TRILL Working Group Tissa Senevirathne
Internet Draft Norman Finn
Intended status: Standard Track Samer Salam
Deepak Kumar
CISCO
Donald Eastlake
Sam Aldrin
YiZhou Li
Huawei
February 17, 2013
Expires: August 2013
TRILL Fault Management
draft-tissa-trill-oam-fm-01.txt
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Abstract
TRILL OAM Fault Management solution is presented in this document.
Methods proposed in this document follow the IEEE 802.1 CFM
framework and reuse OAM tools where possible. Additional messages
and TLVs are defined for TRILL specific applications or where
different set of information is required than IEEE 802.1 CFM.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction...................................................4
2. Conventions used in this document..............................4
3. General Format of TRILL OAM frames.............................5
3.1. Identification of TRILL OAM frames........................7
3.2. Use of TRILL OAM Flag.....................................7
3.2.1. Handling of TRILL frames with "A" Flag...............8
3.3. Backwards Compatibility Method............................8
3.4. OAM Capability Announcement...............................9
4. TRILL OAM Layering vs. IEEE Layering..........................10
4.1. Processing at ISS Layer..................................11
4.1.1. Receive Processing..................................11
4.1.2. Transmit Processing.................................11
4.2. End Station VLAN and Priority Processing.................11
4.2.1. Receive Processing..................................11
4.2.2. Transmit Procession.................................11
4.3. TRLL Encapsulation and De-capsulation Layer..............11
4.3.1. Receive Processing for Unicast packets..............11
4.3.2. Transmit Processing for unicast packets.............12
4.3.3. Receive Processing for Multicast packets............12
4.3.4. Transmit Processing of Multicast packets............13
4.4. TRILL OAM Layer Processing...............................14
5. Maintenance Associations (MA) in TRILL........................15
6. MEP Addressing................................................16
6.1. Use of MIP in TRILL......................................19
7. Approach for Backwards Compatibility..........................21
8. Continuity Check Message (CCM)................................22
9. TRILL OAM Message Channel.....................................24
9.1. TRILL OAM Message header.................................24
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9.2. TRILL OAM Opcodes........................................25
9.3. Format of TRILL OAM TLV..................................25
9.4. TRILL OAM TLVs...........................................26
9.4.1. Common TLVs between 802.1ag and TRILL...............26
9.4.2. TRILL OAM Specific TLVs.............................26
9.4.2.1. TRILL OAM Application Identifier TLV...........27
9.4.3. Out Of Band Reply Address TLV.......................28
9.4.3.1. Diagnostics Label TLV..........................29
9.4.3.2. Original Data Payload TLV......................30
9.4.3.3. RBridge scope TLV..............................30
9.4.3.4. Previous RBridge nickname TLV..................31
9.4.3.5. Next Hop RBridge List TLV......................31
9.4.3.6. Multicast Receiver Port count TLV..............32
9.4.4. Flow Identifier (flow-id) TLV.......................33
10. Loopback Message.............................................34
10.1.1. Loopback OAM Message format........................34
10.1.2. Theory of Operation................................34
10.1.2.1. Originator RBridge............................34
10.1.2.2. Intermediate RBridge..........................35
10.1.2.3. Destination RBridge...........................35
11. Path Trace Message...........................................36
11.1.1. Theory of Operation................................36
11.1.1.1. Originator RBridge............................36
11.1.1.2. Intermediate RBridge..........................37
11.1.1.3. Destination RBridge...........................38
12. Multi-Destination Tree Verification (MTV) Message............38
12.1. Multi-Destination Tree Verification (MTV) OAM Message
Format........................................................39
12.2. Theory of Operation.....................................39
12.2.1. Originator RBridge.................................39
12.2.2. Receiving RBridge..................................40
12.2.3. In scope RBridges..................................40
13. Application of Continuity Check Message (CCM) in TRILL.......41
13.1. CCM Error notification - Method-1.......................42
13.2. CCM Error Notification Method-2.........................43
13.3. Theory of Operation.....................................44
13.3.1. Originator RBridge.................................44
13.3.2. Intermediate RBridge...............................45
13.3.3. Destination RBridge................................45
14. Multiple Fragment Reply......................................45
15. Security Considerations......................................46
16. Allocation Considerations....................................46
16.1. IEEE Allocation Considerations..........................46
16.2. IANA Considerations.....................................46
17. References...................................................47
17.1. Normative References....................................47
17.2. Informative References..................................47
18. Acknowledgments..............................................48
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1. Introduction
The general structure of TRILL OAM messages is presented in
[TRILLOAMFM]. According to [TRILLOAMFM], TRILL OAM messages consist
of five parts: link header, TRILL header, flow entropy, OAM message
channel, and link trailer.
The OAM message channel allows defining various control information
and carrying OAM related data between TRILL switches, also known as
RBridges or Routing Bridges.
The OAM message channel, if defined properly, can be shared between
different technologies. A common OAM channel allows a uniform user
experience for the customers, savings on operator training, re-use
of software code base and faster time to market.
This document uses the message format defined in IEEE 802.1ag
Connectivity Fault Management (CFM) [8021Q] as the basis for the
TRILL OAM message channel.
The ITU-T Y.1731 standard utilizes the same messaging format as
[8021Q] and OAM messages where applicable. In this document, we take
a similar stance and propose reusing [8021Q] in TRILL OAM. We assume
readers are familiar with [8021Q] and Y1731. Readers who are not
familiar with these documents are encouraged to review [8021Q] and
Y1731.
2. Conventions used in this document
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC-2119 [RFC2119].
Acronyms used in the document include the following:
MP - Maintenance Point [TRILLOAMFM]
MEP - Maintenance End Point [TRILLOAMFM] [8021Q]
MIP - Maintenance Intermediate Point [TRILLOAMFM] [8021Q]
MA - Maintenance Association [8021Q] [TRILLOAMFM]
CCM - Continuity Check Message [8021Q]
LBM - Loop Back Message [8021Q]
PTM - Path Trace Message
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MTV - Multi-destination Tree Verification Message
OAM - Operations, Administration, and Maintenance [RFC6291]
TRILL - Transparent Interconnection of Lots of Links [RFC6325]
FGL - Fine Grained Label [RFCfgl]
3. General Format of TRILL OAM frames
The TRILL forwarding paradigm allows an implementation to select a
path from a set of equal cost paths to forward a packet. Selection
of the path of choice is implementation dependent. However, it is a
common practice to utilize Layer 2 through Layer 4 information in
the frame payload for path selection.
For accurate monitoring and/or diagnostics, OAM Messages are
required to follow the same path as corresponding data packets.
[TRILLOAMFM] proposes a high-level format of the OAM messages. The
details of the TRILL OAM frame format are defined in this document.
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+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
. Link Header . (variable)
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
+ TRILL Header + 8 bytes
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
. Flow Entropy . 128 bytes
. .
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| OAM Ether Type |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
. OAM Message Channel . Variable
. .
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Link Trailer |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 1 Format of TRILL OAM Messages
Link Header: Media-dependent header. For Ethernet, this includes
Destination MAC, Source MAC, VLAN (optional) and EtherType fields.
TRILL Header: Minimum of 8 bytes when the Extended Header is not
included [RFC6325]
Flow Entropy: This is a 128-byte fixed size opaque field. The least
significant bits of the field MUST be padded with zeros, up to 128
bytes, when the flow entropy is less than 128 bytes. Flow entropy
enables emulation of the forwarding behavior of the desired data
packets.
OAM Ether Type: OAM Ether Type is 16-bit EtherType that identifies
the OAM Message channel which follows. This document specifies using
the EtherType allocated for 802.1ag for this purpose. Identifying
the OAM Message Channel with a dedicated EtherType allows the easy
identification of the beginning of the OAM message channel across
multiple standards.
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OAM Message Channel: This is a variable size section that carries
OAM related information. We propose reusing the message format
defined in [8021Q] for this purpose.
Link Trailer: Media-dependent trailer. For Ethernet, this is the FCS
(Frame Check Sequence).
3.1. Identification of TRILL OAM frames
TRILL, as originally specified in [RFC6325], did not have a specific
flag or a method to identify OAM frames. This document updates
RFC6325 to include specific methods to identify TRILL OAM frames.
Section 3.2. below explains the details of the method. However, it
is important, for backwards compatibility reasons, to define methods
of identifying TRILL OAM frames without using these extensions.
Section 3.3. presents a set of possible methods for identifying OAM
frames without using the proposed extensions of section 3.2. The
methods defined in section 3.3. impose limitations on the
construction of the flow entropy field of the OAM frames and SHOULD
be used for backwards compatibility scenarios only.
3.2. Use of TRILL OAM Flag
The TRILL Header, as defined in [RFC6325], has two reserved bits
that are currently unused. RBridges are currently required to ignore
these fields. This document specifies use of the reserved bit next
to Version field in the TRILL header as the Alert flag. Alert flag
will be denoted by 'A. (TISSA: Move to A)
Implementations that follow the extension of using the "A" flag to
identify frames MUST exclusively use that flag and methods specified
in section 3.2.1. The "A" flag MUST NOT be utilized for forwarding
decisions such as the selection of ECMP paths, etc.
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| V |A|R|M|Op-Length| Hop Count |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Egress RBridge Nickname | Ingress RBridge Nickname |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Options...
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-
Figure 2 TRILL Header
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A (1 bit) - Indicates this is a possible OAM frame and is subject to
specific handling as specified in this document.
All other fields carry the same meaning as defined in RFC6325.
3.2.1. Handling of TRILL frames with "A" Flag
Value "1" in the A flag indicates TRILL frames that may qualify as
OAM frames. Implementations are further required to validate such
frames by comparing the value at the OAM Ether Type (Figure 1)
location with the CFM EtherType "0x8902" [8021Q]. If the value
matches, such frames are identified as TRILL OAM frames and SHOULD
be processed as discussed in Section 4.
3.3. Backwards Compatibility Method
For unicast frames, TRILL OAM packets are identified by its TRILL
egress nickname and the presence of either Reserved Inner.MacSA
(TBD) or OAM Ether Type 0x8902 [8021Q].
For multicast frames, TRILL OAM packets are identified by either OAM
EtherType 0x8902 [8021Q] or Reserved Inner.MacSA (TBD) .
The following table summarizes the identification of different OAM
frames from data frames.
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|Flow Entropy |Inner |OAM Ether|Egress |
| |MacSA |Type |nickname |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|unicast L2 | N/A |Match |Match |
| | | | |
|Multicast L2 | N/A |Match |N/A |
| | | | |
|Unicast IP | Match |N/A |Match |
| | | | |
|Multicast IP | Match |N/A |N/A |
| | | | |
|Notification | N/A |Match |Match |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 3 Identification of TRILL OAM Frames
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3.4. OAM Capability Announcement
Any given TRILL RBridge can be one of: OAM incapable OR OAM capable
with new extensions OR OAM capable with backwards-compatible method.
The OAM request originator, prior to origination of the request is
required to identify the OAM capability of the target and generate
the appropriate OAM message.
We propose to utilize the capability flags defined in TRILL version
sub-TLV (TRILL-VER) [rfc6326bis]. The following Flags are defined:
O - OAM Capable
B - Backwards Compatible.
A capability announcement, with O Flag set to 1 and B flag set to 1,
indicates that the implementation is OAM capable but utilize
backwards compatible method defined in section 3.3. A capability
announcement, with O Flag set to 1 and B flag set to 0, indicates
that the implementation is OAM capable and utilizes the method
specified in section 3.2.
When O Flag is set to 0, the announcing implementation is considered
not capable of OAM and B flag is ignored on the receiving side.
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Type | (1 byte)
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Length | (1 byte)
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Max-version | (1 byte)
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-...-+
|A|O|B|Other Capabilities and Header Flags| (4 bytes)
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-...-+-+
0 1 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 0 1
Figure 4 TRILL-VER sub-TLV [rfc6326bis] with O and B flags
NOTE: Bit position of O and B flags in the TRILL-VER sub-TLV are
presented above as an example. Actual positions of the flags will be
determined by TRILL WG and IANA and future revision of this document
will be updated to include the allocations.
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4. TRILL OAM Layering vs. IEEE Layering
In this section we present the placement of the TRILL OAM shim
within the IEEE 802.1 layers. The processing of both the Transmit
and Receive directions is explained.
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| RBridge Layer |
| Processing |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|
|
+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| TRILL OAM | UP MEP
| Layer | MIP
+-+-+-+-+-+-+ Down MEP
|
|
+-+-+-+-+-+-+
(3)--------> | TRILL |
| Encap/Decap
+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|
+-+-+-+-+-+-+
(2)--------> |End station|
| VLAN & priority Processing
+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|
+-+-+-+-+-+-+
(1)--------> |ISS |
|Processing |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|
| |
| |
Figure 5 Placement of TRILL MP within IEEE 802.1
[RFC6325] Section 4.6 provides a detail explanation of frame
processing. Please refer to [RFC6325] for processing scenarios not
covered herein.
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4.1. Processing at ISS Layer
4.1.1. Receive Processing
The ISS Layer receives an indication from the port. It extracts DA,
SA and marks the remainder of the payload as M1. ISS Layer passes on
(DA,SA,M1) as an indication to the higher layer.
For TRILL frames, this is Outer DA and Outer SA. M1 is the remainder
of the packet from the VLAN EtherType onwards.
4.1.2. Transmit Processing.
ISS layer receives indication from the higher layer that contains
(DA,SA,M1). It constructs an Ethernet frame and passes down to the
port.
4.2. End Station VLAN and Priority Processing
4.2.1. Receive Processing
Receives (DA,SA,M1) indication from ISS Layer. Extracts the VLAN
from the M1 part of the received indication and construct
(DA,SA,VLAN,PRI,M2). VLAN+PRI+M2 map to M1 in the received
indication. Pass (DA,SA,VLAN,PRI,M2) to the TRILL encap/decap
procession layer.
4.2.2. Transmit Procession
Receive (DA,SA,VLAN+PRI,M2) indication from TRILL encap/decap
processing layer. Merge VLAN, M2 to from M1. Pass down (DA,SA,M1) to
the ISS processing Layer.
4.3. TRLL Encapsulation and De-capsulation Layer
4.3.1. Receive Processing for Unicast packets
Receive indication (DA,SA,VLAN, PRI, M2) from End Station VLAN and
Priority Processing Layer.
o If DA matches Local DA and Frame is of TRILL EtherType
. Discard DA, SA, VLAN, PRI. From M2, derive (TRILL-HDR, iDA,
iSA, i-VL, M3)
. If TRILL nickname is Local and TRILL-OAM Flag is set
Pass on to OAM processing
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. Else pass on (TRILL-HDR, iDA, iSA, i-VL, M3) to RBridge
Layer
o If DA matches local DA and EtherType is not TRILL type
. Discard frame
o If DA does not match and port is Appointed Forwarder and
EtherType is not TRILL
. Insert TRILL-Hdr and send (TRILL-HDR, iDA,iSA,i-VL, M3)
indication to RBridge Layer <- This is the edge function
4.3.2. Transmit Processing for unicast packets
o Receive indication (TRILL-HDR, iDA, iSA, iVL, M3) from RBridge
Layer
o If egress TRILL nickname is local
o If port is Appointed Forwarder and (TRILL Alert Flag set
and OAM EtherType present) then
. Strip TRILL-HDR and construct (DA, SA, VLAN, M2)
o Else
. Set discard flag
o If egress TRILL nickname is not local
o Insert Outer DA, Outer SA, Outer VLAN, TRILL EtherType and
construct (DA,SA,VLAN,M2). Where M2 is (TRILL-HDR, iDA,
iSA, iVL, M)
o Else set the discard flag
o If discard flag is false forward (DA,SA,V,M2) to the VLAN End
Station processing Layer. Otherwise, discard the packet.
4.3.3. Receive Processing for Multicast packets
o Receive (DA,SA,V,M2) from VLAN end station processing layer
o If the DA matches the Well-known TRILL multicast MAC address
and Ethertype of the frame is TRILL
o Strip DA,SA and V. From M2, construct (TRILL-HDR, iDA, iSA,
iVL and M3).
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o If TRILL OAM Flag is set and Ether Type OAM is present at
the end of Flow entropy
. Perform OAM Processing
o Else extract the TRILL header, inner MAC addresses and
inner VLAN and pass indication (TRILL-HDR, iDA, iSA, iVL
and M3) to TRILL RBridge Layer
o If the DA matches the well-known TRILL multicast MAC address
but Ethertype is not TRILL
o Discard the packet
o If the DA does not match the well-known TRILL multicast MAC
address and Ether Type is not TRILL type
o Insert TRILL-HDR and construct (TRILL-HDR, iDA, iSA, IVL,
M3)
o Pass the (TRILL-HDR, iDA, iSA, IVL, M3) to RBridge Layer
o Else
o Discard the packet
4.3.4. Transmit Processing of Multicast packets
o Receive indication (TRILL-HDR, iDA, iSA, iVL, M3) from RBridge
layer.
o If TRILL-HDR multicast flag set and TRILL-HDR Alert flag set
and OAM EtherType present then:
o (DA,SA,V,M2) by inserting TRILL ODA, OSA, O-VL and TRILL
ether type. M2 here is (Ethertype TRILL, TRILL-HDR, iDA,
iSA, iVL, M)
NOTE: Second copy of native format is not made.
o Else If TRILL-HDR multicast flag set and Alert flag not set
o If the port is appointed Forwarder Strip TRILL-HDR, iSA,
iDA, iVL and construct (DA,SA,V,M2) for native format.
o Make a second copy (DA,SA,V,M2) by inserting TRILL ODA,
OSA, O-VL and TRILL ether type. M2 here is (Ethertype
TRILL, TRILL-HDR, iDA, iSA, iVL, M)
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o Else unicast packets as defined in section 4.3.2.
o Pass the indication (DA,SA,V,M2) to End Station VLAN processing
layer.
4.4. TRILL OAM Layer Processing
TRILL OAM Processing Layer is located between the TRILL
Encapsulation and De-capsulation layer and RBridge Layer. It
performs 1. Identification of OAM frames that need local processing
2. Perform OAM processing or redirect to the CPU for OAM processing.
o Receive indication (TRILL-HDR, iDA, iSA, iVL, M3) from RBridge
layer.
o If the TRILL Multicast Flag is set and TRILL Alert Flag is set
and TRILL OAM EtherType is present then
o If MEP or MIP is configured on the inner VLAN of the packet
then
. discard packets that have MD-LEVEL Less than that of
the MEP or packets that does not have MD-LEVEL
present (e.g due to packet truncation).
. If MD-LEVEL matches MD-LEVEL of the MEP then
. Re-direct to OAM Processing (Do not forward
further)
. If MD-LEVEL matches MD-LEVEL of MIP then
. Make a Copy for OAM processing and continue
o Else if TRILL Alert Flag is set and TRILL OAM EtherType is
present then
o If MEP or MIP is configured on the inner VLAN of the packet
then
. discard packets that have MD-LEVEL not present or MD-
LEVEL is Less than the that of the MEP.
. If MD-LEVEL matches MD-LEVEL of the MEP then
. Re-direct to OAM Processing (Do not forward
further)
. If MD-LEVEL matches MD-LEVEL of MIP then
. Make a Copy for OAM processing and continue
o Else // Non OAM l Packet
o Continue
o Pass the indication (DA,SA,V,M2) to End Station VLAN processing
layer.
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NOTE: In the Received path, processing above compares against Down
MEP and MIP Half functions. In the transmit processing it compares
against Up MEP and MIP Half functions.
Appointed Forwarder is a Functionality that TRILL Encap/De-Cap layer
performs. TRILL Encap/De-cap Layer is responsible for prevention of
leaking of OAM packets as native frames.
5. Maintenance Associations (MA) in TRILL
[8021Q] defines a maintenance association as a logical relationship
between a group of nodes. Each Maintenance Association (MA) is
identified with a unique MAID of 48 bytes [8021Q]. CCM and other
related OAM functions operate within the scope of an MA. The
definition of MA is technology independent. Similarly it is encoded
within the OAM message, not on the technology dependent portion of
the packet. Hence we propose to utilize the MAID as defined in
[8021Q]. This also allows us to utilize CCM and LBM messages defined
in [8021Q], as is.
In TRILL, an MA may contain two or more RBridges (MEPs). For
unicast, it is likely that the MA contains exactly two MEPs that are
the two end-points of the flow. For multicast, the MA may contain
two or more MEPs.
For TRILL, in addition to all of the standard 802.ag MIB
definitions, each MEP's MIB contains one or more flow entropy
definitions corresponding to the set of flows that the MEP monitors.
We propose to augment the [8021Q] MIB to add the TRILL specific
information. Figure 6, below depicts the augmentation of the CFM MIB
to add the TRILL specific Flow Entropy.
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MA---
|
--- MEP
|
. - Remote MEP List
.
|
--- MEP-A
|
--- MEP-B
.
|
. - Flow Entropy List { Augments IEEE8021-CFM-MIB}
|
--- (Flow Entropy-1)
|
--- (Flow-entropy-2)
|
. --- ( Flow Entropy n)
|
Other MIB entries
Figure 6 Correlation of TRILL augmented MIB
6. MEP Addressing
In IEEE 802.1ag [8021Q], OAM messages address the target MEP by
utilizing a unique MAC address. In TRILL, for qualifying OAM
packets, we propose to use a combination of the egress RBridge
nickname and Inner VLAN/FGL to address the MEP.
At the MEP, OAM packets go through a hierarchy of op-code de-
multiplexers. The op-code de-multiplexers channel the incoming OAM
packets to the appropriate message processor (e.g. LBM) The reader
may refer to Figure 7 below for a visual depiction of these
different de-multiplexers.
1. Identify the packets that need OAM processing at the Local RBridge
Section 4.
a. Identify the MEP that is associated with the Inner VLAN.
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2. MEP first validate the MD-LEVEL and then
a. Redirect to MD-LEVEL De-multiplexer
3. MD-LEVEL de-multiplexer compares the MD-Level of the packet
against the MD level of the local MEPs of a given MD-Level on the
port (Note: there can be more than one MEP at the same MD-Level
but belonging to different MAs)
a. If the packet MD-LEVEL is equal to the configured MD-LEVEL of
the MEP, then pass to the Opcode de-multiplexer
b. If the packet MD-LEVEL is less, then the configured MD-LEVEL
of the MEP discard the packet
c. If the packer MD-LEVEL is greater, then the configured MD-
LEVEL of the MEP pass on to the next higher MD-LEVEL de-
multiplexer, if available. Otherwise, if no such higher MD-
LEVEL de-multiplexer exists then forward the packet as normal
data.
4. Opcode De-multiplexer compares the opcode in the packet with
supported opcodes
a. If Op-code is CCM, LBM,LBR, PTM,PTR, MTVM, MTVR, then pass on
to the correct Processor
b. If Op-code is Unknown, then discard.
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|
.CCM LBM PTM MTV
| | | |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| OP Code DE-Mux |--- Unknown
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
^ ^ ^
MD==Li | | |
+-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+
| L |-->|L2 |-.- |Ln |---- >
+-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+ |
| ^ | | |
MD
| T |----------------- >| M |--- >
+ TRILL OAM ---- + pass through OAM ----
Figure 7 OAM De-Multiplexers at MEP for active SAP
T : Denotes Tap, that identifies OAM frames that need local
processing. These are the packets with OAM flag set AND OAM
Ether type is present after the flow entropy of the packet
M : Is the post processing merge, merges data and OAM messages
that are pass through. Additionally, Merge component ensure, as
explained earlier, OAM packets are not forwarded out as native
frames.
L : Denotes MD-Level processing. Packets with MD-Level less
than the Level will be dropped. Packets with equal MD-Level are
passed on to the opcode de-multiplexer. Others are passed on to
the next level MD processors or eventually to the merge point
(M).
NOTE: LBM, MTV and PT are not subject to MA de-multiplexers.
These packets do not have an MA encoded in the packet. Adequate
response can be generated to these packets, without loss of
functionality, by any of the MEP present on that interface or
an entity within the RBridge.
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6.1. Use of MIP in TRILL
Maintenance Intermediate Points (MIP) are mainly used for fault
isolation. Link Trace Messages in [8021Q] utilize a well-known
multicast MAC address and MIPs generate responses to Link Trace
messages. Response to Link Trace messages or lack thereof can be
used for fault isolation in TRILL.
As explained in section 11. , we propose to use a hop-count expiry
approach for fault isolation and path tracing. The approach is very
similar to the well-known IP trace-route approach. Hence, explicit
addressing of MIPs is not required for the purpose of fault
isolation.
Any given RBridge can have multiple MIPs located within a interface.
As such, a mechanism is required to identify which MIP should
respond or to an incoming OAM message.
We propose to use the same approach as presented above for MEPs with
some variations. It is important to note that "M", merge block of
MIP does not prevent OAM packets leaking out as native frames. On
edge interfaces, MEPs MUST be configured to prevent the leaking of
TRILL OAM packets out of the TRILL Campus.
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PT MTV
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| OP Code De-Mux |-> Unknown
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
^ ^ ^
MD==Li | | |
+-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+
| L |- >|L2 |-.- |Ln |------+
+-+-+ +-+-+ +-+-+ |
^ |
| |
Drop | |
MD not --- |TRILL OAM |
Present | |
| v
TRILL Data ---- TRILL Data -----
------- >| T |------------------ >| M |---->
+ TRILL OAM ---- ----
Figure 8 OAM De-Multiplexers at MIP for active SAP
T: TAP processing for MIP. All packets with OAM flag set are
captured.
L : MD Level Processing, Packet with matching MD Level are "copied"
to the Opcode de-multiplexer and original packet is passed on to the
next MD level processor. Other packets are simply passed on to the
next MD level processor, without copying to the OP code de-
multiplexer.
M : Merge processor, merge OAM packets to be forwarded along with
the data flow.
Packets that carry Path Trace (PTM) or Multi-destination Tree
Verification (MTV) OpCode are passed on to the respective
processors.
Packets with unknown OpCodes are counted and discarded.
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7. Approach for Backwards Compatibility
Methodology presented in this document is in-line with the [8021Q]
framework or provide fault management coverage. However, in
practice, some platforms may not have the required capabilities to
support some of the proposed techniques. In this section, we present
a method that allows RBridges, which do not have the required
hardware capabilities, to participate in the proposed OAM solution.
For backwards compatibility, we propose to locate MEPs and MIPs in
the CPU. This will be referred to as the "central brain" model as
opposed to "port brain" model.
In the "central brain" model, an RBridge using either ACLs or some
other method forwards qualifying OAM messages to the CPU. The CPU
then performs the required processing and multiplexing to the
correct MP (Maintenance Point).
Additionally, RBridges MUST have the capability to prevent the
leaking of OAM packets, as specified in [TRILLOAMREQ] and in the
Transmission processing in Figure 9.
Receiver Processing:
If (M==1 && F==1) then
Copy to CPU and Forward normally as defined in RFC 6325
Else if (M==0 && F==1 && egress nickname is the processing RBridge)
then
Forward to CPU BUT DO NOT forward along the data plane
Else
Forward as defined in [RFC6325]
End;
Transmit Processing:
If (F==1) then
Forward as defined in [RFC6325] BUT Do not de-capsulate and
forward as a native frame
Else
Forward as defined in [RFC6325]
Figure 9 Pseudo code for Backward compatible Processing
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[8021Q] requires that the MEP filters or pass through OAM messages
based on the MD-Level. The MD-Level is embedded deep in the OAM
message. Hence, conventional methods of frame filtering may not be
able to filter frames based on the MD-Level. As a result, OAM
messages, that must be dropped due to MD level mismatch, may leak in
to a TRILL domain with different MD-Level.
This leaking may not cause any functionality loss. Receiving MEP/MIP
is required to validate the MD-level prior to acting on the message.
Any frames received with an incorrect MD-Level will be dropped.
Generally, TRILL campuses are managed by a single operator, hence
there is no risk of security exposure. However, in the event of
multi operator deployments, operators should be aware of possible
exposure of device specific information and appropriate measures
must be taken.
It is also important to note that the MPLS OAM [RFC4379] framework
does not include the concept of domains and OAM filtering based on
operators. It is our opinion that the lack of OAM frame filtering
based on domains does not introduce significant functional
deficiency or security risk.
8. Continuity Check Message (CCM)
CCM are used to monitor connectivity and configuration errors.
[8021Q] monitors connectivity by listening to periodic CCM messages
received from its remote MEP partners in the MA. An [8021Q] MEP
identifies cross-connect errors by comparing the MAID in the
received CCM message with the MEP's local MAID. The MAID [8021Q] is
a 48 byte field that is technology independent. Similarly, the MEPID
is a 2 byte field that is independent of the technology. Given this
generic definition of CCM fields, CCM as defined in [8021Q] can be
utilized in TRILL with no changes. TRILL specific information may be
carried in CCMs when encoded using TRILL specific TLVs or sub-TLVs.
This is possible since CCMs may carry optional TLVs.
Unlike classical Ethernet environments, TRILL contains multipath
forwarding. The path taken by a packet depends on the payload of the
packet. The Maintenance Association identifies the interested end-
points (MEPs) of a given monitored path. For unicast there are only
two MEPs per MA. For multicast there can be two or more MEPs in the
MA. Within the MA, we propose to define the entropy values of the
monitored flows. CCM transmit logic will utilize these flow entropy
values when constructing the CCM packets. Please see section 13.
later in the document for the theory of operation of CCM.
We propose to augment the MIB of [8021Q] with definition of flow-
entropy. Please see [TRILLOAMMIB] for definition of these and other
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TRILL related OAM MIB definitions. Below Figure depicts the
correlation between MA, CCM and proposed flow-entropy.
MA---
|
--- MEP
|
. - Remote MEP List
.
|
--- MEP-A
|
--- MEP-B
.
|
. - Flow Entropy List {Augments IEEE8021-CFM-MIB}
|
--- (Flow Entropy-1) {note we have to define
| destination nickname with
--- (Flow-entropy-2) the flow entropy discuss}
|
. ---(Flow Entropy n)
|
. - CCM
|
--- (standard 8021ag entries)
|
--- (hop-count) { Augments IEEE8021-CFM-MIB}
|
--- (Other TBD TRILL OAM specific entries)
{Augmented}
|
.
|
- Other MIB entries
Figure 10 Augmentation of CCM MIB in TRILL
In a multi-pathing environment, a Flow - by definition - is
unidirectional. A question may arise as to what flow entropy to be
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used in the response. CCMs are unidirectional and have no explicit
reply; as such, the issue of the response flow entropy does not
arise. In the transmitted CCM, each MEP reports local status using
the Remote Defect Indication (RDI) flag. Additionally, a MEP may
raise SNMP TRAPs [TRLLOAMMIB] as Alarms when a connectivity failure
occurs.
9. TRILL OAM Message Channel
The TRILL OAM Message Channel can be divided into two parts: TRILL
OAM Message header and TRILL OAM Message TLVs. Every OAM Message
MUST contain a single TRILL OAM message header and a set of one or
more specified OAM Message TLVs.
9.1. TRILL OAM Message header
As discussed earlier, we propose to use the message format defined
in IEEE 802.1ag. We believe a common messaging framework between
[8021Q], TRILL and other similar standards such as Y.1731 can be
accomplished by re-using the OAM message header defined in [8021Q].
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|MD-L | Version | OpCode | Flags |FirstTLVOffset |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
. Opcode Specific Information .
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
. TLVs .
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 11 OAM Message Format
o MD-L: Maintenance Domain Level (3 bits). Identifies the
maintenance domain level. For TRILL, this MAY be always set to
zero. However, in multilevel TRILL, backbone MAY be of a
different MD-LEVEL. (Please refer to [8021Q] for the definition
of MD-Level)
o Version: Indicates the version (5 bits). As specified in
[8021Q].
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o Flags: Includes operational flags (1 byte). The definition of
flags is Opcode-specific and is covered in the applicable
sections.
o FirstTLVOffset: Defines the location of the first TLV, in
bytes, starting from the end of the FirstTLVOffset field (1
byte). (Refer to [8021Q] for the definition of the
FirstTLVOffset.)
MD-L, Version, Opcode, Flags and FirstTLVOffset fields collectively
are referred to as the OAM Message Header.
The Opcode specific information section of the OAM Message may
contain Session Identification number, time-stamp, etc.
9.2. TRILL OAM Opcodes
The following Opcodes are defined for TRILL. Each of the Opcodes
defines a separate TRILL OAM message. Details of the messages are
presented in the related sections.
TRILL OAM Message Opcodes:
TBD-64 : Path Trace Reply
TBD-65 : Path Trace Message
TBD-66 : Notification Message
TBD-67 : Multicast Tree Verification Reply
TBD-68 : Multicast Tree Verification Message
9.3. Format of TRILL OAM TLV
We propose to use the same TLV format as defined in section 21.5.1
of [8021Q]. The following figure depicts the general format of a
TRILL OAM TLV:
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Type | Length |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
. Value(variable) .
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 12 TRILL OAM TLV
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Type (1 octet) : Specifies the Type of the TLV (see sections 9.4.
for TLV types).
Length (2 octets) : Specifies the length of the 'Value' field in
octets. Length of the 'Value' field can be either zero or more
octets.
Value (variable): The length and the content of this field depend on
the type of the TLV. Please refer to applicable TLV definitions for
the details.
Semantics and usage of Type values allocated for TRILL OAM purpose
are defined by this document and other future related documents.
9.4. TRILL OAM TLVs
In this section we define TRILL related TLVs. We propose to re-use
[8021Q] defined TLVs where applicable. Types 32-63 are reserved for
ITU-T Y.1731. We propose to reserve Types 64-95 for TRILL OAM TLVs.
9.4.1. Common TLVs between 802.1ag and TRILL
The following TLVs are defined in [8021Q]. We propose to re-use them
where applicable. The format and semantics of the TLVs are as
defined in [8021Q]. NOTE: Presented within brackets is the
corresponding Type defined in [8021Q].
1. End TLV (0)
2. Sender ID TLV (1)
3. Port Status TLV (2)
4. Data TLV (3)
5. Interface Status TLV (4)
6. Reply Ingress TLV (5)
7. Reply Egress TLV (6)
8. LTM Egress Identifier TLV (7)
9. LTR Egress Identifier TLV (8)
10. Reserved (9-30)
11. Organization specific TLV (31)
9.4.2. TRILL OAM Specific TLVs
As indicated above, Types 64-95 will be requested to be reserved for
TRILL OAM purposes. Listed below is a summary of TRILL OAM TLVs and
their corresponding codes. Format and semantics of TRILL OAM TLVs
are defined in subsequent sections.
1. TRILL OAM Application Identifier (TBD-TLV-64)
2. Out of Band IP Address (TBD_TLV-65)
3. Diagnostic VLAN (TBD-TLV-66)
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4. RBridge Scope (TBD-TLV-67)
5. Original Payload (TBD-TLV-68)
6. Previous RBridge Nickname(TBD-TLV-69)
7. TRILL Next Hop RBridge List (ECMP) (TBD-TLV-70)
8. Multicast Receiver Availability (TBD-TLV-71)
9. Flow Identifier (TBD-TLV-72)
10. Reserved (TBD-TLV-72 to TBD-TLV-95)
9.4.2.1. TRILL OAM Application Identifier TLV
TRILL OAM Application Identifier TLV carries TRILL OAM application
specific information. The TRILL OAM Application Identifier TLV MUST
always be present and MUST be the first TLV in TRILL OAM messages.
Messages that do not include the TRILL OAM Application Identifier
TLV as the first TLV MUST be discarded by an RBridge, unless that
RBridge is running Ethernet CFM.
1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Type | Length | Version |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Return Code |Return sub-code| Reserved |F|C|O|I|
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 13 TRILL OAM Message TLV
Type (1 octet) = 64 indicate that this is the TRILL OAM Version
Length (2 octets) = 6
TRILL OAM Version (1 Octet), currently set to zero. Indicates the
TRILL OAM version. TRILL OAM version can be different than the
[8021Q] version.
Return Code (1 Octet): Set to zero on requests. Set to an
appropriate value in response or notification messages.
Return sub-code (1 Octet): Return sub-code is set to zero on
transmission of request message. Return sub-code identifies
categories within a specific Return code. Return sub-code MUST be
interpreted within a Return code.
Reserved: set to zero on transmission and ignored on reception.
F (1 bit) : Final flag, when set, indicates this is the last
response.
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C (1 bit ): Label error (VLAN/Label mapping error), if set indicates
that the label (VLAN/FGL) in the flow entropy is different than the
label included in the diagnostic TLV. This field is ignored in
request messages and MUST only be interpreted in response messages.
O (1 bit) : If set, indicates, OAM out-of-band response requested.
I (1 bit) : If set, indicates, OAM in-band response requested.
NOTE: When both O and I bits are set to zero, indicates that no
response is required (silent mode). User MAY specify both O and I or
one of them or none.
9.4.3. Out Of Band Reply Address TLV
Out of Band Reply Address TLV specifies the address to which an out
of band OAM reply message MUST be sent. When O bit in the TRILL
Version TLV is not set, Out of Band Reply Address TLV is ignored.
1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Type | Length | Address Type |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Addr Length | |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |
| |
. Reply Address .
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 14 Out of Band IP Address TLV
Type (1 octet) = 64
Length (2 octets) = Variable. Minimum length is 2.
Address Type (1 Octet): 0 - IPv4. 1 - IPv6. 2- TRILL RBridge
nickname. All other values reserved.
Addr Length (1 Octet). 4 - IPv4. 16 - IPv6, 2 - TRILL RBRidge
nickname.
Reply Address (variable): Address where the reply needed to be sent.
Length depends on the address specification.
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9.4.3.1. Diagnostics Label TLV
Diagnostic label specifies the data label (VLAN or FGL) in which the
OAM messages are generated. Receiving RBridge MUST compare the data
label of the Flow entropy to the data label specified in the
Diagnostic Label TLV. Label Error Flag in the response (TRILL OAM
Message Version TLV) MUST be set when the two VLANs do not match.
1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Type | Length | L-Type |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Reserved | Label(VLAN) |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 15 Diagnostic VLAN TLV
Type (1 octet) = 65 indicates that this is the TRILL Diagnostic
VLAN TLV
Length (2 octets) = 5
L-Type (Label type, 1 octet)
0- indicate 802.1Q 12 bit VLAN.
1 - indicate TRILL 24 bit fine grain label
Label (24 bits): Either 12 bit VLAN or 24 bit fine grain label.
RBridges do not perform Label error checking when Label TLV is not
included in the OAM message. In certain deployment intermediate
devices may perform label (VLAN) translation. In such scenarios,
originator should not include the diagnostic Label TLV in OAM
messages. Inclusion of diagnostic TLV will generated unwanted label
error notifications.
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9.4.3.2. Original Data Payload TLV
1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Type | Length | |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ +
| |
. Original Payload .
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 16 Out of Band IP Address TLV
Length (2 octets) = variable
9.4.3.3. RBridge scope TLV
RBridge scope TLV identifies nicknames of RBridges from which a
response is required. RBridge scope TLV is only applicable to
Multicast Tree Verification messages. This TLV SHOULD NOT be
included in other messages. Receiving RBridges MUST ignore this TLV
on messages other than Multicast Verification Message.
Each TLV can contain up to 255 nicknames of in scope RBridges. A
Multicast Verification Message may contain multiple "RBridge scope
TLVs", in the event that more than 255 in scope RBridges need to be
specified.
Absence of the "RBridge scope TLV" indicates that a response is
needed from all the RBridges. Please see section 12. for details.
1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Type | Length | nOfnicknames |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| nickname-1 | nickname-2 |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
. .
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| | nickname-n |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 17 RBridge Scope TLV
Type (1 octet) = 67 indicates that this is the "RBridge scope TLV"
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Length (2 octets) = variable. Minimum value is 2.
Nickname (2 octets) = 16 bit RBridge nickname.
9.4.3.4. Previous RBridge nickname TLV
"Previous RBridge nickname TLV" identifies the nickname or nicknames
of the upstream RBridge. [RFC6325] allows a given RBridge to hold
multiple nicknames.
"Upstream RBridge nickname TLV" is an optional TLV. Multiple
instances of this TLV MAY be included when an upstream RBridge is
represented by more than 255 nicknames (highly unlikely).
1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Type | Length | Reserved |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Reserved | nickname |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 18 Upstream RBridge nickname TLV
Type (1 octet) = 69 indicates that this is the "Upstream RBridge
nickname"
Length (2 octets) = 4.
Nickname (2 octets) = 16 bit RBridge nickname.
9.4.3.5. Next Hop RBridge List TLV
"Next Hop RBridge List TLV" identifies the nickname or nicknames of
the downstream next hop RBridges. [RFC6325] allows a given RBridge
to have multiple Equal Cost Paths to a specified destination. Each
next hop RBridge is represented by one of its nicknames.
"Next Hop RBridge List TLV" is an optional TLV. Multiple instances
of this TLV MAY be included when there are more than 255 Equal Cost
Paths to the destination.
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1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Type | Length | nOfnicknames |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| nickname-1 | nickname-2 |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
. .
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| | nickname-n |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 19 Next Hop RBridge List TLV
Type (1 octet) = 70 indicates that this is the "Next nickname"
Length (2 octets) = variable. Minimum value is 2.
Nickname (2 octets) = 16 bit RBridge nickname.
9.4.3.6. Multicast Receiver Port count TLV
"Multicast Receiver Port Count TLV" identifies the number of ports
interested in receiving the specified multicast stream within the
responding RBridge on the VLAN specified by the Diagnostic VLAN TLV.
Multicast Receiver Port countis an Optional TLV.
1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Type | Length | Reserved |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| number of Receivers |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 20 Multicast Receiver Availability TLV
Type (1 octet) = 71 indicates that this is the "Multicast
Availability TLV"
Length (2 octets) = 5.
Number if Receivers (4 octets) = Indicates the number of Multicast
receivers available on the responding RBridge on the VLAN specified
by the diagnostic VLAN.
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9.4.4. Flow Identifier (flow-id) TLV
Flow Identifier (flow-id) uniquely identifies a specific flow. The
flow-id value is unique per MEP and needed to be interpreted as
such.
1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Type | Length | Reserved |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| MEP-ID | flow-id |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 21 Out of Band IP Address TLV
Type (1 octet) = 72
Length (2 octets) = 5.
Reserved (1 octet) set to 0 on transmission and ignored on
reception.
MEP-ID (2 octets) = MEP-ID of the originator [8021Q].
Flow-id (2 octets) = uniquely identifies the flow per MEP. Different
MEP may allocate the same flow-id value. The {MEP-ID,flow-id} pair
is globally unique.
Inclusion of the MEP-ID in the flow-id TLV allows inclusion of MEP-
ID for messages that does not contain MEP-ID in OAM header.
Applications may use MEP-ID information for different purposes of
troubleshooting.
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10. Loopback Message
10.1.1. Loopback OAM Message format
1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|MD-L | Version | OpCode | Flags |FirstTLVOffset |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Loopback Transaction Identifier |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| |
. TLVs .
| |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 22 Loopback OAM Message Format
The above figure depicts the format of the Loopback Request and
response messages as defined in [8021Q]. The Opcode for Loopback
Message is set to 65 and the Opcode for the Reply Message is set to
64. Session Identification Number is a 32-bit integer that allows
the requesting RBridge to uniquely identify the corresponding
session. Responding RBridges, MUST echo the received "Loopback
Transaction Identifier" number without modification.
10.1.2. Theory of Operation
10.1.2.1. Originator RBridge
Originator RBridge Identifies the destination RBridge nickname based
on user specification or based on location of the specified
destination inner MAC address.
Constructs the flow entropy based on user specified parameters or
implementation specific default parameters.
Constructs the TRILL OAM header: Set the opcode to Loopback message
type (3). Assign applicable Loopback Transaction Identifier number
for the request.
TRILL OAM Version TLV MUST be included and with the flags set to
applicable values.
Include following OAM TLVs, where applicable
o Out-of-band Reply address TLV
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o Diagnostic Label TLV
o Sender ID TLV
Specify the Hop count of the TRILL data frame per user specification
or utilize an applicable Hop count value.
Dispatch the OAM frame for transmission.
RBridge may continue to retransmit the request at periodic
intervals, until a response is received or the re-transmission count
expires. At each transmission Session Identification number MUST be
incremented.
10.1.2.2. Intermediate RBridge
Intermediate RBridges forward the frame as a normal data frame and
no special handling is required.
10.1.2.3. Destination RBridge
If the Loopback message is addressed to the local RBridge and
satisfies the OAM identification criteria specified in section 3.1.
then, the RBridge data plane forwards the message to the CPU for
further processing.
TRILL OAM application layer further validates the received OAM frame
by examining the presence of OAM-Ethertype at the end of the flow
entropy and the MD Level. Frames that do not contain OAM-Ethertype
at the end of the flow entropy MUST be discarded.
Construction of the TRILL OAM response:
TRILL OAM application encodes the received TRILL header and flow
entropy in the Original payload TLV and includes it in the OAM
message.
Set the Return Code and Return sub code to applicable values. Update
the TRILL OAM opcode to 2 (Loopback Message Reply)
Optionally, if the VLAN/FGL identifier value of the received flow
entropy differs from the value specified in the diagnostic Label,
set the Label Error Flag on TRILL OAM Application Identifier TLV.
Include the sender ID TLV (1)
If in-band response was requested, dispatch the frame to the TRILL
data plane with request-originator RBRidge nickname as the egress
RBridge nickname.
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If out-of-band response was requested, dispatch the frame to the IP
forwarding process.
11. Path Trace Message
The primary use of the Path Trace Message is for fault isolation. It
may also be used for plotting the path taken from a given RBridge to
another RBridge.
[8021Q] accomplishes the objectives of the TRILL Path Trace Message
using Link Trace Messages. Link Trace Messages utilize a well-known
multicast MAC address. This works for [8021Q], because for 802.1
both the unicast and multicast paths are congruent. However, TRILL
is multicast and unicast incongruent. Hence, we propose TRILL OAM to
utilize a new message format: the Path Trace message.
The Path Trace Message has the same format as Loopback Message.
Opcode for Path Trace Reply Message is 65 and Request 64
Operation of Path Trace message is identical to Loopback message
except, that it is first transmitted with a TRILL Hop count field
value of 1. Sending RBridge expects a Time Expiry Return-Code from
the next hop or a successful response. If a Time Expiry Return-code
is received as the response, the originator RBridge records the
information received from intermediate node that generated the Time
Expiry message and resends the message by incrementing the previous
Hop count value by 1. This process is continued until, a response is
received from the destination RBridge or Path Trace process timeout
occur or Hop count reaches a configured maximum value.
11.1.1. Theory of Operation
11.1.1.1. Originator RBridge
Identify the destination RBridge based on user specification or
based on location of the specified MAC address.
Construct the flow entropy based on user specified parameters or
implementation specific default parameters.
Construct the TRILL OAM header: Set the opcode to Path Trace Request
message type (65). Assign applicable Session Identification number
for the request. Return-code and sub-code MUST be set to zero.
TRILL OAM Application Identifier TLV MUST be included and set the
flags to applicable values.
Include following OAM TLVs, where applicable
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o Out-of-band IP address TLV
o Diagnostic Label TLV
o Include the Sender ID TLV
Specify the Hop count of the TRILL data frame as 1 for the first
request.
Dispatch the OAM frame to the TRILL data plane for transmission.
An RBridge may continue to retransmit the request at periodic
intervals, until a response is received or the re-transmission count
expires. At each new re-transmission, the Session Identification
number MUST be incremented. Additionally, for responses received
from intermediate RBridges, the RBridge nickname and interface
information MUST be recorded.
11.1.1.2. Intermediate RBridge
Path Trace Messages transit through Intermediate RBridges
transparently, unless Hop-count has expired.
TRILL OAM application layer further validates the received OAM frame
by examining the presence of TRILL OAM Flag and OAM-Ethertype at the
end of the flow entropy and by examining the MD Level. Frames that
do not contain OAM-Ethertype at the end of the flow entropy MUST be
discarded.
Construction of the TRILL OAM response:
TRILL OAM application encodes the received TRILL header and flow
entropy in the Original payload TLV and include it in the OAM
message.
Set the Return Code to (2) "Time Expired" and Return sub code to
zero (0). Update the TRILL OAM opcode to 64 (Path Trace Message
Reply).
If the VLAN/FGL identifier value of the received flow entropy
differs from the value specified in the diagnostic Label, set the
Label Error Flag on TRILL OAM Application Identifier TLV.
Include following TLVs
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Upstream RBridge nickname TLV (69)
Reply Ingress TLV (5)
Reply Egress TLV (6)
Interface Status TLV (4)
TRILL Next Hop RBridge (Repeat for each ECMP) (70)
Sender ID TLV (1)
If Label error detected, set C flag (Label error detected) in the
version.
If in-band response was requested, dispatch the frame to the TRILL
data plane with request-originator RBRidge nickname as the egress
RBridge nickname.
If out-of-band response was requested, dispatch the frame to the
standard IP forwarding process.
11.1.1.3. Destination RBridge
Processing is identical to section 11.1.1.2. With the exception that
TRILL OAM Opcode is set to Path Trace Reply (64).
12. Multi-Destination Tree Verification (MTV) Message
Multi-Destination Tree Verification messages allow verifying TRILL
distribution tree integrity and pruning. TRILL VLAN/FGL and
multicast pruning are described in [RFC6325] [RFCclcorrect] and
[RFCfgl]. Multi-destination tree verification and Multicast group
verification messages are designed to detect pruning defects.
Additionally, these tools can be used for plotting a given multicast
tree within the TRILL campus.
Multi-Destination tree verification OAM frames are copied to the CPU
of every intermediate RBridge that is part of the distribution tree
being verified. The originator of the Multi-destination Tree
verification message, specifies the scope of RBridges from which a
response is required. Only, the RBridges listed in the scope field
respond to the request. Other RBridges silently discard the request.
Inclusion of scope parameter is required to prevent receiving a
large number of responses. Typical scenario of distribution tree
verification or group verification involves verifying multicast
connectivity to selected set of end-nodes as opposed to the entire
network. Availability of the scope facilitates narrowing down the
focus to only the interested RBridges.
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Implementations MAY choose to rate-limit CPU bound multicast
traffic. As a result of rate-limiting or due to other congestion
conditions, MTV messages may be discarded from time to time by the
intermediate RBRidges and the requester may be required to
retransmit the request. Implementations SHOULD narrow the embedded
scope of retransmission request only to RBRidges that have failed to
respond.
12.1. Multi-Destination Tree Verification (MTV) OAM Message Format
Format of MTV OAM Message format is identical to that of Loopback
Message format defined in section 10. with the exception that the
Loopback Transaction Identifier, in section 10.1.1. , is replaced
with the Session Identifier.
12.2. Theory of Operation
12.2.1. Originator RBridge
User is required at minimum to specify either the distriubiton trees
that need to be verified, or Multicast MAC address and VLAN/FGL, or
VLAN/FGL and Multicast destination IP address. Alternatively, for
more specific multicast flow verification, the user MAY specify more
information e.g. source MAC address, VLAN/FGL, Destination and
Source IP addresses. Implementations, at a minimum, must allow the
user to specify a choice of distribution trees, Destination
Multicast MAC address and VLAN/FGL that needed to be verified.
Although, it is not mandatory, it is highly desired to provide an
option to specify the scope. It should be noted that the source MAC
address and some other parameters may not be specified if the
Backwards Compatibility Method of section 3.2 is used to identify
the OAM frames.
Default parameters MUST be used for unspecified parameters. Flow
entropy is constructed based on user specified parameters and/or
default parameters.
Based on user specified parameters, the originating RBridge
identifies the nickname that represent the multicast tree.
Obtain the applicable Hop count value for the selected multicast
tree.
Construct TRILL OAM message header and include Session
Identification number. Session Identification number facilitate the
originator to map the response to the correct request.
TRILL OAM Application Identifier TLV MUST be included.
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Op-Code MUST be specified as Multicast Tree Verification Message
(70)
Include RBridge scope TLV (67)
Optionally, include following TLV, where applicable
o Out-of-band IP address
o Diagnostic Label
o Sender ID TLV (1)
Specify the Hop count of the TRILL data frame per user
specification. Or utilize the applicable Hop count value, if TRILL
Hop count is not being specified by the user.
Dispatch the OAM frame to the TRILL data plane to be ingressed for
transmission.
RBridge may continue to retransmit the request at a periodic
interval, until a response is received or the re-transmission count
expires. At each new re-transmission, the Session Identification
number MUST be incremented. At each re-transmission, the RBridge may
further reduce the scope to the RBridges that it has not received a
response from.
12.2.2. Receiving RBridge
Receiving RBridges identify multicast verification frames per the
procedure explained in sections 3.2.
CPU of the RBridge validates the frame and analyzes the scope
RBridge list. If the RBridge scope TLV is present and the local
RBridge nickname is not specified in the scope list, it will
silently discard the frame. If the local RBridge is specified in the
scope list OR RBridge scope TLV is absent, the receiving RBridge
proceeds with further processing as defined in section 12.2.3.
12.2.3. In scope RBridges
Construction of the TRILL OAM response:
TRILL OAM application encodes the received TRILL header and flow
entropy in the Original payload TLV and include in the OAM message.
Set the Return Code to (0) and Return sub code to zero (0). Update
the TRILL OAM opcode to 67 (Multicast Tree Verification Reply).
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Include following TLVs
Upstream RBridge nickname TLV (69)
Reply Ingress TLV (5)
Interface Status TLV (4)
TRILL Next Hop RBridge (Repeat for each downstream RBridge) (70)
Sender ID TLV (1)
Multicast Receiver Availability TLV (71)
If VLAN cross connect error detected, set C flag (Cross connect
error detected) in the version.
If in-band response was requested, dispatch the frame to the TRILL
data plane with request-originator RBRidge nickname as the egress
RBridge nickname.
If out-of-band response was requested, dispatch the frame to the
standard IP forwarding process.
13. Application of Continuity Check Message (CCM) in TRILL
Section 8. provides an overview of CCM Messages defined in [8021Q]
and how they can be used within the TRILL OAM. In this section, we
present the application and Theory of Operations of CCM within the
TRILL OAM framework. Readers are referred to [8021Q] for CCM message
format and applicable TLV definitions and usages. Only the TRILL
specific aspects are explained below.
In TRILL, between any two given MEPs there can be multiple potential
paths. Whereas in [8021Q], there is always a single path between any
two MEPs, at any given time. [TRILLOAMREQ] requires solutions to
have the ability to monitor continuity over one or more paths.
CCM Messages are uni-directional, such that there is no explicit
response to a received CCM message. Connectivity status is indicated
by setting the applicable flags (e.g. RDI) of the CCM messages
transmitted by an MEP.
It is important that the proposed solution accomplishes the
requirements specified in [TRILLOAMREQ] within the framework of
[8021Q] in a straightforward manner and with minimum changes.
Section 8, above proposed to define multiple flows within the CCM
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object, each corresponding to a flow that a given MEP wishes to
monitor.
Receiving MEPs do not cross check whether a received CCM belongs to
a specific flow from the originating RBridge. Any attempt to track
status of individual flows may explode the amount of state
information that any given RBridge has to maintain.
Obvious question arises is, how does the originating RBridge knows
which flow or flows are at fault?
13.1. CCM Error notification - Method-1
This is accomplished with a combination of RDI flag in the CCM
header and SNMP Notifications (Traps).
Each MEP transmits 4 CCM messages per each flow. ([8021Q] detects
CCM fault when 3 consecutive CCM messages are lost). Each CCM
Message has a unique sequence number.
When an MEP notice a CCM timeout from a remote MEP ( MEP-A), it sets
the RDI flag on next CCM message it generates. Additionally, it logs
and sends SNMP notification that contain the remote MEP
Identification, Sequence Number of the last CCM message it received
and if available the Sequence Number of the first CCM message it
received after the failure. CCM Messages generated by MEP-A has
monotonically increasing Sequence Numbers; hence operator can easily
identify flows that correspond to specific Sequence Numbers.
Following example illustrate the above.
Assume there are two MEPs, MEP-A and MEP-B.
Assume there are 3 flows between MEP-A and MEP-B.
Lets assume MEP-A allocates sequence numbers as follows
Flow-1 {1,2,3,4,13,14,15,16,.. }
Flow-2 {5,6,7,8,17,18,19,20,.. }
Flow-3 {9,10,12,11,21,22,23,24,.. }
Lets Assume Flow-2 is at fault.
MEP-B, receives CCM from MEP-A with sequence numbers 1,2,3,4, but
did not receive 5,6,7,8. CCM timeout is set to 3 CCM intervals in
[8021Q]. Hence MEP-B detects the error at 8'th CCM message. At this
time the sequence number of the last good CCM message MEP-B has
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received from MEP-A is 4. Hence MEP-B will generate an CCM error
SNMP notification with MEP-A and Last good sequence number 4.
When MEP-A switch to flow-3 after transmitting flow-2, MEP-B will
start receiving CCM messages, in this example it will be CCM message
with Sequence Numbers 9,21 and so on. When receipt of a new CCM
message from a specific MEP, after a CCM timeout, TRILL OAM will
generate SNMP Notification of CCM resume witn remote MEP-ID and the
first valid Sequence number after the CCM timeout. In the foregoing
example, it is MEP-A and Sequence Number 9.
We propose to augment remote MEP list under CCM MIB Object to
contain "Last Sequence Number" and "CCM Timeout" variables. Last
Sequence Number is updated every time a CCM is received from remote
MEP. CCM Timeout variable is set when a CCM timeout has occurred and
cleared when a CCM is received. Combination of the two new MIB
variables and use of monotonically increasing sequence numbers allow
TRILL OAM to clearly identify specific flow or flows at fault.
13.2. CCM Error Notification Method-2
This is accomplished with a combination of RDI flag in the CCM
header, flow-id TLV and SNMP Notifications (Traps).
Each MEP transmits 4 CCM messages per each flow. ([8021Q] detects
CCM fault when 3 consecutive CCM messages are lost). Each CCM
Message has a unique sequence number and unique flow-identifier. The
flow identifier is included in the OAM message via flow-id TLV.
When an MEP notice a CCM timeout from a remote MEP ( MEP-A), it sets
the RDI flag on next CCM message it generates. Additionally, it logs
and sends SNMP notification that contain the remote MEP
Identification, flow-id and the Sequence Number of the last CCM
message it received and if available, the flow-id and the Sequence
Number of the first CCM message it received after the failure. Each
MEP maintain a unique flow-id per each flow, hence operator can
easily identify flows that correspond to the specific flow-id.
Following example illustrate the above.
Assume there are two MEP, MEP-A and MEP-B.
Assume there are 3 flows between MEP-A and MEP-B.
Lets assume MEP-A allocates sequence numbers as follows
Flow-1 Sequence={1,2,3,4,13,14,15,16,.. } flow-id=(1)
Flow-2 Sequence={5,6,7,8,17,18,19,20,.. } flow-id=(2)
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Flow-3 Sequence={9,10,12,11,21,22,23,24,.. } flow-id=(3)
Lets Assume Flow-2 is at fault.
MEP-B, receives CCM from MEP-A with sequence numbers 1,2,3,4, but
did not receive 5,6,7,8. CCM timeout is set to 3 CCM intervals in
[8021Q]. Hence MEP-B detects the error at 8'th CCM message. At this
time the sequence number of the last good CCM message MEP-B has
received from MEP-A is 4 and flow-id of the last good CCM Message is
(1). Hence MEP-B will generate a CCM error SNMP notification with
MEP-A and Last good flow-id (1) and sequence number 4.
When MEP-A switch to flow-3 after transmitting flow-2, MEP-B will
start receiving CCM messages, in this example it will be CCM message
with Sequence Numbers 9,10,11,12,21 and so on. When receipt of a new
CCM message from a specific MEP, after a CCM timeout, TRILL OAM will
generate SNMP Notification of CCM resume with remote MEP-ID and the
first valid flow-id and the Sequence number after the CCM timeout.
In the foregoing example, it is MEP-A, flow-id (1) and Sequence
Number 9.
We propose to augment remote MEP list under CCM MIB Object to
contain "Last Sequence Number", flow-id and "CCM Timeout" variables.
Last Sequence Number and flow-id are updated every time a CCM is
received from a remote MEP. CCM Timeout variable is set when CCM
timeout is occurred and cleared when CCM is received.
13.3. Theory of Operation
13.3.1. Originator RBridge
Derive the flow entropy based on flow entropy specified in the CCM
Management object.
Construct the TRILL CCM OAM header as specified in [8021Q].
TRILL OAM Version TLV MUST be included as the first TLV and set the
flags to applicable values.
Include other TLV specified in [8021Q]
Include following optional TRILL OAM TLVs, where applicable
o Sender ID TLV
Specify the Hop count of the TRILL data frame per user specification
or utilize an applicable Hop count value.
Dispatch the OAM frame to the TRILL data plane for transmission.
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RBridge transmits a total of 4 requests, each at CCM retransmission
interval. At each transmission Session Identification number MUST be
incremented by one.
At the 5 retransmission interval, flow entropy of the CCM packet is
updated to the next flow entropy specified in the CCM Management
Object. If current flow entropy is the last flow entropy specified,
move to the first flow entropy specified and continue the process.
13.3.2. Intermediate RBridge
Intermediate RBridges forward the frame as a normal data frame and
no special handling is required.
13.3.3. Destination RBridge
If the CCM Message is addressed to the local RBridge or multicast
and satisfies OAM identification methods specified in sections 3.2.
then the RBridge data plane forwards the message to the CPU for
further processing.
TRILL OAM application layer further validates the received OAM frame
by examining the presence of OAM-Ethertype at the end of the flow
entropy. Frames that do not contain OAM-Ethertype at the end of the
flow entropy MUST be discarded.
Validate the MD-LEVEL and pass the packet to the Opcode de-
multiplexer. Opcode de-multiplexer delivers CCM packets to the CCM
process.
CCM Process performs processing specified in [8021Q].
Additionally CCM process updates the CCM Management Object with the
sequence number of the received CCM packet. Note: Last received CCM
sequence number and CCM timeout is tracked per each remote MEP.
If CCM timeout is true for the sending remote MEP, then clear the
CCM timeout in the CCM Management object and generate SNMP
notification as specified above.
14. Multiple Fragment Reply
Response Message as described in 4.4.2.1 allows Multiple Fragment
Reply with use of Final Flag. In case of Multiple Fragment Reply,
due to response exceeding MTU size, all messages MUST follow the
procedure defined in this section.
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All Reply Messages MUST be encoded as described in this document.
Same session Identification Number MUST be included in all related
fragments of the same message.
TRILL OAM Application Identifier TLV MUST BE included with the
appropriate Final Flag field. Final Flag, MUST, only be set on the
final fragment of the reply.
15. Security Considerations
For general TRILL related security considerations, please refer to
[RFC6325]. Specific security considerations related methods
presented in this document are currently under investigation.
16. Allocation Considerations
16.1. IEEE Allocation Considerations
The IEEE 802.1 Working Group is requested to allocate a separate
opcode and TLV space within 802.1QCFM messages for TRILL purpose.
16.2. IANA Considerations
- IANA is requested to allocate a multicast MAC address from the
block assigned to TRILL
- Set up sub-registry within the TRILL Parameters registry for block
of TRILL OAM OpCodes -
- Set up sub-registry within the TRILL Parameters registry for TRILL
OAM TLV Types -
- Set up sub-registry within the TRILL Parameters registry for TRILL
OAM return code and return sub codes -
- Request a unicast MAC addressed, reserved for identification of
OAM packets discussed in backward compatibility method (section 3.3.
)
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17. References
17.1. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[RFC5226] Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an
IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 5226,
May 2008.
[RFC6325] Perlman, R., et.al., "Routing Bridges (RBridges): Base
Protocol Specification", RFC 6325, July 2011.
[RFCfgl] D. Eastlake, M. Zhang, P. Agarwal, R. Perlman, D. Dutt,
"TRILL: Fine-Grained Labeling", draft-ietf-trill-fine-
labeling, work in progress.
17.2. Informative References
[RFC6291] Andersson, L., et.al., "Guidelines for the use of the
"OAM" Acronym in the IETF" RFC 6291, June 2011.
[TRILLOAMMIB] "TRILL OAM MIB", To be published.
[RFC4379] Kompella, K. et.al, "Detecting Multi-Protocol Label
Switched (MPLS) Data Plane Failures", RFC 4379, February
2006.
[TRILLOAMREQ] Senevirathne, T., et.al., "Requirements for
Operations, Administration and Maintenance (OAM) in
TRILL", draft-ietf-trill-oam-req, Work in Progress,
November, 2012.
[TRILLOAMFM] Salam, S., et.al., "TRILL OAM Framework", draft-ietf-
trill-oam-framework, Work in Progress, November, 2012.
[RFCclcorrect] Eastlake, Donald, et.al. "TRILL: Clarifications,
Corrections, and Updates, draft-ietf-trill-clear-correct,
July 2012.
[8021Q] IEEE, "Media Access Control (MAC) Bridges and Virtual
Bridged Local Area Networks", IEEE Std 802.1Q-2011,
August, 2011.
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18. Acknowledgments
Work in this document was largely inspired by the directions
provided by Stewart Bryant in finding a common OAM solution between
SDO.
This document was prepared using 2-Word-v2.0.template.dot.
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Authors' Addresses
Tissa Senevirathne
CISCO Systems
375 East Tasman Drive.
San Jose, CA 95134
USA.
Phone: +1 408-853-2291
Email: tsenevir@cisco.com
Samer Salam
CISCO Systems
595 Burrard St. Suite 2123
Vancouver, BC V7X 1J1, Canada
Email: ssalam@cisco.com
Deepak Kumar
CISCO Systems
510 McCarthy Blvd,
Milpitas, CA 95035, USA
Phone : +1 408-853-9760
Email: dekumar@cisco.com
Donald Eastlake
Huawei Technologies
155 Beaver Street
Milford, MA 01757
Phone: +1-508-333-2270
Email: d3e3e3@gmail.com
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Sam Aldrin
Huawei Technologies
2330 Central Express Way
Santa Clara, CA 95951
USA
Email: aldrin.ietf@gmail.com
Yizhou Li
Huawei Technologies
101 Software Avenue,
Nanjing 210012
China
Phone: +86-25-56625375
Email: liyizhou@huawei.com
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