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EXPERIMENTAL
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         V. MorenoRequest for Comments: 8378                                 Cisco SystemsCategory: Experimental                                      D. FarinacciISSN: 2070-1721                                              lispers.net                                                                May 2018Signal-Free Locator/ID Separation Protocol (LISP) MulticastAbstract   When multicast sources and receivers are active at Locator/ID   Separation Protocol (LISP) sites, the core network is required to use   native multicast so packets can be delivered from sources to group   members.  When multicast is not available to connect the multicast   sites together, a signal-free mechanism can be used to allow traffic   to flow between sites.  The mechanism described in this document uses   unicast replication and encapsulation over the core network for the   data plane and uses the LISP mapping database system so encapsulators   at the source LISP multicast site can find decapsulators at the   receiver LISP multicast sites.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for examination, experimental implementation, and   evaluation.   This document defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet   community.  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 candidates for any level of   Internet Standard; seeSection 2 of RFC 7841.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttps://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8378.Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                      [Page 1]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 2018Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2018 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   (https://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.  Definition of Terms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .43.  Requirements Language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54.  Reference Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .65.  General Procedures  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .75.1.  General Receiver-Site Procedures  . . . . . . . . . . . .85.1.1.  Multicast Receiver Detection  . . . . . . . . . . . .85.1.2.  Receiver-Site Registration  . . . . . . . . . . . . .95.1.3.  Consolidation of the Replication List . . . . . . . .105.2.  General Source-Site Procedures  . . . . . . . . . . . . .105.2.1.  Multicast Tree Building at the Source Site  . . . . .105.2.2.  Multicast Destination Resolution  . . . . . . . . . .115.3.  General LISP Notification Procedures  . . . . . . . . . .116.  Source-Specific Multicast Trees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .126.1.  Source Directly Connected to Source-ITRs  . . . . . . . .126.2.  Source Not Directly Connected to Source-ITRs  . . . . . .127.  Multihoming Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .137.1.  Multiple ITRs at a Source Site  . . . . . . . . . . . . .137.2.  Multiple ETRs at a Receiver Site  . . . . . . . . . . . .137.3.  Multiple RLOCs for an ETR at a Receiver Site  . . . . . .147.4.  Multicast RLOCs for an ETR at a Receiver Site . . . . . .148.  PIM Any-Source Multicast Trees  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .159.  Signal-Free Multicast for Replication Engineering . . . . . .1610. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1811. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1912. References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1912.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1912.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .20   Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .21Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                      [Page 2]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 20181.  Introduction   When multicast sources and receivers are active at LISP sites, and   the core network between the sites does not provide multicast   support, a signal-free mechanism can be used to create an overlay   that will allow multicast traffic to flow between sites and connect   the multicast trees at the different sites.   The signal-free mechanism proposed here does not extend PIM [RFC7761]   over the overlay as proposed in [RFC6831], nor does the mechanism   utilize direct signaling between the Receiver-ETRs and Sender-ITRs as   described in [LISP-MULTI-SIGNALING].  The signal-free mechanism   proposed reduces the amount of signaling required between sites to a   minimum and is centered around the registration of receiver sites for   a particular multicast group or multicast channel with the LISP   mapping system.   Registrations from the different receiver sites will be merged at the   mapping system to assemble a multicast-replication-list inclusive of   all Routing Locators (RLOCs) that lead to receivers for a particular   multicast group or multicast channel.  The replication list for each   specific multicast entry is maintained as a database mapping entry in   the LISP mapping system.   When the Ingress Tunnel Router (ITR) at the source site receives   multicast traffic from sources at its site, the ITR can query the   mapping system by issuing Map-Request messages for the (S,G) source   and destination addresses in the packets received.  The mapping   system will return the RLOC replication list to the ITR, which the   ITR will cache as per standard LISP procedure.  Since the core is   assumed to not support multicast, the ITR will replicate the   multicast traffic for each RLOC on the replication list and will   unicast encapsulate the traffic to each RLOC.  The combined function   or replicating and encapsulating the traffic to the RLOCs in the   replication list is referred to as "rep-encapsulation" in this   document.   The document describes general procedures (Section 5) and information   encoding that are required at the receiver sites and source sites to   achieve signal-free multicast interconnectivity.  The general   procedures for mapping system notifications to different sites are   also described.  A section dedicated to the specific case of Source-   Specific Multicast (SSM) trees discusses the implications to the   general procedures for SSM multicast trees over different topological   scenarios.  A section on Any-Source Multicast (ASM) support is   included to identify the constraints that come along with supporting   it using LISP signal-free multicast.Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                      [Page 3]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 2018   There is a section dedicated to Replication Engineering, which is a   mechanism to reduce the impact of head-end replication.  The mapping   system, via LISP signal-free mechanisms, can be used to build a layer   of Re-encapsulating Tunnel Routers (RTRs).2.  Definition of Terms   LISP-related terms, notably Map-Request, Map-Reply, Ingress Tunnel   Router (ITR), Egress Tunnel Router (ETR), Map-Server (MS), and   Map-Resolver (MR) are defined in the LISP specification [RFC6830].   Extensions to the definitions in [RFC6830] for their application to   multicast routing are documented in [RFC6831].   Terms defining interactions with the LISP mapping system are defined   in [RFC6833].   The following terms are consistent with the definitions in [RFC6830]   and [RFC6831].  The terms are specific cases of the general terms and   are defined here to facilitate the descriptions and discussions   within this particular document.   Source: Multicast source endpoint.  The host that originates   multicast packets.   Receiver: Multicast group member endpoint.  The host joins a   multicast group as a receiver of multicast packets sent to the group.   Receiver site: LISP site where multicast receivers are located.   Source site: LISP site where multicast sources are located.   RP site: LISP site where an ASM PIM Rendezvous Point (RP) [RFC7761]   is located.  The RP site and the source site MAY be the same in some   situations.   Receiver-ETR: LISP decapsulating the Tunnel Router (xTR) at the   receiver site.  This is a multicast ETR.   Source-ITR: LISP encapsulating xTR at the source site.  This is a   multicast ITR.   RP-xTR: LISP xTR at the RP site.  This is typically a multicast ITR.   Replication list: Mapping-entry containing the list of RLOCs that   have registered receivers for a particular multicast entry.Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                      [Page 4]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 2018   Multicast entry: A tuple identifying a multicast tree.  Multicast   entries are in the form of (S-prefix, G-prefix).   Rep-encapsulation: The process of replicating and then encapsulating   traffic to multiple RLOCs.   Re-encapsulating Tunnel Router (RTR): An RTR is a router that   implements the re-encapsulating tunnel function detailed inSection 8   of the main LISP specification [RFC6830].  A LISP RTR performs packet   re-routing by chaining ETR and ITR functions, whereby it first   removes the LISP header of an ingress packet and then prepends a new   LISP header to an egress packet.   RTR Level: An RTR level is encoded in a Replication List Entry (RLE)   LISP Canonical Address Format (LCAF) Type detailed in [RFC8060].   Each entry in the replication list contains an address of an xTR and   a level value.  Level values are used to create a replication   hierarchy so that ITRs at source LISP sites replicate to the lowest   (smaller value) level number RTRs in an RLE.  And then RTRs at a   given level replicate to the next higher level of RTRs.  The number   of RTRs at each level are engineered to control the fan-out or   replication factor, so a trade-off between the width of the level   versus the number of levels can be selected.   ASM: Any-Source Multicast as defined in [RFC3569] where multicast   distribution trees are built with a Rendezvous Point [RFC7761].   SSM: Source-Specific Multicast as defined in [RFC3569] where   multicast distribution trees are built and rooted at the multicast   router(s) directly connected to the multicast source.3.  Requirements Language   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and   "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described inBCP14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all   capitals, as shown here.Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                      [Page 5]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 20184.  Reference Model   The reference model that will be used for the discussion of the   signal-free multicast tree interconnection is illustrated in   Figure 1.                                  MS/MR                                  +---+                                  |   |             +---+     +---+      +---+      +---+      +---+   Src-1 ----| R1|-----|ITR|        |        |ETR|------| R2|----- Rcv-2             +---+     +---+        |        +---+      +---+                            \       |       /             Source-site-1   \      |      /    Receiver-site-2                              \     |     /                               \    |    /                                \   |   /                                  Core                                /       \                               /         \                              /           \                             /             \                            /               \                       +---+                 +---+   Src-3 --------------|ITR|                 |ETR|---------------- Rcv-4                       +---+                 +---+            Source-site-3                      Receiver-site-4             Figure 1: LISP Multicast Generic Reference Model   Sites 1 and 3 are source sites.   Source-site-3 presents a source (Src-3) that is directly connected to   the Source-ITR.   Source-site-1 presents a source (Src-1) that is one hop or more away   from the Source-ITR.   Receiver-site-2 and -4 are receiver sites with not-directly connected   and directly connected receiver endpoints, respectively.   R1 is a multicast router in Source-site-1.   R2 is a multicast router at the receiver site.Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                      [Page 6]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 2018   Map-Servers and Map-Resolvers are reachable in the RLOC space in the   core; only one is shown for illustration purposes, but these can be   many or even part of a distributed mapping system, such as a   Delegated Database Tree (DDT).   The procedures for interconnecting multicast trees over an overlay   can be broken down into three functional areas:   o  Receiver-site procedures   o  Source-site procedures   o  LISP notification procedures   The receiver-site procedures will be common for most tree types and   topologies.   The procedures at the source site can vary depending on the type of   trees being interconnected as well as the topological relation   between sources and source-site xTRs.  For ASM trees, a special case   of the source site is the RP site for which a variation of the   source-site procedures MAY be necessary if ASM trees are to be   supported in future specifications of LISP signal-free multicast.   The LISP notification procedures between sites are normalized for the   different possible scenarios.  Certain scenarios MAY benefit from a   simplified notification mechanism or no notification requirement at   all.5.  General Procedures   The interconnection of multicast trees across different LISP sites   involves the following procedures to build the necessary multicast   distribution trees across sites.   1.  The presence of multicast receiver endpoints is detected by the       Receiver-ETRs at the receiver sites.   2.  Receiver-ETRs register their RLOCs as part of the replication       list for the multicast entry the detected receivers subscribe to.   3.  The mapping system merges all Receiver-ETR or delivery-group       RLOCs to build a comprehensive replication list inclusive of all       receiver sites for each multicast entry.   4.  LISP Map-Notify messages MUST be sent to the Source-ITR informing       of any changes in the replication list.Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                      [Page 7]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 2018   5.  Multicast tree building at the source site is initiated when the       Source-ITR receives the LISP notification.   Once the multicast distribution trees are built, the following   forwarding procedures may take place:   1.  The source sends multicast packets to the multicast group       destination address.   2.  Multicast traffic follows the multicast tree built at the source       site and makes its way to the Source-ITRs.   3.  The Source-ITR will issue a Map-Request to resolve the       replication list for the multicast entry.   4.  The mapping system responds to the Source-ITR with a Map-Reply       containing the replication list for the multicast group       requested.   5.  The Source-ITR caches the replication list received in the       map-reply for the multicast entry.   6.  Multicast traffic is rep-encapsulated.  That is, the packet is       replicated for each RLOC in the replication list and then       encapsulated to each one.5.1.  General Receiver-Site Procedures5.1.1.  Multicast Receiver Detection   When the Receiver-ETRs are directly connected to the receivers (e.g.,   Receiver-site-4 in Figure 1), the Receiver-ETRs will receive IGMP   reports from the receivers indicating which group the receivers wish   to subscribe to.  Based on these IGMP reports, the Receiver-ETR is   made aware of the presence of receivers as well as which group they   are interested in.   When the Receiver-ETRs are several hops away from the receivers   (e.g., Receiver-site-2 in Figure 1), the Receiver-ETRs will receive   PIM join messages, which will allow the Receiver-ETR to know that   there are multicast receivers at the site and also to learn which   multicast group the receivers are for.Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                      [Page 8]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 20185.1.2.  Receiver-Site Registration   Once the Receiver-ETRs detect the presence of receivers at the   receiver site, the Receiver-ETRs MUST issue Map-Register messages to   include the Receiver-ETR RLOCs in the replication list for the   multicast entry the receivers joined.   The Map-Register message MUST use the multicast entry (Source, Group)   tuple as its Endpoint ID (EID) record type with the Receiver-ETR   RLOCs conforming the locator set.   The EID in the Map-Register message MUST be encoded using the   Multicast Info LCAF Type defined in [RFC8060].   The RLOC in the Map-Register message MUST be encoded using the RLE   LCAF Type defined in [RFC8060] with the Level Value fields for all   entries set to 128 (decimal).   The encoding described above MUST be used consistently for Map-   Register messages, entries in the mapping system, Map-Reply messages,   as well as the map-cache at the Source-ITRs.   The Map-Register messages [RFC6830] sent by the Receiver-ETRs MUST   have the following bits set as specified here:   1.  merge-request bit set to 1.  The Map-Register messages are sent       with "Merge Semantics".  The Map-Server will receive       registrations from a multitude of Receiver-ETRs.  The Map-Server       will merge the registrations for common EIDs and maintain a       consolidated replication list for each multicast entry.   2.  want-map-notify bit (M) set to 0.  This tells the mapping system       that the Receiver-ETR does not expect to receive Map-Notify       messages as it does not need to be notified of all changes to the       replication list.   3.  proxy-reply bit (P) set to 1.  The merged replication list is       kept in the Map-Servers.  By setting the proxy-reply bit, the       Receiver-ETRs instruct the mapping system to proxy reply to Map-       Requests issued for the multicast entries.   Map-Register messages for a particular multicast entry MAY be sent   for every receiver detected, even if previous receivers have been   detected for the particular multicast entry.  This allows the   replication list to remain up to date.Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                      [Page 9]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 2018   Receiver-ETRs MUST be configured to know what Map-Servers Map-   Register messages are sent to.  The configuration is likely to be   associated with an S-prefix that multiple (S,G) entries match to and   are more specific for.  Therefore, the S-prefix determines the Map-   Server set in the least number of configuration statements.5.1.3.  Consolidation of the Replication List   The Map-Server will receive registrations from a multitude of   Receiver-ETRs.  The Map-Server will merge the registrations for   common EIDs and consolidate a replication list for each multicast   entry.   When an ETR sends an RLE RLOC-record in a Map-Register and the RLE   already exists in the Map-Server's RLE-merged list, the Map-Server   will replace the single RLE with the information from the Map-   Register RLOC-record.  The Map-Server MUST NOT merge duplicate RLOCs   in the consolidated replication list.5.2.  General Source-Site Procedures   Source-ITRs MUST register the unicast EIDs of any sources or   Rendezvous Points that may be present on the source site.  In other   words, it is assumed that the sources and RPs are LISP EIDs.   The registration of the unicast EIDs for the sources or Rendezvous   Points allows the Map-Server to know where to send Map-Notify   messages to.  Therefore, the Source-ITR MUST register the unicast   S-prefix EID with the want-map-notify bit set in order to receive   Map-Notify messages whenever there is a change in the replication   list.5.2.1.  Multicast Tree Building at the Source Site   When the source site receives the Map-Notify messages from the   mapping system as described inSection 5.3, it will initiate the   process of building a multicast distribution tree that will allow the   multicast packets from the source to reach the Source-ITR.   The Source-ITR MUST issue a PIM join for the multicast entry for   which it received the Map-Notify message.  The join will be issued in   the direction of the source or in the direction of the RP for the SSM   and ASM cases, respectively.Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                     [Page 10]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 20185.2.2.  Multicast Destination Resolution   On reception of multicast packets, the Source-ITR obtains the   replication list for the (S,G) addresses in the packets.   In order to obtain the replication list, the Source-ITR MUST issue a   Map-Request message in which the EID is the (S,G) multicast tuple,   which is encoded using the Multicast Info LCAF Type defined in   [RFC8060].   The mapping system (most likely the Map-Server) will Map-Reply with   the merged replication list maintained in the mapping system.  The   Map-Reply message MUST follow the format defined in [RFC6830]; its   EID is encoded using the Multicast Info LCAF Type, and the   corresponding RLOC-records are encoded using the RLE LCAF Type.  Both   LCAF Types are defined in [RFC8060].5.3.  General LISP Notification Procedures   The Map-Server will issue LISP Map-Notify messages to inform the   source site of the presence of receivers for a particular multicast   group over the overlay.   Updated Map-Notify messages SHOULD be issued every time a new   registration is received from a receiver site.  This guarantees that   the source sites are aware of any potential changes in the multicast-   distribution-list membership.   The Map-Notify messages carry (S,G) multicast EIDs encoded using the   Multicast Info LCAF Type defined in [RFC8060].   Map-Notify messages will be sent by the Map-Server to the RLOCs with   which the unicast S-prefix EID was registered.  In the case when   sources are discovered dynamically [LISP-EID-MOBILITY], xTRs MUST   register sources explicitly with the want-map-notify bit set.  This   is so the ITR in the site the source has moved to can get the most   current replication list.   When both the receiver sites and the source sites register to the   same Map-Server, the Map-Server has all the necessary information to   send the Map-Notify messages to the source site.   When the Map-Servers are distributed (when using LISP-DDT [RFC8111]),   the receiver sites MAY register to one Map-Server while the source   site registers to a different Map-Server.  In this scenario, the Map-   Server for the receiver sites MUST resolve the unicast S-prefix EID   across a distributed mapping transport system, per standard LISP   lookup procedures, and obtain the necessary information to send theMoreno & Farinacci            Experimental                     [Page 11]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 2018   Map-Notify messages to the source site.  The Map-Notify messages are   sent with an authentication length of 0 as they would not be   authenticated.   When the Map-Servers are distributed, different receiver sites MAY   register to different Map-Servers.  However, this is not supported   with the currently defined mechanisms.6.  Source-Specific Multicast Trees   The interconnection of SSM trees across sites will follow the general   receiver-site procedures described inSection 5.1 on the receiver   sites.   The source-site procedures will vary depending on the topological   location of the source within the source site as described in   Sections6.1 and6.2 .6.1.  Source Directly Connected to Source-ITRs   When the source is directly connected to the Source-ITR, it is not   necessary to trigger signaling to build a local multicast tree at the   source site.  Therefore Map-Notify messages are not required to   initiate building of the multicast tree at the source site.   Map-Notify messages are still required to ensure that any changes to   the replication list are communicated to the source site so that the   map-cache at the Source-ITRs is kept updated.6.2.  Source Not Directly Connected to Source-ITRs   The general LISP notification procedures described inSection 5.3   MUST be followed when the source is not directly connected to the   Source-ITR.  On reception of Map-Notify messages, local multicast   signaling MUST be initiated at the source site per the general   source-site procedures for multicast tree building described inSection 5.2.1.   In the SSM case, the IP address of the source is known, and it is   also registered with the LISP mapping system.  Thus, the mapping   system MAY resolve the mapping for the source address in order to   send Map-Notify messages to the correct Source-ITR.Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                     [Page 12]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 20187.  Multihoming Considerations7.1.  Multiple ITRs at a Source Site   When multiple ITRs exist at a source multicast site, care MUST be   taken that more than one ITR does not head-end replicate packets;   otherwise, receiver multicast sites will receive duplicate packets.   The following procedures will be used for each topology scenario:   o  When more than one ITR is directly connected to the source host,      either the PIM DR or the IGMP querier (when PIM is not enabled on      the ITRs) is responsible for packet replication.  All other ITRs      silently drop the packet.  In the IGMP querier case, one or more      ITRs on the source LAN MUST be IGMP querier candidates.      Therefore, it is required that they be configured as such.   o  When more than one ITR is multiple hops away from the source host      and one of the ITRs is the PIM Rendezvous Point, then the PIM RP      is responsible for packet replication.   o  When more than one ITR is multiple hops away from the source host      and the PIM Rendezvous Point is not one of the ITRs, then one of      the ITRs MUST join to the RP.  When a Map-Notify is received from      the Map-Server by an ITR, only the highest RLOC addressed ITR will      join toward the PIM RP or toward the source.7.2.  Multiple ETRs at a Receiver Site   When multiple ETRs exist in a receiver multicast site and each one   creates a multicast join state, each Map-Registers its RLOC address   to the mapping system.  In this scenario, the replication happens on   the overlay causing multiple ETR entry points to replicate to all   receivers instead of a single ETR entry point replicating to all   receivers.  If an ETR does not create join state, because it has not   received PIM joins or IGMP reports, it will not Map-Register its RLOC   addresses to the mapping system.  The same procedures inSection 5.1   are followed.   When multiple ETRs exist on the same LAN as a receiver host, then the   PIM DR (when PIM is enabled) or the IGMP querier is responsible for   sending a Map-Register for its RLOC.  In the IGMP case, one or more   ETRs on a LAN MUST be IGMP querier candidates.  Therefore, it is   required that they are configured as such.Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                     [Page 13]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 20187.3.  Multiple RLOCs for an ETR at a Receiver Site   It MAY be desirable to have multiple underlay paths to an ETR for   multicast packet delivery.  This can be done by having multiple RLOCs   assigned to an ETR and having the ETR send Map-Registers for all its   RLOCs.  By doing this, an ITR can choose a specific path based on   underlay performance and/or RLOC reachability.   It is recommended that an ETR send a Map-Register with a single RLOC-   record that uses the Explicit Locator Path (ELP) LCAF Type [RFC8060]   that is nested inside the RLE LCAF.  For example, say ETR1 has   assigned RLOC1 and RLOC2 for a LISP receiver site.  Also, there is   ETR2 in another LISP receiver site that has RLOC3.  The two receiver   sites have the same (S,G) being joined.  Here is how the RLOC-record   is encoded on each ETR:   ETR1: EID-record: (S,G)         RLOC-record: RLE[ ELP{ (RLOC1,s,p), (RLOC2,s,p) } ]   ETR2: EID-record: (S,G)         RLOC-record: RLE[ RLOC3 ]   And here is how the entry is merged and stored on the Map-Server   since the Map-Registers have an RLE-encoded RLOC-record:   MS: EID-record: (S,G)       RLOC-record: RLE[ RLOC3, ELP{ (RLOC1,s,p), (RLOC2,s,p) } ]   When the ITR receives a packet from a multicast source S for group G,   it uses the merged RLOC-record returned from the Map-Server.  The ITR   replicates the packet to (RLOC3 and RLOC1) or (RLOC3 and RLOC2).   Since it is required for the s-bit to be set for RLOC1, the ITR MUST   replicate to RLOC1 if it is reachable.  When the required p-bit is   also set, the RLOC-reachability mechanisms from [RFC6830] are   followed.  If the ITR determines that RLOC1 is unreachable, it uses   RLOC2, as long as RLOC2 is reachable.7.4.  Multicast RLOCs for an ETR at a Receiver Site   This specification is focused on underlays without multicast support,   but it does not preclude the use of multicast RLOCs in RLEs.  ETRs   MAY register multicast EID entries using multicast RLOCs.  In such   cases, the ETRs will be joined to underlay multicast distribution   trees by using IGMP as a multicast host using mechanisms in [RFC2236]   and [RFC3376].Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                     [Page 14]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 20188.  PIM Any-Source Multicast Trees   LISP signal-free multicast can support ASM trees in limited but   acceptable topologies.  It is suggested, for the simplification of   building ASM trees across the LISP overlay, to have PIM-ASM run   independently in each LISP site.  What this means is that a PIM RP is   configured in each LISP site so PIM Register procedures and (*,G)   state maintenance is contained within the LISP site.   The following procedure will be used to support ASM in each LISP   site:   1.  In a receiver site, the RP is co-located with the ETR.  RPs for       different groups can be spread across each ETR, but is not       required.   2.  When (*,G) state is created in an ETR, the procedures inSection 5.1.2 are followed.  In addition, the ETR registers       (S-prefix,G), where S-prefix is 0/0 (the respective unicast       default route for the address-family) to the mapping system.   3.  In a source site, the RP is co-located with the ITR.  RPs for       different groups can be spread across each ITR, but is not       required.   4.  When a multicast source sends a packet, a PIM Register message is       delivered to the ITR, and the procedures inSection 5.2 are       followed.   5.  When the ITR sends a Map-Request for (S,G) and no receiver site       has registered for (S,G), the mapping system will return the       (0/0,G) entry to the ITR so it has a replication list of all the       ETRs that have received (*,G) state.   6.  The ITR stores the replication list in its map-cache for (S,G).       It replicates packets to all ETRs in the list.   7.  ETRs decapsulate packets and forward based on (*,G) state in       their site.   8.  When last-hop PIM routers join the newly discovered (S,G), the       ETR will store the state and follow the procedures inSection 5.1.2.Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                     [Page 15]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 20189.  Signal-Free Multicast for Replication Engineering   The mechanisms in this specification can be applied to the "LISP   Replication Engineering" [LISP-RE] design.  Rather than have the   layered LISP-RE RTR hierarchy use signaling mechanisms, the RTRs can   register their availability for multicast tree replication via the   mapping database system.   As stated in [LISP-RE], the RTR-layered hierarchy is used to avoid   head-end replication in replicating nodes closest to a multicast   source.  Rather than have multicast ITRs replicate to each ETR in an   RLE of an (S,G) mapping database entry, it could replicate to one or   more layer 0 RTRs in the LISP-RE hierarchy.   This document specifies how the RTR hierarchy is determined but not   the optimal layers of RTRs to be used.  Methods for determining   optimal paths or RTR topological closeness are out of scope for this   document.   There are two formats an (S,G) mapping database entry could have.   One format is a 'complete-format', and the other is a 'filtered-   format'.  A 'complete-format' entails an (S,G) entry having multiple   RLOC-records that contain both ETRs that have registered as well as   the RTRs at the first level of the LISP-RE hierarchy for the ITR to   replicate to.  When using 'complete-format', the ITR has the ability   to select if it replicates to RTRs or to the registered ETRs at the   receiver sites.  A 'filtered-format' (S,G) entry is one where the   Map-Server returns the RLOC-records that it decides the ITR SHOULD   use.  So replication policy is shifted from the ITRs to the mapping   system.  The Map-Servers can also decide for a given ITR if it uses a   different set of replication targets per (S,G) entry for which the   ITR is replicating for.   The procedure for the LISP-RE RTRs to make themselves available for   replication can occur before or after any receivers join an (S,G)   entry or any sources send for a particular (S,G) entry.  Therefore,   newly configured RTR state will be used to create new (S,G) state and   will be inherited into existing (S,G) state.  A set of RTRs can   register themselves to the mapping system or a third party can do so   on their behalf.  When RTR registration occurs, it is done with an   (S-prefix, G-prefix) entry so it can advertise its replication   services for a wide range of source/group combinations.   When a Map-Server receives (S,G) registrations from ETRs and   (S-prefix, G-prefix) registrations from RTRs, it has the option of   merging the RTR RLOC-records for each (S,G) that is more specific for   the (S-prefix, G-prefix) entry or keeping them separate.  When   merging, a Map-Server is ready to return a 'complete-format' Map-Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                     [Page 16]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 2018   Reply.  When keeping the entries separate, the Map-Server can decide   what to include in a Map-Reply when a Map-Request is received.  It   can include a combination of RLOC-records from each entry or decide   to use one or the other depending on policy configured.                       +---+                 +----+   Src-1 --------------|ITR|                 |ETR1|--------------- Rcv-1                       +---+                 +----+                           \                 /            Source-site-1   \               /    Receiver-site-1                             \             /                              \           /                   +----+      \         /     +----+                   |RTR1|       \       /      |RTR2|     Level-0                   +----+        \     /       +----+                         \  <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>  /                          \ <              > /                            < Core Network >                            <              >                            <vvvvvvvvvvvvvv>                            /     /   \    \                           /     /     \    \                   +----+ /     /       \    \ +----+                   |RTR3|      /         \     |RTR4|     Level-1                   +----+     /           \    +----+                             /             \                            /               \                       +----+                +----+   Rcv-2 --------------|ETR2|                |ETR3|--------------- Rcv-3                       +----+                +----+            Receiver-site-2                      Receiver-site-3                     Figure 2: LISP-RE Reference Model   Here is a specific example, illustrated in Figure 2, of (S,G) and   (S-prefix, G-prefix) mapping database entries when a source S is   behind an ITR, and there are receiver sites joined to (S,G) via ETR1,   ETR2, and ETR3.  And there exists a LISP-RE hierarchy of RTR1 and   RTR2 at level-0 and RTR3 and RTR4 at level-1:       EID-record: (S,G)          RLOC-record: RLE: (ETR1, ETR2, ETR3), p1       EID-record: (S-prefix, G-prefix)          RLOC-record: RLE: (RTR1(L0), RTR2(L0), RTR3(L1), RTR4(L1)), p1Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                     [Page 17]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 2018   The above entries are in the form in which they were registered and   are stored in a Map-Server.  When a Map-Server uses 'complete-   format', the Map-Reply it originates has the mapping record encoded   as:          EID-record: (S,G)              RLOC-record: RLE: (RTR1(L0), RTR3(L1)), p1              RLOC-record: RLE: (ETR1, ETR2, ETR3), p1   The above Map-Reply allows the ITR to decide if it replicates to the   ETRs or if it SHOULD replicate only to level-0 RTR1.  This decision   is left to the ITR since both RLOC-records have priority 1.  If the   Map-Server wanted to force the ITR to replicate to RTR1, it would set   the ETRs RLOC-record to a priority greater than 1.   When a Map_server uses 'filtered-format', the Map-Reply it originates   has the mapping record encoded as:          EID-record: (S,G)              RLOC-record: RLE: (RTR1(L0), RTR3(L1)), p1   An (S,G) entry can contain alternate RTRs.  So rather than   replicating to multiple RTRs, one RTR set MAY be used based on the   RTR reachability status.  An ITR can test reachability status to any   layer 0 RTR using RLOC-probing, so it can choose one RTR from a set   to replicate to.  When this is done, the RTRs are encoded in   different RLOC-records instead of together in one RLE RLOC-record.   This moves the replication load off the ITRs at the source site to   the RTRs inside the network infrastructure.  This mechanism can also   be used by level-n RTRs to level-n+1 RTRs.   The following mapping would be encoded in a Map-Reply sent by a Map-   Server and stored in the ITR.  The ITR would use RTR1 until it went   unreachable and then switch to use RTR2:          EID-record: (S,G)              RLOC-record: RTR1, p1              RLOC-record: RTR2, p210.  Security Considerations   [LISP-SEC] defines a set of security mechanisms that provide origin   authentication, integrity, and anti-replay protection to LISP's EID-   to-RLOC mapping data conveyed via the mapping lookup process.  LISP-   SEC also enables verification of authorization on EID-prefix claims   in Map-Reply messages.Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                     [Page 18]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 2018   Additional security mechanisms to protect the LISP Map-Register   messages are defined in [RFC6833].   The security of the mapping system infrastructure depends on the   particular mapping database used.  As an example, [RFC8111] defines a   public-key-based mechanism that provides origin authentication and   integrity protection to the LISP DDT protocol.   Map-Replies received by the Source-ITR can be signed (by the Map-   Server), so the ITR knows the replication list is from a legitimate   source.   Data-plane encryption can be used when doing unicast rep-   encapsulation as described in [RFC8061].11.  IANA Considerations   This document has no IANA actions.12.  References12.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119,              DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.   [RFC2236]  Fenner, W., "Internet Group Management Protocol, Version              2",RFC 2236, DOI 10.17487/RFC2236, November 1997,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2236>.   [RFC3376]  Cain, B., Deering, S., Kouvelas, I., Fenner, B., and A.              Thyagarajan, "Internet Group Management Protocol, Version              3",RFC 3376, DOI 10.17487/RFC3376, October 2002,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3376>.   [RFC3569]  Bhattacharyya, S., Ed., "An Overview of Source-Specific              Multicast (SSM)",RFC 3569, DOI 10.17487/RFC3569, July              2003, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3569>.   [RFC6830]  Farinacci, D., Fuller, V., Meyer, D., and D. Lewis, "The              Locator/ID Separation Protocol (LISP)",RFC 6830,              DOI 10.17487/RFC6830, January 2013,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6830>.Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                     [Page 19]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 2018   [RFC6831]  Farinacci, D., Meyer, D., Zwiebel, J., and S. Venaas, "The              Locator/ID Separation Protocol (LISP) for Multicast              Environments",RFC 6831, DOI 10.17487/RFC6831, January              2013, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6831>.   [RFC6833]  Fuller, V. and D. Farinacci, "Locator/ID Separation              Protocol (LISP) Map-Server Interface",RFC 6833,              DOI 10.17487/RFC6833, January 2013,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6833>.   [RFC7761]  Fenner, B., Handley, M., Holbrook, H., Kouvelas, I.,              Parekh, R., Zhang, Z., and L. Zheng, "Protocol Independent              Multicast - Sparse Mode (PIM-SM): Protocol Specification              (Revised)", STD 83,RFC 7761, DOI 10.17487/RFC7761, March              2016, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7761>.   [RFC8060]  Farinacci, D., Meyer, D., and J. Snijders, "LISP Canonical              Address Format (LCAF)",RFC 8060, DOI 10.17487/RFC8060,              February 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8060>.   [RFC8111]  Fuller, V., Lewis, D., Ermagan, V., Jain, A., and A.              Smirnov, "Locator/ID Separation Protocol Delegated              Database Tree (LISP-DDT)",RFC 8111, DOI 10.17487/RFC8111,              May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8111>.   [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase inRFC2119 Key Words",BCP 14,RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,              May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.12.2.  Informative References   [LISP-EID-MOBILITY]              Portoles-Comeras, M., Ashtaputre, V., Moreno, V., Maino,              F., and D. Farinacci, "LISP L2/L3 EID Mobility Using a              Unified Control Plane", Work in Progress,draft-ietf-lisp-eid-mobility-01, November 2017.   [LISP-MULTI-SIGNALING]              Farinacci, D. and M. Napierala, "LISP Control-Plane              Multicast Signaling", Work in Progress,draft-farinacci-lisp-mr-signaling-06, February 2015.   [LISP-RE]  Coras, F., Cabellos-Aparicio, A., Domingo-Pascual, J.,              Maino, F., and D. Farinacci, "LISP Replication              Engineering", Work in Progress,draft-coras-lisp-re-08,              November 2015.Moreno & Farinacci            Experimental                     [Page 20]

RFC 8378               Signal-Free LISP Multicast               May 2018   [LISP-SEC] Maino, F., Ermagan, V., Cabellos-Aparicio, A., and D.              Saucez, "LISP-Security (LISP-SEC)", Work in Progress,draft-ietf-lisp-sec-15, April 2018.   [RFC8061]  Farinacci, D. and B. Weis, "Locator/ID Separation Protocol              (LISP) Data-Plane Confidentiality",RFC 8061,              DOI 10.17487/RFC8061, February 2017,              <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8061>.Acknowledgements   The authors want to thank Greg Shepherd, Joel Halpern, and Sharon   Barkai for their insightful contribution to shaping the ideas in this   document.  A special thanks to Luigi Iannone, LISP WG co-chair, for   shepherding this working group document.  Thanks also goes to Jimmy   Kyriannis, Paul Vinciguerra, Florin Coras, and Yan Filyurin for   testing an implementation of this document.Authors' Addresses   Victor Moreno   Cisco Systems   170 Tasman Drive   San Jose, California  95134   United States of America   Email: vimoreno@cisco.com   Dino Farinacci   lispers.net   San Jose, CA  95120   United States of America   Email: farinacci@gmail.comMoreno & Farinacci            Experimental                     [Page 21]

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