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INFORMATIONAL
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                       K. KompellaRequest for Comments: 6624                              Juniper NetworksCategory: Informational                                       B. KothariISSN: 2070-1721                                            Cisco Systems                                                            R. Cherukuri                                                        Juniper Networks                                                                May 2012Layer 2 Virtual Private Networks Using BGP forAuto-Discovery and SignalingAbstract   Layer 2 Virtual Private Networks (L2VPNs) based on Frame Relay or ATM   circuits have been around a long time; more recently, Ethernet VPNs,   including Virtual Private LAN Service, have become popular.   Traditional L2VPNs often required a separate Service Provider   infrastructure for each type and yet another for the Internet and IP   VPNs.  In addition, L2VPN provisioning was cumbersome.  This document   presents a new approach to the problem of offering L2VPN services   where the L2VPN customer's experience is virtually identical to that   offered by traditional L2VPNs, but such that a Service Provider can   maintain a single network for L2VPNs, IP VPNs, and the Internet, as   well as a common provisioning methodology for all services.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for informational purposes.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents   approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet   Standard; seeSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6624.Kompella, et al.              Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2012 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.Kompella, et al.              Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................31.1. Terminology ................................................61.1.1. Conventions Used in This Document ...................61.2. Advantages of Layer 2 VPNs .................................61.2.1. Separation of Administrative Responsibilities .......71.2.2. Migrating from Traditional Layer 2 VPNs .............71.2.3. Privacy of Routing ..................................71.2.4. Layer 3 Independence ................................71.2.5. PE Scaling ..........................................81.2.6. Ease of Configuration ...............................81.3. Advantages of Layer 3 VPNs .................................91.3.1. Layer 2 Independence ................................91.3.2. SP Routing as Added Value ..........................101.3.3. Class of Service ...................................101.4. Multicast Routing .........................................102. Operation of a Layer 2 VPN .....................................112.1. Network Topology ..........................................112.2. Configuration .............................................132.2.1. CE Configuration ...................................142.2.2. PE Configuration ...................................152.2.3. Adding a New Site ..................................152.2.4. Deleting a Site ....................................162.2.5. Managing CE ID Mappings ............................162.2.6. Managing Label Blocks ..............................162.3. Operations, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM) .........173. PE Information Exchange ........................................173.1. Circuit Status Vector .....................................193.2. Generalizing the VPN Topology .............................204. Layer 2 Interworking ...........................................215. Packet Transport ...............................................225.1. Layer 2 MTU ...............................................225.2. Layer 2 Frame Format ......................................225.3. IP-Only Layer 2 Interworking ..............................236. Security Considerations ........................................237. IANA Considerations ............................................238. Acknowledgments ................................................249. Contributors ...................................................2410. References ....................................................2410.1. Normative References .....................................2410.2. Informative References ...................................25Kompella, et al.              Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 20121.  Introduction   The earliest Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) were based on Layer 2   circuits: X.25, Frame Relay, and ATM (see [Kosiur]).  More recently,   multipoint VPNs based on Ethernet Virtual Local Area Networks (VLANs)   and Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS) [RFC4761][RFC4762] have become   quite popular.  In contrast, the VPNs described in this document are   point-to-point, and usually called Virtual Private Wire Service   (VPWS).  All of these come under the classification of Layer 2 VPNs   (L2VPNs), as the customer-to-Service-Provider hand-off is at Layer 2.   There are at least two factors that adversely affected the cost of   offering L2VPNs.  The first is that the easiest way to offer an L2VPN   of a given type of Layer 2 was over an infrastructure of the same   type.  This approach required that the Service Provider build a   separate infrastructure for each Layer 2 encapsulation, e.g., an ATM   infrastructure for ATM VPNs, an Ethernet infrastructure for Ethernet   VPNs, etc.  In addition, a separate infrastructure was needed for the   Internet and IP VPNs [RFC4364], and possibly yet another for voice   services.  Going down this path meant a proliferation of networks.   The other is that each of these networks had different provisioning   methodologies.  Furthermore, the provisioning of an L2VPN was fairly   complex.  It is important to distinguish between a single Layer 2   circuit, which connects two customer sites, and a Layer 2 VPN, which   is a set of circuits that connect sites belonging to the same   customer.  The fact that two different circuits belonged to the same   VPN was typically known only to the provisioning system, not to the   switches offering the service; this complicated the setting up, and   subsequently, the troubleshooting, of an L2VPN.  Also, each switch   offering the service had to be provisioned with the address of every   other switch in the same VPN, requiring, in the case of full-mesh VPN   connectivity, provisioning proportional to the square of the number   of sites.  This made full-mesh L2VPN connectivity prohibitively   expensive for the Service Provider (SP) and thus also for customers.   Finally, even setting up an individual circuit often required the   provisioning of every switch along the path.   Of late, there has been much progress in network "convergence",   whereby Layer 2 traffic, Internet traffic, and IP VPN traffic can be   carried over a single, consolidated network infrastructure based on   IP/MPLS tunnels; this is made possible by techniques such as those   described in [RFC4448], [RFC4618], [RFC4619], and [RFC4717] for Layer   2 traffic and in [RFC4364] for IP VPN traffic.  This development goes   a long way toward addressing the problem of network proliferation.   This document goes one step further and shows how a Service Provider   can offer Layer 2 VPNs using protocol and provisioning methodologies   similar to that used for VPLS [RFC4761] and IP VPNs [RFC4364],Kompella, et al.              Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012   thereby achieving a significant degree of operational convergence as   well.  In particular, all of these methodologies include the notion   of a VPN identifier that serves to unify components of a given VPN   and the concept of auto-discovery, which simplifies the provisioning   of dense VPN topologies (for example, a full mesh).  In addition,   similar techniques are used in all of the above-mentioned VPN   technologies to offer inter-AS and inter-provider VPNs (i.e., VPNs   whose sites are connected to multiple Autonomous Systems (ASes) or   Service Providers).   Technically, the approach proposed here uses the concepts and   solution described in [RFC4761], which describes a method for VPLS, a   particular form of a Layer 2 VPN.  That document, in turn, borrowed   much from [RFC4364], including the use of BGP for auto-discovery and   "demultiplexor" (see below) exchange and the concepts of Route   Distinguishers to make VPN advertisements unique and Route Targets to   control VPN topology.  In addition, all three documents share the   idea that routers not directly connected to VPN customers should   carry no VPN state, restricting the provisioning of individual   connections to just the edge devices.  This is achieved using tunnels   to carry the data, with a demultiplexor that identifies individual   VPN circuits.  These tunnels could be based on MPLS, GRE, or any   other tunnel technology that offers a demultiplexing field; the   signaling of these tunnels is outside the scope of this document.   The specific approach taken here is to use an MPLS label as the   demultiplexor.   Layer 2 VPNs typically require that all sites in the VPN connect to   the SP with the same Layer 2 encapsulation.  To ease this   restriction, this document proposes a limited form of Layer 2   interworking, by restricting the Layer 3 protocol to IP only (seeSection 4).   It may be instructive to compare the approach described in [RFC4447]   and [RFC6074] (these are the IETF-approved technologies for the   functions described in this document, albeit using two separate   protocols) with the one described here.  To comply with IETF   standards, it is recommended that devices implementing the solution   described in this document also implement the approach in [RFC4447]   and [RFC6074].   The rest of this section discusses the relative merits of Layer 2 and   Layer 3 VPNs.Section 2 describes the operation of a Layer 2 VPN.Section 3 describes PE information exchange.Section 4 describes IP-   only Layer 2 interworking.Section 5 describes how the L2 packets   are transported across the SP network.Kompella, et al.              Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 20121.1.  Terminology   The terminology used is from [RFC4761] and [RFC4364]; it is briefly   repeated here.  A "customer" is a customer of a Service Provider   seeking to interconnect their various "sites" (each an independent   network) at Layer 2 through the Service Provider's network, while   maintaining privacy of communication and address space.  The device   in a customer site that connects to a Service Provider router is   termed the CE (customer edge) device; this device may be a router or   a switch.  The Service Provider router to which a CE connects is   termed a PE (provider edge).  A router in the Service Provider's   network that doesn't connect directly to any CE is termed P   ("provider" device).  Every pair of PEs is connected by a "tunnel";   within a tunnel, VPN data is distinguished by a "demultiplexor",   which in this document is an MPLS label.   Each CE within a VPN is assigned a CE ID, a number that uniquely   identifies a CE within an L2VPN.  More accurately, the CE ID   identifies a physical connection from the CE device to the PE, since   a CE may be connected to multiple PEs (or multiply connected to a   PE); in such a case, the CE would have a CE ID for each connection.   A CE may also be part of many L2VPNs; it would need one (or more) CE   ID(s) for each L2VPN of which it is a member.  The number space for   CE IDs is scoped to a given VPN.   In the case of inter-provider L2VPNs, there needs to be some   coordination of allocation of CE IDs.  One solution is to allocate   ranges for each SP.  Other solutions may be forthcoming.   Within each physical connection from a CE to a PE, there may be   multiple virtual circuits.  These will be referred to as Attachment   Circuits (ACs), following [RFC3985].  Similarly, the entity that   connects two attachment circuits across the Service Provider network   is called a pseudowire (PW).1.1.1.  Conventions Used in This Document   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].1.2.  Advantages of Layer 2 VPNs   A Layer 2 VPN is one where a Service Provider provides Layer 2   connectivity to the customer.  The Service Provider does not   participate in the customer's Layer 3 network, especially in the   routing, resulting in several advantages to the SP as a whole and to   PE routers in particular.Kompella, et al.              Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 20121.2.1.  Separation of Administrative Responsibilities   In a Layer 2 VPN, the Service Provider is responsible for Layer 2   connectivity; the customer is responsible for Layer 3 connectivity,   which includes routing.  If the customer says that host x in site A   cannot reach host y in site B, the Service Provider need only   demonstrate that site A is connected to site B.  The details of how   routes for host y reach host x are the customer's responsibility.   Another important factor is that once a PE provides Layer 2   connectivity to its connected CE, its job is done.  A misbehaving CE   can at worst flap its interface, but route flaps in the customer   network have little effect on the SP network.  On the other hand, a   misbehaving CE in a Layer 3 VPN can flap its routes, leading to   instability of the PE router or even the entire SP network.  Thus,   when offering a Layer 3 VPN, an SP should proactively protect itself   from Layer 3 instability in the CE network.1.2.2.  Migrating from Traditional Layer 2 VPNs   Since "traditional" Layer 2 VPNs (i.e., real Frame Relay circuits   connecting sites) are indistinguishable from tunnel-based VPNs from   the customer's point of view, migrating from one to the other raises   few issues.  Layer 3 VPNs, on the other hand, require a considerable   redesign of the customer's Layer 3 routing architecture.   Furthermore, with Layer 3 VPNs, special care has to be taken that   routes within the traditional VPN are not preferred over the Layer 3   VPN routes (the so-called "backdoor routing" problem, whose solution   requires protocol changes that are somewhat ad hoc).1.2.3.  Privacy of Routing   In an L2VPN, the privacy of customer routing is a natural fallout of   the fact that the Service Provider does not participate in routing.   The SP routers need not do anything special to keep customer routes   separate from other customers or from the Internet; there is no need   for per-VPN routing tables and the additional complexity this imposes   on PE routers.1.2.4.  Layer 3 Independence   Since the Service Provider simply provides Layer 2 connectivity, the   customer can run any Layer 3 protocols they choose.  If the SP were   participating in customer routing, it would be vital that the   customer and SP both use the same Layer 3 protocol(s) and routing   protocols.Kompella, et al.              Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012   Note that IP-only Layer 2 interworking doesn't have this benefit as   it restricts the Layer 3 to IP only.1.2.5.  PE Scaling   In the Layer 2 VPN scheme described below, each PE transmits a single   small chunk of information about every CE that the PE is connected to   every other PE.  That means that each PE need only maintain a single   chunk of information from each CE in each VPN and keep a single   "route" to every site in every VPN.  This means that both the   Forwarding Information Base and the Routing Information Base scale   well with the number of sites and number of VPNs.  Furthermore, the   scaling properties are independent of the customer: the only germane   quantity is the total number of VPN sites.   This is to be contrasted with Layer 3 VPNs, where each CE in a VPN   may have an arbitrary number of routes that need to be carried by the   SP.  This leads to two issues.  First, both the information stored at   each PE and the number of routes installed by the PE for a CE in a   VPN can be (in principle) unbounded, which means in practice that a   PE must restrict itself to installing routes associated with the VPNs   of which it is currently a member.  Second, a CE can send a large   number of routes to its PE, which means that the PE must protect   itself against such a condition.  Thus, the SP must enforce limits on   the number of routes accepted from a CE; this, in turn, requires the   PE router to offer such control.   The scaling issues of Layer 3 VPNs come into sharp focus at a BGP   route reflector (RR).  An RR cannot keep all the advertised routes in   every VPN since the number of routes will be too large.  The   following solutions/extensions are needed to address this issue:   1.  RRs could be partitioned so that each RR services a subset of       VPNs so that no single RR has to carry all the routes.   2.  An RR could use a preconfigured list of Route Targets for its       inbound route filtering.  The RR may choose to perform Route       Target Filtering, described in [RFC4684].1.2.6.  Ease of Configuration   Configuring traditional Layer 2 VPNs with dense topologies was a   burden primarily because of the O(n*n) nature of the task.  If there   are n CEs in a Frame Relay VPN, say full-mesh connected, n*(n-1)/2   DLCI (Data Link Connection Identifier) Permanent Virtual Circuits   (PVCs) must be provisioned across the SP network.  At each CE, (n-1)   DLCIs must be configured to reach each of the other CEs.   Furthermore, when a new CE is added, n new DLCI PVCs must beKompella, et al.              Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012   provisioned; also, each existing CE must be updated with a new DLCI   to reach the new CE.  Finally, each PVC requires state in every   transit switch.   In our proposal, PVCs are tunneled across the SP network.  The   tunnels used are provisioned independently of the L2VPNs, using   signaling protocols (in the case of MPLS, LDP or RSVP - Traffic   Engineering (RSVP-TE) can be used), or set up by configuration; the   number of tunnels is independent of the number of L2VPNs.  This   reduces a large part of the provisioning burden.   Furthermore, we assume that DLCIs at the CE edge are relatively cheap   and that VPN labels in the SP network are cheap.  This allows the SP   to "overprovision" VPNs, for example, allocate 50 CEs to a VPN when   only 20 are needed.  With this overprovisioning, adding a new CE to a   VPN requires configuring just the new CE and its associated PE;   existing CEs and their PEs need not be reconfigured.  Note that if   DLCIs at the CE edge are expensive, e.g., if these DLCIs are   provisioned across a switched network, one could provision them as   and when needed, at the expense of extra configuration.  This need   not still result in extra state in the SP network, i.e., an   intelligent implementation can allow overprovisioning of the pool of   VPN labels.1.3.  Advantages of Layer 3 VPNs   Layer 3 VPNs ([RFC4364] in particular) offer a good solution when the   customer traffic is wholly IP, customer routing is reasonably simple,   and the customer sites connect to the SP with a variety of Layer 2   technologies.1.3.1.  Layer 2 Independence   One major restriction in a Layer 2 VPN is that the Layer 2 media with   which the various sites of a single VPN connect to the SP must be   uniform.  On the other hand, the various sites of a Layer 3 VPN can   connect to the SP with any supported media; for example, some sites   may connect with Frame Relay circuits and others with Ethernet.   This restriction of Layer 2 VPN is alleviated by the IP-only Layer 2   interworking proposed in this document.  This comes at the cost of   losing the Layer 3 independence.   A corollary to this is that the number of sites that can be in a   Layer 2 VPN is determined by the number of Layer 2 circuits that the   Layer 2 technology provides.  For example, if the Layer 2 technology   is Frame Relay with 2-octet DLCIs, a CE can at most connect to about   a thousand other CEs in a VPN.Kompella, et al.              Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 20121.3.2.  SP Routing as Added Value   Another problem with Layer 2 VPNs is that the CE router in a VPN must   be able to deal with having N routing peers, where N is the number of   sites in the VPN.  This can be alleviated by manipulating the   topology of the VPN.  For example, a hub-and-spoke VPN architecture   means that only one CE router (the hub) need deal with N neighbors.   However, in a Layer 3 VPN, a CE router need only deal with one   neighbor, the PE router.  Thus, the SP can offer Layer 3 VPNs as a   value-added service to its customers.   Moreover, with Layer 2 VPNs, it is up to a customer to build and   operate the whole network.  With Layer 3 VPNs, a customer is just   responsible for building and operating routing within each site,   which is likely to be much simpler than building and operating   routing for the whole VPN.  That, in turn, makes Layer 3 VPNs more   suitable for customers who don't have sufficient routing expertise,   again allowing the SP to provide added value.   As mentioned later, multicast routing and forwarding is another   value-added service that an SP can offer.1.3.3.  Class of Service   Class-of-Service (CoS) issues have been addressed for Layer 3 VPNs.   Since the PE router has visibility into the network Layer (IP), the   PE router can take on the tasks of CoS classification and routing.   This restriction on Layer 2 VPNs is again eased in the case of IP-   only Layer 2 interworking, as the PE router has visibility into the   network Layer (IP).1.4.  Multicast Routing   There are two aspects to multicast routing that we will consider.  On   the protocol front, supporting IP multicast in a Layer 3 VPN requires   PE routers to participate in the multicast routing instance of the   customer and thus keep some related state information.   In the Layer 2 VPN case, the CE routers run native multicast routing   directly.  The SP network just provides pipes to connect the CE   routers; PEs are unaware whether the CEs run multicast or not and   thus do not have to participate in multicast protocols or keep   multicast state information.   On the forwarding front, in a Layer 3 VPN, CE routers do not   replicate multicast packets; thus, the CE-PE link carries only one   copy of a multicast packet.  Whether replication occurs at the   ingress PE or somewhere within the SP network depends on theKompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012   sophistication of the Layer 3 VPN multicast solution.  The simple   solution where a PE replicates packets for each of its CEs may place   considerable burden on the PE.  More complex solutions may require   VPN multicast state in the SP network but may significantly reduce   the traffic in the SP network by delaying packet replication until   needed.   In a Layer 2 VPN, packet replication occurs at the CE.  This has the   advantage of distributing the burden of replication among the CEs   rather than focusing it on the PE to which they are attached and thus   will scale better.  However, the CE-PE link will need to carry   multiple copies of multicast packets.  However, in the case of   Virtual Private LAN Service (a specific type of L2VPN; see   [RFC4761]), the CE-PE link need transport only one copy of a   multicast packet.   Thus, just as in the case of unicast routing, the SP has the choice   to offer a value-added service (multicast routing and forwarding) at   some cost (multicast state and packet replication) using a Layer 3   VPN or to keep it simple and use a Layer 2 VPN.2.  Operation of a Layer 2 VPN   The following simple example of a customer with four sites connected   to three PE routers in a Service Provider network will hopefully   illustrate the various aspects of the operation of a Layer 2 VPN.   For simplicity, we assume that a full-mesh topology is desired.   In what follows, Frame Relay serves as the Layer 2 media, and each CE   has multiple DLCIs to its PE, each connecting to another CE in the   VPN.  If the Layer 2 media were ATM, then each CE would have multiple   VPIs/VCIs (Virtual Path Identifiers/Virtual Channel Identifiers) to   connect to other CEs.  For Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) and Cisco   High-Level Data Link Control (HDLC), each CE would have multiple   physical interfaces to connect to other CEs.  In the case of IP-only   Layer 2 interworking, each CE could have a mix of one or more of the   above Layer 2 media to connect to other CEs.2.1.  Network Topology   Consider a Service Provider network with edge routers PE0, PE1, and   PE2.  Assume that PE0 and PE1 are IGP neighbors, and PE2 is more than   one hop away from PE0.   Suppose that a customer C has four sites S0, S1, S2, and S3, that C   wants to connect via the Service Provider's network using Frame   Relay.  Site S0 has CE0 and CE1 both connected to PE0.  Site S1 has   CE2 connected to PE0.  Site S2 has CE3 connected to PE1 and CE4Kompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012   connected to PE2.  Site S3 has CE5 connected to PE2.  (See Figure 1   below.)  Suppose further that C wants to "overprovision" each current   site, in expectation that the number of sites will grow to at least   10 in the near future.  However, CE4 is only provisioned with nine   DLCIs.  (Note that the signaling mechanism discussed inSection 3.2   of [RFC4761] will allow a site to grow in terms of connectivity to   other sites at a later point of time at the cost of additional   signaling, i.e., overprovisioning is not a must but a   recommendation).   Finally, suppose that the CEs have been provisioned with DLCIs as per   the following:      CE#  |  Provisioned DLCIs     --------------------------------------------------------        0  |  100 through 109        1  |  200 through 209        2  |  100 through 109        3  |  200 through 209        4  |  107, 209, 265, 301, 414, 555, 654, 777, and 888        5  |  417 through 426Kompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012           S0                                                   S3     ..............                                       ..............     .            .                                       .            .     .    +-----+ .                                       .            .     .    | CE0 |-----------+                             .   +-----+  .     .    +-----+ .         |                             .   | CE5 |  .     .            .         |                             .   +--+--+  .     .    +-----+ .         |                             .      |     .     .    | CE1 |-------+   |                             .......|......     .    +-----+ .     |   |                                   /     .            .     |   |                                  /     ..............     |   |                                 /                        |   |         SP Network             /                   .....|...|.............................../.....                   .    |   |                              /     .                   .  +-+---+-+       +-------+           /      .                   .  |  PE0  |-------|   P   |--        |       .                   .  +-+---+-+       +-------+  \       |       .                   .   /    \                     \  +---+---+   .                   .  |      -----+                --|  PE2  |   .                   .  |           |                  +---+---+   .                   .  |       +---+---+                 /        .                   .  |       |  PE1  |                /         .                   .  |       +---+---+               /          .                   .  |            \                 /           .                   ...|.............|.............../.............                      |             |              /                      |             |             /                      |             |            /          S1          |             |    S2     /     ..............   |     ........|........../......     .            .   |     .       |         |      .     .    +-----+ .   |     .    +--+--+   +--+--+   .     .    | CE2 |-----+     .    | CE3 |   | CE4 |   .     .    +-----+ .         .    +-----+   +-----+   .     .            .         .                        .     ..............         ..........................                    Figure 1: Example Network Topology2.2.  Configuration   The following sub-sections detail the configuration that is needed to   provision the above VPN.  For the purpose of exposition, we assume   that the customer will connect to the SP with Frame Relay circuits.Kompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 13]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012   While we focus primarily on the configuration that an SP has to do,   we touch upon the configuration requirements of CEs as well.  The   main point of contact in CE-PE configuration is that both must agree   on the DLCIs that will be used on the interface connecting them.   If the PE-CE connection is Frame Relay, it is recommended to run Link   Management Interface (LMI) between the PE and CE.  For the case of   ATM VCs, Operations, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM) cells may   be used.  For PPP and Cisco HDLC, keepalives may be used directly   between CEs; however, in this case, PEs would not have visibility as   to the liveness of customers circuits.   In the case of IP-only Layer 2 interworking, if CE1, attached to PE0,   connects to CE3, attached to PE1, via an L2VPN circuit, the Layer 2   media between CE1 and PE0 is independent of the Layer 2 media between   CE3 and PE1.  Each side will run its own Layer-2-specific link   management protocol, e.g., LMI, Link Control Protocol (LCP), etc.   PE0 will inform PE1 about the status of its local circuit to CE1 via   the circuit status vector TLV defined inSection 3.1.  Similarly, PE1   will inform PE0 about the status of its local circuit to CE3.2.2.1.  CE Configuration   Each CE that belongs to a VPN is given a "CE ID".  CE IDs must be   unique in the context of a VPN.  For the example, we assume that the   CE ID for CE-k is k.   Each CE is configured to communicate with its corresponding PE with   the set of DLCIs given above, for example, CE0 is configured with   DLCIs 100 through 109.  In general, a CE is configured with a list of   circuits, all with the same Layer 2 encapsulation type, e.g., DLCIs,   VCIs, physical PPP interface, etc.  (IP-only Layer 2 interworking   allows a mix of Layer 2 encapsulation types.)  The size of this list/   set determines the number of remote CEs with which a given CE can   communicate.  Denote the size of this list/set as the CE's range.  A   CE's range must be at least the number of remote CEs that the CE will   connect to in a given VPN; if the range exceeds this, then the CE is   overprovisioned, in anticipation of growth of the VPN.   Each CE also "knows" which DLCI connects it to every other CE.  The   methodology followed in this example is to use the CE ID of the other   CE as an index into the DLCI list this CE has (with zero-based   indexing, i.e., 0 is the first index).  For example, CE0 is connected   to CE3 through its fourth DLCI, 103; CE4 is connected to CE2 by the   third DLCI in its list, namely 265.  This is just the methodology   used in the description here; the actual methodology used to pick the   DLCI to be used is a local matter.  The key factor is that CE-k may   communicate with CE-m using a different DLCI from the DLCI that CE-mKompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 14]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012   uses to communicate to CE-k, i.e., the SP network effectively acts as   a giant Frame Relay switch.  This is very important, as it decouples   the DLCIs used at each CE site, making for much simpler provisioning.2.2.2.  PE Configuration   Each PE is configured with the VPNs in which it participates.  Each   VPN is associated with one or more Route Target communities [RFC4360]   that serve to define the topology of the VPN.  For each VPN, the PE   must determine a Route Distinguisher (RD) to use; this may either be   configured or chosen by the PE.  RDs do not have to be unique across   the VPN.  For each CE attached to the PE in a given VPN, the PE must   know the set of virtual circuits (DLCI, VCI/VPI, or VLAN) connecting   it to the CE and a CE ID identifying the CE within the VPN.  CE IDs   must be unique in the context of a given VPN.2.2.3.  Adding a New Site   The first step in adding a new site to a VPN is to pick a new CE ID.   If all current members of the VPN are overprovisioned, i.e., their   range includes the new CE ID, adding the new site is a purely local   task.  Otherwise, the sites whose range doesn't include the new CE ID   and that wish to communicate directly with the new CE must have their   ranges increased by allocating additional local circuits to   incorporate the new CE ID.   The next step is ensuring that the new site has the required   connectivity.  This usually requires adding a new virtual circuit   between the PE and CE; in most cases, this configuration is limited   to the PE in question.   The rest of the configuration is a local matter between the new CE   and the PE to which it is attached.  At this point, the PE can signal   to other PEs that it has a new site in the VPN by advertising a BGP   Layer 2 route, and traffic connectivity will be set up.   It bears repeating that the key to making additions easy is   overprovisioning and the algorithm for mapping a CE ID to a DLCI that   is used for connecting to the corresponding CE.  However, what is   being overprovisioned is the number of DLCIs/VCIs that connect the CE   to the PE.  This is a local matter between the PE and CE; it does not   affect other PEs or CEs.Kompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 15]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 20122.2.4.  Deleting a Site   Deleting a site consists first of removing the CE ID of the site from   the configuration of the PE to which the site is attached.  The PE   will then signal to other PEs that it no longer has access to that   site by withdrawing its previously advertised BGP Layer 2 route.   Connectivity to the deleted site will cease.   The next steps are bookkeeping: decommissioning the attachment   circuit from the PE to the CE that corresponds to the site being   removed and noting that the CE ID is now free for future allocation.   Note that each PE is now (further) overprovisioned; one may choose to   actively "reap" CE IDs if desired.2.2.5.  Managing CE ID Mappings   In the data plane, an attachment circuit, identified say by a DLCI,   is mapped to a label via the control plane abstraction of a CE ID.   At the egress PE, the label is mapped back to an attachment circuit   via the same CE ID.  It is up to the VPN administrator   o  to provision attachment circuits (e.g., DLCIs);   o  to allocate CE IDs; and   o  to keep a clear mapping of CE IDs to attachment circuits (and      reflect this in PE configurations).   The PEs manage the mappings between attachment circuits and labels,   i.e., the data plane mappings.   Note that in the N-to-one modes listed in Table 1, a single   attachment circuit may correspond to several Layer 2 virtual   circuits.  Nevertheless, there is a one-to-one mapping between an   attachment circuit and a CE ID (and thus a label).2.2.6.  Managing Label Blocks   Label blocks and label values are managed by the PEs.  As sites get   added and removed, labels are allocated and released.  The easiest   way to manage these is to use fixed-size label blocks rather than   variable-size blocks, although the signaling described here supports   either.  If an implementation uses fixed-size blocks, then allocating   a label for a new site may requiring allocating a new block;   similarly, freeing a label may require freeing a block.Kompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 16]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012   If the implementation requires fixed-size blocks, there is probably a   default block size, but the implementation SHOULD allow the   administrator to choose a size.  Larger label block sizes mean more   potential "wasted" labels but less signaling overhead, a trade-off   that the administrator might want to control.   Also, as sites get added and deleted, a PE may receive packets with a   label that reflects a site that has been deleted locally but not yet   processed by remote PEs or that reflects a new site added remotely   but not processed locally.  In either of these cases, the PE SHOULD   silently discard the packet; it may choose to log the event once for   each such label, but not for every such packet.2.3.  Operations, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM)   Many Layer 2 mediums have OAM mechanisms.  For example, the PPP has   Echo Request and Echo Reply messages; Frame Relay has the Local   Management Interface.  Among other things, OAM is used for   troubleshooting and as keepalives.   There are two ways to carry OAM information across Layer 2 VPNs.  The   first is to convey OAM packets as any other Layer 2 packets across   the VPN.  This is the most general method; it maintains full Layer 2   transparency and preserves all OAM information.  The other method   applies only to the link liveness aspect of OAM; it consists of   transmitting the status of each attachment circuit across the control   plane using the circuit status vector (Section 3.1).  This method is   the only one applicable to Layer 2 Interworking VPNs (Section 4),   since OAM packets are not IP frames and thus cannot be transmitted   across such Layer 2 VPNs.3.  PE Information Exchange   When a PE is configured with all the required information for a CE,   it advertises to other PEs the fact that it is participating in a VPN   via BGP messages, as per[RFC4761], Section 3.  BGP was chosen as the   means for exchanging L2VPN information for two reasons: it offers   mechanisms for both auto-discovery and signaling, and it allows for   operational convergence, as explained inSection 1.  A bonus for   using BGP is a robust inter-AS solution for L2VPNs.   There are two modifications to the formatting of messages.  The first   is that the set of Encaps Types carried in the L2-info extended   community has been expanded to include those from Table 1.  The value   of the Encaps Type field identifies the Layer 2 encapsulation, e.g.,   ATM, Frame Relay, etc.Kompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 17]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012   +-----------+-------------------------------------------+-----------+   | Encaps    | Description                               | Reference |   | Type      |                                           |           |   +-----------+-------------------------------------------+-----------+   | 0         | Reserved                                  | -         |   |           |                                           |           |   | 1         | Frame Relay                               |RFC 4446  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 2         | ATM AAL5 SDU VCC transport                |RFC 4446  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 3         | ATM transparent cell transport            |RFC 4816  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 4         | Ethernet (VLAN) Tagged Mode               |RFC 4448  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 5         | Ethernet Raw Mode                         |RFC 4448  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 6         | Cisco HDLC                                |RFC 4618  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 7         | PPP                                       |RFC 4618  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 8         | SONET/SDH Circuit Emulation Service       |RFC 4842  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 9         | ATM n-to-one VCC cell transport           |RFC 4717  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 10        | ATM n-to-one VPC cell transport           |RFC 4717  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 11        | IP Layer 2 Transport                      |RFC 3032  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 15        | Frame Relay Port mode                     |RFC 4619  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 17        | Structure-agnostic E1 over packet         |RFC 4553  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 18        | Structure-agnostic T1 (DS1) over packet   |RFC 4553  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 19        | VPLS                                      |RFC 4761  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 20        | Structure-agnostic T3 (DS3) over packet   |RFC 4553  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 21        | Nx64kbit/s Basic Service using            |RFC 5086  |   |           | Structure-aware                           |           |   |           |                                           |           |   | 25        | Frame Relay DLCI                          |RFC 4619  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 40        | Structure-agnostic E3 over packet         |RFC 4553  |   |           |                                           |           |   | 41 (1)    | Octet-aligned payload for                 |RFC 4553  |   |           | Structure-agnostic DS1 circuits           |           |   |           |                                           |           |Kompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 18]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012   | 42 (2)    | E1 Nx64kbit/s with CAS using              |RFC 5086  |   |           | Structure-aware                           |           |   |           |                                           |           |   | 43        | DS1 (ESF) Nx64kbit/s with CAS using       |RFC 5086  |   |           | Structure-aware                           |           |   |           |                                           |           |   | 44        | DS1 (SF) Nx64kbit/s with CAS using        |RFC 5086  |   |           | Structure-aware                           |           |   +-----------+-------------------------------------------+-----------+                           Table 1: Encaps Types   Note (1): Allocation of a separate code point for Encaps Type   eliminates the need for Time Division Multiplexer (TDM) payload size.   Note (2): Having separate code points for Encaps Types 42-44 allows   specifying the trunk framing (i.e., E1, T1 ESF, or T1 SF) with   Channel Associated Signaling (CAS).   The second is the introduction of TLVs (Type-Length-Value triplets)   in the VPLS NLRI (Network Layer Reachability Information).  L2VPN   TLVs can be added to extend the information carried in the NLRI,   using the format shown in Figure 2.  In L2VPN TLVs, Type is 1 octet,   and Length is 2 octets and represents the size of the Value field in   bits.  L2VPN TLVs, if present, occur as the last element of a VPLS   NLRI.  The length of the NLRI includes the total length of the TLVs,   including their headers.      0                   1                   2                   3      0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+     |     Type      |            Length             |     Value     |     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+     | Value (continued, if needed) ...                              |     +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                         Figure 2: Format of TLVs3.1.  Circuit Status Vector   This sub-TLV carries the status of an L2VPN PVC between a pair of   PEs.  Note that an L2VPN PVC is bidirectional, composed of two   simplex connections going in opposite directions.  A simplex   connection consists of three segments: 1) the local access circuit   between the source CE and the ingress PE, 2) the tunnel Label   Switched Path (LSP) between the ingress and egress PEs, and 3) the   access circuit between the egress PE and the destination CE.Kompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 19]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012   To monitor the status of a PVC, a PE needs to monitor the status of   both simplex connections.  Since it knows the status of its access   circuit and the status of the tunnel towards the remote PE, it can   inform the remote PE of these two.  Similarly, the remote PE can   inform the status of its access circuit to its local CE and the   status of the tunnel to the first PE.  Combining the local and the   remote information, a PE can determine the status of a PVC.   The basic unit of advertisement in L2VPN for a given CE is a label   block.  Each label within a label block corresponds to a PVC on the   CE.  The local status information for all PVCs corresponding to a   label block is advertised along with the NLRI for the label block   using the status vector TLV.  The Type field of this TLV is 1.  The   Length field of the TLV specifies the length of the value field in   bits.  The Value field of this TLV is a bit-vector, each bit of which   indicates the status of the PVC associated with the corresponding   label in the label block.  Bit value 0 corresponds to the PVC   associated with the first label in the label block and indicates that   the local circuit and the tunnel LSP to the remote PE is up, while a   value of 1 indicates that either or both of them are down.  The Value   field is padded to the nearest octet boundary.   A PE can determine the status of a PVC from one of its CEs to a   remote CE as follows.  Say PE A has CE n in VPN X, and PE A gets an   advertisement from PE B for remote CE m also in VPN X; this   advertisement includes a label block and a circuit status vector.  To   determine which label to use for CE m, PE A must determine the index   corresponding to CE m in the label block that PE B advertised.  The   status of the PVC between CE n and CE m can be obtained by looking at   the bit in the circuit status vector corresponding to this index.                   +----------+-----------------------+                   | TLV Type |      Description      |                   +----------+-----------------------+                   |     1    | Circuit Status Vector |                   +----------+-----------------------+                            Table 2: TLV Types3.2.  Generalizing the VPN Topology   In the above, we assumed for simplicity that the VPN was a full mesh.   To allow for more general VPN topologies, a mechanism based on   filtering of BGP extended communities can be used.Kompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 20]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 20124.  Layer 2 Interworking   As defined so far in this document, all CE-PE connections for a given   Layer 2 VPN must use the same Layer 2 encapsulation, e.g., they must   all be Frame Relay.  This is often a burdensome restriction.  One   answer is to use an existing Layer 2 interworking mechanism, for   example, Frame Relay-ATM interworking.   In this document, we take a different approach: we postulate that the   network Layer is IP and base Layer 2 interworking on that.  Thus, one   can choose between pure Layer 2 VPNs, with a stringent Layer 2   restriction but with Layer 3 independence, or Layer 2 interworking   VPNs, where there is no restriction on Layer 2, but Layer 3 must be   IP.  Of course, a PE may choose to implement Frame Relay-ATM   interworking.  For example, an ATM Layer 2 VPN could have some CEs   connect via Frame Relay links, if their PE could translate Frame   Relay to ATM transparently to the rest of the VPN.  This would be   private to the CE-PE connection, and such a course is outside the   scope of this document.   For Layer 2 interworking as defined here, when an IP packet arrives   at a PE, its Layer 2 address is noted, then all Layer 2 overhead is   stripped, leaving just the IP packet.  Next, a VPN label is added,   and the packet is encapsulated in the PE-PE tunnel (as required by   the tunnel technology).  Finally, the packet is forwarded.  Note that   the forwarding decision is made on the basis of the Layer 2   information, not the IP header.  At the egress, the VPN label   determines to which CE the packet must be sent and over which virtual   circuit; from this, the egress PE can also determine the Layer 2   encapsulation to place on the packet once the VPN label is stripped.   An added benefit of restricting interworking to IP only as the Layer   3 technology is that the provider's network can provide IP Diffserv   or any other IP-based QoS mechanism to the L2VPN customer.  The   ingress PE can set up IP/TCP/UDP-based classifiers to do Diffserv   marking and other functions like policing and shaping on the L2   circuits of the VPN customer.  Note the division of labor: the CE   determines the destination CE and encodes that in the Layer 2   address.  The ingress PE thus determines the egress PE and VPN label   based on the Layer 2 address supplied by the CE, but the ingress PE   can choose the tunnel to reach the egress PE (in the case that there   are different tunnels for each CoS/Diffserv code point) or the CoS   bits to place in the tunnel (in the case where a single tunnel   carries multiple CoS/Diffserv code points) based on its own   classification of the packet.Kompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 21]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 20125.  Packet Transport   When a packet arrives at a PE from a CE in a Layer 2 VPN, the Layer 2   address of the packet identifies to which remote attachment circuit   (and thus remote CE) the packet is destined.  The procedure outlined   above installs a route that maps the Layer 2 address to a tunnel   (which identifies the PE to which the destination CE is attached) and   a VPN label (which identifies the destination AC).  If the egress PE   is the same as the ingress PE, no tunnel or VPN label is needed.   The packet may then be modified (depending on the Layer 2   encapsulation).  In case of IP-only Layer 2 interworking, the Layer 2   header is completely stripped off up to the IP header.  Then, a VPN   label and tunnel encapsulation are added as specified by the route   described above, and the packet is sent to the egress PE.   If the egress PE is the same as the ingress, the packet "arrives"   with no labels.  Otherwise, the packet arrives with the VPN label,   which is used to determine which CE is the destination CE.  The   packet is restored to a fully formed Layer 2 packet and then sent to   the CE.5.1.  Layer 2 MTU   This document requires that the Layer 2 MTU configured on all the   access circuits connecting CEs to PEs in an L2VPN be the same.  This   can be ensured by passing the configured Layer 2 MTU in the Layer2-   info extended community when advertising L2VPN label blocks.  On   receiving an L2VPN label block from remote PEs in a VPN, the MTU   value carried in the Layer2-info extended community should be   compared against the configured value for the VPN.  If they don't   match, then the label block should be ignored.   The MTU on the Layer 2 access links MUST be chosen such that the size   of the L2 frames plus the L2VPN header does not exceed the MTU of the   SP network.  Layer 2 frames that exceed the MTU after encapsulation   MUST be dropped.  For the case of IP-only Layer 2 interworking, the   IP MTU on the Layer 2 access link must be chosen such that the size   of the IP packet and the L2VPN header does not exceed the MTU of the   SP network.5.2.  Layer 2 Frame Format   The modification to the Layer 2 frame depends on the Layer 2 type.   This document requires that the encapsulation methods used in   transporting Layer 2 frames over tunnels be the same as described in   [RFC4448], [RFC4618], [RFC4619], and [RFC4717], except in the case of   IP-only Layer 2 Interworking, which is described next.Kompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 22]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 20125.3.  IP-Only Layer 2 Interworking         +-----------------------------------+         | PSN Transport |  VPN  |    IP     |     VPN label is the         |     Header    | Label |  Packet   |     demultiplexing field         +-----------------------------------+          Figure 3: Format of IP-Only Layer 2 Interworking Packet   At the ingress PE, an L2 frame's L2 header is completely stripped off   and is carried over as an IP packet within the SP network (Figure 3).   The forwarding decision is still based on the L2 address of the   incoming L2 frame.  At the egress PE, the IP packet is encapsulated   back in an L2 frame and transported over to the destination CE.  The   forwarding decision at the egress PE is based on the VPN label as   before.  The L2 technology between egress PE and CE is independent of   the L2 technology between ingress PE and CE.6.  Security ConsiderationsRFC 4761 [RFC4761], on which this document is based, has a detailed   discussion of security considerations.  As inRFC 4761, the focus   here is the privacy of customer VPN data (as opposed to   confidentiality, integrity, or authentication of said data); to   achieve the latter, one can use the methods suggested inRFC 4761.   The techniques described inRFC 4761 for securing the control plane   and protecting the forwarding path apply equally to L2VPNs, as do the   remarks regarding multi-AS operation.  The mitigation strategies and   the analogies withRFC 4364 [RFC4364] also apply here.RFC 4761 perhaps should have discussed Denial-of-Service attacks   based on the fact that VPLS PEs have to learn Media Access Control   (MAC) addresses and replicate packets (for flooding and multicast).   However, those considerations don't apply here, as neither of those   actions are required of PEs implementing the procedures in this   document.7.  IANA Considerations   IANA has created two new registries: the first is for the one-octet   Encaps Type field of the L2-info extended community.  The name of the   registry is "BGP Layer 2 Encapsulation Types"; the values already   allocated are in Table 1 ofSection 3.  The allocation policy for new   entries up to and including value 127 is "Expert Review" [RFC5226].   The allocation policy for values 128 through 251 is "First Come First   Served".  The values from 252 through 255 are for "Experimental Use".Kompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 23]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012   The second registry is for the one-octet Type field of the TLVs of   the VPLS NLRI.  The name of the registry is "BGP L2 TLV Types"; the   sole allocated value is in Table 2 ofSection 3.  The allocation   policy for new entries up to and including value 127 is "Expert   Review".  The allocation policy for values 128 through 251 is "First   Come First Served".  The values from 252 through 255 are for   "Experimental Use".8.  Acknowledgments   The authors would like to thank Chaitanya Kodeboyina, Dennis   Ferguson, Der-Hwa Gan, Dave Katz, Nischal Sheth, John Stewart, and   Paul Traina for the enlightening discussions that helped shape the   ideas presented here.  The authors also thank Ross Callon for his   valuable comments.   The idea of using extended communities for more general connectivity   of a Layer 2 VPN was a contribution by Yakov Rekhter, who also gave   many useful comments on the text.  Many thanks to him.9.  Contributors   The following individuals contributed to this document.   Manoj Leelanivas, Juniper Networks   Quaizar Vohra, Juniper Networks   Javier Achirica, Consultant   Ronald Bonica, Juniper Networks   Dave Cooper, Global Crossing   Chris Liljenstolpe, Telstra   Eduard Metz, KPN Dutch Telecom   Hamid Ould-Brahim, Nortel   Chandramouli Sargor   Himanshu Shah, Ciena   Vijay Srinivasan   Zhaohui Zhang, Juniper Networks10.  References10.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC4360]  Sangli, S., Tappan, D., and Y. Rekhter, "BGP Extended              Communities Attribute",RFC 4360, February 2006.Kompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 24]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012   [RFC4364]  Rosen, E. and Y. Rekhter, "BGP/MPLS IP Virtual Private              Networks (VPNs)",RFC 4364, February 2006.   [RFC4446]  Martini, L., "IANA Allocations for Pseudowire Edge to Edge              Emulation (PWE3)",BCP 116,RFC 4446, April 2006.   [RFC4448]  Martini, L., Rosen, E., El-Aawar, N., and G. Heron,              "Encapsulation Methods for Transport of Ethernet over MPLS              Networks",RFC 4448, April 2006.   [RFC4618]  Martini, L., Rosen, E., Heron, G., and A. Malis,              "Encapsulation Methods for Transport of PPP/High-Level              Data Link Control (HDLC) over MPLS Networks",RFC 4618,              September 2006.   [RFC4619]  Martini, L., Kawa, C., and A. Malis, "Encapsulation              Methods for Transport of Frame Relay over Multiprotocol              Label Switching (MPLS) Networks",RFC 4619,              September 2006.   [RFC4717]  Martini, L., Jayakumar, J., Bocci, M., El-Aawar, N.,              Brayley, J., and G. Koleyni, "Encapsulation Methods for              Transport of Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM) over MPLS              Networks",RFC 4717, December 2006.   [RFC4761]  Kompella, K. and Y. Rekhter, "Virtual Private LAN Service              (VPLS) Using BGP for Auto-Discovery and Signaling",RFC 4761, January 2007.   [RFC5226]  Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an              IANA Considerations Section in RFCs",BCP 26,RFC 5226,              May 2008.10.2.  Informative References   [Kosiur]   Kosiur, D., "Building and Managing Virtual Private              Networks", Wiley Computer Publishing, 1998.   [RFC3985]  Bryant, S. and P. Pate, "Pseudo Wire Emulation Edge-to-              Edge (PWE3) Architecture",RFC 3985, March 2005.   [RFC4447]  Martini, L., Rosen, E., El-Aawar, N., Smith, T., and G.              Heron, "Pseudowire Setup and Maintenance Using the Label              Distribution Protocol (LDP)",RFC 4447, April 2006.Kompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 25]

RFC 6624       BGP Auto-Discovery and Signaling for L2VPN       May 2012   [RFC4684]  Marques, P., Bonica, R., Fang, L., Martini, L., Raszuk,              R., Patel, K., and J. Guichard, "Constrained Route              Distribution for Border Gateway Protocol/MultiProtocol              Label Switching (BGP/MPLS) Internet Protocol (IP) Virtual              Private Networks (VPNs)",RFC 4684, November 2006.   [RFC4762]  Lasserre, M. and V. Kompella, "Virtual Private LAN Service              (VPLS) Using Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) Signaling",RFC 4762, January 2007.   [RFC6074]  Rosen, E., Davie, B., Radoaca, V., and W. Luo,              "Provisioning, Auto-Discovery, and Signaling in Layer 2              Virtual Private Networks (L2VPNs)",RFC 6074,              January 2011.Authors' Addresses   Kireeti Kompella   Juniper Networks   1194 N. Mathilda Ave.   Sunnyvale, CA  94089   USA   EMail: kireeti@juniper.net   Bhupesh Kothari   Cisco Systems   3750 Cisco Way   San Jose, CA  95134   USA   EMail: bhupesh@cisco.com   Rao Cherukuri   Juniper Networks   1194 N. Mathilda Ave.   Sunnyvale, CA  94089   USA   EMail: cherukuri@juniper.netKompella, et al.              Informational                    [Page 26]

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