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PROPOSED STANDARD
Updated by:5462,8395,8614
Network Working Group                                   K. Kompella, Ed.Request for Comments: 4761                               Y. Rekhter, Ed.Category: Standards Track                               Juniper Networks                                                            January 2007Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS)Using BGP for Auto-Discovery and SignalingStatus 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 IETF Trust (2007).IESG Note   The L2VPN Working Group produced two separate documents,RFC 4762 and   this document, that ultimately perform similar functions in different   manners.  Be aware that each method is commonly referred to as "VPLS"   even though they are distinct and incompatible with one another.Abstract   Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS), also known as Transparent LAN   Service and Virtual Private Switched Network service, is a useful   Service Provider offering.  The service offers a Layer 2 Virtual   Private Network (VPN); however, in the case of VPLS, the customers in   the VPN are connected by a multipoint Ethernet LAN, in contrast to   the usual Layer 2 VPNs, which are point-to-point in nature.   This document describes the functions required to offer VPLS, a   mechanism for signaling a VPLS, and rules for forwarding VPLS frames   across a packet switched network.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................31.1. Scope of This Document .....................................31.2. Conventions Used in This Document ..........................42. Functional Model ................................................42.1. Terminology ................................................52.2. Assumptions ................................................52.3. Interactions ...............................................63. Control Plane ...................................................63.1. Auto-Discovery .............................................73.1.1. Functions ...........................................73.1.2. Protocol Specification ..............................73.2. Signaling ..................................................83.2.1. Label Blocks ........................................83.2.2. VPLS BGP NLRI .......................................93.2.3. PW Setup and Teardown ..............................103.2.4. Signaling PE Capabilities ..........................103.3. BGP VPLS Operation ........................................113.4. Multi-AS VPLS .............................................133.4.1. Method (a): VPLS-to-VPLS Connections at the ASBRs ..13           3.4.2. Method (b): EBGP Redistribution of VPLS                  Information between ASBRs ..........................14           3.4.3. Method (c): Multi-Hop EBGP Redistribution                  of VPLS Information ................................153.4.4. Allocation of VE IDs across Multiple ASes ..........163.5. Multi-homing and Path Selection ...........................163.6. Hierarchical BGP VPLS .....................................174. Data Plane .....................................................184.1. Encapsulation .............................................184.2. Forwarding ................................................184.2.1. MAC Address Learning ...............................184.2.2. Aging ..............................................194.2.3. Flooding ...........................................194.2.4. Broadcast and Multicast ............................204.2.5. "Split Horizon" Forwarding .........................204.2.6. Qualified and Unqualified Learning .................214.2.7. Class of Service ...................................215. Deployment Options .............................................216. Security Considerations ........................................227. IANA Considerations ............................................238. References .....................................................248.1. Normative References ......................................248.2. Informative References ....................................24Appendix A.  Contributors .........................................26Appendix B.  Acknowledgements .....................................26Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 20071.  Introduction   Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS), also known as Transparent LAN   Service and Virtual Private Switched Network service, is a useful   service offering.  A Virtual Private LAN appears in (almost) all   respects as an Ethernet LAN to customers of a Service Provider.   However, in a VPLS, the customers are not all connected to a single   LAN; the customers may be spread across a metro or wide area.  In   essence, a VPLS glues together several individual LANs across a   packet switched network to appear and function as a single LAN [9].   This is accomplished by incorporating MAC address learning, flooding,   and forwarding functions in the context of pseudowires that connect   these individual LANs across the packet switched network.   This document details the functions needed to offer VPLS, and then   goes on to describe a mechanism for the auto-discovery of the   endpoints of a VPLS as well as for signaling a VPLS.  It also   describes how VPLS frames are transported over tunnels across a   packet switched network.  The auto-discovery and signaling mechanism   uses BGP as the control plane protocol.  This document also briefly   discusses deployment options, in particular, the notion of decoupling   functions across devices.   Alternative approaches include: [14], which allows one to build a   Layer 2 VPN with Ethernet as the interconnect; and [13], which allows   one to set up an Ethernet connection across a packet switched   network.  Both of these, however, offer point-to-point Ethernet   services.  What distinguishes VPLS from the above two is that a VPLS   offers a multipoint service.  A mechanism for setting up pseudowires   for VPLS using the Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) is defined in   [10].1.1.  Scope of This Document   This document has four major parts: defining a VPLS functional model;   defining a control plane for setting up VPLS; defining the data plane   for VPLS (encapsulation and forwarding of data); and defining various   deployment options.   The functional model underlying VPLS is laid out inSection 2.  This   describes the service being offered, the network components that   interact to provide the service, and at a high level their   interactions.   The control plane described in this document uses Multiprotocol BGP   [4] to establish VPLS service, i.e., for the auto-discovery of VPLS   members and for the setup and teardown of the pseudowires that   constitute a given VPLS instance.Section 3 focuses on this, andKompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007   also describes how a VPLS that spans Autonomous System boundaries is   set up, as well as how multi-homing is handled.  Using BGP as the   control plane for VPNs is not new (see [14], [6], and [11]): what is   described here is based on the mechanisms proposed in [6].   The forwarding plane and the actions that a participating Provider   Edge (PE) router offering the VPLS service must take is described in   Section 4.   InSection 5, the notion of 'decoupled' operation is defined, and the   interaction of decoupled and non-decoupled PEs is described.   Decoupling allows for more flexible deployment of VPLS.1.2.  Conventions Used in This Document   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [1].2.  Functional Model   This will be described with reference to the following figure.                                                       -----                                                      /  A1 \        ----                                     ____CE1     |       /    \          --------       --------  /    |       |      |  A2 CE2-      /        \     /        PE1     \     /       \    /   \    /          \___/          | \     -----        ----     ---PE2                        |  \                    |                          |   \   -----                    | Service Provider Network |    \ /     \                    |                          |     CE5  A5 |                    |            ___           |   /  \     /             |----|  \          /   \         PE4_/    -----             |u-PE|--PE3       /     \       /             |----|    --------       -------      ----  /   |    ----     /    \/    \   /    \               CE = Customer Edge Device    |  A3 CE3    --CE4 A4 |              PE = Provider Edge Router     \    /         \    /               u-PE = Layer 2 Aggregation      ----           ----                A<n> = Customer site n                        Figure 1: Example of a VPLSKompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 20072.1.  Terminology   Terminology similar to that in [6] is used: a Service Provider (SP)   network with P (Provider-only) and PE (Provider Edge) routers, and   customers with CE (Customer Edge) devices.  Here, however, there is   an additional concept, that of a "u-PE", a Layer 2 PE device used for   Layer 2 aggregation.  The notion of u-PE is described further inSection 5.  PE and u-PE devices are "VPLS-aware", which means that   they know that a VPLS service is being offered.  The term "VE" refers   to a VPLS edge device, which could be either a PE or a u-PE.   In contrast, the CE device (which may be owned and operated by either   the SP or the customer) is VPLS-unaware; as far as the CE is   concerned, it is connected to the other CEs in the VPLS via a Layer 2   switched network.  This means that there should be no changes to a CE   device, either to the hardware or the software, in order to offer   VPLS.   A CE device may be connected to a PE or a u-PE via Layer 2 switches   that are VPLS-unaware.  From a VPLS point of view, such Layer 2   switches are invisible, and hence will not be discussed further.   Furthermore, a u-PE may be connected to a PE via Layer 2 and Layer 3   devices; this will be discussed further in a later section.   The term "demultiplexor" refers to an identifier in a data packet   that identifies the VPLS to which the packet belongs as well as the   ingress PE.  In this document, the demultiplexor is an MPLS label.   The term "VPLS" will refer to the service as well as a particular   instantiation of the service (i.e., an emulated LAN); it should be   clear from the context which usage is intended.2.2.  Assumptions   The Service Provider Network is a packet switched network.  The PEs   are assumed to be (logically) fully meshed with tunnels over which   packets that belong to a service (such as VPLS) are encapsulated and   forwarded.  These tunnels can be IP tunnels, such as Generic Routing   Encapsulation (GRE), or MPLS tunnels, established by Resource   Reservation Protocol - Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE) or LDP.  These   tunnels are established independently of the services offered over   them; the signaling and establishment of these tunnels are not   discussed in this document.   "Flooding" and MAC address "learning" (seeSection 4) are an integral   part of VPLS.  However, these activities are private to an SP device,   i.e., in the VPLS described below, no SP device requests another SP   device to flood packets or learn MAC addresses on its behalf.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007   All the PEs participating in a VPLS are assumed to be fully meshed in   the data plane, i.e., there is a bidirectional pseudowire between   every pair of PEs participating in that VPLS, and thus every   (ingress) PE can send a VPLS packet to the egress PE(s) directly,   without the need for an intermediate PE (seeSection 4.2.5.)  This   requires that VPLS PEs are logically fully meshed in the control   plane so that a PE can send a message to another PE to set up the   necessary pseudowires.  SeeSection 3.6 for a discussion on   alternatives to achieve a logical full mesh in the control plane.2.3.  Interactions   VPLS is a "LAN Service" in that CE devices that belong to a given   VPLS instance V can interact through the SP network as if they were   connected by a LAN.  VPLS is "private" in that CE devices that belong   to different VPLSs cannot interact.  VPLS is "virtual" in that   multiple VPLSs can be offered over a common packet switched network.   PE devices interact to "discover" all the other PEs participating in   the same VPLS, and to exchange demultiplexors.  These interactions   are control-driven, not data-driven.   u-PEs interact with PEs to establish connections with remote PEs or   u-PEs in the same VPLS.  This interaction is control-driven.   PE devices can participate simultaneously in both VPLS and IP VPNs   [6].  These are independent services, and the information exchanged   for each type of service is kept separate as the Network Layer   Reachability Information (NLRI) used for this exchange has different   Address Family Identifiers (AFIs) and Subsequent Address Family   Identifiers (SAFIs).  Consequently, an implementation MUST maintain a   separate routing storage for each service.  However, multiple   services can use the same underlying tunnels; the VPLS or VPN label   is used to demultiplex the packets belonging to different services.3.  Control Plane   There are two primary functions of the VPLS control plane: auto-   discovery, and setup and teardown of the pseudowires that constitute   the VPLS, often called signaling.Section 3.1 andSection 3.2   describe these functions.  Both of these functions are accomplished   with a single BGP Update advertisement;Section 3.3 describes how   this is done by detailing BGP protocol operation for VPLS.Section 3.4 describes the setting up of pseudowires that span   Autonomous Systems.Section 3.5 describes how multi-homing is   handled.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 20073.1.  Auto-Discovery   Discovery refers to the process of finding all the PEs that   participate in a given VPLS instance.  A PE either can be configured   with the identities of all the other PEs in a given VPLS or can use   some protocol to discover the other PEs.  The latter is called auto-   discovery.   The former approach is fairly configuration-intensive, especially   since it is required that the PEs participating in a given VPLS are   fully meshed (i.e., that every PE in a given VPLS establish   pseudowires to every other PE in that VPLS).  Furthermore, when the   topology of a VPLS changes (i.e., a PE is added to, or removed from,   the VPLS), the VPLS configuration on all PEs in that VPLS must be   changed.   In the auto-discovery approach, each PE "discovers" which other PEs   are part of a given VPLS by means of some protocol, in this case BGP.   This allows each PE's configuration to consist only of the identity   of the VPLS instance established on this PE, not the identity of   every other PE in that VPLS instance -- that is auto-discovered.   Moreover, when the topology of a VPLS changes, only the affected PE's   configuration changes; other PEs automatically find out about the   change and adapt.3.1.1.  Functions   A PE that participates in a given VPLS instance V must be able to   tell all other PEs in VPLS V that it is also a member of V.  A PE   must also have a means of declaring that it no longer participates in   a VPLS.  To do both of these, the PE must have a means of identifying   a VPLS and a means by which to communicate to all other PEs.   U-PE devices also need to know what constitutes a given VPLS;   however, they don't need the same level of detail.  The PE (or PEs)   to which a u-PE is connected gives the u-PE an abstraction of the   VPLS; this is described inSection 5.3.1.2.  Protocol Specification   The specific mechanism for auto-discovery described here is based on   [14] and [6]; it uses BGP extended communities [5] to identify   members of a VPLS, in particular, the Route Target community, whose   format is described in [5].  The semantics of the use of Route   Targets is described in [6]; their use in VPLS is identical.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007   As it has been assumed that VPLSs are fully meshed, a single Route   Target RT suffices for a given VPLS V, and in effect that RT is the   identifier for VPLS V.   A PE announces (typically via I-BGP) that it belongs to VPLS V by   annotating its NLRIs for V (see next subsection) with Route Target   RT, and acts on this by accepting NLRIs from other PEs that have   Route Target RT.  A PE announces that it no longer participates in V   by withdrawing all NLRIs that it had advertised with Route Target RT.3.2.  Signaling   Once discovery is done, each pair of PEs in a VPLS must be able to   establish (and tear down) pseudowires to each other, i.e., exchange   (and withdraw) demultiplexors.  This process is known as signaling.   Signaling is also used to transmit certain characteristics of the   pseudowires that a PE sets up for a given VPLS.   Recall that a demultiplexor is used to distinguish among several   different streams of traffic carried over a tunnel, each stream   possibly representing a different service.  In the case of VPLS, the   demultiplexor not only says to which specific VPLS a packet belongs,   but also identifies the ingress PE.  The former information is used   for forwarding the packet; the latter information is used for   learning MAC addresses.  The demultiplexor described here is an MPLS   label.  However, note that the PE-to-PE tunnels need not be MPLS   tunnels.   Using a distinct BGP Update message to send a demultiplexor to each   remote PE would require the originating PE to send N such messages   for N remote PEs.  The solution described in this document allows a   PE to send a single (common) Update message that contains   demultiplexors for all the remote PEs, instead of N individual   messages.  Doing this reduces the control plane load both on the   originating PE as well as on the BGP Route Reflectors that may be   involved in distributing this Update to other PEs.3.2.1.  Label Blocks   To accomplish this, we introduce the notion of "label blocks".  A   label block, defined by a label base LB and a VE block size VBS, is a   contiguous set of labels {LB, LB+1, ..., LB+VBS-1}.  Here's how label   blocks work.  All PEs within a given VPLS are assigned unique VE IDs   as part of their configuration.  A PE X wishing to send a VPLS update   sends the same label block information to all other PEs.  Each   receiving PE infers the label intended for PE X by adding its   (unique) VE ID to the label base.  In this manner, each receiving PE   gets a unique demultiplexor for PE X for that VPLS.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007   This simple notion is enhanced with the concept of a VE block offset   VBO.  A label block defined by <LB, VBO, VBS> is the set {LB+VBO,   LB+VBO+1, ..., LB+VBO+VBS-1}.  Thus, instead of a single large label   block to cover all VE IDs in a VPLS, one can have several label   blocks, each with a different label base.  This makes label block   management easier, and also allows PE X to cater gracefully to a PE   joining a VPLS with a VE ID that is not covered by the set of label   blocks that PE X has already advertised.   When a PE starts up, or is configured with a new VPLS instance, the   BGP process may wish to wait to receive several advertisements for   that VPLS instance from other PEs to improve the efficiency of label   block allocation.3.2.2.  VPLS BGP NLRI   The VPLS BGP NLRI described below, with a new AFI and SAFI (see [4])   is used to exchange VPLS membership and demultiplexors.   A VPLS BGP NLRI has the following information elements: a VE ID, a VE   Block Offset, a VE Block Size, and a label base.  The format of the   VPLS NLRI is given below.  The AFI is the L2VPN AFI (25), and the   SAFI is the VPLS SAFI (65).  The Length field is in octets.      +------------------------------------+      |  Length (2 octets)                 |      +------------------------------------+      |  Route Distinguisher  (8 octets)   |      +------------------------------------+      |  VE ID (2 octets)                  |      +------------------------------------+      |  VE Block Offset (2 octets)        |      +------------------------------------+      |  VE Block Size (2 octets)          |      +------------------------------------+      |  Label Base (3 octets)             |      +------------------------------------+                  Figure 2: BGP NLRI for VPLS Information   A PE participating in a VPLS must have at least one VE ID.  If the PE   is the VE, it typically has one VE ID.  If the PE is connected to   several u-PEs, it has a distinct VE ID for each u-PE.  It may   additionally have a VE ID for itself, if it itself acts as a VE for   that VPLS.  In what follows, we will call the PE announcing the VPLS   NLRI PE-a, and we will assume that PE-a owns VE ID V (either   belonging to PE-a itself or to a u-PE connected to PE-a).Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007   VE IDs are typically assigned by the network administrator.  Their   scope is local to a VPLS.  A given VE ID should belong to only one   PE, unless a CE is multi-homed (seeSection 3.5).   A label block is a set of demultiplexor labels used to reach a given   VE ID.  A VPLS BGP NLRI with VE ID V, VE Block Offset VBO, VE Block   Size VBS, and label base LB communicates to its peers the following:       label block for V:  labels from LB to (LB + VBS - 1), and       remote VE set for V:  from VBO to (VBO + VBS - 1).   There is a one-to-one correspondence between the remote VE set and   the label block: VE ID (VBO + n) corresponds to label (LB + n).3.2.3.  PW Setup and Teardown   Suppose PE-a is part of VPLS foo and makes an announcement with VE ID   V, VE Block Offset VBO, VE Block Size VBS, and label base LB.  If   PE-b is also part of VPLS foo and has VE ID W, PE-b does the   following:   1.  checks if W is part of PE-a's 'remote VE set': if VBO <= W < VBO       + VBS, then W is part of PE-a's remote VE set.  If not, PE-b       ignores this message, and skips the rest of this procedure.   2.  sets up a PW to PE-a: the demultiplexor label to send traffic       from PE-b to PE-a is computed as (LB + W - VBO).   3.  checks if V is part of any 'remote VE set' that PE-b announced,       i.e., PE-b checks if V belongs to some remote VE set that PE-b       announced, say with VE Block Offset VBO', VE Block Size VBS', and       label base LB'.  If not, PE-b MUST make a new announcement as       described inSection 3.3.   4.  sets up a PW from PE-a: the demultiplexor label over which PE-b       should expect traffic from PE-a is computed as: (LB' + V - VBO').   If Y withdraws an NLRI for V that X was using, then X MUST tear down   its ends of the pseudowire between X and Y.3.2.4.  Signaling PE Capabilities   The following extended attribute, the "Layer2 Info Extended   Community", is used to signal control information about the   pseudowires to be setup for a given VPLS.  The extended community   value is to be allocated by IANA (currently used value is 0x800A).   This information includes the Encaps Type (type of encapsulation onKompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007   the pseudowires), Control Flags (control information regarding the   pseudowires), and the Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU) to be used on   the pseudowires.   The Encaps Type for VPLS is 19.      +------------------------------------+      | Extended community type (2 octets) |      +------------------------------------+      |  Encaps Type (1 octet)             |      +------------------------------------+      |  Control Flags (1 octet)           |      +------------------------------------+      |  Layer-2 MTU (2 octet)             |      +------------------------------------+      |  Reserved (2 octets)               |      +------------------------------------+                 Figure 3: Layer2 Info Extended Community       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |   MBZ     |C|S|      (MBZ = MUST Be Zero)      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                    Figure 4: Control Flags Bit Vector   With reference to Figure 4, the following bits in the Control Flags   are defined; the remaining bits, designated MBZ, MUST be set to zero   when sending and MUST be ignored when receiving this community.        Name   Meaning           C   A Control word [7] MUST or MUST NOT be present when               sending VPLS packets to this PE, depending on whether C               is 1 or 0, respectively           S   Sequenced delivery of frames MUST or MUST NOT be used               when sending VPLS packets to this PE, depending on               whether S is 1 or 0, respectively3.3.  BGP VPLS Operation   To create a new VPLS, say VPLS foo, a network administrator must pick   an RT for VPLS foo, say RT-foo.  This will be used by all PEs that   serve VPLS foo.  To configure a given PE, say PE-a, to be part of   VPLS foo, the network administrator only has to choose a VE ID V forKompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007   PE-a.  (If PE-a is connected to u-PEs, PE-a may be configured with   more than one VE ID; in that case, the following is done for each VE   ID).  The PE may also be configured with a Route Distinguisher (RD);   if not, it generates a unique RD for VPLS foo.  Say the RD is   RD-foo-a.  PE-a then generates an initial label block and a remote VE   set for V, defined by VE Block Offset VBO, VE Block Size VBS, and   label base LB.  These may be empty.   PE-a then creates a VPLS BGP NLRI with RD RD-foo-a, VE ID V, VE Block   Offset VBO, VE Block Size VBS and label base LB.  To this, it   attaches a Layer2 Info Extended Community and an RT, RT-foo.  It sets   the BGP Next Hop for this NLRI as itself, and announces this NLRI to   its peers.  The Network Layer protocol associated with the Network   Address of the Next Hop for the combination <AFI=L2VPN AFI, SAFI=VPLS   SAFI> is IP; this association is required by [4], Section 5.  If the   value of the Length of the Next Hop field is 4, then the Next Hop   contains an IPv4 address.  If this value is 16, then the Next Hop   contains an IPv6 address.   If PE-a hears from another PE, say PE-b, a VPLS BGP announcement with   RT-foo and VE ID W, then PE-a knows that PE-b is a member of the same   VPLS (auto-discovery).  PE-a then has to set up its part of a VPLS   pseudowire between PE-a and PE-b, using the mechanisms inSection 3.2.  Similarly, PE-b will have discovered that PE-a is in   the same VPLS, and PE-b must set up its part of the VPLS pseudowire.   Thus, signaling and pseudowire setup is also achieved with the same   Update message.   If W is not in any remote VE set that PE-a announced for VE ID V in   VPLS foo, PE-b will not be able to set up its part of the pseudowire   to PE-a.  To address this, PE-a can choose to withdraw the old   announcement(s) it made for VPLS foo, and announce a new Update with   a larger remote VE set and corresponding label block that covers all   VE IDs that are in VPLS foo.  This, however, may cause some service   disruption.  An alternative for PE-a is to create a new remote VE set   and corresponding label block, and announce them in a new Update,   without withdrawing previous announcements.   If PE-a's configuration is changed to remove VE ID V from VPLS foo,   then PE-a MUST withdraw all its announcements for VPLS foo that   contain VE ID V.  If all of PE-a's links to its CEs in VPLS foo go   down, then PE-a SHOULD either withdraw all its NLRIs for VPLS foo or   let other PEs in the VPLS foo know in some way that PE-a is no longer   connected to its CEs.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 20073.4.  Multi-AS VPLS   As in [14] and [6], the above auto-discovery and signaling functions   are typically announced via I-BGP.  This assumes that all the sites   in a VPLS are connected to PEs in a single Autonomous System (AS).   However, sites in a VPLS may connect to PEs in different ASes.  This   leads to two issues: 1) there would not be an I-BGP connection   between those PEs, so some means of signaling across ASes is needed;   and 2) there may not be PE-to-PE tunnels between the ASes.   A similar problem is solved in [6], Section 10.  Three methods are   suggested to address issue (1); all these methods have analogs in   multi-AS VPLS.   Here is a diagram for reference:     __________       ____________       ____________       __________    /          \     /            \     /            \     /          \                \___/        AS 1  \   /  AS 2        \___/                                    \ /      +-----+           +-------+    |    +-------+           +-----+      | PE1 | ---...--- | ASBR1 | ======= | ASBR2 | ---...--- | PE2 |      +-----+           +-------+    |    +-------+           +-----+                 ___                / \                ___                /   \              /   \              /   \    \__________/     \____________/     \____________/     \__________/                          Figure 5: Inter-AS VPLS   As in the above reference, three methods for signaling inter-provider   VPLS are given; these are presented in order of increasing   scalability.  Method (a) is the easiest to understand conceptually,   and the easiest to deploy; however, it requires an Ethernet   interconnect between the ASes, and both VPLS control and data plane   state on the AS border routers (ASBRs).  Method (b) requires VPLS   control plane state on the ASBRs and MPLS on the AS-AS interconnect   (which need not be Ethernet).  Method (c) requires MPLS on the AS-AS   interconnect, but no VPLS state of any kind on the ASBRs.3.4.1.  Method (a): VPLS-to-VPLS Connections at the ASBRs   In this method, an AS Border Router (ASBR1) acts as a PE for all   VPLSs that span AS1 and an AS to which ASBR1 is connected, such as   AS2 here.  The ASBR on the neighboring AS (ASBR2) is viewed by ASBR1   as a CE for the VPLSs that span AS1 and AS2; similarly, ASBR2 acts as   a PE for this VPLS from AS2's point of view, and views ASBR1 as a CE.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007   This method does not require MPLS on the ASBR1-ASBR2 link, but does   require that this link carry Ethernet traffic and that there be a   separate VLAN sub-interface for each VPLS traversing this link.  It   further requires that ASBR1 does the PE operations (discovery,   signaling, MAC address learning, flooding, encapsulation, etc.) for   all VPLSs that traverse ASBR1.  This imposes a significant burden on   ASBR1, both on the control plane and the data plane, which limits the   number of multi-AS VPLSs.   Note that in general, there will be multiple connections between a   pair of ASes, for redundancy.  In this case, the Spanning Tree   Protocol (STP) [15], or some other means of loop detection and   prevention, must be run on each VPLS that spans these ASes, so that a   loop-free topology can be constructed in each VPLS.  This imposes a   further burden on the ASBRs and PEs participating in those VPLSs, as   these devices would need to run a loop detection algorithm for each   such VPLS.  How this may be achieved is outside the scope of this   document.3.4.2.  Method (b): EBGP Redistribution of VPLS Information between        ASBRs   This method requires I-BGP peerings between the PEs in AS1 and ASBR1   in AS1 (perhaps via route reflectors), an E-BGP peering between ASBR1   and ASBR2 in AS2, and I-BGP peerings between ASBR2 and the PEs in   AS2.  In the above example, PE1 sends a VPLS NLRI to ASBR1 with a   label block and itself as the BGP nexthop; ASBR1 sends the NLRI to   ASBR2 with new labels and itself as the BGP nexthop; and ASBR2 sends   the NLRI to PE2 with new labels and itself as the nexthop.   Correspondingly, there are three tunnels: T1 from PE1 to ASBR1, T2   from ASBR1 to ASBR2, and T3 from ASBR2 to PE2.  Within each tunnel,   the VPLS label to be used is determined by the receiving device;   e.g., the VPLS label within T1 is a label from the label block that   ASBR1 sent to PE1.  The ASBRs are responsible for receiving VPLS   packets encapsulated in a tunnel and performing the appropriate label   swap operations described next so that the next receiving device can   correctly identify and forward the packet.   The VPLS NLRI that ASBR1 sends to ASBR2 (and the NLRI that ASBR2   sends to PE2) is identical to the VPLS NLRI that PE1 sends to ASBR1,   except for the label block.  To be precise, the Length, the Route   Distinguisher, the VE ID, the VE Block Offset, and the VE Block Size   MUST be the same; the Label Base may be different.  Furthermore,   ASBR1 must also update its forwarding path as follows: if the Label   Base sent by PE1 is L1, the Label-block Size is N, the Label Base   sent by ASBR1 is L2, and the tunnel label from ASBR1 to PE1 is T,   then ASBR1 must install the following in the forwarding path:Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007      swap L2 with L1 and push T,      swap L2+1 with L1+1 and push T, ...      swap L2+N-1 with L1+N-1 and push T.   ASBR2 must act similarly, except that it may not need a tunnel label   if it is directly connected with ASBR1.   When PE2 wants to send a VPLS packet to PE1, PE2 uses its VE ID to   get the right VPLS label from ASBR2's label block for PE1, and uses a   tunnel label to reach ASBR2.  ASBR2 swaps the VPLS label with the   label from ASBR1; ASBR1 then swaps the VPLS label with the label from   PE1, and pushes a tunnel label to reach PE1.   In this method, one needs MPLS on the ASBR1-ASBR2 interface, but   there is no requirement that the link layer be Ethernet.   Furthermore, the ASBRs take part in distributing VPLS information.   However, the data plane requirements of the ASBRs are much simpler   than in method (a), being limited to label operations.  Finally, the   construction of loop-free VPLS topologies is done by routing   decisions, viz. BGP path and nexthop selection, so there is no need   to run the Spanning Tree Protocol on a per-VPLS basis.  Thus, this   method is considerably more scalable than method (a).3.4.3.  Method (c): Multi-Hop EBGP Redistribution of VPLS Information        between ASes   In this method, there is a multi-hop E-BGP peering between the PEs   (or preferably, a Route Reflector) in AS1 and the PEs (or Route   Reflector) in AS2.  PE1 sends a VPLS NLRI with labels and nexthop   self to PE2; if this is via route reflectors, the BGP nexthop is not   changed.  This requires that there be a tunnel LSP from PE1 to PE2.   This tunnel LSP can be created exactly as in [6], Section 10 (c), for   example using E-BGP to exchange labeled IPv4 routes for the PE   loopbacks.   When PE1 wants to send a VPLS packet to PE2, it pushes the VPLS label   corresponding to its own VE ID onto the packet.  It then pushes the   tunnel label(s) to reach PE2.   This method requires no VPLS information (in either the control or   the data plane) on the ASBRs.  The ASBRs only need to set up PE-to-PE   tunnel LSPs in the control plane, and do label operations in the data   plane.  Again, as in the case of method (b), the construction of   loop-free VPLS topologies is done by routing decisions, i.e., BGPKompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007   path and nexthop selection, so there is no need to run the Spanning   Tree Protocol on a per-VPLS basis.  This option is likely to be the   most scalable of the three methods presented here.3.4.4.  Allocation of VE IDs across Multiple ASes   In order to ease the allocation of VE IDs for a VPLS that spans   multiple ASes, one can allocate ranges for each AS.  For example, AS1   uses VE IDs in the range 1 to 100, AS2 from 101 to 200, etc.  If   there are 10 sites attached to AS1 and 20 to AS2, the allocated VE   IDs could be 1-10 and 101 to 120.  This minimizes the number of VPLS   NLRIs that are exchanged while ensuring that VE IDs are kept unique.   In the above example, if AS1 needed more than 100 sites, then another   range can be allocated to AS1.  The only caveat is that there be no   overlap between VE ID ranges among ASes.  The exception to this rule   is multi-homing, which is dealt with below.3.5.  Multi-homing and Path Selection   It is often desired to multi-home a VPLS site, i.e., to connect it to   multiple PEs, perhaps even in different ASes.  In such a case, the   PEs connected to the same site can be configured either with the same   VE ID or with different VE IDs.  In the latter case, it is mandatory   to run STP on the CE device, and possibly on the PEs, to construct a   loop-free VPLS topology.  How this can be accomplished is outside the   scope of this document; however, the rest of this section will   describe in some detail the former case.  Note that multi-homing by   the SP and STP on the CEs can co-exist; thus, it is recommended that   the VPLS customer run STP if the CEs are able to.   In the case where the PEs connected to the same site are assigned the   same VE ID, a loop-free topology is constructed by routing   mechanisms, in particular, by BGP path selection.  When a BGP speaker   receives two equivalent NLRIs (see below for the definition), it   applies standard path selection criteria such as Local Preference and   AS Path Length to determine which NLRI to choose; it MUST pick only   one.  If the chosen NLRI is subsequently withdrawn, the BGP speaker   applies path selection to the remaining equivalent VPLS NLRIs to pick   another; if none remain, the forwarding information associated with   that NLRI is removed.   Two VPLS NLRIs are considered equivalent from a path selection point   of view if the Route Distinguisher, the VE ID, and the VE Block   Offset are the same.  If two PEs are assigned the same VE ID in a   given VPLS, they MUST use the same Route Distinguisher, and they   SHOULD announce the same VE Block Size for a given VE Offset.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 20073.6.  Hierarchical BGP VPLS   This section discusses how one can scale the VPLS control plane when   using BGP.  There are at least three aspects of scaling the control   plane:   1.  alleviating the full mesh connectivity requirement among VPLS BGP       speakers;   2.  limiting BGP VPLS message passing to just the interested speakers       rather than all BGP speakers; and   3.  simplifying the addition and deletion of BGP speakers, whether       for VPLS or other applications.   Fortunately, the use of BGP for Internet routing as well as for IP   VPNs has yielded several good solutions for all these problems.  The   basic technique is hierarchy, using BGP Route Reflectors (RRs) [8].   The idea is to designate a small set of Route Reflectors that are   themselves fully meshed, and then establish a BGP session between   each BGP speaker and one or more RRs.  In this way, there is no need   for direct full mesh connectivity among all the BGP speakers.  If the   particular scaling needs of a provider require a large number of RRs,   then this technique can be applied recursively: the full mesh   connectivity among the RRs can be brokered by yet another level of   RRs.  The use of RRs solves problems 1 and 3 above.   It is important to note that RRs, as used for VPLS and VPNs, are   purely a control plane technique.  The use of RRs introduces no data   plane state and no data plane forwarding requirements on the RRs, and   does not in any way change the forwarding path of VPLS traffic.  This   is in contrast to the technique of Hierarchical VPLS defined in [10].   Another consequence of this approach is that it is not required that   one set of RRs handles all BGP messages, or that a particular RR   handle all messages from a given PE.  One can define several sets of   RRs, for example, a set to handle VPLS, another to handle IP VPNs,   and another for Internet routing.  Another partitioning could be to   have some subset of VPLSs and IP VPNs handled by one set of RRs, and   another subset of VPLSs and IP VPNs handled by another set of RRs;   the use of Route Target Filtering (RTF), described in [12], can make   this simpler and more effective.   Finally, problem 2 (that of limiting BGP VPLS message passing to just   the interested BGP speakers) is addressed by the use of RTF.  This   technique is orthogonal to the use of RRs, but works well in   conjunction with RRs.  RTF is also very effective in inter-AS VPLS;   more details on how RTF works and its benefits are provided in [12].Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007   It is worth mentioning an aspect of the control plane that is often a   source of confusion.  No MAC addresses are exchanged via BGP.  All   MAC address learning and aging is done in the data plane individually   by each PE.  The only task of BGP VPLS message exchange is auto-   discovery and label exchange.   Thus, BGP processing for VPLS occurs when   1.  a PE joins or leaves a VPLS; or   2.  a failure occurs in the network, bringing down a PE-PE tunnel or       a PE-CE link.   These events are relatively rare, and typically, each such event   causes one BGP update to be generated.  Coupled with BGP's messaging   efficiency when used for signaling VPLS, these observations lead to   the conclusion that BGP as a control plane for VPLS will scale quite   well in terms of both processing and memory requirements.4.  Data Plane   This section discusses two aspects of the data plane for PEs and   u-PEs implementing VPLS: encapsulation and forwarding.4.1.  Encapsulation   Ethernet frames received from CE devices are encapsulated for   transmission over the packet switched network connecting the PEs.   The encapsulation is as in [7].4.2.  Forwarding   VPLS packets are classified as belonging to a given service instance   and associated forwarding table based on the interface over which the   packet is received.  Packets are forwarded in the context of the   service instance based on the destination MAC address.  The former   mapping is determined by configuration.  The latter is the focus of   this section.4.2.1.  MAC Address Learning   As was mentioned earlier, the key distinguishing feature of VPLS is   that it is a multipoint service.  This means that the entire Service   Provider network should appear as a single logical learning bridge   for each VPLS that the SP network supports.  The logical ports for   the SP "bridge" are the customer ports as well as the pseudowires on   a VE.  Just as a learning bridge learns MAC addresses on its ports,   the SP bridge must learn MAC addresses at its VEs.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007   Learning consists of associating source MAC addresses of packets with   the (logical) ports on which they arrive; this association is the   Forwarding Information Base (FIB).  The FIB is used for forwarding   packets.  For example, suppose the bridge receives a packet with   source MAC address S on (logical) port P.  If subsequently, the   bridge receives a packet with destination MAC address S, it knows   that it should send the packet out on port P.   If a VE learns a source MAC address S on logical port P, then later   sees S on a different port P', then the VE MUST update its FIB to   reflect the new port P'.  A VE MAY implement a mechanism to damp   flapping of source ports for a given MAC address.4.2.2.  Aging   VPLS PEs SHOULD have an aging mechanism to remove a MAC address   associated with a logical port, much the same as learning bridges do.   This is required so that a MAC address can be relearned if it "moves"   from a logical port to another logical port, either because the   station to which that MAC address belongs really has moved or because   of a topology change in the LAN that causes this MAC address to   arrive on a new port.  In addition, aging reduces the size of a VPLS   MAC table to just the active MAC addresses, rather than all MAC   addresses in that VPLS.   The "age" of a source MAC address S on a logical port P is the time   since it was last seen as a source MAC on port P.  If the age exceeds   the aging time T, S MUST be flushed from the FIB.  This of course   means that every time S is seen as a source MAC address on port P,   S's age is reset.   An implementation SHOULD provide a configurable knob to set the aging   time T on a per-VPLS basis.  In addition, an implementation MAY   accelerate aging of all MAC addresses in a VPLS if it detects certain   situations, such as a Spanning Tree topology change in that VPLS.4.2.3.  Flooding   When a bridge receives a packet to a destination that is not in its   FIB, it floods the packet on all the other ports.  Similarly, a VE   will flood packets to an unknown destination to all other VEs in the   VPLS.   In Figure 1 above, if CE2 sent an Ethernet frame to PE2, and the   destination MAC address on the frame was not in PE2's FIB (for that   VPLS), then PE2 would be responsible for flooding that frame to everyKompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007   other PE in the same VPLS.  On receiving that frame, PE1 would be   responsible for further flooding the frame to CE1 and CE5 (unless PE1   knew which CE "owned" that MAC address).   On the other hand, if PE3 received the frame, it could delegate   further flooding of the frame to its u-PE.  If PE3 was connected to   two u-PEs, it would announce that it has two u-PEs.  PE3 could either   announce that it is incapable of flooding, in which case it would   receive two frames, one for each u-PE, or it could announce that it   is capable of flooding, in which case it would receive one copy of   the frame, which it would then send to both u-PEs.4.2.4.  Broadcast and Multicast   There is a well-known broadcast MAC address.  An Ethernet frame whose   destination MAC address is the broadcast MAC address must be sent to   all stations in that VPLS.  This can be accomplished by the same   means that is used for flooding.   There is also an easily recognized set of "multicast" MAC addresses.   Ethernet frames with a destination multicast MAC address MAY be   broadcast to all stations; a VE MAY also use certain techniques to   restrict transmission of multicast frames to a smaller set of   receivers, those that have indicated interest in the corresponding   multicast group.  Discussion of this is outside the scope of this   document.4.2.5.  "Split Horizon" Forwarding   When a PE capable of flooding (say PEx) receives a broadcast Ethernet   frame, or one with an unknown destination MAC address, it must flood   the frame.  If the frame arrived from an attached CE, PEx must send a   copy of the frame to every other attached CE, as well as to all other   PEs participating in the VPLS.  If, on the other hand, the frame   arrived from another PE (say PEy), PEx must send a copy of the packet   only to attached CEs.  PEx MUST NOT send the frame to other PEs,   since PEy would have already done so.  This notion has been termed   "split horizon" forwarding and is a consequence of the PEs being   logically fully meshed for VPLS.   Split horizon forwarding rules apply to broadcast and multicast   packets, as well as packets to an unknown MAC address.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 20074.2.6.  Qualified and Unqualified Learning   The key for normal Ethernet MAC learning is usually just the   (6-octet) MAC address.  This is called "unqualified learning".   However, it is also possible that the key for learning includes the   VLAN tag when present; this is called "qualified learning".   In the case of VPLS, learning is done in the context of a VPLS   instance, which typically corresponds to a customer.  If the customer   uses VLAN tags, one can make the same distinctions of qualified and   unqualified learning.  If the key for learning within a VPLS is just   the MAC address, then this VPLS is operating under unqualified   learning.  If the key for learning is (customer VLAN tag + MAC   address), then this VPLS is operating under qualified learning.   Choosing between qualified and unqualified learning involves several   factors, the most important of which is whether one wants a single   global broadcast domain (unqualified) or a broadcast domain per VLAN   (qualified).  The latter makes flooding and broadcasting more   efficient, but requires larger MAC tables.  These considerations   apply equally to normal Ethernet forwarding and to VPLS.4.2.7.  Class of Service   In order to offer different Classes of Service within a VPLS, an   implementation MAY choose to map 802.1p bits in a customer Ethernet   frame with a VLAN tag to an appropriate setting of EXP bits in the   pseudowire and/or tunnel label, allowing for differential treatment   of VPLS frames in the packet switched network.   To be useful, an implementation SHOULD allow this mapping function to   be different for each VPLS, as each VPLS customer may have its own   view of the required behavior for a given setting of 802.1p bits.5.  Deployment Options   In deploying a network that supports VPLS, the SP must decide what   functions the VPLS-aware device closest to the customer (the VE)   supports.  The default case described in this document is that the VE   is a PE.  However, there are a number of reasons that the VE might be   a device that does all the Layer 2 functions (such as MAC address   learning and flooding), and a limited set of Layer 3 functions (such   as communicating to its PE), but, for example, doesn't do full-   fledged discovery and PE-to-PE signaling.  Such a device is called a   "u-PE".Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007   As both of these cases have benefits, one would like to be able to   "mix and match" these scenarios.  The signaling mechanism presented   here allows this.  For example, in a given provider network, one PE   may be directly connected to CE devices, another may be connected to   u-PEs that are connected to CEs, and a third may be connected   directly to a customer over some interfaces and to u-PEs over others.   All these PEs perform discovery and signaling in the same manner.   How they do learning and forwarding depends on whether or not there   is a u-PE; however, this is a local matter, and is not signaled.   However, the details of the operation of a u-PE and its interactions   with PEs and other u-PEs are beyond the scope of this document.6.  Security Considerations   The focus in Virtual Private LAN Service is the privacy of data,   i.e., that data in a VPLS is only distributed to other nodes in that   VPLS and not to any external agent or other VPLS.  Note that VPLS   does not offer confidentiality, integrity, or authentication: VPLS   packets are sent in the clear in the packet switched network, and a   man-in-the-middle can eavesdrop, and may be able to inject packets   into the data stream.  If security is desired, the PE-to-PE tunnels   can be IPsec tunnels.  For more security, the end systems in the VPLS   sites can use appropriate means of encryption to secure their data   even before it enters the Service Provider network.   There are two aspects to achieving data privacy in a VPLS: securing   the control plane and protecting the forwarding path.  Compromise of   the control plane could result in a PE sending data belonging to some   VPLS to another VPLS, or blackholing VPLS data, or even sending it to   an eavesdropper; none of which are acceptable from a data privacy   point of view.  Since all control plane exchanges are via BGP,   techniques such as in [2] help authenticate BGP messages, making it   harder to spoof updates (which can be used to divert VPLS traffic to   the wrong VPLS) or withdraws (denial-of-service attacks).  In the   multi-AS methods (b) and (c) described inSection 3, this also means   protecting the inter-AS BGP sessions, between the ASBRs, the PEs, or   the Route Reflectors.  One can also use the techniques described inSection 10 (b) and (c) of [6], both for the control plane and the   data plane.  Note that [2] will not help in keeping VPLS labels   private -- knowing the labels, one can eavesdrop on VPLS traffic.   However, this requires access to the data path within a Service   Provider network.   There can also be misconfiguration leading to unintentional   connection of CEs in different VPLSs.  This can be caused, for   example, by associating the wrong Route Target with a VPLS instance.   This problem, shared by [6], is for further study.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007   Protecting the data plane requires ensuring that PE-to-PE tunnels are   well-behaved (this is outside the scope of this document), and that   VPLS labels are accepted only from valid interfaces.  For a PE, valid   interfaces comprise links from P routers.  For an ASBR, a valid   interface is a link from an ASBR in an AS that is part of a given   VPLS.  It is especially important in the case of multi-AS VPLSs that   one accept VPLS packets only from valid interfaces.   MPLS-in-IP and MPLS-in-GRE tunneling are specified in [3].  If it is   desired to use such tunnels to carry VPLS packets, then the security   considerations described inSection 8 of that document must be fully   understood.  Any implementation of VPLS that allows VPLS packets to   be tunneled as described in that document MUST contain an   implementation of IPsec that can be used as therein described.  If   the tunnel is not secured by IPsec, then the technique of IP address   filtering at the border routers, described inSection 8.2 of that   document, is the only means of ensuring that a packet that exits the   tunnel at a particular egress PE was actually placed in the tunnel by   the proper tunnel head node (i.e., that the packet does not have a   spoofed source address).  Since border routers frequently filter only   source addresses, packet filtering may not be effective unless the   egress PE can check the IP source address of any tunneled packet it   receives, and compare it to a list of IP addresses that are valid   tunnel head addresses.  Any implementation that allows MPLS-in-IP   and/or MPLS-in-GRE tunneling to be used without IPsec MUST allow the   egress PE to validate in this manner the IP source address of any   tunneled packet that it receives.7.  IANA Considerations   IANA allocated value (25) for AFI for L2VPN information.  This should   be the same as the AFI requested by [11].   IANA allocated an extended community value (0x800a) for the Layer2   Info Extended Community.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 20078.  References8.1.  Normative References   [1]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement        Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [2]  Heffernan, A., "Protection of BGP Sessions via the TCP MD5        Signature Option",RFC 2385, August 1998.   [3]  Worster, T., Rekhter, Y., and E. Rosen, "Encapsulating MPLS in        IP or Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE)",RFC 4023,        March 2005.   [4]  Bates, T., Katz, D., and Y. Rekhter, "Multiprotocol Extensions        for BGP-4",RFC 4760, January 2007.   [5]  Sangli, S., Tappan, D., and Y. Rekhter, "BGP Extended        Communities Attribute",RFC 4360, February 2006.   [6]  Rosen, E. and Y. Rekhter, "BGP/MPLS IP Virtual Private Networks        (VPNs)",RFC 4364, February 2006.   [7]  Martini, L., Rosen, E., El-Aawar, N., and G. Heron,        "Encapsulation Methods for Transport of Ethernet over MPLS        Networks",RFC 4448, April 2006.8.2.  Informative References   [8]   Bates, T., Chen, E., and R. Chandra, "BGP Route Reflection: An         Alternative to Full Mesh Internal BGP (IBGP)",RFC 4456,         April 2006.   [9]   Andersson, L. and E. Rosen, "Framework for Layer 2 Virtual         Private Networks (L2VPNs)",RFC 4664, September 2006.   [10]  Lasserre, M., Ed. and V. Kompella, Ed., "Virtual Private LAN         Service (VPLS) Using Label Distribution Protocol (LDP)         Signaling",RFC 4762, January 2007.   [11]  Ould-Brahim, H., "Using BGP as an Auto-Discovery Mechanism for         VR-based Layer-3 VPNs", Work in Progress, April 2006.   [12]  Marques, P.,"Constrained VPN Route Distribution", Work in         Progress, June 2005.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007   [13]  Martini, L., Rosen, E., El-Aawar, N., Smith, T., and G. Heron,         "Pseudowire Setup and Maintenance Using the Label Distribution         Protocol (LDP)",RFC 4447, April 2006.   [14]  Kompella, K.,"Layer 2 VPNs Over Tunnels", Work in Progress,         January 2006.   [15]  Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, "Information         technology - Telecommunications and information exchange         between systems - Local and metropolitan area networks - Common         specifications - Part 3: Media Access Control (MAC) Bridges:         Revision. This is a revision of ISO/IEC 10038: 1993, 802.1j-         1992 and 802.6k-1992.  It incorporates P802.11c, P802.1p and         P802.12e.  ISO/IEC 15802-3: 1998.", IEEE Standard 802.1D,         July 1998.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007Appendix A.  Contributors   The following contributed to this document:           Javier Achirica, Telefonica           Loa Andersson, Acreo           Giles Heron, Tellabs           Sunil Khandekar, Alcatel-Lucent           Chaitanya Kodeboyina, Nuova Systems           Vach Kompella, Alcatel-Lucent           Marc Lasserre, Alcatel-Lucent           Pierre Lin           Pascal Menezes           Ashwin Moranganti, Appian           Hamid Ould-Brahim, Nortel           Seo Yeong-il, Korea TelAppendix B.  Acknowledgements   Thanks to Joe Regan and Alfred Nothaft for their contributions.  Many   thanks too to Eric Ji, Chaitanya Kodeboyina, Mike Loomis, and Elwyn   Davies for their detailed reviews.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007Editors' Addresses   Kireeti Kompella   Juniper Networks   1194 N. Mathilda Ave.   Sunnyvale, CA  94089   US   EMail: kireeti@juniper.net   Yakov Rekhter   Juniper Networks   1194 N. Mathilda Ave.   Sunnyvale, CA  94089   US   EMail: yakov@juniper.netKompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 4761       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for VPLS    January 2007Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).   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, THE IETF TRUST 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.Kompella & Rekhter          Standards Track                    [Page 28]

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