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rfc:rfc5553

Network Working Group A. Farrel, Ed. Request for Comments: 5553 Old Dog Consulting Category: Standards Track R. Bradford

                                                           JP. Vasseur
                                                   Cisco Systems, Inc.
                                                              May 2009
Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) Extensions for Path Key Support

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) 2009 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 in effect on the date of
 publication of this document (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info).
 Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights
 and restrictions with respect to this document.
 This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF
 Contributions published or made publicly available before November
 10, 2008.  The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this
 material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow
 modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process.
 Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling
 the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified
 outside the IETF Standards Process, and derivative works of it may
 not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format
 it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other
 than English.

Farrel, et al. Standards Track [Page 1] RFC 5553 RSVP Extensions for Path Key Support May 2009

Abstract

 The paths taken by Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) and
 Generalized MPLS (GMPLS) Traffic Engineering (TE) Label Switched
 Paths (LSPs) may be computed by Path Computation Elements (PCEs).
 Where the TE LSP crosses multiple domains, such as Autonomous Systems
 (ASes), the path may be computed by multiple PCEs that cooperate,
 with each responsible for computing a segment of the path.
 To preserve confidentiality of topology within each AS, the PCEs
 support a mechanism to hide the contents of a segment of a path (such
 as the segment of the path that traverses an AS), called the
 Confidential Path Segment (CPS), by encoding the contents as a Path
 Key Subobject (PKS) and embedding this subobject within the result of
 its path computation.
 This document describes how to carry Path Key Subobjects in the
 Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) Explicit Route Objects (EROs)
 and Record Route Objects (RROs) so as to facilitate confidentiality
 in the signaling of inter-domain TE LSPs.

1. Introduction

 Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) and Generalized MPLS (GMPLS)
 Traffic Engineering (TE) Label Switched Paths (LSPs) are signaled
 using the TE extensions to the Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP-
 TE) [RFC3209], [RFC3473].  The routes followed by MPLS and GMPLS TE
 LSPs may be computed by Path Computation Elements (PCEs) [RFC4655].
 Where the TE LSP crosses multiple domains [RFC4726], such as
 Autonomous Systems (ASes), the path may be computed by multiple PCEs
 that cooperate, with each responsible for computing a segment of the
 path.  To preserve confidentiality of topology with each AS, the PCE
 Communications Protocol (PCEP) [RFC5440] supports a mechanism to hide
 the contents of a segment of a path, called the Confidential Path
 Segment (CPS), by encoding the contents as a Path Key Subobject (PKS)
 [RFC5520].
 This document defines RSVP-TE protocol extensions necessary to
 support the use of Path Key Subobjects in MPLS and GMPLS signaling by
 including them in Explicit Route Objects (EROs) and Record Route
 Object (RROs) so as to facilitate confidentiality in the signaling of
 inter-domain TE LSPs.

Farrel, et al. Standards Track [Page 2] RFC 5553 RSVP Extensions for Path Key Support May 2009

1.1. Conventions Used in This Document

 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 RFC 2119 [RFC2119].

1.2. Usage Scenario

 Figure 1 shows a simple network constructed of two ASes.  An LSP is
 desired from the ingress in AS-1 to the egress in AS-2.  As described
 in [RFC4655], the ingress Label Switching Router (LSR) acts as a Path
 Computation Client (PCC) and sends a request to its PCE (PCE-1).
 PCE-1 can compute the path within AS-1 but has no visibility into
 AS-2.  So PCE-1 cooperates with PCE-2 to complete the path
 computation.
 However, PCE-2 does not want to share the information about the path
 across AS-2 with nodes outside the AS.  So, as described in
 [RFC5520], PCE-2 reports the AS-2 path segment using a PKS rather
 than the explicit details of the path.
 PCE-1 can now return the path to be signaled to the ingress LSR in a
 path computation response with the AS-2 segment still hidden as a
 PKS.
 In order to set up the LSP, the ingress LSR signals using RSVP-TE and
 encodes the path reported by PCE-1 in the Explicit Route Object
 (ERO).  This process is as normal for RSVP-TE but requires that the
 PKS is also included in the ERO, using the mechanisms defined in this
 document.
 When the signaling message (the RSVP-TE Path message) reaches ASBR-2
 (Autonomous System Border Router), it consults PCE-2 to 'decode' the
 PKS and return the expanded explicit path segment to ASBR-2.  (The
 information that PCE-2 uses to decode the PKS is encoded within the
 PKS itself.) The PKS is replaced in the ERO with the expanded
 information about the path.

Farrel, et al. Standards Track [Page 3] RFC 5553 RSVP Extensions for Path Key Support May 2009

  1. —————————- —————————-

| AS-1 | | AS-2 |

 |                             |  |                            |
 |     -------                 |  |    -------                 |
 |    | PCE-1 |<---------------+--+-->| PCE-2 |                |
 |     -------                 |  |    -------                 |
 |      ^                      |  |    ^                       |
 |      |                      |  |    |                       |
 |      v                      |  |    v                       |
 |  -------              ----  |  |  ----                      |
 | |  PCC  |   -    -   |ASBR| |  | |ASBR|   -    -    ------  |
 | |Ingress|--|A|--|B|--|  1 |-+--+-|  2 |--|C|--|D|--|Egress| |
 |  -------    -    -    ----- |  |  ----    -    -    ------  |
 |                             |  |                            |
  -----------------------------    ----------------------------
     Figure 1: A Simple Network to Demonstrate the Use of the PKS
 Note that PCE-2 may in some case be co-located with ASBR-2.

2. Terminology

 CPS: Confidential Path Segment.  A segment of a path that contains
      nodes and links that the AS policy requires to not be disclosed
      outside the AS.
 PCE: Path Computation Element.  An entity (component, application, or
      network node) that is capable of computing a network path or
      route based on a network graph and applying computational
      constraints.
 PKS: Path Key Subobject.  A subobject of an Explicit Route Object
      that encodes a CPS so as to preserve confidentiality.

3. RSVP-TE Path Key Subobject

 The Path Key Subobject (PKS) may be carried in the Explicit Route
 Object (ERO) of an RSVP-TE Path message [RFC3209].  The PKS is a
 fixed-length subobject containing a Path Key and a PCE-ID.  The Path
 Key is an identifier or token used to represent the CPS within the
 context of the PCE identified by the PCE-ID.  The PCE-ID identifies
 the PCE that can decode the Path Key using a reachable IPv4 or IPv6
 address of the PCE.  In most cases, the decoding PCE is also the PCE
 that computed the Path Key and the associated path.  Because of the
 IPv4 and IPv6 variants, two subobjects are defined as follows.

Farrel, et al. Standards Track [Page 4] RFC 5553 RSVP Extensions for Path Key Support May 2009

   0                   1                   2                   3
   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |L|    Type     |     Length    |           Path Key            |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                    PCE-ID (4 bytes)                           |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
            Figure 2: RSVP-TE Path Key Subobject using an
                      IPv4 address for the PCE-ID
   L
     The L bit SHOULD NOT be set, so that the subobject represents a
     strict hop in the explicit route.
   Type
     Subobject Type for a Path Key with a 32-bit PCE-ID as assigned by
     IANA.
   Length
     The Length contains the total length of the subobject in bytes,
     including the Type and Length fields.  The Length is always 8.
   PCE-ID
     A 32-bit identifier of the PCE that can decode this key.  The
     identifier MUST be unique within the scope of the domain that the
     CPS crosses and MUST be understood by the LSR that will act as
     PCC for the expansion of the PKS.  The interpretation of the
     PCE-ID is subject to domain-local policy.  It MAY be an IPv4
     address of the PCE that is always reachable and MAY be an address
     that is restricted to the domain in which the LSR that is called
     upon to expand the CPS lies.  Other values that have no meaning
     outside the domain (for example, the Router ID of the PCE) MAY be
     used to increase security or confidentiality.

Farrel, et al. Standards Track [Page 5] RFC 5553 RSVP Extensions for Path Key Support May 2009

   0                   1                   2                   3
   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |L|    Type     |     Length    |           Path Key            |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                        PCE-ID (16 bytes)                      |
  |                                                               |
  |                                                               |
  |                                                               |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
            Figure 3: RSVP-TE Path Key Subobject using an
                      IPv6 address for the PCE-ID
   L
     As above.
   Type
     Subobject Type for a Path Key with a 128-bit PCE-ID as assigned
     by IANA.
   Length
     The Length contains the total length of the subobject in bytes,
     including the Type and Length fields.  The Length is always 20.
   PCE-ID
     A 128-bit identifier of the PCE that can decode this key.  The
     identifier MUST be unique within the scope of the domain that the
     CPS crosses and MUST be understood by the LSR that will act as
     PCC for the expansion of the PKS.  The interpretation of the
     PCE-ID is subject to domain-local policy.  It MAY be an IPv6
     address of the PCE that is always reachable, and MAY be an
     address that is restricted to the domain in which the LSR that is
     called upon to expand the CPS lies.  Other values that have no
     meaning outside the domain (for example, the IPv6 TE Router ID)
     MAY be used to increase security (see Section 4).
 Note: The twins of these subobjects are carried in PCEP messages as
 defined in [RFC5520].

Farrel, et al. Standards Track [Page 6] RFC 5553 RSVP Extensions for Path Key Support May 2009

3.1. Explicit Route Object Processing Rules

 The basic processing rules of an ERO are not altered.  Refer to
 [RFC3209] for details.  In particular, an LSR is not required to
 "look ahead" in the ERO beyond the first subobject that is non-local.
 [RFC5520] requires that any path fragment generated by a PCE that
 contains a PKS be such that the PKS is immediately preceded by a
 subobject that identifies the head end of the PKS (for example, an
 incoming interface or a node ID).  This rule is extended to the PKS
 in the ERO so that the following rules are defined.
  1. If an LSR receives a Path message where the first subobject of the

ERO is a PKS, it MUST respond with a PathErr message carrying the

   error code/value combination "Routing Problem" / "Bad initial
   subobject".
  1. If an LSR strips all local subobjects from an ERO carried in a Path

message (according to the procedures in [RFC3209]) and finds that

   the next subobject is a PKS, it MUST attempt to resolve the PKS to
   a CPS.
   Resolution of the PKS MAY take any of the following forms or use
   some other technique subject to local policy and network
   implementation.
   o The LSR can use the PCE-ID contained in the PKS to contact the
     identified PCE using PCEP [RFC5440] and request that the PKS be
     expanded.
   o The LSR can contact any PCE using PCEP [RFC5440] to request that
     the PKS be expanded, relying on cooperation between the PCEs.
   o The LSR can use the information in the PKS to index a CPS
     previously supplied to it by the PCE that originated the PKS.
   If a CPS is derived, the path fragment SHOULD be inserted into the
   ERO of the Path message as a direct replacement for the PKS.  Other
   processing of the CPS and ERO are permitted as described in
   [RFC3209].
   This processing can give rise to the following error cases:
   o PCE-ID cannot be matched to a PCE to decode the PKS.
     The LSR sends a PathErr message with the error code "Routing
     Problem" and the new error value "Unknown PCE-ID for PKS
     expansion" (see Section 6.3).

Farrel, et al. Standards Track [Page 7] RFC 5553 RSVP Extensions for Path Key Support May 2009

   o PCE identified by the PCE-ID cannot be reached.
     The LSR sends a PathErr message with the error code "Routing
     Problem" and the new error value "Unreachable PCE for PKS
     expansion" (see Section 6.3).
   o The PCE is unable to decode the PKS, perhaps because the Path Key
     has expired.
     The LSR sends a PathErr message with the error code "Routing
     Problem" and the new error value "Unknown Path Key for PKS
     expansion" (see Section 6.3).
   o PKS cannot be decoded for policy reasons.
     The LSR sends a PathErr message with the error code "Policy
     Control Failure" and the error value "Inter-domain policy
     failure".
   o Addition of CPS to ERO causes Path message to become too large.
     The LSR MAY replace part of the ERO with loose hops [RFC3209] or
     with a further PKS, according to local policy, if the loss of
     specifics within the explicit path is acceptable.  If the LSR is
     unable to take steps to reduce the size of the ERO, it MUST send
     a PathErr message with the error code "Routing Problem" and the
     new error value "ERO too large for MTU" (see Section 6.3).
  1. An LSR that is called on to process a PKS within an ERO but that

does not recognize the subobject, will react according to [RFC3209]

   and send a PathErr message with the error code/value combination
   "Routing Problem" / "Bad Explicit Route Object".

3.2. Reporting Path Key Segments in Record Route Objects

 The Record Route Object (RRO) is used in RSVP-TE to record the route
 traversed by an LSP.  The RRO may be present on a Path message and on
 a Resv message.  The intention of [RFC3209] is that an RRO on a Resv
 message that is received by an ingress LSR is suitable for use as an
 ERO on a Path message sent by that LSR to achieve an identical LSP.
 The PKS offers an alternative that can be more useful to diagnostics.
 When the signaling message crosses a domain boundary, the path
 segment that needs to be hidden (that is, a CPS) MAY be replaced in
 the RRO with a PKS.  In the case of an RRO on a Resv message, the PKS
 used SHOULD be the one originally signaled in the ERO of the Path
 message.  On a Path message, the PKS SHOULD identify the LSR
 replacing the CPS and provide a Path Key that can be used to expand

Farrel, et al. Standards Track [Page 8] RFC 5553 RSVP Extensions for Path Key Support May 2009

 the path segment.  In the latter case, the Path Key and its expansion
 SHOULD be retained by the LSR that performs the substitution for at
 least the lifetime of the LSP.  In both cases, the expansion of the
 PKS SHOULD be made available to diagnostic tools under the control of
 local policy.

4. Security Considerations

 The protocol interactions required by the mechanisms described in
 this document are point-to-point and can be authenticated and made
 secure as described in [RFC5440] and [RFC3209].  The protocol
 interactions for PCEP are listed in [RFC5520], while general
 considerations for securing RSVP-TE in MPLS-TE and GMPLS networks can
 be found in [MPLS-SEC].
 Thus, security issues can be dealt with using standard techniques for
 securing and authenticating point-to-point communications.  In
 addition, it is RECOMMENDED that the PCE providing a PKS expansion
 check that the LSR that issued the request for PKS expansion is the
 head end of the resulting CPS.
 Further protection can be provided by using a PCE-ID to identify the
 decoding PCE that is only meaningful within the domain that contains
 the LSR at the head of the CPS.  This may be either an IP address
 that is only reachable from within the domain or some non-address
 value.  The former requires configuration of policy on the PCEs; the
 latter requires domain-wide policy.
 The following specific security issues need to be considered.
  1. Confidentiality of the CPS. The question to be answered is whether

other network elements can probe a PCE for the expansion of PKSs,

   possibly generating Path Keys at random.  This can be protected
   against by only allowing PKS expansion to be successfully completed
   if requested by the LSR that is at the head end of the resulting
   CPS.  Under specific circumstances, PKS expansion might also be
   allowed by configured management stations.
   The CPS itself may be kept confidential as it is exchanged in the
   PCEP and RSVP-TE protocols using standard security mechanisms
   defined for those protocols.
  1. Determination of information by probing. In addition to the

probing described above, a node might deduce information from the

   error responses that are generated when PKS expansion fails as
   described in Section 3.1.  Any LSR that determines that supplying
   one of the detailed error codes described in Section 3.1 might

Farrel, et al. Standards Track [Page 9] RFC 5553 RSVP Extensions for Path Key Support May 2009

   provide too much information that could be used as part of a
   systematic attack MAY simply use the error code/value "Policy
   Control Failure" / "Inter-domain policy failure" in all cases.
  1. Authenticity of the Path Key. A concern is that the Path Key in

the PKS will be altered or faked, leading to erroneous Path Key

   expansion and use of the wrong CPS.  The consequence would be a bad
   ERO in a Path message, causing the LSP to be set up incorrectly and
   resulting in incorrect network resource usage, diversion of traffic
   to where it can be intercepted, or failure to set up the LSP.
   These problems can be prevented by protecting the protocol
   exchanges in PCEP and RSVP-TE using the security techniques
   described in [RFC5440], [RFC3209], and [MPLS-SEC].
  1. Resilience to denial-of-service (DoS) attacks. A PCE can be

attacked through a flood of Path Key expansion requests – this

   issue is addressed in [RFC5520] and is out of scope for this
   document.  A further attack might consist of sending a flood of
   RSVP-TE Path messages with deliberately spurious PKSs.  This attack
   is prevented by ensuring the integrity of the Path messages using
   standard RSVP-TE security mechanisms and by enforcing the RSVP-TE
   chain-of-trust security model.

5. Manageability Considerations

5.1. Control of Function through Configuration and Policy

 Policy forms an important part of the use of PKSs in EROs and RROs.
 There are local and domain-wide policies that SHOULD be available for
 configuration in an implementation.
  1. Handling of an ERO containing a PKS. As described in Section 3.1,

an LSR that receives a Path message containing a PKS can be

   configured to reject the Path message according to policy.
  1. Handling of PKS requests at a PCE. As described in Section 3.1, in

[RFC5520], and in [RFC5394], a PCE can be configured with policy

   regarding how it should handle requests for PKS expansion.
  1. PKS expansion. Section 3.1 explains that the PKS can be expanded

by the local LSR, the specific PCE identified in the PKS, any PCE

   acting as a proxy, or by some other method.  The behavior of the
   LSR needs to be locally configurable but is subject to the domain-
   wide policy.
  1. Interpretation of PCE-ID. The interpretation of the PCE-ID

component of PKSs is subject to domain-local policy and needs to be

   configurable as such.  See Section 3 and Section 4 for the options.

Farrel, et al. Standards Track [Page 10] RFC 5553 RSVP Extensions for Path Key Support May 2009

  1. ERO too large. The behavior of an LSR when it finds that adding a

CPS to the ERO causes the Path message to be too large is an

   implementation choice.  However, implementations may choose to
   provide configuration of behavior as described in Section 3.1.
  1. Masking of RRO. As described in Section 3.2, a border router can

choose to mask segments of the path by replacing them with PKSs.

   This behavior needs to be configurable, with the default being to
   not hide any part of the RRO.
  1. Inspection / decoding of PKS by diagnostic tools. A PCE can allow

access from management or diagnostic tools to request the expansion

   of a PKS.  Note that this must be regulated with the security and
   confidentiality behavior described in Section 4.
  1. Hiding of reason codes. An LSR can support the configuration of

local policy to hide reason codes associated with the failure to

   expand a PKS and, as described in Section 4, report all errors as
   policy failures.
 The treatment of a path segment as a CPS, and its substitution in a
 PCRep ERO with a PKS, is a PCE function and is described in
 [RFC5520].

6. IANA Considerations

6.1. Explicit Route Object Subobjects

 IANA maintains a registry called "Resource Reservation Protocol
 (RSVP) Parameters" with a subregistry called "Class Names, Class
 Numbers, and Class Types".
 Within this subregistry, there is a definition of the EXPLICIT_ROUTE
 object with Class Number 20.  The object definition lists a number of
 acceptable subobjects for the Class Type 1.
 IANA has allocated two further subobjects as described in Section 3.
 The resulting entry in the registry is as follows.
  20  EXPLICIT_ROUTE                                  [RFC3209]
      Class Types or C-Types:
        1   Type 1 Explicit Route                     [RFC3209]
            Subobject type
             64   Path Key with 32-bit PCE-ID         [RFC5553]
             65   Path Key with 128-bit PCE-ID        [RFC5553]

Farrel, et al. Standards Track [Page 11] RFC 5553 RSVP Extensions for Path Key Support May 2009

 Note well: [RFC5520] defines the PKS for use in PCEP.  IANA has
 assigned the same subobject numbers for use in RSVP-TE as are
 assigned for the PKS in PCEP.  The numbers above are the same as in
 [RFC5520].

6.2. Record Route Objects Subobjects

 IANA maintains a registry called "Resource Reservation Protocol
 (RSVP) Parameters" with a subregistry called "Class Names, Class
 Numbers, and Class Types".
 Within this subregistry, there is a definition of the ROUTE_RECORD
 object (also known as the RECORD_ROUTE object) with Class Number 21.
 The object definition lists a number of acceptable subobjects for the
 Class Type 1.
 IANA has allocated two further subobjects as described in Section 3.
 The resulting entry in the registry is as follows.
  21  ROUTE_RECORD                                    [RFC3209]
      (also known as RECORD_ROUTE)
      Class Types or C-Types:
        1   Type 1 Route Record                       [RFC3209]
            Subobject type
             64   Path Key with 32-bit PCE-ID         [RFC5553]
             65   Path Key with 128-bit PCE-ID        [RFC5553]
 Note well: IANA is requested to use the same subobject numbers as are
 defined for the EXPLICIT_ROUTE object in Section 6.1.

6.3. Error Codes and Error Values

 IANA maintains a registry called "Resource Reservation Protocol
 (RSVP) Parameters" with a subregistry called "Error Codes and
 Globally-Defined Error Value Sub-Codes".
 Within this subregistry, there is a definition of the "Routing
 Problem" error code with error code value 24.  The definition lists a
 number of error values that may be used with this error code.
 IANA has allocated further error values for use with this error code
 as described in Section 3.1.  The resulting entry in the registry is
 as follows.

Farrel, et al. Standards Track [Page 12] RFC 5553 RSVP Extensions for Path Key Support May 2009

 24  Routing Problem                             [RFC3209]
     This Error Code has the following globally defined Error
     Value sub-codes:
      31 = Unknown PCE-ID for PKS expansion      [RFC5553]
      32 = Unreachable PCE for PKS expansion     [RFC5553]
      33 = Unknown Path Key for PKS expansion    [RFC5553]
      34 = ERO too large for MTU                 [RFC5553]

7. References

7.1. Normative References

 [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
            Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
 [RFC3209]  Awduche, D., Berger, L., Gan, D., Li, T., Srinivasan, V.,
            and G. Swallow, "RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for LSP
            Tunnels", RFC 3209, December 2001.
 [RFC3473]  Berger, L., Ed., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label
            Switching (GMPLS) Signaling Resource ReserVation
            Protocol-Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE) Extensions", RFC
            3473, January 2003.

7.2. Informative References

 [RFC4655]  Farrel, A., Vasseur, J.-P., and J. Ash, "A Path
            Computation Element (PCE)-Based Architecture", RFC 4655,
            August 2006.
 [RFC4726]  Farrel, A., Vasseur, J.-P., and A. Ayyangar, "A Framework
            for Inter-Domain Multiprotocol Label Switching Traffic
            Engineering", RFC 4726, November 2006.
 [RFC5394]  Bryskin, I., Papadimitriou, D., Berger, L., and J. Ash,
            "Policy-Enabled Path Computation Framework", RFC 5394,
            December 2008.
 [RFC5440]  Vasseur, JP., Ed., and JL. Le Roux, Ed., "Path Computation
            Element (PCE) Communication Protocol (PCEP)", RFC 5440,
            March 2009.
 [RFC5520]  Bradford, R., Ed., Vasseur, JP., and A. Farrel,
            "Preserving Topology Confidentiality in Inter-Domain Path
            Computation Using a Path-Key-Based Mechanism", RFC 5520,
            April 2009.

Farrel, et al. Standards Track [Page 13] RFC 5553 RSVP Extensions for Path Key Support May 2009

 [MPLS-SEC] Fang, L., Ed., "Security Framework for MPLS and GMPLS
            Networks", Work in Progress, March 2009.

Authors' Addresses

 Adrian Farrel
 Old Dog Consulting
 EMail:  adrian@olddog.co.uk
 Rich Bradford
 Cisco Systems, Inc.
 1414 Massachusetts Avenue
 Boxborough, MA - 01719
 USA
 EMail: rbradfor@cisco.com
 Jean-Philippe Vasseur
 Cisco Systems, Inc
 11, Rue Camille Desmoulins
 L'Atlantis
 92782 Issy Les Moulineaux
 France
 EMail: jpv@cisco.com

Farrel, et al. Standards Track [Page 14]

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