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An Architecture for Multi-Segment Pseudowire Emulation Edge-to-Edge
draft-ietf-pwe3-ms-pw-arch-07

The information below is for an old version of the document that is already published as an RFC.
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This is an older version of an Internet-Draft that was ultimately published as RFC 5659.
Authors Stewart Bryant , Matthew Bocci
Last updated 2015-10-14 (Latest revision 2009-07-30)
RFC stream Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
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Send notices to david.sinicrope@ericsson.com
draft-ietf-pwe3-ms-pw-arch-07
Network Working Group                                         M.Bocci 
Internet Draft                                          Alcatel-Lucent 
                                                                      
                                                             S.Bryant 
                                                         Cisco Systems 
 
Intended Status: Informational 
Expires: January 2010                                    July 30, 2009 
                                   
 
    An Architecture for Multi-Segment Pseudowire Emulation Edge-to-Edge  

                     draft-ietf-pwe3-ms-pw-arch-07.txt 

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   This Internet-Draft is submitted to IETF in full conformance with the 
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   This Internet-Draft will expire on January 30, 2010. 

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   Copyright (c) 2009 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 in effect on the date of 
   publication of this document (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info).  

 
 
 
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   Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights 
   and restrictions with respect to this document. 

Abstract 

   This document describes an architecture for extending pseudowire 
   emulation across multiple packet switched network segments. Scenarios 
   are discussed where each segment of a given edge-to-edge emulated 
   service spans a different provider's PSN, and where the emulated 
   service originates and terminates on the same provider's PSN, but may 
   pass through several PSN tunnel segments in that PSN. It presents an 
   architectural framework for such multi-segment pseudowires, defines 
   terminology, and specifies the various protocol elements and their 
   functions.  

Table of Contents 

    
   1. Introduction................................................3 
      1.1. Motivation and Context..................................3 
      1.2. Non-Goals of this Document..............................6 
      1.3. Terminology............................................7 
   2. Applicability...............................................8 
   3. Protocol Layering model......................................9 
      3.1. Domain of MS-PW Solutions...............................9 
      3.2. Payload Types..........................................9 
   4. Multi-Segment Pseudowire Reference Model....................10 
      4.1. Intra-Provider Connectivity Architecture...............11 
         4.1.1. Intra-Provider Switching Using ACs................11 
         4.1.2. Intra-Provider Switching Using PWs................12 
      4.2. Inter-Provider Connectivity Architecture...............12 
         4.2.1. Inter-Provider Switching Using ACs................12 
         4.2.2. Inter-Provider Switching Using PWs................12 
   5. PE Reference Model.........................................13 
      5.1. Pseudowire Pre-processing..............................13 
         5.1.1. Forwarding........................................13 
         5.1.2. Native Service Processing.........................14 
   6. Protocol Stack reference Model..............................14 
   7. Maintenance Reference Model.................................15 
   8. PW Demultiplexer Layer and PSN Requirements.................16 
      8.1. Multiplexing..........................................16 
      8.2. Fragmentation.........................................17 
   9. Control Plane..............................................17 
      9.1. Setup and Placement of MS-PWs..........................17 
      9.2. Pseudowire Up/Down Notification........................18 
      9.3. Misconnection and Payload Type Mismatch................18 
   10. Management and Monitoring..................................18 
 
 
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   11. Congestion Considerations..................................19 
   12. IANA Considerations........................................20 
   13. Security Considerations....................................20 
   14. Acknowledgments...........................................23 
   15. References................................................24 
      15.1. Normative References..................................24 
      15.2. Informative References................................24 
   Author's Addresses............................................24 
   Acknowledgment................................................25 
    
1. Introduction 

   RFC 3985 [1] defines the architecture for pseudowires, where a 
   pseudowire (PW) both originates and terminates on the edge of the 
   same packet switched network (PSN). The PW label is unchanged between 
   the originating and terminating PEs. This is now known as a single-
   segment pseudowire (SS-PW). 

   This document extends the architecture in RFC 3985 to enable point to 
   point pseudowires to be extended through multiple PSN tunnels. These 
   are known as multi-segment pseudowires (MS-PWs). Use cases for multi-
   segment pseudowires (MS-PWs), and the consequent requirements, are 
   defined in RFC 5254 [5].  

1.1. Motivation and Context 

   RFC 3985 addresses the case where a PW spans a single segment between 
   two PEs. Such PWs are termed single-segment pseudowires (SS-PWs) and 
   provide point-to-point connectivity between two edges of a provider 
   network. However, there is now a requirement to be able to construct 
   multi-segment pseudowires. These requirements are specified in RFC 
   5254 [5], and address three main problems: 

   i.   How to constrain the density of the mesh of PSN tunnels when 
         the number of PEs grows to many hundreds or thousands, while 
         minimizing the complexity of the PEs and P routers. 

   ii.  How to provide PWs across multiple PSN routing domains or areas 
         in the same provider. 

   iii. How to provide PWs across multiple provider domains, and 
         different PSN types. 

   Consider a single PW domain, such as that shown in Figure 1. There 
   are 4 PEs, and PWs must be provided from any PE to any other PE.  PWs 
   can be supported by establishing a full mesh of PSN tunnels between 
   the PEs, requiring a full mesh of LDP signaling adjacencies between 
 
 
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   the PEs. PWs can therefore be established between any PE and any 
   other PE via a single, direct PSN tunnel that is switched only by 
   intermediate P-routers (not shown in the figure). In this case, each 
   PW is a SS-PW. A PE must terminate all the pseudowires that are 
   carried on the PSN tunnels that terminate on that PE according to the 
   architecture of RFC 3985. This solution is adequate for small numbers 
   of PEs, but the number of PEs, PSN tunnels and signaling adjacencies 
   will grow in proportion to the square of the number of PEs. 

   For reasons of economy, the edge PEs that terminate the attachment 
   circuits (AC) are often small devices built to very low cost with 
   limited processing power. Consider an example where a particular PE, 
   residing at the edge of a provider network, terminates N PWs to/from 
   N different remote PEs. This needs N PW signaling adjacencies to be 
   set-up and maintained. If the edge PE attaches to a single 
   intermediate PE that is able to switch the PW, that edge PE only 
   needs a single adjacency to signal and maintain all N PWs. The 
   intermediate switching PE (which is a larger device) needs M 
   signaling adjacencies, but statistically this is less than tN where t 
   is the number of edge PEs that it is serving. Similarly, if the PWs 
   are running over TE PSN tunnels, there is a statistical reduction in 
   the number of TE PSN tunnels that need to be set up and maintained 
   between the various PEs. 

   One possible solution that is more efficient for large numbers of 
   PEs, in particular for the control plane, is therefore to support a 
   partial mesh of PSN tunnels between the PEs, as shown in Figure 1. 
   For example, consider a PW service whose endpoints are PE1 and PE4. 
   Pseudowires for this can take the path PE1->PE2->PE4, and rather than 
   terminating at PE2, be switched between ingress and egress PSN 
   tunnels on that PE. This requires a capability in PE2 that can 
   concatenate PW segments PE1-PE2 to PW segments PE2-PE4. The end-to-
   end PW is known as a multi-segment PW. 

 
 
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                                ,,..--..,,_ 
                            .-``           `'., 
                    +-----+`                   '+-----+ 
                    | PE1 |---------------------| PE2 | 
                    |     |---------------------|     | 
                    +-----+      PSN Tunnel     +-----+ 
                    / ||                          || \ 
                   /  ||                          ||  \ 
                  |   ||                          ||   | 
                  |   ||         PSN              ||   | 
                  |   ||                          ||   | 
                   \  ||                          ||  / 
                    \ ||                          || / 
                     \||                          ||/ 
                    +-----+                     +-----+ 
                    | PE3 |---------------------| PE4 | 
                    |     |---------------------|     | 
                    +-----+`'.,_           ,.'` +-----+ 
                                `'''---''`` 
    Figure 1 PWs Spanning a Single PSN with Partial Mesh of PSN Tunnels 

   Figure 1 shows a simple flat PSN topology. However, large provider 
   networks are typically not flat, consisting of many domains that are 
   connected together to provide edge-to-edge services. The elements in 
   each domain are specialized for a particular role, for example 
   supporting different PSN types or using different routing protocols.  

   An example application is shown in Figure 2. Here, the provider's 
   network is divided into three domains: Two access domains and the 
   core domain. The access domains represent the edge of the provider's 
   network at which services are delivered. In the access domain, 
   simplicity is required in order to minimize the cost of the network. 
   The core domain must support all of the aggregated services from the 
   access domains, and the design requirements here are for scalability, 
   performance, and information hiding (i.e. minimal state). The core 
   must not be exposed to the state associated with large numbers of 
   individual edge-to-edge flows. That is, the core must be simple and 
   fast.  

   In a traditional layer 2 network, the interconnection points between 
   the domains are where services in the access domains are aggregated 
   for transport across the core to other access domains. In an IP 
   network, the interconnection points could also represent interworking 
   points between different types of IP networks e.g. those with MPLS 
   and those without, and also points where network policies can be 
   applied. 

 
 
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         <-------- Edge to Edge Emulated Services -------> 
    
             ,'    .      ,-`       `',       ,'    . 
            /       \   .`             `,    /       \ 
           /        \  /                 ,  /        \ 
    AC  +----+     +----+               +----+       +----+    AC 
     ---| PE |-----| PE |---------------| PE |-------| PE |--- 
        |  1 |     |  2 |               | 3  |       | 4  | 
        +----+     +----+               +----+       +----+ 
           \        /  \                 /  \        / 
            \       /  \      Core       `   \       / 
             `,    `     .             ,`     `,    ` 
               '-'`       `.,       _.`         '-'` 
            Access 1         `''-''`         Access 2 
    
                    Figure 2 Multi-Domain Network Model 

   A similar model can also be applied to inter-provider services, where 
   a single PW spans a number of separate provider networks in order to 
   connect ACs residing on PEs in disparate provider networks. In this 
   case, each provider will typically maintain their own PE at the 
   border of their network in order to apply policies such as security 
   and QoS to PWs entering their network. Thus, the connection between 
   the domains will normally be a link between two PEs on the border of 
   each provider's network. 

   Consider the application of this model to PWs. PWs use tunneling 
   mechanisms such as MPLS to enable the underlying PSN to emulate 
   characteristics of the native service. One solution to the multi-
   domain network model above is to extend PSN tunnels edge-to-edge 
   between all of the PEs in access domain 1 and all of the PEs in 
   access domain 2, but this requires a large number of PSN tunnels as 
   described above, and also exposes the access and the core of the 
   network to undesirable complexity. An alternative is to constrain the 
   complexity to the network domain interconnection points (PE2 and PE3 
   in the example above). Pseudowires between PE1 and PE4 would then be 
   switched between PSN tunnels at the interconnection points, enabling 
   PWs from many PEs in the access domains to be aggregated across only 
   a few PSN tunnels in the core of the network. PEs in the access 
   domains would only need to maintain direct signaling sessions, and 
   PSN tunnels, with other PEs in their own domain, thus minimizing 
   complexity of the access domains. 

1.2. Non-Goals of this Document 

   The following are non-goals for this document: 

 
 
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   o The on-the-wire specification of PW encapsulations 

   o The detailed specification of mechanisms for establishing and 
      maintaining multi-segment pseudo-wires. 

1.3. Terminology 

   The terminology specified in RFC 3985 [1] and RFC 4026 [2] applies. 
   In addition, we define the following terms: 

   o PW Terminating Provider Edge (T-PE).  A PE where the customer-
      facing attachment circuits (ACs) are bound to a PW forwarder. A 
      Terminating PE is present in the first and last segments of a MS-
      PW. This incorporates the functionality of a PE as defined in RFC 
      3985. 

   o Single-Segment Pseudowire (SS-PW). A PW setup directly between two 
      T-PE devices.  The PW label is unchanged between the originating 
      and terminating T-PEs. 

   o Multi-Segment Pseudowire (MS-PW).  A static or dynamically 
      configured set of two or more contiguous PW segments that behave 
      and function as a single point-to-point PW. Each end of a MS-PW by 
      definition terminates on a T-PE. 

   o PW Segment. A part of a single-segment or multi-segment PW, which 
      traverses one PSN tunnel in each direction between two PE devices, 
      T-PEs and/or S-PEs. 

   o PW Switching Provider Edge (S-PE).  A PE capable of switching the 
      control and data planes of the preceding and succeeding PW 
      segments in a MS-PW. The S-PE terminates the PSN tunnels of the 
      preceding and succeeding segments of the MS-PW. It therefore 
      includes a PW switching point for a MS-PW. A PW Switching Point is 
      never the S-PE and the T-PE for the same MS-PW. A PW switching 
      point runs necessary protocols to setup and manage PW segments 
      with other PW switching points and terminating PEs. A S-PE can 
      exist anywhere where a PW must be processed or policy applied. It 
      is therefore not limited to the edge of a provider network. 

      Note that it was originally anticipated that S-PEs would only be 
      deployed at the edge of a provider network where there would be 
      used to switch the PWs of different service providers. However as 
      the design of MS-PW progressed other applications for MS-PW were 
      recognized. By this time S-PE had become the accepted term for the 
      equipment even though they were no longer universally deployed at 
      the provider edge.  
 
 
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   o PW Switching. The process of switching the control and data planes 
      of the preceding and succeeding PW segments in a MS-PW. 

   o PW Switching Point. The reference point in an S-PE where the 
      switching takes place, e.g. where PW label swap is executed.  

   o Eligible S-PE or T-PE. An Eligible S-PE or T-PE is a PE that meets 
      the security and privacy requirements of the MS-PW, according to 
      the network operator's policy.   

   o Trusted S-PE or T-PE. A trusted S-PE or T-PE is a PE that is 
      understood to be eligible by its next hop S-PE or T-PE, while a 
      trust relationship exists between two S-PEs or T-PEs if they 
      mutually consider each other to be eligible. 

2. Applicability 

   A MS-PW is a single PW that for technical or administrative reasons 
   is segmented into a number of concatenated hops. From the perspective 
   of a L2VPN, a MS-PW is indistinguishable from a SS-PW. Thus, the 
   following are equivalent from the perspective of the T-PE 

       +----+                                                  +----+ 
       |TPE1+--------------------------------------------------+TPE2| 
       +----+                                                  +----+ 
    
       |<---------------------------PW----------------------------->| 
    
       +----+              +---+           +---+               +----+ 
       |TPE1+--------------+SPE+-----------+SPE+---------------+TPE2| 
       +----+              +---+           +---+               +----+ 
    

                        Figure 3 MS-PW Equivalence 

   Although a MS-PW may require services such as node discovery and path 
   signaling to construct the PW, it should not be confused with a L2VPN 
   system, which also requires these services. A VPWS connects its 
   endpoints via a set of PWs. MS-PW is a mechanism that abstracts the 
   construction of complex PWs from the construction of a L2VPN. Thus a 
   T-PE might be an edge device optimized for simplicity and an S-PE 
   might be an aggregation device designed to absorb the complexity of 
   continuing the PW across the core of one or more service provider 
   networks to another T-PE located at the edge of the network. 

   As well as supporting traditional L2VPNs, an MS-PW is applicable to 
   providing connectivity across a transport network based on packet 
 
 
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   switching technology e.g. MPLS Transport profile (MPLS-TP) [6], [8]. 
   Such a network uses pseudowires to support the transport and 
   aggregation of all services. This application requires deterministic 
   characteristics and behavior from the network. The operational 
   requirements of such networks may need pseudowire segments that can 
   be established and maintained in the absence of a control plane, and 
   the operational independence of PW maintenance from the underlying 
   PSN. 

3. Protocol Layering model 

   The protocol-layering model specified in RFC 3985 applies to MS-PWs 
   with the following clarification: the pseudowires may be considered 
   to be a separate layer to the PSN tunnel. That is, although a PW 
   segment will follow the path of the PSN tunnel between S-PEs, the MS-
   PW is independent of the PSN tunnel routing, operations, signaling 
   and maintenance. The design of PW routing domains should not imply 
   that the underlying PSN routing domains are the same. However, MS-PWs 
   will reuse the protocols of the PSN and may, if applicable, use 
   information that is extracted from the PSN e.g. reachability. 

3.1. Domain of MS-PW Solutions 

   PWs provide the Encapsulation Layer, i.e. the method of carrying 
   various payload types, and the interface to the PW Demultiplexer 
   Layer. Other layers provide the following: 

      . PSN tunnel setup, maintenance and routing 

      . T-PE discovery 

   Not all PEs may be capable of providing S-PE functionality. 
   Connectivity to the next hop S-PE or T-PE must be provided by a PSN 
   tunnel, according to [1]. The selection of which set of S-PEs to use 
   to reach a given T-PE is considered to be within the scope of MS-PW 
   solutions.   

     

3.2. Payload Types 

   MS-PWs are applicable to all PW payload types. Encapsulations defined 
   for SS-PWs are also used for MS-PW without change. Where the PSN 
   types for each segment of an MS-PW are identical, the PW types of 
   each segment must also be identical. However, if different segments 
   run over different PSN types, the encapsulation may change but the PW 

 
 
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   segments must be of an equivalent PW type i.e. the S-PE must not need 
   to process the PW payload to provide translation.  

4. Multi-Segment Pseudowire Reference Model 

   The PWE3 reference architecture for the single segment case is shown 
   in [1]. This architecture applies to the case where a PSN tunnel 
   extends between two edges of a single PSN domain to transport a PW 
   with endpoints at these edges. 

 

       Native  |<------Multi-Segment Pseudowire------>|  Native 
       Service |         PSN              PSN         |  Service 
        (AC)   |     |<-Tunnel->|     |<-Tunnel->|    |   (AC) 
          |    V     V     1    V     V    2     V    V     | 
          |    +----+           +-----+          +----+     | 
   +----+ |    |TPE1|===========|SPE1 |==========|TPE2|     | +----+ 
   |    |------|..... PW.Seg't1....X....PW.Seg't3.....|-------|    | 
   | CE1| |    |    |           |     |          |    |     | |CE2 | 
   |    |------|..... PW.Seg't2....X....PW.Seg't4.....|-------|    | 
   +----+ |    |    |===========|     |==========|    |     | +----+ 
        ^      +----+           +-----+          +----+       ^ 
        |   Provider Edge 1        ^        Provider Edge 2   | 
        |                          |                          | 
        |                          |                          | 
        |                  PW switching point                 | 
        |                                                     | 
        |<------------------ Emulated Service --------------->| 
    
                      Figure 4 MS-PW Reference Model 

   Figure 4 extends this architecture to show a multi-segment case. The 
   PEs that provide services to CE1 and CE2 are Terminating-PE1 (T-PE1) 
   and Terminating-PE2 (T-PE2) respectively. A PSN tunnel extends from 
   T-PE1 to switching-PE1 (S-PE1) across PSN1, and a second PSN tunnel 
   extends from S-PE1 to T-PE2 across PSN2. PWs are used to connect the 
   attachment circuits (ACs) attached to PE1 to the corresponding ACs 
   attached to T-PE2.  

   Each PW segment on the tunnel across PSN1 is switched to a PW segment 
   in the tunnel across PSN2 at S-PE1 to complete the multi-segment PW 
   (MS-PW) between T-PE1 and T-PE2. S-PE1 is therefore the PW switching 
   point. PW segment 1 and PW segment 3 are segments of the same MS-PW 
   while PW segment 2 and PW segment 4 are segments of another MS-PW. PW 
   segments of the same MS-PW (e.g., PW segment 1 and PW segment 3) must 
   be of equivalent PW types, as described in Section 3.2. above, while 
 
 
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   PSN tunnels (e.g., PSN1 and PSN2) may be of the same or different PSN 
   types. An S-PE switches an MS-PW from one segment to another based on 
   the PW demultiplexer, i.e., PW label that may take one of the forms 
   defined in RFC3985 Section 5.4.1 [1]. 

   Note that although Figure 4 only shows a single S-PE, a PW may 
   transit more one S-PE along its path. This architecture is applicable 
   when the S-PEs are statically chosen, or when they are chosen using a 
   dynamic path selection mechanism. Both directions of an MS-PW must 
   traverse the same set of S-PEs on a reciprocal path. Note that 
   although the S-PE path is therefore reciprocal, the path taken by the 
   PSN tunnels between the T-PEs and S-PEs might not be reciprocal due 
   to choices made by the PSN routing protocol. 

4.1. Intra-Provider Connectivity Architecture 

   There is a requirement to deploy PWs edge-to-edge in large service 
   provider networks (RFC 5254 [5]). Such networks typically encompass 
   hundreds or thousands of aggregation devices at the edge, each of 
   which would be a PE. These networks may be partitioned into separate 
   metro and core PW domains, where the PEs are interconnected by a 
   sparse mesh of tunnels.  

   Whether or not the network is partitioned into separate PW domains, 
   there is also a requirement to support a partial mesh of traffic 
   engineered PSN tunnels. 

   The architecture shown in Figure 4 can be used to support such cases. 
   PSN1 and PSN2 may be in different administrative domains or access, 
   core or metro regions within the same provider's network. PSN 1 and 
   PSN2 may also be of different types. For example, S-PEs may be used 
   to connect PW segments traversing metro networks of one technology 
   e.g. statically allocated labels, with segments traversing a MPLS 
   core network. 

   Alternatively, T-PE1, S-PE1 and T-PE2 may reside at the edges of the 
   same PSN. 

4.1.1. Intra-Provider Switching Using ACs 

   In this model, the PW reverts to the native service AC at the domain 
   boundary PE. This AC is then connected to a separate PW on the same 
   PE. In this case, the reference models of RFC 3985 apply to each 
   segment and to the PEs. The remaining PE architectural considerations 
   in this document do not apply to this case. 

    
 
 
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4.1.2. Intra-Provider Switching Using PWs 

   In this model, PW segments are switched between PSN tunnels that span 
   portions of a provider's network, without reverting to the native 
   service at the boundary. For example, in Figure 4, PSN 1 and PSN 2 
   would be portions of the same provider's network. 

4.2. Inter-Provider Connectivity Architecture 

   Inter-provider PWs may need to be switched between PSN tunnels at the 
   provider boundary in order to minimize the number of tunnels required 
   to provide PW-based services to CEs attached to each provider's 
   network. In addition, the following may need to be implemented on a 
   per-PW basis at the provider boundary: 

      . Operations and Management (OAM), 

      . Authentication, Authorization and Accounting (AAA), 

      . Security mechanisms.  

   Further security related architectural considerations are described 
   in Section 13.  

4.2.1. Inter-Provider Switching Using ACs. 

   In this model, the PW reverts to the native service at the provider 
   boundary PE. This AC is then connected to a separate PW at the peer 
   provider boundary PE. In this case, the reference models of RFC 3985 
   apply to each segment and to the PEs. This is similar to the case in 
   Section 4.1.1. , except that additional security and policy 
   enforcement measures will be required. The remaining PE architectural 
   considerations in this document do not apply to this case. 

4.2.2. Inter-Provider Switching Using PWs. 

   In this model, PW segments are switched between PSN tunnels in each 
   provider's network, without reverting to the native service at the 
   boundary. This architecture is shown in Figure 5. Here, S-PE1 and S-
   PE2 are provider border routers. PW segment 1 is switched to PW 
   segment 2 at S-PE1. PW segment 2 is then carried across an inter-
   provider PSN tunnel to S-PE2, where it is switched to PW segment 3 in 
   PSN 2.  

 
 
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                |<------Multi-Segment Pseudowire------>| 
                |       Provider         Provider      | 
           AC   |    |<----1---->|     |<----2--->|    |  AC 
            |   V    V           V     V          V    V  | 
            |   +----+     +-----+     +----+     +----+  | 
   +----+   |   |    |=====|     |=====|    |=====|    |  |    +----+ 
   |    |-------|......PW.....X....PW.....X...PW.......|-------|    | 
   | CE1|   |   |    |Seg 1|     |Seg 2|    |Seg 3|    |  |    |CE2 | 
   +----+   |   |    |     |     |     |    |     |    |  |    +----+ 
        ^       +----+     +-----+     +----+     +----+       ^ 
        |       T-PE1       S-PE1       S-PE2     T-PE2        | 
        |                     ^          ^                     | 
        |                     |          |                     | 
        |                  PW switching points                 | 
        |                                                      | 
        |                                                      | 
        |<------------------- Emulated Service --------------->| 

                  Figure 5 Inter-Provider Reference Model 

5. PE Reference Model 

5.1. Pseudowire Pre-processing 

   Pseudowire preprocessing is applied in the T-PEs as specified in RFC 
   3985. Processing at the S-PEs is specified in the following sections. 

5.1.1. Forwarding 

   Each forwarder in the S-PE forwards packets from one PW segment on 
   the ingress PSN facing interface of the S-PE to one PW segment on the 
   egress PSN facing interface of the S-PE. 

   The forwarder selects the egress segment PW based on the ingress PW 
   label. The mapping of ingress to egress PW label may be statically or 
   dynamically configured. Figure 6 shows how a single forwarder is 
   associated with each PW segment at the S-PE.  

 
 
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               +------------------------------------------+ 
               |                S-PE Device               | 
               +------------------------------------------+ 
     Ingress   |             |             |              |   Egress 
   PW instance |   Single    |             |    Single    | PW Instance 
   <==========>X PW Instance +  Forwarder  + PW Instance  X<==========> 
               |             |             |              | 
               +------------------------------------------+ 
    
                      Figure 6 Point-to-Point Service 

   Other mappings of PW to forwarder are for further study.  
    
5.1.2. Native Service Processing 

   There is no native service processing in the S-PEs.  

6. Protocol Stack reference Model 

   Figure 7 illustrates the protocol stack reference model for multi-
   segment PWs. 

+----------------+                                  +----------------+     
|Emulated Service|                                  |Emulated Service| 
|(e.g., TDM, ATM)|<======= Emulated Service =======>|(e.g., TDM, ATM)| 
+----------------+                                  +----------------+ 
|    Payload     |                                  |    Payload     | 
|  Encapsulation |<=== Multi-segment Pseudowire ===>|  Encapsulation | 
+----------------+            +--------+            +----------------+ 
|PW Demultiplexer|<PW Segment>|PW Demux|<PW Segment>|PW Demultiplexer| 
+----------------+            +--------+            +----------------+ 
|   PSN Tunnel,  |<PSN Tunnel>|  PSN   |<PSN Tunnel>|  PSN Tunnel,   | 
| PSN & Physical |            |Physical|            | PSN & Physical | 
|     Layers     |            | Layers |            |    Layers      | 
+-------+--------+            +--------+            +----------------+ 
        |            ..........   |   ..........            |  
        |           /          \  |  /          \           |         
        +==========/    PSN     \===/    PSN     \==========+         
                   \  domain 1  /   \  domain 2  /                        
                    \__________/     \__________/                         
                     ``````````       `````````` 

                 Figure 7 Multi-Segment PW Protocol Stack 

   The MS-PW provides the CE with an emulated physical or virtual 
   connection to its peer at the far end. Native service PDUs from the 
   CE are passed through an Encapsulation Layer and a PW demultiplexer 
 
 
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   is added at the sending T-PE. The PDU is sent over PSN domain via the 
   PSN transport tunnel. The receiving S-PE swaps the existing PW 
   demultiplexer for the demultiplexer of the next segment, and then 
   sends the PDU over transport tunnel in PSN2. Where the ingress and 
   egress PSN domains of the S-PE are of the same type e.g. they are 
   both MPLS PSNs, a simple label swap operation is performed, as 
   described in RFC 3031 [3] Section 3.13. However, where the ingress 
   and egress PSNs are of different types, e.g. MPLS and L2TPv3, the 
   ingress PW demultiplexer is removed (or popped), a mapping to the 
   egress PW demultiplexer is performed, and then inserted (or pushed).  

   Policies may also be applied to the PW at this point. Examples of 
   such policies include: admission control, rate control, QoS mappings, 
   and security. The receiving T-PE removes the PW demultiplexer and 
   restores the payload to its native format for transmission to the 
   destination CE. 

   Where the encapsulation format is different e.g. MPLS and L2TPv3, the 
   payload encapsulation may be translated at the S-PE. 

7. Maintenance Reference Model 

   Figure 8 shows the maintenance reference model for multi-segment 
   pseudowires. 

    

 
 
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         |<------------- CE (end-to-end) Signaling ------------>| 
         |                                                      | 
         |       |<-------- MS-PW/T-PE Maintenance ----->|      | 
         |       |  |<---PW Seg't-->| |<--PW Seg't--->|  |      | 
         |       |  |   Maintenance | | Maintenance   |  |      | 
         |       |  |               | |               |  |      | 
         |       |  |     PSN       | |     PSN       |  |      | 
         |       |  | |<-Tunnel1->| | | |<-Tunnel2->| |  |      | 
         |       V  V V Signaling V V V V Signaling V V  V      | 
         V       +----+           +-----+           +----+      V 
    +----+       |TPE1|===========|SPE1 |===========|TPE2|      +----+ 
    |    |-------|......PW.Seg't1....X....PW Seg't3......|------|    | 
    | CE1|       |    |           |     |           |    |      |CE2 | 
    |    |-------|......PW.Seg't2....X....PW Seg't4......|------|    | 
    +----+       |    |===========|     |===========|    |      +----+ 
      ^          +----+           +-----+           +----+         ^ 
      |        Terminating           ^            Terminating      | 
      |      Provider Edge 1         |          Provider Edge 2    | 
      |                              |                             | 
      |                      PW switching point                    | 
      |                                                            | 
      |<--------------------- Emulated Service ------------------->| 
    
                Figure 8 MS-PW Maintenance Reference Model 

   RFC 3985 specifies the use of CE (end-to-end) and PSN tunnel 
   signaling, and PW/PE maintenance. CE and PSN tunnel signaling is as 
   specified in RFC 3985. However, in the case of MS-PWs, signaling 
   between the PEs now has both an edge-to-edge and a hop-by-hop 
   context. That is, signaling and maintenance between T-PEs and S-PEs 
   and between adjacent S-PEs is used to set up, maintain, and tear down 
   the MS-PW segments, which include the coordination of parameters 
   related to each switching point, as well as the MS-PW end points. 

8. PW Demultiplexer Layer and PSN Requirements 

8.1. Multiplexing 

   The purpose of the PW demultiplexer layer at the S-PE is to 
   demultiplex PWs from ingress PSN tunnels and to multiplex them into 
   egress PSN tunnels. Although each PW may contain multiple native 
   service circuits, e.g. multiple ATM VCs, the S-PEs do not have 
   visibility of, and hence do not change, this level of multiplexing 
   because they contain no Native Service Processor (NSP).  

 
 
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8.2. Fragmentation 

   If fragmentation is to be used in an MS-PW, T-PEs and S-PEs must 
   satisfy themselves that fragmented PW payloads can be correctly 
   reassembled for delivery to the destination attachment circuit. 

   An S-PE is not required to make any attempt to reassemble a 
   fragmented PW payload. However, it may choose to do so if, for 
   example, it knows that a downstream PW segment does not support 
   reassembly.   

   An S-PE may fragment a PW payload using [4]. 

9. Control Plane 

9.1. Setup and Placement of MS-PWs 

   For multi-segment pseudowires, the intermediate PW switching points 
   may be statically provisioned, or they may be chosen dynamically.  

   For the static case, there are two options for exchanging the PW 
   labels: 

   o By configuration at the T-PEs or S-PEs 

   o By signaling across each segment using a dynamic maintenance 
      protocol.  

   A multi-segment pseudowire may thus consist of segments where the 
   labels are statically configured and segments where the labels are 
   signaled.   

   For the case of dynamic choice of the PW switching points, there are 
   two options for selecting the path of the MS-PW: 

   o T-PEs determine the full path of the PW through intermediate 
      switching points. This may be either static or based on a dynamic 
      PW path selection mechanism.  

   o Each T-PE and S-PE makes a local decision as to which next-hop S-
      PE to choose to reach the target T-PE. This choice is made either 
      using locally configured information, or by using a dynamic PW 
      path selection mechanism. 

 
 
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9.2. Pseudowire Up/Down Notification 

   Since a multi-segment PW consists of a number of concatenated PW 
   segments, the emulated service can only be considered as being up 
   when all of the constituting PW segments and PSN tunnels are 
   functional and operational along the entire path of the MS-PW. 

   If a native service requires bi-directional connectivity, the 
   corresponding emulated service can only be signaled as being 
   operational up when the PW segments and PSN tunnels (if used), are 
   functional and operational in both directions. 

   RFC 3985 describes the architecture of failure and other status 
   notification mechanisms for PWs. These mechanisms are also needed in  
   multi-segment pseudowires. In addition, if a failure notification 
   mechanism is provided for consecutive segments of the same PW, the S-
   PE must propagate such notifications between the consecutive 
   concatenated segments.   

9.3. Misconnection and Payload Type Mismatch 

   Misconnection and payload type mismatch can occur with PWs. 
   Misconnection can breach the integrity of the system.  Payload 
   mismatch can disrupt the customer network.  In both instances, there 
   are security and operational concerns. 

   The services of the underlying tunneling mechanism or the PW control 
   and OAM protocols can be used to ensure that the identity of the PW 
   next hop is as expected. As part of the PW setup, a PW-TYPE 
   identifier is exchanged. This is then used by the forwarder and the 
   NSP of the T-PEs to verify the compatibility of the ACs. This can 
   also be used by S-PEs to ensure that concatenated segments of a given 
   MS-PW are compatible, or that a MS-PW is not misconnected into a 
   local AC. In addition, it is possible to perform an end-to-end 
   connection verification to check the integrity of the PW, to verify 
   the identity of S-PEs and check the correct connectivity at S-PEs, 
   and to verify the identity of the T-PE. 

10. Management and Monitoring 

   The management and monitoring as described in RFC 3985 applies here.  

   The MS-PW architecture introduces additional considerations related 
   to management and monitoring, which need to be reflected in the 
   design of maintenance tools and additional management objects for MS-
   PWs. 

 
 
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   The first is that each S-PE is a new point at which defects may occur 
   along the path of the PW. In order to troubleshoot MS-PWs, management 
   and monitoring should be able to operate on a subset of the segments 
   of an MS-PW, as well as edge-to-edge. That is, connectivity 
   verification mechanisms should be able to troubleshoot and 
   differentiate the connectivity between T-PEs and intermediate S-PEs, 
   as well as T-PE to T-PE.  

   The second is that the set of S-PEs and P-routers along the MS-PW 
   path may be less optimal than a path between the T-PEs chosen solely 
   by the underlying PSN routing protocols. This is because the S-PEs 
   are chosen by the MS-PW path selection mechanism and not by the PSN 
   routing protocols. Troubleshooting mechanisms should therefore be 
   provided to verify the set of S-PEs that are traversed by a MS-PW to 
   reach a T-PE. 

   Some of the S-PEs and the T-PEs for an MS-PW may reside in different 
   service provider's PSN domain from that of the operator who initiated 
   the establishment of the MS-PW. These situations may necessitate the 
   use of remote management of the MS-PW, which is able to securely 
   operate across provider boundaries.  

    

     

11. Congestion Considerations 

   The following congestion considerations apply to MS-PWs. These are in 
   addition to the considerations for PWs described in RFC 3985 [1], [7] 
   and in the respective RFCs specifying each PW type.  

   The control plane and the data plane fate-share in traditional IP 
   networks. The implication of this is that congestion in the data 
   plane can cause degradation of the operation of the control plane. 
   Under quiescent operating conditions it is expected that the network 
   will be designed to avoid such problems. However, MS-PW mechanisms 
   should also consider what happens when congestion does occur, when 
   the network is stretched beyond its design limits, for example during 
   unexpected network failure conditions. 

   Although congestion within a single provider's network can be 
   mitigated by suitable engineering of the network so that the traffic 
   imposed by PWs can never cause congestion in the underlying PSN, a 
   significant number of MS-PWs are expected to be deployed for inter-
   provider services. In this case, there may be no way of a provider 
   who initiates the establishment of a MS-PW at a T-PE guaranteeing 
 
 
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   that it will not cause congestion in a downstream PSN. A specific PSN 
   may be able to protect itself from excess PW traffic by policing all 
   PWs at the S-PE at the provider border. However, this may not be 
   effective when the PSN tunnel across a provider utilizes the transit 
   services of another provider that cannot distinguish PW traffic from 
   ordinary, TCP-controlled, IP traffic.  

   Each segment of an MS-PW therefore needs to implement congestion 
   detection and congestion control mechanisms where it is not possible 
   to explicitly provision sufficient capacity to avoid congestion.  

   In many cases, only the T-PEs may have sufficient information about 
   each PW to fairly apply congestion control. Therefore, T-PEs need to 
   be aware which of their PWs are causing congestion in a downstream 
   PSN and their native service characteristics and to apply congestion 
   control accordingly. S-PEs therefore need to propagate PSN congestion 
   state information between their downstream and upstream directions. 
   If the MS-PW transits many S-PEs, it may take some time for 
   congestion state information to propagate from the congested PSN 
   segment to the source T-PE, thus delaying the application of 
   congestion control. Congestion control in the S-PE at the border of 
   the congested PSN can enable a more rapid response and thus 
   potentially reduce the duration of congestion. 

   In addition to protecting the operation of the underlying PSN, 
   consistent QoS and traffic engineering mechanisms should be used on 
   each segment of a MS-PW to support the requirements of the emulated 
   service. The QoS treatment given to a PW packet at an S-PE may be 
   derived from context information of the PW (e.g. traffic or QoS 
   parameters signaled to the S-PE by an MS-PW control protocol), or 
   from PSN-specific QoS flags in the PSN tunnel label or PW 
   demultiplexer e.g. TC bits in either the LSP or PW label for an MPLS 
   PSN or the DS field of the outer IP header for L2TPv3. 

     

12. IANA Considerations 

   This document does not contain any IANA actions. 

13. Security Considerations 

   The security considerations described in RFC 3985 [1] apply here. 

   Detailed security requirements for MS-PWs are specified in RFC 5254 
   [5]. This section describes the architectural implications of those 
   requirements.  
 
 
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   The security implications for T-PEs are similar to those for PEs in 
   single segment pseudowires. However, S-PEs represent a point in the 
   network where the PW label is exposed to additional processing. An 
   S-PE or T-PE must trust that the context of the MS-PW is maintained 
   by a downstream S-PE. OAM tools must be able to verify the identity 
   of the far end T-PE to the satisfaction of the network operator. 
   Additional consideration needs to be given to the security of the S-
   PEs, both at the data plane and the control plane, particularly when 
   these are dynamically selected and/or when the MS-PW transits the 
   networks of multiple operators. 

   An implicit trust relationship exists between the initiator of an MS-
   PW, the T-PEs, and the S-PEs along the MS-PW's path. That is, the T-
   PE trusts the S-PEs to process and switch PWs without compromising 
   the security or privacy of the PW service. An S-PE should not select 
   a next-hop S-PE or T-PE unless it knows it would be considered 
   eligible, as defined in Section 1.3. above, by the originator of the 
   MS-PW. For dynamically placed MS-PWs, this can be achieved by 
   allowing the T-PE to explicitly specify the path of the MS-PW. When 
   the MS-PW is dynamically created by the use of a signaling protocol, 
   an S-PE or T-PE should determine the authenticity of the peer entity 
   from which it receives the request, and its compliance with policy. 

   Where a MS-PW crosses a border between one provider and another 
   provider, the MS-PW segment endpoints (S-PEs or T-PEs), or P-routers 
   for the PSN tunnel, typically reside on the same nodes as the ASBRs 
   interconnecting the two providers. In either case, an S-PE in one 
   provider is connected to a limited number of trusted T-PEs or S-PEs 
   in the other provider. The number of such trusted T-PEs or S-PEs is 
   bounded and not anticipated to create a scaling issue for the control 
   plane authentication mechanisms. 

   Directly interconnecting the S-PEs/T-PEs using a physically secure 
   link, and enabling signaling and routing authentication between the 
   S-PEs/T-PEs, eliminates the possibility of receiving a MS-PW 
   signaling message or packet from an untrusted peer. The S-PEs/T-PEs 
   represent security policy enforcement points for the MS-PW, while the 
   ASBRs represent security policy enforcement points for the provider's 
   PSNs. This architecture is illustrated in Figure 9. 

 
 
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               |<------------- MS-PW ---------------->| 
               |       Provider         Provider      | 
          AC   |    |<----1---->|     |<----2--->|    |  AC 
           |   V    V           V     V          V    V  | 
           |   +----+     +-----+     +----+     +----+  | 
   +---+   |   |    |=====|     |=====|    |=====|    |  |    +---+ 
   |   |-------|......PW.....X....PW.....X...PW.......|-------|   | 
   |CE1|   |   |    |Seg 1|     |Seg 2|    |Seg 3|    |  |    |CE2| 
   +---+   |   |    |     |     |     |    |     |    |  |    +---+ 
       ^       +----+     +-----+  ^  +----+     +----+       ^ 
       |       T-PE1       S-PE1   |   S-PE2     T-PE2        | 
       |                    ASBR   |    ASBR                  | 
       |                           |                          | 
       |                  Physically secure link              | 
       |                                                      | 
       |                                                      | 
       |<------------------- Emulated Service --------------->| 

         Figure 9 Directly Connected Inter-Provider Reference Model 

    

   Alternatively, the P-routers for the PSN tunnel may reside on the 
   ASBRs, while the S-PEs or T-PEs reside behind the ASBRs within each 
   provider's network. A limited number of trusted inter-provider PSN 
   tunnels interconnect the provider networks. This is illustrated in 
   Figure 10. 

             |<-------------- MS-PW -------------------->| 
             |          Provider          Provider       | 
         AC  |    |<------1----->|   |<-----2------->|   |  AC 
          |  V    V              V   V               V   V  | 
          |  +---+     +---+  +--+   +--+  +---+     +---+  | 
   +---+  |  |   |=====|   |===============|   |=====|   |  |   +---+ 
   |   |-----|.....PW....X.......PW..............PW....X.|------|   | 
   |CE1|  |  |   |Seg 1|   |  | Seg 2|     |   |Seg 3|   |  |   |CE2| 
   +---+  |  |   |     |   |  |  |   |     |   |     |   |  |   +---+ 
       ^     +---+     +---+  +--+ ^ +--+  +---+     +---+      ^ 
       |      T-PE1    S-PE1  ASBR | ASBR  S-PE2     T-PE2      | 
       |                           |                            | 
       |                           |                            | 
       |                Trusted Inter-AS PSN Tunnel             | 
       |                                                        | 
       |                                                        | 
       |<------------------- Emulated Service ----------------->| 

       Figure 10 Indirectly Connected Inter-Provider Reference Model 
 
 
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   Particular consideration needs to be given to Quality of Service 
   requests because the inappropriate use of priority may impact any 
   service guarantees given to other PWs. Consideration also needs to be 
   given to the avoidance of spoofing the PW demultiplexer. 

   Where an S-PE provides interconnection between different providers, 
   similar considerations to those applied to ASBRs apply. In particular 
   peer entity authentication should be used.  

   Where an S-PE also supports T-PE functionality, mechanisms should be 
   provided to ensure that MS-PWs to switched correctly to the 
   appropriate outgoing PW segment, rather than a local AC. Other 
   mechanisms for PW end point verification may also be used to confirm 
   the correct PW connection prior to enabling the attachment circuits. 

14. Acknowledgments 

   The authors gratefully acknowledge the input of Mustapha Aissaoui, 
   Dimitri Papadimitrou, Sasha Vainshtein, and Luca Martini.  

    

 
 
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15. References 

15.1. Normative References 

     [1] Bryant, S. and Pate, P. (Editors), "Pseudo Wire Emulation Edge-
           to-Edge (PWE3) Architecture", RFC 3985, March 2005 

     [2] Andersson, L. and Madsen, T., "Provider Provisioned Virtual 
           Private Network (VPN) Terminology", RFC 4026, March 2005 

     [3] Rosen, E. Viswanathan, A. and Callon, R., "Multiprotocol Label 
           Switching Architecture", RFC 3031, January 2001 

     [4] Malis, A. and Townsley, M., "Pseudowire Emulation Edge-to-Edge 
           (PWE3) Fragmentation and Reassembly", RFC 4623, August 2006 

15.2. Informative References 

     [5] Martini, L. Bitar, N. and Bocci, M (Editors), "Requirements for 
           Multi-Segment Pseudowire Emulation Edge-to-Edge (PWE3)", RFC 
           5254, October 2008  

     [6] Niven-Jenkins, B. et al., "MPLS-TP Requirements", draft-ietf-
           mpls-tp-requirements-09.txt, June 2009, work in progress. 

     [7] Bryant, S et al."Pseudowire Congestion Control Framework", 
           draft-ietf-pwe3-congestion-frmwk-02.txt, June 2009, work in 
           progress.  

     [8] Bocci, M., Bryant, S., Levrau, L. (Editors), "A Framework for 
           MPLS in Transport Networks", draft-ietf-mpls-tp-framework-
           02.txt, July 2009, work in progress. 

      

Author's Addresses 

   Matthew Bocci 
   Alcatel-Lucent 
   Voyager Place, Shoppenhangers Road, 
   Maidenhead, Berks, UK 
   Phone: +44 1633 413600 
   Email: matthew.bocci@alcatel-lucent.com 

 
 
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   Stewart Bryant 
   Cisco 
   250, Longwater, 
   Green Park, 
   Reading, RG2 6GB, 
   United Kingdom. 
   Email: stbryant@cisco.com 

    

Acknowledgment 

   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the 
   Internet Society. 

    

 
 
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