Internet Working Group                                 Ali Sajassi
   Internet Draft                                       Cisco Systems
   
                                                         Yetik Serbest
                                                    SBC Communications
   
                                                       Frank Brockners
                                                         Cisco Systems
   
                                                          Dinesh Mohan
                                                                Nortel
   Expires: December 2006
   
   
                   VPLS Interoperability with CE Bridges
              draft-sajassi-l2vpn-vpls-bridge-interop-03.txt
   
   Status of this Memo
   
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   Copyright Notice
   
   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).  All Rights Reserved.
   
   
   Abstract
   
   One of the main motivations behind VPLS is its ability to provide
   connectivity not only among customer routers and servers/hosts but
   also among customer bridges. If only connectivity among customer IP
   routers/hosts was desired, then IPLS solution [IPLS] could have been
   
   
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   used. The strength of the VPLS solution is that it can provide
   connectivity to both bridge and non-bridge types of CE devices. VPLS
   is expected to deliver the same level of service that current
   enterprise users are accustomed to from their own enterprise bridged
   networks today or the same level of service that they receive from
   their Ethernet Service Providers using IEEE 802.1ad-based networks
   [P802.1ad] (or its predecessor – QinQ-based network).
   
   When CE devices are IEEE bridges, then there are certain issues and
   challenges that need to be accounted for in a VPLS network. Majority
   of these issues have currently been addressed in IEEE 802.1ad
   standard for provider bridges and they need to be addressed for VPLS
   networks. This draft discusses these issues and wherever possible,
   the recommended solutions to these issues.
   
   
   
   Conventions
   
   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 RFC 2119
   
   
   Table of Contents
   
   1. Overview........................................................3
   2. Ethernet Service Instance.......................................3
   3. VPLS-Capable PE Model with Bridge Module........................4
   4. Mandatory Issues................................................7
   4.1. Service Mapping...............................................7
   4.2. CE Bridge Protocol Handling...................................9
   4.3. Partial-mesh of Pseudowires..................................10
   4.4. Multicast Traffic............................................11
   5. Optional Issues................................................12
   5.1. Customer Network Topology Changes............................12
   5.2. Redundancy...................................................14
   5.3. MAC Address Learning.........................................15
   6. Interoperability with 802.1ad Networks.........................16
   7. Acknowledgments................................................16
   8. Security Considerations........................................16
   9. References.....................................................17
   10. Authors' Addresses............................................17
   11. Full Copyright Statement......................................18
   12. Intellectual Property Statement.....Error! Bookmark not defined.
   
   
   
   
   
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   1.  Overview
   
   Virtual Private LAN Service is a LAN emulation service intended for
   providing connectivity between geographically dispersed customer
   sites across MAN/WAN (over MPLS/IP) network(s), as if they were
   connected using a LAN. One of the main motivations behind VPLS is
   its ability to provide connectivity not only among customer routers
   and servers/hosts but also among customer bridges. If only
   connectivity among customer IP routers/hosts was desired, then IPLS
   solution [IPLS] could have been used. The strength of the VPLS
   solution is that it can provide connectivity to both bridge and non-
   bridge types of CE devices. VPLS is expected to deliver the same
   level of service that current enterprise users are accustomed to
   from their own enterprise bridged networks [802.1D/802.1Q] today or
   the same level of service that they receive from their Ethernet
   Service Providers using IEEE 802.1ad-based networks [P802.1ad] (or
   its predecessor – QinQ-based network).
   
   When CE devices are IEEE bridges, then there are certain issues and
   challenges that need to be accounted for in a VPLS network. Majority
   of these issues have currently been addressed in IEEE 802.1ad
   standard for provider bridges and they need to be addressed for VPLS
   networks. This draft discusses these issues and wherever possible,
   the recommended solutions to these issues. It also discusses
   interoperability issues between VPLS and IEEE 802.1ad networks when
   the end-to-end service spans across both types of networks, as
   outlined in [VPLS-LDP].
   
   This draft categorizes the CE-bridge issues into two groups: 1)
   Mandatory and 2) Optional. The issues in group (1) need to be
   addressed in order to ensure the proper operation of CE bridges. The
   issues in group (2) would provide additional operational improvement
   and efficiency and may not be required for interoperability with CE
   bridges. Sections four and five discuss the mandatory and optional
   issues respectively.
   
   
   
   2.  Ethernet Service Instance
   
   Before starting the discussion of bridging issues, it is important
   to first clarify the Ethernet Service definition. The term VPLS has
   different meanings in different contexts. In general, VPLS is used
   in the following contexts [Eth-OAM]: a) as an end-to-end bridged-LAN
   service over one or more network (one of which being MPLS/IP
   network), b) as an MPLS/IP network supporting these bridged LAN
   services, and c) as (V)LAN emulation. For better clarity, we
   differentiate between its usage as network versus service by using
   the terms VPLS network and VPLS instance respectively. Furthermore,
   we confine VPLS (both network and service) to only the portion of
   the end-to-end network that spans across an MPLS/IP network. For an
   
   
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   end-to-end service (among different sites of a given customer), we
   use the term “Ethernet Service Instance” or ESI.
   
   [MFA-Ether] defines the Ethernet Service Instance (ESI) as an
   association of two or more Attachment Circuits (ACs) over which an
   Ethernet service is offered to a given customer. An AC can be either
   a UNI or a NNI; furthermore, it can be an Ethernet interface or a
   VLAN, it can be an ATM or FR VC, or it can be a PPP/HDLC interface.
   If an ESI is associated with more than two ACs, then it is a
   multipoint ESI. In this document, where ever the keyword ESI is
   used, it means multipoint ESI, unless it is stated otherwise.
   
   An ESI can correspond to a VPLS instance if its associated ACs are
   only connected to a VPLS network or an ESI can correspond to a
   Service VLAN if its associated ACs are only connected to a Provider-
   Bridged network [P802.1ad]. Furthermore, an ESI can be associated
   with both a VPLS instance and a Service VLAN when considering an
   end-to-end service that spans across both VPLS and Provider-Bridged
   networks. An ESI can span across different networks (e.g., IEEE
   802.1ad and VPLS) belonging to the same or different administrative
   domains.
   
   An ESI (either for a point-to-point or multipoint connectivity) is
   associated with a forwarding path within the service provider’s
   network and that is different from an Ethernet Class of Service
   (CoS) which is associated with the frame Quality-of-Service
   treatment by each node along the path defined by the ESI. An ESI can
   have one or more CoS associated with it.
   
   An ESI most often represents a customer or a specific service
   requested by a customer. Since traffic isolation among different
   customers (or their associated services) is of paramount importance
   in service provider networks, its realization shall be done such
   that it provides a separate MAC address domain and broadcast domain
   per ESI. A separate MAC address domain is provided by using a
   separate filtering database per ESI (for both VPLS and IEEE 802.1ad
   networks) and separate broadcast domain is provided by using a full-
   mesh of PWs per ESI over the IP/MPLS core in a VPLS network and/or a
   dedicated Service VLAN per ESI in an IEEE 802.1ad network.
   
   
   3.  VPLS-Capable PE Model with Bridge Module
   
   [L2VPN-FRWK] defines three models for VPLS-capable PE (VPLS-PE)
   based on the bridging functionality that needs to be supported by
   the PE. If the CE devices can include both routers/hosts and IEEE
   bridges, then the second model is the most suitable and adequate one
   and it is consistent with IEEE standards for Provider Bridges
   [P802.1ad]. We briefly describe the second model and then elaborate
   upon this model to show its sub-components based on [P802.1ad]
   Provider Bridge model.
   
   
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   As described in [L2VPN-FRWK], the second model for VPLS-PE contains
   a single bridge module supporting all the VPLS instances on that PE
   where each VPLS instance is represented by a unique VLAN inside that
   bridge module (also known as Service VLAN or S-VLAN). The bridge
   module has at least a single “Emulated LAN” interface over which
   each VPLS instance is represented by a unique S-VLAN tag. Each VPLS
   instance can consist of a set of PWs and its associated forwarder
   corresponding to a single Virtual LAN (VLAN) as depicted in the
   following figure. Thus, sometimes it is referred to as V-LAN
   emulation.
   
        +----------------------------------------+
        |           VPLS-capable PE model        |
        |   +---------------+          +------+  |
        |   |               |          |VPLS-1|------------
        |   |               |==========|Fwdr  |------------ PWs
        |   |     Bridge    ------------      |------------
        |   |               | S-VLAN-1 +------+  |
        |   |     Module    |             o      |
        |   |               |             o      |
        |   |   (802.1ad    |             o      |
        |   |    bridge)    |             o      |
        |   |               |             o      |
        |   |               | S-VLAN-n +------+  |
        |   |               ------------VPLS-n|-------------
        |   |               |==========| Fwdr |------------- PWs
        |   |               |     ^    |      |-------------
        |   +---------------+     |    +------+  |
        |                         |              |
        +-------------------------|--------------+
                         LAN emulation Interface
   
                      Figure 1. VPLS-capable PE Model
   
   Customer frames associated with a given ESI, carry the S-VLAN ID for
   that ESI over the LAN emulation interface. The S-VLAN ID is stripped
   before transmitting the frames over the set of PWs associated with
   that VPLS instance (assuming raw mode PW is used as specified in
   [PWE3-Ethernet]).
   
   The bridge module can itself consist of one or two sub-components
   depending on the functionality that it needs to perform. The
   following figure depicts the model for bridge module based on
   [P802.1ad].
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
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                   +-------------------------------+
                   |  802.1ad Bridge Module Model  |
                   |                               |
        +---+      |  +------+      +-----------+  |
        |CE |---------|C-VLAN|------|           |  |
        +---+      |  |bridge|------|           |  |
                   |  +------+      |           |  |
                   |     o          |   S-VLAN  |  |
                   |     o          |           |  |
                   |     o          |   Bridge  |  |
        +---+      |  +------+      |           |  |
        |CE |---------|C-VLAN|------|           |  |
        +---+      |  |bridge|------|           |  |
                   |  +------+      +-----------+  |
                   +-------------------------------+
   
               Figure 2. The Model of 802.1ad Bridge Module
   
   The S-VLAN bridge component is always required and it is responsible
   for tagging customer frames with S-VLAN tags in the ingress
   direction (from customer UNIs) and removing S-VLAN tags in the
   egress direction (toward customer UNIs). It is also responsible for
   running the provider’s bridge protocol such as RSTP, MSTP, GVRP,
   GMRP, etc. among provider bridges within a single administrative
   domain.
   
   The C-VLAN bridge component is required when the customer Attachment
   Circuits are VLANs (aka C-VLANs). In such cases, the VPLS-capable PE
   needs to participate in some of the customer’s bridging protocol
   such as RSTP and MSTP. The reason that such participation is
   required is because a customer VLAN (C-VLAN) at one site can be
   mapped into a different C-VLAN at a different site or in case of
   asymmetric mapping (as describe in the previous section), a customer
   Ethernet port at one site can be mapped into a customer VLAN (or
   group of C-VLANs) at a different site.
   
   In scenarios where C-VLAN bridge component is required, then there
   will be one such component per customer UNI port in order to avoid
   local switching within the C-VLAN bridge component and thus limiting
   local switching among different UNIs for the same customer to S-VLAN
   bridge component.
   
   The C-VLAN bridge component does service selection and
   identification based on C-VLAN tags. Each frame from the customer
   device is assigned to a C-VLAN and presented at one or more internal
   port-based interfaces, each supporting a single service instance
   that the customer desires to carry that C-VLAN. Similarly frames
   from the provider network are assigned to an internal interface or
   ‘LAN’ (e.g, between C-VLAN and S-VLAN components) on the basis of
   the S-VLAN tag. Since each internal interface supports a single
   service instance, the S-VLAN tag can be, and is, removed at this
   
   
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   interface by the S-VLAN bridge component. If multiple C-VLANs are
   supported by this service instance (e.g., VLAN bundling or port-
   based), then the frames will have already been tagged with C-VLAN
   tags. If a single C-VLAN is supported by this service instance
   (e.g., VLAN-based), then the frames shall not have been tagged with
   C-VLAN tag since C-VLAN can be derived from the S-VLAN (e.g., one to
   one mapping). The C-VLAN aware bridge component applies a port VLAN
   ID (PVID) to untagged frames received on each internal ‘LAN’,
   allowing full control over the delivery of frames for each C-VLAN
   through the Customer UNI Port.
   
   
   4.  Mandatory Issues
   
   4.1.  Service Mapping
   
   Different Ethernet AC types can be associated with a single Ethernet
   Service Instance (ESI). For example, an ESI can be associated with
   only physical Ethernet ports, VLANs, or a combination of two (e.g.,
   one end of the service be associated with physical Ethernet ports
   and the other end be associated with VLANs). In [VPLS-LDP],
   unqualified and qualified learning is used to refer to port-based
   and VLAN-based operation respectively and it does not describe the
   possible mappings between different types of Ethernet ACs (e.g.,
   802.1D, 802.1Q or 802.1ad frames). In general, the mapping of a
   customer port or VLAN to a given service instance is a local
   function performed by the local PE and the service provisioning
   shall accommodate it. In other words, there is no reason to restrict
   and limit an ESI to have only port-based ACs or to have only VLAN-
   based ACs. [P802.1ad] allows for each customer AC (either a physical
   port, or a VLAN, or a group of VLANs) to be mapped independently to
   an ESI which provides better service offering to Enterprise
   customers. For better and more flexible service offerings and for
   interoperability purposes between VPLS and 802.1ad networks, it is
   imperative that both networks offer the same capabilities in terms
   of customer ACs mapping to the customer service instance.
   
   The following table lists possible mappings that can exist between
   customer ACs and its associated ESI – this table is extracted from
   [MFA-Ether]. As it can be seen, there are several possible ways to
   perform such mapping. In the first scenario, it is assumed that an
   Ethernet physical port only carries untagged traffic and all the
   traffic is mapped to the corresponding service instance or ESI. This
   is referred to as “port-based w/ untagged traffic”. In the second
   scenario, it is assumed that an Ethernet physical port carries both
   tagged and untagged traffic and all that traffic is mapped to the
   corresponding service instance or ESI. This is referred to as “port-
   based w/ tagged and untagged traffic”. In the third scenario, it is
   assumed that only a single VLAN is mapped to the corresponding
   service instance or ESI (referred to as VLAN-based). Finally, in the
   fourth scenario, it is assumed that a group of VLANs from the
   
   
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   Ethernet physical interface is mapped to the corresponding service
   instance or ESI.
   
   
   ===================================================================
               Ethernet I/F & Associated Service Instance(s)
   -------------------------------------------------------------------
              Port-based       port-based       VLAN-based    VLAN
              Untagged         tagged &                       bundling
                               untagged
   -------------------------------------------------------------------
   Port-based    Y               N               Y(Note-1)    N
   untagged
   
   Port-based    N               Y               Y(Note-2)    Y
   tagged &
   untagged
   
   VLAN-based    Y(Note-1)       Y(Note-2)       Y            Y(Note-3)
   
   
   VLAN          N               Y               Y(Note-3)    Y
   Bundling
   ===================================================================
   
   Note-1: In this asymmetric mapping scenario, it is assumed that the
   CE device with “VLAN-based” AC is a device capable of supporting
   [802.1Q] frame format.
   
   Note-2: In this asymmetric mapping scenario, it is assumed that the
   CE device with “VLAN-based” AC is a device that can support
   [P802.1ad]  frame format because it will receive Ethernet frames
   with two tags; where the outer tag is S-VLAN and the inner tag is C-
   VLAN received from “port-based” AC. One application example for such
   CE device is in feature server for DSL aggregation over Metro
   Ethernet network.
   
   Note–3: In this asymmetric mapping scenario, it is assumed that the
   CE device with “VLAN-based” AC can support the [P802.1ad]  frame
   format because it will receive Ethernet frames with two tags; where
   the outer tag is S-VLAN and the inner tag is C-VLAN received from
   “VLAN bundling” AC.
   
   If a PE uses an S-VLAN tag for a given ESI (either by adding an S-
   VLAN tag to customer traffic or by replacing a C-VLAN tag with a S-
   VLAN tag), then the frame format and EtherType for S-VLAN shall
   adhere to [P802.1ad].
   
   As mentioned before, the mapping function between the customer AC
   and its associated ESI is a local function and thus when the AC is a
   single customer VLAN, it is possible to map different customer VLANs
   
   
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   at different sites to a single ESI without coordination among those
   sites.
   
   When a port-based or a VLAN-bundling is used, then the may PE use an
   additional S-VLAN tag to mark the customer traffic received over
   that AC as belonging to a given ESI. If the PE uses the additional
   S-VLAN tag, then in the opposite direction the PE shall strip the S-
   VLAN tag before sending the customer frames over the same AC.
   However, when VLAN-mapping mode is used at an AC and if the PE uses
   S-VLAN tag locally, then if the Ethernet interface is a UNI, the
   tagged frames over this interface shall have a frame format based on
   [802.1Q] and the PE shall translate the customer tag (C-VLAN) into
   the provider tag (S-VLAN) upon receiving a frame from the customer
   and in the opposite direction, the PE shall translate from provider
   frame format (802.1ad) back to customer frame format (802.1Q).
   
   All the above asymmetric services can be supported via the PE model
   with the bridge module depicted in figure-2 (based on [802.1ad]).
   
   4.2.  CE Bridge Protocol Handling
   
   When a VPLS-capable PE is connected to a CE bridge, then depending
   on the type of Attachment Circuit, different protocol handling may
   be required by the bridge module of the PE. [P802.1ad] states that
   when a PE is connected to a CE bridge, then the service offered by
   the PE may appear to specific customer protocols running on the CE
   in one of the four ways:
   
     i) Transparent to the operation of the protocol among CEs of
        different sites using the service provided, appearing as an
        individual LAN without bridges; or,
     ii) Discarding frames, acting as a non-participating barrier to the
        operation of the protocol; or,
     iii) Peering, with a local protocol entity at the point of provider
        ingress and egress, participating in and terminating the
        operation of the protocol; or,
     iv) Participation in individual instances of customer protocols.
   
   All the above CE bridge protocol handling can be supported via the
   PE model with the bridge module depicted in figure-2 (based on
   [802.1ad]). For example, when an Attachment Circuit is port-based,
   then the bridge module of the PE can operate transparently with
   respect to the CE’s RSTP/MSTP protocols (and thus no C-VLAN
   component is required for that customer UNI). However, when an
   Attachment Circuit is VLAN-based (either VLAN-based or VLAN
   bundling), then the bridge module of the PE needs to peer with the
   RSTP/MSTP protocols running on the CE (and thus the C-VLAN bridge
   component is required). There are also protocols that require
   peering but are independent from the type of Attachment Circuit. An
   
   
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   example of such protocol is link aggregation protocol [802.3ad];
   however, this is a media-dependent protocol as its name implies.
   Therefore, the peering requirement can be generalized such that the
   media-independent protocols (RSTP/MSTP, CFM, etc) that require
   peering are for VLAN-based or VLAN-bundling Attachment Circuit.
   
   [P802.1ad] reserves a block of 16 MAC addresses for the operation of
   C-VLAN and S-VLAN bridge components and it shows which of these
   reserved MAC addresses are only for C-VLAN bridge component and
   which ones are only for S-VLAN bridge component and which ones apply
   to both C-VLAN and S-VLAN components.
   
   
   4.3.  Partial-mesh of Pseudowires
   
   The effect of a PW failure (resulting in creation of partial-mesh of
   PWs) on the CE devices and their supported services should be well
   known. If the CE devices belonging to an ESI are routers running
   link state routing protocols that use LAN procedures over that ESI,
   then a partial-mesh of PWs can result in “black holing” traffic
   among the selected set of routers. And if the CE devices belonging
   to an ESI are IEEE bridges, then a partial-mesh of PWs can cause
   broadcast storms in the customer and provider networks. Furthermore,
   it can cause multiple copies of a single frame to be received by the
   CE and/or PE devices. Therefore, it is of paramount importance to be
   able to detect PW failure and to take corrective action to prevent
   creation of partial-mesh of PWs.
   
   [Rosen-Mesh] defines a procedure for detection of partial mesh in
   which each PE keeps track of the status of PW Endpoint Entities (EEs
   - e.g., VPLS forwarders) for itself as wells the ones reported by
   other PEs. Therefore, upon a PW failure, the PE that detects the
   failure not only takes notice locally but it notifies other PEs
   belonging to that service instance of such failure so that all the
   participants PEs have a consistent view of the PW mesh. The
   procedure defined in [Rosen-Mesh] is for detection of partial mesh
   per service instance and in turn it relies on additional procedure
   for PW failure detection such as BFD or VCCV. Given that there can
   be ten (or even hundreds) of thousands of PWs in a PE, the
   scalability aspects of this procedure needs to be worked out. Also
   [Rosen-Mesh] acknowledges that many of the details regarding
   operational aspects of such procedure are missing and need to be
   worked out.
   
   If the PE model, with bridge module as depicted in figure-2, is
   used, then [P802.1ag] procedures could be used for detection of
   partial-mesh of PWs. [p802.1ag] defines a set of procedures for
   fault detection, verification, isolation, and notification per ESI.
   
   Fault detection mechanism of [p8021.ag] can be used to perform
   connectivity check among PEs belonging to a given VPLS instance. It
   
   
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   checks the integrity of a service instance end-to-end within an
   administrative domain – e.g., from one AC at one end of the network
   to another AC at the other end of the network. Therefore, its path
   coverage includes bridge module within a PE and it is not limited to
   just PWs. Furthermore, [P802.1ag] operates transparently over the
   full-mesh of PWs for a given service instance since it operates at
   the Ethernet level (and not at PW level). It should be noted that
   [P802.1ag] assumes that the Ethernet links or LAN segments
   connecting provider bridges are full-duplex and the failure in one
   direction results in the failure of the whole link or LAN segment.
   However, that is not the case for VPLS instance since a PW consists
   of two uni-directional LSPs and one direction can fail independent
   from the other causing inconsistent view of the full-mesh by the
   participating PEs till the detected failure in one side is
   propagated to the other side.
   
   
   4.4.  Multicast Traffic
   
   VPLS follows a centralized model for multicast replication within an
   ESI. VPLS relies on ingress replication. The ingress PE replicates
   the multicast packet for each egress PE and sends it to the egress
   PE using PtP PW over a unicast tunnel. VPLS operates on an overlay
   topology formed by the full mesh of pseudo-wires. Thus, depending on
   the underlying topology, the same datagram can be sent multiple
   times down the same physical link. VPLS currently does not offer any
   mechanisms to restrict the distribution of multicast or broadcast
   traffic of an ESI throughout the network causing additional burden
   on the ingress PE for unnecessary packet replication, causing
   additional load on the MPLS core network, and causing additional
   processing at the receiving PE where multicast packet is discarded.
   
   One possible approach, to deliver multicast more efficiently over
   VPLS network, is to include the use of IGMP snooping in order to
   send the packet only to the PEs that have receivers for that
   traffic, rather than to all the PEs in the VPLS instance. If the
   customer bridge or its network has dual-home connectivity as
   described in section 7, then for proper operation of IGMP snooping,
   the PE must generate a “General Query” over that customer UNIs upon
   receiving a customer topology change notification as described in
   [IGMP-SNOOP]. A “General Query” by the PE results in proper
   registration of the customer multicast MAC address(s) at the PE when
   there is customer topology change. It should be noted that IGMP
   snooping provides a solution for IP multicast packets and is not
   applicable to general multicast data.
   
   Using the IGMP-snooping as described, the ingress PE can select a
   sub-set of PWs for packet replication; therefore, avoiding sending
   multicast packets to the egress PEs that don’t need them. However,
   the replication is still performed by the ingress PE. In order to
   avoid, replication at ingress PE, one may want to use multicast
   
   
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   distribution trees (MDTs) in the provider core network; however,
   this comes with its potential pitfalls. If the MDT is used for all
   multicast traffic of a given customer, then this results in customer
   multicast and unicast traffic to be forwarded on different PWs and
   even on a different physical topology within the provider network.
   This is a serious issue for customer bridges because customer BPDUs,
   which are multicast data, can take a different path through the
   network than the unicast data. Situations might arise where either
   unicast OR multicast connectivity is lost. If unicast connectivity
   is lost, but multicast forwarding continues to work, the customer
   spanning tree would not take notice which results in loss of its
   unicast traffic. Similarly, if multicast connectivity is lost, but
   unicast is working, then the customer spanning tree will activate
   the blocked port which may result in loop within the customer
   network. Therefore, the MDT cannot be used for both customer
   multicast control and data traffic. If it is used, it should only be
   limited to customer data traffic. However, there can be potential
   issue even when it is used for customer data traffic since the MDT
   doesn’t fit the PE model described in Figure-1 (it operates
   independently from the full-mesh of PWs that correspond to an S-
   VLAN). It is also not clear how CFM procedures (802.1ag) used for
   ESI integrity check (e.g., per service instance) can be applied to
   check the integrity of the customer multicast traffic over the
   provider MDT. Because of these potential issues, the specific
   applications of the provider MDT to customer multicast traffic shall
   be documented and its limitations be clearly specified.
   
   
   5.  Optional Issues
   
   5.1.  Customer Network Topology Changes
   
   A single CE or a customer network can be connected to a provider
   network using more than one User-Network Interface (UNI).
   Furthermore, a single CE or a customer network can be connected to
   more than one provider network. [L2VPN-REQ] provides some examples
   of such customer network connectivity that are depicted in the
   figure below. Such network topologies are designed to protect
   against the failure or removal of network components with the
   customer network and it is assumed that the customer leverages the
   spanning tree protocol to protect against these cases. Therefore, in
   such scenarios, it is important to flush customer MAC addresses in
   the provider network upon the customer topology change to avoid
   black holing of customer frames.
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
   
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                      +-----------                     +---------------
                      |                                |
     +------+     +------+            +------+     +------+
     |  CE  |-----|  PE  |            |  CE  |-----|  PE  |
     |device|     |device|            |device|     |device| SP network
     +------+\    +------+            +------+\    +------+
        |     \       |                  |     \       |
        |Back  \      |                  |Back  \      +---------------
        |door   \     |   SP network     |door   \     +---------------
        |link    \    |                  |link    \    |
     +------+     +------+            +------+     +------+
     |  CE  |     |  PE  |            |  CE  |     |  PE  |
     |device|-----|device|            |device|-----|device| SP network
     +------+     +------+            +------+     +------+
                      |                                |
                      +------------                    +---------------
                     (a)                                 (b)
   
      Figure 3. Combination of Dual-Homing and Backdoor Links for CE
                                  Devices
   
   The customer networks use their own instances of spanning tree
   protocol to configure and partition their active topology, so that
   the provider connectivity doesn’t result in data loop.
   Reconfiguration of a customer’s active topology can result in the
   apparent movement of customer end stations from the point of view of
   the PEs. However, the requirement for mutual independence of the
   distinct ESIs that can be supported by a single provider spanning
   tree active topology does not permit either the direct receipt of
   provider topology change notifications from the CEs or the use of
   received customer spanning tree protocol topology change
   notifications to stimulate topology change signaling on a provider
   spanning tree.
   
   To address this issue, [P802.1ad] requires that customer topology
   change notification to be detected at the ingress of the S-VLAN
   bridge component and the S-VLAN bridge transmits a Customer Change
   Notification (CCN) BPDU tagged with the S-VLAN ID associated with
   that service instance and a destination MAC address as specified in
   the block of 16 reserved multicast MAC addresses. Upon receiving the
   CCN, the provider bridge will flush all the customer MAC addresses
   associated with that S-VLAN ID on all the provider bridge interfaces
   except the one that the CCN message is received from.
   
   Based on the provider bridge model depicted in figure (1), there are
   two methods of propagating the CCN message over the VPLS network.
   The first method is to translate the in-band CCN message into an
   out-of-band “MAC Address Withdrawal” message as specified in [VPLS-
   LDP] and the second method is to treat the CCN message as customer
   data and pass it transparently over the set of PWs associated with
   that VPLS instance. The second method is recommended because of ease
   
   
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   of interoperability between the bridge and the LAN emulation modules
   of the PE.
   
   
   5.2.  Redundancy
   
   [VPLS-LDP] talks about dual-homing of a given u-PE to two n-PEs over
   a provider MPLS access network to provide protection against link
   and node failure – e.g., in case the primary n-PE fails or the
   connection to it fails, then the u-PE uses the backup PWs to reroute
   the traffic to the backup n-PE. Furthermore, it discusses the
   provision of redundancy when a provider Ethernet access network is
   used and how any arbitrary access network topology (not just limited
   to hub-and-spoke) can be supported using the provider’s MSTP
   protocol and how the provider MSTP for a given access network can be
   confined to that access network and operate independently from MSTP
   protocols running in other access networks.
   
   In both types of redundancy mechanisms (Ethernet versus MPLS access
   networks), only one n-PE is active for a given VPLS instance at any
   time. In case of an Ethernet access network, core-facing PWs (for a
   VPLS instance) at the n-PE are blocked by the MSTP protocol;
   whereas, in case of a MPLS access network, the access-facing PW is
   blocked at the u-PE for a given VPLS instance.
   
      -------------------------+  Provider  +-------------------------
                               .   Core     .
                   +------+    .            .    +------+
                   | n-PE |======================| n-PE |
        Provider   | (P)  |---------\    /-------| (P)  |  Provider
        Access     +------+    ._    \  /   .    +------+  Access
        Network                .      \/    .              Network
          (1)      +------+    .      /\    .    +------+     (2)
                   | n-PE |----------/  \--------| n-PE |
                   |  (B) |----------------------| (B)  |_
                   +------+    .            .    +------+
                               .            .
       ------------------------+            +-------------------------
   
                       Figure 4. Bridge Module Model
   
   Figure-4 shows two provider access networks each with two n-PEs
   where the n-PEs are connected via a full mesh of PWs for a given
   VPLS instance. As shown in the figure, only one n-PE in each access
   network is serving as a Primary PE (P) for that VPLS instance and
   the other n-PE is serving as the backup PE (B). In this figure, each
   primary PE has two active PWs originating from it. Therefore, when a
   multicast, broadcast, and unknown unicast frame arrives at the
   primary n-PE from the access network side, the n-PE replicates the
   frame over both PWs in the core even though it only needs to send
   the frames over a single PW (shown with “==” in the figure) to the
   
   
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   primary n-PE on the other side. This is an unnecessary replication
   of the customer frames that consumes core-network bandwidth (half of
   the frames get discarded at the receiving n-PE). This issue gets
   aggravated when there are more than two n-PEs per provider access
   network  – e.g., if there are three n-PEs or four n-PEs per access
   network, then 67% or 75% of core-BW for multicast, broadcast and
   unknown unicast are respectively wasted.
   
   Therefore, it is recommended to have a protocol among n-PEs that can
   disseminate the status of PWs (active or blocked) among themselves
   and furthermore to have it tied up with the redundancy mechanism
   such that per VPLS instance the status of active/backup n-PE gets
   reflected on the corresponding PWs emanating from that n-PE.
   
   The above discussion was centered on the lack of efficiency with
   regards to packet replication over MPLS core network for current
   VPLS redundancy mechanism. Another important issue to consider is
   the interaction between customer and service provider redundancy
   mechanisms especially when customer devices are IEEE bridges. If CEs
   are IEEE bridges, then they can run RSTP/MSTP protocols, RSTP
   convergence and detection time is much faster than its predecessor
   (IEEE 802.1D STP which is obsolete). Therefore, if the provider
   network offers VPLS redundancy mechanism, then it should provide
   transparency to the customer’s network during a failure within its
   network – e.g., the failure detection and recovery time within the
   service provider network to be less than the one in the customer
   network. If this is not the case, then a failure within the provider
   network can result in unnecessary switch-over and temporary
   flooding/loop within the customer’s network that is dual homed.
   
   
   5.3.  MAC Address Learning
   
   When customer devices are routers, servers, or hosts, then the
   number of MAC addresses per customer sites is very limited (most
   often one MAC address per CE). However, when CEs are bridges, then
   there can be many customer MAC addresses (e.g., hundreds of MAC
   addresses) associated with each CE.
   
   [P802.1ad] has devised a mechanism to alleviate MAC address learning
   within provider Ethernet networks that can equally be applied to
   VPLS networks. This mechanism calls for disabling MAC address
   learning for an S-VLAN (or a service instance) within a provider
   bridge (or PE) when there is only one ingress and one egress port
   associated with that service instance on that PE. In such cases,
   there is no need to learn customer MAC addresses on that PE since
   the path through that PE for that service instance is fixed. For
   example, if a service instance is associated with four CEs at four
   different sites, then the maximum number of provider bridges (or
   PEs), that need to participate in that customer MAC address
   learning, is only three regardless of how many PEs are in the path
   
   
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   of that service instance. This mechanism can reduce the number of
   MAC addressed learned in a H-VPLS with QinQ access configuration.
   
   If the provider access network is of type Ethernet (e.g., IEEE
   802.1ad-based network), then the MSTP protocol can be used to
   partition access network into several loop-free spanning tree
   topologies where Ethernet service instances (S-VLANs) are
   distributed among these tree topologies. Furthermore, GVRP can be
   used to limit the scope of each service instance to a subset of its
   associated tree topology (and thus limiting the scope of customer
   MAC address learning to that sub-tree). Finally, the MAC address
   disabling mechanism (described above) can be applied to that sub-
   tree, to further limit the number of nodes (PEs) on that sub-tree
   that need to learn customer MAC addresses for that service instance.
   
   Furthermore, [p802.1ah] provides the capability of encapsulating
   customers’ MAC addresses within the provider MAC header. A u-PE
   capable of this functionality can reduce the number of MAC addressed
   learned significantly within the provider network for H-VPLS with
   QinQ access as well as H-VPLS with MPLS access.
   
   
   6.  Interoperability with 802.1ad Networks
   
   [VPLS-LDP] discusses H-VPLS provider-network topologies with both
   Ethernet [P802.1ad] as well as MPLS access networks. Therefore, it is
   of paramount importance to ensure seamless interoperability between
   these two types of networks.
   
   Provider bridges as specified in [P802.1ad] are intended to operate
   seamlessly with customer bridges and provide the required services.
   Therefore, if a PE is modeled based on Figures 1&2 which includes a
   [802.1ad] bridge module, then it should operate seamlessly with
   Provider Bridges given that the issues discussed in this draft have
   been taken into account.
   
   
   7.  Acknowledgments
   
   The authors would like to thank Norm Finn for his comments and
   feedbacks.
   
   
   
   8.  Security Considerations
   
   There are no additional security aspects beyond that of VPLS/H-VPLS
   that needs to be discussed here.
   
   
   
   
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   9.  Normative References
   
   [L2VPN-REQ] Agustyn, W. et al, "Service Requirements for Layer-2
   Provider Provisioned Virtual Provider Networks", work in progress
   
   [L2VPN-FRWK] Andersson, L. and et al, "Framework for Layer 2 Virtual
   Private Networks (L2VPNs)", Work in Progress
   
   [VPLS-LDP] Lasserre, M. and et al, "Virtual Private LAN Services
   over MPLS", work in progress
   
   
   [P802.1ad] IEEE Draft P802.1ad/D2.4 “Virtual Bridged Local Area
   Networks: Provider Bridges”, Work in progress, September 2004
   
   [P802.1ag] IEEE Draft P802.1ag/D0.1 “Virtual Bridge Local Area
   Networks: Connectivity Fault Management”, Work in Progress, October
   2004
   
   
   10.  Informative References
   
   [IPLS] Shah, H. and et al, "IP-Only LAN Service (IPLS) ", work in
   progress, October 2004
   
   [MFA-Ether] Sajassi, A. and et al, “Ethernet Service Interworking
   Over MPLS”, Work in Progress, September 2004
   
   [Rosen-Mesh] “Detecting and Reacting to Failures of the Full Mesh in
   IPLS and VPLS”,draft-rosen-l2vpn-mesh-failure-01.txt, March 2004
   
   [PWE3-Ethernet] "Encapsulation Methods for Transport of Ethernet
   Frames Over IP/MPLS Networks", draft-ietf-pwe3-ethernet-encap-
   01.txt, Work in progress, November 2002.
   
   [802.1D-REV] IEEE Std. 802.1D-2003 “Media Access Control (MAC)
   Bridges”.
   
   [802.1Q] IEEE Std. 802.1Q-2003 "Virtual Bridged Local Area
   Networks".
   
   [IGMP-SNOOP] Christensen, M. and et al, “Considerations for IGMP and
   MLD Snooping Switches”, Work in progress, May 2004
   
   [Eth-OAM] Dinesh Mohan, Ali Sajassi, and et al, “L2VPN OAM
   Requirements and Framework”, Work in progress, July 2006
   
   
   11.  Authors' Addresses
   
   Ali Sajassi
   
   
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   Cisco Systems, Inc.
   170 West Tasman Drive
   San Jose, CA  95134
   Email: sajassi@cisco.com
   
   Yetik Serbest
   SBC Labs
   9505 Arboretum Blvd.
   Austin, TX 78759
   Email: yetik_serbest@labs.sbc.com
   
   Frank Brockners
   Cisco Systems, Inc.
   Hansaallee 249
   40549 Duesseldorf
   Germany
   Email: fbrockne@cisco.com
   
   Dinesh Mohan
   Nortel Networks
   3500 Carling Ave
   Ottawa, ON K2H8E9
   Email: mohand@nortel.com
   
   
   12.  Intellectual Property Considerations
   
   This document is being submitted for use in IETF standards
   discussions.
   
   
   13.  Full Copyright Statement
   
   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2006).
   
   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 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.
   
   
   
   
   
   
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   14.  IPR Notice
   
   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
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   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be
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   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any
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   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any
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   ipr@ietf.org.
   
   
   
   
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