Network Working Group P. Pillay-Esnault
Internet-Draft Cisco Systems
Intended status: Standards Track P. Moyer
Expires: September 9, 2010 Pollere, Inc
J. Doyle
Jeff Doyle and Associates
E. Ertekin
M. Lundberg
Booz Allen Hamilton
March 8, 2010
OSPFv3 as a PE-CE routing protocol
draft-ietf-l3vpn-ospfv3-pece-05
This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF
Contributions published or made publicly available before November
10, 2008. The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this
material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow
modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process.
Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling
the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified
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not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format
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than English.
Abstract
Many Service Providers (SPs) offer Virtual Private Network (VPN)
services to their customers using a technique in which Customer Edge
(CE) routers are routing peers of Provider Edge (PE) routers. The
Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) is used to distribute the customer's
routes across the provider's IP backbone network, and Multiprotocol
Label Switching (MPLS) is used to tunnel customer packets across the
provider's backbone. This is known as a "BGP/MPLS IP VPN".
Originally only IPv4 was supported and it was later extended to
support IPv6 VPNs as well. Extensions were later added for the
support of the Open Shortest Path First protocol version 2 (OSPFv2)
as a PE-CE routing protocol for the IPv4 VPNs. This document extends
those specifications to support OSPF version 3 (OSPFv3) as a PE-CE
routing protocol. The OSPFv3 PE-CE functionality is identical to
that of OSPFv2 except for the differences described in this document.
Status of This Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted to IETF in full conformance with the
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described in the BSD License.
This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF
Contributions published or made publicly available before November
10, 2008. The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this
material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow
modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process.
Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling
the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified
outside the IETF Standards Process, and derivative works of it may
not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format
it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other
than English.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Specification of Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3. Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3.1. OSPFv3 Specificities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
4. BGP/OSPFv3 Interaction Procedures for PE Routers . . . . . . . 6
4.1. VRFs and OSPFv3 Instances . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
4.1.1. Independent OSPFv3 Instances in PEs . . . . . . . . . 6
4.1.2. OSPFv3 Domain Identifier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
4.2. OSPFv3 Areas . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
4.3. VRFs and Routes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
4.3.1. OSPFv3 Routes on PE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
4.3.2. VPN-IPv6 Routes Received from MP-BGP . . . . . . . . . 9
4.4. OSPFv3 Route Extended Communities Attribute . . . . . . . 11
4.5. Loop Prevention Techniques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.5.1. OSPFv3 Down Bit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
4.5.2. Other Possible Loops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
5. OSPFv3 Sham Links . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
5.1. Creating A Sham link . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
5.2. OSPF Protocol On Sham link . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
5.3. OSPF Packet Forwarding On Sham Link . . . . . . . . . . . 16
6. Multiple Address Family Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
7. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
9. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
10. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
11. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
11.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
11.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
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1. Introduction
[rfc4364] offers Service Providers (SPs) a method for providing
Layer-3 Virtual Private Network (VPN) services to subtending customer
networks. Using the procedures defined in [rfc4364], provider edge
(PE) routers separate customer VPN routing information into Virtual
Routing and Forwarding (VRF) tables. The Border Gateway Protocol
(BGP) is used to disseminate customer network VPN routes between PE
VRFs configured in the same VPN.
The initial BGP/MPLS IP VPN specification enabled PE routers to learn
routes within customer sites through static routing, or through a
dynamic routing protocol instantiated on the PE-CE link.
Specifically, [rfc4364] (and its predecessor, [rfc2547]) included
support for dynamic routing protocols such as BGP, RIP, and OSPFv2.
The OSPFv2 as the Provider/Customer Edge Protocol for BGP/MPLS IP
Virtual Private Networks specification [rfc4577] further updates the
operation of OSPFv2 as the PE-CE routing protocol by detailing
additional extensions to enable intra-domain routing connectivity
between OSPFv2-based customer sites.
While [rfc4364] was defined for IPv4 based networks, [rfc4659]
extends the BGP/MPLS IP VPN framework to support IPv6 VPNs. This
includes the capability to connect IPv6 based sites over an IPv4 or
IPv6 SP backbone. It is expected that OSPFv3 will be used as the IGP
for some IPv6 VPNs just as the OSPFv2 was used for IPv4 VPNs. The
advantages of using OSPFv3 as a PE-CE protocol are the same as for
the IPv4 VPN deployment.
This document defines the mechanisms required to enable the operation
of OSPFv3 as the PE-CE Routing Protocol in BGP MPLS/IP VPNs. In
doing so, it reuses, and extends where necessary, the "BGP/MPLS IP
VPN" method for IPv6 VPNs defined in [rfc4659], and OSPFv2 as the
PE-CE routing protocol defined in [rfc4577]. This document also
includes the specifications for maintaining intra-domain routing
connectivity between OSPFv3-based customer sites across a SP
backbone.
We presuppose familiarity with the contents of [rfc4364], [rfc4659],
[rfc4577], [rfc4576], [rfc5340] and [rfc2328].
2. Specification of Requirements
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].
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3. Requirements
The benefits and considerations associated with deploying OSPFv3 as
the PE-CE routing protocol are similar to those described in
[rfc4577]. The requirements described in Section 3 of [rfc4577]
remain semantically identical for the deployment of OSPFv3.
[rfc5340] describes the modifications required to OSPF to support
IPv6. In that specification, many of the fundamental mechanisms
associated with OSPFv2 remain unchanged for OSPFv3. Consequently,
the operation of OSPFv3 as the PE-CE routing protocol is very similar
to OSPFv2 as the PE-CE protocol.
3.1. OSPFv3 Specificities
Section 2.0 of [rfc5340] describes differences between OSPFv3 and
OSPFv2. Several of these changes will require modifications to the
architecture described in [rfc4577]. These differences and their
corresponding impact to [rfc4577] are described below:
New LSA types:
For an IPv6 MPLS/VPN architecture where customers interface to
providers through OSPFv3, traditional BGP/OSPF interactions
specify that VPN-IPv6 reachability information redistributed into
OSPFv3 will be expressed as an AS-External OSPFv3 LSAs. Instead,
it may be desirable to view these LSAs as inter-area-prefix LSAs.
For the encoding of OSPFv3 LSAs, a new OSPFv3 Route Extended
Community attribute is defined in Section 4.4.
Multiple instances over a link:
OSPFv3 operates on a per-link basis as opposed to OSPFv2, which
operates on a per-IP-subnet basis. The support of multiple OSPFv3
protocol instances on a link changes the architecture described in
[rfc4577]. [rfc4577] specifies that each interface belongs to no
more than one OSPF instance. For OSPFv3, multiple instances can
be established over a single interface, and associated with the
same VRF.
In addition to establishing multiple OSPFv3 instances over a
single PE-CE link, multiple OSPFv3 instances can also be
established across a sham link. This enables multiple OSPFv3
instances associated with a VRF to independently establish intra-
area connectivity to other OSPFv3 instances attached to a remote
PE VRF. Support for multiple OSPFv3 instances across the sham
link is described in Section 5.
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4. BGP/OSPFv3 Interaction Procedures for PE Routers
4.1. VRFs and OSPFv3 Instances
The relationship between VRFs, interfaces, and OSPFv3 instances on a
PE router is described in the following section.
As defined in [rfc4364], a PE router can be configured with one or
more VRFs. Each VRF configured on the PE corresponds to a customer
VPN, and retains the destinations that are reachable within that VPN.
Each VRF may be associated with one or more interfaces, which allows
multiple sites to participate in the same VPN. If OSPFv3 is
instantiated on an interface associated with a VRF, the VRF will be
populated with OSPFv3 routing information.
As OSPFv3 supports multiple instances on a single interface, it is
therefore possible that multiple customer sites can connect to the
same interface of a PE router (e.g., through a layer 2 switch) using
distinct OSPFv3 instances. However, since a PE interface can be
associated with only one VRF, all OSPFv3 instances running on the
same interface MUST be associated with the same VRF.
4.1.1. Independent OSPFv3 Instances in PEs
Similar to [rfc4577], the PE must associate at least one OSPFv3
instance for each OSPFv3 domain to which it attaches, and each
instance of OSPFv3 MUST be associated with a single VRF.
The support of multiple PE-CE OSPFv3 instances per PE interface does
not change the paradigm that an OSPF instance can be associated with
only a single VRF. Furthermore, for each instance instantiated on
the interface, the PE establishes adjacencies with corresponding CEs
associated with the instance. Note that although multiple instances
may populate a common VRF, they do not leak routes to one another,
unless configured to do so.
4.1.2. OSPFv3 Domain Identifier
The OSPFv3 Domain ID describes the administrative domain of the OSPF
instance which originated the route. It has an AS wide significance
and is one of the parameters used to determine whether a VPN-IPv6
route should be translated as an Inter-area-prefix-LSA or External-
LSA. Each OSPFv3 instance MUST have a primary Domain ID which is
transported along with the VPN-IPv6 route in a BGP attribute over the
MPLS VPN backbone. Each OSPFv3 instance may have a set of secondary
Domain IDs which applies to other OSPFv3 instances within its
administrative domain.
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The primary Domain ID may either be configured or may be set to a
value of NULL. The secondary Domain IDs are only allowed if a non-
null primary Domain ID is configured. The Domain ID MUST be
configured on a per-OSPFv3 instance basis.
The Domain ID is used to determine whether an incoming VPN-IPv6 route
belongs to the same domain as the receiving OSPFv3 instance. An
incoming VPN-IPv6 route is said to belong to the same domain if a
non-NULL incoming Domain ID matches either the local primary or one
of the secondary Domain IDs. If the local Domain ID and incoming
Domain ID are NULL, it is considered a match.
4.2. OSPFv3 Areas
Sections 4.1.4 and 4.2.3 of [rfc4577] describe the characteristics of
a PE router within an OSPFv2 domain. The mechanisms and expected
behavior described in [rfc4577] are applicable to an OSPFv3 domain.
4.3. VRFs and Routes
From the perspective of the CE, the PE appears as any other OSPFv3
neighbor. There is no requirement for the CE to support any
mechanisms of IPv6 BGP/MPLS VPNs or for the CE to have any awareness
of the VPNs, thereby enabling any OSPFv3 implementation to be used on
a CE.
Because the export and import policies might cause different routes
to be installed in different VRFs of the same OSPFv3 domain, the MPLS
VPN backbone cannot be considered as a single router from the
perspective of the domain's CEs. Rather, each CE should view its
connected PE as a separate router.
The PE uses OSPFv3 to distribute routes to CEs, and MP-BGP [rfc2858]
to distribute VPN-IPv6 routes to other (remote) PE routers as defined
in [rfc4659]. An IPv6 prefix installed in the VRF by OSPFv3 is
changed to a VPN-IPv6 prefix by the addition of an 8-octet Route
Distinguisher (RD) as discussed in Section 2 of [rfc4659]. This VPN-
IPv6 route can then be redistributed into MP-BGP according to an
export policy that adds a Route Target Extended Communities (RT)
attribute to the NLRI [rfc4360]. An IPv6 Address Specific BGP
Extended Communities attribute as described in [rfc5701] may also be
attached to the route.
Domain IDs are used to distinguish between OSPFv3 instances. When an
OSPFv3 distributed route is redistributed into MP-BGP, the Domain ID,
OSPFv3 Router ID, Area, OSPFv3 Route Type, and Options fields
(External Route Type) are also carried in an attribute of the MP-BGP
route.
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A PE receiving a VPN-IPv6 NLRI from MP-BGP uses an import policy to
determine, based on the RT, whether the route is eligible to be
installed in one of its local VRFs. The BGP decision process selects
which of the eligible routes are to be installed in the associated
VRF, and the selected set of VPN-IPv6 routes are converted into IPv6
routes by removing the RD before installation.
An IPv6 route learned from MP-BGP and installed in a VRF might or
might not be redistributed into OSPFv3, depending on the local
configuration. For example, the PE might be configured to advertise
only a default route to CEs of a particular OSPFv3 instance.
Further, if the route is to be redistributed into multiple OSPFv3
instances, the route might be advertised using different LSA types in
different instances.
If an IPv6 route learned from MP-BGP is to be redistributed into a
particular OSPFv3 instance, the OSPFv3 Route Extended Community
attribute (Section 4.4) of the VPN-IPv6 route is used to determine
whether the OSPFv3 instance from which the route was learned is the
same as the OSPFv3 instance into which the route is to be
redistributed.
4.3.1. OSPFv3 Routes on PE
VRFs may be populated by both OSPFv3 routes from a CE or VPN-IPv6
routes from other PEs via MP-BGP. OSPFv3 routes are installed in a
VRF using the OSPFv3 decision process. As described in [rfc4577],
OSPFv2 routes installed in a VRF may be redistributed into BGP and
disseminated to other PEs participating in the VPN. At these remote
PEs, the VPN-IPv6 routes may be imported into a VRF and redistributed
into the OSPFv3 instance(s) associated with that VRF.
As specified in [rfc4659], routes imported and exported into a VRF
are controlled by the Route Target (RT) Extended Communities
attribute. OSPFv3 routes that are redistributed into BGP are given a
RT that corresponds to the VRF. This RT is examined at remote PEs.
In order to import a route, a VRF must have a RT that is identical to
the route's RT. For routes which are eligible to be imported into
the VRF, the standard BGP decision process is used to choose the
"best" route(s).
When a route is advertised from a CE to a PE via OSPFv3 and that
route is installed in the VRF associated with the CE, the route is
advertised to other locally attached CEs under normal OSPFv3
procedures.
The route is also redistributed into MP-BGP to be advertised to
remote PEs. The information necessary for accurate redistribution
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back into OSPFv3 by the remote PEs is carried in an OSPFv3 Route
Extended Communities attribute (Section 4.4). The relevant local
OSPFv3 information encoded into the attribute is:
The Domain ID of the local OSPFv3 process. If no Domain ID is
configured, the NULL identifier is used.
The Area ID of the PE-CE link.
The PE's Router ID associated with the OSPFv3 instance.
The Route Type, as determined by the LSA type from which the route
was learned.
The Options fields (External metric-type)
A Multi-Exit-Discriminator (MED) attribute SHOULD also be set to the
value of the OSPFv3 distance associated with the route plus 1, when
the OSPFv3 route is redistributed into the MP-BGP.
4.3.2. VPN-IPv6 Routes Received from MP-BGP
When a PE receives a valid VPN-IPv6 route from MP-BGP and has
identified an association with a local VRF, it must determine:
Whether a route to the corresponding IPv6 prefix is to be
installed in the VRF;
Whether the installed IPv6 route is to be redistributed to one or
more local OSPFv3 instances; and
What OSPFv3 LSA type is to be used when advertising the route into
each OSPFv3 instance
An IPv6 route derived from a received VPN-IPv6 route is not installed
in the associated local VRF if:
The BGP decision process identifies a better route to the
destination NLRI
A configured import policy prohibits the installation of the route
The PE advertises the IPv6 route learned from MP-BGP to attached CEs
via OSPFv3 if:
No configured filtering prohibits redistributing the route to
OSPFv3
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No configured policy blocks the route in favor of a less-specific
summary route
No OSPFv3 route to the same prefix exists in the VRF.
The subsequent sections discuss the advertisement of routes learned
from MP-BGP, and the rules for determining what LSA types and what
CEs to advertise the routes to.
When the PE sends an LSA to a CE, it sets the DN bit in the LSA to
prevent looping. The DN bit is discussed in Section 4.5.1.
4.3.2.1. OSPF Inter-Area Routes
A PE advertises an IPv6 route using an Inter-Area-Prefix (type
0x2003) LSA under the following circumstances:
The OSPFv3 domain from which the IPv6 route was learned is the
same (as determined by the Domain ID) as the domain of the OSPFv3
instance into which it is to be redistributed; AND
The IPv6 route was advertised to a remote PE in an Intra-Area-
Prefix (type 0x2009) OR an Inter-Area-Prefix (type 0x2003) LSA.
Note that under these rules the PE represents itself as an ABR
regardless of whether or not the route is being advertised into the
same area number from which the remote PE learned it (that is,
whether the VPN-IPv6 route carries the same or different area
numbers).
4.3.2.2. OSPF Intra-Area Route
A route is advertised as an intra-area route using an Intra-Area-
Prefix (type 0x2009) LSA only when sham links are used, as described
in Section 5. Otherwise routes are advertised as either inter-area
(Section 4.3.2.1) or external/NSSA (Sections 4.3.2.3) routes.
4.3.2.3. OSPF External Routes And NSSA Routes
A PE considers an IPv6 route to be external under the following
circumstances:
The OSPFv3 domain from which the route was learned is different
(as determined by the Domain ID) from the domain of the OSPFv3
instance into which it is redistributed; OR
The OSPFv3 domain from which the route was learned is the same as
the domain of the OSPFv3 instance into which it is redistributed
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AND it was advertised to the remote PE in an AS-External (type
0x4005) or a Type-7 (type 0x2007, NSSA) LSA; OR
The route was not learned from an OSPFv3 instance
To determine if the learned route is from a different domain, the
Domain ID associated with the VPN-IPv6 route (in the OSPFv3 Route
Extended Communities attribute or attributes) is compared with the
local OSPFv3 Domain ID, if configured. Compared Domain IDs are
considered identical if:
1. All six bytes are identical; or
2. Both Domain IDs are NULL (all zeroes).
Note that if the VPN-IPv6 route does not have a Domain ID in its
attributes, or if the local OSPFv3 instance does not have a
configured Domain ID, in either case the route is considered to have
a NULL Domain ID.
An IPv6 route that is determined to be external might or might not be
advertised to a connected CE, depending on the type of area to which
the PE-CE link belongs and whether there is a configured policy
restricting its advertisement.
If there are multiple external routes to the same prefix, the
standard OSPFv3 decision process is used to select the "best" route.
If the external route is to be advertised and the area type of the
PE/CE link is NSSA, the PE advertises the route in a Type-7 (type
0x2007) LSA; otherwise the external route is advertised in an AS-
External (type 0x4005) LSA.
The DN bit of the LSA advertising the external route MUST be set, as
described in Section 4.5.1.
If the VPN-IPv6 route indicates a route type-1 metric, the PE
advertises the external route with that metric-type; otherwise the
metric-type of the external IPv6 route is set to type-2 by default.
4.4. OSPFv3 Route Extended Communities Attribute
OSPFv3 routes from one site are translated and delivered
transparently to the remote site as BGP VPN-IPv6 routes. The
original OSPFv3 routes carry OSPFv3 specific information which need
to be communicated to the remote PE to ensure transparency. BGP
extended communities are used to carry the needed information to
enable the receiving side to reconstruct a database just as in the
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OSPFv2 case.
All OSPFv3 routes added to the VRF routing table on a PE router are
examined to create a corresponding VPN-IPv6 route in BGP. Each of
the OSPFv3 routes MUST have a corresponding BGP Extended Community
Attribute which contains and preserves the OSPFv3 information
attached to the original OSPFv3 route.
This document defines a new BGP attribute in the proposed "IPv6
Address Specific Extended Community" registry described in Section 3
of [rfc5701]. The OSPFv3 Route Extended Community Attribute has the
Sub-type value of 0x0004. It carries an OSPFv3 Domain ID, OSPFv3
Router ID, OSPFv3 Area ID, OSPFv3 Route type, and Options field.
0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| 0x00 | 4 | OSPF Domain ID |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| OSPF Domain ID (Cont.) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| OSPF Router ID |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Area ID |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Route Type | Options | UNUSED |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
The OSPFv3 Route Extended Community Attribute
This attribute is MANDATORY for all OSPFv3 routes in a VRF instance
on a PE router. The fields of this new BGP Extended Community
attribute are described in the following sections.
OSPFv3 Domain IDs field : 6 bytes
Each OSPFv3 Instance within a VRF MUST have a Domain ID. The
Domain ID is configured per OSPFv3 Instance. The OSPFv3 Domain ID
is a 6-byte number and its default value is 0.
OSPFv3 Router ID field : 4 bytes
The OSPFv3 Router ID is a 32 bit number as in OSPFv2. Setting
this field is OPTIONAL and its default value is 0.
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OSPFv3 Area ID : 4 bytes
The Area ID field indicates the 32-bit Area ID to which the route
belongs.
OSPFv3 Route Types : 1 byte
To accommodate OSPFv3 LSA types, the OSPF Route Type field is
encoded as follows:
Route Type Route Type LSA Type Description
Code
-----------------------------------------------------------
0x30 Inter-area 0x2003 Inter-area-prefix-LSA
0x50 External 0x4005 AS-external-LSA
0x70 NSSA 0x2007 NSSA-LSA
0x90 Intra-area-prefix 0x2009 Intra-area-prefix-LSA
The OSPFv3 Route Type Field Encoding
OSPFv3 Route Options : 1 byte
The Options field indicates the options that are associated with
the OSPFv3 route.
8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+
| | | | | | | | E |
+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+
The OSPFv3 Route Options Field
The least significant bit (i.e., bit E) in this field designates
the external metric type. If the bit is clear, the route carries
a Type-1 external metric; if the bit is set, the route carries a
Type-2 external metric.
4.5. Loop Prevention Techniques
In some topologies, it is possible for routing loops to occur due to
the nature and manner of route reachability propagation. One such
example is the case of a dual homed CE router connected to two PEs;
those PE routers would receive this information both through their CE
and their peer PE. As there is transparent transport of OSPFv3
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routes over the BGP/MPLS backbone, it is not possible for the PE
routers to determine whether they are within a loop.
The loop scenarios in OSPFv3 topologies are identical to those in the
OSPFv2 topologies described in Section 4.2.5.1 and Section 4.2.5.2 of
[rfc4577]. Of the two loop preventions mechanisms described in the
sections aforementioned, only the DN bit option will be supported in
the OSPFv3 implementation.
4.5.1. OSPFv3 Down Bit
Section 1 and Section 3 of [rfc4576] describe the usage of the DN-bit
for OSPFv2 and are applicable for OSPFv3 for inter-area-prefix LSAs,
NSSA LSAs and External LSAs. Similarly, the DN-bit MUST be set in
inter-area-prefix-LSAs, NSSA-LSAs and AS-External-LSAs, when these
are originated from a PE to a CE, to prevent those prefixes from
being re-advertised into BGP. As in [rfc4577], any LSA with the DN
bit set must not be used for route calculations.
The DN bit MUST be clear in all other LSA types. The OSPFv3 DN-bit
format is described in Appendix 4.1.1 of [rfc5340].
4.5.2. Other Possible Loops
The mechanism described in Section 4.5.1 of this document is
sufficient to prevent looping if the DN bit information attached to a
prefix is preserved in the OSPF domain. As described in Section
4.2.5.3 of [rfc4576], caution must be exercised if mutual
redistribution is performed on a PE causing loss of loop prevention
information.
5. OSPFv3 Sham Links
This section modifies the specification of OSPFv2 sham links (defined
in Section 4.2.7 of [rfc4577]) to support OSPFv3. Support for OSPFv3
sham links is an OPTIONAL feature of this specification.
A sham link enables a VPN backbone to act as an intra-area link. It
is needed when two sites are connected by an intra-area "backdoor"
link and the inter-area MPLS VPN backbone route would be less
preferable due to OSPF route preference rules. The figure below
shows the instantiation of a sham link between two VPN sites.
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(VPN backbone)
(site-1) <-------- sham link --------> (site-2)
CE1 -------- PE1 -------- P ---------- PE2 -------- CE2
| |
|___________________________________________________|
<------------ backdoor link -------------->
(OSPF intra-area link)
Sham Link
Much of the operation of sham links remains semantically identical to
what was previously specified. There are, however, several
differences that need to be defined to ensure the proper operation of
OSPFv3 sham links.
One of the primary differences between sham links for OSPFv3 and sham
links as specified in [rfc4577] are for configurations where multiple
OSPFv3 instances populate a VRF. It may be desirable to provide
separate intra-area links between these instances over the same sham
link. To achieve this, multiple OSPFv3 instances may be established
across the PE-PE sham link to provide intra-area connectivity between
PE-CE OSPFv3 instances.
Note that even though multiple OSPFv3 instances may be associated
with a VRF, a sham link is still thought of as a relation between two
VRFs.
Another modification to OSPFv2 sham links is that OSPFv3 sham links
are now identified by 128-bit endpoint addresses. Since sham links
end-point addresses are now 128-bits, they can no longer default to
the RouterID, which is a 32-bit number. Sham link endpoint addresses
MUST be configured.
Sham link endpoint addresses MUST be distributed by BGP as routeable
VPN IPv6 addresses whose IPv6 address prefix is 128 bits long. As
specified in section 4.2.7.1 of [rfc4577], these endpoint addresses
MUST NOT be advertised by OSPFv3; if there is no BGP route to the
sham link endpoint address, that address is to appear unreachable, so
that the sham link appears to be down.
If there is a BGP route to the remote sham link endpoint address, the
sham link appears to be up. Conversely, if there is no BGP route to
the sham link endpoint address, the sham link appears to be down.
5.1. Creating A Sham link
The procedures for creating an OSPFv3 sham link are identical to
those specified in Section 4.2.7.2 of [rfc4577]. Note that the
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creation of OSPFv3 sham links requires the configuration of both
local and remote 128-bit sham link endpoint addresses. The local
Sham link endpoint address associated with a VRF MAY be used by all
OSPFv3 instances that are attached to that VRF. The OSPFv3 PE-PE
"link" Instance ID in the protocol packet header is used to
demultiplex multiple OSPFv3 instance protocol packets exchanged over
the sham link.
5.2. OSPF Protocol On Sham link
Much of the operation of OSPFv3 over a sham link is semantically the
same as the operation of OSPFv2 over a sham link, as described in
Section 4.2.7.3 of [rfc4577]. This includes the methodology for
sending and receiving OSPFv3 packets over sham links, as well as
Hello/Router Dead Intervals. Furthermore, the procedures associated
with the assignment of sham link metrics adhere to those set forth
for OSPFv2. OSPFv3 sham links are treated as on demand circuits.
Although the operation of the OSPFv3 protocol over the sham link is
the same as OSPFv2, multiple OSPFv3 instances may be instantiated
across this link. By instantiating multiple instances across the
sham link, distinct intra-area connections can be established between
PE-PE OSPFv3 instances associated with the endpoint addresses.
For example, if two OSPFv3 instances (O1, O2) attach to a VRF V1, and
on a remote PE, two other OSPFv3 instances (O3, O4) attach to a VRF
V2, it may be desirable to connect, O1 and O3 with an intra-area
link, and O2 and O4 with an intra-area link. This can be
accomplished by instantiating two OSPFv3 instances across the sham
link, which connects V1 and V2. O1 and O3 can be mapped to one of
the sham link OSPFv3 instances; O2 and O4 can be mapped to the other
sham link OSPFv3 instance.
5.3. OSPF Packet Forwarding On Sham Link
The rules associated with route redistribution, stated in Section
4.2.7.4 of [rfc4577], remain unchanged in this specification.
Specifically:
If the next hop interface for a particular route is a sham link,
then the PE SHOULD NOT redistribute that route into BGP as a VPN-
IPv6 route.
Any other route advertised in an LSA that is transmitted over a
sham link MUST also be redistributed (by the PE flooding the LSA
over the sham link) into BGP.
When redistributing these LSAs into BGP, they are encoded with the
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OSPFv3 Route Extended Community, as defined in Section 4.4 of this
document.
When forwarding a packet, if the preferred route for that packet has
the sham link as its next hop interface, then the packet MUST be
forwarded according to the corresponding BGP route (as defined in
[rfc4364] and [rfc4659]).
6. Multiple Address Family Support
The support of multiple address families (AF) in OSPFv3 is described
in [OSPF-AF-ALT]. [OSPF-AF-ALT] differentiates between AF using
reserved ranges of Instance IDs for each AF.
The architecture described in this document is fully compatible with
[OSPF-AF-ALT]. The OSPFv3 PE-CE protocol can support multiple
address families across a MPLS VPN backbone. All AFs redistributed
from OSPFv3 into BGP on a PE MUST contain the OSPFv3 Route Extended
Community Attribute.
Note that since [OSPF-AF-ALT] does not support multiple AFs across
virtual links, this document only addresses support for unicast IPv6
addresses across the sham link.
7. Security Considerations
The extensions described in this document are specific to the use of
OSPFv3 as the PE-CE protocol and do not introduce any concerns
regarding the use of BGP as transport of IPv6 reachability over the
MPLS Backbone. The Security considerations for the transport of IPv6
reachability information using BGP are discussed in Section 11 of
[rfc4659] and are not altered.
The new extensions defined in this document do not introduce any new
security concerns other than those already defined in Section 6 of
[rfc4577].
8. IANA Considerations
This document defines a new BGP attribute in the proposed "IPv6
Address Specific Extended Community" registry described in Section 3
of [rfc5701]. This document makes the following assignments in the
"IPv6 Address Specific Extended Community" registry.
Name Sub-type Value
---- --------------
OSPFv3 Route Attributes 0x0004
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The OSPFv3 specific BGP Extended Community types
This document also defines a new "OSPFv3 Route Attribute Options"
registry. Represented by 8 bits, the new registry documents the
contents of the Options field in the OSPFv3 Route Attributes Extended
Community. This document makes the following assignment in the
"OSPFv3 Route Attribute Options" registry.
Value Description Reference
----- ----------- ---------
0x01 External Metric Type [rfcThis]
OSPFv3 Route Attribute Options
Following the policies outlined in [RFC5226], the IANA policy for
assigning the remaining bits for the "OSPFv3 Route Attribute Options"
registry shall be "Standards Action": values are assigned only for
Standards Track RFCs approved by the IESG.
9. Contributors
Joe Lapolito
10. Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank Kelvin Upson, Seiko Okano, Matthew
Everett, and Dr. Vineet Mehta for their support of this work. Thanks
to Peter Psenak, Abhay Roy and Acee Lindem for their last call
comments.
This document was produced using Marshall Rose's xml2rfc tool.
11. References
11.1. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFC's to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC5226] Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing
an IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26,
RFC 5226, May 2008.
[rfc2328] Moy, J., "OSPF Version 2", RFC 2328, April 1998.
[rfc2858] Bates, T., Rehkter, Y., Chandra, R., and D. Katz,
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"Multiprotocol Extensions for BGP-4", RFC 2858,
June 2000.
[rfc4360] Sangli, S., Tappan, D., and Y. Rehkter, "BGP Extended
Communities Attribute", RFC 4360, February 2006.
[rfc4364] Rosen, E. and Y. Rehkter, "BGP/MPLS IP Virtual Private
Networks (VPNs)", RFC 4364, February 2006.
[rfc4576] Rosen, E., Psenak, P., and P. Pillay-Esnault, "Using a
Link State Advertisement (LSA) Options Bit to Prevent
Looping in BGP/MPLS IP Virtual Private Networks
(VPNs)", RFC 4576, June 2006.
[rfc4577] Rosen, E., Psenak, P., and P. Pillay-Esnault, "OSPF as
the Provider/Customer Edge Protocol for BGP/MPLS IP
Virtual Private Networks (VPNs)", RFC 4577, June 2006.
[rfc4659] De Clercq, J., Ooms, D., Carugi, M., and F.
Lefaucheur, "BGP-MPLS IP Virtual Private Network (VPN)
Extension for IPv6 VPN", RFC 4659, September 2006.
[rfc5340] Coltun, R., Ferguson, D., Moy, J., and A. Lindem,
"OSPF for IPv6", RFC 5340, July 2008.
[rfc5701] Rehkter, Y., "IPv6 Address Specific BGP Extended
Communities Attribute", November 2009.
11.2. Informative References
[OSPF-AF-ALT] Mirtorabi, S., Roy, A., Barnes, M., Aggarwal, R., and
A. Lindem, "Support of address families in OSPFv3",
December 2009, <http://www.ietf.org/internet-drafts/
draft-ietf-ospf-af-alt-10.txt>.
[rfc2547] Rosen, E. and Y. Rehkter, "BGP/MPLS VPNs", RFC 2547,
March 1999.
Authors' Addresses
Padma Pillay-Esnault
Cisco Systems
510 McCarty Blvd
Milpitas, CA 95035
USA
EMail: ppe@cisco.com
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Peter Moyer
Pollere, Inc
325M Sharon Park Drive #214
Menlo Park, CA 94025
USA
EMail: pete@pollere.net
Jeff Doyle
Jeff Doyle and Associates
9878 Teller Ct.
Westminster, CO 80021
USA
EMail: jdoyle@doyleassociates.net
Emre Ertekin
Booz Allen Hamilton
5220 Pacific Concourse Drive
Los Angeles, CA 90045
USA
EMail: ertekin_emre@bah.com
Michael Lundberg
Booz Allen Hamilton
22 Batterymarch Street
Boston, MA 02109
USA
EMail: lundberg_michael@bah.com
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