One document matched: draft-irtf-sam-hybrid-overlay-framework-01.txt
Differences from draft-irtf-sam-hybrid-overlay-framework-00.txt
SAM J. Buford, Avaya
Internet Draft January 27, 2007
Expires: July 27, 2007
Hybrid Overlay Multicast Framework
draft-irtf-sam-hybrid-overlay-framework-01.txt
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Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2007). All Rights Reserved.
Abstract
We describe an experimental framework for constructing SAM sessions
using hybrid combinations of Application Layer Multicast, native
multicast, and multicast tunnels. We leverage AMT [THA2006] relay
and gateway elements for interoperation between native regions and
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ALM regions. The framework allows different overlay algorithms and
different ALM control algorithms to be used.
Conventions used in this document
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC-2119 [1].
Table of Contents
1. Introduction...................................................3
2. Definitions....................................................4
2.1. Overlay Network...........................................4
2.2. Overlay Multicast.........................................4
2.3. Peer......................................................4
2.4. Multi-Destination Routing.................................5
3. Assumptions....................................................5
3.1. Overlay...................................................5
3.2. Overlay Multicast.........................................5
3.3. NAT.......................................................6
3.4. Regions...................................................6
3.5. AMT.......................................................6
4. ALM Tree Operations............................................7
5. Hybrid Connectivity............................................8
6. Scenarios......................................................9
6.1. ALM-Only Tree – Scribe Algorithm..........................9
6.2. ALM tree with peer at AMT site (AMT-GW)..................10
6.3. ALM tree with NM peer using AMT-R........................11
6.4. ALM tree with NM peer with P-AMT-R.......................11
6.5. Other....................................................11
7. Open Issues and Further Work..................................12
8. Security Considerations.......................................12
9. References....................................................12
9.1. Normative References.....................................12
9.2. Informative References...................................13
Author's Addresses...............................................14
Intellectual Property Statement..................................14
Disclaimer of Validity...........................................14
Copyright Statement..............................................14
Acknowledgment...................................................15
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1. Introduction
The concept of scalable adaptive multicast [BUF2007] includes both
scaling properties and adaptability properties. Scalability is
intended to cover:
o large group size
o large numbers of small groups
o rate of group membership change
o admission control for QoS
o use with network layer QoS mechanisms
o varying degrees of reliability
o trees connect nodes over global internet
Adaptability includes
o use of different control mechanisms for different multicast trees
depending on initial application parameters or application class
o changing multicast tree structure depending on changes in
application requirements, network conditions, and membership
o use of different control mechanisms and tree structure in
different regions of network depending on native multicast
support, network characteristics, and node behavior
In this document we describe an experimental framework for
constructing SAM sessions using hybrid combinations of Application
Layer Multicast, native multicast, and multicast tunnels.
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2. Definitions
2.1. Overlay Network
P P P P P
..+....+....+...+.....+...
. +P
P+ .
. +P
..+....+....+...+.....+...
P P P P P
Overlay network – An application layer virtual or logical network in
which end points are addressable and that provides connectivity,
routing, and messaging between end points. Overlay networks are
frequently used as a substrate for deploying new network services, or
for providing a routing topology not available from the underlying
physical network. Many peer-to-peer systems are overlay networks
that run on top of the Internet.
In the above figure, “P” indicates overlay peers, and peers are
connected in a logical address space. The links shown in the figure
represent predecessor/successor links. Depending on the overlay
routing model, additional or different links may be present.
2.2. Overlay Multicast
Overlay Multicast (OM): Hosts participating in a multicast session
form an overlay network and utilize unicast connections among pairs
of hosts for data dissemination. The hosts in overlay multicast
exclusively handle group management, routing, and tree construction,
without any support from Internet routers. This is also commonly
known as Application Layer Multicast (ALM) or End System Multicast
(ESM).
We call systems which use proxies connected in an overlay multicast
backbone “proxied overlay multicast” or POM.
2.3. Peer
Peer: an autonomous end system that is connected to the physical
network and participates in and contributes resources to overlay
construction, routing and maintenance. Some peers may also perform
additional roles such as connection relays, super nodes, NAT
traversal, and data storage.
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2.4. Multi-Destination Routing
Multi-Destination Routing (MDR): A type of multicast routing in which
group member’s addresses are explicitly listed in each packet
transmitted from the sender [AGU1984]. XCAST [BOI2005] is an
experimental MDR protocol. A hybrid host group and MDR design is
described in [HE2006].
3. Assumptions
3.1. Overlay
Peers connect in a large-scale overlay, which may be used for a
variety of peer-to-peer applications in addition to multicast
sessions.
Peers may assume additional roles in the overlay beyond participation
in the overlay and in multicast trees.
We assume a single structured overlay routing algorithm is used. Any
of a variety of multi-hop, one-hop, or variable-hop overlay
algorithms could be used.
Castro et al. [CAS2003] compared multi-hop overlays and found that
tree-based construction in a single overlay out-performed using
separate overlays for each multicast session. We use a single
overlay rather than separate overlays per multicast sessions. We
defer federated and hierarchical multi-overlay designs to later
versions of this document.
Peers may be distributed throughout the network, in regions where
native multicast (NM) is available as well as regions where it is not
available.
An overlay multicast algorithm may leverage the overlay’s mechanism
for maintaining overlay state in the face of churn. For example, a
peer may hold a number of DHT (Distributed Hash Table) entries. When
the peer gracefully leaves the overlay, it transfers those entries to
the nearest peer. When another peers joins which is closer to some
of the entries than the current peer which holds those entries, than
those entries are migrated. Overlay churn affects multicast trees as
well; remedies include automatic migration of the tree state and
automatic re-join operations for dislocated children nodes.
3.2. Overlay Multicast
The overlay supports concurrent multiple multicast trees. The limit
on number of concurrent trees depends on peer and network resources
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and is not an intrinsic property of the overlay. Some multicast
trees will contain peers use ALM only, i.e., the peers do not have NM
connectivity. Some multicast trees will contain peers with a
combination of ALM and NM. Although the overlay could be used to form
trees of NM-only peers, if such peers are all in the same region we
expect native mechanisms to be used for such tree construction, and
if such peers are in different regions we expect AMT to handle most
cases of interest.
Peers are able to determine, through configuration or discovery:
o Can they connect to a NM router
o Is an AMT gateway accessible
o Can the peer support the AMT-GW functionality locally
o Is MDR supported in the region
3.3. NAT
Some peers in the overlay may be in anprivate address space and
behind firewalls. We assume that mechanisms are available for the
following, and that the mechanisms scale as the ratio of NATed peers
to public address (public) peers grows, to a limit.
o Connectivity establishment between NATed peers and public peers
o Routing of overlay control messages to/from NATed and public
peers.
o Routing of data messages over the topology of the tree
NAT traversal solutions developed elsewhere in IETF will be used, and
new NAT traversal mechanisms are out of scope to this framework.
3.4. Regions
A region is a contiguous internetwork such that if native multicast
is available, all routers and end systems can connect to native
multicast groups available in that region.
A region may include end systems.
3.5. AMT
We use AMT [THA2006] to connect peers in ALM region with peers in NM
region. AMT permits AMT-R and AMT-GW functionality to be embedded in
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hosts or specially configured routers. We assume AMT-R and AMT-GW
can be implemented in peers.
AMT has certain restrictions: 1) isolated sites/hosts can receive
SSM, 2) isolated non-NAT sites/hosts can send SSM, 3) isolated
sites/hosts can receive general multicast. AMT does not permit
isolated sites/hosts to send general multicast.
4. ALM Tree Operations
Peers use the overlay to support ALM operations such as:
o Create tree
o Join
o Leave
o Re-Form or optimize tree
There are a variety of algorithms for peers to form multicast trees
in the overlay. We permit multiple such algorithms to be supported
in the overlay, since different algorithms may be more suitable for
certain application requirements, and since we wish to support
experimentation. Therefore, overlay messaging corresponding to the
set of overlay multicast operations must carry algorithm
identification information.
For example, for small groups, the join point might be directly
assigned by the rendezvous point, while for large trees the join
request might be propagated down the tree with candidate parents
forwarding their position directly to the new node.
In addition to these overlay level tree operations, some peers may
implement additional operations to map tree operations to native
multicast and/or AMT [THA2006] connections.
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+---------------+ +---------------+
| AMT Site | P P P P P | Native MCast |
| ..........+...+....+....+...+.....+....+....... |
| . +---++ ++---+ +P |
| P+ |AMT | |AMT | . |
| . |GW | |RLY | +P |
| . +---++ ++---+ . |
+-----+---------+ +------+--------+
. .
. +------+--------+
. | . Native |
. | . MDR |
P+....+P .....+...+..+P |
. . | P |
+--------+------+ . +---------------+
| Native . MCast| .
| . | . +---------------+
| P-AMT-R+ | P+ |Native Mcast |
| . | . ++---+ |
| P-AMT-R+ | P-AMT-GW+===|AMT | |
| ...+...+.. . |RLY | |
| P | .+....+........+.....+ ++---+ |
+---------------+ P P P P +---------------+
5. Hybrid Connectivity
In the above figure we show the hybrid architecture in six regions of
the network. All peers are connected in an overlay, and the figure
shows the predecessor/successor links between peers. The peers may
have other connections in the overlay.
o No native multicast: Peers (P) in this region connect to the
overlay
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o Native multicast (NM) with a local AMT gateway (AMT GW). There
are one or more peers (P) connected to the overlay in this region.
o Native multicast with a local AMT relay (AMT RLY). There are one
or more peers (P) connected to the overlay in this region.
o Native multicast with one or more peers which emulate the AMT
relay behavior (P-AMT-R) which also connect to the overlay. There
may be other peers (P) which also connect to the overlay.
o Native MDR is a native multicast region using multi-destination
routing, in which one or more peers reside in the region.
o Native multicast with no peers that connect to the overlay, but
for which there is at least one peer in the unicast-only part of
the network which can behave as an AMT-GW (P-AMT-GW) to connect to
multicast sources through an AMT-R for that region. It may be
feasible to also allow non-peer hosts in such a region to
participate as receivers of overlay multicast; for this version,
we prefer to require all hosts to join the overlay as peers.
6. Scenarios
6.1. ALM-Only Tree – Scribe Algorithm
Here is a summary of the Scribe algorithm [CAS2002] for forming a
multicast tree in the overlay. Its main advantage is use of the
overlay routing mechanism for routing both control and data messages.
The group creator doesn’t have to be the root of the tree or even in
the tree. It doesn’t consider per node load, admission control, or
alternative paths.
As stated earlier, multiple algorithms will co-exist in the overlay.
1. Peer which initiates multicast group:
groupID = create(); // allocate a unique groupId
// the root is the nearest peer in the overlay
// out of band advertisement/distribution of groupID, perhaps by
publishing in DHT
2. Any joining peer:
// out of band discovery of groupID, perhaps by lookup in DHT
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joinTree(groupID); // sends “join groupID” message
The overlay routes the join request using the overlay routing
mechanism toward the peer with the nearest id to the groupID.
This peer is the root. Peers on the path to the root join the
tree as forwarding points. The joining peer is a member of the
group.
3. Leave Tree:
leaveTree(groupID) // removes this node from the tree
Propagates a leave message to each child node and to the parent
node. If the parent node is a forwarding node and this is its
last child, then it propagates a leave message to its parent. A
child node receiving a leave message from a parent sends a join
message to the groupID.
4. Message forwarding:
multicastMsg(groupID, msg);
The sender routes the message to the IP address of the root of
the tree, which in turn forwards it after validation down the
tree.
5. Heartbeat
Periodically each parent sends a heartbeat message to its
children. If a child node misses heartbeat messages, tree
repair is triggered.
6.2. ALM tree with peer at AMT site (AMT-GW)
The joining peer connects to the tree using the ALM protocol, or, if
the tree includes a peer in an NM region, then the peer can use the
AMT GW to connect to the NM peer through the AMT relay. The peer can
choose the delivery path based on latency and throughput.
If the peer is not a joining peer and is on the overlay path of a
join request:
o If its next hop is a peer in an NM region with AMT-R, then it can
select either overlay routed multicast messages or AMT delivered
multicast messages.
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o If its next hop is a peer outside of an NM region, then it could
use either ALM only or use AMT delivery as an alternate path
6.3. ALM tree with NM peer using AMT-R
There are these cases:
o There is no peer in the tree which has an AMT-GW
The NM peer uses ALM routing
o There is at least one peer in the tree which can function as P-
AMT-GW
The NM peer can join the tree using ALM routing and/or
connecting to the P-AMT-GW.
o There is at least one peer in the tree which is in an AMT-GW
region
The NM peer can join the tree using ALM routing and/or
connecting to the AMT-GW.
6.4. ALM tree with NM peer with P-AMT-R
Either the NM peer supports P-AMT-R or another peer in the multcast
tree in the same region is P-AMT-R capable.
The three cases above apply here, replacing AMT-R with P-AMT-R.
6.5. Other
The next version of this document will elaborate:
o ALM tree topology vs NM topology and NM-ALM edges
o Single NM-ALM edge nodes vs multi NM peers from same region in the
tree
o Initial tree membership is ALM vs initial tree membership is NM
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7. Open Issues and Further Work
o AMT [THA2006] has some restrictions on connecting isolated
sites/hosts as SSM/ASM sources and receivers. Further analysis is
needed to insure that OM data path is consistent with these
constraints and whether additional operating restrictions between
the overlay and AMT need be specified.
o For NM regions with no AMT support, specifics of how peers self-
select as P-AMT-GW and P-AMT-RLY, and what additional behavior if
any is needed beyond that specified in [THA2006].
o We expect that the evolution of this document will lead to
protocol specification related to the interopation points of the
hybrid interfaces of the network.
8. Security Considerations
Overlays are vulnerable to DOS and collusion attacks. We are not
solving overlay security issues.
For this version we assume centralized peer authentication model
similar to what is proposed for P2P-SIP.
9. References
9.1. Normative References
[1] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement
Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 199
[RFC0792] Postel, J., "Internet Control Message Protocol", STD 5,RFC
792, September 1981.
[RFC3376] Cain, B., Deering, S., Kouvelas, I., Fenner, B., and A.
Thyagarajan, "Internet Group Management Protocol, Version
3", RFC 3376, October 2002.
[RFC3810] Vida, R. and L. Costa, "Multicast Listener Discovery
Version 2 (MLDv2) for IPv6", RFC 3810, June 2004.
[RFC4605] Fenner, B., He, H., Haberman, B., and H. Sandick, "Internet
Group Management Protocol (IGMP) / Multicast Listener
Discovery (MLD)-Based Multicast Forwarding ("IGMP/MLD
Proxying")", RFC 4605, August 2006.
[RFC4607] Holbrook, H. and B. Cain, "Source-Specific Multicast for
IP", RFC 4607, August 2006.
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9.2. Informative References
[AGU1984] L. Aguilar, Datagram Routing for Internet Multicasting,
Sigcomm 84, March 1984.
[BOI2005] R. Boivie, N. Feldman , Y. Imai , W. Livens , D. Ooms, O.
Paridaens, E. Muramoto, Explicit Multicast (Xcast) Basic
Specification, draft-ooms-xcast-basic-spec-09.txt, Work in
Progress. Dec. 2005.
[BUF2007] J. Buford, S. Kadadi. SAM Problem Statement. Dec 2006.
Internet Draft draft-irtf-sam-problem-statement-01.txt,
work in progress.
[CAS2002] M. Castro, P. Druschel, A.-M. Kermarrec, An. Rowstron,
Scribe: A large-scale and decentralized application-level
multicast infrastructure IEEE Journal on Selected Areas in
Communications, Vol.20, No.8. October 2002.
[CAS2003] M. Castro, M. Jones, A. Kermarrec, A. Rowstron, M. Theimer,
H. Wang and A. Wolman, “An Evaluation of Scalable
Application-level Multicast Built Using Peer-to-peer
overlays,” in Proceedings of IEEE INFOCOM 2003, April 2003.
[HE2005] Q. He, M. Ammar. Dynamic Host-Group/Multi-Destination
Routing for Multicast Sessions. J. of Telecommunication
Systems, vol. 28, pp. 409-433, 2005.
[MUR2006] E. Muramoto, Y. Imai, N. Kawaguchi. Requirements for
Scalable Adaptive Multicast Framework in Non-GIG Networks.
November 2006. Internet Draft draft-muramoto-irtf-sam-
generic-require-01.txt, work in progress.
[THA2006] D. Thale, M. Talwar, A. Aggarwal, L. Vicisano, T. Pusateri.
Automatic IP Multicast Without Explicit Tunnels (AMT).
Internet Draft draft-ietf-mboned-auto-multicast-07, Work in
progress. Nov 2006.
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Author's Addresses
John Buford
Avaya Labs
307 Middletown-Lincroft Road
Lincroft, NJ 07738, USA
Email: buford@samrg.org
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This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
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Acknowledgment
Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
Internet Society.
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