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rfc:rfc4206

Network Working Group K. Kompella Request for Comments: 4206 Y. Rekhter Category: Standards Track Juniper Networks

                                                          October 2005
             Label Switched Paths (LSP) Hierarchy with
        Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS)
                      Traffic Engineering (TE)

Status of This Memo

 This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
 Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
 improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
 Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
 and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).

Abstract

 To improve scalability of Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching
 (GMPLS) it may be useful to aggregate Label Switched Paths (LSPs) by
 creating a hierarchy of such LSPs.  A way to create such a hierarchy
 is by (a) a Label Switching Router (LSR) creating a Traffic
 Engineering Label Switched Path (TE LSP), (b) the LSR forming a
 forwarding adjacency (FA) out of that LSP (by advertising this LSP as
 a Traffic Engineering (TE) link into the same instance of ISIS/OSPF
 as the one that was used to create the LSP), (c) allowing other LSRs
 to use FAs for their path computation, and (d) nesting of LSPs
 originated by other LSRs into that LSP (by using the label stack
 construct).
 This document describes the mechanisms to accomplish this.

Kompella & Rekhter Standards Track [Page 1] RFC 4206 LSP Hierarchy with GMPLS TE October 2005

Table of Contents

 1. Overview ........................................................2
 2. Specification of Requirements ...................................3
 3. Routing Aspects .................................................4
    3.1. Traffic Engineering Parameters .............................4
         3.1.1. Link Type (OSPF Only) ...............................5
         3.1.2. Link ID (OSPF Only) .................................5
         3.1.3. Local and Remote Interface IP Address ...............5
         3.1.4. Local and Remote Link Identifiers ...................5
         3.1.5. Traffic Engineering Metric ..........................5
         3.1.6. Maximum Bandwidth ...................................5
         3.1.7. Unreserved Bandwidth ................................5
         3.1.8. Resource Class/Color ................................5
         3.1.9. Interface Switching Capability ......................6
         3.1.10. SRLG Information ...................................6
 4. Other Considerations ............................................6
 5. Controlling FA-LSPs Boundaries ..................................7
    5.1. LSP Regions ................................................7
 6. Signalling Aspects ..............................................8
    6.1. Common Procedures ..........................................8
         6.1.1. RSVP-TE .............................................8
         6.1.2. CR-LDP ..............................................9
    6.2. Specific Procedures .......................................10
    6.3. FA-LSP Holding Priority ...................................11
 7. Security Considerations ........................................11
 8. Acknowledgements ...............................................12
 9. Normative References ...........................................12
 10. Informative References ........................................13

1. Overview

 An LSR uses Generalized MPLS (GMPLS) TE procedures to create and
 maintain an LSP.  The LSR then may (under local configuration
 control) announce this LSP as a Traffic Engineering (TE) link into
 the same instance of the GMPLS control plane (or, more precisely, its
 ISIS/OSPF component) as the one that was used to create the LSP.  We
 call such a link a "forwarding adjacency" (FA).  We refer to the LSP
 as the "forwarding adjacency LSP", or just FA-LSP.  Note that an FA-
 LSP is both created and used as a TE link by exactly the same
 instance of the GMPLS control plane.  Thus, the concept of an FA is
 applicable only when an LSP is both created and used as a TE link by
 exactly the same instance of the GMPLS control plane.  Note also that
 an FA is a TE link between two GMPLS nodes whose path transits zero
 or more (G)MPLS nodes in the same instance of the GMPLS control
 plane.

Kompella & Rekhter Standards Track [Page 2] RFC 4206 LSP Hierarchy with GMPLS TE October 2005

 The nodes connected by a 'basic' TE link may have a routing
 adjacency; however, the nodes connected by an FA would not usually
 have a routing adjacency.  A TE link of any kind (either 'basic' or
 FA) would have to have a signaling adjacency in order for it to be
 used to establish an LSP across it.
 In general, the creation/termination of an FA and its FA-LSP could be
 driven either by mechanisms outside of GMPLS (e.g., via configuration
 control on the LSR at the head-end of the adjacency), or by
 mechanisms within GMPLS (e.g., as a result of the LSR at the head-end
 of the adjacency receiving LSP setup requests originated by some
 other LSRs).
 ISIS/OSPF floods the information about FAs just as it floods the
 information about any other links.  As a result of this flooding, an
 LSR has in its TE link state database the information about not just
 basic TE links, but FAs as well.
 An LSR, when performing path computation, uses not just basic TE
 links, but FAs as well.  Once a path is computed, the LSR uses
 RSVP/CR-LDP [RSVP-TE, CR-LDP] for establishing label binding along
 the path.
 In this document we define mechanisms/procedures to accomplish the
 above.  These mechanisms/procedures cover both the routing
 (ISIS/OSPF) and the signalling (RSVP/CR-LDP) aspects.
 Note that an LSP may be advertised as a point-to-point link into ISIS
 or OSPF, to be used in normal SPF by nodes other than the head-end.
 While this is similar in spirit to an FA, this is beyond the scope of
 this document.
 Scenarios where an LSP is created (and maintained) by one instance of
 the GMPLS control plane, and is used as a (TE) link by another
 instance of the GMPLS control plane, are outside the scope of this
 document.

2. Specification of Requirements

 The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
 "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
 document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14, RFC 2119
 [RFC2119].

Kompella & Rekhter Standards Track [Page 3] RFC 4206 LSP Hierarchy with GMPLS TE October 2005

3. Routing Aspects

 In this section we describe procedures for constructing FAs out of
 LSPs, and handling of FAs by ISIS/OSPF.  Specifically, this section
 describes how to construct the information needed to advertise LSPs
 as links into ISIS/OSPF.  Procedures for creation/termination of such
 LSPs are defined in Section 5, "Controlling FA-LSPs boundaries".
 FAs may be represented as either unnumbered or numbered links.  If
 FAs are numbered with IPv4 addresses, the local and remote IPv4
 addresses come out of a /31 that is allocated by the LSR that
 originates the FA-LSP; the head-end address of the FA-LSP is the one
 specified as the IPv4 tunnel sender address; the remote (tail-end)
 address can then be inferred.  If the LSP is bidirectional, the
 tail-end can thus know the addresses to assign to the reverse FA.
 If there are multiple LSPs that all originate on one LSR and all
 terminate on another LSR, then at one end of the spectrum all these
 LSPs could be merged (under control of the head-end LSR) into a
 single FA using the concept of Link Bundling (see [BUNDLE]); while at
 the other end of the spectrum each such LSP could be advertised as
 its own adjacency.
 When an FA is created under administrative control (static
 provisioning), the attributes of the FA-LSP have to be provided via
 configuration.  Specifically, the following attributes may be
 configured for the FA-LSP: the head-end address (if left
 unconfigured, this defaults to the head-end LSR's Router ID); the
 tail-end address; bandwidth and resource colors constraints.  The
 path taken by the FA-LSP may be either computed by the LSR at the
 head-end of the FA-LSP, or specified by explicit configuration; this
 choice is determined by configuration.
 When an FA is created dynamically, the attributes of its FA-LSP are
 inherited from the LSP that induced its creation.  Note that the
 bandwidth of the FA-LSP must be at least as big as the LSP that
 induced it, but may be bigger if only discrete bandwidths are
 available for the FA-LSP.  In general, for dynamically provisioned
 FAs, a policy-based mechanism may be needed to associate attributes
 to the FA-LSPs.

3.1. Traffic Engineering Parameters

 In this section, the Traffic Engineering parameters (see [OSPF-TE]
 and [ISIS-TE]) for FAs are described.

Kompella & Rekhter Standards Track [Page 4] RFC 4206 LSP Hierarchy with GMPLS TE October 2005

3.1.1. Link Type (OSPF Only)

 The Link Type of an FA is set to "point-to-point".

3.1.2. Link ID (OSPF Only)

 The Link ID is set to the Router ID of the tail-end of FA-LSP.

3.1.3. Local and Remote Interface IP Address

 If the FA is to be numbered, the local interface IP address (OSPF) or
 IPv4 interface address (ISIS) is set to the head-end address of the
 FA-LSP.  The remote interface IP address (OSPF) or IPv4 neighbor
 address (ISIS) is set to the tail-end address of the FA-LSP.

3.1.4. Local and Remote Link Identifiers

 For an unnumbered FA, the assignment and handling of the local and
 remote link identifiers is specified in [UNNUM-RSVP], [UNNUM-CRLDP].

3.1.5. Traffic Engineering Metric

 By default the TE metric on the FA is set to max(1, (the TE metric of
 the FA-LSP path) - 1) so that it attracts traffic in preference to
 setting up a new LSP.  This may be overridden via configuration at
 the head-end of the FA.

3.1.6. Maximum Bandwidth

 By default, the Maximum Reservable Bandwidth and the initial Maximum
 LSP Bandwidth for all priorities of the FA is set to the bandwidth of
 the FA-LSP.  These may be overridden via configuration at the head-
 end of the FA (note that the Maximum LSP Bandwidth at any one
 priority should be no more than the bandwidth of the FA-LSP).

3.1.7. Unreserved Bandwidth

 The initial unreserved bandwidth for all priority levels of the FA is
 set to the bandwidth of the FA-LSP.

3.1.8. Resource Class/Color

 By default, an FA does not have resource colors (administrative
 groups).  This may be overridden by configuration at the head-end of
 the FA.

Kompella & Rekhter Standards Track [Page 5] RFC 4206 LSP Hierarchy with GMPLS TE October 2005

3.1.9. Interface Switching Capability

 The (near-end) Interface Switching Capability associated with the FA
 is the (near end) Interface Switching Capability of the first link in
 the FA-LSP.
 When the (near-end) Interface Switching Capability field is PSC-1,
 PSC-2, PSC-3, or PSC-4, the specific information includes Interface
 MTU and Minimum LSP Bandwidth.  The Interface MTU is the minimum MTU
 along the path of the FA-LSP; the Minimum LSP Bandwidth is the
 bandwidth of the LSP.

3.1.10. SRLG Information

 An FA advertisement could contain the information about the Shared
 Risk Link Groups (SRLG) for the path taken by the FA-LSP associated
 with that FA.  This information may be used for path calculation by
 other LSRs.  The information carried is the union of the SRLGs of the
 underlying TE links that make up the FA-LSP path; it is carried in
 the SRLG TLV in IS-IS or the SRLG sub-TLV of the TE Link TLV in OSPF.
 See [GMPLS-ISIS, GMPLS-OSPF] for details on the format of this
 information.
 It is possible that the underlying path information might change over
 time, via configuration updates or dynamic route modifications,
 resulting in the change of the SRLG TLV.
 If FAs are bundled (via link bundling), and if the resulting bundled
 link carries an SRLG TLV, it MUST be the case that the list of SRLGs
 in the underlying path, followed by each of the FA-LSPs that form the
 component links, is the same (note that the exact paths need not be
 the same).

4. Other Considerations

 It is expected that FAs will not be used for establishing ISIS/OSPF
 peering relation between the routers at the ends of the adjacency.
 It may be desired in some cases to use FAs only in Traffic
 Engineering path computations.  In IS-IS, this can be accomplished by
 setting the default metric of the extended IS reachability TLV for
 the FA to the maximum link metric (2^24 - 1).  In OSPF, this can be
 accomplished by not advertising the link as a regular LSA, but only
 as a TE opaque LSA.

Kompella & Rekhter Standards Track [Page 6] RFC 4206 LSP Hierarchy with GMPLS TE October 2005

5. Controlling FA-LSPs Boundaries

 To facilitate controlling the boundaries of FA-LSPs, this document
 introduces two new mechanisms: Interface Switching Capability (see
 [GMPLS-ISIS, GMPLS-OSPF], and "LSP region" (or just "region").

5.1. LSP Regions

 The information carried in the Interface Switching Capabilities is
 used to construct LSP regions and to determine regions' boundaries as
 follows.
 Define an ordering among interface switching capabilities as follows:
 PSC-1 < PSC-2 < PSC-3 < PSC-4 < TDM < LSC < FSC.  Given two
 interfaces if-1 and if-2 with interface switching capabilities isc-1
 and isc-2 respectively, say that if-1 < if-2 iff isc-1 < isc-2 or
 isc-1 == isc-2 == TDM, and if-1's max LSP bandwidth is less than if-
 2's max LSP bandwidth.
 Suppose an LSP's path is as follows: node-0, link-1, node-1, link-2,
 node-2, ..., link-n, node-n.  Moreover, for link-i denote by [link-i,
 node-(i-1)] the interface that connects link-i to node-(i-1), and by
 [link-i, node-i] the interface that connects link-i to node-i.
 If [link-(i+1), node-i)] < [link-(i+1), node-(i+1)], we say that the
 LSP has crossed a region boundary at node-i; with respect to that LSP
 path, the LSR at node-i is an edge LSR.  The 'other edge' of the
 region with respect to the LSP path is node-k, where k is the
 smallest number greater than i such that [link-(i+1), node-(i+1)]
 equal [link-k, node-(k-1)], and [link-k, node-(k-1)] > [link-k,
 node-k].
 Path computation may take region boundaries into account when
 computing a path for an LSP.  For example, path computation may
 restrict the path taken by an LSP to only the links whose Interface
 Switching Capability is PSC-1.
 Note that an interface may have multiple Interface Switching
 Capabilities.  In such a case, the test is whether if-i < if-j
 depends on the Interface Switching Capabilities chosen for if-i and
 if-j, which in turn determines whether or not there is a region
 boundary at node-i.

Kompella & Rekhter Standards Track [Page 7] RFC 4206 LSP Hierarchy with GMPLS TE October 2005

6. Signalling Aspects

 In this section we describe procedures that an LSR at the head-end of
 an FA uses for handling LSP setup originated by other LSR.
 As we mentioned before, establishment/termination of FA-LSPs may be
 triggered either by mechanisms outside of GMPLS (e.g., via
 administrative control), or by mechanisms within GMPLS (e.g., as a
 result of the LSR at the edge of an aggregate LSP receiving LSP setup
 requests originated by some other LSRs beyond LSP aggregate and its
 edges).  Procedures described in Section 6.1, "Common Procedures",
 apply to both cases.  Procedures described in Section 6.2, "Specific
 Procedures", apply only to the latter case.

6.1. Common Procedures

 For the purpose of processing the ERO in a Path/Request message of an
 LSP that is to be tunneled over an FA, an LSR at the head-end of the
 FA-LSP views the LSR at the tail of that FA-LSP as adjacent (one IP
 hop away).
 How this is to be achieved for RSVP-TE and CR-LDP is described in the
 following subsections.
 In either case (RSVP-TE or CR-LDP), when an LSP is tunneled through
 an FA-LSP, the LSR at the head-end of the FA-LSP subtracts the LSP's
 bandwidth from the unreserved bandwidth of the FA.
 In the presence of link bundling (when link bundling is applied to
 FAs), when an LSP is tunneled through an FA-LSP, the LSR at the
 head-end of the FA-LSP also needs to adjust Max LSP bandwidth of the
 FA.

6.1.1. RSVP-TE

 If one uses RSVP-TE to signal an LSP to be tunneled over an FA-LSP,
 then the Path message MUST contain an IF_ID RSVP_HOP object
 [GRSVP-TE, GSIG] instead of an RSVP_HOP object; and the data
 interface identification MUST identify the FA-LSP.
 The preferred method of sending the Path message is to set the
 destination IP address of the Path message to the computed NHOP for
 that Path message.  This NHOP address must be a routable address; in
 the case of separate control and data planes, this must be a control
 plane address.

Kompella & Rekhter Standards Track [Page 8] RFC 4206 LSP Hierarchy with GMPLS TE October 2005

 Furthermore, the IP header for the Path message MUST NOT have the
 Router Alert option.  The Path message is intended to be IP-routed to
 the tail-end of the FA-LSP without being intercepted and processed as
 an RSVP message by any of the intermediate nodes.
 Finally, the IP TTL vs. RSVP TTL check MUST NOT be made.  In general,
 if the IF_ID RSVP_HOP object is used, this check must be disabled, as
 the number of hops over the control plane may be greater than one.
 Instead, the following check is done by the receiver Y of the IF_ID
 RSVP_HOP object:
 1. Make sure that the data interface identified in the IF_ID RSVP_HOP
    object actually terminates on Y.
 2. Find the "other end" of the above data interface, say X.  Make
    sure that the PHOP in the IF_ID RSVP_HOP object is a control
    channel address that belongs to the same node as X.
 How check #2 is carried out is beyond the scope of this document;
 suffice it to say that it may require a Traffic Engineering Database,
 or the use of LMP [LMP], or yet other means.
 An alternative method is to encapsulate the Path message in an IP
 tunnel (or, in the case that the Interface Switching Capability of
 the FA-LSP is PSC[1-4], in the FA-LSP itself), and unicast the
 message to the tail-end of the FA-LSP, without the Router Alert
 option.  This option may be needed if intermediate nodes process RSVP
 messages regardless of whether the Router Alert option is present.
 A PathErr sent in response to a Path message with an IF_ID RSVP_HOP
 object SHOULD contain an IF_ID HOP object.  (Note: a PathErr does not
 normally carry an RSVP_HOP object, but in the case of separated
 control and data, it is necessary to identify the data channel in the
 PathErr message.)
 The Resv message back to the head-end of the FA-LSP (PHOP) is IP-
 routed to the PHOP in the Path message.  If necessary, Resv Messages
 MAY be encapsulated in another IP header whose destination IP address
 is the PHOP of the received Path message.

6.1.2. CR-LDP

 If one uses CR-LDP to signal an LSP to be tunneled over an FA-LSP,
 then the Request message MUST contain an IF_ID TLV [GCR-LDP] object,
 and the data interface identification MUST identify the FA-LSP.

Kompella & Rekhter Standards Track [Page 9] RFC 4206 LSP Hierarchy with GMPLS TE October 2005

 Furthermore, the head-end LSR must create a targeted LDP session with
 the tail-end LSR.  The Request (Mapping) message is unicast from the
 head-end (tail-end) to the tail-end (head-end).

6.2. Specific Procedures

 When an LSR receives a Path/Request message, the LSR determines
 whether it is at the edge of a region with respect to the ERO carried
 in the message.  The LSR does this by looking up the interface
 switching capabilities of the previous hop and the next hop in its
 IGP database, and comparing them using the relation defined in this
 section.  If the LSR is not at the edge of a region, the procedures
 in this section do not apply.
 If the LSR is at the edge of a region, it must then determine the
 other edge of the region with respect to the ERO, again using the IGP
 database.  The LSR then extracts (from the ERO) the subsequence of
 hops from itself to the other end of the region.
 The LSR then compares the subsequence of hops with all existing FA-
 LSPs originated by the LSR.  If a match is found, that FA-LSP has
 enough unreserved bandwidth for the LSP being signaled, the L3PID of
 the FA-LSP is compatible with the L3PID of the LSP being signaled,
 and the LSR uses that FA-LSP as follows.  The Path/Request message
 for the original LSP is sent to the egress of the FA-LSP, not to the
 next hop along the FA-LSP's path.  The PHOP in the message is the
 address of the LSR at the head-end of the FA-LSP.  Before sending the
 Path/Request message, the ERO in that message is adjusted by removing
 the subsequence of the ERO that lies in the FA-LSP, and replacing it
 with just the end point of the FA-LSP.
 Otherwise (if no existing FA-LSP is found), the LSR sets up a new
 FA-LSP.  That is, it initiates a new LSP setup just for the FA-LSP.
 Note that the new LSP may traverse either 'basic' TE links or FAs.
 After the LSR establishes the new FA-LSP, the LSR announces this LSP
 into IS-IS/OSPF as an FA.
 The unreserved bandwidth of the FA is computed by subtracting the
 bandwidth of sessions pending the establishment of the FA-LSP
 associated from the bandwidth of the FA-LSP.
 An FA-LSP could be torn down by the LSR at the head-end of the FA-LSP
 as a matter of policy local to the LSR.  It is expected that the FA-
 LSP would be torn down once there are no more LSPs carried by the
 FA-LSP.  When the FA-LSP is torn down, the FA associated with the
 FA-LSP is no longer advertised into IS-IS/OSPF.

Kompella & Rekhter Standards Track [Page 10] RFC 4206 LSP Hierarchy with GMPLS TE October 2005

6.3. FA-LSP Holding Priority

 The value of the holding priority of an FA-LSP must be the minimum of
 the configured holding priority of the FA-LSP and the holding
 priorities of the LSPs tunneling through the FA-LSP (note that
 smaller priority values denote higher priority).  Thus, if an LSP of
 higher priority than the FA-LSP tunnels through the FA-LSP, the FA-
 LSP is itself promoted to the higher priority.  However, if the
 tunneled LSP is torn down, the FA-LSP need not drop its priority to
 its old value right away; it may be advisable to apply hysteresis in
 this case.
 If the holding priority of an FA-LSP is configured, this document
 restricts it to 0.

7. Security Considerations

 From a security point of view, the primary change introduced in this
 document is that the implicit assumption of a binding between data
 interfaces and the interface over which a control message is sent is
 no longer valid.
 This means that the "sending interface" or "receiving interface" is
 no longer well-defined, as the interface over which an RSVP message
 is sent may change as routing changes.  Therefore, mechanisms that
 depend on these concepts (for example, the definition of a security
 association) need a clearer definition.
 [RFC2747] provides a solution: in Section 2.1, under "Key
 Identifier", an IP address is a valid identifier for the sending (and
 by analogy, receiving) interface.  Since RSVP messages for a given
 LSP are sent to an IP address that identifies the next/previous hop
 for the LSP, one can replace all occurrences of 'sending [receiving]
 interface' with 'receiver's [sender's] IP address' (respectively).
 For example, in Section 4, third paragraph, instead of:
    "Each sender SHOULD have distinct security associations (and keys)
    per secured sending interface (or LIH).  ...  At the sender,
    security association selection is based on the interface through
    which the message is sent."
 it should read:
    "Each sender SHOULD have distinct security associations (and keys)
    per secured receiver's IP address. ...  At the sender, security
    association selection is based on the IP address to which the
    message is sent."

Kompella & Rekhter Standards Track [Page 11] RFC 4206 LSP Hierarchy with GMPLS TE October 2005

 Note that CR-LDP does not have this issue, as CR-LDP messages are
 sent over TCP sessions, and no assumption is made that these sessions
 are to direct neighbors.  The recommended mechanism for
 authentication and integrity of LDP message exchange is to use the
 TCP MD5 option [LDP].
 Another consequence (relevant to RSVP) of the changes proposed in
 this document is that IP destination address of Path messages be set
 to the receiver's address, not to the session destination.  Thus, the
 objections raised in Section 1.2 of [RFC2747] should be revisited to
 see if IPSec AH is now a viable means of securing RSVP-TE messages.

8. Acknowledgements

 Many thanks to Alan Hannan, whose early discussions with Yakov
 Rekhter contributed greatly to the notion of Forwarding Adjacencies.
 We would also like to thank George Swallow, Quaizar Vohra and Ayan
 Banerjee.

9. Normative References

 [GCR-LDP]     Ashwood-Smith, P. and L. Berger, "Generalized Multi-
               Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) Signaling Constraint-
               based Routed Label Distribution Protocol (CR-LDP)
               Extensions", RFC 3472, January 2003.
 [GMPLS-ISIS]  Kompella, K., Ed., and Y. Rekhter, Ed., "Intermediate
               System to Intermediate System (IS-IS) Extensions in
               Support of Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching
               (GMPLS)", RFC 4205, October 2005.
 [GMPLS-OSPF]  Kompella, K., Ed., and Y. Rekhter, Ed., "OSPF
               Extensions in Support of Generalized Multi-Protocol
               Label Switching (GMPLS)", RFC 4203, October 2005.
 [GRSVP-TE]    Berger, L., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching
               (GMPLS) Signaling Resource ReserVation Protocol-Traffic
               Engineering (RSVP-TE) Extensions", RFC 3473, January
               2003.
 [GSIG]        Berger, L., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching
               (GMPLS) Signaling Functional Description", RFC 3471,
               January 2003.
 [ISIS-TE]     Smit, H. and T. Li, "Intermediate System to
               Intermediate System (IS-IS) Extensions for Traffic
               Engineering (TE)", RFC 3784, June 2004.

Kompella & Rekhter Standards Track [Page 12] RFC 4206 LSP Hierarchy with GMPLS TE October 2005

 [LDP]         Andersson, L., Doolan, P., Feldman, N., Fredette, A.,
               and B. Thomas, "Label Distribution Protocol", RFC 3036,
               January 2001.
 [OSPF-TE]     Katz, D., Kompella, K., and D. Yeung, "Traffic
               Engineering (TE) Extensions to OSPF Version 2", RFC
               3630, September 2003.
 [UNNUM-CRLDP] Kompella, K., Rekhter, Y., and A. Kullberg, "Signalling
               Unnumbered Links in CR-LDP (Constraint-Routing Label
               Distribution Protocol)", RFC 3480, February 2003.
 [UNNUM-RSVP]  Kompella, K. and Y. Rekhter, "Signalling Unnumbered
               Links in Resource ReSerVation Protocol - Traffic
               Engineering (RSVP-TE)", RFC 3477, January 2003.
 [RFC2119]     Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
               Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
 [RFC2747]     Baker, F., Lindell, B., and M. Talwar, "RSVP
               Cryptographic Authentication", RFC 2747, January 2000.

10. Informative References

 [BUNDLE]      Kompella, K., Rekhter, Y., and L. Berger, "Link
               Bundling in MPLS Traffic Engineering (TE)", RFC 4201,
               October 2005.
 [LMP]         Lang, L., Ed., "Link Management Protocol (LMP)", RFC
               4204, October 2005.

Authors' Addresses

 Kireeti Kompella
 Juniper Networks, Inc.
 1194 N. Mathilda Ave
 Sunnyvale, CA 94089
 EMail: kireeti@juniper.net
 Yakov Rekhter
 Juniper Networks, Inc.
 1194 N. Mathilda Ave
 Sunnyvale, CA 94089
 EMail: yakov@juniper.net

Kompella & Rekhter Standards Track [Page 13] RFC 4206 LSP Hierarchy with GMPLS TE October 2005

Full Copyright Statement

 Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).
 This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions
 contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors
 retain all their rights.
 This document and the information contained herein are provided on an
 "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS
 OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET
 ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM 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
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Kompella & Rekhter Standards Track [Page 14]

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