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Obsoleted by:5311 INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                        A. HermelinRequest for Comments: 3786                                 Montilio Inc.Category: Informational                                       S. Previdi                                                                M. Shand                                                           Cisco Systems                                                                May 2004Extending the Number ofIntermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS)Link State PDU (LSP) Fragments Beyond the 256 LimitStatus of this Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   This document describes a mechanism that allows a system to originate   more than 256 Link State PDU (LSP) fragments, a limit set by the   original Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) Routing   protocol, as described in ISO/IEC 10589.  This mechanism can be used   in IP-only, OSI-only, and dual routers.Table of Contents1.  Introduction .................................................21.1.  Keywords ...............................................21.2.  Definitions of Commonly Used Terms .....................21.3.  Operation Modes ........................................31.4.  Overview ...............................................42.  IS Alias ID TLV (IS-A) .......................................53.  Generating LSPs ..............................................63.1.  Both Operation Modes ...................................63.2.  Operation Mode 1 Additives .............................84.  Purging Extended LSP Fragments ...............................105.  Modifications to LSP handling in SPF .........................106.  Forming Adjacencies ..........................................11   7.  Interoperating between extension-capable and non-capable ISs . 118.  Security Considerations ......................................129.  Acknowledgements .............................................12Hermelin, et al.             Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 3786                  IS-IS LSP Fragments                   May 200410. References ...................................................1211. Authors' Addresses ...........................................1312. Full Copyright Statement .....................................141.  Introduction   In the Intermediate System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) protocol, a   system floods its link-state information in Link State PDU (LSP) Data   Units, or LSPs for short.  These logical LSPs can become quite large,   therefore the protocol specifies a means of fragmenting this   information into multiple LSP fragments.  The number of fragments a   system can generate is limited by ISO/IEC 10589 [ISIS-ISO] to 256   fragments, where each fragment's size is also limited.  Hence, there   is a limit on the amount of link-state information a system can   generate.   A number of factors can contribute to exceeding this limit:   -  Introduction of new TLVs and sub-TLVs to be included in LSPs.   -  The use of LSPs to propagate various types of information (such as      traffic-engineering information).   -  The increasing number of destinations and AS topologies.   -  Finer granularity routing, and the ability to inject external      routes into areas [DOMAIN-WIDE].   -  Other emerging technologies, such as optical, IPv6, etc.   This document describes mechanisms to relax the limit on the number   of LSP fragments.1.1.  Keywords   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 inBCP 14,RFC 2119   [BCP14].1.2.  Definitions of Commonly Used Terms   This section provides definitions for terms that are used throughout   the text.      Originating System         A router physically running the IS-IS protocol.  As this         document describes methods allowing a single IS-IS process to         advertise its LSPs as multiple "virtual" routers, the         Originating System represents the single "physical" IS-IS         process.Hermelin, et al.             Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 3786                  IS-IS LSP Fragments                   May 2004      Normal system-id         The system-id of an Originating System.      Additional system-id         An Additional system-id that is assigned by the network         administrator.  Each Additional system-id allows generation of         256 additional, or extended, LSP fragments.  The Additional         system-id, like the Normal system-id, must be unique throughout         the routing domain.      Virtual System         The system, identified by an Additional system-id, advertised         as originating the extended LSP fragments.  These fragments         specify the Additional system-id in their LSP IDs.      Original LSP         An LSP using the Normal system-id in its LSP ID.      Extended LSP         An LSP using an Additional system-id in its LSP ID.      LSP set         Logical LSP.  This term is used only to resolve the ambiguity         between a logical LSP and an LSP fragment, both of which are         sometimes termed "LSP".      Extended LSP set         A group of LSP fragments using an Additional system-id, and         originated by the Originating System.      Extension-capable IS         An IS implementing the mechanisms described in this document.1.3.  Operation Modes   Two administrative operation modes are provided:   -  Operation Mode 1 provides behavior that allows implementations      that don't support this extension, to correctly process the      extended fragment information, without any modifications.  This      mode has some restrictions on what may be advertised in the      extended LSP fragments.  Namely, only leaf information may be      advertised in the extended LSPs.Hermelin, et al.             Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 3786                  IS-IS LSP Fragments                   May 2004   -  Operation Mode 2 extends the previous mode and relaxes its      advertisement restrictions.  Any link-state information may be      advertised in the extended LSPs.  However, it mandates a change to      the way LSPs are considered during the SPF algorithm, in a way      that is not compatible with previous implementations.   These modes are configured on a per-level and area basis.  That is,   all LSPs considered in the same SPF instance MUST use the same Mode.   There is no restriction that an L1/L2 IS operates in the same mode,   for both its L1 and L2 instances.  It can use Mode 1 for its L1 LSPs,   and Mode 2 for its L2 LSPs, or vice versa.   Mode 1 has the only advantage of being backwards compatible with   older implementations.  It does have restrictions which are   considered drawbacks.  Therefore, routers should operate in Mode 1   only if backwards compatibility is desired.  Otherwise, it is   recommended to run in Mode 2.   Routers MAY implement Operational Mode 2 without supporting running   in Operational Mode 1.  They will still interoperate correctly with   routers that support both modes.1.4.  Overview   Using Additional system-ids assigned by the administrator, the   Originating System can advertise the excess link-state information in   extended LSPs under these Additional system-ids.  It would do so as   if other routers, or "Virtual Systems", were advertising this   information.  These extended LSPs will also have the specified limit   on their LSP fragments; however, the Originating System may generate   extended LSPs under numerous Virtual Systems.   For Operation Mode 1, 0-cost adjacencies are advertised from the   Originating System to its Virtual System(s).  No adjacencies (other   than back to the Originating System) are advertised in the extended   LSPs.  As a consequence, the Virtual Systems are 'stub', meaning they   can only be reached through their Originating System.  Therefore,   older implementations do not need modifications in order to correctly   process these extended LSPs.   For both modes, each LSP (set) created by a node will contain in its   fragment-0 a new TLV (IS Alias ID TLV) that contains the Normal   system-id and PN Number of the Original LSP created by the router.   Extension-capable ISs can then use this information and store the   original and extended LSPs as one logical LSP.   The only sections that deal only with Mode 1 additions are 3.2,   3.2.1, and 3.2.2.  All other sections relate to both modes.Hermelin, et al.             Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 3786                  IS-IS LSP Fragments                   May 20042.  IS Alias ID TLV (IS-A)   The proposed IS-A TLV allows extension-capable ISs to recognize all   LSPs of an Originating System, and combine the original and extended   LSPs for the purpose of SPF computation.  It identifies the Normal   system-id of the Originating System.   The proposed IS Alias ID TLV is type 24, and its format is as   follows:   x CODE   - 24.   x LENGTH - total length of the value field.   x VALUE  -                            No. of Octets      +-------------------+      | Normal system-id  |      6      +-------------------+      | Pseudonode number |      1      +-------------------+      | Sub-TLVs length   |      1      +-------------------+      |                   |     0-247      : Sub-TLVs          :      :                   :      |                   |      +-------------------+   Normal system-id      The Normal system-id of the LSP set, as described insection 1.2      of this document.   Pseudonode number      The Pseudonode number of the LSP set.  LSPs with the same Normal      system-id and Pseudonode number are considered in SPF as one      logical LSP, as described insection 5 of this document.   Sub-TLVs length      Total length of all sub-TLVs.Hermelin, et al.             Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 3786                  IS-IS LSP Fragments                   May 2004   Sub-TLVs   A series of tuples with the following format:                         No. of Octets   +-------------------+   | Sub-type          |      1   +-------------------+   | Length            |      1   +-------------------+   |                   |     0-245   : Value             :   :                   :   |                   |   +-------------------+   Sub-type      Type of the sub-TLV   Length      Total length of the value field   Value      Type-specific TLV payload.   For an explanation on sub-TLV handling, see [ISIS-TE].   Without sub-TLVs, this structure consumes 8 octets per LSP set.  This   TLV MUST be included in fragment 0 of every LSP set belonging to an   Originating System running in either Mode 1 or Mode 2.  Currently,   there are no sub-TLVs defined.   For a complete list of used IS-IS TLV numbers, see [ISIS-CODES].3.  Generating LSPs3.1.  Both Operation Modes   Under both modes, the Originating System MUST include information   binding the Original LSP and the Extended ones.  It can do this since   it is trivially an extension-capable IS.  This is to ensure other   extension-capable routers correctly process the extra information in   their SPF calculation.  This binding is advertised via a new IS Alias   ID TLV, which is advertised in all fragment 0 of Original and   Extended LSPs.Hermelin, et al.             Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 3786                  IS-IS LSP Fragments                   May 2004   +---------------------------------------------+   |  Originating System                         |   |  system-id   = S                            |   |  is-alias-id = S                            |   +---------------------------------------------+   +-------------------+     +-------------------+   |  Virtual System   |     |  Virtual System   |   |  system-id   = S' |     |  system-id   = S''|   |  is-alias-id = S  |     |  is-alias-id = S  |   +-------------------+     +-------------------+   Figure 1. Advertising binding between all of a system's LSPs             (both modes).  S' and S'' are configured as Additional             system-ids.   When new extended LSP fragments are generated, these fragments should   be generated as specified in ISO/IEC 10589 [ISIS-ISO].  Furthermore,   a system SHOULD treat its extended LSPs the same as it treats its   original LSPs, with the exceptions noted in the following sections.   Specifically, creating, flooding, renewing, purging and all other   operations are similar for both Original and Extended LSPs, unless   stated otherwise.  The Extended LSPs will use one of the Additional   system-ids configured for the router, in their LSP ID.   Extended LSPs fragment zero should be regarded in the same special   manner as specified in ISO/IEC 10589 for LSPs with number zero, and   should include the same type of extra information as specified in   ISO/IEC 10589 andRFC 1195 [ISIS-IP].  So, for example, when a system   reissues its LSP fragment zero due to an area address change, it   should reissue all extended LSPs fragment zero as well.   An extended LSP fragment zero MUST be generated for every extended   LSP set, to allow a router's SPF calculation to consider those   fragments in that set.  Seesection 5 for details.3.1.1.  The Attached Bits   The Attached (ATT) bits SHOULD be set to zero for all four metric   types, on all Extended LSPs.  This is due to the following: if a   Virtual System is reachable, so is its Originating System.  It is   preferable, then, that an L1 IS chooses the Originating System and   not the Virtual System as its nearest L2 exit point, as connectivity   to the Virtual System has a higher probability of being lost (as a   result of the extended LSP no longer being advertised).  This could   cause unnecessary computations on some implementations.Hermelin, et al.             Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 3786                  IS-IS LSP Fragments                   May 20043.1.2.  The Partition Repair Bit   The Partition Repair (P) bit SHOULD be set to zero on all extended   LSPs.  This is for the same reasons as for the Attached bits.3.1.3.  ES Neighbors TLV   ISO/IEC 10589 [ISIS-ISO]section 7.3.7 specifies inserting an ES   Neighbor TLV in L1 LSPs, with the system ID of the router.RFC 1195   [ISIS-IP] relieves IP-only routers of this requirement.  However, for   routers that do insert this ESN TLV in L1 LSPs (whether IP-only or   OSI-capable), then in an extended LSP, the ESN TLV should include the   relevant Additional system-id.  Furthermore, OSI-capable routers   should accept packets destined for this Additional system-id.3.1.4.  Overload Bit   The overload bit should be set consistently across all LSPs, original   and extended, belonging to an Originating System, and should reflect   the Originating System's overload state.3.1.5.  Other Fields and TLVs   Other fields and TLVs not mentioned above remain the same, both for   original and extended LSPs.3.2.  Operation Mode 1 Additions   The following additions apply only to routers generating LSPs in Mode   1.  Routers, which are configured to operate in Operation Mode 2,   SHOULD NOT apply these additions to their advertisements.   Under Operation Mode 1, adjacencies from the Originating System to   its Virtual Systems are advertised using the standard neighbor TLVs.   The metric for these connections MUST be zero, since the cost of   reaching a Virtual System is the same as the cost of reaching its   Originating System.   To older implementations, Virtual Systems would appear reachable only   through their Originating System, hence loss of connectivity to the   Originating System means loss of connectivity to all of its   information, including that advertised in its extended LSPs.   Furthermore, the cost of reaching information advertised in non-   extended LSPs is the same as the cost of reaching information   advertised in the new extended LSPs, with an additional hop.Hermelin, et al.             Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 3786                  IS-IS LSP Fragments                   May 2004   +---------------------------------------------+   |         Originating System                  |   |         system-id = S                       |   |         is-alias-id = S                     |   +---------------------------------------------+          |    /\                    |    /\   cost=0 |    |cost=max-1    cost=0 |    |cost=max-1          |    |                     |    |          \/   |                     \/   |   +-------------------+     +-------------------+   |  Virtual System   |     |  Virtual System   |   |  system-id   = S' |     |  system-id   = S''|   |  is-alias-id = S  |     |  is-alias-id = S  |   +-------------------+     +-------------------+   Figure 2. Advertising connections to Virtual Systems under             Operation Mode 1.  S' and S'' are configured as             Additional system-ids.   Under Operation Mode 1, only "leaf" information, i.e., information   that serves only as leaves in a shortest path tree, can be advertised   in extended LSPs.   When an Extended LSP belonging to Additional system-id S' is first   created, the Original LSP MUST specify S' as a neighbor, with metric   set to zero.  This is in order to consider the cost of reaching the   Virtual System S' the same as the cost of reaching its Originating   System.  Furthermore, the Extended LSP MUST specify the Normal   system-id as a neighbor.  The metric SHOULD be set to MaxLinkMetric -   1 (this is only for uniformity purpose, any metric greater than zero   is acceptable).  This in order to satisfy the two-way connectivity   check on other routers.  Where relevant, this adjacency SHOULD be   considered as point-to-point.   Note, that the restriction specified in ISO/IEC 10589section 7.2.5   holds:  if an LSP Number zero of the Originating System is not   present, none of that system's neighbor entries would be processed   during SPF, hence none of its extended LSPs would be processed as   well.3.2.1.  IS Neighbors TLV (Mode 1 Only)   An Extended LSP must specify only the Originating System as a   neighbor, with the metric set to (MaxLinkMetric - 1).  Where   relevant, this adjacency should be considered as point-to-point.   Other neighbors MUST NOT be specified in an Extended LSP, becauseHermelin, et al.             Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 3786                  IS-IS LSP Fragments                   May 2004   those other neighbors would only specify the Originating System and   not the Virtual System, and hence would not satisfy the bi-   directionality check in the SPF computation.3.2.2.  Originating System in the Overload State in (Mode 1 Only)   If the Originating System is in the overload state, information in   the extended LSPs will not be processed by other routers in their SPF   computation.  This is because in Mode 1, extended LSPs are reachable   only through adjacencies from the Original LSP.  If this LSP has set   its OL bit, adjacencies will not be processed in the SPF computation.   This side effect should be taken into consideration when operating in   Mode 1.4.  Purging Extended LSP Fragments   ISO/IEC 10589 [ISIS-ISO]section 7.3.4.4 note 25 suggests that an   implementation keeps the number of LSP fragments within a certain   limit based on the optimal (minimal) number of fragments needed.Section 7.3.4.6 also recommends that an IS purge its empty LSPs to   conserve resources.  These recommendations hold for the extended LSP   fragments as well.  However, an extended LSP fragment zero should not   be purged until all of the fragments in its set (i.e., belonging to a   particular Additional system-id), are empty as well.  This is to   ensure implementations consider the fragments in their SPF   computations, as specified insection 7.2.5.   In Operational Mode 1, when all the extended LSP fragments of a   particular Additional system-id S' have been purged, the Originating   System SHOULD remove the neighbor information to S' from its original   LSPs.5.  Modifications to LSP handling in SPF   This section describes modifications to the way extension-capable ISs   handle LSPs for the SPF computation.   When considering LSPs of an extension-capable IS (identified by the   inclusion of the IS Alias ID TLV), the original and extended LSPs are   combined to form one large logical LSP.  If the LSP belongs to an IS   running Operational Mode 1, there might be adjacencies between the   original and extended LSPs.  These are trivially ignored (since when   processing them the large logical LSP is already on PATHS), and does   not complicate the SPF.  Furthermore, this check should already be   implemented (this scenario could occur on error, without this   extension).Hermelin, et al.             Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 3786                  IS-IS LSP Fragments                   May 2004   If LSP fragment 0 of the Original LSP set is missing or its   RemainingLifetime is zero, all of the LSPs generated by that   Originating System (Extended as well) MUST NOT be considered in the   SPF.  That is, the large logical LSP is not considered in the SPF.   The original LSP fragments are identified when the is-alias-id value   is the same as the system-id of those LSPs.  If an LSP fragment 0 of   an extended LSP set is missing or its RemainingLifetime is zero, only   that LSP set MUST NOT be considered in the SPF.  These rules are   present to ensure consistent SPF results on Mode 1 and Mode 2 LSPs.   Note, that the above behavior is consistent with how previous   implementations will interpret Mode 1 LSPs.6.  Forming Adjacencies   It should be noted, that an IS MUST use the system-id of the LSP that   will include a neighbor, when forming an adjacency with that   neighbor.  That is, if a neighbor is to be included in extended LSP   S', then S' should be used as the system-id in IS Hellos [3] and IS-   IS Hellos when forming an adjacency with that neighbor.  This is   regardless of the Operational Mode.  Of course, in Mode 1 this means   that only the Normal system-id will be used when sending hellos.7.  Interoperating between extension-capable and non-extension-capable    ISs.   In order to correctly advertise link-state information under   Operation Mode 2, all ISs in an area must be extension-capable.   However, it is possible to not upgrade every router in the network,   if the extended information is not routing information, but rather   data that is of use to only a subset of routers (e.g., optical   switches using IS-IS could carry optical-specific information in   extended LSPs)   If a live network contains routers exceeding the 256 fragment limit,   and for some reason the upgrade has to be done incrementally, it is   possible to transition the network, using the following steps:   -  Upgrade the routers, one-by-one, to run this extension in      Operation Mode 1.  The other non-extension-capable routers will      interoperate correctly.   -  When all routers are extension-capable, configure them one-by-one      to run in Operation Mode 2.  All extension-capable routers      interoperate correctly, regardless of what mode they are run in.Hermelin, et al.             Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 3786                  IS-IS LSP Fragments                   May 2004   Implementations SHOULD support a configuration parameter controlling   the LSP origination behavior.  The default value of this parameter   SHOULD correspond to the behavior described in [ISIS-ISO], i.e.,   neither of the two modes described in this document should be enabled   without explicit configuration when the router software is upgraded   with this extension.8.  Security Considerations   This document raises no new security issues for IS-IS.9.  Acknowledgments   The authors would like to thank Tony Li and Radia Perlman for helpful   comments and suggestions on the subject.10.  References10.1.  Normative References   [ISIS-ISO]    "Intermediate System to Intermediate System Intra-                 Domain Routeing Exchange Protocol for use in                 Conjunction with the Protocol for Providing the                 Connectionless-mode Network Service (ISO 8473)",                 ISO/IEC 10589:2002, Second Edition.   [ISIS-IP]     Callon, R., "Use of OSI IS-IS for routing in TCP/IP and                 dual environments",RFC 1195, December 1990.   [ISIS-TE]     Smit, H. and T. Li, "Intermediate System to                 Intermediate System (IS-IS) Extensions for Traffic                 Engineering (TE)",RFC 3784, May 2004.   [BCP14]       Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate                 Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.10.2.  Informative References   [DOMAIN-WIDE] Li, T., Przygienda, T. and H. Smit, "Domain-wide Prefix                 Distribution with Two-Level IS-IS",RFC 2966, October                 2000.   [ISIS-CODES]  Przygienda, T., "Reserved Type, Length and Value (TLV)                 Codepoints in Intermediate System to Intermediate                 System",RFC 3359, August 2002.Hermelin, et al.             Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 3786                  IS-IS LSP Fragments                   May 200411.  Authors' Addresses   Amir Hermelin   Montilio Inc.   1 Maskit St.   POB 12253   Herzelia, 46733   ISRAEL   Phone: +972 9 9511944   Fax: +972 9 9542430   EMail: amir@montilio.com   Stefano Previdi   Cisco Systems, Inc.   Via Del Serafico 200   00142 Roma   Italy   Phone: +39 06 5164 4491   EMail: sprevidi@cisco.com   Mike Shand   Cisco Systems   250, Longwater Avenue,   Green Park,   Reading,   RG2 6GB,   UK   Phone: +44 20 8824 8690   EMail: mshand@cisco.comHermelin, et al.             Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 3786                  IS-IS LSP Fragments                   May 200412.  Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).  This document is subject   to the rights, licenses and restrictions contained inBCP 78, and   except as set forth therein, the authors retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET   ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,   INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE   INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at ietf-   ipr@ietf.org.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Hermelin, et al.             Informational                     [Page 14]

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