One document matched: draft-stenberg-v6ops-pd-route-maintenance-00.txt
IPv6 Operations Working Group M. Stenberg
Internet-Draft O. Troan
Expires: June 12, 2008 Cisco Systems, Inc.
December 10, 2007
IPv6 Prefix Delegation routing state maintenance approaches
draft-stenberg-v6ops-pd-route-maintenance-00
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Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).
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Abstract
The maintenance of Prefix Delegation (PD) routing state is an issue
that people have discussed in the IETF DHC WG, and there have been
drafts on the topic. However, as the pros and cons of the different
routing state maintenance solutions have not been examined
thoroughly, this text attempts to shed some light on both the actual
problem and the various alternative solutions.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. Different approaches for maintaining routing state . . . . . . 5
2.1. Backend provisioning system responsible for routing
state . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2.2. Delegating router responsible for routing state . . . . . 6
2.2.1. Approach 1: On-demand lease query . . . . . . . . . . 7
2.2.2. Approach 2: Anticipatory lease query . . . . . . . . . 7
2.2.3. Approach 3: Persistent storage . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
2.3. Requesting router responsible for routing state . . . . . 9
2.3.1. Approach 1: Layer-2 detection of link state . . . . . 9
2.3.2. Approach 2: Keepalive . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
2.3.3. Approach 3: Short lifetimes . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
2.3.4. Approach 4: Routing protocol to the requesting
router . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
4. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
5. Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
6. Informative references . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Appendix A. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Appendix B. Revision history . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements . . . . . . . . . . 19
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1. Introduction
A prefix delegation deployment consists of Requesting Routers (RR),
Delegating Routers (DR) and possibly a backend provisioning system
(see Figure 1). The delegated prefix has to be routed in the
network. This document explores various alternatives for how the
route for the delegated prefix can be injected in the network, and
how the routing state can be maintained.
/~~~~~~~~~\
| Network |
\~~~~~~~~~/
|
|-----------------------------------------
| \
| +-----------------------------+-------------------+
| | Backend provisioning system | DR 4 (integrated) |
| +-----------------------------+-------------------+
| | | |
| +------+ +------+ +------+
|-| DR 1 | | DR 3 | | RR 3 |
\ +------+ +------+ +------+
--- | --------------------/ |
+------+ +------+
| DR 2 | | RR 2 |
+------+ +------+
|
+------+
| RR 1 |
+------+
Figure 1: Possible prefix delegation deployment cases.
Prefix delegation is a stateful protocol. The RR needs to maintain
state so that it can sub-delegate prefixes to downstream links. The
RR maintains soft-state which can be recovered by redoing the prefix
request (for example, using Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for
IPv6 (DHCPv6) [RFC3315] with the Prefix Delegation options defined in
[RFC3633]).
If the DR should do route injection on behalf of the RR, it needs to
maintain state. The backend provisioning system must maintain a list
of prefixes delegated, as a prefix delegation is a long-lived entity
(lifetime of a customer relationship, as in months or years). The
backend system and DR might run on the same router. This document
focuses on the case where the backend system and DR are separate and
the DR has little or no persistent storage. Therefore the DR 4 case
(in Figure 1) is not covered here, as it is trivial - the backend has
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nonvolatile storage for the prefixes, and it can re-inject the routes
when the integrated DR 4 restarts.
The DR's routing state that needs to be maintained can be divided
into two distinct categories: local routing state (that is, a local
RIB entry containing the next-hop and the interface the assigned
prefix is connected to), and global (AS-wide) routing state which
requires advertising the route via a routing protocol.
Advertising a route per delegation from the DR can be avoided if
there is an aggregate prefix covering the delegation. This requires
stringent address allocation procedures and prohibits an RR from
moving to a different DR.
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2. Different approaches for maintaining routing state
As any router (or the backend system for that matter) can go offline
and come back up later, it is necessary for the system to recover
from these intermittent failures.
The problem is how to delegate responsibility for route maintenance
to one (or more) of the three components of the system, and letting
it take care of maintaining the required routing state in place for
the RR's prefix.
2.1. Backend provisioning system responsible for routing state
Considering the backend provisioning system is the only component in
the system that actually requires significant amount of nonvolatile
storage, from data system point of view it would be ideal to have the
backend provisioning system responsible for maintaining the routing
state as well.
It would mean that the backend provisioning system should, when DR
restarts, (securely) re-inject the local or global routing state into
the DR(s). Similarly, whenever first hop DR-RR link goes down, the
backend provisioning system should remove the routing state for the
RR.
In practise, this is infeasible as a general-purpose, standard-
oriented solution - there is a significant amount of both information
access and routing state configuration change methods that cannot be
done with the currently available standards.
o There is no standard way for the backend to detect when the DR is
restarted, or when the first hop DR-RR link goes down without some
sort of keepalive mechanism, and if the keepalive mechanism fails,
there are multiple potential reasons for that which require
different reactions from the backend system. This leads to
implementation complexity.
o None of the current routing protocols are suitable for altering
remote router's local routing information, and therefore some
protocol development would be in order for this approach to be
usable. As alternative, some out of band configuration method
might be used for this, such as say, XML over some secure
transport, but those are also currently not defined. There are
also security implications with this solution when passing
administrative boundaries.
o The backend may lack the information to identify the DR to the
routing system. With multiple DRs, if the delegation protocol
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does not contain everything needed to re-inject the route later on
to the specific DR, the re-injection cannot be performed (without
some statistic configuration, at least). For example, DHCPv6 does
not uniquely identify the relays. And if interim DRs do not have
backend provisioning system-addressible addresses, there is a
problem. All DRs may not have global unicast addresses, and this
is problematic especially in configurations spanning multiple
administrative domains.
In addition to lacking the ways of retrieving/altering the DR state,
there are also some issues with the backend system performing active
role for the maintenance of the routing state:
o Redundancy of DR, or the links between DR and backend system,
makes it difficult for the backend system to judge the state of
the DR accurately without significant extra configuration data
about the deployed configuration.
o Lack of scalability; the benefit of having 'backend' provisioning
system disappears as it will need to take care of maintaining
routes of every one of its DRs.
Having noted these disclaimers about "standard"-oriented ways of
shifting the routing state maintenance to the backend system, it must
be noted that given some proprietary solutions for the state
retrieval from the DR, as well as method of pushing routing state,
the backend system may be viable candidate for maintaining the
routing state. This type of approach would consist of (for example)
Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD - [I-D.ietf-bfd-base]) or
some layer-2 way for the backend provisioning system to make sure
that the RR connectivity is available; if it is down for significant
period of time, the route for the allocated prefix could be removed
until either connectivity resumes (that is, either the RR reconnects
or some intermediate network failure is repaired). If the first-hop
DR requires some sort of updating whenever connectivity is restored,
some way of accessing DR and querying and updating it's state would
be needed.
Having the backend provisioning system responsible for the routing
state of the whole system seems possible only in some walled-garden
proprietary applications; for general-purpose approach, we look
elsewhere, that is, delegating router/requesting router-based
options.
2.2. Delegating router responsible for routing state
As the DR is part of the local routing infrastructure, placing the
responsibility for routing state in the DR seems sensible. With that
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design decision, the next problem is _when_ the routing information
is updated after the DR restarts:
2.2.1. Approach 1: On-demand lease query
In the on-demand lease query case as defined in
[I-D.ietf-dhc-dhcvp6-leasequery], the routing state maintenance
problem is assumed to be local, and therefore the DR will receive
packets both from the network at large as well as the RR even after a
loss of local state caused by a restart.
When traffic arrives to DR either from the RR, or from the network to
the DR for a prefix without local routing information, the DR will
perform lease query, acquire the allocated prefix, and update the
routing information appropriately.
This approach, while simple to specify, has some major issues:
o It depends on the aggregated prefix to cause the inbound traffic
to wind up in the DR. This assumption may not be valid, depending
on the address assignment policies of the organization.
Geographical or network topological hierarchical address
assignment at large seems to be a failure, and it is unclear if
all deployments can really implement this.
o It requires the incoming traffic both from the RR and the network,
for which no route exists, to trigger the lease query. This has
two negative side effects: it requires support from the fast path
hardware in the DR, and potentially causes large amount of
spurious requests to the backend provisioning system (up to the
desired rate that is considered harmful to the system).
o It requires simulated ordering of the unordered transaction
stream, to ensure that the routing state is maintained correctly.
The DR cannot be argued to be particularly stateless anymore.
2.2.2. Approach 2: Anticipatory lease query
Anticipatory, or bulk lease query, solves the routing state problem
by requesting ALL prefix information from the backend provisioning
system at the DR restart time. There are two different ways: The
first approach is asynchronous, that is, the old state is fetched
while handling the delegation requests, requiring synchronization
algorithm between the bulk data retrieved from the backend system,
and the requests served during that. For synchronization, some sort
of ordering of the transaction stream is needed. The second
alternative is synchronous: the bulk query is performed first, and
only then the RRs' requests are handled.
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Bulk query has several advantages over the on-demand case:
o No need for triggering based on either inbound or outbound traffic
for the prefix.
o If DR handles the query synchronously, we can avoid the ordering
of the transaction stream and the associated complexity rising
from it.
o Given reasonable TCP transport scheme, the transfer of the state
is more efficient than the on-demand case in terms of total number
of packets.
o Does not require changes to fast path hardware, as no new triggers
are needed from the traffic. Instead, simple additional code in
the system initialization is enough.
But, unfortunately it has also some disadvantages:
o It causes more uneven load on the backend provisioning system than
the on-demand case. If the prefix is not being actively used at
the time, it will not cause traffic in the on-demand case, but it
will in the bulk case.
o Synchronization is non-trivial if the DR serves RR requests during
the bulk retrieval of the data.
o Doesn't work very well with virtual interfaces - it is hard to
retrieve state at boot time if the interfaces themselves get up
only at some point, and with their transient nature mapping a DUID
to individual customers is difficult.
2.2.3. Approach 3: Persistent storage
It is possible for the DR to store the route information to be
injected either locally, or on some adjacent storage node. The clear
advantage of this is the lack of traffic on the wire.
Unfortunately, it has also some problems - the data being possibly
outdated due to lack of synchronization, and the management overhead
when the customers for example move around would be significant.
However, in most deployment scenarios persistent storage at or near
all routers is not desirable or possible in the first place, so this
is listed simply for the sake of completeness.
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2.3. Requesting router responsible for routing state
The most interested party in the routing state of the given prefix is
the RR itself; therefore, giving the responsibility for maintaining
its routing state to it seemed to be idea worth considering.
Due to the operators wariness of the systems not under their direct
control, even with the RR responsible for maintenance of the state,
the real route injection should be handled by the DR.
The nice thing about some of the RR-oriented solutions is that they
can be deployed without any changes to the rest of the
infrastructure.
2.3.1. Approach 1: Layer-2 detection of link state
If the RR implementation gets notifications about the state of the
link layer, it can actually detect the state of the network link
going down and coming back up; performing reconfiguration to ensure
that the routing state is still up seems like a trivial solution in
this case.
This solution can be the best one when operating over connection-
oriented media (PPPoE, L2TP) but it doesn't work on say, Ethernet
without direct connection between the RR and DR.
2.3.2. Approach 2: Keepalive
If the RR doesn't have L2 way of detecting DR being restarted, it can
maintain a keepalive mechanism using, for example, BFD to send self-
addressed echo packets to the DR and waiting for their replies. The
implementations SHOULD do this only if there is no traffic from the
network within a desired period of time - see IPv6 Neighbor
Unreachability Detection (NUD)'s definition of forward progress
detection as a way to send keepalives only when truly necessary in
[RFC2461].
Assuming sub-second round-trips (reasonable assumption in most modern
network environments), the longest factor for the determining the
keepalive timeout is the recovery speed of the DR (by orders of
magnitude), as it can take from some seconds (hot standby) to minutes
(non-HA restart, or cold standby with huge configurations). The
initial keepalive timer should be some fraction of the highest delay
in the system, that is, the DR recovery time. The subsequent retries
if no reply is received within reasonable timeframe should be
calculated based on the link delay, and jitter, to ensure that the
reply is unlikely to be coming back by the time the keepalive message
is re-sent.
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As far as overhead is concerned, assuming the cold standby/restart
taking minute(s), with a keepalive per 60 seconds for example, the
QoS would remain roughly same as with faster intervals (as the DR
going down would cause interruption in the routing in the order of
minute(s) in any case). This value would cause overhead of 0.017pps
per RR, and it is unlikely to be the straw that breaks camel's back
for the DR, as the BFD handling on should on the receiver side should
be simply a matter of re-forwarding the traffic within fast path, and
therefore it should not require any routing plane resources to
handle. With any traffic, even NUD packets should outnumber the
keepalive traffic.
As far as resource utilization is concerned, this solution involves
only routing plane of the RR, the data link between RR and DR, and
fast path of DR which bounces the packets back. Therefore it can be
argued to be fairly lightweight general-purpose solution.
2.3.3. Approach 3: Short lifetimes
The current best practice for maintaining the routing state is to set
short configuration lifetimes (DHCP T1/T2 values). It causes extra
traffic and load on the whole DHCP infrastructure. That is because
during every reconfiguration, even with the DR constantly up and
running, the backend system is queried. The transaction involves all
three components. Due to that, every RR will cause constant load on
the backend system itself over the time, making the solution simply
not scale well.
2.3.4. Approach 4: Routing protocol to the requesting router
The final RR-based approach consists of the RR actually running a
routing protocol; this way, the RR router can simply advertise the
prefix as it receives it, and everything just works. Or not, as it
may be.
The downside is the security, or complete lack of it. The DR
accepting arbitrary RR-advertised prefixes (assuming no state at the
DR) should be acceptable only if DR and RR are within the same
administrative domain. For that case, this is probably the cleanest
solution of all.
If administrative boundaries are crossed, the DR will not take prefix
advertisement at face value. The DR will have extra overhead of
checking the backend provisioning system for AAA purposes before
actually doing anything with the prefix. This can imply look-up for
validity using the prefix and the interface the advertisement came
from, including the DUID or some other identifier within the route
advertisement message, or using some real AAA mechanism if the
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routing protocol supports one. If minimal changes to the routing
protocol implementation are desired, it is also possible to ignore
the advertisement itself, and just trigger on-demand lease query,
thereby using the routing protocol just as an alternative keepalive
mechanism the with most of the logic shoved in DR instead of RR.
/~~~~~~~~~~\
| Network |
\~~~~~~~~~~/
| |
---------/ \---------
/ \
+---------------------+ +---------------------+
| Delegating router 1 | | Delegating router 2 |
+---------------------+ +---------------------+
\ /
-----------+-----------
|
+---------------------+
| Requesting router |
+---------------------+
Figure 2: Multihomed deployment.
There is also a case where the RR HAS to run its own routing
protocol; in multihomed situation like Figure 2, with the same
routable prefix advertised via two different DRs, there is no other
practical way to get the system working. Of course, static route
configuration is always an alternative but it is seldom desirable.
The routing-protocol-based solutions all require a significant level
of trust between RR and DR; regrettably the current routing protocols
are not designed with AAA (or security for that matter) in mind, and
therefore when crossing administrative boundaries, the alternatives
are either using them as-is as a hint that something needs to be
done, or significantly extending the protocols in the AAA direction.
Adding extra complexity to the DR's routing protocol implementation
or configuration is not desirable in general.
Finally, the current prefix delegation solution (DHCPv6 PD) does not
provide the information about which routing protocol to use, and
there is no routing protocol auto-negotiation protocol. Therefore
the auto-configuration of the RR with arbitrary routing protocol
cannot be done currently.
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3. Security Considerations
The backend-oriented solution detailed in Section 2.1 implies a
significant level of trust between the DR and the backend
provisioning system. The system's configuration is simpler if the
backend provisioning system can inject arbitrary routes to the DR,
but allowing injection of routes for only specific sub-prefixes of a
specific prefix is considerably more secure solution. Unfortunately
it requires advance configuration of the prefix(es) involved.
The delegating router-based solutions detailed in Section 2.2 do not
have any security issues, assuming the delegation protocol itself is
secured, or can be assumed to be used only within a trusted network.
The requesting router-based solutions in Section 2.3, even
incorrectly implemented, at most just cause extra load to the DR. As
noted in Section 2.3.4, even when running routing protocol from the
RR, ideally the DR should consider the advertisements only a hint at
best if not part of the same adminstrative domain. This may not be
ideal if the routing protocol information should be propagated as-is
onward, as in the the multihoming cases. Unfortunately, those cases
also most likely cross administrative boundaries (the requesting
router being part of one domain, and connected to delegating routers
in most likely more than one), the providers will not most likely
trust the routing protocol to be used as-is at the delegating
routers, and their complexity will increase due to the required AAA/
policy checks. This is a potential security risk in a critical part
of the network infrastructure.
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4. IANA Considerations
As this document is informational in nature and only summarizes
current best practices, it does not require action from IANA.
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5. Summary
The backend provisioning system should not be assigned the
responsibility for the maintenance of the route. As seen in
Section 2.1, that approach has significant obstacles without any
clear benefits.
If the link layer state can be used to detect the (potential) restart
of delegating router, the requesting router-based simple
reconfiguration described in Section 2.3.1 seems to be the best
choice.
When link layer state is not available, there is no clear 'best'
solution. The tradeoff seems to be between increasing the complexity
of the delegation protocol and the delegating router/backend system
(as described in the lease query cases in Section 2.2.1 and
Section 2.2.2), decreasing scalability of the system significantly by
using low lifetimes for configuration (as described in
Section 2.3.3), or small overhead of the keepalive (as described in
Section 2.3.2). The keepalive is most likely the preferred solution
among these, as it causes load mostly only to the requesting router
itself.
Only in multihoming cases, given some extensions to the current
prefix delegation protocol, should routing protocol on the requesting
router be considered, as described in Section 2.3.4. Multihoming
solution itself is challenging to do securely, as noted in Section 3,
due to lack of AAA support in routing protocols.
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6. Informative references
[RFC3315] Droms, R., Bound, J., Volz, B., Lemon, T., Perkins, C.,
and M. Carney, "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for
IPv6 (DHCPv6)", RFC 3315, July 2003.
[RFC3633] Troan, O. and R. Droms, "IPv6 Prefix Options for Dynamic
Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) version 6", RFC 3633,
December 2003.
[I-D.ietf-dhc-dhcvp6-leasequery]
Brzozowski, J., "DHCPv6 Leasequery",
draft-ietf-dhc-dhcvp6-leasequery-01 (work in progress),
December 2006.
[I-D.ietf-bfd-base]
Katz, D. and D. Ward, "Bidirectional Forwarding
Detection", draft-ietf-bfd-base-06 (work in progress),
March 2007.
[RFC2461] Narten, T., Nordmark, E., and W. Simpson, "Neighbor
Discovery for IP Version 6 (IPv6)", RFC 2461,
December 1998.
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Appendix A. Acknowledgements
Thanks to Bernie Volz for feedback during writing of the document.
Also thanks to the assorted people on the DHC mailing list, who
submitted comments to the second iteration of the draft.
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Appendix B. Revision history
October 2006: draft-stenberg-pd-route-maintenance-00 - initial
version (IETF67)
December 2007: draft-stenberg-v6ops-pd-route-maintenance-00 -
resubmitted at request of some people, with small editorial changes
and clear indication of preference for the L2 or keepalive solutions.
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Authors' Addresses
Markus Stenberg
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Shinjuku Mitsui Building, 2-1-1, Nishi-Shinjuku
Shinjuku-Ku, Tokyo-to 1630409
JP
Email: mstenber@cisco.com
Ole Troan
Cisco Systems, Inc.
GPK02/2/250 Longwater Avenue
Reading, England RG2 6GB
UK
Email: ot@cisco.com
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