BESS WorkGroup A. Sajassi Internet-Draft S. Salam Intended status: Standards Track S. Thoria Expires: December 16, 2020 Cisco Systems J. Drake Juniper J. Rabadan Nokia June 14, 2020 Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN draft-ietf-bess-evpn-inter-subnet-forwarding-09 Abstract EVPN provides an extensible and flexible multi-homing VPN solution over an MPLS/IP network for intra-subnet connectivity among Tenant Systems and End Devices that can be physical or virtual. However, there are scenarios for which there is a need for a dynamic and efficient inter-subnet connectivity among these Tenant Systems and End Devices while maintaining the multi-homing capabilities of EVPN. This document describes an Integrated Routing and Bridging (IRB) solution based on EVPN to address such requirements. Requirements Language 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 RFC 2119 [RFC2119] and RFC 8174 [RFC8174]. 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 December 16, 2020. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 1] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 Copyright Notice Copyright (c) 2020 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 (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. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 2. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 3. EVPN PE Model for IRB Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 4. Symmetric and Asymmetric IRB . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 4.1. IRB Interface and its MAC and IP addresses . . . . . . . 10 5. Symmetric IRB Procedures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 5.1. Control Plane - Advertising PE . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 5.2. Control Plane - Receiving PE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 5.3. Subnet route advertisement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 5.4. Data Plane - Ingress PE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 5.5. Data Plane - Egress PE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 6. Asymmetric IRB Procedures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 6.1. Control Plane - Advertising PE . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 6.2. Control Plane - Receiving PE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 6.3. Data Plane - Ingress PE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 6.4. Data Plane - Egress PE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 7. Mobility Procedure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 7.1. Initiating an ARP Request upon a Move . . . . . . . . . . 19 7.2. Sending Data Traffic without an ARP Request . . . . . . . 20 7.3. Silent Host . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 8. BGP Encoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 8.1. Router's MAC Extended Community . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 9. Operational Models for Symmetric Inter-Subnet Forwarding . . 24 9.1. IRB forwarding on NVEs for Tenant Systems . . . . . . . . 24 9.1.1. Control Plane Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 9.1.2. Data Plane Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 9.2. IRB forwarding on NVEs for Subnets behind Tenant Systems 28 9.2.1. Control Plane Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 9.2.2. Data Plane Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 10. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 11. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 2] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 12. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 13. Intellectual Property Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 14. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 14.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 14.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 1. Terminology AC: Attachment Circuit ARP: Address Resolution Protocol BD: Broadcast Domain. As per [RFC7432], an EVI consists of a single or multiple BDs. In case of VLAN-bundle and VLAN-based service models (see [RFC7432]), a BD is equivalent to an EVI. In case of VLAN-aware bundle service model, an EVI contains multiple BDs. Also, in this document, BD and subnet are equivalent terms. BD Route Target: refers to the Broadcast Domain assigned Route Target [RFC4364]. In case of VLAN-aware bundle service model, all the BD instances in the MAC-VRF share the same Route Target BT: Bridge Table. The instantiation of a BD in a MAC-VRF, as per [RFC7432]. DGW: Data Center Gateway Ethernet A-D route: Ethernet Auto-Discovery (A-D) route, as per [RFC7432]. Ethernet NVO tunnel: refers to Network Virtualization Overlay tunnels with Ethernet payload. Examples of this type of tunnels are VXLAN or GENEVE. EVI: EVPN Instance spanning the NVE/PE devices that are participating on that EVPN, as per [RFC7432]. EVPN: Ethernet Virtual Private Networks, as per [RFC7432]. GRE: Generic Routing Encapsulation GW IP: Gateway IP Address IPL: IP Prefix Length IP NVO tunnel: it refers to Network Virtualization Overlay tunnels with IP payload (no MAC header in the payload). Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 3] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 IP-VRF: A VPN Routing and Forwarding table for IP routes on an NVE/ PE. The IP routes could be populated by EVPN and IP-VPN address families. An IP-VRF is also an instantiation of a layer 3 VPN in an NVE/PE. IRB: Integrated Routing and Bridging interface. It connects an IP- VRF to a BD (or subnet). MAC-VRF: A Virtual Routing and Forwarding table for Media Access Control (MAC) addresses on an NVE/PE, as per [RFC7432]. A MAC-VRF is also an instantiation of an EVI in an NVE/PE. ML: MAC address length ND: Neighbor Discovery Protocol NVE: Network Virtualization Edge GENEVE: Generic Network Virtualization Encapsulation, [GENEVE] NVO: Network Virtualization Overlays RT-2: EVPN route type 2, i.e., MAC/IP Advertisement route, as defined in [RFC7432] RT-5: EVPN route type 5, i.e., IP Prefix route. As defined in Section 3 of [EVPN-PREFIX] SN: Subnet TS: Tenant System VA: Virtual Appliance VNI: Virtual Network Identifier. As in [RFC8365], the term is used as a representation of a 24-bit NVO instance identifier, with the understanding that VNI will refer to a VXLAN Network Identifier in VXLAN, or Virtual Network Identifier in GENEVE, etc. unless it is stated otherwise. VTEP: VXLAN Termination End Point, as in [RFC7348]. VXLAN: Virtual Extensible LAN, as in [RFC7348]. This document also assumes familiarity with the terminology of [RFC7432], [RFC8365] and [RFC7365]. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 4] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 2. Introduction EVPN [RFC7432] provides an extensible and flexible multi-homing VPN solution over an MPLS/IP network for intra-subnet connectivity among Tenant Systems (TSes) and End Devices that can be physical or virtual; where an IP subnet is represented by an EVI for a VLAN-based service or by an (EVI, VLAN) for a VLAN-aware bundle service. However, there are scenarios for which there is a need for a dynamic and efficient inter-subnet connectivity among these Tenant Systems and End Devices while maintaining the multi-homing capabilities of EVPN. This document describes an Integrated Routing and Bridging (IRB) solution based on EVPN to address such requirements. The inter-subnet communication is traditionally achieved at centralized L3 Gateway (L3GW) devices where all the inter-subnet forwarding are performed and all the inter-subnet communication policies are enforced. When two TSes belonging to two different subnets connected to the same PE, wanted to communicate with each other, their traffic needed to be back hauled from the PE all the way to the centralized gateway where inter-subnet switching is performed and then back to the PE. For today's large multi-tenant data center, this scheme is very inefficient and sometimes impractical. In order to overcome the drawback of centralized layer-3 GW approach, IRB functionality is needed on the PEs (also referred to as EVPN NVEs) attached to TSes in order to avoid inefficient forwarding of tenant traffic (i.e., avoid back-hauling and hair-pinning). When a PE with IRB capability receives tenant traffic over an Attachment Circuit (AC), it can not only locally bridge the tenant intra-subnet traffic but also can locally route the tenant inter-subnet traffic on a packet by packet basis thus meeting the requirements for both intra and inter-subnet forwarding and avoiding non-optimum traffic forwarding associated with centralized layer-3 GW approach. Some TSes run non-IP protocols in conjunction with their IP traffic. Therefore, it is important to handle both kinds of traffic optimally - e.g., to bridge non-IP and intra-subnet traffic and to route inter- subnet IP traffic. Therefore, the solution needs to meet the following requirements: R1: The solution MUST allow for both inter-subnet and intra-subnet traffic belonging to the same tenant to be locally routed and bridged respectively. The solution MUST provide IP routing for inter-subnet traffic and Ethernet Bridging for intra-subnet traffic. R2: The solution MUST support bridging for non-IP traffic. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 5] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 R3: The solution MUST allow inter-subnet switching to be disabled on a per VLAN basis on PEs where the traffic needs to be back hauled to another node (i.e., for performing FW or DPI functionality). 3. EVPN PE Model for IRB Operation Since this document discusses IRB operation in relationship to EVPN MAC-VRF, IP-VRF, EVI, Bridge Domain (BD), Bridge Table (BT), and IRB interfaces, it is important to understand the relationship among these components. Therefore, the following PE model is illustrated below to a) describe these components and b) illustrate the relationship among them. +-------------------------------------------------------------+ | | | +------------------+ IRB PE | | Attachment | +------------------+ | | Circuit(AC1) | | +----------+ | MPLS/NVO tnl ----------------------*Bridge | | +----- | | | |Table(BT1)| | +-----------+ / \ \ | | | | *---------* |<--> |Eth| | | | | VLAN x | |IRB1| | \ / / | | | +----------+ | | | +----- | | | ... | | IP-VRF1 | | | | | +----------+ | | RD2/RT2 |MPLS/NVO tnl | | | |Bridge | | | | +----- | | | |Table(BT2)| |IRB2| | / \ \ | | | | *---------* |<--> |IP | ----------------------* VLAN y | | +-----------+ \ / / | AC2 | | +----------+ | +----- | | | MAC-VRF1 | | | +-+ RD1/RT1 | | | +------------------+ | | | | | +-------------------------------------------------------------+ Figure 1: EVPN IRB PE Model A tenant needing IRB services on a PE, requires an IP Virtual Routing and Forwarding table (IP-VRF) along with one or more MAC Virtual Routing and Forwarding tables (MAC-VRFs). An IP-VRF, as defined in [RFC4364], is the instantiation of an IPVPN instance in a PE. A MAC- VRF, as defined in [RFC7432], is the instantiation of an EVI (EVPN Instance) in a PE. A MAC-VRF can consists of one or more Bridge Tables (BTs) where each BT corresponds to a VLAN (broadcast domain - Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 6] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 BD). If service interfaces for an EVPN PE are configured in VLAN- Based mode (i.e., section 6.1 of RFC7432), then there is only a single BT per MAC-VRF (per EVI) - i.e., there is only one tenant VLAN per EVI. However, if service interfaces for an EVPN PE are configured in VLAN-Aware Bundle mode (i.e., section 6.3 of RFC7432), then there are several BTs per MAC-VRF (per EVI) - i.e., there are several tenant VLANs per EVI. Each BT is connected to a IP-VRF via a L3 interface called IRB interface. Since a single tenant subnet is typically (and in this document) represented by a VLAN (and thus supported by a single BT), for a given tenant there are as many BTs as there are subnets and thus there are also as many IRB interfaces between the tenant IP-VRF and the associated BTs as shown in the PE model above. IP-VRF is identified by its corresponding route target and route distinguisher and MAC-VRF is also identified by its corresponding route target and route distinguisher. If operating in EVPN VLAN- Based mode, then a receiving PE that receives an EVPN route with MAC- VRF route target can identify the corresponding BT; however, if operating in EVPN VLAN-Aware Bundle mode, then the receiving PE needs both the MAC-VRF route target and VLAN ID in order to identify the corresponding BT. 4. Symmetric and Asymmetric IRB This document defines and describes two types of IRB solutions - namely symmetric and asymmetric IRB. The description of symmetric and asymmetric IRB procedures relating to data path operations and tables in this document is a logical view of data path lookups and related tables. Actual implementations, while following this logical view, may not strictly adhere to it for performance tradeoffs. Specifically, o references to ARP table in the context of asymmetric IRB is a logical view of a forwarding table that maintains an IP to MAC binding entry on a layer 3 interface for both IPv4 and IPv6. These entries are not subject to ARP or ND protocol. For IP to MAC bindings learnt via EVPN, an implementation may choose to import these bindings directly to the respective forwarding table (such as an adjacency/next-hop table) as opposed to importing them to ARP or ND protocol tables. o references to host IP lookup followed by a host MAC lookup in the context of asymmetric IRB MAY be collapsed into a single IP lookup in a hardware implementation. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 7] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 In symmetric IRB as its name implies, the lookup operation is symmetric at both ingress and egress PEs - i.e., both ingress and egress PEs perform lookups on both MAC and IP addresses. The ingress PE performs a MAC lookup followed by an IP lookup and the egress PE performs a IP lookup followed by a MAC lookup as depicted in the following figure. Ingress PE Egress PE +-------------------+ +------------------+ | | | | | +-> IP-VRF ----|---->---|-----> IP-VRF -+ | | | | | | | | BT1 BT2 | | BT3 BT2 | | | | | | | | ^ | | v | | | | | | | +-------------------+ +------------------+ ^ | | | TS1->-+ +->-TS2 Figure 2: Symmetric IRB In symmetric IRB as shown in figure-2, the inter-subnet forwarding between two PEs is done between their associated IP-VRFs. Therefore, the tunnel connecting these IP-VRFs can be either IP-only tunnel (in case of MPLS or GENEVE encapsulation) or Ethernet NVO tunnel (in case of VxLAN encapsulation). If it is an Ethernet NVO tunnel, the TS1's IP packet is encapsulated in an Ethernet header consisting of ingress and egress PEs MAC addresses - i.e., there is no need for ingress PE to use the destination TS2's MAC address. Therefore, in symmetric IRB, there is no need for the ingress PE to maintain ARP entries for destination TS2's IP and MAC addresses association in its ARP table. Each PE participating in symmetric IRB only maintains ARP entries for locally connected hosts and maintains MAC-VRFs/BTs for only locally configured subnets. In asymmetric IRB, the lookup operation is asymmetric and the ingress PE performs three lookups; whereas the egress PE performs a single lookup - i.e., the ingress PE performs a MAC lookup, followed by an IP lookup, followed by a MAC lookup again; whereas, the egress PE performs just a single MAC lookup as depicted in figure 3 below. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 8] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 Ingress PE Egress PE +-------------------+ +------------------+ | | | | | +-> IP-VRF -> | | IP-VRF | | | | | | | | BT1 BT2 | | BT3 BT2 | | | | | | | | | | | +--|--->----|--------------+ | | | | | | v | +-------------------+ +----------------|-+ ^ | | | TS1->-+ +->-TS2 Figure 3: Asymmetric IRB In asymmetric IRB as shown in figure-3, the inter-subnet forwarding between two PEs is done between their associated MAC-VRFs/BTs. Therefore, the MPLS or NVO tunnel used for inter-subnet forwarding MUST be of type Ethernet. Since only MAC lookup is performed at the egress PE (e.g., no IP lookup), the TS1's IP packets need to be encapsulated with the destination TS2's MAC address. In order for ingress PE to perform such encapsulation, it needs to maintain TS2's IP and MAC address association in its ARP table. Furthermore, it needs to maintain destination TS2's MAC address in the corresponding BT even though it may not have any TSes of the corresponding subnet locally attached. In other words, each PE participating in asymmetric IRB MUST maintain ARP entries for remote hosts (hosts connected to other PEs) as well as maintain MAC-VRFs/BTs and IRB interfaces for ALL subnets in an IP VRF including subnets that may not be locally attached. The following subsection defines the control and data planes procedures for symmetric and asymmetric IRB on ingress and egress PEs. The following figure is used in description of these procedures where it shows a single IP-VRF and a number of BTs on each PE for a given tenant. The IP-VRF of the tenant (i.e., IP-VRF1) is connected to each BT via its associated IRB interface. Each BT on a PE is associated with a unique VLAN (e.g., with a BD) where in turn is associated with a single MAC-VRF in case of VLAN-Based mode or a number of BTs can be associated with a single MAC-VRF in case of VLAN-Aware Bundle mode. Whether the service interface on a PE is VLAN-Based or VLAN-Aware Bundle mode does not impact the IRB operation and procedures. It mainly impacts the setting of Ethernet tag field in EVPN BGP routes as described in [RFC7432]. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 9] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 PE 1 +---------+ +-------------+ | | TS1-----| MACx| | | PE2 (IP1/M1) |(BT1) | | | +-------------+ TS5-----| \ | | MPLS/ | |MACy (BT3) |-----TS3 (IP5/M5) |Mx/IPx \ | | VxLAN/ | | / | (IP3/M3) | (IP-VRF1)|----| NVGRE |---|(IP-VRF1) | | / | | | | \ | TS2-----|(BT2) / | | | | (BT1) |-----TS4 (IP2/M2) | | | | | | (IP4/M4) +-------------+ | | +-------------+ | | +---------+ Figure 4: IRB forwarding 4.1. IRB Interface and its MAC and IP addresses To support inter-subnet forwarding on a PE, the PE acts as an IP Default Gateway from the perspective of the attached Tenant Systems where default gateway MAC and IP addresses are configured on each IRB interface associated with its subnet and falls into one of the following two options: 1. All the PEs for a given tenant subnet use the same anycast default gateway IP and MAC addresses. On each PE, this default gateway IP and MAC addresses correspond to the IRB interface connecting the BT associated with the tenant's VLAN to the corresponding tenant's IP-VRF. 2. Each PE for a given tenant subnet uses the same anycast default gateway IP address but its own MAC address. These MAC addresses are aliased to the same anycast default gateway IP address through the use of the Default Gateway extended community as specified in [RFC7432], which is carried in the EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement routes. On each PE, this default gateway IP address along with its associated MAC addresses correspond to the IRB interface connecting the BT associated with the tenant's VLAN to the corresponding tenant's IP-VRF. It is worth noting that if the applications that are running on the TSes are employing or relying on any form of MAC security, then either the first model (i.e. using anycast MAC address) should be used to ensure that the applications receive traffic from the same IRB interface MAC address that they are sending to, or if the second model is used, then the IRB interface MAC address MUST be the one Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 10] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 used in the initial ARP reply or ND Neighbor Advertisement (NA)for that TS. Although both of these options are equally applicable to both symmetric and asymmetric IRB, the option-1 is recommended because of the ease of anycast MAC address provisioning on not only the IRB interface associated with a given subnet across all the PEs corresponding to that VLAN but also on all IRB interfaces associated with all the tenant's subnets across all the PEs corresponding to all the VLANs for that tenant. Furthermore, it simplifies the operation as there is no need for Default Gateway extended community advertisement and its associated MAC aliasing procedure. Yet another advantage is that following host mobility, the host does not need to refresh the default GW ARP/ND entry. If option-1 is used, an implementation MAY choose to auto-derive the anycast MAC address. If auto-derivation is used, the anycast MAC MUST be auto-derived out of the following ranges (which are defined in [RFC5798]): o Anycast IPv4 IRB case: 00-00-5E-00-01-{VRID} (in hex, in Internet standard bit-order) o Anycast IPv6 IRB case: 00-00-5E-00-02-{VRID} (in hex, in Internet standard bit-order) Where the last octet is generated based on a configurable Virtual Router ID (VRID, range 1-255)). If not explicitly configured, the default value for the VRID octet is '01'. Auto-derivation of the anycast MAC can only be used if there is certainty that the auto- derived MAC does not collide with any customer MAC address. In addition to IP anycast addresses, IRB interfaces can be configured with non-anycast IP addresses for the purpose of OAM (such as traceroute/ping to these interfaces) for both symmetric and asymmetric IRB. These IP addresses need to be distributed as VPN routes when PEs operate in symmetric IRB mode. However, they don't need to be distributed if the PEs are operating in asymmetric IRB mode and the non-anycast IP addresses are configured along with individual MACs. Irrespective of using only the anycast address or both anycast and non-anycast addresses on the same IRB, when a TS sends an ARP request or ND Neighbor Solicitation (NS) to the PE that is attached to, the request is sent for the anycast IP address of the IRB interface associated with the TS's subnet and the reply will use anycast MAC address (in both Source MAC in the Ethernet header and Sender hardware address in the payload). For example, in figure 4, TS1 is Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 11] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 configured with the anycast IPx address as its default gateway IP address and thus when it sends an ARP request for IPx (anycast IP address of the IRB interface for BT1), the PE1 sends an ARP reply with the MACx which is the anycast MAC address of that IRB interface. Traffic routed from IP-VRF1 to TS1 SHOULD use the anycast MAC address as source MAC address. 5. Symmetric IRB Procedures 5.1. Control Plane - Advertising PE When a PE (e.g., PE1 in figure 4 above) learns MAC and IP address of a TS (via an ARP request), it adds the MAC address to the corresponding MAC-VRF/BT of that tenant's subnet and adds the IP address to the IP-VRF for that tenant. Furthermore, it adds this TS's MAC and IP address association to its ARP table. It then builds an EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route (type 2) as follows and advertises it to other PEs participating in that tenant's VPN. o The Length field of the BGP EVPN NLRI for an EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route MUST be either 40 (if IPv4 address is carried) or 52 (if IPv6 address is carried). o Route Distinguisher (RD), Ethernet Segment Identifier, Ethernet Tag ID, MAC Address Length, MAC Address, IP Address Length, IP Address, and MPLS Label1 fields MUST be set per [RFC7432] and [RFC8365]. o The MPLS Label2 field is set to either an MPLS label or a VNI corresponding to the tenant's IP-VRF. In case of an MPLS label, this field is encoded as 3 octets, where the high-order 20 bits contain the label value. Just as in [RFC7432], the RD, Ethernet Tag ID, MAC Address Length, MAC Address, IP Address Length, and IP Address fields are part of the route key used by BGP to compare routes. The rest of the fields are not part of the route key. This route is advertised along with the following two extended communities: 1. Tunnel Type Extended Community 2. Router's MAC Extended Community For symmetric IRB mode, Router's MAC EC is needed to carry the PE's overlay MAC address (e.g., inner MAC address in NVO encapsulation) which is used for IP-VRF to IP-VRF communications with Ethernet NVO Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 12] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 tunnel. If MPLS or IP-only NVO tunnel is used, then there is no need to send Router's MAC Extended Community along with this route. This route MUST be advertised with two route targets - one corresponding to the MAC-VRF of the tenant's subnet and another corresponding to the tenant's IP-VRF. 5.2. Control Plane - Receiving PE When a PE (e.g., PE2 in figure 4 above) receives this EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route, it performs the following: o Using MAC-VRF Route Target (and Ethernet Tag if different from zero), it identifies the corresponding MAC-VRF (and BT). If the MAC- VRF (and BT) exists (e.g., it is locally configured) then it imports the MAC address into it. Otherwise, it does not import the MAC address. o Using IP-VRF route target, it identifies the corresponding IP-VRF and imports the IP address into it. The inclusion of MPLS label2 field in this route signals to the receiving PE that this route is for symmetric IRB mode and MPLS label2 needs to be installed in forwarding path to identify the corresponding IP-VRF. If the receiving PE receives this route with both the MAC-VRF and IP- VRF route targets but the MAC/IP Advertisement route does not include MPLS label2 field and if the receiving PE supports asymmetric IRB mode, then the receiving PE installs the MAC address in the corresponding MAC-VRF and (IP, MAC) association in the ARP table for that tenant (identified by the corresponding IP-VRF route target). If the receiving PE receives this route with both the MAC-VRF and IP- VRF route targets and if the receiving PE does not support either asymmetric or symmetric IRB modes, then if it has the corresponding MAC-VRF, it only imports the MAC address; otherwise, if it doesn't have the corresponding MAC-VRF, it MUST not import this route. If the receiving PE receives this route with both the MAC-VRF and IP- VRF route targets and the MAC/IP Advertisement route includes MPLS label2 field but the receiving PE only supports asymmetric IRB mode, then the receiving PE MUST ignore MPLS label2 field and install the MAC address in the corresponding MAC-VRF and (IP, MAC) association in the ARP table for that tenant (identified by the corresponding IP-VRF route target). Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 13] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 5.3. Subnet route advertisement In case of symmetric IRB, a layer-3 subnet and IRB interface corresponding to a MAC-VRF/BT is required to be provisioned at a PE only if that PE has locally attached hosts in that subnet. In order to enable inter-subnet routing across PEs in a deployment where all subnets are not provisioned at all PEs participating in an EVPN IRB instance, PEs MUST advertise local subnet routes as RT-5. These subnet routes are required for bootstrapping host (MAC,IP) learning using gleaning procedures initiated by an inter-subnet data packet. Consider a subnet A that is locally attached to PE1 and subnet B that is locally attached to PE2 and to PE3. Host A in subnet A, that is attached to PE1 initiates a data packet destined to host B in subnet B that is attached to PE3. If host B's (MAC, IP) has not yet been learnt either via a gratuitous ARP OR via a prior gleaning procedure, a new gleaning procedure MUST be triggered for host B's (MAC, IP) to be learnt and advertised across the EVPN network. Since host B's subnet is not local to PE1, an IP lookup for host B at PE1 will not trigger this gleaning procedure for host B's (MAC, IP). Therefore, PE1 MUST learn subnet B's prefix route via RT-5 advertised from PE2 and PE3, so it can route the packet to one of the PEs that have subnet B locally attached. Once the packet is received at PE2 OR PE3, and the route lookup yields a glean result, an ARP request is triggered and flooded across the layer-2 overlay. This ARP request would be received and replied to by host B, resulting in host B (MAC, IP) learning at PE3, and its advertisement across the EVPN network. Packets from host A to host B can now be routed directly from PE1 to PE3. Advertisement of local subnet RT-5 for an IP VRF MAY typically be achieved via provisioning connected route redistribution to BGP. 5.4. Data Plane - Ingress PE When an Ethernet frame is received by an ingress PE (e.g., PE1 in figure 4 above), the PE uses the AC ID (e.g., VLAN ID) to identify the associated MAC-VRF/BT and it performs a lookup on the destination MAC address. If the MAC address corresponds to its IRB Interface MAC address, the ingress PE deduces that the packet must be inter-subnet routed. Hence, the ingress PE performs an IP lookup in the associated IP-VRF table. The lookup identifies BGP next hop of egress PE along with the tunnel/encapsulation type and the associated MPLS/VNI values. If the tunnel type is that of MPLS or IP-only NVO tunnel, then TS's IP packet is sent over the tunnel without any Ethernet header. However, if the tunnel type is that of Ethernet NVO tunnel, then an Ethernet header needs to be added to the TS's IP packet. The source MAC address of this inner Ethernet header is set to the ingress PE's Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 14] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 router MAC address and the destination MAC address of this inner Ethernet header is set to the egress PE's router MAC address learnt via Router's MAC extended community attached to the route. MPLS VPN label is set to the received label2 in the route. In case of Ethernet NVO tunnel type, VNI may be set one of two ways: o downstream mode: VNI is set to the received label2 in the route which is downstream assigned. o global mode: VNI is set to the received label2 in the route which is domain-wide assigned. This VNI value from received label2 MUST be the same as the locally configured VNI for the IP VRF as all PEs in the NVO MUST be configured with the same IP VRF VNI for this mode of operation. PE's may be configured to operate in one of these two modes depending on the administrative domain boundaries across PEs participating in the NVO, and PE's capability to support downstream VNI mode. In case of NVO tunnel encapsulation, the outer source and destination IP addresses are set to the ingress and egress PE BGP next-hop IP addresses respectively. 5.5. Data Plane - Egress PE When the tenant's MPLS or NVO encapsulated packet is received over an MPLS or NVO tunnel by the egress PE, the egress PE removes NVO tunnel encapsulation and uses the VPN MPLS label (for MPLS encapsulation) or VNI (for NVO encapsulation) to identify the IP-VRF in which IP lookup needs to be performed. If the VPN MPLS label or VNI identifies a MAC- VRF instead of an IP-VRF, then the procedures in section 6.4 for asymmetric IRB are executed. The lookup in the IP-VRF identifies a local adjacency to the IRB interface associated with the egress subnet's MAC-VRF/BT. The egress PE gets the destination TS's MAC address for that TS's IP address from its ARP table, it encapsulates the packet with that destination MAC address and a source MAC address corresponding to that IRB interface and sends the packet to its destination subnet MAC-VRF/BT. The destination MAC address lookup in the MAC-VRF/BT results in local adjacency (e.g., local interface) over which the Ethernet frame is sent on. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 15] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 6. Asymmetric IRB Procedures 6.1. Control Plane - Advertising PE When a PE (e.g., PE1 in figure 4 above) learns MAC and IP address of an attached TS (e.g., via an ARP request), it populates its MAC-VRF/ BT, IP-VRF, and ARP table just as in the case for symmetric IRB. It then builds an EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route (type 2) as follows and advertises it to other PEs participating in that tenant's VPN. o The Length field of the BGP EVPN NLRI for an EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route MUST be either 37 (if IPv4 address is carried) or 49 (if IPv6 address is carried). o Route Distinguisher (RD), Ethernet Segment Identifier, Ethernet Tag ID, MAC Address Length, MAC Address, IP Address Length, IP Address, and MPLS Label1 fields MUST be set per [RFC7432] and [RFC8365]. o The MPLS Label2 field MUST NOT be included in this route. Just as in [RFC7432], the RD, Ethernet Tag ID, MAC Address Length, MAC Address, IP Address Length, and IP Address fields are part of the route key used by BGP to compare routes. The rest of the fields are not part of the route key. This route is advertised along with the following extended community: o Tunnel Type Extended Community For asymmetric IRB mode, Router's MAC EC is not needed because forwarding is performed using destination TS's MAC address which is carried in this EVPN route type-2 advertisement. This route MUST always be advertised with the MAC-VRF route target. It MAY also be advertised with a second route target corresponding to the IP-VRF. 6.2. Control Plane - Receiving PE When a PE (e.g., PE2 in figure 4 above) receives this EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route, it performs the following: o Using MAC-VRF route target, it identifies the corresponding MAC- VRF and imports the MAC address into it. For asymmetric IRB mode, it is assumed that all PEs participating in a tenant's VPN are configured with all subnets (i.e., all VLANs) and corresponding MAC-VRFs/BTs even if there are no locally attached TSes for some Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 16] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 of these subnets. The reason for this is because ingress PE needs to do forwarding based on destination TS's MAC address and perform NVO tunnel encapsulation as a property of a lookup in MAC-VRF/BT. An implementation may choose to consolidate the lookup at the ingress PE's IP-VRF with the lookup at the ingress PE's destination subnet MAC-VRF. Consideration for such consolidation of lookups is an implementation exercise and thus its specification is outside the scope of this document. o If only MAC-VRF route target is used, then the receiving PE uses the MAC-VRF route target to identify the corresponding IP-VRF - i.e., many MAC-VRF route targets map to the same IP-VRF for a given tenant. In this case, MAC-VRF may be used by the receiving PE to identify the corresponding IP VRF via the IRB interface associated with the subnet MAC-VRF/BT. This would equivalent to how ARP table entries are typically mapped to IRB interface of an IP VRF for installing attached host routes in an IP VRF. Since in asymmetric IRB mode, each PE is configured with all VLANs of a tenant, indirect import to IP VRF via the corresponding MAC-VRF route target is a viable alternative. o Using MAC-VRF route target, the receiving PE identifies the corresponding ARP table for the tenant and it adds an entry to the ARP table for the TS's MAC and IP address association. It should be noted that the tenant's ARP table at the receiving PE is identified by all the MAC- VRF route targets for that tenant. o If IP-VRF route target is included, it may be used to import the route to IP-VRF. If IP-VRF route-target is not included, MAC-VRF is used to derive corresponding IP-VRF for import, as explained in prior section. In both cases, IP-VRF route is installed with the TS MAC binding included in the received route. If the receiving PE receives the MAC/IP Advertisement route with MPLS label2 field but the receiving PE only supports asymmetric IRB mode, then the receiving PE MUST ignore MPLS label2 field and install the MAC address in the corresponding MAC-VRF and (IP, MAC) association in the ARP table for that tenant (with IRB interface identified by the MAC-VRF). If the receiving PE receives the MAC/IP Advertisement route with MPLS label2 field and it can support symmetric IRB mode, then it should use the MAC-VRF route target to identify its corresponding MAC-VRF table and import the MAC address. It should use the IP-VRF route target to identify the corresponding IP-VRF table and import the IP address, as specified in symmetric IRB handling. It MUST NOT import (IP, MAC) association into its ARP table. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 17] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 6.3. Data Plane - Ingress PE When an Ethernet frame is received by an ingress PE (e.g., PE1 in figure 4 above), the PE uses the AC ID (e.g., VLAN ID) to identify the associated MAC-VRF/BT and it performs a lookup on the destination MAC address. If the MAC address corresponds to its IRB Interface MAC address, the ingress PE deduces that the packet must be inter-subnet routed. Hence, the ingress PE performs an IP lookup in the associated IP-VRF table. The lookup identifies a local adjacency to the IRB interface associated with the egress subnet's MAC-VRF/BT. The ingress PE gets the destination TS's MAC address for that TS's IP address from its ARP table, it encapsulates the packet with that destination MAC address and a source MAC address corresponding to that IRB interface and sends the packet to its destination subnet MAC-VRF/BT. The destination MAC address lookup in the MAC-VRF/BT results in BGP next hop address of egress PE along with label-1 (L2 VPN MPLS label or VNI). The ingress PE encapsulates the packet using Ethernet NVO tunnel of the choice (e.g., VxLAN or GENEVE) and sends the packet to the egress PE. Since the packet forwarding is between ingress PE's MAC-VRF/BT and egress PE's MAC-VRF/BT, the packet encapsulation procedures follows that of [RFC7432] for MPLS and [RFC8365] for VxLAN encapsulations. 6.4. Data Plane - Egress PE When a tenant's Ethernet frame is received over an NVO tunnel by the egress PE, the egress PE removes NVO tunnel encapsulation and uses the VPN MPLS label (for MPLS encapsulation) or VNI (for NVO encapsulation) to identify the MAC-VRF/BT in which MAC lookup needs to be performed. The MAC lookup results in local adjacency (e.g., local interface) over which the packet needs to get sent. Note that the forwarding behavior on the egress PE is the same as EVPN intra-subnet forwarding described in [RFC7432] for MPLS and [RFC8365] for NVO networks. In other words, all the packet processing associated with the inter-subnet forwarding semantics is confined to the ingress PE for asymmetric IRB mode. It should also be noted that [RFC7432] provides different level of granularity for the EVPN label. Besides identifying bridge domain table, it can be used to identify the egress interface or a destination MAC address on that interface. If EVPN label is used for egress interface or individual MAC address identification, then no Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 18] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 MAC lookup is needed in the egress PE for MPLS encapsulation and the packet can be directly forwarded to the egress interface just based on EVPN label lookup. 7. Mobility Procedure When a TS moves from one NVE (aka source NVE) to another NVE (aka target NVE), it is important that the MAC mobility procedures are properly executed and the corresponding MAC-VRF and IP-VRF tables on all participating NVEs are updated. [RFC7432] describes the MAC mobility procedures for L2-only services for both single-homed TS and multi-homed TS. This section describes the incremental procedures and BGP Extended Communities needed to handle the MAC mobility for IRB. In order to place the emphasis on the differences between L2-only and IRB use cases, the incremental procedure is described for single-homed TS with the expectation that the reader can easily extrapolate multi-homed TS based on the procedures described in section 15 of [RFC7432]. This section describes mobility procedures for both symmetric and asymmetric IRB. Although the language used in this section is for IPv4 ARP, it equally applies to IPv6 ND. When a TS moves from a source NVE to a target NVE, it can behave in one of the following three ways: 1. TS initiates an ARP request upon a move to the target NVE 2. TS sends data packet without first initiating an ARP request to the target NVE 3. TS is a silent host and neither initiates an ARP request nor sends any packets The following subsections describe the procedures for each of the above options. In the following subsections, it is assumed that the MAC and IP addresses of a TS have one-to-one relationship (i.e., there is one IP address per MAC address and vice versa). If there is many- to-one relationship such that there are many host IP addresses correspond to a single host MAC address or there are many host MAC addresses correspond to a single IP address, then to detect host mobility, the procedures in [IRB-EXT-MOBILITY] must be exercised followed by the procedures described below. 7.1. Initiating an ARP Request upon a Move In this scenario when a TS moves from a source NVE to a target NVE, the TS initiates an ARP request upon the move (e.g., gratuitous ARP) to the target NVE. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 19] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 The target NVE upon receiving this ARP request, updates its MAC-VRF, IP-VRF, and ARP table with the host MAC, IP, and local adjacency information (e.g., local interface). Since this NVE has previously learned the same MAC and IP addresses from the source NVE, it recognizes that there has been a MAC move and it initiates MAC mobility procedures per [RFC7432] by advertising an EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route with both the MAC and IP addresses filled in (per sections 5.1 and 6.1) along with MAC Mobility Extended Community with the sequence number incremented by one. The target NVE also exercises the MAC duplication detection procedure in section 15.1 of [RFC7432]. The source NVE upon receiving this MAC/IP Advertisement route, realizes that the MAC has moved to the target NVE. It updates its MAC-VRF and IP-VRF table accordingly with the adjacency information of the target NVE. In case of the asymmetric IRB, the source NVE also updates its ARP table with the received adjacency information and in case of the symmetric IRB, the source NVE removes the entry associated with the received (MAC, IP) from its local ARP table. It then withdraws its EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route. Furthermore, it sends an ARP probe locally to ensure that the MAC is gone. If an ARP response is received, the source NVE updates its ARP entry for that (IP, MAC) and re-advertises an EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route for that (IP, MAC) along with MAC Mobility Extended Community with the sequence number incremented by one. The source NVE also exercises the MAC duplication detection procedure in section 15.1 of [RFC7432]. All other remote NVE devices upon receiving the MAC/IP Advertisement route with MAC Mobility extended community compare the sequence number in this advertisement with the one previously received. If the new sequence number is greater than the old one, then they update the MAC/IP addresses of the TS in their corresponding MAC-VRF and IP- VRF tables to point to the target NVE. Furthermore, upon receiving the MAC/IP withdraw for the TS from the source NVE, these remote PEs perform the cleanups for their BGP tables. 7.2. Sending Data Traffic without an ARP Request In this scenario when a TS moves from a source NVE to a target NVE, the TS starts sending data traffic without first initiating an ARP request. The target NVE upon receiving the first data packet, learns the MAC address of the TS in data plane and updates its MAC-VRF table with the MAC address and the local adjacency information (e.g., local interface) accordingly. The target NVE realizes that there has been Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 20] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 a MAC move because the same MAC address has been learned remotely from the source NVE. If EVPN-IRB NVEs are configured to advertise MAC-only routes in addition to MAC-and-IP EVPN routes, then the following steps are taken: o The target NVE upon learning this MAC address in data-plane, updates this MAC address entry in the corresponding MAC-VRF with the local adjacency information (e.g., local interface). It also recognizes that this MAC has moved and initiates MAC mobility procedures per [RFC7432] by advertising an EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route with only the MAC address filled in along with MAC Mobility Extended Community with the sequence number incremented by one. o The source NVE upon receiving this MAC/IP Advertisement route, realizes that the MAC has moved to the new NVE. It updates its MAC-VRF table with the adjacency information for that MAC address to point to the target NVE and withdraws its EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route that has only the MAC address (if it has advertised such route previously). Furthermore, it searches for the corresponding MAC-IP entry and sends an ARP probe for this (MAC,IP) pair. The ARP request message is sent both locally to all attached TSes in that subnet as well as it is sent to other NVEs participating in that subnet including the target NVE. Note that the PE would need to maintain a correlation between MAC and MAC-IP route entries in the MAC-VRF to accomplish this. o The target NVE passes the ARP request to its locally attached TSes and when it receives the ARP response, it updates its IP-VRF and ARP table with the host (MAC, IP) information. It also sends an EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route with both the MAC and IP addresses filled in along with MAC Mobility Extended Community with the sequence number set to the same value as the one for MAC-only advertisement route it sent previously. o When the source NVE receives the EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route, it updates its IP-VRF table with the new adjacency information (pointing to the target NVE). In case of the asymmetric IRB, the source NVE also updates its ARP table with the received adjacency information and in case of the symmetric IRB, the source NVE removes the entry associated with the received (MAC, IP) from its local ARP table. Furthermore, it withdraws its previously advertised EVPN MAC/IP route with both the MAC and IP address fields filled in. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 21] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 o All other remote NVE devices upon receiving the MAC/IP advertisement route with MAC Mobility extended community compare the sequence number in this advertisement with the one previously received. If the new sequence number is greater than the old one, then they update the MAC/IP addresses of the TS in their corresponding MAC-VRF, IP-VRF, and ARP tables (in case of asymmetric IRB) to point to the new NVE. Furthermore, upon receiving the MAC/IP withdraw for the TS from the old NVE, these remote PEs perform the cleanups for their BGP tables. If EVPN-IRB NVEs are configured not to advertise MAC-only routes, then upon receiving the first data packet, it learns the MAC address of the TS and updates the MAC entry in the corresponding MAC-VRF table with the local adjacency information (e.g., local interface). It also realizes that there has been a MAC move because the same MAC address has been learned remotely from the source NVE. It uses the local MAC route to find the corresponding local MAC-IP route, and sends a unicast ARP request to the host and when receiving an ARP response, it follows the procedure outlined in section 7.1. In the prior case, where MAC-only routes are also advertised, this procedure of triggering a unicast ARP probe at the target PE MAY also be used in addition to the source PE broadcast ARP probing procedure described earlier for better convergence. 7.3. Silent Host In this scenario when a TS moves from a source NVE to a target NVE, the TS is silent and it neither initiates an ARP request nor it sends any data traffic. Therefore, neither the target nor the source NVEs are aware of the MAC move. On the source NVE, an age-out timer (for the silent host that has moved) is used to trigger an ARP probe. This age-out timer can be either ARP timer or MAC age-out timer and this is an implementation choice. The ARP request gets sent both locally to all the attached TSes on that subnet as well as it gets sent to all the remote NVEs (including the target NVE) participating in that subnet. The source NVE also withdraw the EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route with only the MAC address (if it has previously advertised such a route). The target NVE passes the ARP request to its locally attached TSes and when it receives the ARP response, it updates its MAC-VRF, IP- VRF, and ARP table with the host (MAC, IP) and local adjacency information (e.g., local interface). It also sends an EVPN MAC/IP advertisement route with both the MAC and IP address fields filled in along with MAC Mobility Extended Community with the sequence number incremented by one. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 22] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 When the source NVE receives the EVPN MAC/IP Advertisement route, it updates its IP-VRF table with the new adjacency information (pointing to the target NVE). In case of the asymmetric IRB, the source NVE also updates its ARP table with the received adjacency information and in case of the symmetric IRB, the source NVE removes the entry associated with the received (MAC, IP) from its local ARP table. Furthermore, it withdraws its previously advertised EVPN MAC/IP route with both the MAC and IP address fields filled in. All other remote NVE devices upon receiving the MAC/IP Advertisement route route with MAC Mobility extended community compare the sequence number in this advertisement with the one previously received. If the new sequence number is greater than the old one, then they update the MAC/IP addresses of the TS in their corresponding MAC-VRF, IP- VRF, and ARP (in case of asymmetric IRB) tables to point to the new NVE. Furthermore, upon receiving the MAC/IP withdraw for the TS from the old NVE, these remote PEs perform the cleanups for their BGP tables. 8. BGP Encoding This document defines one new BGP Extended Community for EVPN. 8.1. Router's MAC Extended Community A new EVPN BGP Extended Community called Router's MAC is introduced here. This new extended community is a transitive extended community with the Type field of 0x06 (EVPN) and the Sub-Type of 0x03. It may be advertised along with BGP Encapsulation Extended Community defined in section 4.5 of [TUNNEL-ENCAP]. The Router's MAC Extended Community is encoded as an 8-octet value as follows: 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=0x06 | Sub-Type=0x03 | Router's MAC | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Router's MAC Cont'd | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ Figure 5: Router's MAC Extended Community This extended community is used to carry the PE's MAC address for symmetric IRB scenarios and it is sent with RT-2. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 23] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 9. Operational Models for Symmetric Inter-Subnet Forwarding The following sections describe two main symmetric IRB forwarding scenarios (within a DC - i.e., intra-DC) along with the corresponding procedures. In the following scenarios, without loss of generality, it is assumed that a given tenant is represented by a single IP-VPN instance. Therefore, on a given PE, a tenant is represented by a single IP-VRF table and one or more MAC-VRF tables. 9.1. IRB forwarding on NVEs for Tenant Systems This section covers the symmetric IRB procedures for the scenario where each Tenant System (TS) is attached to one or more NVEs and its host IP and MAC addresses are learned by the attached NVEs and are distributed to all other NVEs that are interested in participating in both intra-subnet and inter-subnet communications with that TS. In this scenario, without loss of generality, it is assumed that NVEs operate in VLAN-based service interface mode with one Bridge Table (BT) per MAC-VRF. Thus, for a given tenant, an NVE has one MAC-VRF for each tenant subnet (e.g., each VLAN) that is configured for extension via VxLAN or GENEVE encapsulation. In case of VLAN- aware bundling, then each MAC-VRF consists of multiple Bridge Tables (e.g., one BT per VLAN). The MAC-VRFs on an NVE for a given tenant are associated with an IP-VRF corresponding to that tenant (or IP-VPN instance) via their IRB interfaces. Since VxLAN and GENEVE encapsulations require inner Ethernet header (inner MAC SA/DA), and since for inter-subnet traffic, TS MAC address cannot be used, the ingress NVE's MAC address is used as inner MAC SA. The NVE's MAC address is the device MAC address and it is common across all MAC-VRFs and IP-VRFs. This MAC address is advertised using the new EVPN Router's MAC Extended Community (section 8.1). Figure 6 below illustrates this scenario where a given tenant (e.g., an IP-VPN instance) has three subnets represented by MAC-VRF1, MAC- VRF2, and MAC-VRF3 across two NVEs. There are five TSes that are associated with these three MAC-VRFs - i.e., TS1, TS4, and TS5 are on the same subnet (e.g., same MAC-VRF/VLAN). TS1 and TS5 are associated with MAC-VRF1 on NVE1, while TS4 is associated with MAC- VRF1 on NVE2. TS2 is associated with MAC-VRF2 on NVE1, and TS3 is associated with MAC-VRF3 on NVE2. MAC-VRF1 and MAC-VRF2 on NVE1 are in turn associated with IP-VRF1 on NVE1 and MAC-VRF1 and MAC-VRF3 on NVE2 are associated with IP-VRF1 on NVE2. When TS1, TS5, and TS4 exchange traffic with each other, only L2 forwarding (bridging) part of the IRB solution is exercised because all these TSes belong to the same subnet. However, when TS1 wants to exchange traffic with TS2 or TS3 which belong to different subnets, both bridging and routing Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 24] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 parts of the IRB solution are exercised. The following subsections describe the control and data planes operations for this IRB scenario in details. NVE1 +---------+ +-------------+ | | TS1-----| MACx| | | NVE2 (IP1/M1) |(MAC- | | | +-------------+ TS5-----| VRF1)\ | | MPLS/ | |MACy (MAC- |-----TS3 (IP5/M5) | \ | | VxLAN/ | | / VRF3) | (IP3/M3) | (IP-VRF1)|----| NVGRE |---|(IP-VRF1) | | / | | | | \ | TS2-----|(MAC- / | | | | (MAC- |-----TS4 (IP2/M2) | VRF2) | | | | VRF1) | (IP4/M4) +-------------+ | | +-------------+ | | +---------+ Figure 6: IRB forwarding on NVEs for Tenant Systems 9.1.1. Control Plane Operation Each NVE advertises a MAC/IP Advertisement route (i.e., Route Type 2) for each of its TSes with the following field set: o RD and ESI per [RFC7432] o Ethernet Tag = 0; assuming VLAN-based service o MAC Address Length = 48 o MAC Address = Mi ; where i = 1,2,3,4, or 5 in the above example o IP Address Length = 32 or 128 o IP Address = IPi ; where i = 1,2,3,4, or 5 in the above example o Label-1 = MPLS Label or VNI corresponding to MAC-VRF o Label-2 = MPLS Label or VNI corresponding to IP-VRF Each NVE advertises an RT-2 route with two Route Targets (one corresponding to its MAC-VRF and the other corresponding to its IP- VRF. Furthermore, the RT-2 is advertised with two BGP Extended Communities. The first BGP Extended Community identifies the tunnel type per section 4.5 of [TUNNEL-ENCAP] and the second BGP Extended Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 25] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 Community includes the MAC address of the NVE (e.g., MACx for NVE1 or MACy for NVE2) as defined in section 8.1. This second Extended Community (for the MAC address of NVE) is only required when Ethernet NVO tunnel type is used. If IP NVO tunnel type is used, then there is no need to send this second Extended Community. It should be noted that IP NVO tunnel type is only applicable to symmetric IRB procedures. Upon receiving this advertisement, the receiving NVE performs the following: o It uses Route Targets corresponding to its MAC-VRF and IP-VRF for identifying these tables and subsequently importing the MAC and IP addresses into them respectively. o It imports the MAC address from MAC/IP Advertisement route into the MAC-VRF with BGP Next Hop address as underlay tunnel destination address (e.g., VTEP DA for VxLAN encapsulation) and Label-1 as VNI for VxLAN encapsulation or EVPN label for MPLS encapsulation. o If the route carries the new Router's MAC Extended Community, and if the receiving NVE uses Ethernet NVO tunnel, then the receiving NVE imports the IP address into IP-VRF with NVE's MAC address (from the new Router's MAC Extended Community) as inner MAC DA and BGP Next Hop address as underlay tunnel destination address, VTEP DA for VxLAN encapsulation and Label-2 as IP-VPN VNI for VxLAN encapsulation. o If the receiving NVE ration MPLS encapsulation, then the receiving NVE imports the IP address into IP-VRF with BGP Next Hop address as underlay tunnel destination address, and Label-2 as IP-VPN label for MPLS encapsulation. If the receiving NVE receives a RT-2 with only Label-1 and only a single Route Target corresponding to IP-VRF, or if it receives a RT-2 with only a single Route Target corresponding to MAC-VRF but with both Label-1 and Label-2, or if it receives a RT-2 with MAC Address Length of zero, then it MUST treat the route as withdraw [RFC7606] and log an error message. 9.1.2. Data Plane Operation The following description of the data-plane operation describes just the logical functions and the actual implementation may differ. Lets consider data-plane operation when TS1 in subnet-1 (MAC-VRF1) on NVE1 wants to send traffic to TS3 in subnet-3 (MAC-VRF3) on NVE2. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 26] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 o NVE1 receives a packet with MAC DA corresponding to the MAC-VRF1 IRB interface on NVE1 (the interface between MAC-VRF1 and IP- VRF1), and VLAN-tag corresponding to MAC-VRF1. o Upon receiving the packet, the NVE1 uses VLAN-tag to identify the MAC-VRF1. It then looks up the MAC DA and forwards the frame to its IRB interface. o The Ethernet header of the packet is stripped and the packet is fed to the IP-VRF where IP lookup is performed on the destination IP address. This lookup yields the outgoing NVO tunnel and the required encapsulation. If the encapsulation is for Ethernet NVO tunnel, then it includes the egress NVE's MAC address as inner MAC DA, the egress NVE's IP address (e.g., BGP Next Hop address) as the VTEP DA, and the VPN-ID as the VNI. The inner MAC SA and VTEP SA are set to NVE's MAC and IP addresses respectively. If it is a MPLS encapsulation, then corresponding EVPN and LSP labels are added to the packet. The packet is then forwarded to the egress NVE. o On the egress NVE, if the packet arrives on Ethernet NVO tunnel (e.g., it is VxLAN encapsulated), then the NVO tunnel header is removed. Since the inner MAC DA is the egress NVE's MAC address, the egress NVE knows that it needs to perform an IP lookup. It uses the VNI to identify the IP-VRF table. If the packet is MPLS encapsulated, then the EVPN label lookup identifies the IP-VRF table. Next, an IP lookup is performed for the destination TS (TS3) which results in access-facing IRB interface over which the packet is sent. Before sending the packet over this interface, the ARP table is consulted to get the destination TS's MAC address. o The IP packet is encapsulated with an Ethernet header with MAC SA set to that of IRB interface MAC address (i.e, IRB interface between MAC-VRF3 and IP-VRF1 on NVE2) and MAC DA set to that of destination TS (TS3) MAC address. The packet is sent to the corresponding MAC-VRF (i.e., MAC-VRF3) and after a lookup of MAC DA, is forwarded to the destination TS (TS3) over the corresponding interface. In this symmetric IRB scenario, inter-subnet traffic between NVEs will always use the IP-VRF VNI/MPLS label. For instance, traffic from TS2 to TS4 will be encapsulated by NVE1 using NVE2's IP-VRF VNI/ MPLS label, as long as TS4's host IP is present in NVE1's IP-VRF. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 27] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 9.2. IRB forwarding on NVEs for Subnets behind Tenant Systems This section covers the symmetric IRB procedures for the scenario where some Tenant Systems (TSes) support one or more subnets and these TSes are associated with one or more NVEs. Therefore, besides the advertisement of MAC/IP addresses for each TS which can be multi- homed with All-Active redundancy mode, the associated NVE needs to also advertise the subnets statically configured on each TS. The main difference between this solution and the previous one is the additional advertisement corresponding to each subnet. These subnet advertisements are accomplished using EVPN IP Prefix route defined in [EVPN-PREFIX]. These subnet prefixes are advertised with the IP address of their associated TS (which is in overlay address space) as their next hop. The receiving NVEs perform recursive route resolution to resolve the subnet prefix with its associated ingress NVE so that they know which NVE to forward the packets to when they are destined for that subnet prefix. The advantage of this recursive route resolution is that when a TS moves from one NVE to another, there is no need to re-advertise any of the subnet prefixes for that TS. All it is needed is to advertise the IP/MAC addresses associated with the TS itself and exercise MAC mobility procedures for that TS. The recursive route resolution automatically takes care of the updates for the subnet prefixes of that TS. Figure below illustrates this scenario where a given tenant (e.g., an IP-VPN service) has three subnets represented by MAC-VRF1, MAC-VRF2, and MAC-VRF3 across two NVEs. There are four TSes associated with these three MAC-VRFs - i.e., TS1, TS5 are connected to MAC-VRF1 on NVE1, TS2 is connected to MAC-VRF2 on NVE1, TS3 is connected to MAC- VRF3 on NVE2, and TS4 is connected to MAC-VRF1 on NVE2. TS1 has two subnet prefixes (SN1 and SN2) and TS3 has a single subnet prefix, SN3. The MAC-VRFs on each NVE are associated with their corresponding IP-VRF using their IRB interfaces. When TS4 and TS1 exchange intra- subnet traffic, only L2 forwarding (bridging) part of the IRB solution is used (i.e., the traffic only goes through their MAC- VRFs); however, when TS3 wants to forward traffic to SN1 or SN2 sitting behind TS1 (inter-subnet traffic), then both bridging and routing parts of the IRB solution are exercised (i.e., the traffic goes through the corresponding MAC-VRFs and IP-VRFs). The following subsections describe the control and data planes operations for this IRB scenario in details. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 28] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 NVE1 +----------+ SN1--+ +-------------+ | | |--TS1-----|(MAC- \ | | | SN2--+ IP1/M1 | VRF1) \ | | | | (IP-VRF)|---| | | / | | | TS2-----|(MAC- / | | MPLS/ | IP2/M2 | VRF2) | | VxLAN/ | +-------------+ | NVGRE | +-------------+ | | SN3--+--TS3-----|(MAC-\ | | | IP3/M3 | VRF3)\ | | | | (IP-VRF)|---| | | / | | | TS4-----|(MAC- / | | | IP4/M4 | VRF1) | | | +-------------+ +----------+ NVE2 Figure 7: IRB forwarding on NVEs for subnets behind TSes 9.2.1. Control Plane Operation Each NVE advertises a Route Type-5 (RT-5, IP Prefix Route defined in [EVPN-PREFIX]) for each of its subnet prefixes with the IP address of its TS as the next hop (gateway address field) as follow: o RD associated with the IP-VRF o ESI = 0 o Ethernet Tag = 0; o IP Prefix Length = 0 to 32 or 0 to 128 o IP Prefix = SNi o Gateway Address = IPi; IP address of TS o Label = 0 This RT-5 is advertised with one or more Route Targets that have been configured as "export route targets" of the IP-VRF from which the route is originated. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 29] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 Each NVE also advertises an RT-2 (MAC/IP Advertisement Route) along with their associated Route Targets and Extended Communities for each of its TSes exactly as described in section 9.1.1. Upon receiving the RT-5 advertisement, the receiving NVE performs the following: o It uses the Route Target to identify the corresponding IP-VRF o It imports the IP prefix into its corresponding IP-VRF that is configured with an import RT that is one of the RTs being carried by the RT-5 route along with the IP address of the associated TS as its next hop. When receiving the RT-2 advertisement, the receiving NVE imports MAC/ IP addresses of the TS into the corresponding MAC-VRF and IP-VRF per section 9.1.1. When both routes exist, recursive route resolution is performed to resolve the IP prefix (received in RT-5) to its corresponding NVE's IP address (e.g., its BGP next hop). BGP next hop will be used as underlay tunnel destination address (e.g., VTEP DA for VxLAN encapsulation) and Router's MAC will be used as inner MAC for VxLAN encapsulation. 9.2.2. Data Plane Operation The following description of the data-plane operation describes just the logical functions and the actual implementation may differ. Lets consider data-plane operation when a host on SN1 sitting behind TS1 wants to send traffic to a host sitting behind SN3 behind TS3. o TS1 send a packet with MAC DA corresponding to the MAC-VRF1 IRB interface of NVE1, and VLAN-tag corresponding to MAC-VRF1. o Upon receiving the packet, the ingress NVE1 uses VLAN-tag to identify the MAC-VRF1. It then looks up the MAC DA and forwards the frame to its IRB interface just like section 9.1.1. o The Ethernet header of the packet is stripped and the packet is fed to the IP-VRF; where, IP lookup is performed on the destination address. This lookup yields the fields needed for VxLAN encapsulation with NVE2's MAC address as the inner MAC DA, NVE'2 IP address as the VTEP DA, and the VNI. MAC SA is set to NVE1's MAC address and VTEP SA is set to NVE1's IP address. o The packet is then encapsulated with the proper header based on the above info and is forwarded to the egress NVE (NVE2). Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 30] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 o On the egress NVE (NVE2), assuming the packet is VxLAN encapsulated, the VxLAN and the inner Ethernet headers are removed and the resultant IP packet is fed to the IP-VRF associated with that the VNI. o Next, a lookup is performed based on IP DA (which is in SN3) in the associated IP-VRF of NVE2. The IP lookup yields the access- facing IRB interface over which the packet needs to be sent. Before sending the packet over this interface, the ARP table is consulted to get the destination TS (TS3) MAC address. o The IP packet is encapsulated with an Ethernet header with the MAC SA set to that of the access-facing IRB interface of the egress NVE (NVE2) and the MAC DA is set to that of destination TS (TS3) MAC address. The packet is sent to the corresponding MAC-VRF3 and after a lookup of MAC DA, is forwarded to the destination TS (TS3) over the corresponding interface. 10. Acknowledgements The authors would like to thank Sami Boutros, Jeffrey Zhang, Krzysztof Szarkowicz, Lukas Krattiger and Neeraj Malhotra for their valuable comments. The authors would also like to thank Linda Dunbar, Florin Balus, Yakov Rekhter, Wim Henderickx, Lucy Yong, and Dennis Cai for their feedbacks and contributions. 11. Security Considerations This document describes a set of procedures for Inter-Subnet Forwarding of tenant traffic across PEs (or NVEs). These procedures include both layer-2 forwarding and layer-3 routing on a packet by packet basis. The security consideration for layer-2 forwarding in this document follow that of [RFC7432] for MPLS encapsulation and it follows that of [RFC8365] for VxLAN or GENEVE encapsulations. Furthermore, the security consideration for layer-3 routing is this document follows that of [RFC4365] with the exception for application of routing protocols between CEs and PEs. Contrary to [RFC4364], this document does not describe route distribution techniques between CEs and PEs, but rather considers the CEs as TSes or VAs that do not run dynamic routing protocols. This can be considered a security advantage, since dynamic routing protocols can be blocked on the NVE/ PE ACs, not allowing the tenant to interact with the infrastructure's dynamic routing protocols. In this document, the RT-5 is used for certain scenarios. This route uses an Overlay Index that requires a recursive resolution to a different EVPN route (an RT-2). Because of this, it is worth noting Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 31] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 that any action that ends up filtering or modifying the RT-2 route used to convey the Overlay Indexes, will modify the resolution of the RT-5 and therefore the forwarding of packets to the remote subnet. 12. IANA Considerations IANA has allocated a new transitive extended community Type of 0x06 and Sub-Type of 0x03 for EVPN Router's MAC Extended Community. 13. Intellectual Property Considerations This document is being submitted for use in IETF standards discussions. 14. References 14.1. Normative References [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997, . [RFC4364] Rosen, E. and Y. Rekhter, "BGP/MPLS IP Virtual Private Networks (VPNs)", RFC 4364, DOI 10.17487/RFC4364, February 2006, . [RFC7432] Sajassi, A., Ed., Aggarwal, R., Bitar, N., Isaac, A., Uttaro, J., Drake, J., and W. Henderickx, "BGP MPLS-Based Ethernet VPN", RFC 7432, DOI 10.17487/RFC7432, February 2015, . [RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174, May 2017, . [RFC8214] Boutros, S., Sajassi, A., Salam, S., Drake, J., and J. Rabadan, "Virtual Private Wire Service Support in Ethernet VPN", RFC 8214, DOI 10.17487/RFC8214, August 2017, . 14.2. Informative References [I-D.ietf-bess-evpn-prefix-advertisement] Rabadan, J., Henderickx, W., Drake, J., Lin, W., and A. Sajassi, "IP Prefix Advertisement in EVPN", draft-ietf- bess-evpn-prefix-advertisement-11 (work in progress), May 2018. Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 32] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 [RFC4365] Rosen, E., "Applicability Statement for BGP/MPLS IP Virtual Private Networks (VPNs)", RFC 4365, DOI 10.17487/RFC4365, February 2006, . [RFC5798] Nadas, S., Ed., "Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) Version 3 for IPv4 and IPv6", RFC 5798, DOI 10.17487/RFC5798, March 2010, . [RFC7348] Mahalingam, M., Dutt, D., Duda, K., Agarwal, P., Kreeger, L., Sridhar, T., Bursell, M., and C. Wright, "Virtual eXtensible Local Area Network (VXLAN): A Framework for Overlaying Virtualized Layer 2 Networks over Layer 3 Networks", RFC 7348, DOI 10.17487/RFC7348, August 2014, . [RFC7365] Lasserre, M., Balus, F., Morin, T., Bitar, N., and Y. Rekhter, "Framework for Data Center (DC) Network Virtualization", RFC 7365, DOI 10.17487/RFC7365, October 2014, . [RFC7606] Chen, E., Ed., Scudder, J., Ed., Mohapatra, P., and K. Patel, "Revised Error Handling for BGP UPDATE Messages", RFC 7606, DOI 10.17487/RFC7606, August 2015, . Authors' Addresses Ali Sajassi Cisco Systems MILPITAS, CALIFORNIA 95035 UNITED STATES Email: sajassi@cisco.com Samer Salam Cisco Systems Email: ssalam@cisco.com Samir Thoria Cisco Systems Email: sthoria@cisco.com Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 33] Internet-Draft Integrated Routing and Bridging in EVPN June 2020 John E Drake Juniper Email: jdrake@juniper.net Jorge Rabadan Nokia Email: jorge.rabadan@nokia.com Sajassi, et al. Expires December 16, 2020 [Page 34]