DetNet N. Finn
Internet-Draft P. Thubert
Intended status: Standards Track Cisco
Expires: December 29, 2016 M. Johas Teener
Broadcom
June 27, 2016
Deterministic Networking Architecture
draft-finn-detnet-architecture-05
Abstract
Deterministic Networking (DetNet) provides a capability to carry
specified unicast or multicast data flows for real-time applications
with extremely low data loss rates and bounded latency. Techniques
used include: 1) reserving data plane resources for individual (or
aggregated) DetNet flows in some or all of the relay nodes (bridges
or routers) along the path of the flow; 2) providing fixed paths for
DetNet flows that do not rapidly change with the network topology;
and 3) sequentializing, replicating, tracing and eliminating
duplicate packets at various points to ensure the availability of at
least one path. The capabilities can be managed by configuration, or
by manual or automatic network management.
Status of This Memo
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Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2016 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.1. Terms used in this document . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.2. IEEE 802 TSN to DetNet dictionary . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3. Providing the DetNet Quality of Service . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3.1. Zero Congestion Loss . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.2. Pinned paths . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.3. Jitter Reduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
3.4. Packet Replication and Elimination . . . . . . . . . . . 9
4. DetNet Architecture . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4.1. Traffic Engineering for DetNet . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
4.1.1. The Application Plane . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.1.2. The Controller Plane . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
4.1.3. The Network Plane . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
4.2. DetNet flows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.2.1. Source guarantees . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
4.2.2. Incomplete Networks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
4.3. Queuing, Shaping, Scheduling, and Preemption . . . . . . 15
4.4. Coexistence with normal traffic . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
4.5. Fault Mitigation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
4.6. Protocol Stack Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
4.7. Exporting flow identification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
4.8. Advertising resources, capabilities and adjacencies . . . 21
4.9. Provisioning model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
4.9.1. Centralized Path Computation and Installation . . . . 22
4.9.2. Distributed Path Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
4.10. Scaling to larger networks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
4.11. Connected islands vs. networks . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
5. Compatibility with Layer-2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
6. Open Questions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
6.1. Data plane shapers and schedulers . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
6.2. DetNet flow identification and sequencing . . . . . . . . 24
6.3. Flat vs. hierarchical control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
6.4. Peer-to-peer reservation protocol . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
6.5. Wireless media interactions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
7. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
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8. Privacy Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
9. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
10. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
11. Access to IEEE 802.1 documents . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
12. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
1. Introduction
Deterministic Networking (DetNet) is a service that can be offered by
a network to data flows (DetNet flows) that that are limited, at
their source, to a maximum data rate specified by that source.
DetNet provides these flows extremely low packet loss rates and
assured maximum end-to-end delivery latency. This is accomplished by
dedicating network resources such as link bandwidth and buffer space
to DetNet flows and/or classes of DetNet flows. Unused reserved
resources are available to non-DetNet packets.
The Deterministic Networking Problem Statement
[I-D.finn-detnet-problem-statement] introduces Deterministic
Networking, and Deterministic Networking Use Cases
[I-D.ietf-detnet-use-cases] summarizes the need for it.
A goal of DetNet is a converged network in all respects. That is,
the presence of DetNet flows does not preclude non-DetNet flows, and
the benefits offered DetNet flows should not, except in extreme
cases, prevent existing QoS mechanisms from operating in a normal
fashion, subject to the bandwidth required for the DetNet flows. A
single source-destination pair can trade both DetNet and non-DetNet
flows. End systems and applications need not instantiate special
interfaces for DetNet flows. Networks are not restricted to certain
topologies; connectivity is not restricted. Any application that
generates a data flow that can be usefully characterized as having a
maximum bandwidth should be able to take advantage of DetNet, as long
as the necessary resources can be reserved. Reservations can be made
by the application itself, via network management, by an applications
controller, or by other means.
Many applications of interest to Deterministic Networking require the
ability to synchronize the clocks in end systems to a sub-microsecond
accuracy. Some of the queue control techniques defined in
Section 4.3 also require time synchronization among relay nodes. The
means used to achieve time synchronization are not addressed in this
document. DetNet should accommodate various synchronization
techniques and profiles that are defined elsewhere to solve exchange
time in different market segments.
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The present document is an individual contribution, but it is
intended by the authors for adoption by the DetNet working group.
2. Terminology
2.1. Terms used in this document
The following special terms are used in this document in order to
avoid the assumption that a given element in the architecture does or
does not have Internet Protocol stack, functions as a router, bridge,
firewall, or otherwise plays a particular role at Layer-2 or higher.
destination
An end system capable of sinking a DetNet flow.
DetNet domain
The portion of a network that is DetNet aware. It includes
end systems and other DetNet nodes.
DetNet flow
A DetNet flow is a sequence of packets from a single source,
through some number of relay nodes to one or more
destinations, that is limited by the source in its maximum
packet size and transmission rate, and can thus be ensured
the DetNet Quality of Service (QoS) from the network.
DetNet compound flow and DetNet member flow
A DetNet compound flow is a DetNet flow that has been
separated into multiple duplicate DetNet member flows, which
are eventually merged back into a single DetNet compound
flow. "Compound" and "member" are strictly relative to each
other, not absolutes; a DetNet compound flow comprising
multiple DetNet member flows can, in turn, be a member of a
higher-order compound.
DetNet node
A DetNet aware end system or relay node. "DetNet" may be
omitted in some text.
DetNet edge node
An instance of a DetNet node that includes a proxy function
for one or more source end systems, analogous to a Label Edge
Router (LER).
end system
Commonly called a "host" or "node" in IETF documents, and an
"end station" is IEEE 802 documents. End systems of interest
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to this document are either sources or destinations of L2
and/or L3 DatNet streams.
link
A connection between two DetNet nodes. It may be composed of
a physical link or a sub-network technology that can provide
appropriate traffic delivery for DetNet flows.
relay node
A router, transit node, bridge, Label Switch Router (LSR),
firewall, or any other system that forwards packets from one
interface to another.
reservation
A trail of configuration between source to destination(s)
through relay nodes associated with a DetNet flow, required
to deliver the benefits of DetNet.
source
An end system capable of sourcing a DetNet flow.
2.2. IEEE 802 TSN to DetNet dictionary
This section also serves as a dictionary for translating from the
terms used by the IEEE 802 Time-Sensitive Networking (TSN) Task Group
to those of the DetNet WG.
Listener
The IEEE 802 term for a destination of a DetNet flow.
relay system
The IEEE 802 term for a DetNet node.
Stream
The IEEE 802 term for a DetNet flow.
Talker
The IEEE 802 term for the source of a DetNet flow.
3. Providing the DetNet Quality of Service
The DetNet Quality of Service can be expressed in terms of:
o Minimum and maximum end-to-end latency from source to destination;
timely delivery and jitter avoidance derive from these constraints
o Probability of loss of a packet, under various assumptions as to
the operational states of the relay nodes and links. A derived
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property is whether it is acceptable to deliver a duplicate
packet, which is an inherent risk in highly reliable and/or
broadcast transmissions
It is a distinction of DetNet that it is concerned solely with worst-
case values for the end-to-end latency. Average, mean, or typical
values are of no interest, because they do not affect the ability of
a real-time system to perform its tasks. In general, a trivial
priority-based queuing scheme will give better average latency to a
data flow than DetNet, but of course, the worst-case latency can be
essentially unbounded.
Three techniques are used by DetNet to provide these qualities of
service:
o Bandwidth reservation and enforcement (Section 3.1).
o Pinned paths (Section 3.2).
o Packet replication and elimination (Section 3.4).
The DetNet techniques are meant to address both of the DetNet QoS
requirements (latency and packet loss). Given that relay nodes have
a finite amount of buffer space, zero congestion loss necessarily
results in a maximum end-to-end latency. It also addresses the
largest contribution to packet loss, which is buffer congestion.
Packet replication and elimination mitigates the second most
important contributions to packet loss, namely random media errors
and equipment failure.
These three techniques can be applied independently, giving eight
possible combinations, including none (no DetNet), although some
combinations are of wider utility than others. This separation keeps
the protocol stack coherent and maximizes interoperability with
existing and developing standards in this (IETF) and other Standards
Development Organizations. Some examples of typical expected
combinations:
o Pinned paths (a) plus packet replication (b) are exactly the
techniques employed by [HSR-PRP]. Pinned paths are achieved by
limiting the physical topology of the network, and the
sequentialization, replication, and duplicate elimination are
facilitated by packet tags added at the front or the end of
Ethernet frames.
o Zero congestion loss (a) alone is is offered by IEEE 802.1 Audio
Video bridging [IEEE802.1BA-2011]. As long as the network suffers
no failures, zero congestion loss can be achieved through the use
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of a reservation protocol (MSRP), shapers in every relay node
(bridge), and a bit of network calculus.
o Using all three together gives maximum protection.
There are, of course, simpler methods available (and employed, today)
to achieve levels of latency and packet loss that are satisfactory
for many applications. Prioritization and over-provisioning is one
such technique. However, these methods generally work best in the
absence of any significant amount of non-critical traffic in the
network (if, indeed, such traffic is supported at all), or work only
if the critical traffic constitutes only a small portion of the
network's theoretical capacity, or work only if all systems are
functioning properly, or in the absence of actions by end systems
that disrupt the network's operations.
There are any number of methods in use, defined, or in progress for
accomplishing each of the above techniques. It is expected that this
DetNet Architecture will assist various vendors, users, and/or
"vertical" Standards Development Organizations (dedicated to a single
industry) to make selections among the available means of
implementing DetNet networks.
3.1. Zero Congestion Loss
The primary means by which DetNet achieves its QoS assurances is to
completely eliminate congestion at an output port as a cause of
packet loss. Given that a DetNet flow cannot be throttled, this can
be achieved only by the provision of sufficient buffer storage at
each hop through the network to ensure that no packets are dropped
due to a lack of buffer storage.
Ensuring adequate buffering requires, in turn, that the source, and
every relay system along the path to the destination (or nearly every
relay node -- see Section 4.2.2) be careful to regulate its output to
not exceed the data rate for any DetNet flow, except for brief
periods when making up for interfering traffic. Any packet sent
ahead of its time potentially adds to the number of buffers required
by the next hop, and may thus exceed the resources allocated for a
particular DetNet flow.
The low-level mechanisms described in Section 4.3 provide the
necessary regulation of transmissions by an edge system or relay node
to ensure zero congestion loss. The reservation of the bandwidth and
buffers for a DetNet flow requires the provisioning described in
Section 4.9. A DetNet node may have other resources requiring
allocation and/or scheduling, that might otherwise be over-subscribed
and trigger the rejection of a reservation.
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3.2. Pinned paths
In networks controlled by typical peer-to-peer protocols such as IEEE
802.1 ISIS bridged networks or IETF OSPF routed networks, a network
topology event in one part of the network can impact, at least
briefly, the delivery of data in parts of the network remote from the
failure or recovery event. Thus, even redundant paths through a
network, if controlled by the typical peer-to-peer protocols, do not
eliminate the chances of brief losses of contact.
Many real-time networks rely on physical rings or chains of two-port
devices, with a relatively simple ring control protocol. This
supports redundant paths with a minimum of wiring. As an additional
benefit, ring topologies can often utilize different topology
management protocols than those used for a mesh network, with a
consequent reduction in the response time to topology changes. Of
course, this comes at some cost in terms of increased hop count, and
thus latency, for the typical path.
In order to get the advantages of low hop count and still ensure
against even very brief losses of connectivity, DetNet employs pinned
paths, where the path taken by a given DetNet flow does not change,
at least immediately, and likely not at all, in response to network
topology events. When combined with packet replication and
elimination (Section 3.4), this results in a high likelihood of
continuous connectivity. Pinned paths are commonly used in MPLS TE
LSPs.
3.3. Jitter Reduction
A core objective of DetNet is to enable the convergence of Non-IP
networks onto a common network infrastructure. This requires the
accurate emulation of currently deployed mission-specific networks,
which typically rely on point-to-point analog (e.g. 4-20mA
modulation) and serial-digital cables (or buses) for highly reliable,
synchronized and jitter-free communications. While the latency of
analog transmissions is basically the speed of light, legacy serial
links are usually slow (in the order of Kbps) compared to, say, GigE,
and some latency is usually acceptable. What is not acceptable is
the introduction of excessive jitter, which may, for instance, affect
the stability of control systems.
Applications that are designed to operate on serial links usually do
not provide services to recover the jitter, because jitter simply
does not exists there. Streams of information are expected to be
delivered in-order and the precise time of reception influences the
processes. In order to converge such existing applications, there is
a desire to emulate all properties of the serial cable, such as clock
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transportation, perfect flow isolation and fixed latency. While
minimal jitter (in the form of specifying minimum, as well as
maximum, end-to-end latency) is supported by DetNet, there are
practical limitations on packet-based networks in this regard. In
general, users are encouraged to use, instead of, "do this when you
get the packet," a combination of:
o Sub-microsecond time synchronization among all source and
destination end systems, and
o Time-of-execution fields in the application packets.
3.4. Packet Replication and Elimination
After congestion loss has been eliminated, the most important causes
of packet loss are random media and/or memory faults, and equipment
failures. Both causes of packet loss can be greatly reduced by
sending the same packets over multiple paths.
Packet replication and elimination, also known as seamless redundancy
[HSR-PRP], or 1+1 hitless protection, involves three capabilities:
o Replicating these packets into multiple DetNet member flows and,
typically, sending them along at least two different paths to the
destination(s), e.g. over the pinned paths of Section 3.2.
o Providing sequencing information, once, at or near the source, to
the packets of a DetNet compound flow. This may be done by adding
a sequence number or time stamp as part of DetNet, or may be
inherent in the packet, e.g. in a transport protocol, or
associated to other physical properties such as the precise time
(and radio channel) of reception of the packet.
o Eliminating duplicated packets. This may be done at any step
along the path to save network resources further down, in
particular if multiple Replication points exist. But the most
common case is to perform this operation at the very edge of the
DetNet network, preferably in or near the receiver.
This function is a "hitless" version of, e.g., the 1+1 linear
protection in [RFC6372]. That is, instead of switching from one flow
to the other when a failure of a flow is detected, DetNet combines
both flows, and performs a packet-by-packet selection of which to
discard, based on sequence number.
In the simplest case, this amounts to replicating each packet in a
source that has two interfaces, and conveying them through the
network, along separate paths, to the similarly dual-homed
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destinations, that discard the extras. This ensures that one path
(with zero congestion loss) remains, even if some relay node fails.
The sequence numbers can also be used for loss detection and for re-
ordering.
Alternatively, relay nodes in the network can provide replication and
elimination facilities at various points in the network, so that
multiple failures can be accommodated.
This is shown in the following figure, where the two relay nodes each
replicate (R) the DetNet flow on input, sending the DetNet member
flows to both the other relay node and to the end system, and
eliminate duplicates (E) on the output interface to the right-hand
end system. Any one link in the network can fail, and the Detnet
compound flow can still get through. Furthermore, two links can
fail, as long as they are in different segments of the network.
> > > > > > > > relay > > > > > > > >
> /------------+ R system E +------------\ >
> / v + ^ \ >
end R + v | ^ + E end
system + v | ^ + system
> \ v + ^ / >
> \------------+ R relay E +------------/ >
> > > > > > > > system > > > > > > > >
Figure 1
Note that packet replication and elimination does not react to and
correct failures; it is entirely passive. Thus, intermittent
failures, mistakenly created packet filters, or misrouted data is
handled just the same as the equipment failures that are detected
handled by typical routing and bridging protocols.
When combining member flows that take different-length paths through
the network, and which are also guaranteed a worst-case latency by
packet shaping, a merge point may require extra buffering to equalize
the delays over the different paths. This equalization ensures that
the resultant compound flow will not exceed its contracted bandwidth
even after one or the other of the paths is restored after a failure.
4. DetNet Architecture
4.1. Traffic Engineering for DetNet
Traffic Engineering Architecture and Signaling (TEAS) [TEAS] defines
traffic-engineering architectures for generic applicability across
packet and non-packet networks. From TEAS perspective, Traffic
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Engineering (TE) refers to techniques that enable operators to
control how specific traffic flows are treated within their networks.
Because if its very nature of establishing pinned optimized paths,
Deterministic Networking can be seen as a new, specialized branch of
Traffic Engineering, and inherits its architecture with a separation
into planes.
The Deterministic Networking architecture is thus composed of three
planes, a (User) Application Plane, a Controller Plane, and a Network
Plane, which echoes that of Figure 1 of Software-Defined Networking
(SDN): Layers and Architecture Terminology [RFC7426].:
4.1.1. The Application Plane
Per [RFC7426], the Application Plane includes both applications and
services. In particular, the Application Plane incorporates the User
Agent, a specialized application that interacts with the end user /
operator and performs requests for Deterministic Networking services
via an abstract Flow Management Entity, (FME) which may or may not be
collocated with (one of) the end systems.
At the Application Plane, a management interface enables the
negotiation of flows between end systems. An abstraction of the flow
called a Traffic Specification (TSpec) provides the representation.
This abstraction is used to place a reservation over the (Northbound)
Service Interface and within the Application plane. It is associated
with an abstraction of location, such as IP addresses and DNS names,
to identify the end systems and eventually specify intermediate relay
nodes.
4.1.2. The Controller Plane
The Controller Plane corresponds to the aggregation of the Control
and Management Planes in [RFC7426], though Common Control and
Measurement Plane (CCAMP) [CCAMP] makes an additional distinction
between management and measurement. When the logical separation of
the Control, Measurement and other Management entities is not
relevant, the term Controller Plane is used for simplicity to
represent them all, and the term controller refers to any device
operating in that plane, whether is it a Path Computation entity or a
Network Management entity (NME). The Path Computation Element (PCE)
[PCE] is a core element of a controller, in charge of computing
Deterministic paths to be applied in the Network Plane.
A (Northbound) Service Interface enables applications in the
Application Plane to communicate with the entities in the Controller
Plane.
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One or more PCE(s) collaborate to implement the requests from the FME
as Per-Flow Per-Hop Behaviors installed in the relay nodes for each
individual flow. The PCEs place each flow along a deterministic
sequence of relay nodes so as to respect per-flow constraints such as
security and latency, and optimize the overall result for metrics
such as an abstract aggregated cost. The deterministic sequence can
typically be more complex than a direct sequence and include
redundancy path, with one or more packet replication and elimination
points.
4.1.3. The Network Plane
The Network Plane represents the network devices and protocols as a
whole, regardless of the Layer at which the network devices operate.
It includes Forwarding Plane (data plane), Application, and
Operational Plane (control plane) aspects.
The network Plane comprises the Network Interface Cards (NIC) in the
end systems, which are typically IP hosts, and relay nodes, which are
typically IP routers and switches. Network-to-Network Interfaces
such as used for Traffic Engineering path reservation in [RFC5921],
as well as User-to-Network Interfaces (UNI) such as provided by the
Local Management Interface (LMI) between network and end systems, are
both part of the Network Plane, both in the control plane and the
data plane.
A Southbound (Network) Interface enables the entities in the
Controller Plane to communicate with devices in the Network Plane.
This interface leverages and extends TEAS to describe the physical
topology and resources in the Network Plane.
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Flow Management Entity
End End
System System
-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ Northbound -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
PCE PCE PCE PCE
-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ Southbound -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
Relay Relay Relay Relay
System System System System
NIC NIC
Relay Relay Relay Relay
System System System System
Figure 2
The relay nodes (and eventually the end systems NIC) expose their
capabilities and physical resources to the controller (the PCE), and
update the PCE with their dynamic perception of the topology, across
the Southbound Interface. In return, the PCE(s) set the per-flow
paths up, providing a Flow Characterization that is more tightly
coupled to the relay node Operation than a TSpec.
At the Network plane, relay nodes may exchange information regarding
the state of the paths, between adjacent systems and eventually with
the end systems, and forward packets within constraints associated to
each flow, or, when unable to do so, perform a last resort operation
such as drop or declassify.
This specification focuses on the Southbound interface and the
operation of the Network Plane.
4.2. DetNet flows
4.2.1. Source guarantees
DetNet flows can by synchronous or asynchronous. In synchronous
DetNet flows, at least the relay nodes (and possibly the end systems)
are closely time synchronized, typically to better than 1
microsecond. By transmitting packets from different DetNet flows or
classes of DetNet flows at different times, using repeating schedules
synchronized among the relay nodes, resources such as buffers and
link bandwidth can be shared over the time domain among different
DetNet flows. There is a tradeoff among techniques for synchronous
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DetNet flows between the burden of fine-grained scheduling and the
benefit of reducing the required resources, especially buffer space.
In contrast, asynchronous DetNet flows are not coordinated with a
fine-grained schedule, so relay and end systems must assume worst-
case interference among DetNet flows contending for buffer resources.
Asynchronous DetNet flows are characterized by:
o A maximum packet size;
o An observation interval; and
o A maximum number of transmissions during that observation
interval.
These parameters, together with knowledge of the protocol stack used
(and thus the size of the various headers added to a packet), limit
the number of bit times per observation interval that the DetNet flow
can occupy the physical medium.
The source promises that these limits will not be exceeded. If the
source transmits less data than this limit allows, the unused
resources such as link bandwidth can be made available by the system
to non-DetNet packets. However, making those resources available to
DetNet packets in other DetNet flows would serve no purpose. Those
other DetNet flows have their own dedicated resources, on the
assumption that all DetNet flows can use all of their resources over
a long period of time.
Note that there is no provision in DetNet for throttling DetNet flows
(reducing the transmission rate via feedback); the assumption is that
a DetNet flow, to be useful, must be delivered in its entirety. That
is, while any useful application is written to expect a certain
number of lost packets, the real-time applications of interest to
DetNet demand that the loss of data due to the network is
extraordinarily infrequent.
Although DetNet strives to minimize the changes required of an
application to allow it to shift from a special-purpose digital
network to an Internet Protocol network, one fundamental shift in the
behavior of network applications is impossible to avoid: the
reservation of resources before the application starts. In the first
place, a network cannot deliver finite latency and practically zero
packet loss to an arbitrarily high offered load. Secondly, achieving
practically zero packet loss for unthrottled (though bandwidth
limited) DetNet flows means that bridges and routers have to dedicate
buffer resources to specific DetNet flows or to classes of DetNet
flows. The requirements of each reservation have to be translated
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into the parameters that control each system's queuing, shaping, and
scheduling functions and delivered to the hosts, bridges, and
routers.
4.2.2. Incomplete Networks
The presence in the network of relay nodes that are not fully capable
of offering DetNet services complicates the ability of the relay
nodes and/or controller to allocate resources, as extra buffering,
and thus extra latency, must be allocated at points downstream from
the non-DetNet relay node for a DetNet flow.
4.3. Queuing, Shaping, Scheduling, and Preemption
As described above, DetNet achieves its aims by reserving bandwidth
and buffer resources at every hop along the path of the DetNet flow.
The reservation itself is not sufficient, however. Implementors and
users of a number of proprietary and standard real-time networks have
found that standards for specific data plane techniques are required
to enable these assurances to be made in a multi-vendor network. The
fundamental reason is that latency variation in one system results in
the need for extra buffer space in the next-hop system(s), which in
turn, increases the worst-case per-hop latency.
Standard queuing and transmission selection algorithms allow a
central controller to compute the latency contribution of each relay
node to the end-to-end latency, to compute the amount of buffer space
required in each relay node for each incremental DetNet flow, and
most importantly, to translate from a flow specification to a set of
values for the managed objects that control each relay or end system.
The IEEE 802 has specified (and is specifying) a set of queuing,
shaping, and scheduling algorithms that enable each relay node
(bridge or router), and/or a central controller, to compute these
values. These algorithms include:
o A credit-based shaper [IEEE802.1Q-2014] Clause 34.
o Time-gated queues governed by a rotating time schedule,
synchronized among all relay nodes [IEEE802.1Qbv].
o Synchronized double (or triple) buffers driven by synchronized
time ticks. [IEEE802.1Qch].
o Pre-emption of an Ethernet packet in transmission by a packet with
a more stringent latency requirement, followed by the resumption
of the preempted packet [IEEE802.1Qbu], [IEEE802.3br].
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While these techniques are currently embedded in Ethernet and
bridging standards, we can note that they are all, except perhaps for
packet preemption, equally applicable to other media than Ethernet,
and to routers as well as bridges.
4.4. Coexistence with normal traffic
A DetNet network supports the dedication of a high proportion (e.g.
75%) of the network bandwidth to DetNet flows. But, no matter how
much is dedicated for DetNet flows, it is a goal of DetNet to coexist
with existing Class of Service schemes (e.g., DiffServ). It is also
important that non-DetNet traffic not disrupt the DetNet flow, of
course (see Section 4.5 and Section 7). For these reasons:
o Bandwidth (transmission opportunities) not utilized by a DetNet
flow are available to non-DetNet packets (though not to other
DetNet flows).
o DetNet flows can be shaped or scheduled, in order to ensure that
the highest-priority non-DetNet packet also is ensured a worst-
case latency (at any given hop).
o When transmission opportunities for DetNet flows are scheduled in
detail, then the algorithm constructing the schedule should leave
sufficient opportunities for non-DetNet packets to satisfy the
needs of the users of the network. Detailed scheduling can also
permit the time-shared use of buffer resources by different DetNet
flows.
Ideally, the net effect of the presence of DetNet flows in a network
on the non-DetNet packets is primarily a reduction in the available
bandwidth.
4.5. Fault Mitigation
One key to building robust real-time systems is to reduce the
infinite variety of possible failures to a number that can be
analyzed with reasonable confidence. DetNet aids in the process by
providing filters and policers to detect DetNet packets received on
the wrong interface, or at the wrong time, or in too great a volume,
and to then take actions such as discarding the offending packet,
shutting down the offending DetNet flow, or shutting down the
offending interface.
It is also essential that filters and service remarking be employed
at the network edge to prevent non-DetNet packets from being mistaken
for DetNet packets, and thus impinging on the resources allocated to
DetNet packets.
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There exist techniques, at present and/or in various stages of
standardization, that can perform these fault mitigation tasks that
deliver a high probability that misbehaving systems will have zero
impact on well-behaved DetNet flows, except of course, for the
receiving interface(s) immediately downstream of the misbehaving
device. Examples of such techniques include traffic policing
functions (e.g. [RFC2475]) and separating flows into per-flow rate-
limited queues.
4.6. Protocol Stack Model
Figure 3 illustrates the DetNet data plane layering model. One may
compare it to that in [IEEE802.1CB], Annex C, a work in progress.
DetNet data plane protocol stack
| packets going | ^ packets coming ^
v down the stack v | up the stack |
+-------------+-------------+ +-------------+-------------+
| source | OAM | | destination | OAM |
+-------------+-------------+ +-------------+-------------+
| Packet sequencing | | Duplicate elimination |
+---------------------------+ +---------------------------+
| DetNet flow duplication | | DetNet flow merging |
+---------------------------+ +---------------------------+
| | | DetNet flow monitoring |
+---------------------------+ +---------------------------+
| Sequence encoding | | Sequence decoding |
+---------------------------+ +---------------------------+
| DetNet flow encoding | | DetNet flow decoding |
+---------------------------+ +---------------------------+
|Queuing shaping scheduling | | |
+---------------------------+ +---------------------------+
| Lower layers | | Lower layers |
+---------------------------+ +---------------------------+
v ^
\_______________________________/
Figure 3
Not all layers are required for any given application, or even for
any given network. The layers are, from top to bottom:
Application
Shown as "source" and "destination" in the diagram.
OAM
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Operations, Administration, and Maintenance leverages in-band
and out-of-and signaling that validates whether the service
is effectively obtained within QoS constraints. It is shown
in parallel with the user's application, OAM makes use of the
same DetNet services. OAM can involve specific tagging added
in the packets for tracing implementation or network
configuration errors; traceability enables to find whether a
packet is a replica, which node performed the replication,
and which segment was intended for the replica.
Packet sequencing
Supplies the sequence number for packet replication and
elimination (Section 3.4) for packets going down the stack.
Peers with packet elimination. This layer is not needed if a
higher-layer transport protocol is expected to perform any
packet elimination required by the DetNet flow duplication.
Duplicate elimination
Based on the sequenced number supplied by its peer, packet
sequencing, packet elimination discards any duplicate packets
generated by DetNet flow duplication. The duplication may
also be inferred from other information such as the precise
time of reception in a scheduled network. The duplicate
elimination layer may also perform resequencing of packets to
restore packet order in a flow that was disrupted by the loss
of packets on one or another of the multiple paths taken.
DetNet flow monitoring
Many DetNet applications, and particularly those in which
multiple applications (e.g. different machine tools) are
sharing the same network infrastructure, or even the same
physical links, it is critical that a misbehaving DetNet flow
does not interfere with the timely delivery of packets
belonging to other DetNet flows. The DetNet flow monitoring
layer monitors DetNet flows entering a DetNet node and
enforces bandwidth and/or sequencing restrictions, taking
appropriate action if a misbehaving flow is detected. See
Section 4.5. This function is shown in the stack at the
point where it can operate on individual DetNet member flows
before they are merged into a DetNet compound flow, but in
fact, it may be present in different forms in multiple places
in the stack to ensure against interference errors.
DetNet flow duplication
Replicates packets going down the stack, that belong to a
DetNet compound flow, into two or more DetNet member flows.
Note that this function is separate from packet sequencing.
Flow duplication can be an explicit duplication and remarking
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of packets, or can be performed by, for example, techniques
similar to ordinary multicast replication. Peers with DetNet
flow merging.
DetNet flow merging
Merges DetNet member flows together for packets coming up the
stack belonging to a specific DetNet compound flow. Peers
with DetNet flow duplication. DetNet flow merging, together
with packet sequencing, duplicate elimination, DetNet flow
duplication, and DetNet flow merging, performs packet
replication and elimination (Section 3.4).
Sequence encoding
Encodes the sequence number into packets going down the
stack. This function may or may not be a null transformation
of the packet, and for some protocols, is not explicitly
present, being included in the DetNet flow encoding layer,
below. Peers with sequence decoding.
Sequence decoding
Extracts the sequence number from packets coming up the stack
for use by the duplicate elimination layer. This function
may or may not be a null transformation of the packet, and
for some protocols, is not explicitly present, being included
in the DetNet flow decoding layer, below. Peers with
sequence encoding.
DetNet flow encoding
Encapsulates packets going down the stack, based on the
packet's locally-significant DetNet flow identifier, in order
to identify to which DetNet flow the packet belongs. This
may be a null transformation or might be an explicit
encapsulation (e.g., altering the VLAN and destination MAC
address). DetNet flow identification is the basis for packet
replication and elimination, for assigning per-flow resources
(if any) to packets and for defense against misbehaving
systems (Section 4.5). When DetNet flows are assigned to
pinned paths, this layer can be indistinguishable from the
data forwarding layer(s). Peers with DetNet flow decoding.
See Section 4.7 for an explanation of why DetNet flow
encoding is not necessarily a part of normal packet
transport.
DetNet flow decoding
Extracts a locally-significant DetNet flow identifier from
packets coming up the stack, in order to identify to which
DetNet flow the packet belongs. This may be a null
transformation or might be an explicit decapsulation (e.g.,
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altering the VLAN and destination MAC address). Peers with
DetNet flow encoding. See also Section 4.7.
Queuing shaping scheduling
This layer provides the latency and congestion loss parts of
the DetNet QoS. See Section 4.3. Note that additional
shaping elements may be provided for DetNet edge nodes in
order to precondition potentially malformed DetNet flows from
a source end system.
The reader is likely to notice that Figure 3 does not specify the
relationship between the DetNet layers, the IP layers, and the link
layers. This is intentional, because they can usefully be placed
different places in the stack, and even in multiple places, depending
on where their peers are placed.
4.7. Exporting flow identification
An interesting feature of DetNet, and one that invites
implementations that can be accused of "layering violations", is the
need for lower layers to be aware of specific flows at higher layers,
in order to provide specific queuing and shaping services for
specific flows. For example:
o A non-IP, strictly L2 source end system X may be sending multiple
flows to the same L2 destination end system Y. Those flows may
include DetNet flows with different QoS requirements, and may
include non-DetNet flows.
o A router may be sending any number of flows to another router.
Again, those flows may include DetNet flows with different QoS
requirements, and may include non-DetNet flows.
o Two routers may be separated by bridges. For these bridges to
perform any required per-flow queuing and shaping, they must be
able to identify the individual flows.
o A Label Edge Router (LERs) may have a Label Switched Path (LSP)
set up for handling traffic destined for a particular IP address
carrying only non-DetNet flows. If a DetNet flow to that same
address is requested, a separate LSP may be needed, in order that
all of the Label Switch Routers (LSRs) along the path to the
destination give that flow special queuing and shaping.
The need for a lower-level DetNet node to be aware of individual
higher-layer flows is not unique to DetNet. But, given the endless
complexity of layering and relayering over tunnels that is available
to network designers, DetNet needs to provide a model for flow
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identification that is at least somewhat better than deep packet
inspection. That is not to say that deep inspection will not be
used, or the capability standardized; but, there are alternatives.
The main alternative is the sequence encode/decode and, particularly,
the DetNet flow encoding/decoding layers shown in Figure 3. In this
model, at the time a DetNet flow is established and the resources for
it reserved, an alternate encapsulation of the DetNet flow at the
lower layer is requested and established. For example:
o A single unicast DetNet flow passing from router A through a
bridged network to router B may be assigned a {VLAN, multicast
destination MAC address} pair that is unique within that bridged
network. The bridges can then identify the flow without accessing
higher-layer headers. Of course, the receiving router must
recognize and accept that multicast MAC address.
o A DetNet flow passing from LSR A to LSR B may be assigned a
different label than that used for other flows to the same IP
destination.
The DetNet flow encoding/decoding layers shown in Figure 3 perform
the required alternate encapsulations. For example, one could place
a DetNet flow encoding shim between the Address Resolution Protocol
(ARP) layer and the MAC layer, which alters the {VLAN, MAC address}
pair to identify particular streams going up and down the stack, so
that the layers above the shim need no alteration to service DetNet
flows.
In any of the above cases, it is possible that an existing DetNet
flow can be used as a carrier for multiple DetNet sub-flows. (Not to
be confused with DetNet compound vs. member flows.) Of course, this
requires that the aggregate DetNet flow be provisioned properly to
carry the sub-flows.
Thus, rather than deep packet inspection, there is the option to
export higher-layer information to the lower layer. The requirement
to support one or the other method for flow identification (or both)
is the essential complexity that DetNet brings to existing control
plane models.
4.8. Advertising resources, capabilities and adjacencies
There are three classes of information that a central controller or
decentralized control plane needs to know that can only be obtained
from the end systems and/or relay nodes in the network. When using a
peer-to-peer control plane, some of this information may be required
by a system's neighbors in the network.
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o Details of the system's capabilities that are required in order to
accurately allocate that system's resources, as well as other
systems' resources. This includes, for example, which specific
queuing and shaping algorithms are implemented (Section 4.3), the
number of buffers dedicated for DetNet allocation, and the worst-
case forwarding delay.
o The dynamic state of an end or relay node's DetNet resources.
o The identity of the system's neighbors, and the characteristics of
the link(s) between the systems, including the length (in
nanoseconds) of the link(s).
4.9. Provisioning model
4.9.1. Centralized Path Computation and Installation
A centralized routing model, such as provided with a PCE (RFC 4655
[RFC4655]), enables global and per-flow optimizations. (See
Section 4.1.) The model is attractive but a number of issues are
left to be solved. In particular:
o Whether and how the path computation can be installed by 1) an end
device or 2) a Network Management entity,
o And how the path is set up, either by installing state at each hop
with a direct interaction between the forwarding device and the
PCE, or along a path by injecting a source-routed request at one
end of the path.
4.9.2. Distributed Path Setup
Whether a distributed alternative without a PCE can be valuable
should be studied as well. Such an alternative could for instance
inherit from the Resource ReSerVation Protocol [RFC3209] (RSVP-TE)
flows.
In a Layer-2 only environment, or as part of a layered approach to a
mixed environment, IEEE 802.1 also has work, either completed or in
progress. [IEEE802.1Q-2014] Clause 35 describes SRP, a peer-to-peer
protocol for Layer-2 roughly analogous to RSVP [RFC2205]. Almost
complete is [IEEE802.1Qca], which defines how ISIS can provide
multiple disjoint paths or distribution trees. Also in progress is
[IEEE802.1Qcc], which expands the capabilities of SRP.
The integration/interaction of the DetNet control layer with an
underlying IEEE 802.1 sub-network control layer will need to be
defined.
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4.10. Scaling to larger networks
Reservations for individual DetNet flows require considerable state
information in each relay node, especially when adequate fault
mitigation (Section 4.5) is required. The DetNet data plane, in
order to support larger numbers of DetNet flows, must support the
aggregation of DetNet flows into tunnels, which themselves can be
viewed by the relay nodes' data planes largely as individual DetNet
flows. Without such aggregation, the per-relay system may limit the
scale of DetNet networks.
4.11. Connected islands vs. networks
Given that users have deployed examples of the IEEE 802.1 TSN TG
standards, which provide capabilities similar to DetNet, it is
obvious to ask whether the IETF DetNet effort can be limited to
providing Layer-2 connections (VPNs) between islands of bridged TSN
networks. While this capability is certainly useful to some
applications, and must not be precluded by DetNet, tunneling alone is
not a sufficient goal for the DetNet WG. As shown in the
Deterministic Networking Use Cases draft [I-D.ietf-detnet-use-cases],
there are already deployments of Layer-2 TSN networks that are
encountering the well-known problems of over-large broadcast domains.
Routed solutions, and combinations routed/bridged solutions, are both
required.
5. Compatibility with Layer-2
Standards providing similar capabilities for bridged networks (only)
have been and are being generated in the IEEE 802 LAN/MAN Standards
Committee. The present architecture describes an abstract model that
can be applicable both at Layer-2 and Layer-3, and over links not
defined by IEEE 802. It is the intention of the authors (and
hopefully, as this draft progresses, of the DetNet Working Group)
that IETF and IEEE 802 will coordinate their work, via the
participation of common individuals, liaisons, and other means, to
maximize the compatibility of their outputs.
DetNet enabled systems and nodes can be interconnected by sub-
networks, i.e., Layer-2 technologies. These sub-networks will
provide DetNet compatible service for support of DetNet traffic.
Examples of sub-networks include 802.1TSN and a point-to-point OTN
link. Of course, multi-layer DetNet systems may be possible too,
where one DetNet appears as a sub-network, and provides service to, a
higher layer DetNet system.
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6. Open Questions
There are a number of architectural questions that will have to be
resolved before this document can be submitted for publication.
Aside from the obvious fact that this present draft is subject to
change, there are specific questions to which the authors wish to
direct the readers' attention.
6.1. Data plane shapers and schedulers
A number of techniques have been defined and are being defined by
IEEE 802 for queuing, shaping, and scheduling transmissions on
EtherNet media, most of which are directly applicable to any other
medium. Specific selections of supported techniques are required,
because minimizing, and even eliminating, congestion losses depends
strongly on the details of the per-hop behavior of sources and relay
nodes.
The present authors expect that, at least, the IEEE 802 mechanisms
will be supported.
6.2. DetNet flow identification and sequencing
The techniques to be used for DetNet flow identification must be
settled. The following paragraphs provide a snapshot of the authors'
opinions at the time of writing. These authors anticipate the
submission of drafts on this subject. See also Section 4.7
IEEE 802.1 TSN streams are identified by giving each stream (DetNet
flow) a {VLAN identifier, destination MAC address} pair that is
unique in the bridged network, and that the MAC address must be a
multicast address. If a source is generating, for example, two
unicast UDP flows to the same destination, one DetNet and one not,
the DetNet flow's packets must be transformed at some point to have a
multicast destination MAC address, and perhaps, a different VLAN than
the non-DetNet flow's packets.
A similar provision would apply to DetNet packets that are identified
by MPLS labels; any bridges between the LSRs need a {VLAN identifier,
destination MAC address} pair uniquely identifying the DetNet flow in
the bridged network.
Provision is made in current draft of [IEEE802.1CB] to make these
transformations either in a Layer-2 shim in the source end system, on
the output side of a router or LSR, or in a proxy function in the
first-hop bridge. It remains to be seen whether this provision is
adequate and/or acceptable to the IETF DetNet WG.
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There are also questions regarding the sequentialization of packets
for use with packet replication and elimination (Section 3.4).
[IEEE802.1CB] defines an EtherNet tag carrying a sequence number. If
MPLS Pseudowires are used with a control word containing a sequence
number, the relationship and interworking between these two formats
must be defined.
6.3. Flat vs. hierarchical control
Boxes that are solely routers or solely bridges are rare in today's
market. In a multi-tenant data center, multiple users' virtual
Layer-2/Layer-3 topologies exist simultaneously, implemented on a
network whose physical topology bears only accidental resemblance to
the virtual topologies.
While the forwarding topology (the bridges and routers) are an
important consideration for a DetNet Flow Management Entity
(Section 4.1.1), so is the purely physical topology. Ultimately, the
model used by the management entities is based on boxes, queues, and
links. The authors hope that the work of the TEAS WG will help to
clarify exactly what model parameters need to be traded between the
relay nodes and the controller(s).
6.4. Peer-to-peer reservation protocol
As described in Section 4.9.2, the DetNet WG needs to decide whether
to support a peer-to-peer protocol for a source and a destination to
reserve resources for a DetNet stream. Assuming that enabling the
involvement of the source and/or destination is desirable (see
Deterministic Networking Use Cases [I-D.ietf-detnet-use-cases]), it
remains to decide whether the DetNet WG will make it possible to
deploy at least some DetNet capabilities in a network using only a
peer-to-peer protocol, without a central controller.
(Note that a UNI (see Section 4.1.3) between an end system and an
edge relay node, for sources and/or listeners to request DetNet
services, can be either the first hop of a per-to-peer reservation
protocol, or can be deflected by the edge relay node to a central
controller for resolution. Similarly, a decision by a central
controller can be effected by the controller instructing the end
system or edge relay node to initiate a per-to-peer protocol
activity.)
6.5. Wireless media interactions
Deterministic Networking Use Cases [I-D.ietf-detnet-use-cases]
illustrates cases where wireless media are needed in a DetNet
network. Some wireless media in general use, such as IEEE 802.11
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[IEEE802.1Q-2014], have significantly higher packet loss rates than
typical wired media, such as Ethernet [IEEE802.3-2012]. IEEE 802.11
includes support for such features as MAC-layer acknowledgements and
retransmissions.
The techniques described in Section 3 are likely to improve the
ability of a mixed wired/wireless network to offer the DetNet QoS
features. The interaction of these techniques with the features of
specific wireless media, although they may be significant, cannot be
addressed in this document. It remains to be decided to what extent
the DetNet WG will address them, and to what extent other WGs, e.g.
6TiSCH, will do so.
7. Security Considerations
Security in the context of Deterministic Networking has an added
dimension; the time of delivery of a packet can be just as important
as the contents of the packet, itself. A man-in-the-middle attack,
for example, can impose, and then systematically adjust, additional
delays into a link, and thus disrupt or subvert a real-time
application without having to crack any encryption methods employed.
See [RFC7384] for an exploration of this issue in a related context.
Furthermore, in a control system where millions of dollars of
equipment, or even human lives, can be lost if the DetNet QoS is not
delivered, one must consider not only simple equipment failures,
where the box or wire instantly becomes perfectly silent, but bizarre
errors such as can be caused by software failures. Because there is
essential no limit to the kinds of failures that can occur,
protecting against realistic equipment failures is indistinguishable,
in most cases, from protecting against malicious behavior, whether
accidental or intentional. See also Section 4.5.
Security must cover:
o the protection of the signaling protocol
o the authentication and authorization of the controlling systems
o the identification and shaping of the DetNet flows
8. Privacy Considerations
DetNet is provides a Quality of Service (QoS), and as such, does not
directly raise any new privacy considerations.
However, the requirement for every (or almost every) node along the
path of a DetNet flow to identify DetNet flows may present an
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additional attack surface for privacy, should the DetNet paradigm be
found useful in broader environments.
9. IANA Considerations
This document does not require an action from IANA.
10. Acknowledgements
The authors wish to thank Jouni Korhonen, Erik Nordmark, George
Swallow, Rudy Klecka, Anca Zamfir, David Black, Thomas Watteyne,
Shitanshu Shah, Craig Gunther, Rodney Cummings, Balasz Varga,
Wilfried Steiner, Marcel Kiessling, Karl Weber, Ethan Grossman, Pat
Thaler, and Lou Berger for their various contribution with this work.
11. Access to IEEE 802.1 documents
To access password protected IEEE 802.1 drafts, see the IETF IEEE
802.1 information page at https://www.ietf.org/proceedings/52/slides/
bridge-0/tsld003.htm.
12. Informative References
[AVnu] http://www.avnu.org/, "The AVnu Alliance tests and
certifies devices for interoperability, providing a simple
and reliable networking solution for AV network
implementation based on the Audio Video Bridging (AVB)
standards.".
[CCAMP] IETF, "Common Control and Measurement Plane",
.
[HART] www.hartcomm.org, "Highway Addressable Remote Transducer,
a group of specifications for industrial process and
control devices administered by the HART Foundation".
[HSR-PRP] IEC, "High availability seamless redundancy (HSR) is a
further development of the PRP approach, although HSR
functions primarily as a protocol for creating media
redundancy while PRP, as described in the previous
section, creates network redundancy. PRP and HSR are both
described in the IEC 62439 3 standard.",
.
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[I-D.finn-detnet-problem-statement]
Finn, N. and P. Thubert, "Deterministic Networking Problem
Statement", draft-finn-detnet-problem-statement-05 (work
in progress), March 2016.
[I-D.ietf-6tisch-architecture]
Thubert, P., "An Architecture for IPv6 over the TSCH mode
of IEEE 802.15.4", draft-ietf-6tisch-architecture-10 (work
in progress), June 2016.
[I-D.ietf-6tisch-tsch]
Watteyne, T., Palattella, M., and L. Grieco, "Using
IEEE802.15.4e TSCH in an IoT context: Overview, Problem
Statement and Goals", draft-ietf-6tisch-tsch-06 (work in
progress), March 2015.
[I-D.ietf-detnet-use-cases]
Grossman, E., Gunther, C., Thubert, P., Wetterwald, P.,
Raymond, J., Korhonen, J., Kaneko, Y., Das, S., Zha, Y.,
Varga, B., Farkas, J., Goetz, F., and J. Schmitt,
"Deterministic Networking Use Cases", draft-ietf-detnet-
use-cases-09 (work in progress), March 2016.
[I-D.ietf-roll-rpl-industrial-applicability]
Phinney, T., Thubert, P., and R. Assimiti, "RPL
applicability in industrial networks", draft-ietf-roll-
rpl-industrial-applicability-02 (work in progress),
October 2013.
[I-D.svshah-tsvwg-deterministic-forwarding]
Shah, S. and P. Thubert, "Deterministic Forwarding PHB",
draft-svshah-tsvwg-deterministic-forwarding-04 (work in
progress), August 2015.
[IEEE802.11-2012]
IEEE, "Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and
Physical Layer (PHY) Specifications", 2012,
.
[IEEE802.1AS-2011]
IEEE, "Timing and Synchronizations (IEEE 802.1AS-2011)",
2011, .
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[IEEE802.1BA-2011]
IEEE, "AVB Systems (IEEE 802.1BA-2011)", 2011,
.
[IEEE802.1CB]
IEEE, "Frame Replication and Elimination for Reliability
(IEEE Draft P802.1CB)", 2016,
.
[IEEE802.1Q-2014]
IEEE, "MAC Bridges and VLANs (IEEE 802.1Q-2014", 2014,
.
[IEEE802.1Qbu]
IEEE, "Frame Preemption", 2016,
.
[IEEE802.1Qbv]
IEEE, "Enhancements for Scheduled Traffic", 2016,
.
[IEEE802.1Qca]
IEEE, "Path Control and Reservation", 2015,
.
[IEEE802.1Qcc]
IEEE, "Stream Reservation Protocol (SRP) Enhancements and
Performance Improvements", 2016,
.
[IEEE802.1Qch]
IEEE, "Cyclic Queuing and Forwarding", 2016,
.
[IEEE802.1TSNTG]
IEEE Standards Association, "IEEE 802.1 Time-Sensitive
Networks Task Group", 2013,
.
[IEEE802.3-2012]
IEEE, "IEEE Stabdard for Ethernet", 2012,
.
Finn, et al. Expires December 29, 2016 [Page 29]
Internet-Draft Deterministic Networking Architecture June 2016
[IEEE802.3br]
IEEE, "Interspersed Express Traffic", 2016,
.
[IEEE802154]
IEEE standard for Information Technology, "IEEE std.
802.15.4, Part. 15.4: Wireless Medium Access Control (MAC)
and Physical Layer (PHY) Specifications for Low-Rate
Wireless Personal Area Networks", June 2011.
[IEEE802154e]
IEEE standard for Information Technology, "IEEE std.
802.15.4e, Part. 15.4: Low-Rate Wireless Personal Area
Networks (LR-WPANs) Amendment 1: MAC sublayer", April
2012.
[ISA100.11a]
ISA/IEC, "ISA100.11a, Wireless Systems for Automation,
also IEC 62734", 2011, < http://www.isa100wci.org/en-
US/Documents/PDF/3405-ISA100-WirelessSystems-Future-broch-
WEB-ETSI.aspx>.
[ISA95] ANSI/ISA, "Enterprise-Control System Integration Part 1:
Models and Terminology", 2000, .
[ODVA] http://www.odva.org/, "The organization that supports
network technologies built on the Common Industrial
Protocol (CIP) including EtherNet/IP.".
[PCE] IETF, "Path Computation Element",
.
[Profinet]
http://us.profinet.com/technology/profinet/, "PROFINET is
a standard for industrial networking in automation.",
.
[RFC2205] Braden, R., Ed., Zhang, L., Berson, S., Herzog, S., and S.
Jamin, "Resource ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP) -- Version 1
Functional Specification", RFC 2205, DOI 10.17487/RFC2205,
September 1997, .
[RFC2475] Blake, S., Black, D., Carlson, M., Davies, E., Wang, Z.,
and W. Weiss, "An Architecture for Differentiated
Services", RFC 2475, DOI 10.17487/RFC2475, December 1998,
.
Finn, et al. Expires December 29, 2016 [Page 30]
Internet-Draft Deterministic Networking Architecture June 2016
[RFC3209] Awduche, D., Berger, L., Gan, D., Li, T., Srinivasan, V.,
and G. Swallow, "RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for LSP
Tunnels", RFC 3209, DOI 10.17487/RFC3209, December 2001,
.
[RFC4655] Farrel, A., Vasseur, J., and J. Ash, "A Path Computation
Element (PCE)-Based Architecture", RFC 4655,
DOI 10.17487/RFC4655, August 2006,
.
[RFC5673] Pister, K., Ed., Thubert, P., Ed., Dwars, S., and T.
Phinney, "Industrial Routing Requirements in Low-Power and
Lossy Networks", RFC 5673, DOI 10.17487/RFC5673, October
2009, .
[RFC5921] Bocci, M., Ed., Bryant, S., Ed., Frost, D., Ed., Levrau,
L., and L. Berger, "A Framework for MPLS in Transport
Networks", RFC 5921, DOI 10.17487/RFC5921, July 2010,
.
[RFC6372] Sprecher, N., Ed. and A. Farrel, Ed., "MPLS Transport
Profile (MPLS-TP) Survivability Framework", RFC 6372,
DOI 10.17487/RFC6372, September 2011,
.
[RFC7384] Mizrahi, T., "Security Requirements of Time Protocols in
Packet Switched Networks", RFC 7384, DOI 10.17487/RFC7384,
October 2014, .
[RFC7426] Haleplidis, E., Ed., Pentikousis, K., Ed., Denazis, S.,
Hadi Salim, J., Meyer, D., and O. Koufopavlou, "Software-
Defined Networking (SDN): Layers and Architecture
Terminology", RFC 7426, DOI 10.17487/RFC7426, January
2015, .
[TEAS] IETF, "Traffic Engineering Architecture and Signaling",
.
[WirelessHART]
www.hartcomm.org, "Industrial Communication Networks -
Wireless Communication Network and Communication Profiles
- WirelessHART - IEC 62591", 2010.
Authors' Addresses
Finn, et al. Expires December 29, 2016 [Page 31]
Internet-Draft Deterministic Networking Architecture June 2016
Norman Finn
Cisco Systems
170 W Tasman Dr.
San Jose, California 95134
USA
Phone: +1 408 526 4495
Email: nfinn@cisco.com
Pascal Thubert
Cisco Systems
Village d'Entreprises Green Side
400, Avenue de Roumanille
Batiment T3
Biot - Sophia Antipolis 06410
FRANCE
Phone: +33 4 97 23 26 34
Email: pthubert@cisco.com
Michael Johas Teener
Broadcom Corp.
3151 Zanker Rd.
San Jose, California 95134
USA
Phone: +1 831 824 4228
Email: MikeJT@broadcom.com
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