Network Working Group                                          Dan Li
Internet Draft                                            Jianhua Gao
                                                                 Huawei

                                                     Arun Satyanarayana
                                                                  Cisco
Intended Status: Informational
Expires: December 2007                                     June, 2007


          Description of the RSVP-TE Graceful Restart Procedures
                  draft-li-ccamp-gr-description-00.txt


Status of this Memo

   By submitting this Internet-Draft, each author represents that any
   applicable patent or other IPR claims of which he or she is aware
   have been or will be disclosed, and any of which he or she becomes
   aware will be disclosed, in accordance with Section 6 of BCP 79.

   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/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt

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

Abstract

   The Hello message for the Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) has
   been defined to establish and maintain basic signaling node
   adjacencies for Label Switching Routers (LSRs) participating in a
   Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) traffic engineered (TE)
   network. The Hello message has been extended for use in Generalized
   MPLS (GMPLS) network for state recovery of control channel or nodal
   faults.





Li                     Expires December 2007                 [Page 1]


Internet-Draft    draft-li-ccamp-gr-description-00.txt        June 2007


   GMPLS protocol definitions for RSVP also allow a restarting node to
   learn the label that it previously allocated for use on a Label
   Switching Path (LSP).

   Further RSVP protocol extensions have been defined to enable a
   restarting node to recover full control plane state by exchanging
   RSVP messages with its upstream and downstream neighbors.

   This document provides an informational clarification of the
   control plane procedures for a GMPLS network when there are
   multiple node failures, and describes how full control plane state
   can be recovered in different scenarios where the order in which
   the nodes restart is different.

   This document does not define any new processes or procedures. All
   protocol mechanisms are already defined in the referenced documents.

Table of Contents


    1. Introduction................................................3
    2. Existing Procedures for Single Node Restart..................4
    2.1. Procedures defined in [RFC3473]............................4
    2.2. Procedures defined in [GR-EXT].............................5
    3. Multiple Node Restart Scenarios..............................5
    4. RSVP State..................................................6
    5. Procedures for Multiple Node Restart.........................7
    5.1. Procedures for the Normal Node.............................7
    5.2. Procedures for the Restarting Node.........................7
    5.2.1. Procedures for Scenario 1...............................7
    5.2.2. Procedures for Scenario 2...............................9
    5.2.3. Procedures for scenario 3..............................10
    5.2.4. Procedures for scenario 4..............................11
    5.2.5. Procedures for scenario 5..............................11
    5.3. Consideration of Re-Use of Data Plane Resources...........12
    5.4. Consideration of Management Plane Intervention............12
    6. Security Considerations....................................12
    7. IANA Considerations........................................13
    8. Acknowledgments............................................13
    9. References.................................................13
    9.1. Normative References.....................................13
    10. Authors' Addresses........................................14
    11. Full Copyright Statement..................................14
    12. Intellectual Property Statement............................15





Li                     Expires December 2007                 [Page 2]


Internet-Draft    draft-li-ccamp-gr-description-00.txt        June 2007


1. Introduction

   The Hello message for the Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) has
   been defined to establish and maintain basic signaling node
   adjacencies for Label Switching Routers (LSRs) participating in a
   Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) traffic engineered (TE)
   network [RFC3209]. The Hello message has been extended for use in
   Generalized MPLS (GMPLS) network for state recovery of control
   channel or nodal faults through the exchange of the Restart
   Capabilities object [RFC3473].

   GMPLS protocol definitions for RSVP [RFC3473] also allow a
   restarting node to learn the label that it previously allocated for
   use on a Label Switching Path (LSP) through the Recovery Label
   object carried on a Path message sent to a restarting node from its
   upstream neighbor.

   Further RSVP protocol extensions have been defined [GR-EXT] to
   perform graceful restart and to enable a restarting node to recover
   full control plane state by exchanging RSVP messages with its
   upstream and downstream neighbors. State previously transmitted to
   the upstream neighbor (principally the downstream label) is
   recovered from the upstream neighbor on a Path message (using the
   Recovery Label object as described in [RFC3473]). State previously
   transmitted to the downstream neighbor (including the upstream
   label, interface identifiers, and the explicit route) is recovered
   from the downstream neighbor using a RecoveryPath message.

   [GR-EXT] also extends the Hello message to exchange information
   about the ability to support the RecoveryPath message.

   The examples and procedures in [RFC3473] and [GR-EXT] focus on the
   description of a single node restart when adjacent network nodes
   are operative. Although the procedures are equally applicable to
   multi-node restarts, no detailed explanation is provided.

   This document provides and informational clarification of the
   control plane procedures for a GMPLS network when there are
   multiple node failures, and describes how full control plane state
   can be recovered in different scenarios where the order in which
   the nodes restart is different.

   This document does not define any new processes or procedures. All
   protocol mechanisms already defined in [RFC3473] and [GR-EXT] are
   definitive.




Li                     Expires December 2007                 [Page 3]


Internet-Draft    draft-li-ccamp-gr-description-00.txt        June 2007


2. Existing Procedures for Single Node Restart

   This section documents for information the existing procedures
   defined in [RFC3473] and [GR-EXT]. Those documents are definitive,
   and the description here is non-normative. It is provided for
   informational clarification only.

2.1. Procedures defined in [RFC3473]

   In the case of nodal faults, the procedures for the restarting node
   and the procedures for the neighbor of a restarting node are
   applied to the corresponding nodes. These procedures described in
   [RFC3473] are summarized as follows:

   For the Restarting Node:

   1) Tells its neighbors that state recovery is supported using the
   Hello message;

   2) Recovers its RSVP state with the help of a Path message received
   from its upstream neighbor carrying the RECOVERY_LABEL object;

   3) For bidirectional LSPs, the UPSTREAM_LABEL object on the received
   Path message is used to recover the corresponding RSVP state;

   4) If the corresponding forwarding state in data plane is not existed,
   the node treats this as a setup for a new LSP. If the forwarding
   state in data plane is existed, the forwarding state is bound to the
   LSP associated with the message, and related forwarding state should
   be considered as valid and refreshed. In addition, if the node is not
   the tail-end of the LSP, the corresponding outgoing Path messages is
   sent with the incoming label from that entry carried in the
   UPSTREAM_LABEL object.

   For the Neighbor of a restarting node:

   1) Sends the Path message with RECOVERY_LABEL object containing a
   label value corresponding to the label value received in the most
   recently received corresponding Resv message;

   2) Resumes refreshing Path state with the restarting node;

   3) Resumes refreshing Resv state with the restarting node.






Li                     Expires December 2007                 [Page 4]


Internet-Draft    draft-li-ccamp-gr-description-00.txt        June 2007


2.2. Procedures defined in [GR-EXT]

   A new message is introduced in [GR-EXT] which is called the
   RecoveryPath message. The message is sent by the downstream
   neighbor of a restarting node to convey the contents of the last
   received Path message back to the restarting node.

   The restarting node will receive the Path message with the
   RECOVERY_LABEL object from its upstream neighbor, and/or the
   RecoveryPath message from its downstream neighbor. The full RSVP
   state of the restarting node can be recovered from these two
   messages.

   From the received Path message the following state can be recovered:

   o Upstream data interface (from RSVP_HOP object)

   o Label on the upstream data interface (from RECOVERY_LABEL object)

   o Upstream label for bidirectional LSP (from UPSTREAM_LABEL object)

   From the received RecoveryPath message the following state can be
   recovered:

   o Downstream data interface (from RSVP_HOP object)

   o Label on the downstream data interface (from RECOVERY_LABEL object)

   o Upstream direction label for bidirectional LSP (from
      UPSTREAM_LABEL object)

   The other objects also can be recovered either by regular Path
   message or RecoveryPath message, and Resv message.

3. Multiple Node Restart Scenarios

   We define the following terms for the different node types:

   Restarting - The node has restarted; communication with its
   neighbor nodes is restored, its RSVP state is under recovery.

   Delayed Restarting - The node has restarted, but the communication
   with a neighbor node is interrupted (for example, the neighbor node
   needs to restart).

   Normal - The normal node is the fully operational neighbor of a
   restarting or delayed restarting node.


Li                     Expires December 2007                 [Page 5]


Internet-Draft    draft-li-ccamp-gr-description-00.txt        June 2007


   There are five scenarios for multi-node restart. We will focus on
   the different positions of a restarting node. As shown in Figure 1,
   an LSP starts from Node A, traverses Nodes B and C, and ends at
   Node D.

          +-----+  Path  +-----+  Path  +-----+  Path  +-----+
          | PSB |------->| PSB |------->| PSB |------->| PSB |
          |     |        |     |        |     |        |     |
          | RSB |<-------| RSB |<-------| RSB |<-------| RSB |
          +-----+  Resv  +-----+  Resv  +-----+  Resv  +-----+
          Node A         Node B         Node C         Node D
                    Figure 1 Two neighbor nodes restart

   1) A Restarting node with downstream Delayed Restarting node. For
   example, in Figure 1, Nodes A and D are Normal nodes, Node B is a
   Restarting node, and Node C is a Delayed Restarting node.

   2) A Restarting node with upstream Delayed Restarting node. For
   example, in Figure 1, Nodes A and D are Normal nodes, Node B is a
   Delayed Restarting node, and Node C is a Restarting node.

   3) A Restarting node with downstream and upstream Delayed Restarting
   nodes. For example, in Figure 1, Node A is a Normal node, Nodes B and
   D are Delayed Restarting nodes, and Node C is a Restarting node.

   4) A Restarting Ingress node with downstream Delayed Restarting node.
   For example, in Figure 1, Node A is a Restarting node, and Node B is
   a Delayed Restarting node. Nodes C and D are Normal nodes.

   5) A Restarting Egress node with upstream Delayed Restarting node.
   For example, in Figure 1, Nodes A and B are Normal nodes, Node C is a
   Delayed Restarting node, and Node D is a Restarting node.

   If the communication between two nodes is interrupted, the upstream
   node may think the downstream node is a Delayed Restarting node, or
   vice versa.

4. RSVP State

   For each scenario, the RSVP state needs to be recovered at the
   restarting nodes are Path State Block (PSB) and Resv State Block
   (RSB), which are created when the node receives the corresponding
   Path message and Resv message.

   According to [RFC2209], how to construct the PSB and RSB is really
   an implementation issue. In fact, there is no requirement to
   maintain separate PSB and RSB data structures. And in GMPLS, there


Li                     Expires December 2007                 [Page 6]


Internet-Draft    draft-li-ccamp-gr-description-00.txt        June 2007


   is a much closer tie between Path and Resv state so it is possible
   to combine the information into a single state block (the LSP state
   block). On the other hand, if P2MP is supported, it may be
   convenient to maintain separate upstream and downstream state. Note
   that the PSB and RSB are not upstream and downstream state since
   the PSB is responsible for receiving a Path from upstream and
   sending a Path to downstream.

   Regardless of how the RSVP state is implemented, on recovery there
   are two logical pieces of state to be recovered and these
   correspond to the PSB and RSB.

5. Procedures for Multiple Node Restart

   In this document, all the nodes are assumed to have the graceful
   restart capabilities which are described in [RFC3473] and [GR-EXT].

5.1. Procedures for the Normal Node

   When the downstream Normal node detects its neighbor restarting, it
   must send a RecoveryPath message for each LSP associated with the
   restarting node for which it has previously sent a Resv message and
   which has not been torn down.

   When the upstream Normal node detects its neighbor restarting, it
   must send a Path message with RECOVERY_LABEL object containing a
   label value corresponding to the label value received in the most
   recently received corresponding Resv message.

   This document does not modify the procedures for the Normal node
   which are described in [RFC3473] and [GR-EXT].

5.2. Procedures for the Restarting Node

   This document does not modify the procedures for the Restarting
   node which are described in [RFC3473] and [GR-EXT].

5.2.1. Procedures for Scenario 1

   After the Restarting node restarts, it starts a Recovery Timer. Any
   RSVP state that has not been resynchronized when the Recovery Timer
   expires, should be cleared.

   At the Restarting node (Node B in the example), full
   resynchronization with the upstream neighbor (Node A) is possible
   because Node A is a Normal node. The upstream Path information is
   recovered from the Path message received from Node A. Node B also


Li                     Expires December 2007                 [Page 7]


Internet-Draft    draft-li-ccamp-gr-description-00.txt        June 2007


   recovers the upstream Resv information (that it had previously sent
   to Node A) from the RECOVERY_LABEL object carried in the Path
   message received from Node A, but, obviously, some information
   (like the Recorded Route Object) will be missing from the new Resv
   message generated by Node B, and can not be supplied until the
   downstream Delayed Restarting node (Node C) restarts and sends a
   Resv.

   After the upstream Path information and upstream Resv information
   has been recovered by Node B, the normal refresh procedure with the
   upstream Node A should be started.

   As per [GR-EXT], the Restarting node (Node B) would normally expect
   to receive a RecoveryPath message from its downstream neighbor
   (Node C). It would use this to recover the downstream Path
   information, and would subsequently send a Path message to its
   downstream neighbor and receive a Resv message. But in this
   scenario, because the downstream neighbor has not restarted yet,
   Node B detects the communication with Node C is interrupted and
   must wait before resynchronizing with its downstream neighbor.

   In this case, the Restarting node (Node B) follows the procedures
   in section 9.3 of [RFC3473] and may run a Restart Timer to wait for
   the downstream neighbor (Node C) to restart. If its downstream
   neighbor (Node C) has not restarted before the timer expires the
   corresponding LSPs may be torn down according to local policy
   [RFC3473]. Note, however, that the Restart Time value suggested in
   [RFC3473] is based on the previous Hello message exchanged with the
   node that has not restarted yet (Node C). Since this time value is
   unlikely to be available to the restarting node (Node B), a
   configured time value must be used if the timer is operated.

   The RSVP state must be reconciled with the retained data plane
   state if the cross-connect information can be retrieved from the
   data plane. In the event of any mismatches, local policy will
   dictate the action that must be taken which could include:

   - reprogramming the data plane

   - sending an alert to the management plane

   - tearing down the control plane state for the LSP.

   In the case that the Delayed Restarting node never comes back, and
   where a Restart Timer is not used to automatically tear down LSPs,
   the LSPs can be tidied up through the control plane using a
   PathTear from the upstream node (Node A). Note that if Node C


Li                     Expires December 2007                 [Page 8]


Internet-Draft    draft-li-ccamp-gr-description-00.txt        June 2007


   restarts after this operation, the RecoveryPath message that it
   sends to Node B will not be matched with any state on Node B and
   will receive a PathTear as its response resulting in the teardown
   of the LSP at all downstream nodes.

5.2.2. Procedures for Scenario 2

   In this case, the Restarting node (Node C) can recover full
   downstream state from its downstream neighbor (Node D) which is a
   Normal node. The downstream Path state can be recovered from the
   RecoveryPath message which is sent by Node D. This allows Node C to
   send a Path refresh message to Node D, and Node D will respond with
   a Resv message from which Node C can reconstruct the downstream
   Resv state.

   After the downstream Path information and downstream Resv
   information has been recovered in Node C, the normal refresh
   procedure with downstream Node D should be started.

   The Restarting node would normally expect to resynchronize with its
   upstream neighbor to re-learn the upstream Path and Resv state, but
   in this scenario, because the upstream neighbor (Node B) has not
   restarted yet, the Restarting node (Node C) detects that the
   communication with upstream neighbor (Node B) is interrupted. The
   Restarting node (Node C) follows the procedures in section 9.3 of
   [RFC3473] and may run a Restart Timer to wait the upstream neighbor
   (Node B) to restart. If its upstream neighbor (Node B) has not
   restarted before the Restart Timer expires, the corresponding LSPs
   may be torn down according to local policy [RFC3473]. Note, however,
   that the Restart Time value suggested in [RFC3473] is based on the
   previous Hello message exchanged with the node that has not
   restarted yet (Node B). Since this time value is unlikely to be
   available to the restarting node (Node C), a configured time value
   must be used if the timer is operated.

   Note that no Resv message is sent to the upstream neighbor (Node B)
   because it has not restarted.

   The RSVP state must be reconciled with the retained data plane
   state if the cross-connect information can be retrieved from the
   data plane.

   In the event of any mismatches, local policy will dictate the
   action that must be taken which could include:

   - reprogramming the data plane



Li                     Expires December 2007                 [Page 9]


Internet-Draft    draft-li-ccamp-gr-description-00.txt        June 2007


   - sending an alert to the management plane

   - tearing down the control plane state for the LSP.

   In the case that the Delayed Restarting node never comes back, and
   where a Restart Timer is not used to automatically tear down LSPs,
   the LSPs cannot be tidied up through the control plane using a
   PathTear from the upstream node(Node A), because there is no
   control plane connectivity to Node C from the upstream direction.
   There are two possibilities in [RFC3473]:

   - Management action may be taken at the Restarting node to tear the
     LSP. This will result in the LSP being removed from Node C, and a
     PathTear being sent downstream to Node D.

   - Management action may be taken at any downstream node (for
     example, Node D) resulting in a PathErr message with the
     Path_State_Reomved flag set being sent to Node C to tear the LSP
     state.

   Note that if Node B restarts after this operation, the Path message
   that it sends to Node C will not be matched with any state on Node
   C and will be treated as a new Path message resulting in LSP setup.
   Node C should use the labels carried in the Path message (in the
   UPSTREAM_LABEL object and in the RECOVERY_LABEL object) to drive
   its label allocation, but may use other labels according to normal
   LSP setup rules.

5.2.3. Procedures for scenario 3

   In this example, the Restarting node (Node C) is isolated. It's
   upstream and downstream neighbors have not restarted.

   The Restarting node (Node C) follows the procedures in section 9.3
   of [RFC3473] and may run a Restart Timer for each of its neighbors
   (Nodes B and D). If a neighbor has not restarted before its Restart
   Timer expires, the corresponding LSPs may be torn down according to
   local policy [RFC3473]. Note, however, that the Restart Time values
   suggested in [RFC3473] are based on the previous Hello message
   exchanged with the nodes that have not restarted yet. Since these
   time values are unlikely to be available to the restarting node
   (Node C), a configured time value must be used if the timer is
   operated.

   During the Recovery Time, if the upstream Delayed Restarting node
   has restarted, the procedure for scenario 1 can be applied.



Li                     Expires December 2007                [Page 10]


Internet-Draft    draft-li-ccamp-gr-description-00.txt        June 2007


   During the Recovery Time, if the downstream Delayed Restarting node
   has restarted, the procedure for scenario 2 can be applied.

   In the case that neither Delayed Restarting node ever comes back,
   and where a Restart Timer is not used to automatically tear down
   LSPs, management intervention is required to tidy up the control
   plane and the data plane on the nodes that are waiting for the
   failed device to restart.

   If the downstream Delayed Restarting node restarts after the
   cleanup of LSPs at Node C, the RecoveryPath message from Node D
   will be responded with a PathTear message. If the upstream Delayed
   Restarting node restarts after the cleanup of LSPs at Node C, the
   Path message from Node B will be treated as a new LSP setup request,
   but the setup will fail because Node D cannot be reached - Node C
   will respond with a PathErr message. Since this happens to Node B
   during its restart processing, it should follow the rules of [GR-
   EXT] and tear down the LSP.

5.2.4. Procedures for scenario 4

   When the Ingress node (Node A) restarts, it does not know which
   LSPs it caused to be created. Usually, however, this information is
   retrieved from the management plane or from the configuration
   requests stored in non-volatile form in the node in order to
   recover the LSP state.

   Furthermore, if the downstream node (Node B) is a Normal node,
   according to the procedures in [GR-EXT], the ingress will receive a
   RecoveryPath message and will understand that it was the ingress of
   the LSP.

   However, in this scenario, the downstream node is a Delayed
   Restarting node, so Node A must rely on the information from the
   management plane or stored configuration, or it must wait for Node
   B to restart.

   In the event that Node B never restarts, management plane
   intervention may be used at Node A to clean up any LSP state
   restored from the management plane or from local configuration.

5.2.5. Procedures for scenario 5

   In this scenario the Egress node (Node D) restarts, and its
   upstream neighbor (Node C) has not restarted. In this case, the
   Egress node is completely unaware of the LSPs. It has no downstream
   neighbor to help it, and no management plane or configuration


Li                     Expires December 2007                [Page 11]


Internet-Draft    draft-li-ccamp-gr-description-00.txt        June 2007


   information. The Egress node must simply wait until its upstream
   neighbor restarts and gives it the information as Path messages
   carrying RECOVERY_LABEL objects.

5.3. Consideration of Re-Use of Data Plane Resources

   Fundamental to the processes described above is an understanding
   that data plane resources may remain in use (allocated and cross-
   connected) when control plane state has not been fully
   resynchronized because some control plane nodes have not restarted.

   It is assumed that these data plane resources might be carrying
   traffic and should not be reconfigured except through application
   of operator-configured policy, or as a direct result of operator
   action.

   In particular, new LSP setup requests from the control plane or the
   management plane should not be allowed to use data plane resources
   that are still in use. Specific action must first be taken to
   release the resources.

5.4. Consideration of Management Plane Intervention

   The management plane must always retain the ability to control data
   plane resources and to over-ride the control plane. In this context,
   the management plane must always be able to release data plane
   resources that were previously in place for use by control-plane
   established LSPs. Further, the management plane must always be able
   to instruct any control plane node to tear down any LSP.

   Operators should be aware of the risks of misconnection that could
   be caused by careless manipulation from the management plane of in-
   use data plane resources.

6. Security Considerations

   This document clarifies the procedures to be performed on RSVP
   agents that neighbor one or more restarting RSVP agents. In the
   case of the control plane in general, and the RSVP agent in
   particular, where one or more nodes carrying one or more LSPs are
   restarted due to external attacks, the procedures defined in [GR-
   EXT] and described in this document provide the ability for the
   restarting RSVP agents to recover the RSVP state in each restarting
   node corresponding to the LSPs, with the least possible
   perturbation to the rest of the network. Ideally, only the
   neighboring RSVP agents should notice the restart and hence need to
   perform additional processing. This allows for a network with


Li                     Expires December 2007                [Page 12]


Internet-Draft    draft-li-ccamp-gr-description-00.txt        June 2007


   active LSPs to recover LSP state gracefully from an external attack,
   without perturbing the data/forwarding plane state.

7. IANA Considerations

   This document defines no new protocols or extensions and makes no
   requests to IANA for registry management.

8. Acknowledgments

   We would like to thank Adrian Farrel, Dimitri Papadimitriou, and
   Lou Berger for their useful comments.

9. References

9.1. Normative References

[RFC2209]     R. Braden, L. Zhang, "Resource ReSerVation Protocol
               (RSVP) -- Version 1 Message Processing Rules", RFC 2209,
               September 1997.

[RFC3209]     Awduche, D., Berger, L., Gan, D., Li, T., Srinivasan,
               V., and G. Swallow, "RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for
               LSP Tunnels", RFC 3209, December 2001.

[RFC3473]     Berger, L., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching
               (GMPLS) Signaling Resource ReserVation Protocol-Traffic
               Engineering (RSVP-TE) Extensions", RFC 3473, January
               2003.

[GR-EXT]      A. Satyanarayana, R. Rahman, "Extensions to GMPLS RSVP
               Graceful Restart", Internet Draft, work in progress,
               draft-ietf-ccamp-rsvp-restart-ext-08.txt, January 2007.















Li                     Expires December 2007                [Page 13]


Internet-Draft    draft-li-ccamp-gr-description-00.txt        June 2007


10. Authors' Addresses

   Dan Li
   Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
   F3-5-B R&D Center, Huawei Base,
   Bantian, Longgang District
   Shenzhen 518129 P.R.China

   Phone: +86-755-28972910
   Email: danli@huawei.com


   Jianhua Gao
   Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
   F3-5-B R&D Center, Huawei Base,
   Bantian, Longgang District
   Shenzhen 518129 P.R.China

   Phone: +86-755-28972902
   Email: gjhhit@huawei.com


   Arun Satyanarayana
   Cisco Systems, Inc.
   170 West Tasman Dr.
   San Jose, CA  95134, USA

   Phone: +1 408 853-3206
   Email: asatyana@cisco.com

11. Full Copyright Statement

   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).

   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
   contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
   retain all their rights.

   This document and the information contained herein are provided on
   an "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE
   REPRESENTS OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE
   IETF TRUST AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL
   WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY
   WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE
   ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS
   FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.



Li                     Expires December 2007                [Page 14]


Internet-Draft    draft-li-ccamp-gr-description-00.txt        June 2007


12. Intellectual Property Statement

   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any
   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed
   to pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described
   in this document or the extent to which any license under such
   rights might or might not be available; nor does it represent that
   it has made any independent effort to identify any such rights.
   Information on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC
   documents can be found in BCP 78 and BCP 79.

   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an
   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use
   of such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this
   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository
   at http://www.ietf.org/ipr.

   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary
   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement
   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at
   ietf-ipr@ietf.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".














Li                     Expires December 2007                [Page 15]