Signaling Entropy Label
Capability and Entropy Readable Label Depth Using OSPF
Capitalonline
xiaohu.xu@capitalonline.net
sriganeshkini@gmail.com
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Eurovea Centre, Central 3
Pribinova Street 10
Bratislava
81109
Slovakia
ppsenak@cisco.com
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Brussels
Belgium
cfilsfil@cisco.com
Cisco Systems, Inc.
La Rigourdiere
Cesson Sevigne
France
slitkows@cisco.com
Nokia
Aztec West Business Park
Bristol
740 Waterside Drive
BS32 4UF
United Kingdom
matthew.bocci@nokia.com
RTG
LSR
Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) has defined a mechanism to load-balance
traffic flows using Entropy Labels (EL). An ingress Label
Switching Router (LSR) cannot insert ELs for packets going into a given
Label Switched Path (LSP) unless an egress LSR has indicated via signaling that it has the
capability to process ELs, referred to as the Entropy Label Capability
(ELC), on that LSP. In addition, it would be useful for ingress LSRs
to know each LSR's capability for reading the maximum label stack depth
and performing EL-based load-balancing, referred to as Entropy Readable
Label Depth (ERLD). This document defines a mechanism to signal these two
capabilities using OSPFv2 and OSPFv3, and Border Gateway Protocol - Link
State (BGP-LS).
Introduction
describes a method to load-balance
Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) traffic flows using Entropy Labels
(EL). It also introduces the concept of Entropy Label
Capability (ELC) and defines the signaling of this capability via MPLS
signaling protocols. Recently, mechanisms have been defined to signal
labels via link-state Interior Gateway Protocols (IGP) such as OSPFv2
and OSPFv3 .
This document defines a mechanism to signal the ELC using OSPFv2 and OSPFv3.
In cases where Segment Routing (SR) is used with the MPLS data plane
(e.g., SR-MPLS ), it would be
useful for ingress LSRs to know each intermediate LSR's capability of
reading the maximum label stack depth and performing EL-based
load-balancing. This capability, referred to as Entropy Readable Label
Depth (ERLD) as defined in ,
may be used by ingress LSRs to determine the position of the EL label in
the stack, and whether it is necessary to insert multiple ELs at
different positions in the label stack. This document defines a
mechanism to signal the ERLD using OSPFv2 and OSPFv3.
Terminology
This memo makes use of the terms defined in and .
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT",
"REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL
NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT",
"RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED",
"MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are
to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 when, and
only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.
The key word OSPF is used throughout the document to refer to both OSPFv2 and
OSPFv3.
Advertising ELC Using OSPF
Even though ELC is a property of the node, in some cases it is advantageous
to associate and advertise the ELC with a prefix. In multi-area networks,
routers may not know the identity of the prefix originator in a remote area
or may not know the capabilities of such an originator. Similarly, in a multi-domain
network, the identity of the prefix originator and its capabilities may not be
known to the ingress LSR.
If a router has multiple interfaces, the router MUST NOT announce ELC
unless all of its interfaces are capable of processing ELs.
If the router supports ELs on all of its interfaces, it
SHOULD advertise the ELC with every local host prefix it
advertises in OSPF.
Advertising ELC Using OSPFv2
defines the OSPFv2
Extended Prefix TLV to advertise additional attributes associated with
a prefix. The OSPFv2 Extended Prefix TLV includes a one-octet Flags
field. A new flag in the Flags field is used to signal the ELC for the
prefix:
- 0x20 - E-Flag (ELC Flag):
- Set by the advertising router
to indicate that the prefix originator is capable of processing
ELs.
The ELC signaling MUST be preserved when an OSPF
Area Border Router (ABR) distributes information between areas. To do
so, an ABR MUST originate an OSPFv2 Extended Prefix
Opaque Link State Advertisement (LSA) including the
received ELC setting.
When an OSPF Autonomous System Border Router (ASBR) redistributes
a prefix from another instance of OSPF or from some other protocol, it
SHOULD preserve the ELC signaling for the prefix if it
exists. To do so, an ASBR SHOULD originate an Extended
Prefix Opaque LSA including
the ELC setting of the redistributed prefix. The flooding scope of the
Extended Prefix Opaque LSA MUST match the flooding
scope of the LSA that an ASBR originates as a result of the
redistribution. The exact mechanism used to exchange ELC between
protocol instances on an ASBR is outside of the scope of this
document.
Advertising ELC Using OSPFv3
defines the OSPFv3
PrefixOptions field to indicate capabilities associated with a
prefix. A new bit in the OSPFv3 PrefixOptions field is used to signal the
ELC for the prefix:
- 0x40 - E-Flag (ELC Flag):
- Set by the advertising router to
indicate that the prefix originator is capable of processing ELs.
The ELC signaling MUST be preserved when an OSPFv3
Area Border Router (ABR) distributes information between areas. The
setting of the ELC Flag in the Inter-Area-Prefix-LSA or in the Inter-Area-Prefix TLV
, generated by an ABR,
MUST be the same as the value the ELC Flag associated
with the prefix in the source area.
When an OSPFv3 Autonomous System Border Router (ASBR)
redistributes a prefix from another instance of OSPFv3 or from some
other protocol, it SHOULD preserve the ELC signaling
for the prefix if it exists. The setting of the ELC Flag in the
AS-External-LSA, Not-So-Stubby Area LSA (NSSA-LSA) ,
or in the External-Prefix TLV , generated by an ASBR, MUST be the
same as the value of the ELC Flag associated with the prefix in the
source domain. The exact mechanism used to exchange ELC between
protocol instances on the ASBR is outside of the scope of this
document.
Advertising ERLD Using OSPF
The ERLD is advertised in a Node Maximum SID Depth (MSD) TLV using the ERLD-MSD type defined in .
If a router has multiple interfaces with different capabilities of
reading the maximum label stack depth, the router MUST
advertise the smallest value found across all of its interfaces.
The absence of ERLD-MSD advertisements indicates only that the advertising
node does not support advertisement of this capability.
When the ERLD-MSD type is received in the OSPFv2 or OSPFv3 Link MSD sub-TLV
, it MUST be ignored.
The considerations for advertising the ERLD are specified in
.
Signaling ELC and ERLD in BGP-LS
The OSPF extensions defined in this document can be advertised via
BGP-LS (distribution of Link-State and TE information using BGP)
using existing BGP-LS TLVs.
The ELC is advertised using the Prefix Attribute Flags TLV as defined in
.
The ERLD-MSD is advertised using the Node MSD TLV as defined in
.
IANA Considerations
IANA has completed the following actions for this document:
- Flag 0x20 in the "OSPFv2 Extended Prefix TLV Flags" registry has been
allocated to the E-Flag (ELC Flag).
- Bit 0x40 in the "OSPFv3 Prefix Options (8 bits)" registry has been
allocated to the E-Flag (ELC Flag).
Security Considerations
This document specifies the ability to advertise additional node
capabilities using OSPF and BGP-LS. As such, the security
considerations as described in , , , , , , , and are
applicable to this document.
Incorrectly setting the E-Flag during origination, propagation, or
redistribution may lead to poor or no load-balancing of the MPLS traffic
or to the MPLS traffic being discarded on the egress node.
Incorrectly setting of the ERLD value may lead to poor or no load-balancing of the
MPLS traffic.
References
Normative References
Signaling Entropy Label Capability and Entropy Readable Label Depth Using IS-IS
Border Gateway Protocol - Link State (BGP-LS) Extensions for Segment Routing
Informative References
Acknowledgements
The authors would like to thank ,
, ,
, , , , and
for their valuable comments.
Contributors
The following people contributed to the content
of this document and should be considered coauthors:
Nokia
Antwerp
Belgium
gunter.van_de_velde@nokia.com
Nokia
Belgium
wim.henderickx@nokia.com
Arrcus
United States of America
keyur@arrcus.com