One document matched: draft-ietf-mpls-tp-survive-fwk-04.txt
Differences from draft-ietf-mpls-tp-survive-fwk-03.txt
Network Working Group N. Sprecher
Internet-Draft Nokia Siemens Networks
Intended status: Informational A. Farrel
Expires: September 08, 2010 Old Dog Consulting
March 08, 2010
Multiprotocol Label Switching Transport Profile Survivability Framework
draft-ietf-mpls-tp-survive-fwk-04.txt
Abstract
Network survivability is the ability of a network to restore traffic
delivery following disruption or failure or degradation of network
resources. Survivability is critical to the delivery of guaranteed
network services such as those subject to strict Service Level
Agreements (SLAs) that place maximum bounds on the length of time the
service may be degraded or unavailable.
The Transport Profile of Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS-TP) is a
packet transport technology based on the MPLS data plane and re-using
many aspects of the MPLS management and control planes.
This document provides a framework for the provision of survivability
in an MPLS-TP network, describing recovery elements, types, methods
and topological considerations. Survivability may be supported by
control plane, management plane, and by Operations, Administration
and Maintenance (OAM) functions to achieve data plane recovery. This
document describes mechanisms for protecting MPLS-TP Label Switched
Paths (LSPs). Detailed consideration for the protection of
pseudowires in MPLS-TP networks is out of scope.
This document is a product of a joint Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF) / International Telecommunication Union Telecommunication
Standardization Sector (ITU-T) effort to include an MPLS Transport
Profile within the IETF MPLS and PWE3 architectures to support the
capabilities and functionalities of a packet transport network as
defined by the ITU-T.
Status of this Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted to IETF in full conformance with the
provisions of BCP 78 and 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-
Drafts.
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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
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The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at
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The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
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This Internet-Draft will expire on May 13, 2010.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
(http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
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include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
described in the Simplified BSD License.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction ................................................. 4
1.1. Recovery Schemes ........................................... 5
1.2. Recovery Action Initiation ................................. 6
1.3. Recovery Context ........................................... 7
1.4. Scope of this Framework .................................... 8
2. Terminology and References ................................... 9
3. Requirements for Survivability .............................. 10
3.1. General Requirements ...................................... 10
3.2. Requirements for Restoration .............................. 11
3.3. Requirements for Protection ............................... 11
3.4. Requirements for Survivability in Ring Topologies ......... 12
3.5. Triggers for Protection, Restoration, and Reversion ....... 13
3.6. Management Plane Operation ................................ 13
3.7. Control Plane and In-band OAM ............................. 14
4. Functional Architecture ..................................... 14
4.1. Elements of Control ....................................... 14
4.1.1. Manual Control .......................................... 14
4.1.2. Defect and Failure-Triggered Actions .................... 15
4.1.3. OAM Signaling ........................................... 15
4.1.4. Control Plane Signaling ................................. 16
4.2. Elements of Recovery ...................................... 16
4.2.1. Span Recovery ........................................... 16
4.2.2. Segment Recovery ........................................ 17
4.2.3. End-to-End Recovery ..................................... 17
4.3. Levels of Recovery ........................................ 18
4.3.1. Dedicated Protection .................................... 18
4.3.2. Shared Protection ....................................... 18
4.3.3. Extra Traffic ........................................... 19
4.3.4. Restoration ............................................. 20
4.3.5. Reversion ............................................... 21
4.4. Mechanisms for Protection ................................. 22
4.4.1. Link-Level Protection ................................... 22
4.4.2. Alternate Paths and Segments ............................ 23
4.4.3. Protection Tunnels ...................................... 23
4.5. Recovery Domains .......................................... 24
4.6. Protection in Different Topologies ........................ 26
4.6.1. Mesh Networks ........................................... 26
4.6.2. Ring Networks ........................................... 34
4.7. Recovery in Layered Networks .............................. 35
4.7.1. Inherited Link-Level Protection ......................... 36
4.7.2. Shared Risk Groups ...................................... 36
4.7.3. Fault Correlation ....................................... 37
5. Applicability and Scope of Survivability in MPLS-TP ......... 38
6. Mechanisms for Providing Survivability for MPLS-TP LSPs ..... 40
6.1. Management Plane .......................................... 40
6.1.1. Configuration of Protection Operation ................... 41
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6.1.2. External Manual Commands ................................ 42
6.2. Fault Detection ........................................... 42
6.3. Fault Isolation ........................................... 43
6.4. OAM Signaling ............................................. 44
6.4.1. Fault Detection ......................................... 45
6.4.2. Testing for Faults ...................................... 45
6.4.3. Fault Isolation ......................................... 46
6.4.4. Fault Reporting ......................................... 46
6.4.5. Coordination of Recovery Actions ........................ 47
6.5. Control Plane ............................................. 47
6.5.1. Fault Detection ......................................... 48
6.5.2. Testing for Faults ...................................... 48
6.5.3. Fault Isolation ......................................... 49
6.5.4. Fault Status Reporting .................................. 49
6.5.5. Coordination of Recovery Actions ........................ 50
6.5.6. Establishment of Protection and Restoration LSPs ........ 50
7. Pseudowire Protection Considerations ........................ 51
7.1. Utilizing Underlying MPLS-TP Recovery ..................... 51
7.2. Recovery in the Pseudowire Layer .......................... 52
8. Manageability Considerations ................................ 52
9. Security Considerations ..................................... 53
10. IANA Considerations ........................................ 53
11. Acknowledgments ............................................ 53
12. References ................................................. 54
12.1. Normative References ..................................... 54
12.2. Informative References ................................... 55
Editors' Note:
This Informational Internet-Draft is aimed at achieving IETF
Consensus before publication as an RFC and will be subject to an IETF
Last Call.
[RFC Editor, please remove this note before publication as an RFC and
insert the correct Streams Boilerplate to indicate that the published
RFC has IETF Consensus.]
1. Introduction
Network survivability is the network's ability to restore traffic
delivery following a failure or degradation of traffic delivery
caused by a network fault or an attack on the network; it plays a
critical role in the delivery of reliable services in transport
networks. Guaranteed services in the form of Service Level
Agreements (SLAs) require a resilient network that very rapidly
detects facility or node degradation or failures, and immediately
starts to restore network operations in accordance with the terms of
the SLA.
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The MPLS Transport Profile (MPLS-TP) is described in [RFC5654] and
[MPLS-TP-FWK]. MPLS-TP is designed to be consistent with existing
transport network operations and management models, and to provide
survivability mechanisms, such as protection and restoration. The
function provided is intended to be similar to or better than that
found in established transport networks which set a high benchmark
for reliability. That is, it is intended to provide the operator with
functions with which they are familiar through their experience with
other transport networks, but this does not preclude additional
techniques.
This document provides a framework for MPLS-TP-based survivability.
It uses the recovery terminology defined in [RFC4427] which draws
heavily on [G.808.1], and it refers to the requirements specified in
[RFC5654].
This document is a product of a joint Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF) / International Telecommunication Union Telecommunication
Standardization Sector (ITU-T) effort to include an MPLS Transport
Profile within the IETF MPLS and PWE3 architectures to support the
capabilities and functionalities of a packet transport network as
defined by the ITU-T.
1.1. Recovery Schemes
Various recovery schemes (for protection and restoration) and
processes have been defined and analyzed in [RFC4427] and [RFC4428].
These schemes can also be applied in MPLS-TP networks to re-establish
end-to-end traffic delivery within the agreed service level and to
recover from "failed" or "degraded" transport entities. In the
context of this document, transport entities are nodes, links, Label
Switch Path (LSP)segments, concatenated LSP segments, and whole LSPs.
Recovery actions are normally initiated by the detection of a defect
or performance degradation, or by an external request (e.g., an
operator request for manual control of protection switching).
[RFC4427] makes a distinction between protection switching and
restoration mechanisms. Protection switching makes use of pre-
assigned capacity between nodes, where the simplest scheme has one
dedicated protection entity for each working entity, while the most
complex scheme has m protection entities shared between n working
entities (m:n). Protection switching may be either unidirectional or
bidirectional; unidirectional meaning that each direction of a
bidirectional connection is protection switched independently, while
bidirectional means that both directions are switched at the same
time even if the fault applies to only one direction of the
connection. Restoration uses any capacity available between nodes
and usually involves re-routing. The resources used for restoration
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may be pre-planned (i.e., predetermined, but not yet allocated to the
recovery path) and recovery priority may be used as a differentiation
mechanism to determine which services are recovered and which are not
recovered or are sacrificed in order to achieve recovery of other
services. Restoration may also be either unidirectional or
bidirectional. In general, protection actions are completed within
time frames of tens of milliseconds, while automated restoration
actions are normally completed in periods ranging from hundreds of
milliseconds to a maximum of a few seconds.
1.2. Recovery Action Initiation
The recovery schemes described in [RFC4427] and evaluated in
[RFC4428] are presented in the context of control plane-driven
actions (such as the configuration of the protection entities and
functions, etc.). The presence of a distributed control plane in an
MPLS-TP network is optional, and the absence of such a control plane
does not affect the ability to operate the network and to use MPLS-TP
forwarding, Operations, Administration and Maintenance (OAM), and
survivability capabilities. In particular, the concepts discussed in
[RFC4427] and [RFC4428] refer to recovery actions in the data plane
and are equally applicable in MPLS-TP with or without the use of a
control plane.
Thus, some of the MPLS-TP recovery mechanisms do not depend on a
control plane, and use MPLS-TP OAM mechanisms or management actions
to trigger protection switching across connections that were set up
using management plane configuration. These recovery mechanisms may
be triggered by data plane events or by operator actions, and are
based on MPLS-TP OAM fault management functions. "Fault management"
in this context refers to failure detection, localization, and
notification (where the term "failure" is used to represent both
signal failure and signal degradation). The term "trigger" is used
to indicate any event that may be used to cause an implementation to
consider taking protection action.
The principles of MPLS-TP protection switching operation are similar
to those described in [RFC4427] as the protection mechanism is based
on the ability to detect certain defects in the transport entities
within the recovery domain. The protection switching controller does
not care which monitoring method is used, as long as it can be given
information about the status of the transport entities within the
recovery domain (e.g., OK, signal failure, signal degradation, etc.).
The protection switching operation is basically a data-plane
capability and in the context of MPLS-TP it needs to be ensured that
it is possible to switch over independent of the way the network is
configured and managed. All the MPLS and GMPLS protection mechanisms
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are applicable in an MPLS-TP environment, and it should be possible
also to provision and manage the related protection entities and
functions defined in MPLS and GMPLS using a management plane.
In some protection switching schemes (such as bidirectional
protection switching), it is necessary to coordinate the protection
state between the edges of the recovery domain. An MPLS-TP
Protection State Coordination (PSC) protocol may be used as an in-
band (i.e., data plane-based) control protocol to align both ends of
the protected domain. Control plane-based mechanism can also be used
to coordinate the protection states between the edges of the
protection domain.
1.3. Recovery Context
An MPLS-TP LSP may be subject to any or all of MPLS-TP link recovery,
path segment recovery, or end-to-end recovery, where:
o MPLS-TP link recovery refers to the recovery of an individual link
(and hence all or a subset of the LSPs routed over the link)
between two MPLS-TP nodes.
o Segment recovery refers to the recovery of an LSP segment (i.e.,
segment and concatenated segment in the language of [RFC5654])
between two nodes.
o End-to-end recovery refers to the recovery of an entire LSP from
its ingress to its egress node.
More than one of these recovery techniques may be configured
concurrently by a single LSP for added resiliency.
Co-routed bidirectional MPLS-TP LSPs are defined such that both
directions of the LSP follow the same route through the network. In
this case the directions are often required by the operator to fate-
share (that is, if one direction fails, both directions should cease
to operate). This may also be the case for associated bidirectional
LSPs where the two directions of the LSP take different paths through
the network. This causes a direct interaction between the recovery
processing affecting the two directions of an LSP such that both
directions of the LSP are recovered at the same time (i.e.,
bidirectional recovery is a consequence of fate sharing).
The recovery scheme operating at the data plane level can function in
a multi-domain environment (in the wider sense of a "domain"
[RFC4726]); it can also protect against a failure of a boundary node
in the case of inter-domain operation.
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MPLS-TP recovery schemes are intended to protect client traffic as it
is sent across the MPLS-TP network. This document introduces
protection and restoration techniques in general terms and then
describes how they may be applied in the LSP layer to meet the
requirements of the MPLS-TP recovery schemes [RFC5654]. Section 7
also provides an introduction to how the techniques may be applied in
the pseudowire layer, but detailed consideration of pseudowires is
out of scope. A description of the MPLS-TP LSP and pseudowire layers
can be found in [MPLS-TP-FWK].
1.4. Scope of this Framework
This framework introduces the architecture of the MPLS-TP recovery
domain and describes the recovery schemes in MPLS-TP (based on the
recovery types defined in [RFC4427] as well as the principles of
operation, recovery states, recovery triggers, and information
exchanges between the different elements that sustain the reference
model. The reference model is based on the MPLS-TP OAM reference
model which is defined in [MPLS-TP-OAM].
The framework also describes the qualitative levels of the
survivability functions that can be provided, such as dedicated
recovery, shared protection, restoration, etc. The level of recovery
directly affects the service level provided to the end-user in the
event of a network failure.
The general description of the functional architecture is applicable
for both LSPs and pseudowires (PWs), however, PW recovery is only
introduced in Section 7, and the details are out of scope for this
document.
This framework applies to general LSP recovery schemes, but also to
schemes that are optimized for specific topologies in order to handle
protection switching in an efficient manner. Recovery schemes
for PWs are introduced in Section 7, but the details are for further
study and will be addressed in a separate document.
This document takes into account the need for co-ordination of
protection switching at multiple layers and sub-layers (for
readability we use the term "layer" to refer equally to layers and
sub-layers). This allows an operator to prevent races and allows the
protection switching mechanism of one layer to fix a problem before
switching at another layer.
This framework also specifies the functions that must be supported by
MPLS-TP to support the recovery mechanisms. MPLS-TP introduces a
tool kit to enable recovery in MPLS-TP-based networks and to ensure
that affected traffic is recovered in the event of a failure.
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Generally, network operators aim to provide the fastest, most stable,
and the best protection mechanism at a reasonable cost according to
the requirements of the customers. The greater the level of
protection, the greater the number of resources consumed and so the
higher the likely cost both to the operator and to the customer. It
is therefore expected that network operators will offer a wide
spectrum of service levels. MPLS-TP-based recovery offers the
flexibility to select the recovery mechanism, choose the granularity
at which traffic is protected, and also choose the specific types of
traffic that are to be protected. With MPLS-TP-based recovery, it is
possible to provide different levels of protection for different
classes of service, based on their service requirements.
2. Terminology and References
The terminology used in this document is consistent with that defined
in [RFC4427]. That RFC is, itself, consistent with [G.808.1].
However, certain protection concepts (such as ring protection) are
not discussed in [RFC4427], and for those concepts, terminology in
this document is drawn from [G.841].
Readers should refer to those documents for normative definitions.
This document supplies brief summaries of some terms for clarity and
to aid the reader, but does not re-define terms.
In particular, note the distinction and definitions made in [RFC4427]
for the following three terms.
o Protection: re-establishing end-to-end traffic using pre-allocated
resources.
o Restoration: re-establishing end-to-end traffic using resources
allocated at the time of need. Sometimes referred to as "repair"
of a service, LSP, or the traffic.
o Recovery: a generic term covering both Protection and Restoration.
Note that the term "survivability" as used in [RFC5654] to cover the
functional elements or "protection" and "restoration" which are
collectively known as "recovery".
Important background information on survivability can be found in
[RFC3386], [RFC3469] , [RFC4426], [RFC4427], and [RFC4428].
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In this document, the following additional terminology is applied:
o Fault Management as defined in [MPLS-TP-NM-Framework].
o Defect and failure are used to indicate both signal defects and
failures, and signal degradation events.
o Trigger indicates any event that may be used to cause an
implementation to consider taking recovery action.
o The acronym OAM is defined as Operations, Administration and
Maintenance consistent with [OAM-SOUP].
o A Transport Entity is a node, link, Label Switch Path (LSP)
segment, concatenated LSP segment, or whole LSP.
o A Working Entity is a transport entity that carries traffic during
normal network operation.
o A Recovery Entity is a transport entity that is used to restore
and transport traffic when the working entity fails.
General terminology for MPLS-TP is found in [MPLS-TP-FWK] and
[ROSETTA]. Background information on MPLS-TP can be found in
[RFC5654].
3. Requirements for Survivability
MPLS-TP requirements are presented in [RFC5654] and serve as a
normative reference for the definition of all MPLS-TP function
including survivability. Survivability is presented in [RFC5654] as
playing a critical role in the delivery of reliable services, and the
requirements for survivability are set out using the recovery
terminology defined in [RFC4427].
These requirements are summarized below. Reference numbers refer to
the requirements as presented in [RFC5654]. Readers should refer to
[RFC5654] for the definitive list of requirements which is not
replaced or superseded by the list provided here.
3.1. General Requirements
o Protection and restoration mechanisms must be provided (56).
o Recovery techniques should be as similar as possible to those in
existing transport networks (56A).
o Point-to-point (P2P) and point-to-multipoint (P2MP) recovery
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techniques should be the same if possible (56B).
o Recovery must be applicable to links, transport paths, segments,
concatenated segments, and end-to-end LSPs and PWs (57).
o Recovery objectives must be configurable to meet the SLA
objectives of the services offered including rapid (sub-50ms)
recovery, protection of all traffic on a path, and protection
across multiple domains (58, 59).
o The recovery mechanisms should be applicable to any topology
(60). See also Section 3.4 of this document.
o Recovery must be coordinated across network layers (61).
o Recovery and reversion must not "flap" (62).
Note that there is no requirement for support for extra traffic
[RFC4427] except in a ring where MPLS-TP must support the sharing of
protection bandwidth in a ring by allowing best-effort traffic (108).
This form of extra traffic may sometimes referred to as "non-
preemptable unprotected traffic".
3.2. Requirements for Restoration
o The restored and protected paths must be able to share resources
(70).
o Priorities must be available to control the order of restoration
and to facilitate preemption during restoration (71, 72).
o Reversion must be supported (73).
3.3. Requirements for Protection
o MPLS-TP data plane protection must operate without regard to
payload content (63).
o The following protection schemes must be supported:
* reversion (64).
* unidirectional and bidirectional 1+1 protection for P2P (65A,
65B).
* unidirectional 1+1 protection for P2MP (65C).
* bidirectional 1:n protection for P2P (67A).
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* unidirectional 1:n protection for P2MP (67B).
o It must be possible to share protection resources (66). This
includes:
* 1:n mesh recovery should be supported (68).
* sharing of resources between protection paths that will not be
required to protect the same fault (69).
3.4. Requirements for Survivability in Ring Topologies
o MPLS-TP recovery mechanisms may be optimized for specific
topologies provided such optimizations interoperate with, and are
as similar as possible to, standard techniques to provide end-to-
end recovery (91, 100).
o Ring topologies support must include:
* single ring (92).
* interconnected rings (93).
* connection of rings to arbitrary networks (99).
* logical and physical rings (101).
o Traffic protection in rings must include:
* unidirectional and bidirectional P2P paths (94).
* unidirectional P2MP paths (95).
o Ring recovery techniques:
* must default to bidirectional (102).
* must support reversion as the default behavior (103).
* must distinguish (to the operator and for the purpose of
prioritized recovery actions) trigger mechanisms (104).
* should protect against multiple failures (106B).
* must support sharing of protection resources (109).
* must prevent recovery flapping (107).
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o Ring protection mechanism scaling must include:
* 1+1 and 1:1 protection switching 50 ms from the moment of fault
detection in a network with a 16-node ring with less than
1200km of fiber (96).
* independence from the number of LSPs crossing the ring (97).
* good scaling behavior (performance, memory, etc.) with
increases in the number of transport paths, the number of nodes
on the ring, and the number of ring interconnects (98).
o It must be possible to disable protection mechanisms on selected
links in a ring (105).
o MPLS-TP recovery mechanisms in a ring must support prioritization
of recovery actions arising from different commands or triggers
and for different protected entities (106A).
3.5. Triggers for Protection, Restoration, and Reversion
Recall that a "trigger" is defined as any event that may be used to
cause an implementation to consider taking recovery action.
o Triggers must be supported from:
* lower network layers (74).
* MPLS-TP OAM (75).
* the management plane (76).
* the control plane (if present) (78).
o It must be possible to distinguish trigger sources and to
prioritize recovery action requests (77, 79).
3.6. Management Plane Operation
o Support is required for preplanning, pre-calculation, and pre-
provisioning of recovery paths and groups of paths (80, 81, 82,
85).
o External commands (controls) must allow the operator to activate,
prevent, or test without activating, any recovery operation (83,
84).
o It must be possible to configure all aspects of recovery (86).
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o It must be possible to monitor all aspects of recovery (87, 88).
3.7. Control Plane and In-band OAM
o If a control plane is used, it must be possible operate all
aspects of recovery (89).
o In-band OAM must support administrative control and protection
state coordination (90).
4. Functional Architecture
This section presents an overview of the elements of the functional
architecture for survivability within an MPLS-TP network. The
intention is to decompose the survivability components into separate
items so that it can be seen how they may be combined to provide
different levels of recovery to meet the requirements set out in the
previous section.
4.1. Elements of Control
Recovery is achieved through specific actions taken to repair
network resources or to redirect traffic onto paths that avoid
failures in the network. Those actions may be triggered
automatically by the MPLS-TP network nodes upon detection of a
network defect or failure, or may be under direct the control of an
operator. Automatic action may be enhanced by in-band (i.e., data-
plane based) OAM mechanisms for fault management and performance
monitoring, or by in-band or out-of-band control plane signaling.
4.1.1. Manual Control
The survivability behavior of the network as a whole, and the
reaction of each LSP when a fault is reported, may be under operator
control. That is, the operator may establish network-wide or local
policies that determine what actions will be taken when different
defects or failures are reported that affect different LSPs. At the
same time, when a service request is made to cause the establishment
of one or more LSPs in the network, the operator (or requesting
application) may express a required or requested level of service,
and this will be mapped to particular survivability actions taken
before and during LSP setup, after the discovery of a defect or
failure of network resources, and upon recovery of those resources.
It should be noted that it is unusual to present a user or customer
with options directly related to recovery actions. Instead, the
user/customer enters into an SLA with the network provider, and the
network operator maps the terms of the SLA (for example for
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guaranteed delivery, availability, or reliability) onto recovery
schemes within the network.
The operator can also be given manual control of survivability
actions and events. For example, the operator may perform the
following actions:
o enable or disable survivability function
o induce the simulation of a network fault
o force a switchover from a working path to a recovery path.
Forced switchover may be done for network optimization purposes with
minimal disturbance of services, such as when modifying protected or
unprotected services, when replacing MPLS-TP network nodes, etc. In
some circumstances, a fault may be reported to the operator and the
operator may then select and initiate the appropriate recovery
action.
4.1.2. Defect and Failure-Triggered Actions
Survivability actions may be directly triggered by network defects
and failures. That is, the device that detects the defect or failure
(for example, notification of an issue reported from equipment in a
lower layer, a failure to receive an OAM Continuity message, or a
reception of OAM message reporting a defect or failure) may
immediately perform a survivability action. Recall that the terms
"defect" and "failure" are used to represent both signal defect /
failure and signal degradation.
This behavior can be subject to management plane or control plane
control, but does not require any control, management or data plane
message exchange to trigger the recovery action; the action is
directly triggered by events in the data plane. Note, however, that
coordination of recovery actions between the edges of the recovery
domain may require message exchanges for some recovery functions or
when performing a bidirectional recovery action.
4.1.3. OAM Signaling
OAM signaling refers to message exchanges that are in-band or closely
coupled to the data channel. Such messages may be used to detect and
isolate faults or indicate a degradation in the operation of the
network, but in this context we are concerned with the use of these
messages to control or trigger survivability actions.
OAM signaling may also be used to coordinate recovery actions within
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the protection domain.
4.1.4. Control Plane Signaling
Control plane signaling is responsible for setup, maintenance, and
teardown of transport paths that are not under management plane
control. The control plane may also be used to coordinate the
detection and isolation, and reaction to network defects and failures
pertaining to peer relationships (neighbor-to-neighbor, or end-to-
end). Thus, control plane signaling may initiate and coordinate
survivability actions.
The control plane can also be used to distribute topology and
resource-availability information. In this way, "graceful shutdown"
[GR-SHUT] of resources may be effected by withdrawing them, and this
can be used as a stimulus to survivability action in a similar way to
the reporting or discovery of a fault as described in the previous
sections.
4.2. Elements of Recovery
This section describes the elements of recovery. These are the
quantitative aspects of recovery; that is the pieces of the network
for which recovery can be provided.
Note that the terminology in this section is consistent with
[RFC4427]. Where the terms differ from those in [RFC5654] a mapping
is provided.
4.2.1. Span Recovery
A span is a single hop between neighboring MPLS-TP nodes in the same
network layer. A span is sometimes incorrectly referred to as a
link, and this may cause some confusion between the concept of a data
link and a traffic engineering (TE) link. LSPs traverse TE links
between neighboring MPLS-TP nodes in the MPLS-TP network layer,
however, a TE link may be provided by:
o a single data link
o a series of data links in a lower layer established as an LSP and
presented to the upper layer as a single TE link
o a set of parallel data links in the same layer presented either as
a bundle of TE links, or a collection of data links that,
together, provide data link layer protection scheme.
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Thus, span recovery may be provided by:
o selecting a different TE link from a bundle
o moving the TE link so that it is supported by a different data
link between the same pair of neighbors
o re-routing the LSP in the lower layer.
Moving the protected LSP to another TE link between the same pair of
neighbors is a form of segment recovery and is described in Section
4.2.2.
4.2.2. Segment Recovery
An LSP segment is one or more continuous hops on the path of the LSP.
[RFC5654] defines two terms. A "segment" is a single hop on the path
of an LSP, and a "concatenated segment" is more than one hop on the
path of an LSP. In the context of this document, a segment covers
both of these concepts.
A PW segment refers to a Single Segment PW (SS-PW) or to a single
segment of a multi-segment PW (MS-PW) that is set up between two PE
devices (i.e., T-PE and S-PE, S-PE and S-PE, or S-PE and T-PE). As
indicated in Section 1, the recovery of PWs and PW segments is out of
scope of this document, but see Section 7.
LSP segment recovery involves redirecting or copying of traffic at
the source end of a segment of an LSP onto an alternate path to the
other end of the segment. According to the required level of
recovery (described in Section 4.3), this redirection may be onto a
pre-established LSP segment, through re-routing of the protected
segment, or by tunneling the protected LSP through a "bypass" LSP.
For details on recovery mechanisms, see Section 4.4.
Note that protecting an LSP against the failure of a node requires
the use of segment recovery, while a link could be protected using
span or segment recovery.
4.2.3. End-to-End Recovery
End-to-end recovery is a special case of segment recovery where the
protected LSP segment is the whole of the LSP. End-to-end recovery
may be provided as link-diverse or node-diverse recovery where the
recovery path shares no links or no nodes with the working path.
Note that node-diverse paths are necessarily link-diverse, and that
full, end-to-end node-diversity is required to guarantee recovery.
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4.3. Levels of Recovery
This section describes the qualitative levels of survivability
function that can be provided. The level of recovery offered has a
direct effect on the service level provided to the end-user in the
event of a network fault. This will be observed as the amount of
data lost when a network fault occurs, and the length of time to
recover connectivity.
In general there is a correlation between the service level (i.e.,
the rapidity of recovery and reduction of data loss) and the cost to
the network; better service levels require pre-allocation of
resources to the recovery paths, and those resources cannot be used
for other purposes if high quality recovery is required. Thus,
"cost" in this case may be measured as the financial cost of
providing resources for the recovery scheme, or the financial loss
from dedicating resources to the recovery scheme such that they
cannot be used to draw new revenue.
Sections 6 and 7 of [RFC4427] provide a full breakdown of protection
and recovery schemes. This section summarizes the qualitative levels
available.
4.3.1. Dedicated Protection
In dedicated protection, the resources for the recovery entity are
pre-assigned for use only by the protected service. This will
clearly be the case in 1+1 protection, and may also be the case in
1:1 protection where extra traffic (see Section 4.3.3) is not
supported.
Note that in the use of protection tunnels (see Section 4.4.3)
resources may also be dedicated to protecting a specific service. In
some cases (one-for-one protection) the whole of the bypass tunnel
may be dedicated to provide recovery for a specific LSP, but in other
cases (such as facility backup) a subset of the resources of the
bypass tunnel may be pre-assigned for use to recover a specific
service. However, as described in Section 4.4.3, the bypass tunnel
approach can also be used for shared protection (Section 4.3.2), to
carry extra traffic (Section 4.3.3), or without reserving resources
to achieve best-effort recovery.
4.3.2. Shared Protection
In shared protection, the resources for the recovery entities of
several services are shared. These may be shared as 1:n or m:n, and
are shared on individual links. Link-by-link resource sharing may be
managed and operated on LSP segments, on PW segments, or on end-to-
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end transport path (LSP or PW). Note that there is no requirement
for m:n recovery in the list of MPLS-TP requirements documented in
[RFC5654].
Where a bypass tunnel is used (Section 4.4.3), the tunnel might not
have sufficient resources to simultaneously protect all of the paths
to which it offers protection, so that if they were all affected by
network defects and failures at the same time, they would not all be
recovered. Policy would dictate how this situation is handled: it
might be that some individual paths would be protected while others
would simply fail; it might be that the traffic for some paths would
be guaranteed, but other traffic would be treated as best effort with
the risk of packets being dropped; or it might be that protection
would not be attempted.
Shared protection is a trade-off between the dedication of expensive
network resources to protection that is not required most of the
time, and the risk of unrecoverable services in the event of multiple
network defects or failures. Rapid recovery that can be achieved
with dedicated protection, but is delayed by message exchanges in the
management, control, or data planes for shared protection. This
means that there is also a trade-off between rapid recovery and the
reduction of network cost achieved by sharing protection resources.
Shared protection might not meet the protection speed requirements in
some cases, but may still be faster than restoration.
These trade-offs may be somewhat mitigated by:
o adjusting the value of n in 1:n protection
o using m:n protection for some value of m > 1
o by establishing new protection paths as each available protection
path is put into use.
4.3.3. Extra Traffic
Network resources allocated for protection represent idle capacity
during the time that recovery is not actually required, and can be
utilized by carrying other traffic referred to as "extra traffic".
Note that extra traffic does not need to start or be terminated at
the ends of the entity (e.g. LSP) that it uses.
When a network resource that is carrying extra traffic is required
for recovery of the protected traffic from the failed working path,
the extra traffic is disrupted - essentially it is pre-empted by the
recovery LSP. This may require additional message exchanges in the
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management, control, or data planes, and that may mean that recovery
could be delayed. Thus the benefits of carrying extra traffic must
be weighed against the disadvantage of delayed recovery, additional
network overhead, and the impact to the services the extra traffic
supports.
Note that extra traffic is not protected by definition, but may be
restored.
Extra traffic is not supported on dedicated protection resources used
for 1+1 protection (Section 4.3.1) by definition, but can be
supported in other protection schemes including shared protection
(Section 4.3.2) and tunnel protection (Section 4.4.3).
Best effort traffic should not be confused with extra traffic. Best
effort traffic is such that the network does not provide any
guarantees of data delivery, and the user is not given any guarantee
of quality of service (e.g., in terms of jitter, packet loss, delay,
etc.). Best effort traffic depends on the current traffic load, but
extra traffic can have quality guarantees up until it is preempted by
the need to use resources for recovery. At such a time, the extra
traffic may be completely displaced, may be treated as best effort,
or itself be recovered (for example, by restoration techniques).
Note that in MPLS-TP support for extra traffic is not required except
in ring topologies (Section 3 and [RFC5654]).
4.3.4. Restoration
This section refers to LSP restoration. Restoration for PWs is out
of scope of this document (but see Section 7).
Restoration represents the most effective use of network resources as
no resources are reserved for recovery. However, restoration
requires computation of a new path and activation of a new LSP
(through the management or control plane). These steps can take much
more time than is required for recovery using protection techniques.
Furthermore, there is no guarantee that restoration will be able to
recover the service. It may be that all suitable network resources
are already in use for other LSPs so that no new path can be found.
This problem can be partially mitigated by the use of LSP setup
priorities so that recovery LSPs can pre-empt existing LSPs of low
priority.
Additionally, when a network defect or failure occurs, multiple LSPs
may be disrupted by the same event. These LSPs may have been
established by different Network Management Stations (NMSes) or
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signaled by different head-end MPLS-TP nodes, and this means that
multiple points in the network will be trying to compute and
establish recovery LSPs at the same time. This can lead to
contention for resources within the network, causing recovery
failures and meaning that some recovery actions must be retried
resulting in even slower recovery times for some services.
Both hard and soft LSP restoration may be supported. In hard LSP
restoration, the resources of the working LSP are released before the
full establishment of the recovery LSP (i.e., break-before-make). In
soft LSP restoration, the resources of the working LSP are released
after the full establishment of an alternate LSP (i.e., make-before-
break). Note that, in the case of reversion (Section 4.3.5) the
resource of the working LSP are not released.
Note that the restoration resources may be pre-calculated and even
pre-signaled before the restoration action starts, but not pre-
allocated. This is known as pre-planned LSP restoration. The
complete establishment/activation of the restoration LSP occurs only
when the restoration action starts. The pre-planning may happen
periodically to have the most accurate information about the
available resources in the network.
4.3.5. Reversion
After a service has been recovered so that traffic is flowing on the
recovery LSP, the defective network resource may be replaced. The
traffic can be redirected back on to the original working LSP (called
"reversion"), or to left it where it is on the recovery LSP ("non-
revertive" behavior).
It should be possible to specify the reversion behavior of each
service, and this might even be configured for each recovery
instance.
In the non-revertive mode an additional operational option exists
where protection roles are switched so that the recovery LSP becomes
the working LSP, and the previous working path (or the resources used
by the previous working path) are used for recovery in the event of a
further fault.
In revertive mode it is important to prevent excessive swapping
between working and recovery paths in the case of an intermittent
defect. This can be addressed by the use of a reversion delay timer
(the Wait To Restore timer) that controls the length of time to wait
following the repair of the fault on the original working path before
performing reversion. It should be possible for an operator to
configure this timer per LSP, and a default value should be defined.
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4.4. Mechanisms for Protection
The purpose of this section is to describe in general (MPLS-TP non-
specific) terms the mechanisms that can be used to provide
protection. As indicated above, while the functional architecture
applies to both LSPs and PWs, the mechanism for recovery described in
this document refers to LSPs and LSP segments only. Recovery
mechanisms for pseudowires and pseudowire segment are for further
study and will be described in a separate document (see also Section
7).
4.4.1. Link-Level Protection
Link-level protection refers to two paradigms: (1) where the
protection is provided in a lower network layer, and (2) the
protection is provided by the MPLS-TP link layer.
Note that link-level protection mechanisms do not protect the nodes
at each end of the entity (e.g., a link or span) that is protected.
End-to-end or segment protection should be used in conjunction to
link-level protection to protect against a failure of the edge nodes.
Link-level protection offers the following levels of protections:
o Full protection, where a dedicated protection entity (e.g., a link
or span) is pre-established to protect a working entity. When the
working entity fails, the protected traffic is switched onto the
protecting entity. In this scenario, all LSPs carried over the
entity are recovered (in one protection operation) when there is a
failure condition. This is referred to in [RFC4427] as "bulk
recovery".
o Partial protection, where only a subset of the LSPs or traffic
carried over a given entity is recovered when there is a failure
condition. The decision as to which LSPs will be recovered and
which will not depends on local policy.
When there is no failure on the working entity, the protection entity
may transport extra traffic which may be preempted when protection
switching occurs.
As with recovery in layered networks, a protection mechanism at the
lower layer needs to be coordinated with protection actions at the
upper layer in order to avoid race conditions. In general, this is
arranged to allow protection actions to be performed in the lower
layer before any attempt is made to perform protection actions in the
upper layer.
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A protection mechanism may be provided at the MPLS-TP link layer
(which connects two MPLS-TP nodes). Such a mechanism can make use of
the procedures defined in [RFC5586] to set up in-band communication
channels at the MPLS-TP link level and use these channels to monitor
the health of the MPLS-TP link and coordinate the protection states
between the ends of the MPLS-TP link.
4.4.2. Alternate Paths and Segments
The use of alternate paths and segments refers to the paradigm
whereby protection is performed in the same network layer as the
protected LSP either for the entire end-to-end LSP or for a segment
of the LSP. In this case, hierarchical LSPs are not used - compare
with Section 4.4.3.
Different levels of protection may be provided:
o Dedicated protection, where a dedicated entity (e.g., LSP or LSP
segment) is fully pre-established to protect a working entity
(e.g., LSP or LSP segment). When there is a failure condition on
the working entity, the traffic is switched onto the protection
entity. Dedicated protection may be performed using 1:1 or 1+1
protection schemes. When the failure condition is eliminated, the
traffic may revert to the working entity. This is subject to
local configuration.
o Shared protection, where one or more protection entity is pre-
established to protect against a failure of one or more working
entities (1:n or m:n).
When the fault condition on the working entity is eliminated, the
traffic should revert back to the working entity in order to allow
other related working entities to be protected by the shared
protection resource.
4.4.3. Protection Tunnels
A protection tunnel is a hierarchical LSP that is pre-provisioned in
order to protect against a failure condition along a sequence of
spans in the network. We call such a sequence, a network segment. A
failure of a network segment may affect one or more LSPs that
transit the network segment.
When there is a failure condition in the network segment (detected
either by OAM on the network segment, or by OAM on a concatenated
segment of one of the LSPs transiting the network segment), one or
more of the protected LSPs are switched over at the ingress point of
the network segment and transmitted over the protection tunnel. The
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way to realize this uses label stacking. Label mapping may be an
option as well.
Different levels of protection may be provided:
o Dedicated protection, where the protection tunnel has resource
reservations sufficient to provide protection for all protected
LSPs without service degradation.
o Partial protection, where the protection tunnel has resources to
protect some of the protected LSPs, but not all of them
simultaneously. Policy would dictate how this situation is
handled: it might be that some individual LSPs would be protected
while others would simply fail; it might be that the traffic for
some LSPs would be guaranteed, but traffic for other LSPs would be
treated as best effort with the risk of packets being dropped; or
it might be that protection would not be attempted.
4.5. Recovery Domains
Protection and restoration are performed in the context of a recovery
domain. A recovery domain is defined between two or more recovery
reference endpoints which are located at the edges of the recovery
domain and bounds the element on which recovery can be provided (as
described in Section 4.2 above). This element can be end-to-end
path, a segment, or a span.
The case of an end-to-end path can be observed as a special case of a
segment, and the ingress and the egress LERs serve as the recover
reference end-points.
In this simple case of a P2P protected entity, exactly two endpoints
reside at the boundary of the Protection Domain. An LSP can enter
through exactly one reference endpoint and exit the recovery domain
through another reference endpoint.
In the case of unidirectional P2MP, three or more endpoints reside at
the boundary of the Protection Domain. One of the endpoints is
referred to as source/root and the other ones are referred to as
sinks/leaves. An LSP can enter the recovery domain through the root
point and exit the recovery domain through the leaves points.
The recovery mechanism should restore interrupted traffic due to a
facility (link or node) fault within the recovery domain. Note that
a single link may part of several recovery domains. If two recovery
domains have any links in common, then one recovery domain must be
contained with the other. This can be referred to as nested recovery
domains. The boundaries of recovery domains may coincide, but
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recovery domains must not intersect.
Note that the edges of a recovery domain are not protected and unless
the whole domain is contained within another recovery domain, the
edges form a single point of failure.
A recovery group is defined within a recovery domain and it consists
of a working (primary) entity and one or more recovery (backup)
entities which reside between the endpoints of the recovery Domain.
In order to guarantee protection in all situations, a dedicated
recovery entity should be pre-provisioned using disjoint resources in
the recovery domain in order to protect against a failure of a
working entity.
The method used to monitor the health of the recovery element is
outside the scope of this document. The endpoints that are
responsible for the recovery action must receive the information on
its condition. The condition of the recovery element may be 'OK',
'failed', or 'degraded'.
When the recovery operation is to be triggered by an OAM FM or PM
indication, an OAM Maintenance Entity Group must be defined for each
of the working and protection entities.
The recovery entities and functions in a recovery domain can be
configured using a management plane or a control plane. A
management plane may be used to configure the recovery domain by
setting the reference points, the working and recovery entities, and
the recovery type (e.g., 1:1 bidirectional linear protection, ring
protection, etc.). Additional parameters associated with the
recovery process may also be configured. For more details, see
Section 6.1.
When a control plane is used, the ingress LERs may communicate with
the recovery reference points requesting that protection or
restoration be configured across a recovery domain. For details, see
Section 6.5.
Cases of multiple interconnections between distinct recovery domains
actually just create a hierarchical arrangement of recovery domains
as a single top-level recovery domain is created from the
concatenation of two recovery domains that have multiple
interconnections. In this case, recovery actions may be taken both
in the individual lower-level recovery domains to protect any LSP
segment that crosses the domain, and within the higher-level recovery
domain to protect the longer LSP segment that traverses the higher-
level domain.
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4.6. Protection in Different Topologies
As described in the requirements listed in Section 3 and detailed in
[RFC5654], the recovery techniques used may be optimized for
different network topologies if the performance of those optimized
mechanisms is significantly better than the performance of the
generic ones in the same topology.
It is required ([RFC5654] R91) that such mechanisms interoperate with
the mechanisms defined for arbitrary topologies to allow end-to-end
protection and to allow consistent protection techniques to be used
across the whole network.
This section describes two different topologies and explains how
recovery may be markedly different in those different scenarios. It
also introduces the concept of a recovery domain and shows how end-
to-end survivability may be achieved through a concatenation of
recovery domains each providing some level of recovery in part of the
network.
4.6.1. Mesh Networks
Linear protection is a mechanism of protection and protection state
coordination that provides a fast and simple protection switching
that fits best in mesh networks since it can operate between any pair
of points within the network. It can protect against a defect or
failure that may happen on an node, a span, an LSP segment, or an
end-to-end LSP. Linear protection provides a clear indication of the
protection status.
Linear protection operates in the context of a Protection Domain. A
Protection Domain is a special case of a Recovery Domain [RFC4427]
that applies to the protection function. A Protection Domain is
composed of the following architectural elements:
o A set of end points which reside at the boundary of the Protection
Domain. In this simple case of 1:n or 1+1 P2P protection, exactly
two endpoints reside at the boundary of the Protection Domain. In
each transmission direction one of the end points is referred to
as a source and the other one is referred to as a sink. In the
case of unidirectional P2MP protection, three or more endpoints
reside at the boundary of the Protection Domain. One of the
endpoints is referred to as source/root and the other ones are
referred to as sinks/leaves.
o A Protection Group which consists of a working (primary) path and
one or more protection (backup) paths which run between the
endpoints of the Protection Domain. In order to guarantee
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protection in all situations, a dedicated protection path should
be pre-provisioned to protect against a defect or failure of a
working path (i.e., 1:1 or 1+1 protection schemes). Also the
working and the protection paths should be disjoint, i.e.,, the
physical routes of the working and the protection paths should
have complete physical diversity.
Note that if the resources of the protection path are less than those
of the working path, the protection path may not have sufficient
resources to protect the traffic of the working path.
As mentioned in Section 4.3.2, the resources of the protection path
may be shared as 1:n. In such a case, the protection path might not
have sufficient resources to simultaneously protect all of the
working paths that may be affected by fault conditions at the same
time.
For P2P paths, both unidirectional and bidirectional protection
switching is supported. In bidirectional protection switching, in
the event of defect or failure, the protection actions are taken in
both directions (even when the fault is unidirectional). This
requires some level of coordination of the protection state between
the endpoints of the protection domain.
In unidirectional protection switching, the protection actions are
taken only in the affected direction.
Revertive and non-revertive operations are provided as network
operator options.
4.6.1.1. Protection Schemes in Mesh Topologies
Linear protection supports the protection schemes described in the
following sub-sections.
4.6.1.1.1. 1:n Linear Protection
In the 1:1 scheme, a protection path is allocated to protect against
a defect or failure or degradation in a working path. As described
above, in order to guarantee protection, the protection entity should
support the full capacity and bandwidth, but it may be configured
(for example, because of limited availability of network resources)
to offer a degraded service compared to the working entity.
Figure 1 presents 1:1 protection architecture. In normal conditions
the data traffic is transmitted over the working entity and the
protection entity is in an idle state (OAM may be running on the
protection entity to verify its state). Normal conditions are
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defined when there is no defect, failure, or degradation on the
working entity and there is no administrative configuration or
request that cause traffic to transmit over the protection entity.
|-----------------Protection Domain---------------|
==============================
/**********Working path***********\
+--------+ ============================== +--------+
| Node /| |\ Node |
| A {< | | >} B |
| | | |
+--------+ ============================== +--------+
Protection path
==============================
Figure 1: 1:1 Protection Architecture
Upon a fault condition (defect, failure, or degradation) along the
working entity or a specific administrative request, the traffic is
switched over to the protection entity.
Note that in the non-revertive behavior (see Section 4.3.5), the old
working entity becomes the protection entity and extra traffic can be
transmitted over the protection entity. This can happen after the
conditions causing the switchover has/have been cleared.
In each transmission direction, the source of the protection domain
bridges the traffic into the appropriate entity and the sink selects
the traffic from the appropriate entity. The source and the sink
need to coordinate the protection states to ensure that the bridging
and the selection are done to and from the same entity. For that
sake a signaling coordination protocol (either data-plane in-band
signaling protocol or a control-plane based signaling protocol) is
needed.
In bidirectional protection switching, both ends of the protection
domain switch to the protection entity (even when the fault is
unidirectional). This requires a protocol to try and coordinate the
protection state between the two end points of the Protection Domain.
When there is no defect or failure, the resources of the idle entity
may be used for less priority traffic. When protection switching is
performed, the lower priority traffic may be pre-empted by the
protected traffic by tearing down the lower priority LSP, by
reporting a fault on the lower priority LSP, or by treating the lower
priority traffic as best effort and discarding it when there is
congestion.
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In the general case of 1:n linear protection, one protection entity
is allocated to protect n working entities. The protection entity
might not have sufficient resources to simultaneously protect all of
the working entities that may be affected by fault conditions at the
same time.
In case of defects or failures along multiple working entities,
priority should be set as to which entity is protected. The
protection states between the edges of the Protection Domain should
be fully coordinated to ensure consistent behavior. As explained
above in section revertive behavior is recommended when 1:n is
supported.
4.6.1.1.2. 1+1 Linear Protection
In the 1+1 protection scheme, a fully dedicated protection entity is
allocated.
As depicted in figure 2, data traffic is copied and fed at the source
to both the working and the protection entities. The traffic on the
working and the protection entities is transmitted simultaneously to
the sink of the Protection Domain, where the selection between the
working and protection entities is made (based on some predetermined
criteria).
|---------------Protection Domain---------------|
==============================
/**********Working path************\
+--------+ ============================== +--------+
| Node /| |\ Node |
| A {< | | >} Z |
| \| |/ |
+--------+ ============================== +--------+
\**********Protection path*********/
==============================
Figure 2: 1+1 Protection Architecture
Note that control traffic between the edges of the Protection Domain
(such as OAM or control protocol to coordinate the protection state,
etc.) may be transmitted on a different entity than the one used for
the protected traffic. These packets should not be discarded by the
sink.
In 1+1 unidirectional protection switching there is no need to
coordinate the protection state between the protection controllers at
both ends of the protection domain. In 1+1 bidirectional protection
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switching, there is a need for a protocol to coordinate the
protection state between the edges of the Protection Domain.
In both protection schemes traffic is restored to the working entity
after the conditions causing the switchover has/have been cleared.
The selection of data may revert to the traffic from the working
entity if reversion is enabled, and will require coordination of
protection state between the edges of the Protection Domain. To
avoid frequent switching in case of intermittent defects or failures
when the network is not stabilized, traffic is not switched back to
the working entity before the Wait-to-Restore (WTR) timer has
expired.
4.6.1.1.3. P2MP Linear Protection
Linear protection may apply to protect unidirectional P2MP entity
using 1+1 protection architecture. The source/root MPLS-TP node
bridges the user traffic to both the working and protection entities.
Each sink/leaf MPLS-TP node selects the traffic from one entity based
on some predetermined criteria. Note that when there is a fault
condition on one of the branches of the P2MP path, some leaf MPLS-TP
nodes may select the working entity, while other leaf MPLS-TP nodes
may select traffic from the protection entity.
In a 1:1 P2MP protection scheme, the source/root MPLS-TP node needs
to identify the existence of a fault condition on any of the branches
of the network. This requires the sink/leaf MPLS-TP nodes to notify
the source/root MPLS-TP node of any fault condition. This required
also a return path from the sinks/leaves to the source/root MPLS-TP
node.
When protection switching is triggered, the source/root MPLS-TP node
selects the protection transport path to transfer the traffic.
Note that such a mechanism does not exist and its exact behavior is
for further study.
4.6.1.2. Triggers for the Linear Protection Switching Action
The protection switching may be performed when:
o A fault condition ('failed' or 'degraded') is declared on the
working entity and protection entity has no or a lesser condition.
Proactive in-band OAM CCV (Continuity and Connectivity
Verification) monitoring of both the working and the protection
entities may be used to enable the fast detection of a fault
condition. For protection switching, it is common to run a CCV
every 3.33ms. In the absence of three consecutive CCV messages,
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a fault condition is declared. In order to monitor the working
and the protection entities, an OAM Maintenance Entity should be
defined for each of the entities. OAM indications of fault
conditions should be provided to the edges of the Protection
Domain which are responsible for the protection switching
operation. Input from OAM performance monitoring indicating
degradation in the working entity may also be used as a trigger
for protection switching. In the case of degradation, switching
to the protection entity is needed only if the protection entity
can guarantee better conditions.
o An indication is received from a lower layer server that there is
a network defect or failure.
o An external operator command is received (e.g., 'Forced Switch',
'Manual Switch'). For details see Section 6.1.2.
o A request to switch over is received from the far end. The far
end may initiate this request for example when it gets an
administrative request to switch over, or when bidirectional 1:1
protection switching is supported and there was a fault that could
be detected only by the far end, etc.
As described above, the protection state should be coordinated
between the end points of the Protection Domain. Control message
should be exchanged between the edges of the Protection Domain to
coordinate the protection state of the edge nodes. The control
messages can be delivered using in-band data-plane driven control
protocol or a control plane based protocol.
In order to achieve 50ms protection switching it is recommended to
use in-band data-plane driven signaling protocol to coordinate the
protection states. An in-band data-plane PSC (Protection State
Coordination) protocol is defined in [MPLS-TP-Linear-Protection] for
this purpose. This protocol is also used to detect mismatches
between the configuration provisioned at the ends of the Protection
Domain.
As described below in Section 6.5, GMPLS already defines procedures
and messages' elements to coordinate the protection states between
the edges of the protection domain. These procedures and protocols
messages are specifies in [RFC4426], [RFC4872] and [RFC4873].
However, these messages lack the capability to coordinate the
revertive/non-revertive behavior and the consistency of configured
timers at the edges of the Protection Domain (timers such as Wait to
Restore (WTR), Hold-off timer, etc.).
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4.6.1.3. Applicability of Linear Protection for LSP Segments
In order to implement data-plane based linear protection on LSP
segments, there is a need to support the MPLS-TP architectural
element PST (Path Segment Tunnel). Maintenance operations (e.g.,
monitoring, protection or management) engage with a transmission of
messages (e.g., OAM, Protection Path Coordination, etc.) in the
maintained domain. According to the MPLS architecture which is
defined in [RFC3031], such messages can be initiated and terminated
at the edges of a path where push and pop operations are enabled. In
order to support the option to monitor, protect and manage a portion
of an LSP, a new architectural element is defined, Path Segment
Tunnel (PST). A Path Segment Tunnel is an LSP which is basically
defined and used for the purposes of OAM monitoring, protection or
management of LSP segments. PST makes use of the MPLS construct of
hierarchical nested LSP which is defined in [RFC3031].
For linear protection operation, PSTs should be defined over the
working and protection entities between the edges of a Protection
Domain. OAM and PSC messages can be initiated at the edge of the PST
and sent to the peer edge of the PST. Note that these messages are
sent over G-ACH channels, within the PST and use two labels stack,
the PST label at the bottom of stack and the G-ACH label (GAL).
The end-to-end traffic of the LSP, including data-traffic and control
traffic (OAM, PSC, management and signaling messages) is tunneled
within the PSTs by means of label stacking as defined in [RFC3031].
The mapping between an LSP and a PST can be 1:1 which is similar to
the ITU-T Tandem Connection element which defines a sub layer
corresponding to a segment of a path. The mapping can also be 1:n to
allow scalable protection of a set of LSPs' segments traversing the
portion of the network in which a Protection Domain is defined. Note
that each of these LSPs can be initiated or terminated at different
endpoints in the network, but they all traverse the Protection Domain
and share similar constraints (such as requirements for QoS, terms of
protection ,etc.).
Note that in the context of segment protection, the PSTs serve as the
working and protection entities.
4.6.1.4. Shared Mesh Protection
In shared mesh protection, the protection resources are used to
protect more than one LSP that do not all have the same end points.
For example, in Figure 3 there are two paths ABCDE and VWXYZ. These
paths do not share end points so they cannot make use of 1:n linear
protection even though they also do not share any common points of
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failure.
ABCDE may be protected by the path APQRE, and VWXYZ can be protected
by the path VPQRZ. In both cases, 1:1 or 1+1 protection may be used.
However, it can be seen that, if 1:1 protection is used for both
paths, the network segment PQR carries no traffic if there are no
failures affecting either of the two working paths. Furthermore, in
the event of only one failure, the segment PQR carries traffic from
only one of the working paths.
Thus, it is possible for the network resources on the segment PQR to
be shared by the two recovery paths. In this way, mesh protection
can substantially reduce the amount of network resources that have to
be reserved to provide protection of a 1:n nature.
A----B----C----D----E
\ /
\ /
\ /
P-----Q-----R
/ \
/ \
/ \
V----W----X----Y----Z
Figure 3: A Shared Mesh Protection Topology
As the complexity of the network and the number of LSPs increases,
the potential for shared mesh protection also increases. However, it
can rapidly become unmanageably complex. Therefore, shared mesh
protection is normally pre-planned and configured by the operator,
although an automated system is not out of the question.
Note that shared mesh protection operates as 1:n linear protection
(see Section 4.6.1.1.1). However, the protection state needs to be
coordinated be coordinated between a larger number of nodes: the
end points of the shared concatenated protection segment (nodes P
and R in the example) as well as the end points of the protected
LSPs (nodes A, E, V, and Z in the example).
Additionally, note that the shared protection resources could be used
to carry extra traffic. For example, in Figure 4, an LSP JPQRK could
be a preemptable LSP that constitutes extra traffic over the hops PQR
and would be displaced in the event of a protection event. In this
case it should be noted that protection state must be additionally
coordinated with the ends of the extra traffic LSPs.
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A----B----C----D----E
\ /
\ /
\ /
J-----P-----Q-----R-----K
/ \
/ \
/ \
V----W----X----Y----Z
Figure 4: Shared Mesh Protection with Extra Traffic
4.6.2. Ring Networks
Several Service Providers have expresses a high level of interest in
operating MPLS-TP in ring topologies and require a high level of
survivability function in these topologies.
Different criteria for optimization are considered in ring
topologies, such as:
1. Simplification of the operation of the Ring in terms of the
number of OAM Maintenance Entities that are needed to trigger the
recovery actions, the number of elements of recovery, the number
of management plane transactions during maintenance operations,
etc.
2. Optimization of resource consumption around the ring, like the
number of labels needed for the protection paths that cross the
network, the total bandwidth needed in the ring to ensure the
protection of the paths, etc.
[RFC5654] introduces a list of requirements on ring protection that
cover the recovery mechanisms need to protect traffic in a single
ring and traffic that traverses more than one ring. Note that
configuration and the operation of the recovery mechanisms in a ring
must scale well with the number of transport paths, the number of
nodes, and the number of ring interconnects.
The requirements for ring protection are fully compatible with the
generic requirements for recovery.
The architecture and the mechanisms for ring protection are specified
in separate documents. These mechanisms need to be evaluated against
the requirements specified in [RFC5654]. The principles for the
development of the mechanisms should be:
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1. Reuse existing procedures and mechanisms for recovery in ring
topologies as along as their performance is as good as new
potential mechanisms.
2. Ensure complete interoperability with the mechanisms defined for
arbitrary topologies to allow end-to-end protection.
4.7. Recovery in Layered Networks
In multi-layer or multi-region networking [RFC5212], recovery may be
performed at multiple layers or across cascaded recovery domains.
The MPLS-TP recovery mechanism must ensure that the timing of
recovery is coordinated in order to avoid races, and to allow either
the recovery mechanism of the server layer to fix the problem before
recovery takes place at the MPLS-TP layer, or to allow an upstream
recovery domain to perform recovery before a downstream domain. In
inter-connected rings, for example, it may be preferable to allow the
upstream ring to perform recovery before the downstream ring, in
order to ensure that recovery takes place in the ring in which the
defect or failure occurred.
A hold-off timer is required to coordinate the timing of recovery at
multiple layers or across cascaded recovery domains. Setting this
configurable timer involves a trade-off between rapid recovery and
the creation of a race condition where multiple layers respond to the
same fault, potentially allocating resources in an inefficient
manner. Thus, the detection of a defect or failure condition in the
MPLS-TP layer should not immediately trigger the recovery process if
the hold-off timer is configured to a value other than zero.
Instead, the hold-off timer should be started when the defect or
failure is detected and, on expiry, the recovery element should be
checked to determine whether the defect or failure condition still
exists. If it does exist, the defect triggers the recovery
operation.
The hold-off timer should be configurable.
In other configurations, where the lower layer does not have a
restoration capability, or where it is not expected to provide
protection, the lower layer needs to trigger the higher layer to
immediately perform recovery. Although the hold-off timer can be
configured to zero to force this, it may be that with layer-
independence, the higher layer does not know whether the lower
layer will perform restoration. In this case, the higher layer will
configure a non-zero hold-off timer and rely on a specific
notification from the lower layer if the lower layer cannot perform
restoration.
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Reference should be made to [RFC3386] that discusses the interaction
between layers in survivable networks.
4.7.1. Inherited Link-Level Protection
Where a link in the MPLS-TP network is formed from connectivity
(i.e., a packet or non-packet LSP) in a lower layer network, that
connectivity may itself be protected. For example, the LSP in the
lower layer network may be provisioned with 1+1 protection. In this
case the link in the MPLS-TP network has an inherited level of
protection.
An LSP in the MPLS-TP network may be provisioned with protection in
the MPLS-TP network as already described, or it may be provisioned to
utilize only links that themselves have inherited protection.
By classifying the links in the MPLS-TP network according to the
level of protection that they inherit from the server network, it is
possible to compute an end-to-end path in the MPLS-TP network that
uses only links with a specific or better level of inherited
protection. This means that the end-to-end MPLS-TP LSP can be
protected at the level necessary to conform with the SLA without the
need to provide any additional protection in the MPLS-TP layer. This
saves complexity and network resources, and reduces issues of
protection switching coordination.
Where the requisite level of inherited protection is not available
on all segments along the path in the MPLS-TP network, segment
protection may be used to achieve the desired protection level.
It should be noted, however, that inherited protection only applies
to links. Nodes cannot be protected in this way. An operator will
need to perform an analysis of the relative likelihood and
consequences of node failure if this approach is taken without
providing any protection in the MPLS-TP LSP or PW layer to handle
node failure.
4.7.2. Shared Risk Groups
When an MPLS-TP protection scheme is established, it is important
that the working and protection paths do not share resources in the
network. If this is not achieved, a single defect or failure may
affect both the working and the protection path with the result that
the traffic cannot be delivered - it was, in fact, not protected.
Note that this restriction does not apply for restoration as this
takes place after the fault has arisen meaning that the point of
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defect or failure can be avoided if an available path exists.
When planning a recovery scheme it is possible to select paths that
use diverse links and nodes within the MPLS-TP network using a
topology map of the MPLS-TP layer. However, this does not guarantee
that the paths are truly diverse. For example, two separate links in
an MPLS-TP network may be provided by two lambdas in the same optical
fiber, or by two fibers that cross the same bridge. And two
completely separate MPLS-TP nodes might be situated in the same
building with a shared power supply.
Thus, in order to achieve proper recovery planning, the MPLS-TP
network must have an understanding of the groups of lower layer
resources that share a common risk of defect or failure. From this,
MPLS-TP shared risk groups can be constructed that show which MPLS-TP
resources share a common risk of defect or failure. The working and
protection paths can be planned to be not only node and link diverse,
but to not use any resources from the same shared risk groups.
4.7.3. Fault Correlation
In a layered network a low-layer fault may be detected and reported
by multiple layers and may sometimes give rise to multiple fault
reports from the same layer. For example, a failure of a data link
may be reported by the line cards in an MPLS-TP node, but it could
also be detected and reported by the MPLS-TP OAM.
Section 4.6 explains how it is important to coordinate the
survivability actions configured and operated in a multi-layer
network to avoid over-equipping the survivability resources in the
network, and to ensure that recovery actions are taken only in one
layer at a time.
Fault correlation is about understanding what single event has led to
a set of fault reports so that the recovery actions can be
coordinated, and so that the fault logging system does not become
overloaded. Fault correlation depends on an understanding of
resource usage at lower layers, shared risk groups, and a wider view
of how the layers are inter-related.
Fault correlation is most easily performed at the point of fault
detection. For example, an MPLS-TP node that receives a fault
notification from the lower layer and detects a fault on an LSP in
the MPLS-TP layer can easily correlate these two events.
Furthermore, the same node detecting multiple faults on LSPs using
the same faulted data link, can easily correlate these. Such a node
may use the correlation to perform group-based recovery actions, and
can reduce the number of alarm events that it raises to its
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management station.
Fault correlation may also be performed at a management station that
receives fault reports from different layers and different nodes in
the network. This enables the management station to coordinate
management-originated recovery actions, and to present a consolidated
fault information to the user and any automated management systems.
There is also a desire to correlate fault information detected and
reported through OAM. This function would enable a fault detected at
a lower layer and reported at a transit node of an MPLS-TP LSP to be
correlated with an MPLS-TP layer fault detected at a Maintenance End
Point (MEP) (for example the egress of the MPLS-TP LSP. Such
correlation allows the coordination of recovery actions taken at the
MEP, but it requires that the lower layer fault information is
propagated to the MEP which is most easily achieved by using a
control plane, management plane, or OAM message.
5. Applicability and Scope of Survivability in MPLS-TP
The MPLS-TP network can be viewed as two layers (the MPLS LSP
layer and the PW layer). The MPLS-TP network operates over data link
connections and data link networks such that the MPLS-TP links are
provided by individual data links or by connections in a lower layer
network. The MPLS LSP layer is a mandatory part of the MPLS-TP
network, and the PW layer is an optional addition to support specific
services.
MPLS-TP survivability provides recovery from defect or failure of the
links and nodes in the MPLS-TP network. The link defects and
failures are typically caused by defects or failures in the
underlying data link connections and networks, but this section is
only concerned with recovery actions taken in the MPLS-TP network,
which must necessarily be to recover from the manifestation of any
problem as a defect or failure in the MPLS-TP network.
This section lists which recovery elements (see Section 1) are
supported in each of the two layers to recover from defects or
failures of nodes or links in the MPLS-TP network.
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+--------------+---------------------+------------------------------+
| Recovery | MPLS LSP Layer | PW Layer |
| Element | | |
+--------------+---------------------+------------------------------+
| Link | MPLS LSP recovery | The PW layer is not aware of |
| Recovery | can be used to | the underlying network. |
| | survive the failure | This function is not |
| | of an MPLS-TP link. | supported. |
+--------------+---------------------+------------------------------+
| Segment/Span | An individual LSP | For a SS-PW, segment |
| Recovery | segment can be | recovery is the same as |
| | recovered to | end-to-end recovery. |
| | survive the failure | Segment recovery for a MS-PW |
| | of an MPLS-TP link. | is for future study, and |
| | | this function is now |
| | | provided using end-to-end |
| | | recovery. |
+--------------+---------------------+------------------------------+
| Concatenated | A concatenated LSP | Concatenated segment |
| Segment | segment can be | recovery (in a MS-PW) is for |
| Recovery | recovered to | future study, and this |
| | survive the failure | function is now provided |
| | of an MPLS-TP link | using end-to-end recovery. |
| | or node. | |
+--------------+---------------------+------------------------------+
| End-to-end | An end-to-end LSP | End-to-end PW recovery can |
| Recovery | can be recovered to | be applied to survive any |
| | survive any node or | node (including S-PE) or |
| | link failure, | link failure except for the |
| | except for the | failure of the ingress |
| | failure of the | egress T-PE. |
| | ingress or egress | |
| | node. | |
+--------------+---------------------+------------------------------+
| Service | The MPLS LSP layer | PW layer service recovery |
| Recovery | is service | requires surviving faults in |
| | agnostic. This | T-PEs or on ACs. This is |
| | function is not | currently out of scope for |
| | supported. | MPLS-TP. |
+--------------+---------------------+------------------------------+
Table 1
Section 6 provides a description of mechanisms for survivability of
MPLS-TP LSPs. Section 7 provides a brief overview of mechanisms for
survivability of MPLS-TP PWs.
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6. Mechanisms for Providing Survivability for MPLS-TP LSPs
This section describes the existing mechanisms available to provide
protection of LSPs within MPLS-TP networks, and highlights areas
where new work is required. It is expected that, as new protocol
extensions and techniques are developed, this section will be updated
to convert the statements of required work into references to those
protocol extensions and techniques.
6.1. Management Plane
As described above, a fundamental requirement of MPLS-TP is that
recovery mechanisms should be capable of functioning in the absence
of a control plane. Recovery may be triggered by MPLS-TP OAM fault
management functions or by external requests (e.g., an operator
request for manual control of protection switching). Recovery LSPs
(and in particular Restoration LSPs) may be provisioned through the
management plane.
The management plane may be used to configure the recovery domain by
setting the reference endpoints points (which controls the recovery
actions), the working and the recovery entities, and the recovery
type (e.g., 1:1 bidirectional linear protection, ring protection,
etc.).
Additional parameters associated with the recovery process (such as a
WTR and hold-off timers, revertive/non-revertive operation, etc.) may
also be configured.
In addition, the management plane may initiate manual control of the
recovery function. A priority should be set between fault conditions
and operator's requests.
Since provisioning the recovery domain involves the selection of a
number of options, mismatches may occur at the different reference
points. The MPLS-TP OAM PSC (protection State Coordination) which is
specified in [MPLS-TP-Linear-Protection] may be used as an in-band
(i.e., data plane-based) control protocol to coordinate the
protection states between the endpoints of the recovery domain and to
check consistency of configured parameters (such as timers,
revertive/non-revertive behavior, etc.) with any discovered
inconsistencies being reported to the operator.
It should also be possible for the management plane to track the
recovery status by receiving reports or by issuing polls.
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6.1.1. Configuration of Protection Operation
In order to implement the protection switching mechanisms, the
following entities and information should be configured and
provisioned:
o The endpoints of a recovery domain. As described above, these
endpoints bound the element of recovery for which recovery is
applied.
o The protection group which, depending on the required protection
scheme, consists of a recovery entity and one or more working
entities. In 1:1 or 1+1 P2P protection, in order to guarantee
protection, the paths of the working entity and the recovery
entities must be completely physically diverse (i.e. not share any
resources or physical locations).
o As defined in Section 4.6.2, in order to implement data-plane
based LSP segment recovery, there is a need to support the MPLS-TP
architectural element PST (Path Segment Tunnel), since related
control messages (e.g., for OAM, Protection Path Coordination,
etc.) can be initiated and terminated at the edges of a path where
push and pop operations are enabled. PST is an end-to-end LSP
which corresponds in this context to the recovery entities
(working and protection) and makes use of the MPLS construct of
hierarchical nested LSP which is defined in [RFC3031]. OAM and
PSC messages can be initiated at the edge of the PST and sent to
the peer edge of the PST, over G-ACH. There is a need to
configure the related PSTs and map between the LSP segments being
protected and the PST. The mapping can be 1:1 or 1:N to allow
scalable protection of a set of LSPs' segments traversing the
portion of the network in which a Protection Domain is defined.
Note that each of these LSPs can be initiated or terminated at
different endpoints in the network, but they all traverse the
Protection Domain and share similar constraints (such as
requirements for QoS, terms of protection ,etc.).
o The protection type that should be defined (e.g., unidirectional
1:1, bidirectional 1+1, etc.).
o Revertive/non-revertive behavior should be configured.
o timers (such as WTR, hold-off timer, etc.) should be set.
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6.1.2. External Manual Commands
The following external, manual commands may be provide for manual
control of the protection switching operation. These commands apply
to a protection group and they are listed in descending order of
priority:
o Blocked protection action - a manual command to prevent data
traffic from switching to the recovery entity. This command
actually disables the protection group.
o Force protection action - a manual command that forces a switch of
normal data traffic to the recovery entity.
o Manual protection action - a manual command that forces a switch
of data traffic to the recovery entity when there is no defect or
failure in the working or the recovery entity.
o Clear switching command - the operator may request to clear a
previous administrative command to switch (manual or force
switch).
6.2. Fault Detection
Fault detection is a fundamental part of recovery and survivability.
In all schemes except for some forms of 1+1 protection, the necessary
actions for recovery of traffic delivery rely on discovering that
there is some kind of fault. In 1+1 protection, the selector (at the
receiving end) may simply be configured to choose the better signal,
thus it does not detect a fault or degradation per se, but simply
identifies which path is better delivering data.
Faults may be detected in a number of ways depending on the traffic
pattern and the underlying hardware. End-to-end faults may be
reported by the application or by knowledge of the application's data
pattern, but this is an unusual approach. There are two more common
mechanisms for detecting faults in the MPLS-TP layer:
o faults reported by the lower layers
o faults detected by protocols within the MPLS-TP layer.
In an IP/MPLS network, the second of these may utilize control plane
protocols (such as the routing protocols) to detect a defect or
failure of adjacency between neighboring nodes. In an MPLS-TP
network, there is no certainty that a control plane will be present.
Even if a control plane is present, it will be a GMPLS control plane
[RFC3945] that makes a logical separation between control channels
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and data channels with the result that no conclusion about the health
of a data channel can be drawn from the defect or failure of an
associated control channel. MPLS-TP layer faults are, therefore, only
detected through the use of OAM protocols as described in Section
6.4.1.
Faults may, however, be reported by a lower layer. These generally
show up as interface failures or data link failures (sometimes known
as connectivity failures) within the MPLS-TP network. For example,
an underlying optical link may detect loss of light and report a
defect or failure of the MPLS-TP link that uses it. Alternatively,
an interface card failure may be reported to the MPLS-TP layer.
Faults reported by lower layers are only visible at specific nodes
within the MPLS-TP network (i.e., at the adjacent end-points of the
MPLS-TP link). This would only allow recovery to be performed
locally so, in order that recovery can be performed by nodes that are
not immediately local to the fault, the fault must be reported
(Sections 6.4.3 and 6.5.4).
6.3. Fault Isolation
If an MPLS-TP node detects that there is a fault in an LSP (that is,
not a network fault reported from a lower layer, but a fault detected
by examining the LSP) it can immediately perform a recovery action.
However, unless the location of the fault is known, the only
practical options are:
o perform end-to-end recovery
o perform some other recovery as a speculative act.
Since speculative acts are not guaranteed to achieve the desired
results and could be costly, and since end-to-end recovery is a
costly option, it is important to be able to isolate the fault.
Fault isolation may be achieved by dividing the network into
protection domains. End-to-end protection is thereby operated on
LSP segments depending on the domain in which the fault is
discovered. This requires that the LSP can be monitored at the
domain edges.
Alternatively, a proactive mechanism of fault isolation through OAM
(Section 6.4.2) or through the control plane (Section 6.5.3) is
required.
Fault isolation is particularly important for restoration because a
new path must be selected that avoids the fault. It may not be
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practical or desirable to select such a path that avoids the whole of
the failed working path and so it is necessary to narrow down (to
isolate) where the fault.
6.4. OAM Signaling
MPLS-TP provides a comprehensive set of OAM tools for fault
management and performance monitoring at different nested levels
(end-to-end, a portion of a path (LSP or PW) and at the link level).
These tools support proactive and on-demand fault management (for
fault detection and fault localization) and for performance
monitoring (to measure the quality of the signals and detect
degradation).
To support fast recovery, it is useful to use some of the proactive
tools to detect fault conditions (e.g., link/node failure or
degradation) and trigger the recovery action.
The MPLS-TP OAM messages run in-band with the traffic and support
unidirectional and bidirectional P2P paths as well as P2MP paths.
As described in [MPLS-TP-OAM-Framework], MPLS-TP OAM operates in the
context of a Maintenance Entity which bounds the OAM responsibilities
and represents the portion of a path between two points which is
being monitored and maintained, and in which OAM messages are
exchanged. [MPLS-TP-OAM-Framework] refers also to a Maintenance
Entity Group (MEG), which is a collection of one or more MEs that
belongs to the same transport path (e.g., P2MP transport path) and
that are maintained and monitored as a group.
An ME includes two MEPs (Maintenance Group End Points) which reside
at the boundaries of an ME, and a set of zero or more MIPS
(Maintenance Group Intermediate Points) which reside within the
Maintenance Entity along the path. A MEP is capable of initiating
and terminating OAM messages, and as such can only located at the
edges of a path where push and pop operations are supported. In
order to be define an ME over a portion of path there is a need to
support the MPLS-TP architectural element PST (Path Segment Tunnel).
PST is an end-to-end LSP which corresponds in this context to the ME
and makes use of the MPLS construct of hierarchical nested LSP which
is defined in [RFC3031]. OAM messages can be initiated at the edge
of the PST and sent to the peer edge of the PST, over G-ACH.
There is a need to configure the related PSTs and map between the LSP
segment(s) being monitored and the PST. The mapping can be 1:1 or
1:N to allow scalable operation. Note that each of these LSPs can be
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initiated or terminated at different endpoints in the network and
share similar constraints (such as requirements for QoS, terms of
protection ,etc.).
In the context of recovery where MPLS-TP OAM is supported, an OAM
Maintenance Entity Group is defined for each of the working and
protection entities.
A MIP is capable of reacting to OAM messages.
6.4.1. Fault Detection
MPLS-TP OAM tools may be used proactively to detect the following
fault conditions between MEPs:
o Loss of continuity and misconnectivity - the proactive Continuity
Check (CC) function is used to detect loss of continuity between
two MEPs in an MEG. The proactive misconnectivity (CV) allows a
sink MEP can detect misconnectivity defect (e.g., mismerge or
misconnection) with its peer source MEP when the received packet
carries an incorrect ME identifier. For protection switching, it
is common to run CCV (Continuity and Connectivity Verification)
message every 3.33ms. In the absence of three consecutive CCV
messages, Loss of Continuity is declared and locally notified to
the edge of the recovery domain to trigger a recovery action. In
some cases, when a slower recovery time is acceptable, it is also
possible to lengthen the transmission rate.
o Signal degradation - notification from the OAM performance
monitoring indicating degradation in the working entity may also
be used as a trigger for protection switching. In the case of
degradation, switching to the recovery entity is needed only if
the recovery entity can guarantee better conditions. Degradation
can be measured activating proactively the MPLS-TP OAM packet loss
measurement or delay measurement.
o A MEP can get an indication from its sink MEP of a Remote Defect
Indication and locally notify the endpoint of the recovery domain
of fault condition to trigger the recovery action.
6.4.2. Testing for Faults
The management plane may be used to initiate testing of links, LSP
segments, or whole LSPs.
MPLS-TP provides OAM tools which may be initiated on-demand by manual
intervention for a limited time to carry out troubleshooting of
links, LSP segments or whole LSPs (e.g. diagnostics, connectivity
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verification, packet loss measurements, etc.). On-demand monitoring
covers a combination of "in service" and "out-of service" monitoring
functions. "out-of-service" testing is supported by the OAM on-demand
lock operation. The lock operation temporarily disables the transport
entity (LSP, LSP segment or link) for transmission of any traffic
except for test traffic, and OAM (dedicated to the locked entity).
[MPLS-TP-OAM-Framework] describes the operations of the OAM functions
that may be initiated on-demand and provides some considerations.
MPLS-TP supports also the in/out-of-service test operation of the
recovery (protection and restoration) mechanism, the integrity of the
protection/recovery transport paths and the coordination protocol
between the endpoints of the recovery domain. The testing operation
emulates a protection switching request without performing the
actually switching action.
6.4.3. Fault Isolation
MPLS-TP provides OAM tools to isolate a fault and determining exactly
where a fault has occurred. It is often the case the fault detection
only takes place at key points in the network (such as at LSP end
points, or MEPs). This means that the fault may be located anywhere
within a segment of the LSP concerned. Finer granularity of
information is needed to implement optimal recovery actions or to
diagnose the fault. On-demand tools like trace-route, loopback and
on-demand CCV can be used to isolate a fault.
The information may be locally notified to the endpoint of the
recovery domain to allow implementation of optimal recovery action.
This may be useful in case of re-calculation of a recovery path.
The information should also be reported to the network management for
diagnostics purposes.
6.4.4. Fault Reporting
The endpoints of a recovery domain should be able fault conditions
detected in the recovery domain to the management plane.
In addition, a node within a recovery domain detecting a fault
condition should also be able to report the fault condition to the
network management. The network management should be capable to
correlate the fault reports and identify the source of the fault.
MPLS-TP OAM tools support a function where an intermediate node along
a path can send an alarm report message to the MEP indicating a
fault condition in the server layer connecting it to its adjacent
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node. The purpose of this capability is to allow a MEP to suppress
alarms that may be generated as a result of the failure condition in
the server layer.
6.4.5. Coordination of Recovery Actions
As described above, in some cases (such as in bidirectional
protection switching, etc.) there is a need to coordinate the
protection states between the edges of the recovery domain.
[MPLS-TP-Linear-Protection] defines procedures and protocol messages
and elements to support the PSC (Protection State Coordination)
function.
The protocol is also used to signal administrative requests (e.g.,
manual switch, etc.) when these are provisioned only at on edge of
the recovery domain.
The protocol also allow to detect mismatches between the
configuration provisioned at the ends of the Protection Domain (such
as timers, revertive/non-revertive behavior), and such mismatches
would be reported to the management plane.
In the event that suitable coordination does not occur (because of
failures of the PSC function, or because it is not run) protection
switching will fail. That is, the operation of the PSC function is a
fundamental part of protection switching.
6.5. Control Plane
The GMPLS control plane has been proposed as the control plane for
MPLS-TP [RFC5317]. Since GMPLS was designed for use in transport
networks, and has been implemented and deployed in many networks, it
is not surprising that it contains many features to support a high
level of survivability function.
The signaling elements of the GMPLS control plane utilize extensions
to the Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) as documented in a series
of documents commencing with [RFC3471] and [RFC3473], but based on
[RFC3209] and [RFC2205]. The architecture for GMPLS is provided in
[RFC3945], and [RFC4426] gives a functional description of the
protocol extensions needed to support GMPLS-based recovery (i.e.,
protection and restoration).
A further control plane protocol called the Link Management Protocol
(LMP) [RFC4204] is part of the GMPLS protocol family and can be used
to coordinate fault isolation and reporting.
Clearly, the control plane techniques described here only apply where
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an MPLS-TP control plane is deployed and operated. All mandatory
MPLS-TP survivability features must be enabled even in the absence of
the control plane, but where the control plane is present it may be
used to provide alternative mechanisms that may be desirable by
virtue of their ease of automation or richer feature-set.
6.5.1. Fault Detection
The control plane is not able to detect data plane faults. However,
it does provide mechanisms to detect control plane faults and these
can be used to deduce data plane faults where it is known that
the control and data planes are fate sharing. Although [RFC5654]
specifies that MPLS-TP must support an out-of-band control channel,
it does not insist that this is used exclusively. That means that
there may be deployments where an in-band (or at least in-fiber)
control channel is used. In this case, the failure of the control
channel can be used to infer a failure of the data channel or at
least to trigger an investigation of the health of the data channel.
Both RSVP and LMP provide a control channel "keep-alive" mechanism
(called the Hello message in both cases). Failure to receive a
message in the configured/negotiated time period indicates a control
plane failure. GMPLS routing protocols ([RFC4203] and [RFC5307] also
include keepalive mechanisms designed to detect routing adjacency
failures and, although these keep-alive mechanisms tend to operate at
a relatively low frequency (order of seconds) it is still possible
that the first indication of a control plane fault will be through
the routing protocol.
Note, however, care must be taken that the failure is not caused by a
problem with the control plane software or processor component at the
far end of a link.
Because of the various issues involved, it is not recommended that
the control plane be used as the primary mechanism for fault
detection in an MPLS-TP network.
6.5.2. Testing for Faults
The control plane may be used to initiate and coordinate testing of
links, LSP segments, or whole LSPs. This is important in some
technologies where it is necessary to halt data transmission while
testing, but may also be useful where testing needs to be
specifically enabled or configured.
LMP provides a control plane mechanism to test the continuity and
connectivity (and naming) of individual links. A single management
operation is required to initiate the test at one end of the link,
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and LMP handles the coordination with the other end of the link. The
test mechanism for an MPLS packet link relies on the LMP Test message
inserted into the data stream at one end of the link and extracted at
the other end of the link. This mechanism need not be disruptive to
data flowing on the link.
Note that a link in LMP may in fact be an LSP tunnel used to form a
link in the MPLS-TP network.
GMPLS signaling (RSVP) offers two mechanisms that may also assist
with testing for faults. First, [RFC3473] defines the Admin_Status
object that allows an LSP to be set into "testing mode". The
interpretation of this mode is implementation specific and could be
documented more precisely for MPLS-TP. The mode sets the whole LSP
into a state where it can be tested; this need not be disruptive to
data traffic.
The second mechanism provided by GMPLS to support testing is provided
in [GMPLS-OAM]. This protocol extension supports the configuration
(including enabling and disabling) of OAM mechanisms for a specific
LSP.
6.5.3. Fault Isolation
Fault isolation is the process of determining exactly where a fault
has occurred. It is often the case the fault detection only takes
place at key points in the network (such as at LSP end points, or
MEPs). This means that the fault may be located anywhere within a
segment of the LSP concerned.
If segment or end-to-end protection are in use, this level of
information is often sufficient to repair the LSP. However, if a
finer granularity of information is needed (either to implement
optimal recovery actions or to diagnose the fault), it is necessary
to isolate the fault more closely.
LMP provides a cascaded test-and-propagate mechanism specifically
designed for this purpose.
6.5.4. Fault Status Reporting
GMPLS signaling uses the Notify message to report fault status
[RFC3473]. The Notify message can apply to a single LSP or can carry
fault information for a set of LSPs to improve the scalability of
fault notification.
Since the Notify message is targeted at a specific node it can be
delivered rapidly without requiring hop-by-hop processing. It can be
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targeted at LSP end-points, or at segment end-points (such as MEPs).
The target points for Notify messages can be manually configured
within the network or may be signaled as the LSP is set up. This
allows the process to be made consistent with segment protection and
the concept of Maintenance Entities.
GMPLS signaling also provides a slower, hop-by-hop mechanism for
reporting individual LSP faults on a hop-by-hop basis using the
PathErr and ResvErr messages.
[RFC4783] provides a mechanism to coordinate alarms and other event
or fault information through GMPLS signaling. This mechanism is
useful to understand the status of the resources used by an LSP and
to help understand why an LSP is not functioning, but it is not
intended to replace other fault reporting mechanisms.
GMPLS routing protocols [RFC4203] and [RFC5307] are used to advertise
link availability and capabilities within a GMPLS-enabled network.
Thus, the routing protocols can also provide indirect information
about network faults. That is, the protocol may stop advertising or
withdraw the advertisement for a failed link, or may advertise that
the link is about to be shut down gracefully [GR-SHUT]. This
mechanisms is, however, not normally considered to be fast enough to
be used as a trigger for protection switching.
6.5.5. Coordination of Recovery Actions
Fault coordination is an important feature for certain protection
mechanisms (such as bidirectional 1:1 protection). The use of the
GMPLS Notify message for this purpose is described in [RFC4426],
however, specific message field values remain to be defined for this
operation.
A further piece of work in needed to allow control and configuration
of reversion behavior for end-to-end and segment protection, and the
coordination of timers' values.
6.5.6. Establishment of Protection and Restoration LSPs
The management plane may be used to set up protection and recovery
LSPs, but the control plane may be used if it is present.
Several protocol extensions exist to make this process more simple:
o [RFC4872] provides features in support of end-to-end protection
switching.
o [RFC4873] describes how to establish a single, segment protected
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LSP. Note that end-to-end protection is a sub case of segment
protection and [RFC4872] can be used also to provide end-to-end
protection.
o [RFC4874] allows one LSP to be signaled with a request that its
path excludes specified resources (links, nodes, SRLGs). This
allows a disjoint protection path to be requested, or a recovery
path to be set up avoiding failed resources.
o Lastly, it should be noted that [RFC5298] provides an overview of
the GMPLS techniques available to achieve protection in multi-
domain environments.
7. Pseudowire Protection Considerations
Pseudowire is one of the clients of the MPLS LSP layer of MPLS-TP.
It is viewed as a layer of the MPLS-TP network. Pseudowires provide
end-to-end connectivity over the MPLS-TP network and may be comprised
of a single pseudowire segment, or multiple segments "stitched"
together to provide end-to-end connectivity.
The pseudowire may, itself, require a level of protection in order to
meet the guarantees or service level of its SLA. This protection
could be provided by the MPLS-TP LSPs that support the pseudowire, or
could be a feature of the pseudowire layer itself.
As indicated above, the functional architecture described in this
document applies to both LSPs and pseudowires. However the recovery
mechanisms for pseudowires are for further study and will be defined
in a separate document in the PWE3 working group.
7.1. Utilizing Underlying MPLS-TP Recovery
MPLS-TP PWs are carried across the network inside MPLS-TP LSPs.
Therefore, an obvious way to protect a PW is to protect the LSP that
carries it. Such protection can take any of the forms described in
this document. The choice of recovery scheme will depend on the
speed of recovery necessary and the traffic loss that is acceptable
for the SLA that the PW is providing.
If the PW is a multi-segment PW, then LSP recovery can only protect
the PW on individual segments. That is, an individual LSP recovery
action cannot protect against a failure of a PW switching point (an
S-PE), nor can it protect more than one segment at a time since the
LSP tunnel is terminated at each S-PE. In this respect, the LSP
protection of a PW is very much like the link-level protection
offered to the MPLS-TP LSP layer by an underlying network layer (see
Section 4.6).
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7.2. Recovery in the Pseudowire Layer
Recovery in the PW layer can be provided simply by running separate
PWs end-to-end. Other recovery mechanisms in the PW layer, such as
segment or concatenated segment recovery, or service-level recovery
involving survivability of T-PE or AC faults is for future study in a
separate document.
As with any recovery mechanism, it is important to coordinate between
layers. This coordination is necessary to ensure that recovery
mechanisms are only actioned in one layer at a time (that is, the
recovery of an underlying LSP needs to be coordinated with the
recovery of the PW itself), and to make sure that the working and
protection PWs do not both use the same MPLS resources within the
network (for example, by running over the same LSP tunnel - compare
with Section 4.6.2).
8. Manageability Considerations
Manageability of MPLS-TP networks and function is discussed in
[MPLS-TP-NM-Framework]. OAM features are discussed in
[MPLS-TP-OAM-Framework].
Survivability has some key interactions with management as described
in this document. In particular:
o Recovery domains may be configured such that there is not a one-
to-one correspondence between the MPLS-TP network and the recovery
domains.
o Survivability policies may be configured per network, per recovery
domain, or per LSP.
o Configuration of OAM may involve the selection of MEPs, enabling
OAM on network segments, spans, and links, and the operation of
OAM on LSPs, concatenated LSP segments, and LSP segments.
o Manual commands may be used to control recovery functions
including forcing recovery and locking recovery actions.
See also the consideration of security for management and OAM in
Section 9 of this document
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9. Security Considerations
This framework does not introduce any new security considerations,
and general issues relevant to MPLS security can be found in
[MPLS-SEC].
However, several points about MPLS-TP survivability should be noted
here.
o If an attacker is able to force a protection switch-over, this may
result in a small perturbation to user traffic, and could result
in extra traffic being preempted or displaced from the protection
resources. In the case of 1:n protection or shared mesh
protection, it may result in other traffic becoming unprotected.
Therefore, it is important that OAM protocols used to detect or
notify faults use adequate security to prevent them being used
(through the insertion of bogus messages, or through the capture
of legitimate messages) to falsely trigger a recovery event.
o If manual commands are modified, captured, or simulated (including
replay), it would be possible for an attacker to perform forced
recovery actions or to impose lock-out. These actions could
impact the ability to provide recovery function, and could also
affect the normal operation of the network for other traffic.
Therefore, management protocols used to perform manual commands
must allow the operator to use appropriate security mechanisms
including verification that the user issuing commands has suitable
authority.
o If the control plane is used to configure or operate recovery
mechanisms, the control plane protocols must also be capable of
providing adequate security.
10. IANA Considerations
This informational document makes no requests for IANA action.
11. Acknowledgments
Thanks for useful comments and discussions to Italo Busi, David
McWalter, Lou Berger, Yaacov Weingarten, Stewart Bryant, Dan Frost,
Lievren Levrau, and Xuehui Dai.
The Editors would like to thank the participants in ITU-T Study Group
15 for their detailed review.
Some figures and text on shared mesh protection were borrowed from
[MPLS-TP-MESH] with thanks to Tae-sik Cheung and Jeong-dong Ryoo.
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12. References
12.1. Normative References
[RFC2205] Bradner, S., Ed., Zhang, L., Berson, S., Herzog, S., and
J. Jamin, "Resource ReserVation Protocol - Version 1
Functional Specification", RFC 2205, September 1997.
[RFC3209] Awduche, D., Berger, L., Gan, D., Li, T., Srinivasan, V.,
and G. Swallow, "RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for LSP
Tunnels", RFC 3209, December 2001.
[RFC3471] Berger, L., Ed., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label
Switching (GMPLS) Signaling Functional Description",
RFC 3471, January 2003.
[RFC3473] Berger, L., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching
(GMPLS) Signaling Resource ReserVation Protocol-Traffic
Engineering (RSVP-TE) Extensions", RFC 3473, January 2003.
[RFC3945] Mannie, E., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching
(GMPLS) Architecture", RFC 3945, October 2004.
[RFC4203] Kompella, K. and Y. Rekhter, "IS-IS Extensions in Support
of Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS)",
RFC 4203, October 2005.
[RFC4204] Lang, J., Ed., "The Link Management Protocol (LMP)",
RFC 4204, September 2005.
[RFC4427] Mannie, E. and D. Papadimitriou, "Recovery (Protection and
Restoration) Terminology for Generalized Multi-Protocol
Label Switching (GMPLS)", RFC 4427, March 2006.
[RFC4428] Papadimitriou, D. and E. Mannie, "Analysis of Generalized
Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) - based Recovery
Mechanisms (including Protection and Restoration) Recovery
(Protection and Restoration) Terminology for Generalized
Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS)", RFC 4428,
March 2006.
[RFC4873] Berger, L., Bryskin, I., Papadimitriou, D., and A. Farrel,
"GMPLS Segment Recovery", RFC 4873, May 2007.
[RFC5307] Kompella, K. and Y. Rekhter, "IS-IS Extensions in Support
of Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS)",
RFC 5307, October 2008.
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[RFC5317] Bryant, S. and L. Andersson, "Joint Working Team (JWT)
Report on MPLS Architectural Considerations for a
Transport Profile", RFC 5317, February 2009.
[RFC5654] Niven-Jenkins, B., Ed., Brungard, D., Ed., Betts, M., Ed.,
Sprecher, N., and S. Ueno, "Requirements of an MPLS
Transport Profile", RFC 5654, September 2009.
[RFC5586] Bocci, M., Ed., Vigoureux, M., Ed., and S. Bryant, Ed.,
"MPLS Generic Associated Channel", RFC 5586, June 2009.
[G.808.1] ITU-T, "Generic Protection Switching - Linear trail and
subnetwork protection", Recommendation G.808.1,
December 2003.
[G.841] ITU-T, "Types and Characteristics of SDH Network
Protection Architectures", Recommendation G.841,
October 1998.
[MPLS-TP-FWK]
Vigoureux, M., Ed., Ward, D., Ed., and Betts, "A Framework
for MPLS in Transport Networks", MPLS-TP-FWK, Work in
Progress.
[MPLS-TP-NM-Framework]
Mansfield, S., Gray, E., and Lam, K., "MPLS-TP Network
Management Framework", draft-ietf-mpls-tp-nm-framework,
Work in Progress.
[MPLS-TP-OAM]
Buci, I., Ed. and B. Niven-Jenkins, Ed., "Requirements for
OAM in MPLS Transport Networks", draft-ietf-mpls-tp-oam-
requirements, Work in Progress.
[MPLS-TP-OAM-Framework]
Buci, I., Ed. and B. Niven-Jenkins, Ed., "A Framework for
MPLS in Transport Networks", draft-ietf-mpls-tp-oam-
framework, Work in Progress.
12.2. Informative References
[RFC3031] Rosen, E., Viswanathan, A., and R. Callon, "Multiprotocol
Label Switching Architecture", RFC 3031, January 2001.
[RFC3386] Lai, W. and D. McDysan, "Network Hierarchy and Multilayer
Survivability", RFC 3386, November 2002.
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[RFC3469] Sharma, V. and F. Hellstrand, "Framework for Multi-
Protocol Label Switching (MPLS)-based Recovery", RFC 3469,
February 2003.
[RFC4426] Lang, J., Ed., Rajagopalan, B., and D. Papadimitriou,
"Generalized Multiprotocol Label Switching (GMPLS)
Recovery Functional Specification", RFC 4426, March 2006.
[RFC4726] Farrel, A., Vasseur, J.-P., and Ayyangar, A., "A Framework
for Inter-Domain Multiprotocol Label Switching Traffic
Engineering", RFC 4726, November 2006.
[RFC4783] Berger, L., "GMPLS - Communication of Alarm Information",
RFC 4783, December 2006.
[RFC4872] Lang, J., Rekhter, Y., and D. Papadimitriou, "RSVP-TE
Extensions in Support of End-to-End Generalized Multi-
Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) Recovery", RFC 4872,
May 2007.
[RFC4874] Lee, CY., Farrel, A., and S. De Cnodder, "Exclude Routes -
Extension to Resource ReserVation Protocol- Traffic
Engineering (RSVP-TE)", RFC 4874, April 2007.
[RFC5212] Shiomoto, K., Papadimitriou, D., Le Roux, JL., Vigoureux,
M., and Brungard, D., " Requirements for GMPLS-Based
Multi-Region and Multi-Layer Networks (MRN/MLN)", RFC
5212, July 2008
[RFC5298] Takeda, T., Farrel, A., Ikejiri, Y., and JP. Vasseur,
"Analysis of Inter-Domain Label Switched Path (LSP)
Recovery", RFC 5298, August 2008.
[G.8081] ITU-T, "Terms and definitions for Automatically Switched
Optical Networks (ASON)", Recommendation G.8081, June 2004
and Recommendation G.8081 Amendment 1, June 2006.
[GMPLS-OAM]
Takacs, A., Fedyk, D., and H. Jia, "OAM Configuration
Framework and Requirements for GMPLS RSVP-TE",
draft-ietf-ccamp-oam-configuration-fwk, Work in Progress.
[GR-SHUT] Ali, Z., Vasseur, J.-P., Zamfir, A., and Newton, J.,
"Graceful Shutdown in MPLS and Generalized MPLS Traffic
Engineering Networks", draft-ietf-ccamp-mpls-graceful-
shutdown, Work in Progress.
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[MPLS-SEC] L. Fang (Ed.), " Security Framework for MPLS and GMPLS
Networks", draft-ietf-mpls-mpls-and-gmpls-security-
framework, Work in Progress.
[MPLS-TP-Linear-Protection]
Weingarten, Y., Bryant, S., Ed., Sprecher, N., Ed., Van
Helvoort, H., Ed., and A. Fulignoli, "MPLS-TP Linear
Protection", draft-ietf-mpls-tp-linear-protection, Work
in Progress.
[MPLS-TP-MESH]
Cheung , T., and Ryoo, J., "MPLS-TP Mesh Protection",
draft-cheung-mpls-tp-mesh-protection, Work in Progress.
[OAM-SOUP] Andersson, L., Betts, M., Van Helvoort, H., Bonica, R.,
and D. Romascanu, "MPLS-TP Linear Protection", draft-ietf-
opsawg-mpls-tp-oam-def, Work in Progress.
[ROSETTA] Van Helvoort, H., Ed., Andersson, L., and N. Sprecher, "A
Thesaurus for the Terminology used in Multiprotocol Label
Switching Transport Profile (MPLS-TP) drafts/RFCs and
ITU-T's Transport Network Recommendations", draft-ietf-
mpls-tp-rosetta-stone, Work in Progress.
Authors' Addresses
Nurit Sprecher
Nokia Siemens Networks
3 Hanagar St. Neve Ne'eman B
Hod Hasharon, 45241
Israel
Email: nurit.sprecher@nsn.com
Adrian Farrel
Old Dog Consulting
Email: adrian@olddog.co.uk
Sprecher & Farrel Expires September 08, 2010 [Page 57]
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