TEAS Working Group Y. Zhuang, Ed.
Internet-Draft Q. Wu
Intended status: Standards Track H. Chen
Expires: May 17, 2017 Huawei
A. Farrel
Juniper Networks
November 13, 2016
Architecture for Scheduled Use of Resources
draft-ietf-teas-scheduled-resources-00
Abstract
Time-Scheduled reservation of traffic engineering (TE) resources can
be used to provide resource booking for TE Label Switched Paths so as
to better guarantee services for customers and to improve the
efficiency of network resource usage into the future. This document
provides a framework that describes and discusses the architecture
for the scheduled reservation of TE resources. This document does
not describe specific protocols or protocol extensions needed to
realize this service.
Status of This Memo
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This Internet-Draft will expire on May 17, 2017.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
2. Problem statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2.1. Provisioning TE-LSPs and TE Resources . . . . . . . . . . 3
2.2. Selecting the Path of an LSP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.3. Planning Future LSPs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.4. Looking at Future Demands on TE Resources . . . . . . . . 5
2.5. Requisite State Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3. Architectural Concepts . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
3.1. Where is Scheduling State Held? . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
3.2. What State is Held? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
4. Architecture Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4.1. Service Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4.2. Initialization and Recovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.3. Synchronization Between PCEs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
5. Security Consideration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
6. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
7. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
8. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
1. Introduction
Traffic Engineering Label Switched Paths (TE-LSPs) are connection
oriented tunnels in packet and non-packet networks [RFC3209],
[RFC3945]. TE-LSPs may reserve network resources for use by the
traffic they carry, thus providing some guarantees of service
delivery and allowing a network operator to plan the use of the
resources across the whole network.
In some technologies (such as wavelength switched optical networks)
the resource is synonymous with the label that is switched on the
path of the LSP so that it is not possible to establish an LSP that
can carry traffic without assigning a concrete resource to the LSP.
In other technologies (such as packet switched networks) the
resources assigned to an LSP are a measure of the capacity of a link
that is dedicated for use by the traffic on the LSP. In all cases,
network planning consists of selecting paths for LSPs through the
network so that there will be no contention for resources; LSP
establishment is the act of setting up an LSP and reserving resources
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within the network; and network optimization or re-optimization is
the process of re-positioning LSPs in the network to make the
unreserved network resources more useful for potential future LSPs
while ensuring that the established LSPs continue to fulfill their
objectives.
It is often the case that it is known that an LSP will be needed at
some time in the future. While a path for that LSP could be computed
using knowledge of the currently established LSPs and the currently
available resources, this does not give any degree of certainty that
the necessary resources will be available when it is time to set up
the new LSP. Yet setting up the LSP ahead of the time when it is
needed (which would guarantee the availability of the resources) is
wasteful since the network resources could be used for some other
purpose in the meantime.
Similarly, it may be known that an LSP will no longer be needed after
some future time and that it will be torn down releasing the network
resources that were assigned to it. This information can be helpful
in planning how a future LSP is placed in the network.
Time-Scheduled (TS) reservation of TE resources can be used to
provide resource booking for TE-LSPs so as to better guarantee
services for customers and to improve the efficiency of network
resource usage into the future. This document provides a framework
that describes and discusses the architecture for the scheduled
reservation of TE resources. This document does not describe
specific protocols or protocol extensions needed to realize this
service.
2. Problem statement
2.1. Provisioning TE-LSPs and TE Resources
TE-LSPs in existing networks are provisioned using RSVP-TE as a
signaling protocol [RFC3209] [RFC3473], by direct control of network
elements such as in the Software Defined Networking (SDN) paradigm,
and using the PCE Communication Protocol (PCEP) [RFC5440] as a
control protocol.
TE resources are reserved at the point of use. That is, the
resources (wavelengths, timeslots, bandwidth, etc.) are reserved for
use on a specific link and are tracked by the Label Switching Routers
(LSRs) at the end points of the link. Those LSRs learn which
resources to reserve during the LSP setup process.
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The use of TE resources can be varied by changing the parameters of
the LSP that uses them, and the resources can be released by tearing
down the LSP.
2.2. Selecting the Path of an LSP
Although TE-LSPs can determine their paths hop-by-hop using the
shortest path toward the destination to route the signaling protocol
messages [RFC3209], in practice this option is not applied because it
does not look far enough ahead into the network to verify that the
desired resources are available. Instead, the full length of the
path of an LSP is computed ahead of time either by the head-end LSR
of a signaled LSP, or by Path Computation Element (PCE) functionality
in a dedicated server or built into network management software
[RFC4655].
Such full-path computation is applied in order that an end-to-end
view of the available resources in the network can be used to
determine the best likelihood of establishing a viable LSP that meets
the service requirements. Even in this situation, however, it is
possible that two LSPs being set up at the same time will compete for
scarce network resources meaning that one or both of them will fail
to be established. This situation is avoided by using a centralized
PCE that is aware of the LSP setup requests that are in progress.
2.3. Planning Future LSPs
LSPs may be established "on demand" when the requester determines
that a new LSP is needed. In this case, the path of the LSP is
computed as described in Section 2.2.
However, in many situations, the requester knows in advance that an
LSP will be needed at a particular time in the future. For example,
the requester may be aware of a large traffic flow that will start at
a well-known time, perhaps for a database synchronzation or for the
exchange of content between streamng sites. Furthermore, the
requester may also know for how long the LSP is required before it
can be torn down.
The set of requests for future LSPs could be collected and held in a
central database (such as at a Network Management System - NMS): when
the time comes for each LSP to be set up the NMS can ask the PCE to
compute a path and can then requst the LSP to be provisioned. This
approach has a number of drawbacks because it is not possible to
determine in advance whether it will be possible to deliver the LSP
since the resources it needs might be used by other LSPs in the
network. Thus, at the time the requester asks for the future LSP,
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the NMS can only make a best-effort guarantee that the LSP will be
set up at the desired time.
A better solution, therefore, is for the requests for future LSPs to
be serviced at once. The paths of the LSPs can be computed ahead of
time and converted into reservations of network resources during
specific windows in the future.
2.4. Looking at Future Demands on TE Resources
While path computation as described in Section 2.2 takes account of
the currently available network resources, and can act to place LSPs
in the network so that there is the best possibility of future LSPs
being accommodated, it cannot handle all eventualities. It is simple
to construct scenarios where LSPs that are placed one at a time lead
to future LSPs being blocked, but where foreknowledge of all of the
LSPs would have made it possible for them all to be set up.
If, therefore, we were able to know in advance what LSPs were going
to be requested we could plan for them and ensure resources were
available. Furthermore, such an approach enables a commitment to be
made to a service user that an LSP will be set up and available at a
specific time.
This service can be achieved by tracking the current use of network
resources and also a future view of the resource usage. We call this
time-scheduled TE (TS-TE) resource reservation.
2.5. Requisite State Information
In order to achieve the TS-TE resource reservation, the use of
resources on the path needs to be scheduled. Scheduling state is
used to indicate when resources are reserved and when they are
available for use.
A simple information model for one piece of scheduling state is as
follows:
{ link id;
resource id or reserved capacity;
reservation start time;
reservation end time
}
The resource that is scheduled can be link capacity, physical
resources on a link, CPU utilization, memory, buffers on an
interfaces, etc. The resource might also be the maximal unreserved
bandwidth of the link over a time intervals. For any one resource
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there could be multiple pieces of scheduling state, and for any one
link, the timing windows might overlap.
There are multiple ways to realize this information model and
different ways to store the data. The resource state could be
expressed as a start time and and end time as shown above, or could
be expressed as a start time and a duration. Multiple periods,
possibly of different lengths, may be associated with one reservation
request, and a reservation might repeat on a regular cycle.
Furthermore, the current state of network reservation could be kept
separate from the scheduled usage, or everything could be merged into
a single TS databasae. This document does not spend any more time on
discussion of encoding of state information except to discuss the
location of storage of the state information and the recovery of the
information after failure events.
This scheduling state information can be used by applications to book
resources for future or now, so as to maximize chance of services
being delivered. Also, it can avoid contention for resources of
LSPs.
Note that it is also to store the information about future LSPs.
This information is held to allow the LSPs to be instantiated when
they are due and using the paths/resources that have been computed
for them, but also to provide correlation with the TS-TE resource
reservations so that it is clear why resources were reserved allowing
pre-emption and handling release of reserved resources in the event
of cancelation of future LSPs.
3. Architectural Concepts
This section examines several important architectural concepts that
lead to design decisions that will influence how networks can achieve
TS-TE in a scalable and robust manner.
3.1. Where is Scheduling State Held?
The scheduling state information described in Section 2.5 has to be
held somewhere. There are two places where this makes sense:
o In the network nodes where the resources exist;
o In a central scheduling controller where decisions about resource
allocation are made.
The first of these makes policing of resource allocation easier. It
means that many points in the network can request immediate or
scheduled LSPs with the associated resource reservation and that all
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such requests can be correlated at the point where the resources are
allocated. However, this approach has some scaling and technical
problems:
o The most obvious issue is that each network node must retain the
full time-based state for all of its resources. In a busy network
with a high arrival rate of new LSPs and a low hold time for each
LSP, this could be a lot of state. Yet network nodes are normally
implemented with minimal spare memory.
o In order that path computation can be performed, the computing
entity normally known as a Path Computation Element (PCE)
[RFC4655] needs access to a database of available links and nodes
in the network, and of the TE properties of the links. This
database is known as the Traffic Engineering Database (TED) and is
usually populated from information advertised in the IGP by each
of the network nodes or exported using BGP-LS
[I-D.ietf-idr-ls-distribution]. To be able to compute a path for
a future LSP the PCE needs to populate the TED with all of the
future resource availability: if this information is held on the
network nodes it must also be advertised in the IGP. This could
be a significant scaling issue for the IGP and the network nodes
as all of the advertised information is held at every network node
and must be periodically refreshed by the IGP.
o When a normal node restarts it can recover resource reservation
state from the forwarding hardware, from Non-volatile random-
access memory (NVRAM), or from adjacent nodes through the
signaling protocol [RFC5063]. If scheduling state is held at the
network nodes it must also be recovered after the restart of a
network node. This cannot be achieved from the forwarding
hardware because the reservation will not have been made, could
require additional expensive NVRAM, or might require that all
adjacent nodes also have the scheduling state in order to
reinstall it on the restarting node. This is potentially complex
processing with scaling and cost implications.
Conversely, if the scheduling state is held centrally it is easily
available at the point of use. That is, the PCE can utilize the
state to plan future LSPs and can update that stored information with
the scheduled reservation of resources for those future LSPs. This
approach also has several issues:
o If there are multiple controllers then they must synchronise their
stored scheduling state as they each plan future LSPs, and must
have a mechanism to resolve resource contention. This is
relatively simple and is mitigated by the fact that there is ample
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processing time to replan future LSPs in the case of resource
contention.
o If other sources of immediate LSPs are allowed (for example, other
controllers or autonomous action by head-end LSRs) then the
changes in resource availability caused by the setup or teardown
of these LSPs must be reflected in the TED (by use of the IGP as
currently) and may have an impact of planned future LSPs. This
impact can be mitigated by replanning future LSPs or through LSP
preemption.
o If other sources of planned LSPs are allowed, they can request
path computation and resource reservation from the centralized PCE
using PCEP [RFC5440].
o If the scheduling state is held centrally at a PCE, the state must
be held and restored after a system restart. This is relatively
easy to achieve on a central server that can have access to non-
volatile storage. The PCE could also synchronize the scheduling
state with other PCEs after restart. See Section 4.2 for details.
o Of course, a centralized system must store informaton about all of
the resources in the network. In a busy network with a high
arrival rate of new LSPs and a low hold time for each LSP, this
could be a lot of state. This is multiplied by the size of the
network measured both by the number of links and nodes, and by the
number of trackable resources on each link or at each node. The
challenge may be mitigated by the centralized server being
dedicated hardware, but the problem of collecting the information
from the network is only solved if the central server has full
control of the booking of resources and the estblshment of new
LSPs.
Thus the architectural conclusion is that scheduling state should be
held centrally at the point of use and not in the network devices.
3.2. What State is Held?
As already described, the PCE needs access to an enhanced, time-based
TED. It stores the traffic engineering (TE) information such as
bandwidth for every link for a series of time intervals. There are a
few ways to store the TE information in the TED. For example,
suppose that the amount of the unreserved bandwidth at a priority
level for a link is Bj in a time interval from time Tj to Tk (k =
j+1), where j = 0, 1, 2, ....
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Bandwidth
^
| B3
| B1 ___________
| __________
|B0 B4
|__________ B2 _________
| ________________
|
-+-------------------------------------------------------> Time
|T0 T1 T2 T3 T4
Figure 1: A Plot of Bandwidth Usage against Time
The unreserved bandwidth for the link can be represented and stored
in the TED as [T0, B0], [T1, B1], [T2, B2], [T3, B3], ... as shown in
Figure 1.
But it must be noted that service requests for future LSPs are known
in terms of the LSPs whose paths are computed and for which resources
are scheduled. For example, if the requester of a future LSP decides
to cancel the request or to modify the request, the PCE must be able
to map this to the resources that were reserved. When the LSP or the
request for the LSP with a number of time intervals is cancelled, the
PCE must release the resources that were reserved on each of the
links along the path of the LSP in every time intervals from the TED.
If the bandwidth reserved on a link for the LSP is B from time T2 to
T3 and the unreserved bandwidth on the link is B2 from T2 to T3, B is
added to the link for the time interval from T2 to T3 and the
unreserved bandwidth on the link from T2 to T3 will be B2 + B.
This suggests that the PCE needs an LSP Database (LSP-DB)
[I-D.ietf-pce-stateful-pce] that contains information not only about
LSPs that are active in the network, but also those that are planned.
The information for an LSP stored in the LSP-DB includes for each
time interval that applies to the LSP: the time interval, the paths
computed for the LSP satisfying the constraints in the time interval,
and the resources such as bandwidth reserved for the LSP in the time
interval. See also Section 2.3
It is an implementation choice how the TED and LSP-DB are stored both
for dynamic use and for recovery after failure or restart, but it may
be noted that all of the information in the scheduled TED can be
recovered from the active network state and from the scheduled LSP-
DB.
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4. Architecture Overview
The architectural considerations and conclusions described in the
previous section lead to the architecture described in this section.
-------------------
| Service Requester |
-------------------
^
a|
v
------- b --------
| |<--->| LSP-DB |
| | --------
| PCE |
| | c -----
| |<---->| TED |
------- -----
^ ^
| |
d| |e
| |
------+-----+--------------------
| | Network
| --------
| | Router |
v --------
----- -----
| LSR |<------>| LSR |
----- f -----
Figure 2: Reference Architecture for Scheduled Use of Resources
4.1. Service Request
As shown in Figure 2, some component in the network requests a
service. This may be an application, an NMS, an LSR, or any
component that qualifies as a Path Computation Client (PCC). We show
this on the figure as the "Service Requester" and it sends a request
to the PCE for an LSP to be set up at some time (either now or in the
future). The request, indicated on Figure 2 by the arrow (a)
includes all of the parameters of the LSP that the requester wishes
to supply such as bandwidth, start time, and end time. Note that the
requester in this case may be the same LSR shown in the figure or may
be a distinct system.
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The PCE enters the LSP request in its LSP-DB (b), and uses
information from its TED (c) to compute a path that satisfies
constraints such as bandwidth constraint for the LSP in the time
interval from a start time to an end time. It updates the future
resource availability in the TED so that further path computations
can take account of the scheduled resource usage. It stores the path
for the LSP into the LSP-DB (b).
When it is time such as at a start time for the LSP to be set up, the
PCE sends a PCEP Initiate request to the head end LSR (d) providing
the path to be signaled as well as other parameters such as the
bandwidth of the LSP.
As the LSP is signaled between LSRs (f) the use of resources in the
network is updated and distributed using the IGP. This information
is shared with the PCE either through the IGP or using BGP-LS (e),
and the PCE updates the information stored in its TED (c).
After the LSP is set up, the head end LSR sends a PCEP LSP State
Report (PCRpt message) to the PCE (d). The report contains the
resources such as bandwidth usage for the LSP. The PCE updates the
status of the LSP in the LSPDB according to the report.
When an LSP is no longer required (either because the Service
Requester has cancelled the request, or because the LSP's scheduled
lifetime has expired) the PCE can remove it. If the LSP is currently
active, the PCE instructs the head-end LSR to tear it down (d), and
the network resource usage will be updated by the IGP and advertised
back to the PCE through the IGP or BGP-LS (e). Once the LSP is no
longer active, the PCE can remove it from the LSP-DB (b).
4.2. Initialization and Recovery
When a PCE in the architecture shown in Figure 2 is initialized, it
must learn state from the network, from its stored databases, and
potentially from other PCEs in the network.
The first step is to get an accurate view of the topology and
resource availability in the network. This would normally involve
reading the state direct from the network via the IGP or BGP-LS (e),
but might include receiving a copy of the TED from another PCE. Note
that a TED stored from a previous instantiation of the PCE is
unlikely to be valid.
Next, the PCE must construct a time-based TED to show scheduled
resource usage. How it does this is implementation specific and this
document does not dictate any particular mechanism: it may recover a
time-based TED previously saved to non-volatile storage, or it may
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reconstruct the time-based TED from information retrieved from the
LSP-DB previously saved to non-volatile storage. If there is more
than one PCE active in the network, the recovering PCE will need to
synchronize the LSP-DB and time-based TED with other PCEs (see
Section 4.3).
4.3. Synchronization Between PCEs
If there is more than one PCE active in the network which supports
scheduling, it is important to achieve some consistency between the
scheduled TED and scheduled LSP-DB between the PCEs.
[RFC7399] answers various questions around synchronization between
the PCEs. It should be noted that the time-based "scheduled"
information adds another dimension to it. It should be noted that
the deployment may use a primary PCE and the other PCEs as backup,
where the backup PCE can take over only in the event of a failure of
the primary PCE. Or the PCEs may share the load at all times. The
choice of the synchronization technique is largely dependent on the
deployment of PCEs in the network.
One option for ensuring that multiple PCEs use the same scheduled
information is simply to have the PCEs driven from the same shared
database, but it is likely to be inefficient and inter-operation
between multiple implementation harder.
Or the PCEs might be responsible for its own scheduled database and
utilize some distributed database synchronization mechanism to have a
consistent database. Based on the implementation, this could be
efficient but the inter-operation between heterogeneous
implementation is still hard.
Another approach would be to utilize PCEP messages to synchronize the
scheduled state between PCEs. This approach would work well if the
number of PCEs which support scheduling are less, but as the number
increases considerable message exchange needs to happen to keep the
scheduled database in sync. Future solution could also utilize some
synchronization optimization techniques for efficiency. Another
variation would be to request information from other PCEs for a
particular time slice but this might have impact on the optimization
algorithm.
5. Security Consideration
TBD
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6. Acknowledgements
This work has benefited from the discussions of resource scheduling
over the years. In particular the DRAGON project [DRAGON] and
[I-D.yong-ccamp-ason-gmpls-autobw-service] both of which provide
approaches to auto-bandwidth services in GMPLS networks.
Mehmet Toy, Lei Liu and Khuzema Pithewan contributed the earlier
version of [I-D.chen-teas-frmwk-tts]. We would like to thank authors
of that draft on Temporal Tunnel Services andfor help inspire
discussion in the TEAS WG and get this work solid.
Thanks to Michael Scharf and Daniele Ceccarelli for useful comments
on this work.
7. Contributors
The following people contributed to discussions that led to the
development of this document:
Dhruv Dhody
Email: dhruv.dhody@huawei.com
8. Informative References
[DRAGON] National Science Foundation, "http://www.maxgigapop.net/
wp-content/uploads/The-DRAGON-Project.pdf".
[I-D.chen-teas-frmwk-tts]
Chen, H., Toy, M., Liu, L., and K. Pithewan, "Framework
for Temporal Tunnel Services", draft-chen-teas-frmwk-
tts-01 (work in progress), March 2016.
[I-D.ietf-idr-ls-distribution]
Gredler, H., Medved, J., Previdi, S., Farrel, A., and S.
Ray, "North-Bound Distribution of Link-State and TE
Information using BGP", draft-ietf-idr-ls-distribution-13
(work in progress), October 2015.
[I-D.ietf-pce-stateful-pce]
Crabbe, E., Minei, I., Medved, J., and R. Varga, "PCEP
Extensions for Stateful PCE", draft-ietf-pce-stateful-
pce-16 (work in progress), September 2016.
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[I-D.yong-ccamp-ason-gmpls-autobw-service]
Yong, L. and Y. Lee, "ASON/GMPLS Extension for Reservation
and Time Based Automatic Bandwidth Service", draft-yong-
ccamp-ason-gmpls-autobw-service-00 (work in progress),
October 2006.
[RFC3209] Awduche, D., Berger, L., Gan, D., Li, T., Srinivasan, V.,
and G. Swallow, "RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for LSP
Tunnels", RFC 3209, DOI 10.17487/RFC3209, December 2001,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3209>.
[RFC3473] Berger, L., Ed., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label
Switching (GMPLS) Signaling Resource ReserVation Protocol-
Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE) Extensions", RFC 3473,
DOI 10.17487/RFC3473, January 2003,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3473>.
[RFC3945] Mannie, E., Ed., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label
Switching (GMPLS) Architecture", RFC 3945,
DOI 10.17487/RFC3945, October 2004,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3945>.
[RFC4655] Farrel, A., Vasseur, J., and J. Ash, "A Path Computation
Element (PCE)-Based Architecture", RFC 4655,
DOI 10.17487/RFC4655, August 2006,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4655>.
[RFC5063] Satyanarayana, A., Ed. and R. Rahman, Ed., "Extensions to
GMPLS Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) Graceful
Restart", RFC 5063, DOI 10.17487/RFC5063, October 2007,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5063>.
[RFC5440] Vasseur, JP., Ed. and JL. Le Roux, Ed., "Path Computation
Element (PCE) Communication Protocol (PCEP)", RFC 5440,
DOI 10.17487/RFC5440, March 2009,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5440>.
[RFC7399] Farrel, A. and D. King, "Unanswered Questions in the Path
Computation Element Architecture", RFC 7399,
DOI 10.17487/RFC7399, October 2014,
<http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7399>.
Authors' Addresses
Zhuang, et al. Expires May 17, 2017 [Page 14]
Internet-Draft Scheduled Use of Resources November 2016
Yan Zhuang (editor)
Huawei
101 Software Avenue, Yuhua District
Nanjing, Jiangsu 210012
China
Email: zhuangyan.zhuang@huawei.com
Qin Wu
Huawei
101 Software Avenue, Yuhua District
Nanjing, Jiangsu 210012
China
Email: bill.wu@huawei.com
Huaimo Chen
Huawei
Boston, MA
US
Email: huaimo.chen@huawei.com
Adrian Farrel
Juniper Networks
Email: adrian@olddog.co.uk
Zhuang, et al. Expires May 17, 2017 [Page 15]