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rfc:rfc2171

Network Working Group K. Murakami Request for Comments: 2171 M. Maruyama Category: Informational NTT Laboratories

                                                            June 1997
     MAPOS - Multiple Access Protocol over SONET/SDH  Version 1

Status of this Memo

 This memo provides information for the Internet community.  This memo
 does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of
 this memo is unlimited.

Authors' Note

 This memo documents a multiple access protocol for transmission of
 network-protocol datagrams, encapsulated in High-Level Data Link
 Control (HDLC) frames, over SONET/SDH.  This document is NOT the
 product of an IETF working group nor is it a standards track
 document.  It has not necessarily benefited from the widespread and
 in depth community review that standards track documents receive.

Abstract

 This document describes the protocol MAPOS, Multiple Access Protocol
 over SONET/SDH, for transmitting network-protocol datagrams over
 SONET/SDH.  It focuses on the core protocol -- other documents listed
 in the bibliography may be referenced in conjunction with this
 document to provide support and services for protocols at higher
 layers.

1. Introduction

1.1 SONET/SDH

 The Synchronous Optical Network/Synchronous Digital Hierarchy
 (SONET/SDH) [1][2][3][4] family of ITU-T standard protocols are
 designed to provide common, simple, and flexible interface for
 broadband optical fiber transmission systems.  It enables direct
 octet-synchronous multiplexing of lower rate tributaries.
 SONET/SDH-compliant transmission systems are widely deployed by
 telephone carriers world wide.
 This document defines the MAPOS protocol -- a method for transmitting
 HDLC frames over SONET/SDH. The protocol provides multiple access
 capability to SONET/SDH, an inherently point-to-point link. This
 enables construction of seamless networking environment using
 SONET/SDH as transmission media for both LAN and WAN.

Murakami & Maruyama Informational [Page 1] RFC 2171 MAPOS June 1997

1.2 Possible Configurations

 The MAPOS protocol provides multiple access, broadcast / multicast-
 capable switched LAN environment using SONET/SDH lines as
 transmission media.  Possible configurations of MAPOS system are
 shown in the following diagrams.  In (a), two end nodes are connected
 to each other.  Figure (b) shows a star-topology "SONET-LAN" where
 multiple end nodes are connected to an HDLC frame switch. The frame
 switch forwards packets between nodes and provides multiple access
 capability. In (c), multiple frame switches are linked together,
 creating a switching cluster.
         +------+                                +------+
         | Node +--------------------------------+ Node |
         +------+                                +------+
                  (a) Point-to-Point configuration

Murakami & Maruyama Informational [Page 2] RFC 2171 MAPOS June 1997

         +------+                                +---------------+
         | Node +--------------------------------+               |
         +------+                                |               |
                                                 |               |
         +------+                                |               |
         | Node +--------------------------------+               |
         +------+                                |               |
                                                 | Frame Switch  |
         +------+                                |               |
         | Node +--------------------------------+               |
         +------+                                |               |
                                                 |               |
         +------+                                |               |
         | Node +--------------------------------+               |
         +------+                                +---------------+
               (b) Point-to-Multipoint configuration
         +--------+                      +--------+
         | Frame  +----------------------+ Frame  |
         | Switch +--------+    +--------+ Switch |
         +--+-----+      +-+----+-+      +--------+
            |            | Frame  |                      +--------+
         +--+-----+      | Switch |      +--------+      | Frame  |
         | Frame  |      +-----+--+      | Frame  +------+ Switch |
         | Switch |            +---------+ Switch |      ++-------+
         +-------++                      +--------+       |
                 |________________________________________|
                (c) Switching cluster configuration
                 Figure 1. Possible configurations
 Each port on a switch has an unique identifier within the switch. A
 node connected to a switch port must inherit the address of the port.
 That is, the node address is equal to the port identifier and is
 unique within the switch.
 In a switch cluster, a node address is subnetted. The high-order
 bits, the part where the corresponding bits in the "subnet mask" are
 1, indicate the switch address.  The remaining low-order bits
 indicate the unique node address within the switch. The two fields
 form an unique address for a given node.
 In either case, the address may be configured manually into a node
 interface, or automatically by the address assignment mechanism
 described in [5].

Murakami & Maruyama Informational [Page 3] RFC 2171 MAPOS June 1997

 Note that any two components may be connected either directly, or via
 a long-haul SONET/SDH leased line.

1.3 Packet Transmission

 The protocol is connection-less -- when a node wish to communicate
 with some other node, it simply fills-in the destination address of
 an HDLC frame, places it in one or more SONET/SDH payloads, and sends
 it over a SONET/SDH link.
 The switch forwards the frame to its destination based on the
 destination address. In a switch cluster, the frame may be forwarded
 by multiple switches and is eventually delivered to the specified
 node.  Broadcast and multicast are also supported. Frames with an
 invalid destination address are silently discarded.
 Like ethernet, the multiple access capability is provided by a switch
 or a switch cluster. Since MAPOS is a link layer protocol, it is
 independent of the upper layer protocols. That is, it can support any
 network layer protocols such as IP. MAPOS IPv4 support is described
 in [6].

2. Physical Layer

 This protocol treats the underlying end-to-end SONET/SDH transmission
 link as if it was a plain, transparent channel.  It sends HDLC frames
 in SONET/SDH payloads, and expects them to arrive at the other end
 unaltered.
 Each node and switch should terminate SONET/SDH overhead such as
 section overhead, line overhead, and path overhead according to the
 specification of SONET/SDH. Unfortunately, SONET and SDH overhead
 interpretations are not identical. In addition, some SONET/SDH
 implementations utilize some overhead bytes in proprietary manner.
 The detail of the interpretation is beyond the scope of this
 document.  Appendix A describes some of the most significant
 differences among SONET, SDH, and their implementations that often
 causes interoperability problems.  Implementors of SONET/SDH
 interfaces are strongly encouraged to be aware of such differences,
 and provide workaround options in their products.

Murakami & Maruyama Informational [Page 4] RFC 2171 MAPOS June 1997

3. Data Link Layer

3.1 HDLC Frame Format

 MAPOS uses the same HDLC-like framing as used in PPP-over-SONET,
 described in RFC-1662[7].  Figure 2 shows the frame format.  Logical
 Link Control (LLC), and Sublayer/Sub-Network Access Protocol (SNAP)
 are not used.  It does not include the bytes for transparency.  The
 fields are transmitted from left to right.
         +----------+----------+----------+----------+
         |          |          |          |          |
         |   Flag   | Address  | Control  | Protocol |
         | 01111110 |  8bits   | 00000011 |  16 bits |
         +----------+----------+----------+----------+
            +-------------+------------+----------+-----------
            |             |            |          | Inter-frame
            | Information |    FCS     |   Flag   | fill or next
            |             | 16/32 bits | 01111110 | address
            +-------------+------------+----------+------------
                      Figure 2.  Frame format
   Flag Sequence
   Flag sequence is used for frame synchronization.  Each frame begins
   and ends with a flag sequence 01111110 (0x7E).  If a frame
   immediately follows another, one flag sequence may be treated as
   the end of the preceding frame and the beginning of the immediately
   following frame.  When the line is idle, the flag sequence is to be
   transmitted continuously on the line.
   Address
   The address field contains the destination HDLC address.  A frame
   is forwarded by a switch based on this field.  It is 8 bits wide.
   The LSB indicates the end of this field, and must always be 1.  The
   MSB is used to indicate if the frame is a unicast or a multicast
   frame.  The MSB of 0 means unicast, with the remaining six bits
   indicating the destination node address. MSB of 1 means multicast,
   with the remaining six bits indicating the group address.  The
   address 11111111 (0xFF) means that the frame is a broadcast frame.
   The address 00000001 (0x01) is reserved to identify the control
   processor inside a switch.  Frames with an invalid address should
   be silently discarded.

Murakami & Maruyama Informational [Page 5] RFC 2171 MAPOS June 1997

           +-------------+-+
           | | | | | | | | |
           | | node addr |1|
           +-+-----------+-+
            ^             ^
            |             |
            |             +------- EA bit (always 1)
            |
            1 : broadcast, multicast
            0 : unicast
                      Figure 3 Address format
   Control
   The control field contains single octet 00000011 (0x03) which, in
   HDLC nomenclature, means that the frame is an Unnumbered
   Information (UI) with the Poll/Final (P/F) bit set to zero.  Frames
   with any other control field values should be silently discarded.
   Protocol
   The protocol field indicates the protocol to which the datagram
   encapsulated in the information field belongs.  It conforms to the
   ISO 3309 extension mechanism, and the value for this field may be
   obtained from the most recent "Assigned Numbers" [8] and "MAPOS
   Version 1 Assigned Numbers" [9].
   Information
   The information field contains the datagram for the protocol
   specified in the protocol field.  The length of this field may
   vary, but shall not exceed 65,280 (64K - 256) octets.
   Frame Check Sequence (FCS)
   By default, the frame check sequence (FCS) field is 16-bits long.
   Optionally, 32 bit FCS may be used instead.  The FCS is calculated
   over all bits of the address, control, protocol, and information
   fields prior to escape conversions.  The least significant octet of
   the result is transmitted first as it contains the coefficient of
   the highest term.
   Inter-frame fill
   A sending station must continuously transmit the flag sequence as
   inter-frame fill after the FCS field.  The inter-frame flag
   sequences must be silently discarded by the receiving station.

Murakami & Maruyama Informational [Page 6] RFC 2171 MAPOS June 1997

   When an under-run occurs during DMA in the sending station, it must
   abort the frame transfer and continuously send the flag sequence to
   indicate the error.

3.2 Octet-Synchronous Framing

 MAPOS uses an octet stuffing procedure because it treats SONET/SDH as
 a byte-oriented synchronous link.  Since SONET/SDH provides
 transparency, Async-Control-Character-Map (ACCM) is not used.  HDLC
 frames are mapped into the SONET/SDH payload as follows.
 Each HDLC frame is separated from another frame by one or more flag
 sequence, 01111110 (0x7E).  An escape sequence is defined to escape
 the flag sequence and itself.  Prior to sending the frame, but after
 the FCS computation, every occurrence of 01111110 (0x7E) other than
 the flags is to be converted to the sequence 01111101 01011110 (0x7D
 0x5E), and the sequence 01111101 (0x7D) is to be converted to the
 sequence 01111101 01011101 (0x7D 0x5D).  Upon receiving a frame, this
 conversion must be reversed prior to FCS computation.

4. Further Reading

 To fully utilize MAPOS protocol, it is useful to reference other
 documents[5][6][9][10] in conjunction with this document.

5. Security Considerations

 Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

References

 [1]  CCITT Recommendation G.707: Synchronous Digital Hierarchy Bit
      Rates (1990).
 [2]  CCITT Recommendation G.708: Network Node Interface for
      Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (1990).
 [3]  CCITT Recommendation G.709: Synchronous Multiplexing Structure
      (1990).
 [4]  American National Standard for Telecommunications - Digital
      Hierarchy - Optical Interface Rates and Formats Specification,
      ANSI T1.105-1991.
 [5]  Murakami, K. and M. Maruyama, "A MAPOS version 1 Extension -
      Node Switch Protocol," RFC2173, June, 1997.

Murakami & Maruyama Informational [Page 7] RFC 2171 MAPOS June 1997

 [6]  Murakami, K. and M. Maruyama, "IPv4 over MAPOS Version 1,"
      RFC2176, June, 1997.
 [7]  Simpson, W., editor, "PPP in HDLC-like Framing," RFC1662, July
      1994.
 [8]  IANA, "IANA-Assignments,"
      http://www.iana.org/iana/assignments.html
 [9]  Maruyama, M. and K. Murakami, "MAPOS Version 1 Assigned
      Numbers," RFC2172, June 1997.
 [10] Murakami, K. and M. Maruyama, "A MAPOS version 1 Extension -
      Switch Switch Protocol," RFC2174, June, 1997.

Acknowledgements

 The authors would like to acknowledge the contributions and
 thoughtful suggestions of John P. Mullaney, Clark Bremer, Masayuki
 Kobayashi, Paul Francis, Toshiaki Yoshida, and Takahiro Sajima.

Author's Address

           Ken Murakami
           NTT Software Laboratories
           3-9-11, Midori-cho
           Musashino-shi
           Tokyo-180, Japan
           E-mail: murakami@ntt-20.ecl.net
           Mitsuru Maruyama
           NTT Software Laboratories
           3-9-11, Midori-cho
           Musashino-shi
           Tokyo-180, Japan
           E-mail: mitsuru@ntt-20.ecl.net

Murakami & Maruyama Informational [Page 8] RFC 2171 MAPOS June 1997

APPENDIX A. Differences among SONET, SDH, and their Implementations

 This section briefly describes the major differences among SONET
 which is an ANSI standard, SDH, an ITU-T standard, and their
 implementations.
   AU pointer (H1, H2, H3)
   The AU pointer consists of bytes H1, H2, and H3. The bits 5 and 6
   of the H1 byte are called "SS bits," and are used to indicate the
   offset into the payload where the beginning of a SPE is located.
   (Note that "SPE" is a SONET term -- SDH calls it "VC.")  In the
   case of OC-3c, SONET sets the SS bits of the second and the third
   H1 bytes to 0, whereas SDH sets them to 10 for AU-4, and 01 for
   AU-31.  Although the SS bits may be ignored at the receiving
   station, some transmission systems discards SONET/SDH frames with
   SS bits that it doesn't expect -- the sending station should be
   aware of this, and include a configuration option to handle it.
   Z1 and Z2
   The Z bytes are reserved in SONET/SDH.  Some transmission systems,
   however, use them in a proprietary manner.  SONET uses Z1 for Line
   Error Monitoring.  NTT, a carrier in Japan, utilized Z1 for
   Automatic Protection Switching (APS.)
   DCC Bytes
   The D bytes are called the Data Communication channel (DCC), and
   are defined for maintenance and operations.  However, some carriers
   and vendors use them in a proprietary manner.  For example, NTT's
   STM-1 UNI uses the D4, D5, and D6 bytes to transfer section and
   path maintenance information.

Murakami & Maruyama Informational [Page 9]

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