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INFORMATIONAL
Updated by:3152
Network Working Group                                         R. RockellRequest for Comments: 2772                                        SprintObsoletes:2546                                                  R. FinkCategory: Informational                                            ESnet                                                           February 2000                   6Bone Backbone Routing GuidelinesStatus of this Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   The 6Bone is an Ipv6 testbed to assist in the evolution and   deployment of IPv6. Because of this, it is important that the core   backbone of the IPv6 network maintain stability, and that all   operators have a common set of rules and guidelines by which to   deploy IPv6 routing equipment.   This document provides a set of guidelines for all 6bone routing   equipment operators to use as a reference for efficient and stable   deployment of 6bone routing systems. As the complexity of the 6Bone   grows,the adherence to a common set of rules becomes increasingly   important in order for an efficient, scalable backbone to exist.Rockell & Fink               Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 2772           6Bone Backbone Routing Guidelines       February 2000Table of Contents1. Introduction..................................................22. Scope of this document........................................33. Common Rules for the 6bone....................................33.1 Link-local prefixes......................................33.2 Site-local prefixes......................................43.3 Loopback and unspecified prefixes........................53.4 Multicast prefixes.......................................53.5 IPv4 compatible prefixes.................................53.6 IPv4-mapped prefixes.....................................63.7 Default routes...........................................63.8 Yet undefined unicast prefixes...........................63.9 Inter-site links.........................................63.10 6to4 Prefixes...........................................73.11 Aggregation & advertisement issues......................74. Routing Policies for the 6bone................................75. The 6Bone Registry............................................86. Guidelines for new sites joining the 6Bone....................97. Guidelines for 6Bone pTLA sites...............................98. 6Bone Operations group........................................119. Common rules enforcement for the 6bone........................1110. Security Considerations......................................1211. References...................................................1212. Authors' Addresses...........................................1313. Full Copyright Statement.....................................141. Introduction   The 6Bone is an IPv6 testbed to assist in the evolution and   deployment of IPv6. Because of this, it is important that the core   backbone of the IPv6 network maintain stability, and that all   operators have a common set of rules and guidelines by which to   deploy IPv6 routing equipment.   This document provides a set of guidelines for all 6bone routing   equipment operators to use as a reference for efficient and stable   deployment of 6bone routing systems. As the complexity of the 6Bone   grows,the adherence to a common set of rules becomes increasingly   important in order for an efficient, scalable backbone to exist.   This document uses BGP-4 with Multiprotocol Extensions for BGP-4 as   defined [RFC 2283], commonly referred to as BGP4+, as the currently   accepted EGP.   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC 2119].Rockell & Fink               Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 2772           6Bone Backbone Routing Guidelines       February 20002. Scope of this document   This document is a best-practices Informational document aimed at   IPv6 entities which operate under the 6Bone IPv6 testbed TLA   allocation.3. Common Rules for the 6bone   This section details common rules governing the routing of the 6Bone.   They are derived from the issues encountered on the 6Bone, with   respect to the routes advertised, handling of special addresses, and   aggregation:      1) link local prefixes      2) site local prefixes      3) loopback and unspecified prefixes      4) multicast prefixes      5) IPv4-compatible prefixes      6) IPv4-mapped prefixes      7) default routes      8) yet undefined unicast prefixes (from a different /3 prefix)      9) inter-site links issues      10) 6to4 prefixes      11) aggregation & advertisement issues3.1 Link-local prefixes   This link-local prefix (FE80::/10) MUST NOT be advertised through   either an IGP or an EGP.  Under no circumstance should this prefix be   seen in the 6Bone backbone routing table.   By definition, the link-local prefix has a scope limited to a   specific link. Since the prefix is the same on all IPv6 links,   advertising it in any routing protocol does not make sense and,   worse, may introduce nasty error conditions.   Well known cases where link-local prefixes could be advertised by   mistake include, but are not limited to:Rockell & Fink               Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 2772           6Bone Backbone Routing Guidelines       February 2000   -  a router advertising all directly connected network prefixes      including the link-local one   -  subnetting of the link-local prefix   In such cases, vendors should be urged to correct their code. While   vendors should be encouraged to fix the problem, the ultimate   responsibility lies on the operator of that IPv6 site to correct the   problem through whatever means necessary.   Should a pTLA discover link-local prefixes coming from another pTLA,   it is the responsibility of the pTLA leaking the routes to filter   these, and correct the problem in a timely fashion. Should a pTLA   discover that a downstream of that pTLA is leaking link-local   prefixes, it is the pTLA's responsibility to ensure that these   prefixes are not leaked to other pTLA's, or to other downstreams of   that pTLA.   Failure to filter such routes in a timely fashion may result in the   manual shutting down of BGP4+ sessions to that pTLA, from other   pTLA's.   (Also, it is each pTLA, pNLA, and end-site's responsibility to not   only filter their own BGP4+ sessions appropriately to peers, but to   filter routes coming from peers as well, and to only allow those   routes that fit the aggregation model, and do not cause operational   problems).3.2 Site-local prefixes   Site local prefixes (in the FEC0::/10 range) MAY be advertised by   IGP's or EGP's within a site. The precise definition of a site is   ongoing work of the IPng working group, but should generally include   a group of nodes that are operating under one administrator or group   of administrators, or a group of nodes which are used for a common   purpose.   Site-local prefixes MUST NOT be advertised across transit pNLAs,   pTLAs, or leaf-sites.   Again, should site-local prefixes be leaked outside of a given site,   it is the responsibility of the site to fix the problem in a timely   manner, either through filters, or via other means which remove the   operational impact that those prefixes had on the peering sites   involved. However, every site SHOULD filter not only outbound on   their EGP, but also inbound, in order to ensure proper routing   announcements are not only sent, but also received.Rockell & Fink               Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 2772           6Bone Backbone Routing Guidelines       February 20003.3 Loopback and unspecified prefixes   The loopback prefix (::1/128) and the unspecified prefix (::0/128)   MUST NOT be advertised by any routing protocol.   The same responsibility lies with the party guilty of advertising the   loopback or unspecified prefix as inSection 3.1 and 3.2.3.4 Multicast prefixes   Multicast prefixes MUST NOT be advertised by any unicast routing   protocol. Multicast routing protocols are designed to respect the   semantics of multicast and MUST therefore be used to route packets   with multicast destination addresses (in the range of FF00::/8).   Multicast address scopes MUST be respected on the 6Bone.  Only global   scope multicast addresses MAY be routed across transit pNLAs and   pTLAs.  There is no requirement on a pTLA to route multicast packets   at the time of the writing of this memo.   Organization-local multicasts (in the FF08::/16 or FF18::/16 ranges)   MAY be routed across a pNLA to its leaf sites.   Site-local multicasts MUST NOT be routed toward transit pNLAs or   pTLAs.   Link-local multicasts and node-local multicasts MUST NOT be routed at   all.3.5 IPv4 compatible prefixes   Sites may choose to use IPv4 compatible addresses (::a.b.c.d where   a.b.c.d represents the octets of an IPv4 address) internally. As   there is no real rationale today for doing so, these address SHOULD   NOT be used or routed in the 6Bone.   The ::/96 IPv4-compatible prefixes MAY be advertised by IGPs.   IPv4 compatible prefixes MUST NOT be advertised by EGPs to transit   pNLAs or pTLAs.   Should ::/96 IPv4-compatible prefixes be leaked into an EGP, it is   the responsibility of the party who is advertising the route to fix   the problem, either through proper filters, or through other means,   while it remains in the best interest of all particiapants of the   6Bone to filter both outbound and inbound at their IGP borders.Rockell & Fink               Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 2772           6Bone Backbone Routing Guidelines       February 20003.6 IPv4-mapped prefixes   IPv4-mapped prefixes (::FFFF:a.b.c.d where a.b.c.d represents the   octets of an IPv4 address) MAY be advertised by IGPs within a site.   It may be useful for some IPv6 only nodes within a site to have such   a route pointing to a translation device, to aid in deployment of   IPv6.   IPv4-mapped prefixes MUST NOT be advertised by EGPs.3.7 Default routes   6Bone core pTLA routers MUST be default-free.   pTLAs MAY advertise a default route to any downstream peer (non-pTLA   site). Transit pNLAs MAY advertise a default route to any of their   downstreams (other transit pNLA or leaf site).   Should a default route be redistributed into an EGP and found on any   pTLA EGP sessions, it is the responsibility of the pTLA to fix this   problem immediately upon realization of the route's existence, and   the responsibility of the guilty pTLA to push the entity from which   the default route was originated, should the default route have   originated from downstream of a pTLA.3.8 Yet undefined unicast prefixes   Yet undefined unicast prefixes from a format prefix other than   2000::/3 MUST NOT be advertised by any routing protocol in the 6Bone.   In particular,RFC 2471 test addresses MUST NOT be advertised on the   6Bone.   Routing of global unicast prefixes outside the 6Bone range   (3ffe::/16), and routing of global unicast prefixes yet undelegated   in the range (3ffe::/16) are discussed insection 4, Routing   policies, below.3.9 Inter-site links   Global IPv6 addresses must be used for the end points of inter-site   links. In particular, IPv4 compatible addresses MUST NOT be used for   tunnels.   Sites MAY use Other addressing schemes for Inter-site links, but   these addresses MUST NOT be advertised into the IPv6 global routing   table.Rockell & Fink               Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 2772           6Bone Backbone Routing Guidelines       February 2000   Prefixes for inter-site links MUST NOT be injected in the global   routing tables.3.10 6to4 Prefixes   The 6to4 prefix, or some portion thereof, MAY be announced by any   pTLA which has a current implementation of 6to4 in their IPv6   network.  However, as 6to4 implementors gain more operational   experience, it MAY be necessary to change this in some way.  At the   time of the writing of this docuement, any pTLA MAY announce the 6to4   prefix into global EBGP. However, in order to announce this block,   the pTLA MUST have a 6to4 router active, sourcing this prefix   announcement.   This section subject to change, and MAY vary, depending on 6to4   progress within the NGTRANS working group.3.11 Aggregation & advertisement issues   Route aggregation MUST be performed by any border router talking EGP   with any other IPv6 sites. More-specifics MUST NOT be leaked into or   across the IPv6 6Bone backbone.4. Routing Policies for the 6bone   Leaf sites or pNLAs MUST only advertise to an upstream provider the   prefixes assigned by that provider. Advertising a prefix assigned by   another provider to a provider is not acceptable, and breaks the   aggregation model. A site MUST NOT advertise a prefix from another   provider to a provider as a way around the multi-homing problem.   However, in the interest of testing new solutions, one may break this   policy, so long as ALL affected parties  are aware of this test, and   all agree to support this testing.  These policy breaks MUST NOT   affect the 6bone routing table globally.   To clarify, if one has two upstream pNLA or pTLA providers, (A and B   for this example), one MUST only announce the prefix delegated to one   by provider A to provider A, and one MUST only announce the prefeix   delegated by one from provider B upstream to provider B. There exists   no circumstance where this should be violated, as it breaks the   aggregation model, and could globally affect routing decisions if   downstreams are able to leak other providers' more specific   delegations up to a pTLA. As the IPNG working group works through the   multi-homing problem, there may be a need to alter this rule   slightly, to test new strategies for deployment. However, in the case   of current specifications at the time of this writing, there is no   reason to advertise more specifics, and pTLA's MUST adhere to the   current aggregation model.Rockell & Fink               Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 2772           6Bone Backbone Routing Guidelines       February 2000   Site border routers for pNLA or leaf sites MUST NOT advertise   prefixes more specific (longer) than the prefix that was allocated by   their upstream provider.   All 6bone pTLAs MUST NOT advertise prefixes longer than a given pTLA   delegation (currently /24 or /28) to other 6bone pTLAs unless special   peering arrangements are implemented. When such special peering   aggreements are in place between any two or more 6bone pTLAs, care   MUST be taken not to leak the more specifics to other 6bone pTLAs not   participating in the peering aggreement. 6bone pTLAs which have such   agreements in place MUST NOT  advertise other 6bone pTLA more   specifics to downstream 6bone pNLAs or leaf sites, as this will break   the best-path routing decision.   The peering agreements across the 6Bone may be by nature non-   commercial, and therefore MAY allow transit traffic, if peering   agreements of this nature are made. However, no pTLA is REQUIRED to   give or receive transit service from another pTLA.   Eventually, the Internet registries will assign prefixes under other   than the 6Bone TLA (3FFE::/16). As of the time this document was   written in 1999, the Internet registries were starting to assign /35   sub-TLA (sTLA) blocks from the 2001::/16 TLA. Others will certainly   be used in the future.   The organizations receiving prefixes under these newer TLAs would be   expected to want to establish peering and connectivity relationships   with other IPv6 networks, both in the newer TLA space and in the   6bone pTLA space. Peering between new TLA's and the current 6Bone   pTLA's MAY occur, and details such as transit, and what routes are   received by each, are outside of general peering rules as stated in   this memo, and are left up to the members of those TLA's and pTLA's   that are establishing said peerings. However, it is expected that   most of the rules discussed here are equally applicable to new TLAs.5. The 6Bone Registry   The 6Bone registry is a RIPE-181 database with IPv6 extensions used   to store information about the 6Bone, and its sites. The 6bone is   accessible at:         <http://www.6bone.net/whois.html>)   Each 6Bone site MUST maintain the relevant entries in the 6Bone   registry. In particular, the following object MUST be present for all   6Bone leaf sites, pNLAs and pTLAs:Rockell & Fink               Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 2772           6Bone Backbone Routing Guidelines       February 2000   -  IPv6-site: site description   -  Inet6num: prefix delegation (one record MUST exist for each      delegation)   -  Mntner: contact info for site maintance/administration staff.   Other object MAY be maintained at the discretion of the sites such as   routing policy descriptors, person, or role objects.  The Mntner   object MUST make reference to a role or person object, but those MAY   NOT necessarily reside in the 6Bone registry. They can be stored   within any of the Internet registry databases (ARIN, APNIC, RIPE-NCC,   etc.)6. Guidelines for new sites joining the 6Bone   New sites joining the 6Bone should seek to connect to a transit pNLA   or a pTLA within their region, and preferably as close as possible to   their existing IPv4 physical and routing path for Internet service.   The 6Bone web site at <http://www.6bone.net> has various information   and tools to help find candidate 6bone networks.   Any site connected to the 6Bone MUST maintain a DNS server for   forward name lookups and reverse address lookups.  The joining site   MUST maintain the 6Bone objects relative to its site, as describe insection 5.   The upstream provider MUST delegate the reverse address translation   zone in DNS to the joining site, or have an agreement in place to   perform primary DNS for that downstream. The provider MUST also   create the 6Bone registry inet6num object reflecting the delegated   address space.   Up to date informatino about how to join the 6Bone is available on   the 6Bone Web site at <http://www.6bone.net>.7. Guidelines for 6Bone pTLA sites   The following rules apply to qualify for a 6Bone pTLA allocation. It   should be recognized that holders of 6Bone pTLA allocations are   expected to provide production quality backbone network services for   the 6Bone.   1. The pTLA Applicant must have a minimum of three (3) months      qualifying experience as a 6Bone end-site or pNLA transit.  During      the entire qualifying period the Applicant must be operationally      providing the following:Rockell & Fink               Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 2772           6Bone Backbone Routing Guidelines       February 2000      a. Fully maintained, up to date, 6Bone Registry entries for their         ipv6-site inet6num, mntner, and person objects, including each         tunnel that the Applicant has.      b. Fully maintained, and reliable, BGP4+ peering and connectivity         between the Applicant's boundary router and the appropriate         connection point into the 6Bone. This router must be IPv6         pingable. This criteria is judged by members of the 6Bone         Operations Group at the time of the Applicant's pTLA request.      c. Fully maintained DNS forward (AAAA) and reverse (ip6.int)         entries for the Applicant's router(s) and at least one host         system.      d. A fully maintained, and reliable, IPv6-accessible system         providing, at a mimimum, one or more web pages, describing the         Applicant's IPv6 services.  This server must be IPv6 pingable.   2. The pTLA Applicant MUST have the ability and intent to provide      "production-quality" 6Bone backbone service. Applicants must      provide a statement and information in support of this claim.      This MUST include the following:      a. A support staff of two persons minimum, three preferable, with         person attributes registered for each in the ipv6-site object         for the pTLA applicant.      b. A common mailbox for support contact purposes that all support         staff have acess to, pointed to with a notify attribute in the         ipv6-site object for the pTLA Applicant.   3. The pTLA Applicant MUST have a potential "user community" that      would be served by its becoming a pTLA, e.g., the Applicant is a      major provider of Internet service in a region, country, or focus      of interest. Applicant must provide a statement and information in      support this claim.   4. The pTLA Applicant MUST commit to abide by the current 6Bone      operational rules and policies as they exist at time of its      application, and agree to abide by future 6Bone backbone      operational rules and policies as they evolve by consensus of the      6Bone backbone and user community.   When an Applicant seeks to receive a pTLA allocation, it will apply   to the 6Bone Operations Group (seesection 8 below) by providing to   the Group information in support of its claims that it meets the   criteria above.Rockell & Fink               Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 2772           6Bone Backbone Routing Guidelines       February 20008. 6Bone Operations Group   The 6Bone Operations Group is the group in charge of monitoring and   policing adherence to the current rules. Membership in the 6Bone   Operations Group is mandatory for, and restricted to, sites connected   to the 6Bone.   The 6Bone Operations Group is currently defined by those members of   the existing 6Bone mailing list who represent sites participating in   the 6Bone. Therefore it is incumbent on relevant site contacts to   join the 6Bone mailing list. Instructions on how to join the list are   maintained on the 6Bone web site at <http://www.6bone.net>.9.  Common rules enforcement for the 6bone   Participation in the 6Bone is a voluntary and benevolent undertaking.   However, participating sites are expected to adhere to the rules and   policies described in this document in order to maintain the 6Bone as   a quality tool for the deployment of, and transition to, IPv6   protocols and the products implementing them.   The following is in support of policing adherence to 6Bone rules and   policies:   1. Each pTLA site has committed to implement the 6Bone's rules and      policies, and SHOULD try to ensure they are adhered to by sites      within their administrative control, i.e. those to who prefixes      under their respective pTLA prefix have been delegated.   2. When a site detects an issue, it SHOULD first use the 6Bone      registry to contact the site maintainer and work the issue.   3. If nothing happens, or there is disagreement on what the right      solution is, the issue SHOULD be brought to the 6Bone Operations      Group.   4. When the problem is related to a product issue, the site(s)      involved SHOULD be responsible for contacting  the product vendor      and work toward its resolution.   5. When an issue causes major operational problems, backbone sites      SHOULD decide to temporarily set filters in order to restore      service.Rockell & Fink               Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 2772           6Bone Backbone Routing Guidelines       February 200010.  Security Considerations   The result of incorrect entries in routing tables is usually   unreachable sites.  Having guidelines to aggregate or reject routes   will clean up the routing tables. It is expected that using these   rules and policies, routing on the 6Bone will be less sensitive to   denial of service attacks due to misleading routes.   The 6Bone is an IPv6 testbed to assist in the evolution and   deployment of IPv6. Therefore, denial of service or packet disclosure   are to be expected.  However, it is the pTLA from where the attack   originated who has ultimate responsibility for isolating and fixing   problems of this nature. It is also every 6Bone site's responsibility   to safely introduce new test systems into the 6Bone, by placing them   at a strategically safe places which will have minimal impact on   other 6Bone sites, should bugs or misconfigurations occur.11. References   [RFC 2373] Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing              Architecture",RFC 2373, July 1998.   [RFC 2471] Hinden, R., Fink, R. and J. Postel, "IPv6 Testing Address              Allocation",RFC 2471, December 1998.   [RFC 2546] Durand, A. and B. Buclin, "6Bone Routing Practice",RFC2546, March 1999   [RFC 2080] Malkin, G. and R. Minnear, "RIPng for IPv6",RFC 2080,              January 1997.   [RFC 2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement  Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC 2283] Bates, T., Chandra, R., Katz, D. and Y. Rekhter,              "Multiprotocol Extensions for BGP-4",RFC 2283, March              1998.   [RIPE-181] Bates, T., Gerich, E., Joncheray, L., Jouanigot, J.,              Karrenberg, D., Terpstra, M. and J.  Yu,  Representation              of IP Routing Policies in a Routing Registry.  Technical              Report ripe-181, RIPE, RIPE NCC, Amsterdam, Netherlands,              October 1994.Rockell & Fink               Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 2772           6Bone Backbone Routing Guidelines       February 200012. Authors' Addresses   Rob Rockell   EMail: rrockell@sprint.net   Bob Fink   EMail: fink@es.netRockell & Fink               Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 2772           6Bone Backbone Routing Guidelines       February 200013. Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Rockell & Fink               Informational                     [Page 14]

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