INTERNET-DRAFT Enke Chen Cisco John W. Stewart, III Juniper December 1998 A Framework for Inter-Domain Route Aggregation Status of this Memo This document is an Internet-Draft. Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months. Internet-Drafts may be updated, replaced or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is not appropriate to use Internet- Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as a "working draft" or "work in progress." Please check the abstract listing contained in each Internet-Draft directory to learn the current status of this or any other Internet- Draft. Abstract This document presents a framework for inter-domain route aggregation and shows an example router configuration which 'implements' this framework. This framework is flexible and scales well as it emphasizes the philosophy of aggregation by the source, both within routing domains as well as towards upstream providers, and it also strongly encourages the use of the 'no-export' BGP community to balance the provider-subscriber need for more granular routing information with the Internet's need for scalable inter-domain routing. Chen & Stewart [Page 1] INTERNET-DRAFT Route Aggregation Framework December 1998 1. Introduction The need for route aggregation has long been recognized. Route aggregation is good as it reduces the size, and slows the growth, of the Internet routing table. Thus, the amount of resources (e.g., CPU and memory) required to process routing information is reduced and route calculation is sped up. Another benefit of route aggregation is that route flaps are limited in number, frequency and scope, which saves resources and makes the global Internet routing system more stable. Since CIDR (Classless Inter-Domain Routing) [2] was introduced, significant progress has been made on route aggregation, particularly in the following two areas: - Formulation and implementation of IP address allocation policies by the top registries that conform to the CIDR principles [1]. This policy work is the cornerstone which makes efficient route aggrega- tion technically possible. - Route aggregation by large (especially "Tier 1") providers. To date, the largest reductions in the size of the routing table have resulted from efficient aggregation by large providers. However, the ability of various levels of the global routing system to implement efficient aggregation schemes varies widely. As a result, the size and growth rate of the Internet routing table, as well as the asso- ciated route computation required, remain major issues today. To sup- port Internet growth, it is important to maximize the efficiency of aggregation at all levels in the routing system. Because of the current size of the routing system and its dynamic nature, the first step towards this goal is to establish a clearly- defined framework in which scaleable inter-domain route aggregation can be realized. The framework described in this document is based on the predominant and current experience in the Internet. It emphasizes the philosophy of aggregation by the source, both within routing domains as well as towards upstream providers. The framework also strongly encour- ages the use of the "no-export" BGP community to balance the provider- subscriber need for more granular routing information with the Inter- net's need for scalable inter-domain routing. The advantages of this framework include the following: - Route aggregation is done in a distributed fashion, with emphasis on aggregation by the party or parties injecting the aggregatable routing information into the global mesh. Chen & Stewart [Page 2] INTERNET-DRAFT Route Aggregation Framework December 1998 - The flexibility of a routing domain to be able to inject more gran- ular routing information to an adjacent domain to control the resulting traffic patterns, without having an impact on the global routing system. In addition to describing the philosophy, we illustrate it by presenting sample configurations. IPv4 prefixes, BGP4 and ASs are used in exam- ples, though the principles are applicable to inter-domain route aggre- gation in general. Address allocation policies and technologies to renumber entire net- works, while very relevant to the realization of successful and sus- tained inter-domain routing, are not the focus of this document. The references section contains pointers to relevant documents [8, 9, 11, 12]. 2. Route Aggregation Framework The framework of inter-domain route aggregation we are proposing can be summarized as follows: - Aggregation from the originating AS That is, in its outbound route announcements, each AS aggregates the BGP routes originated by itself, by dedicated AS and by pri- vate-ASs [10]. ("Routes originated by an AS" refers to routes which have that AS first in the AS path attribute. For example, routes statically configured and injected into BGP fall into this category.) This framework does not depend on "proxy aggregation" which refers to route aggregation done by an AS other than the originating AS. This preserves the capability of a multi-homed site to control the granularity of routing information injected into the global routing system. Since proxy aggregation involves coordination among multiple organizations, the complexity of doing proxy aggregation increases with the number of parties involved in the coordination. The complexity, in turn, impacts the practicality of proxy aggregation. An AS shall always originate via a stable mechanism (e.g., static route configuration) the BGP routes for the large aggregates from which it allocates addresses to customers. This ensures that it is safe for its customers to use BGP "no-export". - Using BGP community "no-export" toward upstream providers Chen & Stewart [Page 3] INTERNET-DRAFT Route Aggregation Framework December 1998 That is, in its route announcements toward its upstream provider, an AS tags the BGP community "no-export" to routes it originates that do not need to be propagated beyond its upstream provider (e.g., prefixes allocated by the upstream provider). This framework is illustrated in Figure 1. A "Tier 1" provider does not use "no-export" in its announcement as it does not have an upstream provider. However, it shall aggregate the routes it originates in its outbound announcements towards both peer providers and customers. An AS with an upstream provider shall aggregate the routes it originates and use "no-export" toward its upstream provider for routes that do not need to be propagated beyond its provider's AS. This recursion shall apply to all levels of the routing hierarchy. Tier 1 +-- Provider <--+ | | o aggregates routes | | o announces customer routes it originates | | o aggregates routes it originates | ^ o uses "no-export" if appropriate | +---> Tier 2 <--+ Provider | V | | | o aggregates routes | | o announces customer routes it originates | | o aggregates routes it originates | | o uses "no-export" if appropriate | | | ^ -> Customer AS Figure 1 This framework scales well as aggregation is done at all levels of the routing system. It is flexible because the originating AS controls whether routes of finer granularity are injected to, and/or propagated by, its upstream provider. It facilitates multi-homing without compro- mising route aggregation. This framework is detailed in the following sections. Chen & Stewart [Page 4] INTERNET-DRAFT Route Aggregation Framework December 1998 3. Aggregation from the Originating AS It has been well recognized that address allocation and address renum- bering are keys to containing the growth of the Internet routing table [1, 2, 8, 9, 11, 12]. Although the strategies discussed in this document do not assume a per- fect address allocation, it is strongly urged that an AS receive alloca- tion from its upstream service providers' address block. 3.1 Intra-Domain Aggregation To reduce the number of routes that need to be injected into an AS, there are a couple of principles that shall be followed: - Carry in its BGP table the large route block allocated from its upstream provider or an address registry (e.g., InterNIC, RIPE, APNIC). This can be done by either static configuration of the large block or by aggregating more specific BGP routes. The former is recommended as it does not depend on other routes. - Allocate sub-blocks to the access routers where further allocation is done. That is, the address allocation shall be done such that only a few, less specific routes (instead of many more, specific ones) need to be known to the other routers within the AS. For example, a prefix of /17 can be further allocated to different access routers as /20s which can then be allocated to customers connected to different interfaces on that router (as shown in Fig- ure 2). Then in general only the /20 needs to be injected into the whole AS. Exceptions need to be made for multi-homed static routes. access router +------------+ | x.x.x.x/20 | +------------+ | | | | | | /24 /22 /25 Figure 2 It is noted that rehoming of customers without renumbering even within Chen & Stewart [Page 5] INTERNET-DRAFT Route Aggregation Framework December 1998 the same AS may lead to injection of more specific routes. However, in general the more-specifics do not need to be advertised outside of that AS. Such routes can either be tagged with the BGP community "no-export" or filtered out by a prefix-based filter to prevent them from being advertised out. 3.2 Inter-Domain Aggregation There are at least two types of routes that need to be advertised by an AS: routes originated by the AS and routes originated by its BGP cus- tomers. An AS may need to advertise full routes to certain BGP cus- tomers, in which case the routing announcements include routes origi- nated by non-customer ASs. Clearly an AS can, and should, safely aggre- gate the routes originated by itself and by its BGP customers multi- homed only to it (using, e.g., the dedicated-AS and by the private-AS mechanism [10]) in its outbound announcement. But it is far more dan- gerous to aggregate routes originated by customer ASs due to multi-hom- ing. However, there are several cases in which a route originated by a BGP customer (other than using the dedicated AS or private AS) does not need to be advertised out by its upstream providers. For example, - The route is a more-specific of the upstream provider's block. However, the customer is either singly homed; or its connection to this particular upstream provider is used for backup only. - The more-specifics of a larger block are announced by the customer in order to balance traffic over the multiple links to the upstream provider. Our approach to suppress such routes is to give control to the ASs that originate the more-specifics (as seen by its upstream providers) and let them tag the BGP community "no-export" to the appropriate routes. The BGP community "no-export" is a well known BGP community [6, 7]. A route with this attribute is not propagated beyond an AS boundary. So, if a route is tagged with this community in its announcement to an upstream provider and is accepted by the upstream provider, the route will not be announced beyond the upstream provider's AS. This achieves the goal of suppressing the more-specifics in the upstream provider's outbound announcement. In this framework, the BGP community "no-export" shall be tagged to routes that are to be advertized to, but not propagated by, its upstream provider. They may include routes allocated out of its upstream Chen & Stewart [Page 6] INTERNET-DRAFT Route Aggregation Framework December 1998 provider's block or the more specific routes announced to its upstream provider for the purpose of load balancing. This aggregation strategy can be implemented via prefix-based filtering as shown in the example of Section 5. For its own protection, a downstream AS shall announce only its own routes and its customer routes to its upstream providers. Thus, the outbound routing announcement and aggregation policy can be expressed as follows: For routes originated by itself/dedicated-AS/private-AS: tag with "no-export" when appropriate, and advertise the large block and suppress the more-specifics For routes originated by customer ASs: advertise to upstream ASs For any other routes: do not advertise to upstream ASs This approach is flexible and scales well as it gives control to the party with the special needs, distributes the workload and avoids the coordination overhead required by proxy aggregation. 4. Aggregation by a Provider A provider shall aggregate all the routes it originates, as documented in Section 3. The only difference is that the provider may be providing full routes to certain BGP customers where no outbound filtering is presently in place. Experience has shown that inconsistent route announcement (e.g., aggregate at the interconnects but not toward cer- tain customers) can cause serious routing problems for the Internet as a whole because of longest-match routing. In certain cases announcing the more-specifics to customers might provide for more accurate IGP metrics and could be useful for better load-balancing. However, the potential risk seems to outweigh the benefit, especially given the increasing com- plexity of connectivity that a customer may have. As a result, every effort shall be made to ensure consistent route aggregation for all BGP peers. This means deploying filters for the BGP peers which receive full routes. Chen & Stewart [Page 7] INTERNET-DRAFT Route Aggregation Framework December 1998 In summary, the aggregation strategy for a provider shall be: - In announcing customer routes: For routes originated by itself/dedicated-AS/private-AS: tag with "no-export" when appropriate, and advertise the large block and suppress the more-specifics For routes originated by other customer ASs: advertise For any other routes: do not advertise - In announcing full routes: For routes originated by itself/dedicated-AS/private-AS: tag with "no-export" when appropriate, and advertise the large block and suppress the more-specifics For any other routes: advertise 5. An Example Consider the example shown in Figure 3 where AS 1000 is a "Tier 1" provider with two large aggregates 208.128.0.0/12 and 166.55.0.0/16, and AS 2000 is a customer of AS 1000 with a "portable address" 160.75.0.0/16 and an address 208.128.0.0/19 allocated from AS 1000. Assume that 208.128.0.0/19 does not need to be propagated beyond AS 1000. +----------------+ | AS 1000 | | 208.128.0.0/12 | | 166.55.0.0/16 | +----------------+ | | BGP | | +----------------+ | AS 2000 | | 208.128.0.0/19 | | 160.75.0.0/16 | +----------------+ Figure 3 Chen & Stewart [Page 8] INTERNET-DRAFT Route Aggregation Framework December 1998 Then, based on the framework presented, AS 1000 would - originate and advertise the BGP routes 208.128.0.0/12 and 166.55.0.0/16, and suppress more-specifics originated by itself/private-ASs/dedicated-ASs - advertise the routes received from the customer AS 2000 and AS 2000 would - originate BGP route 208.128.0.0/19 and 160.75.0.0/16 - advertise both 160.75.0.0/16 and 208.128.0.0/19 to its provider AS 1000 and suppress the more specifics originated by itself/private- AS/dedicated-AS, tagging the route 208.128.0.0/19 with "no-export" - advertise both 160.75.0.0/16 and 208.128.0.0/19 to its BGP cus- tomers (if any) and suppress the more-specifics originated by itself/private-AS/dedicated-AS, plus any other routes the customers may desire to receive The sample configuration which implement these policies (in Cisco syn- tax) is given in Appendix A. 6. Acknowledgments The authors would like to thank Roy Alcala of MCI for a number of inter- esting hallway discussions related to this work. The IETF's IDR Working Group also provided many helpful comments and suggestions. 7. References [1] Rekhter, Y., Li, T., "An Architecture for IP Address Allocation with CIDR", RFC 1518, September 1993. [2] Fuller, V., Li, T., Yu, J., and K. Varadhan, "Classless Inter- Domain Routing (CIDR): an Address Assignment and Aggregation Strategy", RFC 1519, September 1993. [3] Rekhter, Y., and Li, T., "A Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4)", RFC1771, March 1995. [4] Rekhter, Y., and Gross, P., "Application of the Border Gateway Pro- tocol in the Internet", RFC1772, March 1995. [5] Rekhter, Y., "Routing in a Multi-provider Internet", RFC1787, April 1995. [6] Chandra, R., Traina, P., and Li, T., "BGP Communities Attribute", RFC 1997, August 1996. Chen & Stewart [Page 9] INTERNET-DRAFT Route Aggregation Framework December 1998 [7] Chen, E., and Bates, T., "An Application of the BGP Community Attribute in Multi-home Routing", RFC 1998, August 1996. [8] Ferguson, P., Berkowitz, H., "Network Renumbering Overview: Why would I want it and what is it anyway?", RFC 2071, January 1997. [9] Berkowitz, H., "Router Renumbering Guide", RFC 2072, January 1997. [10] Stewart, J., Bates, T., Chandra, R., and Chen, E., "Using a Dedicated AS for Sites Homed to a Single Provider", RFC2270, January, 1998. [11] Carpenter, B., Crowcroft, J., Rekhter, Y., "IPv4 Address Behaviour Today", RFC 2101, February 1997. [12] Carpenter, B., Rekhter, Y., "Renumbering Needs Work", RFC 1900, February 1996. [13] Cisco systems, Cisco IOS Software Version 10.3 Router Products Con- figuration Guide (Addendum), May 1995. 8. Authors' Addresses Enke Chen Cisco Systems 170 West Tasman Drive San Jose, CA 95134-1706 Phone: +1 408 527 4652 email: enkechen@cisco.com John W. Stewart, III Juniper Networks, Inc. 385 Ravendale Drive Mountain View, CA 94043 phone: +1 650 526 8000 email: jstewart@juniper.net Chen & Stewart [Page 10] INTERNET-DRAFT Route Aggregation Framework December 1998 A. Appendix A: Example Cisco Configuration This appendix lists the Cisco configurations for AS 2000 of the examples presented in Section 5. The configuration here uses the AS-path for outbound filtering although it can also be based on BGP community. Sev- eral route-maps are defined that can be used for peering with the upstream provider, and for peering with customers (announcing full routes or customer routes). !!# inject aggregates ip route 160.75.0.0 255.255.0.0 Null0 254 ip route 208.128.0.0 255.255.224.0 Null0 254 ! router bgp 2000 network 160.75.0.0 mask 255.255.0.0 network 208.128.0.0 mask 255.255.224.0 neighbor x.x.x.x remote-as 1000 neighbor x.x.x.x route-map export-routes-to-provider out neighbor x.x.x.x send-community ! !!# match all ip as-path access-list 1 permit .* ! !!# List of internal AS and private ASs that are safe to aggregate ip as-path access-list 10 permit ^$ ip as-path access-list 10 permit ^64999_ ip as-path access-list 10 deny .* ! !!# list of other customer ASs ip as-path access-list 20 permit ^3000_ !!# List of prefixes to be tagged with "no-export" access-list 101 permit ip 208.128.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.224.0 0.0.0.0 !!# Filter out the more specifics of large aggregates, and permit the rest access-list 102 permit ip 160.75.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.0.0 0.0.0.0 access-list 102 deny ip 160.75.0.0 0.0.255.255 255.255.128.0 0.0.127.255 access-list 102 permit ip 208.128.0.0 0.0.0.0 255.255.224.0 0.0.0.0 access-list 102 deny ip 208.128.0.0 0.0.31.255 255.255.240.0 0.0.16.255 access-list 102 permit ip any any ! Chen & Stewart [Page 11] INTERNET-DRAFT Route Aggregation Framework December 1998 !!# route-map with the upstream provider route-map export-routes-to-provider permit 10 match ip address 101 set community no-export route-map export-routes-to-provider permit 20 match as-path 10 match ip address 102 route-map export-routes-to-provider permit 30 match as-path 20 ! !!# route-map with BGP customers that desire only customer routes route-map export-customer-routes permit 10 match as-path 10 match ip address 102 route-map export-customer-routes permit 20 match as-path 20 ! !!# route-map with BGP customers that desire full routes route-map export-full-routes permit 10 match as-path 10 match ip address 102 route-map export-full-routes permit 20 match as-path 1 ! Chen & Stewart [Page 12]