One document matched: draft-ietf-rtgwg-ipfrr-spec-base-02.txt
Differences from draft-ietf-rtgwg-ipfrr-spec-base-01.txt
Network Working Group A. Atlas, Ed.
Internet-Draft Avici Systems, Inc.
Expires: July 22, 2005 January 21, 2005
Basic Specification for IP Fast-Reroute: Loop-free Alternates
draft-ietf-rtgwg-ipfrr-spec-base-02
Status of this Memo
This document is an Internet-Draft and is subject to all provisions
of section 3 of RFC 3667. By submitting this Internet-Draft, each
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Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).
Abstract
This document describes the use of loop-free alternates to provide
local protection for IP unicast and/or LDP traffic in the event of a
single failure, whether link, node or shared risk link group (SRLG).
The goal of this technology is to reduce the micro-looping that and
packet loss that happens while routers converge after a topology
change due to a failure. When a topology change occurs, a router S
determines for each prefix an alternate next-hop which can be used if
the primary next-hop fails. An acceptable alternate next-hop must be
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a loop-free alternate, which goes to a neighbor whose shortest path
to the prefix does not go back through the router S.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.1 Failure Scenarios . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Alternate Next-Hop Calculation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
2.1 Basic Loop-free Condition . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
2.2 Node-Protecting Alternate Next-Hops . . . . . . . . . . . 7
2.3 Broadcast and NBMA Links . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
2.4 Interactions with ISIS Overload, RFC 3137 and Costed
Out Links . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
2.5 Selection Procedure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3. Using an Alternate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3.1 Terminating Use of Alternate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4. Requirements on LDP Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
5. Routing Aspects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
5.1 Multi-Homed Prefixes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
5.2 OSPF External Routing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
5.3 OSPF Virtual Links . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
5.4 BGP Next-Hop Synchronization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
5.5 Multicast Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
6. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
7. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . . 17
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1. Introduction
Applications for interactive multimedia services such as VoIP and
pseudo-wires can be very sensitive to traffic loss, such as occurs
when a link or router in the network fails. A router's convergence
time is generally on the order of seconds; the application traffic
may be sensitive to losses greater than 10s of milliseconds.
As discussed in [FRAMEWORK], minimizing traffic loss requires a
mechanism for the router adjacent to a failure to rapidly invoke a
repair path, which is minimally affected by any subsequent
re-convergence. This specification describes such a mechanism which
allows a router whose local link has failed to forward traffic to a
pre-computed alternate until the router installs the new primary
next-hops based upon the changed network topology. The terminology
used in this specification is given in [FRAMEWORK].
When a local link fails, a router currently must signal the event to
its neighbors via the IGP, recompute new primary next-hops for all
affected prefixes, and only then install those new primary next-hops
into the forwarding plane. Until the new primary next-hops are
installed, traffic directed towards the affected prefixes is
discarded. This process can take seconds.
<--
+-----+
/------| S |--\
/ +-----+ \
/ 5 8 \
/ \
+-----+ +-----+
| E | | N_1 |
+-----+ +-----+
\ /
\ \ 4 3 / /
\| \ / |/
-+ \ +-----+ / +-
\---| D |---/
+-----+
Figure 1: Basic Topology
The goal of IP Fast-Reroute is to reduce that traffic convergence
time to 10s of milliseconds by using a pre-computed alternate
next-hop, in the event that the currently selected primary next-hop
fails, so that the alternate can be rapidly used when the failure is
detected. A network with this feature experiences less traffic loss
and less micro-looping of packets than a network without IPFRR.
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There are cases where micro-looping is still a possibility since
IPFRR coverage varies but in the worst possible situation a network
with IPFRR is equivalent with respect traffic convergence to a
network without IPFRR.
To clarify the behavior of IP Fast-Reroute, consider the simple
topology in Figure 1. When router S computes its shortest path to
router D, router S determines to use the link to router E as its
primary next-hop. Without IP Fast-Reroute, that link is the only
next-hop that router S computes to reach D. With IP Fast-Reroute, S
also looks for an alternate next-hop to use. In this example, S
would determine that it could send traffic destined to D by using the
link to router N_1 and therefore S would install the link to N_1 as
its alternate next-hop. At some later time, the link between router
S and router E could fail. When that link fails, S and E will be the
first to detect it. On detecting the failure, S will stop sending
traffic destined for D towards E via the failed link, and instead
send the traffic to S's pre-computed alternate next-hop, which is the
link to N_1, until a new SPF is run and its results are installed.
As with the primary next-hop, an alternate next-hop is computed for
each destination. The process of computing an alternate next-hop
does not alter the primary next-hop computed via a standard SPF.
If in the example of Figure 1, the link cost from N_1 to D increased
to 30 from 3, then N_1 would not be a loop-free alternate, because
the cost of the path from N_1 to D via S would be 17 while the cost
from N_1 directly to D would be 30. In real networks, we may often
face this situation. The existence of a suitable loop-free alternate
next-hop is topology dependent.
A neighbor N can provide a loop-free alternate if and only if
Distance_opt(N, D) < Distance_opt(N, S) + Distance_opt(S, D)
Equation 1: Loop-Free Criterion
A sub-set of loop-free alternate are downstream paths which must meet
the more restrictive condition of
Distance_opt(N, D) < Distance_opt(S, D)
Equation 2: Downstream Path Criterion
1.1 Failure Scenarios
The alternate next-hop can protect against a single link failure, a
single node failure, one or more shared risk link group failure, or a
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combination of these. Whenever a failure occurs that is more
extensive than what the alternate was intended to protect, there is
the possibility of looping traffic. The example where a node fails
when the alternate provided only link protection is illustrated
below. If unexpected simultaneous failures occur, then micro-looping
may occur since the alternates are not pre-computed to avoid the set
of failed links.
If only link protection is provided and the node fails, it is
possible for traffic using the alternates to experience
micro-looping. This issue is illustrated in Figure 2. If Link(S->E)
fails, then the link-protecting alternate via N will work correctly.
However, if router E fails, then both S and N will detect a failure
and switch to their alternates. In this example, that would cause S
to redirect the traffic to N and N to redirect the traffic to S and
thus causing a forwarding loop. Such a scenario can arise because
the key assumption, that all other routers in the network are
forwarding based upon the shortest path, is violated because of a
second simultaneous correlated failure - another link connected to
the same primary neighbor. If there are not other protection
mechanisms a node failure is still a concern when only using link
protection.
<@@@
@@@>
+-----+ +-----+
| S |-------| N |
+-+---+ 5 +-----+
| |
| 5 4 | |
| | | \|/
\|/ | |
| +-----+ |
+----| E |---+
+--+--+
|
|
| 10
|
+--+--+
| D |
+-----+
Figure 2: Link-Protecting Alternates Causing Loop on Node Failure
Micro-looping of traffic via the alternates caused when a more
extensive failure than planned for can be prevented via selection of
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only downstream paths as alternates. In Figure 2, S would be able to
use N as an alternate, but N could not use S; therefore N would have
no alternate and would discard the traffic, thus avoiding the
micro-loop. A micro-loop due to the use of alternates can be avoided
by using downstream paths because each router in the path to the
destination must be closer to the destination (according to the
topology prior to the failures). Although use of downstream paths
ensures that the micro-looping via alternates does not occur, such a
restriction can severely limit the coverage of alternates.
It may be desirable to find an alternate that can protect against
other correlated failures (of which node failure is a specific
instance). In the general case, these are handled by shared risk
link groups (SRLGs) where any links in the network can belong to the
SRLG. General SRLGs may add unacceptably to the computational
complexity of finding a loop-free alternate.
However, a sub-category of SRLGs is of interest and can be applied
only during the selection of an acceptable alternate. This
sub-category is to express correlated failures of links that are
connected to the same router. For example, if there are multiple
logical sub-interfaces on the same physical interface, such as VLANs
on an Ethernet interface, if multiple interfaces use the same
physical port because of channelization, or if multiple interfaces
share a correlated failure because they are on the same line-card.
This sub-category of SRLGs will be referred to as local-SRLGs. A
local-SRLG has all of its member links with one end connected to the
same router. Thus, router S could select a loop-free alternate which
does not use a link in the same local-SRLG as the primary next-hop.
The local-SRLGs belonging to E can be protected against via
node-protection; i.e. picking a loop-free node-protecting alternate.
2. Alternate Next-Hop Calculation
To support IP Fast-Reroute, a router must be able to determine if a
next-hop will provide a loop-free alternate before the router
installs that next-hop as an alternate. That next-hop must go to a
loop-free neighbor.
To do this computation, a router could run an SPF from the
perspective of each of its neighbors as well as from its own
perspective. This provides the router with all the information
necessary to test the equations given is this specification.
To determine SRLG protection, the set of SRLGs that include at least
one link from the computing router could be determined. Then when
the SPF is run from the perspective of a router's neighbor, the SRLGs
traversed on each shortest path can be tracked.
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2.1 Basic Loop-free Condition
Alternate next hops used by implementations following this
specification MUST conform to at least the loop-freeness condition
stated above in Equation 1. Further conditions may be applied when
determining link-protecting and/or node-protecting alternate
next-hops as described in Sections Section 2.2 and Section 2.3.
2.2 Node-Protecting Alternate Next-Hops
For an alternate next-hop to protect against node failure, the
alternate next-hop MUST be loop-free with respect to the primary
neighbor E and the destination.
An alternate will be node-protecting if it doesn't go through the
same primary neighbor as the primary next-hop. This is the case if
Equation 3 is true, where N is the neighbor providing a loop-free
alternate.
Distance_opt(N, D) < Distance_opt(N, E) + Distance_opt(E, D)
Equation 3: Criteria for a Node-Protecting Loop-Free Alternate
If Distance_opt(N,D) = Distance_opt(N, E) + Distance_opt(E, D), it is
possible that the neighbor may have equal-cost paths and one of those
could provide a loop-free node-protecting alternate. However, the
decision as to which of equal-cost paths a router will use is a
router-local decision. Therefore, a router MUST assume that an
alternate next-hop does not offer node protection if Equation 3 is
not met.
2.3 Broadcast and NBMA Links
The computation for link-protection is a bit more complicated for
broadcast links. In an SPF computation, a broadcast links is
represented as a pseudo-node with links of 0 cost exiting the
pseudo-node. For an alternate to be considered link-protecting, it
must be loop-free with regard to the pseudo-node. Consider the
example in Figure 3.
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+-----+ 15
| S |--------
+-----+ |
| 5 |
| |
| 0 |
/----\ 0 5 +-----+
| PN |-----| N |
\----/ +-----+
| 0 |
| | 8
| 5 |
+-----+ 5 +-----+
| E |----| D |
+-----+ +-----+
Figure 3: Loop-Free Alternate that is Link-Protecting
In Figure 3, N offers a loop-free alternate which is link-protecting.
If the primary next-hop uses a broadcast link, then an alternate must
be loop-free with respect to that link's pseudo-node to provide link
protection. This requirement is described in Equation 4 below.
D_opt(N, D) < D_opt(N, pseudo) + D_opt(pseudo, D)
Equation 4: Loop-Free Link-Protecting Criterion for Broadcast Links
Because the shortest path from the pseudo-node goes through E, if a
loop-free alternate from a neighbor N is node-protecting, the
alternate will also be link-protecting unless the router S can only
reach the neighbor N via the same pseudo-node. This can occur
because S will direct traffic away from the shortest path to use an
alternate. Therefore link protection must be considered during the
alternate selection.
2.4 Interactions with ISIS Overload, RFC 3137 and Costed Out Links
As described in [RFC3137], there are cases where it is desirable not
to have a router used as a transit node. For those cases, it is also
desirable not to have the router used on an alternate path.
For computing an alternate, a router MUST not consider diverting from
the SPF tree along a link whose cost or reverse cost is LSInfinity
(for OSPF) or the maximum cost (for ISIS) or whose next-hop router
has the overload bit set (for ISIS).
In the case of OSPF, if all links from router S to a neighbor N_i
have a reverse cost of LSInfinity, then router S MUST NOT consider
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using N_i as an alternate.
Similarly in the case of ISIS, if N_i has the overload bit set, then
S MUST NOT consider using N_i as an alternate.
This preserves the desired behavior of diverting traffic away from a
router which is following [RFC3137] and it also preserves the desired
behavior when an operator sets the cost of a link to LSInfinity for
maintenance which is not permitting traffic across that link unless
there is no other path.
If a link or router which is costed out was the only possible
alternate to protect traffic from a particular router S to a
particular destination, then there will be no alternate provided for
protection.
2.5 Selection Procedure
A router supporting this specification SHOULD select a loop-free
alternate next-hop for each primary next-hop used for a given prefix.
A router MAY decide to not use an available loop-free alternate
next-hop. A reason for such a decision might be that the loop-free
alternate next-hop does not provide protection for the failure
scenario of interest.
The alternate selection should maximize the coverage of the failure
cases.
S SHOULD select a loop-free node-protecting alternate next-hop, if
one is available. If S has a choice between a loop-free
link-protecting node-protecting alternate and a loop-free
node-protecting alternate which is not link-protecting, S SHOULD
select a loop-free node-protecting alternate which is also
link-protecting. This can occur as explained in Section 2.3. If S
has multiple primary next-hops, then S SHOULD select as a loop-free
alternate either one of the other primary next-hops or a loop-free
node-protecting alternate. If no loop-free node-protecting alternate
is available, then S MAY select a loop-free link-protecting
alternate.
Each next-hop can be categorized as to the type of alternate it can
provide to a particular destination D from router S for a particular
primary next-hop which goes to a neighbor E. A next-hop may provide
one of the following types of paths:
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Primary Path - This is the primary next-hop.
Loop-Free Node-Protecting Alternate - This next-hop satisfies
Equation 1 and Equation 3. The path avoids S, S's primary
neighbor E, and the link from S to E.
Loop-Free Link-Protecting Alternate - This next-hop satisfies
Equation 1 but not Equation 3. If the primary next-hop uses a
broadcast link, then this next-hop satisfies Equation 4.
Unavailable - This may be because the path goes through S to reach
D, because the link is costed out, etc.
An alternate path may also provide none, some or complete SRLG
protection as well as node and link or link protection. For
instance, a link may belong to two SRLGs G1 and G2. The alternate
path might avoid other links in G1 but not G2, in which case the
alternate would only provide partial SRLG protection.
3. Using an Alternate
If an alternate next-hop is available, the router SHOULD redirect
traffic to the alternate next-hop when the primary next-hop has
failed.
When a local interface failure is detected, traffic that was destined
to go out the failed interface must be redirected to the appropriate
alternate next-hops. Other failure detection mechanisms which detect
the loss of a link or a node may also be used to trigger redirection
of traffic to the appropriate alternate next-hops. The mechanisms
available for failure detection are discussed in [FRAMEWORK] and are
outside the scope of this specification.
The alternate next-hop MUST be used only for traffic types which are
routed according to the shortest path. Multicast traffic is
specifically out of scope for this specification.
3.1 Terminating Use of Alternate
A router MUST limit the amount of time an alternate next-hop is used
after the primary next-hop has become unavailable. This ensures that
the router will start using the new primary next-hops. It ensures
that all possible transient conditions are removed and the network
converges according to the deployed routing protocol.
It is desirable to avoid micro-forwarding loops involving S. An
example illustrating the problem is given in Figure 4. If the link
from S to E fails, S will use N1 as an alternate and S will compute
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N2 as the new primary next-hop to reach D. If S starts using N2 as
soon as S can compute and install its new primary, it is probable
that N2 will not have yet installed its new primary next-hop. This
would cause traffic to loop and be dropped until N2 has installed the
new topology. This can be avoided by S delaying its installation and
leaving traffic on the alternate next-hop.
+-----+
| N2 |-------- |
+-----+ 1 | \|/
| |
| +-----+ @@> +-----+
| | S |---------| N1 |
10 | +-----+ 10 +-----+
| | |
| 1 | | |
| | \|/ 10 |
| +-----+ | |
| | E | | \|/
| +-----+ |
| | |
| 1 | | |
| | \|/ |
| +-----+ |
|----| D |--------------
+-----+
Figure 4: Example where Continued Use of Alternate is Desirable
This is an example of a case where the new primary is not a loop-free
alternate before the failure and therefore may have been forwarding
traffic through S. This will occur when the path via a previously
upstream node is shorter than the the path via a loop-free alternate
neighbor. In these cases, it is useful to give sufficient time to
ensure that the new primary neighbor and other nodes on the new
primary path have switched to the new route.
If the newly selected primary was loop-free before the failure, then
it is safe to switch to that new primary immediately; the new primary
wasn't dependent on the failure and therefore its path will not have
changed.
Given that there is an alternate providing appropriate protection and
while the assumption of a single failure holds, it is safe to delay
the installation of the new primaries; this will not create
forwarding loops because the alternate's path to the destination is
known to not go via S or the failed element and will therefore not be
affected by the failure.
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An implementation SHOULD continue to use the alternate next-hops for
packet forwarding even after the new routing information is available
based on the new network topology. The use of the alternate
next-hops for packet forwarding SHOULD terminate:
a. if the new primary next-hop was loop-free prior to the topology
change, or
b. if a configured hold-down, which represents a worst-case bound on
the length of the network convergence transition, has expired, or
c. if notification of an unrelated topological change in the network
is received.
4. Requirements on LDP Mode
Since LDP traffic will follow the path specified by the IGP, it is
also possible for the LDP traffic to follow the loop-free alternates
indicated by the IGP. To do so, it is necessary for LDP to have the
appropriate labels available for the alternate so that the
appropriate out-segments can be installed in the forwarding plane
before the failure occurs.
This means that a Label Switched Router (LSR) running LDP must
distribute its labels for the FECs it can provide to all its
neighbors, regardless of whether or not they are upstream.
Additionally, LDP must be acting in liberal label retention mode so
that the labels which correspond to neighbors that aren't currently
the primary neighbor are stored. Similarly, LDP should be in
downstream unsolicited mode, so that the labels for the FEC are
distributed other than along the SPT.
If these requirements are met, then LDP can use the loop-free
alternates without requiring any targeted sessions or signaling
extensions for this purpose.
5. Routing Aspects
5.1 Multi-Homed Prefixes
An SPF-like computation is run for each topology, which corresponds
to a particular OSPF area or ISIS level. The IGP needs to determine
loop-free alternates to multi-homed routes. Multi-homed routes occur
for routes obtained from outside the routing domain by multiple
routers, for subnets on links where the subnet is announced from
multiple ends of the link, and for routes advertised by multiple
routers to provide resiliency.
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Figure 5 demonstrates such a topology. In this example, the shortest
path to reach the prefix p is via E. The prefix p will have the link
to E as its primary next-hop. If the alternate next-hop for the
prefix p is simply inherited from the router advertising it on the
shortest path to p, then the prefix p's alternate next-hop would be
the link to C. This would provide link protection, but not the node
protection that is possible via A.
5 +---+ 4 +---+ 5 +---+
------| S |------| A |-----| B |
| +---+ +---+ +---+
| | |
| 5 | 5 |
| | |
+---+ 5 +---+ 5 7 +---+
| C |---| E |------ p -------| F |
+---+ +---+ +---+
Figure 5: Multi-homed prefix
To determine the best protection possible, the prefix p can be
treated in the SPF computations as a node with uni-directional links
to it from those routers that have advertised the prefix. Such a
node need never have its links explored, as it has no out-going
links.
If there exist multiple multi-homed prefixes exist that share the
same connectivity and the difference in metrics to those routers,
then a single node can be used to represent the set. For instance,
if in Figure 5 there were another prefix X that was connected to E
with a metric of 1 and to F with a metric of 3, then that prefix X
could use the same alternate next-hop as was computed for prefix p.
A router SHOULD compute the alternate next-hop for an IGP multi-homed
prefix by considering alternate paths via all routers that have
announced that prefix.
5.2 OSPF External Routing
An additional complication comes from forwarding addresses, where an
ASBR uses a forwarding address to indicate to all routers in the
Autonomous System to use the specified address instead of going
through the ASBR. When a forwarding address has been indicated, all
routers in the topology calculate the shortest path to the link
specified in the external LSA. In this case, the alternate next-hop
should be computed by selecting among the alternate paths to the
forwarding link(s) instead of among alternate paths to the ASBR.
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5.3 OSPF Virtual Links
OSPF virtual links are used to connect two disjoint backbone areas
using a transit area. A virtual link is configured at the border
routers of the disjoint area. If router S is itself an ABR or one of
the endpoints of the disjoint area, then router S must resolve its
paths to the destination on the other side of the disjoint area by
using the summary links in the transit area and using the closest ABR
summarizing them into the transit area. This means that the data
path may diverge from the virtual neighbor's control path. An ABR's
primary and alternate next-hops are calculated by S on the transit
area.
A virtual link MUST NOT be used as an alternate next-hop.
5.4 BGP Next-Hop Synchronization
Typically BGP prefixes are advertised with AS exit routers router-id,
and AS exit routers are reached by means of IGP routes. BGP resolves
its advertised next-hop to the immediate next-hop by potential
recursive lookups in the routing database. IP Fast-Reroute computes
the alternate next-hops to all IGP destinations, which include
alternate next-hops to the AS exit router's router-id. BGP simply
inherits the alternate next-hop from IGP. The BGP decision process
is unaltered; BGP continues to use the IGP optimal distance to find
the nearest exit router. MBGP routes do not need to copy the
alternate next hops.
It is possible to provide ASBR protection if BGP selected a set of
IGP next-hops and allowed the IGP to determine the primary and
alternate next-hops as if the BGP route were a multi-homed prefix.
This is for future study.
5.5 Multicast Considerations
Multicast traffic is out of scope for this specification of IP
Fast-Reroute. The alternate next-hops SHOULD not used for multi-cast
RPF checks.
6. Security Considerations
This document does not introduce any new security issues. The
mechanisms described in this document depend upon the network
topology distributed via an IGP, such as OSPF or ISIS. It is
dependent upon the security associated with those protocols.
Atlas, et al. Expires July 22, 2005 [Page 14]
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7 References
[FRAMEWORK]
Shand, M., "IP Fast Reroute Framework",
draft-ietf-rtgwg-ipfrr-framework-02.txt (work in
progress), October 2004.
[RFC3036] Andersson, L., Doolan, P., Feldman, N., Fredette, A. and
B. Thomas, "LDP Specification", RFC 3036, January 2001.
[RFC3137] Retana, A., Nguyen, L., White, R., Zinin, A. and D.
McPherson, "OSPF Stub Router Advertisement", RFC 3137,
June 2001.
[RFC3209] Awduche, D., Berger, L., Gan, D., Li, T., Srinivasan, V.
and G. Swallow, "RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for LSP
Tunnels", RFC 3209, December 2001.
Authors' Addresses
Alia K. Atlas (editor)
Avici Systems, Inc.
101 Billerica Avenue
N. Billerica, MA 01862
USA
Phone: +1 978 964 2070
EMail: aatlas@avici.com
Raveendra Torvi
Avici Systems, Inc.
101 Billerica Avenue
N. Billerica, MA 01862
USA
Phone: +1 978 964 2026
EMail: rtorvi@avici.com
Atlas, et al. Expires July 22, 2005 [Page 15]
Internet-Draft draft-ietf-rtgwg-ipfrr-spec-base-02.txt January 2005
Gagan Choudhury
AT&T
200 Laurel Avenue, Room D5-3C21
Middletown, NJ 07748
USA
Phone: +1 732 420-3721
EMail: gchoudhury@att.com
Christian Martin
Verizon
1880 Campus Commons Drive
Reston, VA 20191
USA
Brent Imhoff
LightCore
14567 North Outer Forty Rd.
Chesterfield, MO 63017
USA
Phone: +1 314 880 1851
EMail: brent@lightcore.net
Don Fedyk
Nortel Networks
600 Technology Park
Billerica, MA 01821
USA
Phone: +1 978 288 3041
EMail: dwfedyk@nortelnetworks.com
Atlas, et al. Expires July 22, 2005 [Page 16]
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Atlas, et al. Expires July 22, 2005 [Page 17]
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