Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


[RFC Home] [TEXT|PDF|HTML] [Tracker] [IPR] [Info page]

EXPERIMENTAL
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                           Q. ZhaoRequest for Comments: 7334                                      D. DhodyCategory: Experimental                                 Huawei TechnologyISSN: 2070-1721                                                  D. King                                                      Old Dog Consulting                                                                  Z. Ali                                                           Cisco Systems                                                             R. Casellas                                                                    CTTC                                                             August 2014PCE-Based Computation Procedure to ComputeShortest Constrained Point-to-Multipoint (P2MP) Inter-DomainTraffic Engineering Label Switched PathsAbstract   The ability to compute paths for constrained point-to-multipoint   (P2MP) Traffic Engineering Label Switched Paths (TE LSPs) across   multiple domains has been identified as a key requirement for the   deployment of P2MP services in MPLS- and GMPLS-controlled networks.   The Path Computation Element (PCE) has been recognized as an   appropriate technology for the determination of inter-domain paths of   P2MP TE LSPs.   This document describes an experiment to provide procedures and   extensions to the PCE Communication Protocol (PCEP) for the   computation of inter-domain paths for P2MP TE LSPs.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for examination, experimental implementation, and   evaluation.   This document defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet   community.  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/rfc7334.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 1]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 2014Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2014 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.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 2]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 2014Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................41.1. Scope ......................................................41.2. Requirements Language ......................................42. Terminology .....................................................53. Examination of Existing Mechanisms ..............................64. Assumptions .....................................................75. Requirements ....................................................86. Objective Functions and Constraints .............................97. P2MP Path Computation Procedures ...............................107.1. General ...................................................107.2. Core-Trees ................................................107.3. Optimal Core-Tree Computation Procedure ...................137.4. Sub-tree Computation Procedures ...........................157.5. PCEP Protocol Extensions ..................................157.5.1. Extension of RP Object .............................157.5.2. Domain and PCE Sequence ............................167.6. Using H-PCE for Scalability ...............................167.7. Parallelism ...............................................178. Protection .....................................................178.1. End-to-End Protection .....................................178.2. Domain Protection .........................................189. Manageability Considerations ...................................189.1. Control of Function and Policy ............................189.2. Information and Data Models ...............................189.3. Liveness Detection and Monitoring .........................199.4. Verifying Correct Operation ...............................19      9.5. Requirements on Other Protocols and Functional           Components ................................................199.6. Impact on Network Operation ...............................199.7. Policy Control ............................................2010. Security Considerations .......................................2011. IANA Considerations ...........................................2112. Acknowledgements ..............................................2113. References ....................................................2113.1. Normative References .....................................2113.2. Informative References ...................................2214. Contributors' Addresses .......................................24Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 3]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 20141.  Introduction   Multicast services are increasingly in demand for high-capacity   applications such as multicast VPNs, IPTV (which may be on-demand or   streamed), and content-rich media distribution (for example, software   distribution, financial streaming, or database replication).  The   ability to compute constrained Traffic Engineering Label Switched   Paths (TE LSPs) for point-to-multipoint (P2MP) LSPs in MPLS and GMPLS   networks across multiple domains is therefore required.   The applicability of the PCE [RFC4655] for the computation of such   paths is discussed in [RFC5671], and the requirements placed on the   PCE Communication Protocol (PCEP) for this are given in [RFC5862].   This document details the requirements for inter-domain P2MP path   computation and then describes the experimental procedure "core-tree"   path computation, developed to address the requirements and   objectives for inter-domain P2MP path computation.   When results of implementation and deployment are available, this   document will be updated and refined, and it will then be moved from   Experimental status to Standards Track.1.1.  Scope   The inter-domain P2MP path computation procedures described in this   document are experimental.  The experiment is intended to enable   research for the usage of the PCE to support inter-domain P2MP path   computation.   This document is not intended to replace the intra-domain P2MP path   computation approach defined by [RFC6006] and will not impact   existing PCE procedures and operations.1.2.  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].Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 4]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 20142.  Terminology   Terminology used in this document is consistent with the related   MPLS/GMPLS and PCE documents [RFC4461], [RFC4655], [RFC4875],   [RFC5376], [RFC5440], [RFC5441], [RFC5671], and [RFC5862].   Additional terms are defined below:   Core-Tree: a P2MP tree where the root is the ingress Label Switching   Router (LSR) and the leaf nodes are the entry boundary nodes of the   leaf domains.   Entry BN of domain(n): a boundary node (BN) connecting domain(n-1) to   domain(n) along a determined sequence of domains.   Exit BN of domain(n): a BN connecting domain(n) to domain(n+1) along   a determined sequence of domains.   H-PCE: Hierarchical PCE (as per [RFC6805]).   Leaf Domain: a domain with one or more leaf nodes.   Path Tree: a set of LSRs and TE links that comprise the path of a   P2MP TE LSP from the ingress LSR to all egress LSRs (the leaf nodes).   Path Domain Sequence: the known sequence of domains for a path   between the root domain and a leaf domain.   Path Domain Tree: the tree formed by the domains that the P2MP path   crosses, where the source (ingress) domain is the root domain.   PCE(i): a PCE that performs path computations for domain(i).   Root Domain: the domain that includes the ingress (root) LSR.   Sub-tree: a P2MP tree where the root is the selected entry BN of the   leaf domain and the leaf nodes are the destinations (leaves) in that   domain.  The sub-trees are grafted to the core-tree.   Transit/Branch Domain: a domain that has an upstream and one or more   downstream neighbor domains.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 5]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 20143.  Examination of Existing Mechanisms   The Path Computation Element (PCE) defined in [RFC4655] is an entity   that is capable of computing a network path or route based on a   network graph and applying computational constraints.  A Path   Computation Client (PCC) may make requests to a PCE for paths to be   computed.   [RFC4875] describes how to set up P2MP TE LSPs for use in MPLS- and   GMPLS-controlled networks.  The PCE is identified as a suitable   application for the computation of paths for P2MP TE LSPs [RFC5671].   [RFC5441] specifies a procedure relying on the use of multiple PCEs   to compute point-to-point (P2P) inter-domain constrained shortest   paths across a predetermined sequence of domains, using a Backward-   Recursive PCE-Based Computation (BRPC) technique.  The technique can   be combined with the use of Path-Keys [RFC5520] to preserve   confidentiality across domains, which is sometimes required when   domains are managed by different Service Providers.   PCEP [RFC5440] was extended for point-to-multipoint (P2MP) path   computation requests in [RFC6006].   As discussed in [RFC4461], a P2MP tree is the ordered set of LSRs and   TE links that comprise the path of a P2MP TE LSP from its ingress LSR   to all of its egress LSRs.  A P2MP LSP is set up with TE constraints   and allows efficient packet or data replication at various branching   points in the network.  As per [RFC5671], selection of branch points   is fundamental to the determination of the paths for a P2MP TE LSP.   Not only is this selection constrained by the network topology and   available network resources, but it is also determined by the   objective functions (OFs) that may be applied to path computation.   Generally, an inter-domain P2MP tree (i.e., a P2MP tree with source   and at least one destination residing in different domains) is   particularly difficult to compute even for a distributed PCE   architecture.  For instance, while the BRPC may be well-suited for   P2P paths, P2MP path computation involves multiple branching path   segments from the source to the multiple destinations.  As such,   inter-domain P2MP path computation may result in a plurality of   per-domain path options that may be difficult to coordinate   efficiently and effectively between domains.  That is, when one or   more domains have multiple ingress and/or egress boundary nodes   (i.e., when the domains are multiply inter-connected), existing   techniques may be convoluted when used to determine which boundary   node of another domain will be utilized for the inter-domain P2MP   tree, and there is no way to limit the computation of the P2MP tree   to those utilized boundary nodes.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 6]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 2014   A trivial solution to the computation of the inter-domain P2MP tree   would be to compute shortest inter-domain P2P paths from source to   each destination and then combine them to generate an inter-domain,   shortest-path-to-destination P2MP tree.  This solution, however,   cannot be used to trade cost to destination for overall tree cost   (i.e., it cannot produce a Minimum Cost Tree (MCT)), and in the   context of inter-domain P2MP TE LSPs, it cannot be used to reduce the   number of domain boundary nodes that are transited.  Computing P2P TE   LSPs individually does not guarantee the generation of an optimal   P2MP tree for every definition of "optimal" in every topology.   Per-domain path computation [RFC5152] may be used to compute P2MP   multi-domain paths but may encounter the issues previously described.   Furthermore, this approach may be considered to have scaling issues   during LSP setup.  That is, the LSP to each leaf is signaled   separately, and each boundary node needs to perform path computation   for each leaf.   P2MP MCT, i.e., a computation that guarantees the least cost   resulting tree, typically is an NP-complete problem.  Moreover,   adding and/or removing a single destination to/from the tree may   result in an entirely different tree.  In this case, frequent MCT   path computation requests may prove computationally intensive, and   the resulting frequent tunnel reconfiguration may even cause network   destabilization.   This document presents a solution, procedures, and extensions to PCEP   to support P2MP inter-domain path computation.4.  Assumptions   Within this document we make the following assumptions:   o  Due to deployment and commercial limitations (e.g., inter-AS      (Autonomous System) peering agreements), the path domain tree will      be known in advance.   o  Each PCE knows about any leaf LSRs in the domain it serves.   Additional assumptions are documented in [RFC5441] and are not   repeated here.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 7]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 20145.  Requirements   This section summarizes the requirements specific to computing   inter-domain P2MP paths.  In these requirements, we note that the   actual computation time taken by any PCE implementation is outside   the scope of this document, but we observe that reducing the   complexity of the required computations has a beneficial effect on   the computation time regardless of implementation.  Additionally,   reducing the number of message exchanges and the amount of   information exchanged will reduce the overall computation time for   the entire P2MP tree.  We refer to the "complexity of the   computation" as the impact on these aspects of path computation time   as various parameters of the topology and the P2MP TE LSP are   changed.   It is also important that the solution can preserve confidentiality   across domains, which is required when domains are managed by   different Service Providers via the Path-Key mechanism [RFC5520].   Other than the requirements specified in [RFC5862], a number of   requirements specific to inter-domain P2MP are detailed below:   1.  The complexity of the computation for each sub-tree within each       domain SHOULD be dependent only on the topology of the domain,       and it SHOULD be independent of the domain sequence.   2.  The number of PCReq (Path Computation Request) and PCRep (Path       Computation Reply) messages SHOULD be independent of the number       of multicast destinations in each domain.   3.  It SHOULD be possible to specify the domain entry and exit nodes       in the PCReq.   4.  Specifying which nodes are to be used as branch nodes SHOULD be       supported in the PCReq.   5.  Reoptimization of existing sub-trees SHOULD be supported.   6.  It SHOULD be possible to compute diverse P2MP paths from existing       P2MP paths.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 8]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 20146.  Objective Functions and Constraints   For the computation of a single or a set of P2MP TE LSPs, a request   to meet specific optimization criteria, called an objective function   (OF), MAY be used.  SPT (Shortest Path Tree) and MCT (Minimum Cost   Tree), defined in [RFC6006], are two such OF optimization criteria   for the sub-tree within each domain used to select the "best"   candidate path.   In addition to the OFs, the following constraints MAY also be   beneficial for inter-domain P2MP path computation:   1.  The computed P2MP "core-tree" SHOULD be optimal when only       considering the paths to the leaf domain entry BNs.   2.  Grafting and pruning of multicast destinations (sub-trees) within       a leaf domain SHOULD ensure minimal impact on other domains and       on the core-tree.   3.  It SHOULD be possible to choose to optimize the core-tree.   4.  It SHOULD be possible to choose to optimize the entire tree (P2MP       LSP).   5.  It SHOULD be possible to combine the aforementioned OFs and       constraints for P2MP path computation.   When implementing and operating P2MP LSPs, the following need to be   taken into consideration:   o  The complexity of computation.   o  The optimality of the tree (core-tree as well as full P2MP LSP      tree).   o  The stability of the core-tree.   The solution SHOULD allow these trade-offs to be made at computation   time.   The algorithms used to compute optimal paths using a combination of   OFs and multiple constraints are out of the scope of this document.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                      [Page 9]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 20147.  P2MP Path Computation Procedures7.1.  General   A P2MP path computation can be broken down into two steps: core-tree   computation and grafting of sub-trees.  Breaking the procedure into   these specific steps has the following impact, allowing the core-   tree-based solution to provide an optimal inter-domain P2MP TE LSP:   o  The core-tree and sub-tree are smaller in comparison to the full      P2MP tree and are thus easier to compute.   o  An implementation MAY choose to keep the core-tree fairly static      or computed offline (trade-off with optimality).   o  Adding/pruning of leaves requires changes to the sub-tree in the      leaf-domain only.   o  The PCEP message size is smaller in comparison.   The following sub-sections describe the core-tree-based mechanism,   including procedures and PCEP extensions that satisfy the   requirements and objectives specified in Sections5 and6 of this   document.7.2.  Core-Trees   A core-tree is defined as a tree that satisfies the following   conditions:   o  The root of the core-tree is the ingress LSR in the root domain.   o  The leaves of the core-tree are the entry boundary nodes in the      leaf domains.   To support confidentiality, these nodes and links MAY be hidden using   the Path-Key mechanism [RFC5520], but they MUST be computed and be a   part of the core-tree.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 10]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 2014   For example, consider the domain tree in Figure 1, representing a   domain tree of 6 domains and part of the resulting core-tree, which   satisfies the aforementioned conditions.                             +----------------+                             |                |Domain D1                             |        R       |                             |                |                             |        A       |                             |                |                             +-B------------C-+                              /              \                             /                \                            /                  \            Domain D2      /                    \ Domain D3            +-------------D--+             +-----E----------+            |                |             |                |            |  F             |             |                |            |          G     |             |       H        |            |                |             |                |            |                |             |                |            +-I--------------+             +-J------------K-+             /\                             /              \            /  \                           /                \           /    \                         /                  \          /      \                       /                    \         /        \                     /                      \        /          \                   /                        \       / Domain D4  \      Domain D5  /              Domain D6   \     +-L-------------W+       +------P---------+      +-----------T----+     |                |       |                |      |                |     |                |       |  Q             |      |   U            |     |  M        O    |       |         S      |      |                |     |                |       |                |      |          V     |     |          N     |       |   R            |      |                |     +----------------+       +----------------+      +----------------+                          Figure 1: Domain Tree ExampleZhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 11]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 2014                                    (R)                                     |                                    (A)                                    / \                                   /   \                                 (B)   (C)                                 /       \                                /         \                              (D)         (E)                              /            |                             /             |                           (G)            (H)                           /              / \                          /              /   \                        (I)            (J)   (K)                        / \            /       \                       /   \          /         \                     (L)   (W)      (P)         (T)                           Figure 2: Core-Tree   A core-tree is computed such that the root of the tree is R and the   leaf nodes are the entry nodes of the destination domains (L, W, P,   and T).  The Path-Key mechanism can be used to hide the internal   nodes and links in the final core-tree as shown below for domains D2   and D3 (nodes G and H are hidden via Path-Keys PK1 and PK2,   respectively).Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 12]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 2014                                    (R)                                     |                                    (A)                                    / \                                   /   \                                 (B)   (C)                                 /       \                                /         \                              (D)         (E)                              /            |                             /             |                          |PK1|          |PK2|                           /              / \                          /              /   \                        (I)            (J)   (K)                        / \            /       \                       /   \          /         \                     (L)   (W)      (P)         (T)                    Figure 3: Core-Tree with Path-Key7.3.  Optimal Core-Tree Computation Procedure   Applying the core-tree procedure to large groups of domains, such as   the Internet, is not considered feasible or desirable and is out of   the scope of this document.   The following extended BRPC-based procedure can be used to compute   the core-tree.  Note that a root PCE MAY further use its own enhanced   optimization techniques in the future to compute the core-tree.   A BRPC-based core-tree path computation procedure is described below:   1.  Use the BRPC procedures to compute the VSPT(i) (Virtual Shortest       Path Tree) for each leaf BN(i), i=1 to n, where n is the total       number of entry nodes for all the leaf domains.  In each VSPT(i),       there are a number of P(i) paths.   2.  When the root PCE has computed all the VSPT(i), i=1 to n, take       one path from each VSPT and form all possible sets of paths.  We       call them PathSet(j), j=1 to M, where M=P(1)xP(2)...xP(n).   3.  For each PathSet(j), there are n S2L (Source-to-Leaf) BN paths.       Form these n paths into a core-tree(j).   4.  There will be M number core-trees computed from step 3.  An       optimal core-tree is selected based on the OF and constraints.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 13]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 2014   Note that since the point-to-point BRPC procedure is used to compute   VSPT, the path request and response message formats defined in   [RFC5440] are used.   Also note that the application of BRPC in the aforementioned   procedure differs from the typical one since paths returned from a   downstream PCE are not necessarily pruned from the solution set   (extended VSPT) by intermediate PCEs.  The reason for this is that if   the PCE in a downstream domain does the pruning and returns the   single optimal sub-path to the upstream PCE, the combination of these   single optimal sub-paths into a core-tree is not necessarily optimal   even if each S2L (Source-to-Leaf) sub-path is optimal.   Without trimming, the ingress PCE will obtain all the possible S2L   sub-paths set for the entry boundary nodes of the leaf domain.  By   looking through all the combinations and taking one sub-path from   each set to build one tree, the PCE will then select the optimal   core-tree.   A PCE MAY add equal-cost paths within the domain while constructing   an extended VSPT.  This will provide the ingress PCE more candidate   paths for an optimal core-tree.   The proposed method may present a scalability problem for the dynamic   computation of the core-tree (by iterative checking of all   combinations of the solution space), especially with dense/meshed   domains.  Considering a domain sequence D1, D2, D3, D4, where the   leaf boundary node is at domain D4, PCE(4) will return 1 path.   PCE(3) will return N paths, where N is E(3) x X(3), where E(k) x X(k)   denotes the number of entry nodes times the number of exit nodes for   that domain.  PCE(2) will return M paths, where M = E(2) x X(2) x N =   E(2) x X(2) x E(3) x X(3) x 1, etc.  Generally speaking, the number   of potential paths at the ingress PCE Q = prod E(k) x X(k).   Consequently, it is expected that the core-tree will typically be   computed offline, without precluding the use of dynamic, online   mechanisms such as the one presented here, in which case it SHOULD be   possible to configure transit PCEs to control the number of paths   sent upstream during BRPC (trading trimming for optimality at the   point of trimming and downwards).Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 14]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 20147.4.  Sub-tree Computation Procedures   Once the core-tree is built, the grafting of all the leaf nodes from   each domain to the core-tree can be achieved by a number of   algorithms.  One algorithm for doing this phase is that the root PCE   will send the request with the C-bit set (as defined inSection 7.5.1   of this document) for the path computation to the destination(s)   directly to the PCE where the destination(s) belong(s) along with the   core-tree computed perSection 7.2.   This approach requires that the root PCE manage a potentially large   number of adjacencies (either in persistent or non-persistent mode),   including PCEP adjacencies to PCEs that are not within neighbor   domains.   An alternative would involve establishing PCEP adjacencies that   correspond to the PCE domain tree.  This would require that branch   PCEs forward requests and responses from the root PCE towards the   leaf PCEs and vice versa.   Note that the P2MP path request and response format is as per   [RFC6006], where Record Route Objects (RROs) are used to carry the   core-tree paths in the P2MP grafting request.   The algorithms to compute the optimal large sub-tree are outside the   scope of this document.7.5.  PCEP Protocol Extensions7.5.1.  Extension of RP Object   This experiment will be carried out by extending the RP (Request   Parameters) object (defined in [RFC5440]) used in PCEP requests and   responses.   The extended format of the RP object body to include the C-bit is as   follows:   The C-bit is added in the flag bits field of the RP object to signal   the receiver of the message whether or not the request/reply is for   inter-domain P2MP core-tree.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 15]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 2014   The following flag is added in this document:      Bit Number     Name Flag      17             Core-tree computation (C-bit)      C-bit (Core-Tree bit - 1 bit):      0:  Indicates that this is not for an inter-domain P2MP core-tree.      1:  Indicates that this is a PCEP request or a response for the          computation of an inter-domain core-tree or for the grafting          of a sub-tree to an inter-domain core-tree.7.5.2.  Domain and PCE Sequence   The procedure described in this document requires the domain tree to   be known in advance.  This information MAY be either administratively   predetermined or dynamically discovered by some means, such as the   Hierarchical PCE (H-PCE) framework [RFC6805], or derived through the   IGP/BGP routing information.   Examples of ways to encode the domain path tree are found in   [RFC5886], which uses PCE-ID Objects, and [DOMAIN-SEQ].7.6.  Using H-PCE for Scalability   The ingress/root PCE is responsible for the core-tree computation as   well as grafting of sub-trees into the multi-domain tree.  Therefore,   the ingress/root PCE will receive all computed path segments from all   the involved domains.  When the ingress/root PCE chooses to have a   PCEP session with all involved PCEs, this may cause an excessive   number of sessions or added complexity in implementations.   The H-PCE framework [RFC6805] may be used to establish a dedicated   PCE with the capability (memory and CPU) and knowledge to maintain   the necessary PCEP sessions.  The parent PCE would be responsible for   sending an intra-domain path computation request to the PCEs,   combining them, and returning the overall P2MP tree.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 16]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 20147.7.  Parallelism   In order to minimize latency in path computation in multi-domain   networks, intra-domain path segments and intra-domain sub-trees can   be computed in parallel when possible.  The proposed procedures in   this document present opportunities for parallelism:   1.  The BRPC procedure for each leaf boundary node can be launched in       parallel by the ingress/root PCE for dynamic computation of the       core-tree.   2.  The grafting of sub-trees can be triggered in parallel once the       core-tree is computed.   One of the potential issues of parallelism is that the ingress PCE   would require a potentially high number of PCEP adjacencies to   "remote" PCEs at the same time; this situation may not be desirable.8.  Protection   It is envisaged that protection may be required when deploying and   using inter-domain P2MP TE LSPs.  The procedures and mechanisms   defined in this document do not prohibit the use of existing and   proposed types of protection, including end-to-end protection   [RFC4872] and domain protection schemes.   Segment or facility (link and node) protection is problematic in   inter-domain environments due to the limit of fast reroute (FRR)   [RFC4875] requiring knowledge of its next hop across domain   boundaries while maintaining domain confidentiality.  However, the   FRR protection might be implemented if next-hop information was known   in advance.8.1.  End-to-End Protection   An end-to-end protection (for nodes and links) principle can be   applied for computing backup P2MP TE LSPs.  During computation of the   core-tree and sub-trees, protection may also be taken into   consideration.  A PCE may compute the primary and backup P2MP TE LSP   together or sequentially.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 17]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 20148.2.  Domain Protection   In this protection scheme, a backup P2MP tree can be computed that   excludes the transit/branch domain completely.  A backup domain path   tree is needed with the same source domain and destination domains   and a new set of transit domains.  The backup path tree can be   applied to the above procedure to obtain the backup P2MP TE LSP with   disjoint transit domains.9.  Manageability Considerations   [RFC5862] describes various manageability requirements in support of   P2MP path computation when applying PCEP.  This section describes how   the manageability requirements mentioned in [RFC5862] are supported   in the context of PCEP extensions specified in this document.   Note that [RFC5440] describes various manageability considerations in   PCEP, and most of the manageability requirements mentioned in   [RFC6006] are already covered there.9.1.  Control of Function and Policy   In addition to the PCE configuration parameters listed in [RFC5440]   and [RFC6006], the following additional parameters might be required:   o  The ability to enable or disable multi-domain P2MP path      computations on the PCE.   o  Configuration of the PCE to enable or disable the advertisement of      its multi-domain P2MP path computation capability.9.2.  Information and Data Models   A number of MIB objects have been defined for general PCEP control   and monitoring of P2P computations in [PCEP-MIB].  [RFC5862]   specifies that MIB objects will be required to support the control   and monitoring of the protocol extensions defined in this document.   [PCEP-P2MP-MIB] describes managed objects for modeling of PCEP   communications between a PCC and PCE, communication between PCEs, and   P2MP path computation requests and responses.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 18]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 20149.3.  Liveness Detection and Monitoring   No changes are necessary to the liveness detection and monitoring   requirements as already embodied in [RFC4657].   It should be noted that multi-domain P2MP computations are likely to   take longer than P2P computations and single-domain P2MP   computations.  The liveness detection and monitoring features of the   PCEP SHOULD take this into account.9.4.  Verifying Correct Operation   There are no additional requirements beyond those expressed in   [RFC4657] for verifying the correct operation of the PCEP.  Note that   verification of the correct operation of the PCE and its algorithms   is out of the scope of the protocol requirements, but a PCC MAY send   the same request to more than one PCE and compare the results.9.5.  Requirements on Other Protocols and Functional Components   A PCE operates on a topology graph that may be built using   information distributed by TE extensions to the routing protocol   operating within the network.  In order that the PCE can select a   suitable path for the signaling protocol to use to install the P2MP   TE LSP, the topology graph MUST include information about the P2MP   signaling and branching capabilities of each LSR in the network.   Mechanisms for the knowledge of other domains and the discovery of   corresponding PCEs and their capabilities SHOULD be provided, and   this information MAY be collected by other mechanisms.   Whatever means is used to collect the information to build the   topology graph, the graph MUST include the requisite information.  If   the TE extensions to the routing protocol are used, these SHOULD be   as described in [RFC5073].9.6.  Impact on Network Operation   The use of a PCE to compute P2MP paths is not expected to have   significant impact on network operations.  However, it should be   noted that the introduction of P2MP support to a PCE that already   provides P2P path computation might change the loading of the PCE   significantly, and that might have an impact on the network behavior,   especially during recovery periods immediately after a network   failure.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 19]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 2014   The dynamic computation of core-trees might also have an impact on   the load of the involved PCEs as well as path computation times.   It should be noted that pre-computing and maintaining domain trees   might introduce considerable administration effort for the operator.9.7.  Policy Control   [RFC5394] provides additional details on policy within the PCE   architecture and also provides context for the support of PCE Policy.   They are also applicable to inter-domain P2MP path computation via   the core-tree mechanism.10.  Security Considerations   As described in [RFC5862], P2MP path computation requests are more   CPU-intensive and also utilize more link bandwidth.  In the event of   an unauthorized P2MP path computation request or a denial-of-service   attack, the subsequent PCEP requests and processing may be disruptive   to the network.  Consequently, it is important that implementations   conform to the relevant security requirements of [RFC5440] that   specifically help to minimize or negate unauthorized P2MP path   computation requests and denial-of-service attacks.  These mechanisms   include:   o  Securing the PCEP session requests and responses using TCP      security techniques (Section 10.2 of [RFC5440]).   o  Authenticating the PCEP requests and responses to ensure the      message is intact and sent from an authorized node (Section 10.3      of [RFC5440]).   o  Providing policy control by explicitly defining which PCCs, via IP      access lists, are allowed to send P2MP path requests to the PCE      (Section 10.6 of [RFC5440]).   PCEP operates over TCP, so it is also important to secure the PCE and   PCC against TCP denial-of-service attacks.Section 10.7.1 of   [RFC5440] outlines a number of mechanisms for minimizing the risk of   TCP-based denial-of-service attacks against PCEs and PCCs.   PCEP implementations SHOULD also consider the additional security   provided by the TCP Authentication Option (TCP-AO) [RFC5925].   Finally, any multi-domain operation necessarily involves the exchange   of information across domain boundaries.  This may represent a   significant security and confidentiality risk, especially when the   domains are controlled by different commercial entities.  PCEP allowsZhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 20]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 2014   individual PCEs to maintain confidentiality of their domain path   information by using Path-Keys [RFC5520] and would allow for securing   of domain path information when performing core-tree-based path   computations.11.  IANA Considerations   IANA maintains the "Path Computation Element Protocol (PCEP) Numbers"   registry and the "RP Object Flag Field" sub-registry.   IANA has allocated a new bit from this registry as follows:      Bit             Description                        Reference      17              Core-tree computation (C-bit)      [RFC7334]12.  Acknowledgements   The authors would like to thank Adrian Farrel, Dan Tappan, Olufemi   Komolafe, Oscar Gonzalez de Dios, and Julien Meuric for their   valuable comments on this document.13.  References13.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]        Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate                    Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC5440]        Vasseur, JP., Ed., and JL. Le Roux, Ed., "Path                    Computation Element (PCE) Communication Protocol                    (PCEP)",RFC 5440, March 2009.   [RFC5441]        Vasseur, JP., Ed., Zhang, R., Bitar, N., and JL. Le                    Roux, "A Backward-Recursive PCE-Based Computation                    (BRPC) Procedure to Compute Shortest Constrained                    Inter-Domain Traffic Engineering Label Switched                    Paths",RFC 5441, April 2009.   [RFC6006]        Zhao, Q., Ed., King, D., Ed., Verhaeghe, F., Takeda,                    T., Ali, Z., and J. Meuric, "Extensions to the Path                    Computation Element Communication Protocol (PCEP)                    for Point-to-Multipoint Traffic Engineering Label                    Switched Paths",RFC 6006, September 2010.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 21]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 201413.2.  Informative References   [RFC4461]        Yasukawa, S., Ed., "Signaling Requirements for                    Point-to-Multipoint Traffic-Engineered MPLS Label                    Switched Paths (LSPs)",RFC 4461, April 2006.   [RFC4655]        Farrel, A., Vasseur, J.-P., and J. Ash, "A Path                    Computation Element (PCE)-Based Architecture",RFC4655, August 2006.   [RFC4657]        Ash, J., Ed., and J. Le Roux, Ed., "Path Computation                    Element (PCE) Communication Protocol Generic                    Requirements",RFC 4657, September 2006.   [RFC4872]        Lang, J., Ed., Rekhter, Y., Ed., and D.                    Papadimitriou, Ed., "RSVP-TE Extensions in Support                    of End-to-End Generalized Multi-Protocol Label                    Switching (GMPLS) Recovery",RFC 4872, May 2007.   [RFC4875]        Aggarwal, R., Ed., Papadimitriou, D., Ed., and S.                    Yasukawa, Ed., "Extensions to Resource Reservation                    Protocol - Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE) for Point-                    to-Multipoint TE Label Switched Paths (LSPs)",RFC4875, May 2007.   [RFC5073]        Vasseur, J., Ed., and J. Le Roux, Ed., "IGP Routing                    Protocol Extensions for Discovery of Traffic                    Engineering Node Capabilities",RFC 5073, December                    2007.   [RFC5152]        Vasseur, JP., Ed., Ayyangar, A., Ed., and R. Zhang,                    "A Per-Domain Path Computation Method for                    Establishing Inter-Domain Traffic Engineering (TE)                    Label Switched Paths (LSPs)",RFC 5152, February                    2008.   [RFC5376]        Bitar, N., Zhang, R., and K. Kumaki, "Inter-AS                    Requirements for the Path Computation Element                    Communication Protocol (PCECP)",RFC 5376, November                    2008.   [RFC5394]        Bryskin, I., Papadimitriou, D., Berger, L., and J.                    Ash, "Policy-Enabled Path Computation Framework",RFC 5394, December 2008.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 22]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 2014   [RFC5520]        Bradford, R., Ed., Vasseur, JP., and A. Farrel,                    "Preserving Topology Confidentiality in Inter-Domain                    Path Computation Using a Path-Key-Based Mechanism",RFC 5520, April 2009.   [RFC5671]        Yasukawa, S. and A. Farrel, Ed., "Applicability of                    the Path Computation Element (PCE) to Point-to-                    Multipoint (P2MP) MPLS and GMPLS Traffic Engineering                    (TE)",RFC 5671, October 2009.   [RFC5862]        Yasukawa, S. and A. Farrel, "Path Computation                    Clients (PCC) - Path Computation Element (PCE)                    Requirements for Point-to-Multipoint MPLS-TE",RFC5862, June 2010.   [RFC5886]        Vasseur, JP., Ed., Le Roux, JL., and Y. Ikejiri, "A                    Set of Monitoring Tools for Path Computation Element                    (PCE)-Based Architecture",RFC 5886, June 2010.   [RFC5925]        Touch, J., Mankin, A., and R. Bonica, "The TCP                    Authentication Option",RFC 5925, June 2010.   [RFC6805]        King, D., Ed., and A. Farrel, Ed., "The Application                    of the Path Computation Element Architecture to the                    Determination of a Sequence of Domains in MPLS and                    GMPLS",RFC 6805, November 2012.   [PCEP-MIB]       Koushik, A., Stephan, E., Zhao, Q., King, D., and J.                    Hardwick, "Path Computation Element Protocol (PCEP)                    Management Information Base", Work in Progress,                    July 2014.   [PCEP-P2MP-MIB]  Zhao, Q., Dhody, D., Palle, U., and D. King,                    "Management Information Base for the PCE                    Communications Protocol (PCEP) When Requesting                    Point-to-Multipoint Services", Work in Progress,                    August 2012.   [DOMAIN-SEQ]     Dhody, D., Palle, U., and R. Casellas, "Standard                    Representation Of Domain-Sequence", Work in                    Progress, July 2014.Zhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 23]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 201414.  Contributors' Addresses   Siva Sivabalan   Cisco Systems   2000 Innovation Drive   Kanata, Ontario  K2K 3E8   Canada   EMail: msiva@cisco.com   Tarek Saad   Cisco Systems, Inc.   2000 Innovation Drive   Kanata, Ontario  K2K 3E8   Canada   EMail: tsaad@cisco.comZhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 24]

RFC 7334            PCEP P2MP Inter-Domain Procedures        August 2014Authors' Addresses   Quintin Zhao   Huawei Technology   125 Nagog Technology Park   Acton, MA  01719   US   EMail: quintin.zhao@huawei.com   Dhruv Dhody   Huawei Technology   Leela Palace   Bangalore, Karnataka  560008   India   EMail: dhruv.dhody@huawei.com   Daniel King   Old Dog Consulting   UK   EMail: daniel@olddog.co.uk   Zafar Ali   Cisco Systems   2000 Innovation Drive   Kanata, Ontario  K2K 3E8   Canada   EMail: zali@cisco.com   Ramon Casellas   CTTC   Av. Carl Friedrich Gauss n7   Castelldefels, Barcelona  08860   Spain   EMail: ramon.casellas@cttc.esZhao, et al.                  Experimental                     [Page 25]

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp