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INFORMATIONAL
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                        A. SajassiRequest for Comments: 7080                                      S. SalamCategory: Informational                                            CiscoISSN: 2070-1721                                                 N. Bitar                                                                 Verizon                                                                F. Balus                                                          Nuage Networks                                                           December 2013Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS) Interoperabilitywith Provider Backbone BridgesAbstract   The scalability of Hierarchical Virtual Private LAN Service (H-VPLS)   with Ethernet access networks (RFC 4762) can be improved by   incorporating Provider Backbone Bridge functionality in the VPLS   access.  Provider Backbone Bridging has been standardized as IEEE   802.1ah-2008.  It aims to improve the scalability of Media Access   Control (MAC) addresses and service instances in Provider Ethernet   networks.  This document describes different interoperability   scenarios where Provider Backbone Bridge functionality is used in   H-VPLS with Ethernet or MPLS access network to attain better   scalability in terms of number of customer MAC addresses and number   of service instances.  The document also describes the scenarios and   the mechanisms for incorporating Provider Backbone Bridge   functionality within H-VPLS with existing Ethernet access and   interoperability among them.  Furthermore, the document discusses the   migration mechanisms and scenarios by which Provider Backbone Bridge   functionality can be incorporated into H-VPLS with existing MPLS   access.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/rfc7080.Sajassi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2013 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................32. Terminology .....................................................33. Applicability ...................................................54. H-VPLS with Homogeneous PBBN Access .............................64.1. Service Interfaces and Interworking Options ................84.2. H-VPLS with PBBN Access: Type I Service Interface .........104.3. H-VPLS with PBBN Access: Type II Service Interface ........115. H-VPLS with Mixed PBBN Access and PBN Access ...................145.1. H-VPLS with Mixed PBBN and PBN Access: Modified PBN PE ....155.2. H-VPLS with Mixed PBBN and PBN Access: Regular PBN PE .....166. H-VPLS with MPLS Access ........................................176.1. H-VPLS with MPLS Access: PBB U-PE .........................176.2. H-VPLS with MPLS Access: PBB N-PE .........................197. H-VPLS with MPLS Access: PBB Migration Scenarios ...............217.1. 802.1ad Service Frames over VPLS Core .....................217.2. PBB Service Frames over VPLS Core .........................227.3. Mixed 802.1ad and PBB over VPLS Core ......................238. Acknowledgments ................................................249. Security Considerations ........................................2410. References ....................................................2410.1. Normative References .....................................2410.2. Informative References ...................................25Sajassi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 20131.  Introduction   The scalability of Hierarchical Virtual Private LAN Service (H-VPLS)   with Ethernet access networks [RFC4762] can be improved by   incorporating Provider Backbone Bridge (PBB) functionality in the   VPLS access.  Provider Backbone Bridging has been standardized as   IEEE 802.1ah-2008 [802.1ah], which is an amendment to IEEE 802.1Q to   improve the scalability of Media Access Control (MAC) addresses and   service instances in Provider Ethernet networks.  This document   describes interoperability scenarios where IEEE 802.1ah functionality   is used in H-VPLS with Ethernet or MPLS access network to attain   better scalability in terms of the number of customer MAC addresses   and the number of services.   This document also covers the interoperability scenarios for   deploying H-VPLS with Provider Backbone Bridging Ethernet access when   other types of access networks are deployed, including existing   802.1ad Ethernet and MPLS access in either single or multiple service   domains.  Furthermore, the document explores the scenarios by which   an operator can gradually migrate an existing H-VPLS network to   Provider Backbone Bridging over VPLS.Section 2 gives a quick terminology reference andSection 3   highlights the applicability of Provider Backbone Bridging   interoperation with VPLS.Section 4 describes H-VPLS with   homogeneous Provider Backbone Bridge Access Network.Section 5   discusses H-VPLS with mixed 802.1ah/802.1ad access.Section 6   focuses on Provider Backbone Bridging in H-VPLS with MPLS Access   Network including PBB function on U-PE and on N-PE variants.   Finally,Section 7 describes gradual migration scenarios from   existing H-VPLS to Provider Backbone Bridging over H-VPLS.2.  Terminology   802.1ad: IEEE specification for "QinQ" encapsulation and bridging of      Ethernet frames.   802.1ah: IEEE specification for "MAC tunneling" encapsulation and      bridging of frames across a Provider Backbone Bridged Network      (PBBN).   B-BEB: A backbone edge bridge positioned at the edge of a PBBN.  It      contains a B-component that supports bridging in the provider      backbone based on B-MAC and B-TAG information.   B-MAC: The backbone source or destination MAC address fields defined      in the 802.1ah provider MAC encapsulation header.Sajassi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   BCB: A backbone core bridge running in the core of a provider      backbone bridged network.  It bridges frames based on B-TAG      information just as an 802.1ad provider bridge will bridge frames      based on a Service VLAN (S-VLAN) identifier.   B-Component: The backbone component of a Provider Backbone edge      bridge as defined in [802.1ah].   BEB: A backbone edge bridge positioned at the edge of a provider      backbone bridged network.  It can contain an I-component,      B-component, or both.   B-MACs: Backbone MAC addresses -- outer MAC addresses of a PBB-      encapsulated frame.   B-TAG: A field defined in the 802.1ah provider MAC encapsulation      header that conveys the backbone VLAN identifier information.  The      format of the B-TAG field is the same as that of an 802.1ad S-TAG      field.   B-Tagged Service Interface: This is the interface between a BEB and      BCB in a PBB network.  Frames passed through this interface      contain a B-TAG field.   B-VID: This is the specific VLAN identifier carried inside a B-TAG   C-MACs: Customer MAC addresses are the inner MAC addresses of a PBB-      encapsulated frame.   H-VPLS: Hierarchical Virtual Private LAN Service.   I-component: A bridging component contained in a backbone edge bridge      that bridges in the customer space (customer MAC addresses,      S-VLAN).   IB-BEB: A backbone edge bridge positioned at the edge of a provider      backbone bridged network.  It contains an I-component for bridging      in the customer space (customer MAC addresses, S-VLAN IDs) and a      B-component for bridging the provider's backbone space (B-MAC,      B-TAG).   I-BEB: A backbone edge bridge positioned at the edge of a provider      backbone bridged network.  It contains an I-component for bridging      in the customer space (customer MAC addresses, S-VLAN IDs).   I-SID: The 24-bit service instance field carried inside the I-TAG.      I-SID defines the service instance that the frame should be      "mapped to".Sajassi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   I-TAG: A field defined in the 802.1ah provider MAC encapsulation      header that conveys the service instance information (I-SID)      associated with the frame.   I-Tagged Service Interface: This is the interface defined between the      I-component and B-component inside an IB-BEB or between two      B-BEBs.  Frames passed through this interface contain an I-TAG      field.   N-PE: Network-facing Provider Edge   PBB: Provider Backbone Bridge   PBBN: Provider Backbone Bridged Network   PBN: Provider Bridged Network.  A network that employs 802.1ad (QinQ)      technology.   S-TAG: A field defined in the 802.1ad QinQ encapsulation header that      conveys the Service VLAN (S-VLAN) identifier information.   S-Tagged Service Interface: This the interface defined between the      customer (CE) and the I-BEB or IB-BEB components.  Frames passed      through this interface contain an S-TAG field.   S-VLAN: The specific Service VLAN identifier carried inside an S-TAG   U-PE: User-facing Provider Edge   VPLS: Virtual Private LAN Service3.  Applicability   [RFC4762] describes a two-tier hierarchical solution for VPLS for the   purpose of improved pseudowire (PW) scalability.  This improvement is   achieved by reducing the number of PE devices connected in a full-   mesh topology through connecting CE devices via the lower-tier access   network, which in turn is connected to the top-tier core network.   [RFC4762] describes two types of H-VPLS network topologies -- one   with an MPLS access network and another with an IEEE 802.1ad (QinQ)   Ethernet access network.  In both types of H-VPLS, the learning and   forwarding of MAC addresses is based on customer MAC addresses   (C-MACs), which poses scalability issues as the number of VPLS   instances (and thus C-MACs) increases.  Furthermore, since a set of   PWs is maintained on a per customer service instance basis, the   number of PWs required at N-PE devices is proportional to the number   of customer service instances multiplied by the number of N-PE   devices in the full-mesh set.  This can result in scalability issuesSajassi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   (in terms of PW manageability and troubleshooting) as the number of   customer service instances grows.   In addition to the above, H-VPLS with an 802.1ad Ethernet access   network has another scalability issue in terms of the maximum number   of service instances that can be supported in the access network as   described in [RFC4762].  Since the number of provider VLANs (S-VLANs)   is limited to 4094 and each S-VLAN represents a service instance in   an 802.1ad network, then the maximum number of service instances that   can be supported is 4094.  These issues are highlighted in [RFC6246].   This document describes how IEEE 802.1ah (aka Provider Backbone   Bridges) can be integrated with H-VPLS to address these scalability   issues.  In the case of H-VPLS with 802.1ah Ethernet access, the   solution results in better scalability in terms of both number of   service instances and number of C-MACs in the Ethernet access network   and the VPLS core network, as well as number of PWs in VPLS core   network.  And in the case of H-VPLS with MPLS access, Provider   Backbone Bridging functionality can be used at the U-PE or N-PE,   which results in reduction of customer MAC addresses and the number   of PWs in the VPLS core network.   The interoperability scenarios depicted in this document fall into   the following two categories:   -  Scenarios in which Provider Backbone Bridging seamlessly works      with current VPLS implementations (e.g.,Section 4.2).   -  Scenarios in which VPLS-PE implementations need to be upgraded in      order to work with Provider Backbone Bridging (e.g., Sections4.3      and 5.1).4.  H-VPLS with Homogeneous PBBN Access   PBBN access offers MAC-address-table scalability for H-VPLS PE nodes.   This is due to the MAC tunneling encapsulation scheme of PBB, which   only exposes the provider's own MAC addresses to PE nodes (B-MACs of   Provider's PBB-capable devices in the access network), as opposed to   customers' MAC addresses in conventional H-VPLS with MPLS or 802.1ad   access.   PBBN access also offers service-instance scalability when compared to   H-VPLS with 802.1Q/802.1ad access networks.  This is due to the new   24-bit service identifier (I-SID) used in PBB encapsulation, which   allows up to 16M services per PBB access network, compared to 4094   services per 802.1Q/802.1ad access network.Sajassi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   Another important advantage of PBBN access is that it offers clear   separation between the service layer (represented by I-SID) and the   network layer (represented by B-VLAN).  B-VLANs segregate a PBB   access network into different broadcast domains and possibly unique   spanning-tree topologies, with each domain being able to carry   multiple services (i.e., I-SIDs).  In 802.1ad access networks, the   network and service layers are the same (represented by S-VLAN).   This separation allows the provider to manage and optimize the PBB   access network topology independent of the number of service   instances that are supported.   In this section and those following, we look into different flavors   of H-VPLS with PBBN access.  This section discusses the case in which   H-VPLS is deployed with homogeneous PBBN access.Section 5 describes   the case in which at least one of the access networks has PBN access   (QinQ/802.1ad) while the others are PBBNs.   On a macro scale, a network that employs H-VPLS with PBBN access can   be represented as shown in Figure 1 below.                           +--------------+                           |              |           +---------+     |    IP/MPLS   |    +---------+   +----+  |         |   +----+        +----+  |         |  +----+   | CE |--|         |   |VPLS|        |VPLS|  |         |--| CE |   +----+  |  PBBN   |---| PE |        | PE |--|  PBBN   |  +----+   +----+  | 802.1ah |   +----+        +----+  | 802.1ah |  +----+   | CE |--|         |     |   Backbone   |    |         |--| CE |   +----+  +---------+     +--------------+    +---------+  +----+                    Figure 1: H-VPLS with PBBN Access   In the context of PBBN and H-VPLS interoperability, "I-SID Domain"   and "B-VLAN Domain" can be defined as follows:   -  "I-SID Domain" refers to a network administrative boundary under      which all the PBB BEBs and VPLS-PE devices use the same I-SID      space.  That is, the I-SID assignment is carried out by the same      administration.  This effectively means that a given service      instance has the same I-SID designation on all devices within an      I-SID Domain.   -  "B-VLAN Domain" refers to a network administrative boundary under      which all the PBB BEBs and VPLS-PE devices employ consistent I-SID      to B-VLAN bundling.  For example, the grouping of I-SIDs to      B-VLANs is the same in that domain.  Although the two B-VLANs in      two PBBNs that represent the same group of I-SIDs do not need toSajassi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013      use the same B-VID value, in practice, they often use the same      value because once the I-SID grouping is made identical in two      PBBNs.  It is very easy to make the values of the corresponding      B-VIDs identical also.   Consequently, three different kinds of "Service Domains" are defined   in the following manner:   -  Tightly Coupled Service Domain - Different PBBNs' access belonging      to the same I-SID Domain and B-VLAN Domain.  However, the network      control protocols (e.g., xSTP) run independently in each PBBN      access.   -  Loosely Coupled Service Domain - Different PBBNs' access belonging      to the same I-SID Domain.  However, each PBBN access maintains its      own independent B-VLAN Domain.  Again, the network control      protocols (e.g., xSTP) run independently in each PBBN access.   -  Different Service Domain - In this case, each PBBN access      maintains its own independent I-SID Domain and B-VLAN Domain, with      independent network control protocols (e.g., xSTP) in each PBBN      access.   In general, correct service connectivity spanning networks in a   Tightly Coupled Service Domain can be achieved via B-VID mapping   between the networks (often even without B-VID translation).   However, correct service connectivity spanning networks in a Loosely   Coupled Service Domain requires I-SID to B-VID remapping (i.e.,   unbundling and rebundling of I-SIDs into B-VIDs).  Furthermore,   service connectivity spanning networks in Different Service Domains   requires both I-SID translation and I-SID to B-VID remapping.4.1.  Service Interfaces and Interworking Options   Customer devices will interface with PBBN edge bridges using existing   Ethernet interfaces including IEEE 802.1Q and IEEE 802.1ad.  At the   PBBN edge, C-MAC frames are encapsulated in a PBB header that   includes service provider source and destination MAC addresses   (B-MACs) and are bridged up to the VPLS-PE.  The PBB-encapsulated   C-MAC frame is then injected into the VPLS backbone network,   delivered to the remote VPLS-PE node(s), and switched onto the remote   PBBN access.  From there, the PBBN bridges the encapsulated frame to   a PBBN edge bridge where the PBB header is removed and the customer   frame is sent to the customer domain.Sajassi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   Interoperating between PBBN devices and VPLS-PE nodes can leverage   the BEB functions already defined in [802.1ah].  When I-SID   visibility is required at the VPLS-PE nodes, a new service interface   based on I-SID tag will need to be defined.   Moreover, by mapping a bridge domain (e.g., B-VLAN) to a VPLS   instance, and bundling multiple end-customer service instances   (represented by I-SID) over the same bridge domain, service providers   will be able to significantly reduce the number of full-mesh PWs   required in the core.  In this case, I-SID visibility is not required   on the VPLS-PE and the I-SID will serve as the means of   multiplexing/de-multiplexing individual service instances in the PBBN   over a bundle (e.g., B-VLAN).   When I-SID visibility is expected across the service interface at the   VPLS-PE, the VPLS-PE can be considered to offer service-level   interworking between PBBN access and the IP/MPLS core.  Similarly,   when the PE is not expected to have visibility of the I-SID at the   service interface, the VPLS-PE can be considered to offer network-   level interworking between PBBN access and the MPLS core.   A VPLS-PE is always part of the IP/MPLS core, and it may optionally   participate in the control protocols (e.g., xSTP) of the access   network.  When connecting to a PBBN access, the VPLS-PE needs to   support one of the following two types of service interfaces:      -  Type I: B-Tagged Service Interface with B-VID as Service         Delimiter   The PE connects to a Backbone Core Bridge (BCB) in the PBBN access.   The handoff between the BCB and the PE is B-Tagged PBB-encapsulated   frames.  The PE is transparent to PBB encapsulations and treats these   frames as 802.1ad frames since the B-VID EtherType is the same as the   S-VID EtherType.  The PE does not need to support PBB functionality.   This corresponds to conventional VPLS-PEs' tagged service interface.   When using Type I service interface, the PE needs to support either   raw mode or tagged mode Ethernet PW.  Type I service interface is   described in detail inSection 4.2.      -  Type II: I-Tagged Service Interface with I-SID as Service         Delimiter   The PE connects to a B-BEB (backbone edge bridge with B-component) in   the PBBN access.  The PE itself also supports the B-BEB functionality   of [802.1ah].  The handoff between the B-BEB in the PBBN access and   the PE is an I-Tagged PBB-encapsulated frame.  With Type II serviceSajassi, et al.               Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   interface, the PE supports the existing raw mode and tagged mode PW   types.  Type II service interface is described in detail inSection4.3.4.2.  H-VPLS with PBBN Access: Type I Service Interface   This is a B-Tagged service interface with B-VID as service delimiter   on the VPLS-PE.  It does not require any new functionality on the   VPLS-PE.  As shown in Figure 2, the PE is always part of the IP/MPLS   core.  The PE may also be part of the PBBN access (e.g., VPLS-PE on   right side of Figure 2) by participating in network control protocols   (e.g., xSTP) of the PBBN access.        PBBN Access       IP/MPLS Core      PBBN Access                        +--------------+        +---------+     |              | +---------------+        |         |    +----+          | |               |        |      +---+   |VPLS|   +-+    | |    +---+      |        |      |BCB|---| PE |---|P|    | |    |BCB|      |        |      +---+  /+----+  /+-+   | |   /+---+      |        |+---+    |  / +----+ /     +----+ /       +---+|   +--+ ||IB-| +---+/  |VPLS|/  +-+  |VPLS|/  +---+ |IB-|| +--+   |CE|-||BEB|-|BCB|---| PE |---|P|--| PE |---|BCB|-|BEB|--|CE|   +--+ |+---+ +---+ ^ +----+   +-+  +----+ ^ +---+ +---+| +--+        |         |  |  |              | |  |            |        +---------+  |  |              | +--|------------+                     |  +--------------+    |                     |                      |                   Type I                  Type I     Figure 2: H-VPLS with PBBN Access and Type I Service Interface   Type I service interface is applicable to networks with Tightly   Coupled Service Domains, where both I-SID Domains and B-VLAN Domains   are the same across all PBBN access networks.   The BCB and the VPLS-PE will exchange PBB-encapsulated frames that   include source and destination B-MACs, a B-VID, and an I-SID.  The   service delimiter, from the perspective of the VPLS-PE, is the B-VID;   in fact, this interface operates exactly as a current 802.1Q/ad   interface into a VPLS-PE does today.  With Type I service interface,   the VPLS-PE can be considered to provide network-level interworking   between PBBN and MPLS domains, since VPLS-PE does not have visibility   of I-SIDs.   The main advantage of this service interface, when compared to other   types, is that it allows the service provider to save on the number   of full-mesh PWs required in the core.  This is primarily becauseSajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   multiple service instances (I-SIDs) are bundled over a single full-   mesh PW corresponding to a bridge domain (e.g., B-VID), instead of   requiring a dedicated full-mesh PW per service instance.  Another   advantage is the MAC address scalability in the core since the core   is not exposed to C-MACs.   The disadvantage of this interface is the comparably excessive   replication required in the core: since a group of service instances   share the same full-mesh of PWs, an unknown unicast, multicast, or   broadcast on a single service instance will result in a flood over   the core.  This, however, can be mitigated via the use of flood   containment per I-SID (B-MAC multicast pruning).   Three different modes of operation are supported by Type I service   interface:   -  Port Mode: All traffic over an interface in this mode is mapped to      a single VPLS instance.  Existing PW signaling and Ethernet raw      mode (0x0005) PW type, defined in [RFC4447] and [RFC4448], are      supported.   -  VLAN Mode: all traffic associated with a particular VLAN      identified by the B-VID is mapped to a single VPLS instance.      Existing PW signaling and Ethernet raw mode (0x0005) PW type,      defined in [RFC4447] and [RFC4448], are supported.   -  VLAN Bundling Mode: all traffic associated with a group or range      of VLANs or B-VIDs is mapped to a single VPLS instance.  Existing      PW signaling and Ethernet raw mode (0x0005) PW type, defined in      [RFC4447] and [RFC4448], are supported.   For the VLAN mode, it is also possible to use Ethernet tagged mode   (0x0004) PW, as defined in [RFC4447] and [RFC4448], for   interoperability with equipment that does not support raw mode.  The   use of raw mode is recommended to be the default though.4.3.  H-VPLS with PBBN Access: Type II Service Interface   This is an I-Tagged service interface with I-SID as service delimiter   on the VPLS-PE.  It requires the VPLS-PE to include the B-component   of PBB BEB for I-SID processing in addition to the capability to map   an I-SID Bundle to a VPLS instance.  As shown in Figure 3, the PE is   always part of the IP/MPLS core and connects to one or more B-BEBs in   the PBBN access.Sajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013        PBBN Access      IP/MPLS Core      PBBN Access                       +--------------+        +---------+    |              |    +---------+        |         |    |              |    |         |        |      +---+  +-----+         |    |  +---+  |        |      |B- |  |PE w/| +-+     |    |  |BCB|  |        |      |BEB|--|B-BEB|-|P|     |    |  +---+  |        |      +---+ /+-----+ +-+     |    | /   |   |        |+---+ +---+/ +-----+/    +-----+ +---+ +---+|   +--+ ||IB-| |B- |  |PE w/| +-+ |PE w/| |B- | |IB-|| +--+   |CE|-||BEB|-|BEB|--|B-BEB|-|P|-|B-BEB|-|BEB| |BEB|--|CE|   +--+ |+---+ +---+ ^+-----+ +-+ +-----+^+---+ +---+| +--+        |         |  |  |             |  | |         |        +---------+  |  |             |  | +---------+                     |  +-------------+  |                     |                   |                 Type II             Type II   Figure 3: H-VPLS with PBBN Access and Type II Service Interface   Type II service interface is applicable to Loosely Coupled Service   Domains and Different Service Domains.  B-VLAN Domains can be   independent and the B-VID is always locally significant in each PBBN   access: it does not need to be transported over the IP/MPLS core.   Given the above, it should be apparent that Type II service interface   is applicable to Tightly Coupled Service Domains as well.   By definition, the B-BEB connecting to the VPLS-PE will remove any   B-VLAN tags for frames exiting the PBBN access.  The B-BEB and   VPLS-PE will exchange PBB-encapsulated frames that include source and   destination B-MACs and an I-SID.  The service delimiter, from the   perspective of the VPLS-PE, is the I-SID.  Since the PE has   visibility of I-SIDs, the PE provides service-level interworking   between PBBN access and IP/MPLS core.   Type II service interface may operate in I-SID Bundling Mode: all   traffic associated with a group or range of I-SIDs is mapped to a   single VPLS instance.  The PE maintains a mapping of I-SIDs to a PE   local bridge domain (e.g., B-VID).  The VPLS instance is then   associated with this bridge domain.  With Loosely Coupled service   Domains, no I-SID translation needs to be performed.  Type II Service   interface also supports Different Service Domains in this mode, since   the B-BEB link in the PE connecting to the local PBBN can perform the   translation of PBBN-specific I-SID to a local I-SID within the   IP/MPLS core, which may then be translated to the other PBBN-specific   I-SID on the egress PE.  Such translation can also occur in the B-BEB   of PBBN access.  Existing PW signaling and Ethernet raw mode   (0x0005), defined in [RFC4447] and [RFC4448], is supported.  It isSajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   also possible to use a tagged mode (0x0004) PW for purpose of   interoperability with equipment that does not support raw mode.   Type II service interface provides operators with the flexibility to   trade off PW state for multicast flooding containment, since a full-   mesh of PWs can be set up:   a. per I-SID,   b. per group of I-SIDs, or   c. for all I-SIDs.   For (a) and (b), the advantage that Type II service interface has   compared to Type I is that it can reduce replication in the core   without the need for a mechanism that provides flood containment per-   I-SID (B-MAC multicast pruning).  This is mainly due to the increased   segregation of service instances over disjoint full meshes of PWs.   For (c), both Type II and Type I service interfaces are at par with   regard to flood containment.   For (a) and (b), the disadvantage of this service interface, compared   to Type I, is that it may require a larger number of full-mesh PWs in   the core.  For (c), both Type II and Type I service interfaces are at   par with regard to PW state.  However, for all three scenarios, the   number of full-mesh PWs can still be fewer than the number required   by H-VPLS without PBBN access, since an I-SID can multiplex many   S-VLANs.   It is expected that this interface type will be used for customers   with significant multicast traffic (but without multicast pruning   capability in the VPLS-PE) so that a separate VPLS instance is set up   per group of customers with similar geographic locality (per I-SID   group).   Note: Port mode is not called out in Type II service interface since   it requires the mapping of I-SIDs to be identical on different   I-Tagged interfaces across VPLS network.  If this is indeed the case,   Port mode defined in Type I service interface (Section 4.2) can be   used.Sajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 13]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 20135.  H-VPLS with Mixed PBBN Access and PBN Access   It is foreseeable that service providers will want to interoperate   their existing Provider Bridged Networks (PBNs) with Provider   Backbone Bridged Networks (PBBNs) over H-VPLS.  Figure 4 below shows   the high-level network topology.                           +--------------+                           |              |           +---------+     |    IP/MPLS   |    +---------+   +----+  |         |   +----+        +----+  |         |  +----+   | CE |--|   PBN   |   |VPLS|        |VPLS|  |         |--| CE |   +----+  |  (QinQ) |---| PE1|        | PE2|--|  PBBN   |  +----+   +----+  | 802.1ad |   +----+        +----+  | 802.1ah |  +----+   | CE |--|         |     |   Backbone   |    |         |--| CE |   +----+  +---------+     +--------------+    +---------+  +----+       Figure 4: H-VPLS with Mixed PBN and PBBN Access Networks   Referring to Figure 4 above, two possibilities come into play   depending on whether the interworking is carried out at PE1 or PE2.   These are described in the following subsections.Sajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 14]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 20135.1.  H-VPLS with Mixed PBBN and PBN Access: Modified PBN PE   As shown in Figure 5, the operation of VPLS-PE2 (connecting to the   PBBN access on the right) is no different from what was discussed inSection 4.  Type II service interface, as discussed in the above   section, is applicable.  It is the behavior of VPLS-PE1 (connecting   to the PBN access on the left) that is the focus of this section.         PBN Access       IP/MPLS Core      PBBN Access          (802.1ad)     +--------------+     (802.1ah)                        |              |    +---------+         +---------+    |              |    |         |         |         |   +-----+         |    |  +---+  |         |      +---+  |PE w/| +-+     |    |  |BCB|  |         |      |PCB|--|IBBEB|-|P|     |    |  +---+  |         |      +---+ /+-----+ +-+     |    | /   |   |         |         | / +-----+/    +-----+ +---+ +---+|    +--+ |+---+ +---+  |PE w/| +-+ |PE w/| |B- | |IB-|| +--+    |CE|-||PEB|-|PCB|--|IBBEB|-|P|-|B-BEB|-|BEB| |BEB|--|CE|    +--+ |+---+ +---+ ^+-----+ +-+ +-----+^+---+ +---+| +--+         |         |  |  |PE1       PE2|  | |         |         +---------+  |  |             |  | +---------+                      |  +-------------+  |                      |                   |                  S-Tagged           Type II (I-Tagged)   Figure 5: H-VPLS with Mixed PBN and PBBN Access: Modified PBN PE   Some assumptions made for this topology include:   -  CE is directly connected to PBBN via S-Tagged or port-based      interface.   -  I-SID in PBBN access represents the same customer as S-VID in PBN      access.   -  At S-Tagged service interface of PE with IB-BEB functionality      (e.g., PE1 in Figure 5), the only viable service is 1:1 mapping of      S-VID to I-SID.  However, towards the core network side, the same      PE can support I-SID bundling into a VPLS instance.   -  PE1 participates in the local I-SID Domain of the IP/MPLS core so      the model accommodates for the rest of the PBB network any of the      three domain types described inSection 4 -- Tightly Coupled,      Loosely Coupled, and Different Service Domains.Sajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 15]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   -  For ease of provisioning in these disparate access networks, it is      recommended to use the same I-SID Domain among the PBBN access      networks and the PEs with IB-BEB functionality (those connecting      to PBN).   This topology operates in I-SID Bundling Mode: at a PE connecting to   PBN access, each S-VID is mapped to an I-SID and subsequently a group   of I-SIDs is mapped to a VPLS instance.  Similarly, at a PE   connecting to PBBN access, each group of I-SIDs is mapped to a VPLS   instance.  Similar to Type II service interface, no I-SID translation   is performed for the I-SID bundling case.  Existing PW signaling and   Ethernet raw mode (0x0005) PW type, defined in [RFC4447] and   [RFC4448], are supported.  It is possible to use tagged mode (0x0004)   PW for backward compatibility as well.5.2.  H-VPLS with Mixed PBBN and PBN Access: Regular PBN PE   As shown in Figure 6, the operation of VPLS-PE1 (connecting to the   PBN access on the left) is no different from existing VPLS-PEs.  It   is the behavior of VPLS-PE2 (connecting to the PBBN access on the   right) that is the focus of this section.         PBN Access       IP/MPLS Core      PBBN Access          (802.1ad)     +--------------+     (802.1ah)                        |              |    +---------+         +---------+    |              |    |         |         |         |   +-----+         |    |  +---+  |         |      +---+  |  PE | +-+     |    |  |BCB|  |         |      |PCB|--|     |-|P|     |    |  +---+  |         |      +---+ /+-----+ +-+     |    | /   |   |         |         | / +-----+/    +-----+ +---+ +---+|    +--+ |+---+ +---+  |  PE | +-+ |PE w/| |B- | |IB-|| +--+    |CE|-||PEB|-|PCB|--|     |-|P|-|IBBEB|-|BEB| |BEB|--|CE|    +--+ |+---+ +---+ ^+-----+ +-+ +-----+^+---+ +---+| +--+         |         |  |  |PE1       PE2|  | |         |         +---------+  |  |             |  | +---------+                      |  +-------------+  |                      |                   |                  S-Tagged           Type II (I-Tagged)   Figure 6: H-VPLS with Mixed PBN and PBBN Access: Regular PBN PE   Some assumptions made for this topology include:   -  The CE is directly connected to the PBBN access via an S-Tagged or      port-based Interface.Sajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 16]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   -  The I-SID in the PBBN access represents the same customer as the      S-VID in the PBN access.   -  There is 1:1 mapping between the I-SID and the VPLS instance.   -  At the S-Tagged service interface of the PE connecting to PBN      (e.g., PE1 in Figure 6), the PE only provides 1:1 mapping of S-VID      to the VPLS instance.  S-VID bundling is not a viable option since      it does not correspond to anything in the PBBN access.   -  The PE connecting to the PBBN access (e.g., PE2 in Figure 6),      supports IB-BEB functionality and the I-component is connected to      the VPLS Forwarder (i.e., the I-component faces the IP/MPLS core      whereas the B-component faces the PBBN access network).  One or      more I-SIDs can be grouped into a B-VID in the PBBN access.   -  Since C-VID grouping in different PBBN access networks must be      consistent, it is assumed that same I-SID Domain is used across      these PBBN access networks.   Unlike the previous case, I-SID bundling mode is not supported in   this case.  This is primarily because the VPLS core operates in the   same manner as today.  The PE with IB-BEB functionality connecting to   PBBN access performs the mapping of each VPLS instance to an I-SID   and one or more of these I-SIDs may be mapped onto a B-VID within the   PBBN access network.6.  H-VPLS with MPLS Access   In this section, the case of H-VPLS with MPLS access network is   discussed.  The integration of PBB functionality into VPLS-PE for   such access networks is described to improve the scalability of the   network in terms of the number of MAC addresses and service instances   that are supported.   For this topology, it is possible to embed PBB functionality in   either the U-PE or the N-PE.  Both of these cases are described in   the following subsections.6.1.  H-VPLS with MPLS Access: PBB U-PE   As stated earlier, the objective for incorporating PBB function at   the U-PE is to improve the scalability of H-VPLS networks in terms of   the number of MAC addresses and service instances that are supported.   In current H-VPLS, the N-PE must learn customer MAC addresses   (C-MACs) of all VPLS instances in which it participates.  This can   easily add up to hundreds of thousands or even millions of C-MACs atSajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 17]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   the N-PE.  When the U-PE performs PBB encapsulation, the N-PE only   needs to learn the MAC addresses of the U-PEs, which is a significant   reduction.  Furthermore, when PBB encapsulation is used, many I-SIDs   are multiplexed within a single bridge domain (e.g., B-VLAN).  If the   VPLS instance is set up per B-VLAN, then one can also achieve a   significant reduction in the number of full-mesh PWs.  It should be   noted that this reduction in full-mesh PWs comes at the cost of   potentially increased replication over the full-mesh of PWs: customer   multicast and/or broadcast frames are effectively broadcasted within   the B-VLAN.  This may result in additional frame replication because   the full-mesh PWs corresponding to a B-VLAN are most likely bigger   than the full-mesh PWs corresponding to a single I-SID.  However,   flood containment per I-SID (B-MAC multicast pruning) can be used to   remedy this drawback and have multicast traffic replicated   efficiently for each customer (i.e., for each I-SID).   Figure 7 below illustrates the scenario for H-VPLS with MPLS access.   As illustrated, customer networks or hosts (CE) connect into the U-PE   nodes using standard Ethernet interfaces [802.1D-REV], [802.1Q], or   [802.1ad].  The U-PE is connected upstream to one or more VPLS N-PE   nodes by MPLS PWs (per VPLS instance).  These, in turn, are connected   via a full mesh of PWs (per VPLS instance) traversing the IP/MPLS   core.  The U-PE is outfitted with PBB Backbone Edge Bridge (BEB)   functions where it can encapsulate/decapsulate customer MAC frames in   provider B-MACs and perform I-SID translation if needed.        PBB                                                PBB        BEB                  +----------+                  BEB         |                   |          |                   |         |   +-----------+   |    IP    |   +-----------+   |         |   | MPLS      |   |   MPLS   |   |    MPLS   |   |         V   | Access +----+ |   Core   | +----+ Access |   V   +--+  +----+       |VPLS|-|          |-|VPLS|       +----+  +--+   |CE|--|U-PE|       |N-PE| |          | | PE |       |U-PE|--|CE|   +--+  +----+       +----+ |          | +----+       +----+  +--+             |           |   |          |   |           |             +-----------+   +----------+   +-----------+          Figure 7: H-VPLS with MPLS Access Network and PBB U-PE   The U-PE still provides the same type of services toward its   customers as before and they are:      -  Port mode (either 802.1D, 802.1Q, or 802.1ad)      -  VLAN mode (either 802.1Q or 802.1ad)      -  VLAN-bundling mode (either 802.1Q or 802.1ad)Sajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 18]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   By incorporating a PBB function, the U-PE maps each of these services   (for a given customer) onto a single I-SID based on the configuration   at the U-PE.  Many I-SIDs are multiplexed within a single bridge   domain (e.g., B-VLAN).  The U-PE can then map a bridge domain onto a   VPLS instance and the encapsulated frames are sent over the PW   associated with that VPLS instance.  Furthermore, the entire Ethernet   bridging operation over the VPLS network is performed as defined in   [RFC4762].  In other words, MAC forwarding is based on the B-MAC   address space and service delimiter is based on VLAN ID, which is   B-VID in this case.  There is no need to inspect or deal with I-SID   values in the VPLS N-PEs.   In the case of PBB U-PEs in a single I-SID Domain, I-SID assignment   is performed globally across all MPLS access networks and therefore   there is no need for I-SID translation.  This scenario supports I-SID   bundling mode, and it is assumed that the mapping of the I-SIDs to   the bridge domain (e.g., B-VLAN) is consistent across all the   participating PE devices.  In the case of the I-SID bundling mode, a   bridge domain (e.g., B-VLAN) is mapped to a VPLS instance and an   existing Ethernet raw mode (0x0005) or tagged mode (0x0004) PW type   is used as defined in [RFC4447] and [RFC4448].   I-SID mode can be considered to be a degenerate case of I-SID   bundling where a single bridge domain is used per I-SID.  However,   that results in an increased number of bridge domains and PWs in the   PEs.  PBB flood containment (B-MAC multicast pruning) per I-SID can   be used in conjunction with I-SID bundling mode to limit the scope of   flooding per I-SID thus removing the need for I-SID mode.6.2.  H-VPLS with MPLS Access: PBB N-PE   In this case, the PBB function is incorporated at the N-PE to improve   the scalability of H-VPLS networks in terms of the numbers of MAC   addresses and service instances that are supported.   Customer networks or hosts (CE) connect into the U-PE nodes using   standard Ethernet interfaces [802.1D-REV], [802.1Q], or [802.1ad].   The U-PE is connected upstream to one or more VPLS N-PE nodes by MPLS   PWs (per customer).  These, in turn, are connected via a full mesh of   PWs (per customer or group of customers) traversing the IP/MPLS core.   The U-PE still provides the same type of services toward its   customers as before and they are:      -  Port mode (either 802.1D, 802.1Q, or 802.1ad)      -  VLAN mode (either 802.1Q or 802.1ad)      -  VLAN-bundling mode (either 802.1Q or 802.1ad)Sajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 19]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   The spoke PW from the U-PE to the N-PE is not service multiplexed   because there is no PBB functionality on the U-PE, i.e., one service   per PW.                         PBB              PBB                         BEB +----------+ BEB                           | |          | |             +-----------+ | |    IP    | | +-----------+             | MPLS      | V |   MPLS   | V |    MPLS   |             | Access +----+ |   Core   | +----+ Access |   +--+  +----+       |VPLS|-|          |-|VPLS|       +----+  +--+   |CE|--|U-PE|       |N-PE| |          | | PE |       |U-PE|--|CE|   +--+  +----+       +----+ |          | +----+       +----+  +--+             |           |   |          |   |           |             +-----------+   +----------+   +-----------+       Figure 8: H-VPLS with MPLS Access Network and PBB N-PE   By incorporating a PBB function, the N-PE maps each of these services   (for a given customer) onto a single I-SID based on the configuration   at the N-PE.  Many I-SIDs can be multiplexed within a single bridge   domain (e.g., B-VLAN).  The N-PE can, then, either map a single I-SID   into a VPLS instance or map a bridge domain (e.g., B-VLAN) onto a   VPLS instance, according to its configuration.  Next, the   encapsulated frames are sent over the set of PWs associated with that   VPLS instance.   In the case of PBB N-PEs in a single I-SID Domain, I-SID assignment   is performed globally across all MPLS access networks and therefore   there is no need for I-SID translation.  This scenario supports I-SID   bundling mode, and it is assumed that the mapping of the I-SIDs to   the bridge domain (e.g., B-VLAN) is consistent across all the   participating PE devices.  In the case of the I-SID bundling mode, a   bridge domain (e.g., B-VLAN) is mapped to a VPLS instance and an   existing Ethernet raw mode (0x0005) or tagged mode (0x0004) PW type   as defined in [RFC4447] and [RFC4448], can be used.   I-SID mode can be considered to be a degenerate case of I-SID   bundling where a single bridge domain is used per I-SID.  However,   that results in an increased number of bridge domains and PWs in the   PE.  PBB flood containment (B-MAC multicast pruning) per I-SID can be   used in conjunction with I-SID bundling mode to limit the scope of   flooding per I-SID thus removing the need for I-SID mode.Sajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 20]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 20137.  H-VPLS with MPLS Access: PBB Migration Scenarios   Operators and service providers that have deployed H-VPLS with either   MPLS or Ethernet are unlikely to migrate to PBB technology over night   because of obvious cost implications.  Thus, it is imperative to   outline migration strategies that will allow operators to protect   investments in their installed base while still taking advantage of   the scalability benefits of PBB technology.   In the following subsections, we explore three different migration   scenarios that allow a mix of existing H-VPLS access networks to   coexist with newer PBB-based access networks.  The scenarios differ   in whether or not the Ethernet service frames passing over the VPLS   core are PBB-encapsulated.  The first scenario, inSection 7.1,   involves passing only frames that are not PBB-encapsulated over the   core.  The second scenario, inSection 7.2, stipulates passing only   PBB-encapsulated frames over the core.  Whereas, the final scenario,   inSection 7.3, depicts a core that supports a mix of PBB-   encapsulated and non-PBB-encapsulated frames.  The advantages and   disadvantages of each scenario will be discussed in the respective   sections.7.1.  802.1ad Service Frames over VPLS Core   In this scenario, existing access networks are left unchanged.  All   N-PEs would forward frames based on C-MACs.  In other words, Ethernet   frames that are traversing the VPLS core (within PWs) would use the   802.1ad frame format, as in current VPLS.  Hence, the N-PEs in   existing access networks do not require any modification.  For new   MPLS access networks that have PBB functions on the U-PE, the   corresponding N-PE must incorporate built-in IB-BEB functions in   order to terminate the PBB encapsulation before the frames enter the   core.  A key point here is that while both the U-PE and N-PE nodes   implement PBB IB-BEB functionality, the former has the I-component   facing the customer (CE) and the B-component facing the core; whereas   the latter has the I-component facing the core and the B-component   facing the customer (i.e., access network).Sajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 21]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013                                          PBB            PBB                             +----------+ IB-BEB         IB-BEB                             |          | |               |             +-----------+   |    IP    | | +-----------+ |             | MPLS      |   |   MPLS   | V |    MPLS   | |             | Access +----+ |   Core   | +----+ Access | V   +--+  +----+       |VPLS|-|          |-|VPLS|       +----+  +--+   |CE|--|U-PE|       |N-PE| |          | | PE |       |U-PE|--|CE|   +--+  +----+       +----+ |          | +----+       +----+  +--+             | (Existing)|   |          |   |  (New)    |             +-----------+   +----------+   +-----------+   Figure 9: Migration with 802.1ad Service Frames over VPLS Core   The main advantage of this approach is that it requires no change to   existing access networks or existing VPLS N-PEs.  The main   disadvantage is that these N-PEs will not leverage the advantages of   PBB in terms of MAC address and PW scalability.  It is worth noting   that this migration scenario is an optimal option for an H-VPLS   deployment with a single PBB-capable access network.  When multiple   PBB-capable access networks are required, then the scenario inSection 7.3 is preferred, as it provides a more scalable and optimal   interconnect amongst the PBB-capable networks.7.2.  PBB Service Frames over VPLS Core   This scenario requires that the VPLS N-PE connecting to existing MPLS   access networks be upgraded to incorporate IB-BEB functions.  All   Ethernet service frames passing over the VPLS core would be PBB-   encapsulated.  The PBB over MPLS access networks would require no   special requirements beyond what is captured inSection 6 of this   document.  In this case, both the U-PE and N-PE, which implement   IB-BEB functionality, have the I-component facing the customer and   the B-component facing the core.                         PBB                             PBB                      IB-BEB +----------+              IB-BEB                           | |          |                 |             +-----------+ | |    IP    |   +-----------+ |             | MPLS      | V |   MPLS   |   |    MPLS   | |             | Access +----+ |   Core   | +----+ Access | V   +--+  +----+       |VPLS|-|          |-|VPLS|       +----+  +--+   |CE|--|U-PE|       |N-PE| |          | | PE |       |U-PE|--|CE|   +--+  +----+       +----+ |          | +----+       +----+  +--+             | (Existing)|   |          |   |  (New)    |             +-----------+   +----------+   +-----------+    Figure 10: Migration with PBB Service Frames over VPLS CoreSajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 22]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   The main advantage of this approach is that it allows better   scalability of the VPLS N-PEs in terms of MAC address and pseudowire   counts.  The disadvantage is that it requires upgrading the VPLS   N-PEs of all existing MPLS access networks.7.3.  Mixed 802.1ad and PBB over VPLS Core   In this scenario, existing access networks are left unchanged, and   they exchange Ethernet frames with 802.1ad format over the PWs in the   core.  The newly added access networks, which incorporate PBB   functionality exchange Ethernet frames that are PBB-encapsulated   amongst each other over core PWs.  For service connectivity between   existing access network (non-PBB-capable) and new access network (PBB   based), the VPLS N-PE of the latter network employs IB-BEB   functionality to decapsulate the PBB header from frames outbound to   the core and encapsulate the PBB header for frames inbound from the   core.  As a result, a mix of PBB-encapsulated and 802.1ad Ethernet   service frames are exchanged over the VPLS core.   This mode of operation requires new functionality on the VPLS N-PE of   the PBB-capable access network, so that the PE can send frames in   802.1ad format or PBB format, on a per PW basis, depending on the   capability of the destination access network.  Effectively, the PE   would have to incorporate B-BEB as well as IB-BEB functions.   A given PE needs to be aware of the capability of its remote peer in   order to determine whether it connects to the right PW Forwarder.   This can be achieved either via static configuration or by extending   the VPLS control plane (BGP-based auto-discovery and LDP Signaling)   discussed in [RFC6074].  The latter approach and the details of the   extensions required are out of scope for this document.                                          PBB                                          B-BEB          PBB                             +----------+ IB-BEB         IB-BEB                             |          | |               |             +-----------+   |    IP    | | +-----------+ |             | MPLS      |   |   MPLS   | V |    MPLS   | |             | Access +----+ |   Core   | +----+ Access | V   +--+  +----+       |VPLS|-|          |-|VPLS|       +----+  +--+   |CE|--|U-PE|       |N-PE| |          | |N-PE|       |U-PE|--|CE|   +--+  +----+       +----+ |          | +----+       +----+  +--+             | (Existing)|   |          |   |  (New)    |             +-----------+   +----------+   +-----------+                Figure 11: Migration with Mixed 802.1ad and                     PBB Service Frames over VPLS CoreSajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 23]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   The U-PE and N-PE of the PBB-capable access network both employ BEB   functionality.  The U-PE implements IB-BEB functionality where the   I-component faces the customer (CE) and the B-component faces the   core.  The N-PE, on the other hand, implements IB-BEB functionality   with the I-component facing the core and the B-component facing the   customer (access network).  In addition, the N-PE implements   standalone B-BEB functionality.   This scenario combines the advantages of both previous scenarios   without any of their shortcomings, namely: it does not require any   changes to existing access networks and it allows the N-PE to   leverage the scalability benefits of 802.1ah for PBBN to PBBN   connectivity.  The disadvantage of this option is that it requires   new functionality on the N-PE of the PBBN access.  A second   disadvantage is that this option requires two P2MP LSPs to be set up   at the ingress N-PE: one for the N-PEs that support PBB encapsulation   and another one for the N-PEs that don't support PBB encapsulation.8.  Acknowledgments   The authors would like to thank Chris Metz and Dinesh Mohan for their   valuable feedback and contributions.9.  Security Considerations   This document does not introduce any additional security aspects   beyond those applicable to VPLS/H-VPLS.  VPLS/H-VPLS security   considerations are already covered in [RFC4111] and [RFC4762].10.  References10.1.  Normative References   [802.1ad]    "IEEE Standard for and metropolitan area networks --                Virtual Bridged Local Area Networks -- Provider                Bridges", 802.1ad-2005, August 2005.   [802.1ah]    "IEEE Standard for Local and metropolitan area networks                -- Virtual Bridged Local Area Networks Amendment 7:                Provider Backbone Bridges", IEEE Std. 802.1ah-2008,                August 2009.   [RFC4447]    Martini, L., Ed., Rosen, E., El-Aawar, N., Smith, T.,                and G. Heron, "Pseudowire Setup and Maintenance Using                the Label Distribution Protocol (LDP)",RFC 4447, April                2006.Sajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 24]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013   [RFC4448]    Martini, L., Ed., Rosen, E., El-Aawar, N., and G. Heron,                "Encapsulation Methods for Transport of Ethernet over                MPLS Networks",RFC 4448, April 2006.   [RFC4762]    Lasserre, M., Ed., and V. Kompella, Ed., "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                2011.10.2.  Informative References   [802.1Q]     "IEEE Standard for Local and metropolitan area networks                - Media Access Control (MAC) Bridges and Virtual Bridged                Local Area Networks", IEEE Std 802.1Q(tm), 2012 Edition,                October 2012.   [802.1D-REV] "IEEE Standard for Local and metropolitan area networks                Media Access Control (MAC) Bridges", IEEE Std. 802.1D,                June 2004.   [RFC6246]    Sajassi, A., Ed., Brockners, F., Mohan, D., Ed., and Y.                Serbest, "Virtual Private LAN Service (VPLS)                Interoperability with Customer Edge (CE) Bridges",RFC6246, June 2011.   [RFC4111]    Fang, L., Ed., "Security Framework for Provider-                Provisioned Virtual Private Networks (PPVPNs)",RFC4111, July 2005.Sajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 25]

RFC 7080             VPLS Interoperability with PBB        December 2013Authors' Addresses   Ali Sajassi   Cisco   EMail: sajassi@cisco.com   Samer Salam   Cisco   EMail: ssalam@cisco.com   Nabil Bitar   Verizon Communications   EMail : nabil.n.bitar@verizon.com   Florin Balus   Nuage Networks   EMail: florin.balus@nuagenetworks.netSajassi, et al.               Informational                    [Page 26]

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