Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


[RFC Home] [TEXT|PDF|HTML] [Tracker] [IPR] [Errata] [Info page]

INFORMATIONAL
Errata Exist
Network Working Group                                            L. YangRequest for Comments: 3746                                   Intel Corp.Category: Informational                                         R. Dantu                                                    Univ. of North Texas                                                             T. Anderson                                                             Intel Corp.                                                                R. Gopal                                                                   Nokia                                                              April 2004Forwarding and Control Element Separation (ForCES) FrameworkStatus of this Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   This document defines the architectural framework for the ForCES   (Forwarding and Control Element Separation) network elements, and   identifies the associated entities and their interactions.Table of Contents1.  Definitions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21.1. Conventions used in this document . . . . . . . . . . . .21.2. Terminologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3   2.  Introduction to Forwarding and Control Element Separation       (ForCES) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .53.  Architecture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83.1. Control Elements and Fr Reference Point . . . . . . . . .103.2. Forwarding Elements and Fi reference point. . . . . . . .113.3. CE Managers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .143.4. FE Managers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .144.  Operational Phases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .154.1. Pre-association Phase . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .154.1.1. Fl Reference Point . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .154.1.2. Ff Reference Point . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .164.1.3. Fc Reference Point . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .174.2. Post-association Phase and Fp reference point . . . . . .174.2.1. Proximity and Interconnect between CEs and FEs . .18Yang, et al.                 Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 20044.2.2. Association Establishment. . . . . . . . . . . . .184.2.3. Steady-state Communication . . . . . . . . . . . .194.2.4. Data Packets across Fp reference point . . . . . .214.2.5. Proxy FE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .224.3. Association Re-establishment. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .224.3.1. CE graceful restart. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .234.3.2. FE restart . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .245.  Applicability toRFC 1812. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .255.1. General Router Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .255.2. Link Layer. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .265.3. Internet Layer Protocols. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .275.4. Internet Layer Forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .275.5. Transport Layer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .285.6. Application Layer -- Routing Protocols. . . . . . . . . .295.7. Application Layer -- Network Management Protocol. . . . .296.  Summary. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .297.  Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .308.  Security Considerations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .308.1. Analysis of Potential Threats Introduced by ForCES. . . .318.1.1. "Join" or "Remove" Message Flooding on CEs . . . .318.1.2. Impersonation Attack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .318.1.3. Replay Attack. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .318.1.4. Attack during Fail Over. . . . . . . . . . . . . .328.1.5. Data Integrity . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .328.1.6. Data Confidentiality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .328.1.7. Sharing security parameters. . . . . . . . . . . .338.1.8. Denial of Service Attack via External Interface. .338.2. Security Recommendations for ForCES . . . . . . . . . . .338.2.1. Using TLS with ForCES. . . . . . . . . . . . . . .348.2.2. Using IPsec with ForCES. . . . . . . . . . . . . .359.  References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .379.1. Normative References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .379.2. Informative References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3710. Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3911. Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .401.  Definitions1.1.  Conventions used in this document   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inBCP 14,RFC 2119 [1].Yang, et al.                 Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 20041.2.  Terminologies   A set of terminology associated with the ForCES requirements is   defined in [4] and we only include the definitions that are most   relevant to this document here.   Addressable Entity (AE) - An entity that is directly addressable   given some interconnect technology.  For example, on IP networks, it   is a device to which we can communicate using an IP address; on a   switch fabric, it is a device to which we can communicate using a   switch fabric port number.   Physical Forwarding Element (PFE) - An AE that includes hardware used   to provide per-packet processing and handling.  This hardware may   consist of (but is not limited to) network processors, ASICs   (Application-Specific Integrated Circuits), or general purpose   processors, installed on line cards, daughter boards, mezzanine   cards, or in stand-alone boxes.   PFE Partition - A logical partition of a PFE consisting of some   subset of each of the resources (e.g., ports, memory, forwarding   table entries) available on the PFE.  This concept is analogous to   that of the resources assigned to a virtual switching element as   described in [9].   Physical Control Element (PCE) - An AE that includes hardware used to   provide control functionality.  This hardware typically includes a   general purpose processor.   PCE Partition - A logical partition of a PCE consisting of some   subset of each of the resources available on the PCE.   Forwarding Element (FE) - A logical entity that implements the ForCES   Protocol.  FEs use the underlying hardware to provide per-packet   processing and handling as directed by a CE via the ForCES Protocol.   FEs may happen to be a single blade (or PFE), a partition of a PFE,   or multiple PFEs.   Control Element (CE) - A logical entity that implements the ForCES   Protocol and uses it to instruct one or more FEs on how to process   packets.  CEs handle functionality such as the execution of control   and signaling protocols.  CEs may consist of PCE partitions or whole   PCEs.   ForCES Network Element (NE) - An entity composed of one or more CEs   and one or more FEs.  An NE usually hides its internal organization   from external entities and represents a single point of management to   entities outside the NE.Yang, et al.                 Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   Pre-association Phase - The period of time during which an FE Manager   (see below) and a CE Manager (see below) are determining whether an   FE and a CE should be part of the same network element.  It is   possible for some elements of the NE to be in pre-association phase   while other elements are in the post-association phase.   Post-association Phase - The period of time during which an FE knows   which CE is to control it and vice versa, including the time during   which the CE and FE are establishing communication with one another.   ForCES Protocol - While there may be multiple protocols used within   the overall ForCES architecture, the term "ForCES Protocol" refers   only to the ForCES post-association phase protocol (see below).   ForCES Post-Association Phase Protocol - The protocol used for post-   association phase communication between CEs and FEs.  This protocol   does not apply to CE-to-CE communication, FE-to-FE communication, or   to communication between FE and CE managers.  The ForCES Protocol is   a master-slave protocol in which FEs are slaves and CEs are masters.   This protocol includes both the management of the communication   channel (e.g., connection establishment, heartbeats) and the control   messages themselves.  This protocol could be a single protocol or   could consist of multiple protocols working together, and may be   unicast or multicast based.  A separate protocol document will   specify this information.   FE Manager - A logical entity that operates in the pre-association   phase and is responsible for determining to which CE(s) an FE should   communicate.  This process is called CE discovery and may involve the   FE manager learning the capabilities of available CEs.  An FE manager   may use anything from a static configuration to a pre-association   phase protocol (see below) to determine which CE(s) to use; however,   this is currently out of scope.  Being a logical entity, an FE   manager might be physically combined with any of the other logical   entities mentioned in this section.   CE Manager - A logical entity that operates in the pre-association   phase and is responsible for determining to which FE(s) a CE should   communicate.  This process is called FE discovery and may involve the   CE manager learning the capabilities of available FEs.  A CE manager   may use anything from a static configuration to a pre-association   phase protocol (see below) to determine which FE to use; however,   this is currently out of scope.  Being a logical entity, a CE manager   might be physically combined with any of the other logical entities   mentioned in this section.Yang, et al.                 Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   Pre-association Phase Protocol - A protocol between FE managers and   CE managers that is used to determine which CEs or FEs to use.  A   pre-association phase protocol may include a CE and/or FE capability   discovery mechanism.  Note that this capability discovery process is   wholly separate from (and does not replace) that used within the   ForCES Protocol.  However, the two capability discovery mechanisms   may utilize the same FE model.   FE Model - A model that describes the logical processing functions of   an FE.   ForCES Protocol Element - An FE or CE.   Intra-FE topology - Representation of how a single FE is realized by   combining possibly multiple logical functional blocks along multiple   data paths.  This is defined by the FE model.   FE Topology - Representation of how the multiple FEs in a single NE   are interconnected.  Sometimes it is called inter-FE topology, to be   distinguished from intra-FE topology used by the FE model.   Inter-FE topology - See FE Topology.2.  Introduction to Forwarding and Control Element Separation (ForCES)   An IP network element (NE) appears to external entities as a   monolithic piece of network equipment, e.g., a router, NAT, firewall,   or load balancer.  Internally, however, an IP network element (NE)   (such as a router) is composed of numerous logically separated   entities that cooperate to provide a given functionality (such as   routing).  Two types of network element components exist: control   element (CE) in control plane and forwarding element (FE) in   forwarding plane (or data plane).  Forwarding elements are typically   ASIC, network-processor, or general-purpose processor-based devices   that handle data path operations for each packet.  Control elements   are typically based on general-purpose processors that provide   control functionality, like routing and signaling protocols.   ForCES aims to define a framework and associated protocol(s) to   standardize information exchange between the control and forwarding   plane.  Having standard mechanisms allows CEs and FEs to become   physically separated standard components.  This physical separation   accrues several benefits to the ForCES architecture.  Separate   components would allow component vendors to specialize in one   component without having to become experts in all components.   Standard protocol also allows the CEs and FEs from different   component vendors to interoperate with each other and hence it   becomes possible for system vendors to integrate together the CEs andYang, et al.                 Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   FEs from different component suppliers.  This interoperability   translates into increased design choices and flexibility for the   system vendors.  Overall, ForCES will enable rapid innovation in both   the control and forwarding planes while maintaining interoperability.   Scalability is also easily provided by this architecture in that   additional forwarding or control capacity can be added to existing   network elements without the need for forklift upgrades.      -------------------------       -------------------------      |  Control Blade A      |       |  Control Blade B      |      |       (CE)            |       |          (CE)         |      -------------------------       -------------------------              ^   |                           ^    |              |   |                           |    |              |   V                           |    V      ---------------------------------------------------------      |               Switch Fabric Backplane                 |      ---------------------------------------------------------             ^  |            ^  |                   ^  |             |  |            |  |     . . .         |  |             |  V            |  V                   |  V         ------------    ------------           ------------         |Router    |    |Router    |           |Router    |         |Blade #1  |    |Blade #2  |           |Blade #N  |         |   (FE)   |    |   (FE)   |           |   (FE)   |         ------------    ------------           ------------             ^  |            ^  |                   ^  |             |  |            |  |     . . .         |  |             |  V            |  V                   |  V      Figure 1. A router configuration example with separate blades.   One example of such physical separation is at the blade level. Figure   1 shows such an example configuration of a router, with two control   blades and multiple forwarding blades, all interconnected into a   switch fabric backplane.  In such a chassis configuration, the   control blades are the CEs while the router blades are the FEs, and   the switch fabric backplane provides the physical interconnect for   all the blades.  Control blade A may be the primary CE while control   blade B may be the backup CE providing redundancy.  It is also   possible to have a redundant switch fabric for high availability   support.  Routers today with this kind of configuration use   proprietary interfaces for messaging between CEs and FEs.  The goal   of ForCES is to replace such proprietary interfaces with a standard   protocol.  With a standard protocol like ForCES implemented on all   blades, it becomes possible for control blades from vendor X and   forwarding blades from vendor Y to work seamlessly together in one   chassis.Yang, et al.                 Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004          -------         -------          | CE1 |         | CE2 |          -------         -------             ^               ^             |               |             V               V      ============================================ Ethernet          ^       ^       . . .   ^          |       |               |          V       V               V       -------  -------         --------       | FE#1|  | FE#2|         | FE#n |       -------  -------         --------         ^  |     ^  |            ^  |         |  |     |  |            |  |         |  V     |  V            |  V      Figure 2. A router configuration example with separate boxes.   Another level of physical separation between the CEs and FEs can be   at the box level.  In such a configuration, all the CEs and FEs are   physically separated boxes, interconnected with some kind of high   speed LAN connection (like Gigabit Ethernet).  These separated CEs   and FEs are only one hop away from each other within a local area   network.  The CEs and FEs communicate to each other by running   ForCES, and the collection of these CEs and FEs together become one   routing unit to the external world.  Figure 2 shows such an example.   In both examples shown here, the same physical interconnect is used   for both CE-to-FE and FE-to-FE communication.  However, that does not   have to be the case.  One reason to use different interconnects is   that the CE-to-FE interconnect does not have to be as fast as the   FE-to-FE interconnect, so the more faster and more expensive   connections can be saved for FE-to-FE.  The separate interconnects   may also provide reliability and redundancy benefits for the NE.   Some examples of control functions that can be implemented in the CE   include routing protocols like RIP, OSPF, and BGP, control and   signaling protocols like RSVP (Resource Reservation Protocol), LDP   (Label Distribution Protocol) for MPLS, etc.  Examples of forwarding   functions in the FE include LPM (longest prefix match) forwarder,   classifiers, traffic shaper, meter, NAT (Network Address   Translators), etc.  Figure 3 provides example functions in both CE   and FE.  Any given NE may contain one or many of these CE and FE   functions in it.  The diagram also shows that the ForCES Protocol is   used to transport both the control messages for ForCES itself and theYang, et al.                 Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   data packets that are originated/destined from/to the control   functions in the CE (e.g., routing packets).Section 4.2.4 provides   more detail on this.      -------------------------------------------------      |       |       |       |       |       |       |      |OSPF   |RIP    |BGP    |RSVP   |LDP    |. . .  |      |       |       |       |       |       |       |      -------------------------------------------------      |               ForCES Interface                |      -------------------------------------------------                              ^   ^                      ForCES  |   |data                      control |   |packets                      messages|   |(e.g., routing packets)                              v   v      -------------------------------------------------      |               ForCES Interface                |      -------------------------------------------------      |       |       |       |       |       |       |      |LPM Fwd|Meter  |Shaper |NAT    |Classi-|. . .  |      |       |       |       |       |fier   |       |      -------------------------------------------------      |               FE resources                    |      -------------------------------------------------           Figure 3. Examples of CE and FE functions.   A set of requirements for control and forwarding separation is   identified in [4].  This document describes a ForCES architecture   that satisfies the architectural requirements of [4] and defines a   framework for ForCES network elements and the associated entities to   facilitate protocol definition.  Whenever necessary, this document   uses many examples to illustrate the issues and/or possible solutions   in ForCES.  These examples are intended to be just examples, and   should not be taken as the only or definite ways of doing certain   things.  It is expected that a separate document will be produced by   the ForCES working group to specify the ForCES Protocol.3.  Architecture   This section defines the ForCES architectural framework and the   associated logical components.  This ForCES framework defines   components of ForCES NEs, including several ancillary components.   These components may be connected in different kinds of topologies   for flexible packet processing.Yang, et al.                 Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004                          ---------------------------------------                          | ForCES Network Element              |   --------------   Fc    | --------------      --------------  |   | CE Manager |---------+-|     CE 1   |------|    CE 2    |  |   --------------         | |            |  Fr  |            |  |         |                | --------------      --------------  |         | Fl             |         |  |    Fp       /          |         |                |       Fp|  |----------| /           |         |                |         |             |/            |         |                |         |             |             |         |                |         |     Fp     /|----|        |         |                |         |  /--------/      |        |   --------------     Ff  | --------------      --------------  |   | FE Manager |---------+-|     FE 1   |  Fi  |     FE 2   |  |   --------------         | |            |------|            |  |                          | --------------      --------------  |                          |   |  |  |  |          |  |  |  |    |                          ----+--+--+--+----------+--+--+--+-----                              |  |  |  |          |  |  |  |                              |  |  |  |          |  |  |  |                                Fi/f                   Fi/f       Fp: CE-FE interface       Fi: FE-FE interface       Fr: CE-CE interface       Fc: Interface between the CE Manager and a CE       Ff: Interface between the FE Manager and an FE       Fl: Interface between the CE Manager and the FE Manager       Fi/f: FE external interface            Figure 4. ForCES Architectural Diagram   The diagram in Figure 4 shows the logical components of the ForCES   architecture and their relationships.  There are two kinds of   components inside a ForCES network element: control element (CE) and   forwarding element (FE).  The framework allows multiple instances of   CE and FE inside one NE.  Each FE contains one or more physical media   interfaces for receiving and transmitting packets from/to the   external world.  The aggregation of these FE interfaces becomes the   NE's external interfaces.  In addition to the external interfaces,   there must also exist some kind of interconnect within the NE so that   the CE and FE can communicate with each other, and one FE can forward   packets to another FE.  The diagram also shows two entities outside   of the ForCES NE: CE Manager and FE Manager.  These two ancillary   entities provide configuration to the corresponding CE or FE in the   pre-association phase (seeSection 4.1).Yang, et al.                 Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   For convenience, the logical interactions between these components   are labeled by reference points Fp, Fc, Ff, Fr, Fl, and Fi, as shown   in Figure 4.  The FE external interfaces are labeled as Fi/f.  More   detail is provided inSection 3 and 4 for each of these reference   points.  All these reference points are important in understanding   the ForCES architecture, however, the ForCES Protocol is only defined   over one reference point -- Fp.   The interface between two ForCES NEs is identical to the interface   between two conventional routers and these two NEs exchange the   protocol packets through the external interfaces at Fi/f.  ForCES NEs   connect to existing routers transparently.3.1.  Control Elements and Fr Reference Point   It is not necessary to define any protocols across the Fr reference   point to enable control and forwarding separation for simple   configurations like single CE and multiple FEs.  However, this   architecture permits multiple CEs to be present in a network element.   In cases where an implementation uses multiple CEs, the invariant   that the CEs and FEs together appear as a single NE must be   maintained.   Multiple CEs may be used for redundancy, load sharing, distributed   control, or other purposes.  Redundancy is the case where one or more   CEs are prepared to take over should an active CE fail.  Load sharing   is the case where two or more CEs are concurrently active and any   request that can be serviced by one of the CEs can also be serviced   by any of the other CEs.  For both redundancy and load sharing, the   CEs involved are equivalently capable.  The only difference between   these two cases is in terms of how many active CEs there are   simultaneously.  Distributed control is the case where two or more   CEs are concurrently active but certain requests can only be serviced   by certain CEs.   When multiple CEs are employed in a ForCES NE, their internal   organization is considered an implementation issue that is beyond the   scope of ForCES.  CEs are wholly responsible for coordinating amongst   themselves via the Fr reference point to provide consistency and   synchronization.  However, ForCES does not define the implementation   or protocols used between CEs, nor does it define how to distribute   functionality among CEs.  Nevertheless, ForCES will support   mechanisms for CE redundancy or fail over, and it is expected that   vendors will provide redundancy or fail over solutions within this   framework.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 20043.2.  Forwarding Elements and Fi reference point   An FE is a logical entity that implements the ForCES Protocol and   uses the underlying hardware to provide per-packet processing and   handling as directed by a CE.  It is possible to partition one   physical FE into multiple logical FEs.  It is also possible for one   FE to use multiple physical FEs.  The mapping between physical FE(s)   and logical FE(s) is beyond the scope of ForCES.  For example, a   logical partition of a physical FE can be created by assigning some   portion of each of the resources (e.g., ports, memory, forwarding   table entries) available on the ForCES physical FE to each of the   logical FEs.  Such a concept of FE virtualization is analogous to a   virtual switching element as described in [9].  If FE virtualization   occurs only in the pre-association phase, it has no impact on ForCES.   However, if FE virtualization results in a resource change taken from   an existing FE (already participating in ForCES post-association   phase), the ForCES Protocol needs to be able to inform the CE of such   a change via asynchronous messages (see [4], Section 5, requirement   #6).   FEs perform all packet processing functions as directed by CEs.  FEs   have no initiative of their own.  Instead, FEs are slaves and only do   as they are told.  FEs may communicate with one or more CEs   concurrently across reference point Fp.  FEs have no notion of CE   redundancy, load sharing, or distributed control.  Instead, FEs   accept commands from any CE authorized to control them, and it is up   to the CEs to coordinate among themselves to achieve redundancy, load   sharing, or distributed control.  The idea is to keep FEs as simple   and dumb as possible so that FEs can focus their resources on the   packet processing functions.  Unless otherwise configured or   determined by a ForCEs Protocol exchange, each FE will process   authorized incoming commands directed at it as it receives them on a   first come first serve basis.   For example, in Figure 5, FE1 and FE2 can be configured to accept   commands from both the primary CE (CE1) and the backup CE (CE2).   Upon detection of CE1 failure, perhaps across the Fr or Fp reference   point, CE2 is configured to take over activities of CE1.  This is   beyond the scope of ForCES and is not discussed further.   Distributed control can be achieved in a similar fashion, without   much intelligence on the part of FEs.  For example, FEs can be   configured to detect RSVP and BGP protocol packets, and forward RSVP   packets to one CE and BGP packets to another CE.  Hence, FEs may need   to do packet filtering for forwarding packets to specific CEs.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004      -------   Fr  -------      | CE1 | ------| CE2 |      -------       -------        |   \      /   |        |    \    /    |        |     \  /     |        |      \/Fp    |        |      /\      |        |     /  \     |        |    /    \    |      -------  Fi   -------      | FE1 |<----->| FE2 |      -------       -------      Figure 5. CE redundancy example.   This architecture permits multiple FEs to be present in an NE.  [4]   dictates that the ForCES Protocol must be able to scale to at least   hundreds of FEs (see [4]Section 5, requirement #11).  Each of these   FEs may potentially have a different set of packet processing   functions, with different media interfaces.  FEs are responsible for   basic maintenance of layer-2 connectivity with other FEs and with   external entities.  Many layer-2 media include sophisticated control   protocols.  The FORCES Protocol (over the Fp reference point) will be   able to carry messages for such protocols so that, in keeping with   the dumb FE model, the CE can provide appropriate intelligence and   control over these media.   When multiple FEs are present, ForCES requires that packets must be   able to arrive at the NE by one FE and leave the NE via a different   FE (See [4], Section 5, Requirement #3).  Packets that enter the NE   via one FE and leave the NE via a different FE are transferred   between FEs across the Fi reference point.  The Fi reference point   could be used by FEs to discover their (inter-FE) topology, perhaps   during the pre-association phase.  The Fi reference point is a   separate protocol from the Fp reference point and is not currently   defined by the ForCES Protocol.   FEs could be connected in different kinds of topologies and packet   processing may spread across several FEs in the topology.  Hence,   logical packet flow may be different from physical FE topology.   Figure 6 provides some topology examples.  When it is necessary to   forward packets between FEs, the CE needs to understand the FE   topology.  The FE topology may be queried from the FEs by the CEs via   the ForCES Protocol, but the FEs are not required to provide that   information to the CEs.  So, the FE topology information may also be   gathered by other means outside of the ForCES Protocol (like inter-FE   topology discovery protocol).Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004            -----------------            |      CE       |            -----------------             ^      ^      ^            /       |       \           /        v        \          /      -------      \         /    +->| FE3 |<-+    \        /     |  |     |  |     \       v      |  -------  |      v     -------  |           |  -------     | FE1 |<-+           +->| FE2 |     |     |<--------------->|     |     -------                 -------        ^  |                   ^  |        |  |                   |  |        |  v                   |  v    (a) Full mesh among FE1, FE2, and FE3                -----------                |   CE    |                -----------               ^ ^       ^ ^              /  |       |  \       /------   |       |   ------\       v         v       v          v   -------   -------   -------   -------   | FE1 |<->| FE2 |<->| FE3 |<->| FE4 |   -------   -------   -------   -------     ^  |     ^  |       ^  |     ^  |     |  |     |  |       |  |     |  |     |  v     |  v       |  v     |  v   (b) Multiple FEs in a daisy chainYang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004                   ^ |                   | v                -----------                |   FE1   |<-----------------------|                -----------                        |                  ^    ^                           |                 /      \                          |          | ^   /        \   ^ |                   V          v |  v          v  | v                ----------        ---------        ---------              |        |        | FE2   |        |  FE3  |<------------>|   CE   |        ---------        ---------              |        |            ^  ^          ^                     ----------            |   \        /                        ^  ^            |    \      /                         |  |            |    v     v                          |  |            |   -----------                       |  |            |   |   FE4   |<----------------------|  |            |   -----------                          |            |      |  ^                              |            |      v  |                              |            |                                        |            |----------------------------------------|        (c) Multiple FEs connected by a ring        Figure 6. Some examples of FE topology3.3.  CE Managers   CE managers are responsible for determining which FEs a CE should   control.  It is legitimate for CE managers to be hard-coded with the   knowledge of with which FEs its CEs should communicate with.  A CE   manager may also be physically embedded into a CE and be implemented   as a simple keypad or other direct configuration mechanism on the CE.   Finally, CE managers may be physically and logically separate   entities that configure the CE with FE information via such   mechanisms as COPS-PR [7] or SNMP [5].3.4.  FE Managers   FE managers are responsible for determining with which CE any   particular FE should initially communicate.  Like CE managers, no   restrictions are placed on how an FE manager decides with which CE   its FEs should communicate, nor are restrictions placed on how FE   managers are implemented.  Each FE should have one and only one FEYang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   manager, while different FEs may have the same or different FE   manager(s).  Each manager can choose to exist and operate   independently of other manager.4.  Operational Phases   Both FEs and CEs require some configuration to be in place before   they can start information exchange and function as a coherent   network element.  Two operational phases are identified in this   framework: pre-association and post-association.4.1.  Pre-association Phase   The Pre-association phase is the period of time during which an FE   Manager and a CE Manager are determining whether an FE and a CE   should be part of the same network element.  The protocols used   during this phase may include all or some of the message exchange   over Fl, Ff, and Fc reference points.  However, all these may be   optional and none of this is within the scope of the ForCES Protocol.4.1.1.  Fl Reference Point   CE managers and FE managers may communicate across the Fl reference   point in the pre-association phase in order to determine whether an   individual CE and FE, or a set of CEs and FEs should be associated.   Communication across the Fl reference point is optional in this   architecture.  No requirements are placed on this reference point.   CE managers and FE managers may be operated by different entities.   The operator of the CE manager may not want to divulge, except to   specified FE managers, any characteristics of the CEs it manages.   Similarly, the operator of the FE manager may not want to divulge FE   characteristics, except to authorized entities.  As such, CE managers   and FE managers may need to authenticate one another.  Subsequent   communication between CE managers and FE managers may require other   security functions such as privacy, non-repudiation, freshness, and   integrity.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   FE Manager      FE               CE Manager     CE    |              |                 |             |    |              |                 |             |    |(security exchange)             |             |   1|<------------------------------>|             |    |              |                 |             |    |(a list of CEs and their attributes)          |   2|<-------------------------------|             |    |              |                 |             |    |(a list of FEs and their attributes)          |   3|------------------------------->|             |    |              |                 |             |    |              |                 |             |    |<----------------Fl------------>|             |   Figure 7. An example of a message exchange over the Fl reference             point   Once the necessary security functions have been performed, the CE and   FE managers communicate to determine which CEs and FEs should   communicate with each other.  At the very minimum, the CE and FE   managers need to learn of the existence of available FEs and CEs   respectively.  This discovery process may entail one or both managers   learning the capabilities of the discovered ForCES protocol elements.   Figure 7 shows an example of a possible message exchange between the   CE manager and FE manager over the Fl reference point.4.1.2.  Ff Reference Point   The Ff reference point is used to inform forwarding elements of the   association decisions made by the FE manager in the pre-association   phase.  Only authorized entities may instruct an FE with respect to   which CE should control it.  Therefore, privacy, integrity,   freshness, and authentication are necessary between the FE manager   and FEs when the FE manager is remote to the FE.  Once the   appropriate security has been established, the FE manager instructs   the FEs across this reference point to join a new NE or to disconnect   from an existing NE.  The FE Manager could also assign unique FE   identifiers to the FEs using this reference point.  The FE   identifiers are useful in the post association phase to express FE   topology.  Figure 8 shows example of a message exchange over the Ff   reference point.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   FE Manager      FE               CE Manager     CE    |              |                |             |    |              |                |             |    |(security exchange)            |(security exchange)   1|<------------>|authentication 1|<----------->|authentication    |              |                |             |    |(FE ID, attributes)            |(CE ID, attributes)   2|<-------------|request        2|<------------|request    |              |                |             |   3|------------->|response       3|------------>|response    |(corresponding CE ID)          |(corresponding FE ID)    |              |                |             |    |              |                |             |    |<-----Ff----->|                |<-----Fc---->|         Figure 8. Examples of a message exchange                   over the Ff and Fc reference points   Note that the FE manager function may be co-located with the FE (such   as by manual keypad entry of the CE IP address), in which case this   reference point is reduced to a built-in function.4.1.3.  Fc Reference Point   The Fc reference point is used to inform control elements of the   association decisions made by CE managers in the pre-association   phase.  When the CE manager is remote, only authorized entities may   instruct a CE to control certain FEs.  Privacy, integrity, freshness,   and authentication are also required across this reference point in   such a configuration.  Once appropriate security has been   established, the CE manager instructs the CEs as to which FEs they   should control and how they should control them.  Figure 8 shows   example of a message exchange over the Fc reference point.   As with the FE manager and FEs, configurations are possible where the   CE manager and CE are co-located and no protocol is used for this   function.4.2.  Post-association Phase and Fp reference point   The Post-association phase is the period of time during which an FE   and CE have been configured with information necessary to contact   each other and includes both association establishment and steady-   state communication.  The communication between CE and FE is   performed across the Fp ("p" meaning protocol) reference point.   ForCES Protocol is exclusively used for all communication across the   Fp reference point.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 20044.2.1.  Proximity and Interconnect between CEs and FEs   The ForCES Working Group has made a conscious decision that the first   version of ForCES will be focused on "very close" CE/FE localities in   IP networks.  Very Close localities consist of control and forwarding   elements that are either components in the same physical box, or   separated at most by one local network hop ([8]).  CEs and FEs can be   connected by a variety of interconnect technologies, including   Ethernet connections, backplanes, ATM (cell) fabrics, etc.  ForCES   should be able to support each of these interconnects (see [4]Section 5, requirement #1).  When the CEs and FEs are separated   beyond a single L3 routing hop, the ForCES Protocol will make use of   an existingRFC 2914 [3] compliant L4 protocol with adequate   reliability, security, and congestion control (e.g., TCP, SCTP) for   transport purposes.4.2.2.  Association Establishment                FE                      CE                |                       |                |(Security exchange.)   |               1|<--------------------->|                |                       |                |(Let me join the NE please.)               2|---------------------->|                |                       |                |(What kind of FE are you? -- capability query)               3|<----------------------|                |                       |                |(Here is my FE functions/state: use model to   describe)               4|---------------------->|                |                       |                |(Initial config for FE -- optional)               5|<----------------------|                |                       |                |(I am ready to go. Shall I?)               6|---------------------->|                |                       |                |(Go ahead!)            |               7|<----------------------|                |                       |   Figure 9. Example of a message exchange between CE and FE             over Fp to establish an NE associationYang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   As an example, figure 9 shows some of the message exchange that may   happen before the association between the CE and FE is fully   established.  Either the CE or FE can initiate the connection.   Security handshake is necessary to authenticate the two communication   endpoints to each other before any further message exchange can   happen.  The security handshake should include mutual authentication   and authorization between the CE and FE, but the exact details depend   on the security solution chosen by the ForCES Protocol.   Authorization can be as simple as checking against the list of   authorized end points provided by the FE or CE manager during the   pre-association phase.  Both authentication and authorization must be   successful before the association can be established.  If either   authentication or authorization fails, the end point must not be   allowed to join the NE.  After the successful security handshake,   message authentication and confidentiality are still necessary for   the on-going information exchange between the CE and FE, unless some   form of physical security exists.  Whenever a packet fails   authentication, it must be dropped and a notification may be sent to   alert the sender of the potential attack.Section 8 provides more   details on the security considerations for ForCES.   After the successful security handshake, the FE needs to inform the   CE of its own capability and optionally its topology in relation to   other FEs.  The capability of the FE shall be represented by the FE   model, as required in [4] (Section 6, requirement #1).  The model   would allow an FE to describe what kind of packet processing   functions it contains, in what order the processing happens, what   kinds of configurable parameters it allows, what statistics it   collects, and what events it might throw, etc.  Once such information   is available to the CE, the CE may choose to send some initial or   default configuration to the FE so that the FE can start receiving   and processing packets correctly.  Such initialization may not be   necessary if the FE already obtains the information from its own   bootstrap process.  Once the necessary initial information is   exchanged, the process of association is completed.  Packet   processing and forwarding at the FE cannot begin until association is   established.  After the association is established, the CE and FE   enter steady-state communication.4.2.3.  Steady-state Communication   Once an association is established between the CE and FE, the ForCES   Protocol is used by the CE and FE over the Fp reference point to   exchange information to facilitate packet processing.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004           FE                      CE           |                       |           |(Add these new routes.)|          1|<----------------------|           |                       |           |(Successful.)          |          2|---------------------->|           |                       |           |                       |           |(Query some stats.)    |          1|<----------------------|           |                       |           |(Reply with stats collected.)          2|---------------------->|           |                       |           |                       |           |(My port is down, with port #.)          1|---------------------->|           |                       |           |(Here is a new forwarding table)          2|<----------------------|           |                       |   Figure 10. Examples of a message exchange between CE and FE              over Fp during steady-state communication   Based on the information acquired through CEs' control processing,   CEs will frequently need to manipulate the packet-forwarding   behaviors of their FE(s) by sending instructions to FEs.  For   example, Figure 10 shows message exchange examples in which the CE   sends new routes to the FE so that the FE can add them to its   forwarding table.  The CE may query the FE for statistics collected   by the FE and the FE may notify the CE of important events such as   port failure.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 20044.2.4.  Data Packets across Fp reference point   ---------------------           ----------------------   |                   |           |                    |   |    +--------+     |           |     +--------+     |   |    |CE(BGP) |     |           |     |CE(BGP) |     |   |    +--------+     |           |     +--------+     |   |        |          |           |          ^         |   |        |Fp        |           |          |Fp       |   |        v          |           |          |         |   |    +--------+     |           |     +--------+     |   |    |  FE    |     |           |     |   FE   |     |   |    +--------+     |           |     +--------+     |   |        |          |           |          ^         |   | Router |          |           | Router   |         |   | A      |          |           | B        |         |   ---------+-----------           -----------+----------            v                                 ^            |                                 |            |                                 |            ------------------->---------------   Figure 11. Example to show data packet flow between two NEs.   Control plane protocol packets (such as RIP, OSPF messages) addressed   to any of NE's interfaces are typically redirected by the receiving   FE to its CE, and CE may originate packets and have its FE deliver   them to other NEs.  Therefore, the ForCES Protocol over Fp not only   transports the ForCES Protocol messages between CEs and FEs, but also   encapsulates the data packets from control plane protocols.   Moreover, one FE may be controlled by multiple CEs for distributed   control.  In this configuration, the control protocols supported by   the FORCES NEs may spread across multiple CEs.  For example, one CE   may support routing protocols like OSPF and BGP, while a signaling   and admission control protocol like RSVP is supported in another CE.   FEs are configured to recognize and filter these protocol packets and   forward them to the corresponding CE.   Figure 11 shows one example of how the BGP packets originated by   router A are passed to router B.  In this example, the ForCES   Protocol is used to transport the packets from the CE to the FE   inside router A, and then from the FE to the CE inside router B.  In   light of the fact that the ForCES Protocol is responsible for   transporting both the control messages and the data packets between   the CE and FE over the Fp reference point, it is possible to use   either a single protocol or multiple protocols.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 20044.2.5.  Proxy FE   In the case where a physical FE cannot implement (e.g., due to the   lack of a general purpose CPU) the ForCES Protocol directly, a proxy   FE can be used to terminate the Fp reference point instead of the   physical FE.  This allows the CE to communicate to the physical FE   via the proxy by using ForCES, while the proxy manipulates the   physical FE using some intermediary form of communication (e.g., a   non-ForCES protocol or DMA).  In such an implementation, the   combination of the proxy and the physical FE becomes one logical FE   entity.  It is also possible for one proxy to act on behalf of   multiple physical FEs.   One needs to be aware of the security implication introduced by the   proxy FE.  Since the physical FE is not capable of implementing   ForCES itself, the security mechanism of ForCES can only secure the   communication channel between the CE and the proxy FE, but not all   the way to the physical FE.  It is recommended that other security   mechanisms (including physical security property) be employed to   ensure the security between the CE and the physical FE.4.3.  Association Re-establishment   FEs and CEs may join and leave NEs dynamically (see [4]Section 5,   requirements #12).  When an FE or CE leaves the NE, the association   with the NE is broken.  If the leaving party rejoins an NE later, to   re-establish the association, it may need to re-enter the pre-   association phase.  Loss of association can also happen unexpectedly   due to a loss of connection between the CE and the FE.  Therefore,   the framework allows the bi-directional transition between these two   phases, but the ForCES Protocol is only applicable for the post-   association phase.  However, the protocol should provide mechanisms   to support association re-establishment.  This includes the ability   for CEs and FEs to determine when there is a loss of association   between them, and to restore association and efficient state   (re)synchronization mechanisms (see [4]Section 5, requirement #7).   Note that security association and state must also be re-established   to guarantee the same level of security (including both   authentication and authorization) exists before and after the   association re-establishment.   When an FE leaves or joins an existing NE that is already in   operation, the CE needs to be aware of the impact on FE topology and   deal with the change accordingly.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 22]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 20044.3.1. CE graceful restart   The failure and restart of the CE in a router can potentially cause   much stress and disruption on the control plane throughout a network   because in restarting a CE for any reason, the router loses routing   adjacencies or sessions with its routing neighbors.  Neighbors who   detect the lost adjacency normally re-compute new routes and then   send routing updates to their own neighbors to communicate the lost   adjacency.  Their neighbors do the same thing to propagate throughout   the network.  In the meantime, the restarting router cannot receive   traffic from other routers because the neighbors have stopped using   the router's previously advertised routes.  When the restarting   router restores adjacencies, neighbors must once again re-compute new   routes and send out additional routing updates.  The restarting   router is unable to forward packets until it has re-established   routing adjacencies with neighbors, received route updates through   these adjacencies, and computed new routes.  Until convergence takes   place throughout the network, packets may be lost in transient black   holes or forwarding loops.   A high availability mechanism known as the "graceful restart" has   been used by the IP routing protocols (OSPF [11], BGP [12], IS-IS   [13]) and MPLS label distribution protocol (LDP [10]) to help   minimize the negative effects on routing throughout an entire network   caused by a restarting router.  Route flap on neighboring routers is   avoided, and a restarting router can continue to forward packets that   would otherwise be dropped.   While the details differ from protocol to protocol, the general idea   behind the graceful restart mechanism remains the same.  With the   graceful restart, a restarting router can inform its neighbors when   it restarts.  The neighbors may detect the lost adjacency but do not   recompute new routes or send routing updates to their neighbors.  The   neighbors also hold on to the routes received from the restarting   router before restart and assume they are still valid for a limited   time.  By doing so, the restarting router's FEs can also continue to   receive and forward traffic from other neighbors for a limited time   by using the routes they already have.  The restarting router then   re-establishes routing adjacencies, downloads updated routes from all   its neighbors, recomputes new routes, and uses them to replace the   older routes it was using.  It then sends these updated routes to its   neighbors and signals the completion of the graceful restart process.   Non-stop forwarding is a requirement for graceful restart.  It is   necessary so a router can continue to forward packets while it is   downloading routing information and recomputing new routes.  This   ensures that packets will not be dropped.  As one can see, one of the   benefits afforded by the separation of CE and FE is exactly theYang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 23]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   ability of non-stop forwarding in the face of the CE failure and   restart.  The support of dynamic changes to CE/FE association in   ForCES also makes it compatible with high availability mechanisms,   such as graceful restart.   ForCES should be able to support a CE graceful restart easily.  When   the association is established the first time, the CE must inform the   FEs what to do in the case of a CE failure.  If graceful restart is   not supported, the FEs may be told to stop packet processing all   together if its CE fails.  If graceful restart is supported, the FEs   should be told to cache and hold on to its FE state, including the   forwarding tables across the restarts.  A timer must be included so   that the timeout causes such a cached state to eventually expire.   Those timers should be settable by the CE.4.3.2.  FE restart   In the same example in Figure 5, assuming CE1 is the working CE for   the moment, what would happen if one of the FEs, say FE1, leaves the   NE temporarily?  FE1 may voluntarily decide to leave the association.   Alternatively, FE1 may stop functioning simply due to unexpected   failure.  In the former case, CE1 receives a "leave-association   request" from FE1.  In the latter, CE1 detects the failure of FE1 by   some other means.  In both cases, CE1 must inform the routing   protocols of such an event, most likely prompting a reachability and   SPF (Shortest Path First) recalculation and associated downloading of   new FIBs from CE1 to the other remaining FEs (only FE2 in this   example).  Such recalculation and FIB updates will also be propagated   from CE1 to the NE's neighbors that are affected by the connectivity   of FE1.   When FE1 decides to rejoin again, or when it restarts again after the   failure, FE1 needs to re-discover its master (CE).  This can be   achieved by several means.  It may re-enter the pre-association phase   and get that information from its FE manager.  It may retrieve the   previous CE information from its cache, if it can validate the   information freshness.  Once it discovers its CE, it starts message   exchange with the CE to re-establish the association, as outlined in   Figure 9, with the possible exception that it might be able to bypass   the transport of the complete initial configuration.  Suppose that   FE1 still has its routing table and other state information from the   last association.  Instead of re-sending all the information, it may   be able to use a more efficient mechanism to re-sync the state with   its CE, if such a mechanism is supported by the ForCES Protocol.  For   example, CRC-32 of the state might give a quick indication of whether   or not the state is in-sync with its CE.  By comparing its state with   the CE first, it sends an information updateYang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 24]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   only if it is needed.  The ForCES Protocol may choose to implement   similar optimization  mechanisms, but it may also choose not to, as   this is not a requirement.5.  Applicability toRFC 1812   [4]Section 5, requirement #9 dictates "Any proposed ForCES   architecture must explain how that architecture supports all of the   router functions as defined inRFC 1812."RFC 1812 [2] discusses   many important requirements for IPv4 routers from the link layer to   the application layer.  This section addresses the relevant   requirements inRFC 1812 for implementing IPv4 routers based on   ForCES architecture and explains how ForCES satisfies these   requirements by providing guidelines on how to separate the   functionalities required into the forwarding plane and control plane.   In general, the forwarding plane carries out the bulk of the per-   packet processing that is required at line speed, while the control   plane carries most of the computationally complex operations that are   typical of the control and signaling protocols.  However, it is   impossible to draw a rigid line to divide the processing into CEs and   FEs cleanly and the ForCES architecture should not limit the   innovative approaches in control and forwarding plane separation.  As   more and more processing power is available in the FEs, some of the   control functions that traditionally are performed by CEs may now be   moved to FEs for better performance and scalability.  Such offloaded   functions may include part of ICMP or TCP processing, or part of   routing protocols.  Once off-loaded onto the forwarding plane, such   CE functions, even though logically belonging to the control plane,   now become part of the FE functions.  Just like the other logical   functions performed by FEs, such off-loaded functions must be   expressed as part of the FE model so that the CEs can decide how to   best take advantage of these off-loaded functions when present on the   FEs.5.1.  General Router Requirements   Routers have at least two or more logical interfaces.  When CEs and   FEs are separated by ForCES within a single NE, some additional   interfaces are needed for intra-NE communications, as illustrated in   figure 12.  This NE contains one CE and two FEs.  Each FE has four   interfaces; two of them are used for receiving and transmitting   packets to the external world, while the other two are for intra-NE   connections.  CE has two logical interfaces #9 and #10, connected to   interfaces #3 and #6 from FE1 and FE2, respectively.  Interface #4   and #5 are connected for FE1-FE2 communication.  Therefore, this   router NE provides four external interfaces (#1, 2, 7, and 8).Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 25]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004      ---------------------------------      |               router NE       |      |   -----------   -----------   |      |   |   FE1   |   |   FE2   |   |      |   -----------   -----------   |      |   1| 2| 3| 4|   5| 6| 7| 8|   |      |    |  |  |  |    |  |  |  |   |      |    |  |  |  +----+  |  |  |   |      |    |  |  |          |  |  |   |      |    |  | 9|        10|  |  |   |      |    |  | -------------- |  |   |      |    |  | |    CE      | |  |   |      |    |  | -------------- |  |   |      |    |  |                |  |   |      -----+--+----------------+--+----           |  |                |  |           |  |                |  |      Figure 12. A router NE example with four interfaces.   IPv4 routers must implement IP to support its packet forwarding   function, which is driven by its FIB (Forwarding Information Base).   This Internet layer forwarding (seeRFC 1812 [2]Section 5)   functionality naturally belongs to FEs in the ForCES architecture.   A router may implement transport layer protocols (like TCP and UDP)   that are required to support application layer protocols (seeRFC1812 [2]Section 6).  One important class of application protocols is   routing protocols (seeRFC 1812 [2]Section 7).  In the ForCES   architecture, routing protocols are naturally implemented by CEs.   Routing protocols require that routers communicate with each other.   This communication between CEs in different routers is supported in   ForCES by FEs' ability to redirect data packets addressed to routers   (i.e., NEs), and the CEs' ability to originate packets and have them   delivered by their FEs.  This communication occurs across the Fp   reference point inside each router and between neighboring routers'   external interfaces, as illustrated in Figure 11.5.2.  Link Layer   Since FEs own all the external interfaces for the router, FEs need to   conform to the link layer requirements inRFC 1812 [2].  Arguably,   ARP support may be implemented in either CEs or FEs.  As we will see   later, a number of behaviors thatRFC 1812 mandates fall into this   category -- they may be performed by the FE and may be performed by   the CE.  A general guideline is needed to ensure interoperability   between separated control and forwarding planes.  The guideline we   offer here is that CEs MUST be capable of these kinds of operationsYang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 26]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   while FEs MAY choose to implement them.  The FE model should indicate   its capabilities in this regard so that CEs can decide where these   functions are implemented.   Interface parameters, including MTU, IP address, etc., must be   configurable by CEs via ForCES.  CEs must be able to determine   whether a physical interface in an FE is available to send packets or   not.  FEs must also inform CEs of the status change of the interfaces   (like link up/down) via ForCES.5.3.  Internet Layer Protocols   Both FEs and CEs must implement the IP protocol and all mandatory   extensions asRFC 1812 specified.  CEs should implement IP options   like source route and record route while FEs may choose to implement   those as well.  The timestamp option should be implemented by FEs to   insert the timestamp most accurately.  The FE must interpret the IP   options that it understands and preserve the rest unchanged for use   by CEs.  Both FEs and CEs might choose to silently discard packets   without sending ICMP errors, but such events should be logged and   counted.  FEs may report statistics for such events to CEs via   ForCES.   When multiple FEs are involved to process packets, the appearance of   a single NE must be strictly maintained.  For example, Time-To-Live   (TTL) must be decremented only once within a single NE.  For example,   it can be always decremented by the last FE with egress function.   FEs must receive and process normally any packets with a broadcast   destination address or a multicast destination address that the   router has asked to receive.  When IP multicast is supported in   routers, IGMP is implemented in CEs.  CEs are also required of ICMP   support, while it is optional for FEs to support ICMP.  Such an   option can be communicated to CEs as part of the FE model. Therefore,   FEs can always rely upon CEs to send out ICMP error messages, but FEs   also have the option of generating ICMP error messages themselves.5.4.  Internet Layer Forwarding   IP forwarding is implemented by FEs.  When the routing table is   updated at the CEs, ForCES is used to send the new route entries from   the CEs to FEs.  Each FE has its own forwarding table and uses this   table to direct packets to the next hop interface.   Upon receiving IP packets, the FE verifies the IP header and   processes most of the IP options.  Some options cannot be processed   until the routing decision has been made.  The routing decision is   made after examining the destination IP address.  If the destinationYang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 27]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   address belongs to the router itself, the packets are filtered and   either processed locally or forwarded to the CE, depending upon the   instructions set-up by the CE.  Otherwise, the FE determines the next   hop IP address by looking in its forwarding table.  The FE also   determines the network interface it uses to send the packets.   Sometimes an FE may need to forward the packets to another FE before   packets can be forwarded out to the next hop.  Right before packets   are forwarded out to the next hop, the FE decrements TTL by 1 and   processes any IP options that could not be processed before.  The FE   performs IP fragmentation if necessary, determines the link layer   address (e.g., by ARP), and encapsulates the IP datagram (or each of   the fragments thereof) in an appropriate link layer frame and queues   it for output on the interface selected.   Other options mentioned inRFC 1812 [2] for IP forwarding may also be   implemented at FEs, for example, packet filtering.   FEs typically forward packets destined locally to CEs.  FEs may also   forward exceptional packets (packets that FEs do not know how to   handle) to CEs.  CEs are required to handle packets forwarded by FEs   for whatever reason.  It might be necessary for ForCES to attach some   meta-data with the packets to indicate the reasons of forwarding from   FEs to CEs.  Upon receiving packets with meta-data from FEs, CEs can   decide to either process the packets themselves, or pass the packets   to the upper layer protocols including routing and management   protocols.  If CEs are to process the packets by themselves, CEs may   choose to discard the packets, or modify and re-send the packets.   CEs may also originate new packets and deliver them to FEs for   further forwarding.   Any state change during router operation must also be handled   correctly according toRFC 1812.  For example, when an FE ceases   forwarding, the entire NE may continue forwarding packets, but it   needs to stop advertising routes that are affected by the failed FE.5.5.  Transport Layer   The Transport layer is typically implemented at CEs to support higher   layer application protocols like routing protocols.  In practice,   this means that most CEs implement both the Transmission Control   Protocol (TCP) and the User Datagram Protocol (UDP).   Both CEs and FEs need to implement the ForCES Protocol.  If some   layer-4 transport is used to support ForCES, then both CEs and FEs   need to implement the L4 transport and ForCES Protocols.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 28]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 20045.6.  Application Layer -- Routing Protocols   Interior and exterior routing protocols are implemented on CEs.  The   routing packets originated by CEs are forwarded to FEs for delivery.   The results of such protocols (like forwarding table updates) are   communicated to FEs via ForCES.   For performance or scalability reasons, portions of the control plane   functions that need faster response may be moved from the CEs and   off-loaded onto the FEs.  For example, in OSPF, the Hello protocol   packets are generated and processed periodically.  When done at the   CEs, the inbound Hello packets have to traverse from the external   interfaces at the FEs to the CEs via the internal CE-FE channel.   Similarly, the outbound Hello packets have to go from the CEs to the   FEs and to the external interfaces.  Frequent Hello updates place   heavy processing overhead on the CEs and can overwhelm the CE-FE   channel as well.  Since typically there are far more FEs than CEs in   a router, the off-loaded Hello packets are processed in a much more   distributed and scalable fashion.  By expressing such off-loaded   functions in the FE model, we can ensure interoperability.  However,   the exact description of the off-loaded functionality corresponding   to the off-loaded functions expressed in the FE model are not part of   the model itself and will need to be worked out as a separate   specification.5.7.  Application Layer -- Network Management ProtocolRFC 1812 [2] also dictates that "Routers MUST be manageable by SNMP".   In general, for the post-association phase, most external management   tasks (including SNMP) should be done through interaction with the CE   in order to support the appearance of a single functional device.   Therefore, it is recommended that an SNMP agent be implemented by CEs   and that the SNMP messages received by FEs be redirected to their   CEs. AgentX framework defined inRFC 2741 ([6]) may be applied here   such that CEs act in the role of master agent to process SNMP   protocol messages while FEs act in the role of subagent to provide   access to the MIB objects residing on FEs.  AgentX protocol messages   between the master agent (CE) and the subagent (FE) are encapsulated   and transported via ForCES, just like data packets from any other   application layer protocols.6.  Summary   This document defines an architectural framework for ForCES.  It   identifies the relevant components for a ForCES network element,   including (one or more) FEs, (one or more) CEs, one optional FE   manager, and one optional CE manager.  It also identifies the   interaction among these components and discusses all the majorYang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 29]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   reference points.  It is important to point out that, among all the   reference points, only the Fp interface between CEs and FEs is within   the scope of ForCES.  ForCES alone may not be enough to support all   desirable NE configurations.  However, we believe that ForCES over an   Fp interface is the most important element in realizing physical   separation and interoperability of CEs and FEs, and hence the first   interface that ought to be standardized.  Simple and useful   configurations can still be implemented with only CE-FE interface   being standardized, e.g., single CE with full-meshed FEs.7.  Acknowledgements   Joel M. Halpern gave us many insightful comments and suggestions and   pointed out several major issues.  T. Sridhar suggested that the   AgentX protocol could be used with SNMP to manage the ForCES network   elements.  Susan Hares pointed out the issue of graceful restart with   ForCES.  Russ Housley, Avri Doria, Jamal Hadi Salim, and many others   in the ForCES mailing list also provided valuable feedback.8.  Security Considerations   The NE administrator has the freedom to determine the exact security   configuration that is needed for the specific deployment. For   example, ForCES may be deployed between CEs and FEs connected to each   other inside a box over a backplane.  In such a scenario, physical   security of the box ensures that most of the attacks, such as man-   in-the-middle, snooping, and impersonation, are not possible, and   hence the ForCES architecture may rely on the physical security of   the box to defend against these attacks and protocol mechanisms may   be turned off.  However, it is also shown that denial of service   attacks via external interfaces as described below inSection 8.1.8   is still a potential threat, even for such an "all-in-one-box"   deployment scenario and hence the rate limiting mechanism is still   necessary.  This is just one example to show that it is important to   assess the security needs of the ForCES-enabled network elements   under different deployment scenarios.  It should be possible for the   administrator to configure the level of security needed for the   ForCES Protocol.   In general, the physical separation of two entities usually results   in a potentially insecure link between the two entities and hence   much stricter security measurements are required.  For example, we   pointed out inSection 4.1 that authentication becomes necessary   between the CE manager and FE manager, between the CE and CE manager,   and between the FE and FE manager in some configurations.  The   physical separation of the CE and FE also imposes serious security   requirements for the ForCES Protocol over the Fp interface.  This   section first attempts to describe the security threats that may beYang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 30]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   introduced by the physical separation of the FEs and CEs, and then it   provides recommendations and guidelines for the secure operation and   management of the ForCES Protocol over the Fp interface based on   existing standard security solutions.8.1.  Analysis of Potential Threats Introduced by ForCES   This section provides the threat analysis for ForCES, with a focus on   the Fp interface.  Each threat is described in detail with the   effects on the ForCES Protocol entities or/and the NE as a whole, and   the required functionalities that need to be in place to defend the   threat.8.1.1.  "Join" or "Remove" Message Flooding on CEs   Threats:  A malicious node could send a stream of false "join NE" or   "remove from NE" requests on behalf of a non-existent or unauthorized   FE to legitimate CEs at a very rapid rate, and thereby creating   unnecessary state in the CEs.   Effects: If maintaining state for non-existent or unauthorized FEs, a   CE may become unavailable for other processing and hence suffer from   a denial of service (DoS) attack similar to the TCP SYN DoS.  If   multiple CEs are used, the unnecessary state information may also be   conveyed to multiple CEs via the Fr interface (e.g., from the active   CE to the stand-by CE) and hence subject multiple CEs to a DoS   attack.   Requirement: A CE that receives a "join" or "remove" request should   not create any state information until it has authenticated the FE   endpoint.8.1.2.  Impersonation Attack   Threats: A malicious node can impersonate a CE or FE and send out   false messages.   Effects: The whole NE could be compromised.   Requirement: The CE or FE must authenticate the message as having   come from an FE or CE on the list of the authorized ForCES elements   (provided by the CE or FE Manager in the pre-association phase)   before accepting and processing it.8.1.3.  Replay Attack   Threat: A malicious node could replay the entire message previously   sent by an FE or CE entity to get around authentication.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 31]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   Effect: The NE could be compromised.   Requirement: A replay protection mechanism needs to be part of the   security solution to defend against this attack.8.1.4.  Attack during Fail Over   Threat: A malicious node may exploit the CE fail-over mechanism to   take over the control of NE.  For example, suppose two CEs, say CE-A   and CE-B, are controlling several FEs.  CE-A is active and CE-B is   stand-by.  When CE-A fails, CE-B is taking over the active CE   position.  The FEs already had a trusted relationship with CE-A, but   the FEs may not have the same trusted relationship established with   CE-B prior to the fail-over.  A malicious node can take over as CE-B   if such a trusted relationship has not been established prior to or   during the fail-over.   Effect: The NE may be compromised after such insecure fail-over.   Requirement: The level of trust between the stand-by CE and the FEs   must be as strong as the one between the active CE and the FEs.  The   security association between the FEs and the stand-by CE may be   established prior to fail-over.  If not already in place, such   security association must be re-established before the stand-by CE   takes over.8.1.5.  Data Integrity   Threats: A malicious node may inject false messages to a legitimate   CE or FE.   Effect: An FE or CE receives the fabricated packet and performs an   incorrect or catastrophic operation.   Requirement: Protocol messages require integrity protection.8.1.6.  Data Confidentiality   Threat: When FE and CE are physically separated, a malicious node may   eavesdrop the messages in transit.  Some of the messages are critical   to the functioning of the whole network, while others may contain   confidential business data.  Leaking of such information may result   in compromise even beyond the immediate CE or FE.   Effect: Sensitive information might be exposed between the CE and FE.   Requirement: Data confidentiality between the FE and CE must be   available for sensitive information.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 32]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 20048.1.7.  Sharing security parameters   Threat: Consider a scenario where several FEs are communicating to   the same CE and sharing the same authentication keys for the Fp   interface.  If any FE or CE is compromised, all other entities are   compromised.   Effect: The whole NE is compromised.   Recommendation: To avoid this side effect, it's better to configure   different security parameters for each FE-CE communication over the   Fp interface.8.1.8.  Denial of Service Attack via External Interface   Threat: When an FE receives a packet that is destined for its CE, the   FE forwards the packet over the Fp interface.  A malicious node can   generate a huge message storm like routing protocol packets etc.   through the external Fi/f interface so that the FE has to process and   forward all packets to the CE through the Fp interface.   Effect: The CE encounters resource exhaustion and bandwidth   starvation on Fp interface due to an overwhelming number of packets   from FEs.   Requirement: Some sort of rate limiting mechanism MUST be in place at   both the FE and CE.  The Rate Limiter SHOULD be configured at the FE   for each message type being received through the Fi/f interface.8.2.  Security Recommendations for ForCES   The requirements document [4] suggested that the ForCES Protocol   should support reliability over the Fp interface, but no particular   transport protocol is yet specified for ForCES.  This framework   document does not intend to specify the particular transport either,   and so we only provide recommendations and guidelines based on the   existing standard security protocols [18] that can work with the   common transport candidates suitable for ForCES.   We review two existing security protocol solutions, namely IPsec (IP   Security) [15] and TLS (Transport Layer Security) [14].  TLS works   with reliable transports such as TCP or SCTP for unicast, while IPsec   can be used with any transport (UDP, TCP, SCTP) and supports both   unicast and multicast.  Both TLS and IPsec can be used potentially to   satisfy all of the security requirements for the ForCES Protocol.  In   addition, other approaches that satisfy the requirements can be used   as well, but are not documented here, including the use of L2   security mechanisms for a given L2 interconnect technology.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 33]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   When ForCES is deployed between CEs and FEs inside a box or a   physically secured room, authentication, confidentiality, and   integrity may be provided by the physical security of the box.  Thus,   the security mechanisms may be turned off, depending on the   networking topology and its administration policy.  However, it is   important to realize that even if the NE is in a single-box, the DoS   attacks as described inSection 8.1.8 can still be launched through   the Fi/f interfaces.  Therefore, it is important to have the   corresponding counter-measurement in place, even for single-box   deployment.8.2.1.  Using TLS with ForCES   TLS [14] can be used if a reliable unicast transport such as TCP or   SCTP is used for ForCES over the Fp interface.  The TLS handshake   protocol is used during the association establishment or re-   establishment phase to negotiate a TLS session between the CE and FE.   Once the session is in place, the TLS record protocol is used to   secure ForCES communication messages between the CE and FE.   A basic outline of how TLS can be used with ForCES is described   below.  Steps 1) through 7) complete the security handshake as   illustrated in Figure 9, while step 8) is for all further   communication between the CE and FE, including the rest of the   messages after the security handshake shown in Figure 9 and the   steady-state communication shown in Figure 10.   1) During the Pre-association phase, all FEs are configured with the      CEs (including both the active CE and the standby CE).   2) The FE establishes a TLS connection with the CE (master) and      negotiates a cipher suite.   3) The FE (slave) gets the CE certificate, validates the signature,      checks the expiration date, and checks whether the certificate has      been revoked.   4) The CE (master) gets the FE certificate and performs the same      validation as the FE in step 3).   5) If any of the checks fail in step 3) or step 4), the endpoint must      generate an error message and abort.   6) After successful mutual authentication, a TLS session is      established between the CE and FE.   7) The FE sends a "join NE" message to the CE.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 34]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   8) The FE and CE use the TLS session for further communication.   Note that there are different ways for the CE and FE to validate a   received certificate.  One way is to configure the FE Manager or CE   Manager or other central component as CA, so that the CE or FE can   query this pre-configured CA to validate that the certificate has not   been revoked.  Another way is to have the CE and FE directly   configure a list of valid certificates in the pre-association phase.   In the case of fail-over, it is the responsibility of the active CE   and the standby CE to synchronize ForCES states, including the TLS   states to minimize the state re-establishment during fail-over.  Care   must be taken to ensure that the standby CE is also authenticated in   the same way as the active CE, either before or during the fail-over.8.2.2.  Using IPsec with ForCES   IPsec [15] can be used with any transport protocol, such as UDP,   SCTP, and TCP, over the Fp interface for ForCES.  When using IPsec,   we recommend using ESP in the transport mode for ForCES because   message confidentiality is required for ForCES.   IPsec can be used with both manual and automated SA and cryptographic   key management.  But IPsec's replay protection mechanisms are not   available if manual key management is used.  Hence, automatic key   management is recommended if replay protection is deemed important.   Otherwise, manual key management might be sufficient for some   deployment scenarios, especially when the number of CEs and FEs is   relatively small.  It is recommended that the keys be changed   periodically, even for manual key management.   IPsec can support both unicast and multicast transport.  At the time   this document was published, the MSEC working group was actively   working on standardizing protocols to provide multicast security   [17].  Multicast-based solutions relying on IPsec should specify how   to meet the security requirements in [4].   Unlike TLS, IPsec provides security services between the CE and FE at   IP level, so the security handshake, as illustrated in Figure 9   amounts to a "no-op" when manual key management is used.  The   following outlines the steps taken for ForCES in such a case.   1) During the Pre-association phase, all the FEs are configured with      CEs (including the active CE and standby CE) and SA parameters      manually.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 35]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   2) The FE sends a "join NE" message to the CE.  This message and all      others that follow are afforded security service according to the      manually configured IPsec SA parameters, but replay protection is      not available.   It is up to the administrator to decide whether to share the same key   across multiple FE-CE communication, but it is recommended that   different keys be used.  Similarly, it is recommended that different   keys be used for inbound and outbound traffic.   If automatic key management is needed, IKE [16] can be used for that   purpose.  Other automatic key distribution techniques, such as   Kerberos, may be used as well.  The key exchange process constitutes   the security handshake as illustrated in Figure 9.  The following   shows the steps involved in using IKE with IPsec for ForCES.  Steps   1) to 6) constitute the security handshake in Figure 9.   1) During the Pre-association phase, all FEs are configured with the      CEs (including active CE and standby CE), IPsec policy etc.   2) The FE kicks off the IKE process and tries to establish an IPsec      SA with the CE (master).  The FE (Slave) gets the CE certificate      as part of the IKE negotiation.  The FE validates the signature,      checks the expiration date, and checks whether the certificate has      been revoked.   3) The CE (master) gets the FE certificate and performs the same      check as the FE in step 2).   4) If any of the checks fail in step 2) or step 3), the endpoint must      generate an error message and abort.   5) After successful mutual authentication, the IPsec session is      established between the CE and FE.   6) The FE sends a "join NE" message to the CE.  No SADB entry is      created in FE yet.   7) The FE and CE use the IPsec session for further communication.   The FE Manager, CE Manager, or other central component can be used as   a CA for validating CE and FE certificates during the IKE process.   Alternatively, during the pre-association phase, the CE and FE can be   configured directly with the required information, such as   certificates or passwords etc., depending upon the type of   authentication that administrator wants to configure.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 36]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   In the case of fail-over, it is the responsibility of the active CE   and standby CE to synchronize ForCES states and IPsec states to   minimize the state re-establishment during fail-over.  Alternatively,   the FE needs to establish a different IPsec SA during the startup   operation itself with each CE.  This will minimize the periodic state   transfer across the IPsec layer though the Fr (CE-CE) Interface.9.  References9.1.  Normative References   [1]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement        Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [2]  Baker, F., Ed., "Requirements for IP Version 4 Routers",RFC1812, June 1995.   [3]  Floyd, S., "Congestion Control Principles",BCP 41,RFC 2914,        September 2000.   [4]  Khosravi, H. and Anderson, T., Eds., "Requirements for        Separation of IP Control and Forwarding",RFC 3654, November        2003.9.2.  Informative References   [5]  Case, J., Mundy, R., Partain, D. and B. Stewart, "Introduction        and Applicability Statements for Internet Standard Management        Framework",RFC 3410, December 2002.   [6]  Daniele, M., Wijnen, B., Ellison, M. and D. Francisco, "Agent        Extensibility (AgentX) Protocol Version 1",RFC 2741, January        2000.   [7]  Chan, K., Seligson, J., Durham, D., Gai, S., McCloghrie, K.,        Herzog, S., Reichmeyer, F., Yavatkar, R. and A. Smith, "COPS        Usage for Policy Provisioning (COPS-PR)",RFC 3084, March 2001.   [8]  Crouch, A. et al.,"ForCES Applicability Statement", Work in        Progress.   [9]  Anderson, T. and J. Buerkle, "Requirements for the Dynamic        Partitioning of Switching Elements",RFC 3532, May 2003.   [10] Leelanivas, M., Rekhter, Y. and R. Aggarwal, "Graceful Restart        Mechanism for Label Distribution Protocol",RFC 3478, February        2003.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 37]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 2004   [11] Moy, J., Pillay-Esnault, P. and A. Lindem, "Graceful OSPF        Restart",RFC 3623, November 2003.   [12] Sangli, S. et al.,"Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP", Work in        Progress.   [13] Shand, M. and L. Ginsberg,"Restart Signaling for IS-IS", Work        in Progress.   [14] Dierks, T. and C. Allen, "The TLS Protocol Version 1.0",RFC2246, January 1999.   [15] Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for the        Internet Protocol",RFC 2401, November 1998.   [16] Harkins, D. and D. Carrel, "The Internet Key Exchange (IKE)",RFC 2409, November 1998.   [17] Hardjono, T. and Weis, B. "The Multicast Group Security        Architecture",RFC 3740, March 2004.   [18] Bellovin, S., Schiller, J. and C. Kaufman, Eds., "Security        Mechanisms for the Internet",RFC 3631, December 2003.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 38]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 200410.  Authors' Addresses   L. Lily Yang   Intel Corp., MS JF3-206,   2111 NE 25th Avenue   Hillsboro, OR 97124, USA   Phone: +1 503 264 8813   EMail: lily.l.yang@intel.com   Ram Dantu   Department of Computer Science,   University of North Texas,   Denton, TX 76203, USA   Phone: +1 940 565 2822   EMail: rdantu@unt.edu   Todd A. Anderson   Intel Corp.   2111 NE 25th Avenue   Hillsboro, OR 97124, USA   Phone: +1 503 712 1760   EMail: todd.a.anderson@intel.com   Ram Gopal   Nokia Research Center   5, Wayside Road,   Burlington, MA 01803, USA   Phone: +1 781 993 3685   EMail: ram.gopal@nokia.comYang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 39]

RFC 3746                    ForCES Framework                  April 200411.  Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).  This document is subject   to the rights, licenses and restrictions contained inBCP 78, and   except as set forth therein, the authors retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE   REPRESENTS OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE   INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR   IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF   THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed   to pertain to the implementation or use of the technology   described in this document or the extent to which any license   under such rights might or might not be available; nor does it   represent that it has made any independent effort to identify any   such rights.  Information on the procedures with respect to   rights in RFC documents can be found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use   of such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository   athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention   any copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other   proprietary rights that may cover technology that may be required   to implement this standard.  Please address the information to the   IETF at ietf-ipr@ietf.org.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Yang, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 40]

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp