Network Working Group A. Vainshtein (Axerra Networks)
Y. Stein (RAD Data Communications)
Internet Draft
Expiration Date: Editors
March 2004
September 2003
Structure-Agnostic TDM over Packet (SAToP)
draft-vain-stein-pwe3-satop-00.txt
Status of this Memo
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Abstract
This document describes a pseudowire encapsulation for TDM (T1, E1, T3,
E3) bit-streams that disregards any structure that may be imposed on
these streams, in particular the structure imposed by the standard TDM
framing [G.704].
Co-Authors
The following are co-authors of this document:
Motty Anavi RAD Data Communications
Tim Frost Zarlink Semiconductors
Eduard Metz TNO Telecom
Prayson Pate Overture Networks
Akiva Sadovski Axerra Networks
Israel Sasson Axerra Networks
Ronen Shashoua RAD Data Communications
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. Introduction......................................................2
2. Terminology and Reference Models..................................3
2.1. Terminology...................................................3
2.2. Reference Models..............................................3
3. Emulated Services.................................................3
4. SAToP Encapsulation Layer.........................................4
4.1. SAToP Packet Format...........................................4
4.2. PSN and Multiplexing Layer Headers............................4
4.3. SAToP Header..................................................4
4.3.1. Usage and Structure of the Control Word...................5
4.3.2. Usage of RTP Header.......................................6
5. SAToP Payload Layer...............................................7
6. SAToP Operation...................................................8
6.1. Common Considerations.........................................8
6.2. IWF operation.................................................8
6.2.1. PSN-bound Direction.......................................8
6.2.2. CE-bound Direction........................................9
6.3. SAToP Defects................................................10
6.4. SAToP PW Performance Monitoring..............................10
7. QoS Issues.......................................................11
8. Congestion Control...............................................11
9. Security Considerations..........................................12
10. Applicability Statement.........................................12
11. IANA Considerations.............................................13
12. Intellectual Property Disclaimer................................13
1. Introduction
This document describes a method for encapsulating TDM bit-streams (T1,
E1, T3, E3) as pseudo-wires over packet-switching networks (PSN). It
addresses only structure-agnostic transport, i.e., the protocol
completely disregards any structure that may possibly be imposed on
these signals, in particular the structure imposed by standard TDM
framing [G.704]. This emulation is referred to as "emulation of
unstructured TDM circuits" in [PWE3-TDM-REQ] and suits applications
where the PEs have no need to interpret TDM data or to participate in
the TDM signaling.
The SAToP solution presented in this document conforms to the PWE3
architecture described in [PWE3-ARCH] and satisfies both the relevant
general requirements put forward in [PWE3-REQ] and specific
requirements for unstructured TDM signals presented in [PWE3-TDM-REQ].
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2. Terminology and Reference Models
2.1. Terminology
"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].
In addition to terms defined in [PWE3-ARCH], the following TDM specific
terms are needed:
o Loss of Signal (LOS) - a condition of the TDM attachment
circuit wherein the incoming signal cannot be detected.
Criteria for entering and leaving the LOS condition can be
found in [G.775]
o Alarm Indication Signal (AIS) - a special bit pattern
(described in [G.775]) in the TDM bit stream that indicates
presence of an upstream circuit outage. For E1, T1 and E3
circuits the AIS pattern is a sequence of binary "1" values of
appropriate duration (the "all ones" pattern).
2.2. Reference Models
The generic models defined in Sections 4.1, 4.2 and 4.4 of [PWE3-ARCH]
fully apply to SAToP.
The native service addressed in this document is a special case of the
bit stream payload type defined in Section 3.3.3 of [PWE3-ARCH].
The Network Synchronization reference model and deployment scenarios
for emulation of TDM services are described in [PWE3-TDM-REQ], Section
4.2.
3. Emulated Services
This specification describes edge-to-edge emulation of the following
TDM services described in [G.702]:
1. E1 (2048 kbit/s)
2. T1 (1544 kbit/s) This service is also known as DS1
3. E3 (34368 kbit/s)
4. T3 (44736 kbit/s) This service is also known as DS3.
The protocol used for emulation of these services does not depend on
the method in which attachment circuits are delivered to the PEs. For
example, a T1 attachment circuit is treated in the same way regardless
of whether it is delivered to the PE on copper [G.703], multiplexed in
a T3 circuit [T.107], mapped into a virtual tributary of a SONET/SDH
circuit [G.707] or carried over an ATM network using unstructured ATM-
CES [ATM-CES]. Termination of any specific "carrier layers" used
between the PE and CE is performed by an appropriate NSP.
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4. SAToP Encapsulation Layer
4.1. SAToP Packet Format
The basic format of SAToP packets is shown in Fig. 1 below.
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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| ... |
| PSN and multiplexing layer headers |
| ... |
+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+
| ... |
+-- --+
| SAToP Encapsulation Header |
+-- --+
| ... |
+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+
| Packetized TDM data (Payload) |
| ... |
| ... |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 1. Basic SAToP Packet Format
4.2. PSN and Multiplexing Layer Headers
The total size of a SAToP packet for a specific PW MUST NOT exceed path
MTU between the pair of PEs terminating this PW. SAToP implementations
using IPv4 PSN MUST mark the IPv4 datagrams they generate as "Don't
Fragment" [RFC791].
4.3. SAToP Header
The SAToP header MUST contain the SAToP Control Word (4 bytes) and MAY
also contain a fixed RTP header [RFC3550]. If the RTP header is
included in the SAToP header, it MUST immediately precede the SAToP
control word in case of an IPv4 or IPv6 PSN, and MUST immediately
follow it in the case of an MPLS PSN (see Fig. 2a and Fig. 2b below).
Note: Such an arrangement complies with the traditional usage of RTP
for the IPv4/IPv6 PSN while making SAToP PWs ECMP-safe for the MPLS PSN
(see [PWE3-ARCH], Section 5.4.4).
Both UDP and L2TPv3 can provide the multiplexing mechanisms for SAToP
PWs over an IPv4/IPv6 PSN. The PW label provides the multiplexing
mechanism over an MPLS PSN as described in Section 5.4.2 of [PWE3-
ARCH].
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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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| ... |
| IPv4/IPv6 and multiplexing layer headers |
| ... |
+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+
| OPTIONAL |
+-- --+
| |
+-- --+
| Fixed RTP Header (see [RFC3550]) |
+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+
| SAToP Control Word |
+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+
| Packetized TDM data (Payload) |
| ... |
| ... |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 2a. SAToP Packet Format for an IPv4/IPv6 PSN
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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| ... |
| MPLS Label Stack |
| ... |
+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+
| SAToP Control Word |
+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+
| OPTIONAL |
+-- --+
| |
+-- --+
| Fixed RTP Header (see [RFC3550]) |
+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+=+
| Packetized TDM data (Payload) |
| ... |
| ... |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 2b. SAToP Packet Format for an MPLS PSN
4.3.1. Usage and Structure of the Control Word
Usage of the SAToP control word allows:
1. Detection of packet loss or mis-ordering
2. Differentiation between the PSN and attachment circuit
problems as causes for the outage of the emulated service
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3. PSN bandwidth conservation by not transferring invalid data
(AIS)
4. Signaling of faults detected at the PW egress to the PW
ingress.
The structure of the SAToP Control Word is shown in Fig. 2 below.
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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|0|0|0|0|L|R|RSV|FRG| LEN | Sequence number |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 2. Structure of the SAToP Control Word
Bits 0 to 3 MUST be set to 0 as described in [PWE3-ARCH], Section 5.4.4
L - if set, indicates that the PSN-bound IWF has detected or has been
informed of a TDM fault condition invalidating the data to be
transmitted. This bit MAY be used to indicate LOS and MAY be used
in conjunction with other faults. When the L bit is set the
contents of the packet payload may be meaningless, and the payload
MAY be omitted in order to conserve bandwidth. Once set, if the TDM
fault is rectified the L bit MUST be cleared.
R - if set by the PSN-bound IWF, indicates that its local CE-bound IWF
is in the packet loss state, i.e. has lost a preconfigured number
of consecutive packets. The R bit MUST be cleared by the PSN-bound
IWF once its local CE-bound IWF has exited the packet loss state,
i.e. has received a preconfigured number of consecutive packets.
RSV (reserved) and FRG (fragmentation) bits (6 to 10) - MUST be set to
0 by the PSN-bound IWF and MUST be ignored by the CE-bound IWF.
LEN (bits (10 to 15) MAY be used to carry the length of the SAToP
packet (defined as the size of the SAToP header + the payload size) if
it is less than 64 bytes, and MUST be set to zero otherwise.
Sequence number is used to provide the common PW sequencing function as
well as detection of lost packets. It MUST be generated in accordance
with the rules defined in [RFC3550], Section 5 for the RTP sequence
number.
4.3.2. Usage of RTP Header
When RTP is used, SAToP requires the fields of the fixed RTP header
(see [RFC3550], Section 5.1) with P (padding), X (header extension), CC
(CSRC count), and M fields (marker) to be set to zero.
The PT (payload type) field is used as following:
1. One PT value MUST be allocated from the range of dynamic
values (see [RTP-TYPES]) for each direction of the PW. The
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same PT value MAY be reused for both directions of the PW and
also reused between different PWs
2. The PSN-bound IWF MUST set the PT field in the RTP header to
the allocated value
3. The CE-bound IWF MAY use the received value to detect
malformed packets
The sequence number field MAY be used to provide the common PW
sequencing function as well as detection of lost packets. It MUST be
generated in accordance with the rules established in [RFC3550] and
MUST be the same as the sequence number in the SAToP control word.
Timestamps are used for carrying timing information over the network.
Their values are generated in accordance with the rules established in
[RFC3550].
The frequency of the clock used for generating timestamps MUST be an
integer multiple of 8 kHz. All implementations of SAToP MUST support
the 8 kHz clock. Other multiples of 8 kHz MAY be used.
The SSRC (synchronization source) value in the RTP header MAY be used
for detection of misconnections.
Timestamp generation MAY be used in the following modes:
1. Absolute mode: the PSN-bound IWF sets timestamps using the
clock recovered from the incoming TDM attachment circuit. As a
consequence, the timestamps are closely correlated with the
sequence numbers. All SAToP implementations that support usage
of the RTP header MUST support this mode.
2. Differential mode: Both IWFs have access to a common high-
quality timing source, and this source is used for timestamp
generation. Support of this mode is OPTIONAL.
Usage of the fixed RTP header in a SAToP PW and all the options
associated with its usage (the time-stamping clock frequency, the time-
stamping mode, selected PT and SSRC values) MUST be agreed upon between
the two SAToP IWFs at the PW setup
5. SAToP Payload Layer
In order to facilitate handling of packet loss in the PSN, SAToP
REQUIRES all packets belonging to a given SAToP PW to carry a fixed
number of bytes filled with TDM data received from the attachment
circuit. The packet payload size MUST be defined during the PW setup,
MUST be the same for both directions of the PW and MUST remain
unchanged for the lifetime of the PW.
The CE-bound and PSN-bound IWFs MUST agree on SAToP packet payload size
at the PW setup (default payload size values defined below guarantee
that such an agreement is always possible). The SAToP packet payload
size can be exchanged over the PWE3 control protocol ([PWE3-CONTROL])
by using the CEP Payload Bytes interface parameter ([PWE3-IANA]).
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SAToP uses the following ordering for packetization of the TDM data:
o The order of the payload bytes corresponds to their order on
the attachment circuit
o Consecutive bits coming from the attachment circuit fill each
payload byte starting from most significant bit to least
significant.
All SAToP implementations MUST be capable of supporting the following
payload sizes:
o E1 - 256 bytes
o T1 - 192 bytes
o E3 and T3 - 1024 bytes.
Notes:
1. Whatever the selected payload size, SAToP does not assume
alignment to any underlying structure imposed by TDM framing
(byte, frame or multiframe alignment).
2. When the L bit in the SAToP control word is set, SAToP packets
MAY omit invalid TDM data in order to conserve PSN bandwidth.
3. Payload sizes that are multiples of 47 bytes MAY be used in
conjunction with unstructured ATM-CES [ATM-CES].
6. SAToP Operation
6.1. Common Considerations
Edge-to-edge emulation of a TDM service using SAToP is only possible
when the two PW attachment circuits are of the same type (T1, E1, T3,
E3). The service type is exchanged at PW setup as described in [PWE3-
CONTROL].
6.2. IWF operation
6.2.1. PSN-bound Direction
Once the PW is set up, the PSN-bound SAToP IWF operates as follows:
TDM data is packetized using the configured number of payload bytes per
packet.
Sequence numbers, flags, and timestamps (if the RTP header is used) are
inserted in the SAToP headers.
SAToP, multiplexing layer and PSN headers are prepended to the
packetized service data.
The resulting packets are transmitted over the PSN.
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6.2.2. CE-bound Direction
The CE-bound SAToP IWF SHOULD include a jitter buffer where payload of
the received SAToP packets is stored prior to play-out to the local TDM
attachment circuit. The size of this buffer SHOULD be locally
configurable to allow accommodation to the PSN-specific packet delay
variation.
The CE-bound SAToP IWF SHOULD use the sequence number in the control
word for detection of lost and mis-ordered packets. If the RTP header
is used, the RTP sequence numbers MAY be used for the same purposes.
The CE-bound SAToP IWF MAY re-order mis-ordered packets. Mis-ordered
packets that cannot be reordered MUST be discarded and treated as lost.
The payload of the received SAToP packets marked with the L bit set
SHOULD be replaced by the equivalent amount of the "all ones" pattern
even if it has not been omitted.
The payload of each lost SAToP packet MUST be replaced with the
equivalent amount of the replacement data. The contents of the
replacement data are implementation-specific and MAY be locally
configurable. By default, all SAToP implementations MUST support
generation of the "all ones" pattern as the replacement data.
Before a PW has been set up and after a PW has been torn down, the IWF
MUST play out the "all ones" pattern to its TDM attachment circuit.
Once the PW has been set up, the CE-bound IWF begins to receive SAToP
packets and to store their payload in the jitter buffer but continues
to play out the "all ones" pattern to its TDM attachment circuit. This
intermediate state persists until a preconfigured amount of TDM data
(usually half of the jitter buffer) has been received in consecutive
SAToP packets or until a preconfigured intermediate state timer
expires.
Once the preconfigured amount of the TDM data has been received, the
CE-bound SAToP IWF enters its normal operation state where it continues
to receive SAToP packets and to store their payload in the jitter
buffer while playing out the contents of the jitter buffer in
accordance with the required clock. In this state the CE-bound IWF
performs clock recovery, MAY monitor PW defects, and MAY collect PW
performance monitoring data.
If the CE-bound SAToP IWF detects loss of a preconfigured number of
consecutive packets or if the intermediate state timer expires before
the required amount of TDM data has been received, it enters its packet
loss state. While in this state, the local PSN-bound SAToP IWF SHOULD
mark every packet it transmits with the R bit set. The CE-bound SAToP
IWF leaves this state and transits to the normal one once a
preconfigured number of consecutive SAToP packets have been received.
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6.3. SAToP Defects
In addition to the packet loss state of the CE-bound SAToP IWF defined
above, it MAY detect the following defects:
o Stray packets
o Malformed packets
o Excessive packet loss rate
o Buffer overrun
o Remote packet loss.
Corresponding to each defect is a defect state of the IWF, a detection
criterion that triggers transition from the normal operation state to
the appropriate defect state, and an alarm that MAY be reported to the
management system and thereafter cleared. Alarms are only reported when
the defect state persists for a preconfigured amount of time (typically
2.5 seconds) and MUST be cleared after the corresponding defect is
undetected for a second preconfigured amount of time (typically 10
seconds). The trigger and release times for the various alarms may be
independent.
Stray packets MAY be detected by the PSN and multiplexing layers. When
RTP is used, the SSRC field in the RTP header MAY be used for this
purpose as well. Stray packets MUST be discarded by the CE-bound IWF
and their detection MUST NOT affect mechanisms for detection of packet
loss.
Malformed packets are detected by mismatch between the expected packet
size (taking the value of the L bit into account) and the actual packet
size inferred from the PSN and multiplexing layers. When RTP is used,
lack of correspondence between the PT value and that allocated for this
direction of the PW MAT also be used for this purpose. Malformed in-
order packets MUST be discarded by the CE-bound IWF and replacement
data generated as for lost packets.
Excessive packet loss rate is detected by computing the average packet
loss rate over a configurable amount of times and comparing it with a
preconfigured threshold.
Buffer overrun is detected in the normal operation state when the CE
bound IWF's jitter buffer cannot accommodate newly arrived SAToP
packets.
Remote packet loss is indicated by reception of packets with their R
bit set.
6.4. SAToP PW Performance Monitoring
Performance monitoring (PM) parameters are routinely collected for TDM
services and provide an important maintenance mechanism in TDM
networks. Ability to collect compatible PM parameters for SAToP PWs
enhances their maintenance capabilities.
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Collection of the SAToP PW performance monitoring parameters is
OPTIONAL, and if implemented, is only performed after the CE-bound IWF
has exited its intermediate state.
SAToP defines error events, errored blocks and defects as follows:
o A SAToP error event is defined as insertion of a single
replacement packet into the jitter buffer (replacement of
payload of SAToP packets with the L bit set is not considered
as insertion of a replacement packet)
o A SAToP errored data block is defined as a block of data
played out to the TDM attachment circuit and of size defined
in accordance with the [G.826] rules for the corresponding TDM
service that has experienced at least one SAToP error event
o A SAToP defect is defined as the packet loss state of the CE-
bound SAToP IWF.
The SAToP PW PM parameters (Errored, Severely Errored and Unavailable
Seconds) are derived from these definitions in accordance with [G.826].
7. QoS Issues
SAToP can benefit from QoS capabilities of the underlying PSN.
If the PSN providing connectivity between PE devices is Diffserv-
enabled and provides a PDB [RFC3086] that guarantees low-jitter and
low-loss, the SAToP PW SHOULD use this PDB in compliance with the
admission and allocation rules the PSN has put in place for that PDB
(e.g., marking packets as directed by the PSN).
If the PSN is Intserv-enabled, then GS (Guaranteed Service) [RFC 2212]
with the appropriate bandwidth reservation shall be used in order to
provide a bandwidth guarantee equal or greater than that of the
aggregate TDM traffic. The delay introduced by the PSN should be
measured prior to traffic flow, to ensure its compliance with the
latency requirement.
8. Congestion Control
SAToP PWs represent a special case of PWs carrying constant bit rate
(CBR) services across the PSN. These services cannot behave in a TCP-
friendly manner prescribed by [RFC2914] under congestion.
SAToP will use the generic PWE3 approach for handling congestion in PWs
carrying CBR services when such an approach has been specified.
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9. Security Considerations
SAToP does not enhance or detract from the security performance of the
underlying PSN, rather it relies upon the PSN mechanisms for
encryption, integrity, and authentication whenever required.
Misconnection detection capabilities of SAToP increase its resilience
to misconfiguration and some types of DoS attacks.
Random initialization of sequence numbers defined in [RFC3550] makes
known-plaintext attacks on encryption more difficult.
10. Applicability Statement
SAToP is an encapsulation layer intended for carrying TDM circuits
(E1/T1/E3/T3) over PSN in a structure-agnostic fashion.
SAToP fully complies with the principle of minimal intervention, thus
minimizing overhead and computational power required for encapsulation.
SAToP can be used in conjunction with various clock recovery techniques
and does not presume availability of a global synchronous clock at the
ends of a PW. However, if the global synchronous clock is available at
both ends of a SAToP PW, using RTP and differential timestamp
generation may improve the quality of the recovered clock.
The option for carrying only the local attachment circuit failure
indication enables bandwidth conservation.
Being a constant bit rate (CBR) service, SAToP cannot provide TCP-
friendly behavior under network congestion.
SAToP allows collection of TDM-like faults and performance monitoring
parameters hence emulating 'classic' carrier services of TDM.
SAToP provides for a carrier-independent ability to detect
misconnections and malformed packets. This feature increases resilience
of the emulated service to misconfiguration and DoS attacks.
SAToP provides for detection of lost packets and allows using various
techniques for generation of "replacement packets". These techniques
increase resilience of the emulated service to effects of lost packets.
SAToP carries indications of outages of incoming attachment circuit
across the PSN thus providing for effective fault isolation.
Faithfulness of a SAToP PW may be increased by exploiting QoS features
of the underlying PSN.
SAToP does not provide any mechanisms for protection against PSN
outages, and hence its resilience to such outages is limited. However,
lost-packet replacement and packet reordering mechanisms increase
resilience of the emulated service to fast PSN rerouting events.
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11. IANA Considerations
This specification requires assignment of new PW Types services listed
in Section 3.
12. Intellectual Property Disclaimer
This document is being submitted for use in IETF standards discussions.
Axerra Networks, Inc. has filed one or more patent applications
relating to the SAToP technology outlined in this document. Axerra
Networks, Inc. will grant free unlimited licenses for use of this
technology to the users who will register and sign up at the Axerra web
site.
RAD Data Communications, Ltd. has filed one or more patent
applications that may relate to the technology outlined in this
document. RAD hereby grants free unlimited license for use of its
intellectual property to the extent required for compliance with this
document.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
We acknowledge the work of Gil Biran and Hugo Silberman who implemented
TDM transport over IP in 1998.
We would like to thank Alik Shimelmits for many productive discussions
and Ron Insler for his assistance in deploying TDM over PSN.
We express deep gratitude to Stephen Casner who has reviewed in detail
one of the predecessors of this document and provided valuable feedback
regarding various aspects of RTP usage, and to Kathleen Nichols who has
provided the current text of the QoS section considering Diffserv-
enabled PSN.
We thank Robert Biksner, Stewart Bryant, Rao Cherukuri, Ron Cohen, Alex
Conta, Shahram Davari, Tom Johnson, Sim Narasimha, Yaron Raz, and
Maximilian Riegel for their valuable feedback.
NORMATIVE REFERENCES
[RFC791] J. Postel (ed), Internet Protocol, RFC 791, IETF, 1981
[RFC1122] R. Braden (ed.), Requirements for Internet Hosts --
Communication Layers, RFC 1122, IETF, 1989
[RFC2119] S.Bradner, Key Words in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels,
RFC 2119, IETF, 1997
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[RFC2112] S. Shenker et al, Specification of Guaranteed Quality of
Service, IETF, RFC 2212, 1997
[RFC2914] S. Floyd, Congestion Control Principles, RFC 2914, IETF, 2000
[RFC3086] K. Nichols, B. Carpenter, Definition of Differentiated
Services Per Domain Behaviors and Rules for their Specification, RFC
3086, IETF, 2001
[RFC3550] H. Schulzrinne et al, RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time
Applications, RFC 3550, IETF, 2003
[RTP-TYPES] RTP PARAMETERS, http://www.iana.org/assignments/rtp-
parameters
[G.702] ITU-T Recommendation G.702 (11/88) - Digital Hierarchy Bit
Rates
[G.703] ITU-T Recommendation G.703 (10/98) - Physical/Electrical
Characteristics of Hierarchical Digital Interfaces
[G.704] ITU-T Recommendation G.704 (10/98) - Synchronous frame
structures used at 1544, 6312, 2048, 8448 and 44 736 Kbit/s
hierarchical levels
[G.707] ITU-T Recommendation G.707 (03/96) - Network Node Interface for
the Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH)
[G.751] ITU-T Recommendation G.751 (11/88) - Digital Multiplex
Equipments Operating at the Third Order Bit Rate of 34368 kbit/s and
the Fourth Order Bit Rate of 139264 kbit/s and Using Positive
Justification
[G.775] ITU-T Recommendation G.775 (10/98) - Loss of Signal (LOS),
Alarm Indication Signal (AIS) and Remote Defect Indication (RDI) Defect
Detection and Clearance Criteria for PDH Signals
[G.826] ITU-T Recommendation G.826 (02/99) - Error performance
parameters and objectives for international, constant bit rate digital
paths at or above the primary rate
[T1.107] American National Standard for Telecommunications - Digital
Hierarchy - Format Specifications, ANSI T1.107-1988
INFORMATIONAL REFERENCES
[PWE3-REQ] XiPeng Xiao et al, Requirements for Pseudo Wire Emulation
Edge-to-Edge (PWE3), Work in Progress, June 2003, draft-ietf-pwe3-
requirements-06.txt
[PWE3-TDM-REQ] Maximilian Riegel et al, Requirements for Edge-to-Edge
Emulation of TDM Circuits over Packet Switching Networks (PSN), Work in
Progress, June 2003, draft-ietf-pwe3-tdm-requirements-01.txt
Vainshtein & Stein Expires March 2004 [Page 14]
Structure-Agnostic TDM over Packet August 2003
[PWE3-ARCH] S. Bryant, P. Pate et al, Framework for Pseudo Wire
Emulation Edge-to-Edge (PWE3), Work in progress, August 2003, draft-
ietf-pwe3-framework-05.txt
[PWE3-CONTROL] L. Martini et al, Pseudowire Setup and Maintenance using
LDP, Work in progress, June 2003, draft-ietf-pwe3-control-protocol-
03.txt
[PWE3-IANA] L. Martini, M. Townsley, IANA Allocations for pseudo Wire
Edge to Edge Emulation (PWE3), Work in progress, February 2003, draft-
ietf-pwe3-iana-allocation-01.txt
[ATM-CES] ATM forum specification af-vtoa-0078 (CES 2.0)
Circuit Emulation Service Interoperability Specification Ver. 2.0
Editors' Addresses
Alexander ("Sasha") Vainshtein
Axerra Networks
24 Raoul Wallenberg St.,
Tel Aviv 69719, Israel
email: sasha@axerra.com
Yaakov (Jonathan) Stein
RAD Data Communications
24 Raoul Wallenberg St., Bldg C
Tel Aviv 69719, Israel
Email: yaakov_s@rad.com
Vainshtein & Stein Expires March 2004 [Page 15]