Framework of Operations, Administration and Maintenance (OAM) for Deterministic Networking (DetNet)Ericssongregimirsky@gmail.comCNRS300 boulevard Sebastien Brant - CS 10413Illkirch - Strasbourg67400FRANCE+33 368 85 45 33theoleyre@unistra.frhttp://www.theoleyre.euIMT AtlantiqueOffice B00 - 102A2 Rue de la ChâtaigneraieCesson-Sévigné - Rennes35510FRANCE+33 299 12 70 04georgios.papadopoulos@imt-atlantique.fr
Universidad Carlos III de Madrid
Av. Universidad, 30Leganes, Madrid28911Spain+34 91624 6236cjbc@it.uc3m.eshttp://www.it.uc3m.es/cjbc/EricssonMagyar Tudosok krt. 11.BudapestHungary1117balazs.a.varga@ericsson.comEricssonMagyar Tudosok krt. 11.BudapestHungary1117janos.farkas@ericsson.comDetNet
Deterministic Networking (DetNet), as defined in RFC 8655, is aimed to provide a bounded end-to-end latency
on top of the network infrastructure, comprising both Layer 2 bridged and Layer 3 routed segments.
This document's primary purpose is to detail the specific requirements of the Operation, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM) recommended to maintain a
deterministic network. With the implementation of the OAM framework in DetNet, an operator will have a real-time
view of the network infrastructure regarding the network's ability to respect the Service Level
Objective, such as packet delay, delay variation, and packet loss ratio, assigned to each DetNet flow.
Introduction
Deterministic Networking (DetNet) has proposed to provide a bounded end-to-end latency
on top of the network infrastructure, comprising both Layer 2 bridged and Layer 3 routed segments.
That work encompasses the data plane, OAM, time synchronization, management, control, and security aspects.
Operations, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM) Tools are of primary importance
for IP networks .
DetNet OAM should provide a toolset for fault detection, localization, and performance measurement.
This document's primary purpose is to detail the specific requirements of the OAM features recommended to maintain a
deterministic/reliable network.
Specifically, it investigates the requirements for a deterministic network, supporting critical flows.
In this document, the term OAM will be used according to its definition specified
in .
DetNet expects to implement an OAM framework to maintain a real-time
view of the network infrastructure, and its ability to respect the Service Level
Objectives (SLO), such as in-order packet delivery, packet delay, delay variation, and packet loss ratio, assigned to each DetNet flow.
This document lists the functional requirements toward OAM for DetNet domain.
The list can further be used for gap analysis of available OAM tools to identify
possible enhancements of existing or whether new OAM tools are required to
support proactive and on-demand path monitoring and service validation.
Terminology
This document uses definitions, particularly of a DetNet flow, provided in Section 2.1 .
The following terms are used throughout this document as defined below:
DetNet OAM domain: a DetNet network used by the monitored DetNet flow. A DetNet OAM domain
(also referred to in this document as "OAM domain") may have MEPs on its edge and MIPs within.
DetNet OAM instance: a function that monitors a DetNet flow for defects and/or measures its performance metrics. Within this document,
a shorter version, OAM instance, is used interchangeably.
Maintenance End Point (MEP): an OAM instance that is capable of generating OAM test packets
in the particular sub-layer of the DetNet OAM domain.
Maintenance Intermediate endPoint (MIP): an OAM instance along the DetNet flow in the particular sub-layer of the DetNet OAM domain.
A MIP MAY respond to an OAM message generated by the MEP at its sub-layer of the same DetNet OAM domain.
Control and management plane: the control and management planes are used to configure and control the network (long-term).
Relative to a DetNet flow, the control and/or management plane can be out-of-band.
Active measurement methods (as defined in )
modify a DetNet flow by inserting novel fields, injecting specially constructed test packets ).
Passive measurement methods infer information by observing unmodified existing flows.
Hybrid measurement methods is the combination of elements of both active and passive measurement methods.
In-band OAM is an active OAM is considered in-band in the monitored
DetNet OAM domain when it traverses the same set of links and interfaces
receiving the same QoS and Packet Replication, Elimination, and Ordering Functions
(PREOF) treatment as the monitored DetNet flow.
Out-of-band OAM is an active OAM whose path through the DetNet domain is not topologically identical to the
path of the monitored DetNet flow, or its test packets receive different QoS and/or PREOF treatment, or both.
On-path telemetry can be realized as a hybrid OAM method. The origination of the telemetry information
is inherently in-band as packets in a DetNet flow are used as triggers. Collection of the on-path telemetry information
can be performed using in-band or out-of-band OAM methods.
AcronymsOAM: Operations, Administration, and MaintenanceDetNet: Deterministic NetworkingPREOF: Packet Replication, Elimination and Ordering FunctionsSLO: Service Level ObjectiveRequirements 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
when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.
Role of OAM in DetNet
DetNet networks expect to provide communications with predictable low
packet delay and packet loss. Most critical applications will define
an SLO to be required for the DetNet flows it generates.
To respect strict guarantees, DetNet can use an orchestrator able to
monitor and maintain the network. Typically, a Software-Defined
Network (SDN) controller places DetNet flows in the deployed network
based on their SLO. Thus, resources have to be provisioned a
priori for the regular operation of the network. OAM represents the
essential elements of the network operation and necessary for OAM
resources that need to be accounted for to maintain the network
operational.
Many legacy OAM tools can be used in DetNet networks, but they are
not able to cover all the aspects of deterministic networking. Fulfilling
strict guarantees is essential for DetNet flows, resulting in
new DetNet specific functionalities that must be covered with OAM.
Filling these gaps is inevitable and needs accurate consideration of
DetNet specifics. Similar to DetNet flows itself, their OAM needs careful
end-to-end engineering as well.
For example, appropriate placing of MEPs along the path of a DetNet flow is
not always a trivial task and may require proper design together with the
design of the service component of a given DetNet flow.
There are several DetNet specific challenges for OAM. Bounded network
characteristics (e.g., delay, loss) are inseparable service parameters;
therefore, PM is a key topic for DetNet. OAM tools are needed to prove the
SLO without impacting the DetNet flow characteristics. A further challenge
is the strict resource allocation. Resources used by OAM must be considered
and allocated to avoid disturbing DetNet flow(s).
The DetNet Working Group has defined two sub-layers:
DetNet service sub-layer, at which a DetNet service (e.g., service
protection) is provided.
DetNet forwarding sub-layer, which
optionally provides resource allocation for DetNet flows over paths
provided by the underlying network.
OAM mechanisms exist for the
DetNet forwarding sub-layer, nonetheless, OAM for the service
sub-layer requires new OAM procedures. These new OAM functions
must allow, for example, to recognize/discover DetNet relay
nodes, to get information about their configuration, and to
check their operation or status.
DetNet service sub-layer functions using a sequence number. That creates
a challenge for inserting OAM packets in the DetNet flow.
Fault tolerance also assumes that multiple paths could be provisioned
to maintain an end-to-end circuit by adapting to the existing conditions.
The central controller/orchestrator typically
controls the PREOF on a node. OAM is expected to support monitoring and
troubleshooting PREOF on a particular node and within the domain.
Note that distributed controllers can also control PREOF
in those scenarios where DetNet solutions involve more than one single central controller.
DetNet forwarding sub-layer is based on legacy technologies and has
a much better coverage regarding OAM. However, the forwarding sub-layer
is terminated at DetNet relay nodes, so the end-to-end OAM state of forwarding
may be created only based on the status of multiple forwarding sub-layer segments
serving a given DetNet flow (e.g., in case of DetNet MPLS, there may be
no end-to-end LSP below the DetNet PW).
Operation
OAM features will enable DetNet with robust operation both for forwarding and routing
purposes.
It is worth noting that the test and data packets MUST follow the same
path, i.e., the connectivity verification has to be conducted in-band without
impacting the data traffic.
Test packets MUST share fate with the monitored data traffic without introducing congestion in normal network conditions.
Information Collection
Information about the state of the network can be collected using several mechanisms. Some protocols,
e.g., Simple Network Management Protocol, send queries.
Others, e.g., YANG-based data models, generate notifications based on the publish-subscribe method.
In either way, information is collected and sent to the controller.
Also, we can characterize methods of transporting OAM information relative to the path of data.
For instance, OAM information may be transported in-band or out-of-band relative to the DetNet flow.
In case of the former, the telemetry information uses resources allocated for the monitored DetNet flow.
If an in-band method of transporting telemetry is used, the amount of generated information needs
to be carefully analyzed, and additional resources must be reserved. defines the in-band
transport mechanism where telemetry information is collected in the data packet on which information is generated.
Two tracing methods are described - end-to-end, i.e., from the ingress and egress nodes,
and hop-by-hop, i.e., like end-to-end with additional information from transit nodes.
and are examples of out-of-band
telemetry transport. In the former case, information is transported by each node traversed
by the data packet of the monitored DetNet flow in a specially constructed packet. In the latter,
information is collected in a sequence of follow-up packets that traverse the same path as the data packet of the monitored DetNet flow.
In both methods, transport of the telemetry can avoid using resources allocated for the DetNet domain.
Continuity Check
Continuity check is used to monitor the continuity of a path, i.e.,
that there exists a way to deliver the packets between
two MEP A and MEP B. The continuity check detects a network failure in one direction, from the MEP transmitting test packets to the remote egress MEP.
Connectivity Verification
In addition to the Continuity Check, DetNet solutions have to verify the connectivity.
This verification considers additional constraints, i.e., the absence of
misconnection. The misconnection error state is entered after several consecutive test packets
from other DetNet flows are received. The definition of the conditions of entry and exit for misconnection
error state is outside the scope of this document.
Route Tracing
Ping and traceroute are two ubiquitous tools that help localize and characterize a failure in the network.
They help to identify a subset of the list of routers in the route.
However, to be predictable, resources are reserved per flow in DetNet.
Thus, DetNet needs to define route tracing tools able to track the route for a
specific flow. Also, tracing can be used for the discovery of the Path Maximum Transmission Unit or location of elements of PREOF
for the particular route in the DetNet domain.
DetNet is NOT RECOMMENDED to use multiple paths or links, i.e., Equal-Cost Multipath (ECMP) .
As the result, OAM in ECMP environment is outside the scope of this document.
Fault Verification/detection
DetNet expects to operate fault-tolerant networks.
Thus, mechanisms able to detect faults before they impact the network
performance are needed.
The network has to detect when a fault occurred, i.e., the network has deviated
from its expected behavior.
While the network must report an alarm, the cause may not be identified
precisely.
For instance, the end-to-end reliability has decreased significantly, or a
buffer overflow occurs.
DetNet OAM mechanisms SHOULD allow a fault detection in real time. They MAY,
when possible, predict faults based on current network conditions. They MAY also
identify and report the cause of the actual/predicted network failure.
Fault Localization and Characterization
An ability to localize the network defect and provide its characterization are necessary elements of network operation.
Fault localization, a process of deducing the location of a network failure from a set of observed failure indications,
might be achieved, for example, by tracing the route of the DetNet flow in which the network failure was detected.
Another method of fault localization can correlate reports of failures from a set of interleaving sessions monitoring path continuity.
Fault characterization is a process of identifying the root cause of the problem. For instance, misconfiguration or malfunction of PREOF elements
can be the cause of erroneous packet
replication or extra packets being flooded in the DetNet domain.
Use of Hybrid OAM in DetNetHybrid OAM methods are used in performance monitoring and defined in as:
Hybrid Methods are Methods of Measurement that use a combination of
Active Methods and Passive Methods.
A hybrid measurement method may produce metrics as close to passive,
but it still alters something in a data packet even if that is the value of a
designated field in the packet encapsulation. One example of such a hybrid measurement method
is the Alternate Marking method (AMM) described in .
As with all on-path telemetry methods, AMM in a DetNet domain with the IP data plane is natively in-band
in respect to the monitored DetNet flow. Because the marking is applied to a data flow,
measured metrics are directly applicable to the DetNet flow. AMM minimizes the additional load on
the DetNet domain by using nodal collection and computation of performance metrics in combination with
optionally using out-of-band telemetry collection for further network analysis.
Administration
The network SHOULD expose a collection of metrics to support an operator making proper decisions, including:
Queuing Delay: the time elapsed between a packet enqueued and its transmission to the next hop.
Buffer occupancy: the number of packets present in the buffer, for each of the existing flows.
The following metrics SHOULD be collected:
per a DetNet flow to measure the end-to-end performance for a given flow.
Each of the paths has to be isolated in multipath routing strategies.
per path to detect misbehaving path when multiple paths are applied.
per device to detect misbehaving device, when it relays the packets of
several flows.
Collection of metrics
DetNet OAM SHOULD optimize the number of statistics / measurements to collected, frequency of collecting.
Distributed and centralized mechanisms MAY be used in combination. Periodic and
event-triggered collection information characterizing the state of a network MAY be used.
Worst-case metrics
DetNet aims to enable real-time communications on top of a heterogeneous multi-hop architecture.
To make correct decisions, the controller needs to know the distribution
of packet losses/delays for each flow, and each hop of the paths.
In other words, the average end-to-end statistics are not enough.
The collected information must be sufficient to allow the controller to predict the worst-case.
Maintenance
In the face of events that impact the network operation (e.g., link up/down,
device crash/reboot, flows starting and ending), the DetNet Controller need to perform
repair and re-optimization actions in order to permanently ensure
the SLO of all active flows with minimal waste of resources
The controller MUST be able to continuously retrieve the state of the network,
to evaluate conditions and trends about the relevance of a reconfiguration, quantifying:
the cost of the sub-optimality: resources may not be used
optimally (e.g., a better path exists).
the reconfiguration cost: the controller needs to trigger some
reconfigurations.
For this transient period, resources may be twice reserved, and control packets have to be transmitted.
Thus, reconfiguration may only be triggered if the gain is significant.
Replication / Elimination
When multiple paths are reserved between two MEPs,
packet replication may be used to introduce redundancy and alleviate transmission errors and collisions.
For instance, in , the source device S is
transmitting a packet to devices A and B.
Resource Reservation
Because the quality of service criteria associated with a path may degrade, the network has
to provision additional resources along the path. We need to provide
mechanisms to patch the network configuration.
Requirements
According to , DetNet functionality is divided into forwarding and service sub-layers.
The DetNet forwarding sub-layer includes DetNet transit nodes and may allocate resources for a DetNet flow over paths provided by the underlay network.
The DetNet service sub-layer includes DetNet relay nodes and provides a DetNet service (e.g., service protection).
This section lists general requirements for DetNet OAM as well as requirements in each of the DetNet sub-layers of a DetNet domain.
It MUST be possible to initiate a DetNet OAM session from a MEP located at a
DetNet node towards downstream MEP(s) within the given domain at a particular DetNet sub-layer.
It MUST be possible to initialize a DetNet OAM session from a centralized controller.
DetNet OAM MUST support proactive OAM monitoring and measurement methods.
DetNet OAM MUST support on-demand OAM monitoring and measurement methods.
DetNet OAM MUST support unidirectional OAM methods, continuity check,
connectivity verification, and performance measurement.
OAM methods MAY combine in-band monitoring or measurement in the forward direction and out-of-bound
notification in the reverse direction, i.e., towards the ingress MEP.
DetNet OAM MUST support bi-directional DetNet flows.
DetNet OAM MAY support bi-directional OAM methods for bi-directional DetNet flows.
OAM test packets used for monitoring and measurements MUST be in-band in both directions.
DetNet OAM MUST support proactive monitoring of a DetNet device reachability for a given DetNet flow.
DetNet OAM MUST support hybrid performance measurement methods.
Calculated performance metrics MUST include but are not limited to throughput, packet loss, out of order,
delay, and delay variation metrics. provides detailed information on performance
measurement and performance metrics.
DetNet OAM MUST support Path Maximum Transmission Unit discovery.
DetNet OAM MUST support Remote Defect Indication notification to the DetNet OAM instance
performing continuity checking.
DetNet OAM MUST support monitoring levels of resources allocated for the particular DetNet flow.
Such resources include but not limited to buffer utilization, scheduler transmission calendar.
DetNet OAM MUST support monitoring any sub-set of paths traversed through the DetNet domain by the DetNet flow.
The OAM functions for the DetNet service sub-layer allow, for example, to
recognize/discover DetNet relay nodes, to get information about their
configuration, and to check their operation or status.
The requirements on OAM for a DetNet relay node are:
DetNet OAM MUST provide OAM functions for the DetNet service sub-layer.
DetNet OAM MUST support the discovery of DetNet relay nodes in a DetNet network.
DetNet OAM MUST support the discovery of Packet Replication, Elimination, and Order preservation sub-functions locations in the domain.
DetNet OAM MUST support the collection of the DetNet service sub-layer specific (e.g.,
configuration/operation/status) information from DetNet relay nodes.
DetNet OAM MUST support excercising functionality of Packet Replication, Elimination, and Order preservation sub-functions in the domain.
DetNet OAM MUST work for DetNet data planes - MPLS and IP.
DetNet OAM MUST support defect notification mechanism, like Alarm Indication Signal. Any DetNet relay node within the given DetNet flow
MAY originate a defect notification addressed to any subset of DetNet relay nodes within that flow.
DetNet OAM MUST be able to measure metrics (e.g. delay) inside a collection of OAM sessions, specially for complex DetNet flows, with PREOF features.
IANA ConsiderationsThis document has no actionable requirements for IANA. This section can be removed before the publication.Security Considerations
This document lists the OAM requirements for a DetNet domain
and does not raise any security concerns or issues in addition to ones common to networking and
those specific to a DetNet discussed in .
Acknowledgments
The authors express their appreciation and gratitude to Pascal Thubert for the review, insightful questions, and helpful comments.
ReferencesNormative ReferencesInformative References