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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                      C. PignataroRequest for Comments: 7880                                       D. WardUpdates:5880                                                      CiscoCategory: Standards Track                                       N. AkiyaISSN: 2070-1721                                      Big Switch Networks                                                               M. Bhatia                                                          Ionos Networks                                                           S. Pallagatti                                                               July 2016Seamless Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (S-BFD)Abstract   This document defines Seamless Bidirectional Forwarding Detection   (S-BFD), a simplified mechanism for using BFD with a large proportion   of negotiation aspects eliminated, thus providing benefits such as   quick provisioning, as well as improved control and flexibility for   network nodes initiating path monitoring.   This document updatesRFC 5880.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 7841.   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/rfc7880.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 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.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 2016Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................42. Terminology .....................................................43. Seamless BFD Overview ...........................................64. S-BFD Discriminators ............................................74.1. S-BFD Discriminator Uniqueness .............................74.2. Discriminator Pools ........................................75. Reflector BFD Session ...........................................86. State Variables .................................................96.1. New State Variables ........................................96.2. State Variable Initialization and Maintenance ..............97. S-BFD Procedures ...............................................107.1. Demultiplexing of S-BFD Control Packet ....................107.2. Responder Procedures ......................................117.2.1. Responder Demultiplexing ...........................11           7.2.2. Transmission of S-BFD Control Packet by                  SBFDReflector ......................................117.2.3. Additional SBFDReflector Behaviors .................127.3. Initiator Procedures ......................................137.3.1. SBFDInitiator State Machine ........................14           7.3.2. Transmission of S-BFD Control Packet by                  SBFDInitiator ......................................157.3.3. Additional SBFDInitiator Behaviors .................157.4. Diagnostic Values .........................................167.5. The Poll Sequence .........................................168. Operational Considerations .....................................168.1. Scaling Aspect ............................................178.2. Congestion Considerations .................................179. Co-existence with Classical BFD Sessions .......................1710. S-BFD Echo Function ...........................................1811. Security Considerations .......................................1912. References ....................................................2012.1. Normative References .....................................2012.2. Informative References ...................................20Appendix A. Loop Problem and Solution .............................22   Acknowledgements ..................................................23   Contributors ......................................................23   Authors' Addresses ................................................24Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 20161.  Introduction   Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD), as described in [RFC5880]   and related documents, has efficiently generalized the failure   detection mechanism for multiple protocols and applications.  There   are some improvements that can be made to better fit existing   technologies.  There is a possibility of evolving BFD to better fit   new technologies.  This document focuses on several aspects of BFD in   order to further improve efficiency, expand failure detection   coverage, and allow BFD usage for wider scenarios.  Additional use   cases are listed in [RFC7882].   Specifically, this document defines Seamless Bidirectional Forwarding   Detection (S-BFD), a simplified mechanism for using BFD with a large   proportion of negotiation aspects eliminated, thus providing benefits   such as quick provisioning, as well as improved control and   flexibility for network nodes initiating path monitoring.  S-BFD   enables cases benefiting from the use of core BFD technologies in a   fashion that leverages existing implementations and protocol   machinery while providing a rather simplified and largely stateless   infrastructure for continuity testing.   One key aspect of the mechanism described in this document eliminates   the time between a network node wanting to perform a continuity test   and completing the continuity test.  In traditional BFD terms, the   initial state changes from DOWN to UP are virtually nonexistent.   Removal of this "seam" (i.e., time delay) in BFD provides a smooth   and continuous operational experience for applications.  Therefore,   "Seamless BFD" (S-BFD) has been chosen as the name for this   mechanism.2.  Terminology   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].   The reader is expected to be familiar with the BFD [RFC5880], IP   [RFC791] [RFC2460], and MPLS [RFC3031] terms and protocol constructs.   The remainder of this section describes several new terms introduced   by S-BFD.   o  Classical BFD - BFD session types based on [RFC5880].   o  S-BFD - Seamless BFD.   o  S-BFD Control packet - a BFD Control packet for the S-BFD      mechanism.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 2016   o  S-BFD Echo packet - a BFD Echo packet for the S-BFD mechanism.   o  S-BFD packet - a BFD Control packet or a BFD Echo packet.   o  Entity - a function on a network node to which the S-BFD mechanism      allows remote network nodes to perform continuity tests.  An      entity can be abstract (e.g., reachability) or specific (e.g., IP      addresses, Router-IDs, functions).   o  SBFDInitiator - an S-BFD session on a network node that performs a      continuity test to a remote entity by sending S-BFD packets.   o  SBFDReflector - an S-BFD session on a network node that listens      for incoming S-BFD Control packets to local entities and generates      response S-BFD Control packets.   o  Reflector BFD session - synonymous with SBFDReflector.   o  S-BFD Discriminator - a BFD Discriminator allocated for a local      entity.  An SBFDReflector listens for S-BFD Discriminators.   o  BFD Discriminator - a BFD Discriminator allocated for an      SBFDInitiator.   o  Initiator - a network node hosting an SBFDInitiator.   o  Responder - a network node hosting an SBFDReflector.   Figure 1 describes the relationship between S-BFD terms.    +---------------------+                +------------------------+    |      Initiator      |                |         Responder      |    | +-----------------+ |                |    +-----------------+ |    | |  SBFDInitiator  |---S-BFD Ctrl pkt----->|  SBFDReflector  | |    | | +-------------+ |<--S-BFD Ctrl pkt------| +-------------+ | |    | | | BFD Discrim | | |                |    | |S-BFD Discrim| | |    | | |             | |---S-BFD Echo pkt---+  | |             | | |    | | +-------------+ | |                | |  | +----------^--+ | |    | +-----------------+<-------------------+  +------------|----+ |    |                     |                |                 |      |    |                     |                |             +---v----+ |    |                     |                |             | Entity | |    |                     |                |             +--------+ |    +---------------------+                +------------------------+                 Figure 1: S-BFD Terminology RelationshipPignataro, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 20163.  Seamless BFD Overview   An S-BFD module on each network node allocates one or more S-BFD   Discriminators for local entities and creates a Reflector BFD   session.  Allocated S-BFD Discriminators may be advertised by   applications (e.g., OSPF/IS-IS).  The required result is that   applications on other network nodes will know about the S-BFD   Discriminators allocated by a remote node to remote entities.  The   Reflector BFD session, upon receiving an S-BFD Control packet   targeted to one of the local S-BFD Discriminator values, is to   transmit a response S-BFD Control packet back to the initiator.   Once the above setup is complete, any network node that knows about   the S-BFD Discriminator allocated by a remote node to a remote entity   or entities can quickly perform a continuity test to the remote   entity by simply sending S-BFD Control packets with a corresponding   S-BFD Discriminator value in the Your Discriminator field.   This is exemplified in Figure 2.                     <------- IS-IS Network ------->                               +---------+                               |         |                     A---------B---------C---------D                     ^                             ^                     |                             |                 System-ID                      System-ID                    xxx                            yyy                BFD Discrim                    BFD Discrim                    123                            456                     Figure 2: S-BFD for IS-IS Network   An S-BFD module in a system with IS-IS System-ID xxx (Node A)   allocates an S-BFD Discriminator 123, and IS-IS advertises the S-BFD   Discriminator 123 in an IS-IS TLV.  An S-BFD module in a system with   IS-IS System-ID yyy (Node D) allocates an S-BFD Discriminator 456,   and IS-IS advertises the S-BFD Discriminator 456 in an IS-IS TLV.  A   Reflector BFD session is created on both network nodes (Node A and   Node D).  When Node A wants to check the reachability of Node D,   Node A can send an S-BFD Control packet destined to Node D with the   Your Discriminator field set to 456.  When the Reflector BFD session   on Node D receives this S-BFD Control packet, then a response S-BFD   Control packet is sent back to Node A, which allows Node A to   complete the continuity test.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 2016   When a node allocates multiple S-BFD Discriminators, how remote nodes   determine which of the discriminators is associated with a specific   entity is currently unspecified.  The use of multiple S-BFD   Discriminators by a single network node is therefore discouraged   until a means of learning the mapping is defined.4.  S-BFD Discriminators4.1.  S-BFD Discriminator Uniqueness   One important characteristic of an S-BFD Discriminator is that it   MUST be unique within an administrative domain.  If multiple network   nodes allocate the same S-BFD Discriminator value, then S-BFD Control   packets falsely terminating on a wrong network node can result in a   Reflector BFD session generating a response back because of a   matching Your Discriminator value.  This is clearly not desirable.4.2.  Discriminator Pools   This subsection describes a discriminator pool implementation   technique to minimize S-BFD Discriminator collisions.  This technique   will allow an implementation to better satisfy the S-BFD   Discriminator uniqueness requirement defined inSection 4.1.   o  An SBFDInitiator is to allocate a discriminator from the BFD      Discriminator pool.  If the system also supports classical BFD      (i.e., implements [RFC5880]), then the BFD Discriminator pool      SHOULD be shared by SBFDInitiator sessions and classical BFD      sessions.   o  An SBFDReflector is to allocate a discriminator from the S-BFD      Discriminator pool.  The S-BFD Discriminator pool SHOULD be a      separate pool from the BFD Discriminator pool.   The remainder of this subsection describes the reasons for the   suggestions above.   Locally allocated S-BFD Discriminator values for entities that   SBFDReflector sessions are listening for may be arbitrarily allocated   or derived from values provided by applications.  These values may be   protocol IDs (e.g., System-ID, Router-ID) or network targets (e.g.,   IP address).  To avoid derived S-BFD Discriminator values already   being assigned to other BFD sessions (i.e., SBFDInitiator sessions   and classical BFD sessions), it is RECOMMENDED that the discriminator   pool for SBFDReflector sessions be separate from other BFD sessions.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 2016   Even when following the "separate discriminator pool" approach, a   collision is still possible between different S-BFD applications that   may be using different values and algorithms to derive S-BFD   Discriminator values.  If two applications are using S-BFD for the   same purpose (e.g., network reachability), then the colliding S-BFD   Discriminator value can be shared.  If the two applications are using   S-BFD for a different purpose, then the collision must be addressed.   The use of multiple S-BFD Discriminators by a single network node,   however, is discouraged (seeSection 3).5.  Reflector BFD Session   Each network node creates one or more Reflector BFD sessions.  This   Reflector BFD session is a session that transmits S-BFD Control   packets in response to received S-BFD Control packets with the   Your Discriminator field having S-BFD Discriminators allocated for   local entities.  Specifically, this Reflector BFD session has the   following characteristics:   o  MUST NOT transmit any S-BFD packets based on local timer expiry.   o  MUST transmit an S-BFD Control packet in response to a received      S-BFD Control packet having a valid S-BFD Discriminator in the      Your Discriminator field, unless prohibited by local policies      (e.g., administrative, security, rate-limiter).   o  MUST be capable of sending only two states: UP and AdminDown.   One Reflector BFD session may be responsible for handling received   S-BFD Control packets targeted to all locally allocated S-BFD   Discriminators, or a few Reflector BFD sessions may each be   responsible for a subset of locally allocated S-BFD Discriminators.   This policy is a local matter and is outside the scope of this   document.   Note that incoming S-BFD Control packets may be based on IPv4, IPv6,   or MPLS [RFC7881].  Note also that other options are possible and may   be defined in future documents.  How such S-BFD Control packets reach   an appropriate Reflector BFD session is also a local matter and is   outside the scope of this document.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 20166.  State Variables   S-BFD introduces new state variables and modifies the usage of   existing ones.6.1.  New State Variables   A new state variable is added to the base specification in support   of S-BFD.   o  bfd.SessionType: This is a new state variable that describes      the type of a particular session.  Allowable values for S-BFD      sessions are:      *  SBFDInitiator - an S-BFD session on a network node that         performs a continuity test to a target entity by sending S-BFD         packets.      *  SBFDReflector - an S-BFD session on a network node that listens         for incoming S-BFD Control packets to local entities and         generates response S-BFD Control packets.   The bfd.SessionType variable MUST be initialized to the appropriate   type when an S-BFD session is created.6.2.  State Variable Initialization and Maintenance   State variables (defined inSection 6.8.1 of [RFC5880]) need to   be initialized or manipulated differently, depending on the   session type.   o  bfd.DemandMode: This variable MUST be initialized to 1 for session      type SBFDInitiator and MUST be initialized to 0 for session type      SBFDReflector.  This is done to prevent loops (seeAppendix A).Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 20167.  S-BFD Procedures7.1.  Demultiplexing of S-BFD Control Packet   An S-BFD packet MUST be demultiplexed with lower-layer information   (e.g., dedicated destination UDP port [RFC7881], associated Channel   Type [RFC7885]).  The following procedure SHOULD be executed on both   initiator and reflector:      If the packet is an S-BFD packet         If the S-BFD packet is for an SBFDReflector            The packet MUST be looked up to locate a corresponding            SBFDReflector session based on the value from the            Your Discriminator field in the table describing S-BFD            Discriminators.         Else            The packet MUST be looked up to locate a corresponding            SBFDInitiator session or classical BFD session based on the            value from the Your Discriminator field in the table            describing BFD Discriminators.  If no match, then the            received packet MUST be discarded.            If the session is an SBFDInitiator session               The destination of the packet (i.e., the destination IP               address) SHOULD be verified as being for itself.            Else               The packet MUST be discarded.      Else         The procedure described inSection 6.8.6 of [RFC5880] MUST be         applied.   More details on S-BFD Control packet demultiplexing are provided in   relevant S-BFD data-plane documents.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 20167.2.  Responder Procedures   A network node that receives S-BFD Control packets transmitted by an   initiator is referred to as the responder.  The responder, upon   reception of S-BFD Control packets, is to verify the validity of the   packets, as described in [RFC5880].7.2.1.  Responder Demultiplexing   An S-BFD packet MUST be demultiplexed with lower-layer information.   The following procedure SHOULD be executed by the responder:      If the Your Discriminator field is not one of the entries      allocated for local entities         The packet MUST be discarded.      Else         The packet is determined to be handled by a Reflector BFD         session responsible for that S-BFD Discriminator.         If allowable per local policy (e.g., administrative, security,         rate-limiter)            The chosen Reflector BFD session SHOULD transmit a response            BFD Control packet using the procedures described inSection 7.2.2.7.2.2.  Transmission of S-BFD Control Packet by SBFDReflector   The contents of S-BFD Control packets sent by an SBFDReflector MUST   be set as perSection 6.8.7 of [RFC5880].  There are a few fields   that need to be set differently from [RFC5880], as follows:      State (Sta)         Set to bfd.SessionState (either UP or AdminDown only).         Clarification of Reflector BFD session state is described inSection 7.2.3.      Demand (D)         Set to 0, to indicate that the S-BFD packet is sent by the         SBFDReflector.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 2016      Detect Mult         Value to be copied from the Detection Multiplier field of the         received BFD packet.      My Discriminator         Value to be copied from the Your Discriminator field of the         received BFD packet.      Your Discriminator         Value to be copied from the My Discriminator field of the         received BFD packet.      Desired Min TX Interval         Value to be copied from the Desired Min TX Interval field of         the received BFD packet.      Required Min RX Interval         Set to bfd.RequiredMinRxInterval.  Value indicating the minimum         interval, in microseconds, between received S-BFD Control         packets.  Further details are provided inSection 7.2.3.      Required Min Echo RX Interval         If the device supports looping back S-BFD Echo packets            Set to the minimum required S-BFD Echo packet receive            interval for this session.         Else            Set to 0.7.2.3.  Additional SBFDReflector Behaviors   o  S-BFD Control packets transmitted by the SBFDReflector MUST have      Required Min RX Interval set to a value that expresses, in      microseconds, the minimum interval between incoming S-BFD Control      packets that this SBFDReflector can handle.  The SBFDReflector can      control how fast SBFDInitiators will be sending S-BFD Control      packets to themselves by ensuring that Required Min RX Interval      indicates a value based on the current load.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 2016   o  When the SBFDReflector receives an S-BFD Control packet from an      SBFDInitiator, then the SBFDReflector needs to determine what      "state" to send in the response S-BFD Control packet.  If the      monitored local entity is in service, then the state MUST be set      to UP.  If the monitored local entity is "temporarily out of      service", then the state SHOULD be set to AdminDown.   o  If an SBFDReflector receives an S-BFD Control packet with the      Demand (D) bit cleared, the packet MUST be discarded (seeAppendix A).7.3.  Initiator Procedures   S-BFD Control packets transmitted by an SBFDInitiator MUST set the   Your Discriminator field to an S-BFD Discriminator corresponding to   the remote entity.   Every SBFDInitiator MUST have a locally unique My Discriminator value   allocated from the BFD Discriminator pool.   Figure 3 describes the high-level concept of continuity testing using   S-BFD.  R2 allocates XX as the S-BFD Discriminator for network   reachability purposes and advertises XX to neighbors.  Figure 3 shows   R1 and R4 performing a continuity test to R2.          +--- md=50/yd=XX (ping) ----+          |                           |          |+-- md=XX/yd=50 (pong) --+ |          ||                        | |          |v                        | v          R1 ==================== R2[*] ========= R3 ========= R4                                    | ^                        |^                                    | |                        ||                                    | +-- md=60/yd=XX (ping) --+|                                    |                           |                                    +---- md=XX/yd=60 (pong) ---+         [*] Reflector BFD session on R2.         === Links connecting network nodes.         --- S-BFD Control packet traversal.                      Figure 3: S-BFD Continuity TestPignataro, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 20167.3.1.  SBFDInitiator State Machine   An SBFDInitiator may be a "persistent" session on the initiator with   a timer for S-BFD Control packet transmissions (stateful   SBFDInitiator).  An SBFDInitiator may also be a module, a script, or   a tool on the initiator that transmits one or more S-BFD Control   packets "when needed" (stateless SBFDInitiator).  For stateless   SBFDInitiators, a complete BFD state machine may not be applicable.   For stateful SBFDInitiators, the states and the state machine   described in [RFC5880] will not function due to the SBFDReflector   session only sending the UP and AdminDown states (i.e., the   SBFDReflector session does not send the INIT state).  The following   diagram provides the RECOMMENDED state machine for stateful   SBFDInitiators.  The notation on each arc represents the state of the   SBFDInitiator (as received in the State field in the S-BFD Control   packet) or indicates the expiration of the Detection Timer.  See   Figure 4.                       +--+          ADMIN DOWN,  |  |          TIMER        |  V                     +------+   UP                +------+                     |      |-------------------->|      |----+                     | DOWN |                     |  UP  |    | UP                     |      |<--------------------|      |<---+                     +------+   ADMIN DOWN,       +------+                                TIMER               Figure 4: SBFDInitiator Finite State Machine   Note that the above state machine is different from the base BFD   specification [RFC5880].  This is because the INIT state is no longer   applicable for the SBFDInitiator.  Another important difference is   the transition of the state machine from the DOWN state to the UP   state when a packet with an UP state setting is received by the   SBFDInitiator.  The definitions of the states and events have the   same meanings as those defined in the base BFD specification   [RFC5880].Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 20167.3.2.  Transmission of S-BFD Control Packet by SBFDInitiator   The contents of S-BFD Control packets sent by an SBFDInitiator MUST   be set as perSection 6.8.7 of [RFC5880].  There are a few fields   that need to be set differently from [RFC5880], as follows:      Demand (D)         Used to indicate that the S-BFD packet originated from the         SBFDInitiator.  Always set to 1.      Your Discriminator         Set to bfd.RemoteDiscr.  bfd.RemoteDiscr is set to the         Discriminator value of the remote entity.  It MAY be learnt         from routing protocols or configured locally.      Required Min RX Interval         Set to 0.      Required Min Echo RX Interval         Set to 0.7.3.3.  Additional SBFDInitiator Behaviors   o  If the SBFDInitiator receives a valid S-BFD Control packet in      response to a transmitted S-BFD Control packet to a remote entity,      then the SBFDInitiator SHOULD conclude that the S-BFD Control      packet reached the intended remote entity.   o  When an SBFDInitiator receives a response S-BFD Control packet, if      the state specified is AdminDown, the SBFDInitiator MUST NOT      conclude that the reachability of the corresponding remote entity      is lost and MUST back off the packet transmission interval for the      remote entity to an interval no faster than 1 second.   o  When a sufficient number of S-BFD packets have not arrived as they      should, the SBFDInitiator SHOULD declare loss of reachability to      the remote entity.  The criteria for declaring loss of      reachability and the action that would be triggered as a result      are outside the scope of this document; the action MAY include      logging an error.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 2016   o  Regarding the third bullet item, it is critical for an      implementation to understand the latency to/from the Reflector BFD      session on the responder.  In other words, for the very first      S-BFD packet transmitted by the SBFDInitiator, an implementation      MUST NOT expect a response S-BFD packet to be received for a time      equivalent to the sum of the latencies: initiator to responder and      responder back to initiator.   o  If the SBFDInitiator receives an S-BFD Control packet with the      Demand (D) bit set, the packet MUST be discarded (seeAppendix A).7.4.  Diagnostic Values   The diagnostic value in both directions MAY be set to a certain   value, to attempt to communicate further information to both ends.   Implementations MAY use the already-existing diagnostic values   defined inSection 4.1 of [RFC5880].  However, details regarding this   topic are outside the scope of this specification.7.5.  The Poll Sequence   The Poll Sequence MAY be used in both directions.  The Poll Sequence   MUST operate in accordance with [RFC5880].  An SBFDReflector MAY use   the Poll Sequence to slow down the rate at which S-BFD Control   packets are generated from an SBFDInitiator.  This is done by the   SBFDReflector, using the procedures described inSection 7.2.3 and   setting the Poll (P) bit in the reflected S-BFD Control packet.  The   SBFDInitiator is to then send the next S-BFD Control packet with the   Final (F) bit set.  If an SBFDReflector receives an S-BFD Control   packet with the P bit set, then the SBFDReflector MUST respond with   an S-BFD Control packet with the P bit cleared and the F bit set.8.  Operational Considerations   S-BFD provides a smooth and continuous (i.e., seamless) operational   experience as an Operations, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM)   mechanism for connectivity checking and connection verification.   This is achieved by providing a simplified mechanism with a large   proportion of negotiation aspects eliminated, resulting in faster and   simpler provisioning.   Because of this simplified mechanism, due to a misconfiguration an   SBFDInitiator could send S-BFD Control packets to a target that does   not exist or that is outside the S-BFD administrative domain.  As   explained inSection 7.3.1, an SBFDInitiator can be a persistent   initiator or a "when needed" one.  When an S-BFD persistent   SBFDInitiator is used, a deployment SHOULD ensure that S-BFD Control   packets do not propagate for an extended period of time outside ofPignataro, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 2016   the administrative domain that uses it.  Further, operational   measures SHOULD be taken to determine if responses to S-BFD packets   are not sent for an extended period of time and then remediate the   situation.  These potential concerns are largely mitigated by dynamic   advertisement mechanisms for S-BFD and with automation checks before   applying configurations.8.1.  Scaling Aspect   This mechanism brings forth one noticeable difference in terms of the   scaling aspect: the number of SBFDReflectors.  This specification   eliminates the need for egress nodes to have fully active BFD   sessions when only one side desires to perform continuity tests.   With the introduction of the Reflector BFD concept, egress is no   longer required to create any active BFD sessions on a per-path/LSP/   function basis.  Because of this, the total number of BFD sessions in   a network is reduced.8.2.  Congestion Considerations   When S-BFD performs failure detection, it consumes resources,   including bandwidth and CPU processing.  To avoid congestion, it is   therefore imperative that operators correctly provision the rates at   which S-BFD packets are transmitted.  When BFD is used across   multiple hops, a congestion control mechanism MUST be implemented,   and when congestion is detected, the BFD implementation MUST reduce   the amount of traffic it generates.  The exact mechanism used to   detect congestion is outside the scope of this specification but may   include the detection of lost BFD Control packets or other means.   The SBFDReflector can limit the rate at which SBFDInitiators will be   sending S-BFD Control packets by utilizing Required Min RX Interval,   but at the expense of detection time (i.e., detection time will   increase).9.  Co-existence with Classical BFD Sessions   Demultiplexing requirements for the initial packet are described inSection 7.1.  Because of this, the S-BFD mechanism can co-exist with   classical BFD sessions.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 201610.  S-BFD Echo Function   The concept of the S-BFD Echo function is similar to the BFD Echo   function described in [RFC5880].  S-BFD Echo packets have the   destination of "self"; thus, S-BFD Echo packets are self-generated   and self-terminated after traversing a link/path.  S-BFD Echo packets   are expected to U-turn on the target node in the data plane and   MUST NOT be processed by any Reflector BFD sessions on the   target node.   When using the S-BFD Echo function, it is RECOMMENDED that:   o  Both S-BFD Control packets and S-BFD Echo packets be sent.   o  Both S-BFD Control packets and S-BFD Echo packets have the same      semantics in the forward direction to reach the target node.   In other words, it is not preferable to send just S-BFD Echo packets   without also sending S-BFD Control packets.  There are two reasons   behind this suggestion:   o  S-BFD Control packets can verify the reachability of the intended      target node; this allows one to have confidence that S-BFD Echo      packets are U-turning on the expected target node.   o  S-BFD Control packets can detect when the target node is going out      of service (i.e., by receiving AdminDown state).   S-BFD Echo packets can be spoofed and can U-turn in a transit node   before reaching the expected target node.  When the S-BFD Echo   function is used, it is RECOMMENDED in this specification that both   S-BFD Control packets and S-BFD Echo packets be sent.  While the   additional use of S-BFD Control packets alleviates these two   concerns, some form of authentication MAY still be included.   The usage of the Required Min Echo RX Interval field is described in   Sections7.2.2 and7.3.2.  Because of the stateless nature of   SBFDReflector sessions, a value specified in the Required Min Echo RX   Interval field is not very meaningful to the SBFDReflector.  Thus, it   is RECOMMENDED that the Required Min Echo RX Interval field simply be   set to zero by the SBFDInitiator.  The SBFDReflector MAY set the   Required Min Echo RX Interval field to an appropriate value to   control the rate at which it wants to receive S-BFD Echo packets.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 2016   The following aspects of S-BFD Echo functions are left as   implementation details and are outside the scope of this document:   o  Format of the S-BFD Echo packet (e.g., data beyond UDP header).   o  Procedures on when and how to use the S-BFD Echo function.11.  Security Considerations   The same security considerations as those described in [RFC5880]   apply to this document.  Additionally, implementing the following   measures will strengthen security aspects of the mechanism described   by this document:   o  The SBFDInitiator MAY pick a sequence number to be set in      "sequence number" in the Authentication Section, based on the      configured authentication mode.   o  The SBFDReflector MUST NOT use the crypto sequence number to make      a decision about accepting the packet.  This is because the      SBFDReflector does not maintain S-BFD peer state and because the      SBFDReflector can receive S-BFD packets from multiple      SBFDInitiators.  Consequently, BFD authentication can be used, but      not the sequence number.   o  The SBFDReflector MAY use the Auth Key ID in the incoming packet      to verify the Authentication Data.   o  The SBFDReflector MUST accept the packet if authentication is      successful.   o  The SBFDReflector MUST compute the Authentication Data and MUST      use the same sequence number that it received in the S-BFD Control      packet to which it is responding.   o  The SBFDInitiator SHOULD accept an S-BFD Control packet with a      sequence number within the permissible range.  One potential      approach is the procedure explained in [BFD-GEN-AUTH].   Using the above method,   o  SBFDReflectors continue to remain stateless, despite using      security.   o  SBFDReflectors are not susceptible to replay attacks, as they      always respond to S-BFD Control packets irrespective of the      sequence number carried.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 2016   o  An attacker cannot impersonate the responder, since the      SBFDInitiator will only accept S-BFD Control packets that come      with the sequence number that it had originally used when sending      the S-BFD Control packet.   Additionally, the use of strong forms of authentication is strongly   encouraged for S-BFD.  The use of Simple Password authentication   [RFC5880] potentially puts other services at risk if S-BFD packets   can be intercepted and those password values are reused for other   services.   Considerations related to loop problems are covered inAppendix A.12.  References12.1.  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>.   [RFC5880]  Katz, D. and D. Ward, "Bidirectional Forwarding Detection              (BFD)",RFC 5880, DOI 10.17487/RFC5880, June 2010,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5880>.12.2.  Informative References   [BFD-GEN-AUTH]              Bhatia, M., Manral, V., Zhang, D., and M. Jethanandani,              "BFD Generic Cryptographic Authentication", Work in              Progress,draft-ietf-bfd-generic-crypto-auth-06,              April 2014.   [RFC791]   Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5,RFC 791,              DOI 10.17487/RFC791, September 1981,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc791>.   [RFC2460]  Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6              (IPv6) Specification",RFC 2460, DOI 10.17487/RFC2460,              December 1998, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2460>.   [RFC3031]  Rosen, E., Viswanathan, A., and R. Callon, "Multiprotocol              Label Switching Architecture",RFC 3031,              DOI 10.17487/RFC3031, January 2001,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3031>.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 2016   [RFC7881]  Pignataro, C., Ward, D., and N. Akiya, "Seamless              Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (S-BFD) for IPv4, IPv6,              and MPLS",RFC 7881, DOI 10.17487/RFC7881, July 2016,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7881>.   [RFC7882]  Aldrin, S., Pignataro, C., Mirsky, G., and N. Kumar,              "Seamless Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (S-BFD) Use              Cases",RFC 7882, DOI 10.17487/RFC7882, July 2016,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7882>.   [RFC7885]  Govindan, V. and C. Pignataro, "Seamless Bidirectional              Forwarding Detection (S-BFD) for Virtual Circuit              Connectivity Verification (VCCV)",RFC 7885,              DOI 10.17487/RFC7885, July 2016,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7885>.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 2016Appendix A.  Loop Problem and Solution   Consider a scenario where we have two nodes and both are S-BFD   capable.    Node A (IP 2001:db8::1) ----------------- Node B (IP 2001:db8::2)                                    |                                    |                         Man in the Middle (MITM)   Assume that Node A reserved a discriminator 0x01010101 for target   identifier 2001:db8::1 and has a reflector session in listening mode.   Similarly, Node B reserved a discriminator 0x02020202 for its target   identifier 2001:db8::2 and also has a reflector session in   listening mode.   Suppose that a MITM sends a spoofed packet with My Discriminator =   0x01010101, Your Discriminator = 0x02020202, source IP as   2001:db8::1, and destination IP as 2001:db8::2.  When this packet   reaches Node B, the reflector session on Node B will swap the   discriminators and IP addresses of the received packet and reflect it   back, since the Your Discriminator value of the received packet   matches the reserved discriminator of Node B.  The reflected packet   that reached Node A will have My Discriminator = 0x02020202 and   Your Discriminator = 0x01010101.  Since the Your Discriminator value   of the received packet matches the reserved discriminator of Node A,   Node A will swap the discriminators and reflect the packet back to   Node B.  Since the reflectors must set the TTL of the reflected   packets to 255, the above scenario will result in an infinite loop   because of just one malicious packet injected from the MITM.   The solution is to avoid the loop problem by using the D bit (Demand   mode bit).  The initiator always sets the D bit, and the reflector   always clears it.  This way, we can determine if a received packet   was a reflected packet and avoid reflecting it back.Pignataro, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 2016Acknowledgements   The authors would like to thank Jeffrey Haas, Greg Mirsky, Marc   Binderberger, and Alvaro Retana for performing thorough reviews and   providing a number of suggestions.  The authors would also like to   thank Girija Raghavendra Rao, Les Ginsberg, Srihari Raghavan, Vanitha   Neelamegam, and Vengada Prasad Govindan from Cisco Systems for   providing valuable comments.  Finally, the authors would also like to   thank John E. Drake and Pablo Frank for providing comments and   suggestions.Contributors   The following are key contributors to this document:      Tarek Saad, Cisco Systems, Inc.      Siva Sivabalan, Cisco Systems, Inc.      Nagendra Kumar, Cisco Systems, Inc.      Mallik Mudigonda, Cisco Systems, Inc.      Sam Aldrin, GooglePignataro, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 7880                    Seamless BFD Base                  July 2016Authors' Addresses   Carlos Pignataro   Cisco Systems, Inc.   Email: cpignata@cisco.com   Dave Ward   Cisco Systems, Inc.   Email: wardd@cisco.com   Nobo Akiya   Big Switch Networks   Email: nobo.akiya.dev@gmail.com   Manav Bhatia   Ionos Networks   Email: manav@ionosnetworks.com   Santosh Pallagatti   Email: santosh.pallagatti@gmail.comPignataro, et al.            Standards Track                   [Page 24]

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