Network Working Group Luca Martini Internet Draft Eric C. Rosen Expiration Date: June 2006 Cisco Systems, Inc. Giles Heron Andrew G. Malis Tellabs December 2005 Encapsulation Methods for Transport of PPP/HDLC Over MPLS Networks draft-ietf-pwe3-hdlc-ppp-encap-mpls-06.txt Status of this Memo By submitting this Internet-Draft, each author represents that any applicable patent or other IPR claims of which he or she is aware have been or will be disclosed, and any of which he or she becomes aware will be disclosed, in accordance with Section 6 of 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/1id-abstracts.html The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html. Abstract A Pseudowire (PW) can be used to carry PPP, or HDLC Protocol Data Units over an MPLS network without terminating the PPP/HDLC protocol. This enables service providers to offer "emulated" HDLC, or PPP link services over existing MPLS networks. This document specifies the Martini, et al. [Page 1] Internet Draft draft-ietf-pwe3-hdlc-ppp-encap-mpls-06.txt December 2005 encapsulation of PPP/HDLC PDUs within a pseudo wire. Table of Contents 1 Specification of Requirements .......................... 2 2 Introduction ........................................... 2 3 General encapsulation method ........................... 5 3.1 The Control Word ....................................... 5 3.1.1 Setting the sequence number ............................ 7 3.2 MTU Requirements ....................................... 7 4 Protocol-Specific Details .............................. 8 4.1 HDLC ................................................... 8 4.2 Frame Relay Port Mode .................................. 8 4.3 PPP .................................................... 10 5 Using an MPLS Label as the Demultiplexer Field ......... 11 5.1 MPLS Shim EXP Bit Values ............................... 11 5.2 MPLS Shim S Bit Value .................................. 11 6 Congestion Control ..................................... 11 7 IANA Considerations .................................... 12 8 Security Considerations ................................ 12 9 Intellectual Property Statement ........................ 12 10 Full Copyright Statement ............................... 13 11 Normative References ................................... 13 12 Informative References ................................. 14 13 Author Information ..................................... 14 14 Contributing Author Information ........................ 15 1. Specification of Requirements 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 2. Introduction A PPP/HDLC Pseudowire (PW) allows PPP/HDLC Protocol Data Units (PDUs) to be carried over an MPLS network. In addressing the issues associated with carrying a PPP/HDLC PDU over an MPLS network, this document assumes that a Pseudowire (PW) has been set up by some means outside the scope of this document. This may be via manual configuration, or using the signaling protocol such as that defined in [CONTROL]. Martini, et al. [Page 2] Internet Draft draft-ietf-pwe3-hdlc-ppp-encap-mpls-06.txt December 2005 The following figure describe the reference models which are derived from [ARCH] to support the HDLC/PPP PW emulated services. |<-------------- Emulated Service ---------------->| | | | |<------- Pseudo Wire ------>| | | | | | | | |<-- PSN Tunnel -->| | | | V V V V | V AC +----+ +----+ AC V +-----+ | | PE1|==================| PE2| | +-----+ | |----------|............PW1.............|----------| | | CE1 | | | | | | | | CE2 | | |----------|............PW2.............|----------| | +-----+ ^ | | |==================| | | ^ +-----+ ^ | +----+ +----+ | | ^ | | Provider Edge 1 Provider Edge 2 | | | | | | Customer | | Customer Edge 1 | | Edge 2 | | | | native HDLC/PPP service native HDLC/PPP service Figure 1: PWE3 HDLC/PPP Interface Reference Configuration This document specifies the emulated PW encapsulation for PPP, and HDLC, however QoS related issues are not discussed in this document. For the purpose of the discussion in this document PE1 will be defined as the ingress router, and PE2 as the egress router. A layer 2 PDU will be received at PE1, encapsulated at PE1, transported, decapsulated at PE2, and transmitted out on the attachment circuit of PE2. The following reference model describes the termination point of each end of the PW within the PE: Martini, et al. [Page 3] Internet Draft draft-ietf-pwe3-hdlc-ppp-encap-mpls-06.txt December 2005 +-----------------------------------+ | PE | +---+ +-+ +-----+ +------+ +------+ +-+ | | |P| | | |PW ter| | PSN | |P| | |<==|h|<=| NSP |<=|minati|<=|Tunnel|<=|h|<== From PSN | | |y| | | |on | | | |y| | C | +-+ +-----+ +------+ +------+ +-+ | E | | | | | +-+ +-----+ +------+ +------+ +-+ | | |P| | | |PW ter| | PSN | |P| | |==>|h|=>| NSP |=>|minati|=>|Tunnel|=>|h|==> To PSN | | |y| | | |on | | | |y| +---+ +-+ +-----+ +------+ +------+ +-+ | | +-----------------------------------+ ^ ^ ^ | | | A B C Figure 2: PW reference diagram The PW terminates at a logical port within the PE, defined at point A in the above diagram. This port provides an Ethernet MAC service that will deliver each Ethernet frame that is received at point A, unaltered, to the point A in the corresponding PE at the other end of the PW. The Native Service Processing (NSP) function includes frame processing that is required for the Ethernet frames that are forwarded to the PW termination point. Such functions may include stripping, overwriting or adding VLAN tags, physical port multiplexing and demultiplexing, PW-PW bridging, L2 encapsulation, shaping, policing, etc. These functions are specific to the native frame technology , and may not be required for the PW emulation service. The points to the left of A, including the physical layer between the CE and PE, and any adaptation (NSP) functions between it and the PW terminations, are outside of the scope of PWE3 and are not defined here. "PW Termination", between A and B, represents the operations for setting up and maintaining the PW, and for encapsulating and decapsulating the Ethernet frames as necessary to transmit them across the MPLS network. Martini, et al. [Page 4] Internet Draft draft-ietf-pwe3-hdlc-ppp-encap-mpls-06.txt December 2005 3. General encapsulation method This section describes the general encapsulation format for PPP and HDLC frames over MPLS pseudo wires. 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 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | PSN Transport Header (As Required) | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Pseudo Wire Header | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Control Word | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | PPP/HDLC Service Payload | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ Figure 3: General format for PPP/HDLC encapsulation over PSNs The PSN Transport Header depends on the particular tunneling technology in use. This header is used to transport the encapsulated PPP/HDLC information through the packet switched core. The Pseudo Wire Header identifies a particular PPP/HDLC service on a tunnel. In case of MPLS the Pseudo Wire Header is the MPLS label at the bottom of the MPLS label stack. The Control Word is inserted before the PPP/HDLC service payload. It may contain a length and sequence number. 3.1. The Control Word There are three requirements that may need to be satisfied when transporting layer 2 protocols over an MPLS backbone: -i. Sequentiality may need to be preserved. -ii. Small packets may need to be padded in order to be transmitted on a medium where the minimum transport unit is larger than the actual packet size. -iii. Control bits carried in the header of the layer 2 frame may need to be transported. -iv. Creating an in-band associated channel for operation and maintenance communications. The Control Word defined in this section is based on the Generic PW MPLS Control Word as defined in [CW]. It provides the ability to sequence individual frames on the PW, avoidance of equal-cost Martini, et al. [Page 5] Internet Draft draft-ietf-pwe3-hdlc-ppp-encap-mpls-06.txt December 2005 multiple-path load-balancing (ECMP) [RFC2992], and OAM mechanisms including VCCV [VCCV]. [PWE3-CW] states, "If a PW is sensitive to packet misordering and is being carried over an MPLS PSN that uses the contents of the MPLS payload to select the ECMP path, it MUST employ a mechanism which prevents packet misordering." This is necessary due to the fact that ECMP implementations may examine the first nibble after the MPLS label stack to determine whether the labeled packet is IP or not. Thus, if the PPP protocol number of an ppp frame carried over the PW without a control word present begins with 0x4 or 0x6, it could be mistaken for an IPv4 or IPv6 packet. This could, depending on the configuration and topology of the MPLS network, lead to a situation where all packets for a given PW do not follow the same path. This may increase out-of-order frames on a given PW, or cause OAM packets to follow a different path than actual traffic. The features that the control word provides may not be needed for a given PPP/HDLC PW. For example, ECMP may not be present or active on a given MPLS network, strict frame sequencing may not be required, etc. If this is the case, the control word provides little value and is therefore optional. Early PPP/HDLC PW implementations have been deployed that do not include a control word or the ability to process one if present. To aid in backwards compatibility, future implementations MUST be able to send and receive frames without the control word present. In all cases the ingress PE MUST be aware of whether the egress PE will send a control word over a specific PW. This may be achieved by configuration of the PEs, or by signaling, as defined in [CONTROL]. The control word is defined 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 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |0 0 0 0|0 0 0 0|Res| Length | Sequence Number | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ Figure 4: MPLS PWE3 Control Word In the above diagram the first 4 bits are set to 0 in indicate a CW [CW]. The next 4 bits provide space for carrying protocol specific flags. These are not used for HDLC/PPP and they MUST be set to 0 when transmitting, and MUST be ignored upon receipt. Martini, et al. [Page 6] Internet Draft draft-ietf-pwe3-hdlc-ppp-encap-mpls-06.txt December 2005 The next 2 bits are reserved for future use , and MUST be ignored. The next 6 bits provide a length field, which is used as follows: If the packet's length (defined as the length of the layer 2 payload plus the length of the control word) is less than 64 bytes, the length field MUST be set to the packet's length. Otherwise the length field MUST be set to zero. The value of the length field, if not zero, is used to remove any padding that may have been added by the MPLS network. When the packet reaches the service provider's egress router any padding MUST be removed before forwarding the packet. The next 16 bits provide a sequence number that can be used to guarantee ordered packet delivery. The processing of the sequence number field is OPTIONAL. The sequence number space is a 16 bit, unsigned circular space. The sequence number value 0 is used to indicate an unsequenced packet. 3.1.1. Setting the sequence number The procedures described in section 4 of [CW] MUST be followed to process the sequence number field. 3.2. MTU Requirements The network MUST be configured with an MTU that is sufficient to transport the largest encapsulation frames. When MPLS is used as the tunneling protocol, for example, this is likely to be 12 or more bytes greater than the largest frame size. The methodology described in [FRAG] MAY be used to fragment encapsulated frames that exceed the PSN MTU. However if [FRAG] is not used then if the ingress router determines that an encapsulated layer 2 PDU exceeds the MTU of the PSN tunnel through which it must be sent, the PDU MUST be dropped. If a packet is received, on the attachment circuit, that exceeds the interface MTU subTLV value [CONTROL] , it MUST be dropped. Martini, et al. [Page 7] Internet Draft draft-ietf-pwe3-hdlc-ppp-encap-mpls-06.txt December 2005 4. Protocol-Specific Details 4.1. HDLC HDLC mode provides port to port transport of HDLC encapsulated traffic. The HDLC PDU is transported in its entirety, including the HDLC address, control and protocol fields, but excluding HDLC flags and the FCS. Bit/Byte stuffing is undone. The control word is OPTIONAL. If the control word is used then the flag bits in the control word are not used, and MUST be set to 0 when transmitting, and MUST be ignored upon receipt. When the PE detects a status change in the attachment circuit status, such as an attachment circuit physical link failure, or the AC is administratively disabled, the PE MUST send the appropriate PW status notification message that corresponds to the HDLC AC status. In a similar manner, the local PW status MUST also be reflected in a respective PW status notification message as described in [CONTROL]. The HDLC mode is suitable for port to port transport of Frame Relay UNI or NNI traffic. It must be noted, however, that this mode is transparent to the FECN, BECN and DE bits. Since all packets are passed in a largely transparent manner over the HDLC PW, any protocol which has HDLC-like framing may utilize the HDLC PW mode, including PPP, Frame-Relay, X.25, etc. Exceptions include cases where direct access to the HDLC interface is required, or modes which operate on the flags, FCS, or bit/byte unstuffing that is performed before sending the HDLC PDU over the PW. An example of this is PPP ACCM negotiation. The PW of type 0x0006 "HDLC" will be used to transport HDLC frames. The IANA allocation registry of "Pseudowire Type" is defined in the iana allocation document for PWs [IANA] along with initial allocated values. 4.2. Frame Relay Port Mode Figure 5 illustrates the concept of frame relay port mode or many- to-one mapping which is an OPTIONAL capability. Figure 5 (a) shows two frame relay devices physically connected with a frame relay UNI or NNI. Between their two ports P1 and P2, n frame relay VCs are configured. Figure 5 (b) shows the replacement of the physical frame relay interface with a pair of PEs and a PW between them. The interface between a FR device and a PE is either a FR UNI or NNI. The set of n Martini, et al. [Page 8] Internet Draft draft-ietf-pwe3-hdlc-ppp-encap-mpls-06.txt December 2005 FR VCs between the two FR ports P1 and P2 which are controlled by the same signaling channel using DLCI=0, are mapped into one PW. The standard frame relay Link management Interface (LMI) procedures happen directly between the CEs. Hence with port mode we have many- to-one mapping between FR VCs and a PW. +------+ +-------+ | FR | | FR | |device| FR UNI/NNI | device| | [P1]------------------------[P2] | | | carrying n FR VCs | | +------+ +-------+ [Pn]: A port Figure 5a FR interface between two FR devices |<---------------------------->| | | +----+ +----+ +------+ | | One PW | | +------+ | | | |==================| | | | | FR | FR | PE1| carrying n FR VCs| PE2| FR | FR | |device|----------| | | |---------|device| | CE1 | UNI/NNI | | | | UNI/NNI | CE2 | +------+ +----+ +----+ +------+ | | |<----------------------------------------------->| n FR VCs Figure 5b Pseudo-wires replacing the FR interface FR VCs are not visible individually to a PE; there is no configuration of individual FR VC in a PE. A PE processes the set of FR VCs assigned to a port as an aggregate. FR port mode provides transport between two PEs of a complete FR frame using the same encapsulation as described above for HDLC mode. Al thought frame relay port mode shares the same encapsulation as HDLC mode, a different PW type is allocated in [IANA]: 0x000F Frame-Relay Port mode. All other aspects of this PW type are identical to the HDLC PW encapsulation described above. Martini, et al. [Page 9] Internet Draft draft-ietf-pwe3-hdlc-ppp-encap-mpls-06.txt December 2005 4.3. PPP PPP mode provides point to point transport of PPP encapsulated traffic, as specified in [PPP]. The PPP PDU is transported in its entirety, including the protocol field (whether compressed using Protocol Field Compression or not), but excluding any media-specific framing information, such as HDLC address and control fields or FCS. Since media-specific framing is not carried the following options will not operate correctly if the PPP peers attempt to negotiate them: - Frame Check Sequence (FCS) Alternatives - Address-and-Control-Field-Compression (ACFC) - Asynchronous-Control-Character-Map (ACCM) Note also that PW LSP Interface MTU negotiation as specified in [CONTROL] is not affected by PPP MRU advertisement. Thus if a PPP peer sends a PDU with a length in excess of that negotiated for the PW tunnel that PDU will be discarded by the ingress router. If the OPTIONAL control word is used then the flag bits in the control word are not used, and MUST be set to 0 when transmitting, and MUST be ignored upon receipt. When the PE detects a status change in the attachment circuit (AC)status, such as an attachment circuit physical link failure, or the AC is administratively disabled, the PE MUST send the appropriate PW status notification message that corresponds to the PPP AC status. It should be noted that PPP negotiation status is transparent to the PW, and MUST not be communicated to the remote MPLS PE. In a similar manner, the local PW status MUST also be reflected in a respective PW status notification message as described in [CONTROL]. A PW of type 0x0007 "PPP" will be used to transport PPP frames. The IANA allocation registry of "Pseudowire Type" is defined in the iana allocation document for PWs [IANA] along with initial allocated values. Martini, et al. [Page 10] Internet Draft draft-ietf-pwe3-hdlc-ppp-encap-mpls-06.txt December 2005 5. Using an MPLS Label as the Demultiplexer Field To use an MPLS label as the demultiplexer field, a 32-bit label stack entry [MPLSENCAP] is simply prepended to the emulated PW encapsulation, and hence will appear as the bottom label of an MPLS label stack. This label may be called the "PW label". The particular emulated PW identified by a particular label value must be agreed by the ingress and egress LSRs, either by signaling (e.g, via the methods of [CONTROL]) or by configuration. Other fields of the label stack entry are set as follows. 5.1. MPLS Shim EXP Bit Values If it is desired to carry Quality of Service information, the Quality of Service information SHOULD be represented in the EXP field of the PW label. If more than one MPLS label is imposed by the ingress LSR, the EXP field of any labels higher in the stack MUST also carry the same value. 5.2. MPLS Shim S Bit Value The ingress LSR, PE1, MUST set the S bit of the PW label to a value of 1 to denote that the PW label is at the bottom of the stack. 6. Congestion Control As explained in [ARCH], the PSN carrying the PW may be subject to congestion, with congestion characteristics depending on PSN type, network architecture, configuration, and loading. During congestion the PSN may exhibit packet loss that will impact the service carried by the PPP/HLDC PW. In addition, since PPP/HDLC PWs carry an unspecified type of services across the PSN, they cannot behave in a TCP-friendly manner prescribed by [RFC2914]. In the presence of services that reduce transmission rate, PPP/HDLC PWs will thus consume more than their fair share and SHOULD be halted. Whenever possible, PPP/HDLC PWs should be run over traffic-engineered PSNs providing bandwidth allocation and admission control mechanisms. IntServ-enabled domains providing the Guaranteed Service (GS) or DiffServ-enabled domains using EF (expedited forwarding) are examples of traffic-engineered PSNs. Such PSNs will minimize loss and delay while providing some degree of isolation of the PPP/HDLC PW's effects from neighboring streams. The PEs SHOULD monitor for congestion (by using explicit congestion Martini, et al. [Page 11] Internet Draft draft-ietf-pwe3-hdlc-ppp-encap-mpls-06.txt December 2005 notification, [VCCV], or by measuring packet loss) in order to ensure that the service using the PPP/HDLC PW may be maintained. When significant congestion is detected the PPP/HDLCPW SHOULD be administratively disabled. If the PW has been set up using the protocol defined in [CONTROL], then procedures specified in [CONTROL] for status notification can be used to disable packet transmission on the ingress PE from the egress PE. The PW may be restarted by manual intervention, or by automatic means after an appropriate waiting time. 7. IANA Considerations This document has no IANA Actions. 8. Security Considerations The PPP, and HDLC pseudowire type is subject to all of the general security considerations discussed in [ARCH][CONTROL]. This document specifies only encapsulations, and not the protocols that may be used to carry the encapsulated packets across the MPLS network. Each such protocol may have its own set of security issues, but those issues are not affected by the encapsulations specified herein. 9. Intellectual Property Statement The IETF 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 this 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. Information on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be found in BCP 78 and BCP 79. Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository at http://www.ietf.org/ipr. The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement this standard. Please address the information to the IETF at ietf- Martini, et al. [Page 12] Internet Draft draft-ietf-pwe3-hdlc-ppp-encap-mpls-06.txt December 2005 ipr@ietf.org. By submitting this Internet-Draft, I certify that any applicable patent or other IPR claims of which I am aware have been disclosed, or will be disclosed, and any of which I become aware will be disclosed, in accordance with RFC 3668. 10. Full Copyright Statement Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005). This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors retain all their rights. This document and the information contained herein are provided on an "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. 11. Normative References [CONTROL] "Pseudowire Setup and Maintenance using LDP", Martini, L., et al., draft-ietf-pwe3-control-protocol-16.txt, ( work in progress ), April 2005 [MPLSENCAP] "MPLS Label Stack Encoding", E. Rosen, Y. Rekhter, D. Tappan, G. Fedorkow, D. Farinacci, T. Li, A. Conta. RFC3032 [IANA] "IANA Allocations for pseudo Wire Edge to Edge Emulation (PWE3)" Martini,Townsley, draft-ietf-pwe3-iana-allocation-09.txt (work in progress), April 2004 [CW] "PWE3 Control Word for use over an MPLS PSN", S. Bryant, G. Swal- low, D. McPherson, draft-ietf-pwe3-cw-06.txt, ( work in progress ), October 2005. Martini, et al. [Page 13] Internet Draft draft-ietf-pwe3-hdlc-ppp-encap-mpls-06.txt December 2005 12. Informative References [PPP] "The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)", RFC 1661. [ATM] "Encapsulation Methods for Transport of ATM Cells/Frame Over MPLS Networks", draft-ietf-pwe3-atm-encap-02.txt ( work in progress ) [ETHER] "Encapsulation Methods for Transport of Ethernet Frames Over MPLS Networks", draft-ietf-pwe3-ethernet-encap-06.txt. ( work in progress ) [FRAME] "Frame Relay over Pseudo-Wires", draft-ietf-pwe3-frame-relay-01.txt. (work in progress ) [ARCH] "PWE3 Architecture" Bryant, et al.,RFC3985 [FRAG] "PWE3 Fragmentation and Reassembly", A. Malis,W. M. Townsley, draft-ietf-pwe3-fragmentation-08.txt ( work in progress ) February 2005 [ARCH] "PWE3 Architecture", Bryant, et al., RFC3985. [VCCV] Nadeau, T., et al."Pseudo Wire Virtual Circuit Connection Verification (VCCV)", Internet Draft draft-ietf-pwe3-vccv-08.txt, October 2005. (work in progress) [RFC2992] RFC-2992: Analysis of an Equal-Cost Multi-Path Algorithm, C. Hopps, November 2000 [RFC4026] Andersson, L., Madsen, T. "Provider Provisioned Virtual Private Network (VPN) Terminology", RFC 4026, March 2005. [RFC2914] S. Floyd, "Congestion Control Principles" RFC 2914 13. Author Information Luca Martini Cisco Systems, Inc. 9155 East Nichols Avenue, Suite 400 Englewood, CO, 80112 e-mail: lmartini@cisco.com Martini, et al. [Page 14] Internet Draft draft-ietf-pwe3-hdlc-ppp-encap-mpls-06.txt December 2005 Giles Heron Tellabs Abbey Place 24-28 Easton Street High Wycombe Bucks HP11 1NT UK e-mail: giles.heron@tellabs.com Eric C. Rosen Cisco Systems, Inc. 1414 Massachusetts Avenue Boxborough, MA 01719 E-mail: erosen@cisco.com Andrew G. Malis Tellabs 90 Rio Robles Dr. San Jose, CA 95134 e-mail: Andy.Malis@tellabs.com 14. Contributing Author Information Yeongil Seo 463-1 KT Technology Lab Jeonmin-dong Yusung-gu Daegeon, Korea email: syi1@kt.co.kr Toby Smith Laurel Networks, Inc. Omega Corporate Center 1300 Omega Drive Pittsburgh, PA 15205 e-mail: tob@laurelnetworks.com Martini, et al. [Page 15]