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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                     J. Hadi SalimRequest for Comments: 5811                             Mojatatu NetworksCategory: Standards Track                                       K. OgawaISSN: 2070-1721                                          NTT Corporation                                                              March 2010SCTP-Based Transport Mapping Layer (TML) for theForwarding and Control Element Separation (ForCES) ProtocolAbstract   This document defines the SCTP-based TML (Transport Mapping Layer)   for the ForCES (Forwarding and Control Element Separation) protocol.   It explains the rationale for choosing the SCTP (Stream Control   Transmission Protocol) and also describes how this TML addresses all   the requirements required by and the ForCES protocol.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/rfc5811.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2010 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.Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010   This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF   Contributions published or made publicly available before November   10, 2008.  The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this   material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow   modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process.   Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling   the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified   outside the IETF Standards Process, and derivative works of it may   not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format   it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other   than English.Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................32. Definitions .....................................................33. Protocol Framework Overview .....................................43.1. The PL .....................................................53.2. The TML ....................................................53.2.1. TML and PL Interfaces ...............................53.2.2. TML Parameterization ................................64. SCTP TML Overview ...............................................74.1. Rationale for Using SCTP for TML ...........................74.2. Meeting TML Requirements ...................................84.2.1. SCTP TML Channels ...................................94.2.2. Satisfying TML Requirements ........................145. SCTP TML Channel Work ..........................................166. IANA Considerations ............................................167. Security Considerations ........................................177.1. IPsec Usage ...............................................177.1.1. SAD and SPD Setup ..................................188. Acknowledgements ...............................................189. References .....................................................199.1. Normative References ......................................199.2. Informative References ....................................20Appendix A.  Suggested SCTP TML Channel Work Implementation .......21A.1.  SCTP TML Channel Initialization ...........................21A.2.  Channel Work Scheduling ...................................21A.2.1.  FE Channel Work Scheduling ............................21A.2.2.  CE Channel Work Scheduling ............................22A.3.  SCTP TML Channel Termination ..............................23A.4.  SCTP TML NE-Level Channel Scheduling ......................23Appendix B.  Suggested Service Interface ..........................24B.1.  TML Bootstrapping .........................................24B.2.  TML Shutdown ..............................................26B.3.  TML Sending and Receiving .................................27Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 20101.  Introduction   The ForCES (Forwarding and Control Element Separation) working group   in the IETF defines the architecture and protocol for separation of   control elements (CEs) and forwarding elements (FEs) in network   elements (NEs) such as routers.  [RFC3654] and [RFC3746],   respectively, define architectural and protocol requirements for the   communication between CEs and FEs.  The ForCES protocol layer   specification [RFC5810] describes the protocol semantics and   workings.  The ForCES protocol layer operates on top of an inter-   connect hiding layer known as the TML.  The relationship is   illustrated in Figure 1.   This document defines the SCTP-based TML for the ForCES protocol   layer.  It also addresses all the requirements for the TML including   security, reliability, and etc., as defined in [RFC5810].2.  Definitions   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].   The following definitions are taken from [RFC3654] and [RFC3746]:   LFB:              Logical Functional Block.  A template that                     represents a fine-grained, logically separate                     aspect of FE processing.   ForCES Protocol:  The protocol used at the Fp reference point in the                     ForCES Framework in [RFC3746].   ForCES PL:        ForCES Protocol Layer.  A layer in the ForCES                     architecture that embodies the ForCES protocol and                     the state transfer mechanisms as defined in                     [RFC5810].   ForCES TML:       ForCES Protocol Transport Mapping Layer.  A layer                     in the ForCES protocol architecture that                     specifically addresses the protocol message                     transportation issues, such as how the protocol                     messages are mapped to different transport media                     (like SCTP, IP, TCP, UDP, ATM, Ethernet, etc.), and                     how to achieve and implement reliability, security,                     etc.Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 20103.  Protocol Framework Overview   The reader is referred to the Framework document [RFC3746], and in   particular Sections3 and4, for an architectural overview and   explanation of where and how the ForCES protocol fits in.   There is some content overlap between the ForCES protocol   specification [RFC5810] and this section (Section 3) in order to   provide basic context to the reader of this document.   The ForCES protocol layering constitutes two pieces, the PL and TML.   This is depicted in Figure 1.               +----------------------------------------------+               |                    CE PL                     |               +----------------------------------------------+               |                    CE TML                    |               +----------------------------------------------+                                      ^                                      |                           ForCES PL  |messages                                      |                                      v               +-----------------------------------------------+               |                   FE TML                      |               +-----------------------------------------------+               |                   FE PL                       |               +-----------------------------------------------+               Figure 1: Message Exchange between CE and FE                      to Establish an NE Association   The PL is in charge of the ForCES protocol.  Its semantics and   message layout are defined in [RFC5810].  The TML is necessary to   connect two ForCES endpoints as shown in Figure 1.   Both the PL and TML are standardized by the IETF.  While only one PL   is defined, different TMLs are expected to be standardized.  The TML   at each of the nodes (CE and FE) is expected to be of the same   definition in order to inter-operate.   When transmitting from a ForCES endpoint, the PL delivers its   messages to the TML.  The TML then delivers the PL message to the   destination TML(s).   On reception of a message, the TML delivers the message to its   destination PL (as described in the ForCES header).Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 20103.1.  The PL   The PL is common to all implementations of ForCES and is standardized   by the IETF [RFC5810].  The PL is responsible for associating an FE   or CE to an NE.  It is also responsible for tearing down such   associations.   An FE may use the PL to asynchronously send packets to the CE.  The   FE may redirect various control protocol packets (e.g., OSPF, etc.)   to the CE via the PL (from outside the NE).  Additionally, the FE   delivers various events that the CE has subscribed to via the PL   [RFC5812].   The CE and FE may interact synchronously via the PL.  The CE issues   status requests to the FE and receives responses via the PL.  The CE   also configures the components of the associated FE's LFBs using the   PL [RFC5812].3.2.  The TML   The TML is responsible for the transport of the PL messages.[RFC5810], Section 5 defines the requirements that need to be met by   a TML specification.  The SCTP TML specified in this document meets   all the requirements specified in[RFC5810], Section 5.Section 4.2.2 of this document describes how the TML requirements are   met.3.2.1.  TML and PL Interfaces   There are two interfaces to the PL and TML.  The specification of   these interfaces is out of scope for this document, but the   interfaces are introduced to show how they fit into the architecture   and summarize the function provided at the interfaces.  The first   interface is between the PL and TML and the other is the CE Manager   (CEM)/FE Manager (FEM) [RFC3746] interface to both the PL and TML.   Both interfaces are shown in Figure 2.Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010                      +----------------------------+                      |  +----------------------+  |                      |  |                      |  |     +---------+      |  |          PL          |  |     |         |      |  +----------------------+  |     |FEM/CEM  |<---->|             ^              |     |         |      |             |              |     +---------+      |             |TML API       |                      |             |              |                      |             V              |                      |  +----------------------+  |                      |  |                      |  |                      |  |          TML         |  |                      |  |                      |  |                      |  +----------------------+  |                      +----------------------------+                      Figure 2: The TML-PL Interface   The CEM/FEM [RFC3746] interface is responsible for bootstrapping and   parameterization of the TML.  In its most basic form, the CEM/FEM   interface takes the form of a simple static config file that is read   on startup in the pre-association phase.Appendix B discusses the service interfaces in more detail.3.2.2.  TML Parameterization   It is expected that it should be possible to use a configuration   reference point, such as the FEM or the CEM, to configure the TML.   Some of the configured parameters may include:   o  PL ID   o  Connection Type and associated data.  For example, if a TML uses      IP/SCTP, then parameters such as SCTP ports and IP addresses need      to be configured.   o  Number of transport connections   o  Connection Capability, such as bandwidth, etc.   o  Allowed/Supported Connection Quality of Service (QoS) Policy (or      Congestion Control Policy)Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 20104.  SCTP TML Overview   SCTP [RFC4960] is an end-to-end transport protocol that is equivalent   to TCP, UDP, or DCCP in many aspects.  With a few exceptions, SCTP   can do most of what UDP, TCP, or DCCP can achieve.  SCTP as can also   do most of what a combination of the other transport protocols can   achieve (e.g., TCP and DCCP or TCP and UDP).   Like TCP, it provides ordered, reliable, connection-oriented, flow-   controlled, congestion-controlled data exchange.  Unlike TCP, it does   not provide byte streaming and instead provides message boundaries.   Like UDP, it can provide unreliable, unordered data exchange.  Unlike   UDP, it does not provide multicast support   Like DCCP, it can provide unreliable, ordered, congestion controlled,   connection-oriented data exchange.   SCTP also provides other services that none of the three transport   protocols mentioned above provide that we found attractive.  These   include:   o  Multi-homing   o  Runtime IP address binding   o  A range of reliability shades with congestion control   o  Built-in heartbeats   o  Multi-streaming   o  Message boundaries with reliability   o  Improved SYN DOS protection   o  Simpler transport events   o  Simplified replicasting4.1.  Rationale for Using SCTP for TML   SCTP has all the features required to provide a robust TML.  As a   transport that is all-encompassing, it negates the need for having   multiple transport protocols in order to satisfy the TML requirements   ([RFC5810], Section 5).  As a result, it allows for simpler coding   and therefore reduces a lot of the interoperability concerns.Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010   SCTP is also very mature and widely used, making it a good choice for   ubiquitous deployment.4.2.  Meeting TML Requirements                  PL                  +----------------------+                  |                      |                  +-----------+----------+                              |   TML API                   TML        |                  +-----------+----------+                  |           |          |                  |    +------+------+   |                  |    |  TML core   |   |                  |    +-+----+----+-+   |                  |      |    |    |     |                  |    SCTP socket API   |                  |      |    |    |     |                  |      |    |    |     |                  |    +-+----+----+-+   |                  |    |    SCTP     |   |                  |    +------+------+   |                  |           |          |                  |           |          |                  |    +------+------+   |                  |    |      IP     |   |                  |    +-------------+   |                  +----------------------+             Figure 3: The TML-SCTP Interface   Figure 3 details the interfacing between the PL and SCTP TML and the   internals of the SCTP TML.  The core of the TML interacts on its   northbound interface to the PL (utilizing the TML API).  On the   southbound interface, the TML core interfaces to the SCTP layer   utilizing the standard socket interface [TSVWG-SCTPSOCKET].  There   are three SCTP socket connections opened between any two PL endpoints   (whether FE or CE).Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 20104.2.1.  SCTP TML Channels                  +--------------------+                  |                    |                  |     TML   core     |                  |                    |                  +-+-------+--------+-+                    |       |        |                    |   Med prio,    |                    |  Semi-reliable |                    |    channel     |                    |       |      Low prio,                    |       |      Unreliable                    |       |      channel                    |       |        |                    ^       ^        ^                    |       |        |                    Y       Y        Y          High prio,|       |        |           reliable |       |        |            channel |       |        |                    Y       Y        Y                 +-+--------+--------+-+                 |                     |                 |        SCTP         |                 |                     |                 +---------------------+              Figure 4: The TML-SCTP Channels   Figure 4 details further the interfacing between the TML core and   SCTP layers.  There are three channels used to group and prioritize   the work for different types of ForCES traffic.  Each channel   constitutes an SCTP socket interface that has different properties.   It should be noted that all SCTP channels are congestion aware (and   for that reason that detail is left out of the description of the   three channels).  SCTP ports 6704, 6705, and 6706 are used for the   higher-, medium-, and lower-priority channels, respectively.  SCTP   Payload Protocol ID (PPID) values of 21, 22, and 23 are used for the   higher-, medium-, and lower-priority channels, respectively.4.2.1.1.  Justifying Choice of Three Sockets   SCTP allows up to 64 K streams to be sent over a single socket   interface.  The authors initially envisioned using a single socket   for all three channels (mapping a channel to an SCTP stream).  This   simplifies programming of the TML as well as conserves use of SCTP   ports.Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010   Further analysis revealed head-of-line blocking issues with this   initial approach.  Lower-priority packets not needing reliable   delivery could block higher-priority packets (needing reliable   delivery) under congestion situations for an indeterminate period of   time (depending on how many outstanding lower-priority packets are   pending).  For this reason, we elected to go with mapping each of the   three channels to a different SCTP socket (instead of a different   stream within a single socket).4.2.1.2.  Higher-Priority, Reliable Channel   The higher-priority (HP) channel uses a standard SCTP reliable socket   on port 6704.  SCTP PPID 21 is used for all messages on the HP   channel.  The HP channel is used for CE-solicited messages and their   responses:   1.  ForCES configuration messages flowing from CE to FE and responses       from the FE to CE.   2.  ForCES query messages flowing from CE to FE and responses from       the FE to the CE.   PL priorities 4-7 MUST be used for all PL messages using this   channel.  The following PL messages MUST use the HP channel for   transport:   o  AssociationSetup (default priority: 7)   o  AssociationSetupResponse (default priority: 7)   o  AssociationTeardown (default priority: 7)   o  Config (default priority: 4)   o  ConfigResponse (default priority: 4)   o  Query (default priority: 4)   o  QueryResponse (default priority: 4)   If PL priorities outside of the specified range priority (4-7), PPID,   or PL message types other than the above are received on the HP   channel, then the PL message MUST be dropped.   Although an implementation may choose different values from the   defined range (4-7), it is RECOMMENDED that default priorities be   used.  A response to a ForCES message MUST contain the same priorityHadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010   as the request.  For example, a config sent by the CE with priority 5   MUST have a config-response from the FE with priority 5.4.2.1.3.  Medium-Priority, Semi-Reliable Channel   The medium-priority (MP) channel uses SCTP-PR on port 6705.  SCTP   PPID 22 MUST be used for all messages on the MP channel.  Time limits   on how long a message is valid are set on each outgoing message.   This channel is used for events from the FE to the CE that are   obsoleted over time.  Events that are accumulative in nature and are   recoverable by the CE (by issuing a query to the FE) can tolerate   lost events and therefore should use this channel.  For example, a   generated event that carries the value of a counter that is   monotonically incrementing is fit to use this channel.   PL priority 3 MUST be used for PL messages on this channel.  The   following PL messages MUST use the MP channel for transport:   o  Event Notification (default priority: 3)   If PL priorities outside of the specified priority, PPID, or PL   message type other than the above are received on the MP channel,   then the PL message MUST be dropped.4.2.1.4.  Lower-Priority, Unreliable Channel   The lower-priority (LP) channel uses SCTP port 6706.  SCTP PPID 23 is   used for all messages on the LP channel.  The LP channel also MUST   use SCTP-PR with lower timeout values than the MP channel.  The   reason an unreliable channel is used for redirect messages is to   allow the control protocol at both the CE and its peer-endpoint to   take charge of how the end-to-end semantics of the said control   protocol's operations.  For example:   1.  Some control protocols are reliable in nature, therefore making       this channel reliable introduces an extra layer of reliability       that could be harmful.  So any end-to-end retransmits will happen       remotely.   2.  Some control protocols may desire having obsolescence of messages       over retransmissions; making this channel reliable contradicts       that desire.   Given ForCES PL heartbeats are traffic sensitive, sending them over   the LP channel also makes sense.  If the other end is not processing   other channels, it will eventually get heartbeats; and if it is busy   processing other channels, heartbeats will be obsoleted locally over   time (and it does not matter if they did not make it).Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010   PL priorities 1-2 MUST be used for PL messages on this channel.  PL   messages that MUST use the MP channel for transport are:   o  PacketRedirect (default priority: 2)   o  Heartbeat (default priority: 1)   If PL priorities outside of the specified priority range, PPID, or PL   message types other than the above are received on the LP channel,   then the PL message MUST be dropped.4.2.1.5.  Scheduling of the Three Channels   In processing the sending and receiving of the PL messages, the TML   core uses strict priority work-conserving scheduling, as shown in   Figure 5.   This means that the HP messages are always processed first until   there are no more left.  The LP channel is processed only if channels   that are a higher priority than itself have no messages left to   process.  This means that under a congestion situation, a higher-   priority channel with sufficient messages that occupy the available   bandwidth would starve lower-priority channel(s).   The design intent of the SCTP TML is to tie processing   prioritization, as described inSection 4.2.1.1, and transport   congestion control to provide implicit node congestion control.  This   is further detailed inAppendix A.2.   It should be emphasized that the work scheduling prioritization   scheme prescribed in this document is receiver-based processing.   Fully arrived packets on any of the channels are a source of work   whose output may result in transmitted packets.  However, we have no   control on the order in which the SCTP/OS/network chooses to send   transmitted packets across and make them available to the receiver.   This is a limitation that we try to ameliorate by our choice of   channel properties, ForCES message grouping, and the tying of CE and   FE work scheduling.  While that helps us ameliorate some of these   issues, it does not fully resolve all.   From a ForCES perspective, we can tolerate some reordering.  For   example, if an FE transmits a config response (HP) followed by 10000   OSPF redirect packets (LP) and the CE gets 5 OSPF redirects (LP)   first before the config response (HP), that is tolerable.  What   matters is the CE gets to processing the HP message soon (instead of   sitting in long periods of time processing OSPF packets that would   have happened if we use a single socket with three streams).  This isHadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010   particularly important in order to deal with node overload well, as   discussed inSection 4.2.2.6.          SCTP channel            +----------+          Work available          |   DONE   +---<--<--+              |                   +---+------+         |              Y                                        ^              |         +-->--+         +-->---+       |      +-->-->-+         |     |         |      |       |      |       |         |     |         |      |       ^      |       ^         ^     v         ^      v       |      ^      / \        |     |         |      |       |      |     /   \       |     ^         |      ^       ^      |    / Is  \      |    / \        |     / \      |      |   / there \     |   /Is \       |    /Is \     |      ^  / HP work \    ^  /there\      ^   /there\    ^      |  \    ?    /    | /MP work\     |  /LP work\   |      |   \       /     | \    ?  /     |  \   ?   /   |      |    \     /      |  \     /      |   \     /    ^      |     \   /       ^   \   /       ^    \   /     |      |      \ /        |    \ /        |     \ /      |      ^       Y-->-->-->+     Y-->-->-->+      Y->->->-+      |       |    NO         |    NO          |  NO      |       |               |                |      |       Y               Y                Y      |       | YES           | YES            | YES      ^       |               |                |      |       Y               Y                Y      |  +----+------+    +---|-------+   +----|------+      |  |- process  |    |- process  |   |- process  |      |  |  HP work  |    |  MP work  |   | LP work   |      |  +------+----+    +-----+-----+   +-----+-----+      |         |               |               |      ^         Y               Y               Y      |         |               |               |      |         Y               Y               Y      +--<--<---+--<--<----<----+-----<---<-----+            Figure 5: SCTP TML Strict Priority Scheduling4.2.1.6.  SCTP TML Parameterization   The following is a list of parameters needed for booting the TML.  It   is expected these parameters will be extracted via the FEM/CEM   interface for each PL ID.   1.  The IP address(es) or a resolvable DNS/hostname(s) of the CE/FE.Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010   2.  Whether or not to use IPsec.  If IPsec is used, how to       parameterize the different required ciphers, keys, etc., as       described inSection 7.1   3.  The HP SCTP port, as discussed inSection 4.2.1.2.  The default       HP port value is 6704 (Section 6).   4.  The MP SCTP port, as discussed inSection 4.2.1.3.  The default       MP port value is 6705 (Section 6).   5.  The LP SCTP port, as discussed inSection 4.2.1.4.  The default       LP port value is 6706 (Section 6).4.2.2.  Satisfying TML Requirements[RFC5810], Section 5 lists requirements that a TML needs to meet.   This section describes how the SCTP TML satisfies those requirements.4.2.2.1.  Satisfying Reliability Requirement   As mentioned earlier, a shade of reliability ranges is possible in   SCTP.  Therefore, this requirement is met.4.2.2.2.  Satisfying Congestion Control Requirement   Congestion control is built into SCTP.  Therefore, this requirement   is met.4.2.2.3.  Satisfying Timeliness and Prioritization Requirement   By using three sockets in conjunction with the partial-reliability   feature [RFC3758], both timeliness and prioritization requirements   are addressed.4.2.2.4.  Satisfying Addressing Requirement   There are no extra headers required for SCTP to fulfill this   requirement.  SCTP can be told to replicast packets to multiple   destinations.  The TML implementation will need to translate PL   addresses to a variety of unicast IP addresses in order to emulate   multicast and broadcast PL addresses.4.2.2.5.  Satisfying High-Availability Requirement   Transport link resiliency is one of SCTP's strongest points.  Failure   detection and recovery is built in, as mentioned earlier.Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010   o  The SCTP multi-homing feature is used to provide path diversity.      Should one of the peer IP addresses become unreachable, the others      are used without needing lower-layer convergence (routing, for      example) or even the TML becoming aware.   o  SCTP heartbeats and data transmission thresholds are used on a      per-peer IP address to detect reachability faults.  The faults      could be a result of an unreachable address or peer, which may be      caused by a variety of reasons, like interface, network, or      endpoint failures.  The cause of the fault is noted.   o  With the ADDIP feature, one can migrate IP addresses to other      nodes at runtime.  This is not unlike the Virtual Router      Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) [RFC5798] use.  This feature is used in      addition to multi-homing in a planned migration of activity from      one FE/CE to another.  In such a case, part of the provisioning      recipe at the CE for replacing an FE involves migrating activity      of one FE to another.4.2.2.6.  Satisfying Node Overload Prevention Requirement   The architecture of this TML defines three separate channels, one per   socket, to be used within any FE-CE setup.  The work scheduling   design for processing the TML channels (Section 4.2.1.5) is a strict   priority.  A fundamental desire of the strict prioritization is to   ensure that more important processing work always gets node resources   over less important work.   When a ForCES node CPU is overwhelmed because the incoming packet   rate is higher than it can keep up with, the channel queues grow and   transport congestion subsequently follows.  By virtue of using SCTP,   the congestion is propagated back to the source of the incoming   packets and eventually alleviated.   The HP channel work gets prioritized at the expense of the MP, which   gets prioritized over LP channels.  The preferential scheduling only   kicks in when there is node overload regardless of whether there is   transport congestion.  As a result of the preferential work   treatment, the ForCES node achieves a robust steady processing   capacity.  Refer toAppendix A.2 for details on scheduling.   For an example of how the overload prevention works, consider a   scenario where an overwhelming amount of redirected packets (from   outside the NE) coming into the NE may overload the FE while it has   outstanding config work from the CE.  In such a case, the FE, while   it is busy processing config requests from the CE, essentially   ignores processing the redirect packets on the LP channel.  If enough   redirect packets accumulate, they are dropped either because the LPHadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010   channel threshold is exceeded or because they are obsoleted.  If on   the other hand, the FE has successfully processed the higher-priority   channels and their related work, then it can proceed and process the   LP channel.  So as demonstrated in this case, the TML ties transport   congestion and node overload implicitly together.4.2.2.7.  Satisfying Encapsulation Requirement   The SCTP TML sets SCTP PPIDs to identify channels used as described   inSection 4.2.1.1.5.  SCTP TML Channel Work   There are two levels of TML channel work within an NE when a ForCES   node (CE or FE) is connected to multiple other ForCES nodes:   1.  NE-level I/O work where a ForCES node (CE or FE) needs to choose       which of the peer nodes to process.   2.  Node-level I/O work where a ForCES node, handles the three SCTP       TML channels separately for each single ForCES endpoint.   NE-level scheduling definition is left up to the implementation and   is considered out of scope for this document.Appendix A.4 briefly   discusses some constraints about which an implementer needs to worry.   This document provides suggestions on SCTP channel work   implementation inAppendix A.   The FE SHOULD do channel connections to the CE in the order of   incrementing priorities, i.e., LP socket first, followed by MP, and   ending with HP socket connection.  The CE, however, MUST NOT assume   that there is ordering of socket connections from any FE.6.  IANA Considerations   Following the policies outlined in "Guidelines for Writing an IANA   Considerations Section in RFCs" [RFC5226], the following namespaces   are defined in ForCES SCTP TML.   o  SCTP port 6704 for the HP channel, 6705 for the MP channel, and      6706 for the LP channel.   o  SCTP Payload Protocol ID (PPID) 21 for the HP channel (ForCES-HP),      22 for the MP channel (ForCES-MP), and 23 for the LP channel      (ForCES-LP).Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 20107.  Security Considerations   The SCTP TML provides the following security services to the PL:   o  A mechanism to authenticate ForCES CEs and FEs at the transport      level in order to prevent the participation of unauthorized CEs      and unauthorized FEs in the control and data path processing of a      ForCES NE.   o  A mechanism to ensure message authentication of PL data and      headers transferred from the CE to FE (and vice versa) in order to      prevent the injection of incorrect data into PL messages.   o  A mechanism to ensure the confidentiality of PL data and headers      transferred from the CE to FE (and vice versa), in order to      prevent disclosure of PL information transported via the TML.   Security choices provided by the TML are made by the operator and   take effect during the pre-association phase of the ForCES protocol.   An operator may choose to use all, some or none of the security   services provided by the TML in a CE-FE connection.   When operating under a secured environment, or for other operational   concerns (in some cases performance issues) the operator may turn off   all the security functions between CE and FE.   IP Security Protocol (IPsec) [RFC4301] is used to provide needed   security mechanisms.   IPsec is an IP-level security scheme transparent to the higher-layer   applications and therefore can provide security for any transport   layer protocol.  This gives IPsec the advantage that it can be used   to secure everything between the CE and FE without expecting the TML   implementation to be aware of the details.   The IPsec architecture is designed to provide message integrity and   message confidentiality outlined in the TML security requirements   [RFC5810].  Mutual authentication and key exchange protocol are   provided by Internet Key Exchange (IKE) [RFC2409].7.1.  IPsec Usage   A ForCES FE or CE MUST support the following:   o  Internet Key Exchange (IKE)[RFC2409] with certificates for      endpoint authentication.   o  Transport Mode Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) [RFC4303].Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010   o  HMAC-SHA1-96 [RFC2404] for message integrity protection   o  AES-CBC with 128-bit keys [RFC3602] for message confidentiality.   o  Replay protection [RFC4301].   A compliant implementation SHOULD provide operational means for   configuring the CE and FE to negotiate other cipher suites and even   use manual keying.7.1.1.  SAD and SPD Setup   To minimize the operational configuration, it is RECOMMENDED that   only the IANA-issued SCTP protocol number (132) be used as a selector   in the Security Policy Database (SPD) for ForCES.  In such a case,   only a single SPD and SAD entry is needed.   Setup MAY alternatively extend the above policy so that it uses the   three SCTP TML port numbers as SPD selectors.  But as noted above,   this choice will require an increased number of SPD entries.   In scenarios where multiple IP addresses are used within a single   association, and there is desire to configure different policies on a   per-IP address, then following [RFC3554] is RECOMMENDED.8.  Acknowledgements   The authors would like to thank Joel Halpern, Michael Tuxen, Randy   Stewart, Evangelos Haleplidis, Chuanhuang Li, Lars Eggert, Avshalom   Houri, Adrian Farrel, Juergen Quittek, Magnus Westerlund, and Pasi   Eronen for engaging us in discussions that have made this document   better.   Ross Callon was an excellent manager who persevered in providing us   guidance and Joel Halpern was an excellent document shepherd without   whom this document would have taken longer to publish.Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 20109.  References9.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC2404]  Madson, C. and R. Glenn, "The Use of HMAC-SHA-1-96 within              ESP and AH",RFC 2404, November 1998.   [RFC2409]  Harkins, D. and D. Carrel, "The Internet Key Exchange              (IKE)",RFC 2409, November 1998.   [RFC3554]  Bellovin, S., Ioannidis, J., Keromytis, A., and R.              Stewart, "On the Use of Stream Control Transmission              Protocol (SCTP) with IPsec",RFC 3554, July 2003.   [RFC3602]  Frankel, S., Glenn, R., and S. Kelly, "The AES-CBC Cipher              Algorithm and Its Use with IPsec",RFC 3602,              September 2003.   [RFC3758]  Stewart, R., Ramalho, M., Xie, Q., Tuexen, M., and P.              Conrad, "Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP)              Partial Reliability Extension",RFC 3758, May 2004.   [RFC4301]  Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the              Internet Protocol",RFC 4301, December 2005.   [RFC4303]  Kent, S., "IP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)",RFC 4303, December 2005.   [RFC4960]  Stewart, R., "Stream Control Transmission Protocol",RFC 4960, September 2007.   [RFC5226]  Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an              IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 5226,              May 2008.   [RFC5810]  Doria, A., Ed., Hadi Salim, J., Ed., HAAS, R., Ed.,              Khosravi, H., Ed., Wang, W., Ed., Dong, L., Gopal, R., and              J. Halpern, "Forwarding and Control Element Separation              (ForCES) Protocol Specification",RFC 5810, March 2010.Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 20109.2.  Informative References   [RFC3654]  Khosravi, H. and T. Anderson, "Requirements for Separation              of IP Control and Forwarding",RFC 3654, November 2003.   [RFC3746]  Yang, L., Dantu, R., Anderson, T., and R. Gopal,              "Forwarding and Control Element Separation (ForCES)              Framework",RFC 3746, April 2004.   [RFC5812]  Halpern, J. and J. Hadi Salim, "Forwarding and Control              Element Separation (ForCES) Forwarding Element Model",RFC 5812, March 2010.   [RFC5798]  Nadas, S., Ed., "Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP)              Version 3 for IPv4 and IPv6",RFC 5798, March 2010.   [TSVWG-SCTPSOCKET]              Stewart, R., Poon, K., Tuexen, M., Yasevich, V., and P.              Lei, "Sockets API Extensions for Stream Control              Transmission Protocol (SCTP)", Work in Progress,              March 2010.Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010Appendix A.  Suggested SCTP TML Channel Work Implementation   As mentioned inSection 5, there are two levels of TML channel work   within an NE when a ForCES node (CE or FE) is connected to multiple   other ForCES nodes:   1.  NE-level I/O work where a ForCES node (CE or FE) needs to choose       which of the peer nodes to process.   2.  Node-level I/O work where a ForCES node, handles the three SCTP       TML channels separately for each single ForCES endpoint.   NE-level scheduling definition is left up to the implementation and   is considered out of scope for this document.Appendix A.4 briefly   discusses some constraints about which an implementer needs to worry.   This document, and in particularAppendix A.1,Appendix A.2, andAppendix A.3 discuss details of node-level I/O work.A.1.  SCTP TML Channel Initialization   As discussed inSection 5, it is recommended that the FE SHOULD do   socket connections to the CE in the order of incrementing priorities,   i.e., LP socket first, followed by MP, and ending with HP socket   connection.  The CE, however, MUST NOT assume that there is ordering   of socket connections from any FE.Appendix B.1 has more details on   the expected initialization of SCTP channel work.A.2.  Channel Work Scheduling   This section provides high-level details of the scheduling view of   the SCTP TML core (Section 4.2.1).  A practical scheduler   implementation takes care of many little details (such as timers,   work quanta, etc.) not described in this document.  It is left to the   implementer to take care of those details.   The CE(s) and FE(s) are coupled together in the principles of the   scheduling scheme described here to tie together node overload with   transport congestion.  The design intent is to provide the highest   possible robust work throughput for the NE under any network or   processing congestion.A.2.1.  FE Channel Work Scheduling   The FE scheduling, in priority order, needs to I/O process:   1.  The HP channel I/O in the following priority order:Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010       1.  Transmitting back to the CE any outstanding result of           executed work via the HP channel transmit path.       2.  Taking new incoming work from the CE that creates ForCES work           to be executed by the FE.   2.  ForCES events that result in transmission of unsolicited ForCES       packets to the CE via the MP channel.   3.  Incoming Redirect work in the form of control packets that come       from the CE via LP channel.  After redirect processing, these       packets get sent out on external (to the NE) interface.   4.  Incoming Redirect work in the form of control packets that come       from other NEs via external (to the NE) interfaces.  After some       processing, such packets are sent to the CE.   It is worth emphasizing, at this point again, that the SCTP TML   processes the channel work in strict priority.  For example, as long   as there are messages to send to the CE on the HP channel, they will   be processed first until there are no more left before processing the   next priority work (which is to read new messages on the HP channel   incoming from the CE).A.2.2.  CE Channel Work Scheduling   The CE scheduling, in priority order, needs to deal with:   1.  The HP channel I/O in the following priority order:       1.  Process incoming responses to requests of work it made to the           FE(s).       2.  Transmit any outstanding HP work it needs the FE(s) to           complete.   2.  Incoming ForCES events from the FE(s) via the MP channel.   3.  Outgoing Redirect work in the form of control packets that get       sent from the CE via LP channel destined to external (to the NE)       interface on FE(s).   4.  Incoming Redirect work in the form of control packets that come       from other NEs via external interfaces (to the NE) on the FE(s).   It is worth repeating, for emphasis, that the SCTP TML processes the   channel work in strict priority.  For example, if there are messages   incoming from an FE on the HP channel, they will be processed firstHadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010   until there are no more left before processing the next priority   work, which is to transmit any outstanding HP channel messages going   to the FE.A.3.  SCTP TML Channel TerminationAppendix B.2 describes a controlled disassociation of the FE from the   NE.   It is also possible for connectivity to be lost between the FE and CE   on one or more sockets.  In cases where SCTP multi-homing features   are used for path availability, the disconnection of a socket will   only occur if all paths are unreachable; otherwise, SCTP will ensure   reachability.  In the situation of a total connectivity loss of even   one SCTP socket, it is recommended that the FE and CE SHOULD assume a   state equivalent to ForCES Association Teardown being issued and   follow the sequence described inAppendix B.2.   A CE could also disconnect sockets to an FE to indicate an "emergency   teardown".  The "emergency teardown" may be necessary in cases when a   CE needs to disconnect an FE but knows that an FE is busy processing   a lot of outstanding commands (some of which the FE hasn't gotten   around to processing, yet).  By virtue of the CE closing the   connections, the FE will immediately be asynchronously notified and   will not have to process any outstanding commands from the CE.A.4.  SCTP TML NE-Level Channel Scheduling   In handling NE-level I/O work, an implementation needs to worry about   being both fair and robust across peer ForCES nodes.   Fairness is desired so that each peer node makes progress across the   NE.  For the sake of illustration, consider two FEs connected to a   CE; whereas one FE has a few HP messages that need to be processed by   the CE, another may have infinite HP messages.  The scheduling scheme   may decide to use a quota scheduling system to ensure that the second   FE does not hog the CE cycles.   Robustness is desired so that the NE does not succumb to a Denial-of-   Service (DoS) attack from hostile entities and always achieves a   maximum stable workload processing level.  For the sake of   illustration, consider again two FEs connected to a CE.  Consider FE1   as having a large number of HP and MP messages and FE2 having a large   number of MP and LP messages.  The scheduling scheme needs to ensure   that while FE1 always gets its messages processed, at some point we   allow FE2 messages to be processed.  A promotion and preemption-based   scheduling could be used by the CE to resolve this issue.Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010Appendix B.  Suggested Service Interface   This section outlines a high-level service interface between FEM/CEM   and TML, the PL and TML, and between local and remote TMLs.  The   intent of this interface discussion is to provide general guidelines.   The implementer is expected to care of details and even follow a   different approach if needed.   The theory of operation for the PL-TML service is as follows:   1.  The PL starts up and bootstraps the TML.  The end result of a       successful TML bootstrap is that the CE TML and the FE TML       connect to each other at the transport level.   2.  Transmission and reception of the PL messages commences after a       successful TML bootstrap.  The PL uses send and receive PL-TML       interfaces to communicate to its peers.  The TML is agnostic to       the nature of the messages being sent or received.  The first       message exchanges that happen are to establish ForCES       association.  Subsequent messages may be either unsolicited       events from the FE PL, control message redirects to/from the CE       to/from FE, or configuration from the CE to the FE, and their       responses flowing from the FE to the CE.   3.  The PL does a shutdown of the TML after terminating ForCES       association.B.1.  TML Bootstrapping   Figure 6 illustrates a flow for the TML bootstrapped by the PL.   When the PL starts up (possibly after some internal initialization),   it boots up the TML.  The TML first interacts with the FEM/CEM and   acquires the necessary TML parameterization (Section 4.2.1.6).  Next,   the TML uses the information it retrieved from the FEM/CEM interface   to initialize itself.   The TML on the FE proceeds to connect the three channels to the CE.   The socket interface is used for each of the channels.  The TML   continues to re-try the connections to the CE until all three   channels are connected.  It is advisable that the number of   connection retry attempts and the time between each retry is also   configurable via the FEM.  On failure to connect one or more   channels, and after the configured number of retry thresholds is   exceeded, the TML will return an appropriate failure indicator to the   PL.  On success (as shown in Figure 6), a success indication is   presented to the PL.Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010   FE PL      FE TML           FEM  CEM        CE TML              CE PL     |            |             |    |            |                    |     |            |             |    |            |      Bootup        |     |            |             |    |            |<-------------------|     |  Bootup    |             |    |            |                    |     |----------->|             |    |get CEM info|                    |     |            |get FEM info |    |<-----------|                    |     |            |------------>|    ~            ~                    |     |            ~             ~    |----------->|                    |     |            |<------------|                 |                    |     |            |                               |-initialize TML     |     |            |                               |-create the 3 chans.|     |            |                               | to listen to FEs   |     |            |                               |                    |     |            |-initialize TML                |Bootup success      |     |            |-create the 3 chans. locally   |------------------->|     |            |-connect 3 chans. remotely     |                    |     |            |------------------------------>|                    |     |            ~                               ~ - FE TML connected ~     |            ~                               ~ - FE TML info init ~     |            | channels connected            |                    |     |            |<------------------------------|                    |     | Bootup     |                               |                    |     | succeeded  |                               |                    |     |<-----------|                               |                    |     |            |                               |                    |                     Figure 6: SCTP TML Bootstrapping   On the CE, things are slightly different.  After initializing from   the CEM, the TML on the CE side proceeds to initialize the three   channels to listen to remote connections from the FEs.  The success   or failure indication is passed on to the CE PL (in the same manner   as was done in the FE).   Post bootup, the CE TML waits for connections from the FEs.  Upon a   successful connection by an FE, the CE TML level keeps track of the   transport-level details of the FE.  Note, at this stage only   transport-level connection has been established; ForCES-level   association follows using send/receive PL-TML interfaces (refer toAppendix B.3 and Figure 8).Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010B.2.  TML Shutdown   Figure 7 shows an example of an FE shutting down the TML.  It is   assumed at this point that the ForCES Association Teardown has been   issued by the CE.  It should also be noted that different   implementations may have different procedures for cleaning up state,   etc.   When the FE PL issues a shutdown to its TML for a specific PL ID, the   TML releases all the channel connections to the CE.  This is achieved   by closing the sockets used to communicate to the CE.  This results   in the stack sending a SCTP shutdown, which is received on the CE.   FE PL      FE TML                      CE TML              CE PL     |            |                         |                    |     |  Shutdown  |                         |                    |     |----------->|                         |                    |     |            |-disconnect 3 chans.     |                    |     |            |-SCTP level shutdown     |                    |     |            |------------------------>|                    |     |            |                         |                    |     |            |                         |TML detects shutdown|     |            |                         |-FE TML info cleanup|     |            |                         |-optionally tell PL |     |            |                         |------------------->|     |            |                         |                    |     |            |- clean up any state of  |                    |     |            |-channels disconnected   |                    |     |            |<------------------------|                    |     |            |-SCTP shutdown ACK       |                    |     |            |                         |                    |     | Shutdown   |                         |                    |     | succeeded  |                         |                    |     |<-----------|                         |                    |     |            |                         |                    |                        Figure 7: FE Shutting Down   On the CE side, a TML disconnection would result in possible cleanup   of the FE state.  Optionally, depending on the implementation, there   may be need to inform the PL about the TML disconnection.  The CE-   stack-level SCTP sends an acknowledgement to the FE TML in response   to the earlier SCTP shutdown.Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010B.3.  TML Sending and Receiving   The TML should be agnostic to the content of the PL messages, or   their operations.  The PL should provide enough information to the   TML for it to assign an appropriate priority and loss behavior to the   message.  Figure 8 shows an example of a message exchange originated   at the FE and sent to the CE (such as a ForCES association message),   which illustrates all the necessary service interfaces for sending   and receiving.   When the FE PL sends a message to the TML, the TML is expected to   pick one of HP/MP/LP channels and send out the ForCES message.   FE PL       FE TML           CE TML                CE PL      |            |              |                      |      |PL send     |              |                      |      |----------->|              |                      |      |            |              |                      |      |            |              |                      |      |            |-pick channel |                      |      |            |-TML  Send    |                      |      |            |------------->|                      |      |            |              |                      |      |            |              |-TML Receive on chan. |      |            |              |- mux to PL/PL recv   |      |            |              |--------------------->|      |            |              |                      ~      |            |              |                      ~ PL Process      |            |              |                      ~      |            |              |  PL send             |      |            |              |<---------------------|      |            |              |-pick chan to send on |      |            |              |-TML send             |      |            |<-------------|                      |      |            |-TML Receive  |                      |      |            |-mux to PL    |                      |      | PL Recv    |              |                      |      |<---------- |              |                      |      |            |              |                      |                       Figure 8: Send and Recv Flow   When the CE TML receives the ForCES message on the channel on which   it was sent, it demultiplexes the message to the CE PL.Hadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 5811                     ForCES SCTP TML                  March 2010   The CE PL, after some processing (in this example, dealing with the   FE's association), sends the TML the response.  As in the case of FE   PL, the CE TML picks the channel to send on before sending.   The processing of the ForCES message upon arrival at the FE TML and   delivery to the FE PL is similar to the CE side equivalent as shown   above inAppendix B.3.Authors' Addresses   Jamal Hadi Salim   Mojatatu Networks   Ottawa, Ontario   Canada   EMail: hadi@mojatatu.com   Kentaro Ogawa   NTT Corporation   3-9-11 Midori-cho   Musashino-shi, Tokyo  180-8585   Japan   EMail: ogawa.kentaro@lab.ntt.co.jpHadi Salim & Ogawa           Standards Track                   [Page 28]

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