
localization.
Practical requirements for exchanges include, proximity to the
physical cabling infrastructure, diversity of its own physical
location and the interconnect capacity between those parts, as well
as appropriate scaling to the number and types of customers in the
region. As a general rule, an exchange fabric at layer-2 is the most
flexible, but the exchange service may also want to provide a layer-
3 peering aggregator to reduce the number of participants in an N-
way mesh.
The general point is that the transit providers interconnecting the
metro areas only need to know the aggregates. To accomplish that
there needs to be a common structured exchange point, or subset of
routers which know the interconnect detail. As the number of full
length prefixes (::/48) grows, the convergence time of the routing
protocol rises. It is assumed that simply for reasons of physical
infrastructure scale, before the list of advertisements grows too
long, additional exchanges will be established using longer prefix
subsets of the established exchange.
Care must be given to the fact that when an area scope is too large,
it may become partitioned by natural terrain based boundaries. In
these cases, either the more specific prefix values must be
advertised, or the providers involved must carry the specifics
necessary to heal the partition.
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Note: exchanges for a scope don't have to be physically located
in the scope of interest; they are simply required to have
service provider agreement about aggregation and traffic
exchange.
One concern that has been raised is that the majority business model
of the current exchange points is focused on being an interconnect
fabric rather than acting as a service provider. There is nothing in
the PI prefix mechanism that requires that to change, as sites could
multi-home through local ISP's rather than direct attachments to the
exchange. It is also true that any exchange which provides direct
service to sites could use a PA prefix like any other local service
provider. This means that the exchange business model is not a
factor in the allocation of geo based PI prefixes.
What the exchange brings to the PI mechanism is a focal point and
simplified relationships to help ensure that the infrastructure of
the short prefix scope is contiguous. While it is technically
possible to operate without an exchange fabric (and for performance
reasons some interconnects within a scope will choose this), the
inter-provider relationship matrix becomes more complex without one.
Placement
With an expansion in the number of multi-homed sites, additional
exchanges may need to be built. The decision to do so will be a
clear engineering driven decision based on the acceptable size of
the local routing table (driven by the number of multi-homed sites)
and the circuit costs providers will have for connecting.
Operational experience shows that over time service providers have
deployed exchanges with 40 – 600 km spacing loosely based on
connected population density [10] (2-1991 -> 200-2002 -> 220-2006).
One reason for the current set of exchanges is the reality that
costs have been significant when national boundaries are crossed.
While minimizing the size of the table for any given router would
drive deployment of exchanges with ever-closer spacing, the
continuing circuit cost for connecting to multiple exchanges will
act as a natural counter balance to prevent an excessive number of
them from being created. The costs for these additional exchanges
should be directly mapped back to the multi-homed sites that create
the need. Punching holes in PA space leads to a situation where it
is difficult to associate the site that creates the routing table
growth problem with the point where the pain is felt (the DFZ); but
distribution of the PI format prefix creates a mechanism where the
providers could point at a specific local cost (the exchange) which
supports the goals of a site, and the site could in turn see
explicit value for the additional cost. Replacing the current
arbitrary inter-provider filtering arrangement with a clear
architecture around exchange points will make it easier to explain
the costs.
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While cost pressure is going to push back and discourage a massive
number of small exchanges, there will be a clear benefit to
exchanges covering a large expanse. Even if economics only justifies
exchanges for the 22 dense population centers listed below, over 300
million people are covered (~5% of global population). Taking the
example out to 12 bits (::/16) provides additional granularity for
those regions where several large population centers already support
multiple exchanges, and may simplify operations. Couple this with
the likelihood that significant geographic areas are connected
through these population centers and there is little immediate need
to add additional exchanges.
Population centers Prefix Example Current Exchanges
(~10 M people)
Sydney - x128::/12 AUSIX
Tokyo, Osaka - x2D3::/12 NSPIXP-2, JPIX
Seoul - x2C9::/16 IX, DACOM
Beijing - x29D::/16 Terramark
Shanghai - x2C0::/16 SHIX
Manila - x24A::/12 PHIX, PHNET CORE, HKIX
Jakarta - x0B8::/12 Napsindo, Sing Tel, KLIX
Delhi, Calcutta - xB7A::/12 THIX
Mumbai - xB67::/16 EMIX
Karachi, Teheran - xB69::/16 Karachi NAP
Moscow - xBAC::/12 M9-IX, MPIX
Cairo - xB80::/16 AIX, CyIX
Istanbul - xADD::/16 TIX
London - xAB7::/12 LINX
Paris - xAE2::/12 PARIX, AMS-IX
Sao Paulo - x5C7::/12 Diveo NAP
NY - x798::/12 MAE-East, NYIIX
Mexico City - x673::/12 Chicago NAP
LA - x6C2::/12 MAE-West, MAE-LA
Some neighboring regions may find it advantageous to leak full
prefix lengths between themselves. While a region has a flat routing
table, providers in that region can ignore the detail in the
majority of the global table. The interconnection robustness at the
scale of this example is fairly high, so there is potential for
significant gain. Within the vast regions, it becomes a mater of
local politics and business practice as to how much further the plan
can go, or how additional existing exchanges might be leveraged.
Certainly evolving to a structured interconnect model will be more
difficult in either Europe or the US than all the others combined,
but if those PI regions are initially written off as hopelessly
intertwined, there is still an opportunity for significant gain when
the rest of the world is able to ignore the details of that
interconnection mess.
A further reduction is possible by starting with three groupings.
London/Amsterdam : Tokyo/Osaka : Chicago/New York
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90.00000 s 90.00000 e Tokyo xC00::/10
60.00000 s 90.00000 e Tokyo x000::/6
90.00000 n 90.00000 e Tokyo xE00::/10
90.00000 s 180.00000 e Chicago xC40::/10
60.00000 s 210.00000 e Chicago x400::/6
90.00000 n 180.00000 e Chicago xE40::/10
90.00000 s 0.00000 e London xD40::/10
60.00000 s 330.00000 e London x800::/6
90.00000 n 0.00000 e London xF40::/10
(Getting the polar sections to map to even binary units requires
dividing 360 by 2^n. Given the land mass alignments, it makes sense
for n to be 2, with 0 – 90, 90 – 180, & 180 – 360 groupings.)
>-------------------global service providers------------------<
| | |
| | |
Asia IX Amer IX Euro IX
| | |
| | |
----------- regional service providers -----------
/ | \ / | \ / | \
/ | \ / | \ / | \
Local IX's Local IX's Local IX's
| | |
| | |
----------- local service providers -----------
Engineering considerations
Many private-peer connections exist to avoid the performance
limitations of a shared interconnect. These limitations include both
the interconnect fabric, and the access paths between the fabric and
the provider network. While not as simple to operate as exchange
interconnections, these peering points are an engineering necessity
for scale. Fortunately, both interconnect strategies work with the
PI address format, as long as the scope of the advertised PI prefix
is contiguous (ie: there is a path between the private interconnect
and the shared fabric when the prefix applies to both).
One engineering consideration is that the size and location of an
exchange has no mandatory relationship to the prefix lengths
exchanged there. For example, assume there is a massive exchange in
London with hundreds of providers participating covering all of the
UK, and nearby another exchange, say Moscow, where there may only be
tens of providers, but they cover all of Russia from a single
exchange point. The fact that one has more participants, or covers a
region approximately 10 degrees square, while the other covers a
region 20 x 150 degrees has nothing to do with the number of multi-
homed sites supported. A single exchange in each may be inadequate,
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or may be overkill for the required service. The requirement is that
all participants agree on the set of prefixes to be exchanged, and
that set will almost assuredly contain multiple lengths to avoid
overlapping with a neighboring exchange. The existing Regional
Registries for PA format addresses already have the appropriate
constituency and fora to act as a catalyst for the necessary
agreement on prefixes at each exchange point.
It should be noted that when a site is directly connected to an
exchange, the exchange becomes the logical customer of the transit
service providers that tie the exchanges together. In this context
the exchange itself appears to be one of the service providers for
the regional aggregate. While the current set of exchanges are not
likely to scale to support millions of multi-homed sites for a
specific scope, in the long-run the location and number of exchanges
will evolve to meet the engineering cost/benefit analysis. The
design of the PI mechanism allows for the creation of exchanges at
the scope that makes local engineering sense, without impact on any
other scopes.
Observations and Considerations
Address Selection
IPv6 defines that interfaces will have multiple addresses, so having
a PI set as well as potentially several PA sets should not present
any particular concerns to the end nodes. The primary technical
issue will be limitations in the size of a DNS response packet.
Using both the PI and PA prefixes, multi-site networks SHOULD
internally advertise all of the appropriate natural prefixes for the
connections the network manager is willing to use, then let the host
address selection rules [11] sort it out. Due to longest match
selection the default rules would result in systems using a source
address that most closely matches one for the destination. When the
destination is single-homed return traffic would naturally be
directed toward the site boundary closest to the destination site
(ie: traffic would traverse the public network as little as
possible). If this is not the desired behavior, local policy may
establish an appropriate set of rules to reorder the end system
preferences.
While broad advertisement of available prefixes provides the most
robust infrastructure to the end systems, managers of large multi-
national organization networks should exercise operational care to
administer the distribution scope of any prefix. It is unlikely that
nodes in a 10,000-seat office complex would be expected to use the
local Internet access provided for a 3-person office halfway around
the world. When this policy is true, the small-office prefix SHOULD
NOT be propagated beyond that local office, because doing so would
only clutter and slow the address selection process for the larger
segment of the organization's network.
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The longest match algorithm will automatically select between PA and
PI prefixes. If the two sites share some part of the provider
hierarchy and some degree of geographic locality, it will become a
case-by-case issue as to which one is longer. On one hand they may
be geographic neighbors using different providers with no
relationship in the PA based allocation (longest match rule would
cause hosts to select PI based prefix). In the contrasting case,
they share the same provider but are on opposing sides of the globe
(longest match rule would cause hosts to select PA prefix). While
the hosts have no direct access to current topology information, the
simple longest match rule for address selection would appear to bias
connections toward the most appropriate path. In any case, once the
packets are sent, traffic flow will follow the inter-provider policy
perspective of the optimal route.
In the case where one site is single-homed (therefore using a PA
prefix), and the other is multi-homed using PI, the routing system
would not particularly care because these are both global unicast
prefixes and will be handled appropriately. (Creating this situation
presumes that the multi-homed site is not informing its hosts or DNS
about any PA prefixes it may have, or has a local policy overriding
the default selection rules.) In fact this may be a useful case for
a content provider trying to do global load distribution, though it
would require the PA node to be aware of its PI prefix, even if it
was never used in a packet.
Path Selection
A frequently asked question is how a source selects the correct
first hop when more than one exists? This is actually a multipart
question since it involves both the address selection as well as the
first hop router selection.
Many arguments about address selection revolve around the host's
knowledge (or lack thereof) about the technically optimum path for
the metrics of bit-rate, loss-rate, delay, and jitter, but they
generally avoid the topic of actual access cost, which is all the
site usually knows. Address selection was dealt with in the previous
section, and lacking local policy to the contrary, will be based on
longest match between the source and destination.
A fundamental characteristic of IPv6 hosts is that they will always
choose one of the available routers, and expect to be redirected by
the routers which actually know at least part of the optimal path.
This set of routers for a site will be managed according to local
policy and will forward or redirect in that context. While many
discussions assume the destination route announcement determines the
source's routing; the reality is the holder of the packet always
decides based on its perspectives of cost. The source policy has
always determined at least the first hop, and any intermediate
policy may bias the route at any point by ignoring any announced
destination policy.
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Partitioning
One of the concerns that aggregation through an exchange raises is
the potential for a portion of the local topology to partition. This
would effectively create a black hole for sites that are only
attached to the disconnected partition. While this is clearly a
problem for single-homed sites, those sites should be using PA space
and not be subject to the aggregation of PI prefixes. For those
multi-homed sites using PI in a metro-aggregate context, their
exposure to partitioning occurs when all of their local providers
partition from the set of transit providers at the same time. The
potential for simultaneous partition raises the case that any metro
interconnection topology could create a single point of failure,
which further leads to a strong recommendation that these metro
interconnects actually consist of 2 or more interconnected fabrics
per scope. The routing implications of this are that the number of
BGP speakers will increase in proportion to the number of fabrics,
but as long as the set of prefixes match they will appear to be one
logical exchange point. In any case partitions can be locally healed
with explicit routing entries in the interconnecting providers, and
the rest of the world does not need to be aware.
Renumbering
Even though this address format is derived from geographic
information, renumbering is not required as devices move within a
network. The only time renumbering becomes a concern is when the
layer 1 demarcation for the network changes. In this case all of the
attached devices would renumber together, just as they would for a
change of providers when using the PA prefix model.
Relationship to telephony addressing model
It has been noted that the PI format shares characteristics with the
global telephone address plan (an alternative PI aggregation scheme,
discussed in GAPI [12], is a closer match to the traditional
telephony model of allocations). While the distribution of prefixes
to specific geographic areas would appear to be similar, the
telephone environment address space was divvied up in a pseudo-
random way where the resulting provider boundaries aligned with the
political notion of geography at one point in time. The PI address
format is devoid of any political context (beyond agreement on WGS-
84 as the reference tool), and allows for structured aggregation at
any bit boundary. Unfortunately the cost models for circuits still
align with political notions of geography. This situation is
expected to ease as the telephony system continues its efforts at
deregulation and privatization. The one place where there is a
strong similarity between the addressing models is the perspective
that some providers operate within a geographic area (routing full-
length prefixes), while other providers tie the diverse areas
together (routing short area aggregates). Thus the common
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characteristic is the fundamental model that allows local detail to
be abstracted at a distance.
General Considerations
One concern raised by enterprise managers is that a ::/48 might not
be enough for some large organizations. Using the PI format, a large
organization will almost assuredly have multiple ::/48's to work
with. For example, if their facilities covered a contiguous 100x100
meter lot they would have an entire ::/36 to work with, and the
types of organizations that will need more than a single ::/48 are
also likely to have multiple 100x100 meter lots just to house that
number of end systems.
While the IPv6 PI address format is designed to support exchange-
based aggregation in the context of various scope sizes, it is not
dependent on exchanges as a fabric for its overall route aggregation
properties. It will provide efficient route aggregation in a global
context when providers in a given scope interconnect by whatever
means (ie: common third party providing transit services), such that
only the shorter prefix is announced outside that scope. Any
provider (including a traditional exchange point route server)
announcing a short prefix MUST be able to deliver packets to
anywhere in the scope, either directly or through specific
arrangements. In the case where a service provider does not
interconnect with others in its scope it MUST advertise the longer
prefixes associated with its customers.
It is not likely to happen soon, but there is a concern that
eventually a few regions may exist with extreme densities (greater
than 1M independent multi-homed sites per area 6.5 km/side). When
the density of independently multi-homed subnets exceeds 64 per
vertical meter, of 6.4 x 6.4m horizontal surface, in 1km tall
buildings, an alternative allocation mechanism will be required.
One characteristic that is frequently overlooked is that geography
provides distinguished meaning to the term 'home address'. So a node
using Mobile-IPv6 [7] with PI addresses as the home address and the
current value from the intermittent access provider for the care-of-
address could expect to maintain connections across access events.
Note this does not mean the geographic address is allocated or even
known to the intermittent access point. The routing system doesn't
need to know the binding for the geographic address since packets
are routed according to the PA care-of-address. The home-agent would
need a way to inject its Provider Independent prefix and current
binding. This could be a form of tunnel-broker within a region.
When used in conjunction with RFC3306, it would be possible for
governments to establish a regional notification multicast service.
While they could do this with PA addresses, the burden of connecting
to the right multicast would fall on the end user. Using the PI
format, a hierarchy of groups could be defined, where very targeted
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messages could be multicast efficiently without need for the
consumer to understand the technical details.
Recommendations
Attempting to balance the conflicting policies of the service
provider operations staff, their business staff, each end site, and
any additional service providers will require a clear policy that
everyone can rely on for consistent packet treatment. As it is not
the purview of the IETF to establish operational policy for
independent operators, the closest fit is a recommendation in the
form known as Best Current Practice. In that context, this document
recommends:
1) that all providers filter out and ignore any announcements that
include 5 or more PI prefixes longer than ::/28, originating from
a common AS, where the AS path length is longer than 2.
2) an AS number be restricted to those who require injecting
explicit policy into the DFZ.
3) metro interconnects actually consist of 2 or more interconnected
fabrics per scope.
Policy 1 allows global enterprise sites which need to inject global
policy into the DFZ, to inject up to 4 long prefixes if they can
justify to the registries they require an AS number. At the same
time it removes the small business and telecommuter announcements
from the DFZ because those would have an origin AS from a provider
that would most likely be sourcing more than 5 long prefixes. While
it removes those small types of sites from the DFZ, it still allows
them a degree of provider independence and resiliency in the metro
context.
Policy 2 removes multi-homing as an independent requirement to
acquire an AS number. If the AS number becomes more difficult to
acquire through a change in policy, and service providers employ a
filter (either at the protocol level ::/28, or by charging extra per
prefix) on AS paths longer than 2 where 5 or more PI prefixes share
the same origin AS, the growth of the routing table will be slowed
to at most 4x the growth in AS allocations. This change in policies
would allow the global enterprise to manage its own policies, while
avoiding the table explosion that would happen if every small
business or telecommuter appeared in the DFZ. This would also allow
neighboring service providers in a region to share detailed
information about customers using the PI prefix.
Policy 3 removes the potential for a single point of failure that
would be contrary to the goals of multi-homing resiliency.
It has been noted that the existing inter-provider relationships and
settlement models do not align precisely with the concept of
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regional aggregation that is recommended here. While this is
undoubtedly true, the situation is partially due to the lack of a
structured address plan to align with. Other factors that play into
the situation are that the perceived costs are not a strict function
of distance, and that the industry lacks a rate structure for packet
settlement. While the fundamental cost of physical media does have a
distance component, the current pricing realities often ignore this.
Compounding this situation is the fact that the Internet providers
have gone out of their way to avoid hierarchy on one hand, while
looking for someone to dump packets to on the other. The resulting
relationship complexity could be simplified through packet
accounting, but that model runs counter to the current culture that
is best described a 'shared pain'.
For the IPv4 Internet, service providers have attempted
technological restraint systems through routing filters to varying
degrees of success. For the IPv6 Internet the PI address format
looks to provide a reasonable tool for aggregation, while allowing
well-defined exceptions. Given this environment, economics and human
nature will align the interconnect strategies of the service
providers over time.
In any case, deploying a new approach will require a significant
number of service providers and sites to agree that these
recommendations result in a sustainable business model, which
actually lowers overall costs. To reach that goal, the PI address
model explicitly trades address consumption for simplicity in the
derivation and routing, as well as trades maximal routing efficiency
for end-to-end system level efficiency.
RFC Editor Considerations
The format prefix x in the examples needs to be replaced by the
value assigned by IANA.
Security Considerations
While there may be concerns about location privacy raised by the
geographic scheme, there is nothing inherent in this address format
that would raise any more security considerations than any other
global addressing format. If location privacy were an issue it would
be wise to avoid this mechanism in favor of location independent
mechanisms such as provider based allocations.
Relationship to the IETF Multi-6 WG multi-homing requirements
The multi-homing requirements for IPv6, consistent with current IPv4
usage, are detailed in [13]. The capability of the Provider
Independent address format to deal with each of the points in that
document will be addressed here. Since the goal for a short-term
approach to deal with multi-homed sites was specifically taken off
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the table as the IETF moves between the Multi-6 and extended
lifetime architectural change of the Shim WG, the proposed GEO
approach is clearly not an overlapping mechanism.
Redundancy –
The Provider Independent address format is designed to provide
redundancy between attached providers. By having the site prefix
independent of all service providers, link and routing failures in
one provider should be completely transparent to the site. The
primary case where things may break is a link or routing failure in
any part of the path that lacks physical redundancy.
Load Sharing –
This recommendation for specific applications of the Provider
Independent address format will allow sites to manage outbound
traffic without concern for undue filtering in the routing system.
It also allows for load sharing on inbound traffic by large
enterprises that can justify expression of policy in the DFZ.
Performance –
The Provider Independent address format allows traffic to arrive
from a variety of sources over the set of available paths, but does
not explicitly provide for remote flow control. A site may exercise
some course level of remote traffic flow management by arrangements
for service from multiple providers. At a minimum, traffic from the
other customers of an attached provider would follow the site's path
through that provider, and not transit any other provider.
Policy –
Traffic class alignment as policy routing is not an IP routing
issue, and even using PA addresses can only be accomplished by
announcing explicit subnet or host routes. As such the Provider
Independent address format will not offer any additional explicit
support. Achieving the goal of this bullet is probably best met with
a mix of Provider Independent and Provider Aggregatable prefix
announcements where the hosts respond to the specific address/port
mappings according to local policy.
Simplicity –
The target of the Provider Independent address format is simplicity,
both in the method of allocation, and in the routing expectations.
From the site perspective, an allocation independent of provider is
what they are after (ie: PI format). From the service provider
perspective, handling GEO [1] type PI prefixes is as simple as IPv4
PI prefixes. The potential increase in complexity over current IPv4
deployments is understanding the impact when site chooses to use
both PI and PA prefixes.
Transport-Layer Survivability –
The Provider Independent address format explicitly deals with
transport-layer survivability by isolating the session from the
intervening providers. As long as the routing system converges
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within the timeout period of the transport-layer, any active
connections will survive.
Impact on DNS –
There are no modifications required for the Provider Independent
address format discussed here. There is a potential issue with the
size of a response packet if a multi-homed site chooses to include
all of the applicable addresses. Use of a single PI rather than
multiple PA prefixes would reduce this concern, while retaining the
immunity-to-provider-failure characteristic.
Packet Filtering –
The Provider Independent address format does not preclude filtering
inappropriate packets, and may facilitate such filtering since the
location of the demarcation point helps reduce any ambiguity.
Scalability –
No one approach will solve all scalability concerns. An appropriate
mix of Provider Independent and Provider Aggregatable address use
will solve most concerns without undue complexity in either the host
or the routing system.
Impact on Routers –
The impact on routers outside a region is a significantly smaller
routing table, both from the reaggregation of the provider prefixes
and from the ability to further abstract geographically distant
sites. Within a scope, the full routes need to be carried, but this
is no worse than the holes punched in provider aggregates, and can
be managed through interconnecting at smaller scopes.
Impact on Hosts –
Hosts may have an additional address to select from if the site
chose to use advertise both the Provider Independent and Provider
Aggregatable formats. Using longest-match rules should easily sort
between Provider Independent and Provider Aggregatable prefixes.
Hosts may also want to choose to use this as a distinguished form of
'Home' address for mobile applications.
Interaction between hosts & routing system –
Routers providing for IPv6 auto-configuration through announcement
of the site prefixes may have an additional one in the list, or may
simply choose to announce only the Provider Independent prefix.
Operations and Management –
The mechanism for deriving the Provider Independent address is
specifically designed to simplify this operations issue by using the
globally ubiquitous WGS84 system of measurement.
Cooperation between Transit Providers –
The Provider Independent address mechanism does not require
cooperation between service providers specifically for a given
multi-homed site. It does require all service providers for a given
Hain Expires - August 2006 26
Application and Use of the IPv6 Provider- February 2006
Independent Global Unicast Address Format
scope to agree on the boundaries for the scope and any traffic
exchange point that might be necessary.
Multiple Solutions –
The Provider Independent address mechanism does not preclude other
forms of multi-homing. It does provide a complimentary service to
the Provider Aggregatable prefixes for single-homed use, and scales
much better than punching holes in those for multi-homed sites.
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Application and Use of the IPv6 Provider- February 2006
Independent Global Unicast Address Format
References
1 Geo, draft-hain-ipv6-PI-addr-08.txt, Hain, T., "An IPv6 Provider-
Independent (Geographic Reference) Global Unicast Address
Format", June 2005.
2 RFC-2119, Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997
3 http://www.wgs84.com/files/wgsman24.pdf
4 RFC-1518, Rekhter & Li, "An Architecture for IP Address
Allocation with CIDR", September 1993
5 RFC-3587, Hinden, B., Nordmark, E., Deering, S., "IPv6 Global
Unicast Address Format", RFC 3587, August 2003.
6 http://kahuna.telstra.net/bgp2/as1221/ , G. Huston
7 RFC-3775, Johnson, D., Perkins, C., "Mobility Support in IPv6",
June 2004
8 RFC-1887, Rekhter, Y., Li, T. "IPv6 Unicast Address Allocation
Architecture", December 1995.
9 draft-ietf-ipv6-unique-local-addr-04.txt, Hinden, R., Haberman, B.
"Unique Local IPv6 Unicast Addresses", May 2004.
10 http://www.ep.net/
11 RFC-3484, Draves, R., "Default Address Selection for Internet
Protocol version 6 (IPv6)", RFC 3484, February 2003.
12 GAPI, M.Py, I. Beijnum, A Geographically Aggregatable Provider
Independent Address Space to Support Multihoming in IPv6, draft-
py-multi6-gapi-00.txt, October 2002
13 RFC-3582, Black, et. al., "Goals for IPv6 Site-Multihoming
Architectures", RFC 3582, August 2003
Hain Expires - August 2006 28
Acknowledgments
Discussion threads on the NANOG and IETF/Multi-6 mail lists provided
many of the perspectives presented here. Early feedback was provided
by Iljitsch van Beijnum, Brian Carpenter, Sean Doran, Geoff Huston,
and Pekka Savola.
Author's Addresses
Tony Hain
Cisco Systems
500 108th Ave. N.E. Suite 400
Bellevue, Wa. 98004
Email: alh-ietf@tndh.net
Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006). All Rights Reserved.
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."
Disclaimer of Validity
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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.
Hain Expires - August 2006 29
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