Network Working Group D. Papadimitriou Internet Draft J. Jones draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-lsps-01.txt Alcatel Expiration Date: May 2001 November 2000 Enhanced LSP Services Status of this Memo This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet- Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet- Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress." The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html. Abstract This document describes G.LSP parameters and attributes as well as the enhanced services they support. In the scope of the domain service model, this draft covers the User-to-Network Interface (UNI) parameters and the specific parameters used within Network-to- Network Interface (NNI) signaling. We propose to group these parameters in three distinct groups: G.LSP Identification parameters, G.LSP Service parameters and Policy parameters. The main objective of this proposal is to integrate within the G.LSP parameters the Virtual Private optical Network (VPoN) model, the class-of-priorities and the Class-of-Service (CoS) augmented model as well as enhanced protection mechanism and signaling security levels. Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 1 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 1. Introduction Current IP protocols extensions for services (Integrated or Differentiated), for traffic-engineering (Multi-Protocol Label Switching), for privacy (Virtual Private Networks), for multicast applications (IP Multicast protocols) and for security (IPSec Protocol) results from the short-term perspective when the IP protocol was defined begin of the eighties. Now, the current developments on optical networking are challenging the same problem: if these features are not included from the beginning within the signaling and routing protocols used in optical networking, future needs won't be covered by the current developments. The main objective of this proposal is to include within the G.LSP parameters and within signaling and routing protocols (for further studies) the Virtual Private optical Network (VPoN) model, the Class-of-Priorities (CoP) and the Class-of-Service (CoS) augmented model, and the multicast G.LSP. Enhancement considered in this document cover also the protection and fault-tolerance mechanism as well as signaling security levels. In order to structure the integration of these features within the signaling and routing protocols, we propose a classification separating the parameters distributed within an optical sub-network (Identification and Service parameters) from the one centralized on directory service (Policy-related parameters). This means that we consider for scalability, convergence and performance reasons that keeping all the policy-related parameters would result in an overflow of information to be distributed throughout the optical- network giving rise to an increasing convergence time which could potentially increase the setup time of a G.LSP. The proposed classification and parameter hierarchy takes also into account the relationship with status and result codes. The remainder of the document is organized as follows: Sections 2 _ 4 describe the details of the attributes for Identification, Service and Policy groups, respectively. Section 5 describes result and status codes. Annex 1 defines the terminology used in the contribution. 2. Identification parameters The following identification-related parameters are considered. These parameters belong to Type 0x01. Within this document parameters types and sub-types are defined for future use. 2.1 Termination-Point identification parameters (Sub-type 0x01) The ONE Termination-point identification parameters apply to both the source and the destination of a G.LSP. These definitions could Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 2 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 be applied also to the CNE end-point identification. Within the scope of the Domain Service model, the concepts developed within this section are also related to the address registration and resolution mechanisms. 2.1.1 Parameters definition - Port ID: 16-bit integer indicating and identifying the a port within an Optical Network Element _ ONE or Client Network Element - CNE - Channel ID: 16-bit integer indicating and identifying a channel within the specified port ID - Sub-Channel ID: 16-bit integer indicating a sub-channel within the specified Channel ID - Logical-port ID: identifies a logical port; concatenation of the port-ID (16-bit field), the Channel-ID (16-bit field) and the Sub- channel-ID (16-bit field) - Logical-address: the address associated with a logical-port. Logical-address could be one of the following: - ITU-T E.164 ATM End System Address (AESA): 160-bit field - British Standards Institute ICD AESA: 160-bit field - ANSI DCC AESA: 160-bit field - Ethernet address: 48-bit field - IPv4 address: 32-bit field - IPv6 address: 128-bit field - Default-value: 56-bit field (UNSPECIFIED: 0x0...0) The logical-address field (maximum 21-byte field) is constituted by the logical-address type sub-field and the logical-address value sub-field: - the logical-address type is a 8-bit sub-field indicating the type of the logical-address (default-value of the logical- address type is 0x00). - the logical-address value is a variable-length field of maximum 20 bytes indicating the value of the logical-address (maximum 20-byte sub-field without justification). The default-value (type 0x00) is a 56-bit field to optionally indicate the User-Group ID (7-byte field) within this field. Consequently, the logical-address of the Client will map a virtual identifier corresponding to the User-Group ID to which the G.LSP belongs. By using this method, the Virtual Private optical Network _ VPoN concept is mainly integrated within the logical addressing scheme. - Termination-point ID: 80-bit field resulting from the concatenation of the unique IPv4 address (32-bit field) Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 3 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 associated to the device and the logical-port ID (48-bit field) - Termination-point address: concatenation of the logical address and the termination-point ID. Consequently for the Client Network Element (CNE) addressing: := := The termination-point ID is a 80-bit field (32-bit IP Address, 16- bit Port ID; 16-bit Channel ID, 16-bit Sub-Channel ID). By concatenating this value with the logical-address a maximum 248-bit field results. and for the Optical Network Element (ONE) addressing: := := For ONEs that do not associate logical addresses with their interfaces, the ONE termination-point address corresponds to the UNSPECIFIED value concatenated with the ONE termination-point ID. 2.1.2 Address Registration/Resolution - Overview Client logical-address registration mechanism is detailed in [OIF2000.261.1]. Concerning the address resolution mechanism, the source client needs to send an address resolution request to obtain the ONE destination termination-point ID (trusted UNI interface) or CNE termination-point ID (untrusted UNI interface) corresponding to the destination CNE logical-address. Protocol specifications for the address resolution request/response are left for further study. Consequently, at a trusted UNI interface, the G.LSP create message sent by the CNE to the ONE includes the source and destination ONE (or CNE) termination-point IDs requested for this G.LSP. This implies that the source ONE must perform a internal address-lookup toward a directory service or a local mapping table, in order to find the mapping between the destination CNE termination-point ID and the destination ONE termination-point ID. So, the optical network client only needs to know the CNE source and destination logical address and termination-point ID in order to request a G.LSP creation; any other topological information concerning the optical network termination-point identification is transparent for the client. This mechanism is also adapted for inter-domain G.LSP [OPTICAL-TEIP] since in this case only the autonomous-system (AS) boundary ONE termination-point to CNE termination-point mapping-list has to announced to the neighboring BGP AS's. Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 4 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 2.1.3 Address Space Considerations By default, the address space is unique within a given optical network. This means that all client addresses connected to the same optical network must be unique. However, if the optical network supports the concept of client identifier (which determines the owner of the CNEs connected to the optical network, see section 2.3), then the address space uniqueness could be limited to logical addresses belonging to the same Client ID. This aspect is covered in section 2.3. In to order to guarantee the uniqueness of the client addressing scheme and consequently the uniqueness of the mappings, an additional mechanism must be provided during the client address registration process. This mechanism includes within the address registration response a status message indicating if the mapping between the logical-address and the corresponding termination-point ID has been registered or rejected. If the mapping has been registered, then it means that this mapping is unique within the optical network; otherwise if the mapping has been rejected it means that either the logical address already exists within the optical network or the logical address-type is invalid. When a duplicated logical address generates a mapping rejection, the rejected mapping must be the one coming from the newly non- registered address. This is to ensure a non-disruptive service for the established G.LSPs already using this mapping. Additional mechanisms could be defined to enable logical address mismatch, rejection, and error tracking. These mechanisms are left for further study. 2.2 Optical network identification parameters (Sub-type 0x02)_ - The Carrier ID (CID) is a 32-bit field defining the identity of the carrier to which the ONE element belongs. - The Privacy ID (PrID) determines whether a UNI or a NNI interface is untrusted or trusted. Hence, from this point-of-view, we consider four kind of interfaces: trusted UNI, untrusted UNI, trusted NNI and untrusted NNI interfaces. These identifiers are provisioned by the administrative authority of the optical network and exchanged during the neighbor identity discovery process [ONNI-FRAME]. The Carrier ID uniquely determines the owner of a signaling message when travelling over Inter-Domain NNI (IrDI-NNI) signaling channels between optical networks. Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 5 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 The Privacy ID makes the distinction between trusted and untrusted NNI interfaces: generally, there is a trust relationship between Intra-Domain (IaDI-NNI) interfaces and an untrusted relationship between IrDI-NNI interfaces. The privacy level (trusted or untrusted) defines the confidentiality level of the information exchanged through the corresponding NNI interfaces. 2.3 Client identification parameters (Sub-type 0x03) 2.3.1 Parameters definition The client identification parameters include the Client Identifier (Client ID) and the User-Group Identifier (User-Group ID). - Client ID: 32-bit integer (provided by the client) which uniquely identifies a client (i.e. a group of client CNE belonging to the same administrative authority) against the optical network domain. The client ID corresponds to a client identifier which uniquely determines the client identity against an optical network domain. This parameter should not have any complex semantic nor meaning. Note that the client identifier is not equivalent to the Contract ID parameter defined in [OIF2000.61.5]. In this proposal, the Contract ID parameter is defined in section 4.3. - User Group ID: 7-bytes field structure based on the VPN identifiers [VPN-ID] The source and destination ONE are responsible for authentication of User-Groups and for call acceptance policies. In the absence of a pre-determined policy, the default behavior is for the destination CNE to accept the G.LSP create request if the destination CNE is part of the signaled and authenticated User- Group. Since a boundary ONE can potentially be connected to multiple client CNEs, or a given client CNE can potentially request G.LSP for different groups of users, this identifier defines the possibility to setup Virtual Private optical Networks (VpoN). The corresponding models can be described as follows: 2.3.2 VPoN Models The VPoN - Virtual Private optical Network models considered here are based on the following concepts: - the client-ID defines the identification of an optical network client (for instance, an ISP) - the user-group-ID defines the identification of a group defined Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 6 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 within this optical network client (for instance an ISP client) The first model considers the Client-ID as a potential VPoN identifier the second one considers only the User-Group ID as a potential VPoN identifier. If we consider the Client-ID as a potential VpoN identifier, then the following alternative could be considered: - isolation of the resources within a given user-group (for instance, a given ISP client) - isolation of the resources between user-groups within a given client-ID (for instance, between ISP clients belonging to the same ISP) - no-isolation of the resources i.e. sharing of the resource between clients within the optical network In this example, the optical network has several clients (i.e. ISPs identified by a unique Client ID) and each of the optical network clients has several clients (i.e. ISP clients identified by a unique User-Group ID). If we only consider the User-Group ID as a potential VpoN identifier, then the following alternative could be considered: - isolation of the resources within a given user-group (for instance, a given ISP) - no-isolation of the resources i.e. sharing of the resource between user-groups within the optical network In this example, the optical network has several clients (i.e. ISPs identified by a unique User-Group ID) and there is no dependence of the isolation regarding the owner of the VPoN. 2.3.3 VPoN and Address Space If we consider one unique address space per optical network, this means that any address belonging to any VPoN must be unique. Otherwise, if we consider on address space per VPoN (for instance, per Client ID), then the address uniqueness is limited to this VPoN. The last case is most flexible since it permits to connect client having overlapping address spaces. However, this also requires for the optical network to maintain one mapping table per Client ID. 2.4 G.LSP identification parameters (Sub-type 0x00) The G.LSP Identifier (G.LSP ID) is the unique identifier of the G.LSP assigned by the optical network. The G.LSP ID is coded as a 64-bit field obtained from the concatenation of two fields uniquely identifying the G.LSP within an optical network: - IPv4 address of the source ONE considered as an unique IP address inside a given optical network - 32-bit integer assigned by the source ONE. This integer is Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 7 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 locally unique within a given ONE. (Source Termination point ID can be used for this purpose) G.LSP ID is assigned by the source ONE in response to a G.LSP create request. Within the G.LSP create message (sent by the client CNE), the UNSPECIFIED value is assigned to the G.LSP ID. However, an additional distinction could be suitable when considering untrusted interfaces. In this case, the IPv4 address is replaced by the Carrier ID in order to hide the ONE identifier (ONE IPv4 address) from the client network. G.LSP ID reserved values are as follows: - UNSPECIFIED value: 0x0...0 referring to a not-specified G.LSP ID - ALL value: 0xF...F referring to all the G.LSP IDs 3. Services parameters Concerning the G.LSP services, the basic G.LSP services, the G.LSP protection and G.LSP routing parameters are considered. These parameters belong to Type 0x02. 3.1 G.LSP services parameters (Sub-type 0x00) G.LSP service parameters concerning Framing-Bandwidth and SDH/Sonet are different from those proposed in [GMPLS]. Other parameters considered within this sub-section, offers the possibility to implement the enhanced services proposed as main objective of this proposal. 3.1.1 Framing-Bandwidth The Framing-Bandwidth parameter is defined as an integer specifying the format and the associated bandwidth of the signal transported across the UNI and represents the framing and bandwidth of the service requested through the optical network. This parameter is a 16-bit integer constituted by a framing type (4-bit sub-field) and an associated bandwidth (12-bit sub-field) Framing-type (4-bit sub-field) possible values are: - Clear channels : type 0x0 - Sonet : type 0x1 - SDH : type 0x2 - PDH : type 0x3 - WAN Ethernet : type 0x4 - LAN Ethernet : type 0x5 - Digital Wrapper: type 0x6 Bandwidth (12-bit sub-field) possible values are: Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 8 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 - Clear Channels: possible values are coded as OC- where N = 0x001 (OC-1) to N = 0xC00 (OC-3072) - Sonet: possible values are coded as OC- or VT- where N = 0x001 (OC-1) to N = 0xC00 (OC-3072) or N=0xF01 (VT1.5), N=0xF02 (VT2), N=0xF03 (VT3), N=0xF06 (VT6) N=0xF04 (OC-1), N=0xF05 (OC-3c), N=0xF06 (OC-12c), N=0xF07 (OC-48c), N=0xF08 (OC-192c), N=0xF09 (OC-48 Line) N=0xF0A (OC-192 Line), N=0xF0B (OC-48 Section), N=0xF0C (OC-192 Section) - SDH: possible values are coded as STM- or VC- where N = 0x001 (STM-1) to N=0x400 (STM-1024) or N=0xF01 (VC-11), N=0xF02 (VC-12), N=0xF03 (VC-2), N=0xF04 (VC-3), N=0xF05 (VC-4), N=0xF06 (VC-4-4c), N=0xF07 (VC-4-16c), N=0xF08 (VC-4-64c), N=0xF09 (MS-16) N=0xF0A (MS-64), N=0xF0B (RS-16), N=0xF0C (RS-64) - PDH: possible values are DS- - E- - J- where DS = 0x1 - E = 0x2 - J = 0x3 and N = 0x01 to 0x04 So, DS-0 = 0x101 and PDH DS-0 = 0x3101 etc. - WAN Ethernet: possible value 10 Gbps: 0x3E8 - LAN Ethernet: possible values are coded in 10 Mbps units So, 10 Mbps = 0x001 - 100 Mbps = 0x00A 1 Gbps = 0x064 - 10 Gbps = 0x3E8 - Digital Wrapper: possible values are coded in 2.5 Gbps units So, 2.5 Gbps = 0x001 - 10 Gbps = 0x004 - 40 Gbps = 0x028 Note: Digital Wrapper refers to Standard Digital Wrapper layer as proposed by the ITU-T G.709 v0.83 proposal [ITU-T G.709]. 3.1.2 SDH/Sonet Parameter The SDH/Sonet parameter (16-bit integer) applies only to SDH/Sonet framing. This parameter includes the Transparency levels (4 MS Bits) and the Concatenation types (next 4 Bits); the last byte is left unused for future use. Transparency: Possible values are coded on 4-bit integer: - Default-value = 0x0 - PLR-C (Physical Layer Regeneration) = 0x1 - STE-C (Section Terminating Equipment) = 0x2 - LTE-C (Line Terminating Equipment) = 0x3 In PLR-Circuits (type 0x0), all SDH/Sonet overhead bytes are left. unchanged when transported between clients over the optical network. STE-Circuits (type 0x1) preserves all SDH/Sonet line. overhead bytes between clients but the section overhead bytes are not required to be preserved. LTE-Circuits (type 0x3) preserves the SDH/Sonet Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 9 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 payload but the section and line overhead bytes are required to be preserved. Concatenation: Possible values are coded on 4-bit integer: - Default-value (no concatenation) = 0x0 - Virtual Concatenation = 0x1 - Continuous Concatenation = 0x2 3.1.3 Optical Parameter The optical parameter is related to all-optical network. Since SDH/Sonet framing is currently the key consideration, this parameter should be not included within the G.LSP service requests (even optionally). This 32-bit parameter is divided in two parts; both defines the maximum admitted value for an optical signal-related parameter: - Bit Error Rate: 8-bit integer defining the exponent of the maximum BER admitted for a given optical signal (default value: 0x00) - Jitter: 8-bit integer defining the maximum jitter admitted for a given optical signal (default value: 0x00) 3.1.4 Directionality The directionality parameter is an 8-bit integer indicating the directionality of the G.LSP. If this optional parameter is omitted, the G.LSP is assumed to be bi-directional. Possible values are: - uni-directional = 0x01 - bi-directional = 0x11 (default value) - multi-directional = 0xmn Multi-directionality concept is related to point-to-multipoint G.LSPs established throughout the optical network. In this case, one source could have till 256 destinations. Optical mutlicast is for further study. 3.1.5 Priority-Preemption and CoS Augmented Model The priority-preemption is an optional parameter defined as a 16-bit integer including the priority (12-bit integer) and preemption level (4-bit integer) of a G.LSP: 1. Priority Priority is a 12-bit integer indicating the priority of the G.LSP: - Default value: from 0xEF (higher) to 0x10 (lower) - Priorities from 0xF0 to 0xFF are reserved - Priorities from 0x0F to 0x00 are reserved Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 10 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 Where (4 MS bits) defines the priority-class: C ranges from 1 to E Class 1 is considered as the default class and Class 0 and Class F are Reserved priority-classes. The priority value (8 LS bits) within a given priority-class ranges from 0xEF (higher priority) to 0x10 (lower priority). The CoS augmented model [DIFF-ARCH] is based on the following principle: at the boundary CNE, if we consider Packet-Switch Capable (PSC) interfaces, the DiffServ Codepoint (DSCP) [DIFF- DSF] defining the Per Hop Behaviour (PHB) [DIFF-PHB], are mapped to the G.LSP priority class. For this purpose, we propose the following rules: - Class 1 corresponds to Best-Effort service - Class 2 to D corresponds to Assured Forwarding (AF) services . Class AF1 ranges from 2 to 4 . Class AF2 ranges from 5 to 7 . Class AF3 ranges from 8 to A . Class AF4 ranges from B to D - Class E corresponds to Expedited Forwarding (EF) service These DiffServ classes are related within the optical network to the service-level defined in section 3: - Class 1 defines a best-effort service - Class 2 to 7 defines a bronze service - Class 8 to D defines a silver service - Class E defines a gold service Within our definition of G.LSP, the analogy between the drop precedence in DiffServ and the priority class could also be related to the preemption setting at the UNI during the G.LSP creation. In this case, the priority value setting is performed through the following rules: - Class 1 defines a priority ranging from 0x110 to 0x1EF - Class 2 to 7 defines a priority ranging from 0x210 to 0x7EF - Class 8 to D defines a priority ranging from 0x810 to 0xDEF - Class E defines a priority ranging from 0xE10 to 0xEEF 2. Preemption Preemption is a 4-bit integer indicating the preemptability of an G.LSP. This parameter specifies whether a given G.LSP can be preempted by a G.LSP of higher priority if the resource used by the lower-priority G.LSP need to be used during the setup and/or the recovery of this higher priority G.LSP. The possible values for the preemption (4 bit-field) are: - Setup and Recovery preemptability: 0x0 (Class 1) - Recovery preemptability : 0x1 (Class 2 to 7) - Setup preemptability : 0x2 (Class 8 to D) - No_preemptability : 0x3 (Class E) Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 11 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 Two VpoN models have been defined, the priority-preemption levels considered here are directly related to these models and the resource isolation concept described in section 2.3. If we consider the Client-ID as a potential identifier, then we have the following options concerning the preemption levels: - preemption within a given user-group (i.e within VpoN belonging to the same optical network client) - preemption within a given client-ID (i.e between VpoN belonging to the same optical network client) - preemption between client-Ids (i.e between optical network clients) If we do not consider the Client-ID as a potential identifier, then we have the following options concerning the preemption levels: - preemption within a given user-group (i.e within VpoN belonging to the same optical network client) - preemption between user-groups (i.e between VpoN belonging to the separate optical network client) 3.1.6 Bundles The corresponding encoding and semantic is left for further study. 3.1.7 Maximum Signaling Delay The Maximum Signaling Delay is 4-byte parameter specifying a limit to the maximum acceptable propagation delay (units in milliseconds) for the network to process the client requests. The Maximum Signaling Delay parameter is optional. Default value: infinite 3.2 G.LSP protection parameters (Sub-type 0x01) Protection parameter indicates the protection level desired for the G.LSP inside to the optical network (internal protection) or at the UNI (source- and destination-side protection levels) which the protection level requested between both side of the client-to- network connection. This optional parameter indicates the protection type (4-bit integer) requested by the client device from: - the optical network: internal network protection (type 0x1) - the source drop-side: source-side protection (type 0x2) - the destination drop-side: destination-side protection (type 0x3) - no protection (default-value: 0x0) For each of these protection types, the protection levels (8-bit integer) defined are the following: Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 12 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 - Internal Protection (or Network Protection): . Unprotected - type 0x00 (default value) . Dedicated 1:1 Protection - type 0x10 . Shared Protection M:N - type 0x20 . Dedicated 1+1 Protection - type 0x30 - Source-Side Protection (protection between CNE and ONE on source side): . Unprotected - type 0x00 (default value) . Dedicated 1:1 Protection - type 0x10 . Shared Protection M:N - type 0x20 . Dedicated 1+1 Protection - type 0x30 - Destination-Side Protection (protection of between CNE and ONE on destination side): . Unprotected - type 0x00 (default value) . Dedicated 1:1 Protection - type 0x10 . Shared Protection M:N - type 0x20 . Dedicated 1+1 Protection - type 0x30 Internal-network- and Side- protection the last 4-bit sub-field indicates the protection-scheme of the G.LSP: inherent (0x30) or non-intrusive (0x31), quality-class values are TBD. Related to these protection types and levels, a reversion strategy (4-bit integer) could be defined: - a revertive strategy (type 0x0) means that a G.LSP gets restored to its original route after a failure has been recovered or repaired - a non-revertive strategy (type 0x1) means that a G.LSP does not get restored to its original route after a failure has been recovered or repaired 3.3 G.LSP routing parameters (Sub-type 0x02) 3.3.1 Routing Diversity The routing diversity of a G.LSP is defined as the list of N G.LSPs ID from which a given G.LSP (so a given G.LSP ID) must be physically diverse from. Based on the hierarchy specified in the [OIF2000.019] OIF Contribution, the Diversity of a G.LSP takes into account the following types: - Shared Risk Link Group: Resource type: 0x00 (default value) - Fiber segment : Resource type: 0x01 - Fiber sub-segment : Resource type: 0x02 - Fiber link : Resource type: 0x03 - Optical device : Resource type: 0x04 Resource IDs are defines as follows: - Fiber segment : List of fiber sub-segments Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 13 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 - Fiber sub-segment : List of fiber links - Fiber link : - Optical device : ONE IPv4 Address - Shared Risk Link Group: 0x00 (default value) Diversity is considered here for both unidirectional and bi- directional G.LSPs. This means that even if two-half G.LSP as put together to form a bi-directional G.LSP diversity applies to both halves. So the diversity parameter could be implemented as variable-size list: - Exclude: G.LSP ID 1 (64-bit) - Resource type - Resource ID - ... - Exclude: G.LSP ID N (64-bit) - Resource type - Resource ID Note that the SLRG of a G.LSP is the SRLGs union of the links covered by the G.LSP. SRLG encoding should be further discussed: a first approach would be an ordered or unordered list of the SRLG values to which the G.LSP belongs. When executing the G.LSP service request from the client CNE (remind here that the client CNE does only knows about the G.LSPs he has already established) the client CNE can only reference a G.LSP M from which the new G.LSP N should be diverse. The ONE will interpret this request by considering the Shared Risk Link Group (SRLG) of the G.LSP M and find a physical route for the G.LSP N whose SRLG is diverse from. The same process applies at the IrDI-NNI interface where the outgoing ONE (belonging to the BGP AS i) does only knows about the G.LSPs he has already established to the incoming ONE (belonging to the BGP AS j). Consequently, the outgoing ONE can only reference a G.LSP M from which the new G.LSP N should be diverse. 3.3.2 Explicit Route Explicit route parameter applies only at the NNI. However, this parameter could be used at the UNI within the scope of the Domain Specific Routing model. The semantic of the explicit route parameter is detailed in [ONNI- FRAME]. The detailed structure of this parameter is left for further study. 3.3.3 Record Route Record route parameter applies only at the NNI. However, this parameter could be used at the UNI within the scope of the Domain Specific Routing model. Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 14 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 The semantic of the record route parameter is detailed in [ONNI- FRAME]. The detailed structure of this parameter is left for further study. 3.4 Identification and Service Parameters - Summary The following table summarizes the Identification and Service parameters at the UNI interface within G.LSP service requests: -------------------------------------------------------------------- Identification Parameters Size Default value Status -------------------------------------------------------------------- Termination-point ID (ONE) 80 bits 0x0...0 Mandatory(Trust) Termination-point ID (CNE) 80 bits 0x0...0 Mandatory(Untr.) or Logical Address (CNE) max 248 bits Client ID 32 bits Mandatory User-Group ID 56 bits Mandatory G.LSP ID 64 bits 0x0...0 Mandatory -------------------------------------------------------------------- G.LSP Service Parameters Size Default value Status -------------------------------------------------------------------- Framing-Bandwidth 16 bits Mandatory SDH/Sonet Parameter 16 bits 0x0000 Mandatory(TDM) Optical Parameter 32 bits 0x0...0 Future use Directionality 8 bits 0x11 Optional Priority-Preemption 16 bits 0x1EF0 Optional Max Signaling Delay 32 bits 0xF...F Optional Internal Protection 16 bits 0x0000 Optional Side Protection 16 bits 0x0000 Optional Diversity Variable Optional -------------------------------------------------------------------- The following table summarizes the Identification and Service parameters at the NNI interface within G.LSP service requests: -------------------------------------------------------------------- Identification Parameters Size Default value Status -------------------------------------------------------------------- Termination-point ID (ONE) 80 bits 0x0...0 Mandatory Carrier ID 32 bits 0x0...0 Mandatory(IrDI-NNI) User-Group ID 56 bits Mandatory G.LSP ID 64 bits 0x0...0 Mandatory -------------------------------------------------------------------- G.LSP Service Parameters Size Default value Status -------------------------------------------------------------------- Explicit-Route Variable Mandatory Framing-Bandwidth 16 bits Mandatory SDH/Sonet Parameter 16 bits 0x0000 Mandatory(TDM) Optical Parameter 32 bits 0x0...0 Future use Directionality 8 bits 0x11 Optional Priority-Preemption 16 bits 0x1EF0 Optional Max Signaling Delay 32 bits 0xF...F Optional Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 15 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 Internal Protection 16 bits 0x0000 Optional Side Protection 16 bits 0x0000 Optional Diversity Variable Optional Record-Route Variable Optional -------------------------------------------------------------------- 4. Policy parameters (Type: 0x03) Policy-related parameters are related to directory services provided to the client CNE through the UNI services. These parameters include the following items: - Service-Level parameters - Schedule parameters - Contract parameters - Billing parameters - Optional parameters These parameters are referred as type 0x03 parameters. By receiving such kind of parameters the source boundary ONE needs to forward the content of these request through the NMI interface (interface between the ONE and a management server) to a centralized directory service. 4.1 Service-level parameters (Sub-type: 0x01) Service level (i.e. service-level specification) parameter is implemented as a 16-bit integer which refer to parameters detailed in the previous sub-section (service-related parameters). This parameter indicates the class-of-service offered by the optical network carrier. The first 256 values (0 _ 255) are reserved for future OIF inter- operability agreements. The remaining values are carrier specific. The service-level parameter could include the following attributes: - Priority and Preemption - Propagation Delay - Protection parameters - Routing parameters - Signaling security levels For instance, value 0x1xxx might indicate through a request to a directory service, a best-effort service: - unprotected G.LSP - default priority - infinite propagation delay - no routing diversity - no signaling authentication Value ranging from 0x2xxx to 0x7xxx to might indicate through a request to a directory service, a bronze service: - M:N protected G.LSP Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 16 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 - low-priority - infinite propagation delay - no routing diversity - signaling authentication (no signaling encryption) Value ranging from 0x8xxx to 0xDxxx to might indicate through a request to a directory service, a silver service: - M:N protected G.LSP - medium-priority - infinite propagation delay - no routing diversity - signaling authentication (no signaling encryption) Value 0xExxx might indicate through a request to a directory service, a gold service: - 1:1 protected G.LSP - high-priority - finite propagation delay - global routing diversity - signaling authentication and encryption Consequently, this means that the client knows the meaning of the service-level prior to the corresponding G.LSP service request. Within the G.LSP request, explicit parameter values take precedence over service-level. 4.2 Schedule parameters (Sub-type: 0x02) Scheduling refers to the possibility to create, delete or modify G.LSP through a given time-of-day, day-to-day, day-to-week, etc. scheduling plan. For a given plan, the scheduling functions could be start, stop and repeat. The attributes of the scheduling function could be: - the start/stop time at which the function has to be executed/stopped - the start/stop date at which the function has to be executed/stopped - the recurrence interval between two repeated execution of the function - the number of recurrence intervals The default values of the schedule parameter regarding the G.LSP requested service: - the start time is the current time (start now) - the start date is the current date (start now) - the recurrence interval is infinite since the G.LSP request has to be executed only once - the number of recurrence intervals equals zero Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 17 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 4.3 Contract parameters (Sub-type: 0x03) The contract parameter is defined as an identifier (Contract ID) whose value corresponds to a 32-bit string [OIF2000.61.5]. The semantic proposed for this parameter refers to the policy parameters defined in this section. Note that a given Client ID could have more than one Contract ID. 4.4 Billing parameters (Sub-type: 0x04) The billing parameter refers to the billing client identifier onto which the requested services will be charged. A given client ID could have more than one billing client identifier. An optical network client (a Client ID) may have several clients (i.e. User-Groups) and assign to each of them a dedicated billing identifier. This parameter is implemented as a 16-bit integer. The first 256 values (0 _ 255) are reserved for future inter-operability agreements. The remaining values are carrier specific. 4.5 Optional parameters (Sub-type: 0x05) Optional parameters could include Vendor-specific parameters, etc. Details concerning these optional parameters are TBD. Two options seem feasible for this purpose: - either the client CNE knows the content of the policy-related parameters without any additional information coming from the optical network - or the client CNE initiates a G.LSP status request with appropriate extensions to request the policy-related parameters values to the optical network. So the client learns dynamically the service-level offered by the optical network through a directory service before initiate a G.LSP create request to the ONE. We refer to this as directory services at the UNI. 5. Result and Status codes This section describes the Result codes (section 5.1) and Status codes (section 5.2). 5.1 Result codes Result codes are mandatory fields included in response to G.LSP services (this does not preclude the inclusion of other explicit parameter value as response to a G.LSP service request). Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 18 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 Result codes are 16-bit integers: the first sub-field defines the RS byte field and the last sub-field indicates the related cause of the RS byte value. - Result defines the R value (4 MSB bits of the first byte): None (R=0) Failure (R=1) or Success (R=2) - Requested LP-Service defines the S value (4 LSB bits of the first byte): create (S=1), delete (S=2), modify (S=3), or status (S=4) So the RS field defines the result of a service request. The RS field corresponding to 04 is only used within the Status request message. The last byte defines the cause of a given result of a G.LSP service request. The RS field is concatenated to the following values: - Identification . G.LSP ID : 0x00 . Source termination-point ID: 0x01 . Source port ID : 0x02 . Source channel-ID : 0x03 . Source sub-channel-ID : 0x04 . Source user-group ID : 0x05 . Destination termin-point ID: 0x06 . Destination port ID : 0x07 . Destination channel-ID : 0x08 . Destination sub-channel-ID : 0x09 . Destination user-group ID : 0x0A . Client ID : 0x0B . Carrier ID : 0x0C - G.LSP Services . Explicit route : 0x00 . Framing-bandwidth : 0x11 . SDH/Sonet parameter : 0x12 . Optical parameter : 0x13 . Directionality : 0x14 . Priority-preemption : 0x15 . Max signaling delay : 0x16 . Network protection : 0x17 . Source-side protection : 0x18 . Destination-side protection: 0x19 - Policy-related: TBD 5.2 Status codes Status codes are used to indicated the current, or the change status of a G.LSP. Status codes are 16-bit integers. - The encoding of the status code is the same as Result codes except that RS byte is replaced by - Active (0x31) and Inactive (0x32) for G.LSP - Reachable (0x41) and Unreachable (0x42) for Identification Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 19 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 parameters - Modified (0x51) and Restored (0x52) for G.LSP Services - Query all (0x61) and Query (0x62) for Status request queries For instance, an Unreachable (or reachable) status code could refer to a destination port ID which becomes unreachable (or reachable). In the scope of this proposal, this does not always mean that the G.LSP attached to this port are inactive since it is potentially possible to loss the control of a port without any impact on the already established G.LSPs. However, this implies that a new G.LSP can not be established to this specific destination port. 6. Security Considerations By including within the service-level parameter the signaling security level, the proposed document, as detailed in section 4, takes into account the security of the client signaling request in a build-in manner. 7. References 1. [DS-DSF] S.Nichols et al., `Definition of the Differentiated Services Field (DS Field) in the IPv4 and IPv6 Headers', RFC 2474, December 1998. 2. [DS-ARCH] S.Balke et al., `An Architecture for Differentiated Services', RFC 2475, December 1998. 3. [GMPLS] P.Ashwood-Smith et al., `Generalized MPLS - Signaling Functional Description', Internet Draft, draft-ietf-mpls- generalized-signaling-00.txt, April 2001. 4. [MPLS-OUNI] B.Rajagopalan et al., `Signaling Requirements at the Optical UNI', Internet Draft, draft-bala-mpls-optical-uni- signaling-00.txt, April 2001. 5. [OIF2000.125.2] B.Rajagopalan et al., `User Network Interface (UNI) 1.0 Proposal', OIF Contribution, October 2000. 6. [OIF2000.061.5] J.Yates et al., `User to Network Interface (UNI) Service Definition and Lightpath Attributes', OIF Contribution 61, November 2000. 7. [OIF2000.188] R.Barry, `Lightpath Attributes Proposal', OIF Contribution 188, August 2000. 8. [OIF2000.197] J.Heiles, `Alignment of the UNI with ITU-T Terminology', OIF Contribution 197, September 2000. 9. [OIF2000.261.1] D.Papadimitriou et al., `Address Registration and Resolution Proposal', OIF Contribution 261, November 2000. Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 20 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 10.[ONNI-FRAME] D.Papadimitriou et al., `Optical NNI Framework and Signaling Requirements', Internet Draft, draft-papadimitriou-onni- frame-00.txt, November 2000. 11.[OPTICAL-TEIP] O.Duroyon et al., `G.LSP Service Model framework in an Optical G-MPLS network', Internet Draft, draft-duroyon-te-ip- optical-01.txt, November 2000. 12.[VPN-ID] B.Fox and B.Gleeson, `VPN Identifiers', RFC 2685. 8. Acknowledgments The authors would like to thank Bernard Sales, Emmanuel Desmet, Hans De Neve, Fabrice Poppe, Stefan Ansorge and Gert Grammel for their constructive comments. 9. Author's Addresses Dimitri Papadimitriou Alcatel F. Wellesplein 3, B-2018 Antwerpen, Belgium Phone: 32 3 240 8491 Email: Dimitri.Papadimitriou@alcatel.be Jim Jones Alcatel USA 3400 W. Plano Pkwy., Plano, TX 75075, USA Phone: 1 972-519-2744 Email: Jim.D.Jones1@usa.alcatel.com Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 21 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 Appendix 1: Terminology The following terms are used in this document. These definitions take into account the terminology already defined by the IETF for some of the concepts defined here and some are adapted from the OIF Forum terminology. - Optical Network: a collection of optical sub-networks constituted by optical network elements - Optical Network Element (ONE): a network element belonging to the optical network. An optical network device could be an Optical Cross-Connect (OXC), Optical ADM (OADM), etc. - Boundary ONE: an optical network element (ONE) belonging to the optical network and including an UNI-N interface. - Internal ONE: an optical network element internal to the optical network (also referred as a termination incapable device) which does not include a UNI-N interface. - Client Network Element (CNE): a network element belonging to the client network. A client network element could be a SONET/SDH ADM, a SONET/SDH Cross-connect, an ATM Switch, an Ethernet switch, an IP router, etc. - Generalized Label Switched Path (G.LSP): point-to-point optical layer connectivity with specified attributes (mandatory and optional) established between two ONE termination-points in the optical network. G.LSPs are considered as bi-directional (and in a first phase as symmetric). A G.LSP could be a Fiber Switched path, Lambda Switched path or TDM Switched path (Circuit). - UNI Client (UNI-C): signaling and routing interface between a Boundary CNE and a boundary ONE belonging to an optical network. - UNI Network (UNI-N): signaling and routing interface between a Boundary ONE and a boundary CNE belonging to a client network. - UNI Services: the services defined at the UNI are the following: - Neighbor discovery service - Service discovery service - G.LSP signalling services (create/delete/modify/status) - NMI interface: the interface between the ONE controller and the centralized management server. Concerning the relationship with this terminology and others [ITU- T], we consider within this document that the term Client is equivalent to User, Optical network to Service provider network, Controller to Signaling agent, Trusted to Private and Untrusted to Public. Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 22 draft-papadimitriou-enhanced-LSPs-01.txt November 2000 Full Copyright Statement "Copyright (C) The Internet Society (date). All Rights Reserved. This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it or assist in its implmentation may be prepared, copied, published and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be followed, or as required to translate it into. Papadimitriou et al. Expires May 2001 23