Network Working Group O. Finkelman
Internet-Draft Qwilt
Intended status: Standards Track S. Mishra
Expires: May 23, 2020 Verizon
November 20, 2019

CDNI Request Routing Extensions
draft-ietf-cdni-request-routing-extensions-08

Abstract

Open Caching architecture is a use case of Content Delivery Networks Interconnection (CDNI) in which the commercial Content Delivery Network (CDN) is the upstream CDN (uCDN) and the ISP caching layer serves as the downstream CDN (dCDN). The extensions specified in this document to the CDNI Metadata Interface (MI) and the Footprint and Capabilities Interface (FCI) are derived from requirements raised by Open Caching but are also applicable to CDNI use cases in general.

Status of This Memo

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This Internet-Draft will expire on May 23, 2020.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (c) 2019 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved.

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Table of Contents

1. Introduction

The Streaming Video Alliance is a global association that works to solve streaming video challenges in an effort to improve end-user experience and adoption. The Open Caching Working Group of the Streaming Video Alliance is focused on the delegation of video delivery requests from commercial CDNs to a caching layer at the Internet Service Provider's (ISP) network. Open Caching architecture is a specific use case of CDNI where the commercial CDN is the upstream CDN (uCDN) and the ISP caching layer is the downstream CDN (dCDN). The Open Caching Request Routing Specification defines the Request Routing process and the interfaces that are required for its provisioning. This document defines and registers CDNI metadata object [RFC8006] and CDNI Footprint and Capabilities object [RFC8008] that are required for Open Caching Request Routing. For consistency with other CDNI documents this document follows the CDNI convention of uCDN (upstream CDN) and dCDN (downstream CDN) to represent the commercial CDN and ISP caching layer respectively.

This document also registers CDNI Payload Types [RFC7736] for the defined objects:

1.1. Terminology

The following terms are used throughout this document:

Additionally, this document reuses the terminology defined in [RFC6707], [RFC7336], [RFC8006], [RFC8007], and [RFC8008]. Specifically, we use the following CDNI acronyms:

1.2. Requirements Language

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 BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.

2. Redirect Target Capability

Iterative request redirection is defined in Section 1.1 of [RFC7336] and elaborated by examples in Sections 3.2 and 3.4 of [RFC7336]. A Redirection Target (RT) is defined in Section 2 of [RFC7975] for Recursive Request Redirection as:

In this document we adopt the same definition of the RT for the Iterative Request Redirect use case. This use case requires the provisioning of the RT address to be used by the uCDN in order to redirect to the dCDN. RT addresses can vary between different footprints, for example, between different regions, and they may also change over time, for example as a result of network problems. Given this variable and dynamic nature of the redirect target address, it may not be suitable to advertise it during bootstrap. A more dynamic and footprint oriented interface is required. Section 4.3 of [RFC7336] suggests that it could be one of the roles of the FCI [RFC8008]. Following this suggestion, we have therefore, chosen to use the CDNI Footprint and Capabilities interface for redirect target address advertisement.

Use cases

The Redirect Target capability object is used to indicate the target address the uCDN should use in order to redirect a client to the dCDN. A target may be attached to a specific uCDN host, a list of uCDN hosts, or used globally for all the hosts of the uCDN.

When a dCDN is attaching the redirect target to a specific uCDN host or a list of uCDN hosts, the dCDN MUST advertise the hosts within the Redirect Target capability object as "redirecting-hosts". In this case, the uCDN can redirect to that dCDN address, only if the User Agent request was to one of these uCDN hosts.

If the redirect target capability object does not contain a target or the target is empty, the uCDN MUST interpret it as "no target available for these uCDN hosts for the specified footprint". In case such a target was already advertised in a previous FCI object, the uCDN MUST interpret it as an update that deletes the previous redirect target.

2.1. DNS Redirect Target

A redirect target for DNS redirection is a FQDN used as an alias in a CNAME record response (see [RFC1034]) of the uCDN DNS router. Note that DNS routers make routing decisions based on either the DNS resolver's IP address or the client IP subnet when EDNS0 client-subnet (ECS) is used (see [RFC7871]). The dCDN may choose to advertise redirect targets and footprints to cover both cases, such that the uCDN resolution would route the DNS query to a different dCDN CNAMEs according client subnet or dCDN resolver IP address. This method further allows the dCDN DNS to optimize the resolution by localizing the target CNAMEs. A uCDN implementation SHOULD prefer routing based on client IP subnet when ECS option is present. A dCDN implementation using the ECS option MUST be aware of the privacy drawbacks listed in Section 2 of [RFC7871] and SHOULD follow the guidelines provided in Section 11.1 of [RFC7871].

2.2. HTTP Redirect Target

A redirect target for HTTP redirection is the URI to be used as the value for the Location header of a HTTP redirect 3xx response, typically a 302 (Found) (see Section 7.1.2 of [RFC7231] and section 6.4 of [RFC7231]).

2.3. Properties of Redirect Target Capability Object

The Redirect Target capability object consists of the following properties:

The following is an example of a Redirect Target capability object serialization that advertises a dCDN target address that is attached to a specific list of uCDN "redirecting-hosts". A uCDN host that is included in that list can redirect to the advertised dCDN redirect target. The capabilities object is serialized as a JSON object as defined in Section 5.1 of [RFC8008]

{
  "capabilities": [
    {
      "capability-type": "FCI.RedirectTarget",
      "capability-value": {
          "redirecting-hosts": [
             "a.service123.ucdn.example.com", 
             "b.service123.ucdn.example.com"
          ],
          "dns-target": {
             "host": "service123.ucdn.dcdn.example.com"
          },
          "http-target": {
              "host": "us-east1.dcdn.example.com",
              "path-prefix": "/cache/1/",
              "include-redirecting-host": true          
          }
      },
      "footprints": [
          <Footprint objects>
      ]
    }
  ]
}
         

2.4. DnsTarget Object

The DnsTarget object gives the target address for the DNS response to delegate from the uCDN to the dCDN.

2.4.1. DNS Target Example

The following is an example of DnsTarget object:

 {
    "host": "service123.ucdn.dcdn.example.com"
 }
            

The following is an example of a DNS query for uCDN address "a.service123.ucdn.example.com" and the corresponding CNAME redirection response:

 Query:
 a.service123.ucdn.example.com: 
 type A, class IN 
 
 Response:
 NAME: a.service123.ucdn.example.com, TYPE: CNAME, CLASS: IN, 
 TTL: 120, RDATA: service123.ucdn.dcdn.example.com
            

2.5. HttpTarget Object

The HttpTarget object gives the necessary information to construct the target Location URI for HTTP redirection.

2.5.1. HTTP Target Example

Example of HttpTarget object with a "scheme", a "path-prefix", and "include-redirecting-host" properties:

{
   "host": "us-east1.dcdn.example.com",
   "scheme": "https",
   "path-prefix": "/cache/1/",
   "include-redirecting-host": true
}
            

Example of a HTTP request for content at uCDN host "a.service123.ucdn.example.com" and the corresponding HTTP response with a Location header, used for redirecting the client to the dCDN, constructed according to the HttpTarget object from the above example:

 Request:
 GET /vod/1/movie.mp4 HTTP/1.1
 Host: a.service123.ucdn.example.com
 
 Response:
 HTTP/1.1 302 Found
 Location: https://us-east1.dcdn.example.com/cache/1/
 a.service123.ucdn.example.com/vod/1/movie.mp4
            

2.6. Usage Example

Before requests can be routed from the uCDN to the dCDN the CDNs must exchange service configurations between them. Using the MI, the uCDN advertises out-of-band its hosts to the dCDN, each host is designated by a hostname and has its own specific metadata (see Section 4.1.2 of [RFC8006]. The dCDN, using the FCI, advertises, also out-of-band, the redirect target address object defined in Section 2.3 for the relevant uCDN hosts. The following is a generalized example of the message flow between an upstream CDN and a downstream dCDN. For simplicity, we focus on the sequence of messages between the uCDN and dCDN and not on how they are passed.

  dCDN                                                    uCDN
    +                                                       +
    |                                                       |
(1) | MI:  host: s123.ucdn.example.com                      |
    |      host-metadata: < metadata >                      |
    <-------------------------------------------------------+
    |                                                       |
(2) | FCI:  capability-type: FCI.RedirectTarget             |
    |       redirecting-hosts: s123.ucdn.example.com        |
    |       target host: us-east1.dcdn.example.com          |
    +------------------------------------------------------->
    |                                                       |
    |                                                       |
    +                                                       +

    Figure 1: Redirect target address advertisement
         

  1. The uCDN advertises a host (s123.ucdn.example.com) with the host metadata.
  2. The dCDN advertises its FCI objects to the uCDN including a FCI.RedirectTarget object that contains the redirect target address (us-east1.dcdn.example.com) specified for that uCDN host.

Once the redirect target has been set, the uCDN can start redirecting user requests to the dCDN. The following is a generic sequence of redirection using the host and redirect target that were advertised in Figure 1 above.

End User                  dCDN                   uCDN RR
    +                       +                       +
    |                       |                       |
(1) | Request sent s123.ucdn.example.com            |
    +-----------------------+----------------------->
    |                       |                       |
(2) | Redirect to us-east1.dcdn.example.com         |
    <-----------------------+-----------------------+
    |                       |                       |
(3) | Request us-east1.dcdn.example.com             |
    +----------------------->                       |
    |                       |                       |
(4) | Response              |                       |
    <-----------------------+                       |
    |                       |                       |
    +                       +                       +

    Figure 2: Generic requests redirection sequence
         

  1. The End User sends a request (DNS or HTTP) to the uCDN Request Router (RR).
  2. Using the previously advertised Redirect Target, the uCDN redirects the request to the dCDN.
  3. The End User sends a request to the dCDN.
  4. The dCDN either sends a response or reroutes it, for example, to a dCDN surrogate.

3. Fallback Target Address Metadata

Open Caching requires that the uCDN provides a fallback target server to the dCDN, to be used in cases where the dCDN cannot properly handle the request. To avoid redirect loops, the fallback target server's address at the uCDN MUST be different from the original uCDN address from which the client was redirected to the dCDN. The uCDN MUST avoid further redirection when receiving the client request at the fallback target. The fallback target is defined as a generic metadata object (see Section 3.2 of [RFC8006])

Use cases

The Fallback target metadata object is used to indicate the target address the dCDN should redirect a client to when falling back to the uCDN. Fallback target address is represented as an endpoint object as defined in Section 4.3.3 of [RFC8006].

In DNS redirection a CNAME record is used as the fallback target address.

In HTTP redirection a hostname is used as the fallback target address.

When using HTTP redirect to route a client request back to the uCDN, it is the dCDN's responsibility to use the original URL path as the client would have used for the original uCDN request, stripping, if needed, the dCDN path-prefix and/or the uCDN hostname from the redirect URL that may have been used to request the content from the dCDN.

3.1. Properties of Fallback Target Address Metadata Object

The MI.FallbackTarget Metadata object consists of the following single property:

Example of a MI.FallbackTarget Metadata object that designates the host address the dCDN should use as fallback address to redirect back to the uCDN.

{
    "generic-metadata-type": "MI.FallbackTarget",
    "generic-metadata-value":
    {
        "host": "fallback-a.service123.ucdn.example",
        "scheme": "https"
    }
}
         

3.2. Usage Example

The uCDN advertises out-of-band the fallback target address to the dCDN, so that the dCDN may redirect a request back to the uCDN in case the dCDN cannot serve it. Using the MI the uCDN advertises its hosts to the dCDN, along with their specific host metadata (see Section 4.1.2 of [RFC8006]. The Fallback Target generic metadata object is encapsulated within the "host-metadata" property of each host. The following is an example of a message flow between an upstream CDN and a downstream dCDN. For simplicity, we focus on the sequence of messages between the uCDN and dCDN, not on how they are passed.

  dCDN                                                    uCDN
    +                                                       +
    |                                                       |
(1) | MI:  host: s123.ucdn.example.com                      |
    |      host-metadata:                                   |
    |          < metadata objects >                         |
    |          < MI.FallbackTarget                          |
    |            host: fallback-a.service123.ucdn.example > |
    |          < metadata objects >                         |
    <-------------------------------------------------------+
    |                                                       |
(2) | FCI:  capability-type: FCI.RedirectTarget             |
    |       redirecting-hosts: s123.ucdn.example.com        |
    |       target host: us-east1.dcdn.example.com          |
    +------------------------------------------------------->
    |                                                       |
    |                                                       |
    +                                                       +

    Figure 3: Advertisement of host metadata with Fallback Target 
         

  1. The uCDN advertises a host (s123.ucdn.example.com) with the host metadata. The host-metadata property contains a MI.FallbackTarget object.
  2. The dCDN advertises its FCI objects to the uCDN including a FCI.RedirectTarget object that contains the redirect target address (us-east1.dcdn.example.com) specified for that uCDN host.

The following is a generic sequence of redirection using the configurations that were advertised in Figure 3 above. In this case the dCDN redirects back to the uCDN fallback target address.

End User              dCDN            uCDN fallback          uCDN RR
    +                   +                   +                   +
    |                   |                   |                   |
(1) | Request sent s123.ucdn.example.com    |                   |
    +-------------------+-------------------+------------------->
    |                   |                   |                   |
(2) | Redirect to us-east1.dcdn.example.com |                   |
    <-------------------+-------------------+-------------------+
    |                   |                   |                   |
(3) | Request us-east1.dcdn.example.com     |                   |
    +------------------->                   |                   |
    |                   |                   |                   |
(4) | Redirect back to fallback-a.service123.ucdn.example       |
    <-------------------+                   |                   |
    |                   |                   |                   |
(5) | Request fallback-a.service123.ucdn.example                |
    +--------------------------------------->                   |
    |                   |                   |                   |
(6) | Response          |                   |                   | 
    <-------------------+-------------------+                   |
    |                   |                   |                   |
    +                   +                   +                   +

    Figure 4: Redirection to Fallback Target
         

  1. The End User sends a request (DNS or HTTP) to the uCDN Request Router (RR).
  2. Using the previously advertised Redirect Target, the uCDN redirects the request to the dCDN.
  3. The End User sends a request to the dCDN.
  4. The dCDN cannot handled the request and, therefore, redirects it back to the uCDN fallback target address.
  5. The End User sends the request to the uCDN fallback target address.
  6. The uCDN either sends a response or reroutes it, for example, to a uCDN surrogate.

3.3. uCDN addressing considerations

When advertising fallback addresses to the dCDN the uCDN SHOULD consider the failure use cases that may lead the dCDN to route requests to uCDN fallback. In extreme dCDN network failures or under denial-of-service (DoS) attacks, requests coming from a large segment or multiple segments of the dCDN may be routed back to the uCDN. The uCDN SHOULD therefore design its fallback addressing scheme and its available resources accordingly. A favorable approach would be for the uCDN to use different fallback target address for each uCDN host, enabling it to load balance the requests using the same methods as it would for its original hosts. See Sections 4.1.2 and 4.1.3 of [RFC8006] for a detailed description of how to use GenericMetadata objects within the HostMatch object advertised in the HostIndex of the uCDN.

4. IANA Considerations

4.1. CDNI Payload Types

This document requests the registration of the following CDNI Payload Types under the IANA "CDNI Payload Types" registry defined in [RFC7736]:

Payload Type Specification
FCI.RedirectTarget RFCthis
MI.FallbackTarget RFCthis

[RFC Editor: Please replace RFCthis with the published RFC number for this document.]

4.1.1. CDNI FCI RedirectTarget Payload Type

Purpose: The purpose of this payload type is to distinguish RedirectTarget FCI objects

Interface: FCI

Encoding: see Section 2.3

4.1.2. CDNI MI FallbackTarget Payload Type

Purpose: The purpose of this payload type is to distinguish FallbackTarget MI objects (and any associated capability advertisement)

Interface: MI/FCI

Encoding: see Section 3.1

5. Security Considerations

This specification is in accordance with the CDNI Metadata Interface and the CDNI Request Routing: Footprint and Capabilities Semantics. As such, it is subject to the security and privacy considerations as defined in Section 8 of [RFC8006] and in Section 7 of [RFC8008] respectively.

5.1. Confidentiality and Privacy

The Redirect Target FCI object potentially reveals information about the internal structure of the dCDN network. A third party could intercept the FCI transactions and use the information to attack the dCDN. The same is also true for the Fallback Target Metadata object as it may reveal information about the internal structure of the uCDN, exposing it to external exploits. Implementations of the FCI and MI MUST therefore use strong authentication and encryption and strictly follow the directions for securing the interface as defined for the Metadata Interface in Section 8.3 of [RFC8006].

6. Acknowledgements

The authors thank Nir B. Sopher for reality checks against production use cases, his contribution is significant to this document. The authors also thank Ben Niven-Jenkins for his review and feedback and Kevin J. Ma for his guidance throughout the development of this document including his regular reviews.

7. References

7.1. Normative References

[RFC1034] Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - concepts and facilities", STD 13, RFC 1034, DOI 10.17487/RFC1034, November 1987.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997.
[RFC3986] Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R. and L. Masinter, "Uniform Resource Identifier (URI): Generic Syntax", STD 66, RFC 3986, DOI 10.17487/RFC3986, January 2005.
[RFC6707] Niven-Jenkins, B., Le Faucheur, F. and N. Bitar, "Content Distribution Network Interconnection (CDNI) Problem Statement", RFC 6707, DOI 10.17487/RFC6707, September 2012.
[RFC7231] Fielding, R. and J. Reschke, "Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP/1.1): Semantics and Content", RFC 7231, DOI 10.17487/RFC7231, June 2014.
[RFC7336] Peterson, L., Davie, B. and R. van Brandenburg, "Framework for Content Distribution Network Interconnection (CDNI)", RFC 7336, DOI 10.17487/RFC7336, August 2014.
[RFC7975] Niven-Jenkins, B. and R. van Brandenburg, "Request Routing Redirection Interface for Content Delivery Network (CDN) Interconnection", RFC 7975, DOI 10.17487/RFC7975, October 2016.
[RFC8006] Niven-Jenkins, B., Murray, R., Caulfield, M. and K. Ma, "Content Delivery Network Interconnection (CDNI) Metadata", RFC 8006, DOI 10.17487/RFC8006, December 2016.
[RFC8007] Murray, R. and B. Niven-Jenkins, "Content Delivery Network Interconnection (CDNI) Control Interface / Triggers", RFC 8007, DOI 10.17487/RFC8007, December 2016.
[RFC8008] Seedorf, J., Peterson, J., Previdi, S., van Brandenburg, R. and K. Ma, "Content Delivery Network Interconnection (CDNI) Request Routing: Footprint and Capabilities Semantics", RFC 8008, DOI 10.17487/RFC8008, December 2016.
[RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174, May 2017.

7.2. Informative References

[OC-RR] Finkelman, O., Hofmann, J., Klein, E., Mishra, S., Ma, K., Sahar, D. and B. Zurat, "Open Caching - Request Routing Functional Specification", Version 1.1, October 2019.
[OCWG] "Open Caching Home Page"
[RFC7736] Ma, K., "Content Delivery Network Interconnection (CDNI) Media Type Registration", RFC 7736, DOI 10.17487/RFC7736, December 2015.
[RFC7871] Contavalli, C., van der Gaast, W., Lawrence, D. and W. Kumari, "Client Subnet in DNS Queries", RFC 7871, DOI 10.17487/RFC7871, May 2016.
[SVA] "Streaming Video Alliance Home Page"

Authors' Addresses

Ori Finkelman Qwilt 6, Ha'harash Hod HaSharon, 4524079 Israel EMail: ori.finkelman.ietf@gmail.com
Sanjay Mishra Verizon 13100 Columbia Pike Silver Spring, MD 20904 USA EMail: sanjay.mishra@verizon.com