Network Working Group A. Clemm Internet-Draft J. Medved Intended status: Standards Track R. Varga Expires: December 10, 2015 T. Tkacik Cisco N. Bahadur Bracket Computing H. Ananthakrishnan Packet Design June 8, 2015 A Data Model for Network Topologies draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt Abstract This document defines an abstract (generic) YANG data model for network/service topologies and inventories. The model serves as a base model which is augmented with technology-specific details in other, more specific topology and inventory models. Status of This Memo This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet- Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/. 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." This Internet-Draft will expire on December 10, 2015. Copyright Notice Copyright (c) 2015 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved. This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 1] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License. This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF Contributions published or made publicly available before November 10, 2008. The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process. Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified outside the IETF Standards Process, and derivative works of it may not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other than English. Table of Contents 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 2. Definitions and Acronyms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 3. Model Structure Details . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 3.1. Base Network Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 3.2. Base Network Topology Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 3.3. Extending the model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 3.4. Discussion and selected design decisions . . . . . . . . 11 3.4.1. Container structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 3.4.2. Underlay hierarchies and mappings . . . . . . . . . . 12 3.4.3. Use of groupings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 3.4.4. Cardinality and directionality of links . . . . . . . 12 3.4.5. Multihoming and link aggregation . . . . . . . . . . 13 3.4.6. Mapping redundancy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 3.4.7. Typing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 3.4.8. Representing the same device in multiple networks . . 14 3.5. Items for further discussion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 4. YANG Modules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 4.1. Defining the Abstract Network: network.yang . . . . . . . 15 4.2. Creating Abstract Network Topology: network-topology.yang 19 5. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 6. Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 7. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 8. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 8.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 8.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 2] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 1. Introduction This document introduces an abstract (base) YANG [RFC6020] [RFC6021] data model to represent networks and topologies. The data model is divided into two parts. The first part of the model defines a network model that allows to define network hierarchies (i.e. network stacks) and to maintain an inventory of nodes contained in a network. The second part of the model augments the basic network model with information to describe topology information. Specifically, it adds the concepts of links and termination points to describe how nodes in a network are connected to each other. Moreover the model introduces vertical layering relationships between networks that can be augmented to cover both network inventories and network/service topologies. While it would be possible to combine both parts into a single model, the separation facilitates integration of network topology and network inventory models, by allowing to augment network inventory information separetely and without concern for topology into the network model. The model can be augmented to describe specifics of particular types of networks and topologies. For example, an augmenting model can provide network node information with attributes that are specific to a particular network type. Examples of augmenting models include models for Layer 2 network topologies, Layer 3 network topologies, such as Unicast IGP, IS-IS [RFC1195] and OSPF [RFC2328], traffic engineering (TE) data [RFC3209], or any of the variety of transport and service topologies. Information specific to particular network types will be captured in separate, technology-specific models. The basic data models introduced in this document are generic in nature and can be applied to many network and service topologies and inventories. The models allow applications to operate on an inventory or topology of any network at a generic level, where specifics of particular inventory/topology types are not required. At the same time, where data specific to a network type does comes into play and the model is augmented, the instantiated data still adheres to the same structure and is represented in consistent fashion. This also facilitates the representation of network hierarchies and dependencies between different network components and network types. The abstract (base) network YANG module introduced in this document, entitled "network.yang", contains a list of abstract network nodes and defines the concept of network hierarchy (network stack). The abstract network node can be augmented in inventory and topology models with inventory and topology specific attributes. Network Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 3] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 hierarchy (stack) allows any given network to have one or more "supporting networks". The relationship of the base network model, the inventory models and the topology models is shown in the following figure (dotted lines in the figure denote possible augmentations to models defined in this document). +------------------------+ | | | Abstract Network Model | | | +------------------------+ | +-------+-------+ | | V V +------------+ .............. | Abstract | : Inventory : | Topology | : Model(s) : | Model | : : +------------+ '''''''''''''' | +-------------+-------------+-------------+ | | | | V V V V ............ ............ ............ ............ : L1 : : L2 : : L3 : : Service : : Topology : : Topology : : Topology : : Topology : : Model : : Model : : Model : : Model : '''''''''''' '''''''''''' '''''''''''' '''''''''''' Figure 1: The network model structure The network-topology YANG module introduced in this document, entitled "network-topology.yang", defines a generic topology model at its most general level of abstraction. The module defines a topology graph and components from which it is composed: nodes, edges and termination points. Nodes (from the network.yang module) represent graph vertices and links represent graph edges. Nodes also contain termination points that anchor the links. A network can contain multiple topologies, for example topologies at different layers and overlay topologies. The model therefore allows to capture relationships between topologies, as well as dependencies between nodes and termination points across topologies. An example of a topology stack is shown in the following figure. Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 4] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 +---------------------------------------+ / _[X1]_ "Service" / / _/ : \_ / / _/ : \_ / / _/ : \_ / / / : \ / / [X2]__________________[X3] / +---------:--------------:------:-------+ : : : +----:--------------:----:--------------+ / : : : "L3" / / : : : / / : : : / / [Y1]_____________[Y2] / / * * * / / * * * / +--------------*-------------*--*-------+ * * * +--------*----------*----*--------------+ / [Z1]_______________[Z1] "Optical" / / \_ * _/ / / \_ * _/ / / \_ * _/ / / \ * / / / [Z] / +---------------------------------------+ Figure 2: Topology hierarchy (stack) example The figure shows three topology levels. At top, the "Service" topology shows relationships between service entities, such as service functions in a service chain. The "L3" topology shows network elements at Layer 3 (IP) and the "Optical" topology shows network elements at Layer 1. Service functions in the "Service" topology are mapped onto network elements in the "L3" topology, which in turn are mapped onto network elements in the "Optical" topology. The figure shows two Service Functions - X1 and X2 - mapping onto a single L3 network element; this could happen, for example, if two service functions reside in the same VM (or server) and share the same set of network interfaces. The figure shows a single "L3" network element mapped onto multiple "Optical" network elements. This could happen, for example, if a single IP router attaches to multiple ROADMs in the optical domain. Another example of a service topology stack is shown in the following figure. Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 5] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 VPN1 VPN2 +---------------------+ +---------------------+ / [Y5]... / / [Z5]______[Z3] / / / \ : / / : \_ / : / / / \ : / / : \_ / : / / / \ : / / : \ / : / / [Y4]____[Y1] : / / : [Z2] : / +------:-------:---:--+ +---:---------:-----:-+ : : : : : : : : : : : : : +-------:---:-----:------------:-----:-----+ : / [X1]__:___:___________[X2] : / :/ / \_ : : _____/ / : / : / \_ : _____/ / : / /: / \: / / : / / : / [X5] / : / / : / __/ \__ / : / / : / ___/ \__ / : / / : / ___/ \ / : / / [X4]__________________[X3]..: / +------------------------------------------+ L3 Topology Figure 3: Topology hierarchy (stack) example The figure shows two VPN service topologies (VPN1 and VPN2) instantiated over a common L3 topology. Each VPN service topology is mapped onto a subset of nodes from the common L3 topology. There are multiple applications for such a data model. For example, within the context of I2RS, nodes within the network can use the data model to capture their understanding of the overall network topology and expose it to a network controller. A network controller can then use the instantiated topology data to compare and reconcile its own view of the network topology with that of the network elements that it controls. Alternatively, nodes within the network could propagate this understanding to compare and reconcile this understanding either among themselves or with help of a controller. Beyond the network element and the immediate context of I2RS itself, a network controller might even use the data model to represent its view of the topology that it controls and expose it to applications north of itself. Further use cases that the data model can be applied to are described in [topology-use-cases]. Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 6] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 2. Definitions and Acronyms Datastore: A conceptual store of instantiated management information, with individual data items represented by data nodes which are arranged in hierarchical manner. Data subtree: An instantiated data node and the data nodes that are hierarchically contained within it. HTTP: Hyper-Text Transfer Protocol IGP: Interior Gateway Protocol IS-IS: Intermediate System to Intermediate System protocol NETCONF: Network Configuration Protocol OSPF: Open Shortest Path First, a link state routing protocol URI: Uniform Resource Identifier ReST: Representational State Transfer, a style of stateless interface and protocol that is generally carried over HTTP YANG: A data definition language for NETCONF 3. Model Structure Details 3.1. Base Network Model The abstract (base) network model is defined in the network.yang module. Its structure is shown in the following figure. Brackets enclose list keys, "rw" means configuration data, "ro" means operational state data, and "?" designates optional nodes. Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 7] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 module: ietf-network +--rw network* [network-id] +--rw network-types +--rw network-id network-id +--ro server-provided? boolean +--rw supporting-network* [network-ref] | +--rw network-ref leafref +--rw node* [node-id] +--rw node-id node-id +--rw supporting-node* [network-ref node-ref] +--rw network-ref leafref +--rw node-ref leafref Figure 4: The structure of the abstract (base) network model The model contains a list of networks, contained underneath a root container for this module, "network". Each network is captured in its own list entry, distinguished via a network-id. A network has a certain type, such as L2, L3, OSPF or IS-IS. A network can even have multiple types simultaneously. The type, or types, are captured underneath the container "network-types". In this module it serves merely as an augmentation target; network- specific modules will later introduce new data nodes to represent new network types below this target, i.e. insert them below "network- types" by ways of yang augmentation. When a network is of a certain type, it will contain a corresponding data node. Network types SHOULD always be represented using presence containers, not leafs of empty type. This allows to represent hierarchies of network subtypes within the instance information. For example, an instance of an OSPF network (which, at the same time, is a layer 3 unicast IGP network) would contain underneath "network- types" another container "l3-unicast-igp-network", which in turn would contain a container "ospf-network". A network can in turn be part of a hierarchy of networks, building on top of other networks. Any such networks are captured in the list "supporting-network". A supporting network is in effect an underlay network. Furthermore, a network contains an inventory of nodes that are part of the network. The nodes of a network are captured in their own list. Each node is identified relative to its containing network by a node-id. It should be noted that a node does not exist independently of a network; instead it is a part of the network that it is contained in. Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 8] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 In cases where the same entity takes part in multiple networks, or at multiple layers of a networking stack, the same entity will be represented by multiple nodes, one for each network. In other words, the node represents an abstraction of the device for the particular network that it a is part of. To represent that the same entity or same device is part of multiple topologies or networks, it is possible to create one "physical" network with a list of nodes for each of the devices or entities. This (physical) network, respectively the (entities) nodes in that network, can then be referred to as underlay network and nodes from the other (logical) networks and nodes, respectively. Note that the model allows to define more than one underlay network (and node), allowing for simultaneous representation of layered network- and service topologies and physical instantiation. Similar to a network, a node can be supported by other nodes, and map onto one or more other nodes in an underlay network. This is captured in the list "supporting-node". The resulting hierarchy of nodes allows also to represent device stacks, where a node at one level is supported by a set of nodes at an underlying level. For example, a "router" node might be supported by a node representing a route processor and separate nodes for various line cards and service modules, a virtual router might be supported or hosted on a physical device represented by a separate node, and so on. 3.2. Base Network Topology Model The abstract (base) network topology model is defined in the "network-topology.yang" module. It builds on the network model defined in the "network.yang" module, augmenting it with links (defining how nodes are connected) and termination-points (which anchor the links and are contained in nodes). The structure of the network topology module is shown in the following figure. Brackets enclose list keys, "rw" means configuration data, "ro" means operational state data, and "?" designates optional nodes. Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 9] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 module: ietf-network-topology augment /nd:network: +--rw link* [link-id] +--rw source | +--rw source-node leafref | +--rw source-tp? leafref +--rw destination | +--rw dest-node leafref | +--rw dest-tp? leafref +--rw link-id link-id +--rw supporting-link* [network-ref link-ref] +--rw network-ref leafref +--rw link-ref leafref augment /nd:network/nd:node: +--rw termination-point* [tp-id] +--rw tp-id tp-id +--rw supporting-termination-point* [network-ref node-ref tp-ref] +--rw network-ref leafref +--rw node-ref leafref +--rw tp-ref leafref Figure 5: The structure of the abstract (base) network topology model A node has a list of termination points that are used to terminate links. An example of a termination point might be a physical or logical port or, more generally, an interface. Like a node, a termination point can in turn be supported by an underlying termination point, contained in the supporting node of the underlay network. A link is identified by a link-id that uniquely identifies the link within a given topology. Links are point-to-point and unidirectional. Accordingly, a link contains a source and a destination. Both source and destination reference a corresponding node, as well as a termination point on that node. Similar to a node, a link can map onto one or more links in an underlay topology (which are terminated by the corresponding underlay termination points). This is captured in the list "supporting-link". 3.3. Extending the model In order to derive a model for a specific type of network, the base model can be extended. This can be done roughly as follows: for the new network type, a new YANG module is introduced. In this module a number of augmentations are defined against the network and network- topology YANG modules. Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 10] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 We start with augmentations against the network.yang module. First, a new network type needs to be defined. For this, a presence container that resembles the new network type is defined. It is inserted by means of augmentation below the network-types container. Subsequently, data nodes for any network-type specific node parameters are defined and augmented into the node list. The new data nodes can be defined as conditional ("when") on the presence of the corresponding network type in the containing network. In cases where there are any requirements or restrictions in terms of network hierarchies, such as when a network of a new network-type requires a specific type of underlay network, it is possible to define corresponding constraints as well and augment the supporting-network list accordingly. However, care should be taken to avoid excessive definitions of constraints. Subsequently, augmentations are defined against network- topology.yang. Data nodes are defined both for link parameters, as well as termination point parameters, that are specific to the new network type. Those data nodes are inserted by way of augmentation into the link and termination-point lists, respectively. Again, data nodes can be defined as conditional on the presence of the corresponding network-type in the containing network, by adding a corresponding "when"-statement. It is possible, but not required, to group data nodes for a given network-type under a dedicated container. Doing so introduces further structure, but lengthens data node path names. In cases where a hierarchy of network types is defined, augmentations can in turn against augmenting modules, with the module of a network "sub-type" augmenting the module of a network "super-type". 3.4. Discussion and selected design decisions 3.4.1. Container structure Rather than maintaining lists in separate containers, the model is kept relatively flat in terms of its containment structure. Lists of nodes, links, termination-points, and supporting-nodes, supporting- links, and supporting-termination-points are not kept in separate containers. Therefore, path specifiers used to refer to specific nodes, be it in management operations or in specifications of constraints, can remain relatively compact. Of course, this means there is no separate structure in instance information that separates elements of different lists from one another. Such structure is semantically not required, although it might enhance human readability in some cases. Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 11] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 3.4.2. Underlay hierarchies and mappings To minimize assumptions of what a particular entity might actually represent, mappings between networks, nodes, links, and termination points are kept strictly generic. For example, no assumptions are made whether a termination point actually refers to an interface, or whether a node refers to a specific "system" or device; the model at this generic level makes no provisions for that. Where additional specifics about mappings between upper and lower layers are required, those can be captured in augmenting modules. For example, to express that a termination point in a particular network type maps to an interface, an augmenting module can introduce an augmentation to the termination point which introduces a leaf of type ifref that references the corresponding interface [RFC7223]. Similarly, if a node maps to a particular device or network element, an augmenting module can augment the node data with a leaf that references the network element. It is possible for links at one level of a hierarchy to map to multiple links at another level of the hierarchy. For example, a VPN topology might model VPN tunnels as links. Where a VPN tunnel maps to a path that is composed of a chain of several links, the link will contain a list of those supporting links. Likewise, it is possible for a link at one level of a hierarchy to aggregate a bundle of links at another level of the hierarchy. 3.4.3. Use of groupings The model makes use of groupings, instead of simply defining data nodes "in-line". This allows to more easily include the corresponding data nodes in notifications, which then do not need to respecify each data node that is to be included. The tradeoff for this is that it makes the specification of constraints more complex, because constraints involving data nodes outside the grouping need to be specified in conjunction with a "uses" statement where the grouping is applied. This also means that constraints and XPath- statements need to specified in such a way that they navigate "down" first and select entire sets of nodes, as opposed to being able to simply specify them against individual data nodes. 3.4.4. Cardinality and directionality of links The topology model includes links that are point-to-point and unidirectional. It does not directly support multipoint and bidirectional links. While this may appear as a limitation, it does keep the model simple, generic, and allows it to very easily be subjected to applications that make use of graph algorithms. Bi- Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 12] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 directional connections can be represented through pairs of unidirectional links. Multipoint networks can be represented through pseudo-nodes (similar to IS-IS, for example). By introducing hierarchies of nodes, with nodes at one level mapping onto a set of other nodes at another level, and introducing new links for nodes at that level, topologies with connections representing non-point-to- point communication patterns can be represented. 3.4.5. Multihoming and link aggregation Links are terminated by a single termination point, not sets of termination points. Connections involving multihoming or link aggregation schemes need to be represented using multiple point-to- point links, then defining a link at a higher layer that is supported by those individual links. 3.4.6. Mapping redundancy In a hierarchy of networks, there are nodes mapping to nodes, links mapping to links, and termination points mapping to termination points. Some of this information is redundant. Specifically, if the link-to-links mapping known, and the termination points of each link known, termination point mapping information can be derived via transitive closure and does not have to be explicitly configured. Nonetheless, in order to not constrain applications regarding which mappings they want to configure and which should be derived, the model does provide for the option to configure this information explicitly. The model includes integrity constraints to allow for validating for consistency. 3.4.7. Typing A network's network types are represented using a container which contains a data node for each of its network types. A network can encompass several types of network simultaneously, hence a container is used instead of a case construct, with each network type in turn represented by a dedicated presence container itself. The reason for not simply using an empty leaf, or even simpler, do away even with the network container and just use a leaf-list of network-type instead, is to be able to represent "class hierarchies" of network types, with one network type refining the other. Network-type specific containers are to be defined in the network-specific modules, augmenting the network-types container. Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 13] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 3.4.8. Representing the same device in multiple networks One common requirement concerns the ability to represent that the same device can be part of multiple networks and topologies. However, the model defines a node as relative to the network that it is contained in. The same node cannot be part of multiple topologies. In many cases, a node will be the abstraction of a particular device in a network. To reflect that the same device is part of multiple topologies, the following approach might be chosen: A new type of network to represent a "physical" (or "device") network is introduced, with nodes representing devices. This network forms an underlay network for logical networks above it, with nodes of the logical network mapping onto nodes in the physical network. This scenario is depicted in the following figure. It depicts three networks with two nodes each. A physical network P consists of an inventory of two nodes, D1 and D2, each representing a device. A second network, X, has a third network, Y, as its underlay. Both X and Y also have the physical network P as underlay. X1 has both Y1 and D1 as underlay nodes, while Y1 has D1 as underlay node. Likewise, X2 has both Y2 and D2 as underlay nodes, while Y2 has D2 as underlay node. The fact that X1 and Y1 are both instantiated on the same physical node D1 can be easily derived. +---------------------+ / [X1]____[X2] / X(Service Overlay) +----:--:----:--------+ ..: :..: : ........: ....: : :.... +-----:-------------:--+ : :... / [Y1]____[Y2]....: / :.. : +------|-------|-------+ :.. :... Y(L3) | +---------------------:-----+ : | +----:----|-:----------+ +------------------------/---[D1] [D2] / +----------------------+ P (Physical network) Figure 6: Topology hierarchy example - multiple underlays In the case of a physical network, nodes represent physical devices and termination points physical ports. It should be noted that it is also conceivable to augment the model for a physical network-type, defining augmentations that have nodes reference system information and termination points reference physical interfaces, in order to provide a bridge between network and device models. Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 14] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 3.5. Items for further discussion YANG requires data needs to be designated as either configuration or operational data, but not both, yet it is important to have all network information, including vertical cross-network dependencies, captured in one coherent model. In most cases network topology information is discovered about a network; the topology is considered a property of the network that is reflected in the model. That said, it is conceivable that certain types of topology need to also be configurable by an application. There are several alternatives in which this can be addressed. The alternative chosen in this draft does not restrict network topology information as read-only, but includes a flag that indicates for each network whether it should be considered as read-only or configurable by applications. An alternative would be to designate network list elements as read only. The read-only network list includes each network; it is the complete reference. In parallel a second network list is introduced. This list serves the purpose of being able to configure networks which are then mirrored in the read-only list. The configurable network list adheres to the same structure and uses the same groupings as its read-only counterpart. As most data is defined in those groupings, the amount of additional definitions required will be limited. A configurable network will thus be represented twice: once in the read-only list of all networks, a second time in a configuration sandbox. Similar considerations apply to scenarios in which data is subject to configuration, but implementations want to be smart enough require only some mapping information, such as which link is supported by which other links, while automatically deriving other mapping information where possible, such as which termination points are supported by which underlay termination points. To accommodate such cases, separate provision may again be made by including another "server-provided" option. 4. YANG Modules 4.1. Defining the Abstract Network: network.yang file "ietf-network@2015-06-08.yang" module ietf-network { yang-version 1; namespace "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-network"; prefix nd; Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 15] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 import ietf-inet-types { prefix inet; } organization "TBD"; contact "WILL-BE-DEFINED-LATER"; description "This module defines a common base model for a collection of nodes in a network. Node definitions s are further used in network topologies and inventories."; revision 2015-06-08 { description "Initial revision."; reference "draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01"; } typedef node-id { type inet:uri; description "Identifier for a node."; } typedef network-id { type inet:uri; description "Identifier for a network."; } grouping network-ref { description "Contains the information necessary to reference a network, for example an underlay network."; leaf network-ref { type leafref { path "/network/network-id"; } description "Used to reference a network, for example an underlay network."; } } grouping node-ref { description "Contains the information necessary to reference a node."; leaf node-ref { Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 16] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 type leafref { path "/network[network-id=current()/../network-ref]"+ "/node/node-id"; } description "Used to reference a node. Nodes are identified relative to the network they are contained in."; } uses network-ref; } list network { key "network-id"; description "Describes a network. A network typically contains an inventory of nodes, topological information (augmented through network-topology model), as well as layering information."; container network-types { description "Serves as an augmentation target. The network type is indicated through corresponding presence containers augmented into this container."; } leaf network-id { type network-id; description "Identifies a network."; } leaf server-provided { type boolean; config false; description "Indicates whether the information concerning this particular network is populated by the server (server-provided true, the general case for network information discovered from the server), or whether it is configured by a client (server-provided true, possible e.g. for service overlays managed through a controller)."; } list supporting-network { key "network-ref"; description "An underlay network, used to represent layered network topologies."; Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 17] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 leaf network-ref { type leafref { path "/network/network-id"; } description "References the underlay network."; } } list node { key "node-id"; description "The inventory of nodes of this network."; leaf node-id { type node-id; description "Identifies a node uniquely within the containing network."; } list supporting-node { key "network-ref node-ref"; description "Represents another node, in an underlay network, that this node is supported by. Used to represent layering structure."; leaf network-ref { type leafref { path "../../../supporting-network/network-ref"; } description "References the underlay network that the underlay node is part of."; } leaf node-ref { type leafref { path "/network/node/node-id"; } description "References the underlay node itself."; } } } } } Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 18] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 4.2. Creating Abstract Network Topology: network-topology.yang file "ietf-network-topology@2015-06-08.yang" module ietf-network-topology { yang-version 1; namespace "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-network-topology"; prefix lnk; import ietf-inet-types { prefix inet; } import ietf-network { prefix nd; } organization "TBD"; contact "WILL-BE-DEFINED-LATER"; description "This module defines a common base model for network topology, augmenting the base network model with links to connect nodes, as well as termination points to terminate links on nodes."; revision 2015-06-08 { description "Initial revision."; reference "draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01"; } typedef link-id { type inet:uri; description "An identifier for a link in a topology. The identifier may be opaque. The identifier SHOULD be chosen such that the same link in a real network topology will always be identified through the same identifier, even if the model is instantiated in separate datastores. An implementation MAY choose to capture semantics in the identifier, for example to indicate the type of link and/or the type of topology that the link is a part of."; } typedef tp-id { type inet:uri; description "An identifier for termination points on a node. Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 19] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 The identifier may be opaque. The identifier SHOULD be chosen such that the same TP in a real network topology will always be identified through the same identifier, even if the model is instantiated in separate datastores. An implementation MAY choose to capture semantics in the identifier, for example to indicate the type of TP and/or the type of node and topology that the TP is a part of."; } grouping link-ref { description "References a link in a specific network."; leaf link-ref { type leafref { path "/nd:network[nd:network-id=current()/../"+ "nd:network-ref]/link/link-id"; } description "A type for an absolute reference a link instance. (This type should not be used for relative references. In such a case, a relative path should be used instead.)"; } uses nd:network-ref; } grouping tp-ref { description "References a termination point in a specific node."; leaf tp-ref { type leafref { path "/nd:network[nd:network-id=current()/../"+ "nd:network-ref]/nd:node[nd:node-id=current()/../"+ "nd:node-ref]/termination-point/tp-id"; } description "A type for an absolute reference to a termination point. (This type should not be used for relative references. In such a case, a relative path should be used instead.)"; } uses nd:node-ref; } augment "/nd:network" { description "Add links to the network model."; list link { key "link-id"; Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 20] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 description "A Network Link connects a by Local (Source) node and a Remote (Destination) Network Nodes via a set of the nodes' termination points. As it is possible to have several links between the same source and destination nodes, and as a link could potentially be re-homed between termination points, to ensure that we would always know to distinguish between links, every link is identified by a dedicated link identifier. Note that a link models a point-to-point link, not a multipoint link. Layering dependencies on links in underlay topologies are not represented as the layering information of nodes and of termination points is sufficient."; container source { description "This container holds the logical source of a particular link."; leaf source-node { type leafref { path "../../../nd:node/nd:node-id"; } mandatory true; description "Source node identifier, must be in same topology."; } leaf source-tp { type leafref { path "../../../nd:node[nd:node-id=current()/../"+ "source-node]/termination-point/tp-id"; } description "Termination point within source node that terminates the link."; } } container destination { description "This container holds the logical destination of a particular link."; leaf dest-node { type leafref { path "../../../nd:node/nd:node-id"; } mandatory true; description "Destination node identifier, must be in the same Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 21] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 network."; } leaf dest-tp { type leafref { path "../../../nd:node[nd:node-id=current()/../"+ "dest-node]/termination-point/tp-id"; } description "Termination point within destination node that terminates the link."; } } leaf link-id { type link-id; description "The identifier of a link in the topology. A link is specific to a topology to which it belongs."; } list supporting-link { key "network-ref link-ref"; description "Identifies the link, or links, that this link is dependent on."; leaf network-ref { type leafref { path "../../../nd:supporting-network/nd:network-ref"; } description "This leaf identifies in which underlay topology supporting link is present."; } leaf link-ref { type leafref { path "/nd:network[nd:network-id=current()/.."+ "/network-ref]/link/link-id"; } description "This leaf identifies a link which is a part of this link's underlay. Reference loops, in which a link identifies itself as its underlay, either directly or transitively, are not allowed."; } } } } augment "/nd:network/nd:node" { description "Augment termination points which terminate links. Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 22] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 Termination points can ultimately be mapped to interfaces."; list termination-point { key "tp-id"; description "A termination point can terminate a link. Depending on the type of topology, a termination point could, for example, refer to a port or an interface."; leaf tp-id { type tp-id; description "Termination point identifier."; } list supporting-termination-point { key "network-ref node-ref tp-ref"; description "The leaf list identifies any termination points that the termination point is dependent on, or maps onto. Those termination points will themselves be contained in a supporting node. This dependency information can be inferred from the dependencies between links. For this reason, this item is not separately configurable. Hence no corresponding constraint needs to be articulated. The corresponding information is simply provided by the implementing system."; leaf network-ref { type leafref { path "../../../nd:supporting-node/nd:network-ref"; } description "This leaf identifies in which topology the supporting termination point is present."; } leaf node-ref { type leafref { path "../../../nd:supporting-node/nd:node-ref"; } description "This leaf identifies in which node the supporting termination point is present."; } leaf tp-ref { type leafref { path "/nd:network[nd:network-id=current()/../"+ "network-ref]/nd:node[nd:node-id=current()/../"+ "node-ref]/termination-point/tp-id"; } description Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 23] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 "Reference to the underlay node, must be in a different topology"; } } } } } 5. Security Considerations The transport protocol used for sending the topology data MUST support authentication and SHOULD support encryption. The data-model by itself does not create any security implications. 6. Contributors The model presented in this paper was contributed to by more people than can be listed on the author list. Additional contributors include: o Ken Gray, Cisco Systems o Tom Nadeau, Brocade o Aleksandr Zhdankin, Cisco 7. Acknowledgements We wish to acknowledge the helpful contributions, comments, and suggestions that were received from Alia Atlas, Vishna Pavan Beeram, Andy Bierman, Martin Bjorklund, Igor Bryskin, Benoit Claise, Susan Hares, Xufeng Liu, Ladislav Lhotka, Carlos Pignataro, Juergen Schoenwaelder, and Xian Zhang. 8. References 8.1. Normative References [RFC1195] Callon, R., "Use of OSI IS-IS for Routing in TCP/IP and Dual Environments", RFC 1195, December 1990. [RFC2328] Moy, J., "OSPF Version 2", RFC 2328, April 1998. [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. Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 24] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 [RFC6020] Bjorklund, M., "YANG - A Data Modeling Language for the Network Configuration Protocol (NETCONF)", RFC 6020, October 2010. [RFC6021] Schoenwaelder, J., "Common YANG Data Types", RFC 6021, October 2010. [RFC6241] Enns, R., Bjorklund, M., Schoenwaelder, J., and A. Bierman, "Network Configuration Protocol (NETCONF)", RFC 6241, June 2011. [RFC7223] Bjorklund, M., "A YANG Data Model for Interface Management", RFC 7223, May 2014. 8.2. Informative References [restconf] Bierman, A., Bjorklund, M., and K. Watsen, "RESTCONF Protocol", I-D draft-ietf-netconf-restconf-04, January 2015. [topology-use-cases] Medved, J., Previdi, S., Lopez, V., and S. Amante, "Topology API Use Cases", I-D draft-amante-i2rs-topology- use-cases-01, October 2013. [yang-json] Lhotka, L., "JSON Encoding of Data Modeled with YANG", I-D draft-ietf-netmod-yang-json-03, February 2015. Authors' Addresses Alexander Clemm Cisco EMail: alex@cisco.com Jan Medved Cisco EMail: jmedved@cisco.com Robert Varga Cisco EMail: rovarga@cisco.com Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 25] Internet-Draft draft-ietf-i2rs-yang-network-topo-01.txt June 2015 Tony Tkacik Cisco EMail: ttkacik@cisco.com Nitin Bahadur Bracket Computing EMail: nitin_bahadur@yahoo.com Hariharan Ananthakrishnan Packet Design EMail: hari@packetdesign.com Clemm, et al. Expires December 10, 2015 [Page 26]