PCP working group S. Kiesel
Internet-Draft University of Stuttgart
Intended status: Standards Track R. Penno
Expires: February 26, 2015 Cisco Systems, Inc.
S. Cheshire
Apple
August 25, 2014
PCP Anycast Address
draft-ietf-pcp-anycast-02
Abstract
The Port Control Protocol (PCP) Anycast Address enables PCP clients
to transmit signaling messages to their closest on-path NAT,
Firewall, or other middlebox, without having to learn the IP address
of that middlebox via some external channel. This document
establishes one well-known IPv4 address and one well-known IPv6
address to be used as PCP Anycast Address.
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
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This Internet-Draft will expire on February 26, 2015.
Copyright Notice
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document authors. All rights reserved.
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to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. PCP Server Discovery based on well-known IP Address . . . . . 4
2.1. PCP Discovery Client behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.2. PCP Discovery Server behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
3. Deployment Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
4. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
4.1. Registration of IPv4 Special Purpose Address . . . . . . . 6
4.2. Registration of IPv6 Special Purpose Address . . . . . . . 7
5. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
6. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
6.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
6.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Appendix A. Discussion of other PCP Discovery methods . . . . . . 12
A.1. Default Router . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
A.2. DHCP PCP Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
A.3. User Input . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
A.4. Domain Name System Based . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
A.5. Addressing only based on Destination Port . . . . . . . . 13
Appendix B. Discussion of IP Anycast Address usage for PCP . . . 15
B.1. Motivation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
B.2. Scenarios . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
B.3. Historical Objections to Anycast . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
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1. Introduction
The Port Control Protocol (PCP) [RFC6887] provides a mechanism to
control how incoming packets are forwarded by upstream devices such
as Network Address Translator IPv6/IPv4 (NAT64), Network Address
Translator IPv4/IPv4 (NAT44), IPv6 and IPv4 firewall devices, and a
mechanism to reduce application keep alive traffic.
The PCP document [RFC6887] specifies the message formats used, but
the address to which a client sends its request is either assumed to
be the default router (which is appropriate in a typical single-link
residential network) or has to be configured otherwise via some
external mechanism, such as DHCP. The properties and drawbacks of
various mechanisms are discussed in Appendix A.
This document follows a different approach: it establishes a well-
known anycast address for the PCP Server. PCP clients are expected
to send requests to this address during the PCP Server discovery
process. A PCP Server configured with the anycast address could
optionally redirect or return a list of unicast PCP Servers to the
client. For a more extensive discussion on anycasting see
Appendix B.
The benefit of using an anycast address is simplicity and
reliability. In an example deployment scenario:
1. A network administrator installs a PCP-capable NAT.
2. An end user (who may be the same person) runs a PCP-enabled
application. This application can implement PCP with purely
user-level code -- no operating system support is required.
3. This PCP-enabled application sends its PCP request to the PCP
anycast address. This packet travels through the network like
any other, without any special support from DNS, DHCP, other
routers, or anything else, until it reaches the PCP-capable NAT,
which receives it, handles it, and sends back a reply.
Using the PCP anycast address, the only two things that need to be
deployed in the network are the two things that actually use PCP: The
PCP-capable NAT, and the PCP-enabled application. Nothing else in
the network needs to be changed or upgraded, and nothing needs to be
configured, including the PCP client.
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2. PCP Server Discovery based on well-known IP Address
2.1. PCP Discovery Client behavior
PCP Clients that need to discover PCP servers SHOULD first send a PCP
request to the configured PCP server or to the default router, as
described in Section 8.1 of [RFC6887]. However, differing from
Section 8.1.1 of [RFC6887], MRC (Maximum Retransmission Count) is set
to 4. Trying the configured PCP server or the default router first
is important because in the case of cascaded PCP Servers, all of them
need to be discovered in order of hop distance from the client.
If contacting the configured PCP server or the default router does
not succeed with this first approach, the PCP client re-initializes
RT based on IRT, and it resets MRC to its "normal" value (0 unless a
different value is requested by the application), as described in
Section 8.1.1 of [RFC6887]. Then, the PCP client repeatedly
transmits a message to the configured PCP server or the default
router, waits RT, transmits a message to the anycast address, waits
RT, recalculates RT as specified in Section 8.1.1 of [RFC6887], and
starts again with a retransmission to the configured PCP server or
the default router. This procedure continues until a reply is
received or the PCP client is no longer interested in the PCP
transaction or the message exchange is considered to have failed
according to MRC/MRD.
The PCP client SHOULD select the PCP anycast address to be of the
same IP address family as its requested PCP mapping, i.e., the
address family of the Requested Internal IP Address.
2.2. PCP Discovery Server behavior
A PCP Server can be configured to listen on the anycast address for
incoming PCP requests.
PCP responses are sent from that same IANA-assigned address (see Page
5 of [RFC1546]).
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3. Deployment Considerations
There are known limitations when there is more than one PCP server
and asymmetric routing, or similar scenarios. Mechanisms to deal
with those situations, such as state synchronization between PCP
servers, are beyond the scope of this document.
For general recommendations regarding operation of anycast services
see [RFC4786].
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4. IANA Considerations
4.1. Registration of IPv4 Special Purpose Address
IANA is requested to register a single IPv4 address in the IANA IPv4
Special Purpose Address Registry [RFC5736].
[RFC5736] itemizes some information to be recorded for all
designations:
1. The designated address prefix.
Prefix: TBD by IANA. Prefix length: /32
2. The RFC that called for the IANA address designation.
This document.
3. The date the designation was made.
TBD.
4. The date the use designation is to be terminated (if specified
as a limited-use designation).
Unlimited. No termination date.
5. The nature of the purpose of the designated address (e.g.,
unicast experiment or protocol service anycast).
protocol service anycast.
6. For experimental unicast applications and otherwise as
appropriate, the registry will also identify the entity and
related contact details to whom the address designation has been
made.
N/A.
7. The registry will also note, for each designation, the
intended routing scope of the address, indicating whether the
address is intended to be routable only in scoped, local, or
private contexts, or whether the address prefix is intended to be
routed globally.
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Typically used within a network operator's network domain, but in
principle globally routable.
8. The date in the IANA registry is the date of the IANA action,
i.e., the day IANA records the allocation.
TBD.
4.2. Registration of IPv6 Special Purpose Address
IANA is requested to register a single IPv6 address in the IANA IPv6
Special Purpose Address Block [RFC4773].
[RFC4773] itemizes some information to be recorded for all
designations:
1. The designated address prefix.
Prefix: TBD by IANA. Prefix length: /128
2. The RFC that called for the IANA address designation.
This document.
3. The date the designation was made.
TBD.
4. The date the use designation is to be terminated (if specified
as a limited-use designation).
Unlimited. No termination date.
5. The nature of the purpose of the designated address (e.g.,
unicast experiment or protocol service anycast).
protocol service anycast.
6. For experimental unicast applications and otherwise as
appropriate, the registry will also identify the entity and
related contact details to whom the address designation has been
made.
N/A.
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7. The registry will also note, for each designation, the
intended routing scope of the address, indicating whether the
address is intended to be routable only in scoped, local, or
private contexts, or whether the address prefix is intended to be
routed globally.
Typically used within a network operator's network domain, but in
principle globally routable.
8. The date in the IANA registry is the date of the IANA action,
i.e., the day IANA records the allocation.
TBD.
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5. Security Considerations
In a network without any border gateway, NAT or firewall that is
aware of the PCP anycast address, outgoing PCP requests could leak
out onto the external Internet, possibly revealing information about
internal devices.
Using an IANA-assigned well-known PCP anycast address enables border
gateways to block such outgoing packets. In the default-free zone,
routers should be configured to drop such packets. Such
configuration can occur naturally via BGP messages advertising that
no route exists to said address.
Sensitive clients that do not wish to leak information about their
presesence can set an IP TTL on their PCP requests that limits how
far they can travel into the public Internet.
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6. References
6.1. Normative References
[RFC1546] Partridge, C., Mendez, T., and W. Milliken, "Host
Anycasting Service", RFC 1546, November 1993.
[RFC3958] Daigle, L. and A. Newton, "Domain-Based Application
Service Location Using SRV RRs and the Dynamic Delegation
Discovery Service (DDDS)", RFC 3958, January 2005.
[RFC4773] Huston, G., "Administration of the IANA Special Purpose
IPv6 Address Block", RFC 4773, December 2006.
[RFC5736] Huston, G., Cotton, M., and L. Vegoda, "IANA IPv4 Special
Purpose Address Registry", RFC 5736, January 2010.
[RFC6887] Wing, D., Cheshire, S., Boucadair, M., Penno, R., and P.
Selkirk, "Port Control Protocol (PCP)", RFC 6887,
April 2013.
6.2. Informative References
[DNSDisc] Hagino, J. and D. Thaler, "Analysis of DNS Server
Discovery Mechanisms for IPv6",
draft-ietf-ipngwg-dns-discovery-01 (work in progress),
November 2001.
[DhcpRequestParams]
OpenFlow, "OpenFlow Switch Specification", February 2011,
<http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/
aa363298%28v=vs.85%29.aspx>.
[I-D.chen-pcp-mobile-deployment]
Chen, G., Cao, Z., Boucadair, M., Ales, V., and L.
Thiebaut, "Analysis of Port Control Protocol in Mobile
Network", draft-chen-pcp-mobile-deployment-04 (work in
progress), July 2013.
[I-D.ietf-dhc-container-opt]
Droms, R. and R. Penno, "Container Option for Server
Configuration", draft-ietf-dhc-container-opt-07 (work in
progress), April 2013.
[I-D.ietf-pcp-dhcp]
Boucadair, M., Penno, R., and D. Wing, "DHCP Options for
the Port Control Protocol (PCP)", draft-ietf-pcp-dhcp-13
(work in progress), April 2014.
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[RFC4786] Abley, J. and K. Lindqvist, "Operation of Anycast
Services", BCP 126, RFC 4786, December 2006.
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Appendix A. Discussion of other PCP Discovery methods
Several algorithms have been specified that allows PCP Client to
discover the PCP Servers on a network . However, each of this
approaches has technical or operational issues that will hinder the
fast deployment of PCP.
A.1. Default Router
The PCP specification allows one mode of operation in which the PCP
client sends its requests to the default router. This approach is
appropriate in a typical single-link residential network but has
limitations in more complex network topologies.
If PCP server does not reside in first hop router, whether because
subscriber has a existing home router or in the case of Wireless
Networks (3G, LTE) [I-D.chen-pcp-mobile-deployment], trying to send a
request to default router will not work.
A.2. DHCP PCP Options
One general drawback of relying on external configuration mechanisms,
such as DHCP [I-D.ietf-pcp-dhcp], is that it creates an external
dependency on another piece of network infrastructure which must be
configured with the right address for PCP to work. In some
environments the staff managing the DHCP servers may not be the same
staff managing the NAT gateways, and in any case, constantly keeping
the DHCP server address information up to date as NAT gateways are
added, removed, or reconfigured, is burdensome.
Another drawback of relying on DHCP for configuration is that at
least one significant target deployment environments for PCP --
namely 3GPP for mobile telephones -- does not use DHCP.
There are two problems with DHCP Options: DHCP Server on Home
Gateways (HGW) and Operating Systems DHCP clients
Currently what the HGW does with the options it receives from the ISP
is not standardized in any general way. As a matter of practice, the
HGW is most likely to use its own customer-LAN-facing IP address for
the DNS server address. As for other options, it's free to offer the
same values to the client, offer no value at all, or offer its own IP
address if that makes sense, as it does (sort of) for DNS.
In scenarios where PCP Server resides on ISP network and is intended
to work with arbitrary home gateways that don't know they are being
used in a PCP context, that won't work, because there's no reason to
think that the HGW will even request the option from the DHCP server,
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much less offer the value it gets from the server on the customer-
facing LAN. There is work on the DHC WG to overcome some of these
limitations [I-D.ietf-dhc-container-opt] but in terms of deployment
it also needs HGW to be upgraded.
The problems with Operating Systems is that even if DHCP PCP Option
were made available to customer-facing LAN, host stack DHCP
enhancements are required to process or request new DHCP PCP option.
One exception is Windows [DhcpRequestParams]
Finally, in the case of IPv6 there are networks where there is DHCPv6
infrastructure at all or some hosts do not have a DHCPv6 client.
A.3. User Input
A regular subscriber can not be expected to input IP address of PCP
Server or network domain name. Moreover, user can be at a Wi-Fi
hotspot, Hotel or related. Therefore relying on user input is not
reliable.
A.4. Domain Name System Based
There are three separate category of problems with NAPTR [RFC3958]
1. End Points: It relies on PCP client determining the domain name
and supporting certain DNS queries
2. DNS Servers: DNS server need to be provisioned with the necessary
records
3. CPEs: CPEs might interfere with DNS queries and the DHCP domain
name option conveyed by ISP that could be used to bootstrap NAPTR
might not be relayed to home network.
A.5. Addressing only based on Destination Port
One design option that was considered for Apple's NAT gateways was to
have the NAT gateway simply handle and respond to all packets
addressed to UDP port 5351, regardless of the destination address in
the packet. Since the device is a NAT gateway, it already examines
every packet in order to rewrite port numbers, so also detecting
packets addressed to UDP port 5351 is not a significant additional
burden. Also, since this device is a NAT gateway which rewrites port
numbers, any attempt by a client to talk *though* this first NAT
gateway to create mappings in some second upstream NAT gateway is
futile and pointless. Any mappings created in the second NAT gateway
are useful to the client only if there are also corresponding
mappings created in the first NAT gateway. Consequently, there is no
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case where it is useful for PCP requests to pass transparently
through the first PCP-aware NAT gateway on their way to the second
PCP-aware NAT gateway. In all cases, for useful connectivity to be
established, the PCP request must be handled by the first NAT
gateway, and then the first NAT gateway generates a corresponding new
upstream request to establish a mapping in the second NAT gateway.
(This process can be repeated recursively for as many times as
necessary for the depth of nesting of NAT gateways; this is
transparent to the client device.)
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Appendix B. Discussion of IP Anycast Address usage for PCP
B.1. Motivation
The two issues identified in Appendix A.5 result in the following
related observations: the PCP client may not *know* what destination
address to use in its PCP request packets; the PCP server doesn't
*care* what destination address is in the PCP request packets.
Given that the devices neither need to know nor care what destination
address goes in the packet, all we need to do is pick one and use it.
It's little more than a placeholder in the IP header. Any globally
routable unicast address will do. Since this address is one that
automatically routes its packet to the closest on-path device that
implements the desired functionality, it is an anycast address.
B.2. Scenarios
In the simple case where the first-hop router is also the NAT gateway
(as is common in a typical single-link residential network), sending
to the PCP anycast address is equivalent to sending to the client's
default router, as specified in the PCP base document [RFC6887].
In the case of a larger corporate network, where there may be several
internal routed subnets and one or more border NAT gateway(s)
connecting to the rest of the Internet, sending to the PCP anycast
address has the interesting property that it magically finds the
right border NAT gateway for that client. Since we posit that other
network infrastructure does not need (and should not have) any
special knowledge of PCP (or its anycast address) this means that to
other non-NAT routers, the PCP anycast address will look like any
other unicast destination address on the public Internet, and
consequently the packet will be forwarded as for any other packet
destined to the public Internet, until it reaches a NAT or firewall
device that is aware of the PCP anycast address. This will result in
the packet naturally arriving the NAT gateway that handles this
client's outbound traffic destined to the public Internet, which is
exactly the NAT gateway that the client wishes to communicate with
when managing its port mappings.
B.3. Historical Objections to Anycast
In March 2001 a draft document entitled "Analysis of DNS Server
Discovery Mechanisms for IPv6" [DNSDisc] proposed using anycast to
discover DNS servers, a proposal that was subsequently abandoned in
later revisions of that draft document.
There are legitimate reasons why using anycast to discover DNS
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servers is not compelling, mainly because it requires explicit
configuration of routing tables to direct those anycast packets to
the desired DNS server. However, DNS server discovery is very
different to NAT gateway discovery. A DNS server is something a
client explicitly talks to, via IP address. The DNS server may be
literally anywhere on the Internet. Various reasons make anycast an
uncompelling technique for DNS server discovery:
o DNS is a pure application-layer protocol, running over UDP.
o On an operating system without appropriate support for configuring
anycast addresses, a DNS server would have to use something like
Berkeley Packet Filter (BPF) to snoop on received packets to
intercept DNS requests, which is inelegant and inefficient.
o Without appropriate routing changes elsewhere in the network,
there's no reason to assume that packets sent to that anycast
address would even make it to the desired DNS server machine.
This places an addition configuration burden on the network
administrators, to install appropriate routing table entries to
direct packets to the desired DNS server machine.
In contrast, a NAT gateway is something a client's packets stumble
across as they try to leave the local network and head out onto the
public Internet. The NAT gateway has to be on the path those packets
naturally take or it can't perform its NAT functions. As a result,
the objections to using anycast for DNS server discovery do not apply
to PCP:
o No routing changes are needed (or desired) elsewhere in the local
network, because the whole *point* of using anycast is that we
want the client's PCP request packet to take the same forwarding
path through the network as a TCP SYN to any other remote
destination address, because we want the *same* NAT gateway that
would have made a mapping in response to receiving an outbound TCP
SYN packet from the client to be the the one that makes a mapping
in response to receiving a PCP request packet from the client.
o A NAT engine is already snooping on (and rewriting) every packet
it forwards. As part of that snooping it could trivially look for
packets addressed to the PCP UDP port and process them locally
(just like the local processing it already does when it sees an
outbound TCP SYN packet).
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Authors' Addresses
Sebastian Kiesel
University of Stuttgart Information Center
Networks and Communication Systems Department
Allmandring 30
Stuttgart 70550
Germany
Email: ietf-pcp@skiesel.de
Reinaldo Penno
Cisco Systems, Inc.
San Jose, CA
US
Phone:
Fax:
Email: repenno@cisco.com
URI:
Stuart Cheshire
Apple Inc.
1 Infinite Loop
Cupertino, California 95014
USA
Phone: +1 408 974 3207
Email: cheshire@apple.com
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