Network Working Group L. Jin
Internet-Draft
Intended status: Standards Track F. Jounay
Expires: April 14, 2014 France Telecom
I. Wijnands
Cisco Systems
N. Leymann
Deutsche Telekom
October 11, 2013
LDP Extensions for Hub & Spoke Multipoint Label Switched Path
draft-ietf-mpls-mldp-hsmp-02.txt
Abstract
This draft introduces a hub & spoke multipoint LSP (or HSMP LSP for
short), which allows traffic both from root to leaf through P2MP LSP
and also leaf to root along the co-routed reverse path. That means
traffic entering the HSMP LSP from application/customer at the root
node travels downstream to each leaf node, exactly as if it is
travelling downstream along a P2MP LSP to each leaf node. Upstream
traffic entering the HSMP LSP at any leaf node travels upstream along
the tree to the root, as if it is unicast to the root, and strictly
follows the downstream path of the tree rather than routing protocol
based unicast path to the root.
Requirements Language
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 [RFC2119].
Status of this Memo
This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the
provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.
Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute
working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-
Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.
Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."
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This Internet-Draft will expire on April 14, 2014.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2013 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
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include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
described in the Simplified BSD License.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3. Applications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3.1. Time Synchronization Scenario . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3.2. Virtual Private Multicast Service Scenario . . . . . . . . 5
3.3. IPTV Scenario . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
4. Setting up HSMP LSP with LDP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
4.1. Support for HSMP LSP Setup with LDP . . . . . . . . . . . 6
4.2. HSMP FEC Elements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
4.3. Using the HSMP FEC Elements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
4.3.1. HSMP LSP Label Map . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
4.3.2. HSMP LSP Label Withdraw . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4.3.3. HSMP LSP Upstream LSR Change . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
5. HSMP LSP on a LAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
6. Redundancy Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
7. Co-routed Path Exceptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
8. Failure Detection of HSMP LSP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
9. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
10. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
11. Acknowledgement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
12. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
12.1. Normative references . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
12.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
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1. Introduction
The point-to-multipoint LSP defined in [RFC6388] allows traffic to
transmit from root to several leaf nodes, and multipoint-to-
multipoint LSP allows traffic from every node to transmit to every
other node. This draft introduces a hub & spoke multipoint LSP (or
HSMP LSP for short), which allows traffic both from root to leaf
through P2MP LSP and also leaf to root along the co-routed reverse
path. That means traffic entering the HSMP LSP at the root node
travels downstream, exactly as if it is travelling downstream along a
P2MP LSP, and traffic entering the HSMP LSP at any other node travels
upstream along the tree to the root. A packet travelling upstream
should be thought of as being unicast to the root, except that it
follows the path of the tree rather than routing protocol based
unicast path to the root. The combination of upstream LSPs initiated
from all leaf nodes forms a multipoint-to-point LSP.
2. Terminology
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].
This document uses some terms and acronyms as follows:
HSMP LSP: hub & spoke multipoint LSP. An LSP allows traffic both
from root to leaf through P2MP LSP and also leaf to root along the
co-routed reverse path.
mLDP: Multipoint extensions for LDP
MP2MP LSP: An LSP that connects a set of nodes, such that traffic
sent by any node in the LSP is delivered to all others.
PTP: The timing and synchronization protocol used by IEEE1588
P2MP LSP: An LSP that has one Ingress LSR and one or more Egress
LSRs.
3. Applications
In some cases, the P2MP LSP may not have a reply path for OAM
messages (e.g, LSP Ping Echo Request). If P2MP LSP is provided by
HSMP LSP instead, then the upstream path could be used as the OAM
message reply path. This is especially useful in the case of P2MP
LSP fault detection, performance measurement, root node redundancy
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and etc. There are several other applications that could take
advantage of a LDP based HSMP LSP as described below.
3.1. Time Synchronization Scenario
[IEEE1588] over MPLS is defined in [I-D.ietf-tictoc-1588overmpls].
It is required that the LSP used to transport PTP event message
between a Master Clock and a Slave Clock, and the LSP between the
same Slave Clock and Master Clock must be co-routed. Using point-to-
multipoint technology to transmit PTP event messages from Master
Clock at root side to Slave Clock at leaf side will greatly improve
the bandwidth usage. Unfortunately current point-to-multipoint LSP
only provides unidirectional path from root to leaf, which cannot
provides a co-routed reverse path for the PTP event messages. LDP
based HSMP LSP described in this draft provides unidirectional point-
to-multipoint LSP from root to leaf and co-routed reverse LSP from
leaf to root.
3.2. Virtual Private Multicast Service Scenario
Point to multipoint PW described in [I-D.ietf-pwe3-p2mp-pw] requires
to set up reverse path from leaf node (referred as egress PE) to root
node (referred as ingress PE), if HSMP LSP is used to multiplex P2MP
PW, the reverse path can also be multiplexed to HSMP upstream path to
avoid setup independent reverse path. In that case, the operational
cost will be reduced for maintaining only one HSMP LSP, instead of
P2MP LSP and n (number of leaf nodes) P2P reverse LSPs.
The VPMS defined in [I-D.ietf-l2vpn-vpms-frmwk-requirements] requires
reverse path from leaf to root node. The P2MP PW multiplexed to HSMP
LSP can provide VPMS with reverse path, without introducing
independent reverse path from each leaf to root.
3.3. IPTV Scenario
The mLDP based HSMP LSP can also be applied in a typical IPTV
scenario. There is usually only one location with senders but there
are many receiver locations. If IGMP is used for signalling between
senders as IGMP querier [RFC3376] and receivers, the IGMP messages
from the receivers are travelling only from the leaves to the root
(and from root towards leaves) but not from leaf to leaf. In
addition traffic from the root is only replicated towards the leaves.
Then leaf node receiving IGMP report message (for source specific
multicast case) will join HSMP LSP(use similar mechanism in [RFC6826]
section 2), and then send IGMP report message upstream to root along
HSMP upstream LSP. Note that in above case, there is no node
redundancy for IGMP querier. And the node redundancy for IGMP
querier[RFC3376] could be provided by two independent VPMS instances
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with HSMP applied.
4. Setting up HSMP LSP with LDP
HSMP LSP is similar with MP2MP LSP described in [RFC6388], with the
difference that the leaf LSRs can only send traffic to root node
along the same path of traffic from root node to leaf node.
HSMP LSP consists of a downstream path and upstream path. The
downstream path is same as MP2MP LSP, while the upstream path is only
from leaf to root node, without communication between leaf and leaf
nodes. The transmission of packets from the root node of an HSMP LSP
to the receivers is identical to that of a P2MP LSP. Traffic from a
leaf node follows the upstream path toward the root node, along a
path that traverse the same nodes as the downstream node, but in
reverse order.
For setting up the upstream path of an HSMP LSP, ordered mode MUST be
used which is same as MP2MP. Ordered mode can guarantee a leaf to
start sending packets to root immediately after the upstream path is
installed, without being dropped due to an incomplete LSP.
Due to much of similar behaviors between HSMP LSP and MP2MP LSP, the
following sections only describe the difference between the two
entities.
4.1. Support for HSMP LSP Setup with LDP
HSMP LSP requires the LDP capabilities [RFC5561] for nodes to
indicate that they support setup of HSMP LSPs. An implementation
supporting the HSMP LSP procedures specified in this document MUST
implement the procedures for Capability Parameters in Initialization
Messages. Advertisement of the HSMP LSP Capability indicates support
of the procedures for HSMP LSP setup.
A new Capability Parameter TLV is defined, the HSMP LSP Capability
Parameter. Following is the format of the HSMP LSP Capability
Parameter.
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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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|1|0| HSMP LSP Cap(TBD IANA) | Length |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|S| Reserved |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 1. HSMP LSP Capability Parameter encoding
The length SHOULD be 1, and the S bit and reserved bits are defined
in [RFC5561] section 3.
The HSMP LSP Capability Parameter type is to be assigned by IANA.
4.2. HSMP FEC Elements
Similar as MP2MP LSP, we define two new protocol entities, the HSMP
Downstream FEC Element and Upstream FEC Element. If a FEC TLV
contains one of the HSMP FEC Elements, the HSMP FEC Element MUST be
the only FEC Element in the FEC TLV. The structure, encoding and
error handling for the HSMP Downstream FEC Element and Upstream FEC
Element are the same as for the MP2MP FEC Element described in
[RFC6388] Section 3.2. The difference is that two additional new FEC
types are defined: HSMP Downstream FEC (TBD, IANA) and HSMP Upstream
FEC(TBD, IANA).
4.3. Using the HSMP FEC Elements
In order to describe the message processing clearly, the entries in
the list below define the processing of the HSMP FEC Elements.
Additionally, the entries defined in [RFC6388] section 3.3 are also
reused in the following sections.
1. HSMP downstream LSP <X, Y> (or simply downstream <X, Y>): an HSMP
LSP downstream path with root node address X and opaque value Y.
2. HSMP upstream LSP <X, Y> (or simply upstream <X, Y>): an HSMP LSP
upstream path for root node address X and opaque value Y which will
be used by any of downstream node to send traffic upstream to root
node.
3. HSMP downstream FEC Element <X, Y>: a FEC Element with root node
address X and opaque value Y used for a downstream HSMP LSP.
4. HSMP upstream FEC Element <X, Y>: a FEC Element with root node
address X and opaque value Y used for an upstream HSMP LSP.
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5. HSMP-D Label Mapping <X, Y, L>: A Label Mapping message with a
single HSMP downstream FEC Element <X, Y> and label TLV with label L.
Label L MUST be allocated from the per-platform label space of the
LSR sending the Label Mapping Message.
6. HSMP-U Label Mapping <X, Y, Lu>: A Label Mapping message with a
single HSMP upstream FEC Element <X, Y> and label TLV with label Lu.
Label Lu MUST be allocated from the per-platform label space of the
LSR sending the Label Mapping Message.
4.3.1. HSMP LSP Label Map
This section specifies the procedures for originating HSMP Label
Mapping messages and processing received HSMP Label Mapping messages
for a particular HSMP LSP. The procedure of downstream HSMP LSP is
same as that of downstream MP2MP LSP described in [RFC6388]. When
LDP operates in Ordered Label Distribution Control mode [RFC5036],
the upstream LSP will be set up by sending HSMP LSP LDP Label Mapping
message with a label which is allocated by upstream LSR to its
downstream LSR hop by hop from root to leaf node, installing the
upstream forwarding table by every node along the LSP. The detail
procedure of setting up upstream HSMP LSP is different with that of
upstream MP2MP LSP, and is specified in below section.
All labels discussed here are downstream-assigned [RFC5332] except
those which are assigned using the procedures described in section 5.
Determining the upstream LSR for the HSMP LSP <X, Y> follows the
procedure for a MP2MP LSP described in [RFC6388] Section 3.3.1.1.
Determining one's HSMP downstream LSR follows the procedure defined
in [RFC6388] section 3.3.1.2. That is, an upstream LDP peer which
receives a Label Mapping with HSMP downstream FEC Element from an LDP
peer D will treat D as HSMP downstream LDP peer.
Determining the forwarding interface to an LSR follows the procedure
as defined in [RFC6388] section 2.4.1.2.
4.3.1.1. HSMP LSP Leaf Node Operation
The leaf node operation is same as the operation of MP2MP LSP defined
in [RFC6388] section 3.3.1.4. The only difference is the FEC
elements as specified below.
A leaf node Z will send an HSMP-D Label Mapping <X, Y, L> to U,
instead of MP2MP-D Label Mapping <X, Y, L>, and expects an HSMP-U
Label Mapping <X, Y, Lu> from node U and checks whether it already
has forwarding state for upstream <X, Y>. The created forwarding
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state on leaf node Z is same as the leaf node of MP2MP LSP. Z will
push label Lu onto the traffic that Z wants to forward over the HSMP
LSP.
4.3.1.2. HSMP LSP Transit Node Operation
Suppose node Z receives an HSMP-D Label Mapping <X, Y, L> from LSR D,
the procedure is much the same as processing MP2MP-D Label Mapping
message defined in [RFC6388] section 3.3.1.5, and the processing
protocol entity is HSMP-D Label Mapping message. The only difference
is specified below.
Node Z checks if upstream LSR U already has assigned a label Lu to
upstream <X, Y>. If not, transit node Z waits until it receives an
HSMP-U Label Mapping <X, Y, Lu> from LSR U. Once the HSMP-U Label
Mapping is received from LSR U, node Z checks whether it already has
forwarding state upstream <X, Y> with incoming label Lu' and outgoing
label Lu. If it does, Z sends an HSMP-U Label Mapping <X, Y, Lu'> to
downstream node. If it does not, it allocates a label Lu' and
creates a new label swap for Lu' with Label Lu over interface Iu.
Interface Iu is determined via the procedures in section 4.3.1. Node
Z determines the downstream HSMP LSR as per section 4.3.1, and sends
an HSMP-U Label Mapping <X, Y, Lu'> to node D.
Since a packet from any downstream node is forwarded only to the
upstream node, the same label (representing the upstream path) SHOULD
be distributed to all downstream nodes. This differs from the
procedures for MP2MP LSPs [RFC6388], where a distinct label must be
distributed to each downstream node. The forwarding state upstream
<X, Y> on node Z will be like this {<Lu'>, <Iu Lu>}. Iu means the
upstream interface over which Z receives HSMP-U Label Map <X, Y, Lu>
from LSR U. Packets from any downstream interface over which Z sends
HSMP-U Label Map <X, Y, Lu'> with label Lu' will be forwarded to Iu
with label Lu' swap to Lu.
4.3.1.3. HSMP LSP Root Node Operation
Suppose root node Z receives an HSMP-D Label Mapping <X, Y, L> from
node D, the procedure is much the same as processing MP2MP-D Label
Mapping message defined in [RFC6388] section 3.3.1.6, and the
processing protocol entity is HSMP-D Label Mapping message. The only
difference is specified below.
Node Z checks if it has forwarding state for upstream <X, Y>. If
not, Z creates a forwarding state for incoming label Lu' that
indicates that Z is the LSP egress. E.g., the forwarding state might
specify that the label stack is popped and the packet passed to some
specific application. Node Z determines the downstream HSMP LSR as
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per section 4.3.1, and sends an HSMP-U Label Map <X, Y, Lu'> to node
D.
Since Z is the root of the tree, Z will not send an HSMP-D Label Map
and will not receive an HSMP-U Label Mapping.
4.3.2. HSMP LSP Label Withdraw
The HSMP Label Withdraw procedure is much the same as MP2MP leaf
operation defined in [RFC6388] section 3.3.2, and the processing FEC
Elements are HSMP FEC Elements. The only difference is the process
of HSMP-U Label Release message, which is specified below.
When a transit node Z receives an HSMP-U Label Release message from
downstream node D, Z should check if there are any incoming interface
in forwarding state upstream <X, Y>. If all downstream nodes are
released and there is no incoming interface, Z should delete the
forwarding state upstream <X, Y> and send HSMP-U Label Release
message to its upstream node. Otherwise, no HSMP-U Label Release
message will be sent to the upstream node.
4.3.3. HSMP LSP Upstream LSR Change
The procedure for changing the upstream LSR is the same as defined in
[RFC6388] section 3.3.3, only with different processing FEC Element,
the HSMP FEC Element.
5. HSMP LSP on a LAN
The procedure to process the downstream HSMP LSP on a LAN is much the
same as downstream MP2MP LSP described in [RFC6388] section 6.1.1.
When establishing the downstream path of an HSMP LSP, as defined in
[RFC6389], a Label Request message for an LSP label is sent to the
upstream LSR. The upstream LSR should send Label Mapping message
that contains the LSP label for the downstream HSMP FEC and the
upstream LSR context label defined in [RFC5331]. When the LSR
forwards a packet downstream on one of those LSPs, the packet's top
label must be the "upstream LSR context label", and the packet's
second label is "LSP label". The HSMP downstream path will be
installed in the context-specific forwarding table corresponding to
the upstream LSR label. Packets sent by the upstream LSR can be
forwarded downstream using this forwarding state based on a two-label
lookup.
The upstream path of an HSMP LSP on a LAN is the same as the one on
other kind of links. That is, the upstream LSR must send Label
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Mapping message that contains the LSP label for upstream HSMP FEC to
downstream node. Packets travelling upstream need to be forwarded in
the direction of the root by using the label allocated for upstream
HSMP FEC.
6. Redundancy Considerations
In some scenario, it is necessary to provide two root nodes for
redundancy purpose. One way to implement this is to use two
independent HSMP LSPs acting as active/standby. At one time, only
one HSMP LSP will be active, and the other will be standby. After
detecting the failure of active HSMP LSP, the root and leaf nodes
will switch the traffic to the standby HSMP LSP which takes on the
role as active HSMP LSP. The detail of redundancy mechanism is out
of the scope.
7. Co-routed Path Exceptions
There are some exceptional cases when mLDP based HSMP LSP could not
achieve co-routed path. One possible case is using static routing
between LDP neighbors; another possible case is IGP cost asymmetric
generated by physical link cost asymmetric, or TE-Tunnels used
between LDP neighbors. The LSR/LER in HSMP LSP should detect if the
path is co-routed or not. If not co-routed, an alarm indication
should be generated to the management system.
8. Failure Detection of HSMP LSP
The idea of LSP ping for HSMP LSPs could be expressed as an intention
to test the LSP Ping Echo Request packets that enter at the root
along a particular downstream path of HSMP LSP, and end their MPLS
path on the leaf. The leaf node then sends the LSP Ping Echo Reply
along the co-routed upstream path of HSMP LSP, and end on the root
that are the (intended) root node.
New sub-TLVs are required to be assigned by IANA in Target FEC Stack
TLV to define the corresponding HSMP-upstream FEC type and HSMP-
downstream FEC type. In order to ensure the leaf node to send the
LSP Ping Echo Reply along the HSMP upstream path, the R bit (Validate
Reverse Path) in Global Flags Field defined in [RFC6426] is reused
here.
The node processing mechanism of LSP Ping Echo Request and Echo Reply
for HSMP LSP is inherited from [RFC6425] and [RFC6426] section 3.4,
except the following:
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1. The root node sending LSP Ping Echo Request message for HSMP LSP
MUST attach Target FEC Stack with HSMP downstream FEC, and set R bit
to '1' in Global Flags Field.
2. When the leaf node receiving the LSP Ping Echo Request, it MUST
send the LSP Ping Echo Reply to the associated HSMP upstream path.
The Reverse-path Target FEC Stack TLV attached by leaf node in Echo
Reply message SHOULD contain the sub-TLV of associated HSMP upstream
FEC.
9. Security Considerations
The same security considerations apply as for the MP2MP LSP described
in [RFC6388] and [RFC6425].
Although this document introduces new FEC Elements and corresponding
procedures, the protocol does not bring any new security issues
compared to [RFC6388] and [RFC6425].
10. IANA Considerations
This document requires allocation of two new LDP FEC Element types
from the "Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) Parameters registry" the
"Forwarding Equivalence Class (FEC) Type Name Space":
1. the HSMP-upstream FEC type - requested value TBD
2. the HSMP-downstream FEC type - requested value TBD
This document requires allocation of one new code points for the HSMP
LSP capability TLV from "Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) Parameters
registry" the "TLV Type Name Space":
HSMP LSP Capability Parameter - requested value TBD
This document requires allocation of two new sub-TLV types for
inclusion within the LSP ping [RFC4379] Target FEC Stack TLV (TLV
type 1).
1. the HSMP-upstream LDP FEC Stack - requested value TBD
2. the HSMP-downstream LDP FEC Stack - requested value TBD
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11. Acknowledgement
The author would like to thank Eric Rosen, Sebastien Jobert, Fei Su,
Edward, Mach Chen, Thomas Morin, Loa Andersson for their valuable
comments.
12. References
12.1. Normative references
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC5331] Aggarwal, R., Rekhter, Y., and E. Rosen, "MPLS Upstream
Label Assignment and Context-Specific Label Space",
RFC 5331, August 2008.
[RFC5332] Eckert, T., Rosen, E., Aggarwal, R., and Y. Rekhter, "MPLS
Multicast Encapsulations", RFC 5332, August 2008.
[RFC5561] Thomas, B., Raza, K., Aggarwal, S., Aggarwal, R., and JL.
Le Roux, "LDP Capabilities", RFC 5561, July 2009.
[RFC6388] Wijnands, IJ., Minei, I., Kompella, K., and B. Thomas,
"Label Distribution Protocol Extensions for Point-to-
Multipoint and Multipoint-to-Multipoint Label Switched
Paths", RFC 6388, November 2011.
[RFC6389] Aggarwal, R. and JL. Le Roux, "MPLS Upstream Label
Assignment for LDP", RFC 6389, November 2011.
[RFC6425] Saxena, S., Swallow, G., Ali, Z., Farrel, A., Yasukawa,
S., and T. Nadeau, "Detecting Data-Plane Failures in
Point-to-Multipoint MPLS - Extensions to LSP Ping",
RFC 6425, November 2011.
[RFC6426] Gray, E., Bahadur, N., Boutros, S., and R. Aggarwal, "MPLS
On-Demand Connectivity Verification and Route Tracing",
RFC 6426, November 2011.
12.2. Informative References
[I-D.ietf-l2vpn-vpms-frmwk-requirements]
Kamite, Y., JOUNAY, F., Niven-Jenkins, B., Brungard, D.,
and L. Jin, "Framework and Requirements for Virtual
Private Multicast Service (VPMS)",
draft-ietf-l2vpn-vpms-frmwk-requirements-05 (work in
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progress), October 2012.
[I-D.ietf-pwe3-p2mp-pw]
Sivabalan, S., Boutros, S., and L. Martini, "Signaling
Root-Initiated Point-to-Multipoint Pseudowire using LDP",
draft-ietf-pwe3-p2mp-pw-04 (work in progress), March 2012.
[I-D.ietf-tictoc-1588overmpls]
Davari, S., Oren, A., Bhatia, M., Roberts, P., and L.
Montini, "Transporting Timing messages over MPLS
Networks", draft-ietf-tictoc-1588overmpls-05 (work in
progress), June 2013.
[IEEE1588]
"IEEE standard for a precision clock synchronization
protocol for networked measurement and control systems",
IEEE1588v2 , March 2008.
[RFC3376] Cain, B., Deering, S., Kouvelas, I., Fenner, B., and A.
Thyagarajan, "Internet Group Management Protocol, Version
3", RFC 3376, October 2002.
[RFC4379] Kompella, K. and G. Swallow, "Detecting Multi-Protocol
Label Switched (MPLS) Data Plane Failures", RFC 4379,
February 2006.
[RFC4762] Lasserre, M. and V. Kompella, "Virtual Private LAN Service
(VPLS) Using Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) Signaling",
RFC 4762, January 2007.
[RFC5036] Andersson, L., Minei, I., and B. Thomas, "LDP
Specification", RFC 5036, October 2007.
[RFC6374] Frost, D. and S. Bryant, "Packet Loss and Delay
Measurement for MPLS Networks", RFC 6374, September 2011.
[RFC6826] Wijnands, IJ., Eckert, T., Leymann, N., and M. Napierala,
"Multipoint LDP In-Band Signaling for Point-to-Multipoint
and Multipoint-to-Multipoint Label Switched Paths",
RFC 6826, January 2013.
Jin, et al. Expires April 14, 2014 [Page 14]
Internet-Draft draft-ietf-mpls-mldp-hsmp October 2013
Authors' Addresses
Lizhong Jin
Shanghai, China
Email: lizho.jin@gmail.com
Frederic Jounay
France Telecom
2, avenue Pierre-Marzin
22307 Lannion Cedex, FRANCE
Email: frederic.jounay@orange.ch
IJsbrand Wijnands
Cisco Systems, Inc
De kleetlaan 6a
Diegem 1831, Belgium
Email: ice@cisco.com
Nicolai Leymann
Deutsche Telekom AG
Winterfeldtstrasse 21
Berlin 10781
Email: N.Leymann@telekom.de
Jin, et al. Expires April 14, 2014 [Page 15]