icnrg J. Auge Internet-Draft G. Carofiglio Intended status: Informational L. Muscariello Expires: January 3, 2019 M. Papalini Cisco Systems Inc. July 02, 2018 MAP-Me : Managing Anchorless Mobility in Content Centric Networking draft-irtf-icnrg-mapme-01 Abstract Consumer mobility is supported in ICN by design, in virtue of its connectionless pull-based communication model; producer mobility through is not natively supported. This document describes MAP-Me, an anchor-less solution to manage micro-mobility of content producers in the CCN (Content Centric Networking) and NDN (Named Data Networking) architectures, with support for latency-sensitive applications. MAP-Me consists in the combination of two data plane protocols, triggered by the producer movements, and leveraging ICN named-based data plane. The main protocol consists in a lightweight FIB update process, complemented by a mechanism of local notification and scoped discovery suitable for low latency applications and fast mobility. 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 https://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 January 3, 2019. Copyright Notice Copyright (c) 2018 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved. Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 1] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents 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. Table of Contents 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 2. MAP-Me overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 2.1. Anchor-less mobility management . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 2.2. Design principles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 2.3. MAP-Me protocols . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 3. Update protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 3.1. Rationale . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 3.2. Update propagation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 3.3. Concurrent updates . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 4. Notification protocol and scoped discovery . . . . . . . . . 11 4.1. Interest Notification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 4.2. Scoped discovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 4.3. Full approach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 5. Implementation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 5.1. MAP-Me messages . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 5.2. Data structures and temporary state . . . . . . . . . . . 14 5.3. Algorithm description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 5.3.1. Producer attachment and face creation . . . . . . . . 14 5.3.2. IU/IN transmission at producer . . . . . . . . . . . 14 5.3.3. IU/IN transmission at network routers . . . . . . . . 15 5.3.4. Consumer request forwarding in case of producer discovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 5.3.5. Producer departure and face destruction . . . . . . . 18 6. Security considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 7. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 9. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 9.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 9.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 1. Introduction With the phenomenal spread of portable user devices, mobility has become a basic requirement for almost any communication network as well as a compelling feature to integrate in the next generation Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 2] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 networks (5G). The need for a mobility-management paradigm to apply within IP networks has striven a lot of efforts in research and standardization bodies (IETF, 3GPP among others), all resulting in a complex access-dependent set of mechanisms implemented via a dedicated control infrastructure. The complexity and lack of flexibility of such approaches (e.g. Mobile IP) calls for a radically new solution dismantling traditional assumptions like tunneling and anchoring of all mobile communications into the network core. This is particularly important with the increase in rates and mobile nodes (IoT), a vast amount of which never moves. The Information Centric Network (ICN) paradigm brings native support for mobility, security, and storage within the network architecture, hence emerging as a promising 5G technology candidate. Specifically on mobility management, ICN has the potential to relieve limitations of the existing approaches by leveraging its primary feature, the redefinition of packet forwarding based on "names" rather than "network addresses". Removing the dependence on location identifiers is a first step in the direction of removing the need for any anchoring of communications into fixed network nodes, which may considerably simplify and improve mobility management. Within the ICN paradigm, several architectures have been proposed, as reported in [SURVEY12] and [SURVEY14]. As a direct result of CCN/NDN design principles, consumer mobility is natively supported: a change in physical location for the consumer does not translate into a change in the data plane like for IP. The retransmission of requests for data not yet received by the consumer takes place without involving any signaling to the network. Producer mobility and realtime group communications present more challenges, depending on the frequency of movements, latency requirements, and content lifetime. The topology does not reflect the naming structure, and the mobility management process has to preserve key functionalities such as multipath, caching, etc. In all cases, beyond providing connectivity guarantees, additional transport-level mechanisms might be required to protect the flow performance (see [WLDR] for instance). MAP-Me aims at tackling such problems by exploiting key CCN/NDN characteristics. Previous attempts have been made in CCN/NDN (and ICN in general) literature to go beyond the traditional IP approaches, by using the existing CCN/NDN request/data packet structures to trace producer movements and to dynamically build a reverse-forwarding path (see [SURVEY16b] for a survey). They still rely on a stable home address to inform about producer movements or on buffering of incoming requests at the producer's previous point of attachment (PoA), which prevents support for latency-sensitive streaming applications. The approach presented in this document Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 3] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 focuses on this class of applications (e.g. live streaming or videoconferencing) as they have the most stringent performance requirements: negligible per-packet loss-rate and delays. In addition, they typically originate from a single producer and don't allow for the use of caching. MAP-Me defines a name-based mechanism operating in the forwarding plane and completely removing any anchoring, while aiming at latency minimization. Its performance and guarantees of correctness, stability and bounded stretch are analyzed in [MAPME]. 2. MAP-Me overview 2.1. Anchor-less mobility management Many efforts have been made to define mobility-management models for IP networks in the last two decades, resulting in a variety of complex, often not implemented, proposals. A survey of these approaches is proposed in [RFC6301]. Likewise, within ICN, different approaches to mobility management have been presented [SURVEY13]. Specifically for the CCN/NDN solutions, several surveys of mobility- management approaches can be found [SURVEY16a] [SURVEY16b]. We follow here the classification presented in [MAPME] which highlights their reliance on indirection/rendez-vous points. In particular, a new class of anchor-less approaches is introduced, in which the present proposal fits. Such solutions are less common and have been introduced in ICN to remove the need for anchor points in the data plane, but also in the control plane in the form of resolution or mapping services. These solutions completely remove the use of locators and extend the ICN forwarding mechanisms with mobility support. 2.2. Design principles o *Micro-Mobility* : MAP-Me addresses micro (e.g. intra Autonomous Systems) producer mobility. Addressing macro-mobility is a non- goal of the proposal. We are focusing here on complementary mechanisms able to provide a fast and lightweight handover, preserving the performance of flows in progress. * *Control Plane Agnostic* : MAP-Me _is control-plane agnostic as does not rely on routing updates or path computation_, which would be too slow and too costly, but rather works at a faster timescale propagating forwarding updates on a single path and leveraging real-time notifications left as breadcrumbs by the producer, to enable live tracking of its content prefixes and avoid buffering at intermediate nodes. MAP-Me shares the use Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 4] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 of data plane mechanisms for ensuring connectivity with [DATAPLANE] which was originally proposed for link failures. This enables the support of high-speed mobility and real-time group applications. In addition, MAP-Me mobility updates are issued at prefix granularity, rather than content or chunk/ packet granularity, to minimize signaling overhead and temporary state kept by in-network nodes, and scale to large and dynamic mobile networks. o *Access-agnostic* : MAP-Me handles mobility at Layer 3 and is designed to be access-agnostic, to cope with highly heterogeneous wireless access and multi-homed/mobile users. o *Decentralized and localized* : MAP-Me is designed to be fully _decentralized_, to enhance robustness w.r.t. centralized mobility management proposals subject to single point-of-passage problem. MAP-Me updates are _localized_ and affect the minimum number of routers at the edge of the network to restore connectivity. This effectively realizes traffic off-load close to the end-users. o *Transparent* : MAP-Me does not involve any name nor modifications to basic request/reply operations to be compatible with standard CCN/NDN design and to avoid issues caused by name modifications like triangular routing, caching degradation, or security vulnerabilities. It does not require consumers or producer to be aware of the mobility of the remote endpoint, nor producers to perform handover prediction. o *Robust* : to network conditions (e.g. routing failure, wireless or congestion losses, and delays), by leveraging hop-by-hop retransmissions of mobility updates. 2.3. MAP-Me protocols As a data plane protocol, MAP-Me handles producer mobility events by means of dynamic FIB updates with the objective of minimizing unreachability of the producer. It relies on the existence of a routing protocol responsible for creating/updating the FIB of all routers, possibly with multipath routes, and for managing network failures [NLSR]. MAP-Me is composed of: o an Update protocol, detailed in Section 3, which is the central component of our proposal; o a Notification/Discovery protocol, presented in Section 4, to be coupled with the Update protocol to enhance reactivity in mobility Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 5] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 management for realtime/latency-sensitive application, and lower overhead during fast mobility events. 3. Update protocol 3.1. Rationale The rationale behind MAP-Me is that the producer announces its movements to the network by sending a special Interest Packet, named Interest Update (IU) to "itself" after it reattaches to the network. Such a message looks like a regular Interest packet named with the prefix advertised by the producer. As such, it is forwarded according to the information stored in the FIBs of traversed routers towards previous locations of the producer known by router FIBs. A special flag carried in the header of the IU enables all routers on the path to identify the Interest as a mobility update and to process it accordingly to update their FIBs (a detailed description of the IU processing is provided in Section 5.3. The key aspect of the proposal is that it removes the need for a stable home address by directly leveraging name-based forwarding state created by CCN/NDN routing protocols or left by previous mobility updates. FIB updates are triggered by the reception of mobility updates in a fully decentralized way and allow a modification on-the-fly to point to the latest known location of the producer. 3.2. Update propagation The role of the update process is to quickly restore global reachability of mobile prefixes with low signaling overhead, while introducing a bounded maximum path stretch (i.e. ratio between the selected and the shortest path in terms of hops). Let us illustrate its behavior through an example where a single producer serving prefix /p moves from position P0 to P1 and so on. Figure 1 (a) shows the tree formed by the forwarding paths to the name prefix /p where IU initiated by the producer propagates. Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 6] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 +---+ +---+ | 0 | P0 | 0 | P0 +---+ +---+ ^ ^ ^ ^ / \ / \ +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ | 0 | | 0 | | 0 | | 0 | +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ ^ ^ ^ ^ / \ / \ +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ | 0 | | 0 | | 0 | | 0 | +---+ +---+ A +---+ +---+ ^ ^ IU1 / ^ ^ / \ / / \ +---+ +---+ .... .+---+. +---+ | 0 | | 0 | . P1 | 1 | . | 0 | +---+ +---+ . +---+ . +---+ ^ ^ . ^ ^ . / \ . / \ . +---+ +---+ . +---+ +---+ . | 0 | | 0 | . | 0 | | 0 | . +---+ +---+ . +---+ +---+ . .................. (a) (b) Figure 1: IU propagation example Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 7] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 ................. +---+ ... +---+ .. | 0 | P0 . | 1 | P0 . +---+ . A +---+ . ^ ^ . IU(1) / / ^ . / \ . / V \ . +---+ +---+ . +---+ +---+ . | 0 | | 0 | . | 1 | | 0 | . +---+ +---+ . A +---+ +---+ . ^ ^ . IU(1) / / ^ . / \ . / V \ . ........+---+. +---+ . +---+ +---+ . . | 1 | . | 0 | . | 1 | | 0 | . . FIB +---+ . +---+ . A +---+ +---+ . . updated / ^ . . IU(1) / / ^ . . V \ .... . / V \ . . +---+ +---+ . . +---+ +---+ . . P1 | 1 | | 0 | . . P1 | 1 | | 0 | . . +---+ +---+ . . +---+ +---+ . . ^ ^ . . ^ ^ . . / \ . . / \ . . +---+ +---+ . . +---+ +---+ . . | 0 | | 0 | . . | 0 | | 0 | . . +---+ +---+ . . +---+ +---+ . .................. .................. (a) (b) Figure 2: IU propagation example Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 8] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 +---+ | 1 | P1 +---+ ^ A ^ / | \ +---+ +---+ +---+ | 0 | | 0 | | 1 | +---+ +---+ +---+ ^ ^ / \ +---+ +---+ | 0 | | 1 | +---+ +---+ ^ ^ / \ +---+ +---+ P0 | 1 | | 0 | +---+ +---+ ^ / +---+ | 0 | +---+ Figure 3: IU propagation example Network FIBs are assumed to be populated with routes toward P0 by a name-based routing protocol. After the relocation of the producer from P0 to P1, once the layer-2 attachment is completed, the producer issues an IU carrying the prefix /p and this is forwarded by the network toward P0 (in general, toward one of its previous locations according to the FIB state of the traversed routers). Figure 1 (b) shows the propagation of the IU. As the IU progresses, FIBs at intermediate hops are updated with the ingress face of the IU (Figure 2 (a) and (b)). IU propagation stops when the IU reaches P0 and there is no next hop to forward it. The result is that the original tree rooted in P0 becomes re-rooted in P1 (Figure 3). Looking at the different connected regions (represented with dotted lines), we see that IU propagation and consequent FIB updates have the effect of extending the newly connected subtree : at every step, an additional router and its predecessors are included in the connected subtree. The properties of the update propagation process in terms of bounded length and stretch are studied in [MAPME]. Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 9] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 3.3. Concurrent updates Frequent mobility of the producer may lead to the propagation of concurrent updates. To prevent inconsistencies in FIB updates, MAP- Me maintains a sequence number at the producer end that increases at each handover and identifies every IU packet. Network routers also keep track of such sequence number in FIB to verify IU freshness. The modification of FIB entries is only triggered when the received IU carries a higher sequence number than the one locally stored, while the reception of a less recent update determines a propagation of a more recent update through the not-yet-updated path. An example of reconciliation of concurrent updates is illustrated in Figure 4 (a), when the producer has moved successively to P1 and then to P2 before the first update is completed. +---+ +---+ | 0 | P0 | 2 | P0 +---+ A +---+ ^ ^ IU(2) / / ^ / \ / V \ +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ | 0 | | 0 | | 2 | | 0 | +---+ A +---+ A +---+ A +---+ ^ ^ \ IU(1) / ^ \ \ / \ \ IU(2) / / V \ IU(2) +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ | 0 | | 2 | P2 | 1 | | 2 | A +---+ +---+ A +---+ +---+ IU(1) / ^ ^ IU1 / / ^ / / \ / V \ +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ P1 | 1 | | 0 | P1 | 1 | | 0 | +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ ^ ^ ^ ^ / \ / \ +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ | 0 | | 0 | | 0 | | 0 | +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ (a) (b) Figure 4 Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 10] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 +---+ +---+ | 2 | P0 | 2 | P2 +---+ +---+ / ^ ^ V \ | +---+ +---+ +---+ | 2 | | 2 | | 2 | IU(2) / +---+ +---+ +---+ / ^ \ ^ ^ V / V / \ +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ | 2 | | 2 | P2 P0 | 2 | | 2 | IU(2) / +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ / / ^ ^ ^ ^ V V \ / P1 / \ +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ P1 | 1 | | 0 | | 0 | | 2 | | 0 | +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ ^ ^ ^ ^ / \ / \ +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ | 0 | | 0 | | 0 | | 0 | +---+ +---+ +---+ +---+ (a) (b) Figure 5 Both updates propagate concurrently until the update with sequence number 1 (IU(1)) crosses a router that has been updated with fresher information - that has received IU with higher sequence number (IU(2)) as in Figure 4 (b). In this case, the router stops the propagation of IU(1) and sends back along its path a new IU with an updated sequence number (Figure 5 (a)). The update proceeds until ultimately the whole network has converged towards P2 (Figure 5 (b)). MAP-Me protocol reacts at a faster timescale than routing - allowing more frequent and numerous mobility events - and over a localized portion of the network edge between current and previous producer locations. This allows to minimize disconnectivity time and reduce link load, which are the main factors affecting user flow performance, as show in [MAPME] evaluations. 4. Notification protocol and scoped discovery IU propagation in the data plane accelerates forwarding state re- convergence w.r.t. routing or resolution-based approaches operating at control plane, and w.r.t. anchor-based approaches requiring Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 11] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 traffic tunneling through an anchor. Still, network latency makes IU completion not instantaneous and before an update completes, it may happen that a portion of the traffic is forwarded to the previous PoA and dropped because of the absence of a valid output face leading to the producer. Previous work in the Anchor-Less category has suggested the buffering of Interests at previous producer location to prevent such losses by increasing network reactivity. However, such a solution is not suitable for applications with stringent latency requirements (e.g. real-time) and may be incompatible with IU completion times. Moreover, the negative effects on latency performance might be further exacerbated by IU losses and consequent retransmissions in case of wireless medium. To alleviate such issues, we introduce two enhancements to the previously described behavior, namely (i) an "Interest Notification" mechanism for frequent, yet lightweight, signaling of producer movements to the network and (ii) a scoped "Producer Discovery" mechanism for consumer requests to proactively search for the producer's recently visited locations. 4.1. Interest Notification An Interest Notification (IN) is a breadcrumb left by producers at every encountered PoA. It looks like a normal Interest packet carrying a special identification flag and a sequence number, like IUs. Both IU and IN share the same sequence number (producers indistinctly increase it for every sent message) and follow the same FIB lookup and update processes. However, unlike IU packets, the trace left by INs at the first hop router does not propagate further. It is rather used by the discovery process to route consumer requests to the producer even before an update process is completed. It is worth observing that updates and notifications serve the same purpose of informing the network of a producer movement. The IU process restores connectivity and as such has higher latency/ signaling cost than the IN process, due to message propagation. The IN process provides information to track producer movements before update completion when coupled with a scoped discovery. The combination of both IU and IN allows to control the trade-off between protocol reactivity and stability of forwarding re-convergence. 4.2. Scoped discovery The extension of MAP-Me with notifications relies on a local discovery phase: when a consumer Interest reaches a PoA with no valid output face in the corresponding entry, the Interest is tagged with a "discovery" flag and labeled with the latest sequence number stored in FIB (to avoid loops). From that point on, it is broadcasted with Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 12] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 hop limit equal to one to all neighbors and discarded unless it finds the breadcrumbs left by the producer to track him (notifications). The notifications can either allow to forward consumer Interests directly to the producer or give rise to a repeated broadcast in case of no valid output face. The latter is the case of a breadcrumb left by the producer with no associated forwarding information because the producer has already left that PoA as well. A detailed description of the process is reported in Section 5.3. The notification/discovery mechanism proves important to preserve the performance of flows in progress, especially when latency-sensitive. 4.3. Full approach The full MAP-Me approach consists in the combination of Updates and Notifications through a heuristic allowing the producer or its PoA to select which type of packet to send. One such heuristic consist in sending a IN immediately after an attachment and a IU at most every Tu seconds, which allows to reduce signaling overhead during periods of high-mobility. The Tu parameter allows to tune the timescale at which Updates occur, and leads to a trade-off between signaling and discovery overhead [MAPME]. The definition of more advanced heuristics is out of scope for the present draft. 5. Implementation In this section we describe the changes to a regular CCN/NDN architecture required to implement MAP-ME and detail the above- described algorithms. This requires to specify a special Interest message, additional temporary information associated to the FIB entry and additional operations to update such entry. 5.1. MAP-Me messages MAP-Me signaling messages are carried within user plane as special Interest messages corresponding to "update" and "notification", and their corresponding acknowledgements. Two new optional fields are introduced in a CCN/NDN Interest header: o an "Interest Type" (T) used to specify one of the four types of messages: Interest Update (IU), Interest Notification (IN), and as well as their associated acknowledgment (Ack) messages (IU_Ack and IN_Ack). Those flags are recognized by the forwarding pipeline to trigger special treatment; Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 13] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 o a "sequence number" to handle concurrent updates and prevent forwarding loops during signaling, and to control discovery Interests' propagation; 5.2. Data structures and temporary state FIB entries are augmented with information required for mobility management: o a "sequence number" which is incremented upon reception of IU/IN messages. It can be assumed this counter is set to 0 by the routing protocol. o a buffer storing data about not-yet-acknowledged messages for ensuring reliability of the update process, which we refer to as "Temporary FIB buffer", or "TFIB". As sketched in Figure 6, each TFIB entry is composed of an associative array (F -> T) mapping a face F on which IU has been sent with the associated retransmission timer T (possibly Null). TFIB entries are removed upon reception of the corresponding acknowledgement. IU (IN) input face(s) IU (IN) output face +-----------+-------------------+.......+.......................+ | /prefix | { next hop(s) } | seq | { face : rx_timer } | +-----------+-------------------+.......+.......................+ \_____________ _______________/ \______________ ______________/ V V original FIB TFIB section Figure 6: MAP-Me FIB/TFIB description 5.3. Algorithm description 5.3.1. Producer attachment and face creation MAP-Me operations are triggered by producer mobility/handover events. At the producer end, a mobility event is followed by a layer-2 attachment and, at network layer, a change in the FIB. More precisely, a new face is created and activated upon attachment to a new PoA. 5.3.2. IU/IN transmission at producer The creation of a new face on the producer triggers the increase of MAP-Me sequence number and the transmission of an IU or IN for every served prefix carrying the updated sequence number. Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 14] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 To ensure reliable delivery of IUs, a timer is setup in the temporary section of the FIB entry (TFIB). If an acknowledgement of the IU/IN reception is not received within t seconds since the packet transmission, IU is retransmitted. We define the following function for sending Special Interests of a given type on faces F based on FIB entry E. SendReliably(F, type, E) It schedules their retransmission through a timer T stored in TFIB, and removed upon reception of the corresponding Ack. E.TFIB = E.TFIB U (F -> T) 5.3.3. IU/IN transmission at network routers At the reception of IU/IN packets, each router performs a name-based Longest Prefix Match lookup in FIB to compare sequence number from IU/IN and from FIB. According to that comparison: o if the IU/IN packet carries a higher sequence number, the existing next hops associated to the lower sequence number in FIB are used to forward further the IU (INs are not propagated) and temporarily copied into TFIB to avoid loss of such information before completion of the IU/IN acknowledgement process (in case of IN, such entries in TFIB are set with a Null timer to maintain a trace of the producer recent attachment). Also, the originating face of the IU/IN is added to FIB to route consumer requests to the latest known location of the producer. o If the IU/IN packet carries the same sequence number as in the FIB, the originating face of the IU/IN is added to the existing ones in FIB without additional packet processing or propagation. This may occur in presence of multiple forwarding paths. o If the IU/IN packet carries a lower sequence number than the one in the FIB, FIB entry is not updated as it already stores 'fresher information'. To advertise the latest update through the path followed by the IU/IN packet, this one is re-sent through the originating face after having updated its sequence number with the value stored in FIB. The operations in the forwarding pipeline for IU/IN processing are reported in Figure 7. Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 15] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 | Algorithm 1:ForwardSpecialInterest(SpecialInterest SI,IngressFace F) | | CheckValidity() | // Retrieve the FIB entry associated to the prefix | e, T <- FIB.LongestPrefixMatch(SI.name) | if SI.seq >= e.seq then | . // Acknowledge reception | . s <- e.seq | . e.seq <- SI.seq | . SendReliably(F, SI.type + Ack, e) | . //Process special interest | . if F in e.TFIB then | . . // Remove outdated TFIB entry (eventually cancelling timer) | . . e.TFIB = e.TFIB \ F | . if SI.seq > s then | . . if SI.type == IU then | . . . // Forward the IU following the FIB entry | . . . SendReliably(e.NextHops, SI.type, e | . . else | . . . // Create breadcrumb and preserve forwarding structure | . . . e.TFIB = e.TFIB U {(f -> NULL):for all f in e.NextHops} | . . e.NextHops = {} | . e.NextHops = e.NextHops U { F } | else | . // Send updated IU backwards | . SI.seq = e.seq | . SendReliably(F, SI.type, e) Figure 7 5.3.4. Consumer request forwarding in case of producer discovery The forwarding of regular Interests is mostly unaffected in MAP-Me, except in the case of discovery Interests that we detail in Figure 8. The function SendToNeighbors(I) is responsible for broadcasting the Interest I to all neighboring PoAs. Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 16] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 | Algorithm 2: InterestForward(Interest I, Origin face F) | | // Regular PIT and CS lookup | e <- FIB.LongestPrefixMatch(I.name) | if e = 0 then | . return | if I.seq = 0 then | . // Regular interest | . if hasValidFace(e.NextHops) or DiscoveryDisabled then | . . ForwardingStrategy.process(I, e) | . else | . . // Enter discovery mode | . . I.seq <- e.seq | . . SendToNeighbors(I) | else | . // Discovery interest: forward if producer is connnected | . if hasProducerFace(e.NextHops) then | . . ForwardingStrategy.process(I, e) | . // Otherwise iterate iif higher seq and breadcrumb | . else if e.seq >= I.seq and EXISTS f |(f -> NULL) in e.TFIB then | . . I.seq <- e.seq | . . SendToNeighbors(I) Figure 8 When an Interest arrives to a PoA which has no valid next hop for it (because the producer left and the face got destroyed), it enters a discovery phase where the Interest is flagged as a Discovery Interest and with the local sequence number, then broadcasted to neighboring PoAs. Upon reception of a Discovery Interest, the PoA forwards it directly to the producer if still attached, otherwise it repeats the one-hop brodcast discovery to neighboring PoAs if it stores a recent notification of the producer presence, i.e. an entry in TFIB having higher sequence number than the one in the Discovery Interest. Otherwise, the Discovery Interest is discarded. It is worth observing that the discovery process is initiated only in the case of no valid next hop, and not every time a notification is found in a router. This is important to guarantee that the notification/discovery process does not affect IU propagation and completion. Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 17] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 5.3.5. Producer departure and face destruction Upon producer departures from a PoA, the corresponding face is destroyed. If this leads to the removal of the last next hop, then faces in TFIB with Null timer (entries generated by notifications) are restored in FIB to preserve the original forwarding tree and thus global connectivity. 6. Security considerations All mobility management protocols share the same critical need for securing their control messages which have a direct impact on the forwarding of users' traffic. [SEC] reviews standard approaches from the literature and proposes a fast, lightweight and decentralized approach based on hash chains that can be applied to MAP-Me and fits its design principles. 7. Acknowledgements The authors would like to thank Giulio Grassi (UPMC/UCLA), Giovanni Pau (UPMC/UCLA) and Xuan Zeng (Cisco Systems) for their contribution to the work that has led to this document. 8. IANA Considerations This memo includes no request to IANA. 9. References 9.1. Normative References [RFC6301] Zhu, Z., Wakikawa, R., and L. Zhang, "A Survey of Mobility Support in the Internet", RFC 6301, DOI 10.17487/RFC6301, July 2011, . 9.2. Informative References [DATAPLANE] J, ., A, ., A, ., B, ., M, ., and . S, "Ensuring connectivity via data plane mechanisms.", 2013. [KITE] Zhang, Y., Zhang, H., and L. Zhang, "Kite", Proceedings of the 1st international conference on Information-centric networking - INC '14, DOI 10.1145/2660129.2660159, 2014. Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 18] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 [MAPME] Auge, J., Carofiglio, G., Grassi, G., Muscariello, L., Pau, G., and X. Zeng, "MAP-Me: Managing Anchor-Less Producer Mobility in Content-Centric Networks", IEEE Transactions on Network and Service Management Vol. 15, pp. 596-610, DOI 10.1109/tnsm.2018.2796720, June 2018. [NLSR] Hoque, A., Amin, S., Alyyan, A., Zhang, B., Zhang, L., and L. Wang, "NISR", Proceedings of the 3rd ACM SIGCOMM workshop on Information-centric networking - ICN '13, DOI 10.1145/2491224.2491231, 2013. [SEC] Compagno, A., Zeng, X., Muscariello, L., Carofiglio, G., and J. Auge, "Secure producer mobility in information- centric network", Proceedings of the 4th ACM Conference on Information-Centric Networking - ICN '17, DOI 10.1145/3125719.3125725, 2017. [SURVEY12] Ahlgren, B., Dannewitz, C., Imbrenda, C., Kutscher, D., and B. Ohlman, "A survey of information-centric networking", IEEE Communications Magazine Vol. 50, pp. 26-36, DOI 10.1109/mcom.2012.6231276, July 2012. [SURVEY13] Tyson, G., Sastry, N., Rimac, I., Cuevas, R., and A. Mauthe, "A survey of mobility in information-centric networks", Proceedings of the 1st ACM workshop on Emerging Name-Oriented Mobile Networking Design - Architecture, Algorithms, and Applications - NoM '12, DOI 10.1145/2248361.2248363, 2012. [SURVEY14] Xylomenos, G., Ververidis, C., Siris, V., Fotiou, N., Tsilopoulos, C., Vasilakos, X., Katsaros, K., and G. Polyzos, "A Survey of Information-Centric Networking Research", IEEE Communications Surveys & Tutorials Vol. 16, pp. 1024-1049, DOI 10.1109/surv.2013.070813.00063, 2014. [SURVEY16a] Feng, B., Zhou, H., and Q. Xu, "Mobility support in Named Data Networking: a survey", EURASIP Journal on Wireless Communications and Networking Vol. 2016, DOI 10.1186/s13638-016-0715-0, September 2016. Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 19] Internet-Draft Managing Anchorless Mobility in CCN July 2018 [SURVEY16b] Zhang, Y., Afanasyev, A., Burke, J., and L. Zhang, "A survey of mobility support in Named Data Networking", 2016 IEEE Conference on Computer Communications Workshops (INFOCOM WKSHPS), DOI 10.1109/infcomw.2016.7562050, April 2016. [WLDR] Carofiglio, G., Muscariello, L., Papalini, M., Rozhnova, N., and X. Zeng, "Leveraging ICN In-network Control for Loss Detection and Recovery in Wireless Mobile networks", Proceedings of the 2016 conference on 3rd ACM Conference on Information-Centric Networking - ACM-ICN '16, DOI 10.1145/2984356.2984361, 2016. Authors' Addresses Jordan Auge Cisco Systems Inc. Email: augjorda@cisco.com Giovanna Carofiglio Cisco Systems Inc. Email: gcarofig@cisco.com Luca Muscariello Cisco Systems Inc. Email: lumuscar@cisco.com Michele Papalini Cisco Systems Inc. Email: micpapal@cisco.com Auge, et al. Expires January 3, 2019 [Page 20]