Internet-Draft | Encap for MPLS PM with AMM | June 2023 |
Cheng, et al. | Expires 16 December 2023 | [Page] |
This document defines the encapsulation for MPLS performance measurement with alternate marking method, which performs flow-based packet loss, delay, and jitter measurements on MPLS live traffic.¶
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.¶
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.¶
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."¶
This Internet-Draft will expire on 16 December 2023.¶
Copyright (c) 2023 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved.¶
This document is subject to BCP 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 Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Revised BSD License.¶
[RFC9341] describes a performance measurement method, which can be used to measure packet loss, delay, and jitter on live traffic. Since this method is based on marking consecutive batches of packets, it's referred to as Alternate-Marking Method. [RFC8372] describes the desired capabilities for MPLS flow identification, intended for in-band performance monitoring of MPLS flows.¶
This document defines the encapsulation for MPLS performance measurement with alternate marking method, which performs flow-based packet loss, delay, and jitter measurements on MPLS live traffic. The encapsulation defined in this document supports performance monitoring at the intermediate nodes, as well as MPLS flow identification at both transport and service layers.¶
This document employs an encapsulation method, other than Synonymous Flow Label (SFL), to achieve MPLS flow identification. The method described in this document is complementary to the SFL method [RFC8957] [I-D.ietf-mpls-sfl-control], the former mainly aims at hop-by-hop processing and the latter mainly aims at edge-to-edge processing. Different sets of MPLS flows may use different methods.¶
The method described in this document is also complementary to the In-situ OAM method [RFC9197] [RFC9326], the former doesn't introduce any new header whereas the latter introduces a new In-situ OAM header. Furthermore, the former requires the network nodes to collect the data used for performance measurement, while the latter requires the network nodes to collect the data used for operational and telemetry information collection. An MPLS flow may apply both of the two methods concurrently.¶
ACL: Access Control List¶
BoS: Bottom of Stack¶
cSPL: Composite Special Purpose Label¶
ECMP: Equal-Cost Multipath¶
ELC: Entropy Label Capability¶
ERLD: Entropy Readable Label Depth¶
eSPL: Extended Special Purpose Label¶
FL: Flow-ID Label¶
FLC: Flow-ID Label Capability¶
FLI: Flow-ID Label Indicator¶
FRLD: Flow-ID Readable Label Depth¶
LSP: Label Switched Path¶
MPLS: Multi-Protocol Label Switching¶
NMS: Network Management System¶
PHP: Penultimate Hop Popping¶
PM: Performance Measurement¶
PW: PseudoWire¶
SFL: Synonymous Flow Label¶
SID: Segment ID¶
SR: Segment Routing¶
TC: Traffic Class¶
TTL: Time to Live¶
VC: Virtual Channel¶
VPN: Virtual Private Network¶
XL: Extension Label¶
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 in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
Flow-based MPLS performance measurement encapsulation with alternate marking method has the following format:¶
The Flow-ID Label Indicator (FLI) is an Extended Special Purpose Label (eSPL), which is combined with the Extension Label (XL, value 15) to form a Composite Special Purpose Label (cSPL), as defined in [RFC9017]. The FLI is defined in this document as value TBA1.¶
The Traffic Class (TC) and Time To Live (TTL) [RFC3032] for the XL and FLI SHOULD follow the same field values of that label immediately preceding the XL. Otherwise, the TC and TTL for the XL and FLI MAY be different values if it is known that the XL will not be exposed as the top label at any point along the LSP. The Bottom of Stack (BoS) bit [RFC3032] for the XL and FLI MUST be zero.¶
The Flow-ID Label (FL) is used as an MPLS flow identification [RFC8372], its value MUST be unique within the administrative domain. Flow-ID values can be allocated by an external NMS/controller, based on measurement object instance such as LSP or PW. There is a one-to-one mapping between Flow-ID and flow. The specific method on how to allocate the Flow-ID values is described in Section 4.¶
The FL can be placed at either the bottom or the middle of the MPLS label stack, and the FL MAY appear multiple times in a label stack. Section 2.1 of this document provides several examples to illustrate how to apply FL in a label stack. The TTL for the FL MUST be zero to ensure that it is not used inadvertently for forwarding. The BoS bit for the FL depends on whether the FL is placed at the bottom of the MPLS label stack.¶
Besides the flow identification, a color-marking field is also necessary for alternate marking method. To achieve the purpose of coloring the MPLS traffic, as well as the distinction between hop-by-hop measurement and edge-to-edge measurement, the TC for the FL is defined as follows:¶
Three examples on different layout of Flow-ID label (4 octets) are illustrated as follows:¶
(1) Layout of Flow-ID label when applied to MPLS transport.¶
Note that here if the penultimate hop popping (PHP) is in use, the PHP LSR that recognizes the cSPL MAY choose not to pop the cSPL and the following Flow-ID label, otherwise the egress LSR would be excluded from the performance measurement.¶
Also note that in other examples of applying Flow-ID to MPLS transport, one LSP label can be substituted by multiple SID labels in the case of using SR Policy, and the combination of cSPL and Flow-ID label can be placed between SID labels, as specified in Section 5.¶
(2) Layout of Flow-ID label when applied to MPLS service.¶
Note that here the application label can be MPLS PW label, MPLS Ethernet VPN label or MPLS IP VPN label, and it's also called VC label as defined in [RFC4026].¶
(3) Layout of Flow-ID label when applied to both MPLS transport and MPLS service.¶
Note that for this example the two Flow-ID values appearing in a label stack MUST be different, that is to say, the Flow-ID label applied to MPLS transport and the Flow-ID label applied to MPLS service share the same value space. Also note that the two Flow-ID label values are independent from each other, e.g., two packets can belong to the same VPN flow but two different LSP flows, or two packets can belong to two different VPN flows but the same LSP flow.¶
The procedures for Flow-ID label encapsulation, look-up and decapsulation are summarized as follows:¶
There are two ways of allocating Flow-ID, one way is to allocate Flow-ID by manual trigger from the network operator, and the other way is to allocate Flow-ID by automatic trigger from the ingress node. Details are as follows:¶
The policy pre-configured at the NMS/controller decides whether one Flow-ID or two Flow-IDs would be generated. If the performance measurement on MPLS service is enabled, then one Flow-ID applied to MPLS service would be generated; If the performance measurement on MPLS transport is enabled, then one Flow-ID applied to MPLS transport would be generated; If both of them are enabled, then two Flow-IDs respectively applied to MPLS service and MPLS transport would be generated, in this case, the transit node needs to look up both of the two Flow-IDs by default, and that can be changed by configuration to, e.g., look up only the Flow-ID applied to MPLS transport.¶
Whether using manual trigger or automatic trigger, the NMS/controller MUST guarantee every generated Flow-ID is unique within the administrative domain and MUST NOT have a value in the reserved label space (0-15) [RFC3032].¶
Analogous to the Entropy Label Capability (ELC) defined in Section 5 of [RFC6790] and the Entropy Readable Label Depth (ERLD) defined in Section 4 of [RFC8662], the Flow-ID Label Capability (FLC) and the Flow-ID Readable Label Depth (FRLD) are defined in this document. Both FLC and FRLD have the similar semantics with the ELC and ERLD to a router, except that the Flow-ID is used in its flow identification function while the Entropy is used in its load-balancing function.¶
The ingress node MUST insert each FL at an appropriate depth, which ensures the node to which the FL is exposed has the FLC. The ingress node SHOULD insert each FL within an appropriate FRLD, which is the minimum FRLD of all the on-path nodes that need to read and use the FL in question. How the ingress node knows the FLC and FRLD of all the on-path nodes is outside the scope of this document, whereas [I-D.xzc-lsr-mpls-flc-frld] provides a method to achieve that.¶
When the SR paths are used for transport, the label stack grows as the number of on-path segments increases, if the number of on-path segments is high, that may become a challenge for the FL to be placed within an appropriate FRLD. In order to overcome this potential challenge, an implementation MAY provide flexibility to the ingress node to place FL between SID labels, i.e., multiple identical FLs at different depths MAY be interleaved with SID labels, when that happens a sophisticated network planning may be needed and it's beyond the scope of this document.¶
Analogous to what's described in Section 5 of [RFC8957], under conditions of Equal-Cost Multipath (ECMP), the introduction of the FL may lead to the same problem as caused by the SFL, and the two solutions proposed for SFL would also apply here.¶
This document introduces the performance measurement domain that is the scope of a Flow-ID label. The Flow-ID Label Indicator and Flow-ID label MUST NOT be signaled and distributed outside one performance measurement domain. Improper configuration so that the Flow-ID label being passed from one domain to another would likely result in potential Flow-ID conflicts.¶
To prevent packets carrying Flow-ID label from leaking from one domain to another, the domain boundary nodes SHOULD deploy some policies (e.g., ACL) to filter out the packets. Specifically, in the sending edge, the domain boundary node SHOULD filter out the packets that carry the Flow-ID Label Indicator and are sent to other domain; in the receiving edge, the domain boundary node SHOULD drop the packets that carry the Flow-ID Label Indicator and are from other domains.¶
In the Special-Purpose MPLS Label Values registry, a new Extended Special-Purpose MPLS Label Value for the Flow-ID Label Indicator is requested from IANA as follows:¶
Extended Special-Purpose MPLS Label Value | Description | Semantics Definition | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
TBA1 | Flow-ID Label Indicator | Section 2 | This Document |
The authors would like to acknowledge Loa Andersson, Tarek Saad, Stewart Bryant, Rakesh Gandhi, Greg Mirsky, Aihua Liu, Shuangping Zhan, Ming Ke, Wei He, and Ximing Dong for their careful review and very helpful comments.¶
The authors would like to acknowledge Italo Busi and Chandrasekar Ramachandran for their insightful MPLS-RT review and very helpful comments.¶
Minxue Wang
China Mobile
Email: wangminxue@chinamobile.com¶
Wen Ye
China Mobile
Email: yewen@chinamobile.com¶