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Network Working Group                                          E. MannieRequest for Comments: 3946                                    ConsultantCategory: Standards Track                               D. Papadimitriou                                                                 Alcatel                                                            October 2004Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) Extensions forSynchronous Optical Network (SONET) andSynchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) ControlStatus of this Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).Abstract   This document is a companion to the Generalized Multi-Protocol Label   Switching (GMPLS) signaling.  It defines the Synchronous Optical   Network (SONET)/Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) technology   specific information needed when using GMPLS signaling.Table of Contents1.  Introduction .................................................22.  SONET and SDH Traffic Parameters .............................22.1.  SONET/SDH Traffic Parameters ...........................32.2.  RSVP-TE Details ........................................92.3.  CR-LDP Details .........................................93.  SONET and SDH Labels .........................................104.  Acknowledgments ..............................................155.  Security Considerations ......................................166.  IANA Considerations ..........................................167.  References ...................................................167.1.  Normative References ...................................16   Appendix 1 - Signal Type Values Extension for VC-3 ...............18   Annex 1 - Examples ...............................................18   Contributors .....................................................21   Authors' Addresses ...............................................25   Full Copyright Statement .........................................26Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 20041.  Introduction   As described in [RFC3945], Generalized MPLS (GMPLS) extends MPLS from   supporting packet (Packet Switching Capable - PSC) interfaces and   switching to include support of four new classes of interfaces and   switching: Layer-2 Switch Capable (L2SC), Time-Division Multiplex   (TDM), Lambda Switch Capable (LSC) and Fiber-Switch Capable (FSC).  A   functional description of the extensions to MPLS signaling needed to   support the new classes of interfaces and switching is provided in   [RFC3471].  [RFC3473] describes RSVP-TE specific formats and   mechanisms needed to support all five classes of interfaces, and CR-   LDP extensions can be found in [RFC3472].  This document presents   details that are specific to Synchronous Optical Network   (SONET)/Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH).  Per [RFC3471],   SONET/SDH specific parameters are carried in the signaling protocol   in traffic parameter specific objects.   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].   Moreover, the reader is assumed to be familiar with the terminology   in ANSI [T1.105], ITU-T [G.707] as well as [RFC3471], [RFC3472], and   [RFC3473].  The following abbreviations are used in this document:   DCC: Data Communications Channel.   LOVC: Lower Order Virtual Container   HOVC: Higher Order Virtual Container   MS: Multiplex Section.   MSOH: Multiplex Section overhead.   POH: Path overhead.   RS: Regenerator Section.   RSOH: Regenerator section overhead.   SDH: Synchronous digital hierarchy.   SOH: Section overhead.   SONET: Synchronous Optical Network.   SPE: Synchronous Payload Envelope.   STM(-N): Synchronous Transport Module (-N) (SDH).   STS(-N): Synchronous Transport Signal-Level N (SONET).   VC-n: Virtual Container-n (SDH).   VTn: Virtual Tributary-n (SONET).2.  SONET and SDH Traffic Parameters   This section defines the GMPLS traffic parameters for SONET/SDH.  The   protocol specific formats, for the SONET/SDH-specific RSVP-TE objects   and CR-LDP TLVs are described in sections2.2 and2.3 respectively.Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   These traffic parameters specify indeed a base set of capabilities   for SONET ANSI [T1.105] and SDH ITU-T [G.707] such as concatenation   and transparency.  Other documents may further enhance this set of   capabilities in the future.  For instance, signaling for SDH over PDH   ITU-T G.832 or sub-STM-0 ITU-T G.708 interfaces could be defined.   The traffic parameters defined hereafter (seeSection 2.1) MUST be   used when the label is encoded as SUKLM as defined in this memo (seeSection 3).  They MUST also be used when requesting one of Section/RS   or Line/MS overhead transparent STS-1/STM-0, STS-3*N/STM-N (N=1, 4,   16, 64, 256) signals.   The traffic parameters and label encoding defined in[RFC3471],   Section 3.2, MUST be used for fully transparent STS-1/STM-0,   STS-3*N/STM-N (N=1, 4, 16, 64, 256) signal requests.  A fully   transparent signal is one for which all overhead is left unmodified   by intermediate nodes, i.e., when all defined Transparency (T) bits   would be set if the traffic parameters defined insection 2.1 were   used.2.1.  SONET/SDH Traffic Parameters   The traffic parameters for SONET/SDH are organized as follows:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |  Signal Type  |      RCC      |              NCC              |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |              NVC              |        Multiplier (MT)        |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                       Transparency (T)                        |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                           Profile (P)                         |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Annex 1 lists examples of SONET and SDH signal coding.   Signal Type (ST): 8 bits   This field indicates the type of Elementary Signal that comprises the   requested LSP.  Several transforms can be applied successively on the   Elementary Signal to build the Final Signal being actually requested   for the LSP.   Each transform application is optional and must be ignored if zero,   except the Multiplier (MT) that cannot be zero and is ignored if   equal to one.Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   Transforms must be applied strictly in the following order:   -  First, contiguous concatenation (by using the RCC and NCC fields)      can be optionally applied on the Elementary Signal, resulting in a      contiguously concatenated signal.   -  Second, virtual concatenation (by using the NVC field) can be      optionally applied on the Elementary Signal resulting in a      virtually concatenated signal.   -  Third, some transparency (by using the Transparency field) can be      optionally specified when requesting a frame as signal rather than      an SPE or VC based signal.   -  Fourth, a multiplication (by using the Multiplier field) can be      optionally applied either directly on the Elementary Signal, or on      the contiguously concatenated signal obtained from the first      phase, or on the virtually concatenated signal obtained from the      second phase, or on these signals combined with some transparency.   Permitted Signal Type values for SONET/SDH are:   Value  Type (Elementary Signal)   -----  ------------------------    1     VT1.5  SPE / VC-11    2     VT2    SPE / VC-12    3     VT3    SPE    4     VT6    SPE / VC-2    5     STS-1  SPE / VC-3    6     STS-3c SPE / VC-4    7     STS-1      / STM-0   (only when requesting transparency)    8     STS-3      / STM-1   (only when requesting transparency)    9     STS-12     / STM-4   (only when requesting transparency)    10    STS-48     / STM-16  (only when requesting transparency)    11    STS-192    / STM-64  (only when requesting transparency)    12    STS-768    / STM-256 (only when requesting transparency)   A dedicated signal type is assigned to a SONET STS-3c SPE instead of   coding it as a contiguous concatenation of three STS-1 SPEs.  This is   done in order to provide easy interworking between SONET and SDH   signaling.   Appendix 1 adds one signal type (optional) to the above values.   Requested Contiguous Concatenation (RCC): 8 bits   This field is used to request the optional SONET/SDH contiguous   concatenation of the Elementary Signal.Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   This field is a vector of flags.  Each flag indicates the support of   a particular type of contiguous concatenation.  Several flags can be   set at the same time to indicate a choice.   These flags allow an upstream node to indicate to a downstream node   the different types of contiguous concatenation that it supports.   However, the downstream node decides which one to use according to   its own rules.   A downstream node receiving simultaneously more than one flag chooses   a particular type of contiguous concatenation, if any supported, and   based on criteria that are out of this document scope.  A downstream   node that doesn't support any of the concatenation types indicated by   the field must refuse the LSP request.  In particular, it must refuse   the LSP request if it doesn't support contiguous concatenation at   all.   When several flags have been set, the upstream node retrieves the   (single) type of contiguous concatenation the downstream node has   selected by looking at the position indicated by the first label and   the number of label(s) as returned by the downstream node (see alsoSection 3).   The entire field is set to zero to indicate that no contiguous   concatenation is requested at all (default value).  A non-zero field   indicates that some contiguous concatenation is requested.   The following flag is defined:      Flag 1 (bit 1): Standard contiguous concatenation.   Flag 1 indicates that the standard SONET/SDH contiguous concatenation   as defined in [T1.105]/[G.707] is supported.  Note that bit 1 is the   low order bit.  Other flags are reserved for extensions, if not used   they must be set to zero when sent, and should be ignored when   received.   See note 1 hereafter in the section on the NCC about the SONET   contiguous concatenation of STS-1 SPEs when the number of components   is a multiple of three.      Number of Contiguous Components (NCC): 16 bits   This field indicates the number of identical SONET SPEs/SDH VCs   (i.e., Elementary Signal) that are requested to be concatenated, as   specified in the RCC field.Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   Note 1: when requesting a SONET STS-Nc SPE with N=3*X, the      Elementary Signal to use must always be an STS-3c_SPE signal type      and the value of NCC must always be equal to X.  This allows also      facilitating the interworking between SONET and SDH.  In      particular, it means that the contiguous concatenation of three      STS-1 SPEs can not be requested because according to this      specification, this type of signal must be coded using the STS-3c      SPE signal type.   Note 2: when requesting a transparent STS-N/STM-N signal      limited to a single contiguously concatenated STS-Nc_SPE/VC-4-Nc,      the signal type must be STS-N/STM-N, RCC with flag 1 and NCC set      to 1.   The NCC value must be consistent with the type of contiguous   concatenation being requested in the RCC field.  In particular, this   field is irrelevant if no contiguous concatenation is requested (RCC   = 0), in that case it must be set to zero when sent, and should be   ignored when received.  A RCC value different from 0 must imply a   number of contiguous components greater than 1.      Number of Virtual Components (NVC): 16 bits   This field indicates the number of signals that are requested to be   virtually concatenated.  These signals are all of the same type by   definition.  They are Elementary Signal SPEs/VCs for which signal   types are defined in this document, i.e., VT1.5_SPE/VC-11,   VT2_SPE/VC-12, VT3_SPE, VT6_SPE/VC-2, STS-1_SPE/VC-3 or   STS-3c_SPE/VC-4.   This field is set to 0 (default value) to indicate that no virtual   concatenation is requested.      Multiplier (MT): 16 bits   This field indicates the number of identical signals that are   requested for the LSP, i.e., that form the Final Signal.  These   signals can be either identical Elementary Signals, or identical   contiguously concatenated signals, or identical virtually   concatenated signals.  Note that all these signals belong thus to the   same LSP.   The distinction between the components of multiple virtually   concatenated signals is done via the order of the labels that are   specified in the signaling.  The first set of labels must describe   the first component (set of individual signals belonging to the firstMannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   virtual concatenated signal), the second set must describe the second   component (set of individual signals belonging to the second virtual   concatenated signal) and so on.   This field is set to one (default value) to indicate that exactly one   instance of a signal is being requested.  Intermediate and egress   nodes MUST verify that the node itself and the interfaces on which   the LSP will be established can support the requested multiplier   value.  If the requested values can not be supported, the receiver   node MUST generate a PathErr/NOTIFICATION message (seeSection2.2/2.3, respectively).   Zero is an invalid value.  If received, the node MUST generate a   PathErr/NOTIFICATION message (seeSection 2.2/2.3, respectively).   Note 1: when requesting a transparent STS-N/STM-N signal limited to a   single contiguously concatenated STS-Nc-SPE/VC-4-Nc, the multiplier   field MUST be equal to 1 (only valid value).      Transparency (T): 32 bits   This field is a vector of flags that indicates the type of   transparency being requested.  Several flags can be combined to   provide different types of transparency.  Not all combinations are   necessarily valid.  The default value for this field is zero, i.e.,   no transparency requested.   Transparency, as defined from the point of view of this signaling   specification, is only applicable to the fields in the SONET/SDH   frame overheads.  In the SONET case, these are the fields in the   Section Overhead (SOH), and the Line Overhead (LOH).  In the SDH   case, these are the fields in the Regenerator Section Overhead   (RSOH), the Multiplex Section overhead (MSOH), and the pointer fields   between the two.  With SONET, the pointer fields are part of the LOH.   Note as well that transparency is only applicable when using the   following Signal Types: STS-1/STM-0, STS-3/STM-1, STS-12/STM-4,   STS-48/STM-16, STS-192/STM-64 and STS-768/STM-256.  At least one   transparency type must be specified when requesting such a signal   type.   Transparency indicates precisely which fields in these overheads must   be delivered unmodified at the other end of the LSP.  An ingress LSR   requesting transparency will pass these overhead fields that must be   delivered to the egress LSR without any change.  From the ingress and   egress LSRs point of views, these fields must be seen as unmodified.Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   Transparency is not applied at the interfaces with the initiating and   terminating LSRs, but is only applied between intermediate LSRs.   The transparency field is used to request an LSP that supports the   requested transparency type; it may also be used to setup the   transparency process to be applied at each intermediate LSR.   The different transparency flags are the following:      Flag 1 (bit 1): Section/Regenerator Section layer.      Flag 2 (bit 2): Line/Multiplex Section layer.   Where bit 1 is the low order bit.  Other flags are reserved, they   should be set to zero when sent, and should be ignored when received.   A flag is set to one to indicate that the corresponding transparency   is requested.   Intermediate and egress nodes MUST verify that the node itself and   the interfaces on which the LSP will be established can support the   requested transparency.  If the requested flags can not be supported,   the receiver node MUST generate a PathErr/NOTIFICATION message (seeSection 2.2/2.3, respectively).   Section/Regenerator Section layer transparency means that the entire   frames must be delivered unmodified.  This implies that pointers   cannot be adjusted.  When using Section/Regenerator Section layer   transparency all other flags MUST be ignored.   Line/Multiplex Section layer transparency means that the LOH/MSOH   must be delivered unmodified.  This implies that pointers cannot be   adjusted.   Profile (P): 32 bits   This field is intended to indicate particular capabilities that must   be supported for the LSP, for example monitoring capabilities.   No standard profile is currently defined and this field SHOULD be set   to zero when transmitted and SHOULD be ignored when received.   In the future TLV based extensions may be created.Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 20042.2.  RSVP-TE Details   For RSVP-TE, the SONET/SDH traffic parameters are carried in the   SONET/SDH SENDER_TSPEC and FLOWSPEC objects.  The same format is used   both for SENDER_TSPEC object and FLOWSPEC objects.  The content of   the objects is defined above inSection 2.1.  The objects have the   following class and type:   For SONET ANSI T1.105 and SDH ITU-T G.707:   SONET/SDH SENDER_TSPEC object: Class = 12, C-Type = 4   SONET/SDH FLOWSPEC object: Class = 9, C-Type = 4   There is no Adspec associated with the SONET/SDH SENDER_TSPEC.   Either the Adspec is omitted or an int-serv Adspec with the Default   General Characterization Parameters and Guaranteed Service fragment   is used, see [RFC2210].   For a particular sender in a session the contents of the FLOWSPEC   object received in a Resv message SHOULD be identical to the contents   of the SENDER_TSPEC object received in the corresponding Path   message.  If the objects do not match, a ResvErr message with a   "Traffic Control Error/Bad Flowspec value" error SHOULD be generated.   Intermediate and egress nodes MUST verify that the node itself and   the interfaces on which the LSP will be established can support the   requested Signal Type, RCC, NCC, NVC and Multiplier (as defined inSection 2.1).  If the requested value(s) can not be supported, the   receiver node MUST generate a PathErr message with a "Traffic Control   Error/ Service unsupported" indication (see [RFC2205]).   In addition, if the MT field is received with a zero value, the node   MUST generate a PathErr message with a "Traffic Control Error/Bad   Tspec value" indication (see [RFC2205]).   Intermediate nodes MUST also verify that the node itself and the   interfaces on which the LSP will be established can support the   requested Transparency (as defined inSection 2.1).  If the requested   value(s) can not be supported, the receiver node MUST generate a   PathErr message with a "Traffic Control Error/Service unsupported"   indication (see [RFC2205]).2.3.  CR-LDP Details   For CR-LDP, the SONET/SDH traffic parameters are carried in the   SONET/SDH Traffic Parameters TLV.  The content of the TLV is defined   above inSection 2.1.  The header of the TLV has the following   format:Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |U|F|          Type             |      Length                   |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   The type field for the SONET/SDH Traffic Parameters TLV is: 0x0838.   Intermediate and egress nodes MUST verify that the node itself and   the interfaces on which the LSP will be established can support the   requested Signal Type, RCC, NCC, NVC and Multiplier (as defined inSection 2.1).  If the requested value(s) can not be supported, the   receiver node MUST generate a NOTIFICATION message with a "Resource   Unavailable" status code (see [RFC3212]).   In addition, if the MT field is received with a zero value, the node   MUST generate a NOTIFICATION message with a "Resource Unavailable"   status code (see [RFC3212]).   Intermediate nodes MUST also verify that the node itself and the   interfaces on which the LSP will be established can support the   requested Transparency (as defined inSection 2.1).  If the requested   value(s) can not be supported, the receiver node MUST generate a   NOTIFICATION message with a "Resource Unavailable" status code (see   [RFC3212]).3.  SONET and SDH Labels   SONET and SDH each define a multiplexing structure.  Both structures   are trees whose roots are respectively an STS-N or an STM-N; and   whose leaves are the signals that can be transported via the time-   slots and switched between time-slots within an ingress port and   time-slots within an egress port, i.e., a VTx SPE, an STS-x SPE or a   VC-x.  A SONET/SDH label will identify the exact position (i.e.,   first time-slot) of a particular VTx SPE, STS-x SPE or VC-x signal in   a multiplexing structure.  SONET and SDH labels are carried in the   Generalized Label per [RFC3473] and [RFC3472].   Note that by time-slots we mean the time-slots as they appear   logically and sequentially in the multiplex, not as they appear after   any possible interleaving.   These multiplexing structures will be used as naming trees to create   unique multiplex entry names or labels.  The same format of label is   used for SONET and SDH.  As explained in [RFC3471], a label does not   identify the "class" to which the label belongs.  This is implicitly   determined by the link on which the label is used.Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   In case of signal concatenation or multiplication, a list of labels   can appear in the Label field of a Generalized Label.   In case of contiguous concatenation, only one label appears in the   Label field.  This label identifies the lowest time-slot occupied by   the contiguously concatenated signal.  By lowest time-slot we mean   the one having the lowest label (value) when compared as integer   values, i.e., the time-slot occupied by the first component signal of   the concatenated signal encountered when descending the tree.   In case of virtual concatenation, the explicit ordered list of all   labels in the concatenation is given.  Each label indicates the first   time-slot occupied by a component of the virtually concatenated   signal.  The order of the labels must reflect the order of the   payloads to concatenate (not the physical order of time-slots).  The   above representation limits virtual concatenation to remain within a   single (component) link; it imposes as such a restriction compared to   the ANSI [T1.105]/ITU-T [G.707] recommendations.   The standard definition for virtual concatenation allows each virtual   concatenation components to travel over diverse paths.  Within GMPLS,   virtual concatenation components must travel over the same   (component) link if they are part of the same LSP.  This is due to   the way that labels are bound to a (component) link.  Note however,   that the routing of components on different paths is indeed   equivalent to establishing different LSPs, each one having its own   route.  Several LSPs can be initiated and terminated between the same   nodes and their corresponding components can then be associated   together (i.e., virtually concatenated).   In case of multiplication (i.e., using the multiplier transform), the   explicit ordered list of all labels that take part in the Final   Signal is given.  In case of multiplication of virtually concatenated   signals, the first set of labels indicates the time-slots occupied by   the first virtually concatenated signal, the second set of labels   indicates the time-slots occupied by the second virtually   concatenated signal, and so on.  The above representation limits   multiplication to remain within a single (component) link.   The format of the label for SONET and/or SDH TDM-LSR link is:    0                   1                   2                   3    0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |               S               |   U   |   K   |   L   |   M   |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   This is an extension of the numbering scheme defined in [G.707]   sections7.3.7 to7.3.13, i.e., the (K, L, M) numbering.  Note that   the higher order numbering scheme defined in [G.707] sections7.3.1   to 7.3.6 is not used here.   Each letter indicates a possible branch number starting at the parent   node in the multiplex structure.  Branches are considered as numbered   in increasing order, starting from the top of the multiplexing   structure.  The numbering starts at 1, zero is used to indicate a   non-significant or ignored field.   When a field is not significant or ignored in a particular context it   MUST be set to zero when transmitted, and MUST be ignored when   received.   When a hierarchy of SONET/SDH LSPs is used, a higher order LSP with a   given bandwidth can be used to carry lower order LSPs.  Remember here   that a higher order LSP is established through a SONET/SDH higher   order path layer network and a lower order LSP, through a SONET/SDH   lower order path layer network (see also ITU-T G.803,Section 3 for   the corresponding definitions).  In this context, the higher order   SONET/SDH LSP behaves as a "virtual link" with a given bandwidth   (e.g., VC-3), it may also be used as a Forwarding Adjacency.  A lower   order SONET/SDH LSP can be established through that higher order LSP.   Since a label is local to a (virtual) link, the highest part of that   label (i.e., the S, U and K fields) is non-significant and is set to   zero, i.e., the label is "0,0,0,L,M".  Similarly, if the structure of   the lower order LSP is unknown or not relevant, the lowest part of   that label (i.e., the L and M fields) is non-significant and is set   to zero, i.e., the label is "S,U,K,0,0".   For instance, a VC-3 LSP can be used to carry lower order LSPs.  In   that case the labels allocated between the two ends of the VC-3 LSP   for the lower order LSPs will have S, U and K set to zero, i.e.,   non-significant, while L and M will be used to indicate the signal   allocated in that VC-3.   In case of tunneling such as VC-4 containing VC-3 containing   VC-12/VC-11 where the SUKLM structure is not adequate to represent   the full signal structure, a hierarchical approach must be used,   i.e., per layer network signaling.   The possible values of S, U, K, L and M are defined as follows:   1. S=1->N is the index of a particular STS-3/AUG-1 inside an      STS-N/STM-N multiplex.  S is only significant for SONET STS-N      (N>1) and SDH STM-N (N>0).  S must be 0 and ignored for STS-1 and      STM-0.Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   2. U=1->3 is the index of a particular STS-1_SPE/VC-3 within an      STS-3/AUG-1.  U is only significant for SONET STS-N (N>1) and SDH      STM-N (N>0).  U must be 0 and ignored for STS-1 and STM-0.   3. K=1->3 is the index of a particular TUG-3 within a VC-4.  K is      only significant for an SDH VC-4 structured in TUG-3s.  K must be      0 and ignored in all other cases.   4. L=1->7 is the index of a particular VT_Group/TUG-2 within an      STS-1_SPE/TUG-3 or VC-3.  L must be 0 and ignored in all other      cases.   5. M is the index of a particular VT1.5_SPE/VC-11, VT2_SPE/VC-12 or      VT3_SPE within a VT_Group/TUG-2.  M=1->2 indicates a specific VT3      SPE inside the corresponding VT Group, these values MUST NOT be      used for SDH since there is no equivalent of VT3 with SDH.  M=3->5      indicates a specific VT2_SPE/VC-12 inside the corresponding      VT_Group/TUG-2.  M=6->9 indicates a specific VT1.5_SPE/VC-11      inside the corresponding VT_Group/TUG-2.   Note that a label always has to be interpreted according the   SONET/SDH traffic parameters, i.e., a label by itself does not allow   knowing which signal is being requested (a label is context   sensitive).   The label format defined in this section, referred to as SUKLM, MUST   be used for any SONET/SDH signal requests that are not transparent   i.e., when all Transparency (T) bits defined insection 2.1 are set   to zero.  Any transparent STS-1/STM-0/STS-3*N/STM-N (N=1, 4, 16, 64,   256) signal request MUST use a label format as defined in [RFC3471].   The S encoding is summarized in the following table:    S    SDH                     SONET   ------------------------------------------------    0    other                   other    1    1st AUG-1               1st STS-3    2    2nd AUG-1               2nd STS-3    3    3rd AUG-1               3rd STS-3    4    4rd AUG-1               4rd STS-3    :    :                       :    N    Nth AUG-1               Nth STS-3Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   The U encoding is summarized in the following table:    U    SDH AUG-1               SONET STS-3   -------------------------------------------------    0    other                   other    1    1st VC-3                1st STS-1 SPE    2    2nd VC-3                2nd STS-1 SPE    3    3rd VC-3                3rd STS-1 SPE   The K encoding is summarized in the following table:    K    SDH VC-4   ---------------    0    other    1    1st TUG-3    2    2nd TUG-3    3    3rd TUG-3   The L encoding is summarized in the following table:    L    SDH TUG-3    SDH VC-3    SONET STS-1 SPE   -------------------------------------------------    0    other        other       other    1    1st TUG-2    1st TUG-2   1st VTG    2    2nd TUG-2    2nd TUG-2   2nd VTG    3    3rd TUG-2    3rd TUG-2   3rd VTG    4    4th TUG-2    4th TUG-2   4th VTG    5    5th TUG-2    5th TUG-2   5th VTG    6    6th TUG-2    6th TUG-2   6th VTG    7    7th TUG-2    7th TUG-2   7th VTG   The M encoding is summarized in the following table:    M    SDH TUG-2                 SONET VTG   -------------------------------------------------    0    other                     other    1    -                         1st VT3 SPE    2    -                         2nd VT3 SPE    3    1st VC-12                 1st VT2 SPE    4    2nd VC-12                 2nd VT2 SPE    5    3rd VC-12                 3rd VT2 SPE    6    1st VC-11                 1st VT1.5 SPE    7    2nd VC-11                 2nd VT1.5 SPE    8    3rd VC-11                 3rd VT1.5 SPE    9    4th VC-11                 4th VT1.5 SPEMannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   Examples of labels:   Example 1: the label for the STS-3c_SPE/VC-4 in the Sth STS-3/AUG-1      is: S>0, U=0, K=0, L=0, M=0.   Example 2: the label for the VC-3 within the Kth-1 TUG-3 within      the VC-4 in the Sth AUG-1 is: S>0, U=0, K>0, L=0, M=0.   Example 3: the label for the Uth-1 STS-1_SPE/VC-3 within the Sth      STS-3/AUG-1 is: S>0, U>0, K=0, L=0, M=0.   Example 4: the label for the VT6/VC-2 in the Lth-1 VT Group/TUG-2      in the Uth-1 STS-1_SPE/VC-3 within the Sth STS-3/AUG-1 is: S>0,      U>0, K=0, L>0, M=0.   Example 5: the label for the 3rd VT1.5_SPE/VC-11 in the Lth-1 VT      Group/TUG-2 within the Uth-1 STS-1_SPE/VC-3 within the Sth STS-      3/AUG-1 is: S>0, U>0, K=0, L>0, M=8.   Example 6: the label for the STS-12c/VC-4-4c which uses the 9th      STS-3/AUG-1 as its first timeslot is: S=9, U=0, K=0, L=0, M=0.   In case of contiguous concatenation, the label that is used is the   lowest label (value) of the contiguously concatenated signal as   explained before.  The higher part of the label indicates where the   signal starts and the lowest part is not significant.   In case of STM-0/STS-1, the values of S, U and K must be equal to   zero according to the field coding rules.  For instance, when   requesting a VC-3 in an STM-0 the label is S=0, U=0, K=0, L=0, M=0.   When requesting a VC-11 in a VC-3 in an STM-0 the label is S=0, U=0,   K=0, L>0, M=6..9.   Note: when a Section/RS or Line/MS transparent STS-1/STM-0/STS-   3*N/STM-N (N=1, 4, 16, 64, 256) signal is requested, the SUKLM label   format and encoding is not applicable and the label encoding MUST   follow the rules defined in[RFC3471] Section 3.2.4.  Acknowledgments   Valuable comments and input were received from the CCAMP mailing list   where outstanding discussions took place.Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 20045.  Security Considerations   This document introduces no new security considerations to either   [RFC3473] or [RFC3472].  GMPLS security is described insection 11 of   [RFC3471] and refers to [RFC3209] for RSVP-TE and to [RFC3212] for   CR-LDP.6.  IANA Considerations   Three values have been defined by IANA for this document:   Two RSVP C-Types in registry:http://www.iana.org/assignments/rsvp-parameters   -  A SONET/SDH SENDER_TSPEC object: Class = 12, C-Type = 4 (seesection 2.2).   -  A SONET/SDH FLOWSPEC object: Class = 9, C-Type = 4 (seesection2.2).   One LDP TLV Type in registry:http://www.iana.org/assignments/ldp-namespaces   -  A type field for the SONET/SDH Traffic Parameters TLV (seesection2.3).7.  References7.1.  Normative References   [G.707]      ITU-T Recommendation G.707, "Network Node Interface for                the Synchronous Digital Hierarchy", October 2000.   [RFC2119]    Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate                Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC2205]    Braden, R., Zhang, L., Berson, S., Herzog, S., and S.                Jamin, "Resource ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP) -- Version                1 Functional Specification",RFC 2205, September 1997.   [RFC2210]    Wroclawski, J., "The Use of RSVP with IETF Integrated                Services",RFC 2210, September 1997.   [RFC3209]    Awduche, D., Berger, L., Gan, D., Li, T., Srinivasan,                V., and G. Swallow, "RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for LSP                Tunnels",RFC 3209, December 2001.Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   [RFC3212]    Jamoussi, B., Andersson, L., Callon, R., Dantu, R., Wu,                L., Doolan, P., Worster, T., Feldman, N., Fredette, A.,                Girish, M., Gray, E., Heinanen, J., Kilty, T., and A.                Malis, "Constraint-Based LSP Setup using LDP",RFC 3212,                January 2002.   [RFC3471]    Berger, L., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching                (MPLS) Signaling Functional Description",RFC 3471,                January 2003.   [RFC3472]    Ashwood-Smith, P. and L. Berger, "Generalized                Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS) Signaling                - Constraint-based Routed Label Distribution Protocol                (CR-LDP) Extensions",RFC 3472, January 2003.   [RFC3473]    Berger, L., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching                (MPLS) Signaling - Resource ReserVation Protocol Traffic                Engineering (RSVP-TE) Extensions",RFC 3473, January                2003.   [RFC3945]    Mannie, E., Ed., "Generalized Multiprotocol Label                Switching (GMPLS) Architecture",RFC 3945, October 2004.   [T1.105]     "Synchronous Optical Network (SONET): Basic Description                Including Multiplex Structure, Rates, and Formats", ANSI                T1.105, October 2000.Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004Appendix 1 - Signal Type Values Extension for VC-3   This appendix defines the following optional additional Signal Type   value for the Signal Type field ofsection 2.1:   Value         Type   -----  ---------------------    20     "VC-3 via AU-3 at the end"   According to the ITU-T [G.707] recommendation a VC-3 in the TU-   3/TUG-3/VC-4/AU-4 branch of the SDH multiplex cannot be structured in   TUG-2s, however a VC-3 in the AU-3 branch can be. In addition, a VC-3   could be switched between the two branches if required.   A VC-3 circuit could be terminated on an ingress interface of an LSR   (e.g., forming a VC-3 forwarding adjacency). This LSR could then want   to demultiplex this VC-3 and switch internal low order LSPs. For   implementation reasons, this could be only possible if the LSR   receives the VC-3 in the AU-3 branch.  E.g., for an LSR not able to   switch internally from a TU-3 branch to an AU-3 branch on its   incoming interface before demultiplexing and then switching the   content with its switch fabric.   In that case it is useful to indicate that the VC-3 LSP must be   terminated at the end in the AU-3 branch instead of the TU-3 branch.   This is achieved by using the "VC-3 via AU-3 at the end" signal type.   This information can be used, for instance, by the penultimate LSR to   switch an incoming VC-3 received in any branch to the AU-3 branch on   the outgoing interface to the destination LSR.   The "VC-3 via AU-3 at the end" signal type does not imply that the   VC-3 must be switched via the AU-3 branch at some other places in the   network. The VC-3 signal type just indicates that a VC-3 in any   branch is suitable.Annex 1 - Examples   This annex defines examples of SONET and SDH signal coding. Their   objective is to help the reader to understand how works the traffic   parameter coding and not to give examples of typical SONET or SDH   signals.   As stated above, signal types are Elementary Signals to which   successive concatenation, multiplication and transparency transforms   can be applied to obtain Final Signals.Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   1.   A VC-4 signal is formed by the application of RCC with value 0,        NCC with value 0, NVC with value 0, MT with value 1 and T with        value 0 to a VC-4 Elementary Signal.   2.   A VC-4-7v signal is formed by the application of RCC with value        0, NCC with value 0, NVC with value 7 (virtual concatenation of        7 components), MT with value 1 and T with value 0 to a VC-4        Elementary Signal.   3.   A VC-4-16c signal is formed by the application of RCC with flag        1 (standard contiguous concatenation), NCC with value 16, NVC        with value 0, MT with value 1 and T with value 0 to a VC-4        Elementary Signal.   4.   An STM-16 signal with Multiplex Section layer transparency is        formed by the application of RCC with value 0, NCC with value 0,        NVC with value 0, MT with value 1 and T with flag 2 to an STM-16        Elementary Signal.   5.   An STM-4 signal with Multiplex Section layer transparency is        formed by the application of RCC with flag 0, NCC with value 0,        NVC with value 0, MT with value 1 and T with flag 2 applied to        an STM-4 Elementary Signal.   6.   An STM-256 signal with Multiplex Section layer transparency is        formed by the application of RCC with flag 0, NCC with value 0,        NVC with value 0, MT with value 1 and T with flag 2 applied to        an STM-256 Elementary Signal.   7.   An STS-1 SPE signal is formed by the application of RCC with        value 0, NCC with value 0, NVC with value 0, MT with value 1 and        T with value 0 to an STS-1 SPE Elementary Signal.   8.   An STS-3c SPE signal is formed by the application of RCC with        value 1 (standard contiguous concatenation), NCC with value 1,        NVC with value 0, MT with value 1 and T with value 0 to an STS-        3c SPE Elementary Signal.   9.   An STS-48c SPE signal is formed by the application of RCC with        flag 1 (standard contiguous concatenation), NCC with value 16,        NVC with value 0, MT with value 1 and T with value 0 to an STS-        3c SPE Elementary Signal.   10.  An STS-1-3v SPE signal is formed by the application of RCC with        value 0, NVC with value 3 (virtual concatenation of 3        components), MT with value 1 and T with value 0 to an STS-1 SPE        Elementary Signal.Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   11.  An STS-3c-9v SPE signal is formed by the application of RCC with        value 1, NCC with value 1, NVC with value 9 (virtual        concatenation of 9 STS-3c), MT with value 1 and T with value 0        to an STS-3c SPE Elementary Signal.   12.  An STS-12 signal with Section layer (full) transparency is        formed by the application of RCC with value 0, NVC with value 0,        MT with value 1 and T with flag 1 to an STS-12 Elementary        Signal.   13.  3 x STS-768c SPE signal is formed by the application of RCC with        flag 1, NCC with value 256, NVC with value 0, MT with value 3,        and T with value 0 to an STS-3c SPE Elementary Signal.   14.  5 x VC-4-13v composed signal is formed by the application of RCC        with value 0, NVC with value 13, MT with value 5 and T with        value 0 to a VC-4 Elementary Signal.   The encoding of these examples is summarized in the following table:   Signal                     ST   RCC   NCC   NVC   MT   T   --------------------------------------------------------   VC-4                        6     0     0     0    1   0   VC-4-7v                     6     0     0     7    1   0   VC-4-16c                    6     1    16     0    1   0   STM-16 MS transparent      10     0     0     0    1   2   STM-4 MS transparent        9     0     0     0    1   2   STM-256 MS transparent     12     0     0     0    1   2   STS-1 SPE                   5     0     0     0    1   0   STS-3c SPE                  6     1     1     0    1   0   STS-48c SPE                 6     1    16     0    1   0   STS-1-3v SPE                5     0     0     3    1   0   STS-3c-9v SPE               6     1     1     9    1   0   STS-12 Section transparent  9     0     0     0    1   1   3 x STS-768c SPE            6     1   256     0    3   0   5 x VC-4-13v                6     0     0    13    5   0Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004Contributors   Contributors are listed by alphabetical order:   Stefan Ansorge (Alcatel)   Lorenzstrasse 10   70435 Stuttgart, Germany   EMail: stefan.ansorge@alcatel.de   Peter Ashwood-Smith (Nortel)   PO. Box 3511 Station C,   Ottawa, ON K1Y 4H7, Canada   EMail:petera@nortelnetworks.com   Ayan Banerjee (Calient)   5853 Rue Ferrari   San Jose, CA 95138, USA   EMail: abanerjee@calient.net   Lou Berger (Movaz)   7926 Jones Branch Drive   McLean, VA 22102, USA   EMail: lberger@movaz.com   Greg Bernstein (Ciena)   10480 Ridgeview Court   Cupertino, CA 94014, USA   EMail: greg@ciena.com   Angela Chiu (Celion)   One Sheila Drive, Suite 2   Tinton Falls, NJ 07724-2658   EMail: angela.chiu@celion.comMannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   John Drake (Calient)   5853 Rue Ferrari   San Jose, CA 95138, USA   EMail: jdrake@calient.net   Yanhe Fan (Axiowave)   100 Nickerson Road   Marlborough, MA 01752, USA   EMail: yfan@axiowave.com   Michele Fontana (Alcatel)   Via Trento 30,   I-20059 Vimercate, Italy   EMail: michele.fontana@alcatel.it   Gert Grammel (Alcatel)   Lorenzstrasse, 10   70435 Stuttgart, Germany   EMail: gert.grammel@alcatel.de   Juergen Heiles (Siemens)   Hofmannstr. 51   D-81379 Munich, Germany   EMail: juergen.heiles@siemens.com   Suresh Katukam (Cisco)   1450 N. McDowell Blvd,   Petaluma, CA 94954-6515, USA   EMail: suresh.katukam@cisco.com   Kireeti Kompella (Juniper)   1194 N. Mathilda Ave.   Sunnyvale, CA 94089, USA   EMail: kireeti@juniper.netMannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   Jonathan P. Lang (Calient)   25 Castilian   Goleta, CA 93117, USA   EMail: jplang@calient.net   Fong Liaw (Solas Research)   EMail: fongliaw@yahoo.com   Zhi-Wei Lin (Lucent)   101 Crawfords Corner Rd   Holmdel, NJ  07733-3030, USA   EMail: zwlin@lucent.com   Ben Mack-Crane (Tellabs)   EMail: ben.mack-crane@tellabs.com   Dimitrios Pendarakis (Tellium)   2 Crescent Place, P.O. Box 901   Oceanport, NJ 07757-0901, USA   EMail: dpendarakis@tellium.com   Mike Raftelis (White Rock)   18111 Preston Road   Dallas, TX 75252, USA   Bala Rajagopalan (Tellium)   2 Crescent Place, P.O. Box 901   Oceanport, NJ 07757-0901, USA   EMail: braja@tellium.comMannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004   Yakov Rekhter (Juniper)   1194 N. Mathilda Ave.   Sunnyvale, CA 94089, USA   EMail: yakov@juniper.net   Debanjan Saha (Tellium)   2 Crescent Place, P.O. Box 901   Oceanport, NJ 07757-0901, USA   EMail: dsaha@tellium.com   Vishal Sharma (Metanoia)   335 Elan Village Lane   San Jose, CA 95134, USA   EMail: vsharma87@yahoo.com   George Swallow (Cisco)   250 Apollo Drive   Chelmsford, MA 01824, USA   EMail: swallow@cisco.com   Z. Bo Tang (Tellium)   2 Crescent Place, P.O. Box 901   Oceanport, NJ 07757-0901, USA   EMail: btang@tellium.com   Eve Varma (Lucent)   101 Crawfords Corner Rd   Holmdel, NJ  07733-3030, USA   EMail: evarma@lucent.com   Yangguang Xu (Lucent)   21-2A41, 1600 Osgood Street   North Andover, MA 01845, USA   EMail: xuyg@lucent.comMannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004Authors' Addresses   Eric Mannie (Consultant)   Avenue de la Folle Chanson, 2   B-1050 Brussels, Belgium   Phone:  +32 2 648-5023   Mobile: +32 (0)495-221775   EMail:  eric_mannie@hotmail.com   Dimitri Papadimitriou (Alcatel)   Francis Wellesplein 1,   B-2018 Antwerpen, Belgium   Phone:  +32 3 240-8491   EMail:  dimitri.papadimitriou@alcatel.beMannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 3946         GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control     October 2004Full 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 IETF's procedures with respect to rights in IETF 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.Mannie & Papadimitriou      Standards Track                    [Page 26]

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