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INFORMATIONAL
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                       B. DecraeneRequest for Comments: 6198                                France TelecomCategory: Informational                                      P. FrancoisISSN: 2070-1721                                                      UCL                                                              C. Pelsser                                                                     IIJ                                                                Z. Ahmad                                                Orange Business Services                                                  A.J. Elizondo Armengol                                                          Telefonica I+D                                                               T. Takeda                                                                     NTT                                                              April 2011Requirements for the Graceful Shutdown of BGP SessionsAbstract   The Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) is heavily used in Service Provider   networks for both Internet and BGP/MPLS VPN services.  For resiliency   purposes, redundant routers and BGP sessions can be deployed to   reduce the consequences of an Autonomous System Border Router (ASBR)   or BGP session breakdown on customers' or peers' traffic.  However,   simply taking down or even bringing up a BGP session for maintenance   purposes may still induce connectivity losses during the BGP   convergence.  This is no longer satisfactory for new applications   (e.g., voice over IP, online gaming, VPN).  Therefore, a solution is   required for the graceful shutdown of a (set of) BGP session(s) in   order to limit the amount of traffic loss during a planned shutdown.   This document expresses requirements for such a solution.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for informational purposes.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents   approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet   Standard; seeSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6198.Decraene, et al.              Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2011 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................22. Conventions Used in This Document ...............................33. Problem Statement ...............................................43.1. Example of Undesirable BGP Routing Behavior ................43.2. Causes of Packet Loss ......................................54. Terminology .....................................................65. Goals and Requirements ..........................................76. Security Considerations ........................................107. References .....................................................107.1. Normative References ......................................107.2. Informative References ....................................10   Acknowledgments ...................................................11Appendix A. Reference BGP Topologies ..............................12A.1. EBGP Topologies ...........................................12A.2. IBGP Topologies ...........................................15A.3. Routing Decisions .........................................191.  Introduction   The Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) [RFC4271] is heavily used in   Service Provider networks for both Internet and BGP/MPLS VPN services   [RFC4364].  For resiliency purposes, redundant routers and BGP   sessions can be deployed to reduce the consequences of an Autonomous   System Border Router (ASBR) or BGP session breakdown on customers' or   peers' traffic.   We place ourselves in the context where a Service Provider performs a   maintenance operation and needs to shut down one or multiple BGP   peering link(s) or a whole ASBR.  If an alternate path is available   within the Autonomous System (AS), the requirement is to avoid or   reduce customer or peer traffic loss during the BGP convergence.Decraene, et al.              Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011   Indeed, as an alternate path is available in the AS, it should be   made possible to reroute the customer or peer traffic on this backup   path before the BGP session(s) is/are torn down, the nominal path   withdrawn, and the forwarding stopped.   The requirements also cover the subsequent re-establishment of the   BGP session as even this "UP" case can currently trigger route loss,   and thus traffic loss, at some routers.   BGP [RFC4271] and MP-BGP [RFC4760] do not currently have a mechanism   to gracefully migrate traffic from one BGP next-hop to another   without interrupting the flow of traffic.  When a BGP session is   taken down, BGP behaves as if there were a sudden link or router   failure and withdraws the prefixes learned over that session, which   may trigger traffic loss.  While still being advertised as reachable,   there is no mechanism to advertise to its BGP peers that the prefix   will soon be unreachable.  When applicable, such mechanism would   reduce or prevent traffic loss.  It would typically be applicable in   case of a maintenance operation requiring the shutdown of a   forwarding resource.  Typical examples would be a link or line card   maintenance, replacement, or upgrade.  It may also be applicable for   a software upgrade, as it may involve a firmware reset on the line   cards and hence forwarding interruption.   The introduction of route reflectors (RRs) as per [RFC4456] to solve   scalability issues bound to Internal BGP (IBGP) full-meshes has   worsened the duration of routing convergence as some route reflectors   may hide the backup path.  Thus, depending on RR topology, more IBGP   hops may be involved in the IBGP convergence.   Note that these planned maintenance operations cannot be addressed by   Graceful Restart (GR) extensions [RFC4724] as GR only applies when   the forwarding is preserved during the control plane restart.  On the   contrary, graceful shutdown applies when the forwarding is   interrupted.   Also, note that some protocols are already considering such a   graceful shutdown procedure (e.g., GMPLS in [RFC5817]).   A metric of success is the degree to which such a mechanism   eliminates traffic loss during maintenance operations.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 [RFC2119].Decraene, et al.              Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 20113.  Problem Statement   As per [RFC4271], when one (or many) BGP session(s) are shut down, a   BGP NOTIFICATION message is sent to the peer and the session is then   closed.  A protocol convergence is then triggered both by the local   router and by the peer.  Alternate paths to the destination are   selected, if known.  If those alternate paths are not known prior to   the BGP session shutdown, additional BGP convergence steps are   required in each AS to search for an alternate path.   This behavior is not satisfactory in a maintenance situation because   the traffic that was directed towards the removed next-hops may be   lost until the end of the BGP convergence.  As it is a planned   operation, a make-before-break solution should be made possible.   As maintenance operations are frequent in large networks [Reliable],   the global availability of the network is significantly impaired by   this BGP maintenance issue.3.1.  Example of Undesirable BGP Routing Behavior   To illustrate these problems, let us consider the following simple   example where one customer router "CUST" is dual-attached to two   Service Providers' routers, "ASBR1" and "ASBR2".   ASBR1 and ASBR2 are in the same AS and are owned by the same Service   Provider.  Both are IBGP clients of the route reflector R1.                        '                  AS1   '      AS2                        '                  /-----------ASBR1---                 /                     \                /                       \            CUST                         R1                \                       /         Z/z     \                     /                  \-----------ASBR2---                        '                  AS1   '      AS2                        '         Figure 1. Dual-Attached CustomerDecraene, et al.              Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011   Before the maintenance, packets for destination Z/z use the ASBR1-   CUST link because R1 selects ASBR1's route based on the IGP cost.   Let's assume the Service Provider wants to shut down the ASBR1-CUST   link for maintenance purposes.  Currently, when the shutdown is   performed on ASBR1, the following steps are performed:      1. ASBR1 withdraws its prefix Z/z to its route reflector, R1.      2. R1 runs its decision process, selects the route from ASBR2, and         advertises the new path to ASBR1.      3. ASBR1 runs its decision process and recovers the reachability         of Z/z.   Traffic is lost at step 1 when ASBR1 looses its route until step 3   when it discovers a new path.   Note that this is a simplified description for illustrative purposes.   In a bigger AS, multiple steps of BGP convergence may be required to   find and select the best alternate path (e.g., ASBR1 may be chosen   based on a higher LOCAL_PREF, hierarchical route reflectors may be   used, etc.).  When multiple BGP routers are involved and plenty of   prefixes are affected, the recovery process can take longer than   application requirements.3.2.  Causes of Packet Loss   The loss of packets during maintenance has two main causes:      - lack of an alternate path on some routers, and      - transient routing inconsistency.   Some routers may lack an alternate path because another router is   hiding the backup path.  This router can be:      - a route reflector only propagating its best path.      - the backup ASBR not advertising the backup path because it        prefers the nominal path.   This lack of knowledge regarding the alternate path is the first   target of this requirements document.   Transient routing inconsistencies happen during IBGP convergence   because routers do not simultaneously update their Routing   Information Bases (RIBs) and hence do not simultaneously update theirDecraene, et al.              Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011   Forwarding Information Bases (FIBs) entries.  This can lead to   forwarding loops, which result in both link congestion and packet   drops.  The duration of these transient micro-loops is dependent on   the IBGP topology (e.g., number of route reflectors between ingress   and egress ASBR), implementation differences among router platforms   (which result in differences in the time taken to update specific   prefix in the FIB), and forwarding mode (hop-by-hop IP forwarding   versus tunneling).   Note that when an IP lookup is only performed on entry to the AS, for   example, prior to entry into a tunnel across the AS, micro-loops will   not occur.  An example of this is when BGP is being used as the   routing protocol for MPLS VPN as defined in [RFC4364].   Note that [RFC5715] defines a framework for loop-free convergence.   It has been written in the context of IP fast reroute for link state   IGP [RFC5714], but some concepts are also of interest for BGP   convergence.4.  Terminology   g-shut: Graceful shutdown.  A method for explicitly notifying the BGP   routers that a BGP session (and hence the prefixes learned over that   session) is going to be disabled.   g-noshut: Graceful no shutdown.  A method for explicitly notifying   the BGP routers that a BGP session (and hence the prefixes learned   over that session) is going to be enabled.   g-shut initiator: the router on which the session(s) shutdown(s) is   (are) performed for maintenance.   g-shut neighbor: a router that peers with the g-shut initiator via   (one of) the session(s) undergoing maintenance.   affected prefixes: a prefix initially reached via the peering link(s)   undergoing maintenance.   affected router: a router reaching an affected prefix via a peering   link undergoing maintenance.   initiator AS: the autonomous system of the g-shut initiator router.   neighbor AS(es): the autonomous system(s) of the g-shut neighbor   router(s).Decraene, et al.              Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 20115.  Goals and Requirements   Currently, when a BGP session of the router under maintenance is shut   down, the router removes the routes and then triggers the BGP   convergence on its BGP peers by withdrawing its route.   The goal of BGP graceful shutdown of a (set of) BGP session(s) is to   minimize traffic loss during a planned shutdown.  Ideally, a solution   should reduce this traffic loss to zero.   Another goal is to minimize and, preferably, to eliminate packet loss   when the BGP session is re-established following the maintenance.   As the event is known in advance, a make-before-break solution can be   used in order to initiate the BGP convergence, find and install the   alternate paths before the nominal paths are removed.  As a result,   before the nominal BGP session is shut down, all affected routers   learn and use the alternate paths.  Those alternate paths are   computed by BGP, taking into account the known status of the network,   which includes known failures that the network is processing   concurrently with the BGP session graceful shutdown and possibly   other known graceful shutdowns under way.  Therefore, multiple BGP   graceful shutdowns overlapping within a short time frame are   gracefully handled.  Indeed, a given graceful shutdown takes into   account all previous ones.   As a result, provided an alternate path with enough remaining   capacity is available, the packets are rerouted before the BGP   session termination and fewer packets (possibly none) are lost during   the BGP convergence process since, at any time, all routers have a   valid path.   From the above goals, we can derive the following requirements:   a)   A mechanism to advertise the maintenance action to all affected        routers is REQUIRED.  Such a mechanism may be either implicit or        explicit.  Note that affected routers can be located both in the        local AS and in neighboring ASes.  Note also that the        maintenance action can either be the shutdown of a BGP session        or the establishment of a BGP session.        The mechanism SHOULD allow BGP routers to minimize and,        preferably, eliminate packet loss when a path is removed or        advertised.  In particular, it SHOULD be ensured that the old        path is not removed from the routing tables of the affected        routers before the new path is known.Decraene, et al.              Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011        The solution mechanism MUST significantly reduce and, ideally,        eliminate packet loss.  A trade-off may be made between the        degree of packet loss and the simplicity of the solution.   b)   An Internet-wide convergence is OPTIONAL.  However, if the        initiator AS and the neighbor AS(es) have a backup path, they        SHOULD be able to gracefully converge before the nominal path is        shut down.   c)   The proposed solution SHOULD be applicable to any kind of BGP        sessions (External BGP (EBGP), IBGP, IBGP route reflector        client, EBGP confederations, EBGP multi hop, MultiProtocol BGP        extension, etc.) and any address family.  If a BGP        implementation allows the closing or enabling of a subset of        Address Family Identifiers (AFIs) carried in an MP-BGP session,        this mechanism MAY be applicable to this subset of AFIs.        Depending on the kind of session, there may be some variations        in the proposed solution in order to fulfill the requirements.        The following cases should be handled in priority:        - The shutdown of an inter-AS link and therefore the shutdown of          an EBGP session;        - The shutdown of an ASBR and therefore the shutdown of all its          BGP sessions.        Service Providers and platforms implementing a graceful shutdown        solution should note that in BGP/MPLS VPN as per [RFC4364], the        Provider Edge - Customer Edge (PE-CE) routing can be performed        by protocols other than BGP (e.g., static routes, RIPv2, OSPF,        IS-IS).  This is out of scope of this document.   d)   The proposed solution SHOULD NOT change the BGP convergence        behavior for the ASes exterior to the maintenance process,        namely, ASes other than the initiator AS and its neighbor        AS(es).   e)   An incremental deployment on a per-AS or per-BGP session basis        MUST be made possible.  In case of partial deployment, the        proposed solution SHOULD incrementally improve the maintenance        process.  It should be noted that in an inter-domain relation,        one AS may have more incentive to use graceful shutdown than the        other.  Similarly, in a BGP/MPLS VPN environment, it's much        easier to upgrade the PE routers than the CE ones, mainly        because there is at least an order of magnitude more CE and CE        locations than PE and PE locations.  As a consequence, whenDecraene, et al.              Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011        splitting the cost of the solution between the g-shut initiator        and the g-shut neighbor, the solution SHOULD favor a low-cost        solution on the neighbor AS side in order to reduce the impact        on the g-shut neighbor.  Impact should be understood as a        generic term that includes first hardware, then software, then        configuration upgrade.   f)   Redistribution or advertisement of (static) IP routes into BGP        SHOULD also be covered.   g)   The proposed solution MAY be designed in order to avoid        transient forwarding loops.  Indeed, forwarding loops increase        packet transit-delay and may lead to link saturation.   h)   The specific procedure SHOULD end when the BGP session is closed        following the g-shut and once the BGP session is gracefully        opened following the g-noshut.  In the end, once the planned        maintenance is finished, the nominal BGP routing MUST be re-        established.  The duration of the g-shut procedure, and hence        the time before the BGP session is safely closed, SHOULD be        discussed by the solution document.  Examples of possible        solutions are the use of a pre-configured timer, the use of a        message to signal the end of the BGP convergence, or the        monitoring of the traffic on the g-shut interface.   i)   The solution SHOULD be simple and simple to operate.  Hence, it        MAY only cover a subset of the cases.  As a consequence, most of        the above requirements are expressed as "SHOULD" rather than        "MUST".        The metrics to evaluate and compare the proposed solutions are:        - The duration of the remaining loss of connectivity when the          BGP session is brought down or up;        - The applicability to a wide range of BGP and network          topologies;        - The simplicity;        - The duration of transient forwarding loops;        - The additional load introduced in BGP (e.g., BGP messages sent          to peer routers, peer ASes, the Internet).Decraene, et al.              Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 20116.  Security Considerations   At the requirements stage, this graceful shutdown mechanism is not   expected to affect the security of the BGP protocol, especially if it   can be kept simple.  No new sessions are required and the additional   ability to signal the graceful shutdown is not expected to bring   additional attack vectors, as BGP neighbors already have the ability   to send incorrect or misleading information or even shut down the   session.   Security considerations MUST be addressed by the proposed solutions.   In particular, they SHOULD address the issues of bogus g-shut   messages and how they would affect the network(s), as well as the   impact of hiding a g-shut message so that g-shut is not performed.   The solution SHOULD NOT increase the ability of one AS to selectively   influence routing decision in the peer AS (inbound Traffic   Engineering) outside of the case of the BGP session shutdown.   Otherwise, the peer AS SHOULD have means to detect such behavior.7.  References7.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC4271]  Rekhter, Y., Ed., Li, T., Ed., and S. Hares, Ed., "A              Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4)",RFC 4271, January              2006.   [RFC4760]  Bates, T., Chandra, R., Katz, D., and Y. Rekhter,              "Multiprotocol Extensions for BGP-4",RFC 4760, January              2007.   [RFC4456]  Bates, T., Chen, E., and R. Chandra, "BGP Route              Reflection: An Alternative to Full Mesh Internal BGP              (IBGP)",RFC 4456, April 2006.   [RFC4364]  Rosen, E. and Y. Rekhter, "BGP/MPLS IP Virtual Private              Networks (VPNs)",RFC 4364, February 2006.7.2.  Informative References   [RFC5817]  Ali, Z., Vasseur, JP., Zamfir, A., and J. Newton,              "Graceful Shutdown in MPLS and Generalized MPLS Traffic              Engineering Networks",RFC 5817, April 2010.Decraene, et al.              Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011   [RFC5715]  Shand, M. and S. Bryant, "A Framework for Loop-Free              Convergence",RFC 5715, January 2010.   [RFC5714]  Shand, M. and S. Bryant, "IP Fast Reroute Framework",RFC5714, January 2010.   [RFC4724]  Sangli, S., Chen, E., Fernando, R., Scudder, J., and Y.              Rekhter, "Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP",RFC 4724,              January 2007.   [Reliable] Network Strategy Partners, LLC. "Reliable IP Nodes: A              prerequisite to profitable IP services", November 2002.http://www.nspllc.com/NewPages/Reliable_IP_Nodes.pdfAcknowledgments   The authors would like to thank Nicolas Dubois, Benoit Fondeviole,   Christian Jacquenet, Olivier Bonaventure, Steve Uhlig, Xavier Vinet,   Vincent Gillet, Jean-Louis le Roux, Pierre Alain Coste, and Ronald   Bonica for their useful discussions on this subject, review, and   comments.   This document has been partly sponsored by the European project IST   AGAVE.Decraene, et al.              Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011Appendix A.  Reference BGP Topologies   This section describes some frequent BGP topologies used both within   the AS (IBGP) and between ASes (EBGP).  Solutions should be   applicable to the following topologies and their combinations.A.1.  EBGP Topologies   This section describes some frequent BGP topologies used between   ASes.  In each figure, a line represents a BGP session.A.1.1.  One ASBR in AS1 Connected to Two ASBRs in the Neighboring AS2   In this topology, we have an asymmetric protection scheme between AS1   and AS2:      - On the AS2 side, two different routers are used to connect to        AS1.      - On the AS1 side, one single router with two BGP sessions is        used.                    '              AS1   '      AS2                    '              /----------- ASBR2.1             /      '            /       '         ASBR1.1    '            \       '             \      '              \----------- ASBR2.2                    '                    '          AS1       '      AS2                    '         Figure 2. EBGP Topology with Redundant ASBR in One of the ASes   BGP graceful shutdown is expected to be applicable for the   maintenance of:      - one of the routers of AS2;      - one link between AS1 and AS2, performed either on an AS1 or AS2        router.Decraene, et al.              Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011   Note that in the case of maintenance of the whole router, all its BGP   sessions need to be gracefully shutdown at the beginning of the   maintenance and gracefully brought up at the end of the maintenance.A.1.2.  Two ASBRs in AS1 Connected to Two ASBRs in AS2   In this topology, we have a symmetric protection scheme between AS1   and AS2: on both sides, two different routers are used to connect AS1   to AS2.                      '                AS1   '      AS2                      '         ASBR1.1----------- ASBR2.1                      '                      '                      '                      '                      '         ASBR1.2----------- ASBR2.2                      '            AS1       '      AS2                      '         Figure 3. EBGP Topology with Redundant ASBRs in Both ASes   BGP graceful shutdown is expected to be applicable for the   maintenance of:      - any of the ASBR routers (in AS1 or AS2);      - one link between AS1 and AS2, performed either on an AS1 or AS2        router.Decraene, et al.              Informational                    [Page 13]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011A.1.3.  Two ASBRs in AS2 Each Connected to Two Different ASes   In this topology, at least three ASes are involved.                        '                  AS1   '      AS2                        '           ASBR1.1----------- ASBR2.1              |         '              |         '         '''''|''''''''''              |         '              |         '           ASBR3.1----------- ASBR2.2                        '              AS3       '      AS2         Figure 4. EBGP Topology of a Dual-Homed Customer   As the requirement expressed inSection 5 is to advertise the   maintenance only within the initiator and neighbor ASes, not   Internet-wide, BGP graceful shutdown solutions may not be applicable   to this topology.  Depending on which routes are exchanged between   these ASes, some protection for some of the traffic may be possible.   For instance, if ASBR2.2 performs a maintenance affecting ASBR3.1,   then ASBR3.1 will be notified.  However, ASBR1.1 may not be notified   of the maintenance of the EBGP session between ASBR3.1 and ASBR2.2.Decraene, et al.              Informational                    [Page 14]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011A.2.  IBGP Topologies   This section describes some frequent BGP topologies used within an   AS.  In each figure, a line represents a BGP session.A.2.1.  IBGP Full-Mesh   In this topology, we have a full-mesh of IBGP sessions:            P1 ----- P2            | \    / |            |  \  /  |            |   \/   |     AS1            |   /\   |            |  /  \  |            | /    \ |          ASBR1.1--ASBR1.2             \       /              \     /         ''''''\'''/''''''''''''                \ /      AS2               ASBR2.1         Figure 5. IBGP Full-Mesh   When the session between ASBR1.1 and ASBR2.1 is gracefully shut down,   it is required that all affected routers of AS1 reroute traffic to   ASBR1.2 before the session between ASBR1.1 and ASBR2.1 is shut down.   Similarly, when the session between ASBR1.1 and ASBR2.1 is gracefully   brought up, all affected routers of AS1 preferring ASBR1.1 over   ASBR1.2 need to reroute traffic to ASBR1.1 before the less preferred   path through ASBR1.2 is possibly withdrawn.Decraene, et al.              Informational                    [Page 15]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011A.2.2.  Route Reflector   In this topology, route reflectors are used to limit the number of   IBGP sessions.  There is a single level of route reflectors and the   route reflectors are fully meshed.            P1 (RR)-- P2 (RR)            | \      / |            |  \    /  |            |   \  /   |     AS1            |    \/    |            |    /\    |            |   /  \   |            |  /    \  |            | /      \ |          ASBR1.1    ASBR1.2             \          /              \        /         ''''''\''''''/''''''''''''                \    /                 \  /         AS2                ASBR2.1         Figure 6. Route Reflector   When the session between ASBR1.1 and ASBR2.1 is gracefully shut down,   all BGP routers of AS1 need to reroute traffic to ASBR1.2 before the   session between ASBR1.1 and ASBR2.1 is shut down.   Similarly, when the session between ASBR1.1 and ASBR2.1 is gracefully   brought up, all affected routers of AS1 preferring ASBR1.1 over   ASBR1.2 need to reroute traffic to ASBR1.1 before the less preferred   path through ASBR1.2 is possibly withdrawn.Decraene, et al.              Informational                    [Page 16]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011A.2.3.  Hierarchical Route Reflector   In this topology, hierarchical route reflectors are used to limit the   number of IBGP sessions.  There could be more than two levels of   route reflectors and the top-level route reflectors are fully meshed.         P1 (RR) --------  P2 (RR)            |               |            |               |            |               |   AS1            |               |            |               |          P3 (RR)          P4 (RR)            |               |            |               |            |               |   AS1            |               |            |               |          ASBR1.1         ASBR1.2             \             /              \           /         ''''''\'''''''''/''''''''''''                \       /                 \     /        AS2                 ASBR2.1         Figure 7. Hierarchical Route Reflector   When the session between ASBR1.1 and ASBR2.1 is gracefully shut down,   all BGP routers of AS1 need to reroute traffic to ASBR1.2 before the   session between ASBR1.1 and ASBR2.1 is shut down.   Similarly, when the session between ASBR1.1 and ASBR2.1 is gracefully   brought up, all affected routers of AS1 preferring ASBR1.1 over   ASBR1.2 need to reroute traffic to ASBR1.1 before the less preferred   path through ASBR1.2 is possibly withdrawn.A.2.4.  Confederations   In this topology, a confederation of ASes is used to limit the number   of IBGP sessions.  Moreover, RRs may be present in the member ASes of   the confederation.Decraene, et al.              Informational                    [Page 17]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011   Confederations may be run with different sub-options.  Regarding the   IGP, each member AS can run its own IGP or they can all share the   same IGP.  Regarding BGP, LOCAL_PREF may or may not cross the member   AS boundaries.   A solution should support the graceful shutdown and graceful bringing   up of EBGP sessions between member ASes in the confederation in   addition to the graceful shutdown and graceful bringing up of EBGP   sessions between a member-AS and an AS outside of the confederation.         ASBR1C.1 ---------- ASBR1C.2            |                   |            |                   |            |       AS1C        |            |                   |            |                   |         """|"""""""""""""""""""|"""            |        "          |          ASBR1A.2   "        ASBR1B.2            |        "          |            |        "          |            |  AS1A  "   AS1B   |             AS1            |        "          |            |        "          |          ASBR1A.1   "         ASBR1B.1             \       "         /              \      "        /         ''''''\'''''''''''''/''''''''''''                \           /                 \         /                   AS2                   ASBR2.1         Figure 8. Confederation   In the above figure, member ASes AS1A, AS1B, and AS1C belong to a   confederation of ASes in AS1.  AS1A and AS1B are connected to AS2.   In normal operation, for the traffic toward AS2:      - AS1A sends the traffic directly to AS2 through ASBR1A.1.      - AS1B sends the traffic directly to AS2 through ASBR1B.1.      - AS1C load balances the traffic between AS1A and AS1B.   When the session between ASBR1A.1 and ASBR2.1 is gracefully shut   down, all BGP routers of AS1 need to reroute traffic to ASBR1B.1   before the session between ASBR1A.1 and ASBR2.1 is shut down.Decraene, et al.              Informational                    [Page 18]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011   Similarly, when the session between ASBR1A.1 and ASBR2.1 is   gracefully brought up, all affected routers of AS1 preferring   ASBR1A.1 over ASBR1B.1 need to reroute traffic to ASBR1A.1 before the   less preferred path through ASBR1B.1 is possibly withdrawn.A.3.  Routing Decisions   Here we describe some routing engineering choices that are frequently   used in ASes and that should be supported by the solution.A.3.1.  Hot Potato (IGP Cost)   The ingress router selects the nominal egress ASBR (AS exit point)   based on the IGP cost to reach the BGP next-hop.A.3.2.  Cold Potato (BGP LOCAL_PREF)   The ingress router selects the nominal egress ASBR based on the BGP   LOCAL_PREF value set and advertised by the exit point.A.3.3.  Cold Potato (BGP Preference Set on Ingress)   The ingress router selects the nominal egress ASBR based on   preconfigured policy information.  (Typically, this is done by   locally setting the BGP LOCAL_PREF based on the BGP communities   attached on the routes).   As per [RFC4271], note that if tunnels are not used to forward   packets between the ingress and egress ASBR; this can lead to   persistent forwarding loops.Decraene, et al.              Informational                    [Page 19]

RFC 6198             Reqs for Graceful BGP Shutdown           April 2011Authors' Addresses   Bruno Decraene   France Telecom   38-40 rue du General Leclerc   92794 Issy Moulineaux cedex 9   France   EMail: bruno.decraene@orange-ftgroup.com   Pierre Francois   Universite catholique de Louvain   Place Ste Barbe, 2   Louvain-la-Neuve  1348   BE   EMail: francois@info.ucl.ac.be   Cristel Pelsser   Internet Initiative Japan   Jinbocho Mitsui Building   1-105 Kanda jinbo-cho   Chiyoda-ku, Tokyo 101-0051   Japan   EMail: cristel@iij.ad.jp   Zubair Ahmad   Orange Business Services   13775 McLearen Road, Oak Hill VA 20171   USA   EMail: zubair.ahmad@orange-ftgroup.com   Antonio Jose Elizondo Armengol   Division de Analisis Tecnologicos   Technology Analysis Division   Telefonica I+D   C/ Emilio Vargas 6   28043, Madrid   EMail: ajea@tid.es   Tomonori Takeda   NTT Corporation   9-11, Midori-Cho 3 Chrome   Musashino-Shi, Tokyo 180-8585   Japan   EMail: takeda.tomonori@lab.ntt.co.jpDecraene, et al.              Informational                    [Page 20]

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