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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                       W. Sun, Ed.Request for Comments: 5814                                          SJTUCategory: Standards Track                                  G. Zhang, Ed.ISSN: 2070-1721                                                     CATR                                                              March 2010Label Switched Path (LSP) Dynamic Provisioning Performance Metricsin Generalized MPLS NetworksAbstract   Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) is one of the most   promising candidate technologies for a future data transmission   network.  GMPLS has been developed to control and operate different   kinds of network elements, such as conventional routers, switches,   Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) systems, Add-Drop   Multiplexers (ADMs), photonic cross-connects (PXCs), optical cross-   connects (OXCs), etc.  These physically diverse devices differ   drastically from one another in dynamic provisioning ability.  At the   same time, the need for dynamically provisioned connections is   increasing because optical networks are being deployed in metro   areas.  As different applications have varied requirements in the   provisioning performance of optical networks, it is imperative to   define standardized metrics and procedures such that the performance   of networks and application needs can be mapped to each other.   This document provides a series of performance metrics to evaluate   the dynamic Label Switched Path (LSP) provisioning performance in   GMPLS networks, specifically the dynamic LSP setup/release   performance.  These metrics can be used to characterize the features   of GMPLS networks in LSP dynamic provisioning.Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5814.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.   This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF   Contributions published or made publicly available before November   10, 2008.  The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this   material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow   modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process.   Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling   the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified   outside the IETF Standards Process, and derivative works of it may   not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format   it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other   than English.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................62. Conventions Used in This Document ...............................63. Overview of Performance Metrics .................................6   4. A Singleton Definition for Single Unidirectional LSP      Setup Delay .....................................................74.1. Motivation .................................................74.2. Metric Name ................................................74.3. Metric Parameters ..........................................84.4. Metric Units ...............................................84.5. Definition .................................................84.6. Discussion .................................................84.7. Methodologies ..............................................94.8. Metric Reporting ...........................................9   5. A Singleton Definition for Multiple Unidirectional LSPs      Setup Delay ....................................................105.1. Motivation ................................................105.2. Metric Name ...............................................105.3. Metric Parameters .........................................105.4. Metric Units ..............................................105.5. Definition ................................................115.6. Discussion ................................................115.7. Methodologies .............................................125.8. Metric Reporting ..........................................13   6. A Singleton Definition for Single Bidirectional LSP      Setup Delay ....................................................136.1. Motivation ................................................136.2. Metric Name ...............................................146.3. Metric Parameters .........................................146.4. Metric Units ..............................................146.5. Definition ................................................146.6. Discussion ................................................156.7. Methodologies .............................................156.8. Metric Reporting ..........................................16   7. A Singleton Definition for Multiple Bidirectional LSPs      Setup Delay ....................................................167.1. Motivation ................................................167.2. Metric Name ...............................................167.3. Metric Parameters .........................................177.4. Metric Units ..............................................177.5. Definition ................................................177.6. Discussion ................................................187.7. Methodologies .............................................197.8. Metric Reporting ..........................................198. A Singleton Definition for LSP Graceful Release Delay ..........208.1. Motivation ................................................208.2. Metric Name ...............................................20Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 20108.3. Metric Parameters .........................................208.4. Metric Units ..............................................208.5. Definition ................................................208.6. Discussion ................................................228.7. Methodologies .............................................228.8. Metric Reporting ..........................................23   9. A Definition for Samples of Single Unidirectional LSP      Setup Delay ....................................................249.1. Metric Name ...............................................249.2. Metric Parameters .........................................249.3. Metric Units ..............................................249.4. Definition ................................................249.5. Discussion ................................................259.6. Methodologies .............................................259.7. Typical Testing Cases .....................................269.7.1. With No LSP in the Network .........................269.7.2. With a Number of LSPs in the Network ...............269.8. Metric Reporting ..........................................26   10. A Definition for Samples of Multiple Unidirectional       LSPs Setup Delay ..............................................2610.1. Metric Name ..............................................2710.2. Metric Parameters ........................................2710.3. Metric Units .............................................2710.4. Definition ...............................................2710.5. Discussion ...............................................2810.6. Methodologies ............................................2810.7. Typical Testing Cases ....................................2910.7.1. With No LSP in the Network ........................2910.7.2. With a Number of LSPs in the Network ..............2910.8. Metric Reporting .........................................29   11. A Definition for Samples of Single Bidirectional LSP       Setup Delay ...................................................3011.1. Metric Name ..............................................3011.2. Metric Parameters ........................................3011.3. Metric Units .............................................3011.4. Definition ...............................................3011.5. Discussion ...............................................3111.6. Methodologies ............................................3111.7. Typical Testing Cases ....................................3211.7.1. With No LSP in the Network ........................3211.7.2. With a Number of LSPs in the Network ..............3211.8. Metric Reporting .........................................32   12. A Definition for Samples of Multiple Bidirectional       LSPs Setup Delay ..............................................3212.1. Metric Name ..............................................3312.2. Metric Parameters ........................................3312.3. Metric Units .............................................3312.4. Definition ...............................................33Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 201012.5. Discussion ...............................................3412.6. Methodologies ............................................3412.7. Typical Testing Cases ....................................3512.7.1. With No LSP in the Network ........................3512.7.2. With a Number of LSPs in the Network ..............3512.8. Metric Reporting .........................................3513. A Definition for Samples of LSP Graceful Release Delay ........3513.1. Metric Name ..............................................3613.2. Metric Parameters ........................................3613.3. Metric Units .............................................3613.4. Definition ...............................................3613.5. Discussion ...............................................3613.6. Methodologies ............................................3713.7. Metric Reporting .........................................3714. Some Statistics Definitions for Metrics to Report .............3714.1. The Minimum of Metric ....................................3714.2. The Median of Metric .....................................3714.3. The Maximum of Metric ....................................3814.4. The Percentile of Metric .................................3814.5. Failure Statistics of Metric .............................3814.5.1. Failure Count .....................................3914.5.2. Failure Ratio .....................................3915. Discussion ....................................................3916. Security Considerations .......................................4017. Acknowledgments ...............................................4118. References ....................................................4118.1. Normative References .....................................4118.2. Informative References ...................................42Appendix A.  Authors' Addresses ...................................43Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 20101.  Introduction   Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) is one of the most   promising control plane solutions for future transport and service   network.  GMPLS has been developed to control and operate different   kinds of network elements, such as conventional routers, switches,   Dense Wavelength Division Multiplexing (DWDM) systems, Add-Drop   Multiplexors (ADMs), photonic cross-connects (PXCs), optical cross-   connects (OXCs), etc.  These physically diverse devices differ   drastically from one another in dynamic provisioning ability.   The introduction of a control plane into optical circuit switching   networks provides the basis for automating the provisioning of   connections and drastically reduces connection provision delay.  As   more and more services and applications are seeking to use GMPLS-   controlled networks as their underlying transport network, and   increasingly in a dynamic way, the need is growing for measuring and   characterizing the performance of LSP provisioning in GMPLS networks,   such that requirement from applications and the provisioning   capability of the network can be mapped to each other.   This document defines performance metrics and methodologies that can   be used to characterize the dynamic LSP provisioning performance of   GMPLS networks, more specifically, performance of the signaling   protocol.  The metrics defined in this document can be used to   characterize the average performance of GMPLS implementations.2.  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].3.  Overview of Performance Metrics   In this memo, to characterize the dynamic LSP provisioning   performance of a GMPLS network, we define three performance metrics:   unidirectional LSP setup delay, bidirectional LSP setup delay, and   LSP graceful release delay.  The latency of the LSP setup/release   signal is conceptually similar to the Round-trip Delay in IP   networks.  This enables us to refer to the structures and notions   introduced and discussed in the IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)   Framework documents, [RFC2330] [RFC2679] [RFC2681].  The reader is   assumed to be familiar with the notions in those documents.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010   Note that data-path-related metrics, for example, the time between   the reception of a Resv message by the ingress node and when the   forward data path becomes operational, are defined in another   document [CCAMP-DPM].  It is desirable that both measurements are   performed to complement each other.4.  A Singleton Definition for Single Unidirectional LSP Setup Delay   This section defines a metric for single unidirectional Label   Switched Path setup delay across a GMPLS network.4.1.  Motivation   Single unidirectional Label Switched Path setup delay is useful for   several reasons:   o  Single LSP setup delay is an important metric that characterizes      the provisioning performance of a GMPLS network.  Longer LSP setup      delay will most likely incur higher overhead for the requesting      application, especially when the LSP duration itself is comparable      to the LSP setup delay.   o  The minimum value of this metric provides an indication of the      delay that will likely be experienced when the LSP traverses the      shortest route at the lightest load in the control plane.  As the      delay itself consists of several components, such as link      propagation delay and nodal processing delay, this metric also      reflects the status of the control plane.  For example, for LSPs      traversing the same route, longer setup delays may suggest      congestion in the control channel or high control element load.      For this reason, this metric is useful for testing and diagnostic      purposes.   o  The observed variance in a sample of LSP setup delay metric values      variance may serve as an early indicator on the feasibility of      support of applications that have stringent setup delay      requirements.   The measurement of single unidirectional LSP setup delay instead of   bidirectional LSP setup delay is motivated by the following factors:   o  Some applications may use only unidirectional LSPs rather than      bidirectional ones.  For example, content delivery services with      multicasting may use only unidirectional LSPs.4.2.  Metric Name   Single unidirectional LSP setup delaySun & Zhang                  Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 20104.3.  Metric Parameters   o  ID0, the ingress Label Switching Router (LSR) ID   o  ID1, the egress LSR ID   o  T, a time when the setup is attempted4.4.  Metric Units   The value of single unidirectional LSP setup delay is either a real   number of milliseconds or undefined.4.5.  Definition   The single unidirectional LSP setup delay from ingress node ID0 to   egress node ID1 [RFC3945] at T is dT means that ingress node ID0   sends the first bit of a Path message packet to egress node ID1 at   wire-time T, and that ingress node ID0 received the last bit of   responding Resv message packet from egress node ID1 at wire-time   T+dT.   The single unidirectional LSP setup delay from ingress node ID0 to   egress node ID1 at T is undefined means that ingress node ID0 sends   the first bit of Path message packet to egress node ID1 at wire-time   T and that ingress node ID0 does not receive the corresponding Resv   message within a reasonable period of time.   The undefined value of this metric indicates an event of Single   Unidirectional LSP Setup Failure and would be used to report a count   or a percentage of Single Unidirectional LSP Setup failures.  SeeSection 14.5 for definitions of LSP setup/release failures.4.6.  Discussion   The following issues are likely to come up in practice:   o  The accuracy of unidirectional LSP setup delay at time T depends      on the clock resolution in the ingress node; but synchronization      between the ingress node and egress node is not required since      unidirectional LSP setup uses two-way signaling.   o  A given methodology will have to include a way to determine      whether a latency value is infinite or whether it is merely very      large.  Simple upper bounds MAY be used, but GMPLS networks may      accommodate many kinds of devices.  For example, some photonic      cross-connects (PXCs) have to move micro mirrors.  This physical      motion may take several milliseconds, but the common electronicSun & Zhang                  Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010      switches can finish the nodal processing within several      microseconds.  So the unidirectional LSP setup delay varies      drastically from one network to another.  In practice, the upper      bound SHOULD be chosen carefully.   o  If the ingress node sends out the Path message to set up an LSP,      but never receives the corresponding Resv message, the      unidirectional LSP setup delay MUST be set to undefined.   o  If the ingress node sends out the Path message to set up an LSP      but receives a PathErr message, the unidirectional LSP setup delay      MUST be set to undefined.  There are many possible reasons for      this case; for example, the Path message has invalid parameters or      the network does not have enough resources to set up the requested      LSP, etc.4.7.  Methodologies   Generally, the methodology would proceed as follows:   o  Make sure that the network has enough resources to set up the      requested LSP.   o  At the ingress node, form the Path message according to the LSP      requirements.  A timestamp (T1) may be stored locally on the      ingress node when the Path message packet is sent towards the      egress node.   o  If the corresponding Resv message arrives within a reasonable      period of time, take the timestamp (T2) as soon as possible upon      receipt of the message.  By subtracting the two timestamps, an      estimate of unidirectional LSP setup delay (T2-T1) can be      computed.   o  If the corresponding Resv message fails to arrive within a      reasonable period of time, the unidirectional LSP setup delay is      deemed to be undefined.  Note that the "reasonable" threshold is a      parameter of the methodology.   o  If the corresponding response is a PathErr message, the      unidirectional LSP setup delay is deemed to be undefined.4.8.  Metric Reporting   The metric result (either a real number or undefined) MUST be   reported together with the selected upper bound.  The route that the   LSP traverses MUST also be reported.  The route MAY be collected viaSun & Zhang                  Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010   use of the record route object, see [RFC3209], or via the management   plane.  The collection of routes via the management plane is out of   scope of this document.5.  A Singleton Definition for Multiple Unidirectional LSPs Setup Delay   This section defines a metric for multiple unidirectional Label   Switched Paths setup delay across a GMPLS network.5.1.  Motivation   Multiple unidirectional Label Switched Paths setup delay is useful   for several reasons:   o  Carriers may require that a large number of LSPs be set up during      a short time period.  This request may arise, e.g., as a      consequence to interruptions on established LSPs or other network      failures.   o  The time needed to set up a large number of LSPs during a short      time period cannot be deduced from single LSP setup delay.5.2.  Metric Name   Multiple unidirectional LSPs setup delay5.3.  Metric Parameters   o  ID0, the ingress LSR ID   o  ID1, the egress LSR ID   o  Lambda_m, a rate in reciprocal milliseconds   o  X, the number of LSPs to set up   o  T, a time when the first setup is attempted5.4.  Metric Units   The value of multiple unidirectional LSPs setup delay is either a   real number of milliseconds or undefinedSun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 20105.5.  Definition   Given Lambda_m and X, the multiple unidirectional LSPs setup delay   from the ingress node to the egress node [RFC3945] at T is dT means:   o  ingress node ID0 sends the first bit of the first Path message      packet to egress node ID1 at wire-time T;   o  all subsequent (X-1) Path messages are sent according to the      specified Poisson process with arrival rate Lambda_m;   o  ingress node ID0 receives all corresponding Resv message packets      from egress node ID1; and   o  ingress node ID0 receives the last Resv message packet at wire-      time T+dT.   If the multiple unidirectional LSPs setup delay at T is "undefined",   this means that:   o  ingress node ID0 sends all the Path messages toward egress node      ID1,   o  the first bit of the first Path message packet is sent at wire-      time T, and   o  ingress node ID0 does not receive one or more of the corresponding      Resv messages within a reasonable period of time.   The undefined value of this metric indicates an event of Multiple   Unidirectional LSP Setup Failure and would be used to report a count   or a percentage of Multiple Unidirectional LSP Setup failures.  SeeSection 14.5 for definitions of LSP setup/release failures.5.6.  Discussion   The following issues are likely to come up in practice:   o  The accuracy of multiple unidirectional LSPs setup delay at time T      depends on the clock resolution in the ingress node; but      synchronization between the ingress node and egress node is not      required since unidirectional LSP setup uses two-way signaling.   o  A given methodology will have to include a way to determine      whether a latency value is infinite or whether it is merely very      large.  Simple upper bounds MAY be used, but GMPLS networks may      accommodate many kinds of devices.  For example, some photonic      cross-connects (PXCs) have to move micro mirrors.  This physicalSun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010      motion may take several milliseconds, but electronic switches can      finish the nodal processing within several microseconds.  So the      multiple unidirectional LSP setup delay varies drastically from      one network to another.  In practice, the upper bound SHOULD be      chosen carefully.   o  If the ingress node sends out the multiple Path messages to set up      the LSPs, but never receives one or more of the corresponding Resv      messages, multiple unidirectional LSP setup delay MUST be set to      undefined.   o  If the ingress node sends out the Path messages to set up the LSPs      but receives one or more PathErr messages, multiple unidirectional      LSPs setup delay MUST be set to undefined.  There are many      possible reasons for this case.  For example, one of the Path      messages has invalid parameters or the network does not have      enough resources to set up the requested LSPs, etc.   o  The arrival rate of the Poisson process Lambda_m SHOULD be chosen      carefully such that on the one hand, the control plane is not      overburdened.  On the other hand, the arrival rate is large enough      to meet the requirements of applications or services.   o  It is important that all the LSPs MUST traverse the same route.      If there are multiple routes between the ingress node ID0 and      egress node ID1, Explicit Route Objects (EROs), or an alternate      method, e.g., static configuration, MUST be used to ensure that      all LSPs traverse the same route.5.7.  Methodologies   Generally, the methodology would proceed as follows:   o  Make sure that the network has enough resources to set up the      requested LSPs.   o  At the ingress node, form the Path messages according to the LSPs'      requirements.   o  At the ingress node, select the time for each of the Path messages      according to the specified Poisson process.   o  At the ingress node, send out the Path messages according to the      selected time.   o  Store a timestamp (T1) locally on the ingress node when the first      Path message packet is sent towards the egress node.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010   o  If all of the corresponding Resv messages arrive within a      reasonable period of time, take the final timestamp (T2) as soon      as possible upon the receipt of all the messages.  By subtracting      the two timestamps, an estimate of multiple unidirectional LSPs      setup delay (T2-T1) can be computed.   o  If one or more of the corresponding Resv messages fail to arrive      within a reasonable period of time, the multiple unidirectional      LSPs setup delay is deemed to be undefined.  Note that the      "reasonable" threshold is a parameter of the methodology.   o  If one or more of the corresponding responses are PathErr      messages, the multiple unidirectional LSPs setup delay is deemed      to be undefined.5.8.  Metric Reporting   The metric result (either a real number or undefined) MUST be   reported together with the selected upper bound.  The route that the   LSPs traverse MUST also be reported.  The route MAY be collected via   use of the record route object, see [RFC3209], or via the management   plane.  The collection of routes via the management plane is out of   scope of this document.6.  A Singleton Definition for Single Bidirectional LSP Setup Delay   GMPLS allows establishment of bidirectional symmetric LSPs (not of   asymmetric LSPs).  This section defines a metric for single   bidirectional LSP setup delay across a GMPLS network.6.1.  Motivation   Single bidirectional Label Switched Path setup delay is useful for   several reasons:   o  LSP setup delay is an important metric that characterizes the      provisioning performance of a GMPLS network.  Longer LSP setup      delay will incur higher overhead for the requesting application,      especially when the LSP duration is comparable to the LSP setup      delay.  Thus, measuring the setup delay is important for      application scheduling.   o  The minimum value of this metric provides an indication of the      delay that will likely be experienced when the LSP traverses the      shortest route at the lightest load in the control plane.  As the      delay itself consists of several components, such as link      propagation delay and nodal processing delay, this metric also      reflects the status of the control plane.  For example, for LSPsSun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010      traversing the same route, longer setup delays may suggest      congestion in the control channel or high control element load.      For this reason, this metric is useful for testing and diagnostic      purposes.   o  LSP setup delay variance has a different impact on applications.      Erratic variation in LSP setup delay makes it difficult to support      applications that have stringent setup delay requirement.   The measurement of single bidirectional LSP setup delay instead of   unidirectional LSP setup delay is motivated by the following factors:   o  Bidirectional LSPs are seen as a requirement for many GMPLS      networks.  Its provisioning performance is important to      applications that generate bidirectional traffic.6.2.  Metric Name   Single bidirectional LSP setup delay6.3.  Metric Parameters   o  ID0, the ingress LSR ID   o  ID1, the egress LSR ID   o  T, a time when the setup is attempted6.4.  Metric Units   The value of single bidirectional LSP setup delay is either a real   number of milliseconds or undefined6.5.  Definition   For a real number dT, the single bidirectional LSP setup delay from   ingress node ID0 to egress node ID1 at T is dT means that ingress   node ID0 sends out the first bit of a Path message including an   Upstream Label [RFC3473] heading for egress node ID1 at wire-time T,   egress node ID1 receives that packet, then immediately sends a Resv   message packet back to ingress node ID0, and that ingress node ID0   receives the last bit of the Resv message packet at wire-time T+dT.   If the single bidirectional LSP setup delay from ingress node ID0 to   egress node ID1 at T is "undefined", this means that ingress node ID0   sends the first bit of a Path message to egress node ID1 at wire-time   T and that ingress node ID0 does not receive that response packet   within a reasonable period of time.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010   The undefined value of this metric indicates an event of Single   Bidirectional LSP Setup Failure and would be used to report a count   or a percentage of Single Bidirectional LSP Setup failures.  SeeSection 14.5 for definitions of LSP setup/release failures.6.6.  Discussion   The following issues are likely to come up in practice:   o  The accuracy of single bidirectional LSP setup delay depends on      the clock resolution in the ingress node; but synchronization      between the ingress node and egress node is not required since      single bidirectional LSP setup uses two-way signaling.   o  A given methodology will have to include a way to determine      whether a latency value is infinite or whether it is merely very      large.  Simple upper bounds MAY be used, but GMPLS networks may      accommodate many kinds of devices.  For example, some photonic      cross-connects (PXCs) have to move micro mirrors.  This physical      motion may take several milliseconds, but electronic switches can      finish the nodal processing within several microseconds.  So the      bidirectional LSP setup delay varies drastically from one network      to another.  In the process of bidirectional LSP setup, if the      downstream node overrides the label suggested by the upstream      node, the setup delay may also increase.  Thus, in practice, the      upper bound SHOULD be chosen carefully.   o  If the ingress node sends out the Path message to set up the LSP,      but never receives the corresponding Resv message, single      bidirectional LSP setup delay MUST be set to undefined.   o  If the ingress node sends out the Path message to set up the LSP,      but receives a PathErr message, single bidirectional LSP setup      delay MUST be set to undefined.  There are many possible reasons      for this case.  For example, the Path message has invalid      parameters or the network does not have enough resources to set up      the requested LSP.6.7.  Methodologies   Generally, the methodology would proceed as follows:   o  Make sure that the network has enough resources to set up the      requested LSP.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010   o  At the ingress node, form the Path message (including the Upstream      Label or suggested label) according to the LSP requirements.  A      timestamp (T1) may be stored locally on the ingress node when the      Path message packet is sent towards the egress node.   o  If the corresponding Resv message arrives within a reasonable      period of time, take the final timestamp (T2) as soon as possible      upon the receipt of the message.  By subtracting the two      timestamps, an estimate of bidirectional LSP setup delay (T2-T1)      can be computed.   o  If the corresponding Resv message fails to arrive within a      reasonable period of time, the single bidirectional LSP setup      delay is deemed to be undefined.  Note that the "reasonable"      threshold is a parameter of the methodology.   o  If the corresponding response is a PathErr message, the single      bidirectional LSP setup delay is deemed to be undefined.6.8.  Metric Reporting   The metric result (either a real number or undefined) MUST be   reported together with the selected upper bound.  The route that the   LSP traverses MUST also be reported.  The route MAY be collected via   use of the record route object, see [RFC3209], or via the management   plane.  The collection of routes via the management plane is out of   scope of this document.7.  A Singleton Definition for Multiple Bidirectional LSPs Setup Delay   This section defines a metric for multiple bidirectional LSPs setup   delay across a GMPLS network.7.1.  Motivation   Multiple bidirectional LSPs setup delay is useful for several   reasons:   o  Upon traffic interruption caused by network failure or network      upgrade, carriers may require a large number of LSPs be set up      during a short time period.   o  The time needed to set up a large number of LSPs during a short      time period cannot be deduced by single LSP setup delay.7.2.  Metric Name   Multiple bidirectional LSPs setup delaySun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 20107.3.  Metric Parameters   o  ID0, the ingress LSR ID   o  ID1, the egress LSR ID   o  Lambda_m, a rate in reciprocal milliseconds   o  X, the number of LSPs to set up   o  T, a time when the first setup is attempted7.4.  Metric Units   The value of multiple bidirectional LSPs setup delay is either a real   number of milliseconds or undefined7.5.  Definition   Given Lambda_m and X, for a real number dT, the multiple   bidirectional LSPs setup delay from ingress node to egress node at T   is dT, means that:   o  Ingress node ID0 sends the first bit of the first Path message      heading for egress node ID1 at wire-time T;   o  All subsequent (X-1) Path messages are sent according to the      specified Poisson process with arrival rate Lambda_m;   o  Ingress node ID1 receives all corresponding Resv message packets      from egress node ID1; and   o  Ingress node ID0 receives the last Resv message packet at wire-      time T+dT.   If the multiple bidirectional LSPs setup delay from ingress node to   egress node at T is "undefined", this means that the ingress node   sends all the Path messages to the egress node and that the ingress   node fails to receive one or more of the response Resv messages   within a reasonable period of time.   The undefined value of this metric indicates an event of Multiple   Bidirectional LSP Setup Failure and would be used to report a count   or a percentage of Multiple Bidirectional LSP Setup failures.  SeeSection 14.5 for definitions of LSP setup/release failures.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 20107.6.  Discussion   The following issues are likely to come up in practice:   o  The accuracy of multiple bidirectional LSPs setup delay depends on      the clock resolution in the ingress node; but synchronization      between the ingress node and egress node is not required since      bidirectional LSP setup uses two-way signaling.   o  A given methodology will have to include a way to determine      whether a latency value is infinite or whether it is merely very      large.  Simple upper bounds MAY be used, but GMPLS networks may      accommodate many kinds of devices.  For example, some photonic      cross-connects (PXCs) have to move micro mirrors.  This physical      motion may take several milliseconds, but electronic switches can      finish the nodal process within several microseconds.  So the      multiple bidirectional LSPs setup delay varies drastically from a      network to another.  In the process of multiple bidirectional LSPs      setup, if the downstream node overrides the label suggested by the      upstream node, the setup delay may also increase.  Thus, in      practice, the upper bound SHOULD be chosen carefully.   o  If the ingress node sends out the Path messages to set up the      LSPs, but never receives all the corresponding Resv messages, the      multiple bidirectional LSPs setup delay MUST be set to undefined.   o  If the ingress node sends out the Path messages to set up the      LSPs, but receives one or more responding PathErr messages, the      multiple bidirectional LSPs setup delay MUST be set to undefined.      There are many possible reasons for this case.  For example, one      or more of the Path messages have invalid parameters or the      network does not have enough resources to set up the requested      LSPs.   o  The arrival rate of the Poisson process Lambda_m SHOULD be      carefully chosen such that on the one hand, the control plane is      not overburdened.  On the other hand, the arrival rate is large      enough to meet the requirements of applications or services.   o  It is important that all the LSPs MUST traverse the same route.      If there are multiple routes between the ingress node ID0 and      egress node ID1, EROs, or an alternate method, e.g., static      configuration, MUST be used to ensure that all LSPs traverse the      same route.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 20107.7.  Methodologies   Generally, the methodology would proceed as follows:   o  Make sure that the network has enough resources to set up the      requested LSPs.   o  At the ingress node, form the Path messages (including the      Upstream Label or suggested label) according to the LSPs'      requirements.   o  At the ingress node, select the time for each of the Path messages      according to the specified Poisson process.   o  At the ingress node, send out the Path messages according to the      selected time.   o  Store a timestamp (T1) locally in the ingress node when the first      Path message packet is sent towards the egress node.   o  If all of the corresponding Resv messages arrive within a      reasonable period of time, take the final timestamp (T2) as soon      as possible upon the receipt of all the messages.  By subtracting      the two timestamps, an estimate of multiple bidirectional LSPs      setup delay (T2-T1) can be computed.   o  If one or more of the corresponding Resv messages fail to arrive      within a reasonable period of time, the multiple bidirectional      LSPs setup delay is deemed to be undefined.  Note that the      "reasonable" threshold is a parameter of the methodology.   o  If one or more of the corresponding responses are PathErr      messages, the multiple bidirectional LSPs setup delay is deemed to      be undefined.7.8.  Metric Reporting   The metric result (either a real number or undefined) MUST be   reported together with the selected upper bound.  The route that the   LSPs traverse MUST also be reported.  The route MAY be collected via   use of the record route object, see [RFC3209], or via the management   plane.  The collection of routes via the management plane is out of   scope of this document.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 20108.  A Singleton Definition for LSP Graceful Release Delay   There are two different kinds of LSP release mechanisms in GMPLS   networks: graceful release and forceful release.  This document does   not take forceful LSP release procedure into account.8.1.  Motivation   LSP graceful release delay is useful for several reasons:   o  The LSP graceful release delay is part of the total cost of      dynamic LSP provisioning.  For some short duration applications,      the LSP release time cannot be ignored.   o  The LSP graceful release procedure is more preferred in a GMPLS      controlled network, particularly the optical networks.  Since it      doesn't trigger restoration/protection, it is "alarm-free      connection deletion" in [RFC4208].8.2.  Metric Name   LSP graceful release delay8.3.  Metric Parameters   o  ID0, the ingress LSR ID   o  ID1, the egress LSR ID   o  T, a time when the release is attempted8.4.  Metric Units   The value of LSP graceful release delay is either a real number of   milliseconds or undefined8.5.  Definition   There are two different LSP graceful release procedures: one is   initiated by the ingress node, and another is initiated by the egress   node.  The two procedures are depicted in [RFC3473].  We define the   graceful LSP release delay for these two procedures separately.   For a real number dT, if the LSP graceful release delay from ingress   node ID0 to egress node ID1 at T is dT, this means that ingress node   ID0 sends the first bit of a Path message including an Admin Status   Object with the Reflect (R) and Delete (D) bits set to the egress   node at wire-time T, that egress node ID1 receives that packet, thenSun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010   immediately sends a Resv message including an Admin Status Object   with the Delete (D) bit set back to the ingress node.  Ingress node   ID0 sends the PathTear message downstream to remove the LSP, and   egress node ID1 receives the last bit of PathTear packet at wire-time   T+dT.   Also, as an option, upon receipt of the Path message including an   Admin Status Object with the Reflect (R) and Delete (D) bits set,   egress node ID1 may respond with a PathErr message with the   Path_State_Removed flag set.   The LSP graceful release delay from ingress node ID0 to egress node   ID1 at T is undefined means that ingress node ID0 sends the first bit   of Path message to egress node ID1 at wire-time T and that (either   the egress node does not receive the Path packet, the egress node   does not send a corresponding Resv message packet in response, or the   ingress node does not receive that Resv packet, and) egress node ID1   does not receive the PathTear message within a reasonable period of   time.   If the LSP graceful release delay from egress node ID1 to ingress   node ID0 at T is dT, this means that egress node ID1 sends the first   bit of a Resv message including an Admin Status Object with the   Reflect (R) and Delete (D) bits set to the ingress node at wire-time   T.  Ingress node ID0 sends a PathTear message downstream to remove   the LSP, and egress node ID1 receives the last bit of PathTear packet   at wire-time T+dT.   If the LSP graceful release delay from egress node ID1 to ingress   node ID0 at T is "undefined", this means that egress node ID1 sends   the first bit of Resv message including an Admin Status Object with   the Reflect (R) and Delete (D) bits set to the ingress node ID0 at   wire-time T and that (either the ingress node does not receive the   Resv packet or the ingress node does not send PathTear message packet   in response, and) egress node ID1 does not receive the PathTear   message within a reasonable period of time.   The undefined value of this metric indicates an event of LSP Graceful   Release Failure and would be used to report a count or a percentage   of LSP Graceful Release failures.  SeeSection 14.5 for definitions   of LSP setup/release failures.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 20108.6.  Discussion   The following issues are likely to come up in practice:   o  In the first (second) circumstance, the accuracy of LSP graceful      release delay at time T depends on the clock resolution in the      ingress (egress) node.  In the first circumstance, synchronization      between the ingress node and egress node is required, but it is      not in the second circumstance.   o  A given methodology has to include a way to determine whether a      latency value is infinite or whether it is merely very large.      Simple upper bounds MAY be used, but the upper bound SHOULD be      chosen carefully in practice.   o  In the first circumstance, if the ingress node sends out Path      message including an Admin Status Object with the Reflect (R) and      Delete (D) bits set to initiate LSP graceful release, but the      egress node never receives the corresponding PathTear message, LSP      graceful release delay MUST be set to undefined.   o  In the second circumstance, if the egress node sends out the Resv      message including an Admin Status Object with the Reflect (R) and      Delete (D) bits set to initiate LSP graceful release, but never      receives the corresponding PathTear message, LSP graceful release      delay MUST be set to undefined.8.7.  Methodologies   In the first circumstance, the methodology may proceed as follows:   o  Make sure the LSP to be deleted is set up;   o  At the ingress node, form the Path message including an Admin      Status Object with the Reflect (R) and Delete (D) bits set.  A      timestamp (T1) may be stored locally on the ingress node when the      Path message packet is sent towards the egress node.   o  Upon receiving the Path message including an Admin Status Object      with the Reflect (R) and Delete (D) bits set, the egress node      sends a Resv message including an Admin Status Object with the      Delete (D) and Reflect (R) bits set.  Alternatively, the egress      node sends a PathErr message with the Path_State_Removed flag set      upstream.   o  When the ingress node receives the Resv message or the PathErr      message, it sends a PathTear message to remove the LSP.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010   o  The egress node takes a timestamp (T2) once it receives the last      bit of the PathTear message.  The LSP graceful release delay is      then (T2-T1).   o  If the ingress node sends the Path message downstream, but the      egress node fails to receive the PathTear message within a      reasonable period of time, the LSP graceful release delay is      deemed to be undefined.  Note that the "reasonable" threshold is a      parameter of the methodology.   In the second circumstance, the methodology would proceed as follows:   o  Make sure the LSP to be deleted is set up;   o  On the egress node, form the Resv message including an Admin      Status Object with the Reflect (R) and Delete (D) bits set.  A      timestamp may be stored locally on the egress node when the Resv      message packet is sent towards the ingress node.   o  Upon receiving the Admin Status Object with the Reflect (R) and      Delete (D) bits set in the Resv message, the ingress node sends a      PathTear message downstream to remove the LSP.   o  The egress node takes a timestamp (T2) once it receives the last      bit of the PathTear message.  The LSP graceful release delay is      then (T2-T1).   o  If the egress node sends the Resv message upstream, but it fails      to receive the PathTear message within a reasonable period of      time, the LSP graceful release delay is deemed to be undefined.      Note that the "reasonable" threshold is a parameter of the      methodology.8.8.  Metric Reporting   The metric result (either a real number or undefined) MUST be   reported together with the selected upper bound and the procedure   used (e.g., either from the ingress node to the egress node or from   the egress node to the ingress node; seeSection 8.5 for more   details).  The route that the LSP traverses MUST also be reported.   The route MAY be collected via use of the record route object, see   [RFC3209], or via the management plane.  The collection of routes via   the management plane is out of scope of this document.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 20109.  A Definition for Samples of Single Unidirectional LSP Setup Delay   InSection 4, we defined the singleton metric of single   unidirectional LSP setup delay.  Now we define how to get one   particular sample of single unidirectional LSP setup delay.  Sampling   means to take a number of distinct instances of a skeleton metric   under a given set of parameters.  As in [RFC2330], we use Poisson   sampling as an example.9.1.  Metric Name   Single unidirectional LSP setup delay sample9.2.  Metric Parameters   o  ID0, the ingress LSR ID   o  ID1, the egress LSR ID   o  T0, a time   o  Tf, a time   o  Lambda, a rate in the reciprocal milliseconds   o  Th, LSP holding time   o  Td, the maximum waiting time for successful setup9.3.  Metric Units   A sequence of pairs; the elements of each pair are:   o  T, a time when setup is attempted   o  dT, either a real number of milliseconds or undefined9.4.  Definition   Given T0, Tf, and Lambda, compute a pseudo-random Poisson process   beginning at or before T0, with average arrival rate Lambda, and   ending at or after Tf.  Those time values greater than or equal to T0   and less than or equal to Tf are then selected.  At each of the times   in this process, we obtain the value of unidirectional LSP setup   delay sample.  The value of the sample is the sequence made up of the   resulting <time, LSP setup delay> pairs.  If there are no such pairs,   the sequence is of length zero and the sample is said to be empty.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 20109.5.  Discussion   The parameter Lambda should be carefully chosen.  If the rate is too   high, too frequent LSP setup/release procedure will result in high   overhead in the control plane.  In turn, the high overhead will   increase unidirectional LSP setup delay.  On the other hand, if the   rate is too low, the sample might not completely reflect the dynamic   provisioning performance of the GMPLS network.  The appropriate   Lambda value depends on the given network.   The parameters Td should be carefully chosen.  Different switching   technologies may vary significantly in performing a cross-connect   operation.  At the same time, the time needed in setting up an LSP   under different traffic may also vary significantly.   In the case of active measurement, the parameters Th should be   carefully chosen.  The combination of Lambda and Th reflects the load   of the network.  The selection of Th should take into account that   the network has sufficient resources to perform subsequent tests.   The value of Th MAY be constant during one sampling process for   simplicity considerations.   Note that for online or passive measurements, the arrival rate and   LSP holding time are determined by actual traffic; hence, in this   case, Lambda and Th are not input parameters.   It is important that, in obtaining a sample, all the LSPs MUST   traverse the same route.  If there are multiple routes between the   ingress node ID0 and egress node ID1, EROs, or an alternate method,   e.g., static configuration, MUST be used to ensure that all LSPs   traverse the same route.9.6.  Methodologies   o  Select the times using the specified Poisson arrival process,   o  Set up the LSP as the methodology for the singleton unidirectional      LSP setup delay, and obtain the value of unidirectional LSP setup      delay, and   o  Release the LSP after Th, and wait for the next Poisson arrival      event.   Note: it is possible that before the previous LSP release procedure   completes, the next Poisson arrival event arrives and the LSP setup   procedure is initiated.  If there is resource contention between the   two LSPs, the LSP setup may fail.  Ways to avoid such contention are   outside the scope of this document.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 20109.7.  Typical Testing Cases9.7.1.  With No LSP in the Network9.7.1.1.  Motivation   Single unidirectional LSP setup delay with no LSP in the network is   important because this reflects the inherent delay of a Resource   Reservation Protocol - Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE) implementation.   The minimum value provides an indication of the delay that will   likely be experienced when an LSP traverses the shortest route with   the lightest load in the control plane.9.7.1.2.  Methodologies   Make sure that there is no LSP in the network and proceed with the   methodologies described inSection 9.69.7.2.  With a Number of LSPs in the Network9.7.2.1.  Motivation   Single unidirectional LSP setup delay with a number of LSPs in the   network is important because it reflects the performance of an   operational network with considerable load.  This delay may vary   significantly as the number of existing LSPs vary.  It can be used as   a scalability metric of an RSVP-TE implementation.9.7.2.2.  Methodologies   Set up the required number of LSPs, and wait until the network   reaches a stable state; then, proceed with the methodologies   described inSection 9.6.9.8.  Metric Reporting   The metric results including both real and undefined values MUST be   reported together with the total number of values.  The context under   which the sample is obtained, including the selected parameters, the   route traversed by the LSPs, and the testing case used, MUST also be   reported.10.  A Definition for Samples of Multiple Unidirectional LSPs Setup     Delay   InSection 5, we defined the singleton metric of multiple   unidirectional LSPs setup delay.  Now we define how to get one   particular sample of multiple unidirectional LSPs setup delay.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010   Sampling means to take a number of distinct instances of a skeleton   metric under a given set of parameters.  As in [RFC2330], we use   Poisson sampling as an example.10.1.  Metric Name   Multiple unidirectional LSPs setup delay sample10.2.  Metric Parameters   o  ID0, the ingress LSR ID   o  ID1, the egress LSR ID   o  T0, a time   o  Tf, a time   o  Lambda_m, a rate in the reciprocal milliseconds   o  Lambda, a rate in the reciprocal milliseconds   o  X, the number of LSPs to set up   o  Th, LSP holding time   o  Td, the maximum waiting time for successful multiple      unidirectional LSPs setup10.3.  Metric Units   A sequence of pairs; the elements of each pair are:   o  T, a time when the first setup is attempted   o  dT, either a real number of milliseconds or undefined10.4.  Definition   Given T0, Tf, and Lambda, compute a pseudo-random Poisson process   beginning at or before T0, with an average arrival rate Lambda and   ending at or after Tf.  Those time values greater than or equal to T0   and less than or equal to Tf are then selected.  At each of the times   in this process, we obtain the value of multiple unidirectional LSP   setup delay sample.  The value of the sample is the sequence made up   of the resulting <time, setup delay> pairs.  If there are no such   pairs, the sequence is of length zero and the sample is said to be   empty.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 201010.5.  Discussion   The parameter Lambda is used as an arrival rate of "batch   unidirectional LSPs setup" operation.  It regulates the interval in   between each batch operation.  The parameter Lambda_m is used within   each batch operation, as described inSection 5   The parameters Lambda and Lambda_m should be carefully chosen.  If   the rate is too high, overly frequent LSP setup/release procedure   will result in high overhead in the control plane.  In turn, the high   overhead will increase unidirectional LSP setup delay.  On the other   hand, if the rate is too low, the sample might not completely reflect   the dynamic provisioning performance of the GMPLS network.  The   appropriate Lambda and Lambda_m value depends on the given network.   The parameters Td should be carefully chosen.  Different switching   technologies may vary significantly in performing a cross-connect   operation.  At the same time, the time needed in setting up an LSP   under different traffic may also vary significantly.   It is important that, in obtaining a sample, all the LSPs MUST   traverse the same route.  If there are multiple routes between the   ingress node ID0 and egress node ID1, EROs, or an alternate method,   e.g., static configuration, MUST be used to ensure that all LSPs   traverse the same route.10.6.  Methodologies   o  Select the times using the specified Poisson arrival process,   o  Set up the LSP as the methodology for the singleton multiple      unidirectional LSPs setup delay, and obtain the value of multiple      unidirectional LSPs setup delay, and   o  Release the LSP after Th, and wait for the next Poisson arrival      event.   Note: it is possible that before the previous LSP release procedure   completes, the next Poisson arrival event arrives and the LSP setup   procedure is initiated.  If there is resource contention between the   two LSPs, the LSP setup may fail.  Ways to avoid such contention are   outside the scope of this document.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 201010.7.  Typical Testing Cases10.7.1.  With No LSP in the Network10.7.1.1.  Motivation   Multiple unidirectional LSPs setup delay with no LSP in the network   is important because this reflects the inherent delay of an RSVP-TE   implementation.  The minimum value provides an indication of the   delay that will likely be experienced when LSPs traverse the shortest   route with the lightest load in the control plane.10.7.1.2.  Methodologies   Make sure that there is no LSP in the network and proceed with the   methodologies described inSection 10.6.10.7.2.  With a Number of LSPs in the Network10.7.2.1.  Motivation   Multiple unidirectional LSPs setup delay with a number of LSPs in the   network is important because it reflects the performance of an   operational network with considerable load.  This delay can vary   significantly as the number of existing LSPs vary.  It can be used as   a scalability metric of an RSVP-TE implementation.10.7.2.2.  Methodologies   Set up the required number of LSPs, and wait until the network   reaches a stable state; then, proceed with the methodologies   described inSection 10.6.10.8.  Metric Reporting   The metric results including both real and undefined values MUST be   reported together with the total number of values.  The context under   which the sample is obtained, including the selected parameters, the   route traversed by the LSPs, and the testing case used, MUST also be   reported.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 29]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 201011.  A Definition for Samples of Single Bidirectional LSP Setup Delay   InSection 6, we defined the singleton metric of single bidirectional   LSP setup delay.  Now we define how to get one particular sample of   single bidirectional LSP setup delay.  Sampling means to take a   number of distinct instances of a skeleton metric under a given set   of parameters.  As in [RFC2330], we use Poisson sampling as an   example.11.1.  Metric Name   Single bidirectional LSP setup delay sample with no LSP in the   network11.2.  Metric Parameters   o  ID0, the ingress LSR ID   o  ID1, the egress LSR ID   o  T0, a time   o  Tf, a time   o  Lambda, a rate in the reciprocal milliseconds   o  Th, LSP holding time   o  Td, the maximum waiting time for successful setup11.3.  Metric Units   A sequence of pairs; the elements of each pair are:   o  T, a time when setup is attempted   o  dT, either a real number of milliseconds or undefined11.4.  Definition   Given T0, Tf, and Lambda, compute a pseudo-random Poisson process   beginning at or before T0, with an average arrival rate Lambda, and   ending at or after Tf.  Those time values greater than or equal to T0   and less than or equal to Tf are then selected.  At each of the times   in this process, we obtain the value of bidirectional LSP setup delay   sample.  The value of the sample is the sequence made up of the   resulting <time, LSP setup delay> pairs.  If there are no such pairs,   the sequence is of length zero and the sample is said to be empty.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 30]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 201011.5.  Discussion   The parameters Lambda should be carefully chosen.  If the rate is too   high, overly frequent LSP setup/release procedure will result in high   overhead in the control plane.  In turn, the high overhead will   increase bidirectional LSP setup delay.  On the other hand, if the   rate is too low, the sample might not completely reflect the dynamic   provisioning performance of the GMPLS network.  The appropriate   Lambda value depends on the given network.   The parameters Td should be carefully chosen.  Different switching   technologies may vary significantly in performing a cross-connect   operation.  At the same time, the time needed to set up an LSP under   different traffic may also vary significantly.   In the case of active measurement, the parameters Th should be   carefully chosen.  The combination of Lambda and Th reflects the load   of the network.  The selection of Th SHOULD take into account that   the network has sufficient resources to perform subsequent tests.   The value of Th MAY be constant during one sampling process for   simplicity considerations.   Note that for online or passive measurements, the arrival rate and   the LSP holding time are determined by actual traffic; hence, in this   case, Lambda and Th are not input parameters.   It is important that, in obtaining a sample, all the LSPs MUST   traverse the same route.  If there are multiple routes between the   ingress node ID0 and egress node ID1, EROs, or an alternate method,   e.g., static configuration, MUST be used to ensure that all LSPs   traverse the same route.11.6.  Methodologies   o  Select the times using the specified Poisson arrival process,   o  Set up the LSP as the methodology for the singleton bidirectional      LSP setup delay, and obtain the value of bidirectional LSP setup      delay, and   o  Release the LSP after Th, and wait for the next Poisson arrival      event.   Note: it is possible that before the previous LSP release procedure   completes, the next Poisson arrival event arrives and the LSP setup   procedure is initiated.  If there is resource contention between the   two LSPs, the LSP setup may fail.  Ways to avoid such contention are   outside the scope of this document.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 31]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 201011.7.  Typical Testing Cases11.7.1.  With No LSP in the Network11.7.1.1.  Motivation   Single bidirectional LSP setup delay with no LSP in the network is   important because this reflects the inherent delay of an RSVP-TE   implementation.  The minimum value provides an indication of the   delay that will likely be experienced when an LSP traverses the   shortest route with the lightest load in the control plane.11.7.1.2.  Methodologies   Make sure that there is no LSP in the network and proceed with the   methodologies described inSection 11.6.11.7.2.  With a Number of LSPs in the Network11.7.2.1.  Motivation   Single bidirectional LSP setup delay with a number of LSPs in the   network is important because it reflects the performance of an   operational network with considerable load.  This delay can vary   significantly as the number of existing LSPs varies.  It can be used   as a scalability metric of an RSVP-TE implementation.11.7.2.2.  Methodologies   Set up the required number of LSPs and wait until the network reaches   a stable state; then, proceed with the methodologies described inSection 11.6.11.8.  Metric Reporting   The metric results including both real and undefined values MUST be   reported together with the total number of values.  The context under   which the sample is obtained, including the selected parameters, the   route traversed by the LSPs, and the testing case used, MUST also be   reported.12.  A Definition for Samples of Multiple Bidirectional LSPs Setup Delay   InSection 7, we defined the singleton metric of multiple   bidirectional LSPs setup delay.  Now we define how to get one   particular sample of multiple bidirectional LSP setup delay.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 32]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010   Sampling means to take a number of distinct instances of a skeleton   metric under a given set of parameters.  As in [RFC2330], we use   Poisson sampling as an example.12.1.  Metric Name   Multiple bidirectional LSPs setup delay sample12.2.  Metric Parameters   o  ID0, the ingress LSR ID   o  ID1, the egress LSR ID   o  T0, a time   o  Tf, a time   o  Lambda_m, a rate in the reciprocal milliseconds   o  Lambda, a rate in the reciprocal milliseconds   o  X, the number of LSPs to set up   o  Th, LSP holding time   o  Td, the maximum waiting time for successful multiple      unidirectional LSPs setup12.3.  Metric Units   A sequence of pairs; the elements of each pair are:   o  T, a time when the first setup is attempted   o  dT, either a real number of milliseconds or undefined12.4.  Definition   Given T0, Tf, and Lambda, compute a pseudo-random Poisson process   beginning at or before T0, with an average arrival rate Lambda and   ending at or after Tf.  Those time values greater than or equal to T0   and less than or equal to Tf are then selected.  At each of the times   in this process, we obtain the value of multiple unidirectional LSP   setup delay sample.  The value of the sample is the sequence made up   of the resulting <time, setup delay> pairs.  If there are no such   pairs, the sequence is of length zero and the sample is said to be   empty.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 33]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 201012.5.  Discussion   The parameter Lambda is used as an arrival rate of "batch   bidirectional LSPs setup" operation.  It regulates the interval in   between each batch operation.  The parameter Lambda_m is used within   each batch operation, as described inSection 7.   The parameters Lambda and Lambda_m should be carefully chosen.  If   the rate is too high, overly frequent LSP setup/release procedure   will result in high overhead in the control plane.  In turn, the high   overhead will increase unidirectional LSP setup delay.  On the other   hand, if the rate is too low, the sample might not completely reflect   the dynamic provisioning performance of the GMPLS network.  The   appropriate Lambda and Lambda_m values depend on the given network.   The parameters Td should be carefully chosen.  Different switching   technologies may vary significantly in performing a cross-connect   operation.  At the same time, the time needed to set up an LSP under   different traffic may also vary significantly.   It is important that, in obtaining a sample, all the LSPs MUST   traverse the same route.  If there are multiple routes between the   ingress node ID0 and egress node ID1, EROs, or an alternate method,   e.g., static configuration, MUST be used to ensure that all LSPs   traverse the same route.12.6.  Methodologies   o  Select the times using the specified Poisson arrival process,   o  Set up the LSP as the methodology for the singleton multiple      bidirectional LSPs setup delay, and obtain the value of multiple      unidirectional LSPs setup delay, and   o  Release the LSP after Th, and wait for the next Poisson arrival      event.   Note: it is possible that before the previous LSP release procedure   completes, the next Poisson arrival event arrives and the LSP setup   procedure is initiated.  If there is resource contention between the   two LSPs, the LSP setup may fail.  Ways to avoid such contention are   outside the scope of this document.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 34]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 201012.7.  Typical Testing Cases12.7.1.  With No LSP in the Network12.7.1.1.  Motivation   Multiple bidirectional LSPs setup delay with no LSP in the network is   important because this reflects the inherent delay of an RSVP-TE   implementation.  The minimum value provides an indication of the   delay that will likely be experienced when an LSPs traverse the   shortest route with the lightest load in the control plane.12.7.1.2.  Methodologies   Make sure that there is no LSP in the network and proceed with the   methodologies described inSection 10.6.12.7.2.  With a Number of LSPs in the Network12.7.2.1.  Motivation   Multiple bidirectional LSPs setup delay with a number of LSPs in the   network is important because it reflects the performance of an   operational network with considerable load.  This delay may vary   significantly as the number of existing LSPs vary.  It may be used as   a scalability metric of an RSVP-TE implementation.12.7.2.2.  Methodologies   Set up the required number of LSPs, and wait until the network   reaches a stable state; then, proceed with the methodologies   described inSection 12.6.12.8.  Metric Reporting   The metric results including both real and undefined values MUST be   reported together with the total number of values.  The context under   which the sample is obtained, including the selected parameters, the   route traversed by the LSPs, and the testing case used, MUST also be   reported.13.  A Definition for Samples of LSP Graceful Release Delay   InSection 8, we defined the singleton metric of LSP graceful release   delay.  Now we define how to get one particular sample of LSP   graceful release delay.  We also use Poisson sampling as an example.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 35]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 201013.1.  Metric Name   LSP graceful release delay sample13.2.  Metric Parameters   o  ID0, the ingress LSR ID   o  ID1, the egress LSR ID   o  T0, a time   o  Tf, a time   o  Lambda, a rate in reciprocal milliseconds   o  Td, the maximum waiting time for successful LSP release13.3.  Metric Units   A sequence of pairs; the elements of each pair are:   o  T, a time, and   o  dT, either a real number of milliseconds or undefined13.4.  Definition   Given T0, Tf, and Lambda, we compute a pseudo-random Poisson process   beginning at or before T0, with an average arrival rate Lambda and   ending at or after Tf.  Those time values greater than or equal to T0   and less than or equal to Tf are then selected.  At each of the times   in this process, we obtain the value of LSP graceful release delay   sample.  The value of the sample is the sequence made up of the   resulting <time, LSP graceful delay> pairs.  If there are no such   pairs, the sequence is of length zero and the sample is said to be   empty.13.5.  Discussion   The parameter Lambda should be carefully chosen.  If the rate is too   large, overly frequent LSP setup/release procedure will result in   high overhead in the control plane.  In turn, the high overhead will   increase unidirectional LSP setup delay.  On the other hand, if the   rate is too small, the sample might not completely reflect the   dynamic provisioning performance of the GMPLS network.  The   appropriate Lambda value depends on the given network.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 36]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010   It is important that, in obtaining a sample, all the LSPs MUST   traverse the same route.  If there are multiple routes between the   ingress node ID0 and egress node ID1, EROs, or an alternate method,   e.g., static configuration, MUST be used to ensure that all LSPs   traverse the same route.13.6.  Methodologies   Generally, the methodology would proceed as follows:   o  Set up the LSP to be deleted   o  Select the times using the specified Poisson arrival process,   o  Release the LSP as the methodology for the singleton LSP graceful      release delay, and obtain the value of LSP graceful release delay,      and   o  Set up the LSP, and restart the Poisson arrival process, wait for      the next Poisson arrival event.13.7.  Metric Reporting   The metric results including both real and undefined values MUST be   reported together with the total number of values.  The context under   which the sample is obtained, including the selected parameters, and   the route traversed by the LSPs MUST also be reported.14.  Some Statistics Definitions for Metrics to Report   Given the samples of the performance metric, we now offer several   statistics of these samples to report.  From these statistics, we can   draw some useful conclusions of a GMPLS network.  The value of these   metrics is either a real number of milliseconds or undefined.  In the   following discussion, we only consider the finite values.14.1.  The Minimum of Metric   The minimum of the metric is the minimum of all the dT values in the   sample.  In computing this, undefined values SHOULD be treated as   infinitely large.  Note that this means that the minimum could thus   be undefined if all the dT values are undefined.  In addition, the   metric minimum SHOULD be set to undefined if the sample is empty.14.2.  The Median of Metric   Metric median is the median of the dT values in the given sample.  In   computing the median, the undefined values MUST NOT be included.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 37]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 201014.3.  The Maximum of Metric   The maximum of the metric is the maximum of all the dT values in the   sample.  In computing this, undefined values MUST NOT be included.   Note that this means that measurements that exceed the upper bound   are not reported in this statistic.  This is an important   consideration when evaluating the maximum when the number of   undefined measurements is non-zero.14.4.  The Percentile of Metric   The "empirical distribution function" (EDF) of a set of scalar   measurements is a function F(x), which, for any x, gives the   fractional proportion of the total measurements that were <= x.   Given a percentage X, the X-th percentile of the metric means the   smallest value of x for which F(x) >= X.  In computing the   percentile, undefined values MUST NOT be included.   See [RFC2330] for further details.14.5.  Failure Statistics of Metric   In the process of LSP setup/release, it may fail due to various   reasons.  For example, setup/release may fail when the control plane   is overburdened or when there is resource shortage in one of the   intermediate nodes.  Since the setup/release failure may have   significant impact on network operation, it is worthwhile to report   each failure cases, so that appropriate operations can be performed   to check the possible implementation, configuration or other   deficiencies.   Five types of failure events are defined in previous sections:   o  Single Unidirectional LSP Setup Failure   o  Multiple Unidirectional LSP Setup Failure   o  Single Bidirectional LSP Setup Failure   o  Multiple Bidirectional LSP Setup Failure   o  LSP Graceful Release Failure   Given the samples of the performance metric, we now offer two   statistics of failure events of these samples to report.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 38]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 201014.5.1.  Failure Count   Failure Count is defined as the number of the undefined value of the   corresponding performance metric (failure events) in a sample.  The   value of Failure Count is an integer.14.5.2.  Failure Ratio   Failure Ratio is the percentage of the number of failure events to   the total number of requests in a sample.  The calculation for   Failure Ratio is defined as follows:   X type failure ratio = Number of X type failure events/(Number of   valid X type metric values + Number of X type failure events) * 100%.15.  Discussion   It is worthwhile to point out that:   o  The unidirectional/bidirectional LSP setup delay is one ingress-      egress round-trip time plus processing time.  But in this      document, unidirectional/bidirectional LSP setup delay has not      taken the processing time in the end nodes (ingress and/or egress)      into account.  The timestamp T2 is taken after the endpoint node      receives it.  Actually, the last node has to take some time to      process local procedures.  Similarly, in the LSP graceful release      delay, the memo has not considered the processing time in the end      node.   o  This document assumes that the correct procedures for installing      the data plane are followed as described in [RFC3209], [RFC3471],      and [RFC3473].  That is, by the time the egress receives and      processes a Path message, it is safe for the egress to transmit      data on the reverse path, and by the time the ingress receives and      processes a Resv message it is safe for the ingress to transmit      data on the forward path.  See [CCAMP-SWITCH] for detailed      explanations.  This document does not include any verification      that the implementations of the control plane software are      conformant, although such tests MAY be constructed with the use of      suitable signal generation test equipment.  In [CCAMP-DPM], we      defined a series of metrics to do such verifications.  However, it      is RECOMMENDED that both the measurements defined in this document      and the measurements defined in [CCAMP-DPM] are performed to      complement each other.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 39]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010   o  Note that, in implementing the tests described in this document, a      tester should be sure to measure the time taken for the control      plane messages including the processing of those messages by the      nodes under test.   o  Bidirectional LSPs may be set up using three-way signaling, where      the initiating node will send a ResvConf message downstream upon      receiving the Resv message.  The ResvConf message is used to      notify the terminate node that it can transfer data upstream.      Actually, both directions should be ready to transfer data when      the Resv message is received by the initiating node.  Therefore,      the bidirectional LSP setup delay defined in this document does      not take the confirmation procedure into account.16.  Security Considerations   Samples of the metrics can be obtained in either active or passive   manners.   In active measurement, ingress nodes inject probing messages into the   control plane.  Since the measurement endpoints must be conformant to   signaling specifications and behave as normal signaling endpoints, it   will not incur other security issues than normal LSP provisioning.   However, the measurement parameters must be carefully selected so   that the measurements inject trivial amounts of additional traffic   into the networks they measure.  If they inject "too much" traffic,   they can skew the results of the measurement, and, in extreme cases,   cause congestion and denial of service.   When samples of the metrics are collected in a passive manner, e.g.,   by monitoring the operations on real-life LSPs, the implementation of   the monitoring and reporting mechanism must be careful so that they   will not be used to attack the control plane.  A typical   implementation may use the Management Information Base (MIB) to   collect/store the metrics and access to the MIB is limited to the   Network Management Systems (NMSs).  In this case, passive monitoring   will not incur other security issues than implementing the MIBs and   NMSs.  If an implementation chooses to expose the performance data to   other applications, then it must take into account the possible   security issues it may face.  For example, when exposing the   performance data through Simple Network Management Protocol (SNMP),   certain authentication methods should be used to ensure that the   entity maintaining the performance data are not subject to   unauthorized readings and modifications.  Rate limiting on the   performance query may also be desirable to reduce the risk that the   entity maintaining the performance data are overwhelmed by too many   query requests.  It is RECOMMENDED that implementers consider theSun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 40]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010   security features as provided by the SNMPv3 framework (see[RFC3410],   section 8), including full support for the SNMPv3 cryptographic   mechanisms (for authentication and privacy).   Additionally, the security considerations pertaining to the original   RSVP protocol [RFC2205] and its TE extensions [RFC3209] also remain   relevant.17.  Acknowledgments   We wish to thank Dan Li, Fang Liu (Christine), Zafar Ali, Monique   Morrow, Adrian Farrel, Deborah Brungard, Lou Berger, Thomas D. Nadeau   for their comments and help.  Lou Berger and Adrian Farrel have made   text contributions to this document.   We wish to thank experts from IPPM and BMWG -- Reinhard Schrage, Al   Morton, and Henk Uijterwaal -- for reviewing this document.  Reinhard   Schrage has made text contributions to this document.   This document contains ideas as well as text that have appeared in   existing IETF documents.  The authors wish to thank G. Almes, S.   Kalidindi, and M. Zekauskas.   We also wish to thank Weisheng Hu, Yaohui Jin, and Wei Guo in the   state key laboratory of advanced optical communication systems and   networks for the valuable comments.  We also wish to thank the   support from National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) and   863 program of China.18.  References18.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]       Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate                   Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC2205]       Braden, B., Zhang, L., Berson, S., Herzog, S., and S.                   Jamin, "Resource ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP) --                   Version 1 Functional Specification",RFC 2205,                   September 1997.   [RFC2679]       Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A One-                   way Delay Metric for IPPM",RFC 2679, September 1999.   [RFC2681]       Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A Round-                   trip Delay Metric for IPPM",RFC 2681,                   September 1999.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 41]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010   [RFC3209]       Awduche, D., Berger, L., Gan, D., Li, T., Srinivasan,                   V., and G. Swallow, "RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for                   LSP Tunnels",RFC 3209, December 2001.   [RFC3471]       Berger, L., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label                   Switching (GMPLS) Signaling Functional Description",RFC 3471, January 2003.   [RFC3473]       Berger, L., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label                   Switching (GMPLS) Signaling Resource ReserVation                   Protocol-Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE) Extensions",RFC 3473, January 2003.   [RFC3945]       Mannie, E., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label                   Switching (GMPLS) Architecture",RFC 3945,                   October 2004.   [RFC4208]       Swallow, G., Drake, J., Ishimatsu, H., and Y.                   Rekhter, "Generalized Multiprotocol Label Switching                   (GMPLS) User-Network Interface (UNI): Resource                   ReserVation Protocol-Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE)                   Support for the Overlay Model",RFC 4208,                   October 2005.18.2.  Informative References   [CCAMP-DPM]     Sun, W., Zhang, G., Gao, J., Xie, G., Papneja, R.,                   Gu, B., Wei, X., Otani, T., and R. Jing, "Label                   Switched Path (LSP) Data Path Delay Metric in                   Generalized MPLS/ MPLS-TE Networks", Work                   in Progress, December 2009.   [CCAMP-SWITCH]  Shiomoto, K. and A. Farrel, "Advice on When It is                   Safe to Start Sending Data on Label Switched Paths                   Established Using RSVP-TE", Work in Progress,                   October 2009.   [RFC2330]       Paxson, V., Almes, G., Mahdavi, J., and M. Mathis,                   "Framework for IP Performance Metrics",RFC 2330,                   May 1998.   [RFC3410]       Case, J., Mundy, R., Partain, D., and B. Stewart,                   "Introduction and Applicability Statements for                   Internet-Standard Management Framework",RFC 3410,                   December 2002.Sun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 42]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010Appendix A.  Authors' Addresses   Jianhua Gao   Huawei Technologies Co., LTD.   China   Phone: +86 755 28973237   EMail: gjhhit@huawei.com   Guowu Xie   University of California, Riverside   900 University Ave.   Riverside, CA 92521   USA   Phone: +1 951 237 8825   EMail: xieg@cs.ucr.edu   Rajiv Papneja   Isocore   12359 Sunrise Valley Drive, STE 100   Reston, VA  20190   USA   Phone: +1 703 860 9273   EMail: rpapneja@isocore.com   Bin Gu   IXIA   Oriental Kenzo Plaza 8M, 48 Dongzhimen Wai Street, Dongcheng District   Beijing  200240   China   Phone: +86 13611590766   EMail: BGu@ixiacom.com   Xueqin Wei   Fiberhome Telecommunication Technology Co., Ltd.   Wuhan   China   Phone: +86 13871127882   EMail: xqwei@fiberhome.com.cnSun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 43]

RFC 5814            LSP Dynamic PPM in GMPLS Networks         March 2010   Tomohiro Otani   KDDI R&D Laboratories, Inc.   2-1-15 Ohara Kamifukuoka Saitama   356-8502   Japan   Phone: +81-49-278-7357   EMail: otani@kddilabs.jp   Ruiquan Jing   China Telecom Beijing Research Institute   118 Xizhimenwai Avenue   Beijing  100035   China   Phone: +86-10-58552000   EMail: jingrq@ctbri.com.cnEditors' Addresses   Weiqiang Sun (editor)   Shanghai Jiao Tong University   800 Dongchuan Road   Shanghai  200240   China   Phone: +86 21 3420 5359   EMail: sunwq@mit.edu   Guoying Zhang (editor)   China Academy of Telecommunication Research, MIIT, China.   No.52 Hua Yuan Bei Lu,Haidian District   Beijing  100083   China   Phone: +86 1062300103   EMail: zhangguoying@mail.ritt.com.cnSun & Zhang                  Standards Track                   [Page 44]

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