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rfc:rfc7152

Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) R. Key, Ed. Request for Comments: 7152 S. Delord Category: Informational Telstra ISSN: 2070-1721 F. Jounay

                                                             Orange CH
                                                              L. Huang
                                                          China Mobile
                                                                Z. Liu
                                                         China Telecom
                                                               M. Paul
                                                      Deutsche Telekom
                                                            March 2014
 Requirements for Metro Ethernet Forum (MEF) Ethernet-Tree (E-Tree)
         Support in Layer 2 Virtual Private Network (L2VPN)

Abstract

 This document provides functional requirements for the support of
 Metro Ethernet Forum (MEF) Ethernet Tree (E-Tree) in multipoint Layer
 2 Virtual Private Network solutions (referred to as simply "L2VPN").
 It is intended that potential solutions will use these requirements
 as guidelines.

Status of This Memo

 This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is
 published for informational purposes.
 This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has
 received public review and has been approved for publication by the
 Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents
 approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet
 Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 5741.
 Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
 and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
 http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7152.

Key, et al. Informational [Page 1] RFC 7152 Requirement E-Tree in L2VPN March 2014

Copyright Notice

 Copyright (c) 2014 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
 (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
 publication of this document.  Please review these documents
 carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
 to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
 include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
 the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
 described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

 1. Introduction ....................................................3
    1.1. Conventions Used in This Document ..........................3
 2. IETF Multipoint Ethernet L2VPN Services .........................3
    2.1. VPLS .......................................................3
    2.2. Ethernet Virtual Private Network (E-VPN) ...................3
 3. MEF Multipoint Ethernet Services ................................4
    3.1. Similarities between E-LAN and E-Tree ......................4
    3.2. Differences between E-LAN and E-Tree .......................4
    3.3. E-Tree Use Cases ...........................................5
    3.4. Generic E-Tree Service .....................................6
 4. Problem Statement ...............................................6
    4.1. Motivation .................................................6
    4.2. Leaf-to-Leaf Communication Restriction .....................6
 5. Requirements ....................................................7
    5.1. Functional Requirements ....................................7
    5.2. Applicability ..............................................8
    5.3. Backward Compatibility .....................................8
    5.4. External Network Network Interface (ENNI) ..................8
 6. Security Considerations .........................................8
 7. Contributors ....................................................8
 8. Acknowledgements ................................................9
 9. References ......................................................9
    9.1. Normative References .......................................9
    9.2. Informative References ....................................10
 Appendix A. Frequently Asked Question .............................11
 A.1. Are E-Tree Requirements Addressed in the Virtual
      Private Multicast Service (VPMS) Requirements? ...............11

Key, et al. Informational [Page 2] RFC 7152 Requirement E-Tree in L2VPN March 2014

1. Introduction

 This document provides functional requirements for the support of
 Metro Ethernet Forum (MEF) Ethernet Tree (E-Tree) in multipoint Layer
 2 Virtual Private Network solutions (referred to as simply "L2VPN").
 It is intended that potential solutions will use these requirements
 as guidelines.
 A considerable number of service providers have adopted Virtual
 Private LAN Service (VPLS) to provide MEF Ethernet LAN (E-LAN)
 services to customers.  Service providers currently need a simple and
 effective solution to emulate E-Tree services in addition to E-LAN
 services on their MPLS networks.
 Service providers also expect E-Tree support in any newly developed
 L2VPN technologies.

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 [RFC2119].

2. IETF Multipoint Ethernet L2VPN Services

2.1. VPLS

 VPLS [RFC4761] [RFC4762] is an L2VPN service that provides
 multipoint-to-multipoint connectivity for Ethernet across an IP or
 MPLS-enabled IP Packet Switched Network (IP/MPLS PSN).  VPLS emulates
 the Ethernet VLAN functionality of traditional Ethernet networks.
 Thus, in VPLS, the customer Ethernet frame is transported over the
 IP/MPLS PSN from the ingress Provider Edge (PE) to the egress PE
 where the destination is connected based on the Ethernet frame
 destination Media Access Control (MAC) address in the context of the
 virtual switching instance (VSI) to which it belongs.

2.2. Ethernet Virtual Private Network (E-VPN)

 E-VPN is an enhanced L2 service that emulates an Ethernet VLAN across
 an IP/MPLS PSN, primarily targeted to support large scale L2VPNs with
 resiliency requirements not satisfied by other L2VPN solutions.
 E-VPN is currently under development.  Please refer to [EVPN].

Key, et al. Informational [Page 3] RFC 7152 Requirement E-Tree in L2VPN March 2014

3. MEF Multipoint Ethernet Services

 MEF has defined two multipoint Ethernet service types:
  1. E-LAN (Ethernet LAN), multipoint-to-multipoint service
  2. E-Tree (Ethernet Tree), rooted-multipoint service
 For the full specifications, please refer to [MEF6.1] and [MEF10.2].

3.1. Similarities between E-LAN and E-Tree

 The following are the similarities between E-LAN and E-Tree services.
  1. Data frame is an Ethernet frame.
  2. Data forwarding is MAC-based forwarding.
  3. A generic E-LAN/E-Tree service is always bidirectional in the

sense that ingress frames can originate at any endpoint in the

      service.

3.2. Differences between E-LAN and E-Tree

 Within the context of a multipoint Ethernet service, each endpoint is
 designated as either a Root or a Leaf.  A Root can communicate with
 all other endpoints in the same multipoint Ethernet service; however,
 a Leaf can only communicate with Roots but not Leaves.
 The only differences between E-LAN and E-Tree are:
  1. E-LAN has Root endpoints only, which implies there is no

communication restriction between endpoints.

  1. E-Tree has both Root and Leaf endpoints, which implies there is

a need to enforce communication restriction between Leaf

      endpoints.

Key, et al. Informational [Page 4] RFC 7152 Requirement E-Tree in L2VPN March 2014

3.3. E-Tree Use Cases

 Table 1 presents some major E-Tree use cases.
     +---------------------------+--------------+------------+
     | Use Case                  | Root         | Leaf       |
 +---+---------------------------+--------------+------------+
 | 1 | Hub & Spoke VPN           | Hub Site     | Spoke Site |
 +---+---------------------------+--------------+------------+
 | 2 | Wholesale Access          | Customer's   | Customer's |
 |   |                           | Interconnect | Subscriber |
 +---+---------------------------+--------------+------------+
 | 3 | Mobile Backhaul           | Radio Access | RAN Base   |
 |   |                           | Network (RAN)| Station    |
 |   |                           | Network      |            |
 |   |                           | Controller   |            |
 +---+---------------------------+--------------+------------+
 | 4 | IEEE 1588 PTPv2           | Precision    | PTP Client |
 |   | Clock Synchronisation     | Time Protocol|            |
 |   | [IEEE1588]                | (PTP) Server |            |
 +---+---------------------------+--------------+------------+
 | 5 | Internet Access           | Broadband    | Subscriber |
 |   | [TR-101]                  | Network      |            |
 |   |                           | Gateway      |            |
 +---+---------------------------+--------------+------------+
 | 6 | Broadcast Video           | Video Source | Subscriber |
 |   | (unidirectional only)     |              |            |
 +---+---------------------------+--------------+------------+
 | 7 | Broadcast/Multicast Video | Video Source | Subscriber |
 |   | plus Control Channel      |              |            |
 +---+---------------------------+--------------+------------+
 | 8 | Device Management         | Management   | Managed    |
 |   |                           | System       | Device     |
 +---+---------------------------+--------------+------------+
                   Table 1: E-Tree Use Cases
 Common to all use cases, direct L2 Leaf-to-Leaf communication is not
 required or must be inhibited.
 If direct L2 Leaf-to-Leaf communication is not allowed due to a
 security concern, then E-Tree should be used to prohibit
 communication between Leaf endpoints.  Otherwise, E-LAN is also a
 feasible option.

Key, et al. Informational [Page 5] RFC 7152 Requirement E-Tree in L2VPN March 2014

3.4. Generic E-Tree Service

 A generic E-Tree service supports multiple Root endpoints.  The need
 for multiple Root endpoints is usually driven by a redundancy
 requirement.  Whether a particular E-Tree service needs to support
 single or multiple Roots depends on the target application.
 A generic E-Tree service supports all the following traffic flows:
  1. Ethernet Unicast from Root to Leaf
  2. Ethernet Unicast from Leaf to Root
  3. Ethernet Unicast from Root to Root
  4. Ethernet Broadcast/Multicast from Root to other Roots and Leaves
  5. Ethernet Broadcast/Multicast from Leaf to Roots
 A particular E-Tree service may need to support all the above or only
 a subset depending on the target application.

4. Problem Statement

4.1. Motivation

 L2VPN can be used to emulate MEF E-LAN service over an IP/MPLS PSN.
 Service providers also require E-Tree support in L2VPN.

4.2. Leaf-to-Leaf Communication Restriction

 In this section, VPLS is used to illustrate the problem; however, the
 same principle applies to other L2VPN technologies.
 VPLS treats all attachment circuits (ACs) equally (essentially as
 Roots, although they not classified into Root or Leaf) and provides
 any-to-any connectivity among all ACs.  VPLS does not include any
 mechanism for communication restriction between specific ACs.
 Therefore, it is insufficient for emulating generic E-Tree service
 over an IP/MPLS PSN.
 As an example of the problems not addressed in VPLS solutions,
 consider the scenario in Figure 1 where there are two PEs, each with
 a Root AC and a Leaf AC and where VPLS is used to emulate an E-Tree
 service interconnecting these ACs over an IP/MPLS PSN.

Key, et al. Informational [Page 6] RFC 7152 Requirement E-Tree in L2VPN March 2014

                   <------------E-Tree------------>
                  +---------+            +---------+
                  |   PE1   |            |   PE2   |
 +---+            |  +---+  |            |  +---+  |            +---+
 |CE1+-----AC1----+--+   |  |            |  |   +--+----AC3-----+CE3|
 +---+  (Root AC) |  | V |  |  Ethernet  |  | V |  | (Root AC)  +---+
                  |  | S +--+-----PW-----+--+ S |  |
 +---+            |  | I |  |            |  | I |  |            +---+
 |CE2+-----AC2----+--+   |  |            |  |   +--+----AC4-----+CE4|
 +---+  (Leaf AC) |  +---+  |            |  +---+  | (Leaf AC)  +---+
                  +---------+            +---------+
 Figure 1: Problem Scenario for Leaf-to-Leaf Communication Restriction
 When PE2 receives a frame from PE1 via the Ethernet pseudowire (PW),
  1. PE2 does not know which AC on PE1 is the ingress AC
  2. PE2 does not know whether or not the ingress AC is a Leaf AC
  3. PE2 does not have sufficient information to enforce the Leaf-to-

Leaf communication restriction

 Examples where the problems arise:
  1. Customer Edge 2 (CE2) sends a Broadcast/Multicast Ethernet frame

to PE1 via AC2

  1. CE2 sends a Unicast Ethernet frame to PE1 via AC2 with a

destination MAC address corresponding to CE4's MAC address

 Note: Figure 1 is a hypothetical case solely used for explaining the
 problem; it is not meant to represent a typical E-Tree service.
 There are some possible ways to get around this problem that do not
 require extensions to existing VPLS solutions, but they all come with
 significant design complexity or deployment constraints.

5. Requirements

5.1. Functional Requirements

 The following are the E-Tree L2VPN functional requirements:
 (1) A solution MUST prohibit communication between any two Leaf ACs
     in an L2VPN instance.
 (2) A solution MUST allow multiple Root ACs in an L2VPN instance.

Key, et al. Informational [Page 7] RFC 7152 Requirement E-Tree in L2VPN March 2014

 (3) A solution MUST allow a Root AC and Leaf AC of an L2VPN instance
     to coexist on any PE.

5.2. Applicability

 A solution MUST identify the L2VPN technology ([RFC4761], [RFC4762],
 [EVPN]) to which the solution is applicable.

5.3. Backward Compatibility

 A solution SHOULD minimise the impact on VPLS and E-VPN L2VPN
 solutions, especially for the MEF E-LAN services already in
 operation.
 A solution SHOULD be backward compatible with the VPLS and E-VPN
 L2VPN solutions.  It SHOULD allow a case where a common L2VPN
 instance is composed of both PEs supporting the solution and PEs not
 supporting it, and the Leaf-to-Leaf communication restriction is
 enforced within the scope of the compliant PEs.

5.4. External Network Network Interface (ENNI)

 A solution SHOULD support Root Operator Virtual Connection (OVC) End
 Point, Leaf OVC End Point and Trunk OVC End Point specified in
 [MEF26.1].

6. Security Considerations

 This document introduces a requirement of prohibiting communication
 between any two Leaf ACs in an L2VPN instance.  In some use cases,
 such a requirement is imposed because of security reasons.  Other
 than that, there are no additional security considerations beyond
 those already described in [RFC4761], [RFC4762], and [EVPN].

7. Contributors

 Ruediger Kunze
 Deutsche Telekom
 Winterfeldtstr. 21-27
 10781 Berlin, Germany
 EMail: ruediger.kunze@telekom.de
 Nick Del Regno
 Verizon
 400 International Pkwy
 Richardson, TX 75081, USA
 EMail: nick.delregno@verizon.com

Key, et al. Informational [Page 8] RFC 7152 Requirement E-Tree in L2VPN March 2014

 Josh Rogers
 Time Warner Cable
 11921 N Mo Pac Expy
 Suite 210B
 Austin, TX 78759, USA
 EMail: josh.rogers@twcable.com

8. Acknowledgements

 The authors would like to thank Lizhong Jin, Lucy Yong, Yuji Kamite,
 and Wim Henderickx for their valuable input and support.

9. References

9.1. Normative References

 [MEF6.1]     Metro Ethernet Forum, "Ethernet Services Definitions -
              Phase 2", Technical Specification MEF 6.1, April 2008,
              <http://metroethernetforum.org/Assets/
              Technical_Specifications/PDF/MEF6-1.pdf>.
 [MEF10.2]    Metro Ethernet Forum, "Ethernet Services Attributes
              Phase 2", Technical Specification MEF 10.2, October
              2009, <http://metroethernetforum.org/Assets/
              Technical_Specifications/PDF/MEF10.2.pdf>.
 [MEF26.1]    Metro Ethernet Forum, "External Network Network
              Interface (ENNI) Phase 2", Technical Specification, MEF
              26.1, January 2012,
              <http://metroethernetforum.org/Assets/
              Technical_Specifications/PDF/MEF_26.1.pdf>.
 [RFC2119]    Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
              Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
 [RFC4761]    Kompella, K., Ed., and Y. Rekhter, Ed., "Virtual Private
              LAN Service (VPLS) Using BGP for Auto-Discovery and
              Signaling", RFC 4761, January 2007.
 [RFC4762]    Lasserre, M., Ed., and V. Kompella, Ed., "Virtual
              Private LAN Service (VPLS) Using Label Distribution
              Protocol (LDP) Signaling", RFC 4762, January 2007.

Key, et al. Informational [Page 9] RFC 7152 Requirement E-Tree in L2VPN March 2014

9.2. Informative References

 [EVPN]       Sajassi, A., Aggarwal, R., Uttaro, J., Bitar, N.,
              Henderickx, W., and A. Isaac, "Requirements for Ethernet
              VPN (EVPN)", Work in Progress, February 2014.
 [IEEE1588]   IEEE, "1588-2008 Standard for a Precision Clock
              Synchronization Protocol for Networked Measurement and
              Control Systems", July 2008.
 [TR-101]     Broadband Forum, "Migration to Ethernet-Based DSL
              Aggregation", Technical Report, DSL Forum TR-101, April
              2006, <http://www.broadband-forum.org/
              technical/download/TR-101.pdf>.
 [VPMS]       Kamite, Y., Jounay, F., Niven-Jenkins, B., Brungard, D.,
              and L. Jin, "Framework and Requirements for Virtual
              Private Multicast Service (VPMS)", Work in Progress,
              October 2012.

Key, et al. Informational [Page 10] RFC 7152 Requirement E-Tree in L2VPN March 2014

Appendix A. Frequently Asked Question

A.1. Are E-Tree Requirements Addressed in the Virtual Private Multicast

    Service (VPMS) Requirements?
 VPMS requirements are defined in [VPMS].
 The focus of VPMS is to provide point-to-multipoint connectivity.
 VPMS provides single coverage of receiver membership (i.e., there is
 no distinct differentiation for multiple multicast groups).  A VPMS
 service supports single or multiple Root ACs.  All traffic from a
 Root AC will be forwarded to all Leaf ACs (i.e., Point-to-Multipoint
 (P2MP), from Root to all Leaves).  The destination address in an
 Ethernet frame is not used in data forwarding.  As an optional
 capability, a VPMS service may support reverse traffic from a Leaf AC
 to a Root AC (i.e., point-to-point (P2P), from Leaf to Root).
 In contrast, the focus of MEF E-Tree is that a Leaf can only
 communicate with Roots, not Leaves.
 A generic MEF E-Tree service supports multiple Root endpoints.
 Whether a particular E-Tree service needs to support single or
 multiple Root endpoints depends on the target application.
 As discussion in a previous section, a generic MEF E-Tree service
 supports all the following traffic flows:
  1. Ethernet Unicast bidirectional Root to/from Root
  2. Ethernet Unicast bidirectional Root to/from Leaf
  3. Ethernet Broadcast/Multicast unidirectional Root to all Roots

and Leaves

  1. Ethernet Broadcast/Multicast unidirectional Leaf to all Roots
 A particular E-Tree service may need to support all the above or only
 a subset depending on the target application.
 The IETF's VPMS definition and MEF's E-Tree definition are
 significantly different.
 VPMS may be acceptable in cases where E-Tree service is needed, such
 as in the following cases:
  1. No Unicast traffic from Root destined for a specific Leaf (or

there is no concern if such Unicast traffic is forwarded to all

      Leaves)
    - No traffic between Roots

Key, et al. Informational [Page 11] RFC 7152 Requirement E-Tree in L2VPN March 2014

 For generic E-Tree service, VPMS will not be able to meet the
 requirements.

Authors' Addresses

 Raymond Key (editor)
 EMail: raymond.key@ieee.org
 Simon Delord
 Telstra
 EMail: simon.delord@gmail.com
 Frederic Jounay
 Orange CH
 4 rue caudray 1020 Renens
 Switzerland
 EMail: frederic.jounay@orange.ch
 Lu Huang
 China Mobile
 Unit 2, 28 Xuanwumenxi Ave, Xuanwu District
 Beijing 100053, China
 EMail: huanglu@chinamobile.com
 Zhihua Liu
 China Telecom
 109 Zhongshan Ave., Guangzhou
 510630, China
 EMail: zhliu@gsta.com
 Manuel Paul
 Deutsche Telekom
 Winterfeldtstr. 21-27
 10781 Berlin, Germany
 EMail: manuel.paul@telekom.de

Key, et al. Informational [Page 12]

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