One document matched: draft-jounay-niger-pwe3-source-initiated-p2mp-pw-00.txt





Network Working Group                                          F. Jounay 
Internet Draft                                                  P. Niger 
Category: Standards Track                                 France Telecom 
Expires: August 2007                                                     
                                                               Y. Kamite 
                                                      NTT Communications 
                                                                         
                                                       February 26, 2007 


   
   LDP Extensions for Source-initiated Point-to-Multipoint Pseudowire                
        draft-jounay-niger-pwe3-source-initiated-p2mp-pw-00.txt 
   
   
Status of this Memo 

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  This Internet-Daft will expire on August 26, 2007. 
        
   
Abstract 
   
  This document provides a solution to extend Label Distribution 
  Protocol (LDP) signaling in order to allow set up and maintenance of 
  Point-to-Multipoint Pseudowire (P2MP PW). Such an extension of 
  existing point to point Pseudowire is made necessary by new 
  applications. The document deals with the source-initiated P2MP PW 
  setup and maintenance. 
   
   
   

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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 [RFC2119]. 


Table of Contents 
   
   
  1.      Terminology.................................................3 
  2.      Preliminary Notes...........................................3 
  3.      Introduction................................................3 
  4.      P2MP SS-PW Setup Mechanism..................................4 
  4.1.    P2MP SS-PW Reference Model..................................4 
  4.2.    Overview of the P2MP SS-PW Setup............................5 
  4.3.    P2MP PWid FEC Element.......................................5 
  4.4.    P2MP Generalized ID FEC Element.............................6 
  4.4.1.  P2MP GID FEC TLV............................................6 
  4.4.2.  TAII Leaf Sub-TLV...........................................7 
  4.5.    Signaling for P2MP SS-PW....................................8 
  4.5.1.  Configuration/Provisioning..................................8 
  4.5.2.  Capability Negotiation Procedure............................9 
  4.5.3.  Signaling Process...........................................9 
  4.5.4.  Underlying LSP Setup.......................................10 
  4.5.5.  Leaf Grafting/Pruning......................................12 
  4.6.    Failure Reporting (to be completed)........................12 
  4.7.    Protection and Restoration.................................12 
  5.      P2MP MS-PW Setup Mechanism with P2MP PSN tunnel............12 
  5.1.    P2MP MS-PW Reference Model.................................12 
  5.2.    Overview of the P2MP MS-PW Setup...........................14 
  5.3.    Signaling for P2MP MS-PW...................................14 
  5.3.1.  Configuration/Provisioning.................................14 
  5.3.2.  Capability Negotiation Procedure...........................15 
  5.3.3.  Signaling Process..........................................15 
  5.3.4.  Explicit Routing...........................................17 
  5.3.5.  Underlying LSP Setup.......................................17 
  5.3.6.  Leaf Grafting/Pruning......................................18 
  5.4.    Failure Reporting..........................................19 
  5.5.    Protection and Restoration.................................19 
  6.      Security Considerations....................................19 
  7.      IANA Considerations........................................19 
  7.1.    LDP FEC Type...............................................19 
  7.2.    LDP Status Codes...........................................20 
  8.      Acknowledgments............................................20 
  9.      References.................................................20 
  9.1.    Normative References.......................................20 
  9.2.    Informative References.....................................20 
  Authors' Addresses.................................................21  
  Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements.....................22   
   

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1. Terminology 
   
  This document uses acronyms and terminologies defined in [RFC3036], 
  [RFC3985], [P2MP PW REQ] and [MS-PW REQ]. 
   
2. Preliminary Notes 
   
  The current version of the document does not cover: 
   
  - Leaf-initiated unidirectional P2MP PW setup, Leaf-initiated 
  grafting/pruning. This mode is described in a separate document [LEAF 
  INIT P2MP PW]. 
   
  - Downstream Label Assignment for the P2MP PW label. The solution 
  relies on [LDP UPSTREAM] for the PW Label Assignment since the 
  underlying layer is assumed to be a P2MP PSN tunnel. For the MS-PW 
  architectures which do not imply the use of an underlying P2MP LSP to 
  support the PW segment but a P2P LSP this mode is not necessary. The 
  P2MP PW Downstream Label Assignment and detailed procedures for 
  setting up a P2MP PW over a P2P LSP will be described in a future 
  version. 
   
  The Working Group feedback is required on the points described above.   
   
3. Introduction 
   
  [RFC4447] describes a mechanism for establishing Point-to-Point 
  Single-Segment Pseudowire (P2P SS-PW). [DYN MS-PW] describes a 
  mechanism for establishing P2P Multi-Segment Pseudowire (P2P MS-PW). 
   
  These specifications do not provide a solution for setting up a 
  point-to-multipoint Pseudowire (P2MP PW). 
   
  This document defines extensions to the LDP protocol [RFC3036], 
  [RFC4447], to support P2MP PW satisfying the set of requirements 
  described in [P2MP PW REQ]. 
   
  The document presents first a solution to setup a P2MP SS-PW. The 
  proposed solution relies on the definition of two new P2MP FEC 
  elements derived from the FEC128 and the FEC129 used respectively for 
  the double-side provisioning and the single-side provisioning of a 
  P2P PW setup 
   
  The document also presents a solution to setup a P2MP MS-PW. Due to 
  the End-to-End dynamic setup requirement for P2MP MS-PW, the proposed 
  solution relies on the same FEC129-derived P2MP FEC element 
  previously defined for the P2MP SS-PW setup. 
   
   
   
   

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4. P2MP SS-PW Setup Mechanism 
   
   
4.1. P2MP SS-PW Reference Model 
   
  A unidirectional P2MP SS-PW provides a Point-to-Multipoint 
  connectivity from an Ingress PE connected to a traffic source to at 
  least two Egress PEs connected to traffic receivers. The PW endpoints 
  connect the PW to its attachment circuits (AC). As for a P2P PW, an 
  AC can be a Frame Relay DLCI, an ATM VPI/VC, an Ethernet port, a 
  VLAN, a HDLC link, a PPP connection on a physical interface.  
   
  Figure 1 describes the P2MP SS-PW reference model which is extracted 
  from [P2MP PW REQ] to support P2MP emulated services. 
   
   
                 |<-----------P2MP SS-PW------------>|    
         Native  |                                   |  Native 
        Service  |    |<----P2MP PSN tunnel---->|    |  Service 
         (AC)    V    V                         V    V   (AC)  
           |     +----+         +-----+         +----+     | 
           |     |PE1 |         |  P  |=========|PE2 |     |     +----+  
           |     |    |         |   ......PW1........|-----------|CE2 | 
           |     |    |         |   . |=========|    |     |     +----+  
           |     |    |         |   . |         +----+     | 
           |     |    |=========|   . |                    | 
           |     |    |         |   . |         +----+     | 
  +----+   |     |    |         |   . |=========|PE3 |     |     +----+  
  |CE1 |---------|........PW1.........|...PW1........|-----------|CE3 |  
  +----+   |     |    |         |   . |=========|    |     |     +----+  
           |     |    |         |   . |         +----+     | 
           |     |    |=========|   . |                    | 
           |     |    |         |   . |         +----+     |  
           |     |    |         |   . |=========|PE4 |     |     +----+  
           |     |    |         |   ......PW1........|-----------|CE4 | 
           |     |    |         |     |=========|    |     |     +----+  
           |     +----+         +-----+         +----+     | 
     
                    Figure 1 P2MP SS-PW Reference Model 
   
  This architecture applies to the case where a P2MP PSN tunnel extends 
  between edge nodes of a single PSN domain to transport a 
  unidirectional P2MP PW with endpoints at these edge nodes. 
  In this model a single copy of each PW packet is sent over the P2MP 
  PSN tunnel and is received by all Egress PEs due to the P2MP nature 
  of the PSN tunnel. 
   
   
   
   
   

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4.2. Overview of the P2MP SS-PW Setup 
   
  [RFC4447] defines the LDP signaling for establishing a P2P PW. When a 
  PW is set up, the LDP signaling messages include a forwarding 
  equivalence class (FEC) element containing information about the PW 
  type and an endpoint identifier used by the Ingress and Egress PEs 
  for the selection of the PW forwarder that binds the PW to the 
  attachment circuit at each end.  
   
  There are two types of FEC elements in [RFC4447] defined for this 
  purpose: PWid FEC (type 128) and the Generalized ID (GID) FEC (type 
  129). The FEC128 and the FEC129 are used respectively for the double-
  side provisioning or the single-side provisioning of a P2P PW setup 
   
  This document proposes two P2MP PW FEC elements to setup a P2MP SS-
  PW, one derived from the FEC128 and the other one from the FEC129.  
   
  As represented in Figure 1 the unidirectional P2MP SS-PW relies on 
  the use of P2MP LSP as PSN tunnel underlying layer, setup between the 
  Ingress PE and all Egress PEs. 
   
  The Ingress PE maintains one signaling session with every Egress PE. 
  Since the P2MP PW is unidirectional and to avoid replication, after a 
  negotiation procedure between Ingress and Egress PEs, the Upstream 
  Label Assignment [LDP UPSTREAM] MUST be used for the PW label 
  allocation. In case of source-initiated PW tree setup, the Ingress PE 
  initiates the LDP Label Mapping message to announce the PW label used 
  to convey the traffic to the Egress PEs. 
   
  Note : Whatever the signaling initialization is (leaf or source-
  initiated),  the use of the P2MP PWiD FEC to setup the P2MP SS-PW has 
  no particular effect on the required provisioning procedure, since 
  both sides (source and leaves) MUST be configured with the P2MP PWid 
  and the IP address of the remote PE. However when the P2MP GID FEC is 
  used for the PW tree setup, the document describes below a preferred 
  solution based on a source-initiated process, since the single sided 
  configuration alleviates considerably the required provisioning 
  procedure.       
   
   
   
4.3. P2MP PWid FEC Element 
   
   
  A new FEC element is defined and is derived from the PWid FEC element 
  defined in [RFC4447]. The P2MP PWid FEC is defined as follows: 
   
   
   
   
   
   

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   0                   1                   2                   3 
   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
  |P2MP PWid (TBD)|C|       P2MP PW type          |PW info Length | 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
  |                          Group ID                             | 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
  |                           PW ID                               | 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
  |                Interface Parameter Sub-TLV                    | 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   
  The P2MP PWid defines the new FEC Element. All remaining fields are 
  unchanged compared to their definition in [RFC4447]. 
   
4.4. P2MP Generalized ID FEC Element 
   
   
  Based on the benefit provided by the PW AII addresses, the FEC129 
  used for P2P PW setup is extended to propose: 
   
  - a new P2MP GID FEC element containing a P2MP identifier and a PW 
  source address (SAII) 
   
  - a new TAII Leaf sub-TLV containing the list of leaves (identified 
  by AIIs) to be attached to the PW tree. 
   
   
4.4.1. P2MP GID FEC TLV 
   
   
  The P2MP GID FEC is derived from the format of the GID FEC (FEC129) 
  defined in [RFC4447]. 
   
  The AGI plays the same role as for the GID FEC. The same AGI value 
  MUST be configured at all endpoints of the PW tree (Ingress and 
  Egress PEs). 
   
  The SAII is attached to the Ingress PE and identifies the PW tree 
  source. 
   
  The AGI and the SAII have the same structure than for the FEC 129. 
   
  The TAII is replaced by a P2MP Identifier (P2MP Id). The PW tree is 
  identified by means of the pair [SAI, P2MP Identifier]. 
   
   
   
   
   
   
   

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      0                   1                   2                   3     
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
     | P2MP GID (TBD)|C|             PW Type         |PW info Length |  
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
     |   AGI Type    |    Length     |          AGI   Value          |  
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
     ~                        AGI Value (contd.)                     ~ 
     |                                                               |  
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
     |   AII Type    |    Length     |          SAII   Value         |  
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
     ~                        SAII Value (contd.)                    ~ 
     |                                                               |  
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
     |     P2MP Id   |    Length     |         P2MP Id Value         |  
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
     ~                      P2MP Id Value (contd.)                   ~ 
     |                                                               |  
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   
  When a Notification message have to be exchanged between peer PEs 
  (see below detailed description of procedures), the P2MP GID FEC MUST 
  be included in the message to identify the PW tree to which it 
  applies. 
   
4.4.2. TAII Leaf Sub-TLV 
   
  In order to carry the information regarding the leaves to be 
  connected to the tree, a new TAII Leaf sub-TLV is defined.  
   
  The TAII Leaf sub-TLV has the following format: 
   
      0                   1                   2                   3     
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
     |1|0|         TAII Leaf Type    |           Length              |  
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
     |   AII Type    |    Length     |          TAII   Value         |  
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
     ~                      TAII Value (contd.)                      ~ 
     |                                                               |  
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
     |   AII Type    |    Length     |          TAII   Value         |  
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
     ~                      TAII Value (contd.)                      ~ 
     |                                                               |  
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
     ~                                                               ~ 
     ~                      -------------------                      ~ 
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
     |   AII Type    |    Length     |          TAII   Value         |  

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     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
     ~                      TAII Value (contd.)                      ~ 
     |                                                               |  
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  
   
  The TAII have the same structure than for the FEC 129. The TAII Leaf 
  sub-TLV comprises a list of one or more TAII Leaves. 
   
  The TAII Leaf sub-TLV MUST be included in the Label Mapping message 
  initiated by the Ingress PE. 
   
  The TAII Leaf sub-TLV is carried as follows in the Label Mapping 
  message: 
   
      0                   1                   2                   3 
      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
     |                                                               | 
     +                    P2MP Generalized ID FEC                    + 
     |                                                               | 
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
     |                       Interface Parameters                    | 
     |                              "                                | 
     |                              "                                | 
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
     |0|0| Generic Label (0x0200)    |      Length                   | 
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
     |     Label                                                     | 
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
     |1|0|     PW Status (0x096A)    |            Length             | 
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
     |                         Status Code                           | 
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
     |1|0|       TAII Leaf Type      |            Length             | 
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
     |                            Value                              | 
     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 
   
  Note that in the SS-PW topology, the Ingress PE MUST maintain one 
  signaling session with each Egress PE. The TAII Leaf sub-TLV for a 
  given signaling session conveys the TAII leaves related to the 
  corresponding Egress PE. For instance if the Egress PE supports only 
  one AII associated to the PW tree, the TAII Leaf sub-TLV will include 
  only one TAII. 
   
4.5. Signaling for P2MP SS-PW 
   
4.5.1. Configuration/Provisioning 
   
  Referring to Figure 1, if the P2MP PWid FEC is used, the Ingress PE 
  (PE1) and the Egress PEs (PE2, PE3 and PE4) MUST be configured with 
  the same P2MP PWid. 

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  Referring to Figure 1, if the P2MP GID FEC is used the Ingress PE 
  (PE1) MUST be configured with the AGI and SAII. SAI is considered as 
  the Source Attachment Identifier of the PW tree. Each Egress PE MUST 
  be configured with one or more TAII corresponding to one or more 
  leaves of the PW tree. The AGI MUST be the same for all endpoints of 
  the PW tree. Once the AIs are configured at all endpoints, the 
  provisioning next step for the PW tree establishment consists in 
  specifying at the Ingress PE all the TAIIs identifying the leaves of 
  the PW tree. 
   
  Regardless of the FEC element used, the IP address of the Egress PEs 
  where the TAII are attached can be configured manually or learnt 
  dynamically by means of auto discovery protocol at Ingress PE. 
   
4.5.2. Capability Negotiation Procedure 
   
  To achieve the capability negotiation the solution MUST follow the 
  LDP capability advertisement mechanism described in [LDP CAPA]. New 
  code points if required SHOULD be defined. 
   
  The PEs belonging to the PW tree MUST support the same P2MP PW FEC 
  element. 
   
  The unidirectional P2MP SS-PW is supported over a P2MP LSP, so 
  Upstream Label Assignment as defined in [LDP UPSTREAM] MUST be used 
  to prevent replication at the PW level. So that guarantees not to 
  waste the network bandwidth. An Upstream Label Assignment Capability 
  sub-TLV is introduced to signal a PE's support of upstream label 
  assignment, to its LDP peers. This sub-TLV is carried in the LDP 
  Capability TLV.  
   
  The Ingress PE MUST also negotiate with its remote Egress PEs the 
  capability of supporting the PW status TLV. This negotiation is a key 
  element in order to allow the Egress PEs to announce some status 
  information later on to the Ingress PE. 
   
4.5.3. Signaling Process 
   
  After the Ingress PE is manually configured or discovers dynamically 
  by means of an auto-discovery protocol its peer PEs, it initiates a 
  signaling session with every Egress PE.  
   
  If the P2MP PWid FEC is used, the same Label Mapping message is sent 
  to every Egress PE containing the same P2MP PWid. 
   
  If the P2MP GID FEC is used, a Label Mapping message is sent to every 
  Egress PE containing the SAII configured as the source at the Ingress 
  PE. The TAII Leaf sub-TLV includes one or more AII associated to the 
  Egress PE defined as leaves of the tree.  
   


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  The Label Mapping message MUST include an upstream assigned PW label 
  carried within the Upstream Assigned Label TLV. The Ingress PE MUST 
  NOT distribute the Upstream Assigned Label TLV to the Egress PE if 
  the Egress PE had not previously advertised the Upstream Label 
  Assignment Capability in its LDP Initialization messages. 
   
  Note that the Ingress PE does not need to receive a Label Request 
  from the Egress PE to send the Label Mapping message.   
   
  When the Egress PE receives and processes the Label Mapping message, 
  it verifies the PWid or the TAII(s) and checks if it matches to one 
  of its configured Forwarders. 
   
  If a matching is found for the PWid, the Egress PE carries on the 
  process by responding with a PW status TLV to the Ingress PE. The PW 
  status TLV informs the Ingress PE that the Egress PE and associated 
  leaf(ves) is from now part of the PW tree. For this purpose a Success 
  Status Code is used. Therefore the Ingress and the Egress PEs update 
  their PW-to-label bindings. If no matching is found the Egress PE 
  sends a Label Release message. The FEC TLV sent in a Label Release is 
  the same FEC TLV received in the Label Mapping message initiated by 
  the Ingress PE.  
   
  If at least one matching is found among the TAII Leaves, the Egress 
  PE carries on the process by responding with a PW Status Notification 
  message to the Ingress PE in order to inform it about its tree 
  attachment. The PW status TLV informs the Ingress PE that the Egress 
  PE and some associated leaf(ves) is from now part of the PW tree. 
  Therefore the Ingress and the Egress PEs update their PW-to-label 
  bindings. When some TAII leaves do not match with ones configured at 
  the Egress PE, an error procedure must be applied as defined in [SEG 
  PW]. If no matching is found among the TAII leaves, the Egress PE 
  sends a Label Release message. The FEC TLV sent in a Label Release is 
  the same FEC TLV received in the Label Mapping message initiated by 
  the Ingress PE.  
   
  Note that a matching addresses the PWid or the TAII-sub TLV for the 
  GID but other parameters are also checked as described in RFC4447 
  (Type, possible interface parameters). 
   
   
4.5.4. Underlying LSP Setup 
   
  When the Egress PE updates its PW-to-label bindings table, it MUST 
  verify that an underlying layer (P2MP PSN tunnel) is setup to receive 
  traffic coming from the Ingress PE. If it is not the case the Egress 
  PE MUST join the P2MP PSN tunnel. Two possible options are described 
  hereafter. 
   
  The P2MP SS-PW implies a P2MP underlying tunnel. Figure 2 extracted 
  from [P2MP PW REQ] gives an example of P2MP SS-PW topology relying on 


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  a P2MP LSP. The PW tree is composed of one Ingress PE (i1) and 
  several Egress PEs (e1, e2, e3, e4).   
   
  Depending on the Traffic-Engineering requirements, the P2MP LSP set 
  up will be based on [P2MP RSVP-TE] or [MLDP] signaling. 
   
                                    i1 
                                     / 
                                    / \ 
                                   /   \ 
                                  /     \ 
                                 /\      \ 
                                /  \      \ 
                               /    \      \ 
                              /      \    / \ 
                             e1      e2  e3 e4 
   
         Figure 2 Example of P2MP Underlying Layer for P2MP SS-PW 
   
  As defined in [LDP UPSTREAM], the Interface ID TLV is used for 
  signaling the underlying Tunnel Identifier.  The Ingress PE MUST 
  include the identifier of the underlying P2MP LDP or RSVP-TE LSP in 
  Interface ID TLV in the Label Mapping messages along with the 
  Upstream Assigned Label TLV.   
   
  Note that PHP must be disabled on the underlying P2MP PSN tunnel so 
  as to allow an Egress PE to know on which PSN tunnel a packet is 
  received.  
   
  With this procedure a P2MP PW is nested within a P2MP PSN tunnel. 
  This allows aggregating several PW LSPs over a common P2MP PSN 
  tunnel. 
   
  If the P2MP LSP is based on [P2MP RSVP-TE], since the Ingress PE 
  knows the Egress PEs, if the P2MP LSP is not yet setup, it MAY setup
  the P2MP LSP at the same time as the PW tree setup, or after 
  receiving the PW status TLVs from the Egress PEs which informs the 
  Ingress PE of their attachment to the tree. 
   
  If the P2MP LSP is based on [MLDP], the P2MP LSP is setup once the 
  Egress PE retrieves the P2MP LDP FEC from the Interface ID TLV. It 
  may also be setup before. This P2MP FEC is used by the Egress PE to 
  join the P2MP LSP by initiating a LDP Label Mapping messages. 
   
  Remark: need to check if upstream label assignment procedure works 
  when the underlying interface is not established in advance. 
   
   
   
   
   


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4.5.5. Leaf Grafting/Pruning 
   
  Since the grafting/pruning is source-initiated, the Ingress PE MUST 
  send a Label Mapping message to the Egress PE for grafting the new 
  leaf to the tree, or a Label Withdraw message for pruning the 
  existing leaf from the tree. The Egress PE MUST confirms the pruning 
  by sending a Label Release message.    
   
4.6. Failure Reporting (to be completed) 
   
  If a PW tree endpoint configured on an Egress PE or the corresponding 
  AC fails, the Egress PE MUST report by means of PW status TLV 
  transported in a LDP Notification message to the Ingress PE (as 
  defined in [RFC4447]) that the associated leaf is no more reachable . 
  The AII is used to identify the leaf. 
   
  An alternative solution based on in-band OAM could also be used (e.g. 
  based on BFD/VCCV). 
   
  If the Egress PE itself fails, specific OAM features MUST be used 
  (TBD: LDP status or extended VCCV BFD). 
   
   
4.7. Protection and Restoration 
   
  The P2MP SS-PW is supported over a P2MP LSP. If required a first 
  level of protection/restoration MUST be implemented at the LSP layer 
  with classic recovery techniques. 
   
  At the PW layer the only equipments to protect are the Ingress PE and 
  the Egress PEs. 
   
  A mechanism should be implemented to avoid race conditions between 
  recovery at the PSN level and recovery at the PW level. 
   
   
   
5. P2MP MS-PW Setup Mechanism with P2MP PSN tunnel 
   
5.1. P2MP MS-PW Reference Model  
   
  Figure 3 describes the P2MP MS-PW reference model which is derived 
  from [P2MP PW REQ] to support P2MP emulated services. 
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   

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                 |<-----------P2MP MS-PW------------>|    
         Native  |       P2MP            P2MP        |  Native  
        Service  |    |<-PSN1-->|     |<-PSN2-->|    |  Service 
         (AC)    V    V tunnel  V     V tunnels V    V   (AC)  
           |     +----+         +-----+         +----+     | 
           |     |T-PE|         |S-PE1|=========|T-PE|     |     +----+  
           |     |  1 |         |          ........2.|-----------|CE2 | 
           |     |    |=========|     |    .    |    |     |     +----+  
           |     |    |    ...............PW2   +----+     | 
           |     |    |    .    |     |    .    +----+     | 
           |     |    |    .    |     |    .    |T-PE|     |     +----+ 
           |     |    |    .    |          ........3.|-----------|CE3 |  
  +----+   |     |    |    .    |     |=========|    |     |     +----+  
  |CE1 |---------|........PW1   +-----+         +----+     |    
  +----+   |     |    |    .    +-----+         +----+     |    
           |     |    |    .    |S-PE2|=========|T-PE|     |     +----+  
           |     |    |    .    |     |    ........4.|-----------|CE4 |  
           |     |    |    .    |     |    .    |    |     |     +----+  
           |     |    |    .    |     |    .    +----+     |    
           |     |    |    ...............PW3   +----+     | 
           |     |    |=========|     |    .    |T-PE|     |     +----+ 
           |     |    |         |     |    ........5.|-----------|CE5 |  
           |     |    |         |     |=========|    |     |     +----+  
           |     +----+         +-----+         +----+     | 
   
         Figure 3 P2MP MS-PW over P2MP PSN tunnels Reference Model 
   
  Figure 3 extends the P2MP SS-PW architecture of Figure 1 to a multi-
  segment configuration. In a P2P MS-PW configuration as described in 
  [MS-PW REQ] the S-PE is responsible to switch a MS-PW from one input 
  segment to only one output segment, based on the PW identifier. Here 
  in a P2MP MS-PW configuration the S-PE is responsible to switch a MS-
  PW from one input segment to one or several output segments depending 
  on the underlying layer. In this document the underlying layer is a 
  P2MP LSP, so the S-PE switches one P2MP input segment to one or 
  several P2MP output segment.  
   
  Referring to Figure 3 T-PE1 is the Ingress T-PE and T-PE2, T-PE3, T-
  PE4 and T-PE5 are the Egress T-PEs. The S-PE1 and S-PE2 play the role 
  of branch S-PE since they are in charge of switching simultaneously 
  the input P2MP PW segment PW1 to respectively the output P2MP PW 
  segments PW2 and PW3 respectively.  
   
  Note that a P2MP MS-PW may obviously transit trough more than one S-
  PE along its path. 
   
  Note that if the P2MP SS-PW case mandatory implies the use of P2MP 
  PSN tunnel (underlying layer) between the edge nodes, the P2MP MS-PW 
  does not imply such a requirement since each PW segment can be 
  supported over a P2P PSN tunnel. The coexistence of both kinds of PSN 
  tunnel (P2P and P2MP) MUST be considered. The case where the PW 


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  segment composing a MS-PW tree is supported over P2P PSN tunnels will 
  be described in a future version. 
   
   
5.2. Overview of the P2MP MS-PW Setup 
   
  The P2MP MS-PW setup relies on the use of the P2MP GID FEC Element 
  defined in 4.4. The solution aims at setting up a unidirectional P2MP 
  Multi-Segment PW to be capable to extend the P2MP PW to inter-domain. 
   
  The principle proposed here relies on a source-initiated P2MP MS-PW 
  setup. In the proposed approach the source is assumed to know all the 
  leaves of the PW tree, so the source is able to initiate the 
  signaling procedure. Another added value of the P2MP MS-PW source 
  initiated approach is to make possible the implementation of CR 
  (Constraint-based Routed) MS-PW. In that case an explicit route 
  defining the PW tree topology is represented as a list of S-PEs that 
  the P2MP MS-PW must use along the constraint-based route. 
   
  The document describes the solution to setup the P2MP MS-PW in the 
  case the PW segments inside a given PSN are supported over a P2MP PSN 
  tunnel. Since the P2MP PW segment is unidirectional and to avoid 
  replication, after a negotiation procedure between Ingress T-PE/S-PE 
  and S-PE/Egress T-PEs, the Upstream Label Assignment [LDP UPSTREAM] 
  MUST be used for the PW label assignment. 
   
  Note that by definition a P2MP LSP can have a single leaf, so 
  mechanisms defined in this document apply to P2P PSN Tunnels. But 
  since the P2P PSN case does not require upstream label assignment 
  simpler procedures that rely on downstream label assignment will be 
  defined in a future version. 
        
5.3. Signaling for P2MP MS-PW 
   
5.3.1. Configuration/Provisioning 
   
  After configuring on each T-PE of the attached AIIs, it is assumed 
  that all the PEs (Ingress/Egress T-PEs and all S-PEs) maintain an AII 
  PW routing table which gives for each AII as entry the "next hop" to 
  reach that AII. This AII routing table can be filled manually or 
  updated dynamically by means of some extended routing protocol like 
  proposed in [DYN MS-PW]. The construction of the table is out of 
  scope of the present document. 
   
  Each PE relies on its AII PW routing table to select the next hop PE 
  (S-PE or T-PE) to reach a given TAII.  
   
  In the source-initiated P2MP MS-PW setup, the provisioning of the PW 
  tree is only required at the source side, on the Ingress PE instead 
  of all destination PEs. For the P2MP MS-PW setup the provisioning 
  task consists in specifying at the Ingress PE all the TAII considered 


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  as the leaves of the tree (information transported in the TAII sub-
  TLV for signaling procedure). 
   
5.3.2. Capability Negotiation Procedure 
   
  To achieve the capability negotiation the solution MUST follow the 
  LDP capability advertisement mechanism described in [LDP CAPA]. New 
  code points are defined in this document (TBC). 
   
  The unidirectional P2MP PW segment is supported over a P2MP LSP, so 
  Upstream Label Assignment as defined in [LDP UPSTREAM] MUST be used 
  to prevent traffic replication at the PW level. The Upstream Label 
  Assignment Capability sub-TLV is used to signal a PE's support of 
  upstream label assignment, to its LDP peers. This sub-TLV is carried 
  in the LDP Capability TLV.  
   
  The PEs belonging to a given P2MP MS-PW MUST support the P2MP GID FEC 
  Element. 
   
  The PEs MUST also negotiate with their remote PEs the capability of 
  supporting the PW status TLV. This negotiation is a key element in 
  order to allow these PEs to announce some status information later 
  on. 
   
5.3.3. Signaling Process 
   
  Note: in the next release of the document this paragraph will have to 
  be changed for a more normative formulation (MUST, SHOULD, etc). 
   
  It is assumed to use the Upstream Label Assignment for the PW label 
  Assignment to set up a P2MP MS-PW since in this document the P2MP PW 
  segment is assumed to be supported over a P2MP PSN tunnel. 
   
  Ingress T-PE 
   
  To set up the P2MP MS-PW, the Ingress T-PE initiates a signaling 
  session with the S-PEs selected to join the TAIIs. If the Ingress T-
  PE is attached to several S-PEs, and according to the TAII Leaf sub-
  TLV, and the AII routing table, the Ingress T-PE can select a unique 
  S-PE or several S-PEs. In the last case, several signaling sessions 
  have to be set up, one with each selected S-PE. Otherwise only one 
  signalling session is established between the Ingress T-PE and the 
  next hop S-PE. 
   
  The Ingress T-PE sends a Label Mapping message to the S-PE which 
  contains the P2MP GID TLV and the TAII Leaf sub-TLV which identify 
  the subset of MS-PW leaves of the multicast tree that are reachable 
  via the S-PE. A given TAII does not appear in more than once 
  signaling messages in order to avoid building several branches to the 
  same leaf via different paths. 
   
  Branch S-PE 

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  When a branch S-PE receives a Label Mapping message, it checks if one 
  or several TAIIs belonging to the TAII Leaf sub-TLV matches to its 
  AII PW routing table. If at least one matching is found the S-PE 
  sends a PW Status Notification message to the upstream PE (Ingress T-
  PE or S-PE) in order to inform it about its tree attachment. Using 
  such information the T-PE is able to validate its forwarding plane by 
  acknowledging its PW-to-Label bindings. If no matching is found or if 
  some TAIIs are not reachable from the S-PE, an error procedure must 
  be applied as defined in [SEG PW] and reminded in 5.4.Based on the 
  result of the matching the S-PE validates as well its PW-to-label 
  bindings for upstream allocated labels. This ends PW set up between 
  the S-PE and the upstream node (T-PE or S-PE). Here we assume that 
  even though all the TAII from the TAI Leaf sub-TLV are not reachable 
  (which leads to an error message), the PW tree continues to be setup 
  for those reachable.  
   
  In turn the S-PE selects the "next hops" to reach the TAIIs. One or 
  more next hop PEs can be identified. A next hop can be another S-PE 
  or directly an Egress T-PE. The S-PE sends one Label Mapping message 
  to each selected next hop with the same FEC containing the source AII 
  and the P2MP MS-PW identifier. For each next hop the Label Mapping 
  message issued by the S-PE carries in TAII Leaf sub-TLV the leaves 
  that can be reached using the selected next hop. To avoid 
  inconsistency the sub-TLV includes only the TAIIs which are reachable 
  using the selected next hop (other TAIIs are pruned from the received 
  TAII Leaf sub-TLV). The branch S-PE validates its forwarding plane by 
  specifying that the PW-to-label bindings for this segment is active 
  only if it receives a successful PW Status Notification message from 
  its downstream PE (S-PE or Egress T-PE).  
   
  This process is repeated hop by hop until the P2MP MS-PW is 
  completely built, when all reachable leaves are connected to the 
  source. That means that the last PW segment connecting an Egress T-PE 
  is set up based on a TAII Leaf TLV containing only the TAIIs that are 
  attached to this Egress T-PE (only one TAII if there is only one leaf 
  attached to the Egress T-PE). 
   
  Egress PE 
   
  When receiving a Label Mapping message an Egress PE checks that the 
  TAIIs included in the TAII Leaf sub-TLV are configured and could be 
  associated to a forwarder. If it is the case (at least for one TAII) 
  the Egress T-PE sends a PW Status Notification message to the 
  upstream PE (Ingress T-PE or S-PE) in order to inform it about its 
  tree attachment. The Egress T-PE validates its forwarding plane by 
  acknowledging the PW-to-label binding for this last segment. 
   
  The P2MP MS-PW is then built and the corresponding leaves (TAIIs) are  
  connected to the source (SAII). 
   


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  If no AII belonging to the TAII Leaf sub-TLV are configured at the 
  Egress T-PE, the Egress T-PE generates an error message (Label 
  Release message) to the upstream S-PE to tear down the PW segment and 
  prune it from the tree. At turn if this PW segment is the only output 
  PW segment of the P2MP MS-PW for this S-PE, it generates a Label 
  Release message to the upstream S-PE (or Ingress T-PE). Since the PW 
  segment is assumed here P2MP, the S-PE MUST make sure before sending 
  the Label Release to the upstream PE that no leaf is still attached. 
   
   
5.3.4. Explicit Routing 
   
  The P2MP MS-PW source-initiated approach allows the implementation of 
  CR (Constraint-based Routed) P2MP MS-PW. In that case an explicit 
  route determining the P2MP tree topology must be defined. This 
  explicit route could be represented as the list of S-PEs that the 
  P2MP MS-PW must use along the constraint-based route. 
   
  The implementation of such CR P2MP MS-PW requires an extension of 
  existing signaling mechanism in order to allow the signaling message 
  to transport the explicit route used to set up the multicast tree.  
   
  This point requires further studies. 
   
5.3.5. Underlying LSP Setup 
   
  Figure 4 describes an example of P2MP MS-PW topology relying on P2MP 
  LSPs as PSN tunnels. The PW tree is composed of one Ingress PE (i1) 
  and several Egress PEs (e1, e2, e3, e4, e5, e6). The branch S-PEs are 
  represented as b1,b2. In that case the traffic replication along the 
  path of the PW tree is performed at the PW level and at the 
  underlying LSP level. For instance the branch S-PE b2 MUST replicate 
  incoming packets or data received from i1 and send them to Egress T-
  PEs, e3, and e4 via a P2MP PW segment supported over a P2MP PSN 
  tunnel and to e5 and e6 via another P2MP PSN tunnel.   
   
  Figure 4 describes the case where each P2MP PW segment is supported 
  over a P2MP LSP.  
   
                i1 
                / 
               /\ 
              /  \ 
             b1   \ 
            /      \ 
           /\       \  
          /  \      b2  
         e1  e2    /  \ 
                  /\  /\  
                 e3e4e5e6 
   
         Figure 4 Example of P2MP underlying Layer for P2MP MS-PW 

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  When a PW segment is supported over a P2MP LSP, the way to proceed to 
  setup the underlying layer is the same as described for SS-PW 4.5.4 
  except that the procedure applies to a P2MP PW segment and not to a 
  P2MP End-to-End PW. 
   
  P2P PSN is supported by methods defined in this draft but simpler 
  method specific to P2P PSN will be described in a future version. 
   
   
5.3.6. Leaf Grafting/Pruning 
   
  After a P2MP MS-PW has been established, it MUST be possible to 
  add/remove one or more individual leaves. It is required to be able 
  to achieve this addition without damaging the current tree.  
   
  Leaf Grafting 
   
  In that case the procedure is the same as for the P2MP MS-PW 
  construction, except that the procedure is applied with only one TAII 
  identifying the new leaf in the TAII Leaf sub-TLV. 
   
  The Ingress T-PE initiates a Label Mapping message with the P2MP GID 
  FEC [SAI, P2MP Id] of the tree to which the leaf must be added and 
  the TAII Leaf sub-TLV identifying the leaf. The signaling message is 
  processed as described above by PEs (T-PEs and S-PEs). The upstream 
  PE reuses the same upstream label previously assigned for the 
  existing segments of the P2MP tree identified with the P2MP GID FEC 
  [SAI, P2MP Id]. 
   
  Each S-PE checks if an extension of the existing PW tree is required 
  to reach the TAII. If a PW segment already exists to the next hop the 
  signaling message is simply propagated to the next hop. A new PW 
  segment is set up to a next hop only if the next hop was not still 
  used so far for existing leaves of the PW tree. The extension of the 
  PW tree is built hop by hop up to the Egress T-PE where the new leaf 
  is added to the tree. The TAII MUST be configured on the Egress T-PE. 
  Otherwise an error message is issued by the Egress T-PE in the 
  reverse direction (as described above). The error message triggers as 
  well a Label Release message from the Egress T-PE if the given TAII 
  is the only leaf configured at the Egress T-PE.  
   
  Leaf Pruning   
   
  The Ingress T-PE initiates a Label Withdraw message with the P2MP GID 
  FEC [SAI, P2MP Id] of the tree to which the leaf must be removed and 
  the TAII Leaf sub-TLV identifying the leaf. The Label Withdraw 
  message must be processed by the receiving T-PE. The S-PE processes 
  this message only to propagate the message up to the Egress T-PE. It 
  is proposed that the Label Withdraw is propagated up to the 
  corresponding Egress T-PE.  
   

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  The Egress T-PE verifies that the TAII matches with one of its 
  configured local AII. If it is the case the Egress T-PE removes the 
  leaf corresponding to the AII from the PW tree. Then the T-PE checks 
  if the TAII is its only AII attached to the PW tree identified by the 
  P2MP GID FEC. If it is the case the T-PE sends a Label Release 
  message to its upstream PE to tear down the PW segment and prune it 
  from the PW tree. At turn if this PW segment is the only output PW 
  segment of the P2MP MS-PW for this S-PE, it generates a Label Release 
  message to the upstream S-PE (or Ingress T-PE). 
   
  Note: A Label Withdraw message initiated from the Ingress T-PE which 
  does not include a TAII Leaf sub-TLV aims at pruning all the PW tree. 
  The message is processed by all the PEs and propagated up to the 
  Egress T-PEs. 
   
   
5.4. Failure Reporting 
   
  When a notification message must be sent in the backward direction, 
  the P2MP GID FEC is added to the message to identify the P2MP tree 
  concerned. It could be used to announce to the source that a given 
  leaf is not reachable or is no longer reachable (e.g. the 
  corresponding TAII does not exist on the Egress T-PE). It could also 
  be used to send to the source other kinds of information like leaf 
  status reporting, OAM defect indication, etc. 
   
  Solutions on specific OAM features to detect and announce a node or a 
  segment failure are left for future study. 
   
5.5. Protection and Restoration 
   
  This section will be added in a future version. 
   
   
6. Security Considerations 
   
  This section will be added in a future version. 
   
7. IANA Considerations 
   
7.1. LDP FEC Type 
   
  This document uses two new FEC element types, FEC P2MP PWid, FEC P2MP 
  GID , from the "FEC Type Name Space" for the label Distribution 
  Protocol (LDP RFC 3036). 
   
  The following values are suggested for assignment: 
   
  FEC P2MP PWid : 0x82 
   
  FEC P2MP GID : 0x83 
   

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7.2. LDP Status Codes 
   
  This document uses several new LDP status codes; IANA already 
  maintains a registry of name "STATUS CODE NAME SPACE" defined by 
  RFC3036. The following values are suggested for assignment: 
   
     Range/Value     E     Description                       Reference 
     ------------- -----   ----------------------            --------- 
   
  LDP Capabilities 
   
   
8. Acknowledgments 
   
  Many thanks to JL Le Roux for the discussions, comments and support. 
   
9. References 
   
9.1. Normative References 
   
  [RFC2119]    Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate 
               Requirement Levels", BCP 14, March 1997. 

  [RFC4447]    El-Aawar, N., Heron, G., Martini, L., Smith, T., Rosen, 
               E., "Pseudowire Setup and Maintenance Using the Label 
               Distribution Protocol (LDP)", April 2006 

  [RFC3036]    Andersson, L., Doolan, P., Feldman, N., Fredette, A., 
               Thomas, B., "LDP Specification", January 2001. 

  [RFC3985]    Bryant, S., Pate, P. "PWE3 Architecture", March 2005 


9.2. Informative References 
   
  [P2MP PW REQ]        Jounay, F., Niger, P, Kamite, Y., Martini L., 
                       Delord, S. Heron, G., "Use Cases and signaling 
                       requirements for Point-to-Multipoint PW", 
                       Internet Draft, draft-jounay-pwe3-p2mp-pw-
                       requirements-00.txt, February 2007 
   
  [MS-PW REQ]          Bitar, N., Bocci, M., and Martini, L., 
                       "Requirements for inter domain Pseudo-Wires", 
                       Internet Draft, draft-ietf-pwe3-ms-pw-
                       requirements-03.txt, October 2006 
   
  [DYN MS-PW]          Balus, F., Bocci, M., Martini. L, " Dynamic 
                       Placement of Multi Segment Pseudo Wires", 
                       Internet Draft, draft-ietf-pwe3-dynamic-ms-pw-
                       02.txt, October 2006 
   


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  [SEG PW]             Martini et al, "Segmented Pseudo Wire", Internet 
                       Draft, draft-ietf-pwe3-segmented-pw-03.txt, 
                       October 2006 
   
  [LDP UPSTREAM]       Aggarwal, R., Le Roux, JL., "MPLS Upstream Label 
                       Assignment for LDP", Internet Draft, draft-ietf-
                       mpls-ldp-upstream-00.txt, March 2006 
   
  [P2MP RSVP-TE]       Aggarwal, R., Papadimitriou, D., Yasukawa, S., 
                       "Extensions to RSVP-TE for Point-to-Multipoint 
                       TE LSPs", Internet Draft, draft-ietf-mpls-rsvp-
                       te-p2mp-06.txt, July 2006 
   
  [MLDP]               Minei, I., Kompella, K., Thomas, B., Wijnands, 
                       I. "Label Distribution Protocol Extensions for 
                       Point-to-Multipoint and       Multipoint-to-
                       Multipoint Label Switched Paths", Internet 
                       Draft, draft-ietf-mpls-ldp-p2mp-02, June 2006 
   
  [LDP CAPA]           Aggarwal, R., Aggarwal, S., Le Roux, JL., 
                       Thomas, B., "LDP Capabilities" draft-thomas-
                       mpls-ldp-capabilities-01.txt, October 2006 
  
  [LEAF INIT P2MP PW]  Jounay, F., Kamite, Y., Le Roux, JL., Niger, P., 
                       "LDP Extensions for Leaf-initiated Point-to-
                       Multipoint Pseudowire" draft-jounay-pwe3-leaf-
                       initiated-p2mp-pw-00.txt, February 2007 
   
Author's Addresses 
   
  Frederic Jounay   
  France Telecom   
  2, avenue Pierre-Marzin   
  22307 Lannion Cedex   
  FRANCE  
  Email: frederic.jounay@orange-ftgroup.com 
   
  Philippe Niger   
  France Telecom   
  2, avenue Pierre-Marzin   
  22307 Lannion Cedex   
  FRANCE  
  Email: philippe.niger@orange-ftgroup.com 
   
  Yuji Kamite  
  NTT Communications Corporation 
  Tokyo Opera City Tower 
  3-20-2 Nishi Shinjuku, Shinjuku-ku 
  Tokyo  163-1421 
  Japan 
  Email: y.kamite@ntt.com 
   
   
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