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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                          D. FrostRequest for Comments: 6374                                     S. BryantCategory: Standards Track                                  Cisco SystemsISSN: 2070-1721                                           September 2011Packet Loss and Delay Measurement for MPLS NetworksAbstract   Many service provider service level agreements (SLAs) depend on the   ability to measure and monitor performance metrics for packet loss   and one-way and two-way delay, as well as related metrics such as   delay variation and channel throughput.  This measurement capability   also provides operators with greater visibility into the performance   characteristics of their networks, thereby facilitating planning,   troubleshooting, and network performance evaluation.  This document   specifies protocol mechanisms to enable the efficient and accurate   measurement of these performance metrics in MPLS networks.Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   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).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 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/rfc6374.Copyright 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.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................31.1. Applicability and Scope ....................................51.2. Terminology ................................................61.3. Requirements Language ......................................62. Overview ........................................................62.1. Basic Bidirectional Measurement ............................62.2. Packet Loss Measurement ....................................72.3. Throughput Measurement ....................................102.4. Delay Measurement .........................................102.5. Delay Variation Measurement ...............................122.6. Unidirectional Measurement ................................122.7. Dyadic Measurement ........................................132.8. Loopback Measurement ......................................132.9. Measurement Considerations ................................142.9.1. Types of Channels ..................................142.9.2. Quality of Service .................................142.9.3. Measurement Point Location .........................142.9.4. Equal Cost Multipath ...............................152.9.5. Intermediate Nodes .................................152.9.6. Different Transmit and Receive Interfaces ..........162.9.7. External Post-Processing ...........................162.9.8. Loss Measurement Modes .............................162.9.9. Loss Measurement Scope .............................182.9.10. Delay Measurement Accuracy ........................182.9.11. Delay Measurement Timestamp Format ................183. Message Formats ................................................193.1. Loss Measurement Message Format ...........................193.2. Delay Measurement Message Format ..........................253.3. Combined Loss/Delay Measurement Message Format ............273.4. Timestamp Field Formats ...................................283.5. TLV Objects ...............................................293.5.1. Padding ............................................303.5.2. Addressing .........................................313.5.3. Loopback Request ...................................313.5.4. Session Query Interval .............................324. Operation ......................................................334.1. Operational Overview ......................................334.2. Loss Measurement Procedures ...............................344.2.1. Initiating a Loss Measurement Operation ............344.2.2. Transmitting a Loss Measurement Query ..............344.2.3. Receiving a Loss Measurement Query .................354.2.4. Transmitting a Loss Measurement Response ...........354.2.5. Receiving a Loss Measurement Response ..............364.2.6. Loss Calculation ...................................364.2.7. Quality of Service .................................374.2.8. G-ACh Packets ......................................37Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 20114.2.9. Test Messages ......................................374.2.10. Message Loss and Packet Misorder Conditions .......384.3. Delay Measurement Procedures ..............................394.3.1. Transmitting a Delay Measurement Query .............394.3.2. Receiving a Delay Measurement Query ................394.3.3. Transmitting a Delay Measurement Response ..........404.3.4. Receiving a Delay Measurement Response .............414.3.5. Timestamp Format Negotiation .......................414.3.5.1. Single-Format Procedures ..................424.3.6. Quality of Service .................................424.4. Combined Loss/Delay Measurement Procedures ................425. Implementation Disclosure Requirements .........................426. Congestion Considerations ......................................447. Manageability Considerations ...................................448. Security Considerations ........................................459. IANA Considerations ............................................469.1. Allocation of PW Associated Channel Types .................479.2. Creation of Measurement Timestamp Type Registry ...........47      9.3. Creation of MPLS Loss/Delay Measurement Control           Code Registry .............................................47      9.4. Creation of MPLS Loss/Delay Measurement TLV Object           Registry ..................................................4910. Acknowledgments ...............................................4911. References ....................................................4911.1. Normative References .....................................4911.2. Informative References ...................................50Appendix A. Default Timestamp Format Rationale ....................521.  Introduction   Many service provider service level agreements (SLAs) depend on the   ability to measure and monitor performance metrics for packet loss   and one-way and two-way delay, as well as related metrics such as   delay variation and channel throughput.  This measurement capability   also provides operators with greater visibility into the performance   characteristics of their networks, thereby facilitating planning,   troubleshooting, and network performance evaluation.  This document   specifies protocol mechanisms to enable the efficient and accurate   measurement of these performance metrics in MPLS networks.   This document specifies two closely related protocols, one for packet   loss measurement (LM) and one for packet delay measurement (DM).   These protocols have the following characteristics and capabilities:   o  The LM and DM protocols are intended to be simple and to support      efficient hardware processing.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   o  The LM and DM protocols operate over the MPLS Generic Associated      Channel (G-ACh) [RFC5586] and support measurement of loss, delay,      and related metrics over Label Switched Paths (LSPs), pseudowires,      and MPLS sections (links).   o  The LM and DM protocols are applicable to the LSPs, pseudowires,      and sections of networks based on the MPLS Transport Profile      (MPLS-TP), because the MPLS-TP is based on a standard MPLS data      plane.  The MPLS-TP is defined and described in [RFC5921], and      MPLS-TP LSPs, pseudowires, and sections are discussed in detail in      [RFC5960].  A profile describing the minimal functional subset of      the LM and DM protocols in the MPLS-TP context is provided in      [RFC6375].   o  The LM and DM protocols can be used both for continuous/proactive      and selective/on-demand measurement.   o  The LM and DM protocols use a simple query/response model for      bidirectional measurement that allows a single node -- the querier      -- to measure the loss or delay in both directions.   o  The LM and DM protocols use query messages for unidirectional loss      and delay measurement.  The measurement can be carried out either      at the downstream node(s) or at the querier if an out-of-band      return path is available.   o  The LM and DM protocols do not require that the transmit and      receive interfaces be the same when performing bidirectional      measurement.   o  The DM protocol is stateless.   o  The LM protocol is "almost" stateless: loss is computed as a delta      between successive messages, and thus the data associated with the      last message received must be retained.   o  The LM protocol can perform two distinct kinds of loss      measurement: it can measure the loss of specially generated test      messages in order to infer the approximate data-plane loss level      (inferred measurement) or it can directly measure data-plane      packet loss (direct measurement).  Direct measurement provides      perfect loss accounting, but may require specialized hardware      support and is only applicable to some LSP types.  Inferred      measurement provides only approximate loss accounting but is      generally applicable.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011      The direct LM method is also known as "frame-based" in the context      of Ethernet transport networks [Y.1731].  Inferred LM is a      generalization of the "synthetic" measurement approach currently      in development for Ethernet networks, in the sense that it allows      test messages to be decoupled from measurement messages.   o  The LM protocol supports measurement in terms of both packet      counts and octet counts.   o  The LM protocol supports both 32-bit and 64-bit counters.   o  The LM protocol can be used to measure channel throughput as well      as packet loss.   o  The DM protocol supports multiple timestamp formats, and provides      a simple means for the two endpoints of a bidirectional connection      to agree on a preferred format.  This procedure reduces to a      triviality for implementations supporting only a single timestamp      format.   o  The DM protocol supports varying the measurement message size in      order to measure delays associated with different packet sizes.   The One-Way Active Measurement Protocol (OWAMP) [RFC4656] and Two-Way   Active Measurement Protocol (TWAMP) [RFC5357] provide capabilities   for the measurement of various performance metrics in IP networks.   These protocols are not streamlined for hardware processing and rely   on IP and TCP, as well as elements of the Network Time Protocol   (NTP), which may not be available or optimized in some network   environments; they also lack support for IEEE 1588 timestamps and   direct-mode LM, which may be required in some environments.  The   protocols defined in this document thus are similar in some respects   to, but also differ from, these IP-based protocols.1.1.  Applicability and Scope   This document specifies measurement procedures and protocol messages   that are intended to be applicable in a wide variety of circumstances   and amenable to implementation by a wide range of hardware- and   software-based measurement systems.  As such, it does not attempt to   mandate measurement quality levels or analyze specific end-user   applications.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 20111.2.  Terminology   Term  Definition   ----- -------------------------------------------   ACH   Associated Channel Header   DM    Delay Measurement   ECMP  Equal Cost Multipath   G-ACh Generic Associated Channel   LM    Loss Measurement   LSE   Label Stack Entry   LSP   Label Switched Path   NTP   Network Time Protocol   OAM   Operations, Administration, and Maintenance   PTP   Precision Time Protocol   TC    Traffic Class1.3.  Requirements Language   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].2.  Overview   This section begins with a summary of the basic methods used for the   bidirectional measurement of packet loss and delay.  These   measurement methods are then described in detail.  Finally, a list of   practical considerations is discussed that may come into play to   inform or modify these simple procedures.  This section is limited to   theoretical discussion; for protocol specifics, the reader is   referred to Sections3 and4.2.1.  Basic Bidirectional Measurement   The following figure shows the reference scenario.                             T1              T2                   +-------+/     Query       \+-------+                   |       | - - - - - - - - ->|       |                   |   A   |===================|   B   |                   |       |<- - - - - - - - - |       |                   +-------+\     Response    /+-------+                             T4              T3   This figure shows a bidirectional channel between two nodes, A and B,   and illustrates the temporal reference points T1-T4 associated with a   measurement operation that takes place at A.  The operation consists   of A sending a query message to B, and B sending back a response.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   Each reference point indicates the point in time at which either the   query or the response message is transmitted or received over the   channel.   In this situation, A can arrange to measure the packet loss over the   channel in the forward and reverse directions by sending Loss   Measurement (LM) query messages to B, each of which contains the   count of packets transmitted prior to time T1 over the channel to B   (A_TxP).  When the message reaches B, it appends two values and   reflects the message back to A: the count of packets received prior   to time T2 over the channel from A (B_RxP) and the count of packets   transmitted prior to time T3 over the channel to A (B_TxP).  When the   response reaches A, it appends a fourth value: the count of packets   received prior to time T4 over the channel from B (A_RxP).   These four counter values enable A to compute the desired loss   statistics.  Because the transmit count at A and the receive count at   B (and vice versa) may not be synchronized at the time of the first   message, and to limit the effects of counter wrap, the loss is   computed in the form of a delta between messages.   To measure at A the delay over the channel to B, a Delay Measurement   (DM) query message is sent from A to B containing a timestamp   recording the instant at which it is transmitted, i.e., T1.  When the   message reaches B, a timestamp is added recording the instant at   which it is received (T2).  The message can now be reflected from B   to A, with B adding its transmit timestamp (T3) and A adding its   receive timestamp (T4).  These four timestamps enable A to compute   the one-way delay in each direction, as well as the two-way delay for   the channel.  The one-way delay computations require that the clocks   of A and B be synchronized; mechanisms for clock synchronization are   outside the scope of this document.2.2.  Packet Loss Measurement   Suppose a bidirectional channel exists between the nodes A and B.   The objective is to measure at A the following two quantities   associated with the channel:      A_TxLoss (transmit loss): the number of packets transmitted by A      over the channel but not received at B;      A_RxLoss (receive loss): the number of packets transmitted by B      over the channel but not received at A.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   This is accomplished by initiating a Loss Measurement (LM) operation   at A, which consists of transmission of a sequence of LM query   messages (LM[1], LM[2], ...) over the channel at a specified rate,   such as one every 100 milliseconds.  Each message LM[n] contains the   following value:      A_TxP[n]: the total count of packets transmitted by A over the      channel prior to the time this message is transmitted.   When such a message is received at B, the following value is recorded   in the message:      B_RxP[n]: the total count of packets received by B over the      channel at the time this message is received (excluding the      message itself).   At this point, B transmits the message back to A, recording within it   the following value:      B_TxP[n]: the total count of packets transmitted by B over the      channel prior to the time this response is transmitted.   When the message response is received back at A, the following value   is recorded in the message:      A_RxP[n]: the total count of packets received by A over the      channel at the time this response is received (excluding the      message itself).   The transmit loss A_TxLoss[n-1,n] and receive loss A_RxLoss[n-1,n]   within the measurement interval marked by the messages LM[n-1] and   LM[n] are computed by A as follows:   A_TxLoss[n-1,n] = (A_TxP[n] - A_TxP[n-1]) - (B_RxP[n] - B_RxP[n-1])   A_RxLoss[n-1,n] = (B_TxP[n] - B_TxP[n-1]) - (A_RxP[n] - A_RxP[n-1])   where the arithmetic is modulo the counter size.   (Strictly speaking, it is not necessary that the fourth count,   A_RxP[n], actually be written in the message, but this is convenient   for some implementations and useful if the message is to be forwarded   on to an external measurement system.)Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   The derived values      A_TxLoss = A_TxLoss[1,2] + A_TxLoss[2,3] + ...      A_RxLoss = A_RxLoss[1,2] + A_RxLoss[2,3] + ...   are updated each time a response to an LM message is received and   processed, and they represent the total transmit and receive loss   over the channel since the LM operation was initiated.   When computing the values A_TxLoss[n-1,n] and A_RxLoss[n-1,n], the   possibility of counter wrap must be taken into account.  For example,   consider the values of the A_TxP counter at sequence numbers n-1 and   n.  Clearly if A_TxP[n] is allowed to wrap to 0 and then beyond to a   value equal to or greater than A_TxP[n-1], the computation of an   unambiguous A_TxLoss[n-1,n] value will be impossible.  Therefore, the   LM message rate MUST be sufficiently high, given the counter size and   the speed and minimum packet size of the underlying channel, that   this condition cannot arise.  For example, a 32-bit counter for a   100-Gbps link with a minimum packet size of 64 bytes can wrap in 2^32   / (10^11/(64*8)) = ~22 seconds, which is therefore an upper bound on   the LM message interval under such conditions.  This bound will be   referred to as the MaxLMInterval of the channel.  It is clear that   the MaxLMInterval will be a more restrictive constraint in the case   of direct LM and for smaller counter sizes.   The loss measurement approach described in this section has the   characteristic of being stateless at B and "almost" stateless at A.   Specifically, A must retain the data associated with the last LM   response received, in order to use it to compute loss when the next   response arrives.  This data MAY be discarded, and MUST NOT be used   as a basis for measurement, if MaxLMInterval elapses before the next   response arrives, because in this case an unambiguous measurement   cannot be made.   The foregoing discussion has assumed the counted objects are packets,   but this need not be the case.  In particular, octets may be counted   instead.  This will, of course, reduce the MaxLMInterval accordingly.   In addition to absolute aggregate loss counts, the individual loss   counts yield other metrics, such as the average loss rate over any   multiple of the measurement interval.  An accurate loss rate can be   determined over time even in the presence of anomalies affecting   individual measurements, such as those due to packet misordering   (Section 4.2.10).Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   Note that an approach for conducting packet loss measurement in IP   networks is documented in [RFC2680].  This approach differs from the   one described here, for example by requiring clock synchronization   between the measurement points and lacking support for direct-mode   LM.2.3.  Throughput Measurement   If LM query messages contain a timestamp recording their time of   transmission, this data can be combined with the packet or octet   counts to yield measurements of the throughput offered and delivered   over the channel during the interval in terms of the counted units.   For a bidirectional channel, for example, given any two LM response   messages (separated in time by not more than the MaxLMInterval), the   difference between the counter values tells the querier the number of   units successfully transmitted and received in the interval between   the timestamps.  Absolute offered throughput is the number of data   units transmitted and absolute delivered throughput is the number of   data units received.  Throughput rate is the number of data units   sent or received per unit time.   Just as for loss measurement, the interval counts can be accumulated   to arrive at the absolute throughput of the channel since the start   of the measurement operation or be used to derive related metrics   such as the throughput rate.  This procedure also enables out-of-   service throughput testing when combined with a simple packet   generator.2.4.  Delay Measurement   Suppose a bidirectional channel exists between the nodes A and B.   The objective is to measure at A one or more of the following   quantities associated with the channel:   o  The one-way delay associated with the forward (A to B) direction      of the channel;   o  The one-way delay associated with the reverse (B to A) direction      of the channel;   o  The two-way delay (A to B to A) associated with the channel.   The one-way delay metric for packet networks is described in   [RFC2679].  In the case of two-way delay, there are actually two   possible metrics of interest.  The "two-way channel delay" is the sum   of the one-way delays in each direction and reflects the delay of the   channel itself, irrespective of processing delays within the remoteFrost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   endpoint B.  The "round-trip delay" is described in [RFC2681] and   includes in addition any delay associated with remote endpoint   processing.   Measurement of the one-way delay quantities requires that the clocks   of A and B be synchronized, whereas the two-way delay metrics can be   measured directly even when this is not the case (provided A and B   have stable clocks).   A measurement is accomplished by sending a Delay Measurement (DM)   query message over the channel to B that contains the following   timestamp:      T1: the time the DM query message is transmitted from A.   When the message arrives at B, the following timestamp is recorded in   the message:      T2: the time the DM query message is received at B.   At this point, B transmits the message back to A, recording within it   the following timestamp:      T3: the time the DM response message is transmitted from B.   When the message arrives back at A, the following timestamp is   recorded in the message:      T4: the time the DM response message is received back at A.   (Strictly speaking, it is not necessary that the fourth timestamp,   T4, actually be written in the message, but this is convenient for   some implementations and useful if the message is to be forwarded on   to an external measurement system.)   At this point, A can compute the two-way channel delay associated   with the channel as      two-way channel delay = (T4 - T1) - (T3 - T2)   and the round-trip delay as      round-trip delay = T4 - T1.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   If the clocks of A and B are known at A to be synchronized, then both   one-way delay values, as well as the two-way channel delay, can be   computed at A as      forward one-way delay = T2 - T1      reverse one-way delay = T4 - T3      two-way channel delay = forward delay + reverse delay.   Note that this formula for the two-way channel delay reduces to the   one previously given, and clock synchronization is not required to   compute this metric.2.5.  Delay Variation Measurement   Inter-Packet Delay Variation (IPDV) and Packet Delay Variation (PDV)   [RFC5481] are performance metrics derived from one-way delay   measurement and are important in some applications.  IPDV represents   the difference between the one-way delays of successive packets in a   stream.  PDV, given a measurement test interval, represents the   difference between the one-way delay of a packet in the interval and   that of the packet in the interval with the minimum delay.   IPDV and PDV measurements can therefore be derived from delay   measurements obtained through the procedures inSection 2.4.  An   important point regarding delay variation measurement, however, is   that it can be carried out based on one-way delay measurements even   when the clocks of the two systems involved in those measurements are   not synchronized with one another.2.6.  Unidirectional Measurement   In the case that the channel from A to (B1, ..., Bk) (where B2, ...,   Bk refers to the point-to-multipoint case) is unidirectional, i.e.,   is a unidirectional LSP, LM and DM measurements can be carried out at   B1, ..., Bk instead of at A.   For LM, this is accomplished by initiating an LM operation at A and   carrying out the same procedures as used for bidirectional channels,   except that no responses from B1, ..., Bk to A are generated.   Instead, each terminal node B uses the A_TxP and B_RxP values in the   LM messages it receives to compute the receive loss associated with   the channel in essentially the same way as described previously, that   is:   B_RxLoss[n-1,n] = (A_TxP[n] - A_TxP[n-1]) - (B_RxP[n] - B_RxP[n-1])Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   For DM, of course, only the forward one-way delay can be measured and   the clock synchronization requirement applies.   Alternatively, if an out-of-band channel from a terminal node B back   to A is available, the LM and DM message responses can be   communicated to A via this channel so that the measurements can be   carried out at A.2.7.  Dyadic Measurement   The basic procedures for bidirectional measurement assume that the   measurement process is conducted by and for the querier node A.   Instead, it is possible, with only minor variation of these   procedures, to conduct a dyadic or "dual-ended" measurement process   in which both nodes A and B perform loss or delay measurement based   on the same message flow.  This is achieved by stipulating that A   copy the third and fourth counter or timestamp values from a response   message into the third and fourth slots of the next query, which are   otherwise unused, thereby providing B with equivalent information to   that learned by A.   The dyadic procedure has the advantage of halving the number of   messages required for both A and B to perform a given kind of   measurement, but comes at the expense of each node's ability to   control its own measurement process independently, and introduces   additional operational complexity into the measurement protocols.   The quantity of measurement traffic is also expected to be low   relative to that of user traffic, particularly when 64-bit counters   are used for LM.  Consequently, this document does not specify a   dyadic operational mode.  However, it is still possible, and may be   useful, for A to perform the extra copy, thereby providing additional   information to B even when its participation in the measurement   process is passive.2.8.  Loopback Measurement   Some bidirectional channels may be placed into a loopback state such   that messages are looped back to the sender without modification.  In   this situation, LM and DM procedures can be used to carry out   measurements associated with the circular path.  This is done by   generating "queries" with the Response flag set to 1.   For LM, the loss computation in this case is:   A_Loss[n-1,n] = (A_TxP[n] - A_TxP[n-1]) - (A_RxP[n] - A_RxP[n-1])Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   For DM, the round-trip delay is computed.  In this case, however, the   remote endpoint processing time component reflects only the time   required to loop the message from channel input to channel output.2.9.  Measurement Considerations   A number of additional considerations apply in practice to the   measurement methods summarized above.2.9.1.  Types of Channels   There are several types of channels in MPLS networks over which loss   and delay measurement may be conducted.  The channel type may   restrict the kinds of measurement that can be performed.  In all   cases, LM and DM messages flow over the MPLS Generic Associated   Channel (G-ACh), which is described in detail in [RFC5586].   Broadly, a channel in an MPLS network may be either a link, a Label   Switched Path (LSP) [RFC3031], or a pseudowire [RFC3985].  Links are   bidirectional and are also referred to as MPLS sections; see   [RFC5586] and [RFC5960].  Pseudowires are bidirectional.  Label   Switched Paths may be either unidirectional or bidirectional.   The LM and DM protocols discussed in this document are initiated from   a single node: the querier.  A query message may be received either   by a single node or by multiple nodes, depending on the nature of the   channel.  In the latter case, these protocols provide point-to-   multipoint measurement capabilities.2.9.2.  Quality of Service   Quality of Service (QoS) capabilities, in the form of the   Differentiated Services architecture, apply to MPLS as specified in   [RFC3270] and [RFC5462].  Different classes of traffic are   distinguished by the three-bit Traffic Class (TC) field of an MPLS   Label Stack Entry (LSE).  Delay measurement applies on a per-traffic-   class basis, and the TC values of LSEs above the G-ACh Label (GAL)   that precedes a DM message are significant.  Packet loss can be   measured with respect either to the channel as a whole or to a   specific traffic class.2.9.3.  Measurement Point Location   The location of the measurement points for loss and delay within the   sending and receiving nodes is implementation dependent but directly   affects the nature of the measurements.  For example, a sending   implementation may or may not consider a packet to be "lost", for LM   purposes, that was discarded prior to transmission for queuing-Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   related reasons; conversely, a receiving implementation may or may   not consider a packet to be "lost", for LM purposes, if it was   physically received but discarded during receive-path processing.   The location of delay measurement points similarly determines what,   precisely, is being measured.  The principal consideration here is   that the behavior of an implementation in these respects MUST be made   clear to the user.2.9.4.  Equal Cost Multipath   Equal Cost Multipath (ECMP) is the behavior of distributing packets   across multiple alternate paths toward a destination.  The use of   ECMP in MPLS networks is described inBCP 128 [RFC4928].  The typical   result of ECMP being performed on an LSP that is subject to delay   measurement will be that only the delay of one of the available paths   is, and can be, measured.   The effects of ECMP on loss measurement will depend on the LM mode.   In the case of direct LM, the measurement will account for any   packets lost between the sender and the receiver, regardless of how   many paths exist between them.  However, the presence of ECMP   increases the likelihood of misordering both of LM messages relative   to data packets and of the LM messages themselves.  Such misorderings   tend to create unmeasurable intervals and thus degrade the accuracy   of loss measurement.  The effects of ECMP are similar for inferred   LM, with the additional caveat that, unless the test packets are   specially constructed so as to probe all available paths, the loss   characteristics of one or more of the alternate paths cannot be   accounted for.2.9.5.  Intermediate Nodes   In the case of an LSP, it may be desirable to measure the loss or   delay to or from an intermediate node as well as between LSP   endpoints.  This can be done in principle by setting the Time to Live   (TTL) field in the outer LSE appropriately when targeting a   measurement message to an intermediate node.  This procedure may   fail, however, if hardware-assisted measurement is in use, because   the processing of the packet by the intermediate node occurs only as   the result of TTL expiry, and the handling of TTL expiry may occur at   a later processing stage in the implementation than the hardware-   assisted measurement function.  The motivation for conducting   measurements to intermediate nodes is often an attempt to localize a   problem that has been detected on the LSP.  In this case, if   intermediate nodes are not capable of performing hardware-assisted   measurement, a less accurate -- but usually sufficient -- software-   based measurement can be conducted instead.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 20112.9.6.  Different Transmit and Receive Interfaces   The overview of the bidirectional measurement process presented inSection 2 is also applicable when the transmit and receive interfaces   at A or B differ from one another.  Some additional considerations,   however, do apply in this case:   o  If different clocks are associated with transmit and receive      processing, these clocks must be synchronized in order to compute      the two-way delay.   o  The DM protocol specified in this document requires that the      timestamp formats used by the interfaces that receive a DM query      and transmit a DM response agree.   o  The LM protocol specified in this document supports both 32-bit      and 64-bit counter sizes, but the use of 32-bit counters at any of      the up to four interfaces involved in an LM operation will result      in 32-bit LM calculations for both directions of the channel.2.9.7.  External Post-Processing   In some circumstances, it may be desirable to carry out the final   measurement computation at an external post-processing device   dedicated to the purpose.  This can be achieved in supporting   implementations by, for example, configuring the querier, in the case   of a bidirectional measurement session, to forward each response it   receives to the post-processor via any convenient protocol.  The   unidirectional case can be handled similarly through configuration of   the receiver or by including an instruction in query messages for the   receiver to respond out-of-band to the appropriate return address.   Post-processing devices may have the ability to store measurement   data for an extended period and to generate a variety of useful   statistics from them.  External post-processing also allows the   measurement process to be completely stateless at the querier and   responder.2.9.8.  Loss Measurement Modes   The summary of loss measurement at the beginning ofSection 2 made   reference to the "count of packets" transmitted and received over a   channel.  If the counted packets are the packets flowing over the   channel in the data plane, the loss measurement is said to operate in   "direct mode".  If, on the other hand, the counted packets are   selected control packets from which the approximate loss   characteristics of the channel are being inferred, the loss   measurement is said to operate in "inferred mode".Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   Direct LM has the advantage of being able to provide perfect loss   accounting when it is available.  There are, however, several   constraints associated with direct LM.   For accurate direct LM to occur, packets must not be sent between the   time the transmit count for an outbound LM message is determined and   the time the message is actually transmitted.  Similarly, packets   must not be received and processed between the time an LM message is   received and the time the receive count for the message is   determined.  If these "synchronization conditions" do not hold, the   LM message counters will not reflect the true state of the data   plane, with the result that, for example, the receive count of B may   be greater than the transmit count of A, and attempts to compute loss   by taking the difference will yield an invalid result.  This   requirement for synchronization between LM message counters and the   data plane may require special support from hardware-based forwarding   implementations.   A limitation of direct LM is that it may be difficult or impossible   to apply in cases where the channel is an LSP and the LSP label at   the receiver is either nonexistent or fails to identify a unique   sending node.  The first case happens when Penultimate Hop Popping   (PHP) is used on the LSP, and the second case generally holds for   LSPs based on the Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) [RFC5036] as   opposed to, for example, those based on Traffic Engineering   extensions to the Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP-TE) [RFC3209].   These conditions may make it infeasible for the receiver to identify   the data-plane packets associated with a particular source and LSP in   order to count them, or to infer the source and LSP context   associated with an LM message.  Direct LM is also vulnerable to   disruption in the event that the ingress or egress interface   associated with an LSP changes during the LSP's lifetime.   Inferred LM works in the same manner as direct LM except that the   counted packets are special control packets, called test messages,   generated by the sender.  Test messages may be either packets   explicitly constructed and used for LM or packets with a different   primary purpose, such as those associated with a Bidirectional   Forwarding Detection (BFD) [RFC5884] session.   The synchronization conditions discussed above for direct LM also   apply to inferred LM, the only difference being that the required   synchronization is now between the LM counters and the test message   generation process.  Protocol and application designers MUST take   these synchronization requirements into account when developing tools   for inferred LM, and make their behavior in this regard clear to the   user.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   Inferred LM provides only an approximate view of the loss level   associated with a channel, but is typically applicable even in cases   where direct LM is not.2.9.9.  Loss Measurement Scope   In the case of direct LM, where data-plane packets are counted, there   are different possibilities for which kinds of packets are included   in the count and which are excluded.  The set of packets counted for   LM is called the "loss measurement scope".  As noted above, one   factor affecting the LM scope is whether all data packets are counted   or only those belonging to a particular traffic class.  Another is   whether various "auxiliary" flows associated with a data channel are   counted, such as packets flowing over the G-ACh.  Implementations   MUST make their supported LM scopes clear to the user, and care must   be taken to ensure that the scopes of the channel endpoints agree.2.9.10.  Delay Measurement Accuracy   The delay measurement procedures described in this document are   designed to facilitate hardware-assisted measurement and to function   in the same way whether or not such hardware assistance is used.  The   measurement accuracy will be determined by how closely the transmit   and receive timestamps correspond to actual packet departure and   arrival times.   As noted inSection 2.4, measurement of one-way delay requires clock   synchronization between the devices involved, while two-way delay   measurement does not involve direct comparison between non-local   timestamps and thus has no synchronization requirement.  The   measurement accuracy will be limited by the quality of the local   clock and, in the case of one-way delay measurement, by the quality   of the synchronization.2.9.11.  Delay Measurement Timestamp Format   There are two significant timestamp formats in common use: the   timestamp format of the Network Time Protocol (NTP), described in   [RFC5905], and the timestamp format used in the IEEE 1588 Precision   Time Protocol (PTP) [IEEE1588].   The NTP format has the advantages of wide use and long deployment in   the Internet, and it was specifically designed to make the   computation of timestamp differences as simple and efficient as   possible.  On the other hand, there is now also a significant   deployment of equipment designed to support the PTP format.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   The approach taken in this document is therefore to include in DM   messages fields that identify the timestamp formats used by the two   devices involved in a DM operation.  This implies that a node   attempting to carry out a DM operation may be faced with the problem   of computing with and possibly reconciling different timestamp   formats.  To ensure interoperability, it is necessary that support of   at least one timestamp format is mandatory.  This specification   requires the support of the IEEE 1588 PTP format.  Timestamp format   support requirements are discussed in detail inSection 3.4.3.  Message Formats   Loss Measurement and Delay Measurement messages flow over the MPLS   Generic Associated Channel (G-ACh) [RFC5586].  Thus, a packet   containing an LM or DM message contains an MPLS label stack, with the   G-ACh Label (GAL) at the bottom of the stack.  The GAL is followed by   an Associated Channel Header (ACH), which identifies the message   type, and the message body follows the ACH.   This document defines the following ACH Channel Types:      MPLS Direct Loss Measurement (DLM)      MPLS Inferred Loss Measurement (ILM)      MPLS Delay Measurement (DM)      MPLS Direct Loss and Delay Measurement (DLM+DM)      MPLS Inferred Loss and Delay Measurement (ILM+DM)   The message formats for direct and inferred LM are identical.  The   formats of the DLM+DM and ILM+DM messages are also identical.   For these channel types, the ACH SHALL NOT be followed by the ACH TLV   Header defined in [RFC5586].   The fixed-format portion of a message MAY be followed by a block of   Type-Length-Value (TLV) fields.  The TLV block provides an extensible   way of attaching subsidiary information to LM and DM messages.   Several such TLV fields are defined below.   All integer values for fields defined in this document SHALL be   encoded in network byte order.3.1.  Loss Measurement Message Format   The format of a Loss Measurement message, which follows the   Associated Channel Header (ACH), is as follows:Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |Version| Flags |  Control Code |        Message Length         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       | DFlags|  OTF  |                   Reserved                    |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                       Session Identifier          |    DS     |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                        Origin Timestamp                       |       |                                                               |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                           Counter 1                           |       |                                                               |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       .                                                               .       .                                                               .       .                                                               .       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                           Counter 4                           |       |                                                               |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       ~                           TLV Block                           ~       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                      Loss Measurement Message Format   Reserved fields MUST be set to 0 and ignored upon receipt.  The   possible values for the remaining fields are as follows.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   Field                 Meaning   --------------------- -----------------------------------------------   Version               Protocol version   Flags                 Message control flags   Control Code          Code identifying the query or response type   Message Length        Total length of this message in bytes   Data Format Flags     Flags specifying the format of message data   (DFlags)   Origin Timestamp      Format of the Origin Timestamp field   Format (OTF)   Reserved              Reserved for future specification   Session Identifier    Set arbitrarily by the querier   Differentiated        Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) being   Services (DS) Field   measured   Origin Timestamp      64-bit field for query message transmission                         timestamp   Counter 1-4           64-bit fields for LM counter values   TLV Block             Optional block of Type-Length-Value fields   The possible values for these fields are as follows.   Version: Currently set to 0.   Flags: The format of the Flags field is shown below.                               +-+-+-+-+                               |R|T|0|0|                               +-+-+-+-+                      Loss Measurement Message Flags   The meanings of the flag bits are:      R: Query/Response indicator.  Set to 0 for a Query and 1 for a      Response.      T: Traffic-class-specific measurement indicator.  Set to 1 when      the measurement operation is scoped to packets of a particular      traffic class (DSCP value), and 0 otherwise.  When set to 1, the      DS field of the message indicates the measured traffic class.      0: Set to 0.   Control Code: Set as follows according to whether the message is a   Query or a Response as identified by the R flag.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011      For a Query:         0x0: In-band Response Requested.  Indicates that this query has         been sent over a bidirectional channel and the response is         expected over the same channel.         0x1: Out-of-band Response Requested.  Indicates that the         response should be sent via an out-of-band channel.         0x2: No Response Requested.  Indicates that no response to the         query should be sent.  This mode can be used, for example, if         all nodes involved are being controlled by a Network Management         System.      For a Response:         Codes 0x0-0xF are reserved for non-error responses.  Error         response codes imply that the response does not contain valid         measurement data.         0x1: Success.  Indicates that the operation was successful.         0x2: Notification - Data Format Invalid.  Indicates that the         query was processed, but the format of the data fields in this         response may be inconsistent.  Consequently, these data fields         MUST NOT be used for measurement.         0x3: Notification - Initialization in Progress.  Indicates that         the query was processed but this response does not contain         valid measurement data because the responder's initialization         process has not completed.         0x4: Notification - Data Reset Occurred.  Indicates that the         query was processed, but a reset has recently occurred that may         render the data in this response inconsistent relative to         earlier responses.         0x5: Notification - Resource Temporarily Unavailable.         Indicates that the query was processed, but resources were         unavailable to complete the requested measurement and that,         consequently, this response does not contain valid measurement         data.         0x10: Error - Unspecified Error.  Indicates that the operation         failed for an unspecified reason.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011         0x11: Error - Unsupported Version.  Indicates that the         operation failed because the protocol version supplied in the         query message is not supported.         0x12: Error - Unsupported Control Code.  Indicates that the         operation failed because the Control Code requested an         operation that is not available for this channel.         0x13: Error - Unsupported Data Format.  Indicates that the         operation failed because the data format specified in the query         is not supported.         0x14: Error - Authentication Failure.  Indicates that the         operation failed because the authentication data supplied in         the query was missing or incorrect.         0x15: Error - Invalid Destination Node Identifier.  Indicates         that the operation failed because the Destination Node         Identifier supplied in the query is not an identifier of this         node.         0x16: Error - Connection Mismatch.  Indicates that the         operation failed because the channel identifier supplied in the         query did not match the channel over which the query was         received.         0x17: Error - Unsupported Mandatory TLV Object.  Indicates that         the operation failed because a TLV Object received in the query         and marked as mandatory is not supported.         0x18: Error - Unsupported Query Interval.  Indicates that the         operation failed because the query message rate exceeded the         configured threshold.         0x19: Error - Administrative Block.  Indicates that the         operation failed because it has been administratively         disallowed.         0x1A: Error - Resource Unavailable.  Indicates that the         operation failed because node resources were not available.         0x1B: Error - Resource Released.  Indicates that the operation         failed because node resources for this measurement session were         administratively released.         0x1C: Error - Invalid Message.  Indicates that the operation         failed because the received query message was malformed.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011         0x1D: Error - Protocol Error.  Indicates that the operation         failed because a protocol error was found in the received query         message.   Message Length: Set to the total length of this message in bytes,   including the Version, Flags, Control Code, and Message Length fields   as well as the TLV Block, if any.   DFlags: The format of the DFlags field is shown below.                               +-+-+-+-+                               |X|B|0|0|                               +-+-+-+-+                             Data Format Flags   The meanings of the DFlags bits are:      X: Extended counter format indicator.  Indicates the use of      extended (64-bit) counter values.  Initialized to 1 upon creation      (and prior to transmission) of an LM Query and copied from an LM      Query to an LM response.  Set to 0 when the LM message is      transmitted or received over an interface that writes 32-bit      counter values.      B: Octet (byte) count.  When set to 1, indicates that the Counter      1-4 fields represent octet counts.  The octet count applies to all      packets within the LM scope (Section 2.9.9), and the octet count      of a packet sent or received over a channel includes the total      length of that packet (but excludes headers, labels, or framing of      the channel itself).  When set to 0, indicates that the Counter      1-4 fields represent packet counts.      0: Set to 0.   Origin Timestamp Format: The format of the Origin Timestamp field, as   specified inSection 3.4.   Session Identifier: Set arbitrarily in a query and copied in the   response, if any.  This field uniquely identifies a measurement   operation (also called a session) that consists of a sequence of   messages.  All messages in the sequence have the same Session   Identifier.   DS: When the T flag is set to 1, this field is set to the DSCP value   [RFC3260] that corresponds to the traffic class being measured.  For   MPLS, where the traffic class of a channel is identified by the   three-bit Traffic Class in the channel's LSE [RFC5462], this fieldFrost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   SHOULD be set to the Class Selector Codepoint [RFC2474] that   corresponds to that Traffic Class.  When the T flag is set to 0, the   value of this field is arbitrary, and the field can be considered   part of the Session Identifier.   Origin Timestamp: Timestamp recording the transmit time of the query   message.   Counter 1-4: Referring toSection 2.2, when a query is sent from A,   Counter 1 is set to A_TxP and the other counter fields are set to 0.   When the query is received at B, Counter 2 is set to B_RxP.  At this   point, B copies Counter 1 to Counter 3 and Counter 2 to Counter 4,   and re-initializes Counter 1 and Counter 2 to 0.  When B transmits   the response, Counter 1 is set to B_TxP.  When the response is   received at A, Counter 2 is set to A_RxP.   The mapping of counter types such as A_TxP to the Counter 1-4 fields   is designed to ensure that transmit counter values are always written   at the same fixed offset in the packet, and likewise for receive   counters.  This property may be important for hardware processing.   When a 32-bit counter value is written to one of the counter fields,   that value SHALL be written to the low-order 32 bits of the field;   the high-order 32 bits of the field MUST, in this case, be set to 0.   TLV Block: Zero or more TLV fields.3.2.  Delay Measurement Message Format   The format of a Delay Measurement message, which follows the   Associated Channel Header (ACH), is as follows:Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |Version| Flags |  Control Code |        Message Length         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  QTF  |  RTF  | RPTF  |              Reserved                 |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                       Session Identifier          |    DS     |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                           Timestamp 1                         |       |                                                               |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       .                                                               .       .                                                               .       .                                                               .       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                           Timestamp 4                         |       |                                                               |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       ~                           TLV Block                           ~       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                     Delay Measurement Message Format   The meanings of the fields are summarized in the following table.   Field                 Meaning   --------------------- -----------------------------------------------   Version               Protocol version   Flags                 Message control flags   Control Code          Code identifying the query or response type   Message Length        Total length of this message in bytes   QTF                   Querier timestamp format   RTF                   Responder timestamp format   RPTF                  Responder's preferred timestamp format   Reserved              Reserved for future specification   Session Identifier    Set arbitrarily by the querier   Differentiated        Differentiated Services Code Point (DSCP) being   Services (DS) Field   measured   Timestamp 1-4         64-bit timestamp values   TLV Block             Optional block of Type-Length-Value fields   Reserved fields MUST be set to 0 and ignored upon receipt.  The   possible values for the remaining fields are as follows.   Version: Currently set to 0.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   Flags: As specified inSection 3.1.  The T flag in a DM message is   set to 1.   Control Code: As specified inSection 3.1.   Message Length: Set to the total length of this message in bytes,   including the Version, Flags, Control Code, and Message Length fields   as well as the TLV Block, if any.   Querier Timestamp Format: The format of the timestamp values written   by the querier, as specified inSection 3.4.   Responder Timestamp Format: The format of the timestamp values   written by the responder, as specified inSection 3.4.   Responder's Preferred Timestamp Format: The timestamp format   preferred by the responder, as specified inSection 3.4.   Session Identifier: As specified inSection 3.1.   DS: As specified inSection 3.1.   Timestamp 1-4: Referring toSection 2.4, when a query is sent from A,   Timestamp 1 is set to T1 and the other timestamp fields are set to 0.   When the query is received at B, Timestamp 2 is set to T2.  At this   point, B copies Timestamp 1 to Timestamp 3 and Timestamp 2 to   Timestamp 4, and re-initializes Timestamp 1 and Timestamp 2 to 0.   When B transmits the response, Timestamp 1 is set to T3.  When the   response is received at A, Timestamp 2 is set to T4.  The actual   formats of the timestamp fields written by A and B are indicated by   the Querier Timestamp Format and Responder Timestamp Format fields   respectively.   The mapping of timestamps to the Timestamp 1-4 fields is designed to   ensure that transmit timestamps are always written at the same fixed   offset in the packet, and likewise for receive timestamps.  This   property is important for hardware processing.   TLV Block: Zero or more TLV fields.3.3.  Combined Loss/Delay Measurement Message Format   The format of a combined Loss and Delay Measurement message, which   follows the Associated Channel Header (ACH), is as follows:Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |Version| Flags |  Control Code |        Message Length         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       | DFlags|  QTF  |  RTF  | RPTF  |           Reserved            |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                       Session Identifier          |    DS     |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                           Timestamp 1                         |       |                                                               |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       .                                                               .       .                                                               .       .                                                               .       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                           Timestamp 4                         |       |                                                               |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                           Counter 1                           |       |                                                               |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       .                                                               .       .                                                               .       .                                                               .       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                           Counter 4                           |       |                                                               |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       ~                           TLV Block                           ~       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                   Loss/Delay Measurement Message Format   The fields of this message have the same meanings as the   corresponding fields in the LM and DM message formats, except that   the roles of the OTF and Origin Timestamp fields for LM are here   played by the QTF and Timestamp 1 fields, respectively.3.4.  Timestamp Field Formats   The following timestamp format field values are specified in this   document:      0: Null timestamp format.  This value is a placeholder indicating      that the timestamp field does not contain a meaningful timestamp.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011      1: Sequence number.  This value indicates that the timestamp field      is to be viewed as a simple 64-bit sequence number.  This provides      a simple solution for applications that do not require a real      absolute timestamp, but only an indication of message ordering; an      example is LM exception detection.      2: Network Time Protocol version 4 64-bit timestamp format      [RFC5905].  This format consists of a 32-bit seconds field      followed by a 32-bit fractional seconds field, so that it can be      regarded as a fixed-point 64-bit quantity.      3: Low-order 64 bits of the IEEE 1588-2008 (1588v2) Precision Time      Protocol timestamp format [IEEE1588].  This truncated format      consists of a 32-bit seconds field followed by a 32-bit      nanoseconds field, and is the same as the IEEE 1588v1 timestamp      format.   Timestamp formats of n < 64 bits in size SHALL be encoded in the   64-bit timestamp fields specified in this document using the n high-   order bits of the field.  The remaining 64 - n low-order bits in the   field SHOULD be set to 0 and MUST be ignored when reading the field.   To ensure that it is possible to find an interoperable mode between   implementations, it is necessary to select one timestamp format as   the default.  The timestamp format chosen as the default is the   truncated IEEE 1588 PTP format (format code 3 in the list above);   this format MUST be supported.  The rationale for this choice is   discussed inAppendix A.  Implementations SHOULD also be capable of   reading timestamps written in NTPv4 64-bit format and reconciling   them internally with PTP timestamps for measurement purposes.   Support for other timestamp formats is OPTIONAL.   The implementation MUST make clear which timestamp formats it   supports and the extent of its support for computation with and   reconciliation of different formats for measurement purposes.3.5.  TLV Objects   The TLV Block in LM and DM messages consists of zero or more objects   with the following format:        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |     Type      |    Length     |        Value                  ~       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                                TLV FormatFrost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 29]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   The Type and Length fields are each 8 bits long, and the Length field   indicates the size in bytes of the Value field, which can therefore   be up to 255 bytes long.   The Type space is divided into Mandatory and Optional subspaces:   Type Range     Semantics   -------------- ---------   0-127          Mandatory   128-255        Optional   Upon receipt of a query message including an unrecognized mandatory   TLV object, the recipient MUST respond with an Unsupported Mandatory   TLV Object error code.   The types defined are as follows:   Type           Definition   -------------- ---------------------------------   Mandatory   0              Padding - copy in response   1              Return Address   2              Session Query Interval   3              Loopback Request   4-126          Unallocated   127            Experimental use   Optional   128            Padding - do not copy in response   129            Destination Address   130            Source Address   131-254        Unallocated   255            Experimental use3.5.1.  Padding   The two padding objects permit the augmentation of packet size; this   is mainly useful for delay measurement.  The type of padding   indicates whether the padding supplied by the querier is to be copied   to, or omitted from, the response.  Asymmetrical padding may be   useful when responses are delivered out-of-band or when different   maximum transmission unit sizes apply to the two components of a   bidirectional channel.   More than one padding object MAY be present, in which case they MUST   be contiguous.  The Value field of a padding object is arbitrary.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 30]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 20113.5.2.  Addressing   The addressing objects have the following format:        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |     Type      |    Length     |        Address Family         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       ~                           Address                             ~       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                         Addressing Object Format   The Address Family field indicates the type of the address, and it   SHALL be set to one of the assigned values in the "IANA Address   Family Numbers" registry.   The Source and Destination Address objects indicate the addresses of   the sender and the intended recipient of the message, respectively.   The Source Address of a query message SHOULD be used as the   destination for an out-of-band response unless some other out-of-band   response mechanism has been configured, and unless a Return Address   object is present, in which case the Return Address specifies the   target of the response.  The Return Address object MUST NOT appear in   a response.3.5.3.  Loopback Request   The Loopback Request object, when included in a query, indicates a   request that the query message be returned to the sender unmodified.   This object has a Length of 0.   Upon receiving the reflected query message back from the responder,   the querier MUST NOT retransmit the message.  Information that   uniquely identifies the original query source, such as a Source   Address object, can be included to enable the querier to   differentiate one of its own loopback queries from a loopback query   initiated by the far end.   This object may be useful, for example, when the querier is   interested only in the round-trip delay metric.  In this case, no   support for delay measurement is required at the responder at all,   other than the ability to recognize a DM query that includes this   object and return it unmodified.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 31]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 20113.5.4.  Session Query Interval   The Value field of the Session Query Interval object is a 32-bit   unsigned integer that specifies a time interval in milliseconds.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |     Type      |    Length     |            Session Query      >       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       <        Interval (ms)          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                   Session Query Interval Object Format   This time interval indicates the interval between successive query   messages in a specific measurement session.  The purpose of the   Session Query Interval (SQI) object is to enable the querier and   responder of a measurement session to agree on a query rate.  The   procedures for handling this object SHALL be as follows:   1.  The querier notifies the responder that it wishes to be informed       of the responder's minimum query interval for this session by       including the SQI object in its query messages, with a Value of       0.   2.  When the responder receives a query that includes an SQI object       with a Value of 0, the responder includes an SQI object in the       response with the Value set to the minimum query interval it       supports for this session.   3.  When the querier receives a response that includes an SQI object,       it selects a query interval for the session that is greater than       or equal to the Value specified in the SQI object and adjusts its       query transmission rate accordingly, including in each subsequent       query an SQI object with a Value equal to the selected query       interval.  Once a response to one of these subsequent queries has       been received, the querier infers that the responder has been       apprised of the selected query interval and MAY then stop       including the SQI object in queries associated with this session.   Similar procedures allow the query rate to be changed during the   course of the session by either the querier or the responder.  For   example, to inform the querier of a change in the minimum supported   query interval, the responder begins including a corresponding SQI   object in its responses, and the querier adjusts its query rate if   necessary and includes a corresponding SQI object in its queries   until a response is received.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 32]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   Shorter query intervals (i.e., higher query rates) provide finer   measurement granularity at the expense of additional load on   measurement endpoints and the network; seeSection 6 for further   discussion.4.  Operation4.1.  Operational Overview   A loss or delay measurement operation, also called a session, is   controlled by the querier and consists of a sequence of query   messages associated with a particular channel and a common set of   measurement parameters.  If the session parameters include a response   request, then the receiving node or nodes will (under normal   conditions) generate a response message for each query message   received, and these responses are also considered part of the   session.  All query and response messages in a session carry a common   session identifier.   Measurement sessions are initiated at the discretion of the network   operator and are terminated either at the operator's request or as   the result of an error condition.  A session may be as brief as a   single message exchange, for example when a DM query is used by the   operator to "ping" a remote node, or it may extend throughout the   lifetime of the channel.   When a session is initiated for which responses are requested, the   querier SHOULD initialize a timer, called the SessionResponseTimeout,   that indicates how long the querier will wait for a response before   abandoning the session and notifying the user that a timeout has   occurred.  This timer persists for the lifetime of the session and is   reset each time a response message for the session is received.   When a query message is received that requests a response, a variety   of exceptional conditions may arise that prevent the responder from   generating a response that contains valid measurement data.  Such   conditions fall broadly into two classes: transient exceptions from   which recovery is possible and fatal exceptions that require   termination of the session.  When an exception arises, the responder   SHOULD generate a response with an appropriate Notification or Error   control code according to whether the exception is, respectively,   transient or fatal.  When the querier receives an Error response, the   session MUST be terminated and the user informed.   A common example of a transient exception occurs when a new session   is initiated and the responder requires a period of time to become   ready before it can begin providing useful responses.  The response   control code corresponding to this situation is Notification -Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 33]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   Initialization in Progress.  Typical examples of fatal exceptions are   cases where the querier has requested a type of measurement that the   responder does not support or where a query message is malformed.   When initiating a session, the querier SHOULD employ the Session   Query Interval mechanism (Section 3.5.4) to establish a mutually   agreeable query rate with the responder.  Responders SHOULD employ   rate-limiting mechanisms to guard against the possibility of   receiving an excessive quantity of query messages.4.2.  Loss Measurement Procedures4.2.1.  Initiating a Loss Measurement Operation   An LM operation for a particular channel consists of sending a   sequence (LM[1], LM[2], ...) of LM query messages over the channel at   a specific rate and processing the responses received, if any.  As   described inSection 2.2, the packet loss associated with the channel   during the operation is computed as a delta between successive   messages; these deltas can be accumulated to obtain a running total   of the packet loss for the channel or be used to derive related   metrics such as the average loss rate.   The query message transmission rate MUST be sufficiently high, given   the LM message counter size (which can be either 32 or 64 bits) and   the speed and minimum packet size of the underlying channel, that the   ambiguity condition noted inSection 2.2 cannot arise.  In evaluating   this rate, the implementation SHOULD assume that the counter size is   32 bits unless explicitly configured otherwise or unless (in the case   of a bidirectional channel) all local and remote interfaces involved   in the LM operation are known to be 64-bit-capable, which can be   inferred from the value of the X flag in an LM response.4.2.2.  Transmitting a Loss Measurement Query   When transmitting an LM Query, the Version field MUST be set to 0.   The R flag MUST be set to 0.  The T flag SHALL be set to 1 if, and   only if, the measurement is specific to a particular traffic class,   in which case the DS field SHALL identify that traffic class.   The X flag MUST be set to 1 if the transmitting interface writes   64-bit LM counters and otherwise MUST be set to 0 to indicate that   32-bit counters are written.  The B flag SHALL be set to 1 to   indicate that the counter fields contain octet counts or to 0 to   indicate packet counts.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 34]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   The Control Code field MUST be set to one of the values for Query   messages listed inSection 3.1; if the channel is unidirectional,   this field MUST NOT be set to 0x0 (Query: In-band Response   Requested).   The Session Identifier field can be set arbitrarily.   The Origin Timestamp field SHALL be set to the time at which this   message is transmitted, and the Origin Timestamp Format field MUST be   set to indicate its format, according toSection 3.4.   The Counter 1 field SHOULD be set to the total count of units   (packets or octets, according to the B flag) transmitted over the   channel prior to this LM Query, or to 0 if this is the beginning of a   measurement session for which counter data is not yet available.  The   Counter 2 field MUST be set to 0.  If a response was previously   received in this measurement session, the Counter 1 and Counter 2   fields of the most recent such response MAY be copied to the Counter   3 and Counter 4 fields, respectively, of this query; otherwise, the   Counter 3 and Counter 4 fields MUST be set to 0.4.2.3.  Receiving a Loss Measurement Query   Upon receipt of an LM Query message, the Counter 2 field SHOULD be   set to the total count of units (packets or octets, according to the   B flag) received over the channel prior to this LM Query.  If the   receiving interface writes 32-bit LM counters, the X flag MUST be set   to 0.   At this point, the LM Query message must be inspected.  If the   Control Code field is set to 0x2 (No Response Requested), an LM   Response message MUST NOT be transmitted.  If the Control Code field   is set to 0x0 (In-band Response Requested) or 0x1 (Out-of-band   Response Requested), then an in-band or out-of-band response,   respectively, SHOULD be transmitted unless this has been prevented by   an administrative, security, or congestion control mechanism.   In the case of a fatal exception that prevents the requested   measurement from being made, the error SHOULD be reported, via either   a response, if one was requested, or else as a notification to the   user.4.2.4.  Transmitting a Loss Measurement Response   When constructing a Response to an LM Query, the Version field MUST   be set to 0.  The R flag MUST be set to 1.  The value of the T flag   MUST be copied from the LM Query.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 35]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   The X flag MUST be set to 0 if the transmitting interface writes   32-bit LM counters; otherwise, its value MUST be copied from the LM   Query.  The B flag MUST be copied from the LM Query.   The Session Identifier, Origin Timestamp, and Origin Timestamp Format   fields MUST be copied from the LM Query.  The Counter 1 and Counter 2   fields from the LM Query MUST be copied to the Counter 3 and Counter   4 fields, respectively, of the LM Response.   The Control Code field MUST be set to one of the values for Response   messages listed inSection 3.1.  The value 0x10 (Unspecified Error)   SHOULD NOT be used if one of the other more specific error codes is   applicable.   If the response is transmitted in-band, the Counter 1 field SHOULD be   set to the total count of units transmitted over the channel prior to   this LM Response.  If the response is transmitted out-of-band, the   Counter 1 field MUST be set to 0.  In either case, the Counter 2   field MUST be set to 0.4.2.5.  Receiving a Loss Measurement Response   Upon in-band receipt of an LM Response message, the Counter 2 field   is set to the total count of units received over the channel prior to   this LM Response.  If the receiving interface writes 32-bit LM   counters, the X flag is set to 0.  (Since the life of the LM message   in the network has ended at this point, it is up to the receiver   whether these final modifications are made to the packet.  If the   message is to be forwarded on for external post-processing   (Section 2.9.7), then these modifications MUST be made.)   Upon out-of-band receipt of an LM Response message, the Counter 1 and   Counter 2 fields MUST NOT be used for purposes of loss measurement.   If the Control Code in an LM Response is anything other than 0x1   (Success), the counter values in the response MUST NOT be used for   purposes of loss measurement.  If the Control Code indicates an error   condition, or if the response message is invalid, the LM operation   MUST be terminated and an appropriate notification to the user   generated.4.2.6.  Loss Calculation   Calculation of packet loss is carried out according to the procedures   inSection 2.2.  The X flag in an LM message informs the device   performing the calculation whether to perform 32-bit or 64-bit   arithmetic.  If the flag value is equal to 1, all interfaces involved   in the LM operation have written 64-bit counter values, and 64-bitFrost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 36]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   arithmetic can be used.  If the flag value is equal to 0, at least   one interface involved in the operation has written a 32-bit counter   value, and 32-bit arithmetic is carried out using the low-order 32   bits of each counter value.   Note that the semantics of the X flag allow all devices to   interoperate regardless of their counter size support.  Thus, an   implementation MUST NOT generate an error response based on the value   of this flag.4.2.7.  Quality of Service   The TC field of the LSE corresponding to the channel (e.g., LSP)   being measured SHOULD be set to a traffic class equal to or better   than the best TC within the measurement scope to minimize the chance   of out-of-order conditions.4.2.8.  G-ACh Packets   By default, direct LM MUST exclude packets transmitted and received   over the Generic Associated Channel (G-ACh).  An implementation MAY   provide the means to alter the direct LM scope to include some or all   G-ACh messages.  Care must be taken when altering the LM scope to   ensure that both endpoints are in agreement.4.2.9.  Test Messages   In the case of inferred LM, the packets counted for LM consist of   test messages generated for this purpose, or of some other class of   packets deemed to provide a good proxy for data packets flowing over   the channel.  The specification of test protocols and proxy packets   is outside the scope of this document, but some guidelines are   discussed below.   An identifier common to both the test or proxy messages and the LM   messages may be required to make correlation possible.  The combined   value of the Session Identifier and DS fields SHOULD be used for this   purpose when possible.  That is, test messages in this case will   include a 32-bit field that can carry the value of the combined   Session Identifier + DS field present in LM messages.  When TC-   specific LM is conducted, the DS field of the LSE in the label stack   of a test message corresponding to the channel (e.g., LSP) over which   the message is sent MUST correspond to the DS value in the associated   LM messages.   A separate test message protocol SHOULD include a timeout value in   its messages that informs the responder when to discard any state   associated with a specific test.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 37]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 20114.2.10.  Message Loss and Packet Misorder Conditions   Because an LM operation consists of a message sequence with state   maintained from one message to the next, LM is subject to the effects   of lost messages and misordered packets in a way that DM is not.   Because this state exists only on the querier, the handling of these   conditions is, strictly speaking, a local matter.  This section,   however, presents recommended procedures for handling such   conditions.  Note that in the absence of ECMP, packet misordering   within a traffic class is a relatively rare event.   The first kind of anomaly that may occur is that one or more LM   messages may be lost in transit.  The effect of such loss is that   when an LM Response is next received at the querier, an unambiguous   interpretation of the counter values it contains may be impossible,   for the reasons described at the end ofSection 2.2.  Whether this is   so depends on the number of messages lost and the other variables   mentioned in that section, such as the LM message rate and the   channel parameters.   Another possibility is that LM messages are misordered in transit, so   that, for instance, the response to LM[n] is received prior to the   response to LM[n-1].  A typical implementation will discard the late   response to LM[n-1], so that the effect is the same as the case of a   lost message.   Finally, LM is subject to the possibility that data packets are   misordered relative to LM messages.  This condition can result, for   example, in a transmit count of 100 and a corresponding receive count   of 101.  The effect here is that the A_TxLoss[n-1,n] value (for   example) for a given measurement interval will appear to be extremely   (if not impossibly) large.  The other case, where an LM message   arrives earlier than some of the packets, simply results in those   packets being counted as lost.   An implementation SHOULD identify a threshold value that indicates   the upper bound of lost packets measured in a single computation   beyond which the interval is considered unmeasurable.  This is called   the "MaxLMIntervalLoss threshold".  It is clear that this threshold   should be no higher than the maximum number of packets (or bytes) the   channel is capable of transmitting over the interval, but it may be   lower.  Upon encountering an unmeasurable interval, the LM state   (i.e., data values from the last LM message received) SHOULD be   discarded.   With regard to lost LM messages, the MaxLMInterval (seeSection 2.2)   indicates the maximum amount of time that can elapse before the LM   state is discarded.  If some messages are lost, but a message isFrost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 38]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   subsequently received within MaxLMInterval, its timestamp or sequence   number will quantify the loss, and it MAY still be used for   measurement, although the measurement interval will in this case be   longer than usual.   If an LM message is received that has a timestamp less than or equal   to the timestamp of the last LM message received, this indicates that   an exception has occurred, and the current interval SHOULD be   considered unmeasurable unless the implementation has some other way   of handling this condition.4.3.  Delay Measurement Procedures4.3.1.  Transmitting a Delay Measurement Query   When transmitting a DM Query, the Version and Reserved fields MUST be   set to 0.  The R flag MUST be set to 0, the T flag MUST be set to 1,   and the remaining flag bits MUST be set to 0.   The Control Code field MUST be set to one of the values for Query   messages listed inSection 3.1; if the channel is unidirectional,   this field MUST NOT be set to 0x0 (Query: In-band Response   Requested).   The Querier Timestamp Format field MUST be set to the timestamp   format used by the querier when writing timestamp fields in this   message; the possible values for this field are listed inSection 3.4.  The Responder Timestamp Format and Responder's   Preferred Timestamp Format fields MUST be set to 0.   The Session Identifier field can be set arbitrarily.  The DS field   MUST be set to the traffic class being measured.   The Timestamp 1 field SHOULD be set to the time at which this DM   Query is transmitted, in the format indicated by the Querier   Timestamp Format field.  The Timestamp 2 field MUST be set to 0.  If   a response was previously received in this measurement session, the   Timestamp 1 and Timestamp 2 fields of the most recent such response   MAY be copied to the Timestamp 3 and Timestamp 4 fields,   respectively, of this query; otherwise, the Timestamp 3 and Timestamp   4 fields MUST be set to 0.4.3.2.  Receiving a Delay Measurement Query   Upon receipt of a DM Query message, the Timestamp 2 field SHOULD be   set to the time at which this DM Query was received.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 39]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   At this point, the DM Query message must be inspected.  If the   Control Code field is set to 0x2 (No Response Requested), a DM   Response message MUST NOT be transmitted.  If the Control Code field   is set to 0x0 (In-band Response Requested) or 0x1 (Out-of-band   Response Requested), then an in-band or out-of-band response,   respectively, SHOULD be transmitted unless this has been prevented by   an administrative, security, or congestion control mechanism.   In the case of a fatal exception that prevents the requested   measurement from being made, the error SHOULD be reported, via either   a response, if one was requested, or else as a notification to the   user.4.3.3.  Transmitting a Delay Measurement Response   When constructing a Response to a DM Query, the Version and Reserved   fields MUST be set to 0.  The R flag MUST be set to 1, the T flag   MUST be set to 1, and the remaining flag bits MUST be set to 0.   The Session Identifier and Querier Timestamp Format (QTF) fields MUST   be copied from the DM Query.  The Timestamp 1 and Timestamp 2 fields   from the DM Query MUST be copied to the Timestamp 3 and Timestamp 4   fields, respectively, of the DM Response.   The Responder Timestamp Format (RTF) field MUST be set to the   timestamp format used by the responder when writing timestamp fields   in this message, i.e., Timestamp 4 and (if applicable) Timestamp 1;   the possible values for this field are listed inSection 3.4.   Furthermore, the RTF field MUST be set equal to either the QTF or the   RPTF field.  SeeSection 4.3.5 for guidelines on the selection of the   value for this field.   The Responder's Preferred Timestamp Format (RPTF) field MUST be set   to one of the values listed inSection 3.4 and SHOULD be set to   indicate the timestamp format with which the responder can provide   the best accuracy for purposes of delay measurement.   The Control Code field MUST be set to one of the values for Response   messages listed inSection 3.1.  The value 0x10 (Unspecified Error)   SHOULD NOT be used if one of the other more specific error codes is   applicable.   If the response is transmitted in-band, the Timestamp 1 field SHOULD   be set to the time at which this DM Response is transmitted.  If the   response is transmitted out-of-band, the Timestamp 1 field MUST be   set to 0.  In either case, the Timestamp 2 field MUST be set to 0.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 40]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   If the response is transmitted in-band and the Control Code in the   message is 0x1 (Success), then the Timestamp 1 and Timestamp 4 fields   MUST have the same format, which will be the format indicated in the   Responder Timestamp Format field.4.3.4.  Receiving a Delay Measurement Response   Upon in-band receipt of a DM Response message, the Timestamp 2 field   is set to the time at which this DM Response was received.  (Since   the life of the DM message in the network has ended at this point, it   is up to the receiver whether this final modification is made to the   packet.  If the message is to be forwarded on for external post-   processing (Section 2.9.7), then these modifications MUST be made.)   Upon out-of-band receipt of a DM Response message, the Timestamp 1   and Timestamp 2 fields MUST NOT be used for purposes of delay   measurement.   If the Control Code in a DM Response is anything other than 0x1   (Success), the timestamp values in the response MUST NOT be used for   purposes of delay measurement.  If the Control Code indicates an   error condition, or if the response message is invalid, the DM   operation MUST be terminated and an appropriate notification to the   user generated.4.3.5.  Timestamp Format Negotiation   In case either the querier or the responder in a DM transaction is   capable of supporting multiple timestamp formats, it is desirable to   determine the optimal format for purposes of delay measurement on a   particular channel.  The procedures for making this determination   SHALL be as follows.   Upon sending an initial DM Query over a channel, the querier sets the   Querier Timestamp Format (QTF) field to its preferred timestamp   format.   Upon receiving any DM Query message, the responder determines whether   it is capable of writing timestamps in the format specified by the   QTF field.  If so, the Responder Timestamp Format (RTF) field is set   equal to the QTF field.  If not, the RTF field is set equal to the   Responder's Preferred Timestamp Format (RPTF) field.   The process of changing from one timestamp format to another at the   responder may result in the Timestamp 1 and Timestamp 4 fields in an   in-band DM Response having different formats.  If this is the case,Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 41]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   the Control Code in the response MUST NOT be set to 0x1 (Success).   Unless an error condition has occurred, the Control Code MUST be set   to 0x2 (Notification - Data Format Invalid).   Upon receiving a DM Response, the querier knows from the RTF field in   the message whether the responder is capable of supporting its   preferred timestamp format: if it is, the RTF will be equal to the   QTF.  The querier also knows the responder's preferred timestamp   format from the RPTF field.  The querier can then decide whether to   retain its current QTF or to change it and repeat the negotiation   procedures.4.3.5.1.  Single-Format Procedures   When an implementation supports only one timestamp format, the   procedures above reduce to the following simple behavior:   o  All DM Queries are transmitted with the same QTF;   o  All DM Responses are transmitted with the same RTF, and the RPTF      is always set equal to the RTF;   o  All DM Responses received with RTF not equal to QTF are discarded;   o  On a unidirectional channel, all DM Queries received with QTF not      equal to the supported format are discarded.4.3.6.  Quality of Service   The TC field of the LSE corresponding to the channel (e.g., LSP)   being measured MUST be set to the value that corresponds to the DS   field in the DM message.4.4.  Combined Loss/Delay Measurement Procedures   The combined LM/DM message defined inSection 3.3 allows loss and   delay measurement to be carried out simultaneously.  This message   SHOULD be treated as an LM message that happens to carry additional   timestamp data, with the timestamp fields processed as per delay   measurement procedures.5.  Implementation Disclosure Requirements   This section summarizes the requirements placed on implementations   for capabilities disclosure.  The purpose of these requirements is to   ensure that end users have a clear understanding of implementationFrost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 42]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   capabilities and characteristics that have a direct impact on how   loss and delay measurement mechanisms function in specific   situations.  Implementations are REQUIRED to state:   o  METRICS: Which of the following metrics are supported: packet      loss, packet throughput, octet loss, octet throughput, average      loss rate, one-way delay, round-trip delay, two-way channel delay,      packet delay variation.   o  MP-LOCATION: The location of loss and delay measurement points      with respect to other stages of packet processing, such as      queuing.   o  CHANNEL-TYPES: The types of channels for which LM and DM are      supported, including LSP types, pseudowires, and sections (links).   o  QUERY-RATE: The minimum supported query intervals for LM and DM      sessions, both in the querier and responder roles.   o  LOOP: Whether loopback measurement (Section 2.8) is supported.   o  LM-TYPES: Whether direct or inferred LM is supported, and for the      latter, which test protocols or proxy message types are supported.   o  LM-COUNTERS: Whether 64-bit counters are supported.   o  LM-ACCURACY: The expected measurement accuracy levels for the      supported forms of LM, and the expected impact of exception      conditions such as lost and misordered messages.   o  LM-SYNC: The implementation's behavior in regard to the      synchronization conditions discussed inSection 2.9.8.   o  LM-SCOPE: The supported LM scopes (Sections2.9.9 and4.2.8).   o  DM-ACCURACY: The expected measurement accuracy levels for the      supported forms of DM.   o  DM-TS-FORMATS: The supported timestamp formats and the extent of      support for computation with and reconciliation of different      formats.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 43]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 20116.  Congestion Considerations   An MPLS network may be traffic-engineered in such a way that the   bandwidth required both for client traffic and for control,   management, and OAM traffic is always available.  The following   congestion considerations therefore apply only when this is not the   case.   The proactive generation of Loss Measurement and Delay Measurement   messages for purposes of monitoring the performance of an MPLS   channel naturally results in a degree of additional load placed on   both the network and the terminal nodes of the channel.  When   configuring such monitoring, operators should be mindful of the   overhead involved and should choose transmit rates that do not stress   network resources unduly; such choices must be informed by the   deployment context.  In case of slower links or lower-speed devices,   for example, lower Loss Measurement message rates can be chosen, up   to the limits noted at the end ofSection 2.2.   In general, lower measurement message rates place less load on the   network at the expense of reduced granularity.  For delay   measurement, this reduced granularity translates to a greater   possibility that the delay associated with a channel temporarily   exceeds the expected threshold without detection.  For loss   measurement, it translates to a larger gap in loss information in   case of exceptional circumstances such as lost LM messages or   misordered packets.   When carrying out a sustained measurement operation such as an LM   operation or continuous proactive DM operation, the querier SHOULD   take note of the number of lost measurement messages (queries for   which a response is never received) and set a corresponding   Measurement Message Loss Threshold.  If this threshold is exceeded,   the measurement operation SHOULD be suspended so as not to exacerbate   the possible congestion condition.  This suspension SHOULD be   accompanied by an appropriate notification to the user so that the   condition can be investigated and corrected.   From the receiver perspective, the main consideration is the   possibility of receiving an excessive quantity of measurement   messages.  An implementation SHOULD employ a mechanism such as rate-   limiting to guard against the effects of this case.7.  Manageability Considerations   The measurement protocols described in this document are intended to   serve as infrastructure to support a wide range of higher-level   monitoring and diagnostic applications, from simple command-lineFrost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 44]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   diagnostic tools to comprehensive network performance monitoring and   analysis packages.  The specific mechanisms and considerations for   protocol configuration, initialization, and reporting thus depend on   the nature of the application.   In the case of on-demand diagnostics, the diagnostic application may   provide parameters such as the measurement type, the channel, the   query rate, and the test duration when initiating the diagnostic;   results and exception conditions are then reported directly to the   application.  The system may discard the statistics accumulated   during the test after the results have been reported or retain them   to provide a historical measurement record.   Alternatively, measurement configuration may be supplied as part of   the channel configuration itself in order to support continuous   monitoring of the channel's performance characteristics.  In this   case, the configuration will typically include quality thresholds   depending on the service level agreement, the crossing of which will   trigger warnings or alarms, and result reporting and exception   notification will be integrated into the system-wide network   management and reporting framework.8.  Security Considerations   This document describes procedures for the measurement of performance   metrics over a pre-existing MPLS path (a pseudowire, LSP, or   section).  As such, it assumes that a node involved in a measurement   operation has previously verified the integrity of the path and the   identity of the far end using existing MPLS mechanisms such as   Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD) [RFC5884]; tools,   techniques, and considerations for securing MPLS paths are discussed   in detail in [RFC5920].   When such mechanisms are not available, and where security of the   measurement operation is a concern, reception of Generic Associated   Channel messages with the Channel Types specified in this document   SHOULD be disabled.  Implementations MUST provide the ability to   disable these protocols on a per-Channel-Type basis.   Even when the identity of the far end has been verified, the   measurement protocols remain vulnerable to injection and man-in-the-   middle attacks.  The impact of such an attack would be to compromise   the quality of performance measurements on the affected path.  An   attacker positioned to disrupt these measurements is, however,   capable of causing much greater damage by disrupting far more   critical elements of the network such as the network control plane or   user traffic flows.  At worst, a disruption of the measurement   protocols would interfere with the monitoring of the performanceFrost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 45]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   aspects of the service level agreement associated with the path; the   existence of such a disruption would imply that a serious breach of   basic path integrity had already occurred.   If desired, such attacks can be mitigated by performing basic   validation and sanity checks, at the querier, of the counter or   timestamp fields in received measurement response messages.  The   minimal state associated with these protocols also limits the extent   of measurement disruption that can be caused by a corrupt or invalid   message to a single query/response cycle.   Cryptographic mechanisms capable of signing or encrypting the   contents of the measurement packets without degrading the measurement   performance are not currently available.  In light of the preceding   discussion, the absence of such cryptographic mechanisms does not   raise significant security issues.   Users concerned with the security of out-of-band responses over IP   networks SHOULD employ suitable security mechanisms such as IPsec   [RFC4301] to protect the integrity of the return path.9.  IANA Considerations   Per this document, IANA has completed the following actions:   o  Allocation of Channel Types in the "PW Associated Channel Type"      registry   o  Creation of a "Measurement Timestamp Type" registry   o  Creation of an "MPLS Loss/Delay Measurement Control Code" registry   o  Creation of an "MPLS Loss/Delay Measurement Type-Length-Value      (TLV) Object" registryFrost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 46]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 20119.1.  Allocation of PW Associated Channel Types   As per the IANA considerations in [RFC5586], IANA has allocated the   following Channel Types in the "PW Associated Channel Type" registry:   Value  Description                              TLV Follows Reference   ------ ---------------------------------------- ----------- ---------   0x000A MPLS Direct Loss Measurement (DLM)       NoRFC 6374   0x000B MPLS Inferred Loss Measurement (ILM)     NoRFC 6374   0x000C MPLS Delay Measurement (DM)              NoRFC 6374   0x000D MPLS Direct Loss and Delay Measurement   NoRFC 6374          (DLM+DM)   0x000E MPLS Inferred Loss and Delay Measurement NoRFC 6374          (ILM+DM)9.2.  Creation of Measurement Timestamp Type Registry   IANA has created a new "Measurement Timestamp Type" registry, with   format and initial allocations as follows:   Type Description                               Size in Bits Reference   ---- ----------------------------------------- ------------ ---------   0    Null Timestamp                            64RFC 6374   1    Sequence Number                           64RFC 6374   2    Network Time Protocol version 4 64-bit    64RFC 6374        Timestamp   3    Truncated IEEE 1588v2 PTP Timestamp       64RFC 6374   The range of the Type field is 0-15.   The allocation policy for this registry is IETF Review.9.3.  Creation of MPLS Loss/Delay Measurement Control Code Registry   IANA has created a new "MPLS Loss/Delay Measurement Control Code"   registry.  This registry is divided into two separate parts, one for   Query Codes and the other for Response Codes, with formats and   initial allocations as follows:   Query Codes   Code Description                    Reference   ---- ------------------------------ ---------   0x0  In-band Response RequestedRFC 6374   0x1  Out-of-band Response RequestedRFC 6374   0x2  No Response RequestedRFC 6374Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 47]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   Response Codes   Code Description                         Reference   ---- ----------------------------------- ---------   0x0  ReservedRFC 6374   0x1  SuccessRFC 6374   0x2  Data Format InvalidRFC 6374   0x3  Initialization in ProgressRFC 6374   0x4  Data Reset OccurredRFC 6374   0x5  Resource Temporarily UnavailableRFC 6374   0x10 Unspecified ErrorRFC 6374   0x11 Unsupported VersionRFC 6374   0x12 Unsupported Control CodeRFC 6374   0x13 Unsupported Data FormatRFC 6374   0x14 Authentication FailureRFC 6374   0x15 Invalid Destination Node IdentifierRFC 6374   0x16 Connection MismatchRFC 6374   0x17 Unsupported Mandatory TLV ObjectRFC 6374   0x18 Unsupported Query IntervalRFC 6374   0x19 Administrative BlockRFC 6374   0x1A Resource UnavailableRFC 6374   0x1B Resource ReleasedRFC 6374   0x1C Invalid MessageRFC 6374   0x1D Protocol ErrorRFC 6374   IANA has indicated that the values 0x0 - 0xF in the Response Code   section are reserved for non-error response codes.   The range of the Code field is 0 - 255.   The allocation policy for this registry is IETF Review.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 48]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 20119.4.  Creation of MPLS Loss/Delay Measurement TLV Object Registry   IANA has created a new "MPLS Loss/Delay Measurement TLV Object"   registry, with format and initial allocations as follows:   Type Description                       Reference   ---- --------------------------------- ---------   0    Padding - copy in responseRFC 6374   1    Return AddressRFC 6374   2    Session Query IntervalRFC 6374   3    Loopback RequestRFC 6374   127  Experimental useRFC 6374   128  Padding - do not copy in responseRFC 6374   129  Destination AddressRFC 6374   130  Source AddressRFC 6374   255  Experimental useRFC 6374   IANA has indicated that Types 0-127 are classified as Mandatory, and   that Types 128-255 are classified as Optional.   The range of the Type field is 0 - 255.   The allocation policy for this registry is IETF Review.10.  Acknowledgments   The authors wish to thank the many participants of the MPLS working   group who provided detailed review and feedback on this document.   The authors offer special thanks to Alexander Vainshtein, Loa   Andersson, and Hiroyuki Takagi for many helpful thoughts and   discussions, to Linda Dunbar for the idea of using LM messages for   throughput measurement, and to Ben Niven-Jenkins, Marc Lasserre, and   Ben Mack-Crane for their valuable comments.11.  References11.1.  Normative References   [IEEE1588]  IEEE, "1588-2008 IEEE Standard for a Precision Clock               Synchronization Protocol for Networked Measurement and               Control Systems", March 2008.   [RFC2119]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate               Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 49]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   [RFC2474]   Nichols, K., Blake, S., Baker, F., and D. Black,               "Definition of the Differentiated Services Field (DS               Field) in the IPv4 and IPv6 Headers",RFC 2474,               December 1998.   [RFC3031]   Rosen, E., Viswanathan, A., and R. Callon, "Multiprotocol               Label Switching Architecture",RFC 3031, January 2001.   [RFC3270]   Le Faucheur, F., Wu, L., Davie, B., Davari, S., Vaananen,               P., Krishnan, R., Cheval, P., and J. Heinanen, "Multi-               Protocol Label Switching (MPLS) Support of Differentiated               Services",RFC 3270, May 2002.   [RFC5462]   Andersson, L. and R. Asati, "Multiprotocol Label               Switching (MPLS) Label Stack Entry: "EXP" Field Renamed               to "Traffic Class" Field",RFC 5462, February 2009.   [RFC5586]   Bocci, M., Vigoureux, M., and S. Bryant, "MPLS Generic               Associated Channel",RFC 5586, June 2009.   [RFC5905]   Mills, D., Martin, J., Burbank, J., and W. Kasch,               "Network Time Protocol Version 4: Protocol and Algorithms               Specification",RFC 5905, June 2010.11.2.  Informative References   [RFC2679]   Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A One-way               Delay Metric for IPPM",RFC 2679, September 1999.   [RFC2680]   Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A One-way               Packet Loss Metric for IPPM",RFC 2680, September 1999.   [RFC2681]   Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A Round-trip               Delay Metric for IPPM",RFC 2681, September 1999.   [RFC3209]   Awduche, D., Berger, L., Gan, D., Li, T., Srinivasan, V.,               and G. Swallow, "RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for LSP               Tunnels",RFC 3209, December 2001.   [RFC3260]   Grossman, D., "New Terminology and Clarifications for               Diffserv",RFC 3260, April 2002.   [RFC3985]   Bryant, S. and P. Pate, "Pseudo Wire Emulation Edge-to-               Edge (PWE3) Architecture",RFC 3985, March 2005.   [RFC4301]   Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the               Internet Protocol",RFC 4301, December 2005.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 50]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011   [RFC4656]   Shalunov, S., Teitelbaum, B., Karp, A., Boote, J., and M.               Zekauskas, "A One-way Active Measurement Protocol               (OWAMP)",RFC 4656, September 2006.   [RFC4928]   Swallow, G., Bryant, S., and L. Andersson, "Avoiding               Equal Cost Multipath Treatment in MPLS Networks",BCP 128,RFC 4928, June 2007.   [RFC5036]   Andersson, L., Minei, I., and B. Thomas, "LDP               Specification",RFC 5036, October 2007.   [RFC5357]   Hedayat, K., Krzanowski, R., Morton, A., Yum, K., and J.               Babiarz, "A Two-Way Active Measurement Protocol (TWAMP)",RFC 5357, October 2008.   [RFC5481]   Morton, A. and B. Claise, "Packet Delay Variation               Applicability Statement",RFC 5481, March 2009.   [RFC5884]   Aggarwal, R., Kompella, K., Nadeau, T., and G. Swallow,               "Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD) for MPLS Label               Switched Paths (LSPs)",RFC 5884, June 2010.   [RFC5920]   Fang, L., "Security Framework for MPLS and GMPLS               Networks",RFC 5920, July 2010.   [RFC5921]   Bocci, M., Bryant, S., Frost, D., Levrau, L., and L.               Berger, "A Framework for MPLS in Transport Networks",RFC 5921, July 2010.   [RFC5960]   Frost, D., Bryant, S., and M. Bocci, "MPLS Transport               Profile Data Plane Architecture",RFC 5960, August 2010.   [RFC6375]   Frost, D., Ed. and S. Bryant, Ed., "A Packet Loss and               Delay Measurement Profile for MPLS-Based Transport               Networks",RFC 6375, September 2011.   [Y.1731]    ITU-T Recommendation Y.1731, "OAM Functions and               Mechanisms for Ethernet based Networks", February 2008.Frost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 51]

RFC 6374             MPLS Loss and Delay Measurement      September 2011Appendix A.  Default Timestamp Format Rationale   This document initially proposed the Network Time Protocol (NTP)   timestamp format as the mandatory default, as this is the normal   default timestamp in IETF protocols and thus would seem the "natural"   choice.  However, a number of considerations have led instead to the   specification of the truncated IEEE 1588 Precision Time Protocol   (PTP) timestamp as the default.  NTP has not gained traction in   industry as the protocol of choice for high-quality timing   infrastructure, whilst IEEE 1588 PTP has become the de facto time   transfer protocol in networks that are specially engineered to   provide high-accuracy time distribution service.  The PTP timestamp   format is also the ITU-T format of choice for packet transport   networks, which may rely on MPLS protocols.  Applications such as   one-way delay measurement need the best time service available, and   converting between the NTP and PTP timestamp formats is not a trivial   transformation, particularly when it is required that this be done in   real time without loss of accuracy.   The truncated IEEE 1588 PTP format specified in this document is   considered to provide a more than adequate wrap time and greater time   resolution than it is expected will be needed for the operational   lifetime of this protocol.  By truncating the timestamp at both the   high and low order bits, the protocol achieves a worthwhile reduction   in system resources.Authors' Addresses   Dan Frost   Cisco Systems   EMail: danfrost@cisco.com   Stewart Bryant   Cisco Systems   EMail: stbryant@cisco.comFrost & Bryant               Standards Track                   [Page 52]

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