One document matched: draft-ietf-idr-as4bytes-08.txt
Differences from draft-ietf-idr-as4bytes-07.txt
Network Working Group Quaizar Vohra
Internet Draft Juniper Networks
Expiration Date: September 2004 Enke Chen
Network Working Group Redback Networks, Inc.
BGP support for four-octet AS number space
draft-ietf-idr-as4bytes-08.txt
1. 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.
2. Abstract
Currently the Autonomous System number is encoded in BGP [BGP] as a
two-octets field. This document describes extensions to BGP to carry
the Autonomous System number as a four-octets field.
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3. Protocol Extensions
For the purpose of this document lets define a BGP speaker which
doesn't support the new 4-octets AS number extensions as an OLD BGP
speaker, and a BGP speaker which supports the new 4-octets AS number
extensions as a NEW BGP speaker.
BGP carries the Autonomous System number in the My Autonomous System
field of the OPEN message, in the AS_PATH attribute of the UPDATE
message, and in the AGGREGATOR attribute of the UPDATE message. BGP
also carries the Autonomous System number in the BGP Communities
attribute.
A NEW BGP speaker uses BGP Capability Advertisements [RFC2842] to
advertise to its neighbors (either internal or external) that it
supports 4-octets AS number extensions, as specified in this
document.
The Capability that is used by a BGP speaker to convey to its BGP
peer the 4-octets Autonomous System number capability, also carries
the 4-octets Autonomous System number of the speaker in the
Capability Value field of the Capability Optional Parameter. The
Capability Length field of the Capability is set to 4.
NEW BGP speakers carry AS path information expressed in terms of
4-octets Autonomous Systems numbers by using the existing AS_PATH
attribute, except that each AS number in this attribute is encoded
not as a 2-octets, but as a 4-octets entity. The same applies to the
AGGREGATOR attribute - NEW BGP speakers use the same attribute,
except that the AS carried in this attribute is encoded as a 4-octets
entity.
To preserve AS path information with 4-octets AS numbers across OLD
BGP speakers, this document defines a new AS path attribute, called
NEW_AS_PATH. This attribute is optional transitive and contains the
AS path encoded with 4-octets AS numbers. The NEW_AS_PATH attribute
has the same semantics as the AS_PATH attribute, except that it is
optional transitive, and it carries 4-octets AS numbers.
To prevent the possible propagation of confederation path segments
outside of a confederation, the path segment types AS_CONFED_SEQUENCE
and AS_CONFED_SET [RFC3065] are declared invalid for the NEW_AS_PATH
attribute.
Similarly, this document defines a new aggregator attribute called
NEW_AGGREGATOR, which is optional transitive. The NEW_AGGREGATOR
attribute has the same semantics as the AGGREGATOR attribute, except
that it carries 4-octets AS numbers.
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Currently assigned 2-octets Autonomous System numbers are converted
into 4-octets Autonomous System numbers by setting the high-order 2
octets of the 4-octets field to zero. Such a 4-octets AS number is
said to be mappable to a 2-octets AS number.
To represent 4-octets AS numbers (which are not mapped from 2-octets)
as 2-octets AS numbers in the AS path information encoded with
2-octets AS numbers, this document reserves a 2-octets AS number.
Lets denote this special AS number as AS_TRANS for ease of
description in the rest of this specification. This AS number is also
placed in the My Autonomous System field of the OPEN message
originated by a NEW BGP speaker if the speaker doesn't have a
(globally unique) 2-octets AS number.
4. Operations
4.1. Interaction between NEW BGP speakers
A BGP speaker that supports 4-octets Autonomous System numbers may
advertise this to its peers using the BGP Capability Advertisements.
A BGP speaker that advertises such capability to a particular peer,
and receives from that peer the advertisement of such capability MUST
encode Autonomous System numbers as 4-octets entities in both the
AS_PATH and the AGGREGATOR attributes in the updates it sends to the
peer, and MUST assume that these attributes in the updates received
from the peer encode Autonomous System numbers as 4-octets entities.
The new attributes, NEW_AS_PATH and NEW_AGGREGATOR should not be
carried in the UPDATE messages between NEW BGP peers. A NEW BGP
speaker that receives the NEW_AS_PATH and NEW_AGGREGATOR path
attributes in an UPDATE message from a NEW BGP speaker should discard
these path attributes and continue processing the UPDATE message.
4.2. Interaction between NEW and OLD BGP speaker
4.2.1. BGP Peering
Note that peering between a NEW BGP speaker and an OLD one is
possible only if the NEW BGP speaker has a 2-octets AS number.
However, this document doesn't assume that an Autonomous System with
NEW speakers has to have a globally unique 2-octets AS number -
AS_TRANS could be used instead (even if multiple Autonomous System
would use it).
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4.2.2. Generating Updates
When communicating with an OLD BGP speaker, a NEW speaker MUST send
the AS path information in the AS_PATH attribute encoded with
2-octets AS numbers. The NEW speaker also MUST send the AS path
information in the NEW_AS_PATH attribute (encoded with 4-octets AS
numbers), except for the case where the entire AS path information is
composed of 2-octets AS numbers only. In this case the NEW speaker
should not send the NEW_AS_PATH attribute.
In the AS_PATH attribute encoded with 2-octets AS numbers, non-
mappable 4-octets AS numbers are represented by the well known
2-octets AS number, AS_TRANS. This will preserve the path length
property of the AS path information; and will also help in updating
the AS path information received on a NEW BGP speaker from an OLD
speaker, as explained in the next section.
The NEW speaker constructs the NEW_AS_PATH attribute from the
information carried in the AS_PATH attribute. In the case where the
AS_PATH attribute contains either AS_CONFED_SEQUENCE or AS_CONFED_SET
path segments, the NEW speaker, when constructing the NEW_AS_PATH
attribute from the AS_PATH attribute, must exclude such path
segments. The NEW_AS_PATH attribute will be carried across a series
of OLD BGP speakers without modification and will help preserve the
truely 4-octets AS numbers in the AS path information.
Similarly, if the NEW speaker has to send the AGGREGATOR attribute,
and if the aggregating Autonomous System's AS number is truely
4-octets, the speaker constructs the NEW_AGGREGATOR attributes by
taking the attribute length and attribute value from the AGGREGATOR
attribute and placing them into the attribute length and attribute
value of the NEW_AGGREGATOR attribute, and sets the AS number field
in the existing AGGREGATOR attribute to the reserved AS number,
AS_TRANS. Note that if the AS number is 2-octets only, then the
NEW_AGGREGATE attribute should not be sent.
4.2.3. Processing Received Updates
When a NEW BGP speaker receives an update from an OLD one, it should
be prepared to receive the NEW_AS_PATH attribute along with the
existing AS_PATH attribute. If NEW_AS_PATH attribute is also
received, both the attributes will be used to construct the exact AS
path information, and therefore the information carried by both the
attributes will be considered for AS path loop detection.
Note that a route may have traversed a series of autonomous systems
with 2-octets AS numbers and OLD BGP speakers only. In that case, if
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the route carries a NEW_AS_PATH attribute, this attribute may not
have been updated since the route left the last NEW BGP speaker. The
trailing AS path information (representing autonomous systems with
2-octets AS numbers and OLD BGP speakers only) is contained only in
the current AS_PATH attribute (encoded in the leading part of the
AS_PATH attribute). This AS path information should be prepended to
the NEW_AS_PATH attribute to construct the exact AS path information.
Similarly, a NEW BGP speaker should be prepared to receive the
NEW_AGGREGATOR attribute from an OLD BGP speaker. In that case, the
AGGREGATOR attribute is ignored and the NEW_AGGREGATOR contains the
exact information about the aggregating node.
4.3. Interaction between OLD BGP speakers
In all other cases the speaker MUST encode Autonomous System numbers
as 2-octets entities in both the AS_PATH and the AGGREGATOR attribute
in the updates it sends to the peer, and MUST assume that these
attributes in the updates received from the peer encoded Autonomous
System numbers as 2-octets entities.
5. Handling BGP Communities
As specified in [RFC1997], when the high-order two-octets of the
community attribute is neither 0x0000 nor 0xffff, these two octets
encode the Autonomous System number. Quite clearly this would not
work for routers that use 4-octets Autonomous System numbers. Such
routers should use the Extended Communities [EXT-COMM] attribute
instead.
6. Transition
The scheme described in this document allows a gradual transition
from 2-octets AS numbers to 4-octets AS numbers. One can upgrade one
Autonomous system or one router at a time.
To simplify transition this document assumes that an Autonomous
System could start using 4-octets AS number only after all the BGP
speakers within that Autonomous System have been upgraded to support
4-octets AS numbers.
An OLD BGP speaker should not use AS_TRANS as its Autonomous System
number.
A non-mappable 4-octets AS number can not be used as a "Member AS
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Number" of a BGP Confederation until all the BGP speakers within the
Confederation transitioned to support 4-octets AS numbers.
In an environment where an Autonomous System that has OLD BGP
speakers peers with two or more Autonomous Systems that have NEW BGP
speakers and use AS_TRANS (rather than having a globally unique AS
number), use of Multi-Exit Discriminators by the Autonomous System
with the OLD speakers may result in a situation where Multi-Exit
Discriminator will influence route selection among the routes that
were received from different neighboring Autonomous Systems.
Under certain conditions it may not be possible to reconstruct the
entire AS path information from the AS_PATH and the NEW_AS_PATH
attributes of a route. This occurs when two or more routes that carry
the NEW_AS_PATH attribute are aggregated by an OLD BGP speaker, and
the NEW_AS_PATH attribute of at least one of these routes carries at
least one 4-octets AS number (as oppose to a 2-octets AS number that
is encoded in 4 octets). When such aggregation results in creating a
route that is less specific than any of the component routes, (route
whose NLRI covers NLRI of all the component routes), loss of the AS
path information does not create a risk of a routing loop. In all
other cases loss of the AS path information does create a risk of a
routing loop.
7. IANA Consideration
This document uses a BGP Capability code to indicate that a BGP
speaker supports the 4-octets AS numbers. The Capability code has
been assigned by IANA per RFC 2842.
In addition, this document introduces two new BGP optional transitive
attributes. The first is the NEW_AS_PATH attribute, which preserves
the AS path information with 4-octet AS numbers across old BGP
speakers. The second is the NEW_AGGREGATOR attribute, which is
similar in use to the current AGGREGATOR attribute but it carries
4-octet AS numbers. The Type Codes for these attributes has been
assigned by IANA.
Finally, this document introduces a reserved 2-octets AS number -
AS_TRANS. The AS number for AS_TRANS has been assigned by the IANA.
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8. Security Considerations
Security issues are not discussed in this document.
9. Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank Yakov Rekhter, Chaitanya Kodeboyina,
and Jeffrey Haas for the numerous discussions which went into the
making of this draft.
10. References
[BGP] Rekhter, Y., Li, T., "Border Gateway Protocol 4", draft-ietf-
idr-bgp4-12.txt
[EXT-COM] Ramachandra, S., Tappan, D., and Rekter Y. "BGP Extended
Communities Attribute", draft-ramachandra-bgp-ext-communities-02.txt
[RFC1997] Chandra, R., Traina, P. and T. Li, "BGP Communities
Attribute", RFC 1997, August 1996.
[RFC2842] Chandra, R., and Scudder, J., "Capabilities Advertisement
with BGP-4", RFC 2842, May 2000.
[RFC3065] Traina, P., McPherson, D., Scudder, J., "Autonomous System
Confederations for BGP", RFC3065, February 2001.
11. Author Information
Quaizar Vohra
Juniper Networks
1194 N.Mathilda Ave
Sunnyvale, CA 94089
e-mail: qv@juniper.net
Enke Chen
Redback Networks, Inc.
350 Holger Way
San Jose, CA 95134
e-mail: enke@redback.com
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