TRILL Working Group                                      Donald Eastlake
INTERNET-DRAFT                                                    Huawei
Intended status: Proposed Standard                        Anoop Ghanwani
Updates: 6325                                                       Dell
                                                          Vishwas Manral
                                                                      HP
                                                               Yizhou Li
                                                                  Huawei
                                                         Caitlin Bestler
                                                                 Quantum
Expires: December 19, 2012                                 June 20, 2012

                        TRILL: Header Extension
              <draft-ietf-trill-rbridge-extension-05.txt>


Abstract

   The IETF TRILL (Transparent Interconnection of Lots of Links) base
   protocol specifies minimal hooks to safely support TRILL Header
   extensions. This document specifies an initial extension providing
   additional flag bits and specifies some of those bits. It updates RFC
   6325.


Status of This Memo

   This Internet-Draft is submitted to IETF in full conformance with the
   provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

   Distribution of this document is unlimited. Comments should be sent
   to the TRILL working group mailing list <rbridge@postel.org>.

   Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
   Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups.  Note that
   other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-
   Drafts.

   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."

   The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at
   http://www.ietf.org/1id-abstracts.html. The list of Internet-Draft
   Shadow Directories can be accessed at
   http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.








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Table of Contents

      1. Introduction............................................3
      1.1 Conventions used in this document......................3

      2. TRILL Header Extensions.................................4
      2.1 RBridge Extended Flag Handling Requirements............5
      2.2 No Critical Surprises..................................5
      2.3 Extended Header Flags..................................6
      2.3.1 Critical Summary Bits................................7
      2.4 Conflict of Extensions.................................8

      3. Specific Extended Header Flags..........................9
      3.1 The RBridge Channel Alert Extended Flags...............9

      4. Additions to IS-IS.....................................10

      5. IANA Considerations....................................10
      6. Security Considerations................................11
      7. Acknowledgements.......................................11
      8. Normative References...................................12
      9. Informative References.................................12

      Change History............................................13




























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1. Introduction

   The base IETF TRILL (Transparent Interconnection of Lots of Links)
   protocol [RFC6325] [RFC6326bis] provides a TRILL Header extension
   feature and describes minimal hooks to safely support header
   extension. (This feature is called "options" in Section 3.8 of
   [RFC6325].) But, except for the first two bits, the TRILL base
   protocol document does not specify the structure of extensions to the
   TRILL Header nor the details of any particular extension.

   This document is consistent with [RFC6325] and provides further
   details. It specifies an initial extension word providing additional
   flag bits and specifies some of those bits. Additional extensions,
   including TLV (Type, Length, Value) encoded options, may be specified
   in later documents, for example [Options].

   Section 2 below describes some general principles of TRILL header
   extensions and an initial extension.  Section 3 specifies pair of
   flags in this initial extension.



1.1 Conventions used in this document

   The terminology and acronyms defined in [RFC6325] are used herein
   with the same meaning. Devices implementing the TRILL protocol are
   referred to as RBridges (Routing Bridges) or TRILL Switches.

   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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2. TRILL Header Extensions

   The base TRILL Protocol includes a feature for extension of the TRILL
   Header (see [RFC6325] Sections 3.5 and 3.8).  The 5-bit Op-Length
   header field gives the length of the extensions to the TRILL Header
   in units of 4 octets, which allows up to 124 octets of header
   extension. If Op-Length is zero there are no header extensions
   present; else, the extension area follows immediately after the
   Ingress RBridge (Routing Bridge) Nickname field of the TRILL Header.
   The first 32-bit word of the optional extensions area consists of an
   extended flags area and critical summary bits as specified in this
   document.

   As described below, provision is made for

      o  hop-by-hop flags, which might affect any RBridge that receives
         a TRILL Data frame with such a flag set,

      o  ingress-to-egress flags, which would only necessarily affect
         the RBridge(s) where a TRILL frame is decapsulated,

      o  flags affecting an as yet unspecified class of RBridges, for
         example border RBridges in a TRILL campus extended to support
         multi-level IS-IS (Intermediate System to Intermediate System)
         [MultiLevel], and

      o  both "critical" and "non-critical" flags.

   Any RBridge receiving a frame with a critical hop-by-hop extension
   that it does not implement MUST discard the frame because it is
   unsafe to process the frame without understanding such a critical
   extension.

   Any egress RBridge receiving a frame with a critical ingress-to-
   egress extension it does not implement MUST drop the frame if it is a
   unicast frame (TRILL Header M bit = 0); if it is a multi-destination
   TRILL Data frame (M=1), then it MUST NOT be egressed at that RBridge
   but the egress RBridge still forwards such a frame on the
   distribution tree.

   Non-critical extensions can be safely ignored.

   Any extended flag indicating a significant change in the structure or
   interpretation of later parts of the frame which, if the extended
   flag were ignored, could cause a failure of service or violation of
   security policy MUST be a critical extension. If such an extended
   flag affects any fields that transit RBridges will examine, it MUST
   be a hop-by-hop critical extended flag.

      Note: Most RBridges implementations are expected to be optimized


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      for simple and common cases of frame forwarding and processing.
      Although the hard limit on the header extensions area length, the
      32-bit alignment of the extension area, and the presence of
      critical extension summary bits, as described below, are intended
      to assist in the efficient hardware processing of frames with a
      TRILL header extensions area, nevertheless the inclusion of
      extensions may cause frame processing using a "slow path" with
      inferior performance to "fast path" processing. Limited slow path
      throughput of such frames could cause some of them to be
      discarded.



2.1 RBridge Extended Flag Handling Requirements

   All RBridges MUST check whether there are any critical flags set that
   are necessarily applicable to their processing of the frame. To
   assist in this task, critical summary bits are provided that cover
   not only the extended flags specified herein but will cover any
   further extensions that may be specified in future documents, for
   example [Options]. If an RBridge does not implement all critical
   flags in a TRILL Data frame, it MUST treat the frame as having an
   unimplemented critical extension as described in Section 2. A transit
   or egress RBridge may assume that the critical summary bits are
   correct.

   In addition, a transit RBridge:

   o  MAY set or clear hop-by-hop flags as specified for such flags;
   o  MUST adjust the length of the extensions area, including changing
      Op-Length in the TRILL header, as appropriate if it adds or
      removes the word of extended header flags;
   o  MUST, if it adds the word of extended header flags or changes any
      critical flags, correctly set the critical summary bits in the
      extended header flags word;
   o  MUST NOT remove the extended header flags word unless it is all
      zero (either on arrival or after permitted modifications);
   o  MUST NOT set or clear ingress-to-egress or reserved extended
      header flags except as specifically permitted in the specification
      of such flags.



2.2 No Critical Surprises

   RBridges advertise the extended header flags they support in IS-IS
   PDUs (Protocol Data Units) [RFC6326bis]. Unless an RBridge advertises
   support for a critical extended header flag, it will not normally
   receive frames with that flag set. An RBridge is not required to
   support any extensions.


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   An RBridge SHOULD NOT set a critical extended flag in a frame unless,

   -  for a critical hop-by-hop extended header flag, it has determined
      that the next hop RBridge or RBridges that will accept the frame
      support that flag,
   -  for a critical ingress-to-egress extended header flag, it has
      determined that the RBridge or RBridges that will egress the frame
      support that flag, or
   -  for a critical reserved extended header flag, it may set such a
      flag only if it understands which RBridges it is applicable to and
      has determined that those RBridges that will accept the frame
      support that flag.

   "SHOULD NOT" is specified above since there may be cases where it is
   acceptable for those frames, particularly for the multi-destination
   case, to be discarded or not egressed by any RBridges that do not
   implement the extended flag.



2.3 Extended Header Flags

   If any extensions are present in a TRILL Header, as indicated by a
   non-zero Op-Length field, the first 32 bits of the extensions area
   consist of Extended Header Flags, as described below. The remainder
   of the extensions area, if any, after this initial 32 bits, may be
   specified in later documents [Options].

   Any RBridge adding an extensions area to a TRILL Header must set the
   first 32 bits to zero except when permitted or required to set one or
   more of those bits as specified. For TRILL Data frames with
   extensions present, any transit RBridge that does not discard the
   frame MUST transparently copy the extended flags word, except for
   modifications permitted by an extension implemented by that RBridge.

   The word of Extended Header Flags is illustrated below and the
   meanings of these bits is further described in the list following the
   figure.

    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
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
   |Crit.|  CHbH   |   NCHbH   |CRSV | NCRSV |   CItE    |  NCItE  |
   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
   | ... additional optional 32-bit aligned words of extension     |
   |     possibly including TLV extensions ...






D. Eastlake, et al                                              [Page 6]


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   (The first two critical summary bits are as specified in [RFC6325].
   In this document an "S", for Summary, has been added at the end of
   their acronyms. A third critical summary bit is also specified herein
   and its acronym also ends with an "S" for consistency.)

   Bit(s)   Description
   ---------------------

    0-3  Crit.: Critical summary bits.
         0 CHbHS: Critical Hop-by-Hop extension(s) are present.
         1 CItES: Critical Ingress-to-Egress extension(s) are present.
         2 CRSVS: Critical reserved extension(s) are present.

    3-7   CHbH: Critical Hob-by-Hop extended Flag bits.
    8-13  NCHbH: Non-critical Hop-by-Hop extended Flag bits.

    14-16 CRSV: Critical Reserved extended Flag bits.
    17-20 NCRSV: Non-critical Reserved extended Flag bits.

    21-26 CItE: Critical Ingress-to-Egress extended Flag bits.
    27-31 NCItE: Non-critical Ingress-to-Egress extended Flag bits.



2.3.1 Critical Summary Bits

   The top three bits of the Extended Header Flags area, bits 0, 1, and
   2 above, are called the critical summary bits. They summarize the
   presence of critical extensions as follows:

   CHbHS: If the CHbHS (Critical Hop by Hop Summary) bit is one, one or
      more critical hop-by-hop extensions are present. These might be
      critical hop-by-hop extended header flags or critical hop-by-hop
      extensions after the first word in the extensions area. Transit
      RBridges that do not support all of the critical hop-by-hop
      extensions present, for example an RBridge that supported no
      critical hop-by-hop extensions, MUST drop the frame. If the CHbHS
      bit is zero, the frame is safe, from the point of view of
      extensions processing, for a transit RBridge to forward,
      regardless of what extensions that RBridge does or does not
      support.

   CItES: If the CItES (Critical Ingress to Egress Summary) bit is a
      one, one or more critical ingress-to-egress extensions are
      present. These might be critical ingress-to-egress extended header
      flags or critical ingress-to-egress extensions after the first
      word in the extensions area.  If the CItES bit is zero, no such
      extensions are present.  If either CHbHS or CItES is non-zero,
      egress RBridges that do not support all critical extensions
      present, for example an RBridge that supports no critical


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      extensions, MUST drop the frame.  If both CHbHS and CItES are
      zero, the frame is safe, from the point of view of extensions, for
      an egress RBridge to process, regardless of what extensions that
      RBridge does or does not support.

   CRSVS: If the CRSVS (Critical Reserved Summary) bit is a one, one or
      more critical extensions are present that are reserved to apply to
      a class of RBridges to be specified in the future, for example
      border RBridges in a TRILL campus extended to support multi-level
      IS-IS. This class will be a subset of transit RBridges. RBridges
      in this class MUST drop frames with the CRSVS bit set unless they
      implement all critical hop-by-hop and all critical reserved
      extensions present in the frame.

   The critical summary bits enable simple and efficient processing of
   TRILL Data frames by egress RBridges that support no critical
   extensions, by transit RBridges that support no critical hop-by-hop
   extensions, and by RBridges in the reserved class that support no
   critical hop-by-hop or reserved extensions. Such RBridges need only
   check whether Op-Length is non-zero and, if it is, the top one, two,
   or three bits just after the fixed portion of the TRILL Header. Based
   on those three bits, such RBridges can decide whether to discard or
   forward / process the frame.



2.4 Conflict of Extensions

   Defining TRILL extensions including Extended Header Flags that
   conflict with each other would be undesirable. Should conflicting
   extensions appear in the same packet, the results would be
   unpredictable, if different implementations processed them in
   different orders. While rules could be defined to specify how to
   predictably process conflicting extensions, such rules would also
   limit implementation flexibility and could impose substantial
   processing burdens.

   Conflicting extensions SHOULD NOT be defined, but if they are,
   careful thought should be given as to whether and how to specify the
   handling of conflicting extensions.












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3. Specific Extended Header Flags

   The table below shows the state of TRILL Header extended flag
   assignments. See Section 5 for IANA Considerations.

       Bits    Purpose                              Section
      ------------------------------------------------------
        0-2    Critical Summary Bits                2.3.1
        3-6    available critical hop-by-hop flags
        7      Critical Channel Alert Flag          3.1
        8      Non-critical Channel Alert Flag      3.1
        9-13   available non-critical hop-by-hop flags
       14-16   available critical reserved flags
       17-20   available non-critical reserved flags
       21-26   available critical ingress-to-egress flags
       27-31   available non-critical ingress-to-egress flags

                    Table 1. Extended Header Flags Area



3.1 The RBridge Channel Alert Extended Flags

   The RBridge Channel Alert Extended Flags indicates that the frame is
   an RBridge Channel frame [Channel] that requests processing at each
   hop.

   If the critical Channel Alert flag (bit 7) is a one and the RBridge
   does not implement the RBridge Channel feature or the particular
   RBridge Channel protocol involved [Channel] or the frame does not
   actually appear to be an RBridge Channel message, then the frame is
   discarded. This permits implementation, for example, of a Channel
   message requiring strict source routing or the like, with assurance
   that it will be discarded rather than deviate from the directed path.

   If the frame is not discarded as above then the presence of either
   the Critical or Non-critical hop-by-hop Channel Alert flag alerts
   transit RBridges to the presence of an RBridge Channel message
   [Channel] that may require special handling. The non-critical alert
   flag supports, for example, an RBridge Channel protocol message
   including a "record route" function where not recording transit
   RBridges that do not support this function is acceptable.










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4. Additions to IS-IS

   RBridges use IS-IS LSP PDUs to inform other RBridges which Extended
   Header Flags they support. The IS-IS PDU(s), TLV(s), or sub-TLV(s)
   used to encode and advertise this information are specified in a
   separate document [RFC6326bis].



5. IANA Considerations

   IANA is requested to create a subregistry within the TRILL Parameters
   registry: The "TRILL Extended Header Flags" subregistry, that is
   initially populated as specified in Table 1 in Section 3. References
   in that table to sections of this document are to be replaced in the
   IANA subregistry by references to this document as an RFC.

   New TRILL Extended Header Flags are allocated by IETF Review
   [RFC5226].

































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6. Security Considerations

   For general TRILL protocol security considerations, see [RFC6325].

   For security considerations related to extended header flags, see the
   document where the flag is specified.

   It is important that the critical summary bits in the Extended Header
   Flags word be set properly. If set when critical extensions of the
   appropriate category are not present, frames may be unnecessarily
   discarded. If not set when critical extensions are present, frames
   may be mishandled or corrupted and intended security policies may be
   violated.

   The RBridge Channel Alert extended flags have the following security
   considerations. Implementations should keep in mind that they might
   be erroneously set in a frame. If either RBridge Channel Alert flag
   is found set in a frame that is not an RBridge Channel message
   [Channel], the flag MAY be cleared and should have no effect except,
   possibly, delaying processing of the frame. If either Channel Alert
   flag is erroneously omitted from a frame, desired per hop processing
   for the frame may not occur.



7. Acknowledgements

   The following, listed in alphabetic order, are thanked for their
   valuable contributions:  Ben Campbell, Adrian Farrel, Barry Leiba,
   and Thomas Narten.

   This document was produced with raw nroff. All macros used were
   defined in the source file



















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8. Normative References

   [RFC2119] - Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs 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.

   [RFC6325] - Perlman, R., D. Eastlake, D. Dutt, S. Gai, and A.
         Ghanwani, "Routing Bridges (RBridges): Base Protocol
         Specification", July 2011.

   [Channel] - draft-ietf-trill-rbridge-channel, work in progress.

   [RFC6326bis] - draft-eastlake-isis-rfc6326bis, work in progress.



9. Informative References

   [MultiLevel] - draft-perlman-trill-rbridge-multilevel, work in
         progress.

   [Options] - draft-ietf-trill-rbridge-options, work in progress.
         - draft-eastlake-trill-rbridge-more-options, work in progress.


























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Change History

   The sections below summarize changes between successive versions of
   this draft. RFC Editor: Please delete this section before
   publication.

   Version 00 of this draft is an extract and simplification of draft-
   ietf-trill-rbridge-options-05.txt as discussed at the TRILL Working
   Group meeting at IETF 81 and on the TRILL WG mailing list.



From -00 to -01

   1. Update Author Addresses.

   2. Assorted editorial changes.



From -01 to -02

   1. Addition of the Critical RBridge Channel Alert Flag.

   2. Assorted editorial and author changes.



From -02 to -03

   1. Replacement of Section 2.4 to eliminate detailed constraints on
      the processing of conflicting extensions and to warn against the
      future specification of conflicting options.

   2. Minor editorial changes.



From -03 to -04

   Editorial changes including the deletion of Section 2.3.2 that was
   completely redundant with earlier parts of Section 2.3.



From -04 to -05

   1. Add "Updates: 6325" to the first page header as this document
      provides more details on the TRILL Header options area.



D. Eastlake, et al                                             [Page 13]


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   2. Expand first use of some acronyms and other editorial changes.

   3. Change criteria for allocation of extended header flags from
      Standards Action to IETF Review.

   4. Editorial changes primarily based on IESG review.














































D. Eastlake, et al                                             [Page 14]


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Authors' Addresses

   Donald Eastlake
   Huawei R&D USA
   155 Beaver Street
   Milford, MA 01757 USA

   Phone: +1-508-333-2270
   email: d3e3e3@gmail.com


   Anoop Ghanwani
   Dell
   350 Holger Way
   San Jose, CA 95134 USA

   Phone: +1-408-571-3500
   Email: anoop@alumni.duke.edu


   Vishwas Manral
   HP Networking
   19111 Pruneridge Avenue
   Cupertino, CA 95014 USA

   Phone: +1-408-477-0000
   EMail: vishwas.manral@hp.com


   Yizhou Li
   Huawei Technologies
   101 Software Avenue,
   Nanjing 210012, China

   Phone: +86-25-56622310
   Email: liyizhou@huawei.com


   Caitlin Bestler
   Quantum
   1650 Technology Drive , Suite 700
   San Jose, CA 95110 USA

   Phone: +1-408-944-4000
   email: cait@asomi.com







D. Eastlake, et al                                             [Page 15]


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Copyright and IPR Provisions

   Copyright (c) 2012 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
   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
   publication of this document. Please review these documents
   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
   to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must
   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.  The definitive version of
   an IETF Document is that published by, or under the auspices of, the
   IETF. Versions of IETF Documents that are published by third parties,
   including those that are translated into other languages, should not
   be considered to be definitive versions of IETF Documents. The
   definitive version of these Legal Provisions is that published by, or
   under the auspices of, the IETF. Versions of these Legal Provisions
   that are published by third parties, including those that are
   translated into other languages, should not be considered to be
   definitive versions of these Legal Provisions.  For the avoidance of
   doubt, each Contributor to the IETF Standards Process licenses each
   Contribution that he or she makes as part of the IETF Standards
   Process to the IETF Trust pursuant to the provisions of RFC 5378. No
   language to the contrary, or terms, conditions or rights that differ
   from or are inconsistent with the rights and licenses granted under
   RFC 5378, shall have any effect and shall be null and void, whether
   published or posted by such Contributor, or included with or in such
   Contribution.





















D. Eastlake, et al                                             [Page 16]