Network Working Group                                           J. Boyle
Request for Comments: 3346                                       PD Nets
Category: Informational                                          V. Gill
                                                  AOL Time Warner, Inc.
                                                              A. Hannan
                                                            RoutingLoop
                                                              D. Cooper
                                                        Global Crossing
                                                             D. Awduche
                                                         Movaz Networks
                                                           B. Christian
                                                               Worldcom
                                                               W.S. Lai
                                                                   AT&T
                                                            August 2002


      Applicability Statement for Traffic Engineering with MPLS

Status of this Memo

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

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  This document describes the applicability of Multiprotocol Label
  Switching (MPLS) to traffic engineering in IP networks.  Special
  considerations for deployment of MPLS for traffic engineering in
  operational contexts are discussed and the limitations of the MPLS
  approach to traffic engineering are highlighted.















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RFC 3346    Applicability Statement for Traffic Engineering  August 2002


Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction....................................................2
  2.  Technical Overview of ISP Traffic Engineering...................3
  3.  Applicability of Internet Traffic Engineering...................4
  3.1 Avoidance of Congested Resources................................4
  3.2 Resource Utilization in Network Topologies with Parallel Links..5
  3.3 Implementing Routing Policies using Affinities..................5
  3.4 Re-optimization After Restoration...............................6
  4.  Implementation Considerations...................................6
  4.1 Architectural and Operational Considerations....................6
  4.2 Network Management Aspects......................................7
  4.3 Capacity Engineering Aspects....................................8
  4.4 Network Measurement Aspects.....................................8
  5.  Limitations.....................................................9
  6.  Conclusion.....................................................11
  7.  Security Considerations........................................11
  8.  References.....................................................11
  9.  Acknowledgments................................................12
  10. Authors' Addresses.............................................13
  11. Full Copyright Statement.......................................14

1. Introduction

  It is generally acknowledged that one of the most significant initial
  applications of Multiprotocol Label Switching (MPLS) is traffic
  engineering (TE) [1][2] in IP networks.  A significant community of
  IP service providers have found that traffic engineering of their
  networks can have tactical and strategic value [2, 3, 4].  To support
  the traffic engineering application, extensions have been specified
  for Interior Gateway Protocols (IGP) IS-IS [5] and OSPF [6], and to
  signaling protocols RSVP [7] and LDP [8].  The extensions for IS-IS,
  OSPF, and RSVP have all been developed and deployed in large scale in
  many networks consisting of multi-vendor equipment.

  This document discusses the applicability of TE to Internet service
  provider networks, focusing on the MPLS-based approach.  It augments
  the existing protocol applicability statements and, in particular,
  relates to the operational applicability of RSVP-TE [9].  Special
  considerations for deployment of MPLS in operational contexts are
  discussed and the limitations of this approach to traffic engineering
  are highlighted.









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RFC 3346    Applicability Statement for Traffic Engineering  August 2002


2. Technical Overview of ISP Traffic Engineering

  Traffic engineering (TE) is generally concerned with the performance
  optimization of operational networks [2].  In contemporary practice,
  TE means mapping IP traffic flows onto the existing physical network
  topology in the most effective way to accomplish desired operational
  objectives.  Techniques currently used to accomplish this include,
  but are not limited to:

         1.  Manipulation of IGP cost (metrics)
         2.  Explicit routing using constrained virtual-circuit
             switching techniques such as ATM or Frame Relay SPVCs
         3.  Explicit routing using constrained path setup techniques
             such as MPLS

  This document is concerned primarily with MPLS techniques.
  Specifically, it deals with the ability to use paths other than the
  shortest paths selected by the IGP to achieve a more balanced network
  utilization, e.g., by moving traffic away from IGP-selected shortest
  paths onto alternate paths to avoid congestion in the network.  This
  can be achieved by using explicitly signaled LSP-tunnels.  The
  explicit routes to be used may be computed offline and subsequently
  downloaded and configured on the routers using an appropriate
  mechanism.  Alternatively, the desired characteristics of an LSP
  (such as endpoints, bandwidth, affinities) may be configured on a
  router, which will then use an appropriate algorithm to compute a
  path through the network satisfying the desired characteristics,
  subject to various types of constraints.  Generally, the
  characteristics associated with LSPs may include:

         o  Ingress and egress nodes
         o  Bandwidth required
         o  Priority
         o  Nodes to include or exclude in the path
         o  Affinities to include or exclude in the path
         o  Resilience requirements

  Affinities are arbitrary, provider-assigned, attributes applied to
  links and carried in the TE extensions for the IGPs.  Affinities
  impose a class structure on links, which allow different links to be
  logically grouped together.  They can be used to implement various
  types of policies, or route preferences that allow the inclusion or
  exclusion of groups of links from the path of LSPs.  Affinities are
  unique to MPLS and the original requirement for them was documented
  in [2].






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3. Applicability of Internet Traffic Engineering

  As mentioned in [2] and [7], traffic engineering with MPLS is
  appropriate to establish and maintain explicitly routed paths in an
  IP network for effective traffic placement.  LSP-tunnels can be used
  to forward subsets of traffic through paths that are independent of
  routes computed by conventional IGP Shortest Path First (SPF)
  algorithms.  This gives network operators significant flexibility in
  controlling the paths of traffic flows across their networks and
  allows policies to be implemented that can result in the performance
  optimization of networks.  Examples of scenarios where MPLS-based TE
  capabilities are applicable in service provider environments are
  given below.  The applicability of MPLS is certainly not restricted
  to these scenarios.

3.1 Avoidance of Congested Resources

  In order to lower the utilization of congested link(s), an operator
  may utilize TE methods to route a subset of traffic away from those
  links onto less congested topological elements.  These types of
  techniques are viable when segments of the network are congested
  while other parts are underutilized.

  Operators who do not make extensive use of LSP-tunnels may adopt a
  tactical approach to MPLS TE in which they create LSP-tunnels only
  when necessary to address specific congestion problems.  For example,
  an LSP can be created between two nodes (source and destination) that
  are known to contribute traffic to a congested network element, and
  explicitly route the LSP through a separate path to divert some
  traffic away from the congestion.  On the other hand, operators who
  make extensive use of LSP-tunnels, either for measurement or
  automated traffic control, may decide to explicitly route a subset of
  the LSPs that traverse the point of congestion onto alternate paths.
  This can be employed to respond quickly when the bandwidth parameter
  associated with the LSPs does not accurately represent the actual
  traffic carried by the LSPs, and the operator determines that
  changing the bandwidth parameter values might not be effective in
  addressing the issue or may not have lasting impact.

  There are other approaches that measure traffic workloads on LSPs and
  utilize these empirical statistics to configure various
  characteristics of LSPs.  These approaches, for example, can utilize
  the derived statistics to configure explicit routes for LSPs (also
  known as offline TE [10]).  They can also utilize the statistics to
  set the values of various LSP attributes such as bandwidths,
  priority, and affinities (online TE).  All of these approaches can be
  used both tactically and strategically to react to periods of
  congestion in a network.  Congestion may occur as a result of many



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RFC 3346    Applicability Statement for Traffic Engineering  August 2002


  factors: equipment or facility failure, longer than expected
  provisioning cycles for new circuits, and unexpected surges in
  traffic demand.

3.2 Resource Utilization in Network Topologies with Parallel Links

  In practice, many service provider networks contain multiple parallel
  links between nodes.  An example is transoceanic connectivity which
  is often provisioned as numerous low-capacity circuits, such as
  NxDS-3 (N parallel DS-3 circuits) and  NxSTM-1 (N parallel STM-1
  circuits).  Parallel circuits also occur quite often in bandwidth-
  constrained cities.  MPLS TE methods can be applied to effectively
  distribute the aggregate traffic workload across these parallel
  circuits.

  MPLS-based approaches commonly used in practice to deal with parallel
  links include using LSP bandwidth parameters to control the
  proportion of demand traversing each link, explicitly configuring
  routes for LSP-tunnels to distribute them across the parallel links,
  and using affinities to map different LSPs onto different links.
  These types of solutions are also applicable in networks with
  parallel and replicated topologies, such as an NxOC-3/12/48 topology.

3.3 Implementing Routing Policies using Affinities

  It is sometimes desirable to restrict certain types of traffic to
  certain types of links, or to explicitly exclude certain types of
  links in the paths for some types of traffic.  This might be needed
  to accomplish some business policy or network engineering objectives.
  MPLS resource affinities provide a powerful mechanism to implement
  these types of objectives.

  As a concrete example, suppose a global service provider has a flat
  (non-hierarchical) IGP.  MPLS TE affinities can be used to explicitly
  keep continental traffic (traffic originating and terminating within
  a continent) from traversing transoceanic resources.

  Another example of using MPLS TE affinities to exclude certain
  traffic from a subset of circuits might be to keep inter-regional
  LSPs off of circuits that are reserved for intra-regional traffic.

  Still another example is the situation in a heterogeneous network
  consisting of links with different capacities, e.g., OC-12, OC-48,
  and OC-192.  In such networks, affinities can be used to force some
  types of traffic to only traverse links with a given capacity, e.g.
  OC-48.





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RFC 3346    Applicability Statement for Traffic Engineering  August 2002


3.4 Re-optimization After Restoration

  After the occurrence of a network failure, it may be desirable to
  calculate a new set paths for LSPs to optimizes performance over the
  residual topology.  This re-optimization is complementary to the
  fast-reroute operation used to reduce packet losses during routing
  transients under network restoration.  Traffic protection can also be
  accomplished by associating a primary LSP with a set of secondary
  LSPs, hot-standby LSPs, or a combination thereof [11].

4. Implementation Considerations

4.1 Architectural and Operational Considerations

  When deploying TE solutions in a service provider environment, the
  impact of administrative policies and the selection of nodes that
  will serve as endpoints for LSP-tunnels should be carefully
  considered.  As noted in [9], when devising a virtual topology for
  LSP-tunnels, special consideration should be given to the tradeoff
  between the operational complexity associated with a large number of
  LSP-tunnels and the control granularity that large numbers of LSP-
  tunnels allow.  In other words, a large number of LSP-tunnels allow
  greater control over the distribution of traffic across the network,
  but increases network operational complexity.  In large networks, it
  may be advisable to start with a simple LSP-tunnel virtual topology
  and then introduce additional complexity based on observed or
  anticipated traffic flow patterns [9].

  Administrative policies should guide the amount of bandwidth to be
  allocated to an LSP.  One may choose to set the bandwidth of a
  particular LSP to a statistic of the measured observed utilization
  over an interval of time, e.g., peak rate, or a particular percentile
  or quartile of the observed utilization.  Sufficient over-
  subscription (of LSPs) or under-reporting bandwidth on the physical
  links should be used to account for flows that exceed their normal
  limits on an event-driven basis.  Flows should be monitored for
  trends that indicate when the bandwidth parameter of an LSP should be
  resized.  Flows should be monitored constantly to detect unusual
  variance from expected levels.  If an unpoliced flow greatly exceeds
  its assigned bandwidth, action should be taken to determine the root
  cause and remedy the problem.  Traffic policing is an option that may
  be applied to deal with congestion problems, especially when some
  flows exceed their bandwidth parameters and interfere with other
  compliant flows.  However, it is usually more prudent to apply
  policing actions at the edge of the network rather than within the
  core, unless under exceptional circumstances.





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RFC 3346    Applicability Statement for Traffic Engineering  August 2002


  When creating LSPs, a hierarchical network approach may be used to
  alleviate scalability problems associated with flat full mesh virtual
  topologies.  In general, operational experience has shown that very
  large flows (between city pairs) are long-lived and have stable
  characteristics, while smaller flows (edge to edge) are more dynamic
  and have more fluctuating statistical characteristics.  A
  hierarchical architecture can be devised consisting of core and edge
  networks in which the core is traffic engineered and serves as an
  aggregation and transit infrastructure for edge traffic.

  However, over-aggregation of flows can result in a stream so large
  that it precludes the constraint-based routing algorithm from finding
  a feasible path through a network.  Splitting a flow by using two or
  more parallel LSPs and distributing the traffic across the LSPs can
  solve this problem, at the expense of introducing more state in the
  network.

  Failure scenarios should also be addressed when splitting a stream of
  traffic over several links.  It is of little value to establish a
  finely balanced set of flows over a set of links only to find that
  upon link failure the balance reacts poorly, or does not revert to
  the original situation upon restoration.

4.2 Network Management Aspects

  Networks planning to deploy MPLS for traffic engineering must
  consider network management aspects, particularly performance and
  fault management [12].  With the deployment of MPLS in any
  infrastructure, some additional operational tasks are required, such
  as constant monitoring to ensure that the performance of the network
  is not impacted in the end-to-end delivery of traffic.  In addition,
  traffic characteristics, such as latency across an LSP, may also need
  to be assessed on a regular basis to ensure that service-level
  guarantees are achieved.

  Obtaining information on LSP behavior is critical in determining the
  stability of an MPLS network.  When LSPs transition or path changes
  occur, packets may be dropped which impacts network performance.  It
  should be the goal of any network deploying MPLS to minimize the
  volatility of LSPs and reduce the root causes that induce this
  instability.  Unfortunately, there are very few, if any, NMS systems
  that are available at this time with the capability to provide the
  correct level of management support, particularly root cause
  analysis.  Consequently, most early adopters of MPLS develop their
  own management systems in-house for the MPLS domain.  The lack of
  availability of commercial network management systems that deal
  specifically with MPLS-related aspects is a significant impediment to
  the large-scale deployment of MPLS networks.



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  The performance of an MPLS network is also dependent on the
  configured values of bandwidth for each LSP.  Since congestion is a
  common cause of performance degradation in operational networks, it
  is important to proactively avoid these situations.  While MPLS was
  designed to minimize congestion on links by utilizing bandwidth
  reservations, it is still heavily reliant on user configurable data.
  If the LSP bandwidth value does not properly represent the traffic
  demand of that LSP, over-utilization may occur and cause significant
  congestion within the network.  Therefore, it is important to
  develop, deploy, and maintain a good modeling tool for determining
  LSP bandwidth size.  Lack of this capability may result in sub-
  optimal network performance.

4.3 Capacity Engineering Aspects

  Traffic engineering has a goal of ensuring traffic performance
  objectives for different services.  This requires that the different
  network elements be dimensioned properly to handle the expected load.
  More specifically, in mapping given user demands onto network
  resources, network dimensioning involves the sizing of the network
  elements, such as links, processors, and buffers, so that performance
  objectives can be met at minimum cost.  Major inputs to the
  dimensioning process are cost models, characterization of user
  demands and specification of performance objectives.

  In using MPLS, dimensioning involves the assignment of resources such
  as bandwidth to a set of pre-selected LSPs for carrying traffic, and
  mapping the logical network of LSPs onto a physical network of links
  with capacity constraints.  The dimensioning process also determines
  the link capacity parameters or thresholds associated with the use of
  some bandwidth reservation scheme for service protection.  Service
  protection controls the QoS for certain service types by restricting
  access to bandwidth, or by giving priority access to one type of
  traffic over another.  Such methods are essential, e.g., to prevent
  starvation of low-priority flows, to guarantee a minimum amount of
  resources for flows with expected short duration, to improve the
  acceptance probability for flows with high bandwidth requirements, or
  to maintain network stability by preventing performance degradation
  in case of a local overload.

4.4 Network Measurement Aspects

  Network measurement entails robust statistics collection and systems
  development.  Knowing *what* to do with these measurements is often
  where the secret-sauce is.  Examples for different applications of
  measurements are described in [13].  For instance, to ensure that the
  QoS objectives have been met, performance measurements and
  performance monitoring are required so that real-time traffic control



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RFC 3346    Applicability Statement for Traffic Engineering  August 2002


  actions, or policy-based actions, can be taken.  Also, to
  characterize the traffic demands, traffic measurements are used to
  estimate the offered loads from different service classes and to
  provide forecasting of future demands for capacity planning purposes.
  Forecasting and planning may result in capacity augmentation or may
  lead to the introduction of new technology and architecture.

  To avoid QoS degradation at the packet level, measurement-based
  admission control can be employed by using online measurements of
  actual usage.  This is a form of preventive control to ensure that
  the QoS requirements of different service classes can be met
  simultaneously, while maintaining network efficiency at a high level.
  However, it requires proper network dimensioning to keep the
  probability for the refusal of connection/flow requests sufficiently
  low.

5. Limitations

  Significant resources can be expended to gain a proper understanding
  of how MPLS works.  Furthermore, significant engineering and testing
  resources may need to be invested to identify problems with vendor
  implementations of MPLS.  Initial deployment of MPLS software and the
  configurations management aspects to support TE can consume
  significant engineering, operations, and system development
  resources.  Developing automated systems to create router
  configurations for network elements can require significant software
  development and hardware resources.  Getting to a point where
  configurations for routers are updated in an automated fashion can be
  a time consuming process.  Tracking manual tweaks to router
  configurations, or problems associated with these can be an endless
  task.  What this means is that much more is required in the form of
  various types of tools to simplify and automate the MPLS TE function.

  Certain architectural choices can lead to operational, protocol, and
  router implementation scalability problems.  This is especially true
  as the number of LSP-tunnels or router configuration data in a
  network increases, which can be exacerbated by designs incorporating
  full meshes, which create O(N^2) number of LSPs, where N is the
  number of network-edge nodes.  In these cases, minimizing N through
  hierarchy, regionalization, or proper selection of tunnel termination
  points can affect the network's ability to scale.  Loss of scale in
  this sense can be via protocol instability, inability to change
  network configurations to accommodate growth, inability for router
  implementations to be updated, hold or properly process
  configurations, or loss of ability to adequately manage the network.






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RFC 3346    Applicability Statement for Traffic Engineering  August 2002


  Although widely deployed, MPLS TE is a new technology when compared
  to the classic IP routing protocols such as IS-IS, OSPF, and BGP.
  MPLS TE also has more configuration and protocol options.  As such,
  some implementations are not battle-hardened and automated testing of
  various configurations is difficult if not infeasible.  Multi-vendor
  environments are beginning to appear, although additional effort is
  usually required to ensure full interoperability.

  Common approaches to TE in service provider environments switch the
  forwarding paradigm from connectionless to connection oriented.
  Thus, operational analysis of the network may be complicated in some
  regards (and improved in others).  Inconsistencies in forwarding
  state result in dropped packets whereas with connectionless methods
  the packet will either loop and drop, or be misdirected onto another
  branch in the routing tree.

  Currently deployed MPLS TE approaches can be adversely affected by
  both internal and external router and link failures.  This can create
  a mismatch between the signaled capacity and the traffic an LSP-
  tunnel carries.

  Many routers in service provider environments are already under
  stress processing the software workload associated with running IGP,
  BGP, and IPC.  Enabling TE in an MPLS environment involves adding
  traffic engineering databases and processes, adding additional
  information to be carried by the routing processes, and adding
  signaling state and processing to these network elements.  Additional
  traffic measurements may also need to be supported.  In some
  environments, this additional load may not be feasible.

  MPLS in general and MPLS-TE in particular is not a panacea for lack
  of network capacity, or lack of proper capacity planning and
  provisioning in the network dimensioning process.  MPLS-TE may cause
  network traffic to traverse greater distances or to take paths with
  more network elements, thereby incurring greater latency.  Generally,
  this added inefficiency is done to prevent shortcomings in capacity
  planning or available resources path to avoid hot spots.  The ability
  of TE to accommodate more traffic on a given topology can also be
  characterized as a short-term gain during periods of persistent
  traffic growth.  These approaches cannot achieve impossible mappings
  of traffic onto topologies.  Failure to properly capacity plan and
  execute will lead to congestion, no matter what technology aids are
  employed.








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6. Conclusion

  The applicability of traffic engineering in Internet service provider
  environments has been discussed in this document.  The focus has been
  on the use of MPLS-based approaches to achieve traffic engineering in
  this context.  The applicability of traffic engineering and
  associated management and deployment considerations have been
  described, and the limitations highlighted.

  MPLS combines the ability to monitor point-to-point traffic
  statistics between two routers and the capability to control the
  forwarding paths of subsets of traffic through a given network
  topology.  This makes traffic engineering with MPLS applicable and
  useful for improving network performance by effectively mapping
  traffic flows onto links within service provider networks.  Tools
  that simplify and automate the MPLS TE functions and activation help
  to realize the full potential.

7. Security Considerations

  This document does not introduce new security issues.  When deployed
  in service provider networks, it is mandatory to ensure that only
  authorized entities are permitted to initiate establishment of LSP-
  tunnels.

8. References

  1  Rosen, E., Viswanathan, A. and R. Callon, "Multiprotocol Label
     Switching Architecture," RFC 3031, January 2001.

  2  Awduche, D., Malcolm, J., Agogbua, J., O'Dell, M. and J. McManus,
     "Requirements for Traffic Engineering Over MPLS," RFC 2702,
     September 1999.

  3  X. Xiao, A. Hannan, B. Bailey, and L. Ni, "Traffic Engineering
     with MPLS in the Internet," IEEE Network, March/April 2000.

  4  V. Springer, C. Pierantozzi, and J. Boyle, "Level3 MPLS Protocol
     Architecture," Work in Progress.

  5  T. Li, and H. Smit, "IS-IS Extensions for Traffic Engineering,"
     Work in Progress.

  6  D. Katz, D. Yeung, and K. Kompella, "Traffic Engineering
     Extensions to OSPF," Work in Progress.






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RFC 3346    Applicability Statement for Traffic Engineering  August 2002


  7  Awduche, D., Berger, L., Gan, D.H., Li, T., Srinivasan, V. and G.
     Swallow, "RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for LSP Tunnels," RFC 3209,
     December 2001.

  8  Jamoussi, B. (Editor), "Constraint-Based LSP Setup using LDP," RFC
     3212, January 2002.

  9  Awduche, D., Hannan, A. and X. Xiao, "Applicability Statement for
     Extensions to RSVP for LSP-Tunnels," RFC 3210, December 2001.

  10 Awduche, D., Chiu, A., Elwalid, A., Widjaja, I. and X. Xiao,
     "Overview and Principles of Internet Traffic Engineering", RFC
     3272, May 2002.

  11 W.S. Lai, D. McDysan, J. Boyle, M. Carlzon, R. Coltun, T.
     Griffin, E. Kern, and T. Reddington, "Network Hierarchy and
     Multilayer Survivability," Work in Progress.

  12 D. Awduche, "MPLS and Traffic Engineering in IP Networks," IEEE
     Communications Magazine, December 1999.

  13 W.S. Lai, B. Christian, R.W. Tibbs, and S. Van den Berghe, "A
     Framework for Internet Traffic Engineering Measurement," Work in
     Progress.

9. Acknowledgments

  The effectiveness of the MPLS protocols for traffic engineering in
  service provider networks is in large part due to the experience
  gained and foresight given by network engineers and developers
  familiar with traffic engineering with ATM in these environments.  In
  particular, the authors wish to acknowledge the authors of RFC 2702
  for the clear articulation of the requirements, as well as the
  developers and testers of code in deployment today for keeping their
  focus.
















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RFC 3346    Applicability Statement for Traffic Engineering  August 2002


10. Authors' Addresses

  Jim Boyle
  Protocol Driven Networks
  Tel: +1 919-852-5160
  EMail: [email protected]

  Vijay Gill
  AOL Time Warner, Inc.
  12100 Sunrise Valley Drive
  Reston, VA 20191
  EMail: [email protected]

  Alan Hannan
  RoutingLoop Intergalactic
  112 Falkirk Court
  Sunnyvale, CA 94087, USA
  Tel: +1 408-666-2326
  EMail: [email protected]

  Dave Cooper
  Global Crossing
  960 Hamlin Court
  Sunnyvale, CA 94089, USA
  Tel: +1 916-415-0437
  EMail: [email protected]

  Daniel O. Awduche
  Movaz Networks
  7926 Jones Branch Drive, Suite 615
  McLean, VA 22102, USA
  Tel: +1 703-298-5291
  EMail: [email protected]

  Blaine Christian
  Worldcom
  22001 Loudoun County Parkway, Room D1-2-737
  Ashburn, VA 20147, USA
  Tel: +1 703-886-4425
  EMail: [email protected]

  Wai Sum Lai
  AT&T
  200 Laurel Avenue
  Middletown, NJ 07748, USA
  Tel: +1 732-420-3712
  EMail: [email protected]




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RFC 3346    Applicability Statement for Traffic Engineering  August 2002


11.  Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2002).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
  others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it
  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
  and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any
  kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are
  included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this
  document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing
  the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other
  Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of
  developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for
  copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be
  followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than
  English.

  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
  revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

  This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
  TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS 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 WARRANTIES OF
  MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.



















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