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caowayne@huawei mach@huawei MPLS WG, IETF 70

Head Node Protection Extensions to RSVP-TE for LSP Tunnels draft-cao-mpls-te-p2mp-head-protection-01. caowayne@huawei.com mach@huawei.com MPLS WG, IETF 70. Background and Motivation. Background Multicast applications are being deployed

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caowayne@huawei mach@huawei MPLS WG, IETF 70

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  1. Head Node Protection Extensions to RSVP-TE for LSP Tunnelsdraft-cao-mpls-te-p2mp-head-protection-01 caowayne@huawei.com mach@huawei.com MPLS WG, IETF 70

  2. Background and Motivation • Background • Multicast applications are being deployed • TE P2MP LSP Protocol is published, FRR mechanism mature but not applicable for head node failure • Why introduce head node protection ? • Head node failure will cause serious (all subscriber) outages • 1+1 backup is inefficient • Edge more vulnerable than core nodes; higher maintenance requirement • Head node protection objectives • Protect against single head node failure • Achieve 50ms protection • Reuse existing FRR mechanism • Minimize the impact to the devices on the P2MP LSP, only a few nodes should be involved

  3. H1 R1 R2 L1 H2 R3 R4 L2 Scenario of TE P2MP Head Protection MHN MP BHN MP MHN: Main Head Node BHN: Back Head Node • Source device is multi-homed to MHN (Major head node) and BHN (Backup Head Node) • BHN builds backup LSP to all MHN’s downstream LSRs • BHN does not forward the traffic but monitors the MHN status • BHN forwards traffic to all MPs in case of MHN node failure

  4. Solution Overview • Backup LSP Construction • BHN is assigned by MHN • Protected LSP information is synchronized between MHN and BHN by PATH messages • Features • Re-use FRR mechanism • In the View of MP, the protection is similar to link failure protection • Downstream devices of MP will not be affected • Backup LSPs start from BHN to all MPs

  5. 0 1 2 3 Length (bytes) Class-Num C-type Protected Head Backup Head Flags Extension to RSVP-TE • Head Node Protection Object ( For IPv4 ) • This object is are carried in PATH and RESV message between MHN and BHN • Protected Head • IPv4 address identifying the RSVP-TE LSP Head node. • Backup Head • IPv4 address identifying the LSR selected as BHN • Flags • 0x01(bit0): Head protection desired • 0x02(bit1): Head protection available

  6. Applicability Consideration • Topology Requirement • Source device has to be multi-homed to MHN and BHN, or • Two source connected to MHN and BHN independently • BHN must have path to all MPs • MHN node failure detection • Multiple, diversely routed, BFD connections between MHN and BHN may be a solution • Node failure detection can be vendor specific

  7. Next Step? • Revertive Operation • How does MHN learn about LSPs after failure recovery ? • Topology maintenance issue if failure isn’t quickly resolved (recovered from) • Pruning and grafting issues • Bandwidth Reservation Adjustment

  8. Q & A Thanks! MPLS WG, IETF 70

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