Internet DRAFT - draft-chang-mpls-path-protection

draft-chang-mpls-path-protection



IETF Draft                                              Ken Owens 
Multi-Protocol Label Switching                          Erlang Technology, Inc.


Expires: January 2002                                   Vishal Sharma 
                                                        Metanoia, Inc.

                                                        Srinivas Makam 
                                                        Ben Mack-Crane
                                                        Tellabs Operations, Inc.

                                                        Changcheng Huang
                                                        Carleton University

                                                                July 2001

                A Path Protection/Restoration Mechanism for MPLS Networks
                        <draft-chang-mpls-path-protection-03.txt>



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Abstract

It is expected that MPLS-based recovery could become a viable option 
for obtaining faster restoration than layer 3 rerouting. To deliver 
reliable service, however, multi-protocol label switching (MPLS)[ ], 
[ ] requires a set of procedures to provide protection of the 
traffic carried on the label switched paths (LSPs). This imposes 
certain requirements on the path recovery process [ ], and requires 
procedures for the configuration of working and protection paths, 
for the communication of fault information to appropriate switching 
elements, and for the activation of appropriate switchover actions. 
This document specifies a mechanism for path protection switching 
and restoration in MPLS networks. 




Table of Contents 
Page 
1. Introduction								2
2. Purpose and Motivation						3
3. Key Features of the Proposed Mechanism				4
4. Core MPLS Path Protection Components					6
   4.1 Reverse Notification Tree (RNT)					7
   4.2 Protection Domain						10
   4.3 Multiple Faults							11
   4.4 Timers and Thresholds						12
5.0 Configuration							13
   5.1 Establishing a Protection Domain					13
      5.1.1 Explicit Route Protection Information			14
      5.1.2 Path Protection InformationInformation			15
   5.2 Establishing a Recovery/Protection Path				16
   5.3 Creating an RNT							16
   5.4 Engineering a Protection Domain					17
   5.5 Configuring Timers						18
6.0 Fault Detection							20
7.0 Fault Notification							21
8.0 Switch Over								22
9.0 Switchback or Restoration						22
10.0 Protocol Specific Extensions					23
11.0 Security Considerations 						23
12.0 Acknowledgements							23
13.0 Intellectual Property Considerations				23
14.0 Authors' Addresses							23
15.0 References								24

1.0	Introduction

With the migration of real-time and high-priority traffic to IP  
networks, and with the need for IP networks to increasingly carry 
mission-critical business data, network survivability has become 
critical for future IP networks. Current routing algorithms, despite 
being robust and survivable, can take a substantial amount of time, 
to recover from a failure, on the order of several seconds to 
minutes, which can cause serious disruption of service in the 
interim. This is unacceptable for many applications that require a 
highly reliable service, and has motivated network providers to give 
serious consideration to the issue of network survivability. 

Path-oriented technologies, such as MPLS, can be used to support  
advanced survivability requirements and enhance the reliability of 
IP networks. Different from legacy IP networks, MPLS networks 
establish label switched paths (LSPs), where packets with the same 
label follow the same path. This potentially allows MPLS networks to 
pre-establish protection LSPs for working LSPs, and achieve better 
protection switching times than those in legacy IP networks. With 
this objective in mind, the present contribution describes a 
mechanism to protect paths  (or path segments) in MPLS networks. 
Before discussing the specifics of this contribution, we first 
outline the major components of a path protection solution, and 
point out those that are within the scope of this document. A 
complete solution for path protection requires the following 
components:
(i)	A method for selecting the working and protection paths.
(ii)	A method for signaling the setup of the working and protection 
paths.
(iii)	A fault detection mechanism to detect faults along a path.
(iv)	A fault notification mechanism, to convey information about the 
occurrence of a fault to a network entity responsible for 
reacting to the fault and taking appropriate corrective action.
(v)	A switchover mechanism to move traffic over from the working 
path to the protection path.
(vi) A repair detection mechanism, to detect that a fault along a 
path has been repaired. 
(vii) An (optional) switchback or restoration mechanism, for 
switching traffic back to the original working path, once it 
is discovered that the fault has corrected or has been 
repaired.

Observe that component (i) consists of algorithms and techniques 
that are used to select the working and protection paths based on 
specific criteria, established via policy or other constraints, and 
can be proprietary. It is therefore not subject to standardization, 
and is outside the scope of this draft. Therefore, the protection 
mechanism described later assumes that the working and protection 
paths are known to the LSR responsible for path setup, and are 
either communicated to it or are calculated by some intelligence at 
that LSR. Component (ii), which involves establishing the working 
and protection paths via signaling, is within the scope of the 
draft, and is discussed in Section 3.1. 

A detailed specification of fault detection mechanisms is outside 
the scope of this draft, but the specification of how the path 
protection mechanism works with different fault detection methods is 
in scope, and is discussed in Section 5. In particular, we consider 
how the mechanism works for two practical cases of interest: (a) 
when only the end node of a path is responsible for detecting 
faults, and (b) when all the nodes along the path are responsible 
for detecting faults. The main focus of this draft is the 
specification of an efficient fault notification mechanism that 
takes LSP merging into account (irrespective of whether they are 
physically or virtually merged). Switchover and switchback 
mechanisms also are also within the scope of the draft, but 
component (vi) is outside the scope of the draft, so the draft does 
not specify the details of the mechanisms used to detect that a 
fault has been repaired.

2.0	Motivation and Purpose

The framework document [3] lays out the various options for MPLS-
based restoration/recovery. However, candidate approaches 
corresponding to various viable recovery options are still needed. 
Our work on proposing a path protection mechanism for MPLS networks 
is motivated by the belief that path protection (in conjunction with 
local repair) will be needed for truly reliable network operation. 
The purpose of this contribution is to propose a path protection 
mechanism that is:
(i) fast (compared to Layer 3, with the goal of being comparable to 
SONET),
(ii) scalable,
(iii)bandwidth efficient,
(iv)allows for path merging (i.e., is merging compatible), and
(v) works at the MPLS layer (that is, only uses knowledge that is 
commonly available to MPLS routing and signaling modules).

The major differences between this 02 version and the previous 01 
version are:

  -- Protection domain configuration details

  -- Protection domain configuration information elements added

3.0	Key Features of the Proposed Mechanism

This contribution describes an MPLS-based path recovery mechanism 
that can facilitate fast protection switching. The mechanism 
currently supports 1:1 protection [3]. 
Bypass tunneling is for further study. First, because tunnel setup 
itself is not adequately defined yet, and second, because even 
assuming a tunnel could be setup, in the presence of tunnels (or 
tunneled segments) the mechanism still requires the ability to setup 
bi-directional tunnels, which is not defined yet.  The mechanism has 
several timers to enable it to inter-work with protection mechanisms 
at other layers. Some of the key features of the protection 
mechanism are:

-- Special tree structure to efficiently distribute fault and/or 
recovery information.

Existing published proposals for MPLS recovery have not addressed 
the issue of fault notification in detail. Specifically, none of 
these proposals has discussed how to perform fault notification for 
the label merging case. In this draft, we propose a new fault 
notification structure called the reverse notification tree (RNT), 
which makes fault notification efficient and scalable (we provide 
details of the RNT in subsequent sections).

-- Lightweight notification mechanism.

The lack of MPLS OAM functionality requires the definition of a 
lighweight stateless notification mechanism. Reliable transport 
mechanisms, such as TCP, are typically state-oriented and therefore 
difficult to scale. It is also very difficult to support point-to-
multipoint communications based on reliable transport mechanisms. In 
our scheme, therefore, we use a stateless notification mechanism to 
achieve scalability. The notification is based on the transmission 
of packets that are sent periodically until the nodes responsible 
for switchover learn of the fault. Since no acknowledgements or 
handshaking between adjacent nodes is needed, the mechanism works 
only with timers and does not require the maintenance of state. 

--Minimize delays of a recovery cycle. 

An objective of the mechanism proposed in this draft is to minimize 
the duration of the recovery cycle. Thus a stateless transport 
mechanism together with high priority for control traffic minimizes 
notification delay. Likewise, a simple label merging approach to 
handle the traffic arriving on the working and protection paths 
eliminates the need for synchronization (or handshaking) between the 
LSRs at the two ends of a recovery path. 
 
-- Work at the MPLS layer (that is, use information available to the 
MPLS signaling and routing modules at the nodes)

The mechanism is designed to operate using only MPLS constructs and 
the knowledge available to the MPLS modules at the nodes. Therefore, 
the mechanism assumes, by default, that the working and protection 
paths merge at a path merge LSR (PML) within the domain under 
consideration. However, since the mechanism does not depend on the 
path selection method, it also works in settings where a PML does 
not exist, and a path selection algorithm (outside the scope of this 
I-D) determines that the working and protection paths must terminate 
at different egress LSRs. Note, however, that for the path selection 
mechanism to be able to make this determination, it may need 
knowledge beyond that which is commonly available to the MPLS 
modules at a node. This is because determining whether a working 
path can be protected by another path with a different egress LSR 
requires Layer 3 knowledge to ascertain whether the LSR terminating 
the recovery path is acceptable. In the remainder of this document, 
we will focus on the PML case, with the understanding that the non-
PML case is also supported.

In addition to the key features outlined above, some other 
characteristics of the mechanism are:

-- A liveness message to detect faults.

Although fault detection is outside the scope of this draft, we will 
allow the existence of a generic ''liveness'' message that can 
complement any fault detection mechanism. This liveness message may, 
for example, be provided as part of an user/control plane OAM 
function, or by an existing Hello message (as the RSVP "Hello"  
message) with an appropriately set timer value. We do not define 
specific liveness mechanisms in this draft, deferring instead to 
work on OAM in MPLS, which is where we expect such a liveness 
message to be defined.

Our assumption is that faults fall into different classes, and that 
different faults may be detected and corrected by different layers. 
Some faults (for example, the loss of signal or transmitter faults) 
may be detected and corrected by lower layer mechanisms (such as 
SONET), while others (for example, failure of the reverse link) may 
be detected (but may not be corrected) by lower layers and may be 
communicated to the MPLS layer. Still other faults (such as node 
failures or faults on the reverse link) may not be detected by lower 
layers, and will have to be detected and corrected at the MPLS 
layer.  Therefore, we adopt the liveness message as a complementary 
fault detection mechanism.

We note that in this draft we confine our discussion of protection 
to a single MPLS domain, and do not consider protection/recovery 
across multiple MPLS domains or across multiple administrative 
boundaries. We note, however, that protection mechanisms in 
different domains may be concatenated, and that (at least initially) 
these mechanisms may work autonomously, across the (possibly) 
multiple points of attachment between two adjacent domains. However, 
coordination of protection mechanisms across multiple domains or 
across multiple transport technologies is currently out of the scope 
of this document.

4.0 Core MPLS Path Protection Components

This document assumes the terminology given in[1], [2], [3] , and 
introduces some additional terms. For the convenience of the reader, 
we repeat here some of the terminology from earlier documents.

Working Path
The protected path that carries traffic before the occurrence of a 
fault. The working path is the part of the LSP between the PSL and 
the PML (if any) or, in the absence of a PML, between the PSL and an 
egress LSR. A working path is denoted by the sequence of LSRs 
through which it passes. For example, in Fig. 1, the working path 
that starts at LSR 1 and terminates at LSR 7 is denoted by (1-2-3-4-
6-7).

Recovery Path
The path by which traffic is restored after the occurrence of a 
fault. In other words, the path along which traffic is directed by 
the recovery mechanism. The recovery path can either be an 
equivalent recovery path and ensure no reduction in quality of 
service or be a limited recovery path and thereby not guarantee the 
same quality of service (or some other criteria of performance) as 
the working path. A recovery path is also denoted by the sequence of 
LSRs through which it passes. Again, in Fig. 1, the recovery path 
that starts at LSR 1 and terminates at LSR 7 is denoted by (1-5-7).

Path Switch LSR (PSL)
An LSR that is the transmitter of both the working path traffic and 
its corresponding recovery path traffic. The PSL is responsible for 
switching of the traffic between the working path and the recovery 
path. The PSL is the origin of the recovery traffic, but may or may 
not be the origin of the working traffic (that is the working path 
may be transiting the PSL).

Path Merge LSR (PML)

An LSR that receives both working path traffic and its corresponding 
recovery path traffic, and either merges their traffic into a single 
outgoing path, or, it is itself the destination, passes the traffic 
on to the higher layer protocols. The PML is the destination of the 
recovery path but may or may not be the destination of the working 
path.
 
Intermediate LSR
An LSR on a working or recovery path that is neither a PSL nor a PML 
for that path.

FIS (Fault Indication Signal)
A signal that indicates that a fault along a path has occurred. It 
is relayed by each intermediate LSR to its upstream or downstream 
neighbor, until it reaches an LSR that is set up to perform MPLS 
recovery.

FRS (Fault Recovery Signal)
A signal that indicates that a fault along a path has been repaired. 
Like the FIS, it is relayed by each intermediate LSR to its upstream 
or downstream neighbor, until it reaches an LSR that performs a 
switchback to the path for which the FIS was received.

Liveness Message
A generic name for any message exchanged periodically between two 
adjacent LSRs that serves as a link probing mechanism. It provides 
an integrity check of the forward and backward directions of the 
link between the two LSRs as well as a check of neighbor liveness.

Path Continuity Test
A test that verifies the integrity and continuity of a path or a 
path segment. The details of such a test are beyond the scope of 
this draft. (This could be accomplished, for example, by sending a 
control message along the same links and nodes as those traversed by 
the data traffic.)

 
4.1 Reverse Notification Tree

Since LSPs are unidirectional entities and recovery requires the 
notification of faults to the LSR(s) responsible for switchover to 
the recovery path, a mechanism must be provided for the fault 
indication and the fault repair notification to travel from the 
point of occurrence of the fault back to the PSL(s). The situation 
is complicated in the following two cases:

(i) Physically merged LSPs: With label merging multiple working 
paths may converge to form a multipoint-to-point tree, with the 
PSLs as the leaves. In this case, therefore, the fault 
indication and -repair notification should be able to travel 
along a reverse path of the working path to all the PSLs 
affected by the fault. For example, in Fig. 1, for a fault along 
link 34 the affected PSLs are 1 and 9, where as for a fault 
along link 23, the only affected PSL is 1.

(ii) Virtually merged LSPs: When several LSPs originating at 
different LSRs share a common segment beyond some node, and 
share a common identifier (such as the SESSION ID in RSVP-TE), 
we call such LSPs virtually merged. In this case also, savings 
in notification can be realized by sending a single 
notification towards the affected PSLs along segments shared by 
the LSPs emanating from these PSLs, and allowing the 
notification to branch out at the merge node(s). For example, 
in Fig. 1, for a failure along link 67 a single notification 
could be sent for working paths 1-2-3-4-6-7 and 8-9-3-4-6-7 
along their common segment 7-6-4-3.  The notification would 
branch out at node 3, which is the node where the LSP from node 
1 to node 7 and the LSP from node 8 to node 7 merge.

In both the cases above, an appropriate notification path can be 
provided by the reverse notification tree (RNT which is a point-to-
multipoint tree that is an exact mirror image of the converged 
working paths, along which the FIS and the FRS travel.  (see Fig. 
1). There are several advantages to using an RNT:

-- The RNT can be established in association with the working 
path(s), simply by making each LSR along a working path remember 
its upstream neighbor (or the collection of upstream neighbors 
whose working paths converge at the LSR and exit as one). Thus, 
no multicast routing is required. We elaborate more on the RNT in 
Section 3.

-- Only one RNT is required for all the working paths that merge 
(either physically or virtually) to form the multipoint-to-point 
forward path. The RNT is rooted at an appropriately chosen LSR 
along the common segment of the merged working LSPs and is 
terminated at the PSLs. All intermediate LSRs on the converged 
working paths share the same RNT.

Therefore, the RNT enables a reduction in the signaling overhead 
associated with recovery. Unlike schemes that treat each LSP 
independently, and require signaling between a PSL and the PML 
individually for each LSP, the RNT allows for only one  (or a small 
number of) signaling messages on the shared segments of the LSPs.

-- The RNT can be implemented either at Layer 3 or at Layer 2. In 
either case, the delay along the RNT needs to be carefully 
controlled. This may be ensured by giving the highest priority to 
the fault and repair notification packets, which travel along the 
RNT.





                                                              PML
+----+ L[11,13]            +----+                         +----+
| 11 |------+       +======| 14 |=========================| 15 |
|    |      |       ||     |    |         P[14,15]        |    |
+----+      |       ||     +----+                         +----+
            |       ||                                     | :
         +----+     ||P[13,14]                             | |
         | 13 |======+                                     | :
     PSL |    |-------+                                    | |
         +----+<-..-: |                                    | :
            |       | |                                    | |
    L[12,13]|       : |L[13,5]                             | :
+----+      |     +----+                 L[5,15]           | |
| 12 |------+     |    |-----------------------------------+ :
|    |        +===|  5 |<-.-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-..-+
+----+        ||  |    |======================================+
 P[1,5]       ||  +----+                P[5,7]               ||
     +============+                                             ||
  ||                                                         ||
  ||                                                         ||
+----+    +----+ L[2,3]             L[4,6] +----+  L[6,7]  +----+
| 1  |----| 2  |--------+          +-------| 6  |----------| 7  |
|    |<.-.|    |<-..-+  |          | +-..-<|    |<-..-..-..|    |
+----+    +----+ N32 :  |I23       | :     +----+          +----+
 PSL                 |  |          | |                   PML ||
                     :  |          | :                       ||
                     |  |          | |                       ||
                     :  |  L[3,4]  | :                       ||
                    +----+ I34    +----+                     ||    
                    | 3  |--------| 4  |              P[10,7]||
                    |    |<-..-..-|    |                     ||
                    +----+    N43 +----+                     ||    
                 I93 | |                                     ||
                     | :                                     ||
                     | |N39                                  ||
                     | :                                     ||
+----+     +----+    | |                   +----+            ||
| 8  |-----| 9  |----+ :                   | 10 |=============+           
|    |     |    |<-..-.+      P[9,10]      |    |
+----+     +----+==========================+----+ 
            PSL
Legend:
---  = Working path
===  = Protection path
-..- = Reverse Notification Tree
---- = Working path
L[x,y] = Working path link between nodes x and y.
P[x,y] = Protection path link between nodes x and y.
Lxy    = Label used by the LSP traversing link L[x,y] from x to y.  
Nxy   = Label used for RNT traffic sent from node x to node y.
Ixy   = Interface between nodes x and y.       

Figure 1: Illustration of MPLS protection configuration

4.2 Protection Domain

A protection domain is defined as the set of LSRs over which a 
working path and its corresponding recovery path are routed.  Thus, 
a protection domain is bounded by the LSRs that provide the 
switching and (if needed) the merging functions for MPLS protection, 
namely, the PSL and the PML (if present), respectively.
In other words, a protection domain in bounded by the PSL at one 
end, and by the LSRs that form the end of the working or protection 
path at the other. In general, if the working and protection paths 
do not merge within the MPLS domain, the LSRs at the end of the 
working and protection paths may be egress LSRs. The PSL and the PML 
(alternatively, the end points of the working and protection paths 
within the MPLS domain under consideration) are identified during 
the setting up of an LSP, either via an offline algorithm or by an 
algorithm that runs at the head-end of an LSP to decide the specific 
nodes that the LSP must pass through. (Note that segments of the LSP 
between the PSL and the PML may be loosely routed, as long as the 
PSL and PML are known). Recovery should ideally be performed between 
the source and destination (end-to-end), but in some cases segment 
recovery may be desired (for example, when certain segments are more 
unreliable than others) or may be the only option (due to the 
topology of the network, see Fig. 1). For example, in Fig. 1, the 
working path 8-9-3-4-6-7, can only have protection on the segment 9-
3-4-6-7.

Note that when multiple LSPs merge into a single LSP or when 
multiple LSPs that share a common identifier follow the same path 
beyond some node, the working paths corresponding to these LSPs also 
converge. As explained in Section 4.4, an RNT can be used in this 
case for propagating the failure and repair notification back to the 
concerned PSL(s). We can therefore have a situation where different 
protection domains share a common RNT. A protection domain is 
denoted by specifying the working path and the recovery path. For 
example, in Fig. 1, the protection domain bounded by LSR 1 and LSR 
7, is denoted by (1-2-3-4-6-7, 1-5-7). 

4.2.1  Relationship between protection domains with different RNTs

When protection domains have different RNTs, two cases may arise, 
depending on whether or not any portions of the two domains overlap, 
that is, have nodes or links in common. If the protection domains do 
not overlap, the protection domains are independent (note that by 
virtue of the RNTs in the two domains being different, neither the 
working paths nor the RNTs in the two domains can overlap). In other 
words, failures in one domain do not interact with failures in the 
other domain. For example, the protection domain defined by (9-3-4-
6-7, 9-10-7) is completely independent of the domain defined by (11-
13-5-15, 11-13-14-15). As a result, as long as faults occur in 
independent domains, the network shown in Fig. 1 can tolerate 
multiple -faults (for example, simultaneous failures on the working 
path in each domain).

If protection domains with disjoint RNTs overlap, it implies that 
the protection path of one intersects the working path of the other. 
Therefore, although failures on the working paths of the two domains 
do not affect one another, failures on the protection path of one 
may affect the working path of the other and visa versa. For 
example, the protection domain defined by (1-2-3-4-6-7, 1-5-7) is 
not independent of the domain defined by (11-13-5-15, 11-13-14-15) 
since LSR 5 lies on the protection path in the former domain and on 
the working path in the latter domain. 

4.2.2 Relationship between protection domains with the same RNT

When protection domains have the same RNT, different failures along 
the working paths may affect both paths differently.  As shown in 
Fig. 1, for example, working paths 1-2-3-4-5-7 and 9-3-4-6-7 share 
the same RNT. As a result, for a failure on some segments of the 
working path, both domains will be affected, resulting in a 
protection switch in both (for example, the segment 3-4-6-7 in Fig. 
1). Likewise, for failures on other segments of the working path, 
only one domain may be affected (for example, failure on segment 2-3 
affects only the first working path 1-2-3-4-6-7, where as failure on 
the segment 9-3 affects only the second working path 9-3-4-6-7).

4.3 Multiple Faults

We note that transferring the working traffic to the recovery path 
is enough to take care of multiple faults on the working path. 
However, if multiple faults happen such that there is at least one 
failure on both the working and recovery paths, MPLS layer recovery 
may no longer suffice. In this case, the network will either have to 
allow for Layer 3 rerouting or have the PSL inform the administrator 
via an alarm, thus enabling the manual reconfiguration of a 
different working and backup path. (An OAM functionality could 
greatly simplify such communication.) Note that for a PSL to be able 
to generate an alarm, it must also have a mechanism for detecting 
faults on the recovery path, such as a RNT for the recovery path (to 
allow for the fault notification on the recovery path to be 
propagated to the PSL).


4.4 Timers and Thresholds

For its proper operation, the protection mechanism described in this 
contribution uses the following timers and thresholds:

5.0 Configuration

In the following sections, we describe the operation of the path 
protection mechanism, and explain the various steps involved with 
reference to Fig. 1.

Protection configuration consists of two aspects: establishing the 
protection domain and creating the reverse notification tree. The 
protection domain configuration involves either configuring the 
working and protection path pair or the protection path of an 
established working path. These aspects are discussed in this 
section. 

5.1 Establishing a Protection Domain

The label distribution protocol encompasses negotiations in which 
two label distribution peers engage in order to learn of each 
other's MPLS capabilities. The label distribution protocol is used 
to establish a protection domain via signaling. The protection 
domain consists of a working path and a recovery/protection path 
pair. MPLS defines two methods for label distribution, Label 
Distribution Protocol (LDP/CR-LDP) and ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP). 
Our mechanism is designed to work with either of these label 
distribution protocols.

LDP/CR-LDP and RSVP allow the path to be setup loosely (each node 
determines it's next hop) or explicitly (each node has been given 
it's next hop). We assume that protection paths will be setup 
explicitly, however there is no requirement for this. These 
protocols are being extended to provide a mechanism by which 
protection establishment can be signaled and created. The 
funtionality being introduced is:

-- Explicit Route Protection information to identify the PSL and 
PML, and thus the protection domain.

-- Path Protection  information to configure the nodes in the 
protection domain.

The establishment of the protection domain requires the 
identification of the working path and the protection path. There 
are two separate cases to consider: non-merged (point-to-point) and 
merged (multipoint-to-point). The working and protection paths for 
RSVP/CR-LDP are identified as follows:

Non-merged:

-- RSVP:   Same Sender Template (IP tunnel sender IP address, 
LSPID)

-- Cr-LDP: Same LSPID TLV (Ingress LSR Router ID and Local CR-LSP 
ID)


Merged:

-- RSVP:  Same session object (IP tunnel end point address and 
Tunnel ID)

-- Cr-LDP: Same FEC TLV (Host Address and Prefix)

5.1.1 Explicit Route Protection Information

In order to identify the PSL, PML, and the nodes between the PSL and 
PML that make up a protection domain, anExplicit Route Protection 
fieldhas been added to the Explicit Route Field  of CR-LDP and RSVP-
TE [8][9]. The Explicit Route Protection field will first appear 
when the configuration message reaches the PSL. This denotes the 
start of a protection domain. When the PSL processes the Explicit 
Route Protection field, it will modify the configuration message 
with a Path Protection Field that is directly derived from the 
Explicit Route Protection Field and then forwards the configuration 
message. 

The configuration message will continue along the path until the 
second Explicit Route Protection Field is evaluated at the PML. This 
denotes the end of the protection domain. When the PML processes the 
Explicit Route Protection Field, it will remove the Path Protection 
Field from the configuration message and then forward the message. 
This same process would be perfomed for each protection domain along 
the configuration message path. For path protection it is critical 
to identify the PSL,PML, and nodes within the protection domain. The 
following attributes are specified in this field. 

1.	The Router ID of the PSL or PML;
2.	Whether the node processing the Explicit Route Protection field 
at the current hop is a PSL or PML; 
3.	What the protection type is 1+1, 1:1, etc.;
4.	Whether this is the configuration message for the working or 
protection path;
5.	If the protection path resources can be used for extra traffic 
becides the protected traffic;
6.	Whether the RNT is implemented as a Hop-by-hop (Layer 3) LSP, 
as an MPLS (Layer 2) LSP, or over SONET K1/K2 bytes;
7.	What to configure the hold-off and wait-to-restore timers; and
8.	If the protection switching action is revertive.

For example, the Explicit Route Field of the configuration message  
might look like the following:
 
	Ipv4 Address A
	Ipv4 Address B
	Explicit Route Protection (PSL, Router ID = current hop Ipv4 
Router ID B)
	Ipv4 Address C
	Ipv4 Address D	
  Ipv4 Address E	
  Ipv4 Address F	
  Explicit Route Protection (PML, Router ID = current Hop Ipv4 
Router ID F)
	Ipv4 Address G

Denotes the Explicit Route path of two Ipv4 hops (A and B) with the 
second Ipv4 (B) hop identified as the PSL by the presence of the 
Explicit Route Protection field. The PSL signifies the beginning of 
the protection domain and as such creates the Path Protection Field 
in the configuration message and forwards the message to the next 
hop. 

The configuration message continues for four more hops with the 
nodes processing the Path Protection Field. The fourth IPv4 (F)hop 
is identified as the PML by the presence of the Explicit Route 
Protection field. The PML signifies the end of the protection domain 
and as such removes the Path Protection Field from the configuration 
message prior to forwarding the message to the last hop. This 
process could continue if other protection domains are present after 
the PML.

5.1.2 Path Protection Information

The Path Protection specifies whether path protection is activated,  
identifies whether the path is the working path or protection path, 
and  configures each node with in the protection domain[8][9]. The 
PSL node learns during a working/protection path configuration 
process, which working and protection paths are coupled together. 
The PML node learns during a working/protection path configuration 
process, which working and protection paths are merged to the 
outgoing network switch element. The PSL/PML pair constitute a 
protection domain.

The attributes required to establish the Protection Domain are 
defined in the framework[3]:

1	RNT Type: Specifies whether the RNT is implemented as a Hop-by-
hop (Layer 3) LSP, as an MPLS (Layer 2) LSP, or over SONET 
K1/K2 bytes.
2	Timer Options: Specifies the hold-off and wait-to-restore time 
requirements.
3	Revertive Option: Specifies whether the recovery action is 
revertive.

5.2 Establishing a Protection/Recovery Path
The establishment of the recovery path requires the identification 
of the working path.  There are two separate cases to consider: non-
merged (point-to-point) and merged (point-to-multipoint). For path 
protection mechanisms, the working and protection paths for are 
identified as follows:

Non-merged:

-- RSVP:   Same Sender Template (IP tunnel sender IP address, 
LSPID)

-- Cr-LDP: Same LSPID TLV (Ingress LSR Router ID and Local CR-LSP 
ID)

Merged:

-- RSVP:  Same session object (IP tunnel end point address and 
Tunnel ID)

-- Cr-LDP: Same FEC TLV (Host Address and Prefix)


The Explicit Route Protection Field would only carry the protection 
path configuration information. The configuration of the protection 
path would be identical to the description provided in 5.1 for the 
protection path.

In most cases, the working path and its corresponding recovery path 
would be specified during LSP setup, either via a path selection 
algorithm (running at a centralized location or at an ingress LSR) 
or via administrative configuration. Observe that the specification 
of the path, does not, strictly speaking, require the entire path to 
be explicitly specified. Rather, it requires only that the PSL and 
PML (or in the absence of a PML, the path egress points out of the 
MPLS domain) be specified, with the segments between them being 
loosely routed, if required. In other words, the path would be 
established between the two nodes at the boundaries of the 
protection domain via (possibly loose) explicit (or source) routing 
using LDP [ ], [ ] /RSVP [ ], [ ] signaling (alternatively, via 
constraint-based routing, or using manual configuration). 

5.3 Creating the RNT

The RNT is used for propagating the FIS and the FRS, and can be 
created by a simple extension to the LSP setup process. Note: An 
MPLS OAM notification is preferable and could make use of the RNT. 
During the establishment of the working path, the signaling message 
carries with it the identity (address) of the upstream node that 
sent it (for example, via the path attribute in RSVP). Each LSR 
along the path simply remembers the identity of its immediately 
prior upstream neighbor on each incoming link. Through the neighbor 
discovery mechanism of the routing protocol, each LSR finds the 
interface connecting it to the upstream LSRs. (It is assumed in this 
draft that there is a bi-directional connection between two 
neighboring LSRs, such as a bi-directional SONET link, a bi-
directional lower layer network link (e.g., an ATM VP), or a pair of 
bi-directional tunnels over an IP subnetwork.) The node then creates 
an ''inverse'' cross-connect table that for each protected outgoing 
LSP maintains a list of the incoming LSPs that merge into that 
outgoing LSP, together with the identity of the upstream node and 
incoming interface that each incoming LSP comes through. Upon 
receiving an FIS, an LSR extracts the labels contained in it (which 
are the labels of the protected LSPs that use the outgoing link that 
the FIS was received on) and checks whether the current LSR is the 
PSL for that LSP. If it is it terminates the FIS.  Otherwise, it 
consults its inverse cross-connect table to determine the identity 
of the upstream nodes that the protected LSPs come from, and creates 
and transmits an FIS to each of them. 

Therefore, based on whether the RNT is implemented at Layer 3 or 
Layer 2, two cases arise:

If the RNT is implemented by a point-to-multipoint LSP, then the 
working path can be bound to the ingress label and interface of the 
RNT LSP at a LSR. Note that the RNT only be a point-to-multipoint 
LSP in the case of mergeing, otherwise the RNT is implemented as a 
point-to-point LSP. The ingress label and interface can then be used 
as an index into the "inverse" cross-connect table to find the 
egress labels and interfaces of the RNT LSP as shown in Table 2. 
Upon receiving an FIS, an LSR extracts the labels and checks whether 
it is the PSL for that LSP. If it is, it terminates the FIS. 
Otherwise, it consults its inverse cross-connect table to determine 
the outgoing labels and interfaces, performs a label swap and 
forwards the FIS to the appropriate upstream node(s). For example, 
consider Figure 1, and assume that a Layer 2 point-to-multipoint 
RNT, rooted at LSR 7 and extending to LSRs 1 and 9, is bound to the 
multipoint-to-point forward paths starting at LSRs 1 and 8 and 
terminating at LSR 7. Now in case of a fault on link L[4,6], LSR 3 
receives an FIS on the RNT in a labeled packet with label N43. It 
uses this label as an index into its inverse cross-connect table, 
and learns that there are two previous nodes (namely those reachable 
via interfaces I23 and I93 respectively) that the FIS needs to be 
forwarded to. It encapsulates the received FIS into a labeled 
packets with labels N32 and N39, and dispatches them along 
interfaces I23 and I93 respectively.
 

Table 2. An example inverse cross-connect table for LSR 3 using MPLS 
(Layer 2) RNT


If the RNT is implemented by a hop-by-hop Layer 3 mechanism, using, 
for example, UDP packets (with a specific port number to identify 
notification message type), then the egress label and interface of 
the working path can be used as an index into the inverse cross-
connect table to obtain the IP addresses of the previous hop(s) and 
the associated outgoing interface(s), as illustrated in Table 3. On 
each hop, the FIS carried in the UDP packet carries the label and 
interface of the working path for that hop. Thus, if the receiving 
node is not a PSL, the label and interface in the FIS can be 
extracted and can be used to access the inverse cross-connect table. 
The label and interface used by the working LSP on the hop(s) to the 
upstream node(s) are then inserted into FIS packet(s), and the FIS 
packet(s) transmitted to the appropriate upstream node(s) along the 
interface specified the inverse cross-connect table. Therefore, in 
the hop-by-hop mechanism the FIS packets are not forwarded by a node 
to its previous hops using its default layer 3 forwarding table. 
Rather, these packets are forwarded via the outgoing interface 
extracted from the node's inverse cross-connect table. As in the 
example above, in case of a fault on link L[4,6], LSR 3 receives an 
FIS from LSR 4 that contains the outgoing label L34 and the outgoing 
interface I34 of the LSP affected by the fault. LSR3 uses these to 
index its inverse cross-connect table (see Table 3), and learns, as 
before, that there are two previous nodes (those reachable via 
interfaces I23 and I93, respectively) that must receive an FIS. It 
then creates two FIS packets as follows. The first, for transmission 
along interface I23, contains the label L23 used by LSR 2 to 
transmit data to LSR 3 along the working LSP. The second, for 
transmission along interface I93, contains the label L93 used by LSR 
9 to transmit data to LSR 3 along the working LSP. 

Table 3. An example inverse cross-connect table for LSR 3 using a 
hop-by-hop (Layer 3) RNT


The roles of the various core protection/recovery components are:

PSL: The PSL must be able to correlate the RNT with the working and 
recovery paths. To this end, it maintains a table with a list of 
working LSPs protected by an RNT, and the identity of the recovery 
LSPs that each working path is to be switched to in the event of a 
failure on the working path. It need not maintain an inverse cross-
connect table (for those LSPs and working paths for which it is the 
PSL).

PML: The PML, in general, has to remember all of its upstream 
neighbors and associate them with the appropriate working paths and 
RNTs. If the PML is also the root of the RNT, it has to associate 
each of its upstream nodes with a working path and RNT, but it need 
not maintain an inverse cross-connect table (for those LSPs and 
working paths for which it is a PML).

Intermediate LSR: An intermediate LSR has to only remember all of 
its upstream neighbors and associate them with the appropriate 
working paths and RNTs, and has to maintain an "inverse" cross-
connect table.

5.4	Engineering a Protection Domain

For 1:1 protection, the bandwidth (if any) reserved for a 
protection/recovery path should be the same as the bandwidth 
reserved for its corresponding working path. This guarantees the 
same bandwidth for the protected traffic after protection switching. 
If the LSRs on the protection path support excess mode [3], the 
bandwidth reserved on the protection path for protecting high 
priority traffic can be used by other lower priority traffic 
streams. That is, lower priority traffic that has a segment in 
common with the recovery path, use the bandwidth of the recovery 
path, as long as the recovery path is not called into use. When the 
recovery path is pressed into service, the low priority traffic will 
be discarded to allow for the actual working traffic to take its 
place. Also, if delay, jitter or other QoS parameters are to be 
satisfied, the protection path in 1:1 protection should be chosen 
such that these requirements are satisfied.

Since the volume of signaling traffic (e.g., FIS/FRS messages, or 
liveness messages) is small, in general bandwidth need not be 
reserved for the signaling traffic provided that there exist other 
mechanisms that can ensure that the delay requirements of signaling 
messages are met (by using, for example, the highest priority for 
signaling messages).

For bypass tunneling protection, multiple working LSPs may share the 
same protection bandwidth by tunneling protection LSPs over a common 
path. This requires that  the working paths of these LSPs be 
disjoint, except at the PSL and PML, so that they can be assumed to 
not all fail at the same time. In this case, the bandwidth reserved 
on the tunnel will be the maximum of all individual paths. 
Otherwise, a bypass tunnel could be created to carry all the backup 
paths, with the bandwidth reserved for the tunnel being the maximum 
bandwidth required over all failure scenarios on the working LSPs. 

5.5 Configuring Timers

The purpose of timers t1/t1' is to control the tradeoff between 
notification delay of the FIS/FRS and the resources consumed when 
sending the FIS/FRS. If t1/t1' is large, it may take a relatively 
long time for the node that initiated the FIS/FRS transmission to 
send the second the FIS/FRS if the first FIS/FRS message is lost, 
thereby increasing notification delay. On the other hand, if t1/t1' 
is small, the repetitive sending of FIS/FRS messages may waste 
bandwidth and processing power because the first message may already 
have reached the PSL(s).

It is assumed that after t2/t2' it is not necessary to do protection 
at MPLS layer, either because it is no longer useful or because by 
that time an upper layer protection mechanism will have been 
triggered.

The timers t4/t4' are used to control the frequency of liveness 
messages sent between neighboring LSRs, so their purpose is the same 
as those of timers t1/t1'. While frequent exchanges of liveness 
messages can unnecessarily consume network resources, too few 
exchanges may delay the discovery of faults. To accommodate delay 
jitter, t4' may be set at a slightly different value from t4.

The timers t5/t6 are used to allow lower layer protection to take 
effect before initiating MPLS layer recovery mechanisms (for 
example, an automatic protection switching between fibers that 
comprise a link between two LSRs). Following the detection of a 
fault/fault repair S/FRS packet, respectively. This allows for the 
lower layer protection to take effect and for the LSR to learn this 
through one of several ways: via an indication from a lower layer, 
or by the resumption of the reception of a liveness message, or by 
the lack of LF, LD, PF or PD conditions (see definitions in [3]).

The threshold K helps to minimize false alarms due to the occasional 
loss of a liveness message, which may occur, for example, either due 
to a temporary impairment in a link or a peer LSR or due to a buffer 
overflow. 
 
6.0 Fault Detection

Each LSR must be able to detect certain types of faults, such as PF, 
PD, LF, and LD [3] and propagate an FIS message towards the PSL. 
Here we consider unidirectional link faults, bi-directional (or 
complete) link faults, and node faults. 

Essentially, the node upstream of the fault must be able to 
detect/learn about the fault. This motivates the need for a 
"liveness" message, which allows a node upstream of the fault to 
detect the fault either directly or implicitly. Also, the fault 
detection mechanism must provide the trigger for generating the FIS.  
Broadly, the types of mechanisms that could be triggers for the FIS 
are:
i)	Lower layer mechanisms
ii)	MPLS-based detection mechanisms, which may be used to detect 
link faults, via a liveness message for example.
iii) User-plane OAM mechanisms, such as a path continuity test, 
which may be used to detect other faults, such as mis-
connections (arising from incorrect entries in the label 
forwarding table, for example).

The fault types that need to be detected are:

-- Unidirectional Link Fault: A uni-directional fault implies that 
only one direction of a bi-directional link has experienced a 
fault

-- Downlink Fault: A fault on a link in the downstream direction 
will be detected by the node downstream of the faulty link, 
either via the PF or PD condition being detected at the MPLS 
layer, or via LF or LD signals being propagated to the MPLS 
layer by the lower layer or via the absence of liveness 
messages.

-- Uplink Fault: A fault on a link in the upstream direction will 
be detected by a node upstream of the faulty link, either via a 
LF or LD being detected at the lower layer and propagated to 
the MPLS layer (if there was traffic on this reverse link), or 
via the PD or PF condition being detected at the MPLS layer, or 
via absence of liveness messages.

-- Bi-directional link fault or node fault: When both directions 
of the link have a fault (as in the case of a fiber cut), nodes 
at both ends of the link will detect the fault either due to 
the LF or PF signal or due to the absence of liveness messages.
 
7.0 Fault Notification

The rapid notification of a fault is effected by the propagation of 
the FIS message along the RNT. Due to the timers built into the 
FIS/FRS propagation mechanism, the transportation of FIS/FRS 
messages does not require a reliable mechanism like TCP.  Any LSR 
may generate an FIS. 

For instance, in Fig. 1 if link L23 fails, LSR 3 will detect it and 
transmit a FIS to LSR 2 (after waiting for time T2), its upstream 
neighbor along link L23. The FIS will contain the incoming labels 
(at node 3) of those LSPs on link L23 that have protection enabled. 
Upon receiving the FIS message, LSR 2 will consult its inverse-cross 
connect table and generate an FIS message for LSR 1, which on 
receiving the first FIS packet will wait for time t3 before 
performing a protection switch. The node which initiates the FIS 
will continue to send FIS messages at an interval of t1 until timer 
t2 expires. After t2 expires it is assumed that either upper layer 
protection will be triggered or enough number of FIS messages will 
have been sent to reach the desired reliability in conveying fault 
information to the PSL(s).

The roles of the various core protection switching components are:

PSL: The PSL does not generate a FIS message, but must be able to 
detect FIS packets.

PML: The PML must be able to generate the FIS packets in response to 
detecting failure, and should transmit them over the RNT. The PML 
begins FIS transmission after continuously detecting a fault for T2 
time units, and does so every t1 time units for a maximum of t2 time 
units.

Intermediate LSR: An intermediate LSR must be able to 
generate/forward FIS packets, either as a result of continuously 
detecting a fault for T2 time units or in response to a received FIS 
packet. It must transmit these to all its affected upstream 
neighbors as per its inverse cross-connect table. Again, it does so 
every t1 time units for a maximum of t2 time units. 

8.0 Switch Over

The switch over is the actual switching of the working traffic from 
the working path to the recovery path. This is performed by a PSL, 
t3 time units after the reception of the first FIS packet.

For example, in Fig. 1, consider protection domain (1-2-3-4-6-7, 1-
5-7). When link L34 fails, the PSL LSR 1 on learning of the failure 
will perform a protection switch of the protected traffic from the 
working path 1-2-3-4-6-7 to the backup path 1-5-7. Notice that LSR 7 
acts as a protection merge LSR, merging traffic from the working and 
backup paths. Since buffered packets from LSR 4 may continue to 
arrive at LSR 7 even after the protection switch (the dampening 
timer t43 at the PSL tends to mitigate this), a short-term 
misordering of packets may happen at LSR 7, until the buffers on the 
working path drain out. 

The role of the core protection components is as follows:

PSL: Performs the protection switch upon receipt of the FIS message, 
but after waiting for time t3 following the first FIS message.

PML: The PML automatically merges protection traffic with working 
traffic. For a short period of time this may cause misordering of 
packets, since packets buffered at LSRs downstream of the fault may 
continue to arrive at the PML along the working path.

Intermediate LSR: The intermediate LSR has no special action. 

9.0 Switch Back

Switch back or restoration is the transfer of working traffic from 
the recovery path to the working path, once the working path is 
repaired. This may be because the recovery path may be a limited 
recovery path  [3], or because the working path is deemed to be 
preferred  [3] in some respect. Restoration may be automatic or it 
may be performed by manual intervention (or not performed at all). 
In the revertive mode, restoration is performed upon the receipt of 
the FRS message. A path continuity test may be performed to ensure 
the integrity of the entire path before switching. I n the non-
revertive mode it may be performed by operator intervention.

The role of the core protection components is similar here to what 
it is for protection switching. The PML does not need to do 
anything, unless it was the node that detected the failure, in which 
case it transmits a FRS upstream t6 time units after continuously 
detecting recover signal from lower layer or after detecting 
liveness messages from its peers. The intermediate LSR generates the 
FRS message if it was the node that detected the recovery or 
generates a FRS to relay the restoration status received from a 
downstream node. The PSL performs the restoration switch t3' seconds 
after receiving the first FIS message.

10.0 Protocol Specific Extensions

The signaling protocol specific extensions needed to implement the 
mechanism outlined in this draft are discussed in separate documents 
[ ],[9].

11.0 Security Considerations

The MPLS protection that is specified herein does not raise any 
security issues that are not already present in the MPLS 
architecture.


12.0 Intellectual Property Considerations

In accordance with the intellectual property rights procedures of 
the IETF standards process, to the extent that Tellabs has patents, 
pending applications and/or other intellectual property rights that 
are essential to implementation of any subject matter submitted by 
Tellabs that is included in a standard, Tellabs is prepared to 
grant, on the basis of reciprocity (grantback), a license on such 
subject matter under terms and conditions that are reasonable and 
non-discriminatory.

13.0 Acknowledgements

We would like to thank our colleague Ben Mack-Crane, and members of 
the MPLS WG list, in particular Dave Allan, Bora Akyol, Neil 
Harrisson, Ping Pan, and J. Noel Chiappa, for suggestions, feedback, 
and corrections to the first version of this draft.

 
14.0 Authors' Addresses

Changcheng Huang
Vishal Sharma
Department of Systems and 
Computer Engineering
Metanoia, Inc.
Carleton University
335 Elan Village Lane

1125 Colonel By Drive
Unit 203
Ottawa, Ontario K1S 5B6
San Jose, CA 95134-2539
Phone: (613) 520-2600 ext. 2477
Phone: 408-943-1794
Changcheng.huang@sce.carleton.ca
v.sharma@ieee.org


Srinivas Makam
Ken Owens
Tellabs Operations, Inc.
Erlang Technology, Inc.
4951 Indiana Avenue
1106 Fourth Street
Lisle, IL 60532
St. Louis, MO 63126
Phone: 630-512-7217
Phone: 314-918-1579
Srinivas.Makam@tellabs.com
keno@erlangtech.com


Ben Mack-Crane
Tellabs Operations, Inc.
4951 Indiana Avenue
Lisle, IL 60532
Ben.Mackcrane@tellabs.com
Ph: 630-848-7875


15.0 References
[1] Rosen, E., Viswanathan, A., and Callon, R., "Multiprotocol Label 
Switching Architecture", Work in Progress, Internet Draft <draft-
ietf-mpls-arch-07.txt>, July 2000.

[2] Callon, R., Doolan, P., Feldman, N., Fredette, A., Swallow, G., 
Viswanathan, A., "A Framework for Multiprotocol Label Switching", 
Work in Progress, Internet Draft <draft-ietf-mpls-framework-
05.txt>, September 1999.

[3] Makam, V., Sharma, V., Huang, C., Owens, K., Mack-Crane, B., et 
al, "A Framework for MPLS-based Recovery, " Work in Progress, 
Internet Draft <draft-ietf-mpls-recovery-frmwrk-00.txt>, 
September 2000.

[4] Andersson, L., Doolan, P., Feldman, N., Fredette, A., Thomas, 
B., "LDP Specification", Work in Progress, Internet Draft <draft-
ietf-mpls-ldp-11.txt>, August 2000.

[5] Jamoussi, B. "Constraint-Based LSP Setup using LDP", Work in 
Progress, Internet Draft <draft-ietf-mpls-cr-ldp-04.txt>, July 
2000.

[6] Braden, R., Zhang, L., Berson, S., Herzog, S., "Resource 
ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP) -- Version 1 Functional 
Specification", RFC 2205, September 1997.

[7] Awduche, D. et al "Extensions to RSVP for LSP Tunnels", Work in 
Progress, Internet Draft <draft-ietf-mpls-rsvp-lsp-tunnel-07.txt, 
August 2000. 

[8] Huang, C., Sharma, V., Makam. V, and Owens, K., "Extensions to 
RSVP-TE for MPLS Path Protection, " Internet Draft, <draft-chang-
rsvpte-path-protection-ext-01.txt>, November 2000.

[9] Owens, K., Sharma, V., Makam. V, and Huang, C., "Extensions to 
CR-LDP for MPLS Path Protection, " Internet Draft, <draft-owens-
crldp-path-protection-ext-00.txt>, November, 2000.

IETF Draft	 A Path Protection Mechanism for MPLS Networks 	July 2001
15


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