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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                       J. Luo, Ed.Request for Comments: 7743                                           ZTEUpdates:4379                                                L. Jin, Ed.Category: Standards TrackISSN: 2070-1721                                           T. Nadeau, Ed.                                                                 Brocade                                                         G. Swallow, Ed.                                                                   Cisco                                                            January 2016Relayed Echo Reply Mechanism for Label Switched Path (LSP) PingAbstract   In some inter-AS (Autonomous System) and inter-area deployment   scenarios forRFC 4379 ("Label Switched Path (LSP) Ping and   Traceroute"), a replying Label Switching Router (LSR) may not have   the available route to an initiator, and the Echo Reply message sent   to the initiator would be discarded, resulting in false negatives or   a complete failure of operation of the LSP Ping and Traceroute.  This   document describes extensions to the LSP Ping mechanism to enable the   replying LSR to have the capability to relay the Echo Response by a   set of routable intermediate nodes to the initiator.  This document   updatesRFC 4379.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/rfc7743.Luo, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 2016Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2016 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 ....................................................31.1. Conventions Used in This Document ..........................32. Motivation ......................................................33. Extensions ......................................................53.1. Relayed Echo Reply Message .................................53.2. Relay Node Address Stack ...................................63.3. MTU Exceeded Return Code ...................................84. Procedures ......................................................84.1. Sending an Echo Request ....................................94.2. Receiving an Echo Request ..................................94.3. Originating a Relayed Echo Reply ..........................104.4. Relaying a Relayed Echo Reply .............................114.5. Sending an Echo Reply .....................................114.6. Sending Subsequent Echo Requests ..........................124.7. Impact on Traceroute ......................................125. LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply Example ............................136. Security Considerations ........................................147. Backward Compatibility .........................................158. IANA Considerations ............................................158.1. MPLS Relayed Echo Reply ...................................158.2. Relay Node Address Stack TLV ..............................168.3. MTU Exceeded Return Code ..................................169. References .....................................................169.1. Normative References ......................................169.2. Informative References ....................................17   Acknowledgements ..................................................17   Contributors ......................................................17   Authors' Addresses ................................................18Luo, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 20161.  Introduction   This document describes extensions to the Label Switched Path (LSP)   Ping specified in [RFC4379] by adding a Relayed Echo Reply mechanism   that could be used to report data-plane failures for inter-AS   (Autonomous System) and inter-area LSPs.  Without these extensions,   the ping functionality provided by [RFC4379] would fail in many   deployed inter-AS scenarios, since the replying Label Switching   Router (LSR) in one AS may not have an available route to the   initiator in the other AS.  The mechanism in this document defines a   new Message Type referred to as the "Relayed Echo Reply message" and   a new TLV referred to as the "Relay Node Address Stack TLV".   This document updates [RFC4379]; it includes updates to the Echo   Request sending procedure inSection 4.3 of [RFC4379], the Echo   Request receiving procedure inSection 4.4 of [RFC4379], the Echo   Reply sending procedure inSection 4.5 of [RFC4379], and the Echo   Reply receiving procedure inSection 4.6 of [RFC4379].1.1.  Conventions Used in This Document   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].2.  Motivation   LSP Ping [RFC4379] defines a mechanism to detect data-plane failures   and localize faults.  The mechanism specifies that the Echo Reply   should be sent back to the initiator using a UDP packet with the   IPv4/IPv6 destination address set to an address of the LSR that   originated the Echo Request.  This works in administrative domains   where IP-address reachability is allowed among LSRs and every LSR is   able to route back to the originating LSR.  However, in practice,   this is often not the case due to intra-provider routing policy,   route hiding, and network address translation at Autonomous System   Border Routers (ASBRs).  In fact, it is almost always the case that   in inter-AS scenarios, the only node in one AS to which direct   routing is allowed from the other AS is the ASBR, and routing   information from within one AS is not distributed into another AS.   Figure 1 demonstrates a case where an LSP is set up between PE1 and   PE2.  If PE1's IP address is not distributed to AS2, a traceroute   from PE1 directed towards PE2 can result in a failure because an LSR   in AS2 may not be able to send the Echo Reply message.  For example,   P2 cannot forward packets back to PE1 given that it is a routable IP   address in AS1 but not routable in AS2.  In this case, PE1 wouldLuo, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 2016   detect a path break, as the Echo Reply messages would not be   received.  Then, localization of the actual fault would not be   possible.   Note that throughout the document, "routable address" means that it   is possible to route an IP packet to this address using the normal   information exchanged by the IGP and BGP (or EGP) operating in the   AS.   +-------+   +-------+   +------+   +------+   +------+   +------+   |       |   |       |   |      |   |      |   |      |   |      |   |  PE1  +---+   P1  +---+ ASBR1+---+ ASBR2+---+  P2  +---+  PE2 |   |       |   |       |   |      |   |      |   |      |   |      |   +-------+   +-------+   +------+   +------+   +------+   +------+   <---------------AS1-------------><---------------AS2------------>   <---------------------------- LSP ------------------------------>                Figure 1: Simple Inter-AS LSP Configuration   A second example that illustrates how [RFC4379] would be insufficient   would be the inter-area situation in a seamless MPLS architecture   [MPLSARCH] as shown below in Figure 2.  In this example, LSRs in the   core network would not have an IP-reachable route to any of the   access nodes (ANs).  When tracing an LSP from one AN to the remote   AN, the LSR1/LSR2 node cannot send the Echo Reply either, like the P2   node in the inter-AS scenario in Figure 1.              +-------+   +-------+   +------+   +------+              |       |   |       |   |      |   |      |           +--+ AGN11 +---+ AGN21 +---+ ABR1 +---+ LSR1 +--> to AGN          /   |       |  /|       |   |      |   |      |   +----+/    +-------+\/ +-------+   +------+  /+------+   | AN |              /\                     \/   +----+\    +-------+  \+-------+   +------+/\ +------+          \   |       |   |       |   |      |  \|      |           +--+ AGN12 +---+ AGN22 +---+ ABR2 +---+ LSR2 +--> to AGN              |       |   |       |   |      |   |      |              +-------+   +-------+   +------+   +------+   static route    IS-IS L1 LDP            IS-IS L2 LDP   <-Access-><--Aggregation Domain--><---------Core--------->   AGN: aggregation node                   Figure 2: Seamless MPLS ArchitectureLuo, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 2016   This document describes extensions to the LSP Ping mechanism to   facilitate a response from the replying LSR by defining a mechanism   that uses a relay node (e.g., ASBR) to relay the message back to the   initiator.  Every designated or learned relay node must be reachable   to the next relay node or to the initiator.  Using a recursive   approach, a relay node could relay the message to the next relay node   until the initiator is reached.   The LSP Ping relay mechanism in this document is defined for unicast.   How to apply the LSP Ping relay mechanism in multicast is out of   scope.3.  Extensions   [RFC4379] defines two Message Types: Echo Request and Echo Reply.   This document defines a new Message Type: Relayed Echo Reply.  The   Relayed Echo Reply message is used in place of the Echo Reply message   when an LSR is replying LSR to a relay node.   A new TLV named the "Relay Node Address Stack TLV" is defined in this   document to carry the IP addresses of the relay nodes for the   replying LSR.   In addition, the Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU) Exceeded Return Code   is defined to indicate to the initiator that one or more TLVs will   not be returned due to the MTU size.   It should be noted that this document focuses only on detecting the   LSP that is set up using a uniform IP address family type.  That is,   all hops between the source and destination node use the same address   family type for their LSP Ping control planes.  This does not   preclude nodes that support both IPv6 and IPv4 addresses   simultaneously, but the entire path must be addressable using only   one address family type.  Support for mixed IPv4-only and IPv6-only   is beyond the scope of this document.3.1.  Relayed Echo Reply Message   The Relayed Echo Reply message is a UDP packet, and the UDP payload   has the same format with Echo Request/Reply message.  A new Message   Type is requested from IANA.   New Message Type:       Value    Meaning       -----    -------       5        MPLS Relayed Echo ReplyLuo, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 2016   The use of TCP and UDP port number 3503 is described in [RFC4379] and   has been allocated by IANA for LSP Ping messages.  The Relayed Echo   Reply message will use the same port number.3.2.  Relay Node Address Stack   The Relay Node Address Stack TLV is an optional TLV.  It MUST be   carried in the Echo Request, Echo Reply, and Relayed Echo Reply   messages if the Echo Reply relayed mechanism described in this   document is required.  Figure 3 illustrates the TLV format.      0                   1                   2                   3      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+     |                Type           |               Length          |     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+     |   Initiator Source Port       | Reply Add Type|   Reserved    |     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+     |    Source Address of Replying Router (0, 4, or 16 octets)     |     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+     |  Destination Address Offset   |   Number of Relayed Addresses |     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+     |                                                               |     ~                Stack of Relayed Addresses                     ~     |                                                               |     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                  Figure 3: Relay Node Address Stack TLV   -  Type: Value is 32768.  The value has been assigned by IANA from      the 32768-49161 range as suggested by[RFC4379], Section 3.   -  Length: The length of the value field in octets.   -  Initiator Source Port: The source UDP port that the initiator uses      in the Echo Request message, and the port that is expected to      receive the Echo Reply message.   -  Reply Address Type: Address type of replying router.  This value      also implies the length of the address field as shown below.   Type#   Address Type   Address Length   ----    ------------   ------------   0       Null           0   1       IPv4           4   2       IPv6           16Luo, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 2016   -  Reserved: This field is reserved and MUST be set to zero.   -  Source Address of Replying Router: Source IP address of the      originator of Echo Reply or Relay Echo Reply message.   -  Destination Address Offset: The offset in octets from the top-of-      stack to the destination address entry.  Each entry size has been      listed in this section.  Please also refer toSection 4.2 for more      detail of the operation.   -  Number of Relayed Addresses: An integer indicating the number of      relayed addresses in the stack.   -  Stack of Relayed Addresses: A list of relay node address entries.      This stack grows downward, with relay node addresses that are      further along the LSP appearing lower down in the stack.  Please      refer toSection 4.2 for the relay node discovery mechanism.   The format of each relay node address entry is as below:      0                   1                   2                   3      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+     | Address  Type |K|  Reserved   |          Reserved             |     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+     ~           Relayed Address (0, 4, or 16 octets)                ~     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                    Figure 4: Relay Node Address Entry   Type#   Address Type   Address Length   Size of the Entry   ----    ------------   ------------     -----------------   0       Null           0                4   1       IPv4           4                8   2       IPv6           16               20   Reserved: The two fields are reserved and MUST be set to zero.   K bit: If the K bit is set to 1, then this address stack entry MUST   NOT be stripped from the Relay Node Address Stack during the   processing described inSection 4.2.  If the K bit is clear, the   entry might be stripped according to the processing described inSection 4.2.   Having the K bit set in the relay node address entry causes that   entry to be preserved in the Relay Node Address Stack TLV for the   entire traceroute operation.  A responder node MAY set the K bit to   ensure its relay node address entry remains as one of the relay nodesLuo, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 2016   in the Relay Node Address Stack TLV.  The address with the K bit set   will always be a relay node address for the Relayed Echo Reply, seeSection 4.3.   Relayed Address: This field specifies the node address: either IPv4   or IPv6.3.3.  MTU Exceeded Return Code   This Return Code is defined to indicate that one or more TLVs were   omitted from the Echo Reply or Relayed Echo Reply message to avoid   exceeding the message's effective MTU size.  These TLVs MAY be   included in an Errored TLV's Object with their lengths set to 0 and   no value.  The return sub-code MUST be set to the value that   otherwise would have been sent.  For more detail, please refer toSection 4.2.   MTU Exceeded Return Code:       Value    Meaning       -----    -------       20       One or more TLVs not returned due to MTU size   This document updates step 7 inSection 4.4 of [RFC4379] to integrate   the processing of the MTU Exceeded Return Code by adding the   following text:      Before sending Echo Reply, the new packet size should be checked.      If Best-return-code is 3 ("Replying router is an egress for the      FEC at stack depth"), or 8 ("Label switched at stack-depth"), and      if the packet size exceeds MTU size, then Best-return-code is 20      ("One or more TLVs not returned due to MTU size").4.  Procedures   To perform a ping operation, the initiator first discovers the relay   nodes.  Once those nodes have been discovered, the initiator includes   the Relay Node Address Stack TLV into any Echo Request message.  The   node can then ping as normal.  Note that, in some cases, the repeated   lack of replies to Echo Request messages may be due to a route change   that has impacted the necessary stack of relay nodes.  In this case,   the initiator may need to rediscover the relay nodes.  The following   sections describe the procedures for sending and receiving Echo   Request messages with the Relay Node Address Stack TLV.  These   procedures can be used in traceroute mode to discover the relay   nodes.Luo, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 20164.1.  Sending an Echo Request   In addition to the procedures described inSection 4.3 of [RFC4379],   a Relay Node Address Stack TLV MUST be carried in the Echo Request   message if the relay functionality is required.  The relay function   initiation is out of the scope of this document.  One possible way to   do this is that the operator can explicitly add an option to the ping   command.   When the initiator sends the first Echo Request with a Relay Node   Address Stack TLV, the TLV MUST contain the initiator address as the   first entry of the stack of relayed addresses, the Destination   Address Offset set to this entry, and the source address of the   replying router set to null.  The Initiator Source Port field MUST be   set to the source UDP port.  Note that the first relay node address   in the stack will always be the initiator's address.   When sending a subsequent Echo Request message, refer toSection 4.6.4.2.  Receiving an Echo Request   The Type of the Relay Node Address Stack TLV (32768) falls within the   range defined in [RFC4379] as "optional TLVs" that can be silently   dropped if not recognized.  An LSR that does not recognize the TLV   SHOULD ignore it.   In addition to the processes inSection 4.4 of [RFC4379], the   procedures of the Relay Node Address Stack TLV are defined here.   Upon receiving a Relay Node Address Stack TLV in an Echo Request   message, the receiver updates the "Source Address of Replying   Router".  The address MUST be the same as the source IP address of   Relay Echo Reply (Section 4.3) or Echo Reply message (Section 4.5)   being sent.   Those address entries with the K bit set to 1 MUST be kept in the   stack.  The receiver MUST check the addresses of the stack in   sequence from bottom to top to find the last address in the stack   with the K bit set (or the top of the stack if no K bit was found).   The receiver then checks the stack beginning with this entry,   proceeding towards the bottom to find the first routable address IP   address.  The Destination Address Offset MUST be set to this entry,   which is also the resolved destination address.  Address entries   below the first routable IP address MUST be deleted.  At least one   address entry of the replying LSR MUST be added at the bottom of the   stack.  A second address entry (or more) MAY also be added if   necessary, depending on implementation.  The final address added MUST   be an address that is reachable through the interface that the EchoLuo, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 2016   Request message would have been forwarded to if its TTL had not   expired at this node.  The updated Relay Node Address Stack TLV MUST   be carried in the response message.   If the replying LSR is configured to hide its routable address   information, the address entry added in the stack MUST be a NIL entry   with Address Type set to NULL.   If a node spans two addressing domains (with respect to this message)   where nodes on either side may not be able to reach nodes in the   other domain, then the final address added SHOULD set the K bit.  One   example of spanning two address domains is the ASBR node.   K bit applies in the case of a NULL address, to serve as a warning to   the initiator that further Echo Request messages may not result in   receiving Echo Reply messages.   If the full reply message would exceed the MTU size, the Relay Node   Address Stack TLV SHOULD be included in the Echo Reply message (i.e.,   other optional TLVs are excluded).4.3.  Originating a Relayed Echo Reply   The destination address determined as described inSection 4.2 is   used as the next relay node address.  If the resolved next relay node   address is not routable, then the sending of the Relayed Echo Reply   or Echo Reply will fail.   If the first IP address in the Relay Node Address Stack TLV is not   the next relay node address, the replying LSR SHOULD send a Relayed   Echo Reply message to the next relay node.  The processing of Relayed   Echo Reply is the same with the procedure of the Echo Reply described   inSection 4.5 of [RFC4379], except the destination IP address and   the destination UDP port.  The destination IP address of the Relayed   Echo Reply is set to the next relay node address from the Relay Node   Address Stack TLV, and both the source and destination UDP port are   set to 3503.  The updated Relay Node Address Stack TLV described inSection 4.2 MUST be carried in the Relayed Echo Reply message.  The   Source Address of the Replying Router field is kept unmodified, and   the Source IP address field of the IP header is set to an address of   the sending node.   When the next relay node address is the first one in the address   list, please refer toSection 4.5.Luo, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 20164.4.  Relaying a Relayed Echo Reply   Upon receiving a Relayed Echo Reply message with its own address as   the destination address in the IP header, the relay node MUST   determine the next relay node address as described inSection 4.2,   with the modification that the location of the received destination   address is used instead of the bottom of stack in the algorithm.  The   Destination Address Offset in Relay Node Address Stack TLV will be   set to the next relay node address.  Note that unlike inSection 4.2,   no changes are made to the Stack of Relayed Addresses.   If the next relay node address is not the first one in the address   list, i.e., another intermediate relay node, the relay node MUST send   a Relayed Echo Reply message to the determined upstream node with the   payload unchanged other than the Relay Node Address Stack TLV.  The   TTL SHOULD be copied from the received Relay Echo Reply and   decremented by 1.  The Source Address of the Replying Router field is   kept unmodified and the Source IP address field of the IP header is   set to an address of the sending node.   When the next relay node address is the first one in the address   list, please refer toSection 4.5.4.5.  Sending an Echo Reply   The Echo Reply is sent in two cases:   1.  When the replying LSR receives an Echo Request, and the first IP       address in the Relay Node Address Stack TLV is the next relay       node address (Section 4.3), the replying LSR would send an Echo       Reply to the initiator.  In addition to the procedure of the Echo       Reply described inSection 4.5 of [RFC4379], the updated Relay       Node Address Stack TLV described inSection 4.2 MUST be carried       in the Echo Reply.       If the receiver does not recognize the Relay Node Address Stack       TLV, as per Sections3 and4.5 of [RFC4379], it will send an Echo       Reply without including the TLV.   2.  When the intermediate relay node receives a Relayed Echo Reply,       and the first IP address in the Relay Node Address Stack TLV is       the next relay node address (Section 4.4), the intermediate relay       node will send the Echo Reply to the initiator, and update the       Message Type field from type of "Relayed Echo Reply" to "Echo       Reply".  The updated Relay Node Address Stack TLV described inSection 4.4 MUST be carried in the Echo Reply.  The destination       IP address of the Echo Reply is set to the first IP address inLuo, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 2016       the stack, and the destination UDP port will be copied from the       Initiator Source Port field of the Relay Node Address Stack TLV.       The source UDP port should be 3503.  The TTL of the Echo Reply       SHOULD be copied from the received Relay Echo Reply and       decremented by 1.  The Source Address of the Replying Router       field is kept unmodified, and the Source IP address field of the       IP header is set to an address of the sending node.4.6.  Sending Subsequent Echo Requests   During a traceroute operation, multiple Echo Request messages are   sent.  Each time the TTL is increased, the initiator SHOULD copy the   Relay Node Address Stack TLV received in the previous Echo Reply to   the next Echo Request.  The Relay Node Address Stack TLV MUST NOT be   modified except as follows.  A NIL entry that does not have the K bit   set MAY be removed.  A NIL entry with the K bit serves as a warning   that further Echo Request messages are likely not to result in a   reply.  If, however, the initiator decides to continue a traceroute   operation, the NIL entry with the K bit set MUST be removed.  The   Source Address of the Replying Router and Destination Address Offset   fields may be preserved or reset since these fields are ignored in   the received MPLS Echo Request.4.7.  Impact on Traceroute   The Source IP address in Echo Reply and Relay Echo Reply should be   the address of the node sending those packets, not the original   responding node.  Then the traceroute address output module will   print the source IP address as below:     if (Relay Node Address Stack TLV exists) {   Print the Source Address of Replying Router in   Relay Node Address Stack TLV;     } else {   Print the source IP address of Echo Reply message;     }Luo, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 20165.  LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply Example   Considering the inter-AS scenario in Figure 5 below, AS1 and AS2 are   two independent address domains.  In the example, an LSP has been   created between PE1 to PE2, but PE1 in AS1 is not reachable by P2 in   AS2.   +-------+   +-------+   +------+   +------+   +------+   +------+   |       |   |       |   |      |   |      |   |      |   |      |   |  PE1  +---+   P1  +---+ ASBR1+---+ ASBR2+---+  P2  +---+  PE2 |   |       |   |       |   |      |   |      |   |      |   |      |   +-------+   +-------+   +------+   +------+   +------+   +------+   <---------------AS1-------------><---------------AS2------------>   <--------------------------- LSP ------------------------------->                      Figure 5: Example Inter-AS LSP   When performing LSP traceroute on the LSP, the first Echo Request   sent by PE1 with outermost label TTL=1 contains the Relay Node   Address Stack TLV with PE1's address as the first relayed address.   After being processed by P1, P1's interface address facing ASBR1   without the K bit set will be added in the Relay Node Address Stack   TLV address list following PE1's address in the Echo Reply.   PE1 copies the Relay Node Address Stack TLV into the next Echo   Request when receiving the Echo Reply.   Upon receiving the Echo Request, ASBR1 checks the address list in the   Relay Node Address Stack TLV and determines that PE1's address is the   next relay address.  Then it deletes P1's address, and adds its   interface address facing ASBR2 with the K bit set.  As a result,   there will be PE1's address followed by ASBR1's interface address   facing ASBR2 in the Relay Node Address Stack TLV of the Echo Reply   sent by ASBR1.   PE1 then sends an Echo Request with outermost label TTL=3, containing   the Relay Node Address Stack TLV copied from the received Echo Reply   message.  Upon receiving the Echo Request message, ASBR2 checks the   address list in the Relay Node Address Stack TLV and determines that   ASBR1's interface address is the next relay address in the stack TLV.   ASBR2 adds its interface address facing P2 with the K bit set.  Then   ASBR2 sets the next relay address as the destination address of the   Relayed Echo Reply and sends the Relayed Echo Reply to ASBR1.Luo, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 2016   Upon receiving the Relayed Echo Reply from ASBR2, ASBR1 checks the   address list in the Relay Node Address Stack TLV and determines that   PE1's address is the next relay node.  Then ASBR1 sends an Echo Reply   to PE1.   For the Echo Request with outermost label TTL=4, P2 checks the   address list in the Relay Node Address Stack TLV and determines that   ASBR2's interface address is the next relay address.  Then P2 sends a   Relayed Echo Reply to ASBR2 with the Relay Node Address Stack TLV   containing four addresses: PE1's, ASBR1's interface address, ASBR2's   interface address, and P2's interface address facing PE2 in sequence.   Then, according to the process described inSection 4.4, ASBR2 sends   the Relayed Echo Reply to ASBR1.  Upon receiving the Relayed Echo   Reply, ASBR1 sends an Echo Reply to PE1.  And, as relayed by ASBR2   and ASBR1, the Echo Reply would finally be sent to the initiator PE1.   For the Echo Request with outermost label TTL=5, the Echo Reply would   relayed to PE1 by ASBR2 and ASBR1, similar to the case of TTL=4.   The Echo Reply from the replying node that has no IP reachable route   to the initiator is thus transmitted to the initiator by multiple   relay nodes.6.  Security Considerations   The Relayed Echo Reply mechanism for LSP Ping creates an increased   risk of DoS by putting the IP address of a target router in the Relay   Node Address Stack.  These messages could then be used to attack the   control plane of an LSR by overwhelming it with these packets.  A   rate limiter SHOULD be applied to the well-known UDP port on the   relay node as suggested in [RFC4379].  The node that acts as a relay   node SHOULD validate the relay reply against a set of valid source   addresses and discard packets from untrusted border router addresses.   An implementation SHOULD provide such filtering capabilities.   If an operator wants to obscure their nodes, it is RECOMMENDED that   they replace the replying node address that originated the Echo Reply   with the NIL address entry in the Relay Node Address Stack TLV.   A receiver of an MPLS Echo Request could verify that the first   address in the Relay Node Address Stack TLV is the same address as   the source IP address field of the received IP header.Luo, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 2016   The Relay Node Address Stack TLV has the path information of the LSP,   and such information may be maliciously used by any uncontrolled LSR/   LER.  We have two ways to reduce the path information in the TLV:   o  It is recommended to clear the K bit in the relay address entry      unless it must be set (e.g., as listed inSection 4.2).   o  It is recommended to use the NIL address entry to hide node      information, if possible.   Other security considerations discussed in [RFC4379] are also   applicable to this document.7.  Backward Compatibility   When one of the nodes along the LSP does not support the mechanism   specified in this document, the node will ignore the Relay Node   Address Stack TLV as described inSection 4.2.  Then the initiator   may not receive the Relay Node Address Stack TLV in Echo Reply   message from that node.  In this case, an indication should be   reported to the operator, and the Relay Node Address Stack TLV in the   next Echo Request message should be copied from the previous Echo   Request, and continue the ping process.  If the node described above   is located between the initiator and the first relay node, the ping   process could continue without interruption.8.  IANA Considerations   IANA has assigned one new Message Type, one new TLV, and one Return   Code.8.1.  MPLS Relayed Echo Reply   One new Message Type from the "Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS)   Label Switched Paths (LSPs) Ping Parameters" registry in the "Message   Type" subregistry has been allocated:        Value    Meaning        -----    -------        5        MPLS Relayed Echo Reply   The value has been assigned from the "Standards Action" [RFC5226]   range (0-191) using the lowest free value within this range.Luo, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 20168.2.  Relay Node Address Stack TLV   One new TLV from the "Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS) Label   Switched Paths (LSPs) Ping Parameters" registry in the "TLVs"   subregistry has been allocated:        Type    TLV Name        ----    --------        32768   Relay Node Address Stack TLV   The value has been assigned from the "Standards Action" range   (32768-49161) as suggested by [RFC4379] Sections3 and7.2 using the   first free value within this range.8.3.  MTU Exceeded Return Code   The MTU Exceeded return code from the "Multi-Protocol Label Switching   (MPLS) Label Switched Paths (LSPs) Ping Parameters" registry in the   "Return Codes"subregistry has been allocated:       Value    Meaning       -----    -------       20       One or more TLVs not returned due to MTU size   The value has been assigned from the "Standards Action" range (0-191)   using the lowest free value within this range.9.  References9.1.  Normative References   [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>.   [RFC4379]  Kompella, K. and G. Swallow, "Detecting Multi-Protocol              Label Switched (MPLS) Data Plane Failures",RFC 4379,              DOI 10.17487/RFC4379, February 2006,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4379>.Luo, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 20169.2.  Informative References   [MPLSARCH] Leymann, N., Decraene, B., Filsfils, C., Konstantynowicz,              M., and D. Steinberg, "Seamless MPLS Architecture", Work              in Progress,draft-ietf-mpls-seamless-mpls-07, June 2014.   [RFC5226]  Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an              IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 5226,              DOI 10.17487/RFC5226, May 2008,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5226>.Acknowledgements   The authors would like to thank Carlos Pignataro, Xinwen Jiao, Manuel   Paul, Loa Andersson, Wim Henderickx, Mach Chen, Thomas Morin, Gregory   Mirsky, Nobo Akiya, and Joel M. Halpern for their valuable comments   and suggestions.Contributors   Ryan Zheng   JSPTPD   371, Zhongshan South Road   Nanjing 210006   China   Email: ryan.zhi.zheng@gmail.comLuo, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 7743            MPLS LSP Ping Relayed Echo Reply        January 2016Authors' Addresses   Jian Luo (editor)   ZTE   50, Ruanjian Avenue   Nanjing  210012   China   Email: luo.jian@zte.com.cn   Lizhong Jin (editor)   Shanghai   China   Email: lizho.jin@gmail.com   Thomas Nadeau (editor)   Brocade   Email: tnadeau@lucidvision.com   George Swallow (editor)   Cisco Systems   Email: swallow@cisco.comLuo, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 18]

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