Network Working Group                                  P. Traina, Editor
Request for Comments: 1774                                 cisco Systems
Category: Informational                                       March 1995

                       BGP-4 Protocol Analysis

Status of this Memo

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

Introduction

  The purpose of this report is to document how the requirements for
  advancing a routing protocol to Draft Standard have been satisfied by
  the Border Gateway Protocol version 4 (BGP-4). This report summarizes
  the key features of BGP, and analyzes the protocol with respect to
  scaling and performance. This is the first of two reports on the BGP
  protocol.

  BGP-4 is an inter-autonomous system routing protocol designed for
  TCP/IP internets.  Version 1 of the BGP protocol was published in RFC
  1105. Since then BGP versions 2, 3, and 4 have been developed.
  Version 2 was documented in RFC 1163. Version 3 is documented in
  RFC1267.  The changes between versions are explained in Appendix 2 of
  [1].

  Possible applications of BGP in the Internet are documented in [2].

  Please send comments to [email protected].

Key features and algorithms of the BGP-4 protocol.

  This section summarizes the key features and algorithms of the BGP
  protocol. BGP is an inter-autonomous system routing protocol; it is
  designed to be used between multiple autonomous systems. BGP assumes
  that routing within an autonomous system is done by an intra-
  autonomous system routing protocol. BGP does not make any assumptions
  about intra-autonomous system routing protocols employed by the
  various autonomous systems.  Specifically, BGP does not require all
  autonomous systems to run the same intra-autonomous system routing
  protocol.

  BGP is a real inter-autonomous system routing protocol. It imposes no
  constraints on the underlying Internet topology. The information
  exchanged via BGP is sufficient to construct a graph of autonomous
  systems connectivity from which routing loops may be pruned and some



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  routing policy decisions at the autonomous system level may be
  enforced.

  The key features of the protocol are the notion of path attributes
  and aggregation of network layer reachability information (NLRI).

  Path attributes provide BGP with flexibility and expandability. Path
  attributes are partitioned into well-known and optional. The
  provision for optional attributes allows experimentation that may
  involve a group of BGP routers without affecting the rest of the
  Internet.  New optional attributes can be added to the protocol in
  much the same fashion as new options are added to the Telnet
  protocol, for instance.

  One of the most important path attributes is the AS-PATH. AS
  reachability information traverses the Internet, this information is
  augmented by the list of autonomous systems that have been traversed
  thus far, forming the AS-PATH.  The AS-PATH allows straightforward
  suppression of the looping of routing information. In addition, the
  AS-PATH serves as a powerful and versatile mechanism for policy-based
  routing.

  BGP-4 enhances the AS-PATH attribute to include sets of autonomous
  systems as well as lists.  This extended format allows generated
  aggregate routes to carry path information from the more specific
  routes used to generate the aggregate.

  BGP uses an algorithm that cannot be classified as either a pure
  distance vector, or a pure link state. Carrying a complete AS path in
  the AS-PATH attribute allows to reconstruct large portions of the
  overall topology. That makes it similar to the link state algorithms.
  Exchanging only the currently used routes between the peers makes it
  similar to the distance vector algorithms.

  To conserve bandwidth and processing power, BGP uses incremental
  updates, where after the initial exchange of complete routing
  information, a pair of BGP routers exchanges only changes (deltas) to
  that information. Technique of incremental updates requires reliable
  transport between a pair of BGP routers. To achieve this
  functionality BGP uses TCP as its transport.

  In addition to incremental updates, BGP-4 has added the concept of
  route aggregation so that information about groups of networks may
  represented as a single entity.

  BGP is a self-contained protocol. That is, it specifies how routing
  information is exchanged both between BGP speakers in different
  autonomous systems, and between BGP speakers within a single



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  autonomous system.

  To allow graceful coexistence with EGP and OSPF, BGP provides support
  for carrying both EGP and OSPF derived exterior routes BGP also
  allows to carry statically defined exterior routes or routes derived
  by other IGP information.

BGP performance characteristics and scalability

  In this section we'll try to answer the question of how much link
  bandwidth, router memory and router CPU cycles does the BGP protocol
  consume under normal conditions.  We'll also address the scalability
  of BGP, and look at some of its limits.

  BGP does not require all the routers within an autonomous system to
  participate in the BGP protocol. Only the border routers that provide
  connectivity between the local autonomous system and its adjacent
  autonomous systems participate in BGP.  Constraining the set of
  participants is just one way of addressing the scaling issue.

Link bandwidth and CPU utilization

  Immediately after the initial BGP connection setup, the peers
  exchange complete set of routing information. If we denote the total
  number of routes in the Internet by N, the mean AS distance of the
  Internet by M (distance at the level of an autonomous system,
  expressed in terms of the number of autonomous systems), the total
  number of autonomous systems in the Internet by A, and assume that
  the networks are uniformly distributed among the autonomous systems,
  then the worst case amount of bandwidth consumed during the initial
  exchange between a pair of BGP speakers is

                   MR = O(N + M * A)

  The following table illustrates typical amount of bandwidth consumed
  during the initial exchange between a pair of BGP speakers based on
  the above assumptions (ignoring bandwidth consumed by the BGP
  Header).

  # NLRI       Mean AS Distance       # AS's    Bandwidth
  ----------   ----------------       ------    ---------
  10,000       15                     300       49,000 bytes
  20,000       8                      400       86,000 bytes *
  40,000       15                     400       172,000 bytes
  100,000      20                     3,000     520,000 bytes

  * the actual "size" of the Internet at the the time of this
    document's publication



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  Note that most of the bandwidth is consumed by the exchange of the
  Network Layer Reachability Information (NLRI).

  BGP-4 was created specifically to reduce the amount of NLRI entries
  carried and exchanged by border routers.  BGP-4, along with CIDR [4]
  has introduced the concept of the "Supernet" which describes a
  power-of-two aggregation of more than one class-based network.

  Due to the advantages of advertising a few large aggregate blocks
  instead of many smaller class-based individual networks, it is
  difficult to estimate the actual reduction in bandwidth and
  processing that BGP-4 has provided over BGP3.  If we simply enumerate
  all aggregate blocks into their individual class-based networks, we
  would not take into account "dead" space that has been reserved for
  future expansion.  The best metric for determining the success of
  BGP-4's aggregation is to sample the number NLRI entries in the
  globally connected Internet today and compare it to projected growth
  rates before BGP-4 was deployed.

  In January of 1994, router carrying a full routing load for the
  globally connected Internet had approximately 19,000 network entries
  (this number is not exact due to local policy variations).  The BGP
  deployment working group estimated that the growth rate at that time
  was over 1000 new networks per month and increasing.  Since the
  widespread deployment of BGP-4, the growth rate has dropped
  significantly and a sample done at the end of November 1994 showed
  approximately 21,000 entries present,  as opposed to the expected
  30,000.

  CPU cycles consumed by BGP depends only on the stability of the
  Internet. If the Internet is stable, then the only link bandwidth and
  router CPU cycles consumed by BGP are due to the exchange of the BGP
  KEEPALIVE messages. The KEEPALIVE messages are exchanged only between
  peers. The suggested frequency of the exchange is 30 seconds. The
  KEEPALIVE messages are quite short (19 octets), and require virtually
  no processing.  Therefore, the bandwidth consumed by the KEEPALIVE
  messages is about 5 bits/sec.  Operational experience confirms that
  the overhead (in terms of bandwidth and CPU) associated with the
  KEEPALIVE messages should be viewed as negligible.  If the Internet
  is unstable, then only the changes to the reachability information
  (that are caused by the instabilities) are passed between routers
  (via the UPDATE messages). If we denote the number of routing changes
  per second by C, then in the worst case the amount of bandwidth
  consumed by the BGP can be expressed as O(C * M). The greatest
  overhead per UPDATE message occurs when each UPDATE message contains
  only a single network. It should be pointed out that in practice
  routing changes exhibit strong locality with respect to the AS path.
  That is routes that change are likely to have common AS path. In this



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  case multiple networks can be grouped into a single UPDATE message,
  thus significantly reducing the amount of bandwidth required (see
  also Appendix 6.1 of [1]).

  Since in the steady state the link bandwidth and router CPU cycles
  consumed by the BGP protocol are dependent only on the stability of
  the Internet, but are completely independent on the number of
  networks that compose the Internet, it follows that BGP should have
  no scaling problems in the areas of link bandwidth and router CPU
  utilization, as the Internet grows, provided that the overall
  stability of the inter-AS connectivity (connectivity between ASs) of
  the Internet can be controlled. Stability issue could be addressed by
  introducing some form of dampening (e.g., hold downs).  Due to the
  nature of BGP, such dampening should be viewed as a local to an
  autonomous system matter (see also Appendix 6.3 of [1]). It is
  important to point out, that regardless of BGP, one should not
  underestimate the significance of the stability in the Internet.

  Growth of the Internet has made the stability issue one of the most
  crucial ones. It is important to realize that BGP, by itself, does
  not introduce any instabilities in the Internet. Current observations
  in the NSFNET show that the instabilities are largely due to the
  ill-behaved routing within the autonomous systems that compose the
  Internet.  Therefore, while providing BGP with mechanisms to address
  the stability issue, we feel that the right way to handle the issue
  is to address it at the root of the problem, and to come up with
  intra-autonomous routing schemes that exhibit reasonable stability.

  It also may be instructive to compare bandwidth and CPU requirements
  of BGP with EGP. While with BGP the complete information is exchanged
  only at the connection establishment time, with EGP the complete
  information is exchanged periodically (usually every 3 minutes). Note
  that both for BGP and for EGP the amount of information exchanged is
  roughly on the order of the networks reachable via a peer that sends
  the information (see also Section 5.2). Therefore, even if one
  assumes extreme instabilities of BGP, its worst case behavior will be
  the same as the steady state behavior of EGP.

  Operational experience with BGP showed that the incremental updates
  approach employed by BGP presents an enormous improvement both in the
  area of bandwidth and in the CPU utilization, as compared with
  complete periodic updates used by EGP (see also presentation by
  Dennis Ferguson at the Twentieth IETF, March 11-15, 1991, St.Louis).








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Memory requirements

  To quantify the worst case memory requirements for BGP, denote the
  total number of networks in the Internet by N, the mean AS distance
  of the Internet by M (distance at the level of an autonomous system,
  expressed in terms of the number of autonomous systems), the total
  number of autonomous systems in the Internet by A, and the total
  number of BGP speakers that a system is peering with by K (note that
  K will usually be dominated by the total number of the BGP speakers
  within a single autonomous system). Then the worst case memory
  requirements (MR) can be expressed as

                   MR = O((N + M * A) * K)

  In the current NSFNET Backbone (N = 2110, A = 59, and M = 5) if each
  network is stored as 4 octets, and each autonomous system is stored
  as 2 octets then the overhead of storing the AS path information (in
  addition to the full complement of exterior routes) is less than 7
  percent of the total memory usage.

  It is interesting to point out, that prior to the introduction of BGP
  in the NSFNET Backbone, memory requirements on the NSFNET Backbone
  routers running EGP were on the order of O(N * K). Therefore, the
  extra overhead in memory incurred by the NSFNET routers after the
  introduction of BGP is less than 7 percent.

  Since a mean AS distance grows very slowly with the total number of
  networks (there are about 60 autonomous systems, well over 2,000
  networks known in the NSFNET backbone routers, and the mean AS
  distance of the current Internet is well below 5), for all practical
  purposes the worst case router memory requirements are on the order
  of the total number of networks in the Internet times the number of
  peers the local system is peering with. We expect that the total
  number of networks in the Internet will grow much faster than the
  average number of peers per router. Therefore, scaling with respect
  to the memory requirements is going to be heavily dominated by the
  factor that is linearly proportional to the total number of networks
  in the Internet.

  The following table illustrates typical memory requirements of a
  router running BGP. It is assumed that each network is encoded as 4
  bytes, each AS is encoded as 2 bytes, and each networks is reachable
  via some fraction of all of the peers (# BGP peers/per net).








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  # Networks  Mean AS Distance # AS's # BGP peers/per net Memory Req
  ----------  ---------------- ------ ------------------- ----------
  2,100       5                59     3                   27,000
  4,000       10               100    6                   108,000
  10,000      15               300    10                  490,000
  100,000     20               3,000  20                  1,040,000

  To put memory requirements of BGP in a proper perspective, let's try
  to put aside for a moment the issue of what information is used to
  construct the forwarding tables in a router, and just focus on the
  forwarding tables themselves. In this case one might ask about the
  limits on these tables.  For instance, given that right now the
  forwarding tables in the NSFNET Backbone routers carry well over
  20,000 entries, one might ask whether it would be possible to have a
  functional router with a table that will have 200,000 entries.
  Clearly the answer to this question is completely independent of BGP.
  On the other hand the answer to the original questions (that was
  asked with respect to BGP) is directly related to the latter
  question. Very interesting comments were given by Paul Tsuchiya in
  his review of BGP in March of 1990 (as part of the BGP review
  committee appointed by Bob Hinden).  In the review he said that, "BGP
  does not scale well.  This is not really the fault of BGP. It is the
  fault of the flat IP address space.  Given the flat IP address space,
  any routing protocol must carry network numbers in its updates." With
  the introduction of CIDR [4] and BGP-4,  we have attempted to reduce
  this limitation.  Unfortunately,  we cannot erase history nor can
  BGP-4 solve the problems inherent with inefficient assignment of
  future address blocks.

  To reiterate, BGP limits with respect to the memory requirements are
  directly related to the underlying Internet Protocol (IP), and
  specifically the addressing scheme employed by IP. BGP would provide
  much better scaling in environments with more flexible addressing
  schemes.  It should be pointed out that with only very minor
  additions BGP was extended to support hierarchies of autonomous
  system [8]. Such hierarchies, combined with an addressing scheme that
  would allow more flexible address aggregation capabilities, can be
  utilized by BGP-like protocols, thus providing practically unlimited
  scaling capabilities.

Applicability of BGP

  In this section we'll try to answer the question of what environment
  is BGP well suited, and for what is it not suitable?  Partially this
  question is answered in the Section 2 of [1], where the document
  states the following:





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     "To characterize the set of policy decisions that can be enforced
     using BGP, one must focus on the rule that an AS advertises to its
     neighbor ASs only those routes that it itself uses.  This rule
     reflects the "hop-by-hop" routing paradigm generally used
     throughout the current Internet.  Note that some policies cannot
     be supported by the "hop-by-hop" routing paradigm and thus require
     techniques such as source routing to enforce.  For example, BGP
     does not enable one AS to send traffic to a neighbor AS intending
     that the traffic take a different route from that taken by traffic
     originating in the neighbor AS.  On the other hand, BGP can
     support any policy conforming to the "hop-by-hop" routing
     paradigm.  Since the current Internet uses only the "hop-by-hop"
     routing paradigm and since BGP can support any policy that
     conforms to that paradigm, BGP is highly applicable as an inter-AS
     routing protocol for the current Internet."

  While BGP is well suitable for the current Internet, it is also
  almost a necessity for the current Internet as well.  Operational
  experience with EGP showed that it is highly inadequate for the
  current Internet.  Topological restrictions imposed by EGP are
  unjustifiable from the technical point of view, and unenforceable
  from the practical point of view.  Inability of EGP to efficiently
  handle information exchange between peers is a cause of severe
  routing instabilities in the operational Internet. Finally,
  information provided by BGP is well suitable for enforcing a variety
  of routing policies.

  Rather than trying to predict the future, and overload BGP with a
  variety of functions that may (or may not) be needed, the designers
  of BGP took a different approach. The protocol contains only the
  functionality that is essential, while at the same time provides
  flexible mechanisms within the protocol itself that allow to expand
  its functionality.  Since BGP was designed with flexibility and
  expandability in mind, we think it should be able to address new or
  evolving requirements with relative ease. The existence proof of this
  statement may be found in the way how new features (like repairing a
  partitioned autonomous system with BGP) are already introduced in the
  protocol.

  To summarize, BGP is well suitable as an inter-autonomous system
  routing protocol for the current Internet that is based on IP (RFC
  791) as the Internet Protocol and "hop-by-hop" routing paradigm. It
  is hard to speculate whether BGP will be suitable for other
  environments where internetting is done by other than IP protocols,
  or where the routing paradigm will be different.






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Security Considerations

  Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

Acknowledgments

  The BGP-4 protocol has been developed by the IDR/BGP Working Group of
  the Internet Engineering Task Force.  I would like to express thanks
  to Yakov Rekhter for providing RFC 1265.  This document is only a
  minor update to the original text. I'd also like to explicitly thank
  Yakov Rekhter and Tony Li for their review of this document as well
  as their constructive and valuable comments.

Editor's Address

  Paul Traina
  cisco Systems, Inc.
  170 W. Tasman Dr.
  San Jose, CA 95134

  EMail: [email protected]






























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References

  [1] Rekhter, Y., and T., Li, "A Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4)",
      RFC 1771, T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM Corp., cisco Systems,
      March 1995.

  [2] Rekhter, Y., and P. Gross, Editors, "Application of the Border
      Gateway Protocol in the Internet", RFC 1772, T.J. Watson Research
      Center, IBM Corp., MCI, March 1995.

  [3] Willis, S., Burruss, J., and J. Chu, "Definitions of Managed
      Objects for the Fourth Version of the Border Gateway Protocol
      (BGP-4) using SMIv2", RFC 1657, Wellfleet Communications Inc.,
      IBM Corp., July 1994.

  [4] Fuller V., Li. T., Yu J., and K. Varadhan, "Classless Inter-
      Domain Routing (CIDR): an Address Assignment and Aggregation
      Strategy", RFC 1519, BARRNet, cisco, MERIT, OARnet, September
      1993.

  [6] Moy J., "Open Shortest Path First Routing Protocol (Version 2)",
      RFC 1257, Proteon, August 1991.

  [7] Varadhan, K., Hares S., and Y. Rekhter, "BGP4/IDRP for IP---OSPF
      Interaction", Work in Progress.

  [8] ISO/IEC 10747, Kunzinger, C., Editor, "Inter-Domain Routing
      Protocol", October 1993.























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