One document matched: draft-ietf-netmod-routing-cfg-15.xml
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<?rfc toc="yes"?><?rfc symrefs="yes"?><?rfc sortrefs="yes"?><rfc ipr="trust200902" category="std" docName="draft-ietf-netmod-routing-cfg-15" obsoletes="" updates="" submissionType="IETF" xml:lang="en">
<front>
<title abbrev="YANG Routing Management">A YANG Data Model for
Routing Management</title>
<author initials="L." surname="Lhotka" fullname="Ladislav Lhotka">
<organization>CZ.NIC</organization>
<address>
<email>lhotka@nic.cz</email>
</address>
</author>
<date day="25" month="May" year="2014"/>
<area>Operations and Management</area>
<workgroup>NETMOD</workgroup>
<abstract>
<t>This document contains a specification of three YANG modules.
Together they form the core routing data model which serves as a
framework for configuring and managing a routing subsystem. It is
expected that these modules will be augmented by additional YANG
modules defining data models for individual routing protocols and
other related functions. The core routing data model provides
common building blocks for such extensions - routing instances,
routes, routing information bases (RIB), routing protocols and
route filters.</t>
</abstract>
</front>
<middle>
<section anchor="sec.introduction" title="Introduction" toc="default">
<t>This document contains a specification of the following YANG
modules:
<list style="symbols">
<t>Module "ietf-routing" provides generic components of a
routing data model.</t>
<t>Module "ietf-ipv4-unicast-routing" augments the
"ietf-routing" module with additional data specific to IPv4
unicast.</t>
<t>Module "ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing" augments the
"ietf-routing" module with additional data specific to IPv6
unicast, including the router configuration variables required
by <xref target="RFC4861" pageno="false" format="default"/>.</t>
</list></t>
<t>These modules together define the so-called core routing data
model, which is proposed as a basis for the development of data
models for configuration and management of more sophisticated
routing systems. While these three modules can be directly used
for simple IP devices with static routing (see <xref target="app.minimum" pageno="false" format="default"/>), their main purpose is to provide
essential building blocks for more complicated setups involving
multiple routing protocols, multicast routing, additional address
families, and advanced functions such as route filtering or policy
routing. To this end, it is expected that the core routing data
model will be augmented by numerous modules developed by other
IETF working groups.</t>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.term-not" title="Terminology and Notation" toc="default">
<t>The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL
NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL"
in this document are to be interpreted as described in <xref target="RFC2119" pageno="false" format="default"/>.</t>
<t>The following terms are defined in <xref target="RFC6241" pageno="false" format="default"/>:
<list style="symbols">
<t>client</t>
<t>message</t>
<t>protocol operation</t>
<t>server</t>
</list></t>
<t>The following terms are defined in <xref target="RFC6020" pageno="false" format="default"/>:
<list style="symbols">
<t>augment</t>
<t>configuration data</t>
<t>data model</t>
<t>data node</t>
<t>feature</t>
<t>mandatory node</t>
<t>module</t>
<t>state data</t>
<t>RPC operation</t>
</list></t>
<section anchor="sec.new-terms" title="Glossary of New Terms" toc="default">
<t><list style="hanging">
<t hangText="active route:">a route that is actually used for
sending packets. If there are multiple candidate routes with a
matching destination prefix, then it is up to the routing
algorithm to select the active route.</t>
<t hangText="core routing data model:"> YANG data model
comprising "ietf-routing", "ietf-ipv4-unicast-routing" and
"ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing" modules.</t>
<t hangText="direct route:">a route to a directly connected
network.</t>
<t hangText="routing information base (RIB):">An object
containing a list of routes together with other
information. See <xref target="sec.rib" pageno="false" format="default"/> for details.</t>
<t hangText="system-controlled entry:">An entry of a list in
operational state data ("config false") that is created by the
system independently of what has been explicitly
configured. See <xref target="sec.system-user" pageno="false" format="default"/> for details.</t>
<t hangText="user-controlled entry:">An entry of a list in
operational state data ("config false") that is created and
deleted as a direct consequence of certain configuration
changes. See <xref target="sec.system-user" pageno="false" format="default"/> for details.</t>
</list></t>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.tree-symbols" title="Tree Diagrams" toc="default">
<t>A simplified graphical representation of the complete data
tree is presented in <xref target="app.data-tree" pageno="false" format="default"/>, and similar
diagrams of its various subtrees appear in the main text. The
meaning of the symbols in these diagrams is as follows:
<list style="symbols">
<t>Brackets "[" and "]" enclose list keys.</t>
<t>Curly braces "{" and "}" contain names of optional features
that make the corresponding node conditional.</t>
<t>Abbreviations before data node names: "rw" means
configuration (read-write), and "ro" state data
(read-only).</t>
<t>Symbols after data node names: "?" means an optional node and "*"
denotes a "list" or "leaf-list".</t>
<t>Parentheses enclose choice and case nodes, and case nodes
are also marked with a colon (":").</t>
<t>Ellipsis ("...") stands for contents of subtrees that are
not shown.</t>
</list></t>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.prefixes" title="Prefixes in Data Node Names" toc="default">
<t>In this document, names of data nodes, RPC methods and other
data model objects are often used without a prefix, as long as
it is clear from the context in which YANG module each name is
defined. Otherwise, names are prefixed using the standard prefix
associated with the corresponding YANG module, as shown in <xref target="tab.prefixes" pageno="false" format="default"/>.</t>
<texttable anchor="tab.prefixes" title="Prefixes and corresponding YANG modules" suppress-title="false" align="center" style="full">
<ttcol align="left">Prefix</ttcol>
<ttcol align="left">YANG module</ttcol>
<ttcol align="left">Reference</ttcol>
<c>if</c><c>ietf-interfaces</c><c><xref target="RFC7223" pageno="false" format="default"/></c>
<c>ip</c><c>ietf-ip</c><c><xref target="YANG-IP" pageno="false" format="default"/></c>
<c>rt</c><c>ietf-routing</c><c><xref target="sec.mod-rt" pageno="false" format="default"/></c>
<c>v4ur</c><c>ietf-ipv4-unicast-routing</c>
<c><xref target="sec.mod-v4ur" pageno="false" format="default"/></c>
<c>v6ur</c><c>ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing</c>
<c><xref target="sec.mod-v6ur" pageno="false" format="default"/></c>
<c>yang</c><c>ietf-yang-types</c><c><xref target="RFC6991" pageno="false" format="default"/></c>
<c>inet</c><c>ietf-inet-types</c><c><xref target="RFC6991" pageno="false" format="default"/></c>
</texttable>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.objectives" title="Objectives" toc="default">
<t>The initial design of the core routing data model was driven by
the following objectives:
<list style="symbols">
<t>The data model should be suitable for the common address
families, in particular IPv4 and IPv6, and for unicast and
multicast routing, as well as Multiprotocol Label Switching
(MPLS).</t>
<t>Simple routing setups, such as static routing, should be
configurable in a simple way, ideally without any need to develop
additional YANG modules.</t>
<t>On the other hand, the core routing framework must allow for
complicated setups involving multiple routing information bases
(RIB) and multiple routing protocols, as well as controlled
redistributions of routing information.</t>
<t>Device vendors will want to map the data models built on this
generic framework to their proprietary data models and
configuration interfaces. Therefore, the framework should be
flexible enough to facilitate such a mapping and accommodate
data models with different logic.</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.design" title="The Design of the Core Routing Data Model" toc="default">
<t>The core routing data model consists of three YANG modules. The
first module, "ietf-routing", defines the generic components of a
routing system. The other two modules, "ietf-ipv4-unicast-routing"
and "ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing", augment the "ietf-routing" module
with additional data nodes that are needed for IPv4 and IPv6
unicast routing, respectively. Figures <xref target="fig.confdata" format="counter" pageno="false"/> and <xref target="fig.statedata" format="counter" pageno="false"/> show abridged views of the configuration and
operational state data hierarchies. See <xref target="app.data-tree" pageno="false" format="default"/> for the complete data trees.</t>
<figure anchor="fig.confdata" title="Configuration data hierarchy." suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
+--rw routing
+--rw routing-instance* [name]
| +--rw name
| +--rw type?
| +--rw enabled?
| +--rw router-id?
| +--rw description?
| +--rw default-ribs
| | +--rw default-rib* [address-family]
| | +--rw address-family
| | +--rw rib-name
| +--rw interfaces
| | +--rw interface* [name]
| | +--rw name
| | +--rw v6ur:ipv6-router-advertisements
| | ...
| +--rw routing-protocols
| +--rw routing-protocol* [name]
| +--rw name
| +--rw description?
| +--rw enabled?
| +--rw type
| +--rw connected-ribs
| | ...
| +--rw static-routes
| ...
+--rw ribs
| +--rw rib* [name]
| +--rw name
| +--rw address-family
| +--rw description?
| +--rw recipient-ribs
| +--rw recipient-rib* [rib-name]
| ...
+--rw route-filters
+--rw route-filter* [name]
+--rw name
+--rw description?
+--rw type
</artwork>
</figure>
<figure anchor="fig.statedata" title="Operational state data hierarchy." suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
+--ro routing-state
+--ro routing-instance* [name]
| +--ro name
| +--ro id
| +--ro type?
| +--ro router-id?
| +--ro default-ribs
| | +--ro default-rib* [address-family]
| | +--ro address-family
| | +--ro rib-name
| +--ro interfaces
| | +--ro interface* [name]
| | +--ro name
| | +--ro v6ur:ipv6-router-advertisements
| | ...
| +--ro routing-protocols
| +--ro routing-protocol* [name]
| +--ro name
| +--ro type
| +--ro connected-ribs
| ...
+--ro ribs
| +--ro rib* [name]
| +--ro name
| +--ro id
| +--ro address-family
| +--ro routes
| | +--ro route* [id]
| | ...
| +--ro recipient-ribs
| +--ro recipient-rib* [rib-name]
| ...
+--ro route-filters
+--ro route-filter* [name]
+--ro name
+--ro type
</artwork>
</figure>
<t>As can be seen from Figures <xref target="fig.confdata" format="counter" pageno="false"/> and <xref target="fig.statedata" format="counter" pageno="false"/>, the core routing data model introduces several
generic components of a routing framework: routing instances, RIBs
containing lists of routes, routing protocols and route
filters. The following subsections describe these components in
more detail.</t>
<t>By combining the components in various ways, and possibly
augmenting them with appropriate contents defined in other
modules, various routing systems can be realized.</t>
<figure anchor="fig.exsetup" title="Example setup of a routing system" suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
+--------+
| direct | +---+ +--------------+ +---+ +--------------+
| routes |--->| F |--->| |<---| F |<---| |
+--------+ +---+ | default | +---+ | additional |
| RIB | | RIB |
+--------+ +---+ | | +---+ | |
| static |--->| F |--->| |--->| F |--->| |
| routes | +---+ +--------------+ +---+ +--------------+
+--------+ ^ | ^ |
| v | v
+---+ +---+ +---+ +---+
| F | | F | | F | | F |
+---+ +---+ +---+ +---+
^ | ^ |
| v | v
+----------+ +----------+
| routing | | routing |
| protocol | | protocol |
+----------+ +----------+
</artwork>
</figure>
<t>The example in <xref target="fig.exsetup" pageno="false" format="default"/> shows a typical
(though certainly not the only possible) organization of a more
complex routing subsystem for a single address family. Several of
its features are worth mentioning:
<list style="symbols">
<t>Along with the default RIB, which is always present, an
additional RIB is configured.</t>
<t>Each routing protocol instance, including the "static" and
"direct" pseudo-protocols, is connected to exactly one RIB with
which it can exchange routes (in both directions, except for the
"static" and "direct" pseudo-protocols).</t>
<t>RIBs may also be connected to each other and exchange routes
in either direction (or both).</t>
<t>Route exchanges along all connections may be controlled by
means of route filters, denoted by "F" in <xref target="fig.exsetup" pageno="false" format="default"/>.</t>
</list></t>
<section anchor="sec.system-user" title="System-Controlled and User-Controlled List Entries" toc="default">
<t>The core routing data model defines several lists, for
example "routing-instance" or "rib", that have to be
populated with at least one entry in any properly functioning
device, and additional entries may be configured by the user.</t>
<t>In such a list, the server creates the required item as a
so-called system-controlled entry in operational state data,
i.e., inside the "routing-state" container.</t>
<t>Additional entries may be created in the configuration by the
user via the NETCONF protocol. These are so-called
user-controlled entries. If the server accepts a configured
user-controlled entry, then this entry also appears in the
operational state version of the list.</t>
<t>Corresponding entries in both versions of the list (in
operational state data and configuration) have the same value of
the list key.</t>
<t>The user may also provide supplemental configuration of
system-controlled entries. To do so, the user creates a new
entry in the configuration with the desired contents. In order
to bind this entry with the corresponding entry in the
operational state list, the key of the configuration entry has
to be set to the same value as the key of the state entry.</t>
<t>An example can be seen in <xref target="app.get-reply" pageno="false" format="default"/>: the
"/routing-state/routing-instance" list has a single
system-controlled entry whose "name" key has the value
"rtr0". This entry is configured by the
"/routing/routing-instance" entry whose "name" key is
also "rtr0".</t>
<t>Deleting a user-controlled entry from the configuration list
results in the removal of the corresponding entry in the
operational state list. In contrast, if a system-controlled
entry is deleted from the configuration list, only the extra
configuration specified in that entry is removed but the
corresponding operational state entry remains in the list.</t>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.simple-advanced" title="Features of Advanced Routers" toc="default">
<t>The core routing data model attempts to address devices with
elementary routing functions as well as advanced routers. For
simple devices, some parts and options of the data model are not
needed and would represent unnecessary complications for the
implementation. Therefore, the core routing data model makes the
advanced functionality optional by means of two YANG features:
<list style="symbols">
<t>"multiple-ribs" - indicates that the device supports
multiple RIBs per address family, routing protocols connected
to non-default RIBs, and RIBs configured as receivers of
routes from other RIBs.</t>
<t>"multipath-routes" - indicates that the device supports
routes with multiple next-hops.</t>
</list></t>
<t>See the "ietf-routing" module for details.</t>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.building-blocks" title="Basic Building Blocks" toc="default">
<t>This section describes the essential components of the core
routing data model.</t>
<section anchor="sec.routing-instance" title="Routing Instance" toc="default">
<t>Each routing instance in the core routing data model
represents a logical router. The exact semantics of this term are
left to implementations. For example, routing instances may be
completely isolated virtual routers or, alternatively, they may
internally share certain information.</t>
<t>A routing instance together with its operational state is
represented as an entry of the list
"/routing-state/routing-instance", and identified by a unique
name. Configuration of that router instance appears as an entry
of the list "/routing/routing-instance".</t>
<t>An implementation MAY support multiple types of logical
routers simultaneously. Instances of all routing instance types
are organized as entries of the same flat "routing-instance"
list. In order to discriminate routing instances belonging to
different types, the "type" leaf is defined as a child of the
"routing-instance" node.</t>
<t>An implementation MAY create one or more system-controlled
routing instances, and MAY also pose restrictions on allowed
routing instance types and on the number of supported instances
for each type. For example, a simple router implementation may
support only one system-controlled routing instance of the
default type "rt:standard-routing-instance" and may not allow
creation of any user-controlled instances.</t>
<t>Each network layer interface has to be assigned to one or
more routing instances in order to be able to participate in
packet forwarding, routing protocols and other operations of
those routing instances. The assignment is accomplished by
placing a corresponding (system- or user-controlled) entry in
the list of routing instance interfaces ("rt:interface"). The
key of the list entry is the name of a configured network layer
interface, see the "ietf-interfaces" module <xref target="RFC7223" pageno="false" format="default"/>.</t>
<t>In YANG terms, the list of routing instance interfaces is
modeled as a "list" node rather than "leaf-list" in order to
allow for adding, via augmentation, other configuration or state
data related to the corresponding interface.</t>
<t>Implementations MAY specify additional rules for the
assignment of interfaces to routing instances. For example, it may
be required that the sets of interfaces assigned to different
routing instances be disjoint.</t>
<section anchor="sec.4861" title="Parameters of IPv6 Routing Instance Interfaces" toc="default">
<t>The module "ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing" augments the
definition of the data node "rt:interface", in both
configuration and operational state data, with definitions of
the following variables as required by <xref target="RFC4861" pageno="false" format="default"/>, sec. 6.2.1:
<list style="symbols">
<t>send-advertisements,</t>
<t>max-rtr-adv-interval,</t>
<t>min-rtr-adv-interval,</t>
<t>managed-flag,</t>
<t>other-config-flag,</t>
<t>link-mtu,</t>
<t>reachable-time,</t>
<t>retrans-timer,</t>
<t>cur-hop-limit,</t>
<t>default-lifetime,</t>
<t>prefix-list: a list of prefixes to be advertised.<vspace blankLines="1"/>The
following parameters are associated with each prefix in the
list:
<list style="symbols">
<t>valid-lifetime,</t>
<t>on-link-flag,</t>
<t>preferred-lifetime,</t>
<t>autonomous-flag.</t>
</list></t>
</list>
The definitions and descriptions of the above parameters can
be found in the module "ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing" (<xref target="sec.mod-v6ur" pageno="false" format="default"/>).</t>
<t>NOTES:</t>
<t><list style="numbers">
<t>The "IsRouter" flag, which is also required by <xref target="RFC4861" pageno="false" format="default"/>, is implemented in the "ietf-ip" module
<xref target="YANG-IP" pageno="false" format="default"/> (leaf "ip:forwarding").</t>
<t>The original specification <xref target="RFC4861" pageno="false" format="default"/>
allows the implementations to decide whether the
"valid-lifetime" and "preferred-lifetime" parameters remain
the same in consecutive advertisements, or decrement in real
time. However, the latter behavior seems problematic because
the values might be reset again to the (higher) configured
values after a configuration is reloaded. Moreover, no
implementation is known to use the decrementing
behavior. The "ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing" module therefore
assumes the former behavior with constant values.</t>
</list></t>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.route" title="Route" toc="default">
<t>Routes are basic elements of information in a routing
system. The core routing data model defines only the following
minimal set of route attributes:
<list style="symbols">
<t>destination prefix: IP prefix specifying the set of
destination addresses for which the route may be used. This
attribute is mandatory.</t>
<t>next-hop or action: outgoing interface, IP address of one
or more adjacent routers to which a packet should be
forwarded, or a special action such as discarding the
packet.</t>
</list>
</t>
<t>The above list of route attributes suffices for a simple
static routing configuration. It is expected that future modules
defining routing protocols will add other route attributes such
as metrics or preferences.</t>
<t>Routes and their attributes are used both in configuration
data, for example as manually configured static routes, and in
operational state data, for example as entries in RIBs.</t>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.rib" title="Routing Information Base (RIB)" toc="default">
<t>A routing information base (RIB) is a list of routes
complemented with administrative data, namely:
<list style="symbols">
<t>"source-protocol": type of the routing protocol from which
the route was originally obtained.</t>
<t>"last-updated": the date and time when the route was last
updated, or inserted into the RIB.</t>
</list>
Each RIB MUST contain only routes of one address family. In the
data model, address family is represented with an identity
derived from the "rt:address-family" base identity.</t>
<t>In the core routing data model, RIBs are operational state
data represented as entries of the list
"/routing-state/ribs/rib". The contents of RIBs are controlled
and manipulated by routing protocol operations which may result
in route additions, removals and modifications. This also
includes manipulations via the "static" and/or "direct"
pseudo-protocols, see <xref target="sec.pseudoproto" pageno="false" format="default"/>.</t>
<t>RIBs are global, which means that a RIB may be used by any or
all routing instances. However, an implementation MAY specify
rules and restrictions for sharing RIBs among routing
instances.</t>
<t>Each routing instance has, for every supported address
family, one RIB selected as the so-called default RIB. This
selection is recorded in the list "default-rib". The role of
default RIBs is explained in <xref target="sec.proto" pageno="false" format="default"/>.</t>
<t>Simple router implementations that do not advertise the
feature "multiple-ribs" will typically create one
system-controlled RIB per supported address family, and declare
it as the default RIB (via a system-controlled entry of the
"default-rib" list).</t>
<section anchor="sec.user-ribs" title="Multiple RIBs per Address Family" toc="default">
<t>More complex router implementations advertising the
"multiple-ribs" feature support multiple RIBs per address
family that can be used for policy routing and other
purposes. Every RIB can then serve as a source of routes for
other RIBs of the same address family. To achieve this, one or
more recipient RIBs may be specified in the configuration of
the source RIB. Optionally, a route filter may be configured
for any or all recipient RIBs. Such a route filter then
selects and/or manipulates the routes that are passed between
the source and recipient RIB.</t>
<t>A RIB MUST NOT appear among its own recipient RIBs.</t>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.proto" title="Routing Protocol" toc="default">
<t>The core routing data model provides an open-ended framework
for defining multiple routing protocol instances within a routing
instance. Each routing protocol instance MUST be assigned a
type, which is an identity derived from the
"rt:routing-protocol" base identity. The core routing data model
defines two identities for the direct and static
pseudo-protocols (<xref target="sec.pseudoproto" pageno="false" format="default"/>).</t>
<t>Each routing protocol instance is connected to exactly one
RIB for each address family that the routing protocol instance
supports. Routes learned from the network by a routing protocol
are normally installed into the connected RIB(s) and,
conversely, routes from the connected RIB(s) are
normally injected into the routing protocol. However, routing
protocol implementations MAY specify rules that restrict this
exchange of routes in either direction (or both directions).</t>
<t>On devices supporting the "multiple-ribs" feature, any RIB
(system-controlled or user-controlled) may be connected to a
routing protocol instance by configuring a corresponding entry
in the "connected-rib" list. If such an entry is not configured
for an address family, then the default RIB MUST be used as the
connected RIB for this address family.</t>
<t>In addition, two independent route filters (see <xref target="sec.filter" pageno="false" format="default"/>) may be configured for each connected RIB
to apply user-defined policies controlling the exchange of
routes in both directions between the routing protocol instance
and the connected RIB:
<list style="symbols">
<t>import filter controls which routes are passed from the
routing protocol instance to the connected RIB,</t>
<t>export filter controls which routes the routing protocol
instance receives from the connected RIB.</t>
</list></t>
<t>Note that the terms import and export are used from the
viewpoint of a RIB.</t>
<section anchor="sec.pseudoproto" title="Routing Pseudo-Protocols" toc="default">
<t>The core routing data model defines two special routing
protocol types - "direct" and "static". Both are in fact
pseudo-protocols, which means that they are confined to the
local device and do not exchange any routing information with
neighboring routers. Routes from both "direct" and "static"
protocol instances are passed to the connected RIB (subject to
route filters, if any), but an exchange in the opposite
direction is not allowed.</t>
<t>Every routing instance MUST implement exactly one instance of
the "direct" pseudo-protocol type. It is the source of direct
routes for all configured address families. Direct routes are
normally supplied by the operating system kernel, based on the
configuration of network interface addresses, see <xref target="sec.ietf-ip" pageno="false" format="default"/>. The "direct" pseudo-protocol MUST always
be connected to the default RIBs of all supported address
families. Unlike other routing protocol types, this connection
cannot be changed in the configuration. Direct routes MAY be
filtered before they appear in the default RIB.</t>
<t>A pseudo-protocol of the type "static" allows for specifying
routes manually. It MAY be configured in zero or multiple
instances, although a typical configuration will have exactly
one instance per routing instance.</t>
<t>Static routes are configured within the "static-routes"
container, see <xref target="fig.static-routes" pageno="false" format="default"/>.</t>
<figure anchor="fig.static-routes" title="Structure of "static-routes" subtree." suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
+--rw static-routes
+--rw v4ur:ipv4
| +--rw v4ur:route* [id]
| +--rw v4ur:id
| +--rw v4ur:description?
| +--rw v4ur:destination-prefix
| +--rw (next-hop-options)
| +--:(special-next-hop)
| | +--rw v4ur:special-next-hop?
| +--:(simple-next-hop)
| | +--rw v4ur:next-hop?
| | +--rw v4ur:outgoing-interface?
| +--:(next-hop-list) {rt:multipath-routes}?
| +--rw v4ur:next-hop-list
| +--rw v4ur:next-hop* [id]
| +--rw v4ur:id
| +--rw v4ur:address?
| +--rw v4ur:outgoing-interface?
| +--rw v4ur:priority?
| +--rw v4ur:weight?
+--rw v6ur:ipv6
+--rw v6ur:route* [id]
+--rw v6ur:id
+--rw v6ur:description?
+--rw v6ur:destination-prefix
+--rw (next-hop-options)
+--:(special-next-hop)
| +--rw v6ur:special-next-hop?
+--:(simple-next-hop)
| +--rw v6ur:next-hop?
| +--rw v6ur:outgoing-interface?
+--:(next-hop-list) {rt:multipath-routes}?
+--rw v6ur:next-hop-list
+--rw v6ur:next-hop* [id]
+--rw v6ur:id
+--rw v6ur:address?
+--rw v6ur:outgoing-interface?
+--rw v6ur:priority?
+--rw v6ur:weight?
</artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.newproto" title="Defining New Routing Protocols" toc="default">
<t>It is expected that future YANG modules will create data
models for additional routing protocol types. Such a new
module has to define the protocol-specific configuration and
state data, and it has to fit it into the core routing
framework in the following way:
<list style="symbols">
<t>A new identity MUST be defined for the routing protocol
and its base identity MUST be set to "rt:routing-protocol",
or to an identity derived from "rt:routing-protocol".</t>
<t>Additional route attributes MAY be defined, preferably in
one place by means of defining a YANG grouping. The new
attributes have to be inserted by augmenting the definitions
of the nodes
<figure title="" suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
/rt:routing-state/rt:ribs/rt:rib/rt:routes/rt:route
</artwork>
</figure>
and
<figure title="" suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
/rt:active-route/rt:output/rt:route,
</artwork>
</figure>
and possibly other places in the configuration, state
data and RPC input or output.</t>
<t>Configuration parameters and/or state data for the new
protocol can be defined by augmenting the
"routing-protocol" data node under both "/routing" and "/routing-state".</t>
<t>Per-interface configuration, including activation of the
routing protocol on individual interfaces, can use
references to entries in the list of routing instance
interfaces (rt:interface).</t>
</list></t>
<t>By using the "when" statement, the augmented configuration
parameters and state data specific to the new protocol SHOULD
be made conditional and valid only if the value of "rt:type"
or "rt:source-protocol" is equal to the new protocol's
identity. It is also RECOMMENDED that protocol-specific data
nodes be encapsulated in appropriately named containers.</t>
<t>The above steps are implemented by the example YANG module
for the RIP routing protocol in <xref target="app.rip" pageno="false" format="default"/>.</t>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.filter" title="Route Filter" toc="default">
<t>The core routing data model provides a skeleton for defining
route filters that can be used to restrict the set of routes
being exchanged between a routing protocol instance and a
connected RIB, or between a source and a recipient RIB. Route
filters may also manipulate routes, i.e., add, delete, or modify
their attributes.</t>
<t>Route filters are global, which means that a configured route
filter may be used by any or all routing instances. However, an
implementation MAY specify rules and restrictions for sharing
route filters among routing instances.</t>
<t>By itself, the route filtering framework defined in this
document allows for applying only two extreme routing
policies which are represented by the following pre-defined
route filter types:
<list style="symbols">
<t>"deny-all-route-filter": all routes are blocked,</t>
<t>"allow-all-route-filter": all routes are permitted.</t>
</list>
The latter type is equivalent to no route filter.</t>
<t>It is expected that more comprehensive route filtering
frameworks will be developed separately.</t>
<t>Each route filter is identified by a unique name. Its type
MUST be specified by the "type" identity reference - this opens
the space for multiple route filtering framework
implementations.</t>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.rpcs" title="RPC Operations" toc="default">
<t>The "ietf-routing" module defines two RPC operations:
<list style="symbols">
<t>active-route: query a routing instance for the active route
that is currently used for sending datagrams to a destination
host whose address is passed as an input parameter.</t>
<t>route-count: retrieve the total number of entries in a
RIB.</t>
</list></t>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.interactions" title="Interactions with Other YANG Modules" toc="default">
<t>The semantics of the core routing data model also depend on
several configuration parameters that are defined in other YANG
modules.</t>
<section anchor="sec.ietf-if" title="Module "ietf-interfaces"" toc="default">
<t>The following boolean switch is defined in the
"ietf-interfaces" YANG module <xref target="RFC7223" pageno="false" format="default"/>:
<list style="hanging">
<t hangText="/if:interfaces/if:interface/if:enabled">
<vspace blankLines="1"/>
If this switch is set to "false" for a network layer
interface, the device MUST behave exactly as if that
interface was not assigned to any routing instance at all.
</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.ietf-ip" title="Module "ietf-ip"" toc="default">
<t>The following boolean switches are defined in the "ietf-ip"
YANG module <xref target="YANG-IP" pageno="false" format="default"/>:
<list style="hanging">
<t hangText="/if:interfaces/if:interface/ip:ipv4/ip:enabled">
<vspace blankLines="1"/>
If this switch is set to "false" for a network layer
interface, then all IPv4 routing functions related to that
interface MUST be disabled.
</t>
<t hangText="/if:interfaces/if:interface/ip:ipv4/ip:forwarding">
<vspace blankLines="1"/>
If this switch is set to "false" for a network layer
interface, then the forwarding of IPv4 datagrams to and from
this interface MUST be disabled. However, the interface may
participate in other IPv4 routing functions, such as routing
protocols.
</t>
<t hangText="/if:interfaces/if:interface/ip:ipv6/ip:enabled">
<vspace blankLines="1"/>
If this switch is set to "false" for a network layer
interface, then all IPv6 routing functions related to that
interface MUST be disabled.
</t>
<t hangText="/if:interfaces/if:interface/ip:ipv6/ip:forwarding">
<vspace blankLines="1"/>
If this switch is set to "false" for a network layer
interface, then the forwarding of IPv6 datagrams to and from
this interface MUST be disabled. However, the interface may
participate in other IPv6 routing functions, such as routing
protocols.
</t>
</list>
</t>
<t>In addition, the "ietf-ip" module allows for configuring IPv4
and IPv6 addresses and network prefixes or masks on network
layer interfaces. Configuration of these parameters on an
enabled interface MUST result in an immediate creation of the
corresponding direct route. The destination prefix of this route
is set according to the configured IP address and network
prefix/mask, and the interface is set as the outgoing interface
for that route.</t>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.mod-rt" title="Routing Management YANG Module" toc="default">
<t>RFC Ed.: In this section, replace all occurrences of 'XXXX' with
the actual RFC number and all occurrences of the revision date
below with the date of RFC publication (and remove this note).</t>
<figure title="" suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<CODE BEGINS> file "ietf-routing@2014-05-24.yang"
module ietf-routing {
namespace "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-routing";
prefix "rt";
import ietf-yang-types {
prefix "yang";
}
import ietf-interfaces {
prefix "if";
}
organization
"IETF NETMOD (NETCONF Data Modeling Language) Working Group";
contact
"WG Web: <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/netmod/>
WG List: <mailto:netmod@ietf.org>
WG Chair: Thomas Nadeau
<mailto:tnadeau@lucidvision.com>
WG Chair: Juergen Schoenwaelder
<mailto:j.schoenwaelder@jacobs-university.de>
Editor: Ladislav Lhotka
<mailto:lhotka@nic.cz>";
description
"This YANG module defines essential components for the management
of a routing subsystem.
Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as
authors of the code. All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or
without modification, is permitted pursuant to, and subject to
the license terms contained in, the Simplified BSD License set
forth in Section 4.c of the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions
Relating to IETF Documents
(http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info).
This version of this YANG module is part of RFC XXXX; see the
RFC itself for full legal notices.";
revision 2014-05-24 {
description
"Initial revision.";
reference
"RFC XXXX: A YANG Data Model for Routing Management";
}
/* Features */
feature multiple-ribs {
description
"This feature indicates that the device supports multiple RIBS
per address family, and the framework for passing routes
between RIBs.
Devices that do not support this feature MUST provide exactly
one system-controlled RIB per supported address family. These
RIBs then appear as entries of the list
/routing-state/ribs/rib.";
}
feature multipath-routes {
description
"This feature indicates that the device supports multipath
routes that have a list of next-hops.";
}
/* Identities */
identity address-family {
description
"Base identity from which identities describing address
families are derived.";
}
identity ipv4 {
base address-family;
description
"This identity represents IPv4 address family.";
}
identity ipv6 {
base address-family;
description
"This identity represents IPv6 address family.";
}
identity routing-instance-type {
description
"Base identity from which identities describing routing
instance types are derived.
It is primarily intended for discriminating among different
types of logical routers or router virtualization.";
}
identity standard-routing-instance {
base routing-instance-type;
description
"This identity represents a default routing instance.";
}
identity routing-protocol {
description
"Base identity from which routing protocol identities are
derived.";
}
identity direct {
base routing-protocol;
description
"Routing pseudo-protocol which provides routes to directly
connected networks.";
}
identity static {
base routing-protocol;
description
"Static routing pseudo-protocol.";
}
identity route-filter {
description
"Base identity from which all route filters are derived.";
}
identity deny-all-route-filter {
base route-filter;
description
"Route filter that blocks all routes.";
}
identity allow-all-route-filter {
base route-filter;
description
"Route filter that permits all routes.";
}
/* Type Definitions */
typedef routing-instance-ref {
type leafref {
path "/rt:routing/rt:routing-instance/rt:name";
}
description
"This type is used for leafs that reference a routing instance
configuration.";
}
typedef routing-instance-state-ref {
type leafref {
path "/rt:routing-state/rt:routing-instance/rt:name";
}
description
"This type is used for leafs that reference state data of a
routing instance.";
}
typedef rib-ref {
type leafref {
path "/rt:routing/rt:ribs/rt:rib/rt:name";
}
description
"This type is used for leafs that reference a RIB
configuration.";
}
typedef rib-state-ref {
type leafref {
path "/rt:routing-state/rt:ribs/rt:rib/rt:name";
}
description
"This type is used for leafs that reference a RIB in state
data.";
}
typedef route-filter-ref {
type leafref {
path "/rt:routing/rt:route-filters/rt:route-filter/rt:name";
}
description
"This type is used for leafs that reference a route filter
configuration.";
}
typedef route-filter-state-ref {
type leafref {
path "/rt:routing-state/rt:route-filters/rt:route-filter/"
+ "rt:name";
}
description
"This type is used for leafs that reference a route filter in
state data.";
}
/* Groupings */
grouping address-family {
description
"This grouping provides a leaf identifying an address
family.";
leaf address-family {
type identityref {
base address-family;
}
mandatory "true";
description
"Address family.";
}
}
grouping state-entry-id {
description
"This grouping defines a unique identifier for entries in
several operational state lists.";
leaf id {
type uint64;
description
"Unique numerical identifier of a list entry in operational
state. It may be used by protocols or tools that inspect
and/or manipulate operational state data and prefer
fixed-size integers as list entry handles.
These identifiers are always ephemeral, i.e., they may
change after a reboot.";
}
}
grouping router-id {
description
"This grouping provides the definition of router ID.";
leaf router-id {
type yang:dotted-quad;
description
"Router ID - 32-bit number in the form of a dotted quad. Some
protocols use this parameter for identifying a router to its
neighbors.";
}
}
grouping outgoing-interface {
description
"This grouping defines the outgoing interface for use in
next-hops.";
leaf outgoing-interface {
type leafref {
path "/rt:routing-state/rt:routing-instance/rt:interfaces/"
+ "rt:interface/rt:name";
}
description
"Name of the outgoing interface.";
}
}
grouping special-next-hop {
description
"This grouping provides the leaf for specifying special
next-hop options.";
leaf special-next-hop {
type enumeration {
enum blackhole {
description
"Silently discard the packet.";
}
enum unreachable {
description
"Discard the packet and notify the sender with an error
message indicating that the destination host is
unreachable.";
}
enum prohibit {
description
"Discard the packet and notify the sender with an error
message indicating that the communication is
administratively prohibited.";
}
enum receive {
description
"The packet will be received by the local network
device.";
}
}
description
"Special next-hop options.";
}
}
grouping next-hop-classifiers {
description
"This grouping provides two next-hop classifiers.";
leaf priority {
type enumeration {
enum primary {
value "1";
description
"Primary next-hop.";
}
enum backup {
value "2";
description
"Backup next-hop.";
}
}
description
"Simple priority for distinguishing between primary and
backup next-hops.
Backup next-hops are used if and only if no primary
next-hops are reachable.";
}
leaf weight {
type uint8;
must ". = 0 or not(../../next-hop/weight = 0)" {
error-message "Illegal combination of zero and non-zero "
+ "next-hop weights.";
description
"Next-hop weights must be either all zero (equal
load-balancing) or all non-zero.";
}
description
"This parameter specifies the weight of the next-hop for load
balancing. The number specifies the relative fraction of the
traffic that will use the corresponding next-hop.
A value of 0 represents equal load-balancing.
If both primary and backup next-hops are present, then the
weights for each priority level are used separately.";
}
}
grouping next-hop-content {
description
"Generic parameters of next-hops in routes.";
choice next-hop-options {
mandatory "true";
description
"Options for expressing the next-hop in routes.";
case special-next-hop {
uses special-next-hop;
}
case simple-next-hop {
uses outgoing-interface;
}
case next-hop-list {
if-feature multipath-routes;
container next-hop-list {
description
"Container for multiple next-hops.";
list next-hop {
key "id";
description
"An entry of a next-hop list.";
uses state-entry-id;
uses outgoing-interface;
uses next-hop-classifiers;
}
}
}
}
}
grouping route-metadata {
description
"Route metadata.";
leaf source-protocol {
type identityref {
base routing-protocol;
}
mandatory "true";
description
"Type of the routing protocol from which the route
originated.";
}
leaf last-updated {
type yang:date-and-time;
description
"Time stamp of the last modification of the route. If the
route was never modified, it is the time when the route was
inserted into the RIB.";
}
}
/* Operational state data */
container routing-state {
config "false";
description
"Operational state of the routing subsystem.";
list routing-instance {
key "name";
unique "id";
description
"Each list entry is a container for operational state data of
a routing instance.
An implementation MAY create one or more system-controlled
instances, other user-controlled instances MAY be created by
configuration.";
leaf name {
type string;
description
"The name of the routing instance.
For system-controlled instances the name is persistent,
i.e., it SHOULD NOT change across reboots.";
}
uses state-entry-id {
refine "id" {
mandatory "true";
}
}
leaf type {
type identityref {
base routing-instance-type;
}
description
"The routing instance type, primarily intended for
discriminating among different types of logical routers,
route virtualization, master-slave arrangements etc.,
while keeping all routing instances in the same flat
list.";
}
uses router-id {
description
"Global router ID.
An implementation may choose a value if none is
configured.
Routing protocols that use router ID MAY override this
global parameter.";
}
container default-ribs {
description
"Default RIBs used by the routing instance.";
list default-rib {
key "address-family";
description
"Each list entry specifies the default RIB for one
address family.
The default RIB is operationally connected to all
routing protocols for which a connected RIB has not been
explicitly configured.
The 'direct' pseudo-protocol is always connected to the
default RIBs.";
uses address-family;
leaf rib-name {
type rib-state-ref;
mandatory "true";
description
"Name of an existing RIB to be used as the default RIB
for the given routing instance and address family.";
}
}
}
container interfaces {
description
"Network layer interfaces belonging to the routing
instance.";
list interface {
key "name";
description
"List of network layer interfaces assigned to the routing
instance.";
leaf name {
type if:interface-state-ref;
description
"A reference to the name of a configured network layer
interface.";
}
}
}
container routing-protocols {
description
"Container for the list of routing protocol instances.";
list routing-protocol {
key "name";
description
"Operational state of a routing protocol instance.
An implementation MUST provide exactly one
system-controlled instance of the type 'direct'. Other
instances MAY be created by configuration.";
leaf name {
type string;
description
"The name of the routing protocol instance.
For system-controlled instances this name is
persistent, i.e., it SHOULD NOT change across
reboots.";
}
leaf type {
type identityref {
base routing-protocol;
}
mandatory "true";
description
"Type of the routing protocol.";
}
container connected-ribs {
description
"Container for connected RIBs.";
list connected-rib {
key "rib-name";
description
"List of RIBs to which the routing protocol instance
is connected (at most one RIB per address
family).";
leaf rib-name {
type rib-state-ref;
description
"Name of an existing RIB.";
}
leaf import-filter {
type route-filter-state-ref;
description
"Reference to a route filter that is used for
filtering routes passed from this routing protocol
instance to the RIB specified by the 'rib-name'
sibling node.
If this leaf is not present, the behavior is
protocol-specific, but typically it means that all
routes are accepted.";
}
leaf export-filter {
type route-filter-state-ref;
description
"Reference to a route filter that is used for
filtering routes passed from the RIB specified by
the 'rib-name' sibling node to this routing
protocol instance.
If this leaf is not present, the behavior is
protocol-specific - typically it means that all
routes are accepted.
The 'direct' and 'static' pseudo-protocols accept
no routes from any RIB.";
}
}
}
}
}
}
container ribs {
description
"Container for RIBs.";
list rib {
key "name";
unique "id";
description
"Each entry represents a RIB identified by the 'name' key.
All routes in a RIB MUST belong to the same address
family.
The server MUST provide a system-controlled default RIB
for each address family, and MAY provide other
system-controlled RIBs. Additional RIBs MAY be created in
the configuration.";
leaf name {
type string;
description
"The name of the RIB.";
}
uses state-entry-id {
refine "id" {
mandatory "true";
}
}
uses address-family;
container routes {
description
"Current contents of the RIB.";
list route {
key "id";
description
"A RIB route entry. This data node MUST be augmented
with information specific for routes of each address
family.";
uses state-entry-id;
uses next-hop-content;
uses route-metadata;
}
}
container recipient-ribs {
if-feature multiple-ribs;
description
"Container for recipient RIBs.";
list recipient-rib {
key "rib-name";
description
"List of RIBs that receive routes from this RIB.";
leaf rib-name {
type rib-state-ref;
description
"The name of the recipient RIB.";
}
leaf filter {
type route-filter-state-ref;
description
"A route filter which is applied to the routes passed
to the recipient RIB.";
}
}
}
}
}
container route-filters {
description
"Container for route filters.";
list route-filter {
key "name";
description
"Route filters are used for filtering and/or manipulating
routes that are passed between a routing protocol and a
RIB and vice versa, or between two RIBs.
It is expected that other modules augment this list with
contents specific for a particular route filter type.";
leaf name {
type string;
description
"The name of the route filter.";
}
leaf type {
type identityref {
base route-filter;
}
mandatory "true";
description
"Type of the route-filter - an identity derived from the
'route-filter' base identity.";
}
}
}
}
/* Configuration Data */
container routing {
description
"Configuration parameters for the routing subsystem.";
list routing-instance {
key "name";
description
"Configuration of a routing instance.";
leaf name {
type string;
description
"The name of the routing instance.
For system-controlled entries, the value of this leaf must
be the same as the name of the corresponding entry in
state data.
For user-controlled entries, an arbitrary name can be
used.";
}
leaf type {
type identityref {
base routing-instance-type;
}
default "rt:standard-routing-instance";
description
"The type of the routing instance.";
}
leaf enabled {
type boolean;
default "true";
description
"Enable/disable the routing instance.
If this parameter is false, the parent routing instance is
disabled and does not appear in operational state data,
despite any other configuration that might be present.";
}
uses router-id {
description
"Configuration of the global router ID.";
}
leaf description {
type string;
description
"Textual description of the routing instance.";
}
container default-ribs {
if-feature multiple-ribs;
description
"Configuration of the default RIBs used by the routing
instance.
The default RIB for an addressed family if by default
connected to all routing protocol instances supporting
that address family, and always receives direct routes.";
list default-rib {
must "address-family=/routing/ribs/rib[name=current()/"
+ "rib-name]/address-family" {
error-message "Address family mismatch.";
description
"The entry's address family MUST match that of the
referenced RIB.";
}
key "address-family";
description
"Each list entry configures the default RIB for one
address family.";
uses address-family;
leaf rib-name {
type string;
mandatory "true";
description
"Name of an existing RIB to be used as the default RIB
for the given routing instance and address family.";
}
}
}
container interfaces {
description
"Configuration of the routing instance's interfaces.";
list interface {
key "name";
description
"List of network layer interfaces assigned to the routing
instance.";
leaf name {
type if:interface-ref;
description
"A reference to the name of a configured network layer
interface.";
}
}
}
container routing-protocols {
description
"Configuration of routing protocol instances.";
list routing-protocol {
key "name";
description
"Each entry contains configuration of a routing protocol
instance.";
leaf name {
type string;
description
"An arbitrary name of the routing protocol instance.";
}
leaf description {
type string;
description
"Textual description of the routing protocol
instance.";
}
leaf enabled {
type boolean;
default "true";
description
"Enable/disable the routing protocol instance.
If this parameter is false, the parent routing
protocol instance is disabled and does not appear in
operational state data, despite any other
configuration that might be present.";
}
leaf type {
type identityref {
base routing-protocol;
}
mandatory "true";
description
"Type of the routing protocol - an identity derived
from the 'routing-protocol' base identity.";
}
container connected-ribs {
description
"Configuration of connected RIBs.";
list connected-rib {
must "not(/routing/ribs/rib[name=current()/"
+ "preceding-sibling::connected-rib/"
+ "rib-name and address-family=/routing/ribs/"
+ "rib[name=current()/rib-name]/address-family])" {
error-message
"Duplicate address family for connected RIBs.";
description
"For each address family, there MUST NOT be more
than one connected RIB.";
}
key "rib-name";
description
"List of RIBs to which the routing protocol instance
is connected (at most one RIB per address family).
If no connected RIB is configured for an address
family, the routing protocol is connected to the
default RIB for that address family.";
leaf rib-name {
type rib-ref;
must "../../../type != 'rt:direct' or "
+ "../../../../../default-ribs/ "
+ "default-rib/rib-name=." {
error-message "The 'direct' protocol can be "
+ "connected only to a default RIB.";
description
"For the 'direct' pseudo-protocol, the connected
RIB must always be a default RIB.";
}
description
"Name of an existing RIB.";
}
leaf import-filter {
type route-filter-ref;
description
"Configuration of import filter.";
}
leaf export-filter {
type route-filter-ref;
description
"Configuration of export filter.";
}
}
}
container static-routes {
when "../type='rt:static'" {
description
"This container is only valid for the 'static'
routing protocol.";
}
description
"Configuration of the 'static' pseudo-protocol.
Address family specific modules augment this node with
their lists of routes.";
}
}
}
}
container ribs {
description
"Configured RIBs.";
list rib {
key "name";
description
"Each entry represents a configured RIB identified by the
'name' key.
Entries having the same key as a system-controlled entry
of the list /routing-state/ribs/rib are used for
configuring parameters of that entry. Other entries define
additional user-controlled RIBs.";
leaf name {
type string;
description
"The name of the RIB.
For system-controlled entries, the value of this leaf
must be the same as the name of the corresponding entry
in state data.
For user-controlled entries, an arbitrary name can be
used.";
}
uses address-family;
leaf description {
type string;
description
"Textual description of the RIB.";
}
container recipient-ribs {
if-feature multiple-ribs;
description
"Configuration of recipient RIBs.";
list recipient-rib {
must "rib-name != ../../name" {
error-message
"Source and recipient RIBs are identical.";
description
"A RIB MUST NOT appear among its recipient RIBs.";
}
must "/routing/ribs/rib[name=current()/rib-name]/"
+ "address-family=../../address-family" {
error-message "Address family mismatch.";
description
"Address family of the recipient RIB MUST match that
of the source RIB.";
}
key "rib-name";
description
"Each entry configures a recipient RIB.";
leaf rib-name {
type rib-ref;
description
"The name of the recipient RIB.";
}
leaf filter {
type route-filter-ref;
description
"A route filter which is applied to the routes passed
to the recipient RIB.";
}
}
}
}
}
container route-filters {
description
"Configuration of route filters.";
list route-filter {
key "name";
description
"Each entry configures a named route filter.";
leaf name {
type string;
description
"The name of the route filter.";
}
leaf description {
type string;
description
"Textual description of the route filter.";
}
leaf type {
type identityref {
base route-filter;
}
mandatory "true";
description
"Type of the route filter..";
}
}
}
}
/* RPC methods */
rpc active-route {
description
"Return the active route that a routing-instance uses for
sending packets to a destination address.";
input {
leaf routing-instance-name {
type routing-instance-state-ref;
mandatory "true";
description
"Name of the routing instance whose forwarding information
base is being queried.
If the routing instance with name equal to the value of
this parameter doesn't exist, then this operation SHALL
fail with error-tag 'data-missing' and error-app-tag
'routing-instance-not-found'.";
}
container destination-address {
description
"Network layer destination address.
Address family specific modules MUST augment this
container with a leaf named 'address'.";
uses address-family;
}
}
output {
container route {
description
"The active route for the specified destination.
If the routing instance has no active route for the
destination address, no output is returned - the server
SHALL send an <rpc-reply> containing a single element
<ok>.
Address family specific modules MUST augment this list
with appropriate route contents.";
uses address-family;
uses next-hop-content;
uses route-metadata;
}
}
}
rpc route-count {
description
"Return the current number of routes in a RIB.";
input {
leaf rib-name {
type rib-state-ref;
mandatory "true";
description
"Name of the RIB.
If the RIB with name equal to the value of this parameter
doesn't exist, then this operation SHALL fail with
error-tag 'data-missing' and error-app-tag
'rib-not-found'.";
}
}
output {
leaf number-of-routes {
type uint64;
mandatory "true";
description
"Number of routes in the RIB.";
}
}
}
}
<CODE ENDS></artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.mod-v4ur" title="IPv4 Unicast Routing Management YANG Module" toc="default">
<t>RFC Ed.: In this section, replace all occurrences of 'XXXX' with
the actual RFC number and all occurrences of the revision date
below with the date of RFC publication (and remove this note).</t>
<figure title="" suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<CODE BEGINS> file "ietf-ipv4-unicast-routing@2014-05-24.yang"
module ietf-ipv4-unicast-routing {
namespace "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-ipv4-unicast-routing";
prefix "v4ur";
import ietf-routing {
prefix "rt";
}
import ietf-inet-types {
prefix "inet";
}
organization
"IETF NETMOD (NETCONF Data Modeling Language) Working Group";
contact
"WG Web: <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/netmod/>
WG List: <mailto:netmod@ietf.org>
WG Chair: Thomas Nadeau
<mailto:tnadeau@lucidvision.com>
WG Chair: Juergen Schoenwaelder
<mailto:j.schoenwaelder@jacobs-university.de>
Editor: Ladislav Lhotka
<mailto:lhotka@nic.cz>";
description
"This YANG module augments the 'ietf-routing' module with basic
configuration and operational state data for IPv4 unicast
routing.
Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as
authors of the code. All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or
without modification, is permitted pursuant to, and subject to
the license terms contained in, the Simplified BSD License set
forth in Section 4.c of the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions
Relating to IETF Documents
(http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info).
This version of this YANG module is part of RFC XXXX; see the
RFC itself for full legal notices.";
revision 2014-05-24 {
description
"Initial revision.";
reference
"RFC XXXX: A YANG Data Model for Routing Management";
}
/* Identities */
identity ipv4-unicast {
base rt:ipv4;
description
"This identity represents the IPv4 unicast address family.";
}
/* Operational state data */
augment "/rt:routing-state/rt:ribs/rt:rib/rt:routes/rt:route" {
when "../../rt:address-family = 'v4ur:ipv4-unicast'" {
description
"This augment is valid only for IPv4 unicast.";
}
description
"This leaf augments an IPv4 unicast route.";
leaf destination-prefix {
type inet:ipv4-prefix;
description
"IPv4 destination prefix.";
}
}
augment "/rt:routing-state/rt:ribs/rt:rib/rt:routes/rt:route/"
+ "rt:next-hop-options/rt:simple-next-hop" {
when "../../rt:address-family = 'v4ur:ipv4-unicast'" {
description
"This augment is valid only for IPv4 unicast.";
}
description
"This leaf augments the 'simple-next-hop' case of IPv4 unicast
routes.";
leaf next-hop {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
"IPv4 address of the next-hop.";
}
}
augment "/rt:routing-state/rt:ribs/rt:rib/rt:routes/rt:route/"
+ "rt:next-hop-options/rt:next-hop-list/rt:next-hop-list/"
+ "rt:next-hop" {
when "../../../../rt:address-family = 'v4ur:ipv4-unicast'" {
description
"This augment is valid only for IPv4 unicast.";
}
if-feature rt:multipath-routes;
description
"This leaf augments the 'next-hop-list' case of IPv4 unicast
routes.";
leaf address {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
"IPv4 address of the next-hop.";
}
}
/* Configuration data */
augment "/rt:routing/rt:routing-instance/rt:routing-protocols/"
+ "rt:routing-protocol/rt:static-routes" {
description
"This augment defines the configuration of the 'static'
pseudo-protocol with data specific to IPv4 unicast.";
container ipv4 {
description
"Configuration of a 'static' pseudo-protocol instance
consists of a list of routes.";
list route {
key "id";
ordered-by "user";
description
"A user-ordered list of static routes.";
leaf id {
type uint32 {
range "1..max";
}
description
"Unique numeric identifier of the route.
This value is unrelated to system-assigned 'id'
parameters of routes in RIBs.";
}
leaf description {
type string;
description
"Textual description of the route.";
}
leaf destination-prefix {
type inet:ipv4-prefix;
mandatory "true";
description
"IPv4 destination prefix.";
}
choice next-hop-options {
mandatory "true";
description
"Options for expressing the next-hop in static routes.";
case special-next-hop {
uses rt:special-next-hop;
}
case simple-next-hop {
leaf next-hop {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
"IPv4 address of the next-hop.";
}
leaf outgoing-interface {
type leafref {
path "../../../../../../rt:interfaces/rt:interface/"
+ "rt:name";
}
description
"Name of the outgoing interface.
Only interfaces configured for the ancestor routing
instance can be given.";
}
}
case next-hop-list {
if-feature rt:multipath-routes;
container next-hop-list {
description
"Configuration of multiple next-hops.";
list next-hop {
key "id";
description
"An entry of a next-hop list.";
leaf id {
type uint32;
description
"Unique numeric identifier of the entry.
This value is unrelated to system-assigned 'id'
parameters of next-hops in RIBs.";
}
leaf address {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
"IPv4 address of the next-hop.";
}
leaf outgoing-interface {
type leafref {
path "../../../../../../../../rt:interfaces/"
+ "rt:interface/rt:name";
}
description
"Name of the outgoing interface.
Only interfaces configured for the ancestor
routing instance can be given.";
}
uses rt:next-hop-classifiers {
refine "priority" {
default "primary";
}
refine "weight" {
default "0";
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
/* RPC methods */
augment "/rt:active-route/rt:input/rt:destination-address" {
when "rt:address-family='v4ur:ipv4-unicast'" {
description
"This augment is valid only for IPv4 unicast.";
}
description
"This leaf augments the 'rt:destination-address' parameter of
the 'rt:active-route' operation.";
leaf address {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
"IPv4 destination address.";
}
}
augment "/rt:active-route/rt:output/rt:route" {
when "rt:address-family='v4ur:ipv4-unicast'" {
description
"This augment is valid only for IPv4 unicast.";
}
description
"This leaf augments the reply to the 'rt:active-route'
operation.";
leaf destination-prefix {
type inet:ipv4-prefix;
description
"IPv4 destination prefix.";
}
}
augment "/rt:active-route/rt:output/rt:route/rt:next-hop-options/"
+ "rt:simple-next-hop" {
when "rt:address-family='v4ur:ipv4-unicast'" {
description
"This augment is valid only for IPv4 unicast.";
}
description
"This leaf augments the 'simple-next-hop' case in the reply to
the 'rt:active-route' operation.";
leaf next-hop {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
"IPv4 address of the next-hop.";
}
}
augment "/rt:active-route/rt:output/rt:route/rt:next-hop-options/"
+ "rt:next-hop-list/rt:next-hop-list/rt:next-hop" {
when "../../rt:address-family='v4ur:ipv4-unicast'" {
description
"This augment is valid only for IPv4 unicast.";
}
if-feature rt:multipath-routes;
description
"This leaf augments the 'next-hop-list' case in the reply to
the 'rt:active-route' operation.";
leaf address {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
"IPv4 address of the next-hop.";
}
}
}
<CODE ENDS></artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.mod-v6ur" title="IPv6 Unicast Routing Management YANG Module" toc="default">
<t>RFC Ed.: In this section, replace all occurrences of 'XXXX' with
the actual RFC number and all occurrences of the revision date
below with the date of RFC publication (and remove this note).</t>
<figure title="" suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<CODE BEGINS> file "ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing@2014-05-25.yang"
module ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing {
namespace "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing";
prefix "v6ur";
import ietf-routing {
prefix "rt";
}
import ietf-inet-types {
prefix "inet";
}
import ietf-interfaces {
prefix "if";
}
import ietf-ip {
prefix "ip";
}
organization
"IETF NETMOD (NETCONF Data Modeling Language) Working Group";
contact
"WG Web: <http://tools.ietf.org/wg/netmod/>
WG List: <mailto:netmod@ietf.org>
WG Chair: Thomas Nadeau
<mailto:tnadeau@lucidvision.com>
WG Chair: Juergen Schoenwaelder
<mailto:j.schoenwaelder@jacobs-university.de>
Editor: Ladislav Lhotka
<mailto:lhotka@nic.cz>";
description
"This YANG module augments the 'ietf-routing' module with basic
configuration and operational state data for IPv6 unicast
routing.
Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as
authors of the code. All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or
without modification, is permitted pursuant to, and subject to
the license terms contained in, the Simplified BSD License set
forth in Section 4.c of the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions
Relating to IETF Documents
(http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info).
This version of this YANG module is part of RFC XXXX; see the
RFC itself for full legal notices.";
revision 2014-05-25 {
description
"Initial revision.";
reference
"RFC XXXX: A YANG Data Model for Routing Management";
}
/* Identities */
identity ipv6-unicast {
base rt:ipv6;
description
"This identity represents the IPv6 unicast address family.";
}
/* Operational state data */
augment "/rt:routing-state/rt:routing-instance/rt:interfaces/"
+ "rt:interface" {
description
"IPv6-specific parameters of router interfaces.";
container ipv6-router-advertisements {
description
"Parameters of IPv6 Router Advertisements.";
leaf send-advertisements {
type boolean;
description
"A flag indicating whether or not the router sends periodic
Router Advertisements and responds to Router
Solicitations.";
}
leaf max-rtr-adv-interval {
type uint16 {
range "4..1800";
}
units "seconds";
description
"The maximum time allowed between sending unsolicited
multicast Router Advertisements from the interface.";
}
leaf min-rtr-adv-interval {
type uint16 {
range "3..1350";
}
units "seconds";
description
"The minimum time allowed between sending unsolicited
multicast Router Advertisements from the interface.";
}
leaf managed-flag {
type boolean;
description
"The value that is placed in the 'Managed address
configuration' flag field in the Router Advertisement.";
}
leaf other-config-flag {
type boolean;
description
"The value that is placed in the 'Other configuration' flag
field in the Router Advertisement.";
}
leaf link-mtu {
type uint32;
description
"The value that is placed in MTU options sent by the
router. A value of zero indicates that no MTU options are
sent.";
}
leaf reachable-time {
type uint32 {
range "0..3600000";
}
units "milliseconds";
description
"The value that is placed in the Reachable Time field in
the Router Advertisement messages sent by the router. A
value of zero means unspecified (by this router).";
}
leaf retrans-timer {
type uint32;
units "milliseconds";
description
"The value that is placed in the Retrans Timer field in the
Router Advertisement messages sent by the router. A value
of zero means unspecified (by this router).";
}
leaf cur-hop-limit {
type uint8;
description
"The value that is placed in the Cur Hop Limit field in the
Router Advertisement messages sent by the router. A value
of zero means unspecified (by this router).";
}
leaf default-lifetime {
type uint16 {
range "0..9000";
}
units "seconds";
description
"The value that is placed in the Router Lifetime field of
Router Advertisements sent from the interface, in seconds.
A value of zero indicates that the router is not to be
used as a default router.";
}
container prefix-list {
description
"A list of prefixes that are placed in Prefix Information
options in Router Advertisement messages sent from the
interface.
By default, these are all prefixes that the router
advertises via routing protocols as being on-link for the
interface from which the advertisement is sent.";
list prefix {
key "prefix-spec";
description
"Advertised prefix entry and its parameters.";
leaf prefix-spec {
type inet:ipv6-prefix;
description
"IPv6 address prefix.";
}
leaf valid-lifetime {
type uint32;
units "seconds";
description
"The value that is placed in the Valid Lifetime in the
Prefix Information option. The designated value of all
1's (0xffffffff) represents infinity.";
}
leaf on-link-flag {
type boolean;
description
"The value that is placed in the on-link flag ('L-bit')
field in the Prefix Information option.";
}
leaf preferred-lifetime {
type uint32;
units "seconds";
description
"The value that is placed in the Preferred Lifetime in
the Prefix Information option, in seconds. The
designated value of all 1's (0xffffffff) represents
infinity.";
}
leaf autonomous-flag {
type boolean;
description
"The value that is placed in the Autonomous Flag field
in the Prefix Information option.";
}
}
}
}
}
augment "/rt:routing-state/rt:ribs/rt:rib/rt:routes/rt:route" {
when "../../rt:address-family = 'v6ur:ipv6-unicast'" {
description
"This augment is valid only for IPv6 unicast.";
}
description
"This leaf augments an IPv6 unicast route.";
leaf destination-prefix {
type inet:ipv6-prefix;
description
"IPv6 destination prefix.";
}
}
augment "/rt:routing-state/rt:ribs/rt:rib/rt:routes/rt:route/"
+ "rt:next-hop-options/rt:simple-next-hop" {
when "../../rt:address-family = 'v6ur:ipv6-unicast'" {
description
"This augment is valid only for IPv6 unicast.";
}
description
"This leaf augments the 'simple-next-hop' case of IPv6 unicast
routes.";
leaf next-hop {
type inet:ipv6-address;
description
"IPv6 address of the next-hop.";
}
}
augment "/rt:routing-state/rt:ribs/rt:rib/rt:routes/rt:route/"
+ "rt:next-hop-options/rt:next-hop-list/rt:next-hop-list/"
+ "rt:next-hop" {
when "../../../../rt:address-family = 'v6ur:ipv6-unicast'" {
description
"This augment is valid only for IPv6 unicast.";
}
if-feature rt:multipath-routes;
description
"This leaf augments the 'next-hop-list' case of IPv6 unicast
routes.";
leaf address {
type inet:ipv6-address;
description
"IPv6 address of the next-hop.";
}
}
/* Configuration data */
augment
"/rt:routing/rt:routing-instance/rt:interfaces/rt:interface" {
when "/if:interfaces/if:interface[if:name=current()/rt:name]/"
+ "ip:ipv6/ip:enabled='true'" {
description
"This augment is only valid for router interfaces with
enabled IPv6.";
}
description
"Configuration of IPv6-specific parameters of router
interfaces.";
container ipv6-router-advertisements {
description
"Configuration of IPv6 Router Advertisements.";
leaf send-advertisements {
type boolean;
default "false";
description
"A flag indicating whether or not the router sends periodic
Router Advertisements and responds to Router
Solicitations.";
reference
"RFC 4861: Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6 (IPv6) -
AdvSendAdvertisements.";
}
leaf max-rtr-adv-interval {
type uint16 {
range "4..1800";
}
units "seconds";
default "600";
description
"The maximum time allowed between sending unsolicited
multicast Router Advertisements from the interface.";
reference
"RFC 4861: Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6 (IPv6) -
MaxRtrAdvInterval.";
}
leaf min-rtr-adv-interval {
type uint16 {
range "3..1350";
}
units "seconds";
must ". <= 0.75 * ../max-rtr-adv-interval" {
description
"The value MUST NOT be greater than 75 % of
'max-rtr-adv-interval'.";
}
description
"The minimum time allowed between sending unsolicited
multicast Router Advertisements from the interface.
The default value to be used operationally if this leaf is
not configured is determined as follows:
- if max-rtr-adv-interval >= 9 seconds, the default value
is 0.33 * max-rtr-adv-interval;
- otherwise it is 0.75 * max-rtr-adv-interval.";
reference
"RFC 4861: Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6 (IPv6) -
MinRtrAdvInterval.";
}
leaf managed-flag {
type boolean;
default "false";
description
"The value to be placed in the 'Managed address
configuration' flag field in the Router Advertisement.";
reference
"RFC 4861: Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6 (IPv6) -
AdvManagedFlag.";
}
leaf other-config-flag {
type boolean;
default "false";
description
"The value to be placed in the 'Other configuration' flag
field in the Router Advertisement.";
reference
"RFC 4861: Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6 (IPv6) -
AdvOtherConfigFlag.";
}
leaf link-mtu {
type uint32;
default "0";
description
"The value to be placed in MTU options sent by the router.
A value of zero indicates that no MTU options are sent.";
reference
"RFC 4861: Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6 (IPv6) -
AdvLinkMTU.";
}
leaf reachable-time {
type uint32 {
range "0..3600000";
}
units "milliseconds";
default "0";
description
"The value to be placed in the Reachable Time field in the
Router Advertisement messages sent by the router. A value
of zero means unspecified (by this router).";
reference
"RFC 4861: Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6 (IPv6) -
AdvReachableTime.";
}
leaf retrans-timer {
type uint32;
units "milliseconds";
default "0";
description
"The value to be placed in the Retrans Timer field in the
Router Advertisement messages sent by the router. A value
of zero means unspecified (by this router).";
reference
"RFC 4861: Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6 (IPv6) -
AdvRetransTimer.";
}
leaf cur-hop-limit {
type uint8;
description
"The value to be placed in the Cur Hop Limit field in the
Router Advertisement messages sent by the router. A value
of zero means unspecified (by this router).
If this parameter is not configured, the device SHOULD use
the value specified in IANA Assigned Numbers that was in
effect at the time of implementation.";
reference
"RFC 4861: Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6 (IPv6) -
AdvCurHopLimit.
IANA: IP Parameters,
http://www.iana.org/assignments/ip-parameters";
}
leaf default-lifetime {
type uint16 {
range "0..9000";
}
units "seconds";
description
"The value to be placed in the Router Lifetime field of
Router Advertisements sent from the interface, in seconds.
It MUST be either zero or between max-rtr-adv-interval and
9000 seconds. A value of zero indicates that the router is
not to be used as a default router. These limits may be
overridden by specific documents that describe how IPv6
operates over different link layers.
If this parameter is not configured, the device SHOULD use
a value of 3 * max-rtr-adv-interval.";
reference
"RFC 4861: Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6 (IPv6) -
AdvDefaultLifeTime.";
}
container prefix-list {
description
"Configuration of prefixes to be placed in Prefix
Information options in Router Advertisement messages sent
from the interface.
Prefixes that are advertised by default but do not have
their entries in the child 'prefix' list are advertised
with the default values of all parameters.
The link-local prefix SHOULD NOT be included in the list
of advertised prefixes.";
reference
"RFC 4861: Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6 (IPv6) -
AdvPrefixList.";
list prefix {
key "prefix-spec";
description
"Configuration of an advertised prefix entry.";
leaf prefix-spec {
type inet:ipv6-prefix;
description
"IPv6 address prefix.";
}
choice control-adv-prefixes {
default "advertise";
description
"The prefix either may be explicitly removed from the
set of advertised prefixes, or parameters with which
it is advertised may be specified (default case).";
leaf no-advertise {
type empty;
description
"The prefix will not be advertised.
This can be used for removing the prefix from the
default set of advertised prefixes.";
}
case advertise {
leaf valid-lifetime {
type uint32;
units "seconds";
default "2592000";
description
"The value to be placed in the Valid Lifetime in
the Prefix Information option. The designated
value of all 1's (0xffffffff) represents
infinity.";
reference
"RFC 4861: Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6
(IPv6) - AdvValidLifetime.";
}
leaf on-link-flag {
type boolean;
default "true";
description
"The value to be placed in the on-link flag
('L-bit') field in the Prefix Information
option.";
reference
"RFC 4861: Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6
(IPv6) - AdvOnLinkFlag.";
}
leaf preferred-lifetime {
type uint32;
units "seconds";
must ". <= ../valid-lifetime" {
description
"This value MUST NOT be greater than
valid-lifetime.";
}
default "604800";
description
"The value to be placed in the Preferred Lifetime
in the Prefix Information option. The designated
value of all 1's (0xffffffff) represents
infinity.";
reference
"RFC 4861: Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6
(IPv6) - AdvPreferredLifetime.";
}
leaf autonomous-flag {
type boolean;
default "true";
description
"The value to be placed in the Autonomous Flag
field in the Prefix Information option.";
reference
"RFC 4861: Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6
(IPv6) - AdvAutonomousFlag.";
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
augment "/rt:routing/rt:routing-instance/rt:routing-protocols/"
+ "rt:routing-protocol/rt:static-routes" {
description
"This augment defines the configuration of the 'static'
pseudo-protocol with data specific to IPv6 unicast.";
container ipv6 {
description
"Configuration of a 'static' pseudo-protocol instance
consists of a list of routes.";
list route {
key "id";
ordered-by "user";
description
"A user-ordered list of static routes.";
leaf id {
type uint32 {
range "1..max";
}
description
"Unique numeric identifier of the route.
This value is unrelated to system-assigned 'id'
parameters of routes in RIBs.";
}
leaf description {
type string;
description
"Textual description of the route.";
}
leaf destination-prefix {
type inet:ipv6-prefix;
mandatory "true";
description
"IPv6 destination prefix.";
}
choice next-hop-options {
mandatory "true";
description
"Options for expressing the next-hop in static routes.";
case special-next-hop {
uses rt:special-next-hop;
}
case simple-next-hop {
leaf next-hop {
type inet:ipv6-address;
description
"IPv6 address of the next-hop.";
}
leaf outgoing-interface {
type leafref {
path "../../../../../../rt:interfaces/rt:interface/"
+ "rt:name";
}
description
"Name of the outgoing interface.
Only interfaces configured for the ancestor routing
instance can be given.";
}
}
case next-hop-list {
if-feature rt:multipath-routes;
container next-hop-list {
description
"Configuration of multiple next-hops.";
list next-hop {
key "id";
description
"An entry of a next-hop list.";
leaf id {
type uint32;
description
"Unique numeric identifier of the entry.
This value is unrelated to system-assigned 'id'
parameters of next-hops in RIBs.";
}
leaf address {
type inet:ipv6-address;
description
"IPv6 address of the next-hop.";
}
leaf outgoing-interface {
type leafref {
path "../../../../../../../../rt:interfaces/"
+ "rt:interface/rt:name";
}
description
"Name of the outgoing interface.
Only interfaces configured for the ancestor
routing instance can be given.";
}
uses rt:next-hop-classifiers {
refine "priority" {
default "primary";
}
refine "weight" {
default "0";
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
/* RPC methods */
augment "/rt:active-route/rt:input/rt:destination-address" {
when "rt:address-family='v6ur:ipv6-unicast'" {
description
"This augment is valid only for IPv6 unicast.";
}
description
"This leaf augments the 'rt:destination-address' parameter of
the 'rt:active-route' operation.";
leaf address {
type inet:ipv6-address;
description
"IPv6 destination address.";
}
}
augment "/rt:active-route/rt:output/rt:route" {
when "rt:address-family='v6ur:ipv6-unicast'" {
description
"This augment is valid only for IPv6 unicast.";
}
description
"This leaf augments the reply to the 'rt:active-route'
operation.";
leaf destination-prefix {
type inet:ipv6-prefix;
description
"IPv6 destination prefix.";
}
}
augment "/rt:active-route/rt:output/rt:route/rt:next-hop-options/"
+ "rt:simple-next-hop" {
when "rt:address-family='v6ur:ipv6-unicast'" {
description
"This augment is valid only for IPv6 unicast.";
}
description
"This leaf augments the 'simple-next-hop' case in the reply to
the 'rt:active-route' operation.";
leaf next-hop {
type inet:ipv6-address;
description
"IPv6 address of the next-hop.";
}
}
augment "/rt:active-route/rt:output/rt:route/rt:next-hop-options/"
+ "rt:next-hop-list/rt:next-hop-list/rt:next-hop" {
when "../../rt:address-family='v6ur:ipv6-unicast'" {
description
"This augment is valid only for IPv6 unicast.";
}
if-feature rt:multipath-routes;
description
"This leaf augments the 'next-hop-list' case in the reply to
the 'rt:active-route' operation.";
leaf address {
type inet:ipv6-address;
description
"IPv6 address of the next-hop.";
}
}
}
<CODE ENDS></artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section anchor="sec.iana" title="IANA Considerations" toc="default">
<t>RFC Ed.: In this section, replace all occurrences of 'XXXX' with
the actual RFC number (and remove this note).</t>
<t>This document registers the following namespace URIs in the
IETF XML registry <xref target="RFC3688" pageno="false" format="default"/>:</t>
<figure title="" suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
----------------------------------------------------------
URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-routing
Registrant Contact: The IESG.
XML: N/A, the requested URI is an XML namespace.
----------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------
URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-ipv4-unicast-routing
Registrant Contact: The IESG.
XML: N/A, the requested URI is an XML namespace.
----------------------------------------------------------
----------------------------------------------------------
URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing
Registrant Contact: The IESG.
XML: N/A, the requested URI is an XML namespace.
----------------------------------------------------------
</artwork>
</figure>
<t>This document registers the following YANG modules in the YANG
Module Names registry <xref target="RFC6020" pageno="false" format="default"/>:</t>
<figure title="" suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
-------------------------------------------------------------------
name: ietf-routing
namespace: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-routing
prefix: rt
reference: RFC XXXX
-------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------
name: ietf-ipv4-unicast-routing
namespace: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-ipv4-unicast-routing
prefix: v4ur
reference: RFC XXXX
-------------------------------------------------------------------
-------------------------------------------------------------------
name: ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing
namespace: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing
prefix: v6ur
reference: RFC XXXX
-------------------------------------------------------------------
</artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section anchor="sec-cons" title="Security Considerations" toc="default">
<t>Configuration and state data conforming to the core routing
data model (defined in this document) are designed to be accessed
via the NETCONF protocol <xref target="RFC6241" pageno="false" format="default"/>. The lowest
NETCONF layer is the secure transport layer and the
mandatory-to-implement secure transport is SSH <xref target="RFC6242" pageno="false" format="default"/>. The NETCONF access control model <xref target="RFC6536" pageno="false" format="default"/> provides the means to restrict access for
particular NETCONF users to a pre-configured subset of all
available NETCONF protocol operations and content.</t>
<t>A number of data nodes defined in the YANG modules belonging to
the configuration part of the core routing data model are
writable/creatable/deletable (i.e., "config true" in YANG terms,
which is the default). These data nodes may be considered
sensitive or vulnerable in some network environments. Write
operations to these data nodes, such as "edit-config", can have
negative effects on the network if the protocol operations are not
properly protected.</t>
<t>The vulnerable "config true" subtrees and data nodes are the
following:
<list style="hanging">
<t hangText="/routing/routing-instance/interfaces/interface:">This
list assigns a network layer interface to a routing instance and
may also specify interface parameters related to routing.</t>
<t hangText="/routing/routing-instance/routing-protocols/routing-protocol:">This
list specifies the routing protocols configured on a device.</t>
<t hangText="/routing/route-filters/route-filter:">This
list specifies the configured route filters which represent
administrative policies for redistributing and modifying routing
information.</t>
<t hangText="/routing/ribs/rib:">This list specifies the RIBs
configured for the device.</t>
</list>
Unauthorized access to any of these lists can adversely affect the
routing subsystem of both the local device and the network. This
may lead to network malfunctions, delivery of packets to
inappropriate destinations and other problems.</t>
</section>
<section anchor="acknowledgments" title="Acknowledgments" toc="default">
<t>The author wishes to thank Nitin Bahadur, Martin Bjorklund,
Joel Halpern, Wes Hardaker, Sriganesh Kini, David Lamparter,
Andrew McGregor, Jan Medved, Xiang Li, Thomas Morin, Tom Petch,
Bruno Rijsman, Juergen Schoenwaelder, Phil Shafer, Dave Thaler and
Yi Yang for their helpful comments and suggestions.</t>
</section>
</middle>
<back>
<references title="Normative References">
<reference anchor="RFC2119">
<front>
<title abbrev="RFC Key Words">Key words for use in RFCs to
Indicate Requirement Levels</title>
<author initials="S." surname="Bradner" fullname="S. Bradner">
<organization/>
</author>
<date year="1997" month="March"/>
</front>
<seriesInfo name="BCP" value="14"/>
<seriesInfo name="RFC" value="2119"/>
<format type="TXT" octets="4723" target="ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc2119.txt"/>
</reference>
<reference anchor="RFC3688">
<front>
<title>The IETF XML Registry</title>
<author initials="M." surname="Mealling" fullname="M. Mealling">
<organization/></author>
<date year="2004" month="January"/>
</front>
<seriesInfo name="BCP" value="81"/>
<seriesInfo name="RFC" value="3688"/>
<format type="TXT" octets="17325" target="ftp://ftp.isi.edu/in-notes/rfc3688.txt"/>
</reference>
<reference anchor="RFC4861">
<front>
<title>Neighbor Discovery for IP version 6 (IPv6)</title>
<author initials="T" surname="Narten" fullname="T. Narten">
<organization>IBM</organization>
</author>
<author initials="E." surname="Nordmark" fullname="E. Nordmark">
<organization>Sun Microsystems</organization>
</author>
<author initials="W." surname="Simpson" fullname="W. Simpson">
<organization>Daydreamer</organization>
</author>
<author initials="H." surname="Soliman" fullname="H. Soliman">
<organization>Elevate Technologies</organization>
</author>
<date month="September" year="2007"/>
</front>
<seriesInfo name="RFC" value="4861"/>
<format type="HTML" target="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4861"/>
</reference>
<reference anchor="RFC6020">
<front>
<title>YANG - A Data Modeling Language for Network
Configuration Protocol (NETCONF)</title>
<author role="editor" initials="M" surname="Bjorklund" fullname="M. Bjorklund">
<organization>Tail-f Systems</organization>
</author>
<date month="September" year="2010"/>
</front>
<seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6020"/>
<format type="HTML" target="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6020"/>
</reference>
<reference anchor="RFC6991">
<front>
<title>Common YANG Data Types</title>
<author role="editor" initials="J." surname="Schoenwaelder" fullname="J. Schoenwaelder">
<organization/>
</author>
<date month="July" year="2013"/>
</front>
<seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6991"/>
<format type="HTML" target="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6991"/>
</reference>
<reference anchor="RFC6241">
<front>
<title>NETCONF Configuration Protocol</title>
<author initials="R." surname="Enns" fullname="R. Enns">
<organization/>
</author>
<author initials="M." surname="Bjorklund" fullname="M. Bjorklund">
<organization/>
</author>
<author initials="J." surname="Schoenwaelder" fullname="J. Schoenwaelder">
<organization/>
</author>
<author initials="A." surname="Bierman" fullname="A. Bierman">
<organization/>
</author>
<date year="2011" month="June"/>
</front>
<seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6241"/>
<format type="HTML" target="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6241"/>
</reference>
<reference anchor="RFC7223">
<front>
<title>A YANG Data Model for Interface Management</title>
<author initials="M." surname="Bjorklund" fullname="M. Bjorklund">
<organization/>
</author>
<date month="May" year="2014"/>
</front>
<seriesInfo name="RFC" value="7223"/>
<format type="HTML" target="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7223"/>
</reference>
<reference anchor="YANG-IP">
<front>
<title>A YANG Data Model for IP Management</title>
<author initials="M." surname="Bjorklund" fullname="M. Bjorklund">
<organization/>
</author>
<date month="March" day="28" year="2014"/>
</front>
<seriesInfo name="Internet-Draft" value="draft-ietf-netmod-ip-cfg-14"/>
<format type="HTML" target="http://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-netmod-ip-cfg"/>
</reference>
</references>
<references title="Informative References">
<reference anchor="RFC6087">
<front>
<title>Guidelines for Authors and Reviewers of YANG Data Model
Documents</title>
<author initials="A." surname="Bierman" fullname="Andy Bierman">
<organization/>
</author>
<date month="January" year="2011"/>
</front>
<seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6087"/>
<format type="HTML" target="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6087"/>
</reference>
<reference anchor="RFC6242">
<front>
<title>Using the NETCONF Protocol over Secure Shell (SSH)</title>
<author initials="M." surname="Wasserman" fullname="M. Wasserman">
<organization/>
</author>
<date year="2011" month="June"/>
</front>
<seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6242"/>
<format type="HTML" target="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6242"/>
</reference>
<reference anchor="RFC6536">
<front>
<title>Network Configuration Protocol (NETCONF) Access Control
Model</title>
<author initials="A." surname="Bierman" fullname="A. Bierman">
<organization/>
</author>
<author initials="M." surname="Bjorklund" fullname="M. Bjorklund">
<organization/>
</author>
<date year="2012" month="March"/>
</front>
<seriesInfo name="RFC" value="6536"/>
<format type="HTML" target="http://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6536"/>
</reference>
</references>
<section anchor="app.data-tree" title="The Complete Data Trees" toc="default">
<t>This appendix presents the complete configuration and
operational state data trees of the core routing data model.</t>
<t>See <xref target="sec.tree-symbols" pageno="false" format="default"/> for an explanation of the
symbols used. Data type of every leaf node is shown near the right
end of the corresponding line.</t>
<section anchor="app.config-tree" title="Configuration Data" toc="default">
<figure title="" suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
+--rw routing
+--rw routing-instance* [name]
| +--rw name string
| +--rw type? identityref
| +--rw enabled? boolean
| +--rw router-id? yang:dotted-quad
| +--rw description? string
| +--rw default-ribs {multiple-ribs}?
| | +--rw default-rib* [address-family]
| | +--rw address-family identityref
| | +--rw rib-name string
| +--rw interfaces
| | +--rw interface* [name]
| | +--rw name if:interface-ref
| | +--rw v6ur:ipv6-router-advertisements
| | +--rw v6ur:send-advertisements? boolean
| | +--rw v6ur:max-rtr-adv-interval? uint16
| | +--rw v6ur:min-rtr-adv-interval? uint16
| | +--rw v6ur:managed-flag? boolean
| | +--rw v6ur:other-config-flag? boolean
| | +--rw v6ur:link-mtu? uint32
| | +--rw v6ur:reachable-time? uint32
| | +--rw v6ur:retrans-timer? uint32
| | +--rw v6ur:cur-hop-limit? uint8
| | +--rw v6ur:default-lifetime? uint16
| | +--rw v6ur:prefix-list
| | +--rw v6ur:prefix* [prefix-spec]
| | +--rw v6ur:prefix-spec inet:ipv6-prefix
| | +--rw (control-adv-prefixes)?
| | +--:(no-advertise)
| | | +--rw v6ur:no-advertise? empty
| | +--:(advertise)
| | +--rw v6ur:valid-lifetime? uint32
| | +--rw v6ur:on-link-flag? boolean
| | +--rw v6ur:preferred-lifetime? uint32
| | +--rw v6ur:autonomous-flag? boolean
| +--rw routing-protocols
| +--rw routing-protocol* [name]
| +--rw name string
| +--rw description? string
| +--rw enabled? boolean
| +--rw type identityref
| +--rw connected-ribs
| | +--rw connected-rib* [rib-name]
| | +--rw rib-name rib-ref
| | +--rw import-filter? route-filter-ref
| | +--rw export-filter? route-filter-ref
| +--rw static-routes
| +--rw v4ur:ipv4
| | +--rw v4ur:route* [id]
| | +--rw v4ur:id uint32
| | +--rw v4ur:description? string
| | +--rw v4ur:destination-prefix inet:ipv4-prefix
| | +--rw (next-hop-options)
| | +--:(special-next-hop)
| | | +--rw v4ur:special-next-hop? enumeration
| | +--:(simple-next-hop)
| | | +--rw v4ur:next-hop? inet:ipv4-address
| | | +--rw v4ur:outgoing-interface? leafref
| | +--:(next-hop-list) {rt:multipath-routes}?
| | +--rw v4ur:next-hop-list
| | +--rw v4ur:next-hop* [id]
| | +--rw v4ur:id uint32
| | +--rw v4ur:address? inet:ipv4-address
| | +--rw v4ur:outgoing-interface? leafref
| | +--rw v4ur:priority? enumeration
| | +--rw v4ur:weight? uint8
| +--rw v6ur:ipv6
| +--rw v6ur:route* [id]
| +--rw v6ur:id uint32
| +--rw v6ur:description? string
| +--rw v6ur:destination-prefix inet:ipv6-prefix
| +--rw (next-hop-options)
| +--:(special-next-hop)
| | +--rw v6ur:special-next-hop? enumeration
| +--:(simple-next-hop)
| | +--rw v6ur:next-hop? inet:ipv6-address
| | +--rw v6ur:outgoing-interface? leafref
| +--:(next-hop-list) {rt:multipath-routes}?
| +--rw v6ur:next-hop-list
| +--rw v6ur:next-hop* [id]
| +--rw v6ur:id uint32
| +--rw v6ur:address? inet:ipv6-address
| +--rw v6ur:outgoing-interface? leafref
| +--rw v6ur:priority? enumeration
| +--rw v6ur:weight? uint8
+--rw ribs
| +--rw rib* [name]
| +--rw name string
| +--rw address-family identityref
| +--rw description? string
| +--rw recipient-ribs {multiple-ribs}?
| +--rw recipient-rib* [rib-name]
| +--rw rib-name rib-ref
| +--rw filter? route-filter-ref
+--rw route-filters
+--rw route-filter* [name]
+--rw name string
+--rw description? string
+--rw type identityref
</artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section anchor="app.state-tree" title="Operational State Data" toc="default">
<figure title="" suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
+--ro routing-state
+--ro routing-instance* [name]
| +--ro name string
| +--ro id uint64
| +--ro type? identityref
| +--ro router-id? yang:dotted-quad
| +--ro default-ribs
| | +--ro default-rib* [address-family]
| | +--ro address-family identityref
| | +--ro rib-name rib-state-ref
| +--ro interfaces
| | +--ro interface* [name]
| | +--ro name if:interface-state-ref
| | +--ro v6ur:ipv6-router-advertisements
| | +--ro v6ur:send-advertisements? boolean
| | +--ro v6ur:max-rtr-adv-interval? uint16
| | +--ro v6ur:min-rtr-adv-interval? uint16
| | +--ro v6ur:managed-flag? boolean
| | +--ro v6ur:other-config-flag? boolean
| | +--ro v6ur:link-mtu? uint32
| | +--ro v6ur:reachable-time? uint32
| | +--ro v6ur:retrans-timer? uint32
| | +--ro v6ur:cur-hop-limit? uint8
| | +--ro v6ur:default-lifetime? uint16
| | +--ro v6ur:prefix-list
| | +--ro v6ur:prefix* [prefix-spec]
| | +--ro v6ur:prefix-spec inet:ipv6-prefix
| | +--ro v6ur:valid-lifetime? uint32
| | +--ro v6ur:on-link-flag? boolean
| | +--ro v6ur:preferred-lifetime? uint32
| | +--ro v6ur:autonomous-flag? boolean
| +--ro routing-protocols
| +--ro routing-protocol* [name]
| +--ro name string
| +--ro type identityref
| +--ro connected-ribs
| +--ro connected-rib* [rib-name]
| +--ro rib-name rib-state-ref
| +--ro import-filter? route-filter-state-ref
| +--ro export-filter? route-filter-state-ref
+--ro ribs
| +--ro rib* [name]
| +--ro name string
| +--ro id uint64
| +--ro address-family identityref
| +--ro routes
| | +--ro route* [id]
| | +--ro id uint64
| | +--ro (next-hop-options)
| | | +--:(special-next-hop)
| | | | +--ro special-next-hop? enumeration
| | | +--:(simple-next-hop)
| | | | +--ro outgoing-interface? leafref
| | | | +--ro v4ur:next-hop? inet:ipv4-address
| | | | +--ro v6ur:next-hop? inet:ipv6-address
| | | +--:(next-hop-list) {multipath-routes}?
| | | +--ro next-hop-list
| | | +--ro next-hop* [id]
| | | +--ro id uint64
| | | +--ro outgoing-interface? leafref
| | | +--ro priority? enumeration
| | | +--ro weight? uint8
| | | +--ro v4ur:address? inet:ipv4-address
| | | +--ro v6ur:address? inet:ipv6-address
| | +--ro source-protocol identityref
| | +--ro last-updated? yang:date-and-time
| | +--ro v4ur:destination-prefix? inet:ipv4-prefix
| | +--ro v6ur:destination-prefix? inet:ipv6-prefix
| +--ro recipient-ribs {multiple-ribs}?
| +--ro recipient-rib* [rib-name]
| +--ro rib-name rib-state-ref
| +--ro filter? route-filter-state-ref
+--ro route-filters
+--ro route-filter* [name]
+--ro name string
+--ro type identityref
</artwork>
</figure>
</section>
</section>
<section anchor="app.minimum" title="Minimum Implementation" toc="default">
<t>Some parts and options of the core routing model, such as route
filters or multiple routing tables, are intended only for advanced
routers. This appendix gives basic non-normative guidelines for
implementing a bare minimum of available functions. Such an
implementation may be used for hosts or very simple routers.</t>
<t>A minimum implementation will provide a single
system-controlled routing instance, and will not allow clients to
create any user-controlled instances.</t>
<t>Typically, neither of the features defined in the
"ietf-routing" module ("multiple-ribs" and
"multipath-routes") will be supported. This means that:
<list style="symbols">
<t>A single system-controlled RIB (routing table) is available
for each supported address family - IPv4, IPv6 or both. These
RIBs are the default RIBs, so they will also appear as
system-controlled entries of the "default-rib" list in
operational state data. No user-controlled RIBs are allowed.</t>
<t>Each route has no more than one "next-hop",
"outgoing-interface" or "special-next-hop".</t>
</list></t>
<t>In addition to the mandatory instance of the "direct"
pseudo-protocol, a minimum implementation should support
configured instance(s) of the "static"
pseudo-protocol. Even with a single RIB per address family, it may
be occasionally useful to be able to configure multiple "static" instances.
For example, a client may want to configure alternative sets of
static routes and activate or deactivate them by means of
configuring appropriate route filters ("allow-all-route-filter" or
"deny-all-route-filter").</t>
<t>Platforms with severely constrained resources may use
deviations for restricting the data model, e.g., limiting the
number of "static" routing protocol instances, preventing any
route filters to be configured etc.</t>
</section>
<section anchor="app.rip" title="Example: Adding a New Routing Protocol" toc="default">
<t>This appendix demonstrates how the core routing data model can
be extended to support a new routing protocol. The YANG module
"example-rip" shown below is intended only as an illustration
rather than a real definition of a data model for the RIP routing
protocol. For the sake of brevity, we do not follow all the
guidelines specified in <xref target="RFC6087" pageno="false" format="default"/>. See also <xref target="sec.newproto" pageno="false" format="default"/>.</t>
<figure title="" suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
module example-rip {
namespace "http://example.com/rip";
prefix "rip";
import ietf-routing {
prefix "rt";
}
identity rip {
base rt:routing-protocol;
description
"Identity for the RIP routing protocol.";
}
typedef rip-metric {
type uint8 {
range "0..16";
}
}
grouping route-content {
description
"This grouping defines RIP-specific route attributes.";
leaf metric {
type rip-metric;
}
leaf tag {
type uint16;
default "0";
description
"This leaf may be used to carry additional info, e.g. AS
number.";
}
}
augment "/rt:routing-state/rt:ribs/rt:rib/rt:routes/rt:route" {
when "rt:source-protocol = 'rip:rip'" {
description
"This augment is only valid for a routes whose source
protocol is RIP.";
}
description
"RIP-specific route attributes.";
uses route-content;
}
augment "/rt:active-route/rt:output/rt:route" {
description
"RIP-specific route attributes in the output of 'active-route'
RPC.";
uses route-content;
}
augment "/rt:routing/rt:routing-instance/rt:routing-protocols/"
+ "rt:routing-protocol" {
when "rt:type = 'rip:rip'" {
description
"This augment is only valid for a routing protocol instance
of type 'rip'.";
}
container rip {
description
"RIP instance configuration.";
container interfaces {
description
"Per-interface RIP configuration.";
list interface {
key "name";
description
"RIP is enabled on interfaces that have an entry in this
list, unless 'enabled' is set to 'false' for that
entry.";
leaf name {
type leafref {
path "../../../../../../rt:interfaces/rt:interface/"
+ "rt:name";
}
}
leaf enabled {
type boolean;
default "true";
}
leaf metric {
type rip-metric;
default "1";
}
}
}
leaf update-interval {
type uint8 {
range "10..60";
}
units "seconds";
default "30";
description
"Time interval between periodic updates.";
}
}
}
}
</artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section anchor="app.get-reply" title="Example: NETCONF <get> Reply" toc="default">
<t>This section contains a sample reply to the NETCONF <get>
message, which could be sent by a server supporting (i.e.,
advertising them in the NETCONF <hello> message) the
following YANG modules:
<list style="symbols">
<t>ietf-interfaces <xref target="RFC7223" pageno="false" format="default"/>,</t>
<t>ietf-ip <xref target="YANG-IP" pageno="false" format="default"/>,</t>
<t>ietf-routing (<xref target="sec.mod-rt" pageno="false" format="default"/>),</t>
<t>ietf-ipv4-unicast-routing (<xref target="sec.mod-v4ur" pageno="false" format="default"/>),</t>
<t>ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing (<xref target="sec.mod-v6ur" pageno="false" format="default"/>).</t>
</list></t>
<t>We assume a simple network setup as shown in <xref target="fig.exnet" pageno="false" format="default"/>: router "A" uses static default routes with
the "ISP" router as the next-hop. IPv6 router advertisements are
configured only on the "eth1" interface and disabled on the
upstream "eth0" interface.</t>
<figure anchor="fig.exnet" title="Example network configuration" suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
+-----------------+
| |
| Router ISP |
| |
+--------+--------+
|2001:db8:0:1::2
|192.0.2.2
|
|
|2001:db8:0:1::1
eth0|192.0.2.1
+--------+--------+
| |
| Router A |
| |
+--------+--------+
eth1|198.51.100.1
|2001:db8:0:2::1
|
</artwork>
</figure>
<t>A reply to the NETCONF <get> message sent by router "A"
would then be as follows:</t>
<figure title="" suppress-title="false" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<artwork xml:space="preserve" name="" type="" align="left" alt="" width="" height="">
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<rpc-reply
message-id="101"
xmlns="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:netconf:base:1.0"
xmlns:v4ur="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-ipv4-unicast-routing"
xmlns:v6ur="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing"
xmlns:if="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-interfaces"
xmlns:ianaift="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:iana-if-type"
xmlns:ip="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-ip"
xmlns:rt="urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-routing">
<data>
<if:interfaces>
<if:interface>
<if:name>eth0</if:name>
<if:type>ianaift:ethernetCsmacd</if:type>
<if:description>
Uplink to ISP.
</if:description>
<ip:ipv4>
<ip:address>
<ip:ip>192.0.2.1</ip:ip>
<ip:prefix-length>24</ip:prefix-length>
</ip:address>
<ip:forwarding>true</ip:forwarding>
</ip:ipv4>
<ip:ipv6>
<ip:address>
<ip:ip>2001:0db8:0:1::1</ip:ip>
<ip:prefix-length>64</ip:prefix-length>
</ip:address>
<ip:forwarding>true</ip:forwarding>
<ip:autoconf>
<ip:create-global-addresses>false</ip:create-global-addresses>
</ip:autoconf>
</ip:ipv6>
</if:interface>
<if:interface>
<if:name>eth1</if:name>
<if:type>ianaift:ethernetCsmacd</if:type>
<if:description>
Interface to the internal network.
</if:description>
<ip:ipv4>
<ip:address>
<ip:ip>198.51.100.1</ip:ip>
<ip:prefix-length>24</ip:prefix-length>
</ip:address>
<ip:forwarding>true</ip:forwarding>
</ip:ipv4>
<ip:ipv6>
<ip:address>
<ip:ip>2001:0db8:0:2::1</ip:ip>
<ip:prefix-length>64</ip:prefix-length>
</ip:address>
<ip:forwarding>true</ip:forwarding>
<ip:autoconf>
<ip:create-global-addresses>false</ip:create-global-addresses>
</ip:autoconf>
</ip:ipv6>
</if:interface>
</if:interfaces>
<if:interfaces-state>
<if:interface>
<if:name>eth0</if:name>
<if:type>ianaift:ethernetCsmacd</if:type>
<if:phys-address>00:0C:42:E5:B1:E9</if:phys-address>
<if:oper-status>up</if:oper-status>
<if:statistics>
<if:discontinuity-time>
2013-07-02T17:11:27+00:58</if:discontinuity-time>
</if:statistics>
<ip:ipv4>
<ip:forwarding>true</ip:forwarding>
<ip:mtu>1500</ip:mtu>
<ip:address>
<ip:ip>192.0.2.1</ip:ip>
<ip:prefix-length>24</ip:prefix-length>
</ip:address>
</ip:ipv4>
<ip:ipv6>
<ip:forwarding>true</ip:forwarding>
<ip:mtu>1500</ip:mtu>
<ip:address>
<ip:ip>2001:0db8:0:1::1</ip:ip>
<ip:prefix-length>64</ip:prefix-length>
</ip:address>
</ip:ipv6>
</if:interface>
<if:interface>
<if:name>eth1</if:name>
<if:type>ianaift:ethernetCsmacd</if:type>
<if:oper-status>up</if:oper-status>
<if:phys-address>00:0C:42:E5:B1:EA</if:phys-address>
<if:statistics>
<if:discontinuity-time>
2013-07-02T17:11:27+00:59</if:discontinuity-time>
</if:statistics>
<ip:ipv4>
<ip:forwarding>true</ip:forwarding>
<ip:mtu>1500</ip:mtu>
<ip:address>
<ip:ip>198.51.100.1</ip:ip>
<ip:prefix-length>24</ip:prefix-length>
</ip:address>
</ip:ipv4>
<ip:ipv6>
<ip:forwarding>true</ip:forwarding>
<ip:mtu>1500</ip:mtu>
<ip:address>
<ip:ip>2001:0db8:0:2::1</ip:ip>
<ip:prefix-length>64</ip:prefix-length>
</ip:address>
</ip:ipv6>
</if:interface>
</if:interfaces-state>
<rt:routing>
<rt:routing-instance>
<rt:name>rtr0</rt:name>
<rt:description>Router A</rt:description>
<rt:interfaces>
<rt:interface>
<rt:name>eth1</rt:name>
<v6ur:ipv6-router-advertisements>
<v6ur:send-advertisements>true</v6ur:send-advertisements>
<v6ur:prefix-list>
<v6ur:prefix>
<v6ur:prefix-spec>2001:db8:0:2::/64</v6ur:prefix-spec>
</v6ur:prefix>
</v6ur:prefix-list>
</v6ur:ipv6-router-advertisements>
</rt:interface>
</rt:interfaces>
<rt:routing-protocols>
<rt:routing-protocol>
<rt:name>st0</rt:name>
<rt:description>
Static routing is used for the internal network.
</rt:description>
<rt:type>rt:static</rt:type>
<rt:static-routes>
<v4ur:ipv4>
<v4ur:route>
<v4ur:id>1</v4ur:id>
<v4ur:destination-prefix>0.0.0.0/0</v4ur:destination-prefix>
<v4ur:next-hop>192.0.2.2</v4ur:next-hop>
</v4ur:route>
</v4ur:ipv4>
<v6ur:ipv6>
<v6ur:route>
<v6ur:id>1</v6ur:id>
<v6ur:destination-prefix>::/0</v6ur:destination-prefix>
<v6ur:next-hop>2001:db8:0:1::2</v6ur:next-hop>
</v6ur:route>
</v6ur:ipv6>
</rt:static-routes>
</rt:routing-protocol>
</rt:routing-protocols>
</rt:routing-instance>
</rt:routing>
<rt:routing-state>
<rt:routing-instance>
<rt:name>rtr0</rt:name>
<rt:id>2718281828</rt:id>
<rt:router-id>192.0.2.1</rt:router-id>
<rt:default-ribs>
<rt:default-rib>
<rt:address-family>v4ur:ipv4-unicast</rt:address-family>
<rt:rib-name>ipv4-master</rt:rib-name>
</rt:default-rib>
<rt:default-rib>
<rt:address-family>v6ur:ipv6-unicast</rt:address-family>
<rt:rib-name>ipv6-master</rt:rib-name>
</rt:default-rib>
</rt:default-ribs>
<rt:interfaces>
<rt:interface>
<rt:name>eth0</rt:name>
</rt:interface>
<rt:interface>
<rt:name>eth1</rt:name>
<v6ur:ipv6-router-advertisements>
<v6ur:send-advertisements>true</v6ur:send-advertisements>
<v6ur:prefix-list>
<v6ur:prefix>
<v6ur:prefix-spec>2001:db8:0:2::/64</v6ur:prefix-spec>
</v6ur:prefix>
</v6ur:prefix-list>
</v6ur:ipv6-router-advertisements>
</rt:interface>
</rt:interfaces>
<rt:routing-protocols>
<rt:routing-protocol>
<rt:name>st0</rt:name>
<rt:type>rt:static</rt:type>
</rt:routing-protocol>
</rt:routing-protocols>
</rt:routing-instance>
<rt:ribs>
<rt:rib>
<rt:name>ipv4-master</rt:name>
<rt:id>897932384</rt:id>
<rt:address-family>v4ur:ipv4-unicast</rt:address-family>
<rt:routes>
<rt:route>
<rt:id>626433832</rt:id>
<v4ur:destination-prefix>
192.0.2.1/24</v4ur:destination-prefix>
<rt:outgoing-interface>eth0</rt:outgoing-interface>
<rt:source-protocol>rt:direct</rt:source-protocol>
<rt:last-updated>2013-07-02T17:11:27+01:00</rt:last-updated>
</rt:route>
<rt:route>
<rt:id>795028841</rt:id>
<v4ur:destination-prefix>
198.51.100.0/24</v4ur:destination-prefix>
<rt:outgoing-interface>eth1</rt:outgoing-interface>
<rt:source-protocol>rt:direct</rt:source-protocol>
<rt:last-updated>2013-07-02T17:11:27+01:00</rt:last-updated>
</rt:route>
<rt:route>
<rt:id>971693993</rt:id>
<v4ur:destination-prefix>0.0.0.0/0</v4ur:destination-prefix>
<rt:source-protocol>rt:static</rt:source-protocol>
<v4ur:next-hop>192.0.2.2</v4ur:next-hop>
<rt:last-updated>2013-07-02T18:02:45+01:00</rt:last-updated>
</rt:route>
</rt:routes>
</rt:rib>
<rt:rib>
<rt:name>ipv6-master</rt:name>
<rt:id>751058209</rt:id>
<rt:address-family>v6ur:ipv6-unicast</rt:address-family>
<rt:routes>
<rt:route>
<rt:id>749445923</rt:id>
<v6ur:destination-prefix>
2001:db8:0:1::/64</v6ur:destination-prefix>
<rt:outgoing-interface>eth0</rt:outgoing-interface>
<rt:source-protocol>rt:direct</rt:source-protocol>
<rt:last-updated>2013-07-02T17:11:27+01:00</rt:last-updated>
</rt:route>
<rt:route>
<rt:id>78164062</rt:id>
<v6ur:destination-prefix>
2001:db8:0:2::/64</v6ur:destination-prefix>
<rt:outgoing-interface>eth1</rt:outgoing-interface>
<rt:source-protocol>rt:direct</rt:source-protocol>
<rt:last-updated>2013-07-02T17:11:27+01:00</rt:last-updated>
</rt:route>
<rt:route>
<rt:id>862089986</rt:id>
<v6ur:destination-prefix>::/0</v6ur:destination-prefix>
<v6ur:next-hop>2001:db8:0:1::2</v6ur:next-hop>
<rt:source-protocol>rt:static</rt:source-protocol>
<rt:last-updated>2013-07-02T18:02:45+01:00</rt:last-updated>
</rt:route>
</rt:routes>
</rt:rib>
</rt:ribs>
</rt:routing-state>
</data>
</rpc-reply>
</artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section anchor="change-log" title="Change Log" toc="default">
<t>RFC Editor: remove this section upon publication as an RFC.</t>
<section title="Changes Between Versions -14 and -15" toc="default">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Removed all defaults from state data.</t>
<t>Removed default from 'cur-hop-limit' in config.</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Changes Between Versions -13 and -14" toc="default">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Removed dependency of 'connected-ribs' on the
'multiple-ribs' feature.</t>
<t>Removed default value of 'cur-hop-limit' in state data.</t>
<t>Moved parts of descriptions and all references on IPv6 RA
parameters from state data to configuration.</t>
<t>Added reference to RFC 6536 in the Security section.</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Changes Between Versions -12 and -13" toc="default">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Wrote appendix about minimum implementation.</t>
<t>Remove "when" statement for IPv6 router interface
operational state - it was dependent on a config value that
may not be present.</t>
<t>Extra container for the next-hop list.</t>
<t>Names rather than numeric ids are used for referring to
list entries in operational state.</t>
<t>Numeric ids are always declared as mandatory and
unique. Their description states that they are ephemeral.</t>
<t>Descriptions of "name" keys in operational state lists
are required to be persistent.</t>
<t/>
<t>Removed "if-feature multiple-ribs;" from connected-ribs.</t>
<t>"rib-name" instead of "name" is used as the name of
leafref nodes.</t>
<t>"next-hop" instead of "nexthop" or "gateway" used
throughout, both in node names and text.</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Changes Between Versions -11 and -12" toc="default">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Removed feature "advanced-router" and introduced two
features instead: "multiple-ribs" and "multipath-routes".</t>
<t>Unified the keys of config and state versions of
"routing-instance" and "rib" lists.</t>
<t>Numerical identifiers of state list entries are not keys
anymore, but they are constrained using the "unique" statement.</t>
<t>Updated acknowledgements.</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Changes Between Versions -10 and -11" toc="default">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Migrated address families from IANA enumerations to
identities.</t> <t>Terminology and node names aligned with
the I2RS RIB model: router -> routing instance, routing
table -> RIB.</t>
<t>Introduced uint64 keys for state lists: routing-instance,
rib, route, nexthop.</t>
<t>Described the relationship between system-controlled and
user-controlled list entries.</t>
<t>Feature "user-defined-routing-tables" changed into "advanced-router".</t>
<t>Made nexthop into a choice in order to allow for
nexthop-list (I2RS requirement).</t>
<t>Added nexthop-list with entries having priorities
(backup) and weights (load balancing).</t>
<t>Updated bibliography references.</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Changes Between Versions -09 and -10" toc="default">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Added subtree for operational state data
("/routing-state").</t>
<t>Terms "system-controlled entry" and "user-controlled
entry" defined and used.</t>
<t>New feature "user-defined-routing-tables". Nodes that are
useful only with user-defined routing tables are now conditional.</t>
<t>Added grouping "router-id".</t>
<t>In routing tables, "source-protocol" attribute of routes
now reports only protocol type, and its datatype is
"identityref".</t>
<t>Renamed "main-routing-table" to "default-routing-table".</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Changes Between Versions -08 and -09" toc="default">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Fixed "must" expresion for "connected-routing-table".</t>
<t>Simplified "must" expression for "main-routing-table".</t>
<t>Moved per-interface configuration of a new routing
protocol under 'routing-protocol'. This also affects the
'example-rip' module.</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Changes Between Versions -07 and -08" toc="default">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Changed reference from RFC6021 to RFC6021bis.</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Changes Between Versions -06 and -07" toc="default">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>The contents of <get-reply> in <xref target="app.get-reply" pageno="false" format="default"/> was updated: "eth[01]" is used as
the value of "location", and "forwarding" is on for both
interfaces and both IPv4 and IPv6.</t>
<t>The "must" expression for "main-routing-table" was
modified to avoid redundant error messages reporting address
family mismatch when "name" points to a non-existent routing
table.</t>
<t>The default behavior for IPv6 RA prefix advertisements
was clarified.</t>
<t>Changed type of "rt:router-id" to "ip:dotted-quad".</t>
<t>Type of "rt:router-id" changed to "yang:dotted-quad".</t>
<t>Fixed missing prefixes in XPath expressions.</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Changes Between Versions -05 and -06" toc="default">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Document title changed: "Configuration" was replaced by
"Management".</t>
<t>New typedefs "routing-table-ref" and "route-filter-ref".</t>
<t>Double slashes "//" were removed from XPath expressions
and replaced with the single "/".</t>
<t>Removed uniqueness requirement for "router-id".</t>
<t>Complete data tree is now in <xref target="app.data-tree" pageno="false" format="default"/>.</t>
<t>Changed type of "source-protocol" from "leafref" to "string".</t>
<t>Clarified the relationship between routing protocol
instances and connected routing tables.</t>
<t>Added a must constraint saying that a routing table
connected to the direct pseudo-protocol must not be a main
routing table.</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Changes Between Versions -04 and -05" toc="default">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Routing tables are now global, i.e., "routing-tables" is
a child of "routing" rather than "router".</t>
<t>"must" statement for "static-routes" changed to "when".</t>
<t>Added "main-routing-tables" containing references to main
routing tables for each address family.</t>
<t>Removed the defaults for "address-family" and "safi" and
made them mandatory.</t>
<t>Removed the default for route-filter/type and made this
leaf mandatory.</t>
<t>If there is no active route for a given destination, the
"active-route" RPC returns no output.</t>
<t>Added "enabled" switch under "routing-protocol".</t>
<t>Added "router-type" identity and "type" leaf under
"router".</t>
<t>Route attribute "age" changed to "last-updated", its type
is "yang:date-and-time".</t>
<t>The "direct" pseudo-protocol is always connected to main
routing tables.</t>
<t>Entries in the list of connected routing tables renamed
from "routing-table" to "connected-routing-table".</t>
<t>Added "must" constraint saying that a routing table must
not be its own recipient.</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Changes Between Versions -03 and -04" toc="default">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Changed "error-tag" for both RPC methods from "missing
element" to "data-missing".</t>
<t>Removed the decrementing behavior for advertised IPv6
prefix parameters "valid-lifetime" and
"preferred-lifetime".</t>
<t>Changed the key of the static route lists from "seqno" to
"id" because the routes needn't be sorted.</t>
<t>Added 'must' constraint saying that "preferred-lifetime"
must not be greater than "valid-lifetime".</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Changes Between Versions -02 and -03" toc="default">
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Module "iana-afn-safi" moved to I-D "iana-if-type".</t>
<t>Removed forwarding table.</t>
<t>RPC "get-route" changed to "active-route". Its output is
a list of routes (for multi-path routing).</t>
<t>New RPC "route-count".</t>
<t>For both RPCs, specification of negative responses was
added.</t>
<t>Relaxed separation of router instances.</t>
<t>Assignment of interfaces to router instances needn't be
disjoint.</t>
<t>Route filters are now global.</t>
<t>Added "allow-all-route-filter" for symmetry.</t>
<t>Added <xref target="sec.interactions" pageno="false" format="default"/> about
interactions with "ietf-interfaces" and "ietf-ip".</t>
<t>Added "router-id" leaf.</t>
<t>Specified the names for IPv4/IPv6 unicast main routing
tables.</t>
<t>Route parameter "last-modified" changed to "age".</t>
<t>Added container "recipient-routing-tables".</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Changes Between Versions -01 and -02" toc="default">
<t><list style="symbols">
<t>Added module "ietf-ipv6-unicast-routing".</t>
<t>The example in <xref target="app.get-reply" pageno="false" format="default"/> now uses
IP addresses from blocks reserved for documentation.</t>
<t>Direct routes appear by default in the forwarding
table.</t>
<t>Network layer interfaces must be assigned to a router
instance. Additional interface configuration may be present.</t>
<t>The "when" statement is only used with "augment", "must" is
used elsewhere.</t>
<t>Additional "must" statements were added.</t>
<t>The "route-content" grouping for IPv4 and IPv6 unicast now
includes the material from the "ietf-routing" version via
"uses rt:route-content".</t>
<t>Explanation of symbols in the tree representation of data
model hierarchy.</t>
</list></t>
</section>
<section title="Changes Between Versions -00 and -01" toc="default">
<t><list style="symbols">
<t>AFN/SAFI-independent stuff was moved to the "ietf-routing"
module.</t>
<t>Typedefs for AFN and SAFI were placed in a separate
"iana-afn-safi" module.</t>
<t>Names of some data nodes were changed, in particular
"routing-process" is now "router".</t>
<t>The restriction of a single AFN/SAFI per router was
lifted.</t>
<t>RPC operation "delete-route" was removed.</t>
<t>Illegal XPath references from "get-route" to the datastore
were fixed.</t>
<t>Section "Security Considerations" was written.</t>
</list></t>
</section>
</section>
</back>
</rfc>
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