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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                          W. ChengRequest for Comments: 8227                                       L. WangCategory: Standards Track                                          H. LiISSN: 2070-1721                                             China Mobile                                                         H. van Helvoort                                                          Hai Gaoming BV                                                                 J. Dong                                                     Huawei Technologies                                                             August 2017MPLS-TP Shared-Ring Protection (MSRP) Mechanism for Ring TopologyAbstract   This document describes requirements, architecture, and solutions for   MPLS-TP Shared-Ring Protection (MSRP) in a ring topology for point-   to-point (P2P) services.  The MSRP mechanism is described to meet the   ring protection requirements as described inRFC 5654.  This document   defines the Ring Protection Switching (RPS) protocol that is used to   coordinate the protection behavior of the nodes on an MPLS ring.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 7841.   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/rfc8227.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2017 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.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017Table of Contents1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41.1.  Requirements Language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42.  Terminology and Notation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43.  MPLS-TP Ring Protection Criteria and Requirements . . . . . .54.  Shared-Ring Protection Architecture . . . . . . . . . . . . .64.1.  Ring Tunnel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .64.1.1.  Establishment of the Ring Tunnel  . . . . . . . . . .84.1.2.  Label Assignment and Distribution . . . . . . . . . .94.1.3.  Forwarding Operation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .94.2.  Failure Detection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .104.3.  Ring Protection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .114.3.1.  Wrapping  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .124.3.2.  Short-Wrapping  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .144.3.3.  Steering  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .174.4.  Interconnected Ring Protection  . . . . . . . . . . . . .214.4.1.  Interconnected Ring Topology  . . . . . . . . . . . .214.4.2.  Interconnected Ring Protection Mechanisms . . . . . .224.4.3.  Ring Tunnels in Interconnected Rings  . . . . . . . .234.4.4.  Interconnected Ring-Switching Procedure . . . . . . .254.4.5.  Interconnected Ring Detection Mechanism . . . . . . .265.  Ring Protection Coordination Protocol . . . . . . . . . . . .275.1.  RPS and PSC Comparison on Ring Topology . . . . . . . . .275.2.  RPS Protocol  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .285.2.1.  Transmission and Acceptance of RPS Requests . . . . .305.2.2.  RPS Protocol Data Unit (PDU) Format . . . . . . . . .315.2.3.  Ring Node RPS States  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .325.2.4.  RPS State Transitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .345.3.  RPS State Machine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .365.3.1.  Switch Initiation Criteria  . . . . . . . . . . . . .365.3.2.  Initial States  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .395.3.3.  State Transitions When Local Request Is Applied . . .405.3.4.  State Transitions When Remote Request is Applied  . .44       5.3.5.  State Transitions When Request Addresses to Another               Node is Received  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .476.  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .516.1.  G-ACh Channel Type  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .516.2.  RPS Request Codes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .517.  Operational Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .528.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .529.  References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .539.1.  Normative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .539.2.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54   Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .55   Contributors  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .55   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .56Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 20171.  Introduction   As described inSection 2.5.6.1 of [RFC5654], several service   providers have expressed much interest in operating an MPLS Transport   Profile (MPLS-TP) in ring topologies and require a high-level   survivability function in these topologies.  In operational transport   network deployment, MPLS-TP networks are often constructed using ring   topologies.  This calls for an efficient and optimized ring   protection mechanism to achieve simple operation and fast, sub 50 ms,   recovery performance.   This document specifies an MPLS-TP Shared-Ring Protection mechanism   that meets the criteria for ring protection and the ring protection   requirements described inSection 2.5.6.1 of [RFC5654].   The basic concept and architecture of the MPLS-TP Shared-Ring   Protection mechanism are specified in this document.  This document   describes the solutions for point-to-point transport paths.  While   the basic concept may also apply to point-to-multipoint transport   paths, the solution for point-to-multipoint transport paths is out of   the scope of this document.1.1.  Requirements Language   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and   "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described inBCP14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all   capitals, as shown here.2.  Terminology and Notation   Terminology:   Ring node:  All nodes in the ring topology are ring nodes, and they      MUST actively participate in the ring protection.   Ring tunnel:  A ring tunnel provides a server layer for the Label      Switched Paths (LSPs) traversing the ring.  The notation used for      a ring tunnel is: R<d><p><X> where <d> = c (clockwise) or a      (anticlockwise), <p> = W (working) or P (protecting), and <X> =      the node name.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   Ring map:  A ring map is present in each ring node.  The ring map      contains the ring topology information, i.e., the nodes in the      ring, the adjacency of the ring nodes, and the status of the links      between ring nodes (Intact or Severed).  The ring map is used by      every ring node to determine the switchover behavior of the ring      tunnels.   Notation:   The following syntax will be used to describe the contents of the   label stack:   1.  The label stack will be enclosed in square brackets ("[]").   2.  Each level in the stack will be separated by the '|' character.       It should be noted that the label stack may contain additional       layers.  However, we only present the layers that are related to       the protection mechanism.   3.  If the label is assigned by Node X, the Node Name is enclosed in       parentheses ("()").3.  MPLS-TP Ring Protection Criteria and Requirements   The generic requirements for MPLS-TP protection are specified in   [RFC5654].  The requirements specific for ring protection are   specified inSection 2.5.6.1 of [RFC5654].  This section describes   how the criteria for ring protection are met:   a.  The number of Operations, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM)       entities needed to trigger protection       Each ring node requires only one instance of the RPS protocol per       ring.  The OAM of the links connected to the adjacent ring nodes       has to be forwarded to only this instance in order to trigger       protection.  For detailed information, seeSection 5.2.   b.  The number of elements of recovery in the ring       Each ring node requires only one instance of the RPS protocol and       is independent of the number of LSPs that are protected.  For       detailed information, seeSection 5.2.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   c.  The required number of labels required for the protection paths       The RPS protocol uses ring tunnels, and each tunnel has a set of       labels.  The number of ring tunnel labels is related to the       number of ring nodes and is independent of the number of       protected LSPs.  For detailed information, seeSection 4.1.2.   d.  The amount of control and management-plane transactions       Each ring node requires only one instance of the RPS protocol per       ring.  This means that only one maintenance operation is required       per ring node.  For detailed information, seeSection 5.2.   e.  Minimize the signaling and routing information exchange during       protection       Information exchange during a protection switch is using the       in-band RPS and OAM messages.  No control-plane interactions are       required.  For detailed information, seeSection 5.2.4.  Shared-Ring Protection Architecture4.1.  Ring Tunnel   This document introduces a new logical layer of the ring for shared-   ring protection in MPLS-TP networks.  As shown in Figure 1, the new   logical layer consists of ring tunnels that provide a server layer   for the LSPs traversing the ring.  Once a ring tunnel is established,   the forwarding and protection switching of the ring are all performed   at the ring tunnel level.  A port can carry multiple ring tunnels,   and a ring tunnel can carry multiple LSPs.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017                                              +-------------                                +-------------|                  +-------------|             |    ===Service1===|             |             |    ===Service2===|    LSP1     |             |                  +-------------|             |                                |Ring-Tunnel1 |                  +-------------|             |    ===Service3===|             |             |    ===Service4===|    LSP2     |             |                  +-------------|             |                                +-------------|  Physical                                +-------------|                  +-------------|             |    Port    ===Service5===|             |             |    ===Service6===|    LSP3     |             |                  +-------------|             |                                |Ring-Tunnel2 |                  +-------------|             |    ===Service7===|             |             |    ===Service8===|    LSP4     |             |                  +-------------|             |                                +-------------|                                              +-------------                 Figure 1: The Logical Layers of the Ring   The label stack used in the MPLS-TP Shared-Ring Protection mechanism   is [Ring Tunnel Label|LSP Label|Service Label](Payload) as   illustrated in Figure 2.                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                   |           Ring Tunnel Label         |                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                   |               LSP Label             |                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                   |             Service Label           |                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                   |                Payload              |                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       Figure 2: Label Stack Used in MPLS-TP Shared-Ring ProtectionCheng, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 20174.1.1.  Establishment of the Ring Tunnel   The Ring tunnels are established based on the egress nodes.  The   egress node is the node where traffic leaves the ring.  LSPs that   have the same egress node on the ring and travel along the ring in   the same direction (clockwise or anticlockwise) share the same ring   tunnels.  In other words, all the LSPs that traverse the ring in the   same direction and exit from the same node share the same working   ring tunnel and protection ring tunnel.  For each egress node, four   ring tunnels are established:   o  one clockwise working ring tunnel, which is protected by the      anticlockwise protection ring tunnel   o  one anticlockwise protection ring tunnel   o  one anticlockwise working ring tunnel, which is protected by the      clockwise protection ring tunnel   o  one clockwise protection ring tunnel   The structure of the protection tunnels is determined by the selected   protection mechanism.  This will be detailed in subsequent sections.   As shown in Figure 3, LSP1, LSP2, and LSP3 enter the ring from Node   E, Node A, and Node B, respectively, and all leave the ring at Node   D.  To protect these LSPs that traverse the ring, a clockwise working   ring tunnel (RcW_D) via E->F->A->B->C->D and its anticlockwise   protection ring tunnel (RaP_D) via D->C->B->A->F->E->D are   established.  Also, an anticlockwise working ring tunnel (RaW_D) via   C->B->A->F->E->D and its clockwise protection ring tunnel (RcP_D) via   D->E->F->A->B->C->D are established.  For simplicity, Figure 3 only   shows RcW_D and RaP_D.  A similar provisioning should be applied for   any other node on the ring.  In summary, for each node in Figure 3,   when acting as an egress node, the ring tunnels are created as   follows:   o  To Node A: RcW_A, RaW_A, RcP_A, RaP_A   o  To Node B: RcW_B, RaW_B, RcP_B, RaP_B   o  To Node C: RcW_C, RaW_C, RcP_C, RaP_C   o  To Node D: RcW_D, RaW_D, RcP_D, RaP_D   o  To Node E: RcW_E, RaW_E, RcP_E, RaP_E   o  To Node F: RcW_F, RaW_F, RcP_F, RaP_FCheng, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017                       +---+#############+---+                       | F |-------------| A | +-- LSP2                       +---+*************+---+                       #/*                   *\#                      #/*                     *\#                     #/*                       *\#                   +---+                     +---+          LSP1 --+ | E |                     | B |+-- LSP3                   +---+                     +---+                     #\                       */#                      #\                     */#                       #\                   */#                       +---+*************+---+               LSP1 +--| D |-------------| C |               LSP2    +---+#############+---+               LSP3                         ----- Physical Links                         ***** RcW_D                         ##### RaP_D                      Figure 3: Ring Tunnels in MSRP   Through these working and protection ring tunnels, LSPs that enter   the ring from any node can reach any egress nodes on the ring and are   protected from failures on the ring.4.1.2.  Label Assignment and Distribution   The ring tunnel labels are downstream-assigned labels as defined in   [RFC3031].  The ring tunnel labels on each hop of the ring tunnel can   be either configured statically, provisioned by a controller, or   distributed dynamically via a control protocol.  For an LSP that   traverses the ring tunnel, the ingress ring node and the egress ring   node are considered adjacent at the LSP layer, and LSP label needs to   be allocated at these two ring nodes.  The control plane for label   distribution is outside the scope of this document.4.1.3.  Forwarding Operation   When an MPLS-TP transport path, i.e., an LSP, enters the ring, the   ingress node on the ring pushes the working ring tunnel label that is   used to reach the specific egress node and sends the traffic to the   next hop.  The transit nodes on the working ring tunnel swap the ring   tunnel labels and forward the packets to the next hop.  When the   packet arrives at the egress node, the egress node pops the ring   tunnel label and forwards the packets based on the inner LSP labelCheng, et al.                Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   and service label.  Figure 4 shows the label operation in the MPLS-TP   Shared-Ring Protection mechanism.  Assume that LSP1 enters the ring   at Node A and exits from Node D, and the following label operations   are executed.   1.  Ingress node: Packets of LSP1 arrive at Node A with a label stack       [LSP1] and are supposed to be forwarded in the clockwise       direction of the ring.  The label of the clockwise working ring       tunnel RcW_D will be pushed at Node A, the label stack for the       forwarded packet at Node A is changed to [RcW_D(B)|LSP1].   2.  Transit nodes: In this case, Nodes B and C forward the packets by       swapping the working ring tunnel labels.  For example, the label       [RcW_D(B)|LSP1] is swapped to [RcW_D(C)|LSP1] at Node B.   3.  Egress node: When the packet arrives at Node D (i.e., the egress       node) with label stack [RcW_D(D)|LSP1], Node D pops RcW_D(D) and       subsequently deals with the inner labels of LSP1.                      +---+#####[RaP_D(F)]######+---+                      | F |---------------------| A | +-- LSP1                      +---+*****[RcW_D(A)]******+---+                       #/*                        *\#            [RaP_D(E)]#/*[RcW_D(F)]      [RcW_D(B)]*\#[RaP_D(A)]                     #/*                            *\#                   +---+                          +---+                   | E |                          | B |                   +---+                          +---+                     #\                            */#            [RaP_D(D)]#\                [RxW_D(C)]*/#[RaP_D(B)]                       #\                        */#                       +---+*****[RcW_D(D)]****+---+             LSP1  +-- | D |-------------------| C |                       +---+#####[RaP_D(C)]####+---+                            ----- Physical Links                            ***** RcW_D                            ##### RaP_D                     Figure 4: Label Operation of MSRP4.2.  Failure Detection   The MPLS-TP section-layer OAM is used to monitor the connectivity   between each two adjacent nodes on the ring using the mechanisms   defined in [RFC6371].  Protection switching is triggered by the   failure detected on the ring by the OAM mechanisms.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   Two ports of a link form a Maintenance Entity Group (MEG), and a MEG   End Point (MEP) function is installed in each ring port.  Continuity   Check (CC) OAM packets are periodically exchanged between each pair   of MEPs to monitor the link health.  Three consecutive lost CC   packets MUST be interpreted as a link failure.   A node failure is regarded as the failure of two links attached to   that node.  The two nodes adjacent to the failed node detect the   failure in the links that are connected to the failed node.4.3.  Ring Protection   This section specifies the ring protection mechanisms in detail.  In   general, the description uses the clockwise working ring tunnel and   the corresponding anticlockwise protection ring tunnel as an example,   but the mechanism is applicable in the same way to the anticlockwise   working and clockwise protection ring tunnels.   In a ring network, each working ring tunnel is associated with a   protection ring tunnel in the opposite direction, and every node MUST   obtain the ring topology either by configuration or via a topology   discovery mechanism.  The ring topology and the connectivity (Intact   or Severed) between two adjacent ring nodes form the ring map.  Each   ring node maintains the ring map and uses it to perform ring   protection switching.   Taking the topology in Figure 4 as an example, LSP1 enters the ring   at Node A and leaves the ring at Node D.  In normal state, LSP1 is   carried by the clockwise working ring tunnel (RcW_D) through the path   A->B->C->D.  The label operation is:   [LSP1](Payload) -> [RCW_D(B)|LSP1](NodeA) -> [RCW_D(C)|LSP1](NodeB)   -> [RCW_D(D)| LSP1](NodeC) -> [LSP1](Payload).   Then at Node D, the packet will be forwarded based on the label stack   of LSP1.   Three typical ring protection mechanisms are described in this   section: wrapping, short-wrapping, and steering.  All nodes on the   same ring MUST use the same protection mechanism.  If the RPS   protocol in any node detects an RPS message with a protection-   switching mode that was not provisioned in that node, a failure of   protocol will be reported, and the protection mechanism will not be   activated.   Wrapping ring protection: the node that detects a failure or accepts   a switch request switches the traffic impacted by the failure or the   switch request to the opposite direction (away from the failure).  InCheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   this way, the impacted traffic is switched to the protection ring   tunnel by the switching node upstream of the failure, then it travels   around the ring to the switching node downstream of the failure   through the protection ring tunnel, where it is switched back onto   the working ring tunnel to reach the egress node.   Short-wrapping ring protection provides some optimization to wrapping   protection, in which the impacted traffic is only switched once to   the protection ring tunnel by the switching node upstream to the   failure.  At the egress node, the traffic leaves the ring from the   protection ring tunnel.  This can reduce the traffic detour of   wrapping protection.   Steering ring protection implies that the node that detects a failure   sends a request along the ring to the other node adjacent to the   failure, and all nodes in the ring process this information.  For the   impacted traffic, the ingress node (which adds traffic to the ring)   performs switching of the traffic from working to the protection ring   tunnel, and the egress node will drop the traffic received from the   protection ring tunnel.   The following sections describe these protection mechanisms in   detail.4.3.1.  Wrapping   With the wrapping mechanism, the protection ring tunnel is a closed   ring identified by the egress node.  As shown in Figure 4, the RaP_D   is the anticlockwise protection ring tunnel for the clockwise working   ring tunnel RcW_D.  As specified in the following sections, the   closed ring protection tunnel can protect both link failures and node   failures.  Wrapping can be applicable for the protection of   Point-to-Multipoint (P2MP) LSPs on the ring; the details of which are   outside the scope of this document.4.3.1.1.  Wrapping for Link Failure   When a link failure between Nodes B and C occurs, if it is a   bidirectional failure, both Nodes B and C can detect the failure via   the OAM mechanism; if it is a unidirectional failure, one of the two   nodes would detect the failure via the OAM mechanism.  In both cases,   the node at the other side of the detected failure will be determined   by the ring map and informed using the RPS protocol, which is   specified inSection 5.  Then Node B switches the clockwise working   ring tunnel (RcW_D) to the anticlockwise protection ring tunnel   (RaP_D), and Node C switches the anticlockwise protection ring tunnel   (RaP_D) back to the clockwise working ring tunnel (RcW_D).  TheCheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   payload that enters the ring at Node A and leaves the ring at Node D   follows the path A->B->A->F->E->D->C->D.  The label operation is:   [LSP1](Payload) -> [RcW_D(B)|LSP1](Node A) -> [RaP_D(A)|LSP1](Node B)   -> [RaP_D(F)|LSP1](Node A) -> [RaP_D(E)|LSP1] (Node F) ->   [RaP_D(D)|LSP1] (Node E) -> [RaP_D(C)|LSP1] (Node D) ->   [RcW_D(D)|LSP1](Node C) -> [LSP1](Payload).                      +---+#####[RaP_D(F)]######+---+                      | F |---------------------| A | +-- LSP1                      +---+*****[RcW_D(A)]******+---+                      #/*                        *\#           [RaP_D(E)]#/*[RcW_D(F)]      [RcW_D(B)]*\#RaP_D(A)                    #/*                            *\#                  +---+                          +---+                  | E |                          | B |                  +---+                          +---+                    #\                            *x#           [RaP_D(D)]#\                [RcW_D(C)]*x#RaP_D(B)                      #\                        *x#                      +---+*****[RcW_D(D)]****+---+            LSP1  +-- | D |-------------------| C |                      +---+#####[RaP_D(C)]####+---+                 ----- Physical Links    xxxxx Failure Links                 ***** RcW_D             ##### RaP_D                    Figure 5: Wrapping for Link Failure4.3.1.2.  Wrapping for Node Failure   As shown in Figure 6, when Node B fails, Node A detects the failure   between A and B and switches the clockwise working ring tunnel   (RcW_D) to the anticlockwise protection ring tunnel (RaP_D); Node C   detects the failure between C and B and switches the anticlockwise   protection ring tunnel (RaP_D) to the clockwise working ring tunnel   (RcW_D).  The node at the other side of the failed node will be   determined by the ring map and informed using the RPS protocol   specified inSection 5.   The payload that enters the ring at Node A and exits at Node D   follows the path A->F->E->D->C->D.  The label operation is:   [LSP1](Payload)-> [RaP_D(F)|LSP1](NodeA) -> [RaP_D(E)|LSP1](NodeF) ->   [RaP_D(D)|LSP1](NodeE) -> [RaP_D(C)|LSP1] (NodeD) -> [RcW_D(D)|LSP1]   (NodeC) -> [LSP1](Payload).Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   In one special case where Node D fails, all the ring tunnels with   Node D as the egress will become unusable.  The ingress node will   update its ring map according to received RPS messages and determine   that the egress node is not reachable; thus, it will not send traffic   to either the working or the protection tunnel.  However, before the   failure location information is propagated to all the ring nodes, the   wrapping protection mechanism may cause a temporary traffic loop:   Node C detects the failure and switches the traffic from the   clockwise working ring tunnel (RcW_D) to the anticlockwise protection   ring tunnel (RaP_D); Node E also detects the failure and switches the   traffic from the anticlockwise protection ring tunnel (RaP_D) back to   the clockwise working ring tunnel (RcW_D).  A possible mechanism to   mitigate the temporary loop problem is: the TTL of the ring tunnel   label is set to 2*N by the ingress ring node of the traffic, where N   is the number of nodes on the ring.                         +---+#####[RaP_D(F)]######+---+                         | F |---------------------| A | +-- LSP1                         +---+*****[RcW_D(A)]******+---+                         #/*                        *\#              [RaP_D(E)]#/*[RcW_D(F)]      [RcW_D(B)]*\#RaP_D(A)                       #/*                            *\#                     +---+                          xxxxx                     | E |                          x B x                     +---+                          xxxxx                       #\                            */#              [RaP_D(D)]#\                [RcW_D(C)]*/#RaP_D(B)                         #\                       */#                         +---+*****[RcW_D(D)]****+---+               LSP1  +-- | D |-------------------| C |                         +---+#####[RaP_D(C)]####+---+                    ----- Physical Links    xxxxx Failure Nodes                    ***** RcW_D             ##### RaP_D                    Figure 6: Wrapping for Node Failure4.3.2.  Short-Wrapping   With the wrapping protection scheme, protection switching is executed   at both nodes adjacent to the failure; consequently, the traffic will   be wrapped twice.  This mechanism will cause additional latency and   bandwidth consumption when traffic is switched to the protection   path.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   With short-wrapping protection, protection switching is executed only   at the node upstream to the failure, and the packet leaves the ring   in the protection ring tunnel at the egress node.  This scheme can   reduce the additional latency and bandwidth consumption when traffic   is switched to the protection path.  However, the two directions of a   protected bidirectional LSP are no longer co-routed under the   protection-switching conditions.   In the traditional wrapping solution, the protection ring tunnel is   configured as a closed ring, while in the short-wrapping solution,   the protection ring tunnel is configured as ended at the egress node,   which is similar to the working ring tunnel.  Short-wrapping is easy   to implement in shared-ring protection because both the working and   protection ring tunnels are terminated on the egress nodes.  Figure 7   shows the clockwise working ring tunnel and the anticlockwise   protection ring tunnel with Node D as the egress node.4.3.2.1.  Short-Wrapping for Link Failure   As shown in Figure 7, in normal state, LSP1 is carried by the   clockwise working ring tunnel (RcW_D) through the path A->B->C->D.   When a link failure between Nodes B and C occurs, Node B switches the   working ring tunnel RcW_D to the protection ring tunnel RaP_D in the   opposite direction.  The difference with wrapping occurs in the   protection ring tunnel at the egress node.  In short-wrapping   protection, Rap_D ends in Node D, and then traffic will be forwarded   based on the LSP labels.  Thus, with the short-wrapping mechanism,   LSP1 will follow the path A->B->A->F->E->D when a link failure   between Node B and Node C happens.  The protection switch at Node D   is based on the information from its ring map and the information   received via the RPS protocol.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017                         +---+#####[RaP_D(F)]######+---+                         | F |---------------------| A | +-- LSP1                         +---+*****[RcW_D(A)]******+---+                         #/*                        *\#              [RaP_D(E)]#/*[RcW_D(F)]      [RcW_D(B)]*\#RaP_D(A)                       #/*                            *\#                     +---+                           +---+                     | E |                           | B |                     +---+                           +---+                       #\                            *x#              [RaP_D(D)]#\                [RcW_D(C)]*x#RaP_D(B)                         #\                        *x#                         +---+*****[RcW_D(D)]****+---+               LSP1  +-- | D |-------------------| C |                         +---+                   +---+                   ----- Physical Links    xxxxx Failure Links                   ***** RcW_D             ##### RaP_D                 Figure 7: Short-Wrapping for Link Failure4.3.2.2.  Short-Wrapping for Node Failure   For the node failure that happens on a non-egress node, the short-   wrapping protection switching is similar to the link failure case as   described in the previous section.  This section specifies the   scenario of an egress node failure.   As shown in Figure 8, LSP1 enters the ring on Node A and leaves the   ring on Node D.  In normal state, LSP1 is carried by the clockwise   working ring tunnel (RcW_D) through the path A->B->C->D.  When Node D   fails, the traffic of LSP1 cannot be protected by any ring tunnels   that use Node D as the egress node.  The ingress node will update its   ring map according to received RPS messages and determine that the   egress node is not reachable; thus, it will not send traffic to   either the working or the protection tunnel.  However, before the   failure location information is propagated to all the ring nodes   using the RPS protocol, Node C switches all the traffic on the   working ring tunnel RcW_D to the protection ring tunnel RaP_D in the   opposite direction based on the information in the ring map.  When   the traffic arrives at Node E, which also detects the failure of Node   D, the protection ring tunnel RaP_D cannot be used to forward traffic   to Node D.  With the short-wrapping mechanism, protection switching   can only be performed once from the working ring tunnel to the   protection ring tunnel; thus, Node E MUST NOT switch the traffic that   is already carried on the protection ring tunnel back to the workingCheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   ring tunnel in the opposite direction.  Instead, Node E will discard   the traffic received on RaP_D locally.  This can avoid the temporary   traffic loop when the failure happens on the egress node of the ring   tunnel.  This also illustrates one of the benefits of having separate   working and protection ring tunnels in each ring direction.                         +---+#####[RaP_D(F)]######+---+                         | F |---------------------| A | +-- LSP1                         +---+*****[RcW_D(A)]******+---+                         #/*                        *\#              [RaP_D(E)]#/*[RcW_D(F)]      [RcW_D(B)]*\#RaP_D(A)                       #/*                            *\#                     +---+                          +---+                     | E |                          | B |                     +---+                          +---+                       #\                            */#              [RaP_D(D)]#\                [RcW_D(C)]*/#RaP_D(B)                         #\                       */#                         xxxxx*****[RcW_D(D)]****+---+               LSP1  +-- x D x-------------------| C |                         xxxxx                   +---+                   ----- Physical Links    xxxxx Failure Nodes                   ***** RcW_D             ##### RaP_D             Figure 8: Short-Wrapping for Egress Node Failure4.3.3.  Steering   With the steering protection mechanism, the ingress node (which adds   traffic to the ring) performs switching from the working to the   protection ring tunnel, and at the egress node, the traffic leaves   the ring from the protection ring tunnel.   When a failure occurs in the ring, the node that detects the failure   with an OAM mechanism sends the failure information in the opposite   direction of the failure hop by hop along the ring using an RPS   request message and the ring-map information.  When a ring node   receives the RPS message that identifies a failure, it can determine   the location of the fault by using the topology information of the   ring map and updating the ring map accordingly; then, it can   determine whether the LSPs entering the ring locally need to switch   over or not.  For LSPs that need to switch over, it will switch the   LSPs from the working ring tunnels to their corresponding protection   ring tunnels.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 20174.3.3.1.  Steering for Link Failure   Ring Map of F                                  +--LSP1  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+     +---+ ###[RaP_D(F)]### +---/  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  |F|A|B|C|D|E|F|     | F | ---------------- | A |  |A|B|C|D|E|F|A|  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+     +---+ ***[RcW_D(A)]*** +---+  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |I|I|I|S|I|I|       #/*                    *\#    |I|I|S|I|I|I|   +-+-+-+-+-+-+      #/*                      *\#   +-+-+-+-+-+-+         [RaP_D(E)]  #/*           [RcW_D(B)]   *\# [RaP_D(A)]                    #/* [RcW_D(F)]               *\# +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   #/*                            *\# |E|F|A|B|C|D|E| +---+                            +---+ +-- LSP2 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | E |                            | B |  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  |I|I|I|I|S|I|  +---+                            +---+  |B|C|D|E|F|A|B|  +-+-+-+-+-+-+     #\*                            */#   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                     #\* [RcW_D(E)]    [RcW_D(C)] */#     |I|S|I|I|I|I|         [RaP_D(D)]   #\*                        */#      +-+-+-+-+-+-+                       #\*                      */# [RaP_D(B)] +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +---+     [RcW_D(D)]    +---+    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |D|E|F|A|B|C|D|  +--  | D | xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx | C |    |C|D|E|F|A|B|C| +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ LSP1  +---+     [RaP_D(C)]    +---+    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  |I|I|I|I|I|S|  LSP2                                    |S|I|I|I|I|I|  +-+-+-+-+-+-+                                          +-+-+-+-+-+-+                            ----- Physical Links                            ***** RcW_D                            ##### RaP_D                               I: Intact                               S: Severed           Figure 9: Steering Operation and Protection Switching                            When Link C-D Fails   As shown in Figure 9, LSP1 enters the ring from Node A while LSP2   enters the ring from Node B, and both of them have the same   destination, which is Node D.   In normal state, LSP1 is carried by the clockwise working ring tunnel   (RcW_D) through the path A->B->C->D, and the label operation is:   [LSP1](Payload) -> [RcW_D(B)|LSP1](NodeA) -> [RcW_D(C)| LSP1](NodeB)   -> [RcW_D(D)|LSP1](NodeC) -> [LSP1](Payload).   LSP2 is carried by the clockwise working ring tunnel (RcW_D) through   the path B->C->D, and the label operation is: [LSP2](Payload) ->   [RcW_D(C)|LSP2](NodeB) -> [RcW_D(D)|LSP2](NodeC) -> [LSP2](Payload).Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   If the link between Nodes C and D fails, according to the fault   detection and distribution mechanisms, Node D will find out that   there is a failure in the link between C and D, and it will update   the link state of its ring topology, changing the link between C and   D from normal to fault.  In the direction that is opposite to the   failure position, Node D will send the state report message to Node   E, informing Node E of the fault between C and D, and E will update   the link state of its ring topology accordingly, changing the link   between C and D from normal to fault.  In this way, the state report   message is sent hop by hop in the clockwise direction.  Similar to   Node D, Node C will send the failure information in the anticlockwise   direction.   When Node A receives the failure report message and updates the link   state of its ring map, it is aware that there is a fault on the   clockwise working ring tunnel to Node D (RcW_D), and LSP1 enters the   ring locally and is carried by this ring tunnel; thus, Node A will   decide to switch the LSP1 onto the anticlockwise protection ring   tunnel to Node D (RaP_D).  After the switchover, LSP1 will follow the   path A->F->E->D, and the label operation is: [LSP1](Payload) ->   [RaP_D(F)| LSP1](NodeA) -> [RaP_D(E)|LSP1](NodeF) ->   [RaP_D(D)|LSP1](NodeE) -> [LSP1](Payload).   The same procedure also applies to the operation of LSP2.  When Node   B updates the link state of its ring topology, and finds out that the   working ring tunnel RcW_D has failed, it will switch the LSP2 to the   anticlockwise protection tunnel RaP_D.  After the switchover, LSP2   goes through the path B->A->F->E->D, and the label operation is:   [LSP2](Payload) -> [RaP_D(A)|LSP2](NodeB) -> [RaP_D(F)|LSP2](NodeA)   -> [RaP_D(E)|LSP2](NodeF) -> [RaP_D(D)|LSP2](NodeE) ->   [LSP2](Payload).   Assume the link between Nodes A and B breaks down, as shown in   Figure 10.  Similar to the above failure case, Node B will detect a   fault in the link between A and B, and it will update its ring map,   changing the link state between A and B from normal to fault.  The   state report message is sent hop by hop in the clockwise direction,   notifying every node that there is a fault between Nodes A and B, and   every node updates the link state of its ring topology.  As a result,   Node A will detect a fault in the working ring tunnel to Node D, and   switch LSP1 to the protection ring tunnel, while Node B determines   that the working ring tunnel for LSP2 still works fine, and it will   not perform the switchover.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017                                                   /+-- LSP1+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      +---+ ###[RaP_D(F)]####  +---/  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+|F|A|B|C|D|E|F|      | F | -----------------  | A |  |A|B|C|D|E|F|A|+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      +---+ ***[RcW_D(A)]****  +---+  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |I|S|I|I|I|I|       #/*                       x      |S|I|I|I|I|I| +-+-+-+-+-+-+      #/*                         x     +-+-+-+-+-+-+       [RaP_D(E)]  #/*[RcW_D(F)]       [RcW_D(B)]x [RaP_D(A)]                  #/*                             x     /+-- LSP2+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  +---+                             +---/ +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+|E|F|A|B|C|D|E|  | E |                             | B | |B|C|D|E|F|A|B|+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  +---+                             +---+ +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |I|I|S|I|I|I|     #\*                            */#     |I|I|I|I|I|S| +-+-+-+-+-+-+      #\*[RcW_D(E)]    [RcW_D(C)]  */#      +-+-+-+-+-+-+         [RaP_D(D)]  #\*                        */# [RaP_D(B)]+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       #\*                      */#     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+|D|E|F|A|B|C|D|       +---+ ***[RcW_D(D)]*** +---+     |C|D|E|F|A|B|C|+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+  +--  | D | ---------------- | C |     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |I|I|I|S|I|I|   LSP1 +---+ ###[RaP_D(C)]### +---+      |I|I|I|I|S|I| +-+-+-+-+-+-+   LSP2                                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+                          ----- Physical Links                          ***** RcW_D                          ##### RaP_D          Figure 10: Steering Operation and Protection Switching                            When Link A-B Fails4.3.3.2.  Steering for Node Failure   For a node failure that happens on a non-egress node, steering   protection switching is similar to the link failure case as described   in the previous section.   If the failure occurs at the egress node of the LSP, the ingress node   will update its ring map according to the received RPS messages; it   will also determine that the egress node is not reachable after the   failure, thus it will not send traffic to either the working or the   protection tunnel, and a traffic loop can be avoided.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 20174.4.  Interconnected Ring Protection4.4.1.  Interconnected Ring Topology   Interconnected ring topology is widely used in MPLS-TP networks.  For   a given ring, the interconnection node acts as the egress node for   that ring, meaning that all LSPs using the interconnection node as an   egress from one specific ring to another will use the same group of   ring tunnels within the ring.  This document will discuss two typical   interconnected ring topologies:   1.  Single-node interconnected rings          In single-node interconnected rings, the connection between          the two rings is through a single node.  Because the          interconnection node is in fact a single point of failure,          this topology should be avoided in real transport networks.          Figure 11 shows the topology of single-node interconnected          rings.  Node C is the interconnection node between Ring1 and          Ring2.          +---+      +---+                        +---+      +---+          | A |------| B |-----              -----| G |------| H |          +---+      +---+      \           /     +---+      +---+            |                    \         /                   |            |                     \ +---+ /                    |            |        Ring1          | C |         Ring2        |            |                     / +---+ \                    |            |                    /         \                   |          +---+      +---+      /           \     +---+      +---+          | F |------| E |-----              -----| J |------| I |          +---+      +---+                        +---+      +---+                Figure 11: Single-Node Interconnected Rings   2.  Dual-node interconnected rings          In dual-node interconnected rings, the connection between the          two rings is through two nodes.  The two interconnection nodes          belong to both interconnected rings.  This topology can          recover from one interconnection node failure.          Figure 12 shows the topology of dual-node interconnected          rings.  Nodes C and D are the interconnection nodes between          Ring1 and Ring2.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017             +---+      +---+      +---+      +---+      +---+             | A |------| B |------| C |------| G |------| H |             +---+      +---+      +---+      +---+      +---+               |                     |                     |               |                     |                     |               |        Ring1        |        Ring2        |               |                     |                     |               |                     |                     |             +---+      +---+      +---+      +---+      +---+             | F |------| E |------| D |------| J |------| I |             +---+      +---+      +---+      +---+      +---+                 Figure 12: Dual-Node Interconnected Rings4.4.2.  Interconnected Ring Protection Mechanisms   Interconnected rings can be treated as two independent rings.  The   RPS protocol operates on each ring independently.  A failure that   happens in one ring only triggers protection switching in the ring   itself and does not affect the other ring, unless the failure is on   the interconnection node.  In this way, protection switching on each   ring is the same as the mechanisms described inSection 4.3.   The service LSPs that traverse the interconnected rings use the ring   tunnels in each ring; within a given ring, the tunnel is selected   using normal ring-selection procedures.  The traversing LSPs are   stitched on the interconnection node.  On the interconnection node,   the ring tunnel label of the source ring is popped, then LSP label is   swapped; after that, the ring tunnel label of the destination ring is   pushed.   In the dual-node interconnected ring scenario, the two   interconnection nodes can be managed as a virtual node group.  In   addition to the ring tunnels to each physical ring node, each ring   SHOULD assign the working and protection ring tunnels to the virtual   interconnection node group.  In addition, on both nodes in the   virtual interconnection node group, the same LSP label is assigned   for each traversed LSP.  This way, any interconnection node in the   virtual node group can terminate the working or protection ring   tunnels targeted to the virtual node group and stitch the service LSP   from the source ring tunnel to the destination ring tunnel.   When the service LSP passes through the interconnected rings, the   direction of the working ring tunnels used on both rings SHOULD be   the same.  In dual-node interconnected rings, this ensures that in   normal state the traffic passes only one of the two interconnection   nodes and does not pass the link between the two interconnectionCheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   nodes.  The traffic will then only be switched to the protection path   if the interconnection node that is in working path fails.  For   example, if the service LSP uses the clockwise working ring tunnel on   Ring1, when the service LSP leaves Ring1 and enters Ring2, the   working ring tunnel used on Ring2 should also follow the clockwise   direction.4.4.3.  Ring Tunnels in Interconnected Rings   The same ring tunnels as described inSection 4.1 are used in each   ring of the interconnected rings.  In addition, ring tunnels to the   virtual interconnection node group are established on each ring of   the interconnected rings, that is:   o  one clockwise working ring tunnel to the virtual interconnection      node group   o  one anticlockwise protection ring tunnel to the virtual      interconnection node group   o  one anticlockwise working ring tunnel to the virtual      interconnection node group   o  one clockwise protection ring tunnel to the virtual      interconnection node group   The ring tunnels to the virtual interconnection node group are shared   by all LSPs that need to be forwarded to other rings.  These ring   tunnels can terminate at any node in the virtual interconnection node   group.   For example, all the ring tunnels on Ring1 in Figure 13 are   provisioned as follows:   o  To Node A: R1cW_A, R1aW_A, R1cP_A, R1aP_A   o  To Node B: R1cW_B, R1aW_B, R1cP_B, R1aP_B   o  To Node C: R1cW_C, R1aW_C, R1cP_C, R1aP_C   o  To Node D: R1cW_D, R1aW_D, R1cP_D, R1aP_D   o  To Node E: R1cW_E, R1aW_E, R1cP_E, R1aP_E   o  To Node F: R1cW_F, R1aW_F, R1cP_F, R1aP_F   o  To the virtual interconnection node group (including Nodes F and      A): R1cW_F&A, R1aW_F&A, R1cP_F&A, R1aP_F&ACheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   All the ring tunnels on Ring2 in Figure 13 are provisioned as   follows:   o  To Node A: R2cW_A, R2aW_A, R2cP_A, R2aP_A   o  To Node F: R2cW_F, R2aW_F, R2cP_F, R2aP_F   o  To Node G: R2cW_G, R2aW_G, R2cP_G, R2aP_G   o  To Node H: R2cW_H, R2aW_H, R2cP_H, R2aP_H   o  To Node I: R2cW_I, R2aW_I, R2cP_I, R2aP_I   o  To Node J: R2cW_J, R2aW_J, R2cP_J, R2aP_J   o  To the virtual interconnection node group (including Nodes F and      A): R2cW_F&A, R2aW_F&A, R2cP_F&A, R2aP_F&ACheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017                          +---+ccccccccccccc+---+                          | H |-------------| I |--->LSP1                          +---+             +---+                          c/a                   a\                         c/a                     a\                        c/a                       a\                      +---+                     +---+                      | G |        Ring2        | J |                      +---+                     +---+                        c\a                      a/c                         c\a                    a/c                          c\a  aaaaaaaaaaaaa   a/c                          +---+ccccccccccccc+---+                          | F |-------------| A |                          +---+ccccccccccccc+---+                          c/aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa a\                         c/                      a\                        c/                        a\                      +---+                     +---+                      | E |        Ring1        | B |                      +---+                     +---+                        c\a                      a/c                         c\a                    a/c                          c\a                  a/c                          +---+aaaaaaaaaaaaa+---+                  LSP1--->| D |-------------| C |                          +---+ccccccccccccc+---+                          Ring1:                           ccccccccccc  R1cW_F&A                           aaaaaaaaaaa  R1aP_F&A                          Ring2:                           ccccccccccc  R2cW_I                           aaaaaaaaaaa  R2aP_I           Figure 13: Ring Tunnels for the Interconnected Rings4.4.4.  Interconnected Ring-Switching Procedure   As shown in Figure 13, for the service LSP1 that enters Ring1 at Node   D and leaves Ring1 at Node F and continues to enter Ring2 at Node F   and leaves Ring2 at Node I, the short-wrapping protection scheme is   described as below.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   In normal state, LSP1 follows R1cW_F&A in Ring1 and R2cW_I in Ring2.   At the interconnection Node F, the label used for the working ring   tunnel R1cW_F&A in Ring1 is popped, the LSP label is swapped, and the   label used for the working ring tunnel R2cW_I in Ring2 will be pushed   based on the inner LSP label lookup.  The working path that the   service LSP1 follows is: LSP1->R1cW_F&A   (D->E->F)->R2cW_I(F->G->H->I)->LSP1.   In case of link failure, for example, when a failure occurs on the   link between Nodes F and E, Node E will detect the failure and   execute protection switching as described inSection 4.3.2.  The path   that the service LSP1 follows after switching change to: LSP1->R1cW_F   &A(D->E)->R1aP_F&A(E->D->C->B->A)->R2cW_I(A->F->G->H->I)->LSP1.   In case of a non-interconnection node failure, for example, when the   failure occurs at Node E in Ring1, Node D will detect the failure and   execute protection switching as described inSection 4.3.2.  The path   that the service LSP1 follows after switching becomes:   LSP1->R1aP_F&A(D->C->B->A)->R2cW_I(A->F->G->H->I)->LSP1.   In case of an interconnection node failure, for example, when the   failure occurs at the interconnection Node F, Node E in Ring1 will   detect the failure and execute protection switching as described inSection 4.3.2.  Node A in Ring2 will also detect the failure and   execute protection switching as described inSection 4.3.2.  The path   that the service traffic LSP1 follows after switching is:   LSP1->R1cW_F&A(D->E)->R1aP_F&A(E->D->C->B->A)->R2aP_I(A->J->I)->LSP1.4.4.5.  Interconnected Ring Detection Mechanism   As shown in Figure 13, in normal state, the service traffic LSP1   traverses D->E->F in Ring1 and F->G->H->I in Ring2.  Nodes A and F   are the interconnection nodes.  When both links between Nodes F and G   and between Nodes F and A fail, the ring tunnel from Node F to Node I   in Ring2 becomes unreachable.  However, the other interconnection   Node A is still available, and LSP1 can still reach Node I via Node   A.   In order to achieve this, the interconnection nodes need to know the   ring topology of each ring so that they can judge whether a node is   reachable.  This judgment is based on the knowledge of the ring map   and the fault location.  The ring map can be obtained from the   Network Management System (NMS) or topology discovery mechanisms.   The fault location can be obtained by transmitting the fault   information around the ring.  The nodes that detect the failure will   transmit the fault information in the opposite direction hop by hop   using the RPS protocol message.  When the interconnection node   receives the message that informs the failure, it will calculate theCheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   location of the fault according to the topology information that is   maintained by itself and determines whether the LSPs entering the   ring at itself can reach the destination.  If the destination node is   reachable, the LSP will leave the source ring and enter the   destination ring.  If the destination node is not reachable, the LSP   will switch to the anticlockwise protection ring tunnel.   In Figure 13, Node F determines that the ring tunnel to Node I is   unreachable; the service LSP1 for which the destination node on Ring2   is Node I MUST switch to the protection ring tunnel (R1aP_F&A), and   consequently, the service traffic LSP1 traverses the interconnected   rings at Node A.  Node A will pop the ring tunnel label of Ring1 and   push the ring tunnel label of Ring2 and send the traffic to Node I   via the ring tunnel (R2aW_I).5.  Ring Protection Coordination Protocol5.1.  RPS and PSC Comparison on Ring Topology   This section provides comparison between RPS and Protection State   Coordination (PSC) [RFC6378] [RFC6974] on ring topologies.  This can   be helpful to explain the reason of defining a new protocol for ring   protection switching.   The PSC protocol [RFC6378] is designed for point-to-point LSPs, on   which the protection switching can only be performed on one or both   of the endpoints of the LSP.  The RPS protocol is designed for ring   tunnels, which consist of multiple ring nodes, and the failure could   happen on any segment of the ring; thus, RPS is capable of   identifying and handling the different failures on the ring and   coordinating the protection-switching behavior of all the nodes on   the ring.  As will be specified in the following sections, this is   achieved with the introduction of the "pass-through" state for the   ring nodes, and the location of the protection request is identified   via the node IDs in the RPS request message.   Taking a ring topology with N nodes as an example:   With the mechanism specified in [RFC6974], on every ring node, a   linear protection configuration has to be provisioned with every   other node in the ring, i.e., with (N-1) other nodes.  This means   that on every ring node there will be (N-1) instances of the PSC   protocol.  And in order to detect faults and to transport the PSC   message, each instance shall have a MEP on the working path and a MEP   on the protection path, respectively.  This means that every node on   the ring needs to be configured with (N-1) * 2 MEPs.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   With the mechanism defined in this document, on every ring node there   will only be a single instance of the RPS protocol.  In order to   detect faults and to transport the RPS message, each node only needs   to have a MEP on the section to its adjacent nodes, respectively.  In   this way, every ring node only needs to be configured with 2 MEPs.   As shown in the above example, RPS is designed for ring topologies   and can achieve ring protection efficiently with minimum protection   instances and OAM entities, which meets the requirements on topology-   specific recovery mechanisms as specified in [RFC5654].5.2.  RPS Protocol   The RPS protocol defined in this section is used to coordinate the   protection-switching action of all the ring nodes in the same ring.   The protection operation of the ring tunnels is controlled with the   help of the RPS protocol.  The RPS processes in each of the   individual ring nodes that form the ring MUST communicate using the   Generic Associated Channel (G-ACh).  The RPS protocol is applicable   to all the three ring protection modes.  This section takes the   short-wrapping mechanism described inSection 4.3.2 as an example.   The RPS protocol is used to distribute the ring status information   and RPS requests to all the ring nodes.  Changes in the ring status   information and RPS requests can be initiated automatically based on   link status or caused by external commands.   Each node on the ring is uniquely identified by assigning it a node   ID.  The node ID MUST be unique on each ring.  The maximum number of   nodes on the ring supported by the RPS protocol is 127.  The node ID   SHOULD be independent of the order in which the nodes appear on the   ring.  The node ID is used to identify the source and destination   nodes of each RPS request.   Every node obtains the ring topology either by configuration or via   some topology discovery mechanism.  The ring map consists of the ring   topology information, and connectivity status (Intact or Severed)   between the adjacent ring nodes, which is determined via the OAM   message exchanged between the adjacent nodes.  The ring map is used   by every ring node to determine the switchover behavior of the ring   tunnels.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   As shown in Figure 14, when no protection switching is active on the   ring, each node MUST send RPS requests with No Request (NR) to its   two adjacent nodes periodically.  The transmission interval of RPS   requests is specified inSection 5.2.1.                   +---+ A->B(NR)    +---+ B->C(NR)    +---+ C->D(NR)            -------| A |-------------| B |-------------| C |-------          (NR)F<-A +---+    (NR)A<-B +---+    (NR)B<-C +---+          Figure 14: RPS Communication between the Ring Nodes in                      Case of No Failure in the Ring   As shown in Figure 15, when a node detects a failure and determines   that protection switching is required, it MUST send the appropriate   RPS request in both directions to the destination node.  The   destination node is the other node that is adjacent to the identified   failure.  When a node that is not the destination node receives an   RPS request and it has no higher-priority local request, it MUST   transfer in the same direction the RPS request as received.  In this   way, the switching nodes can maintain RPS protocol communication in   the ring.  The RPS request MUST be terminated by the destination node   of the message.  If an RPS request with the node itself set as the   source node is received, this message MUST be dropped and not be   forwarded to the next node.                    +---+ C->B(SF)    +---+ B->C(SF)    +---+ C->B(SF)             -------| A |-------------| B |----- X -----| C |-------           (SF)C<-B +---+    (SF)C<-B +---+    (SF)B<-C +---+          Figure 15: RPS Communication between the Ring Nodes in                   Case of Failure between Nodes B and C   Note that in the case of a bidirectional failure such as a cable cut,   the two adjacent nodes detect the failure and send each other an RPS   request in opposite directions.   o  In rings utilizing the wrapping protection, each node detects the      failure or receives the RPS request as the destination node MUST      perform the switch from/to the working ring tunnels to/from the      protection ring tunnels if it has no higher-priority active RPS      request.   o  In rings utilizing the short-wrapping protection, each node      detects the failure or receives the RPS request as the destination      node MUST perform the switch only from the working ring tunnels to      the protection ring tunnels.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 29]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   o  In rings utilizing the steering protection, when a ring switch is      required, any node MUST perform the switches if its added/dropped      traffic is affected by the failure.  Determination of the affected      traffic MUST be performed by examining the RPS requests      (indicating the nodes adjacent to the failure or failures) and the      stored ring map (indicating the relative position of the failure      and the added traffic destined towards that failure).   When the failure has cleared and the Wait-to-Restore (WTR) timer has   expired, the nodes that generate the RPS requests MUST drop their   respective switches and MUST generate an RPS request carrying the NR   code.  The node receiving such an RPS request from both directions   MUST drop its protection switches.   A protection switch MUST be initiated by one of the criteria   specified inSection 5.3.  A failure of the RPS protocol or   controller MUST NOT trigger a protection switch.   Ring switches MUST be preempted by higher-priority RPS requests.  For   example, consider a protection switch that is active due to a manual   switch request on the given link, and another protection switch is   required due to a failure on another link.  Then an RPS request MUST   be generated, the former protection switch MUST be dropped, and the   latter protection switch established.   The MPLS-TP Shared-Ring Protection mechanism supports multiple   protection switches in the ring, resulting in the ring being   segmented into two or more separate segments.  This may happen when   several RPS requests of the same priority exist in the ring due to   multiple failures or external switch commands.   Proper operation of the MSRP mechanism relies on all nodes using   their ring map to determine the state of the ring (nodes and links).   In order to accommodate ring state knowledge, the RPS requests MUST   be sent in both directions during a protection switch.5.2.1.  Transmission and Acceptance of RPS Requests   A new RPS request MUST be transmitted immediately when a change in   the transmitted status occurs.   The first three RPS protocol messages carrying a new RPS request MUST   be transmitted as fast as possible.  For fast protection switching   within 50 ms, the interval of the first three RPS protocol messages   SHOULD be 3.3 ms.  The successive RPS requests SHOULD be transmitted   with the interval of 5 seconds.  A ring node that is not the   destination of the received RPS message MUST forward it to the next   node along the ring immediately.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 30]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 20175.2.2.  RPS Protocol Data Unit (PDU) Format   Figure 16 depicts the format of an RPS packet that is sent on the   G-ACh.  The Channel Type field is set to indicate that the message is   an RPS message.       0                   1                   2                   3       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |0 0 0 1|Version|   Reserved    |    RPS Channel Type (0x002A)  |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      | Dest Node ID  | Src Node ID   |   Request     | M | Reserved  |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                    Figure 16: G-ACh RPS Packet Format   The following fields MUST be provided:   o  Destination Node ID: The destination node ID MUST always be set to      the value of the node ID of the adjacent node.  The node ID MUST      be unique on each ring.  Valid destination node ID values are      1-127.   o  Source Node ID: The source node ID MUST always be set to the ID      value of the node generating the RPS request.  The node ID MUST be      unique on each ring.  Valid source node ID values are 1-127.   o  Protection-Switching Mode (M): This 2-bit field indicates the      protection-switching mode used by the sending node of the RPS      message.  This can be used to check that the ring nodes on the      same ring use the same protection-switching mechanism.  The      defined values of the M field are listed as below:             +------------------+-----------------------------+             | Bits (MSB - LSB) |  Protection-Switching Mode  |             +------------------+-----------------------------+             |       0 0        |         Reserved            |             |       0 1        |         Wrapping            |             |       1 0        |       Short-Wrapping        |             |       1 1        |         Steering            |             +------------------+-----------------------------+             Note:             MSB = most significant bit             LSB = least significant bitCheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 31]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   o  RPS Request Code: A code consisting of 8 bits as specified below:       +------------------+-----------------------------+----------+       |      Bits        |     Condition, State,       | Priority |       |   (MSB - LSB)    |    or External Request      |          |       +------------------+-----------------------------+----------+       | 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1  |  Lockout of Protection (LP) |  highest |       | 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1  |  Forced Switch (FS)         |          |       | 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 1  |  Signal Fail (SF)           |          |       | 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0  |  Manual Switch (MS)         |          |       | 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1  |  Wait-to-Restore (WTR)      |          |       | 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1  |  Exercise (EXER)            |          |       | 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1  |  Reverse Request (RR)       |          |       | 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0  |  No Request (NR)            |  lowest  |       +------------------+-----------------------------+----------+5.2.3.  Ring Node RPS States   Idle state: A node is in the idle state when it has no RPS request   and is sending and receiving an NR code to/from both directions.   Switching state: A node not in the idle or pass-through states is in   the switching state.   Pass-through state: A node is in the pass-through state when its   highest priority RPS request is a request not destined to it or   generated by it.  The pass-through is bidirectional.5.2.3.1.  Idle State   A node in the idle state MUST generate the NR request in both   directions.   A node in the idle state MUST terminate RPS requests that flow in   both directions.   A node in the idle state MUST block the traffic flow on protection   ring tunnels in both directions.5.2.3.2.  Switching State   A node in the switching state MUST generate an RPS request to its   adjacent node with its highest RPS request code in both directions   when it detects a failure or receives an external command.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 32]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   In a bidirectional failure condition, both of the nodes adjacent to   the failure detect the failure and send the RPS request in both   directions with the destination set to each other; while each node   can only receive the RPS request via the long path, the message sent   via the short path will get lost due to the bidirectional failure.   Here, the short path refers to the shorter path on the ring between   the source and destination node of the RPS request, and the long path   refers to the longer path on the ring between the source and   destination node of the RPS request.  Upon receipt of the RPS request   on the long path, the destination node of the RPS request MUST send   an RPS request with its highest request code periodically along the   long path to the other node adjacent to the failure.   In a unidirectional failure condition, the node that detects the   failure MUST send the RPS request in both directions with the   destination node set to the other node adjacent to the failure.  The   destination node of the RPS request cannot detect the failure itself   but will receive an RPS request from both the short path and the long   path.  The destination node MUST acknowledge the received RPS   requests by replying with an RPS request with the RR code on the   short path and an RPS request with the received RPS request code on   the long path.  Accordingly, when the node that detects the failure   receives the RPS request with RR code on the short path, then the RPS   request received from the same node along the long path SHOULD be   ignored.   A node in the switching state MUST terminate the received RPS   requests in both directions and not forward it further along the   ring.   The following switches as defined inSection 5.3.1 MUST be allowed to   coexist:   o  LP and LP   o  FS and FS   o  SF and SF   o  FS and SF   When multiple MS RPS requests exist at the same time addressing   different links and there is no higher-priority request on the ring,   no switch SHOULD be executed and existing switches MUST be dropped.   The nodes MUST still signal an RPS request with the MS code.   Multiple EXER requests MUST be allowed to coexist in the ring.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 33]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   A node in a ring-switching state that receives the external command   LP for the affected link MUST drop its switch and MUST signal NR for   the locked link if there is no other RPS request on another link.   The node still SHOULD signal a relevant RPS request for another link.5.2.3.3.  Pass-Through State   When a node is in a pass-through state, it MUST transfer the received   RPS request unchanged in the same direction.   When a node is in a pass-through state, it MUST enable the traffic   flow on protection ring tunnels in both directions.5.2.4.  RPS State Transitions   All state transitions are triggered by an incoming RPS request   change, a WTR expiration, an externally initiated command, or locally   detected MPLS-TP section failure conditions.   RPS requests due to a locally detected failure, an externally   initiated command, or a received RPS request shall preempt existing   RPS requests in the prioritized order given inSection 5.2.2, unless   the requests are allowed to coexist.5.2.4.1.  Transitions between Idle and Pass-Through States   The transition from the idle state to pass-through state MUST be   triggered by a valid RPS request change, in any direction, from the   NR code to any other code, as long as the new request is not destined   to the node itself.  Both directions move then into a pass-through   state, so that traffic entering the node through the protection ring   tunnels are transferred transparently through the node.   A node MUST revert from pass-through state to the idle state when an   RPS request with an NR code is received in both directions.  Then   both directions revert simultaneously from the pass-through state to   the idle state.5.2.4.2.  Transitions between Idle and Switching States   Transition of a node from the idle state to the switching state MUST   be triggered by one of the following conditions:   o  A valid RPS request change from the NR code to any code received      on either the long or the short path and is destined to this node   o  An externally initiated command for this nodeCheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 34]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   o  The detection of an MPLS-TP section-layer failure at this node   Actions taken at a node in the idle state upon transition to the   switching state are:   o  For all protection-switch requests, except EXER and LP, the node      MUST execute the switch   o  For EXER, and LP, the node MUST signal the appropriate request but      not execute the switch   In one of the following conditions, transition from the switching   state to the idle state MUST be triggered:   o  On the node that triggers the protection switching, when the WTR      time expires or an externally initiated command is cleared, the      node MUST transit from switching state to Idle State and signal      the NR code using RPS message in both directions.   o  On the node that enters the switching state due to the received      RPS request: upon reception of the NR code from both directions,      the head-end node MUST drop its switch, transition to idle state,      and signal the NR code in both directions.5.2.4.3.  Transitions between Switching States   When a node that is currently executing any protection switch   receives a higher-priority RPS request (due to a locally detected   failure, an externally initiated command, or a ring protection switch   request destined to it) for the same link, it MUST update the   priority of the switch it is executing to the priority of the   received RPS request.   When a failure condition clears at a node, the node MUST enter WTR   condition and remain in it for the appropriate time-out interval,   unless:   o  A different RPS request with a higher priority than WTR is      received   o  Another failure is detected   o  An externally initiated command becomes active   The node MUST send out a WTR code on both the long and short paths.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 35]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   When a node that is executing a switch in response to an incoming SF   RPS request (not due to a locally detected failure) receives a WTR   code (unidirectional failure case), it MUST send out the RR code on   the short path and the WTR on the long path.5.2.4.4.  Transitions between Switching and Pass-Through States   When a node that is currently executing a switch receives an RPS   request for a non-adjacent link of higher priority than the switch it   is executing, it MUST drop its switch immediately and enter the pass-   through state.   The transition of a node from pass-through to switching state MUST be   triggered by:   o  An equal priority, a higher priority, or an allowed coexisting      externally initiated command   o  The detection of an equal priority, a higher priority, or an      allowed coexisting automatic initiated command   o  The receipt of an equal, a higher priority, or an allowed      coexisting RPS request destined to this node5.3.  RPS State Machine5.3.1.  Switch Initiation Criteria5.3.1.1.  Administrative Commands   Administrative commands can be initiated by the network operator   through the Network Management System (NMS).  The operator command   may be transmitted to the appropriate node via the MPLS-TP RPS   message.   The following commands can be transferred by the RPS message:   o  Lockout of Protection (LP): This command prevents any protection      activity and prevents using ring switches anywhere in the ring.      If any ring switches exist in the ring, this command causes the      switches to drop.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 36]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   o  Forced Switch (FS) to protection: This command performs the ring      switch of normal traffic from the working entity to the protection      entity for the link between the node at which the command is      initiated and the adjacent node to which the command is directed.      This switch occurs regardless of the state of the MPLS-TP section      for the requested link, unless a higher-priority switch request      exists.   o  Manual Switch (MS) to protection: This command performs the ring      switch of the normal traffic from the working entity to the      protection entity for the link between the node at which the      command is initiated and the adjacent node to which the command is      directed.  This occurs if the MPLS-TP section for the requested      link is not satisfying an equal or higher priority switch request.   o  Exercise (EXER): This command exercises ring protection switching      on the addressed link without completing the actual switch.  The      command is issued and the responses (RRs) are checked, but no      normal traffic is affected.   The following commands are not transferred by the RPS message:   o  Clear: This command clears the administrative command and WTR      timer at the node to which the command was addressed.  The      node-to-node signaling after the removal of the externally      initiated commands is performed using the NR code.   o  Lockout of Working (LW): This command prevents the normal traffic      transported over the addressed link from being switched to the      protection entity by disabling the node's capability of requesting      a switch for this link in case of failure.  If any normal traffic      is already switched on the protection entity, the switch is      dropped.  If no other switch requests are active on the ring, the      NR code is transmitted.  This command has no impact on any other      link.  If the node receives the switch request from the adjacent      node from any side, it will perform the requested switch.  If the      node receives the switch request addressed to the other node, it      will enter the pass-through state.5.3.1.2.  Automatically Initiated Commands   Automatically initiated commands can be initiated based on MPLS-TP   section-layer OAM indication and the received switch requests.   The node can initiate the following switch requests automatically:   o  Signal Fail (SF): This command is issued when the MPLS-TP section-      layer OAM detects a signal failure condition.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 37]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   o  Wait-to-Restore (WTR): This command is issued when the MPLS-TP      section detects that the SF condition has cleared.  It is used to      maintain the state during the WTR period unless it is preempted by      a higher-priority switch request.  The WTR time may be configured      by the operator in 1 minute steps between 0 and 12 minutes; the      default value is 5 minutes.   o  Reverse Request (RR): This command is transmitted to the source      node of the received RPS message over the short path as an      acknowledgment for receiving the switch request.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 38]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 20175.3.2.  Initial States   This section describes the possible states of a ring node, the   corresponding action of the working and protection ring tunnels on   the node, and the RPS request that should be generated in that state.            +-----------------------------------+----------------+            |        State                      |  Signaled RPS  |            +-----------------------------------+----------------+            |  A  |  Idle                       |  NR            |            |     |  Working: no switch         |                |            |     |  Protection: no switch      |                |            +-----+-----------------------------+----------------+            |  B  |  Pass-through               |  N/A           |            |     |  Working: no switch         |                |            |     |  Protection: pass-through   |                |            +-----+-----------------------------+----------------+            |  C  |  Switching - LP             |  LP            |            |     |  Working: no switch         |                |            |     |  Protection: no switch      |                |            +-----+-----------------------------+----------------+            |  D  |  Idle - LW                  |  NR            |            |     |  Working: no switch         |                |            |     |  Protection: no switch      |                |            +-----+-----------------------------+----------------+            |  E  |  Switching - FS             |  FS            |            |     |  Working: switched          |                |            |     |  Protection: switched       |                |            +-----+-----------------------------+----------------+            |  F  |  Switching - SF             |  SF            |            |     |  Working: switched          |                |            |     |  Protection: switched       |                |            +-----+-----------------------------+----------------+            |  G  |  Switching - MS             |  MS            |            |     |  Working: switched          |                |            |     |  Protection: switched       |                |            +-----+-----------------------------+----------------+            |  H  |  Switching - WTR            |  WTR           |            |     |  Working: switched          |                |            |     |  Protection: switched       |                |            +-----+-----------------------------+----------------+            |  I  |  Switching - EXER           |  EXER          |            |     |  Working: no switch         |                |            |     |  Protection: no switch      |                |            +-----+-----------------------------+----------------+Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 39]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 20175.3.3.  State Transitions When Local Request Is Applied   In the state description below, 'O' means that a new local request   will be rejected because of an existing request.   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   A (Idle)             LP                C (Switching - LP)                        LW                D (Idle - LW)                        FS                E (Switching - FS)                        SF                F (Switching - SF)                        Recover from SF   N/A                        MS                G (Switching - MS)                        Clear             N/A                        WTR expires       N/A                        EXER              I (Switching - EXER)   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   B (Pass-through)     LP                C (Switching - LP)                        LW                B (Pass-through)                        FS                O - if current state is due to                                              LP sent by another node                                          E (Switching - FS) - otherwise                        SF                O - if current state is due to                                              LP sent by another node                                          F (Switching - SF) - otherwise                        Recover from SF   N/A                        MS                O - if current state is due to                                              LP, SF, or FS sent by                                              another node                                          G (Switching - MS) - otherwise                        Clear             N/A                        WTR expires       N/A                        EXER              OCheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 40]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   C (Switching - LP)   LP                N/A                        LW                O                        FS                O                        SF                O                        Recover from SF   N/A                        MS                O                        Clear             A (Idle) - if there is no                                             failure in the ring                                          F (Switching - SF) - if there                                             is a failure at this node                                          B (Pass-through) - if there is                                             a failure at another node                        WTR expires       N/A                        EXER              O   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   D (Idle - LW)        LP                C (Switching - LP)                        LW                N/A - if on the same link                                          D (Idle - LW) - if on another                                             link                        FS                O - if on the same link                                          E (Switching - FS) - if on                                             another link                        SF                O - if on the addressed link                                          F (Switching - SF) - if on                                             another link                        Recover from SF   N/A                        MS                O - if on the same link                                          G (Switching - MS) - if on                                             another link                        Clear             A (Idle) - if there is no                                             failure on addressed link                                          F (Switching - SF) - if there                                             is a failure on this link                        WTR expires       N/A                        EXER              OCheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 41]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   E (Switching - FS)   LP                C (Switching - LP)                        LW                O - if on another link                                          D (Idle - LW) - if on the same                                             link                        FS                N/A - if on the same link                                          E (Switching - FS) - if on                                             another link                        SF                O - if on the addressed link                                          E (Switching - FS) - if on                                             another link                        Recover from SF   N/A                        MS                O                        Clear             A (Idle) - if there is no                                             failure in the ring                                          F (Switching - SF) - if there                                             is a failure at this node                                          B (Pass-through) - if there is                                             a failure at another node                        WTR expires       N/A                        EXER              O   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   F (Switching - SF)   LP                C (Switching - LP)                        LW                O - if on another link                                          D (Idle - LW) - if on the same                                             link                        FS                E (Switching - FS)                        SF                N/A - if on the same link                                          F (Switching - SF) - if on                                             another link                        Recover from SF   H (Switching - WTR)                        MS                O                        Clear             N/A                        WTR expires       N/A                        EXER              OCheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 42]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   G (Switching - MS)   LP                C (Switching - LP)                        LW                O - if on another link                                          D (Idle - LW) - if on the same                                             link                        FS                E (Switching - FS)                        SF                F (Switching - SF)                        Recover from SF   N/A                        MS                N/A - if on the same link                                          G (Switching - MS) - if on                                             another link, release the                                             switches but signal MS                        Clear             A                        WTR expires       N/A                        EXER              O   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   H (Switching - WTR)  LP                C (Switching - LP)                        LW                D (Idle - W)                        FS                E (Switching - FS)                        SF                F (Switching - SF)                        Recover from SF   N/A                        MS                G (Switching - MS)                        Clear             A                        WTR expires       A                        EXER              O   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   I (Switching - EXER) LP                C (Switching - LP)                        LW                D (Idle - W)                        FS                E (Switching - FS)                        SF                F (Switching - SF)                        Recover from SF   N/A                        MS                G (Switching - MS)                        Clear             A                        WTR expires       N/A                        EXER              N/A - if on the same link                                          I (Switching - EXER)   =====================================================================Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 43]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 20175.3.4.  State Transitions When Remote Request is Applied   The priority of a remote request does not depend on the side from   which the request is received.   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   A (Idle)             LP                C (Switching - LP)                        FS                E (Switching - FS)                        SF                F (Switching - SF)                        MS                G (Switching - MS)                        WTR               N/A                        EXER              I (Switching - EXER)                        RR                N/A                        NR                A (Idle)   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   B (Pass-through)     LP                C (Switching - LP)                        FS                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP request in the                                                ring                                          E (Switching - FS) - otherwise                        SF                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP request in the                                                ring                                          F (Switching - SF) - otherwise                        MS                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP, FS, or SF                                                request in the ring                                          G (Switching - MS) - otherwise                        WTR               N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP, FS, SF, or MS                                                request in the ring                        EXER              N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP, FS, SF, MS, or                                                a WTR request in the                                                ring                                          I (Switching - EXER) -                                                otherwise                        RR                N/A                        NR                A (Idle) - if received from                                                     both sidesCheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 44]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   C (Switching - LP)   LP                C (Switching - LP)                        FS                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP request in the                                                ring                        SF                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP request in the                                                ring                        MS                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP request in the                                                ring                        WTR               N/A                        EXER              N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP request in the                                                ring                        RR                C (Switching - LP)                        NR                N/A   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   D (Idle - LW)        LP                C (Switching - LP)                        FS                E (Switching - FS)                        SF                F (Switching - SF)                        MS                G (Switching - MS)                        WTR               N/A                        EXER              I (Switching - EXER)                        RR                N/A                        NR                D (Idle - LW)   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   E (Switching - FS)   LP                C (Switching - LP)                        FS                E (Switching - FS)                        SF                E (Switching - FS)                        MS                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an FS request in the                                                ring                        WTR               N/A                        EXER              N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an FS request in the                                                ring                        RR                E (Switching - FS)                        NR                N/ACheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 45]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   F (Switching - SF)   LP                C (Switching - LP)                        FS                F (Switching - SF)                        SF                F (Switching - SF)                        MS                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an SF request in the                                                ring                        WTR               N/A                        EXER              N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an SF request in the                                                ring                        RR                F (Switching - SF)                        NR                N/A   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   G (Switching - MS)   LP                C (Switching - LP)                        FS                E (Switching - FS)                        SF                F (Switching - SF)                        MS                G (Switching - MS) - release                                             the switches but signal MS                        WTR               N/A                        EXER              N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an MS request in the                                                ring                        RR                G (Switching - MS)                        NR                N/A   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   H (Switching - WTR)  LP                C (Switching - LP)                        FS                E (Switching - FS)                        SF                F (Switching - SF)                        MS                G (Switching - MS)                        WTR               H (Switching - WTR)                        EXER              N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is a WTR request in the                                                ring                        RR                H (Switching - WTR)                        NR                N/ACheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 46]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   I (Switching - EXER) LP                C (Switching - LP)                        FS                E (Switching - FS)                        SF                F (Switching - SF)                        MS                G (Switching - MS)                        WTR               N/A                        EXER              I (Switching - EXER)                        RR                I (Switching - EXER)                        NR                N/A   =====================================================================5.3.5.  State Transitions When Request Addresses to Another Node is        Received   The priority of a remote request does not depend on the side from   which the request is received.   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   A (Idle)             LP                B (Pass-through)                        FS                B (Pass-through)                        SF                B (Pass-through)                        MS                B (Pass-through)                        WTR               B (Pass-through)                        EXER              B (Pass-through)                        RR                N/A                        NR                N/ACheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 47]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   B (Pass-through)     LP                B (Pass-through)                        FS                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP request in the                                                ring                                          B (Pass-through) - otherwise                        SF                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP request in the                                                ring                                          B (Pass-through) - otherwise                        MS                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP, FS, or SF                                                request in the ring                                          B (Pass-through) - otherwise                        WTR               N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP, FS, SF, or MS                                                request in the ring                                          B (Pass-through) - otherwise                        EXER              N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP, FS, SF, MS, or                                                a WTR request in the                                                ring                                          B (Pass-through) - otherwise                        RR                N/A                        NR                N/A   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   C (Switching - LP)   LP                C (Switching - LP)                        FS                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP request in the                                                ring                        SF                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP request in the                                                ring                        MS                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP request in the                                                ring                        WTR               N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP request in the                                                ring                        EXER              N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an LP request in the                                                ring                        RR                N/A                        NR                N/ACheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 48]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   D (Idle - LW)        LP                B (Pass-through)                        FS                B (Pass-through)                        SF                B (Pass-through)                        MS                B (Pass-through)                        WTR               B (Pass-through)                        EXER              B (Pass-through)                        RR                N/A                        NR                N/A   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   E (Switching - FS)   LP                B (Pass-through)                        FS                E (Switching - FS)                        SF                E (Switching - FS)                        MS                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an FS request in the                                                ring                        WTR               N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an FS request in the                                                ring                        EXER              N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an FS request in the                                                ring                        RR                N/A                        NR                N/A   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   F (Switching - SF)   LP                B (Pass-through)                        FS                F (Switching - SF)                        SF                F (Switching - SF)                        MS                N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an SF request in the                                                ring                        WTR               N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an SF request in the                                                ring                        EXER              N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an SF request in the                                                ring                        RR                N/A                        NR                N/ACheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 49]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   G (Switching - MS)   LP                B (Pass-through)                        FS                B (Pass-through)                        SF                B (Pass-through)                        MS                G (Switching - MS) - release                                             the switches but signal MS                        WTR               N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an MS request in the                                                ring                        EXER              N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is an MS request in the                                                ring                        RR                N/A                        NR                N/A   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   H (Switching - WTR)  LP                B (Pass-through)                        FS                B (Pass-through)                        SF                B (Pass-through)                        MS                B (Pass-through)                        WTR               N/A                        EXER              N/A - cannot happen when there                                                is a WTR request in the                                                ring                        RR                N/A                        NR                N/A   =====================================================================   Initial state        New request       New state   -------------        -----------       ---------   I (Switching - EXER) LP                B (Pass-through)                        FS                B (Pass-through)                        SF                B (Pass-through)                        MS                B (Pass-through)                        WTR               N/A                        EXER              I (Switching - EXER)                        RR                N/A                        NR                N/A   =====================================================================Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 50]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 20176.  IANA Considerations   IANA has assigned the values listed in the sections below.6.1.  G-ACh Channel Type   The Channel Types for G-ACh are allocated from the PW Associated   Channel Type registry defined in [RFC4446] and updated by [RFC5586].   IANA has allocated the following new G-ACh Channel Type in the "MPLS   Generalized Associated Channel (G-ACh) Types (including Pseudowire   Associated Channel Types)" registry:      Value |          Description            | Reference     -------+---------------------------------+--------------     0x002A | Ring Protection Switching (RPS) | this document            | Protocol                        |     -------+---------------------------------+--------------6.2.  RPS Request Codes   IANA has created the subregistry "MPLS RPS Request Code Registry"   under the "Generic Associated Channel (G-ACh) Parameters" registry.   All code points within this registry shall be allocated according to   the "Specification Required" procedure as specified in [RFC8126].   The RPS request field is 8 bits; the allocated values are as follows:      Value    Description                  Reference      -------  ---------------------------  -------------         0     No Request (NR)              this document         1     Reverse Request (RR)         this document         2     Unassigned         3     Exercise (EXER)              this document         4     Unassigned         5     Wait-to-Restore (WTR)        this document         6     Manual Switch (MS)           this document        7-10   Unassigned        11     Signal Fail (SF)             this document        12     Unassigned        13     Forced Switch (FS)           this document        14     Unassigned        15     Lockout of Protection (LP)   this document      16-254   Unassigned        255    ReservedCheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 51]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 20177.  Operational Considerations   This document describes three protection modes of the RPS protocol.   Operators could choose the appropriate protection mode according to   their network and service requirement.   Wrapping mode provides a ring protection mechanism in which the   protected traffic will reach every node of the ring and is applicable   to protect both the point-to-point LSPs and LSPs that need to be   dropped in several ring nodes, i.e., the point-to-multipoint   applications.  When protection is inactive, the protected traffic is   switched (wrapped) to/from the protection ring tunnel at both sides   of the defective link/node.  Due to the wrapping, the additional   propagation delay and bandwidth consumption of the protection tunnel   are considerable.  For bidirectional LSPs, the protected traffic in   both directions is co-routed.   Short-wrapping mode provides a ring protection mechanism that can be   used to protect only point-to-point LSPs.  When protection is   inactive, the protected traffic is wrapped to the protection ring   tunnel at the defective link/node and leaves the ring when the   protection ring tunnel reaches the egress node.  Compared with the   wrapping mode, short-wrapping can reduce the propagation latency and   bandwidth consumption of the protection tunnel.  However, the two   directions of a protected bidirectional LSP are not totally co-   routed.   Steering mode provides a ring protection mechanism that can be used   to protect only point-to-point LSPs.  When protection is inactive,   the protected traffic is switched to the protection ring tunnel at   the ingress node and leaves the ring when the protection ring tunnel   reaches the egress node.  The steering mode has the least propagation   delay and bandwidth consumption of the three modes, and the two   directions of a protected bidirectional LSP can be kept co-routed.   Note that only one protection mode can be provisioned in the whole   ring for all protected traffic.8.  Security Considerations   MPLS-TP is a subset of MPLS, thus it builds upon many of the aspects   of the security model of MPLS.  Please refer to [RFC5920] for generic   MPLS security issues and methods for securing traffic privacy and   integrity.   The RPS message defined in this document is used for protection   coordination on the ring; if it is injected or modified by an   attacker, the ring nodes might not agree on the protection action,Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 52]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   and the improper protection-switching action may cause a temporary   break to services traversing the ring.  It is important that the RPS   message is used within a trusted MPLS-TP network domain as described   in [RFC6941].   The RPS message is carried in the G-ACh [RFC5586], so it is dependent   on the security of the G-ACh itself.  The G-ACh is a generalization   of the Associated Channel defined in [RFC4385].  Thus, this document   relies on the security mechanisms provided for the Associated Channel   as described in those two documents.   As described in the security considerations of [RFC6378], the G-ACh   is essentially connection oriented, so injection or modification of   control messages requires the subversion of a transit node.  Such   subversion is generally considered hard in connection-oriented MPLS   networks and impossible to protect against at the protocol level.   Management-level techniques are more appropriate.  The procedures and   protocol extensions defined in this document do not affect the   security model of MPLS-TP linear protection as defined in [RFC6378].9.  References9.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119,              DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.   [RFC3031]  Rosen, E., Viswanathan, A., and R. Callon, "Multiprotocol              Label Switching Architecture",RFC 3031,              DOI 10.17487/RFC3031, January 2001,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3031>.   [RFC4385]  Bryant, S., Swallow, G., Martini, L., and D. McPherson,              "Pseudowire Emulation Edge-to-Edge (PWE3) Control Word for              Use over an MPLS PSN",RFC 4385, DOI 10.17487/RFC4385,              February 2006, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4385>.   [RFC4446]  Martini, L., "IANA Allocations for Pseudowire Edge to Edge              Emulation (PWE3)",BCP 116,RFC 4446,              DOI 10.17487/RFC4446, April 2006,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4446>.   [RFC5586]  Bocci, M., Ed., Vigoureux, M., Ed., and S. Bryant, Ed.,              "MPLS Generic Associated Channel",RFC 5586,              DOI 10.17487/RFC5586, June 2009,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5586>.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 53]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017   [RFC5654]  Niven-Jenkins, B., Ed., Brungard, D., Ed., Betts, M., Ed.,              Sprecher, N., and S. Ueno, "Requirements of an MPLS              Transport Profile",RFC 5654, DOI 10.17487/RFC5654,              September 2009, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5654>.   [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase inRFC2119 Key Words",BCP 14,RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,              May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.9.2.  Informative References   [RFC5920]  Fang, L., Ed., "Security Framework for MPLS and GMPLS              Networks",RFC 5920, DOI 10.17487/RFC5920, July 2010,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5920>.   [RFC6371]  Busi, I., Ed. and D. Allan, Ed., "Operations,              Administration, and Maintenance Framework for MPLS-Based              Transport Networks",RFC 6371, DOI 10.17487/RFC6371,              September 2011, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6371>.   [RFC6378]  Weingarten, Y., Ed., Bryant, S., Osborne, E., Sprecher,              N., and A. Fulignoli, Ed., "MPLS Transport Profile (MPLS-              TP) Linear Protection",RFC 6378, DOI 10.17487/RFC6378,              October 2011, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6378>.   [RFC6941]  Fang, L., Ed., Niven-Jenkins, B., Ed., Mansfield, S., Ed.,              and R. Graveman, Ed., "MPLS Transport Profile (MPLS-TP)              Security Framework",RFC 6941, DOI 10.17487/RFC6941, April              2013, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6941>.   [RFC6974]  Weingarten, Y., Bryant, S., Ceccarelli, D., Caviglia, D.,              Fondelli, F., Corsi, M., Wu, B., and X. Dai,              "Applicability of MPLS Transport Profile for Ring              Topologies",RFC 6974, DOI 10.17487/RFC6974, July 2013,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6974>.   [RFC8126]  Cotton, M., Leiba, B., and T. Narten, "Guidelines for              Writing an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 8126, DOI 10.17487/RFC8126, June 2017,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8126>.Cheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 54]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017Acknowledgements   The authors would like to thank Gregory Mirsky, Yimin Shen, Eric   Osborne, Spencer Jackson, and Eric Gray for their valuable comments   and suggestions.Contributors   The following people contributed significantly to the content of this   document and should be considered co-authors:   Kai Liu   Huawei Technologies   Email: alex.liukai@huawei.com   Jia He   Huawei Technologies   Email: hejia@huawei.com   Fang Li   China Academy of Telecommunication Research MIIT   China   Email: lifang@catr.cn   Jian Yang   ZTE Corporation   China   Email: yang.jian90@zte.com.cn   Junfang Wang   Fiberhome Telecommunication Technologies Co., LTD.   Email: wjf@fiberhome.com.cn   Wen Ye   China Mobile   Email: yewen@chinamobile.com   Minxue Wang   China Mobile   Email: wangminxue@chinamobile.com   Sheng Liu   China Mobile   Email: liusheng@chinamobile.com   Guanghui Sun   Huawei Technologies   Email: sunguanghui@huawei.comCheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 55]

RFC 8227       MSRP Protection Mechanism for Ring Topology   August 2017Authors' Addresses   Weiqiang Cheng   China Mobile   Email: chengweiqiang@chinamobile.com   Lei Wang   China Mobile   Email: wangleiyj@chinamobile.com   Han Li   China Mobile   Email: lihan@chinamobile.com   Huub van Helvoort   Hai Gaoming BV   Email: huubatwork@gmail.com   Jie Dong   Huawei Technologies   Email: jie.dong@huawei.comCheng, et al.                Standards Track                   [Page 56]

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