ANIMA WG Z. Du
Internet-Draft S. Jiang
Intended status: Informational Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd
Expires: January 23, 2016 July 22, 2015

Autonomic Control Plane Based on IPv4
draft-du-anima-ipv4-acp-00

Abstract

This document describes an Autonomic Control Plane (ACP) based on IPv4. The ACP is an overlay control plane logically separate from the data plane. It is established autonomically independent of the operator's configurations. This document introduces the approach of using IPv4 addresses for the routing in an ACP.

Status of This Memo

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction

Autonomic Control Plane (ACP) provides a secure and always-on communication plane. It is one of the infrastructure functions for Autonomic Network (AN). Autonomic Service Agents in the autonomic network can use ACP to discover or negotiate. The background to Autonomic Network is described in [RFC7575] and [RFC7576].

An IPv6-based ACP has been proposed in [I-D.behringer-anima-autonomic-control-plane], and it is suggested that ACP should rely exclusively on IPv6. In this approach, the ACP is organized as a pure IPv6 network, while the network data plane can be based on any protocol, including IPv4 or IPv6. The advantages of this approach are no need to support dual stack IPv4/v6, better self-configuration ability of IPv6, etc.

IPv6 is the best candidate for the ACP, but it should not be precluded to provide an IPv4 based ACP for the operator as an option. When the network data plane is running IPv4, an IPv4 based ACP can offer better compatibility, which means no need to run IPv4 in the data plane, and IPv6 in the control plane.

The purpose of this document is to address the issues that arise if an IPv4 based ACP is considered needed, including clarifying the additional requirements and solutions compared to the IPv6 one.

{Editor notes: an operator, who has difficulties to upgrade the whole network to IPv6, maybe wants an IPv4 based ACP to simplify the management jobs. This document makes sense for the network operators who have an essential requirement to simple the network management, but have a less urgent requirement to upgrade to IPv6. Hence, defining an IPv4 based ACP is helpful for the deployment of Autonomic Network, or at least harmless.}

{Editor notes: It should be noticed that ACP can work while the data plane is unchanged, i.e., remaining IPv4, because ACP and AN have been designed as transparent as possible, which means the operator will rarely notice them. However, it is not always true in practice. The network operator may need to maintain two address systems in this case, for examples, when developing or debugging, or in network monitoring, or if connecting to an IPv4 server for the ACP is needed.}

2. Requirements Language and Terminology

The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119] when they appear in ALL CAPS. When these words are not in ALL CAPS (such as "should" or "Should"), they have their usual English meanings, and are not to be interpreted as [RFC2119] key words.

Autonomic Control Plane:
A self-forming, self-managing and self-protecting control plane used in the Autonomic Network, which is inband on the network, yet as independent as possible of configuration, addressing and routing problems.
Autonomic Function:
A feature or function which requires no configuration, and can derive all required information either through self-knowledge, discovery or through Intent.
Autonomic Node:
A node which employs exclusively Autonomic Functions.
Autonomic Network:
A network containing exclusively Autonomic Nodes. It may contain one or several Autonomic Domains.
Autonomic Service Agent:
An agent implemented on an Autonomic Node which implements an Autonomic Function.

3. Overview

Steps of constructing an IPv4 based Autonomic Control Plane are as follows.

The following figurer illustrates the ACP.

           autonomic node 1                  autonomic node 2
          ...................               ...................
   secure .                 .   secure      .                 .  secure
   tunnel :  +-----------+  :   tunnel      :  +-----------+  :  tunnel
   ..--------| ACP VRF   |---------------------| ACP VRF   |---------..
          : / \         / \   <--routing-->   / \         / \ :
          : \ /  IPv4   \ /                   \ /  IPv4   \ / :
   ..--------| loopback  |---------------------| loopback  |---------..
          :  +-----------+  :               :  +-----------+  :
          :                 :               :                 :
          :  +-----------+  :               :  +-----------+  :
          :  |  global   |  :               :  |  global   |  :
          :  |  routing  |  : <--routing--> :  |  routing  |  :
          :  |           |  :               :  |           |  :
   ..........| data plane|.....................| data plane|...........
          :  +-----------+  :    link       :  +-----------+  :
          :.................:               :.................:

       Figure 1 Overview of the IPv4 Based Autonomic Control Plane

IPv4 has a link-local address mechanism defined in [RFC3927]. Either those link-local addresses can be used for an IPSec tunnel to be established, or the MACSec channels can be used here to encrypt the control traffic hop-by-hop.

4. Issues Needed to be Considered and Possible Solutions

{Editor notes: It is not complete. Further discussions are needed.}

4.1. Link-local Address

In IPv6, a network node will acquire a valid link-local address without any pre-configuration. These link-local addresses are used by the Autonomic Node to set up tunnels with their neighbors in IPv6 based ACP.

As mentioned before, IPv4 has a link-local address mechanism. However, according to [RFC3927], this address is only used when no IP address is manually configured on the interface and no DHCP server is found. In addition, that document does not recommend that IPv4 link-local addresses and routable addresses be configured simultaneously on the same interface.

Therefore, it brings in some troubles for an IPv4 ACP to establish a secure channel with neighbors using link-local addresses.

4.2. Link-local Multicast

In the IPv6 ACP, link-local multicast is suggested to be used in the adjacency discovery. In IPv4 ACP, perhaps a multicast in L2 may be considered instead of the link-local multicast based on the IPv6 link-local address.

4.3. Addressing Inside the ACP

In the IPv6 ACP, Unique Local Addresses (ULA) specified in [RFC4193] is suggested to be used as the overlay addresses of autonomic nodes in the ACP.

IPv4 has the private IP address space, such as 10/8; however, it is maybe not statistically unique inside the AS.

4.4. Autonomic Address Configuration

In the IPv6 ACP, the ULA address can be self-configured. This feature is important in the Autonomic network. However, there is no mechanism for self-configuration of IPv4 addresses. The length of an IPv4 address is much shorter than an IPv6 one, which causes a larger possbility of confilcting in the address self-configuration.

4.5. Routing Protocol

In the IPv6 ACP, RPL is proposed for the routing protocol. However, it does not have an IPv4 version. Perhaps OSPF or ISIS can be used in an IPv4 ACP.

5. Security Considerations

Relevant security issues can be found in [I-D.behringer-anima-autonomic-control-plane].

6. IANA Considerations

Currently, this document reuqestes no action by IANA.

7. Acknowledgements

Valuable comments were received from Bing Liu.

This document was produced using the xml2rfc tool [RFC2629].

8. Change log [RFC Editor: Please remove]

draft-du-anima-ipv4-acp-00: original version, 2015-07-xx.

9. References

[I-D.behringer-anima-autonomic-control-plane] Behringer, M., Bjarnason, S., BL, B. and T. Eckert, "An Autonomic Control Plane", Internet-Draft draft-behringer-anima-autonomic-control-plane-03, June 2015.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997.
[RFC2629] Rose, M., "Writing I-Ds and RFCs using XML", RFC 2629, DOI 10.17487/RFC2629, June 1999.
[RFC3927] Cheshire, S., Aboba, B. and E. Guttman, "Dynamic Configuration of IPv4 Link-Local Addresses", RFC 3927, DOI 10.17487/RFC3927, May 2005.
[RFC4193] Hinden, R. and B. Haberman, "Unique Local IPv6 Unicast Addresses", RFC 4193, DOI 10.17487/RFC4193, October 2005.
[RFC7575] Behringer, M., Pritikin, M., Bjarnason, S., Clemm, A., Carpenter, B., Jiang, S. and L. Ciavaglia, "Autonomic Networking: Definitions and Design Goals", RFC 7575, DOI 10.17487/RFC7575, June 2015.
[RFC7576] Jiang, S., Carpenter, B. and M. Behringer, "General Gap Analysis for Autonomic Networking", RFC 7576, DOI 10.17487/RFC7576, June 2015.

Authors' Addresses

Zongpeng Du Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd Q14, Huawei Campus, No.156 Beiqing Road Hai-Dian District, Beijing, 100095, P.R. China EMail: duzongpeng@huawei.com
Sheng Jiang Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd Q14, Huawei Campus, No.156 Beiqing Road Hai-Dian District, Beijing, 100095, P.R. China EMail: jiangsheng@huawei.com