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INFORMATIONAL
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         A. FarrelRequest for Comments: 7054                              Juniper NetworksCategory: Informational                                          H. EndoISSN: 2070-1721                                            Hitachi, Ltd.                                                               R. Winter                                                                     NEC                                                                Y. Koike                                                                     NTT                                                                 M. Paul                                                        Deutsche Telekom                                                           November 2013Addressing Requirements and Design Considerations forPer-Interface Maintenance Entity Group Intermediate Points (MIPs)Abstract   The framework for Operations, Administration and Maintenance (OAM)   within the MPLS Transport Profile (MPLS-TP) describes how the   Maintenance Entity Group Intermediate Points (MIPs) may be situated   within network nodes at incoming and outgoing interfaces.   This document elaborates on important considerations for internal MIP   addressing.  More precisely, it describes important restrictions for   any mechanism that specifies a way of forming OAM messages so that   they can be targeted at MIPs on either incoming or outgoing   interfaces and forwarded correctly through the forwarding engine.   Furthermore, the document includes considerations for node   implementations where there is no distinction between the incoming   and outgoing MIP.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for informational purposes.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents   approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet   Standard; seeSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7054.Farrel, et al.                Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 7054               Internal MIP Considerations         November 2013Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2013 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................22. Terminology .....................................................33. Summary of the Problem Statement ................................3   4. Requirements and Design Considerations for Internal-MIP      Addressing ......................................................65. Security Considerations ........................................106. Acknowledgments ................................................107. References .....................................................107.1. Normative References ......................................107.2. Informative References ....................................111.  Introduction   The framework for Operations, Administration and Maintenance (OAM)   within the MPLS Transport Profile (MPLS-TP)(the MPLS-TP OAM   Framework, [RFC6371]) distinguishes two configurations for the   Maintenance Entity Group Intermediate Points (MIPs) on a node.  It   defines per-node MIPs and per-interface MIPs, where a per-node MIP is   a single MIP per node in an unspecified location within the node and   per-interface MIPs are two (or more) MIPs per node on each side of   the forwarding engine.   In-band OAM messages are sent using the Generic Associated Channel   (G-ACh) [RFC5586].  OAM messages for the transit points of   pseudowires (PWs) or Label Switched Paths (LSPs) are delivered using   the expiration of the MPLS shim header Time-to-Live (TTL) field.  OAM   messages for the end points of PWs and LSPs are simply delivered as   normal.Farrel, et al.                Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 7054               Internal MIP Considerations         November 2013   OAM messages delivered to end points or transit points are   distinguished from other (data) packets so that they can be processed   as OAM.  In LSPs, the mechanism used is the presence of the Generic   Associated Channel Label (GAL) in the Label Stack Entry (LSE) under   the top LSE [RFC5586].  In PWs, the mechanism used is the presence of   the PW Associated Channel Header (PWACH) [RFC4385] or the presence of   a GAL [RFC6423].   If multiple MIPs are present on a single node, these mechanisms alone   provide no way to address one particular MIP out of the set of MIPs.   A mechanism that addresses this shortcoming has to obey a few   important design considerations, which are discussed in this   document.2.  Terminology   In this document, we use the term in-MIP (incoming MIP) to refer to   the MIP that processes OAM messages before they pass through the   forwarding engine of a node.  An out-MIP (outgoing MIP) processes OAM   messages after they have passed the forwarding engine of the node.   The two together are referred to as internal MIPs.  The term   "forwarding engine" is used as defined in [RFC6371].   Note that the acronym "OAM" is used in conformance with [RFC6291].3.  Summary of the Problem Statement   Figure 1 shows an abstract functional representation of an MPLS-TP   node.  It is decomposed as an incoming interface (labeled "In"), a   forwarding engine (FW), and an outgoing interface (labeled "Out").   As per the discussion in [RFC6371], MIPs may be placed in each of the   functional interface components.                            ------------------------                           |-----              -----|                           | MIP |            | MIP |                           |     |    ----    |     |                    ----->-| In  |->-| FW |->-| Out |->----                           | i/f |    ----    | i/f |                           |-----              -----|                            ------------------------      Figure 1: Abstract Functional Representation of an MPLS-TP NodeFarrel, et al.                Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 7054               Internal MIP Considerations         November 2013   Several distinct OAM functions are required within this architectural   model for both PWs and LSPs, such as:   o  Connectivity Verification (CV) between a Maintenance Entity Group      End Point (MEP) and a MIP   o  traceroute over an MPLS-TP LSP and/or an MPLS-TP PW containing      MIPs   o  data-plane loopback configuration at a MIP   o  diagnostic tests   The MIPs in these OAM functions may also be the MIPs at the incoming   or outgoing interfaces.   Per-interface MIPs have the advantage that they enable a more   accurate localization and identification of faults and diagnostic   tests.  In particular, the identification of whether a problem is   located between nodes or on a particular node and where on that node   is greatly enhanced.  For obvious reasons, it is important to narrow   down the cause of a fault quickly to initiate a timely and well-   directed maintenance action to resume normal network operation.   The following two figures illustrate the fundamental difference   between using per-node and per-interface MEPs and MIPs for OAM.   Figure 2 depicts OAM using per-node MIPs and MEPs.  For reasons of   exposition, we pick a location for the MIPs on the nodes but the   standard does not mandate the exact location for the per-node model.   In the figure, a bidirectional LSP is depicted where in the forward   (FWD) direction MEP1, MIP1, and MEP2 are located on the ingress   interface.  In the backward (BWD) direction MEP1', MIP1' and MEP2'   are located on the egress interface, i.e., the same interfaces.  S1   in the figure denotes the segment from PE1 In to P1 In and S2 denotes   the segment from PE1 In to P2 In.  Figure 3, on the other hand, shows   the same basic network, but per-interface maintenance points are   configured for OAM operations.  Note that these figures are merely   examples.  It is important to note that per-interface MEPs or per-   interface MIPs must logically be placed at a point before (for   in-MIP) or after (for out-MIP) passing the forwarding engine as   defined in [RFC6371].  All traffic associated with the MEP/MIP must   pass through or be terminated at that point.Farrel, et al.                Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 7054               Internal MIP Considerations         November 2013         Customer|           Operator's Administrative     | Customer         Domain  |           Domain                        | Domain         ------> |<--------------------------------------->| <------           CE1   |   T-PE/PE1      S-PE/P1        T-PE/PE2 |   CE2                 |  <-------->    <-------->    <--------> |          +---+  | +-+ +-+ +-+   +-+ +-+ +-+   +-+ +-+ +-+ |  +---+          |   |  | | | | | | |   | | | | | |   | | | | | | |  |   |          |   |  | | | | | | |   | | | | | |   | | | | | | |  |   |          +---+  | +-+ +-+ +-+   +-+ +-+ +-+   +-+ +-+ +-+ |  +---+                 | In  FW  Out   In  FW  Out   In  FW  Out |                 |                                         |      FWD PW/LSP |  o-------------------------- >          |                 |  V-------------*-------------V          |                 | MEP1          MIP1          MEP2        |      BWD PW/LSP |  <---------------------------o          |                 |  V-------------*-------------V          |                 |         MEP1'        MIP1'         MEP2'|                (S1)<============>                (S2)<==========================>        Figure 2: Example of OAM Relying on Per-Node MIPs and MEPs   To illustrate the difference between these two modes of operation, we   use fault detection as an example.  Consider the case where the   client traffic between CE1 and CE2 experiences a fault.  Also assume   that an on-demand CV test between PE1 and PE2 was successful.  The   scenario in Figure 2 therefore leaves the forwarding engine (FW) of   PE2, the out-going interface of PE2, the transmission line between   PE2 and CE2, or CE2 itself as a potential location of the fault as   on-demand CV can only be performed on segment S2.  Note that in this   scenario, the PWs or LSPs are to be understood as two examples (not   one), i.e., the figures do not show the layer structure of PWs and   LSPs.   The per-interface model in Figure 3 allows more fine-grained OAM   operations to be performed.  At first, CV on segment S'4 and in   addition CV on segment S'5 can help to rule out, for example, the   forwarding engine of PE2.  This is of course only a single example,   and other OAM functions and scenarios are trivially conceivable.  The   basic message is that with the per-interface OAM model, an operator   can configure smaller segments on a transport path to which OAM   operations apply.  This enables a more fine-grained scoping of OAM   operations, such as fault localization and performance monitoring,   which gives operators better information to deal with adverse   networking conditions.Farrel, et al.                Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 7054               Internal MIP Considerations         November 2013         Customer|          Operator's Administrative      |Customer         Domain  |          Domain                         |Domain         ------->|<--------------------------------------->|<------           CE1   |   T-PE/PE1      S-PE/P1       T-PE/PE2  |   CE2                 |  <-------->    <-------->    <--------> |          +---+  | +-+ +-+ +-+   +-+ +-+ +-+   +-+ +-+ +-+ |  +---+          |   |  | | | | | | |   | | | | | |   | | | | | | |  |   |          |   |  | | | | | | |   | | | | | |   | | | | | | |  |   |          +---+  | +-+ +-+ +-+   +-+ +-+ +-+   +-+ +-+ +-+ |  +---+                 | In  FW  Out   In  FW  Out   In  FW  Out |                 |                                         |      FWD PW/LSP |  o----------------------------------->  |                 |  V-------*------*------*-----*-------V  |                 | MEP1    MIP1   MIP2   MIP3  MIP4    MEP2|                 |                                         |      BWD PW/LSP |  <-----------------------------------o  |                 | MEP1'   MIP1'  MIP2'  MIP3' MIP4'  MEP2'|               (S'1)<======>               (S'2)<=============>               (S'3)<====================>               (S'4)<==========================>               (S'5)<==================================>      Figure 3: Example of OAM Relying on Per-Interface MIPs and MEPs4.  Requirements and Design Considerations for Internal-MIP Addressing   OAM messages for transit points of PWs or LSPs are delivered using   the expiration of the TTL field in the top LSE of the MPLS packet   header.  OAM messages for the end points of PWs and LSPs are simply   delivered as normal.  These messages are distinguished from other   (data) packets so that they can be processed as OAM.  In LSPs, the   mechanism used is the presence of the GAL in the LSE under the top   LSE [RFC5586].  In PWs, the mechanism used is the presence of the PW   Associated Channel Header [RFC4385] or the presence of a GAL   [RFC6423].  In addition, two sets of identifiers exist that can be   used to address MIPs, which are defined in [RFC6370] and [RFC6923]   Any solution for sending OAM messages to the in- and out-MIPs must   fit within these existing models of handling OAM.   Additionally, many MPLS-TP nodes are implemented in a way that all   queuing and the forwarding function are performed at the incoming   interface.  The abstract functional representation of such a node is   shown in Figure 4.  As shown in the figure, the outgoing interfaces   are minimal and for this reason it may not be possible to includeFarrel, et al.                Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 7054               Internal MIP Considerations         November 2013   MIP functions on those interfaces.  This is the case for existing   deployed implementations in particular.   Any solution that attempts to send OAM messages to the outgoing   interface of an MPLS-TP node must not cause any problems when such   implementations are present (such as leaking OAM packets with a TTL   of 0).                          ---------------------                         |------------         |                         | MIP        |        |                         |      ----  |        |                  ----->-| In  | FW | |-->-Out-|->---                         | i/f  ----  |    i/f |                         |------------         |                          ---------------------              Figure 4: Abstract Functional Representation of                        Some Existing MPLS-TP Nodes   OAM must operate on MPLS-TP nodes that are branch points on point-to-   multipoint (P2MP) trees.  This means that it must be possible to   target individual outgoing MIPs as well as all outgoing MIPs in the   abstract functional representation shown in Figure 5, and to handle   the P2MP node implementations as shown in Figure 6 without causing   problems.                        --------------------------                       |                     -----|                       |                    | MIP |                       |                 ->-|     |->----                       |                |   | Out |                       |                |   | i/f |                       |                |    -----|                       |-----           |    -----|                       | MIP |    ----  |   | MIP |                       |     |   |    |-    |     |                ----->-| In  |->-| FW |--->-| Out |->----                       | i/f |   |    |-    | i/f |                       |-----     ----  |    -----|                       |                |    -----|                       |                |   | MIP |                       |                |   |     |                       |                 ->-| Out |->----                       |                    | i/f |                       |                     -----|                        --------------------------            Figure 5: Abstract Functional Representation of an                       MPLS-TP Node Supporting P2MPFarrel, et al.                Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 7054               Internal MIP Considerations         November 2013                          ----------------------                         |               ->-Out-|->----                         |              |   i/f |                         |------------  |       |                         |            | |       |                         | MIP  ----  | |       |                         |     |    | |-        |                  ----->-| In  | FW | |--->-Out-|->----                         | i/f |    | |-    i/f |                         |      ----  | |       |                         |            | |       |                         |------------  |       |                         |              |   Out |                         |               ->-i/f-|->----                          ----------------------              Figure 6: Abstract Functional Representation of                Some Existing MPLS-TP Nodes Supporting P2MP   In summary, the solution for OAM message delivery must behave as   follows:   o  Delivery of OAM messages to the correct MPLS-TP node.   o  Delivery of OAM instructions to the correct MIP within an MPLS-TP      node.   o  Forwarding of OAM packets exactly as data packets.   o  Packet inspection at the incoming and outgoing interfaces must be      minimized.   The first and second bullet points are obvious.  However, the third   bullet point is also vital.  To illustrate the importance, a rejected   solution is depicted in Figure 7.  In the figure, all data and non-   local OAM is handled as normal.  Local OAM is intercepted at the   incoming interface and delivered to the MIP at the incoming   interface.  If the OAM is intended for the incoming MIP, it is   handled there with no issue.  If the OAM is intended for the outgoing   MIP, it is forwarded to that MIP using some internal messaging system   that is implementation specific.Farrel, et al.                Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 7054               Internal MIP Considerations         November 2013                           ------------------------                          |-----              -----|         local OAM ----->-| MIP |----->------| MIP |                          |     |    ----    |     |              data =====>=| In  |=>=| FW |=>=| Out |=>==== data     non-local OAM ~~~~~>~| i/f |~>~|    |~>~| i/f |~>~~~~ non-local OAM                          |-----     ----     -----|                           ------------------------             Figure 7: OAM Control Message Delivery Bypassing                           the Forwarding Engine   This solution is fully functional for the incoming MIP.  It also   supports control of data loopback for the outgoing MIP and can   adequately perform some OAM features such as interface identity   reporting at the outgoing MIP.   However, because the OAM message is not forwarded through the   forwarding engine, this solution cannot correctly perform OAM   loopback, connectivity verification, LSP tracing, or performance   measurement.   The last bullet point is also an important requirement for any   solution to the internal-MIP addressing problem.  Since OAM packets   that target an out-MIP need to be sent through the forwarding engine   and treated exactly as regular data packets, the determination of   whether to forward the packet or process it at the incoming MIP needs   to be fast; therefore, the processing overhead must be kept to a   minimum.  In addition, there are a few OAM procedures that operate at   line rate such as OAM loopback.  This adds to the requirement of   minimal processing overhead for both the in-MIP and out-MIP.   Most of the above superficially appears to be an implementation   matter local to an individual node; however, the format of the   message needs to be standardized so that:   o  A MEP can correctly target the outgoing MIP of a specific MPLS-TP      node.   o  A node can correctly filter out any OAM messages that were      intended for its upstream neighbor's outgoing MIP, but which were      not handled there because the upstream neighbor is an      implementation as shown in Figures 4 and 6.   Note that the last bullet point describes a safety net in case OAM   messages leak beyond their intended scope, but implementations should   take care that messages do not leak so that the safety net does not   need to be used.Farrel, et al.                Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 7054               Internal MIP Considerations         November 20135.  Security Considerations   OAM security is discussed in [RFC6371] and security aspects specific   to MPLS-TP in general are outlined in [RFC6941].   OAM can provide useful information for detecting and tracing security   attacks.   OAM can also be used to illicitly gather information or for denial-   of-service attacks and other types of attack.  Implementations   therefore are required to offer security mechanisms for OAM.   Deployments are therefore strongly advised to follow the security   advice provided in RFCs 6371 and 6941.   Mixing of per-node and per-interface OAM on a single node is not   advised as OAM message leakage could be the result.6.  Acknowledgments   The authors gratefully acknowledge the substantial contributions of   Zhenlong Cui.  We would also like to thank Eric Gray, Sami Boutros,   and Shahram Davari for interesting input to this document through   discussions.7.  References7.1.  Normative References   [RFC4385]  Bryant, S., Swallow, G., Martini, L., and D. McPherson,              "Pseudowire Emulation Edge-to-Edge (PWE3) Control Word for              Use over an MPLS PSN",RFC 4385, February 2006.   [RFC5586]  Bocci, M., Ed., Vigoureux, M., Ed., and S. Bryant, Ed.,              "MPLS Generic Associated Channel",RFC 5586, June 2009.   [RFC6370]  Bocci, M., Swallow, G., and E. Gray, "MPLS Transport              Profile (MPLS-TP) Identifiers",RFC 6370, September 2011.   [RFC6371]  Busi, I., Ed., and D. Allan, Ed., "Operations,              Administration, and Maintenance Framework for MPLS-Based              Transport Networks",RFC 6371, September 2011.   [RFC6423]  Li, H., Martini, L., He, J., and F. Huang, "Using the              Generic Associated Channel Label for Pseudowire in the              MPLS Transport Profile (MPLS-TP)",RFC 6423, November              2011.Farrel, et al.                Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 7054               Internal MIP Considerations         November 2013   [RFC6923]  Winter, R., Gray, E., van Helvoort, H., and M. Betts,              "MPLS Transport Profile (MPLS-TP) Identifiers Following              ITU-T Conventions",RFC 6923, May 2013.7.2.  Informative References   [RFC6291]  Andersson, L., van Helvoort, H., Bonica, R., Romascanu,              D., and S. Mansfield, "Guidelines for the Use of the "OAM"              Acronym in the IETF",BCP 161,RFC 6291, June 2011.   [RFC6941]  Fang, L., Ed., Niven-Jenkins, B., Ed., Mansfield, S., Ed.,              and R. Graveman, Ed., "MPLS Transport Profile (MPLS-TP)              Security Framework",RFC 6941, April 2013.Authors' Addresses   Adrian Farrel   Juniper Networks   EMail: adrian@olddog.co.uk   Hideki Endo   Hitachi, Ltd.   EMail: hideki.endo.es@hitachi.com   Rolf Winter   NEC   EMail: rolf.winter@neclab.eu   Yoshinori Koike   NTT   EMail: koike.yoshinori@lab.ntt.co.jp   Manuel Paul   Deutsche Telekom   EMail: Manuel.Paul@telekom.deFarrel, et al.                Informational                    [Page 11]

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