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rfc:rfc8581

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) S. Donovan Request for Comments: 8581 Oracle Updates: 7683 August 2019 Category: Standards Track ISSN: 2070-1721

        Diameter Agent Overload and the Peer Overload Report

Abstract

 This specification documents an extension to the Diameter Overload
 Indication Conveyance (DOIC), a base solution for Diameter overload
 defined in RFC 7683.  The extension defines the Peer Overload report
 type.  The initial use case for the peer report is the handling of
 occurrences of overload of a Diameter Agent.

Status of This Memo

 This is an Internet Standards Track document.
 This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
 received public review and has been approved for publication by the
 Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on
 Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8581.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2019 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
 document authors.  All rights reserved.
 This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
 Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
 (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
 publication of this document.  Please review these documents
 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
 to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
 include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
 the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
 described in the Simplified BSD License.

Donovan Standards Track [Page 1] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

Table of Contents

 1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   3
 2.  Requirements Language . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
 3.  Terminology and Abbreviations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
 4.  Peer-Report Use Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
   4.1.  Diameter Agent Overload Use Cases . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
     4.1.1.  Single Agent  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
     4.1.2.  Redundant Agents  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   6
     4.1.3.  Agent Chains  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
   4.2.  Diameter Endpoint Use Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
     4.2.1.  Hop-by-Hop Abatement Algorithms . . . . . . . . . . .   8
 5.  Interaction Between Host/Realm and Peer Overload Reports  . .   9
 6.  Peer-Report Behavior  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
   6.1.  Capability Announcement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
     6.1.1.  Reacting-Node Behavior  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
     6.1.2.  Reporting-Node Behavior . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
   6.2.  Peer Overload Report Handling . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  10
     6.2.1.  Overload Control State  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  10
     6.2.2.  Reporting-Node Maintenance of Peer-Report OCS . . . .  11
     6.2.3.  Reacting-Node Maintenance of Peer-Report OCS  . . . .  12
     6.2.4.  Peer-Report Reporting-Node Behavior . . . . . . . . .  13
     6.2.5.  Peer-Report Reacting-Node Behavior  . . . . . . . . .  13
 7.  Peer-Report AVPs  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  14
   7.1.  OC-Supported-Features AVP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  14
     7.1.1.  OC-Feature-Vector AVP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15
     7.1.2.  OC-Peer-Algo AVP  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15
   7.2.  OC-OLR AVP  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15
     7.2.1.  OC-Report-Type AVP  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
   7.3.  SourceID AVP  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
   7.4.  Attribute-Value Pair Flag Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
 8.  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17
 9.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17
 10. References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
   10.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
   10.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
 Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
 Author's Address  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19

Donovan Standards Track [Page 2] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

1. Introduction

 This specification documents an extension to the Diameter Overload
 Indication Conveyance (DOIC), a base solution for Diameter overload
 [RFC7683].  The extension defines the Peer Overload report type.  The
 initial use case for the peer report is the handling of occurrences
 of overload of a Diameter Agent.
 This document defines the behavior of Diameter nodes when Diameter
 Agents enter an overload condition and send an Overload report
 requesting a reduction of traffic.  It also defines a new Overload
 report type, the Peer Overload report type, which is used for
 handling agent overload conditions.  The Peer Overload report type is
 defined in a generic fashion so that it can also be used for other
 Diameter overload scenarios.
 The base Diameter overload specification [RFC7683] addresses the
 handling of overload when a Diameter endpoint (a Diameter Client or
 Diameter Server as defined in [RFC6733]) becomes overloaded.
 In the base specification, the goal is to handle abatement of the
 overload occurrence as close to the source of the Diameter traffic as
 feasible.  When possible, this is done at the originator of the
 traffic, generally referred to as a Diameter Client.  A Diameter
 Agent might also handle the overload mitigation.  For instance, a
 Diameter Agent might handle Diameter overload mitigation when it
 knows that a Diameter Client does not support the DOIC extension.
 This document extends the base Diameter endpoint overload
 specification to address the case when Diameter Agents become
 overloaded.  Just as is the case with other Diameter nodes, i.e.,
 Diameter Clients and Diameter Servers, surges in Diameter traffic can
 cause a Diameter Agent to be asked to handle more Diameter traffic
 than it was configured to handle.  For a more detailed discussion of
 what can cause the overload of Diameter nodes, refer to the Diameter
 overload requirements [RFC7068].
 This document defines a new Overload report type to communicate
 occurrences of agent overload.  This report type works for the
 Diameter overload loss abatement algorithm defined in [RFC7683] and
 is expected to work for other overload abatement algorithms defined
 in extensions to the DOIC solution.

Donovan Standards Track [Page 3] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

2. Requirements Language

 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.

3. Terminology and Abbreviations

 AVP
    Attribute-Value Pair
 Diameter Node
    A Diameter Client, Diameter Server, or Diameter Agent [RFC6733]
 Diameter Endpoint
    A Diameter Client or Diameter Server [RFC6733]
 Diameter Agent
    A Diameter node that provides relay, proxy, redirect, or
    translation services [RFC6733]
 Reporting Node
    A DOIC node that sends an Overload report in a Diameter answer
    message
 Reacting Node
    A DOIC node that receives and acts on a DOIC Overload report
 DOIC Node
    A Diameter node that supports the DOIC solution defined in
    [RFC7683]

Donovan Standards Track [Page 4] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

4. Peer-Report Use Cases

 This section outlines representative use cases for the peer report
 used to communicate agent overload.
 There are two primary classes of use cases currently identified:
 those involving the overload of agents, and those involving the
 overload of Diameter endpoints.  In both cases, the goal is to use an
 overload algorithm that controls traffic sent towards peers.

4.1. Diameter Agent Overload Use Cases

 The peer report needs to support the use cases described below.
 In the figures in this section, elements labeled "c" are Diameter
 Clients, elements labeled "a" are Diameter Agents, and elements
 labeled "s" are Diameter Servers.

4.1.1. Single Agent

 This use case is illustrated in Figure 1.  In this case, the client
 sends all traffic through the single agent.  If there is a failure in
 the agent, then the client is unable to send Diameter traffic toward
 the server.
                            +-+    +-+    +-+
                            |c|----|a|----|s|
                            +-+    +-+    +-+
                               Figure 1
 A more likely case for the use of agents is illustrated in Figure 2.
 In this case, there are multiple servers behind the single agent.
 The client sends all traffic through the agent, and the agent
 determines how to distribute the traffic to the servers based on
 local routing and load distribution policy.
                                          +-+
                                        --|s|
                            +-+    +-+ /  +-+
                            |c|----|a|-   ...
                            +-+    +-+ \  +-+
                                        --|s|
                                          +-+
                               Figure 2

Donovan Standards Track [Page 5] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

 In both of these cases, the occurrence of overload in the single
 agent must by handled by the client similarly to as if the client
 were handling the overload of a directly connected server.  When the
 agent becomes overloaded, it will insert an Overload report in answer
 messages flowing to the client.  This Overload report will contain a
 requested reduction in the amount of traffic sent to the agent.  The
 client will apply overload abatement behavior as defined in the base
 Diameter overload specification [RFC7683] or in the extension
 document that defines the indicated overload abatement algorithm.
 This will result in the throttling of the abated traffic that would
 have been sent to the agent, as there is no alternative route.  The
 client sends an appropriate error response to the originator of the
 request.

4.1.2. Redundant Agents

 Figure 3 and Figure 4 illustrate a second, and more likely, type of
 deployment scenario involving agents.  In both of these cases, the
 client has Diameter connections to two agents.
 Figure 3 illustrates a client that has a primary connection to one of
 the agents (agent a1) and a secondary connection to the other agent
 (agent a2).  In this scenario, under normal circumstances, the client
 will use the primary connection for all traffic.  The secondary
 connection is used when there is a failure scenario of some sort.
                                   +--+   +-+
                                 --|a1|---|s|
                            +-+ /  +--+\ /+-+
                            |c|-        x
                            +-+ .  +--+/ \+-+
                                 ..|a2|---|s|
                                   +--+   +-+
                               Figure 3

Donovan Standards Track [Page 6] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

 The second case, in Figure 4, illustrates the case where the
 connections to the agents are both actively used.  In this case, the
 client will have local distribution policy to determine the traffic
 sent through each client.
                                   +--+   +-+
                                 --|a1|---|s|
                            +-+ /  +--+\ /+-+
                            |c|-        x
                            +-+ \  +--+/ \+-+
                                 --|a2|---|s|
                                   +--+   +-+
                               Figure 4
 In the case where one of the agents in the above scenarios become
 overloaded, the client should reduce the amount of traffic sent to
 the overloaded agent by the amount requested.  This traffic should
 instead be routed through the non-overloaded agent.  For example,
 assume that the overloaded agent requests a reduction of 10 percent.
 The client should send 10 percent of the traffic that would have been
 routed to the overloaded agent through the non-overloaded agent.
 When the client has both an active and a standby connection to the
 two agents, then an alternative strategy for responding to an
 Overload report from an agent is to change the standby connection to
 active.  This will result in all traffic being routed through the new
 active connection.
 In the case where both agents are reporting overload, the client may
 need to start decreasing the total traffic sent to the agents.  This
 would be done in a similar fashion as that discussed in
 Section 4.1.1.  The amount of traffic depends on the combined
 reduction requested by the two agents.

4.1.3. Agent Chains

 There are also deployment scenarios where there can be multiple
 Diameter Agents between Diameter Clients and Diameter Servers.  An
 example of this type of deployment is when there are Diameter Agents
 between administrative domains.

Donovan Standards Track [Page 7] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

 Figure 5 illustrates one such network deployment case.  Note that
 while this figure shows a maximum of two agents being involved in a
 Diameter transaction, it is possible for more than two agents to be
 in the path of a transaction.
                              +---+     +---+   +-+
                            --|a11|-----|a21|---|s|
                       +-+ /  +---+ \ / +---+\ /+-+
                       |c|-          x        x
                       +-+ \  +---+ / \ +---+/ \+-+
                            --|a12|-----|a22|---|s|
                              +---+     +---+   +-+
                               Figure 5
 The handling of overload for one or both agents, a11 or a12 in this
 case, is equivalent to that discussed in Section 4.1.2.
 The overload of agents a21 and a22 must be handled by the previous-
 hop agents.  As such, agents a11 and a12 must handle the overload
 mitigation logic when receiving an Agent Overload report from agents
 a21 and a22.
 The handling of Peer Overload reports is similar to that discussed in
 Section 4.1.2.  If the overload can be addressed using diversion,
 then this approach should be taken.
 If both of the agents have requested a reduction in traffic, then the
 previous-hop agent must start throttling the appropriate number of
 transactions.  When throttling requests, an agent uses the same error
 responses as defined in the base DOIC specification [RFC7683].

4.2. Diameter Endpoint Use Cases

 This section outlines use cases for the Peer Overload report
 involving Diameter Clients and Diameter Servers.

4.2.1. Hop-by-Hop Abatement Algorithms

 It is envisioned that abatement algorithms will be defined that will
 support the option for Diameter endpoints to send peer reports.  For
 instance, it is envisioned that one usage scenario for the rate
 algorithm [RFC8582] will involve abatement being done on a hop-by-hop
 basis.
 This rate-deployment scenario would involve Diameter endpoints
 generating peer reports and selecting the rate algorithm for
 abatement of overload conditions.

Donovan Standards Track [Page 8] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

5. Interaction Between Host/Realm and Peer Overload Reports

 It is possible for both an agent and an endpoint in the path of a
 transaction to be overloaded at the same time.  When this occurs,
 Diameter entities need to handle multiple Overload reports.  In this
 scenario, the reacting node should first handle the throttling of the
 overloaded Host or Realm.  Any messages that survive throttling due
 to Host or Realm reports should then go through abatement for the
 Peer Overload report.  In this scenario, when doing abatement on the
 peer report, the reacting node SHOULD take into consideration the
 number of messages already throttled by the handling of the host/
 realm report abatement.
    Note: The goal is to avoid traffic oscillations that might result
    from throttling of messages for both the host/realm Overload
    reports and the PEER Overload reports.  This is especially a
    concern if both reports indicate the loss abatement algorithm.

6. Peer-Report Behavior

 This section defines the normative behavior associated with the Peer-
 Report extension to the DOIC solution.

6.1. Capability Announcement

6.1.1. Reacting-Node Behavior

 When sending a Diameter request, a DOIC node that supports the
 OC_PEER_REPORT feature (as defined in Section 7.1.1) MUST include in
 the OC-Supported-Features AVP an OC-Feature-Vector AVP with the
 OC_PEER_REPORT bit set.
 When sending a request, a DOIC node that supports the OC_PEER_REPORT
 feature MUST include a SourceID AVP in the OC-Supported-Features AVP
 with its own DiameterIdentity.
 When a Diameter Agent relays a request that includes a SourceID AVP
 in the OC-Supported-Features AVP, if the Diameter Agent supports the
 OC_PEER_REPORT feature, then it MUST remove the received SourceID AVP
 and replace it with a SourceID AVP containing its own
 DiameterIdentity.

6.1.2. Reporting-Node Behavior

 When receiving a request, a DOIC node that supports the
 OC_PEER_REPORT feature MUST update transaction state with an
 indication of whether or not the peer from which the request was
 received supports the OC_PEER_REPORT feature.

Donovan Standards Track [Page 9] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

    Note: The transaction state is used when the DOIC node is acting
    as a peer-report reporting node and needs to send OC-OLR AVP
    reports of type "PEER-REPORT" in answer messages.  The Peer
    Overload reports are only included in answer messages being sent
    to peers that support the OC_PEER_REPORT feature.
 The peer supports the OC_PEER_REPORT feature if the received request
 contains an OC-Supported-Features AVP with the OC-Feature-Vector with
 the OC_PEER_REPORT feature bit set and with a SourceID AVP with a
 value that matches the DiameterIdentity of the peer from which the
 request was received.
 When an agent relays an answer message, a reporting node that
 supports the OC_PEER_REPORT feature MUST strip any SourceID AVP from
 the OC-Supported-Features AVP.
 When sending an answer message, a reporting node that supports the
 OC_PEER_REPORT feature MUST determine if the peer to which the answer
 is to be sent supports the OC_PEER_REPORT feature.
 If the peer supports the OC_PEER_REPORT feature, then the reporting
 node MUST indicate support for the feature in the OC-Supported-
 Features AVP.
 If the peer supports the OC_PEER_REPORT feature, then the reporting
 node MUST insert the SourceID AVP in the OC-Supported-Features AVP in
 the answer message.
 If the peer supports the OC_PEER_REPORT feature, then the reporting
 node MUST insert the OC-Peer-Algo AVP in the OC-Supported-Features
 AVP.  The OC-Peer-Algo AVP MUST indicate the overload abatement
 algorithm that the reporting node wants the reacting nodes to use
 should the reporting node send a Peer Overload report as a result of
 becoming overloaded.

6.2. Peer Overload Report Handling

 This section defines the behavior for the handling of Overload
 reports of type "PEER-REPORT".

6.2.1. Overload Control State

 This section describes the Overload Control State (OCS) that might be
 maintained by both the peer-report reporting node and the peer-report
 reacting node.
 This is an extension of the OCS handling defined in [RFC7683].

Donovan Standards Track [Page 10] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

6.2.1.1. Reporting-Node Peer-Report OCS

 A DOIC node that supports the OC_PEER_REPORT feature SHOULD maintain
 Reporting-Node OCS, as defined in [RFC7683] and extended here.
 If different abatement-specific contents are sent to each peer, then
 the reporting node MUST maintain a separate reporting-node peer-
 report OCS entry per peer, to which a Peer Overload report is sent.
    Note: The rate-overload abatement algorithm allows for different
    rates to be sent to each peer.

6.2.1.2. Reacting-Node Peer-Report OCS

 In addition to OCS maintained as defined in [RFC7683], a reacting
 node that supports the OC_PEER_REPORT feature maintains the following
 OCS per supported Diameter application:
    A peer-report OCS entry for each peer to which it sends requests
 A peer-report OCS entry is identified by both the Application-ID and
 the peer's DiameterIdentity.
 The peer-report OCS entry includes the following information (the
 actual information stored is an implementation decision):
    Sequence number (as received in the OC-OLR AVP)
    Time of expiry (derived from the OC-Validity-Duration AVP received
    in the OC-OLR AVP and time of reception of the message carrying
    the OC-OLR AVP)
    Selected abatement algorithm (as received in the OC-Supported-
    Features AVP)
    Input data that is specific to the abatement algorithm (as
    received in the OC-OLR AVP, e.g., OC-Reduction-Percentage for the
    loss abatement algorithm)

6.2.2. Reporting-Node Maintenance of Peer-Report OCS

 All rules for managing the reporting-node OCS entries defined in
 [RFC7683] apply to the peer report.

Donovan Standards Track [Page 11] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

6.2.3. Reacting-Node Maintenance of Peer-Report OCS

 When a reacting node receives an OC-OLR AVP with a report type of
 "PEER-REPORT", it MUST determine if the report was generated by the
 Diameter peer from which the report was received.
 If a reacting node receives an OC-OLR AVP of type "PEER-REPORT" and
 the SourceID matches the DiameterIdentity of the Diameter peer from
 which the response message was received, then the report was
 generated by a Diameter peer.
 If a reacting node receives an OC-OLR AVP of type "PEER-REPORT" and
 the SourceID does not match the DiameterIdentity of the Diameter peer
 from which the response message was received, then the reacting node
 MUST ignore the Overload report.
    Note: Under normal circumstances, a Diameter node will not add a
    peer report when sending to a peer that does not support this
    extension.  This requirement is to handle the case where peer
    reports are erroneously or maliciously inserted into response
    messages.
 If the peer report was received from a Diameter peer, then the
 reacting node MUST determine if it is for an existing or new overload
 condition.
 The peer report is for an existing overload condition if the reacting
 node has an OCS that matches the received peer report.  For a peer
 report, this means it matches the Application-ID and the peer's
 DiameterIdentity in an existing OCS entry.
 If the peer report is for an existing overload condition, then it
 MUST determine if the peer report is a retransmission or an update to
 the existing OLR.
 If the sequence number for the received peer report is greater than
 the sequence number stored in the matching OCS entry, then the
 reacting node MUST update the matching OCS entry.
 If the sequence number for the received peer report is less than or
 equal to the sequence number in the matching OCS entry, then the
 reacting node MUST silently ignore the received peer report.  The
 matching OCS MUST NOT be updated in this case.
 If the received peer report is for a new overload condition, then the
 reacting node MUST generate a new OCS entry for the overload
 condition.

Donovan Standards Track [Page 12] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

 For a peer report, this means it creates an OCS entry with a
 DiameterIdentity from the SourceID AVP in the received OC-OLR AVP.
 If the received peer report contains a validity duration of zero
 ("0"), then the reacting node MUST update the OCS entry as being
 expired.
 The reacting node does not delete an OCS when receiving an answer
 message that does not contain an OC-OLR AVP (i.e., the absence of OLR
 means "no change").
 The reacting node sets the abatement algorithm based on the OC-Peer-
 Algo AVP in the received OC-Supported-Features AVP.

6.2.4. Peer-Report Reporting-Node Behavior

 When there is an existing reporting-node peer-report OCS entry, the
 reporting node MUST include an OC-OLR AVP with a report type of
 "PEER-REPORT" using the contents of the reporting-node peer-report
 OCS entry in all answer messages sent by the reporting node to peers
 that support the OC_PEER_REPORT feature.
    Note: The reporting node determines if a peer supports the
    OC_PEER_REPORT feature based on the indication recorded in the
    reporting node's transaction state.
 The reporting node MUST include its DiameterIdentity in the SourceID
 AVP in the OC-OLR AVP.  This is used by DOIC nodes that support the
 OC_PEER_REPORT feature to determine if the report was received from a
 Diameter peer.
 The reporting agent must follow all other overload reporting-node
 behaviors outlined in the DOIC specification.

6.2.5. Peer-Report Reacting-Node Behavior

 A reacting node supporting this extension MUST support the receipt of
 multiple Overload reports in a single message.  The message might
 include a Host Overload report, a Realm Overload report, and/or a
 Peer Overload report.
 When a reacting node sends a request, it MUST determine if that
 request matches an active OCS.
 In all cases, if the reacting node is an agent, then it MUST strip
 the Peer-Report OC-OLR AVP from the message.

Donovan Standards Track [Page 13] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

 If the request matches an active OCS, then the reacting node MUST
 apply abatement treatment to the request.  The abatement treatment
 applied depends on the abatement algorithm indicated in the OCS.
 For Peer Overload Reports, the preferred abatement treatment is
 diversion.  As such, the reacting node SHOULD attempt to divert
 requests identified as needing abatement to other peers.
 If there is not sufficient capacity to divert abated traffic, then
 the reacting node MUST throttle the necessary requests to fit within
 the available capacity of the peers able to handle the requests.
 If the abatement treatment results in throttling of the request and
 if the reacting node is an agent, then the agent MUST send an
 appropriate error response as defined in [RFC7683].
 In the case that the OCS entry validity duration expires or has a
 validity duration of zero ("0"), meaning that if the reporting node
 has explicitly signaled the end of the overload condition, then
 abatement associated with the OCS entry MUST be ended in a controlled
 fashion.

7. Peer-Report AVPs

7.1. OC-Supported-Features AVP

 This extension adds a new feature to the OC-Feature-Vector AVP.  This
 feature indication shows support for handling of Peer Overload
 reports.  Peer Overload reports are used by agents to indicate the
 need for overload abatement handling by the agent's peer.
 A supporting node must also include the SourceID AVP in the
 OC-Supported-Features capability AVP.
 This AVP contains the DiameterIdentity of the node that supports the
 OC_PEER_REPORT feature.  This AVP is used to determine if support for
 the Peer Overload report is in an adjacent node.  The value of this
 AVP should be the same Diameter identity used as part of the Diameter
 Capabilities Exchange procedure defined in [RFC7683].
 This extension also adds the OC-Peer-Algo AVP to the OC-Supported-
 Features AVP.  This AVP is used by a reporting node to indicate the
 abatement algorithm it will use for Peer Overload reports.

Donovan Standards Track [Page 14] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

  OC-Supported-Features ::= < AVP Header: 621 >
                            [ OC-Feature-Vector ]
                            [ SourceID ]
                            [ OC-Peer-Algo]
                          * [ AVP ]

7.1.1. OC-Feature-Vector AVP

 The Peer-Report feature defines a new feature bit for the OC-Feature-
 Vector AVP.
 OC_PEER_REPORT (0x0000000000000010)
    When this flag is set by a DOIC node, it indicates that the DOIC
    node supports the Peer Overload report type.

7.1.2. OC-Peer-Algo AVP

 The OC-Peer-Algo AVP (AVP code 648) is of type Unsigned64 and
 contains a 64-bit flags field of announced capabilities for a DOIC
 node.  The value of zero ("0") is reserved.
 Feature bits defined for the OC-Feature-Vector AVP and associated
 with overload abatement algorithms are reused for this AVP.

7.2. OC-OLR AVP

 This extension makes no changes to the OC_Sequence_Number or
 OC_Validity_Duration AVPs in the OC-OLR AVP.  These AVPs can also be
 used in Peer Overload reports.
 The OC_PEER_REPORT feature extends the base Diameter overload
 specification by defining a new Overload report type of "PEER-
 REPORT".  See Section 7.6 of [RFC7683] for a description of the
 OC-Report-Type AVP.
 The peer report MUST also include the Diameter identity of the agent
 that generated the report.  This is necessary to handle the case
 where there is a non-supporting agent between the reporting node and
 the reacting node.  Without the indication of the agent that
 generated the peer report, the reacting node could erroneously assume
 that the report applied to the non-supporting node.  This could, in
 turn, result in unnecessary traffic being either diverted or
 throttled.
 The SourceID AVP is used in the OC-OLR AVP to carry this
 DiameterIdentity.

Donovan Standards Track [Page 15] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

    OC-OLR ::= < AVP Header: 623 >
               < OC-Sequence-Number >
               < OC-Report-Type >
               [ OC-Reduction-Percentage ]
               [ OC-Validity-Duration ]
               [ SourceID ]
             * [ AVP ]

7.2.1. OC-Report-Type AVP

 The following new report type is defined for the OC-Report-Type AVP.
 PEER_REPORT 2:  The overload treatment should apply to all requests
    bound for the peer identified in the Overload report.  If the peer
    identified in the peer report is not a peer to the reacting
    endpoint, then the peer report should be stripped and not acted
    upon.

7.3. SourceID AVP

 The SourceID AVP (AVP code 649) is of type DiameterIdentity and is
 inserted by a Diameter node to indicate the source of the AVP in
 which it is a part.
 In the case of peer reports, the SourceID AVP indicates the node that
 supports this feature (in the OC-Supported-Features AVP) or the node
 that generates an overload report with a report type of "PEER-REPORT"
 (in the OC-OLR AVP).
 It contains the DiameterIdentity of the inserting node.  This is used
 by other Diameter nodes to determine the node that inserted the
 enclosing AVP that contains the SourceID AVP.

7.4. Attribute-Value Pair Flag Rules

                                                           +---------+
                                                           |AVP flag |
                                                           |rules    |
                                                           +----+----+
                           AVP   Section                   |    |MUST|
   Attribute Name          Code  Defined Value Type        |MUST| NOT|
  +--------------------------------------------------------+----+----+
  |OC-Peer-Algo            648    7.1.2  Unsigned64        |    | V  |
  |SourceID                649    7.3    DiameterIdentity  |    | V  |
  +--------------------------------------------------------+----+----+

Donovan Standards Track [Page 16] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

8. IANA Considerations

 IANA has registered the following values in the "Authentication,
 Authorization, and Accounting (AAA) Parameters" registry:
    Two new AVP codes are defined in Section 7.4.
    Note that the values used for the OC-Peer-Algo AVP are a subset of
    the "OC-Feature-Vector AVP Values (code 622)" registry.  Only the
    values in that registry that apply to overload abatement
    algorithms apply to the OC-Peer-Algo AVP.
    A new OC-Feature-Vector AVP value is defined in Section 7.1.1.
    A new OC-Report-Type AVP value is defined in Section 7.2.1.

9. Security Considerations

 Agent overload is an extension to the base Diameter Overload
 mechanism.  As such, all of the security considerations outlined in
 [RFC7683] apply to the agent overload scenarios.
 It is possible that the malicious insertion of an peer report could
 have a bigger impact on a Diameter network as agents can be
 concentration points in a Diameter network.  Where an endpoint report
 would impact the traffic sent to a single Diameter Server, for
 example, a peer report could throttle all traffic to the Diameter
 network.
 This impact is amplified in a Diameter agent that sits at the edge of
 a Diameter network that serves as the entry point from all other
 Diameter networks.
 The impacts of this attack, as well as the mitigation strategies, are
 the same as those outlined in [RFC7683].

Donovan Standards Track [Page 17] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

10. References

10.1. Normative References

 [RFC6733]  Fajardo, V., Ed., Arkko, J., Loughney, J., and G. Zorn,
            Ed., "Diameter Base Protocol", RFC 6733,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC6733, October 2012,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6733>.
 [RFC7683]  Korhonen, J., Ed., Donovan, S., Ed., Campbell, B., and L.
            Morand, "Diameter Overload Indication Conveyance",
            RFC 7683, DOI 10.17487/RFC7683, October 2015,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7683>.
 [RFC8582]  Donovan, S., Ed. and E. Noel, "Diameter Overload Rate
            Control", RFC 8582, DOI 10.17487/RFC8582, August 2019,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8582>.

10.2. Informative References

 [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
            Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
            DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
            <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
 [RFC7068]  McMurry, E. and B. Campbell, "Diameter Overload Control
            Requirements", RFC 7068, DOI 10.17487/RFC7068, November
            2013, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7068>.
 [RFC8174]  Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
            2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
            May 2017, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.

Acknowledgements

 The author would like to thank Adam Roach and Eric McMurry for the
 work done in defining a comprehensive Diameter overload solution in
 draft-roach-dime-overload-ctrl-03.txt.
 The author would also like to thank Ben Campbell for his insights and
 review of early versions of this document.

Donovan Standards Track [Page 18] RFC 8581 Diameter Agent Overload and Peer Report August 2019

Author's Address

 Steve Donovan
 Oracle
 7460 Warren Parkway, Suite 300
 Frisco, Texas  75034
 United States of America
 Email: srdonovan@usdonovans.com

Donovan Standards Track [Page 19]

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