Internet DRAFT - draft-jaehwoon-dmm-pmipv6

draft-jaehwoon-dmm-pmipv6



DMM Working Group                                           Jaehwoon Lee
Internet-Draft                                        Dongguk University
Intended status: Informational                              Younghan Kim
Expires: December 17, 2015                           Soongsil University
                                                           June 18, 2015



                 PMIPv6-based Distributed Mobility Management
                     draft-jaehwoon-dmm-pmipv6-04


Abstract

   Proxy Mobile IPv6 (PMIPv6) is the network-based mobility management
   protocol where access network supports the mobility of a mobile node
   on behalf of the MN. In PMIPv6, the location information of the MN 
   should be registered to Localized Mobility Anchor and communication 
   must be established via the LMA. Therefore, the performance can be 
   degraded due to traffic concentration and congestion possibility. 
   One method to overcome the above problems is to exploit the 
   distributed mobility management (DMM) mechanism to distribute the 
   LMA function to all access routers within the PMIPv6 domain. This 
   document presents a fully distributed mobility management mechanism 
   in PMIPv6-based network. In this mechanism, there is no need for 
   the location management function to register the location of the MN. 



Status of this Memo

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   This Internet-Draft will expire on December 17, 2015.








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Table of Contents



   1.  Introduction.................................................3
   2.  Conventions and Terminology..................................3
     2.1.  Conventions used in this document........................3
     2.2.  Terminology  ............................................3
   3.  Protocol Operation...........................................3
   4.  Security Considerations......................................7
   5.  IANA Considerations..........................................7
   6. References....................................................7
   Author's Address.................................................7




















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1.  Introduction

   Centralized mobility management protocols such as MIPv6 [1] and 
   PMIPv6 [2] have several problems such as single-node failure, 
   congestion possibility, scalability issues and non-optimal 
   routes [3]. One method to resolve such problems is to use the 
   distributed mobility management (DMM) mechanism to distribute mobile 
   agent function to access routers [4]. Especially, in PMIPv6-based 
   DMM, when an MN moves one network to another, a new access router 
   that the MN moves and connects should know (1) whether the MN firstly 
   enters the PMIPv6 domain and (2) the address information of the LMA 
   for the MN when the access router knows that the MN moves from 
   another network.
   
   This document presents a fully distributed mobility management 
   mechanism which does not need the control function for managing
   MN-LMA address binding information.
   

2.  Conventions and Terminology

2.1.  Conventions

   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 [5].

   
2.2 Terminology
   
   TBD.


3.  Protocol Operation

   Figure 1 shows the message exchange procedure between network 
   entities to provide fully distributed mobility management in PMIPv6 
   environment presented in this document. A network prefix "PREF" is 
   allocated to the PMIPv6 domain. However, a different sub-network 
   prefix belonging to the same network prefix "PREF" is allocated to 
   a different mobility access gateway (MAG) in PMIPv6 domain. 
   For example, a sub-network prefix "PREF1" belonging to "PREF" is 
   allocated to MAG1 and a different sub-network prefix "PREF2" 
   belonging to the same "PREF" is allocated to MAG2. Even though a 
   different sub-network prefix is allocated to a different MAG, all 
   MAGs advertise the same network prefix "PREF" through the interfaces 
   providing PMIPv6 service.




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      MN                    MAG1                 MAG2      MAG3       CN
       |                      |                   |         |         |
       |*** L2 attachment ***>|                   |         |         |
       |<----- RA(PREF) ------|                   |         |         |
       |---DHCP request msg-->|                   |         |         |
       |<--DHCP reponse msg---|                   |         |         |
       |    (MN's address)    |                   |         |         |
 (Configure IPv6 address)     |                   |         |         |
       |<-------------------- exchange IP traffic ------------------->|
 (Move from MAG1 to MAG2)     |                   |         |         |
       |************ L2 attachment **************>|         |         |
       |<-------------- RA(PREF) -----------------|         |         |
       |--------------- IP packet --------------->|         |         |
       |                      |       (packet buffering)    |         |
       |                      |<----DPBU msg------|         |         |
       |     (create BCE and est. tunnel)         |         |         |
       |                      |-----DPBA msg----->|         |         |
       |                      | (create BUL and est. tunnel)|         |
       |                      |<====IP packet=====|         |         |
       |                      |--------------- IP packet ------------>|
  (Move from MAG2 to MAG3)    |                   |         |         |
       |                      |         (packet buffering)  |         |
       |                      |<----DPBRU msg-----|         |         |
       |                      |----DPBRA msg----->|         |         |
       |****************** L2 attachment ******************>|         |
       |<------------------- RA (PREF) ---------------------|         |
       |------------------- IP pkt ------------------------>|         |
       |                      |                    (pkt bufferring)   |
       |                      |<-- exchange DPBU/DPBA msg ->|         |
       |                      |<========= IP packet ========|         |
       |                      |-------------- IP packet ------------->|
       
                   (a) MN to CN packet transmission scenario
                   













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      MN                    MAG1                 MAG2      MAG3       CN
       |                      |                   |         |         |
       |*** L2 attachment ***>|                   |         |         |
       |<----- RA(PREF) ------|                   |         |         |
       |---DHCP request msg-->|                   |         |         |
       |<--DHCP reponse msg---|                   |         |         |
       |    (MN's address)    |                   |         |         |
 (Configure IPv6 address)     |                   |         |         |
       |<-------------------- exchange IP traffic ------------------->|
 (Move from MAG1 to MAG2)     |                   |         |         |
       |                      |<----------- IP packet ----------------|
       |              (packet buffering)          |         |         |
       |************ L2 attachment **************>|         |         |
       |<-------------- RA(PREF) -----------------|         |         |
       |                      |<----DPBU msg------|         |         |
       |     (create BCE and est. tunnel)         |         |         |
       |                      |-----DPBA msg----->|         |         |
       |                      | (create BUL and est. tunnel)|         |
       |                      |=====IP packet====>|         |         |
       |<--------------- IP packet ---------------|         |         |
  (Move from MAG2 to MAG3)    |                   |         |         |
       |                      |         (packet buffering)  |         |
       |                      |<----DPBRU msg-----|         |         |
       |                      |<= Buffered IP pkt=|         |         |
       |              (packet bufffering)         |         |         |
       |                      |<--- FLUSH msg ----|         |         |
       |                      |----DPBRA msg----->|         |         |
       |****************** L2 attachment ******************>|         |
       |<------------------- RA (PREF) ---------------------|         |
       |                      |<-- exchange DPBU/DPBA msg ->|         |
       |                      |==== buffered IP packet ====>|         |
       |                      |====== IP packet ===========>|         |
       |<----------------- IP packet -----------------------|         |
       
                   (b) CN to MN packet transmission scenario

                  Figure 1: Message exchange scenario


   When an MN firstly enters the PMIPv6 domain and connects to a MAG 
   (say, MAG1), MAG1 transmits to the MN a Router Advertisement (RA) 
   message by setting "M (Managed address configuration)" flag in 
   order to configure an address to the MN by using the stateful 
   address configuration method [6]. The network prefix "PREF" is set   
   to the prefix option information field in the RA message. The MN 
   having received the RA message transmits the dynamic host 
   configuration protocol (DHCP) request message to the MAG1 [7]. The 
   MAG1 considers that the MN firstly connects to the PMIPv6 domain and 
   transmits the DHCP response message containing an address belonging 
   to the "PREF1" to the MN. The MN sets the address contained in the 


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   DHCP response message to its interface. After that, the MN can 
   communicate to a CN within the Internet.
   
   When the MN moves MAG1 to MAG2 while communicating with a CN, the 
   MAG1 begins to perform the LMA function for the MN and stores 
   packets sent from the CN into the buffer. The MAG1 stores the MM's
   information into its Binding Cache Entry (BCE). When the MN connects 
   to MAG2, the MAG2 transmits the RA message containing network prefix 
   set to "PREF" to the MN. The MN having received the RA message 
   considers that it connects to the same network by using the "PREF" 
   network prefix in prefix information option of RA message. It 
   continues to use the address configured previously and transmits IP 
   packets as usual. MAG2 checks the first packet transmitted by the MN. 
   If the first packet contains the DHCP request packet, then MAG2 
   considers that the MN firstly connects to the PMIPv6 domain. 
   Otherwise, MAG2 considers that the MN moves from another MAG area and 
   creates the Binding Update List (BUL) for the MN. And then, MAG2 
   transmits the Distributed Proxy Binding Update (DPBU) message. The 
   source address of the packet containing the DPBU message is set to 
   the address of the MAG2 (say, Proxy-CoA2) and the destination address 
   is set to the address of the MN. Here, MAG2 can know the address of 
   the MN by using the source address of the IP packet sent by the MN. 
   Moreover, MAG2 stores packets sent by the MN. DPBU message is 
   transmitted to the MAG1 through the Internet topologically correct 
   routing path. MAG1 having received the DPBU message stores the 
   Proxy-CoA2 address to its BCE for the MN, establishes the tunnel with 
   MAG2, and transmits the Distributed Proxy Binding Acknowledgement 
   (DPBA) message to MAG2. The source and destination addresses of the 
   packet containing the DPBA message are set to the address of MAG1 
   (say, Proxy-CoA1) and Proxy-CoA2, respectively. The DPBA message 
   contains the address of the MN in its option field. MAG2 receiving 
   the PBA message stores the Proxy-CoA1 address to its BUL and 
   establishes the tunnel with MAG1. And then, MAG1 transmits the 
   packets stored in the buffer to MAG2, and MAG2 would the received 
   packets to the MN. After that, the MN continues to communicate with 
   the CN.

   Packets sent from MAG1 to MAG2 might be lost if the MN moves from 
   MAG2 to another MAG (MAG3 for example in this draft). It is because 
   MAG1 cannot know the fact that the MN moves and connects to MAG3. 
   In order to avoid the packet loss, When MAG2 knows to disconnect to 
   the MN, MAG2 transmits the Distributed Proxy Binding Release Update 
   (DPBRU) message to MAG1. Moreover, MAG2 transmits packets for the MN 
   to MAG1 again. When MAG1 receives the DPBRU message, MAG1 transmits 
   FLUSH message to the MAG2 and stores packets sent from the CN in its 
   buffer. MAG2 having received the FLUSH message considers that the 
   message is the final packet sent from the MAG1 and retransmits the 
   FLUSH message. And then, MAG2 removes the entry related the MN in the 
   BUL. MAG1 having received the FLUSH message having sent from MAG2     
   considers that themessage is the final packet sent from MAG2. MAG1 


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   transmits the Distributed Proxy Binding Release Acknowledgement    
   (DPBRA) message to MAG2. When MAG1 receives the DPBU message from 
   MAG3, MAG1 transmits the DPBA message to MAG3, update its BCE related 
   to the MN, transmits the stored packets sent from MAG2, and then 
   transmits packets sent from the CN.

4.  Security Considerations

   TBD


5.  IANA Considerations

   TBD


6.  References
        
   [1]	D. Johnson, C. Perkins and J. Arkko, "Mobility Support in 
        IPv6", IETF RFC 3775, June 2004.
        
   [2]	S. Gundavelli, K. Leung, V. Devarapalli, K. Chowdhury and 
        B. Patil, "Proxy Mobile IPv6", IETF RFC 5213, Aug. 2008.
        
   [3]	H. Chan, D. Liu, P. Seite, H. Yokota and J. Korhonen, 
        "Requirements for Distributed Mobility Management", 
        draft-ietf-dmm-requirements-03 (work in progress), Dec. 2012.
        
   [4]	IETF dmm working group, 
        http://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/dmm/charter.
        
   [5]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
        Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

   [6]	T. Narten, E. Nordmark, W. Sompson and H. Soliman, "Neighbor 
        Discovery for IP version 6 (IPv6), IETF RFC 4861, Sep. 2007.
        
   [7]	R. Droms, J. Bound, B. Volz, T. Lemon, C. Perkins and M. Carney, 
        "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol for IPv6 (DHCPv6)", 
        IETF RFC 3315, July 2003.


Author's Address

   Jaehwoon Lee 
   Dongguk University
   26, 3-ga Pil-dong, Chung-gu
   Seoul 100-715, KOREA  
   Email: jaehwoon@dongguk.edu



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   Younghan Kim
   Soongsil University
   369, Sangdo-ro, Dongjak-gu,
   Seoul 156-743, Korea
   Email: younghak@ssu.ac.kr













































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