Internet-Draft | Source Segment for MSR6 | July 2022 |
Xie, et al. | Expires 12 January 2023 | [Page] |
This document defines the general concept of source segment which is used as the IPv6 source address in an IPv6 packet. Source segment for multicast service is introduced 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]¶
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Segment Routing ([RFC8402]) leverages the mechanism of source routing. An ingress node steers a packet through an ordered list of instructions, called "segments". Each one of these instructions represents a function to be implemented at a specific location in the network. A function is locally defined on the node where it is executed. Network Programming combines Segment Routing functions to achieve a networking objective that goes beyond mere packet routing. [RFC8986] defines the SRv6 Network Programming concept and specifies the main Segment Routing behaviors and network programming functions.¶
Previous segments defined in SRv6 can be used as the destination address of an IPv6 packet. This document introduces the new segments, source segments, which can be used as the IPv6 source address of an IPv6 packet. This document defines the general concept of source segment and the source segment used for multicast service. Protocol extensions on the control plane are not in the scope of this document.¶
This document defines the general concept of source segment and the source segment used for multicast service. Protocol extensions on the control plane are not in the scope of this document.¶
The following new terms are used throughout this document:¶
MSR6: Multicast Source Routing over IPv6;¶
MSR6 Domain: a set of nodes participating in the multicast source routing;¶
Source segment is different from the existing SID defined in RFC8402 from the following aspects:¶
Using source segment for SRv6 Network Programming have several benefits including:¶
Source segment should be avoided to process hop by hop. Per-hop process of source segment which will degrade forwarding performance and bring compatibility issues.¶
Source segment leverages the format of SID defined in SRv6 network programming.¶
Source segment consists of LOC:FUNCT:ARG, where a locator (LOC) is encoded in the L most significant bits of the SID, followed by F bits of function (FUNCT) and A bits of arguments (ARG).¶
A locator may be represented as B:N where B is the SRv6 SID block (IPv6 prefix allocated for SRv6 SIDs by the operator) and N is the identifier of the ingress node .¶
The FUNCT is an opaque identification of the behavior bound to the SID. The behavior could be executed in other nodes except ingress node.¶
The behavior indicated by FUNCT may require additional information for its processing. This information may be encoded in the ARG bits of the SID.¶
In the multicast service, packet is replicated along the tree towards a set of leaf nodes. MVPN routing and the corresponding information could be encapsulated in the source segment carried in the IPv6 source address. Source Segment for MVPN is distributed by the multicast source node and the function is executed by the multicast leaf nodes.As described in section 3, Source Segment for MVPN is not changed when the packet is replicated and forwarded along the P2MP path.¶
This section defines the source segment for MVPN.¶
The following is a set of behaviors that can be associated with a source segment for MVPN.¶
+------------+------------------------------------------------------+ | Src.DT4 |Source address for decapsulation and IPv4 table lookup| |------------|------------------------------------------------------+ | Src.DT6 |Source address for decapsulation and IPv6 table lookup| |------------|------------------------------------------------------+ | Src.DT46 |Source address for decapsulation and IP table lookup | |------------|------------------------------------------------------+ | Src.DT2 |Source address for decapsulation and L2 table lookup | |------------|------------------------------------------------------+¶
The "Source address for decapsulation and IPv4 table lookup" behavior ("Src.DT4" for short) is used in MVPNv4 use case where an MFIB lookup in a specific VRF table T at the egress node is required. The Src.DT4 SID is an SID associated with an IPv4 MFIB table T on the egress PE, either through a control-plane message advertised by the ingress PE, or through a local configuration on the egress PE. When an IPv6 encapsulated packet with IPv6 source address being S is received on an egress PE, and S is associated with an Src.DT4 SID on the egress PE, the egress PE does the following behavior:¶
S01. If (Upper-Layer header type == 4(IPv4) ) { S02. Remove the outer IPv6 header with all its extension headers S03. Set the packet's associated MFIB table to T S04. Submit the packet to the egress IPv4 MFIB lookup for transmission to the new multicast downstreams S05. } Else { S06. Drop the packet; S07. }¶
SRC.DT6 behavior could be used in MVPNv6 use case where a MFIB lookup in a specific VRF table at the egress node is required.¶
S01. If (Upper-Layer header type == 41(IPv6) ) { S02. Remove the outer IPv6 header with all its extension headers S03. Set the packet's associated IPv6 MFIB table to T S04. Submit the packet to the egress IPv6 MFIB lookup for transmission to the new multicast downstreams S05. } Else { S06. Drop the packet; S07. }¶
SRC.DT46 behavior could be used in MVPN use case where a MFIB lookup in a specific VRF table at the egress node is required.¶
S01. If (Upper-Layer header type == 4(IPv4) ) { S02. Remove the outer IPv6 header with all its extension headers S03. Set the packet's associated MFIB table to T S04. Submit the packet to the egress IPv4 MFIB lookup for transmission to the new destination S05. } Else if (Upper-Layer header type == 41(IPv6) ) { S06. Remove the outer IPv6 header with all its extension headers S07. Set the packet's associated MFIB table to T S08. Submit the packet to the egress IPv6 MFIB lookup for transmission to the new destination S09. } Else { S10. Drop the packet; S11. }¶
SRC.DT2 behavior could be used in MVPN use case where a L2 table lookup in a specific Layer-2 Multicast forwarding table at the egress node is required.¶
S01. If (Upper-Layer header type == 143(Ethernet) ) { S02. Remove the outer IPv6 header with all its extension headers S03. Set the packet's associated Layer-2 Multicast forwarding table to T S04. Submit the packet to the egress Layer-2 Multicast forwarding table lookup for transmission to the new multicast downstreams S05. } Else { S06. Send an ICMP Parameter Problem to the Source Address with Code 4 (SR Upper-layer Header Error) and Pointer set to the offset of the Upper-Layer header, interrupt packet processing, and discard the packet S07. }¶
Once a source segment is used in an MSR6 data packet as source address, it is expected to receive an ICMPv6 error message with the source segment being the Destination address, and such a packet is expected to be processed by Ingress PE.¶
Additionally, there are cases where a source segment may appear as destination address of an packet that is not an ICMPv6 message. This could be a packet without SRH, or a packet with SRH and the active segment is the source segment. Such a packet is expected to be dropped.¶
The following pseudo-code describes how a packet with a source segment as destination address is handled:¶
1. IF Upper Layer Protocol = ICMPv6 ;;Ref1: ICMPv6 packet 2. Send to CPU in limited rate. 3. ELSE 4. Drop the packet.¶
The source segment could be applied in the following case:¶