One document matched: draft-ietf-mpls-nodeid-subobject-01.txt

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draft-ietf-mpls-nodeid-subobject-01.txt                May 2003 
 
                                                                          
                                                   Jean Philippe Vasseur 
                                                               Zafar Ali 
                                                          Siva Sivabalan 
                                                     Cisco Systems, Inc. 
                                                                         
IETF Internet Draft 
Expires: November, 2003                                                
                                                         May, 2003 
 
 
                                     
                draft-ietf-mpls-nodeid-subobject-01.txt 
 
 
                 Definition of an RRO node-id subobject 
 
 
 
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. 

















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draft-ietf-mpls-nodeid-subobject-01.txt                February 2003 
 
 
Abstract 
 
In the context of MPLS TE Fast Reroute ([FAST-REROUTE]), the Merge 
Point (MP) address is required at the Point of Local Repair (PLR) in 
order to select a backup tunnel intersecting a fast reroutable Traffic 
Engineering LSP on a downstream LSR.  However, existing protocol 
mechanisms are not sufficient to find an MP address in multi-areas or 
multi-domain routing networks. Hence, the current MPLS Fast Reroute 
mechanism cannot be used to protect inter-area or inter-AS TE LSPs from 
a failure of an ABR (Area Border Router) or ASBR (Autonomous System 
Border Router) respectively. This document specifies the use of 
existing RRO IPv4 and IPv6 subobjects (with a new flag defined) to 
define the node-id subobject in order to solve this issue. Note that 
the MPLS Fast reroute mechanism mentioned in this draft refers to the 
"Facility backup" MPLS TE Fast Reroute method. 
 
 
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 [i]. 
 
 
1.      Terminology 
  
LSR - Label Switch Router 
 
LSP - An MPLS Label Switched Path 
 
PCS - Path Computation Server (may be any kind of LSR (ABR, ...)  
      or a centralized path computation server  
     
PCC - Path Computation Client (any head-end LSR) requesting a path  
      computation of the Path Computation Server.  
     
Local Repair - Techniques used to repair LSP tunnels quickly 
               when a node or link along the LSPs path fails. 
 
Protected LSP - An LSP is said to be protected at a given hop if 
                it has one or multiple associated backup tunnels     
                originating at that hop. 
 
Bypass Tunnel - An LSP that is used to protect a set of LSPs 
                passing over a common facility. 
 
Backup Tunnel - The LSP that is used to backup up one of the many 
                LSPs in many-to-one backup. 
 
PLR - Point of Local Repair. The head-end of a backup tunnel or 
      a detour LSP. 
 
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MP - Merge Point. The LSR where detour or backup tunnels meet 
     the protected LSP. In case of one-to-one backup, this is where 
     multiple detours converge. A MP may also be a PLR. 
 
NHOP Bypass Tunnel - Next-Hop Bypass Tunnel.  A backup tunnel 
     which bypasses a single link of the protected LSP. 
 
NNHOP Bypass Tunnel - Next-Next-Hop Bypass Tunnel.  A backup 
      tunnel which bypasses a single node of the protected LSP. 
 
Reroutable LSP - Any LSP for with the "Local protection desired" 
                 bit is set in the Flag field of the   
                 SESSION_ATTRIBUTE object of its Path messages. 
 
CSPF - Constraint-based Shortest Path First. 
 
Inter-AS MPLS TE LSP: TE LSP whose Head-end LSR and Tail-end LSR do  
not reside within the same Autonomous System (AS) or both Head-end  
LSR and Tail-end LSR are in the same AS but the TE tunnel  
transiting path may be across different ASes 
 
Interconnect or ASBR Routers:  Routers used to connect to another AS of 
a different or the same Service Provider via one or more Inter-AS 
links.  
 
 
2.      Introduction 
 
MPLS Fast Reroute (FRR) ([FAST-REROUTE]) is a fast recovery local 
protection technique used to protect Traffic Engineering LSPs from 
link/SRLG/node failure.  One or more backup tunnels  are pre-
established to protect against the failure of a link/node/SRLG. In case 
of failure, every protected TE LSP traversing the failed resource is 
rerouted onto the appropriate backup tunnels in 10s of msecs. 
 
There are a couple of requirements on the backup tunnel path. At least, 
a backup tunnel should not pass through the element it protects. 
Additionally, a primary tunnel and its associated  backup tunnel should 
intersect at least at two points (nodes): Point of Local Repair (PLR) 
and Merge Point (MP). The former should be the head-end LSR of the 
backup tunnel, and the latter should be the tail-end LSR of the backup 
tunnel. The PLR is where FRR is triggered when link/node/SRLG failure 
happens.  
 
There are different methods for computing paths for backup tunnels at a 
given PLR. Specifically, a user can statically configure one or more 
backup tunnels at the PLR, with explicit path or the PLR can be 
configured to automatically compute a backup path or to send a path 
computation request to a PCS (which can be an LSR or an off-line tool). 
 
 
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Consider the following scenario: 
 
Assumptions: 
- A multi-area network made of three areas: 0, 1 and 2. 
- A fast reroutable TE LSP T1 (TE LSP signaled with the "local 
Protection desired" bit set in the SESSION-ATTRIBUTE object or the FRR 
object) from R0 to R3 
- A backup tunnel B1 from R1 to R2, not traversing ABR1, and following 
the R1-ABR3-R2 path. R1 reroutes any protected TE LSP traversing ABR1 
onto the backup tunnel B1 in case of ABR1's failure. 
 
           <--- area 1 --><---area 0---><---area 2---> 
              R0-----R1-ABR1--R2------ABR2--------R3 
                     \        / 
                      \ ABR3 / 
 
When T1 is first signaled, the PLR R1 needs to dynamically select an 
appropriate backup tunnel intersecting T1 on a downstream LSR. However, 
existing protocol mechanisms are not sufficient to unambiguously find 
the MP address in a network with inter-area or inter-AS traffic 
engineering (although the example above was given in the context of 
multi-area networks, a similar reasoning applies to TE LSP spanning 
multiple ASes). This draft addresses these limitations.  
 
R1 needs to ensure the following:  
 
   1. Backup tunnel intersects with the primary tunnel at the MP (and 
      thus has a valid MP address), e.g., in Figure 1, R1 needs to 
      determine that T1 and B1 share the same MP node R2, 
 
   2. Backup tunnel satisfies the primary LSP's request with respect to 
      the bandwidth protection request (i.e., bandwidth guaranteed for 
      the primary tunnel during failure), and the type of protection 
      (preferably, protecting against a node failure versus a link 
      failure), as specified in [FAST-REROUTE]. 
 
A PLR can make sure that condition (1) is met by examining the Record 
Route Object (RRO) of the primary tunnel to see if any of the addresses 
specified in the RRO is attached to the tail-end of the backup tunnel. 
As per [RSVP-TE], the addresses specified in the RRO IPv4 or IPv6 
subobjects sent in Resv messages can be node-ids and/or interface 
addresses . Hence, in Figure 1, router R2 may specify interface 
addresses in the RROs for T1 and B1. Note that these interface 
addresses are different in this example.  
 
The problem of finding the MP using the interface addresses or node-ids 
can be easily solved in a single area (OSPF_)/level (IS-IS). 
Specifically, in the case of single area/level, the PLR has the 
knowledge of all the interfaces attached to the tail-end of the backup 
tunnel. This information is available in PLR's IGP topology database. 
Thus, the PLR can determine whether a backup tunnel intersecting a 
 
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draft-ietf-mpls-nodeid-subobject-01.txt                February 2003 
 
 
protected TE LSP on a downstream node exists and can also find the MP 
address regardless of how the addresses contained in the RRO IPv4 or 
IPv6 subobjects are specified (i.e., whether using the interface 
addresses or the node IDs). However, such routing information is not 
available in multi-area and inter-AS trafficengineering environments. 
Hence, unambiguously making sure that condition (1) above is met with 
inter-area TE and inter-AS traffic-engineering TE LSPs is not possible 
with existing mechanisms.  
 
In this draft, we define extensions to and describe the use of RSVP 
[RSVP, RSVP-TE] to solve the above-mentioned problem.  
 
 
3.      Signaling node-ids in RROs 
 
As mentioned above, the limitation that we need to address is the 
generality of the contents of the RRO IPv4 and IPv6 subobjects, as 
defined in [RSVP-TE]. 
 
The IPv4 and IPv6 RRO subobjects are currently defined in [RSVP-TE] and 
have the following flags defined: 
 
Local protection available:  0x01 
 
        Indicates that the link downstream of this node is protected 
        via a local repair mechanism, which can be either one-to-one 
        or facility backup. 
 
Local protection in use:  0x02 
 
        Indicates that a local repair mechanism is in use to maintain 
        this tunnel (usually in the face of an outage of the link it 
        was previously routed over, or an outage of the neighboring 
        node). 
 
Bandwidth protection:  0x04 
 
        The PLR will set this when the protected LSP has a backup path 
        which is guaranteed to provide the desired bandwidth specified 
        in the FAST_REROUTE object or the bandwidth of the protected 
        LSP, if no FAST_REROUTE object was included.  The PLR may set 
        this whenever the desired bandwidth is guaranteed; the PLR 
        MUST set this flag when the desired bandwidth is guaranteed 
        and the "bandwidth protection desired" flag was set in the 
        SESSION_ATTRIBUTE object.  If the requested bandwidth is not 
        guaranteed, the PLR MUST NOT set this flag. 
 
Node protection:  0x08 
 
        The PLR will set this when the protected LSP has a backup path 
        which provides protection against a failure of the next LSR 
 
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        along the protected LSP.  The PLR may set this whenever node 
        protection is provided by the protected LSP's backup path; the 
        PLR MUST set this flag when the node protection is provided 
        and the "node protection desired" flag was set in the 
        SESSION_ATTRIBUTE object.  If node protection is not provided, 
        the PLR MUST NOT set this flag.  Thus, if a PLR could only 
        setup a link-protection backup path, the "Local protection 
        available" bit will be set but the "Node protection" bit will 
        be cleared. 
 
Preemption pending: 0x10  
        The preempting node sets this flag if a pending preemption is  
        in progress for the TE LSP. This indicates to the HE of this  
        LSP that it must be re-routed as soon as possible using a make  
        before break.  
  
In this document, we define the following new flag: 
 
Node-id: 0x20 
 
        When set, this indicates that the address specified in the 
        RRO's IPv4 or IPv6 subobject is a node-id address, which refers 
        to the "Router Address" as defined in [OSPF-TE], or "Traffic 
        Engineering Router ID" as defined in [ISIS-TE]. A node MUST use 
        the same address consistently. In other words, once an address 
        is used in RRO's IPv4 or IPv6 subobject, it should always be 
        used for the lifetime of the LSP. 
 
An IPv4 or IPv6 RRO subobject with the node-id flag set is also called 
a node-id subobject. The problem of finding a MP address in a network 
with inter-area or inter-AS traffic engineering is solved by inserting 
a node-id subobject (an RRO "IPv4" and "IPv6" sub-object with the 0x20 
flag set).  
         
An implementation MAY either decide to support of one the following 
options:  
 
Option 1: add the node-id subobject in an RSVP Resv message and, when 
required, also add another IPv4/IPv6 subobject to record interface 
address. 
 
Example: a fast reroutable TE LSP would have in the RRO object carried 
in Resv message two subobjects: a node-id subobject and a label 
subobject. If recording the interface address is required, then an 
additional IPv4/IPv6 subobject is added.  
 
Option 2: add an IPv4/IPv6 subobject recording the interface address 
and, when required, add a node-id subobject in the RRO object. 
 
Example: an inter-area/inter-AS fast reroutable TE LSP would have in 
the RRO object carried in Resv message three subobjects: an IPv4/IPv6 
 
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subobject recording interface address, a label subobject and a node-id 
subobject. 
 
Note also, that the node-id subobject may have other application than 
Fast Reroute backup tunnel selection. 
 
 
4.      Finding Merge Point  
 
Two cases should be considered: 
 
- case 1: the backup tunnel destination is the MP's node-id. Then a PLR 
can find the MP and suitable backup tunnel by simply comparing the 
backup tunnel's destination address with the node-id included in the 
RRO of the primary tunnel.  
- case 2: the backup tunnel terminates at an address different than the 
MP's node-id. Then a node-id subobject MUST also be included in the RRO 
object of the backup tunnel. A PLR can find the MP and suitable backup 
tunnel by simply comparing the node-ids present in the RRO objects of 
both the primary and backup tunnels. 
 
 
When both IPv4 node-id and IPv6 node-id sub-objects are present, a PLR 
may use any or both of them in finding the MP address.  
 
 
5.      Security Considerations 
 
This document does not introduce new security issues. The security 
considerations pertaining to the original RSVP protocol [RSVP] remain 
relevant. 
 
 
6.      Intellectual Property Considerations 
 
Cisco Systems may have intellectual property rights claimed in regard 
to some of the specification contained in this document 
 
 
7.      Acknowledgments 
 
We would like to acknowledge input and helpful comments from Carol 
Iturralde, Anca Zamfir, Reshad Rahman, Rob Goguen and Philip Matthews. 
 
 
References 
[RSVP] Braden, et al, "Resource ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP) - Version 
1, Functional Specification", RFC 2205, September 1997. 
 
[RSVP-TE] Awduche, et al, "Extensions to RSVP for LSP Tunnels", RFC 
3209, December 2001. 
 
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draft-ietf-mpls-nodeid-subobject-01.txt                February 2003 
 
 
 
[FAST-REROUTE] Ping Pan, et al, "Fast Reroute Extensions to RSVP-TE for 
LSP Tunnels", draft-ietf-mpls-rsvp-lsp-fastreroute-02.txt, May 2003. 
 
[OSPF-TE] Katz, D., Yeung, D., Kompella, K., "Traffic Engineering 
Extensions to OSPF Version 2", draft-katz-yeung-ospf-traffic-
09.txt(work in progress). 
 
[ISIS-TE] Li, T., Smit, H., "IS-IS extensions for Traffic Engineering", 
draft-ietf-isis-traffic-04.txt (work in progress) 
 
[MULTI-AREA-TE] Kompella at all,"Multi-area MPLS Traffic Engineering",           
draft-kompella-mpls-multiarea-te-03.txt, June 2002. 
 
[LOOSE-PATH-REOPT] Vasseur and Ikejiri, "Reoptimization of an explicit 
loosely routed MPLS TE paths", draft-vasseur-mpls-loose-path-reopt-
01.txt, February 2003, Work in Progress. 
 
[INTER-AS-TE-REQS] Zhang et al, "MPLS Inter-AS Traffic Engineering 
requirements", draft-tewg-interas-te-req-02.txt (work in progress). 
 
[INTER-AS-TE] Vasseur and Zhang, "MPLS Inter-AS Traffic Engineering", 
draft-vasseur-mpls-inter-as-te-00.txt, February 2003, work in progress. 
 
Authors' Address: 
 
Jean Philippe Vasseur 
Cisco Systems, Inc. 
300 Beaver Brook Road 
Boxborough , MA - 01719 
USA 
Email: jpv@cisco.com 
 
Zafar Ali 
Cisco Systems, Inc. 
100 South Main St. #200 
Ann Arbor, MI 48104 
USA 
zali@cisco.com 
 
Siva Sivabalan  
Cisco Systems, Inc.  
2000 Innovation Drive  
Kanata, Ontario, K2K 3E8  
Canada  
msiva@cisco.com  
                     
    



 
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