One document matched: draft-lapukhov-bgp-routing-large-dc-01.xml
<?xml version="1.0"?>
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<?rfc toc="yes"?>
<?rfc compact="yes"?>
<?rfc symrefs="yes" ?>
<rfc category="info" ipr='trust200902' docName='draft-lapukhov-bgp-routing-large-dc-01'>
<front>
<title abbrev="draft-lapukhov-bgp-routing-large-dc">
Using BGP for routing in large-scale data centers
</title>
<author initials="P.L." surname="Lapukhov" fullname="Petr Lapukhov">
<organization>Microsoft Corp.</organization>
<address>
<postal>
<street>One Microsfot Way</street>
<city>Redmond</city> <region>WA</region>
<code>98052</code>
<country>US</country>
</postal>
<phone>+1 425 7032723 X 32723</phone>
<email>petrlapu@microsoft.com</email>
<uri>http://microsoft.com/</uri>
</address>
</author>
<author initials="A.P." surname="Premji" fullname="Ariff Premji">
<organization>Arista Networks</organization>
<address>
<postal>
<street>5470 Great America Parkway</street>
<city>Santa Clara</city> <region>CA</region>
<code>95054</code>
<country>US</country>
</postal>
<phone>+1 408-547-5699</phone>
<email>ariff@aristanetworks.com</email>
<uri>http://aristanetworks.com/</uri>
</address>
</author>
<date month='July' year='2012' day="14" />
<area >Routing</area>
<workgroup>IDR</workgroup>
<keyword>BGP</keyword>
<keyword>ECMP</keyword>
<keyword>Clos</keyword>
<abstract>
<t>
Some service providers build and operate data centers that support over 100,000 servers. In this document, such data-centers are
referred to as "large-scale" data centers to differentiate them the from more common
smaller infrastructures. The data centers of this scale have a unique
set of network requirements, with emphasis on operational
simplicity and network stability.
</t>
<t>
This document attempts to summarize the authors' experiences in
designing and supporting large data centers, using BGP as the only
control-plane protocol. The intent here is to describe a proven and
stable routing design that could be leveraged by others in the
industry.
</t>
</abstract>
</front>
<middle>
<section title="Introduction" anchor="intro">
<t>
This document presents a practical routing design that can be used in
large-scale data centers. Such data centers, also known as hyper-scale or warehouse scale data centers, have a unique
attribute of supporting over a 100,000 end hosts. In order to support networks of such scale, operators are revisiting networking
designs and platforms to address this need.. Contrary to the more traditional data center designs, the
approach presented in this document does not have any dependency on building a large Layer-2
domain and instead relies on routing at every layer in the network.
Implementing a pure Layer-3 design using BGP further ensures broad vendor support and almost guarantees interoperability between
vendors given that BGP is one of the most widely deployed protocols on the Internet.
</t>
</section>
<section title="Traditional data center designs">
<t>
This section provides an overview of two types of traditional data center designs - Layer-2 and fully routed Layer-3 topologies.
</t>
<section title="Layer 2 Designs">
<t>
In the networking industry, a common design choice for data centers is to use a mix of Ethernet-based Layer 2 technologies.
Network topologies typically look like a tree with redundant uplinks and three levels
of hierarchy commonly named Core , Aggregation and Access layers (see <xref target="typical-dc"></xref>).
To accommodate bandwidth demands, every next level has higher port density and bandwidth capacity, moving upwards in the topology.
To keep terminology uniform, tn this document, these
topology layers will be referred to as "tiers", e.g. Tier 1, Tier 2
and Tier 3 instead of Core, Aggregation or Access layers.
</t>
<figure title="Typical Data Center network layout" anchor="typical-dc">
<artwork>
+------+ +------+
| | | |
| |--| | Tier1
| | | |
+------+ +------+
| | | |
+---------+ | | +----------+
| +-------+--+------+--+-------+ |
| | | | | | | |
+----+ +----+ +----+ +----+
| | | | | | | |
| |-----| | | |-----| | Tier2
| | | | | | | |
+----+ +----+ +----+ +----+
| | | |
| | | |
| +-----+ | | +-----+ |
+-| |-+ +-| |-+ Tier3
+-----+ +-----+
| | | | | |
[Servers] [Servers]
</artwork>
</figure>
<t>
IP routing is normally used only at the upper layers in the topology,
e.g. Tier 1 or Tier 2. Some of the reasons for introducing such large
(sometimes called stretched) layer-2 domains are:
</t>
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Supporting legacy applications that may require direct Layer 2 adjacency or use non-IP protocols</t>
<t>Seamless mobility for virtual machines, to allow the preservation of IP addresses when a virtual machine moves across physical hosts</t>
<t>Simplified IP addressing – less IP subnets is required for the data-center</t>
<t>Application load-balancing may require direct layer-2 reachability to perform certain functions such as Level 2 Direct Server Return (DSR)</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Fully routed network designs">
<t>
Network designs that leverage IP routing down to the access layer (Tier 3) of the network have gained popularity as well.
The main benefit of such designs is improved network stability and scalability, as a result of confining L2 broadcast domains.
A common choice of routing protocol for data center designs would be an IGP, such as OSPF or ISIS.
As data centers grow in scale, and server count exceeds tens of thousands, such fully routed designs become more attractive.
</t>
<t>
Although BGP is the de-facto standard protocol for routing on the Internet, having wide support from both the vendor and service provider
communities, it is not generally deployed in data centers for a number of reasons: </t>
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>BGP is perceived as a "WAN only protocol only" and not often considered for enterprise or data center applications.</t>
<t>BGP is believed to have a “much slower" routing convergence than traditional IGPs.</t>
<t>BGP deployment within an Autonomous System (iBGP mesh) is assumed to have a dependency on the presence of an IGP, which assists with recursive next-hop resolution.</t>
<t>BGP is perceived to require significant configuration overhead and does not support any form of neighbor auto-discovery.</t>
</list>
</t>
<t>
In this document we demonstrate a practical approach for using BGP as the single routing protocol for data center networks.
</t>
</section>
</section>
<section title="Document structure">
<t>
The remaining of this document is organized as following.
First the design requirements for large scale data centers are presented.
Next, the document gives an overview of Clos network topology and its properties.
After that, the reasons for selecting BGP as the single routing protocols are presented.
Finally, the document discusses the design in more details and covers specific BGP policy features.
</t>
</section>
<section title="Network design requirements">
<t>
This section describes and summarizes network design requirement for a large-scale data center.
</t>
<section title="Traffic patterns">
<t>
The primary requirement when building an interconnection network for large number of servers is to accommodate application bandwidth and latency requirements.
Until recently it was quite common to see traffic flows mostly entering and leaving the data center (also known as north-south traffic)
There were no intense, highly meshed flows or traffic patterns between the machines within the same tier.
As a result, traditional "tree" topologies were sufficient to accommodate such flows, even with high oversubscription ratios in network equipment.
If more bandwidth was required, it was added by “scaling up” the network elements, by upgrading line-cards or switch fabrics.
</t>
<t>
In contrast, large-scale data centers often host applications that generate significant amount of server to server traffic, also known as “east-west” traffic.
Examples of such applications could be compute clusters such as Hadoop or live virtual machine migrations.
Scaling up traditional tree topologies to match these bandwidth demands becomes either too expensive or impossible due to physical limitations.
</t>
</section>
<section title="CAPEX minimization">
<t>
The cost of the network infrastructure alone (CAPEX) constitutes about 10-15% of total data center expenditure <xref target="GREENBERG2009"/>.
However, The absolute cost is significant, and there is a need to constantly drive down the cost of networking elements themselves. This can be accomplished in two ways:
</t>
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Unifying all network elements, preferably using the same hardware type or even the same device. This allows for bulk purchases with discounted pricing.</t>
<t>Driving costs down by introducing multiple network equipment vendors.</t>
</list>
</t>
<t>
In order to allow for vendor diversity, it is important to minimize the software feature requirements for the network elements.
Furthermore, this strategy provides the maximum flexibility of vendor equipment choices while enforcing interoperability using open standards
</t>
</section>
<section title="OPEX minimization">
<t>
Operating large scale infrastructure could be expensive, provide that larger amount of elements will statistically fail more often.
Having a simpler design and operating using a limited software feature-set ensures that failures will mostly result from hardware
malfunction and not software issues.
</t>
<t>
An important aspect of OPEX minimization is reducing size of failure domains in the network. Ethernet networks are known to be susceptible to broadcast or unicast storms.
The use of a fully routed design significantly reduces the size of the data-plane failure domains (e.g. limits to Tier-3 switches only).
However, such designs also introduce the problem of distributed control-plane failures.
This calls for simpler control-plane protocols that are expected to have less chances of network meltdown.
</t>
</section>
<section title="Traffic Engineering">
<t>
In any data center, application load-balancing is a critical function performed by network devices. Traditionally, load-balancers are
deployed as dedicated devices in the traffic forwarding path. The problem arises in scaling load-balancers under growing traffic demand.
A preferable solution would be able to scale load-balancing layer horizontally, by adding more of the uniform nodes and distributing
incoming traffic across these nodes
</t>
<t>
In situation like this, an ideal choice would to use network infrastructure itself to distribute traffic across a group of load-balancers.
A combination of features such as Anycast prefix advertisement <xref target="RFC4786"/>
along with Equal Cost Multipath (ECMP) functionality could be used to accomplish this.
To allow for more granular load-distribution, it is beneficial for the network to support the ability to perform controlled
per-hop traffic engineering.
For example, it is beneficial to directly control the ECMP next-hop set for anycast prefixes at
every level of network hierarchy.
</t>
</section>
</section>
<section title="Requirement List">
<t>
This section summarizes the list of requirements, based on the discussion so far:
</t>
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>
REQ1: Select a network topology where capacity could be scaled “horizontally” by adding more links and network switches of the same type,
without requiring an upgrade to the network elements themselves.
</t>
<t>
REQ2: Define a narrow set of software features/protocols supported by a multitude of networking equipment vendors.
</t>
<t>
REQ3: Among the network protocols, choose the one that has a simpler implementation in terms of minimal programming code complexity.
</t>
<t>
REQ4: The network routing protocol should allow for explicit control of the routing prefix next-hop set on per-hop basis.
</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Network topology">
<t>
This section outlines the most common choice for horizontally scalable topology in large scale data centers.
</t>
<section title="Clos topology overview">
<t>
A common choice for a horizontally scalable topology is a folded Clos topology, sometimes called “fat-tree” (see, for example, <xref target="INTERCON"/> and
<xref target="ALFARES2008"/>).
This topology features odd number of stages (dimensions) and is commonly made of the same uniform elements, e.g. switches with the same port count.
Therefore, the choice of Clos topology satisfies both REQ1 and REQ2. See <xref target="three-stage-clos"/> below for an example of folded 3-stage Clos topology:
</t>
<figure title="3-Stage Folded Clos topology" anchor="three-stage-clos">
<artwork>
+-------+
| |----------------------------+
| |------------------+ |
| |--------+ | |
+-------+ | | |
+-------+ | | |
| |--------+---------+-------+ |
| |--------+-------+ | | |
| |------+ | | | | |
+-------+ | | | | | |
+-------+ | | | | | |
| |------+-+-------+-+-----+ | |
| |------+-+-----+ | | | | |
| |----+ | | | | | | | |
+-------+ | | | | | | ---------> M links
Tier1 | | | | | | | | |
+-------+ +-------+ +-------+
| | | | | |
| | | | | | Tier2
| | | | | |
+-------+ +-------+ +-------+
| | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | ---------> N Links
| | | | | | | | |
O O O O O O O O O Servers
</artwork>
</figure>
<t>
In the networking industry, a topology like this is sometimes
referred to as "Leaf and Spine" network, where "Spine" is the name given to the
middle stage of the Clos topology (Tier 1) and "Leaf" is the name of
input/output stage (Tier 2). However, for consistency, we will refer to these layers as "Tier n".
</t>
</section>
<section title="Clos topology properties">
<t>
The following are some key properties of the Clos topology:
</t>
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>Topology is fully non-blocking (or more accurately - non-interfering) if M >= N and oversubscribed by a factor of N/M otherwise.
Here M and N is the uplink and downlink port count respectively, for Tier 2 switch, as shown on <xref target="three-stage-clos"/></t>
<t>Implementing Clos topology requires a routing protocol supporting ECMP with the fan-out of M or more</t>
<t>Every Tier 1 device has exactly one path to every end host (server) in this topology</t>
<t>Traffic flowing from server to server is naturally load-balanced over all available paths using simple ECMP behavior</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="Scaling Clos topology">
<t>
A Clos topology could be scaled either by increasing network switch port count or adding more stages, e.g. moving to a 5-stage Clos, as illustrated
on <xref target="five-stage-clos"/> below:
</t>
<figure title="5-Stage Clos topology" anchor="five-stage-clos">
<artwork>
Tier1
+-----+
| |
+--| |--+
| +-----+ |
Tier2 | | Tier2
+-----+ | +-----+ | +-----+
+-------------| DEV |--+--| |--+--| |-------------+
| +-----| C |--+ | | +--| |-----+ |
| | +-----+ +-----+ +-----+ | |
| | | |
| | +-----+ +-----+ +-----+ | |
| +-----+-----| DEV |--+ | | +--| |-----+-----+ |
| | | +---| D |--+--| |--+--| |---+ | | |
| | | | +-----+ | +-----+ | +-----+ | | | |
| | | | | | | | | |
+-----+ +-----+ | +-----+ | +-----+ +-----+
| DEV | | DEV | +--| |--+ | | | |
| A | | B | Tier3 | | Tier3 | | | |
+-----+ +-----+ +-----+ +-----+ +-----+
| | | | | | | |
O O O O <- Servers -> O O O O
</artwork>
</figure>
<t>
The topology on <xref target="five-stage-clos"/> is built from switches with port count of 4 and provides full bisection bandwidth to all connected servers.
We will refer to the collection of directly connected Tier 2 and Tier 3 switches as a “cluster” in this document.
For example, devices A, B, C, and D on <xref target="five-stage-clos"/> form a cluster.
</t>
<t>
In practice, the Tier 3 level of the network (typically top of rack switches, or ToRs) is where oversubscription is introduced to allow for packaging of more servers in data center.
The main reason to limit oversubscription at a single layer of the network is to simplify application development that would otherwise need to account for two bandwidth pools:
within the same access switch (e.g. rack) and outside of the local switch
Since oversubscription itself does not have any effect on routing, we will not be discussing it further in this document
</t>
</section>
</section>
<section title="Routing design">
<t>
This section discusses the motivation for choosing BGP as the routing protocol and BGP configuration for routing in Clos topology.
</t>
<section title="Choosing the routing protocol">
<t>
The set of requirements discussed earlier call for a single routing
protocol (REQ2) to reduce complexity and
interdependencies. While it is common to rely on an IGP in this
situation, the document proposes the use of BGP only. The advantages of
using BGP are discussed below.
</t>
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>
BGP inherently has less complexity within its protocol design – internal data structures and state-machines are simpler when compared to a link-state IGP.
For example, instead of implementing adjacency formation, adjacency maintenance and/or flow-control, BGP simply relies
on TCP as the underlying transport. This fulfills REQ1 and REQ2.
</t>
<t>
BGP information flooding overhead is less when compared to link-state IGPs.
Indeed, since every BGP router normally re-calculates and propagates best-paths only, a network failure is masked as soon as the BGP speaker finds an alternate path.
In contrary, the event propagation scope of a link-state IGP is single flooding domain, regardless of the failure type.
Furthermore, all well-known link-state IGPs feature periodic refresh updates, while BGP does not expire routing state.
</t>
<t>
BGP supports third-party (recursively resolved) next-hops.
This allows for ECMP or forwarding based on customer-defined forwarding paths.
This satisfied REQ4 stated above.
Some IGPs, such as OSPF, support similar functionality using special concepts such as “Forwarding Address”, but do not satisfy other requirement, such as protocol simplicity.
</t>
<t>
Vanilla BGP configuration, without routing policies, is easier to troubleshoot for network reachability issues.
For example, it is straightforward to dump contents of LocRIB and compare it to the router's RIB and FIB.
Furthermore, every BGP neighbor has corresponding AdjRIBIn and AdjRIBOut structures with incoming/outgoing
NRLI information that could be easily correlated on both sides of the BGP peering session.
Thus BGP fully satisfies REQ3.
</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
<section title="BGP configuration for Clos topology">
<t>
Topologies that have more than 5 stages are very uncommon due to the large numbers of interconnects required by such a design.
</t>
<section title="BGP Autonomous System numbering layout">
<t>
The diagram below illustrates suggests BGP Autonomous System Number (BGP ASN) allocation scheme. The following is a list of guidelines that can be used:
</t>
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>
All BGP peering sessions are external BGP (eBGP) established over direct point-to-point links interconnecting the network nodes.
</t>
<t>
16-bit (two octet) BGP ASNs are used, since these are widely supported and have better vendor interoperability (e.g. no need to support BGP capability negotiation).
</t>
<t>
Private BGP ASNs from the range 64512-64534 are used so as to avoid ASN conflicts.
The private ASN stripping feature can be leveraged as a result (see below).
</t>
<t>
A single BGP ASN is allocated to the Clos middle stage (“Tier 1”), e.g. ASN 64534 as shown in <xref target="bgp-five-stage-clos"/>
</t>
<t>
Unique BGP ASN is allocated per group of “Tier 2” switches. All Tier 2 switches in the same group share the BGP ASN.
</t>
<t>
Unique BGP ASN is allocated to every Tier 3 switch (e.g. ToR) in this topology.
</t>
</list>
</t>
<figure title="BGP ASN layout for 5-stage Clos" anchor="bgp-five-stage-clos">
<artwork>
ASN 64534
+---------+
| +-----+ |
| | | |
+-|-| |-|-+
| | +-----+ | |
ASN 64XXX | | | | ASN 64XXX
+---------+ | | | | +---------+
| +-----+ | | | +-----+ | | | +-----+ |
+-----------|-| |-|-+-|-| |-|-+-|-| |-|-----------+
| +---|-| |-|-+ | | | | +-|-| |-|---+ |
| | | +-----+ | | +-----+ | | +-----+ | | |
| | | | | | | | | |
| | | | | | | | | |
| | | +-----+ | | +-----+ | | +-----+ | | |
| +-----+---|-| |-|-+ | | | | +-|-| |-|---+-----+ |
| | | +-|-| |-|-+-|-| |-|-+-|-| |-|-+ | | |
| | | | | +-----+ | | | +-----+ | | | +-----+ | | | | |
| | | | +---------+ | | | | +---------+ | | | |
| | | | | | | | | | | |
+-----+ +-----+ | | +-----+ | | +-----+ +-----+
| ASN | | | +-|-| |-|-+ | | | |
|65YYY| | ... | | | | | | ... | | ... |
+-----+ +-----+ | +-----+ | +-----+ +-----+
| | | | +---------+ | | | |
O O O O <- Servers -> O O O O
</artwork>
</figure>
</section>
<section title="Non-unique private BGP ASN’s">
<t>
The use of private BGP ASNs limits to the usable range of 1022 unique numbers.
Since it is very likely that the number of network switches could exceed this number, a workaround is required.
One approach would be to re-use the private ASN’s assigned to the Tier 3 switches across different clusters.
For example, private BGP ASN’s 65001, 65002 ... 65032 could be used within every individual cluster to be assigned to Tier 3 switches.
</t>
<t>
To avoid route suppression due to AS PATH loop prevention, upstream eBGP sessions on Tier 3 switches must be configured with the “AllowAS In” feature that allows accepting a
device’s own ASN in received route advertisements. Introducing this feature does not create the opportunity for routing loops under misconfiguration since the AS PATH is
always incremented when routes are propagated from tier to tier.
</t>
<t>
Another solution to this problem would be to using four-octet (32-bit) BGP ASNs.
However, there are no reserved private ASN range in the four-octet numbering scheme although efforts are underway to support this, see <xref target="I-D.mitchell-idr-as-private-reservation"/>.
This will also require vendors to implement specific policy features, such as four-octet private AS removal from AS-PATH attribute.
</t>
</section>
<section title="Prefix advertisement">
<t>
A Clos topology has a large number of point-to-point links and associated prefixes.
Advertising all of these routes into BGP may create FIB overload conditions. There are two possible solutions that can help prevent FIB overload:
</t>
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>
Do not advertise any of the point-to-point links into BGP.
Since eBGP peering changes the next-hop address anyways at every node, distant networks will automatically be reachable via the advertising eBGP peer
</t>
<t>
Advertising point-to-point links, but summarizing them on every advertising device.
This requires proper address allocation, for example allocating a consecutive block of IP addresses per Tier 1 and Tier 2 device
to be used for point-to-point interface addressing.
</t>
</list>
</t>
<t>
Server facing subnets on Tier 3 switches are announced into BGP without using summarization on Tier 2 and Tier 1 switches.
Summarizing subnets in the Clos topology will result in route black-holing under a single link failure (e.g. between Tier 2 and Tier 3 switch) and hence must be avoided.
The use of peer links within the same tier to resolve the black-holing problem is undesirable due to O(N^2) complexity of the peering mesh and waste of ports on the switches.
</t>
</section>
<section title="External connectivity">
<t>
A dedicate cluster (or clusters) in the Clos topology could be used
solely for the purpose of connecting to the Wide Area Network (WAN)
edge devices, or WAN Routers. Tier 3 switches in
such a cluster would be replaced with WAN Routers, but eBGP peering
would be used again, though WAN routers are likely to belong to a
public ASN.
</t>
<t>
The Tier 2 devices in such a dedicated cluster will be referred to as “Border Routers” in this document. These devices have to perform a few special functions:
</t>
<t>
<list style="symbols">
<t>
Hide network topology information when advertising paths to WAN routers, i.e. remove private BGP ASNs from the AS-PATH attribute.
This is typically done to avoid BGP ASN number collisions across the data centers.
A BGP policy feature called "Remove Private AS" is
commonly used to accomplish this. This feature strips a contiguous
sequence of private ASNs found in AS PATH attribute prior to
advertising the path to a neighbor. This assumes that all BGP
ASN's used for intra data center numbering are from the private ASN range.
</t>
<t>
Originate a default route to the data center devices.
This is the only place where default route could be originated, as route summarization is highly undesirable for the “scale-out” topology.
Alternatively, Border Routers may simply relay the default route learned from WAN routers.
</t>
</list>
</t>
</section>
</section>
<section title="ECMP Considerations">
<t>
This section covers the Equal Cost Multipath (ECMP) functionality for Clos topology and discusses a few special requirements.
</t>
<section title="Basic ECMP">
<t>
ECMP is the fundamental load-sharing mechanism used by a Clos topology.
Effectively, every lower-tier switch will use all of its directly attached upper-tier devices to load-share traffic destined to the same prefix.
Number of ECMP paths between two input/output switches in Clos topology equals to the number of the switches in the middle stage (Tier 1).
For example, <xref target="ecmp-fan-out"/> illustrates the topology where Tier 3 device A has four paths to reach servers X and Y, via Tier 2
devices B and C and then Tier 1 devices 1, 2, 3, and 4 respectively.
</t>
<figure title="ECMP fan-out tree from A to X and Y" anchor="ecmp-fan-out">
<artwork>
Tier 1
+-----+
| DEV |
+->| 1 |--+
| +-----+ |
Tier 2 | | Tier 2
+-----+ | +-----+ | +-----+
+------------>| DEV |--+->| DEV |--+--| |-------------+
| +-----| B |--+ | 2 | +--| |-----+ |
| | +-----+ +-----+ +-----+ | |
| | | |
| | +-----+ +-----+ +-----+ | |
| +-----+---->| DEV |--+ | DEV | +--| |-----+-----+ |
| | | +---| C |--+->| 3 |--+--| |---+ | | |
| | | | +-----+ | +-----+ | +-----+ | | | |
| | | | | | | | | |
+-----+ +-----+ | +-----+ | +-----+ +-----+
| DEV | | | Tier 3 +->| DEV |--+ Tier 3 | | | |
| A | | | | 4 | | | | |
+-----+ +-----+ +-----+ +-----+ +-----+
| | | | | | | |
O O O O <- Servers -> X Y O O
</artwork>
</figure>
<t>
The ECMP requirement implies that the BGP implementation must support multi-path fan-out for up to the maximum number of devices directly
attached at any point in the topology. Normally, this number does not exceed half of the ports found on a switch in the topology.
For example, an ECMP max-path of 32 would be required when building a Clos network using 64-port devices.
</t>
<t>
Most implementations declare paths to be equal from ECMP perspective if they match up to and including step (e) in Section 9.1.2.2 of <xref target="RFC4271"/>.
In the proposed network design there is no underlying IGP, so all IGP costs are automatically assumed to be zero (or otherwise the same value across all paths).
Loop prevention is assumed to be handled by the BGP best-path selection process.
</t>
</section>
<section title="BGP ECMP over multiple ASN">
<t>
For application load-balancing purposes we may want the same prefix to be advertised from multiple Tier-3 switches. From the
perspective of other devices, such a prefix would have BGP paths with different AS PATH attribute values, though having the same AS PATH attribute lengths.
Therefore, the BGP implementations must support load-sharing over above-mentioned paths.
This feature is sometimes known as “AS PATH multipath relax” and
effectively allows for ECMP to be done across different neighboring ASNs.
</t>
</section>
</section>
<section title="BGP convergence properties">
<t>
This section reviews routing convergence properties of BGP in the proposed design.
A case is made that sub-second convergence is achievable provided that implementation supports fast BGP peering session shutdown upon failure of an associated link.
</t>
<section title="Convergence timing">
<t>
BGP typically relies on an IGP to route around link/node failures inside an AS, and implements either a polling based or an event-driven mechanism
to obtain updates on IGP state changes. The proposed routing design omits the use of an IGP, so the only mechanisms that could be used for fault
detection are BGP keep-alives and link-failure triggers.
</t>
<t>
Relying solely on BGP keep-alive packets may result in high
convergence delays, in the order of multiple seconds (normally, the
minimum recommended BGP hold time value is 3 seconds). However, many
BGP implementations can shut down local eBGP peering sessions in
response to the "link down" event for the outgoing interface used for
BGP peering. This feature is sometimes called as "fast fail-over".
Since the majority of the links in modern data centers are point to point
fiber connections, a physical interface failure if often detected in milliseconds and subsequently triggers a BGP re-convergence.
</t>
<t>
Furthermore, popular link technologies, such as 10Gbps Ethernet, may support a simple form of OAM for failure signaling
such as <xref target="FAULTSIG10GE"/>, which makes failure detection more robust.
Alternatively, as opposed to relying on physical layer for fault signaling,
some platforms may support Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (<xref target="RFC5880"/>) to allow for sub-second failure detection and fault signaling to the BGP process.
This,
however, presents additional requirements to vendor software and possibly hardware, and may contradict REQ1.
</t>
</section>
<section title="Failure impact scope">
<t>
BGP is inherently a distance-vector protocol, and as such some of failures could be masked if the local node can immediately find a backup path.
The worst case is that all devices in data center topology would have to either withdraw a prefix completely, or recalculate the ECMP paths in the FIB.
Reducing the fault domain using summarization is not possible with the proposed design, since using this technique may create route black-holing issues as
mentioned previously.
Thus, the control-plane failure impact scope is the network as a whole. It is worth pointing that such property is not
a result of choosing BGP, but rather a result of using the "scale-out" Clos topology.
</t>
</section>
<section title="Third-party route injection">
<t>
BGP allows for a third-party BGP speaker (not necessarily directly attached to the network devices) to inject routes anywhere in the
network topology. This could be achieved by peering an external speaker using an eBGP multi-hop session with some or even all devices in the topology.
Furthermore, BGP diverse path distribution <xref target="I-D.ietf-grow-diverse-bgp-path-dist"/> could be used to inject multiple next-hop for the same prefix
to facilitate load-balancing.
Using such a technique would make it possible to implement unequal-cost load-balancing across multiple clusters in the data-center, by associating the same
prefix with next-hops mapped to different clusters.
</t>
<t>
For example, a third-party BGP speaker may peer with Tier 3 and Tier 1 switches, injecting the same prefix, but using a special set of BGP next-hops
for Tier 1 devices.
Those next-hops are assumed to resolve recursively via BGP, and could be, for example, IP addresses on Tier 3 switches.
The resulting forwarding table programming could provide desired traffic proportion distribution among different clusters.
</t>
</section>
</section>
</section>
<section title="Security Considerations">
<t>
The design does not introduce any additional security concerns.
For control plane security, BGP peering sessions could be authenticated using TCP MD5 signature extension header <xref target="RFC2385"/>.
Furthermore, BGP TTL security <xref target="I-D.gill-btsh"/> could be used to reduce the risk of session spoofing and TCP SYN flooding attacks against the control plane.
</t>
</section>
<section title="IANA Considerations">
<t>
There are no considerations associated with IANA for this document.
</t>
</section>
<section title="Acknowledgements">
<t>
This publication summarizes work of many people who participated in developing, testing and deploying the proposed design. Their names, in alphabetical order, are
George Chen, Parantap Lahiri, Dave Maltz, Edet Nkposong, Robert Toomey, and Lihua Yuan. Authors would also like to thank Jon Mitchell, Linda Dunbar and Susan Hares
for reviewing and providing
valuable feedback on the document.
</t>
</section>
</middle>
<back>
<references title="Informative References">
<?rfc include="reference.RFC.4786.xml"?>
<?rfc include="reference.RFC.4271.xml"?>
<?rfc include="reference.RFC.2385.xml"?>
<?rfc include="reference.RFC.5880.xml"?>
<?rfc include="reference.I-D.ietf-grow-diverse-bgp-path-dist"?>
<?rfc include="reference.I-D.mitchell-idr-as-private-reservation"?>
<?rfc include="reference.I-D.gill-btsh"?>
<reference anchor="GREENBERG2009" target="">
<front>
<title>The Cost of a Cloud: Research Problems in Data Center Networks</title>
<author initials="A" surname="Greenberg" fullname="Albert Greenberg">
<organization />
</author>
<author initials="J" surname="Hamilton" fullname="James Hamilton">
<organization />
</author>
<author initials="D" surname="Maltz" fullname="Dave Maltz">
<organization />
</author>
<date month="January" year="2009" />
</front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="FAULTSIG10GE" target="">
<front>
<title>Remote Fault & Break Link Proposal for 10-Gigabit Ethernet</title>
<author initials="H" surname="Frazier" fullname="Howard Frazier">
<organization />
</author>
<author initials="S" surname="Muller" fullname="Shimon Muller">
<organization />
</author>
<date month="September" year="2000" />
</front>
</reference>
<reference anchor="INTERCON" target="">
<front>
<title>Principles and Practices of Interconnection Networks</title>
<author initials="W" surname="Dally" fullname="William James Dally">
<organization />
</author>
<author initials="B" surname="Towles" fullname="Brian Patrick Towles">
<organization />
</author>
<date month="January" year="2004" />
</front>
<seriesInfo name="ISBN" value="978-0122007514"/>
</reference>
<reference anchor="ALFARES2008" target="">
<front>
<title>A Scalable, Commodity Data Center Network Architecture</title>
<author initials="M" surname="Al-Fares" fullname="Mohammad Al-Fares">
<organization />
</author>
<author initials="A" surname="Loukissas" fullname="Alexander Loukissas">
<organization />
</author>
<author initials="A" surname="Vahdat" fullname="Amin Vahdat">
<organization />
</author>
<date month="August" year="2008" />
</front>
</reference>
</references>
</back>
</rfc>
| PAFTECH AB 2003-2026 | 2026-04-23 22:58:49 |