One document matched: draft-ietf-trill-rbridge-protocol-08.txt
Differences from draft-ietf-trill-rbridge-protocol-07.txt
TRILL Working Group Radia Perlman
INTERNET-DRAFT Sun Microsystems
Intended status: Proposed Standard Donald Eastlake 3rd
Expires: January 13, 2009 Eastlake Enterprises
Dinesh G. Dutt
Cisco Systems
Silvano Gai
Nuova Systems
Anoop Ghanwani
Brocade
July 14, 2008
Rbridges: Base Protocol Specification
<draft-ietf-trill-rbridge-protocol-08.txt>
Status of This Document
By submitting this Internet-Draft, each author represents that any
applicable patent or other IPR claims of which he or she is aware
have been or will be disclosed, and any of which he or she becomes
aware will be disclosed, in accordance with Section 6 of BCP 79.
Distribution of this document is unlimited. Comments should be sent
to the TRILL working group mailing list <rbridge@postel.org>.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that
other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-
Drafts.
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at
http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt
The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 1]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Abstract
RBridges provide optimal pair-wise forwarding with zero
configuration, safe forwarding even during periods of temporary
loops, and support for multipathing of both unicast and multicast
traffic. They achieve these goals using IS-IS routing and
encapsulation of traffic with a header that includes a hop count.
RBridges are compatible with previous IEEE 802.1 customer bridges as
well as IPv4 and IPv6 routers and end nodes. They are as invisible to
current IP routers as bridges are and, like routers, they terminate
the bridge spanning tree protocol.
The design supports VLANs and optimization of the distribution of
multi-destination frames based on VLAN and IP derived multicast
groups. It also allows forwarding tables to be based on RBridge
destinations (rather than end node destinations), which allows
internal forwarding tables to be substantially smaller than in
conventional bridge systems.
Acknowledgements
Many people have contributed to this design, including, in alphabetic
order, Alia Atlas, Ayan Banerjee, Suresh Boddapati, Caitlin Bestler,
Stewart Bryant, James Carlson, Dino Farinacci, Don Fedyk, Bill
Fenner, Eric Gray, Joel Halpern, Andrew Lange, David Melman, Erik
Nordmark, Sanjay Sane, Pekka Savola, Matthew Thomas, Joe Touch, and
Mark Townsley. We invite you to join the mailing list at
http://www.postel.org/rbridge.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 2]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Table of Contents
Status of This Document....................................1
Abstract...................................................2
Acknowledgements...........................................2
1. Introduction............................................7
1.1 Algorhyme V2, by Ray Perlner...........................8
1.2 Normative Content and Precedence.......................8
1.3 Terminology and Notation in this document..............8
1.4 Acronyms...............................................9
2. RBridges...............................................12
2.1 End Station Addresses.................................13
2.2 RBridge Encapsulation Architecture....................13
2.2.1 Known-Unicast.......................................15
2.2.2 Multi-destination...................................15
2.3 RBridges and VLANs....................................16
2.3.1 Link VLAN Assumptions...............................17
2.4 RBridges and IEEE 802.1 Bridges.......................17
3. Details of the TRILL Header............................19
3.1 TRILL Header Format...................................19
3.2 Version (V)...........................................19
3.3 Reserved (R)..........................................20
3.4 Multi-destination (M).................................20
3.5 TRILL Header Options..................................20
3.6 Hop Count.............................................21
3.7 RBridge Nicknames.....................................22
3.7.1 Egress RBridge Nickname.............................22
3.7.2 Ingress RBridge Nickname............................23
3.7.3 RBridge Nickname Allocation.........................23
4. Other RBridge Design Details...........................25
4.1 Ethernet Data Encapsulation...........................25
4.1.1 VLAN Tag Information................................26
4.1.2 Inner VLAN Tag......................................27
4.1.3 Outer VLAN Tag......................................28
4.1.4 Frame CheckSum (FCS)................................28
4.2 Link State Protocol (IS-IS)...........................29
4.2.1 IS-IS RBridge Identity..............................29
4.2.2 IS-IS Instances.....................................29
4.2.3 Core TRILL IS-IS....................................30
4.2.3.1 Core IS-IS Link Protocol..........................30
4.2.3.2 Designated RBridge................................33
4.2.3.3 Appointed VLAN-x Forwarder........................34
4.2.3.4 Core TRILL IS-IS LSP Information..................35
4.2.4 End Station Address Distribution Instance (ESADI)
IS-IS...............................................37
4.2.4.1 ESADI Protocol....................................37
R. Perlman, et al [Page 3]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Table of Contents Continued
4.2.4.2 ESADI Information.................................38
4.3 Distribution Trees....................................38
4.3.1 Distribution Tree Calculation and Checks............39
4.3.2 Pruning the Distribution Tree.......................40
4.3.3 Tree Distribution Optimization......................41
4.3.4 Forwarding Using a Distribution Tree................42
4.4 Frame Processing Behavior.............................43
4.4.1 Receipt of a Native Frame...........................43
4.4.1.1 Native Unicast Case...............................43
4.4.1.2 Native Multicast and Broadcast Frames.............44
4.4.2 Receipt of a TRILL Frame............................45
4.4.2.1 TRILL IS-IS Frames................................45
4.4.2.2 TRILL Data Frames.................................46
4.4.3 Receipt of a Control Frame..........................47
4.5 IGMP, MLD, and MRD Learning...........................48
4.6 End Station Address Details...........................48
4.6.1 Learning End Station Addresses......................49
4.6.2 Forgetting End Station Addresses....................50
4.6.3 Shared VLAN Learning................................51
4.7 RBridge Port Structure................................52
4.7.1 BPDU Handling.......................................55
4.7.1.1 Receipt of BPDUs..................................55
4.7.1.2 Root Bridge Changes...............................55
4.7.1.3 Transmission of BPDUs.............................56
4.7.2 Dynamic VLAN Registration...........................56
5. RBridge Addresses, Parameters, and Constants...........57
6. Security Considerations................................58
7. Assignment Considerations..............................59
7.1 IANA Considerations...................................59
7.2 IEEE 802 Assignment Considerations....................59
8. Normative References...................................60
9. Informative References.................................61
Appendix A: Incremental Deployment Considerations.........62
A.1 Link Cost Determination...............................62
A.2 Appointed Forwarders and Bridged LANs.................62
A.3 Wiring Closet Topology................................64
A.3.1 The RBridge Solution................................65
A.3.2 The VLAN Solution...................................65
A.3.3 The Spanning Tree Solution..........................65
A.3.4 Comparison of Solutions.............................66
Appendix B: Trunk and Access Port Configuration...........67
R. Perlman, et al [Page 4]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Table of Contents Continued
Appendix C: Multipathing..................................68
Appendix D: Determination of VLAN and Priority............70
Appendix Z: Revision History..............................71
Changes from -03 to -04...................................71
Changes from -04 to -05...................................72
Changes from -05 to -06...................................73
Changes from -06 to -07...................................73
Changes from -07 to -08...................................74
Disclaimer................................................77
Additional IPR Provisions.................................77
Authors' Addresses........................................78
R. Perlman, et al [Page 5]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Table of Figures
Figure 2.1: Interconnected RBridges.......................14
Figure 2.2: An Ethernet Encapsulated TRILL Frame..........14
Figure 2.3: A PPP Encapsulated TRILL Frame................14
Figure 3.1: TRILL Header..................................19
Figure 3.2: Options Area Initial Flags Byte...............21
Figure 4.1: TRILL Data Encapsulation over Ethernet........26
Figure 4.2: VLAN Tag Information..........................27
Figure 4.3: RBridge Port Model............................54
Figure A.1: Link Cost of a Bridged Link...................62
Figure A.2: Wiring Closet Topology........................64
Figure C.1: Multi-Destination Multipath...................68
Figure C.2: Known Unicast Multipath.......................69
R. Perlman, et al [Page 6]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
1. Introduction
In traditional IPv4 and IPv6 networks, each subnet has a unique
prefix. Therefore, a node in multiple subnets has multiple IP
addresses, typically one per interface. This also means that when an
interface moves from one subnet to another, it changes its IP
address. Administration of IP networks is complicated because IP
routers require significant configuration. Careful IP address
management is required to avoid creating subnets that are sparsely
populated, wasting addresses.
IEEE 802.1 bridges avoid these problems by transparently gluing many
physical links into what appears to IP to be a single LAN [802.1D].
However, 802.1 bridge forwarding using the spanning tree protocol has
some disadvantages:
o The spanning tree protocol blocks ports, limiting the number of
forwarding links, and therefore creates bottlenecks by
concentrating traffic onto selected links.
o The Ethernet header does not contain a hop count (or TTL) field.
This is dangerous when there are temporary loops such as when
spanning tree messages are lost or components such as repeaters
are added.
o VLANs can partition, perhaps unexpectedly, when spanning tree
reconfigures due to a node failure or topology change.
o Forwarding is not pair-wise shortest path, but is instead whatever
path remains after the spanning tree eliminates redundant paths.
This document presents the design for RBridges (Routing Bridges
[RBridges]) which implement the TRILL protocol and are poetically
summarized below. Rbridges combine the advantages of bridges and
routers and in most cases they can incrementally replace IEEE
[802.1Q] customer bridges. While they can be applied to a variety of
link protocols, this specification focuses on IEEE [802.3] links.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 7]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
1.1 Algorhyme V2, by Ray Perlner
I hope that we shall one day see
A graph more lovely than a tree.
A graph to boost efficiency
While still configuration-free.
A network where RBridges can
Route packets to their target LAN.
The paths they find, to our elation,
Are least cost paths to destination!
With packet hop counts we now see,
The network need not be loop-free!
RBridges work transparently.
Without a common spanning tree.
1.2 Normative Content and Precedence
The bulk of the normative material in this specification appears in
Sections 2, 3, and 4 as follows:
Section 2: general RBridge description
Section 3: the TRILL header
Section 4: other TRILL protocol details
In case of conflict, the order of precedence of these section is as
follows, with those appearing earlier in this list having precedence
over those which appear later:
4 > 3 > 2
1.3 Terminology and Notation in this document
"TRILL" normally refers to the protocol specified herein while
"RBridge" refers to the devices that implement that protocol. The
second letter in Rbridge is case insensitive. Both Rbridge and
RBridge are correct.
In this document, Layer 2 frames are divided into three categories,
TRILL frames, control frames, and native frames, as follows::
o "TRILL" frames are those with the TRILL Ethertype. There are
R. Perlman, et al [Page 8]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
two sub-categories of TRILL frames as follows:
- "TRILL IS-IS" frames have the All-IS-IS-RBridges multicast
address as the encapsulated destination address.
- "TRILL data" frames are all other TRILL frames.
o "control" frames are those with a multicast destination address
in the range 01-80-C2-00-00-00 to 01-80-C2-00-00-0F or equal to
01-80-C2-00-00-21. There are two sub-categories of control
frames as follows:
- "high level control frames" are those with a destination
address of 01-80-C2-00-00-00 (BPDU) or 01-80-C2-00-00-21
(VRP).
- "low level control" frames are all control frames other than
high level control frames.
o "native" frames are all frames other than TRILL and control
frames.
(Although, according to the definitions above, a frame could be both
a TRILL frame and a control frame, such a frame would be invalid
regardless of which view was taken and would be silently discarded.)
This document uses Hexadecimal Notation for MAC addresses. Each
octet (that is, 8-bit byte) is represented by two hexadecimal digits
giving the value of the octet as an unsigned integer and successive
octets are separated by a hyphen. This document consistently uses
IETF bit ordering although the physical order of bit transmission
within an octet on an IEEE [802.3] link is from the lowest order bit
to the highest order bit, the reverse.
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 [RFC2119].
1.4 Acronyms
AllL1ISs - All Level 1 Intermediate Systems
AllL2ISs - All Level 2 Intermediate Systems
CHbH - Critical Hop-by-Hop
CItE - Critical Ingress-to-Egress
CSNP - Complete Sequence Number PDU
DA - Destination Address
R. Perlman, et al [Page 9]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
EAP - Extensible Authentication Protocol
ECMP - Equal Cost Multi-Path
EISS - Extended Internal Sublayer Service
ESADI - End Station Address Distribution Instance
DRB - Designated RBridge
FCS - Frame Check Sequence
GARP - Generic Attribute Registration Protocol
GVRP - GARP VLAN Registration Protocol
IEEE - Institute of Electrical and Electronic Engineers
IGMP - Internet Group Management Protocol
IP - Internet Protocol
IS-IS - Intermediate System to Intermediate System
ISS - Internal Sublayer Service
LAN - Local Area Network
LSP - Link State PDU
MAC - Media Access Control
MLD - Multicast Listener Discovery
MRD - Multicast Router Discovery
MRP - Multiple Registration Protocol
MVRP - Multiple VLAN Registration Protocol
NSAP - Network Service Access Point
PDU - Protocol Data Unit
PPP - Point to Point Protocol
RBridge - Routing Bridge
RPF - Reverse Path Forwarding
R. Perlman, et al [Page 10]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
SA - Source Address
SNP - Sequence Number PDU
SPF - Shortest Path First
TLV - Type, Length, Value
TRILL - TRansparent Interconnection of Lots of Links
VLAN - Virtual Local Area Network
VRP - VLAN Registraion Protocol
R. Perlman, et al [Page 11]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
2. RBridges
This section provides a high level overview of RBridges, which
implement the TRILL protocol. Sections 3 and 4 below provide the main
specification.
RBridges run a link state protocol amongst themselves. This gives
them enough information to compute pair-wise optimal paths for
unicast, and calculate distribution trees for delivery of frames
either to unknown MAC destinations or to multicast/broadcast groups.
[RBridges] [RP1999]
To mitigate temporary loop issues, RBridges forward based on a header
with a hop count. RBridges also specify the next hop RBridge as the
frame destination when forwarding unicast frames across a shared-
media link, which avoids spawning additional copies of frames during
a temporary loop. A Reverse Path Forwarding Check and other checks
are performed on multi-destination frames to further control
potentially looping traffic (see Section 4.3.1).
The first RBridge that a unicast frame encounters in a campus, RB1,
encapsulates the received frame with a TRILL header that specifies
the last RBridge, RB2. RB1 is known as the "ingress RBridge" and RB2
is known as the "egress RBridge". To save room in the TRILL header,
a dynamic nickname acquisition protocol is run among the RBridges to
select a 2-octet nickname for each RBridge, unique within the campus,
which is an abbreviation for the 6-octet IS-IS system ID of the
RBridge. The 2-octet nicknames are used to specify the ingress and
egress RBridges in the TRILL header.
Multipathing of multi-destination frames through alternative
distribution tree roots and ECMP (Equal Cost MultiPath) of unicast
frames are supported but not fully specified in this document (see
Appendix C). Multipathing may introduce frame reordering as can
differing frame priorities or changes in network topology.
RBridges run the IS-IS [ISO10589] election protocol to elect a
"Designated RBridge" (DRB) on each bridged LAN ("link"). As with an
IS-IS router, the DRB may give a pseudonode name to the link, issues
an LSP (Link State PDU) on behalf of the pseudonode, and issues CSNPs
(Complete Sequence Number PDUs) on the link. Additionally, the DRB
specifies which VLAN will be the Designated VLAN used for
communication between RBridges on that link. The DRB either
encapsulates/decapsulates all data traffic to/from the link, or, for
load splitting, delegates this responsibility, for one or more VLANs,
to other RBridges on the link. There must at all times be at most
one RBridge on the link that encapsulates/decapsulates traffic for a
particular VLAN. We will refer to the RBridge appointed to forward
VLAN-x traffic on behalf of the link as the "appointed VLAN-x
forwarder". (Section 2.3 discusses VLANs further.)
R. Perlman, et al [Page 12]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Rbridges can be managed with SNMP [RFC3410]. The Rbridge MIB will be
specified in a separate document. This management can be used,
within a campus, even by an RBridge that lacks an IP or other Layer 3
transport stack or which has zero configuration and has no Layer 3
address, by transporting SNMP with Ethernet [RFC4789].
2.1 End Station Addresses
An RBridge, RB1, which is the VLAN-x forwarder on any of its links
MUST learn the location of VLAN-x end nodes, both on the links for
which it is VLAN-x forwarder, and on other links in the campus. RB1
learns the port and Layer 2 (MAC) addresses of end nodes on links for
which it is VLAN-x forwarder from the source address of frames
received, as bridges do (for example, see section 8.7 of [802.1Q]) or
through a layer 2 explicit registration protocol. RB1 learns the
Layer 2 address of distant VLAN-x end nodes, and the corresponding
RBridge to which they are attached, by looking at the ingress RBridge
nickname in the TRILL header and the VLAN and source address of the
inner frame of TRILL data frames that it decapsulates.
Additionally, an end station address distribution instance (ESADI) of
IS-IS MAY be used by the appointed VLAN-x forwarder on a link to
announce some or all of the attached VLAN-x end nodes on that link.
The intention is that such an announcement would be used to announce
end nodes that have been explicitly enrolled, and so such information
would be more authoritative than simply learning from data frames
being decapsulated onto the link. Also, it can be more secure
because not only might the enrollment be authenticated (for example
by cryptographically based EAP methods via [802.1X]), but IS-IS also
supports cryptographic authentication of its messages [RFC3567]. But
even if an ESADI is used to announce attached end nodes, RBridges
MUST still learn from decapsulating data frames unless configured not
to do so.
Advertising end nodes using an ESADI of IS-IS is optional, as is
learning from these announcements.
(See Section 4.6 for further end station address details.)
2.2 RBridge Encapsulation Architecture
The Layer 2 technology used to connect Rbridges may be either IEEE
[802.3] or some other technology such as PPP [RFC1661]. This is
possible since the RBridge relay functionality is layered on top of
the Layer 2 technologies. However, this document specifies only an
IEEE 802.3 encapsulation.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 13]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Figure 2.1 shows two RBridges RB1 and RB2 interconnected through an
Ethernet cloud. The Ethernet cloud may include point-to-point or
shared media, hubs and IEEE 802.1 bridges. The Ethernet cloud may
support VLAN tagging or not.
------------
/ \
+-----+ / Ethernet \ +-----+
| RB1 |----< >---| RB2 |
+-----+ \ Cloud / +-----+
\ /
------------
Figure 2.1: Interconnected RBridges
Figure 2.2 shows the format of a TRILL frame traveling through the
Ethernet cloud from RB1 to RB2.
+--------------------------------+
| Outer Ethernet Header |
+--------------------------------+
| TRILL Header |
+--------------------------------+
| Inner Ethernet Header |
+--------------------------------+
| Ethernet Payload |
+--------------------------------+
| Ethernet FCS |
+--------------------------------+
Figure 2.2: An Ethernet Encapsulated TRILL Frame
In the case of media different from Ethernet, the outer Ethernet
header is replaced by the header specific to that media. For example,
Figure 2.3 shows a TRILL encapsulation over PPP.
+--------------------------------+
| PPP Header |
+--------------------------------+
| TRILL Header |
+--------------------------------+
| Inner Ethernet Header |
+--------------------------------+
| Ethernet Payload |
+--------------------------------+
| Ethernet FCS |
+--------------------------------+
Figure 2.3: A PPP Encapsulated TRILL Frame
R. Perlman, et al [Page 14]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
The outer header is link-specific and, although this document
specifies only Ethernet links, other links are allowed.
In both cases the Inner Ethernet Header and the Ethernet Payload come
from the original frame and are encapsulated with a TRILL Header as
they travel between RBridges for several reasons:
1. to mitigate loop issues a hop count field is included;
2. to prevent original source MAC learning in the core from frames in
transit;
3. to direct frames towards the egress RBridge (this enables
forwarding tables of RBridges to be sized with the number of
RBridges rather than the total number of end nodes); and,
4. to provide a separate VLAN tag for forwarding traffic between
RBridges, independent of the original VLAN of the frame.
When forwarding unicast frames between RBridges across a shared-
media, the outer header has the MAC destination address of the next
hop Rbridge, to avoid frame duplication. Having the outer header
specify the transmitting RBridge as source address ensures that any
bridges inside the shared-media link will not get confused, as they
might given multipathing, if they were to see the original source or
ingress RBridge in the outer header.
There are several types of transit frames between RBridges that are
forwarded differently. They are here classified into two main
categories: known-unicast and multi-destination.
2.2.1 Known-Unicast
These frames have a unicast inner MAC destination Address
(Inner.MacDA) and are those for which the egress RBridge for that
destination MAC address is known to the ingress RBridge.
Such frames are forwarded Rbridge hop by Rbridge hop to their egress
Rbridge.
2.2.2 Multi-destination
These are frames that must be delivered to multiple destinations.
The main cases of multi-destination frames are as follows:
R. Perlman, et al [Page 15]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
1. frames for unknown unicast destinations: the Inner.MacDA is
unicast, but the ingress RBridge does not know its location;
2. frames for Layer 2 multicast addresses derived from IP multicast
addresses: the Inner.MacDA is multicast, from the set of Layer 2
multicast addresses derived from IPv4 [RFC1112] or IPv6 [RFC2464]
multicast addresses; these frames are handled somewhat differently
in different subcases:
2.1 IGMP [RFC3376] and MLD [RFC2710] multicast group membership
reports;
2.2 IGMP [RFC3376] and MLD [RFC2710] queries and MRD [RFC4286]
announcement messages;
2.3 other IP derived Layer 2 multicast frames;
3. frames for Layer 2 multicast addresses not derived from IP
multicast addresses: the Inner.MacDA is multicast, and not from
the set of Layer 2 multicast addresses derived from IPv4 or IPv6
multicast addresses.
4. frames for the Layer 2 broadcast address: the Inner.MacDA is
broadcast.
RBridges build distribution trees (see Section 4.3) and use these
trees for forwarding multi-destination frames. These distribution
trees are pruned in different ways for different cases to avoid
unnecessary propagation of the frame.
2.3 RBridges and VLANs
A VLAN is a way to partition end nodes in a campus into different
Layer 2 communities [802.1Q]. Use of VLANs requires configuration.
The usual method of determining the community of a frame sent by an
end station is based on the port on which it is initially received.
End stations can also explicitly insert this information in a frame.
IEEE 802.1Q bridges can be configured to support multiple VLANs over
a single link by inserting/removing a VLAN tag in the frame. Some
end nodes have the same capability. VLAN tags used by TRILL are
structured according to IEEE 802.1Q. As shown in Figure 2.2 there are
two places where such tags may be present in a TRILL-encapsulated
frame sent over an IEEE 802.3 link: one in the outer header
(Outer.VLAN) and one in the inner header (Inner.VLAN). Inner and
outer VLANs are further discussed in Section 4.1.
RBridges enforce delivery of a native frame originating in a
R. Perlman, et al [Page 16]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
particular VLAN only to other links in the same VLAN; however, there
are a few differences in the handling of VLANs between an RBridge
campus and an 802.1 bridged LAN as described below.
(See Section 4.2.3.1 for further discussion of TRILL IS-IS operation
on a link beyond that in the subsections below.)
2.3.1 Link VLAN Assumptions
TRILL makes certain assumptions concerning the configuration of the
links connected RBridges. Those links may be bridged LANs. Campuses
will still be safe if these assumptions do not hold, in that there
will not be loops, unless RBridges are configured so as to disable
their loop prevention features; but some end stations may not be
provided with connectivity to the campus and some Rbridge ports may
not be utilized. If lack of connectivity occurs due to violation of
these assumptions, it can be restored by altering bridge
configurations so as to conform to the assumptions. Such alteration
could occur through management, dynamic VLAN registration (see
Section 4.7.2), or a combination of these.
TRILL assumes that for every link with two or more Rbridges on it,
there will be at least one VLAN those RBridges are configured to use
that will provide bi-directional connectivity between them. If this
is not the case, one or more of the Rbridges can become orphaned from
the link and not be usable for forwarding native traffic or transit
TRILL data on that link.
Even with partial RBridge deployment, TRILL will provide connectivity
between all links in a particular VLAN that are connected to an
RBridge, assuming TRILL connectivity between the RBridges themselves.
For service to be provided to all end stations in a particular VLAN
on a link, connectivity from those end stations to the appointed
forwarder on that link for that VLAN is needed.
2.4 RBridges and IEEE 802.1 Bridges
Because RBridges are generally compatible with current IEEE [802.1Q]
customer bridges, a LAN can be upgraded by incrementally replacing
such bridges with RBridges. Bridges that have not yet been replaced
are transparent to RBridge traffic. The physical links directly
interconnected by such bridges, together with the bridges themselves,
constitute bridged LANs. These bridged LANs appear to RBridges to be
multi-access links. If the bridges replaced by RBridges were un-
managed, zero configuration bridges, then their RBridge replacements
will not require configuration.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 17]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
The RBridge campus will work best if all IEEE 802.1 bridges are
replaced with RBridges, assuming the RBridges have the same speed and
capacity as the bridges. However, there may be intermediate states,
where only some bridges have been replaced by RBridges, with inferior
performance.
See Appendix A for further discussion of incremental deployment.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 18]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
3. Details of the TRILL Header
The section specifies the TRILL header. Section 4 below provides
other RBridge design details.
3.1 TRILL Header Format
The TRILL header is shown in Figure 3.1 and is independent of the
data link layer used. When that layer is IEEE [802.3], it is prefixed
with the 16-bit TRILL Ethertype, making it 64 bit aligned.
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| V | R |M|Op-Length| Hop Count |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Egress RBridge Nickname | Ingress RBridge Nickname |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 3.1: TRILL Header
The header contains the following fields which are described in the
sections referenced:
o V (Version): 2-bit unsigned integer. See Section 3.2.
o R (Reserved): 2 bits. See Section 3.3.
o M (Multi-destination): 1 bit. See Section 3.4.
o Op-Length (Options Length): 5-bit unsigned integer. See Section
3.5.
o Hop Count: 6-bit unsigned integer. See Section 3.6.
o Egress RBridge Nickname: 16-bit identifier. See Section 3.7.1.
o Ingress RBridge Nickname: 16-bit identifier. See Section 3.7.2.
3.2 Version (V)
A single Ethertype is granted to a protocol and, under IEEE
guidelines, it is the protocol's responsibility to structure itself
to support future revisions. Adhering to this guideline, there is a
two bit Version field in the TRILL header. Version zero of TRILL is
specified in this document. An RBridge that sees a message with a
Version value it does not understand MUST silently discard the
message because it may not be able to parse it.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 19]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
3.3 Reserved (R)
The two R bits are reserved for future use in extensions to the TRILL
protocol. They MUST be zero on transmission and are ignored on
receipt.
3.4 Multi-destination (M)
The Multi-destination bit (see Section 2.2.2) indicates that the
frame is to be delivered to a class of destination end stations via a
distribution tree and that the egress RBridge nickname field
specifies the root RBridge for this tree. In particular:
o M = 0 (FALSE) - The egress RBridge nickname contains the nickname
of the egress Rbridge for a known unicast TRILL data frame or is
zero for a core instance TRILL IS-IS frame;
o M = 1 (TRUE) - The egress RBridge nickname field contains the
nickname of the RBridge that is the root of a distribution tree.
This tree is selected by the ingress RBridge for a TRILL data
frame or by the source RBridge for an end station address
distribution TRILL IS-IS frame.
3.5 TRILL Header Options
The TRILL Protocol includes an option capability in the TRILL Header.
The Op-Length header field gives the length of the options in units
of 4 octets which allows up to 124 octets of options area. If Op-
Length is zero there are no options present. If options are present,
they follow immediately after the Ingress Rbridge Nickname field.
All Rbridges MUST be able to skip the number of 4-octet chunks
indicated by the Op-Length field in order to find the inner frame,
since RBridges must be able to find the destination MAC address and
VLAN tag in the inner frame. (Transit RBridges need such information
to filter VLANs, IP multicast, and the like. Egress Rbridges need to
find the inner frame to correctly decapsulate and dispose of the
inner frame.)
To ensure backward compatible safe operation, when Op-Length is non-
zero indicating that options are present, the top two bits of the
first byte of the options area are specified as follows:
R. Perlman, et al [Page 20]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
+------+------+----+----+----+----+----+----+
| CHbH | CItE | Reserved |
+------+------+----+----+----+----+----+----+
Figure 3.2: Options Area Initial Flags Byte
If the CHbH (Critical Hop by Hop) bit is one, one or more critical
hop-by-hop options are present so transit RBridges that support no
options MUST drop the frame. If the CHbH bit is zero, the frame is
safe, from the point of view of options, for a transit RBridge. A
transit RBridge that supports no options and forwards a frame MUST
transparently forward the options area.
If the CItE (Critical Ingress to Egress) bit is a one, one or more
critical ingress-to-egress options are present. If it is zero, no
such options are present. If either CHbH or CItE is non-zero, egress
RBridges that support no options MUST drop the frame. If both CHbH
and CItE are zero, the frame is safe, from the point of view of
options, for any egress RBridge to process.
Options will be further specified in other documents and are expected
to include provisions for hop-by-hop and ingress-to-egress options as
well as critical and non-critical options. A critical option is one
which must be understood to safely process a frame. A non-critical
option can be safely ignored.
Warning: Most RBridges implementations are expected to be optimized
for the simplest and most common cases of frame forwarding and
processing. The inclusion of any options may, and the inclusion of
complex or lengthy options almost certainly will, cause frame
processing using a "slow path" with markedly inferior performance
to "fast path" processing. Limited slow path throughput may cause
such frames to be lost.
3.6 Hop Count
The Hop Count field is a 6-bit unsigned integer. Each RBridge that is
about to forward a frame to another RBridge MUST check this field and
discard the frame if this field is zero. If this field is greater
than or equal to 1, it MUST be decremented in the forwarded frame.
For known unicast frames, the ingress RBridge MUST set the Hop Count
to at least the number of RBridge hops it expects to the egress
RBridge and SHOULD set it in excess of that number to allow for
alternate routing later in the path.
For multi-destination frames, the Hop Count MUST be set by the
ingress RBridge (or source RBridge for an end station address
R. Perlman, et al [Page 21]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
distribution TRILL IS-IS frame) to at least the expected number of
hops to the most distant RBridge and SHOULD NOT be set in excess of
that amount. To accomplish this, RBridge RBn calculates, for each
branch from RBn of the distribution tree rooted at RBi, the maximum
number of hops in that branch. When forwarding a multi-destination
frame onto a branch, transit RBridge RBm MAY decrease the hop count
by more than 1 so as to set the hop count to be no more than
necessary to reach all destinations in that branch of the tree rooted
at RBi. This minimal Hop Count on multi-destination frames is to
reduce potential problems with temporary loops when forwarding.
Although the RBridge MAY decrease the hop count by more than 1, the
RBridge forwarding a frame MUST decrease the hop count by at least 1,
and discards the frame if it cannot do so because the hop count is 0.
3.7 RBridge Nicknames
Nicknames are 16-bit dynamically assigned abbreviations for each
RBridge's 48-bit IS-IS System ID to achieve a more compact encoding.
This assignment allows specifying up to 2**16 RBridges; however, the
value 0x0000 is reserved to indicate that a nickname is not specified
and the value 0xFFFF is reserved for future specification. RBridges
piggyback a nickname acquisition protocol on the link state protocol
(see Section 3.7.3) to acquire a nickname unique within the campus.
3.7.1 Egress RBridge Nickname
There are three cases for the contents of the egress RBridge nickname
field, depending on the M-bit (see Section 3.4) and the Inner.MacDA
(see Section 4.1). It is filled in by the ingress RBridge for TRILL
data frames and by the source RBridge for TRILL IS-IS frames. Once
the egress nickname field is set, it MUST NOT be changed by any
subsequent transit RBridge.
o For known unicast TRILL data frames, M == 0, the Inner.MacDA is
not All-IS-IS-RBridges, and the egress RBridge nickname field
specifies the egress RBridge i.e. it specifies the RBridge that
needs to remove the TRILL encapsulation from the native frame.
o For core instance TRILL IS-IS frames, M == 0, the Inner.MacDA is
All-IS-IS-Rbridge, and the egress RBridge nickname field is not
used. Such frames may be sent before nicknames have been
established and are only sent one hop. The Egress RBridge
Nickname MUST be set to zero by the source RBridge for such frames
and is ignored by other RBridges.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 22]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
o For multi-destination TRILL data frames and for ESADI (end station
address distribution instance) TRILL IS-IS frames, M == 1. The
egress RBridge nickname field contains the nickname of the root
RBridge of the distribution tree selected to be used to forward
the frame. This root MUST NOT be changed by transit RBridges.
3.7.2 Ingress RBridge Nickname
The ingress RBridge nickname is set to the nickname of the ingress
RBridge for all TRILL data frames and to the nickname of the source
RBridge for all ESADI (end station address distribution instance)
TRILL IS-IS frames.
For core TRILL IS-IS frames, which may be sent before nicknames have
been established, the ingress nickname MUST be set to zero by the
source RBridge and is ignored by receiving RBridges.
Once the ingress nickname field is set, it MUST NOT be changed by any
subsequent transit RBridge.
3.7.3 RBridge Nickname Allocation
The nickname allocation protocol is piggybacked on the core TRILL IS-
IS instance as follows:
o The nickname being used by an RBridge is carried in an IS-IS TLV
(type-length-value data element) along with a priority of use
value. Each RBridge chooses its own nickname.
o The nickname value MAY be configured. An RBridge that has been
configured with a nickname value will have priority for that
nickname value over all Rbridges with non-configured nicknames.
o The nickname values 0x0000 and 0xFFFF are reserved and MUST NOT be
selected or configured. In some cases the value 0x0000 is used to
indicate that the nickname is not known.
o The priority of use field reported with a nickname is an unsigned
8-bit value, where the most significant bit (0x80) indicates that
the nickname value was configured. The bottom 7 bits have the
default value 0x40, but MAY be configured to be some other value.
Additionally, an RBridge MAY increase its priority after holding
the nickname for some amount of time. However, the most
significant bit of the priority MUST NOT be set unless the
nickname value was configured.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 23]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
o Once an RBridge has successfully acquired a nickname it SHOULD
attempt to reuse it in the case of a reboot.
o Each RBridge is responsible for ensuring that its nickname is
unique. If RB1 chooses nickname x, and RB1 discovers, through
receipt of RB2's LSP, that RB2 has also chosen x, then the RBridge
with the numerically higher priority keeps the nickname, or if
there is a tie in priority, the RBridge with the numerically
higher IS-IS System ID keeps the nickname, and the other RBridge
MUST choose a new nickname. This can require an RBridge with a
configured nickname to select a different nickname.
o If two RBridge campuses merge, then transient nickname collisions
are possible. As soon as each RBridge receives the LSPs from the
other RBridges, the RBridges that need to change nicknames choose
new nicknames that do not, to the best of their knowledge, collide
with any existing nicknames. Some RBridges may need to change
their nickname more than once before the situation is resolved.
To minimize the probability of nickname collisions, each RBridge,
when choosing its nickname, does so by randomly hashing some of its
parameters, e.g., interface MAC addresses, time and date, and other
entropy sources such as those given in [RFC4086]. There is no reason
for all Rbridges to use the same algorithm for choosing nicknames.
To minimize the probability of a new RBridge usurping a nickname
already in use, an RBridge whose nickname is not configured SHOULD
wait to acquire the link state database from a neighbor before it
announces its own nickname.
An RBridge which will not act as an ingress, egress, or tree root
need not have a nickname.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 24]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
4. Other RBridge Design Details
Section 3 above specifies TRILL Headers, while this Section specified
other RBridge design details.
4.1 Ethernet Data Encapsulation
TRILL frames in transit on Ethernet links are encapsulated with an
outer Ethernet header (see Figure 2.2). This outer header looks, to a
bridge on the path between two RBridges, like the header of a regular
Ethernet frame and therefore bridges forward the frame without
requiring any modification. To enable RBridges to distinguish TRILL
frames, a new TRILL Ethertype (see Section 7.2) is used in the outer
header.
Figure 4.1 details a TRILL data frame with an outer VLAN tag
traveling on the Ethernet cloud of Figure 2.1 from RB1 to RB2. This
encapsulation has the advantage, in the absence of TRILL options, of
aligning the original Ethernet frame at a 64-bit boundary.
When a TRILL data frame is carried over an Ethernet cloud it has
three pairs of addresses:
o Outer Ethernet Header: Outer Destination MAC Address (Outer.MacDA)
and Outer Source MAC Address (Outer.MacSA): These addresses are
used to specify the next hop RBridge and the transmitting RBridge,
respectively, over a shared Ethernet cloud.
o TRILL Header: Egress Nickname and Ingress Nickname. These specify
the nickname values of the egress and ingress RBridges,
respectively, for TRILL data frames unless they are multi-
destination in which case the Egress Nickname specified the root
of the distribution tree on which the frame is being sent.
o Inner Ethernet Header: Inner Destination MAC Address (Inner.MacDA)
and Inner Source MAC Address (Inner.MacSA): These addresses are as
transmitted by the original end station, specifying, respectively,
the destination and source of the inner frame.
A TRILL data frame also potentially has two VLAN tags that can carry
two different VLAN Identifiers and specify priority.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 25]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Outer Ethernet Header:
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Outer Destination MAC Address (RB2) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Outer Destination MAC Address | Outer Source MAC Address |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Outer Source MAC Address (RB1) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Ethertype = C-Tag [802.1Q] | Outer.VLAN Tag Information |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
TRILL Header:
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Ethertype = TRILL | V | R |M|Op-Length| Hop Count |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Egress (RB2) Nickname | Ingress (RB1) Nickname |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Inner Ethernet Header:
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Inner Destination MAC Address |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Inner Destination MAC Address | Inner Source MAC Address |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Inner Source MAC Address |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Ethertype = C-Tag [802.1Q] | Inner.VLAN Tag Information |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Payload:
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Ethertype of Original Payload | |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |
| Original Ethernet Payload |
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Frame CheckSum:
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| New FCS (Frame CheckSum) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 4.1: TRILL Data Encapsulation over Ethernet
4.1.1 VLAN Tag Information
A "VLAN Tag", also known as a "C-tag" (formerly Q-tag) for customer
tag, includes a VLAN ID and a priority field as shown in Figure 4.2.
The "VLAN ID" may be zero, indicating the no VLAN is specified, just
a priority, although such a tag is properly called a "priority tag"
rather than a "VLAN Tag" [802.1Q].
R. Perlman, et al [Page 26]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Use of 802.1Q S-tags (service tag) is beyond the scope of this
document.
+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+
| Priority | C | VLAN ID |
+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+
Figure 4.2: VLAN Tag Information
As recommended in [802.1Q], Rbridges SHOULD be implemented so as to
allow use of the full range of VLAN IDs from 0x001 through 0xFFE.
VLAN ID zero is the null VLAN identifier and indicates that no VLAN
is specified while VLAN ID 0xFFF is reserved. Rbridges MAY support a
smaller number of simultaneously active VLAN IDs than the total
number of different VLAN IDs they allow.
The VLAN ID 0xFFF is reserved and MUST NOT be used. Rbridges MUST
discard any frame they receive with an Outer.VLAN ID of 0xFFF.
Rbridges MUST discard any frame for which they examine the Inner.VLAN
ID and find it to be 0xFFF; such examination is required at all
egress Rbridges which decapsulate a frame.
The "C" bit shown in Figure 4.2 is not used in TRILL. It MUST be set
to zero and is ignored by receivers.
As specified in [802.1Q], the priority field contains an unsigned
value from 0 through 7 where 1 indicates the lowest priority, 7 the
highest priority, and the default priority zero is considered to be
higher than priority 1 but lower than priority 2. The [802.1ad]
amendment to [802.1Q] permits mapping some adjacent pairs of priority
levels into a single priority level with and without drop
eligibility. RBridges MAY also implement such configuration options.
RBridges are not required to implement any particular number of
distinct priority levels but may treat one or more adjacent priority
levels in the same fashion.
Frames with the same source address, destination address, VLAN, and
priority that are received on the same port and transmitted on the
same port MUST be transmitted in the order received. (Such frames
might not be sent out the same port if multipath is implemented. See
Appendix C.) Differing priorities can cause frame re-ordering.
The C-Tag Ethertype is 0x8100.
4.1.2 Inner VLAN Tag
The "Inner VLAN Tag Information" (Inner.VLAN) field contains the VLAN
tag information associated with the native frame when it was
R. Perlman, et al [Page 27]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
ingressed or the VLAN tag information associated with an ESADI (end
station address distribution instance) TRILL IS-IS message when that
message is created. When a TRILL frame passes through a transit
RBridge, the Inner.VLAN MUST NOT be changed.
When a native frame arrives at an RBridge, the associated VLAN ID and
priority are determined as specified in [802.1Q] (see Appendix D and
[802.1Q] Section 6.7). If the RBridge is an appointed forwarder for
that VLAN and the delivery of the frame requires transmission to one
or more other RBridges, this ingress RBridge forms a TRILL data frame
with the associated VLAN ID and priority placed in the Inner.VLAN
Information. Thus, in TRILL data frames, the Inner.VLAN tag always
specifies a VLAN ID.
The VLAN ID is required at the ingress Rbridge as one element in
determining the appropriate egress Rbridge for a known unicast frame
and is needed at the ingress and every transit Rbridge for multi-
destination frames to correctly prune the distribution tree.
4.1.3 Outer VLAN Tag
TRILL frames sent by an RBridge, except for some TRILL IS-IS Hellos,
use an Outer.VLAN ID specified by the Designated RBridge (DRB) for
the link onto which they are being sent, referred to as the
Designated VLAN.
Transit RBridges forward TRILL frames with the priority present in
the Inner.VLAN of the frame as received. TRILL data frames are sent
with the priority associated with the corresponding native frame when
it is ingressed (see Appendix D). TRILL IS-IS frames are sent with
priority 7.
Whether an Outer.VLAN tag actually appears on the wire when a TRILL
frame is sent depends on the configuration of the RBridge port
through which it is sent in the same way as the appearance of a VLAN
tag on a frame sent by an [802.1Q] frame depends on the configuration
of the bridge port (see Section 4.7).
4.1.4 Frame CheckSum (FCS)
Each Ethernet frame has a single Frame CheckSum (FCS) that is
computed to cover the entire frame, for detecting errors due to
communications failures. It is typically calculated shortly before
transmission and checked on receipt. Any frame for which the FCS
check fails MUST be discarded. The FCS normally changes on
encapsulation, decapsulation, and every TRILL hop due to changes in
R. Perlman, et al [Page 28]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
the outer destination and source addresses, the decrementing of the
hop count, etc.
Although, as stated above, the FCS is normally calculated just before
transmission, it is desirable, when practical, for an FCS to
accompany a frame within an RBridge after receipt. That FCS could
then be dynamically updated to account for changes to the frame
during Rbridge processing and used for transmission or checked
against the FCS calculated for frame transmission. This optional,
more continuous use of an FCS would be helpful in detecting a class
of internal RBridge failures such as memory errors.
4.2 Link State Protocol (IS-IS)
TRILL uses IS-IS [ISO10589] as the routing protocol, since it has the
following advantages:
o it runs directly over Layer 2, so therefore may be run with zero
configuration (no IP addresses need to be assigned);
o it is easy to extend by defining new TLV (type-length-value) data
elements and sub-elements for carrying TRILL information;
4.2.1 IS-IS RBridge Identity
Each RBridge has a unique unsigned 48-bit (6-octet) IS-IS System ID.
This ID may be derived from any of the RBridge's unique MAC
addresses.
A pseudonode is assigned a 7-byte ID by the DRB which created it,
usually by taking a 6-byte ID owned by the DRB, and appending another
byte. The only constraint is that the 7-byte ID be unique within the
campus, and that the 7th byte be nonzero. An RBridge has a 7 byte ID
consisting of its 6 byte system ID concatenated with a byte of 0.
In this document we use the term "IS-IS ID" to refer to the 7 byte
quantity, that can either be the ID of an RBridge or a pseudonode.
4.2.2 IS-IS Instances
TRILL implements separate IS-IS instances from any used by Layer 3,
that is, different from the one used by routers. Layer 3 IS-IS
frames must be distinguished from TRILL IS-IS frames even when those
Layer 3 IS-IS frames are transiting a campus and are TRILL
R. Perlman, et al [Page 29]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
encapsulated.
Layer 3 IS-IS native frames always have a multicast destination
address of either AllL1ISs or AllL2ISs. When they are TRILL
encapsulated, these multicast addresses appear as the Inner.MacDA.
TRILL IS-IS messages are always encapsulated and always have a
different Inner.MacDA, namely All-IS-IS-Rbridges.
Within TRILL, there is a mandatory core IS-IS instance across all
Rbridges in the campus as described in Section 4.2.3. In addition,
there can be optional end station address distribution instances
(ESADIs) between the RBridges on each supported VLAN as described in
Section 4.2.4. They are distinguished by the presence of an inner
VLAN tag in the ESADI TRILL IS-IS frames and the absence of such a
tag in the core instances frames.
4.2.3 Core TRILL IS-IS
All Rbridges must participate in the core TRILL IS-IS instance. Core
instance frames are never forwarded by an RBridge but are
decapsulated and locally processed. (Such processing may cause the
RBridge to send additional core IS-IS instance frames.)
4.2.3.1 Core IS-IS Link Protocol
RBridges send core TRILL IS-IS Hellos on a link in order to discover
RBridge neighbors. As with layer 3 IS-IS, one RBridge is elected DRB
(Designated RBridge), based on configured priority (most significant
field), and system ID. The DRB, as described in Section 4.2.3.2,
designates the VLAN to be used on the link for inter-RBridge
communication and appoints itself or other RBridges on the link as
appointed forwarder (see Section 4.2.3.3) for VLANs on the link.
4.2.3.1.1 Core Hello VLAN Tagging
By default, RBridges tag TRILL IS-IS Hellos with VLAN 1. Because a
link may be a bridged LAN with different connectivity for different
VLANs, and since an RBridge may be configured so that it cannot use
VLAN 1 on a port, Hellos may need to be sent out a port with
additional and/or other VLANs for safety.
An RBridge RBn maintains for each port the same VLAN information as a
customer IEEE [802.1Q] bridge including the set of VLANs enabled for
output through that port (see Section 4.7). In addition, RBn
maintains the following TRILL specific VLAN parameters per port:
R. Perlman, et al [Page 30]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
a) Desired Designated VLAN: the VLAN that RBn, if it is DRB, will
specify be used by all RBridges on the link to communicate all
TRILL frames, except some Hellos. This MUST be an enabled
VLAN. It defaults to the numerically lowest enabled VLAN ID,
which is VLAN 1 for a zero configuration RBridge.
b) Designated VLAN: the VLAN being used on the link for all TRILL
frames except some Hellos. This is set from RBn's Desired
Designated VLAN if RBn believes it is DRB or from the
Designated VLAN in the DRB's Hellos if RBn is not DRB.
c) Announcing VLANs set. This defaults to the enabled VLANs set
but may be configured to be a subset of the enabled VLANs.
d) Forwarding VLANs set: the set of VLANs for which an RBridge
port is appointed VLAN forwarder. This, by definition, is the
same as or a subset of the enabled VLANs for the port.
On each of its ports an RBridge sends Hellos Outer.VLAN tagged with a
set of VLANs. For each port, this set depends on the RBridge's DRB
status and the above VLAN parameters. All RBridges send Hellos
Outer.VLAN tagged with the Designated VLAN unless that VLAN is not
enabled. In addition, the DRB sends Hellos Outer.VLAN tagged with
each enabled VLAN in its Announcing VLANs set. All non-DRB RBridges
send Hellos Outer.VLAN tagged with all enabled VLANs that are in the
intersection of their Forwarding VLANs set and their Announcing VLANs
set. More symbolically, Hellos are sent as follows:
If it is DRB
intersection ( Enabled VLANs,
union ( Designated VLAN, Announcing VLANs ) )
If it is not DRB
intersection ( Enabled VLANs,
union ( Designated VLAN,
intersection ( Forwarding VLANs, Announcing VLANs ) ) )
Configuring the Announcing VLANs set to be null minimizes the number
of Hellos. In that case, Hellos are only tagged with the Designated
VLAN.
The number of Hellos is maximized, within this specification, by
configuring the Announcing VLANs set to be the set of all enabled
VLAN IDs, which is the default. In that case, the DRB will send
Hellos tagged with all its Enabled VLAN tags and any non-DRB RBridge
RBn will send Hellos tagged with the Designated VLAN, if enabled, and
tagged with all VLANs for which RBn is an appointed forwarder. (It is
possible to send even more Hellos. In particular, non-DRB RBridges
could send Hellos on enabled VLANs for which they are not an
appointed forwarder and which are not the Designated VLAN. While this
R. Perlman, et al [Page 31]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
would not cause harm, other than a further communications and
processing burden, there is no significant advantage is doing so.)
When an RBridge port comes up, until it has heard a Hello from a
higher priority RBridge, it considers itself to be DRB on that port
and sends Hellos on that basis. Similarly, even if it has at some
time recognized some other RBridge on the link as DRB, if on that
port it receives no Hellos from an RBridge with higher priority as
DRB for a long enough time, as specified by IS-IS, it will revert to
believing itself DRB. Note that an RBridge RBn does not defer to the
DRB listed in a Hello, even if that claimed DRB is higher priority,
if the Hello was sent by an RBridge with lower priority than RBn.
4.2.3.1.2 Core Hello Contents
A core TRILL IS-IS Hello includes the following information, in
addition to the standard IS-IS Hello header information. The actual
encoding of this information and the IS-IS Type or sub-Type values
for any new IS-IS TLV or sub-TLV data elements are specified in a
separate document.
1. The VLAN ID of the Designated VLAN for the link.
2. A copy of the Outer VLAN ID with which the Hello was tagged to
detect VLAN mapping (see Section 4.2.3.1.3).
3. The set of VLANs for which end station service is enabled on the
port. If this is missing or null, it implies that the port is
configured as a trunk port (see Section 4.7).
4. A flag which, if set, indicates that the sender believes it is
appointed forwarder for the VLAN and port on which the Hello was
sent.
5. If the sender is DRB, the Rbridges (including itself) that the
sender appoints as forwarders for that link and the VLANs for
which it appoints them.
RBridge adjacencies over which TRILL data and TRILL IS-IS frames will
be sent should only be formed on the Designated VLAN. Forming such
adjacencies requires exchange of Hellos with the IS Neighbor TLV, so
that TLV MUST NOT be included in Hellos sent on VLANs other than the
Designated VLAN.
It is anticipated that many links between RBridges will be point-to-
point in which case a pseudonode merely adds to the complexity. If
the DRB specifies the pseudonode ID as all zeros, this indicates that
the RBridges on the link are just to report their adjacencies as
point-to-point. This has no effect on how LSPs are flooded on a
link. It only affects what LSPs are generated.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 32]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
For example, if RB1 and RB2 are the only RBridges on the link and RB1
is DRB, then if RB1 creates a pseudonode there are 3 LSPs: for, say,
RB1.25 (the pseudonode), RB1, and RB2, where RB1.25 reports
connectivity to RB1 and RB2, and RB1 and RB2 each just say they are
connected to RB1.25. Whereas if DRB R1 declares no pseudonode, then
there will be only 2 LSPs: RB1 and RB2 each reporting connectivity to
each other.
A DRB SHOULD NOT create a pseudonode for its link unless the port is
an access port (see Section 4.7) or it has seen at least two
simultaneous adjacencies on the link at some point since it last re-
booted.
4.2.3.1.3 VLAN Mapping
Although customer IEEE [802.1Q] bridges are not permitted to change
the C-tag VLAN ID for a tagged frame they receive, that is, map
VLANs, bridged LANs can nevertheless display this behavior. For
example, one bridge can have a port configured to strip certain VLAN
tags on output and send the resulting untagged frames onto a link
leading to a second bridge whose port tags these frames with a
different VLAN. Although each of these bridges conforms to [802.1Q],
in the aggregate they perform manipulations not permitted for a
single customer 802.1Q bridge. Since RBridge ports have essentially
the same VLAN capabilities as customer 802.1Q bridges, this can occur
even in the absence of bridges.
RBridges include the Outer.VLAN information inside a TLV within each
Hello message. When a Hello is received, they compare this saved copy
with the Outer.VLAN ID information associated with the received
frame. If these differ and the VLAN ID inside the Hello is X and the
Outer.VLAN is Y, it is assumed that VLAN ID X is being mapped into
VLAN ID Y.
When a VLAN mapping from X to Y is detected, the RBridge detecting it
disables its appointed forwarder status for both X and Y. The idea is
to produce a clean failure so the network operator will correct the
bridged LAN configuration.
4.2.3.2 Designated RBridge
TRILL IS-IS elects one RBridge for each link to be the Designated
RBridge (DRB), that is, to have special duties. The Designated
RBridge:
o Chooses, for the link, and announces in its Hellos, the Designated
VLAN ID to be used for inter-Bridge communication. This VLAN is
used for all TRILL data frames and all non-Hello TRILL IS-IS
R. Perlman, et al [Page 33]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
frames. TRILL IS-IS Hellos are sent on this VLAN but may also be
sent on others (see Section 4.2.3.1.1).
o If the link is represented in the IS-IS topology as a pseudonode,
chooses a pseudonode ID and announces that in its Hello and issues
an LSP on behalf of the pseudonode.
o Issues CSNPs.
o For each VLAN-x appearing on the link, chooses an RBridge on the
link to be the appointed VLAN-x forwarder (the DRB MAY choose
itself to be the appointed VLAN-x forwarder for all or some of the
VLANs).
o Before appointing a VLAN-x forwarder (including appointing
itself), wait at least 5 Hello intervals (to ensure it is DRB).
o Continues sending IS-IS Hellos on all its enabled VLANs that have
been configured in the Announcing VLANs set of the DRB, which
defaults to all enabled VLANs.
4.2.3.3 Appointed VLAN-x Forwarder
The appointed VLAN-x forwarder for a link is responsible for the
following:
o Forwarding VLAN-x data traffic to and from the link.
o Learning the MAC address of local VLAN-x nodes based on looking at
the source address of VLAN-x frames from the link.
o Optionally learning the port of local VLAN-x nodes based on any
sort of Layer 2 registration protocols.
o Keeping track of the { egress RBridge, VLAN, MAC address } of
distant VLAN-x end nodes, learned by looking at the fields {
ingress RBridge, Inner.VLAN ID, Inner.MacSA } from frames being
decapsulated onto the link.
o Optionally listening to the messages in the end station address
distribution instance (ESADI) TRILL IS-IS for VLAN-x to learn {
egress RBridge, VLAN-x, MAC address } triplets and the confidence
level of such explicitly advertised end nodes.
o Optionally advertising VLAN-x end nodes, on links for which it is
appointed VLAN-x forwarder, in an ESADI TRILL IS-IS.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 34]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
o Listening to BPDUs on the common spanning tree to learn the root
bridge, if any, for that link and to report in its LSP the
complete set of root bridges seen on any of its links for which
this RBridge is appointed forwarder for VLAN-x.
o Loop avoidance:
- Discarding all native frames that would have been sent onto or
received the link for a configurable time from 30 to zero
seconds, which defaults to 30 second, after it sees a root
bridge change on the link (see Section 4.7.1.1).
- On a per VLAN basis, discarding all native frames that have
been received from or would have been sent onto the link if,
within the past five Hello times, it has reeived a Hello on
that VLAN in which the sender asserts that it is appointed
forwarder for the VLAN.
- Optionally, not decapsulating a frame from ingress RBridge RBm
unless it has RBm's LSP, and the root bridge on the link it is
about to forward onto is not listed in RBm's list of root
bridges for the same VLAN. This is known as the "decapsulation
check" or "root bridge collision check".
o Including a "port number" in its Hellos, and if it sees its own
Hello on port p, where the port number in the received Hello is
"q", then if q>p, not forwarding traffic to/from port p, as
already provided in IS-IS.
4.2.3.4 Core TRILL IS-IS LSP Information
The information in the TRILL IS-IS LSP for the mandatory core
instance is listed below. The actual encoding of this information
and the IS-IS Type or sub-Type values for any new IS-IS TLV or sub-
TLV data elements are specified in a separate document.
1. The IS-IS IDs of neighbors (pseudonodes as well as RBridges) of
RBridge RBn, and the cost of the link to each of those neighbors.
2. Optionally, the nickname of RBridge RBn (2 octets) and the
unsigned 8-bit priority for RBn to have that nickname (see Section
3.7.3);
3. The TRILL Header Versions supported by RBridge RBn (4 bits).
4. The priority of RBn for becoming a distribution tree root and the
number of additional distribution trees it wants computed for the
campus (each 16 bits, see Section 4.3).
R. Perlman, et al [Page 35]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
5. The list of RBridge nicknames that RBn might select for a
distribution tree root when RBn injects a multi-destination frame
into the campus. With this field RBridges can efficiently build
receipt filters to avoid multicast loops (see Section 4.3.1). If
the list is empty or not provided, RBn can only select the highest
priority distribution tree root (see Section 4.3).
6. The list of VLAN IDs of VLANs directly connected to RBn for links
on which RBn is the appointed forwarder for that VLAN. (Note: an
RBridge may advertise that it is connected to additional VLANs in
order to receive additional frames to support certain VLAN based
features beyond the scope of this specification as mentioned in
Section 4.6.3.) In addition, the LSP contains the following
information on a per-VLAN basis:
6.1 Per VLAN Multicast Router attached flags: This is two bits of
information that indicate whether there is an IPv4 and/or IPv6
multicast router attached to the Rbridge on that VLAN. An
RBridge which does not do IP multicast control snooping MUST
set both of these bits (see Section 4.3.3). This information
is used because IGMP [RFC3376] and MLD [RFC2710] Membership
Reports MUST be transmitted to all links with IP multicast
routers, and SHOULD NOT be transmitted to links without such
routers. Also, all frames for IP-derived multicast addresses
MUST be transmitted to all links with IP multicast routers
(within a VLAN), in addition to links from which an IP node
has explicitly asked to join the group the frame is for,
except for some IP mulicast addresses that MUST be treated as
broadcast.
6.2 Per VLAN Other Multicast flag. This is a flag bit that
indicates that the RBridge wishes to receive non-IP derived
multicast for that VLAN. It defaults to true (one). Within
each VLAN, all non-IP derived multicast traffic MUST be sent
to an RBridge that asserts this flag.
6.3 Per VLAN mandatory announcement of the set of IDs of Root
bridges for any of RBn's links on which RBn is forwarder for
that VLAN. Where MSTP (Multiple Spanning Tree Protocol) is
running on a link, this is the root bridge of the CIST (Common
and Internal Spanning Tree). This is to quickly detect cases
where two Layer 2 clouds accidentally get merged, and where
there might otherwise temporarily be two DRBs for the same
VLAN on the same link. (See Section 4.2.3.3.)
6.4 Optionally, per VLAN Layer 2 multicast addresses derived from
IPv4 IGMP or IPv6 MLD notification messages received from
attached end nodes on that VLAN, indicating the location of
listeners for these multicast addresses (see Section 4.3.4).
R. Perlman, et al [Page 36]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
6.5 Per VLAN end station address distribution instance (ESADI)
TRILL IS-IS participation flag, priority, and holding time.
If this flag is one, it indicates that the RBridge wishes to
receive such ESADI frames (see Section 4.2.4.1).
6.6 Per VLAN appointed forwarder status lost counter (see Section
4.6.2).
7. Optionally, a list of VLAN groups where address learning is shared
across that VLAN group (see Section 4.6.3). Each VLAN group is a
list of VLAN IDs, with the first VLAN ID listed in a group, if
present, is the "primary" and the others are "secondary". This is
to detect misconfiguration of features outside the scope of this
document. RBridges that do not support features such as "shared
VLAN learning" ignore this field.
4.2.4 End Station Address Distribution Instance (ESADI) IS-IS
RBridges that are the appointed VLAN-x forwarder for a link MAY
participate in the end station address distribution instance (ESADI)
of IS-IS for that VLAN. But all transit RBridges MUST properly
forward ESADI TRILL IS-IS frames as if they were multicast TRILL data
frames.
Because of this forwarding, it appears to an ESADI IS-IS at an
RBridge that it is directly connected by a shared virtual link to all
other RBridges in the campus running that instance. RBridges that do
not implement that ESADI or are not appointed forwarder for that VLAN
do not decapsulate or locally process any ESADI IS-IS frames they
receive for that VLAN. In other words, these frames are transparently
tunneled through transit RBridges. Such transit RBridges treat them
exactly as multicast TRILL data frames and no IS-IS processing is
invoked due to such forwarding.
4.2.4.1 ESADI Protocol
An RBridge participating in an end station address distribution
instance (ESADI) does not send any additional Hellos. The
information available in the core TRILL IS-IS link state database is
sufficient to determine the DRB on the virtual link for each VLAN's
ESADI. In particular, the core link state database information for
each RBridge includes the VLANs, if any, for which that RBridge is
participating in an ESADI, its priority for being selected as DRB for
each of those instances, its holding time, and its IS-IS system ID
for breaking ties in priority.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 37]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
The DRB, for an ESADI, sends TRILL IS-IS CSNP messages on the ESADI
virtual link. A participating RBridge that determines that some other
RBridge should be DRB on such a virtual link and has not received or
sent a CSNP in at least the DRB holding time MAY also send a CSNP on
the virtual link. A participating RBridge that determines that no
other RBridges are participating in an ESADI for a particular VLAN
SHOULD NOT send ESADI LSPs or CSNPs on the virtual link.
4.2.4.2 ESADI Information
The information in the LSP for a optional TRILL IS-IS ESADI is the
list of local end station MAC addresses known to the originating
RBridge and for each such address a one octet unsigned "confidence"
rating in the range 0-254 (see Section 4.6).
4.3 Distribution Trees
RBridges use distribution trees to forward multi-destination frames
(see Section 2.2.2). Distribution Trees are bidirectional. Although
a single tree is logically sufficient for the entire campus, the
TRILL WG decided that the computation of additional distribution
trees was warranted. Having additional trees increases the
computation load on every RBridge in the campus. However, it enables
multipathing of multi-destination frames and enables the choice of a
tree root closer to or, in the limit, identical with the ingress
RBridge. Such a closer tree root reduces out-of-order delivery when a
unicast address transitions between unknown and known and improves
the efficiency of the delivery of multi-destination frames that are
being delivered to a subset of the links in the campus.
Each RBridge RBn may advertise in the core instance link state
database its priority to be chosen as a tree root and the number of
additional distribution trees it specifies that every RBridge in the
campus must compute if RBn is the highest priority tree root. The
priority is a 16-bit unsigned integer that defaults, for a zero
configuration RBridge or if the RBridge does not advertise any
priority in its LSP, to 0x8000. The number of distribution trees to
be computed is a 16-bit unsigned integer giving the number of trees
to be computed in addition to the one rooted at the highest priority
root. The number of additional tree defaults, for a zero
configuration RBridge or if the RBridge does not advertise any number
in its LSP, to one.
The highest priority RBridge to be tree root is determined by the
numerically lowest priority field or, if priority fields are equal,
by the numerically lowest system ID. A tree is always calculated
R. Perlman, et al [Page 38]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
rooted at this highest priority RBridge and that RBridge specifies to
all RBridges in the campus the total number of distribution trees to
be calculated. If it indicates that k trees are to be calculated,
then they are rooted at the k highest priority RBridges. Thus every
RBridge calculates the same set of k distribution trees.
Every RBridge RBn defaults, in the zero configuration case, to using
a single distribution tree for multi-destination frames. For this
purpose, it orders the trees being computed for the campus by
increasing cost from RBn to the root RBridge of that tree and, if
cost is equal, by decreasing priority to be a tree root and selects
the first tree in that ordering.
If RBn is to multi-path multi-destination frames, it can be
configured with the number of different trees it would like to use,
say j. RBn selects the first trees in its priority-of-use ordering,
up to the minimum of j and k number of trees. However, RBn MUST
announce, in its LSP, an intention to use any particular trees by
listing the tree root.
4.3.1 Distribution Tree Calculation and Checks
RBridges do not use the spanning tree protocol to calculate
distribution trees. Instead, distribution trees are calculated based
on the link state information, selecting a particular RBridge as the
root. Each RBridge RBn independently calculates a tree rooted at RBi
by performing the SPF (Shortest Path First) calculation with RBi as
the root without requiring any additional exchange of information.
When a node RBn has two or more minimal equal cost paths toward the
Root RBi, a deterministic tiebreaker is needed to guarantee that all
Rbridges calculate the same distribution tree. This is obtained by
selecting the path that goes to the parent that has the lower 7-byte
IS-IS ID.
Each RBridge RBn keeps a set of adjacencies ( { port, neighbor}
pairs) for each distribution tree it is calculating. One of these
adjacencies is toward the tree root RBi and the others are toward the
leaves. Once the adjacencies are chosen, it is irrelevant which ones
are towards the root RBi, and which are away from RBi. Let's suppose
that RBn has calculated that adjacencies a, c, and f are in the RBi
tree. A multi-destination frame for the distribution tree RBi is
received only from one of the adjacencies a, c, or f (otherwise it is
discarded) and forwarded to the other two adjacencies.
To further avoid temporary multicast loops during topology changes,
RBridges MUST do a sanity check that a multi-destination frame
arrives on the expected link. This is called the Reverse Path
R. Perlman, et al [Page 39]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Forwarding Check and is done as follows. When RBn calculates the RBi
tree, for each adjacency in the RBi tree, RBn lists the possible
ingress RBridge nicknames on that adjacency. The only ingress
RBridges that appear on any of the adjacencies are RBridges that have
explicitly stated, in their LSP, that they may select RBi as a
distribution tree root or ingress RBridges that list no roots on
adjacencies for the distribution tree with the highest priority root.
If a multi-destination frame is received on a particular adjacency,
marked as the RBi-tree, then RBn MUST NOT forward it if the ingress
RBridge is not listed in the allowed list of ingress RBridges for
that adjacency for that tree.
When a topology change occurs (including apparent changes during
start up), an RBridge MUST adjust its input distribution tree filters
no later than it adjusts its output forwarding.
4.3.2 Pruning the Distribution Tree
Each distribution tree SHOULD be pruned per-VLAN eliminating branches
that have no potential receivers downstream. Multi-destination TRILL
data frames SHOULD only be forwarded on branches that are not pruned.
Further pruning SHOULD be done in several cases: (1) IGMP [RFC3376],
MLD [RFC2710], and MRD [RFC4286] messages, where these are to be
delivered only to links with IP Multicast routers; (2) other
multicast frames derived from an IP multicast address which should be
delivered only to links that have registered listeners, plus links
which have IP Multicast routers, except for IP multicast addresses
which must be broadcast; and (3) other multicast traffic not derived
from an IP address which is only delivered to links for which the
appointed forwarder has the Other Multicast requested flag set. All
of these cases are scoped per-VLAN.
Let's assume that RBridge RBn knows that adjacencies (a, c, and f)
are in the RBi-distribution tree. RBn marks pruning information for
each of the adjacencies in the RBi-tree. For each adjacency and for
each tree, RBn marks:
o the set of VLANs reachable downstream,
o for each one of those VLANs, flags indicating whether there are
IPv4 or IPv6 multicast routers downstream, and whether there are
one or more RBridges downstream with the Other Multicast flag set,
and
o the set of Layer 2 multicast addresses derived from IP multicast
groups for which there are receivers downstream.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 40]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
4.3.3 Tree Distribution Optimization
RBridges MUST determine the VLAN associated with all native frames
and properly enforce VLAN rules on the emission of native frames at
egress RBridge ports according to how those ports are configured.
They SHOULD also prune the distribution tree of multi-destination
frames according to VLAN. But, since they are not required to do
such pruning, they may receive TRILL data frames that should have
been VLAN pruned earlier in the tree distribution. They silently
discard such frames. A campus may contain some Rbridges that prune on
VLAN and some that do not.
The situation is more complex for multicast. RBridges SHOULD analyze
IP derived native multicast frames, and learn and announce listeners
and IP multicast routers for such frames as discussed in Section 4.5
below. And they SHOULD prune the distribution of IP derived multicast
frames based on such learning and announcements. But, they are not
required to prune based on IP multicast listener and router
attachment state. And, unlike VLANs, where VLAN attachment state of
ports MUST be maintained and honored, RBridges are not required to
maintain IP multicast listener and router attachment state.
An RBridge that does not examine native IGMP [RFC3376], MLD
[RFC2710], and MRD [RFC4286] frames that it ingresses MUST advertise
that it has IPv4 and IPv6 IP multicast routers attached for all the
VLANs for which it is an appointed forwarder. It need not advertise
any IP derived multicast listeners. This will cause all IP derived
multicast traffic to be sent to this RBridge for those VLANs. It then
egresses that traffic onto the links for which it is appointed
forwarder where the VLAN of the traffic matches the VLAN for which it
is appointed forwarder on that link. (This may cause the suppression
of certain IGMP membership report messages from end stations but that
is not significant as any multicast traffic such reports would be
requesting will be sent to such end stations under these
circumstances.)
A campus may contain a mixture of Rbridges with different levels of
IP derived multicast optimization. An RBridge may receive IP derived
multicast frames that should have been pruned earlier in the tree
distribution. They silently discard such frames.
See also "Considerations for Internet Group Management Protocol
(IGMP) and Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) Snooping Switches"
[RFC4541].
R. Perlman, et al [Page 41]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
4.3.4 Forwarding Using a Distribution Tree
With maximum optimization, forwarding a multi-destination data frame
is done as follows:
o The RBridge RBn receives a multi-destination TRILL data frame with
inner VLAN-x and a TRILL header indicating that the selected tree
is the RBi-tree;
o if the adjacency from which the frame was received is not one of
the adjacencies in the RBi-tree for the specified ingress RBridge,
the frame is dropped (see Section 4.3.1);
o else, if the frame is an IGMP or MLD announcement message or an
MRD query message, then the frame is forwarded onto adjacencies in
the RBi-tree that indicate there are downstream VLAN-x IPv4 or
IPv6 multicast routers as appropriate;
o else, if the frame is for a Layer 2 multicast address derived from
an IP multicast group, but not the range of IP multicast addresses
which must be treated as broadcast, then the frame is forwarded
onto adjacencies in the RBi-tree that indicate there are
downstream VLAN-x IP multicast routers of the corresponding type
(IPv4 or IPv6), as well as adjacencies that indicate there are
downstream VLAN-x receivers for that group address;
o else, if the frame is for a Layer 2 multicast address not derived
from an IP multicast group, then the frame is forwarded onto
adjacencies in the RBi-tree that indicate there are downstream
RBridges in VLAN-x with the Other Multicast flag set;
o else (the inner frame is for an unknown destination or broadcast
or an IP multicast address which is required to be treated as
broadcast) the frame is forwarded onto an adjacency if and only if
that adjacency is in the RBi-tree, and marked as reaching VLAN-x
links.
For each link for which RBn is appointed forwarder, RBn additionally
checks to see if it should decapsulate the frame and send it to the
link, or process the frame.
ESADI (end station address distribution instance) TRILL IS-IS frames
will be delivered only to RBridges that are appointed forwarders for
their VLAN. Such frames look, to transit RBridges, like any multicast
data frame tagged with an inner VLAN tag. Such frames will be
multicast throughout the campus, like other non-IP-derived multicast
data frames, on the distribution tree chosen by the RBridge which
created the ESADI message, and pruned according to the inner VLAN
tag. Thus all the RBridges that are appointed forwarders for a link
in that VLAN receive them unless the RBridge has cleared its Other
R. Perlman, et al [Page 42]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Multicast bit for that VLAN and has no appointed forwarders
downstream in the tree with the Other Multicast bit set.
4.4 Frame Processing Behavior
This section describes RBridge behavior for all varieties of received
frames, including how they are forwarded when appropriate. Section
4.4.1 covers native frames, Section 4.4.2 covers TRILL frames, and
section 4.4.3 covers control frames.
Frames with a bad FCS are discarded on receipt. Source address
information ( { VLAN, Outer.MacSA, port } ) is learned from any non-
control frame with a unicast sources address (see Section 4.6).
4.4.1 Receipt of a Native Frame
If end station service is disabled on the port, the frame is
discarded.
The ingress Rbridge RB1 determines the VLAN ID for a native frame
according to the same rules as IEEE 802.1Q bridges do (see Appendix
D). Once the VLAN is determined, if RB1 is not the appointed
forwarder for that VLAN on the port where the frame was received, the
frame is discarded. If it is appointed forwarder for that VLAN, then
it is forwarded according to 4.4.1.1 if the frame is unicast and
according to 4.4.1.2 if it is multicast or broadcast, unless the
appointed forwarder is required to discard it due to a recenlty
observed Hello inidcating a conflicting appointed forwarder or root
bridge change (see Section 4.2.3.3).
4.4.1.1 Native Unicast Case
If the destination MAC address of the native frame is a unicast
address, the following steps are performed.
The Layer 2 destination address and VLAN are looked up in the ingress
RBridge's Encapsulation Database to find the egress RBridge RBm or
local egress port or discover that the destination is unknown.
If the destination address is known, one of the following three cases
will apply:
1. If the destination is known to be on the same link from which the
native frame was received, the RBridge silently discards the
R. Perlman, et al [Page 43]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
frame, since the destination should already have received it.
2. If the destination is known to be on a different local link for
which the RBridge is also appointed forwarder for the frame's
VLAN, the RBridge forwards the frame in native form to that link
unless inhibited for this different local link as described in
Section 4.2.3.3.
3. If the destination is known to be on a link for which a different
RBridge is appointed forwarder for the frame's VLAN, say RBridge
RBm, then RB1 converts the native frame to a TRILL data frame with
an Outer.MacSA of RB1 and an Outer.MacDA of the next hop RBridge
towards RBm, a TRILL header with M = 0, the ingress nickname for
RB1, and the egress nickname for RBm.
If a unicast destination address is unknown, RB1 handles the frame as
described in Section 4.4.1.2 for a broadcast frame except that the
Inner.MacDA is the original native frame unicast destination address.
4.4.1.2 Native Multicast and Broadcast Frames
If the destination address of a native frame is the broadcast address
or a multicast address other than All-Rbridges or All-IS-IS-Rbridges,
the frame is processed as described below. A native (non-TRILL) frame
sent to the All-Rbridges or All-IS-IS-Rbridges address is erroneous
and is silently discarded.
If the frame is a native IGMP [RFC3376], MLD [RFC2710], or MRD
[RFC4286] frame, then RB1 SHOULD analyze it, learn any group
membership or IP multicast router presence indicated, and announce
that information for the appropriate VLAN in its LSP (see Section
4.5).
For all multi-destination native frames, RB1 forwards the frame in
native form to its links where it is appointed forwarder for the
frame's VLAN subject to further pruning and inhibition as described
in Section 4.2.3.3. In addition, it converts the native frame to a
TRILL data frame with Outer.MacSA of RB1 and the All-Rbridges
multicast address as Outer.MacDA, a TRILL header with the multi-
destination bit M = 1, the ingress nickname for RB1, and the egress
nickname for the root of the distribution tree it wants to use. It
then forwards the frame on the pruned distribution tree (see Section
4.3).
The default is for RB1 to write the nickname for the distribution
tree whose root is least cost from RB1 into the egress nickname
field. However, RB1 MAY choose a different distribution tree if RB1
has been configured to path-split multicast. In that case RB1 MUST
R. Perlman, et al [Page 44]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
select a tree by specifying an RBridge that is a distribution tree
root (see Section 4.3). Also, RB1 MUST select a tree that RB1 has
announced (in RB1's own LSP) to be one of those that RB1 may choose
as a distribution tree or the tree with the highest priority root if
none is announced.
Although the Outer.MacDA is normally the All-Rbridges multicast
address if, for any particular frame sent out a particular port,
there is only one next hop RBridge of interest, the frame MAY be sent
with the unicast Outer.MacDA of the target RBridge. Using a unicast
Outer.MacDA is of no benefit on a point-to-point link but may result
in substantial savings if the link is actually a bridged LAN with
many bridged branches and end stations, to all of which the frame may
be flooded if a multicast destination is used.
4.4.2 Receipt of a TRILL Frame
A TRILL outer Ethertype indicates a TRILL frame. Such frames will be
received with an Outer.MacDA that is unicast or that is the All-
RBridges multicast address. TRILL frames with any other Outer.MacDA
are erroneous and are discarded except that a TRILL frame with the
broadcast Outer.MacDA MAY be treated as if the Outer.MacDA was the
All-Rbridges multicast address. TRILL frames received by an RBridge
on a port are never blocked because of that RBridge's appointed
forwarder or Designated RBridge status for that port.
If the Outer.MacDA is a unicast address, the frame is discarded
unless that address is the address of the receiving Rbridge. (Such
discarded frames are most likely addressed to another RBridge on a
multi-access link and that other Rbridge will handle them.)
After the above checks, further processing of TRILL frames is
independent of the Outer.MacDA.
If the Version field in the TRILL Header is greater than 0, the frame
is discarded. The Inner.MacDA is then tested. If it is the All-IS-IS-
Rbridges multicast address, processing proceeds as in Section 4.4.2.1
below. If it is any other address, processing proceeds as in Section
4.4.2.2.
4.4.2.1 TRILL IS-IS Frames
If there is no Inner VLAN tag, the frame is a core instance TRILL IS-
IS frame. In that case, if M == 1, the frame is silently discarded.
Otherwise, it is processed by the core IS-IS instance on RBn and is
not forwarded. Note that, in this instance, nicknames may not yet
R. Perlman, et al [Page 45]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
have been established and the ingress and egress nickname fields are
ignored.
If there is an Inner VLAN tag, the frame is an ESADI (end station
address distribution instance) TRILL IS-IS frame. If M == 0, the
frame is silently discarded. The egress nickname designates the
distribution tree. In this case, the frame is forwarded as described
in Section 4.4.2.2.2. In addition, if the forwarding Rbridge is an
appointed forwarder for a link in the specified VLAN and implements
an ESADI of TRILL IS-IS for that VLAN and that instance is enabled,
the inner frame is decapsulated and provided to that local IS-IS
instance.
4.4.2.2 TRILL Data Frames
The port on which the frame was received is first checked and the
frame discarded if there is no IS-IS adjacency on that port.
The M flag is then checked. If it is zero, processing continues as
described in Section 4.4.2.2.1, if it is one, processing continues as
described in Section 4.4.2.2.2.
4.4.2.2.1 Known Unicast TRILL Data Frames
If the egress RBridge indicated is the RBridge performing the
processing (RBn), the frame being forwarded is decapsulated to native
form. The Inner.MacDA is checked: if it is not unicast, the frame is
silently discarded; if it is unicast, the frame is then either sent
onto the link containing the destination or locally processed if the
RBridge itself is the destination.
A known unicast TRILL data frame can arrive at the egress Rbridge
only to find that the MAC destination address is not actually known
by that RBridge. One way this can happen is that the destination MAC
address may have timed out in the egress RBridge cache. In this case,
the egress RBridge decapsulates the frame to native form and sends it
out on all links that are in the frame's VLAN for which the RBridge
is appointed forwarder and has not been inhibited as described in
Section 4.2.3.3, except that it MAY refrain from sending the frame on
links where it knows there cannot be an end station with the
destination MAC address, for example the link is known to be a point-
to-point link to another RBridge.
If RBn is a transit RBridge and the hop count is zero, the frame is
silently discarded. Otherwise the hop count is decremented by one and
the frame forwarded to the next hop RBridge towards the egress
RBridge, using the Forwarding Database. If the egress RBridge is not
known to the transit RBridge, the frame is silently discarded.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 46]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
4.4.2.2.2 Multi-Destination TRILL Data Frames
The Outer.MacSA is checked and the frame discarded if it is not a
tree adjacency for the tree indicated by the egress RBridge nickname
or the reverse path forwarding check fails (see Section 4.3.1).
If the RBridge is an appointed forwarder for the VLAN of the frame, a
copy of the frame is decapsulated, sent in native form on those links
in its VLAN for which the RBridge is appointed forwarder subject to
additional pruning, inhibition as described in Section 4.2.3.3,
and/or locally processed as appropriate.
If the hop count in the frame is zero, it is then silently discarded.
If non-zero, it is decreased (see Section 3.6) and the frame
forwarded down the tree specified by the egress RBridge nickname
pruned as described in Section 4.3.
In the forwarded frame, the Outer.MacSA is set to that of the port on
which the frame is being transmitted and the Outer.MacDA is normally
the All-Rbridges multicast address; however, if for any particular
frame transmitted on a particular port there is only one next hop
RBridge of interest, the frame MAY be sent with a unicast Outer.MacDA
of that next hop RBridge. Using a unicast Outer.MacDA is of no
benefit on a point-to-point link but may result in substantial
savings if the link is actually a bridged LAN with many bridged
branches and end stations, to all of which the frame may be flooded
if a multicast destination is used.
4.4.3 Receipt of a Control Frame
Low level control frames received by an RBridge are handled within
the port where they are received as described in Section 4.7.
There are two types of high level control frames, distinguished by
their destination address, which are handled as described in the
sections referenced below. If VRP frame handling is not implemented,
VRP frames are discarded.
Name Section Destination Address
BPDU 4.7.1 01-80-C2-00-00-00
VRP 4.7.2 01-80-C2-00-00-21
R. Perlman, et al [Page 47]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
4.5 IGMP, MLD, and MRD Learning
RBridges SHOULD learn, based on seeing native IGMP [RFC3376], MLD
[RFC2710], and MRD [RFC4286] frames, which IP derived multicast
messages should be forwarded onto which links. Such frames are also,
in general, encapculated as TRILL data frames and distributed as
described below and in Section 4.3.
An IGMP or MLD membership report received in native form from a link
indicates a multicast group listener for that group on that link. An
IGMP or MLD query or an MRD advertisement received in native form
from a link indicates the presence of an IP multicast router on that
link.
IP multicast group membership reports have to be sent throughout the
campus and delivered to all IP multicast routers, distinguishing IPv4
and IPv6. All IP-derived multicast traffic must also be sent to all
IP multicast routers for the same version of IP.
IP multicast data SHOULD only be sent on links where there is either
an IP multicast router for that IP type (IPv4 or IPv6) or an IP
multicast group listener for that IP multicast derived MAC address,
unless the IP multicast address is in the range required to be
treated as broadcast.
RBridges do not need to announce themselves as listeners to the All-
Snoopers multicast group (the group used for MRD reports [RFC4541]),
because the IP multicast address for that group is in the range where
all frames sent to that IP multicast addresses must be broadcast.
See also "Considerations for Internet Group Management Protocol
(IGMP) and Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) Snooping Switches"
[RFC4541].
4.6 End Station Address Details
RBridges have to learn the MAC addresses and VLANs of their locally
attached end stations for link/VLAN pairs for which they are the
appointed forwarder so they can
o forward the native form of incoming known unicast TRILL data
frames onto the correct link and
o decide for an incoming native unicast frame from a link, where the
RBridge is the appointed forwarder for the frame's VLAN, whether
the frame is
- known to have been destined for another end station on the same
R. Perlman, et al [Page 48]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
link, so the RBridge need do nothing, or
- known to be destined for another end station on another local
link where the RBridge is also appointed forwarder so it can be
directly forwarded in native form or
- neither of the above, so the frame has to be converted to a
TRILL data frame and forwarded.
RBridges need to learn the MAC addresses, VLANs, and remote RBridges
of remotely attached end stations for VLANs for which they and the
remote RBridge are an appointed forwarder, so they can efficiently
direct native frames they receive which are unicast to those
addresses and VLANs.
4.6.1 Learning End Station Addresses
There are five independent ways an RBridge can learn end station
addresses as follows:
1. From the observation of VLAN-x frames received on ports where it
is appointed VLAN-x forwarder, learning the { source MAC, VLAN,
port } triplet of received frames.
2. The { source MAC, VLAN, ingress RBridge nickname } triplet of any
native frames that it decapsulates.
3. By Layer 2 registration protocols learning the { source MAC, VLAN,
port } of end stations registering at a local port.
4. By running one or more ESADIs (end stations address distribution
instances) of IS-IS which receives remote information and
transmits local information.
5. By management configuration.
RBridges MUST implement capabilities 1 and 2 above. RBridges use
these capabilities unless configured, for one or more particular
VLANs and/or ports, to not learn from either received frames or from
decapsulating native frames to be transmitted or both.
RBridges MAY implement capabilities 3 and 4 above. If capability 4 is
implemented, such ESADIs are run only when the RBridge is configured
to do so on a per-VLAN basis.
Entries in the table of learned MAC addresses and associated
information also have a one octet unsigned confidence level
associated with each entry. Such information learned from the
R. Perlman, et al [Page 49]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
observation of data has a confidence of 1 unless configured to have a
different confidence. This confidence level can be configured on a
per RBridge basis separately for information learned from local
native frames and that learned from remotely originated encapsulated
frames. Such information received via an IS-IS ESADI is accompanied
by a confidence level in the range 0 to 254. Such information
configured by management defaults to a confidence level of 255 but
may be configured to have another value.
The table of learned MAC addresses includes { confidence, VLAN, MAC
address, local port } for addresses learned from local native frames
and { confidence, VLAN, MAC address, egress RBridge nickname } for
addresses learned from remote encapsulated frames, plus additional
information to implement timeout of learned addresses, statically
configured addresses, and the like.
When a new learned address and related information are to be entered
into the local database there are three possibilities:
A. If this is a new { address, VLAN } pair, the information is
entered accompanied by the confidence level.
B. If there is already an entry for this { address, VLAN } pair with
the same accompanying delivery information, the confidence level
in the local database is set to the maximum of its existing
confidence level and the confidence level with which it is being
learned.
C. If there is already an entry for this { address, VLAN } pair with
different information, the learned information replaces the older
information only if it is being learned with higher or equal
confidence than that in the database entry.
In case B and in case C where the new information is learned as
above, timer information is reset.
4.6.2 Forgetting End Station Addresses
While RBridges need to learn end station addresses as described
above, it is equally important that they be able to forget such
information. Otherwise, frames for end stations that have moved to a
different part of the campus could be indefinitely black holed by
RBridges with stale information as to the link to which the end
station is attached.
For end station address information locally learned from frames
received, the time out from the last time a native frame was received
or decapsulated with the information conforms to the recommendations
R. Perlman, et al [Page 50]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
of [802.1Q]. It is referred to as the "Aging Time" and is
configurable per RBridge with a range of from 10 seconds to 1,000,000
seconds and a default value of 300 seconds.
The situation is different for end station address information
acquired via an IS-IS ESADI. It is up to the originating RBridge to
decide when to remove such information from the ESADI LSP (or up to
IS-IS timeouts if the originating RBridge becomes inaccessible).
When an RBridge ceases to be appointed forwarder for VLAN-x on a
port, it forgets all end station address information learned from the
observation of VLAN-x frames on that port. It also increments a per
VLAN counter of the number of times it lost appointed forwarder
status for that VLAN.
When, for all of its ports, RBridge RBn is no longer appointed
forwarder for VLAN-x, it forgets all end station address information
learned from decapsulating VLAN-x native frames. Also, if RBn is
participating in an IS-IS ESADI for VLAN-x, it ceases to so
participate after sending a final LSP nulling out the end station
address information for that VLAN which it had been originating. In
addition, all other RBridges that are VLAN-x forwarder on at least
one of their ports notice that the link state data for RBn has
changed to show that it no longer has a link on VLAN-x. In response,
they forget all end station address information they have learned
from decapsulating VLAN-x frames which show RBn as the ingress
RBridge.
When the appointed forwarder lost counter for RBridge RBn for VLAN-x
is observed to increase via the core TRILL IS-IS link state database
but RBn continues to be an appointed forwarder for VLAN-x on at least
one of its ports, every other RBridge that is an appointed forwarder
for VLAN-x modifies the aging of all the addresses it has learned by
decapsulating native frames in VLAN-x from ingress RBridge RBn as
follows: The time remaining for each entry is adjusted to be no
larger than a per RBridge configuration parameter called (to
correspond to [802.1Q]) "Forward Delay". This parameter is in the
range of 4 to 30 seconds with a default value of 15 seconds.
4.6.3 Shared VLAN Learning
RBridges can map VLAN IDs into a smaller number of identifiers for
purposes of address learning, as [802.1Q] bridges can. Then, when a
lookup is done in learned address information, this identifier is
used for matching in place of the VLAN ID. If the ID of the VLAN on
which the address was learned is not retained, then there are the
following consequences:
R. Perlman, et al [Page 51]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
o The RBridge no longer has the information needed to participate in
an IS-IS ESADI for the VLANs whose ID is not being retained.
o In cases where 4.6.2 above requires the discarding of learned
address information based on a particular VLAN, when the VLAN ID
is not available for entries under a shared VLAN identifier,
instead the time remaining for each entry is adjusted to be no
longer than the RBridge's "Forward Delay".
Although outside the scope of this specification, there are some
Layer 2 features in which a set of VLANs has shared learning, where
one of the VLANs is the "primary" and the other VLANs in the group
are "secondaries". An example of this is where traffic from different
communities are separated using VLAN tags, and yet some resource
(such as an IP router or DHCP server) is to be shared by all the
communities. A method of implementing this feature is to give a VLAN
tag, say Z, to a link containing the shared resource, and have the
other VLANs, say A, C, and D, be part of the group { primary=Z,
secondaries = A, C, D }. An RBridge, aware of this grouping, attached
to one of the secondary VLANs in the group also claims to be attached
to the primary VLAN. So an RBridge attached to A would claim to also
be attached to Z. An RBridge attached to the primary would claim to
be attached to all the VLANs in the group.
This specification does not specify how VLAN groups might be used.
Only RBridges that participate in a VLAN group will be configured to
know about the VLAN group. However, to detect misconfiguration, an
RBridge configured to know about a VLAN group SHOULD report the VLAN
group in its LSP.
4.7 RBridge Port Structure
An RBridge port can be modeled as having a structure similar to that
of an [802.1Q] bridge port as shown in Figure 4.3. In this figure,
the double lines represent the general flow of the frames and
information while single lines represent information flow only. The
dashed lines in connection with VRP (GVRP/MVRP) are to show that VRP
support is optional. An actual RBridge port implementation may be
structured in any way which provides the correct behavior.
There are three per port configuration bits as follows:
o Disable port bit. With the possible exception of some low level
control frames, all frames received are discarded and no frames
are sent
o End station service disable (trunk port) bit. All native frames
received on the port and all native frames that would have been
R. Perlman, et al [Page 52]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
sent on the port are discarded. (See Appendix B.)
A port with end station service disabled reports, in the Hellos it
sends out that port, that it has no VLANs for which it is provides
end station support. As a result, such a port will not be
appointed forwarder for any VLAN. Thus a port with end station
service disabled cannot contribute to the VLANs which the RBridge
reports in its LSP as being "connected" to that RBridge. Unless
there is at least one port on an RBridge for which VLAN-x is
appointed forwarder, that RBridge does not normally advertise
itself in the link state as connected to VLAN-x. As a consequence,
it will not normally receive any traffic for VLAN-x except as
TRILL data frames to forward as a transit RBridge.
o Transit data disable (access port) bit. The idea is to avoid
sending RBridge transit traffic (TRILL data frames) on the port
since it is intended for end station traffic (see Appendix B). If
there are no TRILL IS-IS adjacencies on the port, no special
action need be taken. If there adjacencies, and the RBridge is
DRB, it creates a pseudo-node for the link with the IS-IS overflow
bit on. This will cause IS-IS routing to avoid sending transit
data on the link if any other path is available.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 53]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
+-------------------------+
+--------------------------+ |
| | RBridge |
+------+-----+ +- - - - - - + | |
| | | | | Forwarding Engine, |
| Port BPDU | | Port VRP +- - + IS-IS, Etc. |
| Processing | | Processing | +--+--++------------------+
| | | | | ||
+-----++-----+ + - - ++ - - + | ||
|| | +----+ ||
|| | | ||
|| | | +----++------+ <- EISS
|| | | | |
|| | | | Port VLAN |
|| | | | Processing |
|| | | | |
|| | | +----++------+
|| | | ||
+-----++--------------++--------+-------++-----+ <-- ISS
| |
| Lower Level Port/Link Control Logic |
| |
+-------------++-------------------------------+
||
|| +------------+
|| | |
|| | PHY |
|+---+ (Physical +------- Link
+----+ Interface) +-------
| |
+------------+
Figure 4.3: RBridge Port Model
Low level control frames are handled in the lower level port/link
control logic in the same way as in an 802.1Q bridge. This can
optionally include a variety of 802.1 or link specific protocols such
as link layer discovery, link aggregation, MAC security [802.1AE], or
port based access control [802.1X]. While handled at a low level,
these frames may affect higher level processing. For example, a layer
2 registration protocol may affect the confidence in learned
addresses. The interface to this lower level port control logic
corresponds to the Internal Sublayer Service (ISS) in 802.1Q.
Non-control frames are subject to Port VLAN and priority processing
which is the same as for an 802.1Q bridge. The interface to the port
VLAN processing corresponds to the Extended Internal Sublayer Service
(EISS) in 802.1Q.
High level control frames (BPDUs and, if supported, VRP frames) are
R. Perlman, et al [Page 54]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
not VLAN tagged. Although they extend through the ISS interface, they
are not subject to port VLAN processing. Behavior on receipt of a
VLAN tagged BPDU or, if VRP is implemented, VLAN tagged VRP frame, is
unspecified. If VRP is not implemented, then VRP frames are
discarded.
Handling of BPDUs is described in Section 4.7.1 below. Handling of
VRP frames is described in Section 4.7.2 below.
4.7.1 BPDU Handling
If campus topology were static, RBridges would simply be end
stations, thus terminating but not otherwise interacting with
spanning tree. However, there are reasons for RBridges to listen to
and sometimes to transmit BPDUs as described below. Even when
RBridges listen to and transmit BPDUs, these are a local RBridge port
activity. The ports of a particular RBridge never interact so as to
make the RBridge as a whole a spanning tree node.
4.7.1.1 Receipt of BPDUs
Rbridges MUST listen to spanning tree BPDUs received on a port and
keep track of the root bridge, if any, on that link. If MSTP is
running on the link, this is the CIST root. This information is
reported per VLAN by the RBridge in its LSP. In addition, the receipt
of spanning tree BPDUs is used as an indication that a link is a
bridged LAN which can affect the RBridge transmission of BPDUs.
An RBridge MUST NOT encapsulate or forward any BPDU frame it
receives.
RBridges silently discard any topology change BPDUs they receive.
4.7.1.2 Root Bridge Changes
A change in the root bridge seen out a port may indicate a change in
bridged LAN topology including the possibility of the merger of two
bridged LANs or the like. During topology transients, bridges may go
into pre-forwarding states that block TRILL IS-IS Hellos. For these
reasons, when an RBridge sees a root bridge change on a port for
which it is appointed forwarder for one or more VLANs, it discards
all native frames received from or which it would otherwise have sent
to the link for a period of time between 30 and zero seconds. This
time period is configurable per RBridge and defaults to 30 seconds.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 55]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
For example, consider two bridged LANs carrying multiple VLANs, each
with various appointed forwarders. Should they become merged, due to
a repeater coming up or the like, those RBridges attached to the
original bridged LAN with the lower priority root will see a root
bridge change while those attached to the other original bridged LAN
will not. Thus all appointed forwarders in the first set will cease
forwarding native frames to or from the link for the time period
while things are sorted out by BPDUs within the merged bridged LAN
and TRILL IS-IS Hellos between all the RBridges involved.
4.7.1.3 Transmission of BPDUs
When an RBridge ceases to be appointed forwarder for one or more
VLANs out a particular port it SHOULD, as long as it continues to
receive spanning tree BPDUs on that port, send topology change BPDUs
until it sees the topology change acknowledged in a spanning tree
BPDU.
RBridges MAY support a capability for sending spanning tree BPDUs for
the purpose of attempting to force a bridged LAN to partition as
discussed in Section A.3.3. Except for this optional capability,
RBridges MUST NOT send spanning tree BPDUs.
4.7.2 Dynamic VLAN Registration
Dynamic VLAN registration provides a means for bridges (and less
commonly end stations) to request that VLANs be enabled or disabled
on ports leading to the requestor. This is done by VLAN registration
protocol (VRP) frames: GVRP or MVRP. RBridges MAY implement GVRP
and/or MVRP as described below.
VRP frames are never encapsulated as TRILL frames between RBridges or
forwarded in native form by an RBridge. If an RBridge does not
implement a VRP, it discards any VRP frames received and sends none.
RBridge ports may have VLANs whose enablement is dynamic. If an
RBridge supports a VRP, the actual enablement of dynamic VLANs is
determined by GVRP/MVRP frames received as it would be for an
[802.1Q] bridge.
An RBridge that supports a VRP sends GVRP/MVRP frames as an [802.1Q]
bridge would send on each port that is not configured as an RBridge
trunk port. For this purpose, it sends VRP frames to request traffic
in the VLANs for which it is appointed forwarder and traffic in the
Designated VLAN, unless the Designated VLAN is disabled on the port,
and to not request traffic in any other VLAN.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 56]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
5. RBridge Addresses, Parameters, and Constants
IS-IS requires each RBridge to have a unique 48-bit (6-octet) System
ID. This is easily obtainable, for example, as any one of the MAC-48
addresses owned by that RBridge.
A new Ethertype must be assigned to indicate a TRILL encapsulated
frame.
Two Layer 2 multicast addresses must be assigned.
o All-RBridges for use as Outer.MacDA in multi-destination frames.
o All-IS-IS-RBridges as the Inner.MacDA for TRILL IS-IS frames.
RBridges may be configured with a nickname and nickname selection
priority.
RBridges may be configured to have ESADIs (end station address
distribution instances) of TRILL IS-IS and to send and/or learn end
station address information via such instances. Static end address
information and priority of such end station information statically
configured and learned in various ways can also be configured.
The per RBridge parameters of (1) priority to be a distribution tree
root and (2) desired number of distribution trees for the campus, as
discussed in Section 4.3, may be configured.
The per RBridges parameters Aging Timer and Forward Delay, as
described in Section 4.6, may be configured.
The per RBridge per VLAN Other Multicast bit, which defaults to true,
to request the receipt of non-IP derived multicast traffic.
The following RBridge per port parameters:
o Essentially the same parameters as for an 802.1Q port in terms of
VLAN C-tags and frame priority code points.
o Three per-port configuration bits: disable port, disable end
station service, and access port (see Section 4.7).
o Configuration for the optional send-BPDUs solution to the wiring
closet topology problem (see Section A.3.3) consists of System ID
of the RBridge with lowest System ID. If RB1 and RB2 are part of a
wiring closet topology, both need to be configured to know about
this, and that RB1 is the ID that should be used in the spanning
tree protocol on the specified port.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 57]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
6. Security Considerations
Layer 2 bridging in not inherently secure. It is, for example,
subject to forgery of source addresses and bridging control messages.
A goal for TRILL is that RBridges do not add new issues beyond those
existing in current bridging technology.
Countermeasures are available such as to configure the TRILL IS-IS
instances to use IS-IS security [RFC3567] and ignore unauthenticated
TRILL IS-IS messages received on a port. Since such authentication
requires configuration, RBridges using it are no longer zero
configuration.
IEEE 802.1 port admission and link security mechanisms, such as
[802.1X] and [802.1AE], can also be used. These are best thought of
as being implemented within a port and are outside the scope of TRILL
proper (just as they are generally out of scope for bridging
standards [802.1D] and [802.1Q]); however, TRILL can make use of
secure registration through the confidence level communicated in the
optional IS-IS ESADIs (see Section 4.6).
TRILL encapsulates native frames inside the TRILL Ethertype while
they are in transit between that frame's ingress RBridge and egress
RBridge(s). Thus, TRILL ignorant devices with firewall features and
which cannot be detected by RBridges as end stations will generally
not be able to examine the interior of such frames for security
checking purposes. This may render them ineffective. Routers and
hosts appear to RBridges to be end stations and such frames will be
decapsulated before being sent to such devices. Thus they will not
see the TRILL Ethertype. Firewall devices which do not appear to an
RBridge to be an end station, for example bridges with co-located
firewalls, should be modified to understand TRILL encapsulation.
TRILL supports VLANs. These provide logical separation of traffic but
care should be taken in using VLANs for security purposes. To have
reasonable assurance of such separation, all the RBridges and links
in a campus must be secured and configured so as to prohibit end
stations from using dynamic VLAN registration frames or otherwise
gaining access to any VLAN carrying traffic for which they are not
authorized to read and/or inject.
RBridges do not prevent nodes from impersonating other nodes, for
instance, by issuing bogus ARP/ND replies. However, RBridges do not
interfere with any schemes that would secure neighbor discovery.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 58]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
7. Assignment Considerations
This section discuses IANA and IEEE 802 assignment considerations.
7.1 IANA Considerations
A new IANA registry is created for TRILL versions and TRILL Header
Reserved bits. The initial contents of this registry is TRILL Version
number 0, which is specified in this document.
New TRILL Header Version numbers and uses of TRILL Header Reserved
bits are assigned by an IETF Standards Action [RFC5226] as modified
by [RFC4020].
7.2 IEEE 802 Assignment Considerations
The Ethertype <tbd> is assigned by IEEE 802 to indicate a TRILL
encapsulated frame.
The Layer 2 multicast addresses <tbd1> and <tbd2> are assigned by
IEEE 802 for "All-Rbridges" and "All-IS-IS-Rbridges" respectively.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 59]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
8. Normative References
[802.1D] "IEEE Standard for Local and metropolitan area networks /
Media Access Control (MAC) Bridges", 802.1D-2004, 9 June 2004.
[802.1Q] "IEEE Standard for Local and metropolitan area networks /
Virtual Bridged Local Area Networks", 802.1Q-2005, 19 May 2006.
[802.3] "IEEE Standard for Information technology /
Telecommunications and information exchange between systems /
Local and metropolitan area networks / Specific requirements Part
3: Carrier sense multiple access with collision detection
(CSMA/CD) access method and physical layer specifications",
802.3-2005, 9 December 2005
[ISO10589] ISO/IEC 10589:2002, "Intermediate system to Intermediate
system routeing information exchange protocol for use in
conjunction with the Protocol for providing the Connectionless-
mode Network Service (ISO 8473)," ISO/IEC 10589:2002.
[RFC1112] Deering, S., "Host Extensions for IP Multicasting", STD 5,
RFC 1112, Stanford University, August 1989.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC2464] Crawford, M., "Transmission of IPv6 Packets over Ethernet
Networks", RFC 2464, December 1998.
[RFC2710] Deering, S., Fenner, W., and B. Haberman, "Multicast
Listener Discovery (MLD) for IPv6", RFC 2710, October 1999.
[RFC3376] Cain, B., Deering, S., Kouvelas, I., Fenner, B., and A.
Thyagarajan, "Internet Group Management Protocol, Version 3", RFC
3376, October 2002.
[RFC4020] Kompella, K. and A. Zinin, "Early IANA Allocation of
Standards Track Code Points", BCP 100, RFC 4020, February 2005.
[RFC4286] Haberman, B., Martin, J., "Multicast Router Discovery", RFC
4286, December 2005.
[RFC5226] Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an
IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 5226, May 2008.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 60]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
9. Informative References
[802.1AB] "IEEE Standard for Local and metropolitan area networks /
Station and Media Access Control Connectivity Discovery",
802.1AB-2005, 6 May 2005.
[802.1AE] "IEEE Standard for Local and metropolitan area networks /
Media Access Control (MAC) Security", 802.1AE-2006, 18 August 2006
[802.1X] "IEEE Standard for Local and metropolitan area networks /
Port Based Network Access Control", 802.1X-2004, 13 December 2004.
[Arch] Gray, E., "The Architecture of an RBridge Solution to TRILL",
draft-ietf-trill-rbridge-arch-05.txt, February 2008, work in
progress.
[PAS] Touch, J., & R. Perlman, "Transparent Interconnection of Lots
of Links (TRILL) / Problem and Applicability Statement", draft-
ietf-trill-prob-04.txt, June 2008, work in progress.
[RBridges] Perlman, R., "RBridges: Transparent Routing", Proc.
Infocom 2005, March 2004.
[RFC1661] Simpson, W., "The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)", STD 51,
RFC 1661, July 1994.
[RFC3410] Case, J., Mundy, R., Partain, D., and B. Stewart,
"Introduction and Applicability Statements for Internet-Standard
Management Framework", RFC 3410, December 2002.
[RFC3567] Li, T. and R. Atkinson, "Intermediate System to
Intermediate System (IS-IS) Cryptographic Authentication", RFC
3567, July 2003.
[RFC4086] Eastlake, D., 3rd, Schiller, J., and S. Crocker,
"Randomness Requirements for Security", BCP 106, RFC 4086, June
2005.
[RFC4541] Christensen, M., Kimball, K., and F. Solensky,
"Considerations for Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) and
Multicast Listener Discovery (MLD) Snooping Switches", RFC 4541,
May 2006.
[RFC4789] Schoenwaelder, J. and T. Jeffree, "Simple Network
Management Protocol (SNMP) over IEEE 802 Networks", RFC 4789,
November 2006.
[RP1999] Perlman, R., "Interconnection: Bridges, Routers, Switches,
and Internetworking Protocols", Addison Wesley Chapter 3, 1999.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 61]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Appendix A: Incremental Deployment Considerations
Partial RBridge deployment can cause some problems as described below
for link cost determination (Section A.1) and congestion due to
appointed forwarder bottlenecks (Section A.2). A particular example
of a problem related to the TRILL use of a single appointed forwarder
per link per VLAN (the "wiring closet topology") is explored in
detail in Section A.3.
A.1 Link Cost Determination
With an RBridged campus having no bridges or repeaters on the links
between RBridges, the RBridges can accurately determine the number of
physical hops involved in a path and the line speed of each hop,
assuming this is reported by their port logic. With intervening
devices, this is no longer possible. For example, as shown in Figure
A.1, the two bridges B1 and B2 can completely hide a slow link so
that both Rbridges RB1 and RB2 incorrectly believe the link is
faster.
+-----+ +----+ +----+ +-----+
| | Fast | | Slow | | Fast | |
| RB1 +--------+ B1 +--------+ B2 +--------+ RB2 |
| | Link | | Link | | Link | |
+-----+ +----+ +----+ +-----+
Figure A.1: Link Cost of a Bridged Link
Even in the case of a single intervening bridge, two RBridges may
know they are connected but each see the link as a different speed
from how it is seen by the other.
However, this problem is not unique to RBridges. For example, routers
can encounter similar situations due to links hidden by bridges,
repeaters or Rbridges.
A.2 Appointed Forwarders and Bridged LANs
With partial RBridge deployment, the RBridges may partition a bridged
LAN into a relatively small number of relatively large remnant
bridged LANs or possibly not partition it at all, so a single bridged
LAN remains. Then two potential problems can occur as follows:
1. The requirement that end station frames enter and leave a link via
the appointed forwarder for the link and VLAN of the frame can
cause congestion or suboptimal routing. (Similar problems can
R. Perlman, et al [Page 62]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
occur within a bridged LAN due to the spanning tree algorithm.)
The extent to which such a problem will occur is highly dependent
on the network topology. For example, if a bridged LAN had a star-
like structure with core bridges that connected only to other
bridges and peripheral bridges that connected to end stations and
are singly connected to a core bridge, the replacement of all of
the core bridges by RBridges without replacing the peripheral
bridges would generally improve performance without inducing any
appointed forwarder congestion. Solutions to this problem are
discussed below and a particular example explored in Section A.3.
2. TRILL traffic sent to the All-Rbridges multicast address will
typically be flooded throughout a bridged LAN link, which may
create a greater burden than necessary. In cases where there is
actually only one RBridge next hop recipient of interest, this
problem can be eliminated by using the option of sending the TRILL
traffic as a unicast frame to that recipient rather than
multicasting it. (Since one purpose of TRILL IS-IS Hello frames is
to find previously unknown Rbridges, they must always be
multicast.)
Inserting RBridges so that all the bridged portions of the LAN stay
connected to each other and have multiple RBridge connections is
generally the least efficient arrangement.
There are four techniques that may help if problem 1 above occurs and
which can, to some extent, be used in combination:
1. Replace more IEEE 802.1 bridges with RBridges so as to minimize
the size of the remnant bridged LANs between RBridges. This
requires no configuration of the RBridges unless the bridges they
replace required configuration.
2. Re-arrange network topology to minimize the problem. If the
bridges and RBridges involved are configured, this may require
changes in their configuration.
3. Configure the RBridges and bridges so that end stations on a
remnant bridged LAN are separated into different VLANs that have
different appointed forwarders. If the end stations were already
assigned to different VLANs, this is straightforward (see Section
4.2.3.2). If the end stations were on the same VLAN and have to be
split into different VLANs, this technique may lead to
connectivity problems between end stations.
4. Configure the RBridges such that their ports which are connected
to the bridged LAN send BPDUs (see Section A.3.3) in such a way as
to force the partition of the bridged LAN. (Note: A spanning tree
is never formed through an RBridge but always terminates at
RBridge ports.) To use this technique, the RBridges must support
R. Perlman, et al [Page 63]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
this optional feature, and would need to be configured to make use
of it, but the bridges involved would rarely have to be
configured. Warning: This technique makes the bridged LAN
unavailable for TRILL through traffic because the bridged LAN
partitions.
Conversely to item 3 above, there may be bridged LANs which use
VLANs, or use more VLANs than would otherwise be necessary, to evade
the congestion that can be caused by the spanning tree protocol.
Replacing the IEEE 802.1 bridges in such LANs with RBridges may
enable a reduction in or elimination of VLANs and configuration
complexity.
A.3 Wiring Closet Topology
If 802.1 bridges are present and RBridges are not properly
configured, the bridge spanning tree or the DRB may make
inappropriate decisions. Below is a detailed example of the more
general problem that can occur when a bridged LAN is connected to
multiple RBridges.
In cases where there are two (or more) groups of end nodes, each
attached to a bridge (say B1 and B2 respectively), and each bridge is
attached to an RBridge (say RB1 and RB2 respectively), with an
additional link connecting B1 and B2 (see Figure A.2), it may be
desirable to have the B1-B2 link only as a backup in case one of RB1
or RB2 or one of the links B1-RB1 or B2-RB2 fail.
+-------------------------------+
| | | |
| Data +-----+ +-----+ |
| Center -| RB1 |----| RB2 |- |
| +-----+ +-----+ |
| | | |
+-------------------------------+
| |
| |
+-------------------------------+
| | | |
| +----+ +----+ |
| Wiring | B1 |-----| B2 | |
| Closet +----+ +----+ |
| Bridged |
| LAN |
+-------------------------------+
Figure A.2: Wiring Closet Topology
R. Perlman, et al [Page 64]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
For example, B1 and B2 may be in a wiring closet and it may be easy
to provide a short, high bandwidth, low cost link between them while
RB1 and RB2 are at a distant data center such that the RB1-B1 and
RB2-B2 links are slower and more expensive.
Default behavior might be that one of RB1 or RB2 (say RB1) would
become DRB for the bridged LAN including B1 and B2 and appoint itself
forwarder for the VLANs on that bridged LAN. As a result, RB1 would
forward all traffic to/from the link, so end nodes attached to B2
would be connected to the campus via the path B2-B1-RB1, rather than
the desired B2-RB2. This wastes the bandwidth of the B2-RB2 path and
cuts available bandwidth between the end stations and the data center
in half. The desired behavior would be to make use of both the RB1-B1
and RB2-B2 links.
Three solutions to this problem are described below.
A.3.1 The RBridge Solution
Of course, if B1 and B2 are replaced with RBridges, the right thing
will happen with zero configuration (other than VLAN support), but
this may not be immediately practical if bridges are being
incrementally replaced by RBridges.
A.3.2 The VLAN Solution
If the end stations attached to B1 and B2 are already divided among a
number of VLANs, RB1 and RB2 could be configured so that which ever
becomes DRB for this link will appoint itself forwarder for some of
these VLANs and the other RBridge for the remaining VLANs. Should
either of the RBs fail or become disconnected, the other will have
only itself to appoint as forwarder for all the VLANs.
If the end stations are all on a single VLAN, then it would be
necessary to arbitrarily assign them between at least two VLANs to
use this solution. This may lead to connectivity problems that might
require further measures to rectify.
A.3.3 The Spanning Tree Solution
Another solution is to configure RB1 and RB2 to be part of a "wiring
closet group", with a configured System ID RBx (which may be RB1 or
RB2's System ID). Both RB1 and RB2 emit BPDUs on their configured
ports as highest priority root RBx. This causes the spanning tree to
R. Perlman, et al [Page 65]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
logically partition the bridged LAN by blocking the B1-B2 link at one
end or the other as desired (unless one of the bridges is configured
to also have highest priority and has a lower ID, which we consider
to be a misconfiguration). With the B1-B2 link blocked, RB1 and RB2
cannot see each other's Hellos via that link and each acts as
Designated RBridge and appointed forwarder for its respective
partition. Of course, with this partition, no TRILL through traffic
can flow over the RB1-B1-B2-RB2 path.
In the spanning tree BPDU, the Root is "RBx" with highest priority,
cost to Root is 0, Designated Bridge ID is "RB1" when R1 transmits
and "RB2" when R2 transmits, and port ID is a value chosen
independently by each of RB1 and RB2 to distinguish each of its own
ports. (If RB1 and RB2 were actually bridges on the same shared
medium with no bridges between them, the result would be that the one
with the larger ID sees "better" BPDUs (because of the tie-breaker on
the third field: the ID of the transmitting RBridge), and would turn
off its port.)
Should either RB1 or the RB1-B1 link or RB2 or the RB2-B2 link fail,
the spanning tree algorithm will stop seeing one of the RBx roots and
will unblock the B1-B2 link maintaining connectivity of all the end
stations with the data center.
If the link RB1-B1-B2-RB2 is on the cut set of the campus and RB2 and
RB1 have been configured to believe they are part of a wiring closet
group, the campus becomes partitioned as the link is blocked.
A.3.4 Comparison of Solutions
Replacing all 802.1 bridges with RBridges is usually the best
solution with the least amount of configuration required, possibly
none.
The VLAN solution works well with a relatively small amount of
configuration if the end stations are already divided among a number
of VLANs. If they are not, it becomes more complex and problematic.
The spanning tree solution does quite well in this particular case.
But it depends on both RB1 and RB2 having implemented the optional
feature of being able to configure a port to emit BPDUs as described
in Section A.3.3 above. It also makes the bridged LAN whose partition
is being forced unavailable for through traffic Finally, while in
this specific example it neatly breaks the link between the two
bridges B1 and B2, if there were a more complex bridged LAN, instead
of exactly two bridges, there is no guarantee that it would partition
into roughly equal pieces. In such a case, you might end up with a
highly unbalanced load on the RB1 link and the RB2 link.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 66]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Appendix B: Trunk and Access Port Configuration
Many modern bridged LANs are organized into a core and access model,
The core bridges have only point-to-point links to other bridges
while the access bridges connect to end stations, core bridges, and
possibly other access bridges. It seems likely that some RBridge
campuses will be organized in a similar fashion.
An RBridge port can be configured as a trunk port, that is a point-
to-point link to another RBridge, by configuring it to disable end
station support. There is no reason for such a port to have more than
one VLAN enabled and in its Announcing Set on the port. Of course,
the RBridge to which it is connected must have the same VLAN enabled.
There is no reason for this VLAN to be other than the default VLAN 1
unless, perhaps, the link is actually over carrier Ethernet
facilities that provide some other specific VLAN or the like. Such
configuration minimizes wasted Hellos and eliminates useless
decapsulation and transmission of multi-destination traffic in native
form onto the link. (see Sections 4.2.3.1 and 4.7)
An RBridge access port would be expected to lead to a link with end
stations and possibly one or more bridges. Such a link might also
have more than one RBridge connected to it to provide more reliable
service to the end stations. It would be a goal to minimize transit
traffic on such as link as it is intended for end station traffic.
This can be accomplished by turning on the access port configuration
bit for the RBridge port or ports connected to the link (see Section
4.7).
When designing RBridge configuration user interfaces, consideration
should be given to making it convenient to configure trunk and access
ports.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 67]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Appendix C: Multipathing
Rbridges support multipathing of both known unicast and multi-
destination traffic. Implementation of multipathing is optional.
Multi-destination traffic can be multipathed by using different
distribution tree roots for different frames. For example, assume
that in Figure C.1 end stations attached to RBy are the source of
various multicast streams each of which has multiple listeners
attached to various of RB1 through RB9. Assuming equal bandwidth
links, the distribution tree rooted at RBy will predominantly use the
vertical links among RB1 through RB9 while that rooted at RBz will
predominantly use the horizontal. If RBy chooses itself as the
distribution tree root for half of this traffic and RBz the root for
the other half, it may be able to substantially increase the
aggregate bandwidth by making use of both the vertical and horizontal
links among RB1 through RB9.
Since the distribution trees an RBridge must calculate are the same
for all RBridges and transit RBridges MUST respect the tree root
specified by the ingress RBridge, a campus will operate correctly
with a mix of RBridges some of which use different roots for
different multi-destination frames and some of which use a single
root for all such frames.
+---+
|RBy|---------------+
+---+ |
/ | \ |
/ | \ |
/ | \ |
+---+ +---+ +---+ |
|RB1|---|RB2|---|RB3| |
+---+ +---+ +---+\ |
| | | \ |
+---+ +---+ +---+ \+---+
|RB4|---|RB5|---|RB6|-----|RBz|
+---+ +---+ +---+ /+---+
| | | /
+---+ +---+ +---+/
|RB7|---|RB8|---|RB9|
+---+ +---+ +---+
Figure C.1: Multi-Destination Multipath
Known unicast equal cost multipathing (ECMP) can occur if, instead of
using a tie-breaker criterion when building an SPF path between
ingress and egress RBridges, information about equal cost paths is
retained. Different unicast frames can then be sent via different
equal cost paths. For example, in Figure C.2, there are three equal
R. Perlman, et al [Page 68]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
cost paths between RB1 and RB2 and two equal cost paths between RB2
and RB5.
A transit RBridge receiving a known unicast frame forwards it towards
the egress RBridge and is not concerned with whether it believes
itself to be on any particular path from the ingress RBridge or a
previous transit RBridge. Thus a campus will operate correctly with
a mix of RBridges some of which implement ECMP and some of which do
not.
As an alternative to multipathing, it might be possible to combine
the three paths between RB1 and RB2 into one logical link through the
"channel aggregation" feature of 802.3 (see Clause 43 of [802.3]).
Rbridges MAY implement channel aggregation. However, channel
aggregation requires multiple single hop equal bandwidth links (no
intervening bridges). Equal cost multipathing is somewhat more
general in that there can be multiple hops with intervening bridges
and RBridges and links of different costs as long as the path cost is
the same. (Generally, the default estimate of the cost of a link is
proportional to the reciprocal of its line speed.)
+---+ double line = 10 Gbps
----- ===|RB3|--- single line = 1 Gbps
/ \ // +---+ \
+---+ +---+ +---+
===|RB1|-----|RB2| |RB5|===
+---+ +---+ +---+
\ / \ +---+ //
----- ----|RB4|===
+---+
Figure C.2: Known Unicast Multipath
When multipathing is used, frames that follow different paths will be
subject to different delays and may be re-ordered. While some
traffic may be order/delay insensitive, typically most traffic
consists of flows of frames such the re-ordering within a flow is
damaging. How to determine flows or what granularity flows should
have is beyond the scope of this document but, as an example, under
many circumstances it would be safe to consider all the frames
flowing between a particular pair of end station ports to be a flow.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 69]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Appendix D: Determination of VLAN and Priority
A high level, informative summary of how VLAN ID and priority is
determined for incoming native frames, omitting some details, is
given in the bulleted items below:
o When an untagged native frame arrives, a zero configuration
RBridge associates the default priority zero and the VLAN ID 1
with it. It actually sets the VLAN for the untagged frame to be
the "port VLAN ID" associated with that port. The port VLAN ID
defaults to VLAN ID 1 but may be configured to be any other VLAN
ID. An Rbridge may also be configured on a per port basis to
discard such frames or to associate a different priority code
point with them. Determination of the VLAN ID associated with an
incoming non-control frame may also be made dependent on the
Ethertype or NSAP (referred to in 802.1 as the Protocol) of the
arriving frame.
o When a priority tagged native frame arrives, a zero configuration
RBridge associates with it both the port VLAN ID, which defaults
to 1, and the priority code point provided in the priority tag in
the frame. An Rbridge may be configured on a per port basis to
discard such frames or to associate them with a different VLAN ID
as described in the point immediately above. It may also be
configured to map the priority code point provided in the frame by
specifying, for each of the eight possible values that might be in
the frame, what actual priority code point will be associated with
the frame by the RBridge.
o When a C-tagged (formerly called Q-tagged) native frame arrives, a
zero configuration RBridge associates with it the VLAN ID and
priority in the C-tag. An RBridge may be configured on a per port
per-VLAN basis to discard such frames. It may also be configured
on a per port basis to map the priority value as specified above
for priority tagged frames.
In 802.1, the process of associating a priority code point with a
frame, including mapping a priority provided in the frame to another
priority, is referred to as priority "regeneration".
R. Perlman, et al [Page 70]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Appendix Z: Revision History
RFC Editor: Please delete this appendix before publication.
Changes from -03 to -04
1. Divide IANA Considerations section into IANA and IEEE parts. Add
IANA considerations for TRILL Header variations and reserved bit
and normative references to RFCs 2434 and 4020.
2. Add note on the terms Rbridge and TRILL to section 1.2.
3. Remove IS-IS marketing text.
4. Split Section 3 into Sections 3 and 4. Add a new top level
section "5. Pseudo Code", renumbering following sections. Move
pseudo code that was in old Section 3 into Section 5 and make
section 3 more textural. This idea is that Section 3 and 4 have
more readable text descriptions with some corner cases left out
for simplicity while section 5 has more structured and complete
coverage.
5. Revised and extended Security Considerations section.
6. Move multicast router attachment bit and IGMP membership report
information from the per-VLAN IS-IS instance to the core IS-IS
instance so the information can be used by core RBridges to prune
distribution trees.
7. Remove ARP/ND optimization.
8. Change TRILL Header to add option feature. Add option section.
9. Change TRILL Header to expand Version field to the Variation
field. Add TRILL message variations (8 bits) supported to the per
RBridge link state information.
10. Distinguish TRILL data and IS-IS messages by using Variation = 0
and 1.
11. Consistently state that VLAN pruning and IP derived multicast
pruning of distribution trees are SHOULD.
12. Add text and pseudo code to discard TRILL Ethertype data frames
received on a port that does not have an IS-IS adjacency on it.
13. Add end station address learning section. Specify end station
address learning from decapsulated native frames.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 71]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
14. Add nickname allocation priority and optional nickname
configuration. Reserve nickname values zero and 0xFFFF.
15. Explain about multiple Designated RBridges because of multiple
VLANS.
16. Add Incremental Deployment Considerations Section incorporating
expanded Wiring Closet Topology Section.
17. Add more detail on VLAN tag information and material on frame
priority.
18. Miscellaneous minor editing and terminology updates.
Changes from -04 to -05
NOTE: Section 5 was NOT updated as indicated below but the remainder
of the draft was so updated.
1. Mention optional VLAN and multicast optimization in Abstract.
2. Change to distinguish TRILL IS-IS from TRILL data frames based on
the Inner.MacDA instead of a TRILL Header bit.
3. Split IP multicast router attached bit in two so you can
separately indicate attachment of IPv4 and IPv6 routers. Provide
that these bits must be set if an RBridge does not actually do
multicast control snooping on ingressed traffic.
4. Add the term "port VLAN ID" (PVID).
5. Drop references to PIM. Improve discussions of IGMP, MLD, and MRD
messages.
6. Move M bit over one and create two bit pruning field at the
bottom of the "V" combined field.
7. Add pruning control values of V and discussion of same.
8. Permit optional unicast transmission of multi-destination frames
when there is only one received out a port.
9. Miscellaneous minor editing and terminology updates.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 72]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Changes from -05 to -06
1. Revise Section 2 discussion of DRB determination in the presence
of VLANs and move it to Section 2.2. Adjust VLAN handling
description.
2. Change "V" field to be a 2-bit version fields followed by 2
reserved bits. Make corresponding changes to eliminate the
inclusion in the header of frame analysis indicating type of
multi-destination pruning which is proper for frame. Thus all
non-ingress RBridges that wish to perform such pruning are forced
to do full frame analysis. Make further corresponding changes in
IANA Considerations.
3. The Inner.MacDA for TRILL IS-IS frames is changed to a second
multicast address: All-IS-IS-RBridges. IEEE Allocation
Considerations, etc., are correspondingly changed.
4. Note in Section 6 that bridges can hide slow links and generally
make it harder from RBridges to determine the cost of an RBridge
to RBridge hop that is a bridged LAN.
5. Add material noting that replacement of bridges by RBridges can
cause connectivity between previously isolated islands of the
same VLAN.
6. Expand Security Considerations by mentioning RFC 3567 and
indicating that TRILL enveloping may reduce the effectively of
TRILL-ignorant firewall functionality.
7. Extensive updates to psuedo code.
8. Change to one DRB per physical link which dictates the inter-
RBridge VLAN for the link, appoints forwarders per-VLAN, can be
configured to send Hellos on multiple VLANs, etc.
9. Add a minimal management by SNMP statement to Section 2.
10. Delete explicit requirement to process TRILL frames arriving on a
port even if the port implements spanning tree and is in spanning
tree blocked state.
11. Miscellaneous minor editing and terminology updates.
Changes from -06 to -07
[WARNING: Section 5 of draft -07 was not fully updated to incorporate
the changes below.]
R. Perlman, et al [Page 73]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
1. Drop recommendation to set "bridge" flags in some 802.1AB frame
fields.
2. Add Section 2.5 giving an informative description of zero
configuration behavior for 802.1D and 802.1Q bridges and
RBridges.
3. Add Section 4.7 (renumbering the former 4.7 to be 4.9) on the
receipt, handing, and transmission of MVRP and other MRP frames
by RBridges. Add references to 802.1ak.
4. Add Section 4.8 on Multipathing.
5. Partial changes to Section 5 to correspond with changes elsewhere
in the draft.
6. Addition of frame category definitions in Section 1.2.
7. Addition of Section 10, Acronyms.
8. Add note in Section 6.2 that difficult in link cost determination
due to intervening devices is not confined to RBridges.
9. Re-ordered some sections in Section 6.
10. Added a paragraph about taking care if trying to use VLANs for
security to Security Considerations Section and re-ordered
paragraphs in that section.
11. Added mention of being able to configure a port so that native
frames are not send and are dropped on receipt. Probably need to
say more about this.
12. Remove material about pseudo node suppression.
13. Fix a few cases where hop count was off by one.
14. Add option critical bits when option area length non-zero.
16. Miscellaneous minor editing and terminology updates. Changed
Figure numbers to be relative to major section. Added Table
captions.
Changes from -07 to -08
1. Add "low" and "high" level control frame definitions to Section
1.2 and note concerning frames which would qualify as both
R. Perlman, et al [Page 74]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
"TRILL" and "control" frames. Utilize these defined frame types
more consistently through the document.
2. Move substantial areas of tutorial, motivational, and
informational text to Appendices, or a separate document,
including Sections numbered 2.5, 4.8, 6.3, and 6.4 in version
-07.
3. Move link Hellos / VLAN specification and discussion to a new
subsection of Section 4.
4. Replace distribution tree root flag per RBridge with new logic
which orders all RBridges in a campus as to their priority to be
a distribution tree root and provides for the highest priority
distribution tree root to dictate the numbers of trees in the
campus. RBridges use the tree with least cost from themselves to
the tree root for multi-destination frame distribution, or the n
such trees if they multi-path multi-destination traffic.
5. Add "Access" port configuration bit and Appendix on Trunk and
Access Links.
6. Add statement that use of S-tags in TRILL is outside the scope of
this document.
7. Add new section on RBridge port structure (Section 4.7) which
includes discussion of RBridge interactions with BPDUs and
revised interactions with VRP frames. Make provisions for dynamic
VLAN registration a "MAY" implement and agnostic between GVRP and
MVRP. Remove references to 802.1ak. Simplify text related to VRP.
Remove related configuration option.
8. Add requirement to adjust input filters no later than output
forwarding.
9. Add requirement for configurable (default 30 second) prohibition
on RBridge decapsulation out a port if a root bridge change has
just been observed on that port.
10. Add provisions for propagating topology change to attached
bridged LAN when an RBridge is de-appointed forwarder. Also other
end station addressing forgetting details including per VLAN
forwarding status dropped counter.
11. Delete requirement that appointed forwarder wait until it has
received all the LSPs listed in the first CSNP (if any) it has
received from its neighbors before forwarding frames off a link.
12. Add explicit criterion for when an RBridge port defers to the DRB
indicated in a Hello it receives even if that Hello is not from
R. Perlman, et al [Page 75]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
the DRB or even from an RBridge in direct communication with the
DRB.
13. Add provisions for pseudonode minimization.
14. Update refence to RFC 2434 to RC 5226.
15. Miscellaneous minor editing and terminology updates. Add Figures
index after Table of Contents.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 76]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Disclaimer
This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
"AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE IETF TRUST AND
THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS
OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF
THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
Additional IPR Provisions
The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to
pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in
this document or the extent to which any license under such rights
might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has
made any independent effort to identify any such rights. Information
on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be
found in BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an
attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of
such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this
specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at
http://www.ietf.org/ipr.
The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement
this standard. Please address the information to the IETF at ietf-
ipr@ietf.org.
Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2008).
This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
retain all their rights.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 77]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Authors' Addresses
Radia Perlman
Sun Microsystems
16 Network Circle
Menlo Park, CA 94025
Phone: +1-650-960-1300
Email: Radia.Perlman@sun.com
Donald E. Eastlake, 3rd
Eastlake Enterprises
155 Beaver Street
Milford, MA 01757 USA
Phone: +1-508-634-2066
Email: d3e3e3@gmail.com
Dinesh G. Dutt
Cisco Systems
170 Tasman Drive
San Jose, CA 95134-1706 USA
Phone: +1-408-527-0955
EMail: ddutt@cisco.com
Silvano Gai
Nuova Systems
2600 San Tomas Expressway
Santa Clara, CA 95051 USA
Phone: +1-408-387-6123
Email: sgai@nuovasystems.com
Anoop Ghanwani
Brocade
1745 Technology Drive
San Jose, CA 95110 USA
Phone: +1-408-333-7149
Email: anoop@brocade.com
R. Perlman, et al [Page 78]
INTERNET-DRAFT RBridge Protocol
Expiration and File Name
This draft expires in January 12, 2009.
Its file name is draft-ietf-trill-rbridge-08.txt.
R. Perlman, et al [Page 79]
| PAFTECH AB 2003-2026 | 2026-04-23 17:03:00 |