Internet-Draft SRv6 Segment List Compression in SRH May 2021
Cheng, et al. Expires 21 November 2021 [Page]
Workgroup:
SPRING
Internet-Draft:
draft-filsfilscheng-spring-srv6-srh-comp-sl-enc-03
Published:
Intended Status:
Standards Track
Expires:
Authors:
W. Cheng, Ed.
China Mobile
C. Filsfils
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Z. Li
Huawei Technologies
D. Cai
Alibaba
D. Voyer
Bell Canada
F. Clad, Ed.
Cisco Systems, Inc.
S. Zadok
Broadcom
J. Guichard
Futurewei Technologies Ltd.
L. Aihua
ZTE Corporation

Compressed SRv6 Segment List Encoding in SRH

Abstract

This document defines a compressed SRv6 Segment List Encoding in the SRH. This solution does not require any SRH data plane change nor any SRv6 control plane change. This solution leverages the SRv6 Network Programming model.

Status of This Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.

Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."

This Internet-Draft will expire on 21 November 2021.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction

The Segment Routing architecture is defined in [RFC8402].

SRv6 Network Programming [RFC8986] defines a framework to build a network program with topological and service segments carried in a Segment Routing header (SRH) [RFC8754].

This document adds new flavors to the SR endpoint behaviors defined in [RFC8986]. These flavors enable a compressed encoding of the SRv6 Segment-List in the SRH and therefore address the requirements described in [I-D.cheng-spring-shorter-srv6-sid-requirement].

The flavors defined in this document leverage the SRH data plane without any change and do not require any SRv6 control plane change.

2. Terminology

This document leverages the terms defined in [RFC8402], [RFC8754] and [RFC8986]. The reader is assumed to be familiar with this terminology.

This document introduces the following new terms:

3. Basic Concepts

In an SRv6 domain, the SIDs are allocated from a particular IPv6 prefix: the SRv6 SID block. Therefore, all SRv6 SIDs instantiated from the same SRv6 SID block share the same most significant bits. These common bits are named Locator-Block in [RFC8986]. Furthermore, when the combined length of the SRv6 SID Locator, Function and Argument is smaller than 128 bits, the trailing bits are set to zero.

When a sequence of consecutive SIDs in a Segment List shares a common Locator-Block, a compressed SRv6 Segment-List encoding can optimize the packet header length by avoiding the repetition of the Locator-Block and trailing bits with each individual SID.

The compressed Segment List encoding is fully compliant with the specifications in [RFC8402], [RFC8754] and [RFC8986]. Efficient encoding is achieved by combining a compressed Segment List encoding logic on the SR policy headend with new flavors of the base SRv6 endpoint behaviors that decode this compressed encoding. No SRv6 SRH data plane change nor control plane extension is required.

A Segment List can be encoded in the packet header using any combination of compressed and uncompressed sequences. The C-SID sequences leverage the flavors defined in this document, while the uncompressed sequences use behaviors and flavors defined in other documents, such as [RFC8986]. An SR Policy headend constructs and compresses the SID-list depending on the capabilities of each SR endpoint node that the packet should traverse, as well as its own compression capabilities.

It is expected that compressed encoding flavors be available on devices with limited packet manipulation capabilities, such as legacy ASICs.

The compressed Segment List encoding supports any SRv6 SID Block allocation. While other options are supported and may provide higher efficiency, each routing domain can be allocated a /48 prefix from a global IPv6 block (see Section 6.2).

4. SR Endpoint Flavors

This section defines several options to achieve compressed Segment List encoding, in the form of two new flavors for the END, END.X and END.T behaviors of [RFC8986]. These flavors could also be combined with behaviors defined in other documents.

The compressed encoding can be achieved by leveraging any of these SR endpoint flavors. The NEXT-C-SID flavor and the REPLACE-C-SID flavor expose the same high-level behavior in their use of the SID argument to determine the next segment to be processed, but they have different low-level characteristics that can make one more or less efficient that the other for a particular SRv6 deployment. The NEXT-and-REPLACE-C-SID flavor is the combination of the NEXT-C-SID flavor and the REPLACE-C-SID flavor. It provides the best efficiency in terms of encapsulation size at the cost of increased complexity.

It is recommended for ease of operation that a single compressed encoding flavor be used in a given SRv6 domain. However, in a multi-domain deployment, different flavors can be used in different domains.

All three flavors leverage the following variables:

4.1. NEXT-C-SID Flavor

A SID instantiated with the NEXT-C-SID flavor takes an argument that carries the remaining C-SIDs in the current C-SID container.

The length A of the argument is equal to 128-B-NF and should be a multiple of NF.

+----------------------------------------------------+
| Locator-Block | Locator-Node | Function | Argument |
+----------------------------------------------------+
 <----- B -----> <--------- NF ----------> <-- A --->

Pseudo-code:

 1.   If (DA.Argument != 0) {
 2.     Copy DA.Argument into the bits [B..(B+A-1)] of the
          Destination Address of the IPv6 header.
 3.     Set the bits [(B+A)..127] of the Destination Address
          of the IPv6 header to zero.
 4.   } Else {
 5.     Decrement Segments Left by 1.
 6.     Copy Segment List[Segments Left] from the SRH to the
          Destination Address of the IPv6 header.
 7.   }

Note: DA.Argument identifies the bits [(B+NF)..127] in the Destination Address of the IPv6 header.

The NEXT-C-SID flavor has been previously documented in [I-D.filsfils-spring-net-pgm-extension-srv6-usid] under the name "SHIFT" flavor. In that context, a C-SID and a C-SID-sequence are respectively named a Micro-Segment (uSID) and a Micro-Program.

4.2. REPLACE-C-SID Flavor

A SID instantiated with the REPLACE-C-SID flavor takes an argument, which is used to determine the index of the next C-SID in the appropriate container.

All SIDs that are part of a C-SID sequence using the REPLACE-C-SID flavor have the same C-SID length NF.

The length A of the argument should be at least ceil(log_2(128/NF)).

+----------------------------------------------------+
| Locator-Block | Locator-Node | Function | Argument |
+----------------------------------------------------+
 <----- B -----> <--------- NF ----------> <-- A --->

Pseudo-code:

 1.   If (DA.Argument != 0) {
 2.     Decrement DA.Argument by 1.
 3.   } Else {
 4.     Decrement Segments Left by 1.
 5.     Set DA.Argument to (128/NF - 1).
 6.   }
 7.   Copy Segment List[Segments Left][DA.Argument] into the bits
        [B..B+NF-1] of the Destination Address of the IPv6 header.

Notes:

  • DA.Argument identifies the bits [(B+NF)..(B+NF+A-1)] in the Destination Address of the IPv6 header.
  • Segment List[Segments Left][DA.Argument] identifies the bits [DA.Argument*NF..(DA.Argument+1)*NF-1] in the SRH Segment List entry at index Segments Left.

The REPLACE-C-SID flavor has been previously documented in [I-D.cl-spring-generalized-srv6-for-cmpr] under the name "COC(Continue of Compression)" flavor. In that context, a C-SID and a C-SID-sequence are respectively named a G-SID and G-SRv6 compression sub-path.

4.3. Combined NEXT-and-REPLACE-C-SID Flavor

A SID instantiated with the NEXT-and-REPLACE-C-SID flavor takes a two-parts argument comprising, Arg.Next and Arg.Index, and encoded in the SID in this order.

The length A_I of Arg.Index is equal to ceil(log_2(128/NF)).

The length A_N of Arg.Next is equal to 128-B-NF-A_I and must be a multiple of NF.

The total SID argument length A is the sum of A_I and A_N.

The NEXT-and-REPLACE-C-SID flavor also leverages an additional variable, C_DA, that is equal to (1 + (A_N/NF)) and represents the number of C-SID's that can be encoded in the IPv6 Destination Address.

All SIDs that are part of a C-SID sequence using the NEXT-and-REPLACE-C-SID flavor must have the same C-SID length NF. Furthermore, this NF must be a divisor of 128.

+----------------------------------------------------------------+
| Locator-Block | Locator-Node | Function | Arg.Next | Arg.Index |
+----------------------------------------------------------------+
 <----- B -----> <--------- NF ----------> <- A_N --> <-- A_I -->

Pseudo-code:

 1.   If (DA.Arg.Next != 0) {
 2.     Copy DA.Arg.Next into the bits [B..(B+A_N-1)] of the
          Destination Address of the IPv6 header.
 3.     Set the bits [(B+A_N)..(B+NF+A_N-1)] of the Destination Address
          of the IPv6 header to zero.
 4.   } Else If (DA.Arg.Index >= C_DA) {
 5.     Decrement DA.Arg.Index by C_DA.
 6.     Copy C_DA*NF bits from Segment List[Segments Left][DA.Arg.Index]
          into the bits [B..B+C_DA*NF-1] of the Destination Address of
          the IPv6 header.
 7.   } Else If (Segments Left != 0) {
 8.     Decrement Segments Left by 1.
 9.     Set DA.Arg.Index to ((DA.Arg.Index - C_DA) % (128/NF)).
10.     Copy C_DA*NF bits from Segment List[Segments Left][DA.Arg.Index]
          into the bits [B..B+C_DA*NF-1] of the Destination Address of
          the IPv6 header.
11.   } Else {
12.     Copy DA.Arg.Index*NF bits from Segment List[0][0] into the bits
          [B..B+DA.Arg.Index*NF-1] of the Destination Address of the
          IPv6 header.
13.     Set the bits [B+DA.Arg.Index*NF..B+NF+A_N-1] of the Destination
          Address of the IPv6 header to zero.
14.     Set DA.Arg.Index to 0.
15.   }

Notes:

  • DA.Arg.Next identifies the bits [(B+NF)..(B+NF+A_N-1)] in the Destination Address of the IPv6 header.
  • DA.Arg.Index identifies the bits [(B+NF+A_N)..(B+NF+A_N+A_I-1)] in the Destination Address of the IPv6 header.
  • Segment List[Segments Left][DA.Arg.Index] identifies the bits [DA.Arg.Index*NF..(DA.Arg.Index+1)*NF-1] in the SRH Segment List entry at index Segments Left.

5. GIB, LIB, global C-SID and local C-SID

GIB: The set of IDs available for global C-SID allocation.

LIB: The set of IDs available for local C-SID allocation.

5.1. Global C-SID

A C-SID from the GIB.

A Global C-SID typically identifies a shortest-path to a node in the SRv6 domain. An IP route is advertised by the parent node to each of its global C-SID's, under the associated C-SID block. The parent node executes a variant of the END behavior.

A node can have multiple global C-SID's under the same C-SID blocks (e.g. one per IGP flexible algorithm). Multiple nodes may share the same global C-SID (anycast).

5.2. Local C-SID

A C-SID from the LIB.

A local C-SID may identify a cross-connect to a direct neighbor over a specific interface or a VPN context.

No IP route is advertised by a parent node for its local C-SID's.

If N1 and N2 are two different physical nodes of the SRv6 domain and I is a local C-SID value, then N1 and N2 may bind two different behaviors to I.

The concept of LIB is applicable to SRv6 and specifically to its NEXT-C-SID and REPLACE-C-SID flavors. The shorter the SID/C-SID, the more benefit the LIB brings.

The allocation of C-SID's from the GIB and LIB depends on the C-SID length (see Section 6.3).

6. C-SID and Block Length

6.1. C-SID Length

The NEXT-C-SID flavor supports both 16- and 32-bit C-SID lengths. A C-SID length of 16-bit is recommended.

The REPLACE-C-SID flavor supports both 16- and 32-bit C-SID lengths. A C-SID length of 32-bit is recommended.

6.2. Block Length

The compressed Segment List encoding supports any SRv6 SID Block allocation either from GUA or LUA space.

The recommended SRv6 SID block sizes for the NEXT-C-SID flavor are 16, 32 or 48 bits. The smaller the block, the higher the compression efficiency.

The recommended SRv6 SID block size for the REPLACE-C-SID flavor can be 48, 56, 64, 72 or 80 bits, depending on the needs of the operator.

6.3. GIB/LIB Usage

The previous block and C-SID length recommendations, call for the following GIB/LIB usage:

  • NEXT-C-SID:

    • GIB: END.NEXT-C-SID
    • LIB: END.X.NEXT-C-SID, END.DX.NEXT-C-SID, END.DT.NEXT-C-SID
    • LIB: END.DX.NEXT-C-SID for large-scale PW support
  • REPLACE-C-SID:

    • GIB: END.REPLACE-C-SID, END.X.REPLACE-C-SID, END.DX.REPLACE-C-SID, END.DT.REPLACE-C-SID
    • LIB: END.DX.REPLACE-C-SID for large-scale PW support

7. Efficient SID-list Encoding

The compressed SID-list encoding logic is a local behavior of the SR Policy headend node and hence out of the scope of this document.

8. Control Plane

This document does not require any control plane modification.

9. Illustrations

Illustrations will be provided in a separate document.

10. Interoperability Status

In November 2020, China Mobile successfully validated multiple interoperable implementations of the NEXT-C-SID and REPLACE-C-SID flavors defined in this document.

This testing covered two different implementations of the SRv6 endpoint flavors defined in this document:

The interoperability was validated for the following scenario:

Further interoperability testing is ongoing and will be reported in this document as the work progresses.

11. Security Considerations

TBD

12. Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Bruno Decraene, Cheng Li, Kamran Raza, Xing Jiang and YuanChao Su.

13. References

13.1. Normative References

[RFC8402]
Filsfils, C., Ed., Previdi, S., Ed., Ginsberg, L., Decraene, B., Litkowski, S., and R. Shakir, "Segment Routing Architecture", RFC 8402, DOI 10.17487/RFC8402, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8402>.
[RFC8754]
Filsfils, C., Ed., Dukes, D., Ed., Previdi, S., Leddy, J., Matsushima, S., and D. Voyer, "IPv6 Segment Routing Header (SRH)", RFC 8754, DOI 10.17487/RFC8754, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8754>.
[RFC8986]
Filsfils, C., Ed., Camarillo, P., Ed., Leddy, J., Voyer, D., Matsushima, S., and Z. Li, "Segment Routing over IPv6 (SRv6) Network Programming", RFC 8986, DOI 10.17487/RFC8986, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8986>.

13.2. Informative References

[I-D.cheng-spring-shorter-srv6-sid-requirement]
Cheng, W., Chongfeng, Pang, R., Li, Z., Chen, R., Lijun, Duan, X., Mirsk, G., Dukes, D., and S. Zadok, "Shorter SRv6 SID Requirements", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-cheng-spring-shorter-srv6-sid-requirement-02, , <https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-cheng-spring-shorter-srv6-sid-requirement-02.txt>.
[I-D.cl-spring-generalized-srv6-for-cmpr]
Cheng, W., Li, Z., Li, C., Clad, F., Liu, A., Xie, C., Liu, Y., and S. Zadok, "Generalized SRv6 Network Programming for SRv6 Compression", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-cl-spring-generalized-srv6-for-cmpr-03, , <https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-cl-spring-generalized-srv6-for-cmpr-03.txt>.
[I-D.filsfils-spring-net-pgm-extension-srv6-usid]
Filsfils, C., Garvia, P. C., Cai, D., Voyer, D., Meilik, I., Patel, K., Henderickx, W., Jonnalagadda, P., Melman, D., Liu, Y., and J. Guichard, "Network Programming extension: SRv6 uSID instruction", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-filsfils-spring-net-pgm-extension-srv6-usid-10, , <https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-filsfils-spring-net-pgm-extension-srv6-usid-10.txt>.

Authors' Addresses

Weiqiang Cheng (editor)
China Mobile
China
Clarence Filsfils
Cisco Systems, Inc.
Belgium
Zhenbin Li
Huawei Technologies
China
Dennis Cai
Alibaba
United States of America
Daniel Voyer
Bell Canada
Canada
Francois Clad (editor)
Cisco Systems, Inc.
France
Shay Zadok
Broadcom
Israel
James N Guichard
Futurewei Technologies Ltd.
United States of America
Liu Aihua
ZTE Corporation
China