Network Working Group Fatai Zhang Internet Draft Xian Zhang Category: Standards Track Huawei D. Ceccarelli D. Caviglia Ericsson Guoying Zhang CATR D. Beller S.Belotti Alcatel-Lucent Expires: April 11, 2013 October 12, 2012 Link Management Protocol (LMP) extensions for G.709 Optical Transport Networks draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g709v3-lmp-00.txt Status of this Memo This Internet-Draft is submitted to IETF in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet- Drafts. 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." The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt. The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html. This Internet-Draft will expire on April 11, 2013. Abstract Recent progress of the Optical Transport Network (OTN) has introduced new signal types (i.e., ODU0, ODU4, ODU2e and ODUflex) and new Tributary Slot granularity (1.25Gbps). Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 1] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 Since equipments deployed prior to recently defined ITU-T recommendations only support 2.5 Gbps Tributary Slot granularity and ODU1, ODU2 and ODU3 containers, the compatibility problem should be considered. In addition, a Higher Order ODU (HO ODU) link may not support all the types of Lower Order ODU (LO ODU) signals defined by the new OTN standard because of the limitation of the devices at the two ends of a link. In these cases, the control plane is required to run the capability discovering functions for the evolutive OTN. This document describes the extensions to the Link Management Protocol (LMP) needed to discover the capability of HO ODU link, including the granularity of Tributary Slot to be used and the LO ODU signal types that the link can support. Moreover, extensions of LMP test messages detailing the OTN technology specific information in order to cover also G.709v3 signal types and containers are also provided. Conventions used in this document The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119]. Table of Contents 1. Introduction ................................................ 3 2. Terminology ................................................. 4 3. Overview of the Evolutive G.709 .............................. 4 4. Link Capability Discovery ................................... 5 4.1. Link Capabaplity Discovery Requirements ................. 5 4.1.1. Discovering the Granularity of the TS .............. 5 4.1.2. Discovering the Supported LO ODU Signal Types....... 6 4.2. Extensions: LMP Link Summary Message .................... 7 4.2.1. Message Extension .................................. 7 4.2.1.1. LinkSummary Message ........................... 7 4.2.1.2. LinkSummaryAck Message ........................ 8 4.2.1.3. LinkSummaryNack Message ....................... 8 4.2.2. Object Definitions ................................. 8 4.2.3. Procedures ........................................ 10 5. Verifying Link Connectivity ................................. 12 5.1. Encoding Type ......................................... 13 5.2. Verify Transport Mechanism ............................. 13 5.3. Transmission Rate ...................................... 14 6. Trace Monitoring ........................................... 15 6.1. TRACE Object for evolutive OTN ......................... 15 6.2. Discovery Response Message for Layer Adjacency Discovery 17 Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 2] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 7. LMP Behavior Negotiation Update ............................. 18 8. Security Considerations ..................................... 18 9. IANA Considerations ........................................ 19 10. Acknowledgments ........................................... 19 11. References ................................................ 19 11.1. Normative References .................................. 19 11.2. Informative References ................................ 20 12. Authors' Addresses ........................................ 20 13. Contributors .............................................. 22 1. Introduction The Link Management Protocol (LMP) defined in [RFC4204] is being developed as part of the Generalized MPLS (GMPLS) protocol suite to manage Traffic Engineering (TE) links. Recently, great progress has been made for the Optical Transport Networking (OTN) technologies in ITU-T. New ODU containers (i.e., ODU0, ODU4, ODU2e and ODUflex) and a new Tributary Slot (TS) granularity (1.25Gbps) have been introduced by the [G709-V3], enhancing the flexibility of OTNs. With the evolution and deployment of G.709 technology, the backward compatibility problem requires to be considered. In data plane, the equipment supporting 1.25Gbps TS can combine the specific Tributary Slots together (e.g., combination of TS#i and TS#i+4 on a HO ODU2 link) so that it can interwork with other equipments which support 2.5Gbps TS. From the control plane point of view, it is necessary to discover which type of TS is supported at both ends of a link, so that it can choose and reserve the TS resources correctly in this link for the connection. Additionally, the requirement of discovering the signal types of Lower Order ODU (LO ODU) that can be supported by a Higher Order ODU (HO ODU) should be taken into account. Equipment at one end of a HO ODU link may not support to transport some types of LO ODU signals (e.g., may not support the ODUflex). In this case, this HO ODU link should not be selected for those types of LO ODU connections. From the perspective of control plane, it is necessary to discover the capability of a HO ODUk or OTUk link including the granularity of TS to be used and the LO ODU signal types that the link can support. Note that this capability information can be, in principle, discovered by routing. Since in certain case, routing is not present (e.g., UNI case) we need to extend link management protocol capabilities to cover this aspect. Obviously, in case of routing presence, the discovering procedure by LMP could also be optional. Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 3] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 A further enhancement needed with respect to LMP covers the link verification and link property correlation functionalities and the G.709 test procedures they are based on. Such procedures require the definition of a G.709 specific TRACE object. After data links have been verified, it is possible to group them into the TE links. This document extends the LMP and describes the solution of discovering HO ODU link capability and operating link verification and link property correlation. 2. Terminology The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119]. 3. Overview of the Evolutive G.709 The traditional OTN standard [ITUT-G709] describes the optical transport hierarchy (OTH) and introduces three ODU signal types (i.e., ODU1, ODU2 and ODU3). The ODUj can be mapped into one or more Tributary Slots (with a granularity of 2.5Gbps) of OPUk where j<k. The ODUj can also be mapped into OTUj (j=1, 2 or 3) directly. Recent revisions of ITU-T Recommendation G.709 have introduced new features for the evolutive Optical Transport Networks (OTN). New ODU signals, including ODU0, ODU4, ODU2e and ODUflex, are described in [G709-V3]. This document also defines the new multiplexing hierarchy for the evolutive OTN. In this multiplexing hierarchy, LO ODUj can be mapped into an OTUj, or multiplexed into a HO ODUk (where j<k) by occupying several tributary slots. In case of LO ODUj mapping into OTUj, the following mappings are defined: - ODU1 into OTU1 mapping - ODU2 into OTU2 mapping - ODU3 into OTU3 mapping - ODU4 into OTU4 mapping In case of LO ODUj multiplexing into HO ODUk, a new Tributary Slot granularity (i.e., 1.25Gbps) is introduced in [G709-V3]. For the Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 4] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 evolutive OTN, the multiplexing of ODUj (j = 0, 1, 2, 2e, 3, flex) into an ODUk (k > j) signal can be depicted as follows: - ODU0 into ODU1 multiplexing (with 1,25Gbps TS granularity) - ODU0, ODU1, ODUflex into ODU2 multiplexing (with 1.25Gbps TS granularity) - ODU1 into ODU2 multiplexing (with 2.5Gbps TS granularity) - ODU0, ODU1, ODU2, ODU2e and ODUflex into ODU3 multiplexing (with 1.25Gbps TS granularity) - ODU1, ODU2 into ODU3 multiplexing (with 2.5Gbps TS granularity) - ODU0, ODU1, ODU2, ODU2e, ODU3 and ODUflex into ODU4 multiplexing (with 1.25Gbps TS granularity) Note that If TS auto-negotiation is supported, a node supporting 1.25Gbps TS can interwork with the other nodes that supporting 2.5Gbps TS by combining specific TSs together in data plane, as descirbied in [OTN-frwk]. 4. Link Capability Discovery 4.1. Link Capabaplity Discovery Requirements 4.1.1. Discovering the Granularity of the TS As described in section 3.1, if the two ends of a link use different granularities of TS, The LO ODU must be mapped into specific combined Tributary Slots in the end of link with TS of 1.25Gbps. From the perspective of control plane, when creating a LO ODU connection, the node MUST select and reserve specific TS for the connection if the two ends of a link use different granularities of TS. For example, for an ODU2 link, we suppose that node A only supports the 2.5Gbps TS while node B supports the 1.25Gbps TS. When node B receives a Path message from node A requesting an ODU1 connection, node B MUST reserve the TS#i and TS#i+4 (where i<=4) (with the granularity of 1.25Gbps) and tell node A via the label carried in the Resv message that the TS#i (with the granularity of 2.5Gbps) among the 4 slots has been reserved for the ODU1 connection. Otherwise, the reservation procedure will fail. Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 5] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 +-----+ Path +-----+ | | ------------> | | | A +-------ODU2 link-------+ B | | | <------------- | | +-----+ Resv +-----+ (Support 2.5G TS) (Support 1.25G TS) Therefore, for an ODU2 or ODU3 link, in order to reserve TS resources correctly for a LO ODU connection, the control plane of the two ends MUST know which granularity the other end can support before creating the LO ODU connection. 4.1.2. Discovering the Supported LO ODU Signal Types Many new ODU signal types are introduced by [G709-V3], such as ODU0, ODU4, ODU2e and ODUflex. It is possible that equipment does not always support all the LO ODU signal types introduced by [G709-V3]. If one end of a HO ODU link can not support a certain LO ODU signal type and there is no HO ODU FA LSP able to support this LO ODU signal, the HO ODU link/FA LSP can not be selected to carry such type of LO ODU connection. For example, in the following figure, if the interfaces IF1, IF2, IF8, IF7, IF5 and IF6 can support ODUflex signals, while the interfaces IF 3 and IF4 can not support ODUflex signals. In this case, if one ODUflex connection from A to C is requested, and there is no HO ODU FA LSP from node A to C through node B, link #1 and #2 should be excluded, link #3 and link #4 are the candidates (the possible path could be A-D-C through link #3 and link #4). +-----+ link #3 | | link #4 +-----------------+ D +-----------------+ | IF8| |IF7 | | +-----+ | | | |IF1 IF6| +--+--+ +-----+ +--+--+ | | link #1 | | link #2 | | | A +--------------+ B +--------------+ C | | |IF2 IF3| |IF4 IF5| | +-----+ +-----+ +-----+ Therefore, it is necessary for the two ends of a HO ODU link to discover which types of LO ODU can be supported by the HO ODU link. Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 6] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 After discovering, the capability information can be flooded by IGP, so that the correct path for an ODU connection can be calculated. 4.2. Extensions: LMP Link Summary Message [RFC4204] defines the Link Management Protocol (LMP) which consists of four main procedures: control channel management, link property correlation, link connectivity verification, and fault management. As part of LMP, the link property correlation is used to verify the consistency of the TE and data link information on both sides of a link. This document extends the link property correlation procedure to discover the capability of both sides of a HO ODU link. The designated HO ODU overhead bytes (e.g., the GCC1 and GCC2 overhead bytes) can be used as the control channel to carry the LMP message after the HO ODU link is created. The out-of-band Data Communication Network (DCN) can also be used. 4.2.1. Message Extension Three messages are used for link property correlation: LinkSummary, LinkSummaryAck and LinkSummaryNack Message. This document does not change the basic procedure of LMP but just add a new subobject (HO ODU Link Capability) in the DATA_LINK object to carry the capability of one end of a HO ODU link. The formats of LinkSummary, LinkSummaryAck and LinkSummaryNack messages are defined in [RFC4204]. 4.2.1.1. LinkSummary Message The local end of a TE link can send a LinkSummary message to the remote end to start the negotiation about the capability that the TE link can support. One new Subobject named HO ODU Link Capability Subobject in the DATA_LINK object is introduced by this document. This new subobect is used to tell the remote end of the HO ODU link which TS granularity and which LO ODU signal types that the local end can support. When the DATA_LINK object carries the new HO ODU Link Capability Subobject, the N flag SHOULD be set to 1 which means that the subobject is negotiable. Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 7] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 4.2.1.2. LinkSummaryAck Message The LinkSummaryAck message is used to tell the remote end that it has the same capability as the remote end after the LinkSummary message is received by the local end. 4.2.1.3. LinkSummaryNack Message The LinkSummaryNack message is used to tell the remote end that it has different capability from the remote end after the LinkSummary message is received by the local end. The LinkSummaryNack message also carries the HO ODU Link Capability subobject in the DATA_LINK object to tell the remote end the exact capability of the HO ODU link after negotiation, i.e., the granularity of TS and the types of LO ODU that both side of the HO ODU link can support. 4.2.2. Object Definitions A new HO ODU Link Capability subobject type is introduced to the DATA LINK object to carry the HO ODU link capability information. The format of the new subobject is defined as follow: 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 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Type | Length |OD(T)Uk| T | Reserved | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |A|B|C|D|E|F|G| LO ODU Flags | Reserved | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ Type (8 bits): The value of this subobject type is TBD. Length (8 bits): The Length field contains the total length of the subobject in bytes, including the Type and Length fields. As for RFC 4204, the Length MUST be at least 4, and MUST be a multiple of 4. Value of this field is 8. OD(T)Uk (4 bits): This field is used to indicate the HO ODU link type (in case of LO ODUj multiplexing into HO ODUk, wherein j<k) or the OTU link type (in case of LO ODUk mapping into OTUk). Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 8] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 OD(T)Uk field Signal type of HO ODUk or OTUk ------------- ------------------------------ 0 Reserved (for future use) 1 HO ODU1 or OTU1 2 HO ODU2 or OTU2 3 HO ODU3 or OTU3 4 HO ODU4 or OTU4 5-15 Reserved (for future use) T (2 bits): The T bits are used to indicate the granularity of the TS of the HO ODU link. T field TS type ------- ------- 00 Meaningless 01 1.25Gbps TS granularity 10 2.5Gbps TS granularity 11 Reserved (for future use) In case that an OTUk link only support ODUj (j=k) into OTUk mapping and does not support any ODUj into ODUk (j<k) multiplexing, then the T field is not meaningful and MUST be filled with 0 and be ignored on receipt. LO ODU flags (A|B|C|D|E|F|G) (16 bits): These flags are used to indicate which LO ODU signal types that one end or the both end can support. The flags will be set to 1 if the corresponding LO ODU signal types are supported to be mapped or multiplexed into the OTUk or HO ODUk link. This rule imposes that: - At least one flag is set to 1. - When the ODUj (j=k) flag corresponding to the signal type HO ODUk/OTUk is set to 1, then the signal type OD(T)Uk has to be intended as LO ODUk and direct mapping over OTUk is supported. * Furthermore, if only the ODUj(j=k) flag is set to 1, it means that the HO ODUk/OTUk link only supports ODUj(j=k) into OTUk mapping. In other words, the link does not support any ODUj Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 9] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 into ODUk (j<k) multiplexing (i.e., payload type != 20/21), but may support carrying various non-ODU client signals listed in Table 15-8 of [G709-V3]. - When an ODUj (j<k) flag not corresponding to the signal type HO ODUk/OTUk is set to 1 then the signal type OD(T)Uk has to be intended as HO ODUk and multiplexing of LO ODUj over HO ODUk is supported. Flag A: indicates whether LO ODU0 is supported. Flag B: indicates whether LO ODU1 is supported. Flag C: indicates whether LO ODU2 is supported. Flag D: indicates whether LO ODU3 is supported. Flag E: indicates whether LO ODU4 is supported. Flag F: indicates whether LO ODU2e is supported. Flag G: indicates whether LO ODUflex is supported. For example, if one end of an OTU2 link supports LO ODU0, LO ODU1, LO ODUflex into HO ODU2 multiplexing and supports LO ODU2 into OTU2 mapping, the flags A, B, C, and G will be set to 1. As a further example, if one end of an OTU2 link supports only LO ODU2 into OTU2 mapping but no multiplexing, only flag C will be set to 1. The remaining flags are reserved for future use and MUST be set to 0. 4.2.3. Procedures The Link Summary messages used for capability discovery for HO ODUk or OTUk link are sent between adjacent nodes after the HO ODU link is created or driven by some events (e.g., an operator command). The procedure is described below: o The local end of the HO ODU link sends a LinkSummary message including one or more DATA_LINK objects, each of which contains the Local_Interface_Id, the Remote_Interface_Id, and the HO ODU link capability subobject. This subobject carries the capability that the local end can support, i.e., the granularity of TS and the set of LO ODU signal types that the local end can support. The LinkSummary message is sent to the remote end. Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 10] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 o On receipt of the LinkSummary message, the remote end of the HO ODU link firstly determines whether the local/remote Interface_Id mappings match those that are stored locally as described in [RFC4204], and then obtains the HO ODU link capability subobject and determines the capability of the HO ODU link that both ends can support. The detail procedures are as follow: - Only if both ends support the 1.25Gbps TS, the remote end would choose the 1.25Gbps as the negotiated granularity for the HO ODU link. In other cases, the 2.5Gbps TS MUST be used (e.g., if the local end can support 1.25Gbps, and the remote end can support 2.5Gbps, and then the local end should imitate 2.5Gbps). - The remote end compares the two sets of LO ODU signal types that the local end and the remote end can support, and calculates the intersection of them, i.e., extracts all the LO ODU signal types that both two ends can support. This intersection is the set of LO ODU signal types that the HO ODU link can support. o If both the two ends support the same capability, i.e., they support the same granularity of TS and the same LO ODU signal types, the remote end replies a LinkSummaryAck message to the local end. So the both ends know what capability the HO ODU link can support. o If the two ends support different capabilities, i.e., they support different granularities of TS or different LO ODU signal types, the remote end replies a LinkSummaryNack message to the local end. The LinkSummaryNack message carries an ERROR_CODE object and one or more DATA_LINK objects. The ERROR_CODE "Renegotiate LINK_SUMMARY parameters" (see [RFC4204]) indicates that the two ends of the HO ODU link support different capabilities, and the DATA_LINK object carries the HO ODU link capability subobject which contains the negotiated granularity of TS and the set of LO ODU signal types that both ends can support. The local end can learn the HO ODU link capability after receiving the LinkSummaryNack message. o If the remote end does not support the HO ODU link capability negotiation procedure, the LinkSummaryNack message MUST be responded with an ERROR_CODE "Not support of HO ODU Link Capability subobject" (TBA) indicating the reason of rejection. Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 11] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 5. Verifying Link Connectivity [RFC4204] defines a link verification procedure based on the in-band transmission of Test messages over the data links. It is used to verify the physical connectivity of such links, to discover data plane resources and to exchange the Interface_Ids. It is also possible to use a single procedure to verify multiple data links and correlate the information collected by means of the Verify_Id assigned to the procedure. The link verification procedure works as follows: - BeginVerify message: the local node sends a BeginVerify message over a control channel. It includes a BEGIN_VERIFY object which contains all the parameters characterizing the data link like, for example, the number of data links that must be verified, the transmission interval of the Test messages or the wavelength over which the Test messages will be sent. - BeginVerifyAck: if the remote node, upon receiving a BeginVerify message, is ready to begin the procedure, it replies with a BeginVerifyAck message. Such message specifies the desired transport mechanism for the Test messages and the Verify_Id of the procedure assigned by the remote node. - Data link Testing: the local node, upon receiving the BeginVerifyAck message, can begin testing the data links repeatedly sending Test messages over them. The remote node will reply either with a TestStatsSuccess or a TestStatusFailure for each data link. As a consequence the local node will send a TestStatusAck. - End of testing: The local node can terminate the Test procedure at anytime just sending an EndVerifyMessage towards the remote node. Evolutive OTNs need the support from LMP for the testing of all the possible data links defined by ITU-T. This document provides, at present, support to the data links defined by G.709 and G.709 amendment 3 recommendations and to G.Sup43 temporary document. The BEGIN_VERIFY class is defined in Section 13.8 of [RFC4204]. The following fields are extended: Encoding Type, Verify Transport Mechanism and Transmission Rate. Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 12] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 5.1. Encoding Type The Encoding Type identifies the type of encoding supported by the interface. LMP encoding type is consistent with the LSP encoding types defined for RSVP-TE [RFC3471]. In particular, the value to be used for G.709 hierarchy ODU and OTU signals is "Digital Wrapper". 5.2. Verify Transport Mechanism This field defines the transport mechanism for the Test messages and its scope depends on each encoding type. It is a 16 bit mask set by the local node where each bit identifies the various mechanisms it can support for LMP test messages transmission. This document defines the field values with respect to the G.709 digital encoding (they are expressed in network byte order). - 0x01 OTUk TTI: 64 byte Test Message Capability of transmitting Test messages using OTUk Trail Trace Identifier (TTI) overhead with frame length of 64 bytes. See ITU G.709 Section 15.2 and Section 15.7 for the structure and definition. The Test message is sent according to [RFC4204]. - 0x02 ODUk TTI: 64 byte Test Message Capability of transmitting Test messages using ODUk Trail Trace Identifier (TTI) overhead with frame length of 64 bytes. See ITU G.709 Section 15.2 and Section 15.8 for the structure and definition. The Test message is sent according to [RFC4204]. - 0x04 GCC0: Test Message over the GCC0 Capability of transmitting Test messages using the OTUk Overhead General Communications Channel (GCC0). See ITU G.709 Section 15.7 for the structure and definition. The Test message is sent according to [RFC4204] using bit-oriented HDLC framing format [RFC1662]. - 0x08 GCC1/2: Test Message over the GCC1/2 Capability of transmitting Test messages using the ODUk Overhead General Communications Channels (GCC1/2). See ITU G.709 Section 15.8 for the structure and definition. The Test message is sent according to [RFC4204] using bit-oriented HDLC framing format [RFC1662]. - 0x10 OTUk TTI - Section Trace Correlation Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 13] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 Capability of transmitting OTUk Trail Trace Identifier (TTI) as defined in ITU-T G.709. The Test message is not transmitted using the OTUk TTI overhead bytes (i.e. data link), but is sent over the control channel and correlated for consistency to the received pattern. The correlation between the Interface_Id and the in-band pattern is achieved using the TRACE Object as defined in Section 4 of [RFC4207]. No modification to TestStatusSuccess or TestStatusFailure messages is required. - 0x20 ODUk TTI - Path Trace Correlation Capability of transmitting ODUk Trail Trace Identifier (TTI) as defined in ITU-T G.709. The Test message is not transmitted using the OTUk TTI overhead bytes (i.e. data link), but is sent over the control channel and correlated for consistency to the received pattern. The correlation between the Interface_Id the Testmessage is sent from and the pattern sent in-band is achieved using the TRACE Object as defined in Section 4 of [RFC4207]. No modification to TestStatusSuccess or TestStatusFailure messages is required. 5.3. Transmission Rate The transmission rate of the data links where the link verification procedure can be performed is defined into the TransmissionRate field of the BEGIN_VERIFY class ([RFC4204] Section 13.8). Values are expressed in IEEE floating point format using a 32-bit number field and expressed in bytes per second. The following table defines the values to be used in OTNs: +-------------+-----------------+-------------------+ | Signal Type | Bit-rate (kbps) | Value (Bytes/Sec) | +-------------+-----------------+-------------------+ | ODU0 | 1 244 160 | 0x4D1450C0 | +-------------+-----------------+-------------------+ | ODU1 | 2 498 775 | 0x4D94F048 | | OTU1 | 2 666 057 | 0x4D9EE8CD | +-------------+-----------------+-------------------+ | ODU2 | 10 037 274 | 0x4E959129 | Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 14] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 | OTU2 | 10 709 226 | 0x4E9F9475 | +-------------+-----------------+-------------------+ | ODU2e | 10 399 525 | 0x4E9AF70A | +-------------+-----------------+-------------------+ | ODU3 | 40 319 219 | 0X4F963367 | | OTU3 | 43 018 416 | 0X4FA0418F | +-------------+-----------------+-------------------+ | ODU4 | 104 794 445 | 0x504331E3 | | OTU4 | 111 809 973 | 0x50504326 | +-------------+-----------------+-------------------+ Transmission Rate values (Bytes/Sec) 6. Trace Monitoring [RFC4207] describes the set of trace monitoring procedures that allow a node to do trace monitoring by using the G.709 hierarchy capabilities. This document defines a new C-Type of the TRACE Object class used for Trace Monitoring features as defined in [RFC4207]. 6.1. TRACE Object for evolutive OTN The TRACE Object Class assigned by IANA is 21. A new C-Type is TBA and value 2 is suggested. The TRACE Object format is the same as defined in [RFC4207] and is shown in the following: 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 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |N| C-Type | Class | Length | Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 15] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Trace Type | Trace Length | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | | // Trace Message // | | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ TRACE Object Class Trace Type: 16 bits The Trace Type field is used to identify the type of the trace message. The following values are defined and all other values are reserved and should be sent as zero and ignored on receipt. 1 = OTUk TTI 2 = ODUk TTI 3 = Level 1 ODUkT TTI 4 = Level 2 ODUkT TTI 5 = Level 3 ODUkT TTI 6 = Level 4 ODUkT TTI 7 = Level 5 ODUkT TTI 8 = Level 6 ODUkT TTI (default for layer adjacency discovery) It shall be noted that an Amendment to ITU-T G.7714.1 has been approved in September 2010 that defines an extension for OTN layer adjacency discovery based on the ODUk TCM function (ODUkT) providing 6 TCM levels. By default the TCM level 6 SHALL be used. Trace Length: 16 bits Expresses the length of the trace message in bytes (as specified by the Trace Type). Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 16] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 Trace Message: This field includes the value of the expected message to be received in-band. The valid length and value combinations are determined by the ITU.T G.709 recommendation. The message MUST be padded with zeros to a 32-bit boundary, if necessary. Trace Length does not include padding zeroes. This object is non negotiable. 6.2. Discovery Response Message for Layer Adjacency Discovery ITU-T Recommendation G.7714.1 [ITUT-G.7714.1] describes an automatic layer adjacency discovery procedure that can be applied to the ITU-T G.709 OTN technology. The discovery message can be sent to the adjacent node via the Trail Trace Identifier (TTI) and Appendix III of G.7714.1 describes how the discovery response message can be sent back to the originator of the discovery message (discovery agent in G.7714.1 terminology) using the LMP protocol. As defined in [ITUT-G.7714.1], the TraceMonitor message [RFC4207] is used to convey the discovery response message. The following mapping table shows how the discovery response message attributes are mapped to TraceMonitor message objects or other fields of the LMP message (see G.7714.1, section 11 for the description of the attributes): | G.7714.1 discovery response | TraceMonitor/LMP message field message attribute | ---------------------------------+-------------------------------------- <Received DA DCN ID> | <TRACE>: received discovery message | <Received TCP-ID> | <TRACE>: received discovery message | <Sent DA DCN ID> | IP source address in the IP header | <Sent Tx TCP-ID> | identical to <Sent Rx TCP-ID> Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 17] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 | <Sent Rx TCP-ID> | <LOCAL_INTERFACE_ID> | The received TTI, more specifically the discovery message in the SAPI field contains the <Received DA DCN ID> and the <Received TCP-ID>. These attributes are included in the discovery response message by copying the received TTI into the <TRACE> field of the TraceMonitor message. The IP address of the node sending the discovery response message corresponds to the <Sent_DA_DCN_ID> and is the IP source address in the IP header of the LMP TraceMonitor message. Typically, the Trail Connection Point (TCP-)IDs in transmit and receive direction are identical for OTN equipment, i.e., the <Sent Rx TCP-ID> is identical to the <Sent Tx TCP-ID>. The <Sent Rx TCP-ID> identifies the TCP on which the Discovery Message was received and corresponds to the <LOCAL_INTERFACE_ID> object in the TraceMonitor message. 7. LMP Behavior Negotiation Update This docuemnt also introduces an update to the BehaviorConfig C-Type defined in [LMP-NEG]. A new flag in the BehaviorConfig is needed for the indication of the support for OTN Test Messages: 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 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |S|D|C|O| Must Be Zero (MBZ) | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ - O: 1 bit This bit indicates support for the TEST behavior of OTN technology-specific defined in this document. 8. Security Considerations TBD. Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 18] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 9. IANA Considerations TBD. 10. Acknowledgments TBD. 11. References 11.1. Normative References [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. [RFC4204] J. Lang, Ed., "Link Management Protocol (LMP)", RFC 4204, October 2005. [OTN-frwk] Zhang, F. et al, "Framework for GMPLS and PCE Control of G.709 Optical Transport Networks", draft-ietf-ccamp- gmpls-g709-framework-08.txt, June 19, 2012. [ITUT-G709] ITU-T, "Interface for the Optical Transport Network (OTN)", G.709 Recommendation, March 2003. [G709-V3] ITU-T, "Interfaces for the Optical Transport Network (OTN)", G.709 Recommendation, December 2009. [ITUT-G.7714.1] ITU-T, "Protocol for automatic discovery in SDH and OTN networks, G.7714.1 Recommendation", April 2003. [RFC1662] Simpson, W., "PPP in HDLC-like Framing", STD 51, RFC 1662, July 1994. [RFC3471] Berger, L., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) Signaling Functional Description", RFC 3471, January 2003. [RFC3945] Mannie, E., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) Architecture", RFC 3945, October 2004. [RFC4207] Lang, J. and D. Papadimitriou, "Synchronous Optical Network (SONET)/Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) Encoding for Link Management Protocol (LMP) Test Messages", RFC 4207, October 2005. Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 19] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 11.2. Informative References [RFC3945] Mannie, E., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) Architecture", RFC 3945, October 2004. [RFC4328] D. Papadimitriou, Ed. "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) Signaling Extensions for G.709 Optical Transport Networks Control", RFC 4328, Jan 2006. [LMP-NEG] D.Li, D.Ceccarelli, L.Berger, "Link Management Protocol Behavior Negotiation and Configuration Modifications," July 2012, draft-ietf-ccamp-lmp-behavior-negotiation-06. 12. Authors' Addresses Fatai Zhang Huawei Technologies F3-5-B R&D Center, Huawei Base Bantian, Longgang District Shenzhen 518129 P.R.China Phone: +86-755-28972912 Email: zhangfatai@huawei.com Xian Zhang Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. F3-5-B R&D Center, Huawei Base, Bantian, Longgang District Shenzhen 518129 P.R.China Phone: +86-755-28972913 Email: zhang.xian@huawei.com Daniele Ceccarelli Ericsson Via A. Negrone 1/A Genova - Sestri Ponente Italy Email: daniele.ceccarelli@ericsson.com Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 20] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 Diego Caviglia Ericsson Via A. Negrone 1/A Genova - Sestri Ponente Italy Email: diego.caviglia@ericsson.com Francesco Fondelli Ericsson Via Moruzzi 1 Pisa Italy Email: francesco.fondelli@ericsson.com Guoying Zhang China Academy of Telecommunication Research of MII 11 Yue Tan Nan Jie Beijing, P.R.China Phone: +86-10-68094272 Email: zhangguoying@mail.ritt.com.cn Pietro Grandi Alcatel-Lucent Optics CTO Via Trento 30 20059 Vimercate (Milano) Italy +39 039 6864930 Email: pietro_vittorio.grandi@alcatel-lucent.it Sergio Belotti Alcatel-Lucent Optics CTO Via Trento 30 20059 Vimercate (Milano) Italy +39 039 6863033 Email: sergio.belotti@alcatel-lucent.it Dan Li Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 21] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 Huawei Technologies F3-5-B R&D Center, Huawei Base Shenzhen 518129 P.R.China Bantian, Longgang District Phone: +86-755-28973237 Email: danli@huawei.com Dieter Beller Alcatel-Lucent Lorenzstrasse 10 Stuttgart 70435 Germany Email: dieter.beller@alcatel-lucent.com 13. Contributors Yi Lin Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. F3-5-B R&D Center, Huawei Base, Bantian, Longgang District Shenzhen 518129 P.R.China Phone: +86-755-28972914 Email: yi.lin@huawei.com Intellectual Property The IETF Trust takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in any IETF Document or the extent to which any license under such rights might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has made any independent effort to identify any such rights. 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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 Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 23] draft-cecczhang-ccamp-gmpls-g.709v3-lmp-00.txt October 2012 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. Ceccarelli & Zhang Expires April 2013 [Page 24]