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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group X. Xiao, Ed.
Request for Comments: 3916 Riverstone Networks
Category: Informational D. McPherson, Ed.
Arbor Networks
P. Pate, Ed.
Overture Networks
September 2004
Requirements for Pseudo-Wire Emulation Edge-to-Edge (PWE3)
Status of this Memo
This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does
not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of this
memo is unlimited.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).
Abstract
This document describes base requirements for the Pseudo-Wire
Emulation Edge to Edge Working Group (PWE3 WG). It provides
guidelines for other working group documents that will define
mechanisms for providing pseudo-wire emulation of Ethernet, ATM, and
Frame Relay. Requirements for pseudo-wire emulation of TDM (i.e.,
"synchronous bit streams at rates defined by ITU G.702") are defined
in another document. It should be noted that the PWE3 WG
standardizes mechanisms that can be used to provide PWE3 services,
but not the services themselves.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
1.1. What Are Pseudo Wires?. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
1.2. Current Network Architecture. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.3. PWE3 as a Path to Convergence . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.4. Suitable Applications for PWE3. . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.5. Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3. Reference Model of PWE3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
4. Packet Processing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
4.1. Encapsulation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
4.2. Frame Ordering. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
4.3. Frame Duplication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
4.4. Fragmentation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
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4.5. Consideration of Per-PSN Packet Overhead. . . . . . . . 9
5. Maintenance of Emulated Services. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
5.1. Setup and Teardown of Pseudo-Wires. . . . . . . . . . . 9
5.2. Handling Maintenance Message of the Native Services . . 10
5.3. PE-initiated Maintenance Messages . . . . . . . . . . . 10
6. Management of Emulated Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
6.1. MIBs. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
6.2. General MIB Requirements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
6.3. Configuration and Provisioning. . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
6.4. Performance Monitoring. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
6.5. Fault Management and Notifications. . . . . . . . . . . 13
6.6. Pseudo-Wire Connection Verification and Traceroute. . . 13
7. Faithfulness of Emulated Services . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
7.1. Characteristics of an Emulated Service. . . . . . . . . 14
7.2. Service Quality of Emulated Services. . . . . . . . . . 14
8. Non-Requirements. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
9. Quality of Service (QoS) Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . 15
10. Inter-domain Issues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
11. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
12. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
13. References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
13.1. Normative References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
13.2. Informative References. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
14. Authors' Addresses. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
15. Full Copyright Statement. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
1. Introduction
1.1. What Are Pseudo Wires?
Pseudo Wire Emulation Edge-to-Edge (PWE3) is a mechanism that
emulates the essential attributes of a service such as ATM, Frame
Relay or Ethernet over a Packet Switched Network (PSN). The required
functions of PWs include encapsulating service-specific PDUs arriving
at an ingress port, and carrying them across a path or tunnel,
managing their timing and order, and any other operations required to
emulate the behavior and characteristics of the service as faithfully
as possible.
From the customer perspective, the PW is perceived as an unshared
link or circuit of the chosen service. However, there may be
deficiencies that impede some applications from being carried on a
PW. These limitations should be fully described in the appropriate
service-specific documents and Applicability Statements.
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1.2. Current Network Architecture
The following sections give some background on where networks are
today and why they are changing. It also talks about the motivation
to provide converged networks while continuing to support existing
services. Finally, it discusses how PWs can be a solution for this
dilemma.
1.2.1. Multiple Networks
For any given service provider delivering multiple services, the
current infrastructure usually consists of parallel or "overlay"
networks. Each of these networks implements a specific service, such
as Frame Relay, Internet access, etc. This is expensive, both in
terms of capital expense and operational costs. Furthermore, the
presence of multiple networks complicates planning. Service
providers wind up asking themselves these questions:
- Which of my networks do I build out?
- How many fibers do I need for each network?
- How do I efficiently manage multiple networks?
A converged network helps service providers answer these questions in
a consistent and economical fashion.
1.2.2. Transition to a Packet-Optimized Converged Network
In order to maximize return on their assets and minimize their
operating costs, service providers often look to consolidate the
delivery of multiple service types onto a single networking
technology.
As packet traffic takes up a larger and larger portion of the
available network bandwidth, it becomes increasingly useful to
optimize public networks for the Internet Protocol. However, many
service providers are confronting several obstacles in engineering
packet-optimized networks. Although Internet traffic is the fastest
growing traffic segment, it does not generate the highest revenue per
bit. For example, Frame Relay traffic currently generates higher
revenue per bit than native IP services do. Private line TDM
services still generate even more revenue per bit than does Frame
Relay. In addition, there is a tremendous amount of legacy equipment
deployed within public networks that does not communicate using the
Internet Protocol. Service providers continue to utilize non-IP
equipment to deploy a variety of services, and see a need to
interconnect this legacy equipment over their IP-optimized core
networks.
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1.3. PWE3 as a Path to Convergence
How do service providers realize the capital and operational benefits
of a new packet-based infrastructure, while leveraging the existing
equipment and also protecting the large revenue stream associated
with this equipment? How do they move from mature Frame Relay or ATM
networks, while still being able to provide these lucrative services?
One possibility is the emulation of circuits or services via PWs.
Circuit emulation over ATM and interworking of Frame Relay and ATM
have already been standardized. Emulation allows existing services
to be carried across the new infrastructure, and thus enables the
interworking of disparate networks.
Implemented correctly, PWE3 can provide a means for supporting
today's services over a new network.
1.4. Suitable Applications for PWE3
What makes an application suitable (or not) for PWE3 emulation? When
considering PWs as a means of providing an application, the following
questions must be considered:
- Is the application sufficiently deployed to warrant emulation?
- Is there interest on the part of service providers in providing an
emulation for the given application?
- Is there interest on the part of equipment manufacturers in
providing products for the emulation of a given application?
- Are the complexities and limitations of providing an emulation
worth the savings in capital and operational expenses?
If the answer to all four questions is "yes", then the application is
likely to be a good candidate for PWE3. Otherwise, there may not be
sufficient overlap between the customers, service providers,
equipment manufacturers and technology to warrant providing such an
emulation.
1.5. Summary
To maximize the return on their assets and minimize their operational
costs, many service providers are looking to consolidate the delivery
of multiple service offerings and traffic types onto a single IP-
optimized network.
In order to create this next-generation converged network, standard
methods must be developed to emulate existing telecommunications
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formats such as Ethernet, Frame Relay, and ATM over IP-optimized core
networks. This document describes requirements for accomplishing
this goal.
2. Terminology
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALLNOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119.
Some terms used throughout this document are listed below.
Attachment Circuit (AC)
The physical or virtual circuit attaching a CE
to a PE. An AC can be a Frame Relay DLCI, an
ATM VPI/VCI, an Ethernet port, a VLAN, a HDLC
link, a PPP connection on a physical interface,
a PPP session from an L2TP tunnel, an MPLS LSP,
etc.
Customer Edge (CE) A device where one end of a service originates
and/or terminates. The CE is not aware that it
is using an emulated service rather than a
native service.
Packet Switched Network (PSN)
Within the context of PWE3, this is a network
using IP or MPLS as the mechanism for packet
forwarding.
Provider Edge (PE) A device that provides PWE3 to a CE.
Pseudo Wire (PW) A mechanism that carries the essential elements
of an emulated circuit from one PE to another
PE over a PSN.
Pseudo Wire Emulation Edge to Edge (PWE3)
A mechanism that emulates the essential
attributes of a service (such as a T1 leased
line or Frame Relay) over a PSN.
Pseudo Wire PDU A Protocol Data Unit (PDU) sent on the PW that
contains all of the data and control
information necessary to emulate the desired
service.
PSN Tunnel A tunnel across a PSN inside which one or more
PWs can be carried.
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3. Reference Model of PWE3
A pseudo-wire (PW) is a connection between two provider edge (PE)
devices which connects two attachment circuits (ACs). An AC can be a
Frame Relay DLCI, an ATM VPI/VCI, an Ethernet port, a VLAN, a HDLC
link, a PPP connection on a physical interface, a PPP session from an
L2TP tunnel, an MPLS LSP, etc.
|<------- Pseudo Wire ------>|
| |
| |<-- PSN Tunnel -->| |
V V V V
+----+ +----+
+-----+ | PE1|==================| PE2| +-----+
| |----------|............PW1.............|----------| |
| CE1 | | | | | | CE2 |
| |----------|............PW2.............|----------| |
+-----+ ^ | |==================| | +-----+
^ | +----+ +----+ ^
| | Provider Edge 1 Provider Edge 2 |
| | |
| Attachment Circuit |
| |
|<-------------- Emulated Service ---------------->|
Customer Customer
Edge 1 Edge 2
Figure 1: PWE3 Reference Model
During the setup of a PW, the two PEs will be configured or will
automatically exchange information about the service to be emulated
so that later they know how to process packets coming from the other
end. After a PW is set up between two PEs, frames received by one PE
from an AC are encapsulated and sent over the PW to the remote PE,
where native frames are re-constructed and forwarded to the other CE.
For a detailed PWE3 architecture overview, readers should refer to
the PWE3 architecture document [PWE3_ARCH].
This document does not assume that a particular type of PWs (e.g.,
[L2TPv3] sessions or [MPLS] LSPs) or PSNs (e.g., IP or MPLS) is used.
Instead, it describes generic requirements that apply to all PWs and
PSNs, for all services including Ethernet, ATM, and Frame Relay, etc.
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4. Packet Processing
This section describes data plane requirements for PWE3.
4.1. Encapsulation
Every PE MUST provide an encapsulation mechanism for PDUs from an AC.
It should be noted that the PDUs to be encapsulated may or may not
contain L2 header information. This is service specific. Every PWE3
service MUST specify what the PDU is.
A PW header consists of all the header fields in a PW PDU that are
used by the PW egress to determine how to process the PDU. The PSN
tunnel header is not considered as part of the PW header.
Specific requirements on PDU encapsulation are listed below.
4.1.1. Conveyance of Necessary L2 Header Information
The egress of a PW needs some information, e.g., which native service
the PW PDUs belong to, and possibly some L2 header information, in
order to know how to process the PDUs received. A PWE3 encapsulation
approach MUST provide some mechanism for conveying such information
from the PW ingress to the egress. It should be noted that not all
such information must be carried in the PW header of the PW PDUs.
Some information (e.g., service type of a PW) can be stored as state
information at the egress during PW setup.
4.1.2. Support of Variable Length PDUs
A PWE3 approach MUST accommodate variable length PDUs, if variable
length PDUs are allowed by the native service. For example, a PWE3
approach for Frame Relay MUST accommodate variable length frames.
4.1.3. Support of Multiplexing and Demultiplexing
If a service in its native form is capable of grouping multiple
circuits into a "trunk", e.g., multiple ATM VCCs in a VPC or multiple
Ethernet 802.1Q interfaces in a port, some mechanism SHOULD be
provided so that a single PW can be used to connect two end-trunks.
From encapsulation perspective, sufficient information MUST be
carried so that the egress of the PW can demultiplex individual
circuits from the PW.
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4.1.4. Validation of PW-PDU
Most L2 frames have a checksum field to assure frame integrity.
Every PWE3 service MUST specify whether the frame's checksum should
be preserved across the PW, or should be removed at the ingress PE
and then be re-calculated and inserted at the egress PE. For
protocols such as ATM and FR, the checksum covers link-local
information such as the circuit identifiers (e.g., FR DLCI or ATM
VPI/VCI). Therefore, such checksum MUST be removed at the ingress PE
and recalculated at the egress PE.
4.1.5. Conveyance of Payload Type Information
Under some circumstances, it is desirable to be able to distinguish
PW traffic from other types of traffic such as IPv4 or IPv6 or OAM.
For example, if Equal Cost Multi-Path (ECMP) is employed in a PSN,
this additional distinguishability can be used to reduce the chance
that PW packets get misordered by the load balancing mechanism. Some
mechanism SHOULD provide this distinguishability if needed. Such
mechanism MAY be defined in the PWE3 WG or other WGs.
4.2. Frame Ordering
When packets carrying the PW PDUs traverse a PW, they may arrive at
the egress out of order. For some services, the frames (either
control frames only or both control and data frames) must be
delivered in order. For such services, some mechanism MUST be
provided for ensuring in-order delivery. Providing a sequence number
in the PW header for each packet is one possible approach to detect
out-of-order frames. Mechanisms for re-ordering frames may be
provided by Native Service Processing (NSP) [PWE3_ARCH] but are out
of scope of PWE3.
4.3. Frame Duplication
In rare cases, packets traversing a PW may be duplicated. For some
services, frame duplication is not allowed. For such services some
mechanism MUST be provided to ensure that duplicated frames will not
be delivered. The mechanism may or may not be the same as the
mechanism used to ensure in-order frame delivery.
4.4. Fragmentation
If the combined size of the L2 payload and its associated PWE3 and
PSN headers exceeds the PSN path MTU, the L2 payload may need to be
fragmented (Alternatively the L2 frame may be dropped). For certain
native service, fragmentation may also be needed to maintain a
control frame's relative position to the data frames (e.g., an ATM PM
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cell's relative position). In general, fragmentation has a
performance impact. It is therefore desirable to avoid fragmentation
if possible. However, for different services, the need for
fragmentation can be different. When there is potential need for
fragmentation, each service-specific PWE3 document MUST specify
whether to fragment the frame in question or to drop it. If an
emulated service chooses to drop the frame, the consequence MUST be
specified in its applicability statement.
4.5. Consideration of Per-PSN Packet Overhead
When the L2 PDU size is small, in order to reduce PSN tunnel header
overhead, multiple PDUs MAY be concatenated before a PSN tunnel
header is added. Each encapsulated PDU still carries its own PW
header so that the egress PE knows how to process it. However, the
benefit of concatenating multiple PDUs for header efficiency should
be weighed against the resulting increase in delay, jitter and the
larger penalty incurred by packet loss.
5. Maintenance of Emulated Services
This section describes maintenance requirements for PWE3.
5.1. Setup and Teardown of Pseudo-Wires
A PW must be set up before an emulated circuit can be established,
and must be torn down when an emulated circuit is no longer needed.
Setup and teardown of a PW can be triggered by a command from the
management plane of a PE, or by Setup/Teardown of an AC (e.g., an ATM
SVC), or by an auto-discovery mechanism.
Every PWE3 approach MUST define some setup mechanism for establishing
the PWs. During the setup process, the PEs need to exchange some
information (e.g., to learn each other's capability). The setup
mechanism MUST enable the PEs to exchange all necessary information.
For example, both endpoints must agree on methods for encapsulating
PDUs and handling frame ordering. Which signaling protocol to use
and what information to exchange are service specific. Every PWE3
approach MUST specify them. Manual configuration of PWs can be
considered as a special kind of signaling and is allowed.
If a native circuit is bi-directional, the corresponding emulated
circuit can be signaled "Up" only when the associated PW and PSN
tunnels in both directions are functional.
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5.2. Handling Maintenance Message of the Native Services
Some native services have mechanisms for maintenance purpose, e.g.,
ATM OAM and FR LMI. Such maintenance messages can be in-band (i.e.,
mixed with data messages in the same AC) or out-of-band (i.e., sent
in a dedicated control circuit). For such services, all in-band
maintenance messages related to a circuit SHOULD be transported in-
band just like data messages through the corresponding PW to the
remote CE. In other words, no translation is needed at the PEs for
in-band maintenance messages. In addition, it MAY be desirable to
provide higher reliability for maintenance messages. The mechanisms
for providing high reliability do not have to be defined in the PWE3
WG.
Out-of-band maintenance messages between a CE and a PE may relate to
multiple ACs between the CE and the PE. They need to be processed at
the local PE and possibly at the remote PE as well. If a native
service has some out-of-band maintenance messages, the corresponding
emulated service MUST specify how to process such messages at the
PEs. In general, an out-of-band maintenance message is either
translated into an in-band maintenance message of the native service
or a PWE-specific maintenance message for every AC related to that
out-of-band message. As an example, assume the ACs between a CE and
a PE are some ATM VCCs inside a VPC. When a F4 AIS [UNI3.0] from the
CE is received by the PE, the PE should translate that F4 AIS into a
F5 AIS and send it to the remote CE for every VCC. Alternatively,
the PE should generate a PWE-specific maintenance message (e.g.,
label withdrawal) to the remote PE for every VCC. When the remote PE
receives such a PWE-specific maintenance message, it may need to
generate a maintenance message of the native service and send it to
the attached CE.
5.3. PE-initiated Maintenance Messages
A PE needs to initiate some maintenance messages under some
circumstances without being triggered by any native maintenance
messages from the CE. These circumstances are usually caused by
fault, e.g., a PW failure in the PSN or a link failure between the CE
and the PE.
The reason the PEs need to initiate some maintenance messages under a
fault condition is because the existence of a PW between two CEs
would otherwise reduce the CEs' maintenance capability. This is
illustrated in the following example. If two CEs are directly
connected by a physical wire, a native service (e.g., ATM) can use
notifications from the lower layer (e.g., the physical link layer) to
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assist its maintenance. For example, an ATM PVC can be signaled
"Down" if the physical wire fails. However, consider the following
scenario.
+-----+ Phy-link +----+ +----+ Phy-link +-----+
| CE1 |----------| PE1|......PW......|PE2 |----------| CE2 |
+-----+ +----+ +----+ +-----+
If the PW between PE1 and PE2 fails, CE1 and CE2 will not receive
physical link failure notification. As a result, they cannot declare
failure of the emulated circuit in a timely fashion, which will in
turn affect higher layer applications. Therefore, when the PW fails,
PE1 and PE2 need to initiate some maintenance messages to notify the
client layer on CE1 and CE2 that use the PW as a server layer. (In
this case, the client layer is the emulated service). Similarly, if
the physical link between PE1-CE1 fails, PE1 needs to initiate some
maintenance message(s) so that the client layer at CE2 will be
notified. PE2 may need to be involved in this process.
In the rare case when a physical wire between two CEs incurs many bit
errors, the physical link can be declared "Down" and the client layer
at the CEs be notified. Similarly, a PW can incur packet loss,
corruption, and out-of-order delivery. These can be considered as
"generalized bit error". Upon detection of excessive "generalized
bit error", a PW can be declared "Down" and the detecting PE needs to
initiate a maintenance message so that the client layer at the CE is
notified.
In general, every emulated service MUST specify:
* Under what circumstances PE-initiated maintenance messages are
needed,
* Format of the maintenance messages, and
* How to process the maintenance messages at the remote PE.
Some monitoring mechanisms are needed for detecting such
circumstances, e.g., a PW failure. Such mechanisms can be defined in
the PWE3 WG or elsewhere.
Status of a group of emulated circuits may be affected identically by
a single network incidence. For example, when the physical link
between a CE and a PE fails, all the emulated circuits that go
through that link will fail. It is desirable that a single
maintenance message be used to notify failure of the whole group of
emulated circuits connected to the same remote PE. A PWE3 approach
MAY provide some mechanism for notifying status changes of a group of
emulated circuits. One possible approach is to associate each
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emulated circuit with a group ID while setting up the PW for that
emulated circuit. In a maintenance message, that group ID can be
used to refer to all the emulated circuits in that group.
If a PE needs to generate and send a maintenance message to a CE, the
PE MUST use a maintenance message of the native service. This is
essential in keeping the emulated service transparent to the CEs.
The requirements stated in this section are aligned with the ITU-T
maintenance philosophy for telecommunications networks [G805] (i.e.,
client layer/server layer concept).
6. Management of Emulated Services
Each PWE3 approach SHOULD provide some mechanisms for network
operators to manage the emulated service. These mechanisms can be in
the forms described below.
6.1. MIBs
SNMP MIBs [SMIV2] MUST be provided for managing each emulated circuit
as well as pseudo-wire in general. These MIBs SHOULD be created with
the following requirements.
6.2. General MIB Requirements
New MIBs MUST augment or extend where appropriate, existing tables as
defined in other existing service-specific MIBs for existing services
such as MPLS or L2TP. For example, the ifTable as defined in the
Interface MIB [IFMIB] MUST be augmented to provide counts of out-of-
order packets. A second example is the extension of the MPLS-TE-MIB
[TEMIB] when emulating circuit services over MPLS. Rather than
redefining the tunnelTable so that PWE can utilize MPLS tunnels, for
example, entries in this table MUST instead be extended to add
additional PWE-specific objects. A final example might be to extend
the IP Tunnel MIB [IPTUNMIB] in such a way as to provide PWE3-
specific semantics when tunnels other than MPLS are used as PSN
transport. Doing so facilitates a natural extension of those objects
defined in the existing MIBs in terms of management, as well as
leveraging existing agent implementations.
An AC MUST appear as an interface in the ifTable.
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6.3. Configuration and Provisioning
MIB Tables MUST be designed to facilitate configuration and
provisioning of the AC.
The MIB(s) MUST facilitate intra-PSN configuration and monitoring of
ACs.
6.4. Performance Monitoring
MIBs MUST collect statistics for performance and fault management.
MIBs MUST provide a description of how existing counters are used for
PW emulation and SHOULD not replicate existing MIB counters.
6.5. Fault Management and Notifications
Notifications SHOULD be defined where appropriate to notify the
network operators of any interesting situations, including faults
detected in the AC.
Objects defined to augment existing protocol-specific notifications
in order to add PWE functionality MUST explain how these
notifications are to be emitted.
6.6. Pseudo-Wire Connection Verification and Traceroute
For network management purpose, a connection verification mechanism
SHOULD be supported by PWs. Connection verification as well as other
alarming mechanisms can alert network operators that a PW has lost
its remote connection. It is sometimes desirable to know the exact
functional path of a PW for troubleshooting purpose, thus a
traceroute function capable of reporting the path taken by data
packets over the PW SHOULD be provided.
7. Faithfulness of Emulated Services
An emulated service SHOULD be as similar to the native service as
possible, but NOT REQUIRED to be identical. The applicability
statement of a PWE3 service MUST report limitations of the emulated
service.
Some basic requirements on faithfulness of an emulated service are
described below.
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7.1. Characteristics of an Emulated Service
From the perspective of a CE, an emulated circuit is characterized as
an unshared link or circuit of the chosen service, although service
quality of the emulated service may be different from that of a
native one. Specifically, the following requirements MUST be met:
1) It MUST be possible to define type (e.g., Ethernet, which is
inherited from the native service), speed (e.g., 100Mbps), and MTU
size for an emulated circuit, if it is possible to do so for a
native circuit.
2) If the two endpoints CE1 and CE2 of emulated circuit #1 are
connected to PE1 and PE2, respectively, and CE3 and CE4 of
emulated circuit #2 are also connected to PE1 and PE2, then the
PWs of these two emulated circuits may share the same physical
paths between PE1 and PE2. But from each CE's perspective, its
emulated circuit MUST appear as unshared. For example, CE1/CE2
MUST NOT be aware of existence of emulated circuit #2 or CE3/CE4.
3) If an emulated circuit fails (either at one of the ACs or in the
middle of the PW), both CEs MUST be notified in a timely manner,
if they will be notified in the native service (see Section 5.3
for more information). The definition of "timeliness" is
service-dependent.
4) If a routing protocol (e.g., IGP) adjacency can be established
over a native circuit, it MUST be possible to be established over
an emulated circuit as well.
7.2. Service Quality of Emulated Services
It is NOT REQUIRED that an emulated service provide the same service
quality as the native service. The PWE3 WG only defines mechanisms
for providing PW emulation, not the services themselves. What
quality to provide for a specific emulated service is a matter
between a service provider (SP) and its customers, and is outside
scope of the PWE3 WG.
8. Non-Requirements
Some non-requirements are mentioned in various sections of this
document. Those work items are outside scope of the PWE3 WG. They
are summarized below:
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- Service interworking;
In Service Interworking, the IWF (Interworking Function) between
two dissimilar protocols (e.g., ATM & MPLS, Frame Relay & ATM, ATM
& IP, ATM & L2TP, etc.) terminates the protocol used in one
network and translates (i.e., maps) its Protocol Control
Information (PCI) to the PCI of the protocol used in other network
for User, Control and Management Plane functions to the extent
possible.
- Selection of a particular type of PWs;
- To make the emulated services perfectly match their native
services;
- Defining mechanisms for signaling the PSN tunnels;
- Defining how to perform traffic management on packets that carry
PW PDUs;
- Providing any multicast service that is not native to the emulated
medium.
To illustrate this point, Ethernet transmission to a multicast
IEEE-48 address is considered in scope, while multicast services
like [MARS] that are implemented on top of the medium are out of
scope;
9. Quality of Service (QoS) Considerations
Some native services such as ATM can offer higher service quality
than best effort Internet service. QoS is therefore essential for
ensuring that emulated services are compatible (but not necessarily
identical) to their native forms. It is up to network operators to
decide how to provide QoS - They can choose to rely on over-
provisioning and/or deploy some QoS mechanisms.
In order to take advantage of QoS mechanisms defined in other working
groups, e.g., the traffic management schemes defined in DiffServ WG,
it is desirable that some mechanisms exists for differentiating the
packets resulted from PDU encapsulation. These mechanisms do not
have to be defined in the PWE3 approaches themselves. For example,
if the resulted packets are MPLS or IP packets, their EXP or DSCP
field can be used for marking and differentiating. A PWE3 approach
MAY provide guidelines for marking and differentiating.
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The applicability of PWE3 to a particular service depends on the
sensitivity of that service (or the CE implementation) to
delay/jitter etc and the ability of the application layer to mask
them. PWE3 may not be applicable to services that have severe
constraints in this respect.
10. Inter-domain Issues
PWE is a matter between the PW end-points and is transparent to the
network devices between the PW end-points. Therefore, inter-domain
PWE is fundamentally similar to intra-domain PWE. As long as PW
end-points use the same PWE approach, they can communicate
effectively, regardless of whether they are in the same domain.
Security may become more important in the inter-domain case and some
security measure such as end-point authentication MAY be applied.
QoS may become more difficult to deliver too, as one service provider
has no control over another service provider's provisioning and
traffic management policy. To solve the inter-domain QoS problem,
service providers have to cooperate. Once they agree at a
contractual level to provider high quality of service to certain
traffic (e.g., PWE traffic), the mechanisms defined in other working
groups, e.g., Diffserv WG, can be used.
Inter-domain PSN tunnels are generally more difficult to set up, tear
down and maintain than intra-domain ones. But that is an issue for
PSN tunneling protocols such as MPLS and L2TPv3 and is outside the
scope of PWE3.
11. Security Considerations
The PW end-point, PW demultiplexing mechanism, and the payloads of
the native service can all be vulnerable to attack. PWE3 should
leverage security mechanisms provided by the PW Demultiplexer or PSN
Layers. Such mechanisms SHOULD protect PW end-point and PW
Demultiplexer mechanism from denial-of-service (DoS) attacks and
spoofing of the native data units. Preventing unauthorized access to
PW end-points and other network devices is generally effective
against DoS attacks and spoofing, and can be part of protection
mechanism. Protection mechanisms SHOULD also address the spoofing of
tunneled PW data. The validation of traffic addressed to the PW
Demultiplexer end-point is paramount in ensuring integrity of PW
encapsulation. Security protocols such as IPsec [RFC2401] can be
used.
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12. Acknowledgments
The authors would like to acknowledge input from M. Aissaoui, M.
Bocci, S. Bryant, R. Cohen, N. Harrison, G. Heron, T. Johnson, A.
Malis, L. Martini, E. Rosen, J. Rutemiller, T. So, Y. Stein, and S.
Vainshtein.
13. References
13.1. Normative References
[IFMIB] McCloghrie, K. and F. Kastenholz, "The Interfaces Group
MIB", RFC 2863, June 2000.
[SMIV2] McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D., and J. Schoenwaelder,
"Structure of Management Information Version 2 (SMIv2)",
STD 58, RFC 2578, April 1999.
13.2. Informative References
[G805] "Generic Functional Architecture of Transport Networks",
ITU-T Recommendation G.805, 2000.
[IPTUNMIB] Thaler, D., "IP Tunnel MIB", RFC 2667, August 1999.
[L2TPv3] Lau, J., Townsley, M., and I. Goyret, et al., "Layer Two
Tunneling Protocol (Version 3)", Work in Progress, June
2004.
[MARS] Armitage, G., "Support for Multicast over UNI 3.0/3.1
based ATM Networks", RFC 2022, November 1996.
[MPLS] Rosen, E., Viswanathan, A., and R. Callon, "Multiprotocol
Label Switching Architecture", RFC 3031, January 2001.
[PWE3_ARCH] S. Bryant and P. Pate, et. al., "PWE3 Architecture", Work
in Progress, March 2004.
[RFC2401] Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for the
Internet Protocol", RFC 2401, November 1998.
[TEMIB] Srinivasan, C., Viswanathan, A., and T. Nadeau,
"Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) Traffic Engineering
(TE) Management Information Base (MIB)", RFC 3812, June
2004.
[UNI3.0] ATM Forum, "ATM User-Network Interface Specification
Version 3.0", Sept. 1993.
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14. Authors' Addresses
XiPeng Xiao (Editor)
Riverstone Networks
5200 Great America Parkway
Santa Clara, CA 95054
EMail: xxiao@riverstonenet.com
Danny McPherson (Editor)
Arbor Networks
EMail: danny@arbor.net
Prayson Pate (Editor)
Overture Networks
507 Airport Boulevard, Suite 111
Morrisville, NC, USA 27560
EMail: prayson.pate@overturenetworks.com
Vijay Gill
AOL Time Warner
EMail: vijaygill9@aol.com
Kireeti Kompella
Juniper Networks, Inc.
1194 N. Mathilda Ave.
Sunnyvale, CA 94089
EMail: kireeti@juniper.net
Thomas D. Nadeau
Cisco Systems, Inc.
300 Beaver Brook Drive
Boxborough, MA 01719
EMail: tnadeau@cisco.com
Craig White
Level 3 Communications, LLC.
1025 Eldorado Blvd.
Broomfield, CO, 80021
EMail: Craig.White@Level3.com
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RFC 3916 PWE3 Requirements September 2004
15. Full Copyright Statement
Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).
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contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
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Xiao, et al. Informational [Page 19]
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