Internet-Draft Abbreviated-Title April 2022
Wang, et al. Expires 18 October 2022 [Page]
Workgroup:
Network Working Group
Internet-Draft:
draft-wang-bess-sbfd-discriminator-02
Published:
Intended Status:
Standards Track
Expires:
Authors:
H. Wang
Huawei
J. Dong
Huawei
G. Mirsky
Ericsson
Y. Huang
Huawei

Advertising S-BFD Discriminators in BGP

Abstract

Seamless Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (S-BFD) is a simplified BFD mechanism. It eliminates most negotiation aspects and provides advantages such as fast configuration injection. S-BFD is especially useful in multi-homing PE scenarios and reduces resource overheads on the dual-homing PEs. Although S-BFD is simpler than BFD, a large number of manual configurations are required when there are a large number of PEs.

This document provides the mechanism of distributing S-BFD discriminators with VPN service routes, which simplifies S-BFD deployment for VPN services.

Requirements Language

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].

Status of This Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.

Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."

This Internet-Draft will expire on 18 October 2022.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction

[RFC7880] defines the Seamless Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (S-BFD) mechanism. S-BFD is a simplified mechanism for using BFD with a large proportion of negotiation aspects eliminated, thus providing benefits such as quick provisioning, as well as improved control and flexibility for network nodes initiating path monitoring. Currently, S-BFD can be used to simplify the service deployment.

During network construction, carriers usually deploy active and standby nodes to improve network reliability. In this way, when a single node is faulty, a protection switchover can be performed quickly. To accelerate fault detection, BFD is generally used. BFD sessions must be deployed on both ends of the BFD session, which occupies resources on both ends of the PE.

[RFC7880] defines Seamless Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (S-BFD), a simplified mechanism for using BFD with a large proportion of negotiation aspects eliminated, thus providing benefits such as quick provisioning, as well as improved control and flexibility for network nodes initiating path monitoring. This mechanism is useful for asymmetric scenarios, such as 3PE scenarios. In dual-homing scenarios, BFD does not need to be deployed to detect single-homing nodes. In this scenario, S-BFD greatly saves resources on the dual-homing side.

To deploy S-BFD, the initiator needs to know the reflector's endpoint and identifier. When a large number of PEs need to be deployed, the deployment is complicated. [RFC7883] and [RFC7884] introduced an IGP-based S-BFD discriminator advertisement mechanism to simplify S-BFD deployment. VPN service may be deployed across inter-area or inter-AS. In this case, the IGP flooding mechanism does not work.

It is recommended to use BGP to distribute BFD discriminator information. BGP can transmit routes across domains, and service routes can drive to generate the end-to-end S-BFD sessions on demand.

2. Terminology

BFD : Bidirectional Forwarding Detection

S-BFD : Seamless Bidirectional Forwarding Detection

APE : Access PE, used to access users

SPE: Service PE, used to support service for users

UCE: User CE

SCE: Service CE

3. Scenarios

In some EVPN deployments, for example, when it spans over multiple domains, only one of a pair of interconnected PEs benefits from monitoring the status of the connection. In such a case, using S-BFD [RFC7880] is advantageous as it reduces the load on one of the PEs while providing the benefit of faster convergence. The following sections provide examples of EVPNs that would benefit from using S-BFD.

For SRv6 services, there are two different service types. One is service over SRv6 BE, the other is service over SRv6 Policy. For the service over SRv6 BE, it will use the VPNSID to resolve the forwarding information. Thus we must generate an S-BFD session to detect the VPNSID's reachability. This is an IP-routed S-BFD. We may use the remote VPNSID's locator as the destination of the S-BFD session. For the service over SRv6 Policy, it will use <nexthop, color> of the service route to resolve an SRv6 Policy. Then we must generate an S-BFD session to detect the reachability of the SR Policy.

3.1. EVPN Layer 3 Service Over SRv6 BE Use Case

         /---------------------\  /--------------------\
         |                     |  |                    |
+----+   | +----+      +-----+ |  |+-----+      +----+ |
|UCE1|---|-|APE1|------|ASBR1|-|--||ASBR3|------|SPE1| |
+----+   | +----+ \    ,-----+ |  |+-----+\    /+----+ |
         |         \  /        |  |        \  /       `|
         | ....     \/         |  |         \/         |', +----+
         |          /\         |  |         /\         |  .|SCE1|
         |         /  \        |  |        /  \        |-` +----+
+----+   | +----+ /    '-----+ |  |+-----+-    '+-----`|
|UCEn|---|-|APEn|------|ASBR2|-|--||ASBR4|------|SPE2| |
+----+   | +----+      +-----+ |  |+-----+      +----+ |
         |                     |  |                    |
         |      AS65001        |  |       AS65002      |
         \---------------------/  \--------------------/
Figure 1: EVPN Layer 3 Service Over SRv6 BE

Figure 1 shows a SRv6 BE based seamless scenario. UCE is single-homed to APE, and SCE is dual-homed to SPE1 and SPE2. The service is across multiple ASes.

SCE1 accesses SPE1 and SE2 through Layer 3 and advertises its private network routes to them. SPE1 and SPE2 encapsulate the routes into Type 5 routes in the EVPN format and sends them to APE1. After receiving Type 5 routes advertised by SPE1 and SPE2, APE1 generates primary and backup entries for the routes to speed up service switchover. In this scenario, the SRv6 BE service mode is used. APE1 will resolve SPE1's VPN routes reachability through the VPNSID. To ensure that APE1 can properly route to PE1, PE1 needs to advertise its own locator route. The advertisement of the locator route is not in the scope of this document.

To speed up fault detection, we may configure an S-BFD session on APE1 to detect SPE1 or SPE2's reachability. In traditional mode, a discriminator needs to be assigned by SPE1 and SPE2, and two S-BFD sessions need to be configured on APE1 to detect the VPN SID's reachability of SPE1 and SPE2. It needs to generate an S-BFD session with the destination set to the VPN SID. To reduce the number of S-BFD sessions, locator-based S-BFD sessions can be used instead of S-BFD sessions for VPNSIDs.

There are a large number of such APEs that exist on the network. Each APE is configured with several S-BFD sessions to detect PE1 and PE2, which increases the deployment complexity.

3.2. EVPN Layer 3 Service Over SPv6 Policy Use Case

         /---------------------\  /--------------------\
         |                     |  |                    |
+----+   | +----+      +-----+ |  |+-----+      +----+ |
|UCE1|---|-|APE1|------|ASBR1|-|--||ASBR3|------|SPE1| |
+----+   | +----+ \    ,-----+ |  |+-----+\    /+----+ |
         |         \  /        |  |        \  /       `|
         | ....     \/         |  |         \/         |', +----+
         |          /\         |  |         /\         |  .|SCE1|
         |         /  \        |  |        /  \        |-` +----+
+----+   | +----+ /    '-----+ |  |+-----+-    '+-----`|
|UCEn|---|-|APEn|------|ASBR2|-|--||ASBR4|------|SPE2| |
+----+   | +----+      +-----+ |  |+-----+      +----+ |
         |                     |  |                    |
         |      AS65001        |  |       AS65002      |
         \---------------------/  \--------------------/
Figure 2: EVPN Layer 3 Service Over SRv6 Policy

Figure 2 shows a SRv6 Policy scenario. SCE1 is dual-homed to SPE1 and SPE2, and UCE1 is accessed to APE1. SPE1, SPE2, and APE1 are cross BGP ASes.

SCE1 accesses SPE1 and SPE2 through Layer 3 and advertises its private network routes to APE1. SPE1 and SPE2 encapsulate the routes into Type 5 routes in the EVPN format and sends them to APE1.

After receiving Type 5 routes advertised by SPE1 and SPE2, APE1 generates primary and backup entries for the routes, speeding up service switchover. APE1 parses the tunnel based on the <nexthop, color> of the service routes advertised by SPE1 and SPE2, and matches an SRv6 Policy. After receiving the traffic from UCE1 to SCE1, APE1 encapsulates and forwards the traffic based on the SRv6 Policy.

An S-BFD session needs to be established for these SRv6 Policy-based forwarding paths to swiftly detect the availability of the paths. When detecting a fault on the SRv6 Policy path of the primary service route, services can be swiftly switched to the backup path, providing more reliable protection for services.

There are a large number of such PEs that exist on the network. Each PE is configured with several S-BFD sessions to detect PE1 and PE2, which increases the deployment complexity.

Certainly, this scenario may also be implemented in other methods. For example, when delivering an SRv6 policy, specify a tunnel to generate an S-BFD session.

4. Procedure

4.1. BGP Encoding

[RFC9026] specifies the "BFD Discriminators" (38) attribute, which is an optional transitive BGP attribute that conveys the Discriminators and other optional attributes used to establish BFD sessions.

The attribute defined in [RFC9026] is used to transmit P2MP BFD session creation information through the BFD Discriminator attribute in MVPN scenarios. For non-multicast services, such as L3VPN services, L2VPN services, and native IP services, BFD discriminators are also required to create an S-BFD session.

The S-BFD Discriminator attribute introduced in this document is defined as follows:

 0                   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
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|    BFD Mode   |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|                       BFD Discriminator                       |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
~                         Optional TLVs                         ~
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 3: Format of the BFD Discriminator Attribute

o BFD Mode:

The BFD Mode field is 1 octet. [RFC9026] defines only the P2MP BFD session for MVPN. This document defines two new types of S-BFD session types based on the preceding scenarios.

As described in the preceding scenario. There are two types of S-BFD sessions for SRv6 services. For service over SRv6 BE, an IP-routed S-BFD session needs to be created to detect the locator route. For service over SRv6 Policy, an S-BFD session for SRv6 Policy path needs to be created to detect the SRv6 Policy path. So two new BFD modes should be introduced here.

S-BFD for SRv6 Locator Session Mode, which is dedicated to detecting the locator. The temporary type is 176, and is to be allocated by IANA.

S-BFD for Common Session Mode, which is for general S-BFD session. The temporary type is 177, and is to be allocated by IANA. This mode is not only for SRv6, but also can be used for other scenarios.

o BFD Discriminators:

The field length is 4 octets. Used to specify the discriminator for S-BFD session.

o Optional TLVs:

Variable-length fields are optional. Indicates the additional information required for creating a S-BFD session. The format is as follows:

 0                   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    |           Value             ...
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 4: Format of the Optional TLV

If a transit node changes the next hop or reassigns a VPN SID when forwarding a route, the transit node needs to use the locally allocated S-BFD discriminator to advertise the S-BFD discriminator attribute. If the transit node does not recognize the S-BFD Discriminator attribute in the learned route and continues to advertise the route to the remote PE, the receiver may use incorrect information when creating an S-BFD session. Therefore, the advertised S-BFD Discriminator attribute needs to carry the IP address for receiver verification.

In this document, S-BFD for SRv6 Locator Session and S-BFD for Common Session must carry IP addresses except discriminators, which reuse the Source IP Address TLV defined in [RFC9026].

If the mode is set to S-BFD for SRv6 Locator Session, the SRv6 Locator address used for the service is carried.

If the mode is set to S-BFD for Common Session, the next-hop address used for the service is carried.

For details about the error handling, see section "Error Handling".

4.2. Router Procedure

In BGP address families, such as L3VPN or EVPN, routes can carry the S-BFD Discriminator attribute as required so that S-BFD sessions can be established based on the attribute. The following uses S-BFD for SRv6 Locator as an example. If mode is set to S-BFD for Common Session, the processing method is similar.

4.2.1. Egress Node Process

As shown in figure 1, the S-BFD discriminator is configured on PE1. After obtaining the information, BGP encapsulates the attribute into the EVPN route and sets the BFD Mode to S-BFD for Locator Session, when advertising the EVPN route. The Discriminator value is local discriminator value. The optional TLV carries the local PE's locator address used by the VPN.

4.2.2. Transit Node Process

Here is the end-to-end SRv6 BE scenario. The ASBR does not re-allocate the VPN SID. Thus, the ASBR does not require to modify the VPN SID, and not to alter the BFD discriminator attribute.

4.2.3. Ingress Node Process

After receiving the EVPN Type 5 routes from PE1 and PE2, PE3 imports the routes to the VRF of PE3 based on the route targets. Routes triggers establish the S-BFD sessions based on <S-BFD discriminator, locator ip>.

Then, routes with the same prefix from PE1 and PE2 form primary and backup paths. When the primary path or the egress node is in fault, S-BFD detects that fault and forms switch to backup path quickly.

To avoid the waste of redundant resources, assume that the ASBR re-assigns the SID in Option B and the ASBR does not recognize the attribute. In this case, the SID and locator carried in the route received by PE3 do not match the Source IP carried in the Optional TLV in the BFD attribute. Therefore, PE3 does not need to establish an S-BFD session to remote PE, which can avoid resource waste.

5. Error handling

Error handling complies with [RFC7606]. In this document, the BFD discriminator information is used only to establish an S-BFD session. Therefore, if the BFD discriminator information is invalid, the BFD attribute will be discard and not transmit to other devices.

For BFD discriminator attribute, the following case will be processed:

o The BFD Discriminator value in receiving BFD Discriminator attribute is 0, the attribute is invalid.

For BFD mode type is S-BFD for SRv6 Locator Session, the following case will be processed:

o The BFD discriminator attribute doesn't contain optional TLV with type set to 1, the attribute is invalid.

o The optional TLV type is 1 but the length is not 16, the attribute is invalid.

o The optional TLV type is 1 but the value is all 0, the attribute is invalid.

o If multiple Source IP Optional TLVs are carried, the first source IP address should be used as the destination to establish an S-BFD session. For EVPN type 2 MAC-IP routes may use the first and the second IP address because it may carry two SRv6 SIDs with different locators. Other source IP addresses should be ignored.

o If a non-Source IP Optional TLV is carried, the Optional TLV will be ignored.

For BFD mode type is S-BFD for Common Session, the following case will be processed:

o The BFD discriminator attribute doesn't contain optional TLV with type set to 1, the attribute is invalid.

o The optional TLV type is 1 but the length is not 4 or 16, the attribute is invalid.

o The optional TLV type is 1 but the value is all 0, the attribute is invalid.

o If multiple Source IP Optional TLVs are carried, only the first source IP address should be used as the destination to establish an S-BFD session. Other source IP addresses should be ignored.

o If a non-Source IP Optional TLV is carried, the Optional TLV will be ignored.

6. IANA Considerations

This document defines two new BFD modes in the BFD Discriminator attribute. The following values are recommended to be assigned by IANA:

Value  Description
----  -------------------------
176   S-BFD for SRv6 Locator Session
177   S-BFD for Common Session

7. Security Considerations

The new S-BFD Discriminators sub-TLV does not introduce any new security risks for BGP.

When creating an S-BFD session, the initiator verifies the S-BFD session based on routing information. This reduces the number of invalid S-BFD sessions and avoid attribute attack.

8. Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank Greg Mirsky for their review and comments.

9. References

9.1. Normative References

[RFC2119]
Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.

9.2. References

[RFC7606]
Chen, E., Ed., Scudder, J., Ed., Mohapatra, P., and K. Patel, "Revised Error Handling for BGP UPDATE Messages", RFC 7606, DOI 10.17487/RFC7606, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7606>.
[RFC7880]
Pignataro, C., Ward, D., Akiya, N., Bhatia, M., and S. Pallagatti, "Seamless Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (S-BFD)", RFC 7880, DOI 10.17487/RFC7880, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7880>.
[RFC7883]
Ginsberg, L., Akiya, N., and M. Chen, "Advertising Seamless Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (S-BFD) Discriminators in IS-IS", RFC 7883, DOI 10.17487/RFC7883, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7883>.
[RFC7884]
Pignataro, C., Bhatia, M., Aldrin, S., and T. Ranganath, "OSPF Extensions to Advertise Seamless Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (S-BFD) Target Discriminators", RFC 7884, DOI 10.17487/RFC7884, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7884>.
[RFC9026]
Morin, T., Ed., Kebler, R., Ed., and G. Mirsky, Ed., "Multicast VPN Fast Upstream Failover", RFC 9026, DOI 10.17487/RFC9026, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9026>.

Authors' Addresses

Haibo Wang
Huawei
No. 156 Beiqing Road
Beijing
100095
P.R. China
Jie Dong
Huawei
No. 156 Beiqing Road
Beijing
100095
P.R. China
Greg Mirsky
Ericsson
Yang Huang
Huawei
No. 156 Beiqing Road
Beijing
100095
P.R. China