One document matched: draft-ietf-ipfix-mediators-problem-statement-01.txt
Differences from draft-ietf-ipfix-mediators-problem-statement-00.txt
IPFIX Working Group A. Kobayashi, Ed.
Internet-Draft NTT PF Lab.
Intended status: Informational September 26, 2008
Expires: March 30, 2009
IPFIX Mediation: Problem Statement
draft-ietf-ipfix-mediators-problem-statement-01
Status of this Memo
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Abstract
Flow-based measurement is currently a popular method for various
network monitoring usages. The sharing of flow-based information
among orthogonal monitoring applications raises open issues in terms
of scalability, reliability and flexibility that IPFIX Mediation may
help resolve. IPFIX Mediation reroutes, replicates, filters,
aggregates, correlates or modifies Flow Records or Packet Reports, or
changes a transport protocol. This document describes the
applicability of IPFIX Mediation and the problems that IPFIX
Mediation might encounter.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. Terminology and Definition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3. Flow-Based Mediation: Applicability Examples . . . . . . . . . 9
3.1. IPFIX Export Across Domains . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.2. Data Retention . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.3. Interoperability between Legacy Protocols and IPFIX . . . 9
3.4. Rerouting Flow Records/Packet Reports . . . . . . . . . . 10
3.5. IPFIX Export from Branch Office . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3.6. Correlation of Flow Records/Packet Reports Information . . 11
4. Approaches to Scalability . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
4.1. Adjusting Sampling Rates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
4.2. Flow Aggregation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
4.2.1. Flow Aggregation on Original Exporters . . . . . . . . 13
4.2.2. Flow Aggregation on IPFIX Concentrators . . . . . . . 13
4.3. Time Composition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.4. Space Composition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4.5. Distributing Load among Collectors . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4.6. Flow Selection Sampling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
5. Problems with using IPFIX Mediators . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
5.1. Loss of Observation Point Information . . . . . . . . . . 15
5.2. Loss of Base Time Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
5.3. Loss of Option Template Information . . . . . . . . . . . 16
5.4. Observation Domain ID and Template ID Management . . . . . 16
5.5. Transport Sessions Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
6. Conclusion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
7. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
9. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
9.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
9.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . . . . 25
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1. Introduction
While the IPFIX requirements defined in [RFC3917] mention an
intermediate function, such as an IPFIX Proxy or an Concentrator,
there is no document to define the function called IPFIX Mediation.
IPFIX Mediation is an additional function to suit the needs of some
measurement system. In this document, we describe several applicable
examples of IPFIX Mediation. Furthermore, we describe the problems
of IPFIX Mediation considering implementations. These problems can
be solved by additional specifications without influencing the
present IPFIX specification defined in [RFC5101].
Section 2 describes the terminology used in this document. Section 3
describes applicable examples of IPFIX Mediation. As more effective
cases, section 4 describes some usages of the IPFIX Mediation in
large-scale networks. Finally, section 5 describes the problems an
implementation of an IPFIX Mediation device might face.
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2. Terminology and Definition
The terms in this section are in line with those in the IPFIX
specification document [RFC5101] and the PSAMP specification document
[I-D.ietf-psamp-protocol]. Additional terms required for the IPFIX
Mediation are also defined here. All these terms are capitalized in
this document.
Observation Point
An Observation Point is a location in the network where IP packets
can be observed. Examples include: a line to which a probe is
attached, a shared medium, such as an Ethernet-based LAN, a single
port of a router, or a set of interfaces (physical or logical) of
a router.
Note that every Observation Point is associated with an
Observation Domain (defined below), and that one Observation Point
may be a superset of several other Observation Points. For
example, one Observation Point can be an entire line card. That
would be the superset of the individual Observation Points at the
line card's interfaces.
Observation Domain
An Observation Domain is the largest set of Observation Points for
which Flow information can be aggregated by a Metering Process.
For example, a router line card may be an Observation Domain if it
is composed of several interfaces, each of which is an Observation
Point. In the IPFIX Message it generates, the Observation Domain
includes its Observation Domain ID, which is unique per Exporting
Process. That way, the Collecting Process can identify the
specific Observation Domain from the Exporter that sends the IPFIX
Messages. Every Observation Point is associated with an
Observation Domain. It is RECOMMENDED that Observation Domain IDs
also be unique per IPFIX Device.
Flow Key
Each of the fields that:
1. belong to the packet header (e.g., destination IP address),
2. are a property of the packet itself (e.g., packet length),
3. are derived from packet treatment (e.g., Autonomous System (AS)
number),
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and that are used to define a Flow are termed Flow Keys.
Flow Record
A Flow Record contains information about a specific Flow that was
observed at an Observation Point. A Flow Record contains measured
properties of the Flow (e.g., the total number of bytes for all
the Flow's packets) and usually characteristic properties of the
Flow (e.g., source IP address).
Packet Reports
Packet Reports comprise a configurable subset of a packet's input
to the Selection Process, including the Packet Content,
information relating to its treatment (for example, the output
interface), and its associated selection state (for example, a
hash of the Packet Content).
Exporting Process
The Exporting Process sends Flow Records to one or more Collecting
Processes. The Flow Records are generated by one or more Metering
Processes.
Exporter
A device that hosts one or more Exporting Processes is termed an
Exporter.
IPFIX Device
An IPFIX Device hosts at least one Exporting Process. It may host
further Exporting Processes and arbitrary numbers of Observation
Points and Metering Processes.
Collecting Process
A Collecting Process receives Flow Records from one or more
Exporting Processes. The Collecting Process might process or
store received Flow Records, but such actions are out of scope for
this document.
Collector
A device that hosts one or more Collecting Processes is termed a
Collector.
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IPFIX Message
An IPFIX Message is a message originating at the Exporting Process
that carries the IPFIX records of this Exporting Process and whose
destination is a Collecting Process. An IPFIX Message is
encapsulated at the transport layer.
Information Element
An Information Element is a protocol and encoding-independent
description of an attribute that may appear in an IPFIX Record.
The IPFIX information model [RFC5102] defines the base set of
Information Elements for IPFIX. The type associated with an
Information Element indicates constraints on what it may contain
and also determines the valid encoding mechanisms for use in
IPFIX.
IPFIX Mediation
IPFIX Mediation is a function located between Exporting Processes
and Collecting Processes. The IPFIX Mediation can be included in
any IPFIX Devices. The IPFIX Mediation consists of a set of some
of functions:
* rerouting input Flow Records/Packet Reports to a appropriate
Collecting Process
* replicating input Flow Records/Packet Reports
* filtering and selecting input Flow Records/Packet Reports
* aggregating input Flow Records/Packet Reports based on new Flow
Keys
* correlating a set of Flow Records/Packet Reports for creating
new Flow Records/Packet Reports with new metrics
* modifying input Flow Records/Packet Reports
* changing a transport protocol which carries IPFIX Messages
The modification of Flow Records/Packet Reports includes these
functions:
* changing the value of specified Information Elements
* adding new Information Elements by deriving further Flow or
packet properties from existing fields or calculating new
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metrics
* deleting specified Information Elements.
IPFIX Mediation can be included in any devices, such as routers,
switches, NMS(Network Management Systems), or be deployed in
stand-alone devices.
Flow-Based Collector Selection
The Flow-Based Collector Selection evaluates an input Flow Record/
Packet Report based on the value of the specified Information
Element and then selects Collector for each input Flow Record/
Packet Report.
IPFIX Mediator
An IPFIX Mediator contains one or more functions defined in IPFIX
Mediation. The IPFIX Mediator can be a stand-alone or a virtual
device. It also contains one or more Collecting Processes and one
or more Exporting Processes.
Original Exporter
An Original Exporter is an IPFIX Device which hosts Observation
Points where IP packets can be directly observed.
IPFIX Proxy
An IPFIX Proxy is an IPFIX Mediator that receives IPFIX Messages
from Original Exporter, and sends IPFIX Messages to one or more
Collectors. It may alter a part of IPFIX Message in order to
comply with IPFIX Protocol specifications. It may also change
type of transport protocol, such as UDP, TCP, SCTP and PR-SCTP,
and convert a legacy protocol message to an IPFIX Message, if
necessary.
IPFIX Concentrator
An IPFIX Concentrator is an IPFIX Mediator that receives Flow
Records/Packet Reports, aggregates them, then exports the
aggregated Flow Records.
IPFIX Distributor
An IPFIX Distributor is an IPFIX Mediator that reroutes input Flow
Records/Packet Reports based on the result of Flow-Based Collector
Selection. It may filter or replicate input Flow Records/Packet
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Reports, if necessary.
IPFIX Masquerading Proxy
An IPFIX Masquerading Proxy is an IPFIX Mediator that screens out
a part of data of input Flow Records/Packet Reports according to
configured policies. It can thus, for example, hide the network
topology information or customers' IP addresses.
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3. Flow-Based Mediation: Applicability Examples
3.1. IPFIX Export Across Domains
IPFIX export across administrative domains can be used to measure
traffic for wide-area traffic engineering, or to analyze the trend of
Internet traffic. In such cases, operators need to adhere to privacy
policies and prevent the transmission of confidential information.
Using an IPFIX Masquerading Proxy allows them to operate on Flow
Records safely by anonymizing and filtering them. IP Flow
anonymisation is described in [I-D.boschi-ipfix-anon] in detail.
3.2. Data Retention
Data retention refers to the storage of traffic data by service
providers and commercial organizations. According to European
Commission directives, operators are required to retain both IP and
voice traffic data, in wired and wireless networks, generated by end
users while using a service provider's services. The goal of data
retention is to ensure that call detail records and Flow Records are
available for the purpose of detection, investigation, and
prosecution of serious crimes, if necessary. The European Commission
directives define the following data retention services:
o Fixed telephony (includes fixed voice, voicemail, and conference
and data calls)
o Mobile telephony (includes mobile voice, voicemail, conference and
data calls, SMS, and MMS)
o Internet telephony (includes every multimedia session associated
with IP multimedia services)
o Internet e-mail
o Internet access
By monitoring Flow Records, IPFIX can fulfill these requirements of
Internet access services.
3.3. Interoperability between Legacy Protocols and IPFIX
During the migration process from a legacy protocol such as NetFlow
[RFC3954] to IPFIX, both NetFlow and IPFIX Exporters will need to co-
exist in the same network. An IPFIX Proxy which converts a legacy
protocol to IPFIX will allow operators to continue measuring Flows
from legacy Exporters, even after introducing IPFIX Collectors.
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3.4. Rerouting Flow Records/Packet Reports
Recently, several networks seem to have shifted towards integrated
networks, such as the Internet and MPLS, which includes IPv4, IPv6,
and VPN traffic. Flow Records/Packet Reports of these types need to
be analyzed separately and from different perspectives. However,
handling them separately without improving the capability of the
Collector is difficult. An IPFIX Distributor rerouting Flow Records/
Packet Reports based on the result of Flow-based Collector Selection,
would be necessary. Thus, it allows individual Collectors related to
each network to analyze traffic data for their own specific purposes.
As another example, in case of rerouting specific customer's Flow
Records, an IPFIX Distributor needs to identify each customer. As
identification data, the RD (Route Distinguisher), ingress IF,
peering AS number, or BGP next hop are listed. As shown in the
following figure, the IPFIX Distributor reroutes Flow Records based
on the RD value. This system allows each customer's traffic to be
inspected independently.
.---------.
|Traffic |
.---->|Collector|<==>Customer#A
| |#1 |
| '---------'
RD=100:1
.-----------. |
.--------. |IPFIX |----' .---------.
|IPFIX | |Distributor| RD=100:2 |Traffic |
|router#1|------->| |--------->|Collector|<==>Customer#B
| | | | |#2 |
'--------' | |----. '---------'
'-----------' |
RD=100:3
| .---------.
| |Traffic |
'---->|Collector|<==>Customer#C
|#3 |
'---------'
Figure A: Rerouting Flow Records to Collectors using IPFIX
Distributor
3.5. IPFIX Export from Branch Office
Generally, in big enterprise networks, traffic data from branch
offices is gathered in a central office. But, in the long distance
branch office case, the bandwidth for transport IPFIX is not enough.
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Therefore, it is beneficial that an IPFIX Concentrator located in a
branch office exports aggregated Flow Records to cope with the
limitation of bandwidth.
3.6. Correlation of Flow Records/Packet Reports Information
The correlation of Flow Records/Packet Reports information offers
some new metrics. There are some examples as follows:
o One way delay follows from correlating Packet Reports exported
from different Exporters on the path.
o The result of a queueing or rate-limiting function applied to
ingress or egress interface follows from correlating Flow Records
with the same Flow Key observed at both interfaces.
o Average/maximum/minimum values follow from correlating each in a
set of Flow Records.
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4. Approaches to Scalability
Usually, operators measure traffic at several Observation Points for
a specific purpose, typically sampling packets with rates ranging
from 1/10,000 to 1/100. This value depends on several factors, such
as the capacity of the management network, the available storage and
speed of the Collector, and the load on the routers/switches.
On the one hand, the number of Observation Points in the networks can
even be increased to improve the effectiveness of these methods. In
the near future, we anticipate that the advanced features of IPFIX,
such as the monitoring of wide-area traffic matrices and QoS
performance, will accelerate IPFIX utilization.
On the other hand, the increasing amount of traffic brought about by
broadband users might have an impact on measurement parameters, such
as the sampling rate or granularity of Flows. Generally, large-scale
networks already have multiple 10 Gb/s links, their total traffic
exceeding 100 Gb/s. In the near future, broadband users' traffic
will increase by approximately 50% per year according to [TRAFGRW].
When operators monitor traffic of 500 Gb/s with a sampling rate of
1/1000, the amount of exported Flow Records from Exporters could
exceed 50 kFlows/s. This value is beyond the ability of a single
Collector.
This section explains how operators can cope with such a huge amount
of Flow Records using available IPFIX solutions. Generally, the
solutions encompass two approaches: reducing the amount of exported
Flow Records or increasing the capacity of the Collecting Process.
The following sub-sections show each solution.
4.1. Adjusting Sampling Rates
Adjusting the sampling rate can reduce the amount of Flow Records,
and a flow-based measurement system can thus easily adapt to the
ability of the Collecting and Exporting Processes. However, in that
case, Flows with small traffic volumes could easily get lost. If
traffic incidents happened, operators would no longer be able to
investigate traffic change. While traffic volumes on networks
continue to increase, operators will not be able to maintain the
sampling rates currently used. In the near future, flow-based
measurement systems possibly will not be able to detect traffic
anomalies which can currently be detected.
4.2. Flow Aggregation
The simplest types of Flows are those comprised of all packets having
a fixed five tuple of protocol, source and destination IP addresses,
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and source and destination port numbers. On the other hand, choosing
a shorter Flow Key, such as a three tuple or two tuple, or a single
Flow Key, such as a network prefix, peering AS number, or BGP Next-
Hop, creates more aggregated Flow Records. This solution is
especially useful for measurements of traffic exchange in an entire
network domain and for easy adjustments to the performance of a
Collector.
4.2.1. Flow Aggregation on Original Exporters
Original Exporters can aggregate Flow Records to reduce the amount of
them. But, in-depth traffic monitoring might not be possible, as it
is with the five tuple. One way to this is to be able to specify the
Template Records for specific needs. This extra flexibility in the
Metering Process allows operators to specify their own set of Flow
Keys and extra Information Elements in the Template Record.
Specifically, Original Exporters classify the Flow Records by their
contents, and then aggregate them with appropriate Flow keys based on
a specific application. There is an application for security,
another for capacity planning, and so on. The content and
granularity of the Flow can satisfy the requirements of each
Collector with a specific application.
On one hand, this optimizes the Metering Process, because only Flows
of interest are looked at. On the other hand, it optimizes the
Exporting Process, because only the information of interest is
exported. Finally, this reduces load of the Collecting Process as
less Flow Records are handled, and Flow Record filtering and
aggregating are required.
4.2.2. Flow Aggregation on IPFIX Concentrators
Another approach involves a hierarchical measurement system using
IPFIX Concentrators. Aggregation and storage for input Flow Records
on IPFIX Concentrators makes a most useful distributed-collection
system. It allows other devices to retrieve the stored Flow Record.
This method increases the capacity of Collecting Process of whole
system. Flow aggregation method is described in
[I-D.dressler-ipfix-aggregation] in detail.
4.3. Time Composition
Time composition is defined as aggregation for consecutive Flow
Records with same Flow Keys. It leads to the same output as setting
a longer active interval timer on Original Exporters. However, an
IPFIX Mediation can calculate average, maximum and minimum values of
each counter from Flow Records received with shorter interval time.
The output allows operators to keep track of changes that might have
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happened during the time interval.
4.4. Space Composition
Space composition is defined as aggregation for one or more Flow
Records involved in a larger Observation Domain or a set of
Observation Points. It is divided into two types:
o Space Composition within one Exporter
In that case, the spatial range is within one Exporters. For
example, the Flow Records observed at physical interfaces which
belong to virtual interface by link aggregation can be composed to
one Flow Records.
o Space Composition within some Exporters
In that case, the spatial range consists of some different
Exporters. For example, the Flow Records observed at same domain,
such as west area and east area of an ISP network, can be composed
to one Flow Records.
4.5. Distributing Load among Collectors
As described in the previous section, an IPFIX Distributor reroutes
Flow Records/Packet Reports to appropriate Collectors based on the
result of the Flow-based Collector Selection. It can thus distribute
the load among multiple Collectors according to a specific
application, each area, or each customer.
4.6. Flow Selection Sampling
A Flow selection sampling method is described in
[I-D.peluso-flowselection] in detail. Generally, the distribution of
the number of packets per Flow seems to be heavy-tailed. Most types
of Flow Records are likely to be small Flows consisting of a small
number of packets. The flow-based measurement system, in particular
the Collecting Process and Exporting Process, is burdened with a huge
amount of these small Flows. If statistics information of small
Flows is exported as merging data by applying a policy or threshold,
the burden on measurement system is reduced.
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5. Problems with using IPFIX Mediators
In this section, we focus on the problems related to the use of IPFIX
Mediators in consideration of implementation.
5.1. Loss of Observation Point Information
Both the Exporter IP address indicated by the source IP address of
the IPFIX session as well as the Observation Domain ID included in
the IPFIX header are likely to be lost in the mediation process
performed by an IPFIX Mediator. This IP address and Observation
Domain ID indicate the Observation Point information from the
viewpoint of the entire network domain. Such information is
necessary for guaranteeing the continuity of the work of the top
level Collector. Even if an IPFIX Mediator could, with some new
mechanism, notify Collectors of this Observation Point information,
older Collectors might not accept it. These Collectors would then
wrongly assume that the IP address of the IPFIX Mediator is that of
the Original Exporter. The Collector, however, needs to recognize
the precise Observation Point whether Flow Records go through an
IPFIX Mediator or not.
In the following figure, a Collector could identify 2 Exporters with
IP addresses of 10.1.1.3 and 10.1.1.2, respectively. The Collector,
however, needs to somehow recognize Router#1 and Router#2, which are
the Original Exporters. Defined notification methods that can be
interpreted by Collectors and Mediators are thus necessary.
.--------. .--------.
|IPFIX | |IPFIX |
|Router#1|--------->|Mediator|---+
| | | | |
'--------' '--------' | .---------.
IP:10.1.1.1 IP:10.1.1.3 '----->| |
ODID:10 ODID:0 |Collector|
+----->| |
.--------. | '---------'
|IPFIX | |
|Router#2|-----------------------'
| |
'--------'
IP:10.1.1.2
ODID:20
Figure B: Loss of Observation Point Information.
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5.2. Loss of Base Time Information
The Export Time field included in the IPFIX header indicates the base
time for Flow Records. In IPFIX Information Elements, described in
[RFC5102], there are delta time fields that indicate the time
difference from the value of the Export Time field. If the Flow
Records include any delta time fields and the IPFIX Mediator
overwrites the Export Time field when sending IPFIX messages, the
delta time fields become meaningless and, because Collectors can not
recognize this situation, wrong time values are propagated.
5.3. Loss of Option Template Information
In some cases, depending on the implementation of the IPFIX
Mediators, the information that is reported by the Option Templates
could also be lost. If, for example, the sampling rate is not
communicated to the Collectors, a Collector would miscalculate the
traffic volume. This might bring crucial problems. Even if an IPFIX
Mediator were to simply relay received Option Template Information,
the value of its scope fields would become meaningless in the context
of a different session. It should be noted that the minimal
information to be communicated by an IPFIX Mediator needs to be
defined.
5.4. Observation Domain ID and Template ID Management
The Observation Domain ID is locally unique to the Exporting Process
in an IPFIX Mediator, just like the Template ID is unique on the
basis of the Observation Domain ID. These renewed identifiers should
be managed using the Transport Session Information of the Collecting
Process. If IPFIX Mediators could not manage the relations among
these identifiers and the received Transport Session Information, the
Mediators would, for example, relay wrong values for the scope fields
of the Option Template and for a "Template Withdraw Message". In
most cases, a Collector would not be able to interpret the Template
ID of a "Template Withdraw Message" and the scope fields of an Option
Template. The Collector would then shut down the IPFIX Session.
5.5. Transport Sessions Management
How an IPFIX Mediator maintains relationships between the Transport
Sessions of Collecting Processes and of Exporting Processes depends
on its implementation. If multiple Transport Sessions of the
Collecting Process are relayed to single Transport Session of the
Exporting Process and the IPFIX Mediators shuts down the Transport
Session of the Exporting Process, Flow Records on other Transport
Sessions of the Collecting Processes would not be relayed at all. In
the case of resetting a session of the Collecting Process, the
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behavior of the IPFIX Mediator needs to be defined.
.--------.
|IPFIX |
|Router#1|----+
| | |
'--------' X
.--------. | .--------. .---------.
|IPFIX | '---->|IPFIX | | |
|Router#2|--------->|Mediator|----X---->|Collector|
| | +---->| | | |
'--------' | '--------' '---------'
.--------. |
|IPFIX | |
|Router#3|----'
| |
'--------'
Figure C: Relaying from Multiple Transport Sessions to Single
Transport Session.
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6. Conclusion
This document has covered the applicability of IPFIX Mediation and a
multitude of problems related to the implementation of IPFIX
Mediators. To assist the ability of the Exporters and Collectors, it
should be noted that there are various IPFIX Mediation functions for
the operators to select from. Examples of the applicability of IPFIX
Mediation are as follows.
o Regarding IPFIX Exporting across domains, IPFIX Masquerading
Proxies help operators to anonymize or filter Flow Records/Packet
Reports, preventing privacy violations.
o Regarding data retention, IPFIX Mediators enhance the storage of
the measurement system.
o Regarding interoperability, IPFIX Proxies provide interoperability
between legacy protocols and IPFIX, even during the migration
period to IPFIX.
o Regarding the Flow-based Collector Selection function, in
integrated networks, which mix MPLS VPN and IPv4/IPv6, this could
be utilized more frequently. More sophisticated implementation
methods would enhance the effectiveness.
o Regarding scalability in large-scale networks, IPFIX Concentrators
or IPFIX Distributors help to achieve high sample rates and fine-
grained Flow analysis even as networks grow. As IPFIX Mediation
functions, Flow selection sampling, aggregation and composition
are beneficial.
As a result, the benefits of IPFIX Mediation become apparent.
However, there are still some open issues.
o With the use of IPFIX Mediators, both Observation Point and IPFIX
header information, such as the Exporter IP address, Observation
Domain ID, and Export Time field, might be lost. This data should
therefore be communicated between the Original Exporter and
Collector via the IPFIX Mediator.
o With the use of IPFIX Mediators, data advertised by Option
Templates from the Original Exporter, such as the sampling rate
and sampling algorithm used, might be lost. If a Collector is not
informed of current sampling rates, traffic information might
become worthless.
o IPFIX Mediators are required to manage Transport Sessions,
Template IDs, and Observation Domain IDs. Otherwise, anomalous
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IPFIX messages could be created.
These problems stem from the fact that no standards regarding IPFIX
Mediation have been set. In particular, the minimum set of
information which should be communicated between Original Exporters
and Collectors, interworking between different IPFIX Transport
Sessions, and the internal components of IPFIX Mediators should be
standardized.
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7. Security Considerations
A flow-based measurement system might lead to privacy violations,
such as the export of Flow Records to an outside address, if the
system is not confined to the large-scale network under observation.
General security issues of the IPFIX protocol are covered by the
security considerations section in [RFC5101]. Security MUST be
considered if different networks exchange Flow information. As the
security of the exchange relies mostly on the protocol used, UDP does
not seem appropriate for the exchange of information between
networks.
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8. IANA Considerations
This document has no actions for IANA.
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9. References
9.1. Normative References
[I-D.ietf-psamp-protocol]
Claise, B., "Packet Sampling (PSAMP) Protocol
Specifications", draft-ietf-psamp-protocol-09.txt (work in
progress) , December 2007.
[RFC3917] Quittek, J., Zseby, T., Claise, B., and S. Zander,
"Requirements for IP Flow Information Export(IPFIX)",
October 2004.
[RFC3954] Claise, B., "Cisco Systems NetFlow Services Export Version
9", October 2004.
[RFC5101] Claise, B., "Specification of the IP Flow Information
Export (IPFIX) Protocol for the Exchange of IP Traffic
Flow Information", January 2008.
[RFC5102] Quittek, J., Bryant, S., Claise, B., Aitken, P., and J.
Meyer, "Information Model for IP Flow Information Export",
January 2008.
9.2. Informative References
[I-D.boschi-ipfix-anon]
Boschi, E. and B. Trammell, "IP Flow Anonymisation
Support", draft-boschi-ipfix-anon-01.txt (work in
progress) , July 2008.
[I-D.dressler-ipfix-aggregation]
Dressler, F., Sommer, C., Muenz, G., and A. Kobayashi,
"IPFIX Aggregation",
draft-dressler-ipfix-aggregation-05.txt (work in
progress) , July 2008.
[I-D.peluso-flowselection]
Peluso, L., Zseby, T., D'Antonio, S., and M. Molina, "Flow
selection Techniques",
draft-peluso-flowselection-tech-01.txt (work in
progress) , November 2007.
[TRAFGRW] Cho, K., Fukuda, K., Esaki, H., and A. Kato, "The Impact
and Implications of the Growth in Residential User-to-User
Traffic", SIGCOMM2006, pp. 207-218, Pisa, Italy, September
2006. , October 2006.
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Authors' Addresses
Atsushi Kobayashi
NTT Information Sharing Platform Laboratories
3-9-11 Midori-cho
Musashino-shi, Tokyo 180-8585
Japan
Phone: +81-422-59-3978
Email: akoba@nttv6.net
URI: http://www3.plala.or.jp/akoba/
Haruhiko Nishida
NTT Information Sharing Platform Laboratories
3-9-11 Midori-cho
Musashino-shi, Tokyo 180-8585
Japan
Phone: +81-422-59-3978
Email: nishida.haruhiko@lab.ntt.co.jp
Christoph Sommer
University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
Department of Computer Science 7
Martensstr. 3
Erlangen 91058
Germany
Phone: +49 9131 85-27993
Email: christoph.sommer@informatik.uni-erlangen.de
URI: http://www7.informatik.uni-erlangen.de/~sommer/
Falko Dressler
University of Erlangen-Nuremberg
Department of Computer Science 7
Martensstr. 3
Erlangen 91058
Germany
Phone: +49 9131 85-27914
Email: dressler@informatik.uni-erlangen.de
URI: http://www7.informatik.uni-erlangen.de/~dressler/
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Stephan Emile
France Telecom
2 avenue Pierre Marzin
Lannion, F-22307
Fax: +33 2 96 05 18 52
Email: emile.stephan@orange-ftgroup.com
Benoit Claise
Cisco Systems
De Kleetlaan 6a b1
Diegem 1831
Belgium
Phone: +32 2 704 5622
Email: bclaise@cisco.com
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