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PROPOSED STANDARD
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                   A. Sajassi, Ed.Request for Comments: 7623                                      S. SalamCategory: Standards Track                                          CiscoISSN: 2070-1721                                                 N. Bitar                                                                 Verizon                                                                A. Isaac                                                                 Juniper                                                           W. Henderickx                                                          Alcatel-Lucent                                                          September 2015Provider Backbone Bridging Combined with Ethernet VPN (PBB-EVPN)Abstract   This document discusses how Ethernet Provider Backbone Bridging (PBB)   can be combined with Ethernet VPN (EVPN) in order to reduce the   number of BGP MAC Advertisement routes by aggregating Customer/Client   MAC (C-MAC) addresses via Provider Backbone MAC (B-MAC) address,   provide client MAC address mobility using C-MAC aggregation, confine   the scope of C-MAC learning to only active flows, offer per-site   policies, and avoid C-MAC address flushing on topology changes.  The   combined solution is referred to as PBB-EVPN.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/rfc7623.Sajassi, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 2015Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2015 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 ....................................................32. Terminology .....................................................43. Requirements ....................................................43.1. MAC Advertisement Route Scalability ........................53.2. C-MAC Mobility Independent of B-MAC Advertisements .........53.3. C-MAC Address Learning and Confinement .....................53.4. Per-Site Policy Support ....................................63.5. No C-MAC Address Flushing for All-Active Multihoming .......64. Solution Overview ...............................................65. BGP Encoding ....................................................75.1. Ethernet Auto-Discovery Route ..............................75.2. MAC/IP Advertisement Route .................................75.3. Inclusive Multicast Ethernet Tag Route .....................85.4. Ethernet Segment Route .....................................85.5. ESI Label Extended Community ...............................85.6. ES-Import Route Target .....................................95.7. MAC Mobility Extended Community ............................95.8. Default Gateway Extended Community .........................96. Operation .......................................................96.1. MAC Address Distribution over Core .........................96.2. Device Multihoming .........................................96.2.1. Flow-Based Load-Balancing ...........................96.2.1.1. PE B-MAC Address Assignment ...............106.2.1.2. Automating B-MAC Address Assignment .......11                  6.2.1.3. Split Horizon and Designated                           Forwarder Election ........................126.2.2. Load-Balancing based on I-SID ......................126.2.2.1. PE B-MAC Address Assignment ...............12                  6.2.2.2. Split Horizon and Designated                           Forwarder Election ........................136.2.2.3. Handling Failure Scenarios ................13Sajassi, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 20156.3. Network Multihoming .......................................146.4. Frame Forwarding ..........................................146.4.1. Unicast ............................................156.4.2. Multicast/Broadcast ................................156.5. MPLS Encapsulation of PBB Frames ..........................167. Minimizing ARP/ND Broadcast ....................................168. Seamless Interworking with IEEE 802.1aq / 802.1Qbp .............178.1. B-MAC Address Assignment ..................................178.2. IEEE 802.1aq / 802.1Qbp B-MAC Address Advertisement .......178.3. Operation: ................................................179. Solution Advantages ............................................189.1. MAC Advertisement Route Scalability .......................189.2. C-MAC Mobility Independent of B-MAC Advertisements ........189.3. C-MAC Address Learning and Confinement ....................199.4. Seamless Interworking with 802.1aq Access Networks ........199.5. Per-Site Policy Support ...................................209.6. No C-MAC Address Flushing for All-Active Multihoming ......2010. Security Considerations .......................................2011. IANA Considerations ...........................................2012. References ....................................................2112.1. Normative References .....................................2112.2. Informative References ...................................21   Acknowledgements ..................................................22   Contributors ......................................................22   Authors' Addresses ................................................231.  Introduction   [RFC7432] introduces a solution for multipoint Layer 2 Virtual   Private Network (L2VPN) services, with advanced multihoming   capabilities, using BGP for distributing customer/client MAC address   reachability information over the core MPLS/IP network.  [PBB]   defines an architecture for Ethernet Provider Backbone Bridging   (PBB), where MAC tunneling is employed to improve service instance   and MAC address scalability in Ethernet as well as VPLS networks   [RFC7080].   In this document, we discuss how PBB can be combined with EVPN in   order to: reduce the number of BGP MAC Advertisement routes by   aggregating Customer/Client MAC (C-MAC) addresses via Provider   Backbone MAC (B-MAC) address, provide client MAC address mobility   using C-MAC aggregation, confine the scope of C-MAC learning to only   active flows, offer per-site policies, and avoid C-MAC address   flushing on topology changes.  The combined solution is referred to   as PBB-EVPN.Sajassi, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 20152.  Terminology   ARP: Address Resolution Protocol   BEB: Backbone Edge Bridge   B-MAC: Backbone MAC   B-VID: Backbone VLAN ID   CE: Customer Edge   C-MAC: Customer/Client MAC   ES: Ethernet Segment   ESI: Ethernet Segment Identifier   EVI: EVPN Instance   EVPN: Ethernet VPN   I-SID: Service Instance Identifier (24 bits and global within a PBB          network see [RFC7080])   LSP: Label Switched Path   MP2MP: Multipoint to Multipoint   MP2P: Multipoint to Point   NA: Neighbor Advertisement   ND: Neighbor Discovery   P2MP: Point to Multipoint   P2P: Point to Point   PBB: Provider Backbone Bridge   PE: Provider Edge   RT: Route Target   VPLS: Virtual Private LAN Service   Single-Active Redundancy Mode: When only a single PE, among a group   of PEs attached to an Ethernet segment, is allowed to forward traffic   to/from that Ethernet segment, then the Ethernet segment is defined   to be operating in Single-Active redundancy mode.   All-Active Redundancy Mode: When all PEs attached to an Ethernet   segment are allowed to forward traffic to/from that Ethernet segment,   then the Ethernet segment is defined to be operating in All-Active   redundancy mode.   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 inBCP 14 [RFC2119].3.  Requirements   The requirements for PBB-EVPN include all the requirements for EVPN   that were described in [RFC7209], in addition to the following:Sajassi, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 20153.1.  MAC Advertisement Route Scalability   In typical operation, an EVPN PE sends a BGP MAC Advertisement route   per C-MAC address.  In certain applications, this poses scalability   challenges, as is the case in data center interconnect (DCI)   scenarios where the number of virtual machines (VMs), and hence the   number of C-MAC addresses, can be in the millions.  In such   scenarios, it is required to reduce the number of BGP MAC   Advertisement routes by relying on a 'MAC summarization' scheme, as   is provided by PBB.3.2.  C-MAC Mobility Independent of B-MAC Advertisements   Certain applications, such as virtual machine mobility, require   support for fast C-MAC address mobility.  For these applications,   when using EVPN, the virtual machine MAC address needs to be   transmitted in BGP MAC Advertisement route.  Otherwise, traffic would   be forwarded to the wrong segment when a virtual machine moves from   one ES to another.  This means MAC address prefixes cannot be used in   data center applications.   In order to support C-MAC address mobility, while retaining the   scalability benefits of MAC summarization, PBB technology is used.   It defines a B-MAC address space that is independent of the C-MAC   address space, and aggregates C-MAC addresses via a single B-MAC   address.3.3.  C-MAC Address Learning and Confinement   In EVPN, all the PE nodes participating in the same EVPN instance are   exposed to all the C-MAC addresses learned by any one of these PE   nodes because a C-MAC learned by one of the PE nodes is advertised in   BGP to other PE nodes in that EVPN instance.  This is the case even   if some of the PE nodes for that EVPN instance are not involved in   forwarding traffic to, or from, these C-MAC addresses.  Even if an   implementation does not install hardware forwarding entries for C-MAC   addresses that are not part of active traffic flows on that PE, the   device memory is still consumed by keeping record of the C-MAC   addresses in the routing information base (RIB) table.  In network   applications with millions of C-MAC addresses, this introduces a non-   trivial waste of PE resources.  As such, it is required to confine   the scope of visibility of C-MAC addresses to only those PE nodes   that are actively involved in forwarding traffic to, or from, these   addresses.Sajassi, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 20153.4.  Per-Site Policy Support   In many applications, it is required to be able to enforce   connectivity policy rules at the granularity of a site (or segment).   This includes the ability to control which PE nodes in the network   can forward traffic to, or from, a given site.  Both EVPN and PBB-   EVPN are capable of providing this granularity of policy control.  In   the case where the policy needs to be at the granularity of per C-MAC   address, then the C-MAC address should be learned in the control   plane (in BGP) per [RFC7432].3.5.  No C-MAC Address Flushing for All-Active Multihoming   Just as in [RFC7432], it is required to avoid C-MAC address flushing   upon link, port, or node failure for All-Active multihomed segments.4.  Solution Overview   The solution involves incorporating IEEE Backbone Edge Bridge (BEB)   functionality on the EVPN PE nodes similar to PBB-VPLS, where BEB   functionality is incorporated in the VPLS PE nodes.  The PE devices   would then receive 802.1Q Ethernet frames from their attachment   circuits, encapsulate them in the PBB header, and forward the frames   over the IP/MPLS core.  On the egress EVPN PE, the PBB header is   removed following the MPLS disposition, and the original 802.1Q   Ethernet frame is delivered to the customer equipment.                   BEB   +--------------+  BEB                   ||    |              |  ||                   \/    |              |  \/       +----+ AC1 +----+ |              | +----+   +----+       | CE1|-----|    | |              | |    |---| CE2|       +----+\    | PE1| |   IP/MPLS    | | PE3|   +----+              \   +----+ |   Network    | +----+               \         |              |             AC2\ +----+ |              |                 \|    | |              |                  | PE2| |              |                  +----+ |              |                    /\   +--------------+                    ||                    BEB         <-802.1Q-> <------PBB over MPLS------> <-802.1Q->                        Figure 1: PBB-EVPN NetworkSajassi, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 2015   The PE nodes perform the following functions:   -  Learn customer/client MAC addresses (C-MACs) over the attachment      circuits in the data plane, per normal bridge operation.   -  Learn remote C-MAC to B-MAC bindings in the data plane for traffic      received from the core per the bridging operation described in      [PBB].   -  Advertise local B-MAC address reachability information in BGP to      all other PE nodes in the same set of service instances.  Note      that every PE has a set of B-MAC addresses that uniquely      identifies the device.  B-MAC address assignment is described in      details inSection 6.2.2.   -  Build a forwarding table from remote BGP advertisements received      associating remote B-MAC addresses with remote PE IP addresses and      the associated MPLS label(s).5.  BGP Encoding   PBB-EVPN leverages the same BGP routes and attributes defined in   [RFC7432], adapted as described below.5.1.  Ethernet Auto-Discovery Route   This route and all of its associated modes are not needed in PBB-EVPN   because PBB encapsulation provides the required level of indirection   for C-MAC addresses -- i.e., an ES can be represented by a B-MAC   address for the purpose of data-plane learning/forwarding.   The receiving PE knows that it need not wait for the receipt of the   Ethernet A-D (auto-discovery) route for route resolution by means of   the reserved ESI encoded in the MAC Advertisement route: the ESI   values of 0 and MAX-ESI indicate that the receiving PE can resolve   the path without an Ethernet A-D route.5.2.  MAC/IP Advertisement Route   The EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route is used to distribute B-MAC   addresses of the PE nodes instead of the C-MAC addresses of end-   stations/hosts.  This is because the C-MAC addresses are learned in   the data plane for traffic arriving from the core.  The MAC   Advertisement route is encoded as follows:   -  The MAC address field contains the B-MAC address.   -  The Ethernet Tag field is set to 0.Sajassi, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 2015   -  The Ethernet Segment Identifier field must be set to either 0 (for      single-homed segments or multihomed segments with per-I-SID load-      balancing) or to MAX-ESI (for multihomed segments with per-flow      load-balancing).  All other values are not permitted.   -  All other fields are set as defined in [RFC7432].   This route is tagged with the RT corresponding to its EVI.  This EVI   is analogous to a B-VID.5.3.  Inclusive Multicast Ethernet Tag Route   This route is used for multicast pruning per I-SID.  It is used for   auto-discovery of PEs participating in a given I-SID so that a   multicast tunnel (MP2P, P2P, P2MP, or MP2MP LSP) can be set up for   that I-SID.  [RFC7080] uses multicast pruning per I-SID based on   [MMRP], which is a soft-state protocol.  The advantages of multicast   pruning using this BGP route over [MMRP] are that a) it scales very   well for a large number of PEs and b) it works with any type of LSP   (MP2P, P2P, P2MP, or MP2MP); whereas, [MMRP] only works over P2P   pseudowires.  The Inclusive Multicast Ethernet Tag route is encoded   as follows:   -  The Ethernet Tag field is set with the appropriate I-SID value.   -  All other fields are set as defined in [RFC7432].   This route is tagged with an RT.  This RT SHOULD be set to a value   corresponding to its EVI (which is analogous to a B-VID).  The RT for   this route MAY also be auto-derived from the corresponding Ethernet   Tag (I-SID) based on the procedure specified in Section 5.1.2.1 of   [OVERLAY].5.4.  Ethernet Segment Route   This route is used for auto-discovery of PEs belonging to a given   redundancy group (e.g., attached to a given ES) per [RFC7432].5.5.  ESI Label Extended Community   This extended community is not used in PBB-EVPN.  In [RFC7432], this   extended community is used along with the Ethernet A-D route to   advertise an MPLS label for the purpose of split-horizon filtering.   Since in PBB-EVPN, the split-horizon filtering is performed natively   using B-MAC source address, there is no need for this extended   community.Sajassi, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 20155.6.  ES-Import Route Target   This RT is used as defined in [RFC7432].5.7.  MAC Mobility Extended Community   This extended community is defined in [RFC7432] and it is used with a   MAC route (B-MAC route in case of PBB-EVPN).  The B-MAC route is   tagged with the RT corresponding to its EVI (which is analogous to a   B-VID).  When this extended community is used along with a B-MAC   route in PBB-EVPN, it indicates that all C-MAC addresses associated   with that B-MAC address across all corresponding I-SIDs must be   flushed.   When a PE first advertises a B-MAC, it MAY advertise it with this   extended community where the sticky/static flag is set to 1 and the   sequence number is set to zero.  In such cases where the PE wants to   signal the stickiness of a B-MAC, then when a flush indication is   needed, the PE advertises the B-MAC along with the MAC Mobility   extended community where the sticky/static flag remains set and the   sequence number is incremented.5.8.  Default Gateway Extended Community   This extended community is not used in PBB-EVPN.6.  Operation   This section discusses the operation of PBB-EVPN, specifically in   areas where it differs from [RFC7432].6.1.  MAC Address Distribution over Core   In PBB-EVPN, host MAC addresses (i.e., C-MAC addresses) need not be   distributed in BGP.  Rather, every PE independently learns the C-MAC   addresses in the data plane via normal bridging operation.  Every PE   has a set of one or more unicast B-MAC addresses associated with it,   and those are the addresses distributed over the core in MAC   Advertisement routes.6.2.  Device Multihoming6.2.1.  Flow-Based Load-Balancing   This section describes the procedures for supporting device   multihoming in an All-Active redundancy mode (i.e., flow-based load-   balancing).Sajassi, et al.              Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 20156.2.1.1.  PE B-MAC Address Assignment   In [PBB], every BEB is uniquely identified by one or more B-MAC   addresses.  These addresses are usually locally administered by the   service provider.  For PBB-EVPN, the choice of B-MAC address(es) for   the PE nodes must be examined carefully as it has implications on the   proper operation of multihoming.  In particular, for the scenario   where a CE is multihomed to a number of PE nodes with All-Active   redundancy mode, a given C-MAC address would be reachable via   multiple PE nodes concurrently.  Given that any given remote PE will   bind the C-MAC address to a single B-MAC address, then the various PE   nodes connected to the same CE must share the same B-MAC address.   Otherwise, the MAC address table of the remote PE nodes will keep   oscillating between the B-MAC addresses of the various PE devices.   For example, consider the network of Figure 1, and assume that PE1   has B-MAC address BM1 and PE2 has B-MAC address BM2.  Also, assume   that both links from CE1 to the PE nodes are part of the same   Ethernet link aggregation group.  If BM1 is not equal to BM2, the   consequence is that the MAC address table on PE3 will keep   oscillating such that the C-MAC address M1 of CE1 would flip-flop   between BM1 or BM2, depending on the load-balancing decision on CE1   for traffic destined to the core.   Considering that there could be multiple sites (e.g., CEs) that are   multihomed to the same set of PE nodes, then it is required for all   the PE devices in a redundancy group to have a unique B-MAC address   per site.  This way, it is possible to achieve fast convergence in   the case where a link or port failure impacts the attachment circuit   connecting a single site to a given PE.                               +---------+                +-------+  PE1 | IP/MPLS |               /               |         |            CE1                | Network |     PEr           M1  \               |         |                +-------+  PE2 |         |                /-------+      |         |               /               |         |            CE2                |         |          M2   \               |         |                \              |         |                 +------+  PE3 +---------+                    Figure 2: B-MAC Address Assignment   In the example network shown in Figure 2 above, two sites   corresponding to CE1 and CE2 are dual-homed to PE1/PE2 and PE2/PE3,   respectively.  Assume that BM1 is the B-MAC used for the siteSajassi, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 2015   corresponding to CE1.  Similarly, BM2 is the B-MAC used for the site   corresponding to CE2.  On PE1, a single B-MAC address (BM1) is   required for the site corresponding to CE1.  On PE2, two B-MAC   addresses (BM1 and BM2) are required, one per site.  Whereas on PE3,   a single B-MAC address (BM2) is required for the site corresponding   to CE2.  All three PE nodes would advertise their respective B-MAC   addresses in BGP using the MAC Advertisement routes defined in   [RFC7432].  The remote PE, PEr, would learn via BGP that BM1 is   reachable via PE1 and PE2, whereas BM2 is reachable via both PE2 and   PE3.  Furthermore, PEr establishes, via the PBB bridge learning   procedure, that C-MAC M1 is reachable via BM1, and C-MAC M2 is   reachable via BM2.  As a result, PEr can load-balance traffic   destined to M1 between PE1 and PE2, as well as traffic destined to M2   between both PE2 and PE3.  In the case of a failure that causes, for   example, CE1 to be isolated from PE1, the latter can withdraw the   route it has advertised for BM1.  This way, PEr would update its path   list for BM1 and will send all traffic destined to M1 over to PE2   only.6.2.1.2.  Automating B-MAC Address Assignment   The PE B-MAC address used for single-homed or Single-Active sites can   be automatically derived from the hardware (using for example the   backplane's address and/or PE's reserved MAC pool ).  However, the   B-MAC address used for All-Active sites must be coordinated among the   redundancy group members.  To automate the assignment of this latter   address, the PE can derive this B-MAC address from the MAC address   portion of the CE's Link Aggregation Control Protocol (LACP) System   Identifier by flipping the 'Locally Administered' bit of the CE's   address.  This guarantees the uniqueness of the B-MAC address within   the network, and ensures that all PE nodes connected to the same All-   Active CE use the same value for the B-MAC address.   Note that with this automatic provisioning of the B-MAC address   associated with All-Active CEs, it is not possible to support the   uncommon scenario where a CE has multiple link bundles within the   same LACP session towards the PE nodes, and the service involves   hair-pinning traffic from one bundle to another.  This is because the   split-horizon filtering relies on B-MAC addresses rather than Site-ID   Labels (as will be described in the next section).  The operator must   explicitly configure the B-MAC address for this fairly uncommon   service scenario.   Whenever a B-MAC address is provisioned on the PE, either manually or   automatically (as an outcome of CE auto-discovery), the PE MUST   transmit a MAC Advertisement route for the B-MAC address with a   downstream assigned MPLS label that uniquely identifies that addressSajassi, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 2015   on the advertising PE.  The route is tagged with the RTs of the   associated EVIs as described above.6.2.1.3.  Split Horizon and Designated Forwarder Election   [RFC7432] relies on split-horizon filtering for a multi-homed ES,   where the ES label is used for egress filtering on the attachment   circuit in order to prevent forwarding loops.  In PBB-EVPN, the B-MAC   source address can be used for the same purpose, as it uniquely   identifies the originating site of a given frame.  As such, ES labels   are not used in PBB-EVPN, and the egress split-horizon filtering is   done based on the B-MAC source address.  It is worth noting here that   [PBB] defines this B-MAC address-based filtering function as part of   the I-Component options; hence, no new functions are required to   support split-horizon filtering beyond what is already defined in   [PBB].   The Designated Forwarder (DF) election procedures are defined in   [RFC7432].6.2.2.  Load-Balancing based on I-SID   This section describes the procedures for supporting device   multihoming in a Single-Active redundancy mode with per-I-SID load-   balancing.6.2.2.1.  PE B-MAC Address Assignment   In the case where per-I-SID load-balancing is desired among the PE   nodes in a given redundancy group, multiple unicast B-MAC addresses   are allocated per multihomed ES: Each PE connected to the multihomed   segment is assigned a unique B-MAC.  Every PE then advertises its   B-MAC address using the BGP MAC Advertisement route.  In this mode of   operation, two B-MAC address-assignment models are possible:   -  The PE may use a shared B-MAC address for all its single-homed      segments and/or all its multi-homed Single-Active segments (e.g.,      segments operating in per-I-SID load-balancing mode).   -  The PE may use a dedicated B-MAC address for each ES operating      with per-I-SID load-balancing mode.   A PE implementation MAY choose to support either the shared B-MAC   address model or the dedicated B-MAC address model without causing   any interoperability issues.  The advantage of the dedicated B-MAC   over the shared B-MAC address for multi-homed Single-Active segments,   is that when C-MAC flushing is needed, fewer C-MAC addresses are   impacted.  Furthermore, it gives the disposition PE the ability toSajassi, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 2015   avoid C-MAC destination address lookup even though source C-MAC   learning is still required in the data plane.  Its disadvantage is   that there are additional B-MAC advertisements in BGP.   A remote PE initially floods traffic to a destination C-MAC address,   located in a given multihomed ES, to all the PE nodes configured with   that I-SID.  Then, when reply traffic arrives at the remote PE, it   learns (in the data path) the B-MAC address and associated next-hop   PE to use for said C-MAC address.6.2.2.2.  Split Horizon and Designated Forwarder Election   The procedures are similar to the flow-based load-balancing case,   with the only difference being that the DF filtering must be applied   to unicast as well as multicast traffic, and in both core-to-segment   as well as segment-to-core directions.6.2.2.3.  Handling Failure Scenarios   When a PE connected to a multihomed ES loses connectivity to the   segment, due to link or port failure, it needs to notify the remote   PEs to trigger C-MAC address flushing.  This can be achieved in one   of two ways, depending on the B-MAC assignment model:   -  If the PE uses a shared B-MAC address for multiple Ethernet      segments, then the C-MAC flushing is signaled by means of having      the failed PE re-advertise the MAC Advertisement route for the      associated B-MAC, tagged with the MAC Mobility extended community      attribute.  The value of the Counter field in that attribute must      be incremented prior to advertisement.  This causes the remote PE      nodes to flush all C-MAC addresses associated with the B-MAC in      question.  This is done across all I-SIDs that are mapped to the      EVI of the withdrawn MAC route.   -  If the PE uses a dedicated B-MAC address for each ES operating      under per-I-SID load-balancing mode, the failed PE simply      withdraws the B-MAC route previously advertised for that segment.      This causes the remote PE nodes to flush all C-MAC addresses      associated with the B-MAC in question.  This is done across all      I-SIDs that are mapped to the EVI of the withdrawn MAC route.   When a PE connected to a multihomed ES fails (i.e., node failure) or   when the PE becomes completely isolated from the EVPN network, the   remote PEs will start purging the MAC Advertisement routes that were   advertised by the failed PE.  This is done either as an outcome of   the remote PEs detecting that the BGP session to the failed PE has   gone down, or by having a Route Reflector withdrawing all the routes   that were advertised by the failed PE.  The remote PEs, in this case,Sajassi, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 2015   will perform C-MAC address flushing as an outcome of the MAC   Advertisement route withdrawals.   For all failure scenarios (link/port failure, node failure, and PE   node isolation), when the fault condition clears, the recovered PE   re-advertises the associated ES route to other members of its   redundancy group.  This triggers the backup PE(s) in the redundancy   group to block the I-SIDs for which the recovered PE is a DF.  When a   backup PE blocks the I-SIDs, it triggers a C-MAC address flush   notification to the remote PEs by re-advertising the MAC   Advertisement route for the associated B-MAC, with the MAC Mobility   extended community attribute.  The value of the Counter field in that   attribute must be incremented prior to advertisement.  This causes   the remote PE nodes to flush all C-MAC addresses associated with the   B-MAC in question.  This is done across all I-SIDs that are mapped to   the EVI of the withdrawn/re-advertised MAC route.6.3.  Network Multihoming   When an Ethernet network is multihomed to a set of PE nodes running   PBB-EVPN, Single-Active redundancy model can be supported with per-   service instance (i.e., I-SID) load-balancing.  In this model, DF   election is performed to ensure that a single PE node in the   redundancy group is responsible for forwarding traffic associated   with a given I-SID.  This guarantees that no forwarding loops are   created.  Filtering based on DF state applies to both unicast and   multicast traffic, and in both access-to-core as well as core-to-   access directions just like a Single-Active multihomed device   scenario (but unlike an All-Active multihomed device scenario where   DF filtering is limited to multi-destination frames in the core-to-   access direction).  Similar to a Single-Active multihomed device   scenario, with load-balancing based on I-SID, a unique B-MAC address   is assigned to each of the PE nodes connected to the multihomed   network (segment).6.4.  Frame Forwarding   The frame-forwarding functions are divided in between the Bridge   Module, which hosts the [PBB] BEB functionality, and the MPLS   Forwarder which handles the MPLS imposition/disposition.  The details   of frame forwarding for unicast and multi-destination frames are   discussed next.Sajassi, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 20156.4.1.  Unicast   Known unicast traffic received from the Attachment Circuit (AC) will   be PBB-encapsulated by the PE using the B-MAC source address   corresponding to the originating site.  The unicast B-MAC destination   address is determined based on a lookup of the C-MAC destination   address (the binding of the two is done via transparent learning of   reverse traffic).  The resulting frame is then encapsulated with an   LSP tunnel label and an EVPN label associated with the B-MAC   destination address.  If per flow load-balancing over ECMPs in the   MPLS core is required, then a flow label is added below the label   associated with the B-MAC address in the label stack.   For unknown unicast traffic, the PE forwards these frames over the   MPLS core.  When these frames are to be forwarded, then the same set   of options used for forwarding multicast/broadcast frames (as   described in next section) are used.6.4.2.  Multicast/Broadcast   Multi-destination frames received from the AC will be PBB-   encapsulated by the PE using the B-MAC source address corresponding   to the originating site.  The multicast B-MAC destination address is   selected based on the value of the I-SID as defined in [PBB].  The   resulting frame is then forwarded over the MPLS core using one of the   following two options:   Option 1: the MPLS Forwarder can perform ingress replication over a      set of MP2P or P2P tunnel LSPs.  The frame is encapsulated with a      tunnel LSP label and the EVPN ingress replication label advertised      in the Inclusive Multicast Ethernet Tag [RFC7432].   Option 2: the MPLS Forwarder can use P2MP tunnel LSP per the      procedures defined in [RFC7432].  This includes either the use of      Inclusive or Aggregate Inclusive trees.  Furthermore, the MPLS      Forwarder can use MP2MP tunnel LSP if Inclusive trees are used.   Note that the same procedures for advertising and handling the   Inclusive Multicast Ethernet Tag defined in [RFC7432] apply here.Sajassi, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 20156.5.  MPLS Encapsulation of PBB Frames   The encapsulation for the transport of PBB frames over MPLS is   similar to that of classical Ethernet, albeit with the additional PBB   header, as shown in the figure below:                           +------------------+                           | IP/MPLS Header   |                           +------------------+                           | PBB Header       |                           +------------------+                           | Ethernet Header  |                           +------------------+                           | Ethernet Payload |                           +------------------+                           | Ethernet FCS     |                           +------------------+                   Figure 3: PBB over MPLS Encapsulation7.  Minimizing ARP/ND Broadcast   The PE nodes MAY implement an ARP/ND-proxy function in order to   minimize the volume of ARP/ND traffic that is broadcasted over the   MPLS network.  In case of ARP proxy, this is achieved by having each   PE node snoop on ARP request and response messages received over the   access interfaces or the MPLS core.  The PE builds a cache of IP/MAC   address bindings from these snooped messages.  The PE then uses this   cache to respond to ARP requests ingress on access ports and target   hosts that are in remote sites.  If the PE finds a match for the IP   address in its ARP cache, it responds back to the requesting host and   drops the request.  Otherwise, if it does not find a match, then the   request is flooded over the MPLS network using either ingress   replication or P2MP LSPs.  In case of ND proxy, this is achieved   similar to the above but with ND/NA messages per [RFC4389].Sajassi, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 20158.  Seamless Interworking with IEEE 802.1aq / 802.1Qbp                           +--------------+                           |              |           +---------+     |     MPLS     |    +---------+   +----+  |         |   +----+        +----+  |         |  +----+   |SW1 |--|         |   | PE1|        | PE2|  |         |--| SW3|   +----+  | 802.1aq |---|    |        |    |--| 802.1aq |  +----+   +----+  |  .1Qbp  |   +----+        +----+  |  .1Qbp  |  +----+   |SW2 |--|         |     |   Backbone   |    |         |--| SW4|   +----+  +---------+     +--------------+    +---------+  +----+   |<------ IS-IS -------->|<-----BGP----->|<------ IS-IS ------>|  CP   |<-------------------------   PBB  -------------------------->|  DP                           |<----MPLS----->|   Legend: CP = Control-Plane View           DP = Data-Plane View    Figure 4: Interconnecting 802.1aq / 802.1Qbp Networks with PBB-EVPN8.1.  B-MAC Address Assignment   The B-MAC addresses need to be globally unique across all networks   including PBB-EVPN and IEEE 802.1aq / 802.1Qbp networks.  The B-MAC   addresses used for single-homed and Single-Active Ethernet segments   should be unique because they are typically auto-derived from the   PE's pools of reserved MAC addresses that are unique.  The B-MAC   addresses used for All-Active Ethernet segments should also be unique   given that each network operator typically has its own assigned   Organizationally Unique Identifier (OUI) and thus can assign its own   unique MAC addresses.8.2.  IEEE 802.1aq / 802.1Qbp B-MAC Address Advertisement   B-MAC addresses associated with 802.1aq / 802.1Qbp switches are   advertised using the EVPN MAC/IP route advertisement already defined   in [RFC7432].8.3.  Operation:   When a PE receives a PBB-encapsulated Ethernet frame from the access   side, it performs a lookup on the B-MAC destination address to   identify the next hop.  If the lookup yields that the next hop is a   remote PE, the local PE would then encapsulate the PBB frame in MPLS.   The label stack comprises of the VPN label (advertised by the remoteSajassi, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 2015   PE), followed by an LSP/IGP label.  From that point onwards, regular   MPLS forwarding is applied.   On the disposition PE, assuming penultimate-hop-popping is employed,   the PE receives the MPLS-encapsulated PBB frame with a single label:   the VPN label.  The value of the label indicates to the disposition   PE that this is a PBB frame, so the label is popped, the TTL field   (in the 802.1Qbp F-Tag) is reinitialized, and normal PBB processing   is employed from this point onwards.9.  Solution Advantages   In this section, we discuss the advantages of the PBB-EVPN solution   in the context of the requirements set forth inSection 3.9.1.  MAC Advertisement Route Scalability   In PBB-EVPN, the number of MAC Advertisement routes is a function of   the number of Ethernet segments (e.g., sites) rather than the number   of hosts/servers.  This is because the B-MAC addresses of the PEs,   rather than C-MAC addresses (of hosts/servers), are being advertised   in BGP.  As discussed above, there's a one-to-one mapping between   All-Active multihomed segments and their associated B-MAC addresses;   there can be either a one-to-one or many-to-one mapping between   Single-Active multihomed segments and their associated B-MAC   addresses; and finally there is a many-to-one mapping between single-   home sites and their associated B-MAC addresses on a given PE.  This   means a single B-MAC is associated with one or more segments where   each segment can be associated with many C-MAC addresses.  As a   result, the volume of MAC Advertisement routes in PBB-EVPN may be   multiple orders of magnitude less than EVPN.9.2.  C-MAC Mobility Independent of B-MAC Advertisements   As described above, in PBB-EVPN, a single B-MAC address can aggregate   many C-MAC addresses.  Given that B-MAC addresses are associated with   segments attached to a PE or to the PE itself, their locations are   fixed and thus not impacted what so ever by C-MAC mobility.   Therefore, C-MAC mobility does not affect B-MAC addresses (e.g., any   re-advertisements of them).  This is because the association of C-MAC   address to B-MAC address is learned in the data-plane and C-MAC   addresses are not advertised in BGP.  Aggregation via B-MAC addresses   in PBB-EVPN performs much better than EVPN.Sajassi, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 2015   To illustrate how this compares to EVPN, consider the following   example:      If a PE running EVPN advertises reachability for N MAC addresses      via a particular segment, and then 50% of the MAC addresses in      that segment move to other segments (e.g., due to virtual machine      mobility), then N/2 additional MAC Advertisement routes need to be      sent for the MAC addresses that have moved.  With PBB-EVPN, on the      other hand, the B-MAC addresses that are statically associated      with PE nodes are not subject to mobility.  As C-MAC addresses      move from one segment to another, the binding of C-MAC to B-MAC      addresses is updated via data-plane learning in PBB-EVPN.9.3.  C-MAC Address Learning and Confinement   In PBB-EVPN, C-MAC address reachability information is built via   data-plane learning.  As such, PE nodes not participating in active   conversations involving a particular C-MAC address will purge that   address from their forwarding tables.  Furthermore, since C-MAC   addresses are not distributed in BGP, PE nodes will not maintain any   record of them in the control-plane routing table.9.4.  Seamless Interworking with 802.1aq Access Networks   Consider the scenario where two access networks, one running MPLS and   the other running 802.1aq, are interconnected via an MPLS backbone   network.  The figure below shows such an example network.                               +--------------+                               |              |               +---------+     |     MPLS     |    +---------+       +----+  |         |   +----+        +----+  |         |  +----+       | CE |--|         |   | PE1|        | PE2|  |         |--| CE |       +----+  | 802.1aq |---|    |        |    |--|  MPLS   |  +----+       +----+  |         |   +----+        +----+  |         |  +----+       | CE |--|         |     |   Backbone   |    |         |--| CE |       +----+  +---------+     +--------------+    +---------+  +----+                  Figure 5: Interoperability with 802.1aq   If the MPLS backbone network employs EVPN, then the 802.1aq data-   plane encapsulation must be terminated on PE1 or the edge device   connecting to PE1.  Either way, all the PE nodes that are part of the   associated service instances will be exposed to all the C-MAC   addresses of all hosts/servers connected to the access networks.   However, if the MPLS backbone network employs PBB-EVPN, then the   802.1aq encapsulation can be extended over the MPLS backbone, thereby   maintaining C-MAC address transparency on PE1.  If PBB-EVPN is alsoSajassi, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 2015   extended over the MPLS access network on the right, then C-MAC   addresses would be transparent to PE2 as well.9.5.  Per-Site Policy Support   In PBB-EVPN, the per-site policy can be supported via B-MAC addresses   via assigning a unique B-MAC address for every site/segment   (typically multihomed but can also be single-homed).  Given that the   B-MAC addresses are sent in BGP MAC/IP route advertisement, it is   possible to define per-site (i.e., B-MAC) forwarding policies   including policies for E-TREE service.9.6.  No C-MAC Address Flushing for All-Active Multihoming   Just as in [RFC7432], with PBB-EVPN, it is possible to avoid C-MAC   address flushing upon topology change affecting an All-Active   multihomed segment.  To illustrate this, consider the example network   of Figure 1.  Both PE1 and PE2 advertise the same B-MAC address (BM1)   to PE3.  PE3 then learns the C-MAC addresses of the servers/hosts   behind CE1 via data-plane learning.  If AC1 fails, then PE3 does not   need to flush any of the C-MAC addresses learned and associated with   BM1.  This is because PE1 will withdraw the MAC Advertisement routes   associated with BM1, thereby leading PE3 to have a single adjacency   (to PE2) for this B-MAC address.  Therefore, the topology change is   communicated to PE3 and no C-MAC address flushing is required.10.  Security Considerations   All the security considerations in [RFC7432] apply directly to this   document because this document leverages the control plane described   in [RFC7432] and their associated procedures -- although not the   complete set but rather a subset.   This document does not introduce any new security considerations   beyond that of [RFC7432] and [RFC4761] because advertisements and   processing of B-MAC addresses follow that of [RFC7432] and processing   of C-MAC addresses follow that of [RFC4761] -- i.e, B-MAC addresses   are learned in the control plane and C-MAC addresses are learned in   data plane.11.  IANA Considerations   There are no additional IANA considerations for PBB-EVPN beyond what   is already described in [RFC7432].Sajassi, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 201512.  References12.1.  Normative References   [PBB]      IEEE, "IEEE Standard for Local and metropolitan area              networks - Media Access Control (MAC) Bridges and Virtual              Bridged Local Area Networks", Clauses 25 and 26, IEEE Std              802.1Q, DOI 10.1109/IEEESTD.2011.6009146.   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119,              DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.   [RFC7432]  Sajassi, A., Ed., Aggarwal, R., Bitar, N., Isaac, A.,              Uttaro, J., Drake, J., and W. Henderickx, "BGP MPLS-Based              Ethernet VPN",RFC 7432, DOI 10.17487/RFC7432, February              2015, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7432>.12.2.  Informative References   [MMRP]     IEEE, "IEEE Standard for Local and metropolitan area              networks - Media Access Control (MAC) Bridges and Virtual              Bridged Local Area Networks", Clause 10, IEEE Std 802.1Q,              DOI 10.1109/IEEESTD.2011.6009146.   [OVERLAY]  Sajassi, A., Ed., Drake, J., Ed., Bitar, N., Isaac, A.,              Uttaro, J., Henderickx, W., Shekhar, R., Salam, S., Patel,              K., Rao, D., and S. Thoria, "A Network Virtualization              Overlay Solution using EVPN",draft-ietf-bess-evpn-overlay-01, February 2015.   [RFC4389]  Thaler, D., Talwar, M., and C. Patel, "Neighbor Discovery              Proxies (ND Proxy)",RFC 4389, DOI 10.17487/RFC4389, April              2006, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4389>.   [RFC4761]  Kompella, K., Ed., and Y. Rekhter, Ed., "Virtual Private              LAN Service (VPLS) Using BGP for Auto-Discovery and              Signaling",RFC 4761, DOI 10.17487/RFC4761, January 2007,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4761>.   [RFC7080]  Sajassi, A., Salam, S., Bitar, N., and F. Balus, "Virtual              Private LAN Service (VPLS) Interoperability with Provider              Backbone Bridges",RFC 7080, DOI 10.17487/RFC7080,              December 2013, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7080>.Sajassi, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 2015   [RFC7209]  Sajassi, A., Aggarwal, R., Uttaro, J., Bitar, N.,              Henderickx, W., and A. Isaac, "Requirements for Ethernet              VPN (EVPN)",RFC 7209, DOI 10.17487/RFC7209, May 2014,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7209>.Acknowledgements   The authors would like to thank Jose Liste and Patrice Brissette for   their reviews and comments of this document.  We would also like to   thank Giles Heron for several rounds of reviews and providing   valuable inputs to get this document ready for IESG submission.Contributors   In addition to the authors listed, the following individuals also   contributed to this document.   Lizhong Jin, ZTE   Sami Boutros, Cisco   Dennis Cai, Cisco   Keyur Patel, Cisco   Sam Aldrin, Huawei   Himanshu Shah, Ciena   Jorge Rabadan, ALUSajassi, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 7623                        PBB-EVPN                  September 2015Authors' Addresses   Ali Sajassi, editor   Cisco   170 West Tasman Drive   San Jose, CA  95134   United States   Email: sajassi@cisco.com   Samer Salam   Cisco   595 Burrard Street, Suite # 2123   Vancouver, BC V7X 1J1   Canada   Email: ssalam@cisco.com   Nabil Bitar   Verizon Communications   Email: nabil.n.bitar@verizon.com   Aldrin Isaac   Juniper   Email: aisaac@juniper.net   Wim Henderickx   Alcatel-Lucent   Email: wim.henderickx@alcatel-lucent.comSajassi, et al.              Standards Track                   [Page 23]

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