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rfc:rfc2966

Network Working Group T. Li Request for Comments: 2966 Procket Networks Category: Informational T. Przygienda

                                                               Redback
                                                               H. Smit
                                                      Procket Networks
                                                          October 2000
        Domain-wide Prefix Distribution with Two-Level IS-IS

Status of this Memo

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

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

 This document describes extensions to the Intermediate System to
 Intermediate System (IS-IS) protocol to support optimal routing
 within a two-level domain.  The IS-IS protocol is specified in ISO
 10589, with extensions for supporting IPv4 (Internet Protocol)
 specified in RFC 1195 [2].
 This document extends the semantics presented in RFC 1195 so that a
 routing domain running with both level 1 and level 2 Intermediate
 Systems (IS) [routers] can distribute IP prefixes between level 1 and
 level 2 and vice versa.  This distribution requires certain
 restrictions to insure that persistent forwarding loops do not form.
 The goal of this domain-wide prefix distribution is to increase the
 granularity of the routing information within the domain.

1. Introduction

 An IS-IS routing domain (a.k.a., an autonomous system running IS-IS)
 can be partitioned into multiple level 1 (L1) areas, and a level 2
 (L2) connected subset of the topology that interconnects all of the
 L1 areas.  Within each L1 area, all routers exchange link state
 information.  L2 routers also exchange L2 link state information to
 compute routes between areas.
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 RFC 1195 [2] defines the Type, Length and Value (TLV) tuples that are
 used to transport IPv4 routing information in IS-IS.  RFC 1195 also
 specifies the semantics and procedures for interactions between
 levels.  Specifically, routers in a L1 area will exchange information
 within the L1 area.  For IP destinations not found in the prefixes in
 the L1 database, the L1 router should forward packets to the nearest
 router that is in both L1 and L2 (i.e., an L1L2 router) with the
 "attached bit" set in its L1 Link State Protocol Data Unit (LSP).
 Also per RFC 1195, an L1L2 router should be manually configured with
 a set of prefixes that summarizes the IP prefixes reachable in that
 L1 area.  These summaries are injected into L2.  RFC 1195 specifies
 no further interactions between L1 and L2 for IPv4 prefixes.

1.1 Motivations for domain-wide prefix distribution

 The mechanisms specified in RFC 1195 are appropriate in many
 situations, and lead to excellent scalability properties.  However,
 in certain circumstances, the domain administrator may wish to
 sacrifice some amount of scalability and distribute more specific
 information than is described by RFC 1195.  This section discusses
 the various reasons why the domain administrator may wish to make
 such a tradeoff.
 One major reason for distributing more prefix information is to
 improve the quality of the resulting routes.  A well know property of
 prefix summarization or any abstraction mechanism is that it
 necessarily results in a loss of information.  This loss of
 information in turn results in the computation of a route based upon
 less information, which will frequently result in routes that are not
 optimal.
 A simple example can serve to demonstrate this adequately.  Suppose
 that a L1 area has two L1L2 routers that both advertise a single
 summary of all prefixes within the L1 area.  To reach a destination
 inside the L1 area, any other L2 router is going to compute the
 shortest path to one of the two L1L2 routers for that area.  Suppose,
 for example, that both of the L1L2 routers are equidistant from the
 L2 source, and that the L2 source arbitrarily selects one L1L2
 router.  This router may not be the optimal router when viewed from
 the L1 topology.  In fact, it may be the case that the path from the
 selected L1L2 router to the destination router may traverse the L1L2
 router that was not selected.  If more detailed topological
 information or more detailed metric information was available to the
 L2 source router, it could make a more optimal route computation.
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 This situation is symmetric in that an L1 router has no information
 about prefixes in L2 or within a different L1 area.  In using the
 nearest L1L2 router, that L1L2 is effectively injecting a default
 route without metric information into the L1 area.  The route
 computation that the L1 router performs is similarly suboptimal.
 Besides the optimality of the routes computed, there are two other
 significant drivers for the domain wide distribution of prefix
 information.
 When a router learns multiple possible paths to external destinations
 via BGP, it will select only one of those routes to be installed in
 the forwarding table.  One of the factors in the BGP route selection
 is the IGP cost to the BGP next hop address.  Many ISP networks
 depend on this technique, which is known as "shortest exit routing".
 If a L1 router does not know the exact IGP metric to all BGP speakers
 in other L1 areas, it cannot do effective shortest exit routing.
 The third driver is the current practice of using the IGP (IS-IS)
 metric as part of the BGP Multi-Exit Discriminator (MED).  The value
 in the MED is advertised to other domains and is used to inform other
 domains of the optimal entry point into the current domain.  Current
 practice is to take the IS-IS metric and insert it as the MED value.
 This tends to cause external traffic to enter the domain at the point
 closest to the exit router.  Note that the receiving domain may,
 based upon policy, choose to ignore the MED that is advertised.
 However, current practice is to distribute the IGP metric in this way
 in order to optimize routing wherever possible.  This is possible in
 current networks that only are a single area, but becomes problematic
 if hierarchy is to be installed into the network.  This is again
 because the loss of end-to-end metric information means that the MED
 value will not reflect the true distance across the advertising
 domain.  Full distribution of prefix information within the domain
 would alleviate this problem as it would allow accurate computation
 of the IS-IS metric across the domain, resulting in an accurate value
 presented in the MED.

1.2 Scalability

 The disadvantage to performing the domain-wide prefix distribution
 described above is that it has an impact to the scalability of IS-IS.
 Areas within IS-IS help scalability in that LSPs are contained within
 a single area.  This limits the size of the link state database, that
 in turn limits the complexity of the shortest path computation.
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 Further, the summarization of the prefix information aids scalability
 in that the abstraction of the prefix information removes the sheer
 number of data items to be transported and the number of routes to be
 computed.
 It should be noted quite strongly that the distribution of prefixes
 on a domain wide basis impacts the scalability of IS-IS in the second
 respect.  It will increase the number of prefixes throughout the
 domain.  This will result in increased memory consumption,
 transmission requirements and computation requirements throughout the
 domain.
 It must also be noted that the domain-wide distribution of prefixes
 has no effect whatsoever on the first aspect of scalability, namely
 the existence of areas and the limitation of the distribution of the
 link state database.
 Thus, the net result is that the introduction of domain-wide prefix
 distribution into a formerly flat, single area network is a clear
 benefit to the scalability of that network.  However, it is a
 compromise and does not provide the maximum scalability available
 with IS-IS.  Domains that choose to make use of this facility should
 be aware of the tradeoff that they are making between scalability and
 optimality and provision and monitor their networks accordingly.
 Normal provisioning guidelines that would apply to a fully
 hierarchical deployment of IS-IS will not apply to this type of
 configuration.

2. Proposed syntax and semantics for L2→L1 inter-area routes

 This document defines the syntax of how to advertise level 2 routes
 in level 1 LSPs.  The encoding is an extension of the encoding in RFC
 1195.
 To some extent, in IS-IS the level 2 backbone can be seen as a
 separate area itself.  RFC 1195 defines that L1L2 routers can
 advertise IP routes that were learned via L1 routing into L2.  These
 routes can be regarded as inter-area routes.  RFC 1195 defines that
 these L1->L2 inter-area routes must be advertised in L2 LSPs in the
 "IP Internal Reachability Information" TLV (TLV 128).  Intra-area L2
 routes are also advertised in L2 LSPs in an "IP Internal Reachability
 Information" TLV.  Therefore, L1->L2 inter-area routes are
 indistinguishable from L2 intra-area routes.
 RFC 1195 does not define L2->L1 inter-area routes.  A simple
 extension would be to allow a L1L2 router to advertise routes learned
 via L2 routing in its L1 LSP.  However, to prevent routing-loops,
 L1L2 routers must never advertise L2->L1 inter-area routes that they
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 learn via L1 routing, back into L2.  Therefore, there must be a way
 to distinguish L2->L1 inter-area routes from L1 intra-area routes.
 Draft-ietf-isis-traffic-01.txt defines the "up/down bit" for this
 purpose.  RFC 1195 defines TLVs 128 and 130 to contain IP routes.
 TVLs 128 and 130 have a metric field that consists of 4 TOS metrics.
 The first metric, the so-called "default metric", has the high-order
 bit reserved (bit 8).  Routers must set this bit to zero on
 transmission, and ignore it on receipt.
 This document redefines this high-order bit in the default metric
 field in TLVs 128 and 130 to be the up/down bit.  L1L2 routers must
 set this bit to one for prefixes that are derived from L2 routing and
 are advertised into L1 LSPs.  The bit must be set to zero for all
 other IP prefixes in L1 or L2 LSPs.  Prefixes with the up/down bit
 set that are learned via L1 routing, must never be advertised by L1L2
 routers back into L2.

2.1 Clarification of external route-type and external metric-type

 RFC 1195 defines two TLVs for carrying IP prefixes.  TLV 128 is
 defined as "IP Internal Reachability Information", and should be used
 to carry IP prefixes that are directly connected to IS-IS routers.
 TLV 130 is defined as "IP External Reachability Information", and
 should be used to carry routes learned from outside the IS-IS domain.
 RFC 1195 documents TLV type 130 only for level 2 LSPs.
 RFC 1195 also defines two types of metrics.  Metrics of the internal
 metric-type should be used when the metric is comparable to metrics
 used to weigh links inside the ISIS domain.  Metrics of the external
 metric-type should be used if the metric of an IP prefix cannot be
 directly compared to internal metrics. External metric-type can only
 be used for external IP prefixes.  A direct result is that metrics of
 external metric-type should never be seen in TLV 128.
 To prevent confusion, this document states again that when a router
 computes IP routes, it must give the same preference to IP routes
 advertised in an "IP Internal Reachability Information" TLV and IP
 routes advertised in an "IP External Reachability Information" TLV.
 RFC 1195 states this quite clearly in the note in paragraph 3.10.2,
 item 2c).  This document does not alter this rule of preference.
     NOTE: Internal routes (routes to destinations announced in the
     "IP Internal Reachability Information" field), and external
     routes using internal metrics (routes to destinations announced
     in the "IP External Reachability Information" field, with a
     metric of type "internal") are treated identically for the
     purpose of the order of preference of routes, and the Dijkstra
     calculation.
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 However, IP routes advertised in "IP External Reachability
 Information" with external metric-type must be given less preference
 than the same IP routes advertised with internal-metric type,
 regardless of the value of the metrics.
 While IS-IS routers must not give different preference to IP prefixes
 learned via "IP Internal Reachability Information" and "IP External
 Reachability Information" when executing the Dijkstra calculation,
 routers that implement multiple IGPs are free to use this distinction
 between internal and external routes when comparing routes derived
 from different IGPs for inclusion in their global RIB.

2.2 Definition of external IP prefixes in level 1 LSPs

 RFC 1195 does not define the "IP External Reachability Information"
 TLV for L1 LSPs.  However, there is no reason why an IS-IS
 implementation could not allow for redistribution of external routes
 into L1.  Some IS-IS implementations already allow network
 administrators to do this.  This document loosens the restrictions in
 RFC 1195, and allows for the inclusion of the "IP External
 Reachability Information" TLV in L1 LSPs.
 RFC 1195 defines that IP routes learned via L1 routing must always be
 advertised in L2 LSPs in a "IP Internal Reachability Information"
 TLV.  Now that this document allows "IP External Reachability
 Information" TLVs in L1 LSPs, and allows for the advertisement of
 routes learned via L2 routing into L1, the above rule needs a
 extensions.
 When a L1L2 router advertises a L1 route into L2, where that L1 route
 was learned via a prefix advertised in a "IP External Reachability
 Information" TLV, that L1L2 router should advertise that prefix in
 its L2 LSP within an "IP External Reachability Information" TLV.  L1
 routes learned via an "IP Internal Reachability Information" TLV
 should still be advertised within a "IP Internal Reachability
 Information" TLV.  These rules should also be applied when
 advertising IP routes derived from L2 routing into L1. Of course in
 this case also the up/down bit must be set.
 RFC 1195 defines that if a router sees the same external prefix
 advertised by two or more routers with the same external metric, it
 must select the route that is advertised by the router that is
 closest to itself.  It should be noted that now that external routes
 can be advertised from L1 into L2, and vice versa, that the router
 that advertises an external prefix in its LSP might not be the router
 that originally injected this prefix into the IS-IS domain.
 Therefore, it is less useful to advertise external routes with
 external metrics into other levels.
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3. Types of IP routes in IS-IS and their order of preference

 RFC 1195 and this document defines several ways of advertising IP
 routes in IS-IS. There are four variables involved.
 1) The level of the LSP in which the route is advertised.  There are
    currently two possible values: level 1 and level 2
 2) The route-type, which can be derived from the type of TLV in which
    the prefix is advertised.  Internal routes are advertised in IP
    Internal Reachability Information TLVs (TLV 128), and external
    routes are advertised in IP External Reachability Information TLVs
    (TLV 130).
 3) The metric-type: Internal or External. The metric-type is derived
    from the Internal/External metric-type bit in the metric field
    (bit 7).
 4) The fact whether this route is leaked down in the hierarchy, and
    thus can not be advertised back up.  This information can be
    derived from the newly defined up/down bit in the default metric
    field.

3.1 Overview of all types of IP prefixes in IS-IS Link State PDUs

 The combination IP Internal Reachability Information and external
 metric-type is not allowed. Also the up/down bit is never set in L2
 LSPs.  This leaves us with 8 different types of IP advertisements in
 IS-IS.  However, there are more than 8 reasons for IP prefixes to be
 advertised in IS-IS.  The following tables describe the types of IP
 prefixes and how they are encoded.
 1) L1 intra-area routes
  These are advertised in L1 LSPs, in TLV 128.
  The up/down bit is set to zero, metric-type is internal metric.
  These IP prefixes are directly connected to the advertising router.
 2) L1 external routes
  These are advertised in L1 LSPs, in TLV 130.
  The up/down bit is set to zero, metric-type is internal metric.
  These IP prefixes are learned from other IGPs, and are usually not
  directly connected to the advertising router.
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 3) L2 intra-area routes
  These are advertised in L2 LSPs, in TLV 128.
  The up/down bit is set to zero, metric-type is internal metric.
  These IP prefixes are directly connected to the advertising router.
  These prefixes can not be distinguished from L1->L2 inter-area
  routes.
 4) L2 external routes
  These are advertised in L2 LSPs, in TLV 130.
  The up/down bit is set to zero, metric-type is internal metric.
  These IP prefixes are learned from other IGPs, and are usually not
  directly connected to the advertising router.  These prefixes can
  not be distinguished from L1->L2 inter-area external routes.
 5) L1->L2 inter-area routes
  These are advertised in L2 LSPs, in TLV 128.
  The up/down bit is set to zero, metric-type is internal metric.
  These IP prefixes are learned via L1 routing, and were derived
  during the L1 SPF computation from prefixes advertised in L1 LSPs in
  TLV 128.  These prefixes can not be distinguished from L2 intra-area
  routes.
 6) L1->L2 inter-area external routes
  These are advertised in L2 LSPs, in TLV 130.
  The up/down bit is set to zero, metric-type is internal metric.
  These IP prefixes are learned via L1 routing, and were derived
  during the L1 SPF computation from prefixes advertised in L1 LSPs in
  TLV 130.  These prefixes can not be distinguished from L2 external
  routes.
 7) L2->L1 inter-area routes
  These are advertised in L1 LSPs, in TLV 128.
  The up/down bit is set to one, metric-type is internal metric.
  These IP prefixes are learned via L2 routing, and were derived
  during the L2 SPF computation from prefixes advertised in TLV 128.
 8) L2->L1 inter-area external routes
  These are advertised in L1 LSPs, in TLV 130.
  The up/down bit is set to one, metric-type is internal metric.
  These IP prefixes are learned via L2 routing, and were derived
  during the L2 SPF computation from prefixes advertised in L2 LSPs in
  TLV 130.
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 9) L1 external routes with external metric
  These are advertised in L1 LSPs, in TLV 130.
  The up/down bit is set to zero, metric-type is external metric.
  These IP prefixes are learned from other IGPs, and are usually not
  directly connected to the advertising router.
 10) L2 external routes with external metric
  These are advertised in L2 LSPs, in TLV 130.
  The up/down bit is set to zero, metric-type is external metric.
  These IP prefixes are learned from other IGPs, and are usually not
  directly connected to the advertising router.  These prefixes can
  not be distinguished from L1->L2 inter-area external routes with
  external metric.
 11) L1->L2 inter-area external routes with external metric
  These are advertised in L2 LSPs, in TLV 130.
  The up/down bit is set to zero, metric-type is external metric.
  These IP prefixes are learned via L1 routing, and were derived
  during the L1 SPF computation from prefixes advertised in L1 LSPs in
  TLV 130 with external metrics.  These prefixes can not be
  distinguished from L2 external routes with external metric.
 12) L2->L1 inter-area external routes with external metric
  These are advertised in L1 LSPs, in TLV 130.
  The up/down bit is set to one, metric-type is external metric.
  These IP prefixes are learned via L2 routing, and were derived
  during the L1 SPF computation from prefixes advertised in L2 LSPs in
  TLV 130 with external metrics.

3.2 Order of preference for all types of IP routes in IS-IS

 Unfortunately IS-IS cannot depend on metrics alone for route
 selection.  Some types of routes must always preferred over others,
 regardless of the costs that were computed in the Dijkstra
 calculation.  One of the reasons for this is that inter-area routes
 can only be advertised with a maximum metric of 63.  Another reason
 is that this maximum value of 63 does not mean infinity (e.g. like a
 hop count of 16 in RIP denotes unreachable).  Introducing a value for
 infinity cost in IS-IS inter-area routes would introduce counting-
 to-infinity behavior via two or more L1L2 routers, which would have a
 bad impact on network stability.
 The order of preference of IP routes in IS-IS is based on a few
 assumptions.
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  1. RFC 1195 defines that routes derived from L1 routing are preferred

over routes derived from L2 routing.

  1. The note in RFC 1195 paragraph 3.10.2, item 2c) defines that

internal routes with internal metric-type and external prefixes

   with internal metric-type have the same preference.
 - RFC 1195 defines that external routes with internal metric-type are
   preferred over external routes with external metric type.
 - Routes derived from L2 routing are preferred over L2->L1 routes
   derived from L1 routing.
 Based on these assumptions, this document defines the following route
 preferences.
  1) L1 intra-area routes with internal metric
     L1 external routes with internal metric
  2) L2 intra-area routes with internal metric
     L2 external routes with internal metric
     L1->L2 inter-area routes with internal metric
     L1->L2 inter-area external routes with internal metric
  3) L2->L1 inter-area routes with internal metric
     L2->L1 inter-area external routes with internal metric
  4) L1 external routes with external metric
  5) L2 external routes with external metric
     L1->L2 inter-area external routes with external metric
  6) L2->L1 inter-area external routes with external metric

3.3 Additional notes on what prefixes to accept or advertise

 Paragraphs 4.1 and 4.2 enumerate all used IP route types in IS-IS.
 Besides these defined route types, the encoding used would allow for
 a few more potential combinations.  One of them is the combination of
 "IP Internal Reachability Information" and external metric type.
 This combination should never be used when building an LSP.  Upon
 receipt of an IP prefix with this combination, routers must ignore
 this prefix.
 Another issue would be the usage of the up/down bit in L2 LSPs.
 Because IS-IS is currently defined with two levels of hierarchy,
 there should never be a need to set the up/down bit in L2 LSPs.
 However, if IS-IS would ever be extended with more than two levels of
 hierarchy, L2-only (or L1L2) routers will need to be able to accept
 L2 IP routes with the up/down bit set.  Therefore, it is recommended
 that implementations ignore the up/down bit in L2 LSPs, and accept
 the prefixes in L2 LSPs regardless whether the up/down bit is set.
 This will allow for simpler migration once more than two levels of
 hierarchy are defined.
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RFC 2966 Domain-wide Prefix Distribution October 2000

 Another detail that implementors should be aware of is the fact that
 L1L2 routers should only advertise in their L2 LSP those L1 routes
 that they use for forwarding themselves.  They should not
 unconditionally advertise into L2 all prefixes from LSPs in the L1
 database.
 Not all prefixes need to be advertised up or down the hierarchy.
 Implementations might allow for additional manual filtering or
 summarization to further bring down the number of inter-area prefixes
 they advertise in their LSPs.  It is also recommended that the
 default configuration of L1L2 routers is to not advertise any L2
 routes into L1 (see also paragraph 5.0).

4. Inter-operability with older implementations

 The solution in this document is not fully compatible with RFC 1195.
 It is an extension to RFC 1195.  If routers do not use the new
 functionality of external L1 routes, nor L2->L1 inter-area routes,
 older implementations that strictly follow RFC 1195 will be
 compatible with newer implementations that follow this document.
 Implementations that do not accept the "IP External Reachability
 Information" TLV in L1 LSPs will not be able to compute external L1
 routes.  This could cause routing loops between L1-only routers that
 do understand external L1 routes for a particular destination, and
 L1-only routers that use the default route pointing the closest
 attached L1L2 router for that destination.
 Implementations that follow RFC 1195 should ignore bit 8 in the
 default metric field when computing routes.  Therefore, even older
 implementations that do not know of the up/down bit should be able to
 accept the new L2->L1 inter-area routes.  These older implementations
 will install the new L2->L1 inter-area routes as L1 intra-area
 routes, but that in itself does not cause routing loops among L1-only
 routers.
 However, it is vital that the up/down bit is recognized by L1L2
 routers.  As has been stated before, L1L2 routers must never
 advertise L2->L1 inter-area routes back into L2.  Therefore, if L2
 routes are advertised down into L1 area, it is required that all L1L2
 routers in that area run software that understands the new up/down
 bit.  Older implementations that follow RFC 1195 and do not
 understand the new up/down bit will threat the L2->L1 inter-area
 routes as L1 intra-area routes, and they will advertise these routes
 back into L2.  This can cause routing loops, sub-optimal routing or
 extra routing instability.  For this reason it is recommended that
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 implementations by default do not advertise any L2 routes into L1.
 Implementations should force the network administrator to manually
 configure L1L2 routers to advertise any L2 routes into L1.

5. Comparisons with other proposals

 In [3], a new TLV is defined to transport IP prefix information.
 This TLV format also defines an up/down bit to allow for L2->L1
 inter-area routes.  [3] also defines a new TLV to describe links.
 Both TLVs have wider metric space, and have the possibility to define
 sub-TLVs to advertise extra information belonging to the link or
 prefix.  The wider metric space in IP prefix TLVs allows for more
 granular metric information about inter-area path costs.  To make
 full use of the wider metric space, network administrators must
 deploy both new TLVs at the same time.
 Deployment of [3] requires an upgrade of all routers in the network
 and a transition to the new TLVs.  Such a network-wide upgrade and
 transition might not be an easy task.  In this case, the solution
 defined in this document, which requires only an upgrade of L1L2
 routers in selected areas, might be a good alternative to the
 solution defined in [3].

6. Security Considerations

 This document raises no new security issues for IS-IS.

7. References

 [1] ISO 10589, "Intermediate System to Intermediate System Intra-
     Domain Routing Exchange Protocol for use in Conjunction with the
     Protocol for Providing the Connectionless-mode Network Service
     (ISO 8473)".  [Also republished as RFC 1142.]
 [2] Callon, R., "Use of OSI IS-IS for routing in TCP/IP and dual
     environments", RFC 1195, December 1990.
 [3] Smit, H. and T. Li, "IS-IS Extensions for Traffic Engineering",
     Work in Progress.
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8. Authors' Addresses

 Tony Li
 Procket Networks
 1100 Cadillac Court
 Milpitas, CA 95035-3025
 EMail: tli@procket.com
 Tony Przygienda
 Redback
 350 Holger Way
 San Jose, CA 95134
 EMail: prz@redback.com
 Henk Smit
 Procket Networks
 1100 Cadillac Court
 Milpitas, CA 95035-3025
 EMail: henk@procket.com
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RFC 2966 Domain-wide Prefix Distribution October 2000

9. Full Copyright Statement

 Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.
 This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
 others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
 or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
 and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
 kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
 included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
 document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
 the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
 Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
 developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
 copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
 followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
 English.
 The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
 revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.
 This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
 "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
 TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
 BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
 HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
 MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Acknowledgement

 Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
 Internet Society.
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