Internet-Draft | MVPN in IPv6 Infrastructure | May 2024 |
Duan, et al. | Expires 25 November 2024 | [Page] |
MVPN deployment faces some problems while used in provider's IPv6 infrastructure networks. This document describes these problems, and corresponding solutions.¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
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BGP MVPN procedure is defined in [RFC6514]. As a mature MVPN technology, it has been accepted by most operators and vendors. In [RFC6515], BGP MVPN is updated for IPv6 infrastructure networks. However, the deployment of BGP MVPN in IPv6 network still faces some problems. This document describes these problems and corresponding solutions.¶
Readers of this document are assumed to be familiar with the terminology and concepts of the documents listed as Normative References.¶
In [RFC6514] and [RFC6515], the following issues are critical for IPv6 infrastructure scenarios while a non-segmented inter-AS P-tunnel is being established between root PE and its leaf PEs, of which the reason is that the Source AS field (4 octets) of C-multicast route cannot hold a IPv6 address (16 octets).¶
In order to distinguish the C-multicast routes for a specific multicast c-flow (C-S, C-G) sent to different root PEs, section 11.1.3 of [RFC6514] proposed that "To support non-segmented inter-AS tunnels, the Source AS field in the C-multicast route is set to value of the Originating Router's IP Address field of the found Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route". However, in NLRI of C-multicast route, Source AS field is 4 octets in length, while the Originating Router's IP Address field of Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route is 16 octets length in provider's IPv6 networks. The 4-octet Source AS field cannot hold the Originating Router's IP Address in IPv6 network.¶
In order to control the propagation of C-multicast routes between different ASes, section 11.2 of [RFC6514] proposed that "Instead of matching the RD and Source AS carried in the C-multicast route against the RD and Source AS of an Inter-AS I-PMSI A-D route, the ASBR should match it against the RD and the Originating Router's IP Address of the Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes". However, Source AS field in NLRI of C-multicast route cannot be translated to the Originating Router's IP Address of the Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes in provider's IPv6 networks, because of the mismatch of their field length.¶
In the process of evolution to IPv6, IPv4 and IPv6 infrastructure addresses will coexist in the provider's network. The following figure is an example of BGP MVPN evolution to IPv6.¶
During the evolution process, IPv4 and IPv6 parallel BGP sessions are established between Provider Edge routers and route reflectors(RR). If the BGP MVPN routes are sent to all IPv4 and IPv6 BGP peers without any control, the number of the PATHs of these routes will be doubled with each reflection while BGP ADD-PATH [RFC7911] procedure is enabled on route reflectors.¶
The solution to distinguish the C-multicast routes sent to different root PEs is related to the way to distinguish UMH routes for a specific multicast source (C-S) sent from different root PEs, which the later is not a problem of IPv6 infrastructure specific. In [RFC6514], it recommended that the RDs of root PEs of a same MVPN were configured distinctly to perform selective forwarding selection, which was broken by GTM procedures defined in [RFC7716] because the UMH routes sent from different root PEs through BGP SAFI 1 or SAFI 2 lack RD informations. There are also some MVPN deployment cases that the RDs of root PEs may be configuered with a same value for provisioning reasons. According to above description, whether the RDs of PEs of a MVPN are same or not are two different deployment cases. This document addresses the C-multicast routes distinguishing issue for both cases. How to distinguish UMH routes in the cases of root PEs with same RD is out of the scope of this document, because it is not IPv6 infrastructure specific.¶
To support non-segmented inter-AS tunnels in IPv6 infrastructure network, the C-multicast route NLRI is redefined as follow:¶
+-----------------------------------+ | RD (8 octets) | +-----------------------------------+ | Root Distinguisher (4 octets) | +-----------------------------------+ | Multicast Source Length (1 octet) | +-----------------------------------+ | Multicast Source (variable) | +-----------------------------------+ | Multicast Group Length (1 octet) | +-----------------------------------+ | Multicast Group (variable) | +-----------------------------------+¶
In the above figure, the Root Distinguisher field replaces the Source As field defined in [RFC6514]. When constructing a C-multicast route, leaf PE follows the following specification:¶
For the cases of IPv4 infrastructure or Intra-AS P-tunnel establishment in IPv6 infrastructure, the Root Distinguisher field MUST be treated as Source AS field and section 11.1.3 of [RFC6514] MUST be fully followed.¶
For non-segmented Inter-AS P-tunnel establishment in IPv6 infrastructure scenarios, if the RDs of ingress PEs are distinct (which can be detected from UMH routes), the Root Distinguisher field MUST be filled with the number of ingress AS.¶
For non-segmented Inter-AS P-tunnel establishment in IPv6 infrastructure scenarios, if the RDs of ingress PEs are same, a 4-octet distinct value MUST be assigned by leaf PE for each root PE. For example, each leaf PE uses a same well-known / configured hash algorithm to transform the IPv6 root IP to 4-octet distinct value for each ingress PE, or a provisioning method is used to globally assign different 4-octet IDs for each ingress PE. The Root Distinguisher field in C-multicast NLRI is filled with this value and a distinct C-multicast route will be sent to individual upstream root PE.¶
The solution to control the propagation of C-multicast route between different ASes is to use the IPv6 address included in IPv6 VRF Route Import Extended Community insteading of Source AS field of C-multicast NLRI while locating Intra-AS AD route of the corresponding root PE the C-multicast sent to on ASBRs. This document recommends that the Local Administrator field of IPv6 VRF Route Import Extended Community is set to a non-zero value by root PEs even in GTM scenarios, of which the value is local assigned distinctly by root PE for both each MVPN and GTM instance. Accordingly, the IPv6 root address of a C-multicast route can be extracted from the only IPv6 VRF Route Import Extended Community carring a non-zero Local Administrator field.¶
When receiving a C-multicast route from E-BGP neighbors, the ASBR checks whether an IPv6 VRF Route Import Extended Community with a non-zero Local Administrator field is included in this route and takes following actions:¶
If the IPv6 VRF Route Import Extended Community does not exist in the C-multicast route, the ASBR will treat the Root Distinguisher field as Source AS field and follows the description in section 11.2 of [RFC6514].¶
If the IPv6 VRF Route Import Extended Community does exist in the C-multicast route, the ASBR will match the IPv6 address carried in this extended community and the RD in C-multicast route NLRI against the Originating Router's IP Address and the RD of the Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes. If the corresponding Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route exists, the ASBR will propagate the C-multicast route in its local AS.¶
To reduce BGP MVPN routes in Parallel IPv4 and IPv6 BGP sessions scenario, the following actions should be taken by sender PEs:¶
For Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D Route, S-PMSI A-D Route and Leaf A-D Route, if the Originating Router's IP Address field in the route is filled with an IPv6 address, it will be sent to the IPv6 BGP neighbors; otherwise, it will be sent to the IPv4 BGP neighbors.¶
For Inter-AS I-PMSI A-D Route and Source Active A-D Route, it is sent to both IPv6 BGP neighbors and IPv4 BGP neighbors.¶
For C-multicast route, if the IPv6 VRF Route Import Extended Community exists in the route, it will be sent to the IPv6 BGP neighbors; otherwise, it will be sent to the IPv4 BGP neighbors.¶
In the route reflectors, the part of routes which are received from IPv6 BGP neighbors will be reflected to other IPv6 BGP neighbors and the other part of routes which are received from IPv4 BGP neighbors will be reflected to other IPv4 BGP neighbors.¶
This document introduces no new security considerations beyond those already specified in [RFC6514] and [RFC6515].¶
This document contains no actions for IANA.¶
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