Network Working Group                                             J. Ash
Request for Comments: 4247                                      B. Goode
Category: Informational                                          J. Hand
                                                                   AT&T
                                                               R. Zhang
                                                             BT Infonet
                                                          November 2005


            Requirements for Header Compression over 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 (2005).

Abstract

  Voice over IP (VoIP) typically uses the encapsulation
  voice/RTP/UDP/IP.  When MPLS labels are added, this becomes
  voice/RTP/UDP/IP/MPLS-labels.  For an MPLS VPN, the packet header is
  typically 48 bytes, while the voice payload is often no more than 30
  bytes, for example.  Header compression can significantly reduce the
  overhead through various compression mechanisms, such as enhanced
  compressed RTP (ECRTP) and robust header compression (ROHC).  We
  consider using MPLS to route compressed packets over an MPLS Label
  Switched Path (LSP) without compression/decompression cycles at each
  router.  This approach can increase the bandwidth efficiency as well
  as processing scalability of the maximum number of simultaneous flows
  that use header compression at each router.  In this document, we
  give a problem statement, goals and requirements, and an example
  scenario.














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RFC 4247     Requirements for Header Compression over MPLS November 2005


Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................2
  2. Problem Statement ...............................................3
     2.1. Specification of Requirements ..............................4
  3. Goals and Requirements ..........................................5
  4. Candidate Solution Methods and Needs ............................6
  5. Example Scenario ................................................7
  6. Security Considerations .........................................8
  7. Normative References ............................................8
  8. Informative References ..........................................9
  9. Acknowledgements ...............................................10

1.  Introduction

  Voice over IP (VoIP) typically uses the encapsulation
  voice/RTP/UDP/IP.  When MPLS labels [MPLS-ARCH] are added, this
  becomes voice/RTP/UDP/IP/MPLS-labels.  For an MPLS Virtual Private
  Network (VPN) (e.g., [MPLS-VPN]), the packet header is at least 48
  bytes, while the voice payload is often no more than 30 bytes, for
  example.  The interest in header compression (HC) is to exploit the
  possibility of significantly reducing the overhead through various
  compression mechanisms, such as with enhanced compressed RTP [ECRTP]
  or robust header compression [ROHC], and also to increase scalability
  of HC.  We consider using MPLS to route compressed packets over an
  MPLS Label Switched Path (LSP) without compression/decompression
  cycles at each router.  Such an HC over MPLS capability can increase
  bandwidth efficiency as well as the processing scalability of the
  maximum number of simultaneous flows that use HC at each router.

  To implement HC over MPLS, the ingress router/gateway would have to
  apply the HC algorithm to the IP packet, the compressed packet routed
  on an MPLS LSP using MPLS labels, and the compressed header would be
  decompressed at the egress router/gateway where the HC session
  terminates.  Figure 1 illustrates an HC over MPLS session established
  on an LSP that crosses several routers, from R1/HC --> R2 --> R3 -->
  R4/HD, where R1/HC is the ingress router where HC is performed, and
  R4/HD is the egress router where header decompression (HD) is done.
  HC of the RTP/UDP/IP header is performed at R1/HC, and the compressed
  packets are routed using MPLS labels from R1/HC to R2, to R3, and
  finally to R4/HD, without further decompression/recompression cycles.
  The RTP/UDP/IP header is decompressed at R4/HD and can be forwarded
  to other routers, as needed.








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RFC 4247     Requirements for Header Compression over MPLS November 2005


                   _____
                  |     |
                  |R1/HC| Header Compression (HC) Performed
                  |_____|
                     |
                     | voice/compressed-header/MPLS-labels
                     V
                   _____
                  |     |
                  | R2  |
                  |_____|
                     |
                     | voice/compressed-header/MPLS-labels
                     V
                   _____
                  |     |
                  | R3  |
                  |_____|
                     |
                     | voice/compressed-header/MPLS-labels
                     V
                   _____
                  |     |
                  |R4/HD| Header Decompression (HD) Performed
                  |_____|

           Figure 1.  Example of Header Compression over MPLS
                          over Routers R1-->R4

  In the example scenario, HC therefore takes place between R1 and R4,
  and the MPLS path transports voice/compressed-header/MPLS-labels
  instead of voice/RTP/UDP/IP/MPLS-labels, typically saving 30 octets
  or more per packet.  The MPLS label stack and link-layer headers are
  not compressed.  A signaling method is needed to set up a
  correspondence between the ingress and egress routers of the HC over
  MPLS session.

  In Section 2 we give a problem statement, in Section 3 we give goals
  and requirements, and in Section 5 we give an example scenario.

2.  Problem Statement

  As described in the introduction, HC over MPLS can significantly
  reduce the header overhead through HC mechanisms.  The need for HC
  may be important on low-speed links where bandwidth is more scarce,
  but it could also be important on backbone facilities, especially
  where costs are high (e.g., some global cross-sections).  VoIP
  typically will use voice compression mechanisms (e.g., G.729) on



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  low-speed and international routes, in order to conserve bandwidth.
  With HC, significantly more bandwidth could be saved.  For example,
  carrying uncompressed headers for the entire voice load of a large
  domestic network with 300 million or more calls per day could consume
  on the order of about 20-40 gigabits per second on the backbone
  network for headers alone.  This overhead could translate into
  considerable bandwidth capacity.

  The claim is often made that once fiber is in place, increasing the
  bandwidth capacity is inexpensive, nearly 'free'.  This may be true
  in some cases; however, on some international cross-sections,
  especially, facility/transport costs are very high and saving
  bandwidth on such backbone links is very worthwhile.  Decreasing the
  backbone bandwidth is needed in some areas of the world where
  bandwidth is very expensive.  It is also important in almost all
  locations to decrease the bandwidth consumption on low-speed links.
  So although bandwidth is getting cheaper, the value of compression
  does not go away.  It should be further noted that IPv6 will increase
  the size of headers, and therefore increase the importance of HC for
  RTP flows.

  Although hop-by-hop HC could be applied to decrease bandwidth
  requirements, that implies a processing requirement for compression-
  decompression cycles at every router hop, which does not scale well
  for large voice traffic loads.  The maximum number of compressed RTP
  (cRTP) flows is about 30-50 for a typical customer premise router,
  depending upon its uplink speed and processing power, while the need
  may exceed 300-500 for a high-end case.  Therefore, HC over MPLS
  seems to be a viable alternative to get the compression benefits
  without introducing costly processing demands on the intermediate
  nodes.  By using HC over MPLS, routers merely forward compressed
  packets without doing a decompression/recompression cycle, thereby
  increasing the maximum number of simultaneous compressed flows that
  routers can handle.

  Therefore, the proposal is to use existing HC techniques, together
  with MPLS labels, to make the transport of the RTP/UDP/IP headers
  more efficient over an MPLS network.  However, at this time, there
  are no standards for HC over MPLS, and vendors have not implemented
  such techniques.

2.1.  Specification of Requirements

  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 [KEY].





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RFC 4247     Requirements for Header Compression over MPLS November 2005


3.  Goals and Requirements

  The goals of HC over MPLS are as follows:

  a. provide more efficient voice transport over MPLS networks,
  b. increase the scalability of HC to a large number of flows,
  c. not significantly increase packet delay, delay variation, or loss
     probability, and
  d. leverage existing work through use of standard protocols as much
     as possible.

  Therefore the requirements for HC over MPLS are as follows:

  a. MUST use existing protocols (e.g., [ECRTP], [ROHC]) to compress
     RTP/UDP/IP headers, in order to provide for efficient transport,
     tolerance to packet loss, and resistance to loss of session
     context.
  b. MUST allow HC over an MPLS LSP, and thereby avoid hop-by-hop
     compression/decompression cycles (e.g., [HC-MPLS-PROTO]).
  c. MUST minimize incremental performance degradation due to increased
     delay, packet loss, and jitter.
  d. MUST use standard protocols to signal context identification and
     control information (e.g., [RSVP], [RSVP-TE], [LDP]).
  e. Packet reordering MUST NOT cause incorrectly decompressed packets
     to be forwarded from the decompressor.

  It is necessary that the HC method be able to handle out-of-sequence
  packets.  MPLS [MPLS-ARCH] enables 4-byte labels to be appended to IP
  packets to allow switching from the ingress Label Switching Router
  (LSR) to the egress LSP on an LSP through an MPLS network.  However,
  MPLS does not guarantee that packets will arrive in order at the
  egress LSR, since a number of things could cause packets to be
  delivered out of sequence.  For example, a link failure could cause
  the LSP routing to change, due perhaps to an MPLS fast reroute taking
  place, or to the Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP) and Label
  Distribution Protocol (LDP) converging to another route, among other
  possible reasons.  Other causes could include IGP reroutes due to
  'loose hops' in the LSP, or BGP route changes reflecting back into
  IGP reroutes.  HC algorithms may be able to handle reordering
  magnitudes on the order of about 10 packets, which may make the time
  required for IGP reconvergence (typically on the order of seconds)
  untenable for the HC algorithm.  On the other hand, MPLS fast reroute
  may be fast enough (on the order of 50 ms or less) for the HC
  algorithm to handle packet reordering.  The issue of reordering needs
  to be further considered in the development of the HC over MPLS
  solution.





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  Resynchronization and performance also needs to be considered, since
  HC over MPLS can sometimes have multiple routers in the LSP.
  Tunneling an HC session over an MPLS LSP with multiple routers in the
  path will increase the round-trip delay and the chance of packet
  loss, and HC contexts may be invalidated due to packet loss.  The HC
  error recovery mechanism can compound the problem when long round-
  trip delays are involved.

4.  Candidate Solution Methods and Needs

  [cRTP] performs best with very low packet error rates on all hops of
  the path.  When the cRTP decompressor context state gets out of synch
  with the compressor, it will drop packets associated with the context
  until the two states are resynchronized.  To resynchronize context
  state at the two ends, the decompressor transmits the CONTEXT_STATE
  packet to the compressor, and the compressor transmits a FULL_HEADER
  packet to the decompressor.

  [ECRTP] uses mechanisms that make cRTP more tolerant to packet loss,
  and ECRTP thereby helps to minimize the use of feedback-based error
  recovery (CONTEXT_STATE packets).  ECRTP is therefore a candidate
  method to make HC over MPLS more tolerant of packet loss and to guard
  against frequent resynchronizations.  ECRTP may need some
  implementation adaptations to address the reordering requirement in
  Section 3 (requirement e), since a default implementation will
  probably not meet the requirement.  ECRTP protocol extensions may be
  required to identify FULL_HEADER, CONTEXT_STATE, and compressed
  packet types.  [cRTP-ENCAP] specifies a separate link-layer packet
  type defined for HC.  Using a separate link-layer packet type avoids
  the need to add extra bits to the compression header to identify the
  packet type.  However, this approach does not extend well to MPLS
  encapsulation conventions [MPLS-ENCAP], in which a separate link-
  layer packet type translates into a separate LSP for each packet
  type.  In order to extend ECRTP to HC over MPLS, each packet type
  defined in [ECRTP] would need to be identified in an appended packet
  type field in the ECRTP header.

  [ROHC] is also very tolerant of packet loss, and therefore is a
  candidate method to guard against frequent resynchronizations.  ROHC
  also achieves a somewhat better level of compression as compared to
  ECRTP.  ROHC may need some implementation adaptations to address the
  reordering requirement in Section 3 (requirement e), since a default
  implementation will probably not meet the requirement (see
  [ROHC-REORD]).  ROHC already has the capability to identify the
  packet type in the compression header, so no further extension is
  needed to identify packet type.





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  Extensions to MPLS signaling may be needed to identify the LSP from
  HC to HD egress point, negotiate the HC algorithm used and protocol
  parameters, and negotiate the Session Context IDs (SCIDs) space
  between the ingress and egress routers on the MPLS LSP.  For example,
  new objects may need to be defined for [RSVP-TE] to signal the SCID
  spaces between the ingress and egress routers, and the HC algorithm
  used to determine the context; these HC packets then contain the SCID
  identified by using the RSVP-TE objects.  It is also desirable to
  signal HC over MPLS tunnels with the Label Distribution Protocol
  [LDP], since many RFC 2547 VPN [MPLS-VPN] implementations use LDP as
  the underlying LSP signaling mechanism, and LDP is very scalable.
  However, extensions to LDP may be needed to signal SCIDs between
  ingress and egress routers on HC over MPLS LSPs.  For example,
  'targeted LDP sessions' might be established for signaling SCIDs, or
  perhaps methods described in [LDP-PWE3] to signal pseudo-wires and
  multipoint-to-point LSPs might be extended to support signaling of
  SCIDs for HC over MPLS LSPs.  The specific MPLS signaling protocol
  extensions to support these approved requirements need to be
  developed as a well-coordinated separate document in the appropriate
  IETF working groups.  The IETF needs to support a coordinated process
  for the two solution documents, though they are in separate areas.

5.  Example Scenario

  As illustrated in Figure 2, many VoIP flows are originated from
  customer sites, which are served by routers R1, R2, and R3, and
  terminated at several large customer call centers, which are served
  by R5, R6, and R7.  R4 is a service-provider router, and all VoIP
  flows traverse R4.  It is essential that the R4-R5, R4-R6, and R4-R7
  low-speed links all use HC to allow a maximum number of simultaneous
  VoIP flows.  To allow processing at R4 to handle the volume of
  simultaneous VoIP flows, it is desired to use HC over MPLS for these
  flows.  With HC over MPLS, R4 does not need to do HC/HD for the flows
  to the call centers, enabling more scalability of the number of
  simultaneous VoIP flows with HC at R4.
















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       voice/C-HDR/MPLS-labels ______ voice/C-HDR/MPLS-labels
  R1/HC---------------------->|      |-----------------------> R5/HD
                              |      |
       voice/C-HDR/MPLS-labels|      |voice/C-HDR/MPLS-labels
  R2/HC---------------------->|  R4  |-----------------------> R6/HD
                              |      |
       voice/C-HDR/MPLS-labels|      |voice/C-HDR/MPLS-labels
  R3/HC---------------------->|______|-----------------------> R7/HD

                   Note: HC    = header compression
                         C-HDR = compressed header
                         HD    = header decompression

       Figure 2.  Example Scenario for Application of HC over MPLS

6.  Security Considerations

  The high processing load of HC makes HC a target for denial-of-
  service attacks.  For example, an attacker could send a high-
  bandwidth data stream through a network, with the headers in the data
  stream marked appropriately to cause HC to be applied.  This would
  use large amounts of processing resources on the routers performing
  compression and decompression, and these processing resources might
  then be unavailable for other important functions on the router.
  This threat is not a new threat for HC, but is addressed and
  mitigated by HC over MPLS.  That is, by reducing the need for
  performing compression and decompression cycles, as proposed in this
  document, the risk of this type of denial-of-service attack is
  reduced.

7.  Normative References

  [cRTP]          Casner, S. and V. Jacobson, "Compressing IP/UDP/RTP
                  Headers for Low-Speed Serial Links", RFC 2508,
                  February 1999.

  [cRTP-ENCAP]    Engan, M., Casner, S., Bormann, C., and T. Koren, "IP
                  Header Compression over PPP", RFC 3544, July 2003.

  [ECRTP]         Koren, T., Casner, S., Geevarghese, J., Thompson, B.,
                  and P. Ruddy, "Enhanced Compressed RTP (CRTP) for
                  Links with High Delay, Packet Loss and Reordering",
                  RFC 3545, July 2003.

  [KEY]           Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
                  Requirement Levels", RFC 2119, March 1997.





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RFC 4247     Requirements for Header Compression over MPLS November 2005


  [LDP]           Andersson, L., Doolan, P., Feldman, N., Fredette, A.,
                  and B. Thomas, "LDP Specification", RFC 3036, January
                  2001.

  [MPLS-ARCH]     Rosen, E., Viswanathan, A., and R. Callon,
                  "Multiprotocol Label Switching Architecture", RFC
                  3031, January 2001.

  [ROHC]          Bormann, C., et al., "RObust Header Compression
                  (ROHC): Framework and four profiles: RTP, UDP, ESP,
                  and uncompressed ", RFC 3095, July 2001.

  [RSVP]          Braden, R., Zhang, L., Berson, S., Herzog, S., and S.
                  Jamin, "Resource ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP) --
                  Version 1 Functional Specification", RFC 2205,
                  September 1997.

  [RSVP-TE]       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.

8.  Informative References

  [HC-MPLS-PROTO] Ash, G., Goode, B., Hand, J., Jonsson, L-E., Malis,
                  A., and R. Zhang, "Protocol Extensions for Header
                  Compression over MPLS", work in progress.

  [LDP-PWE3]      Martini, L., El-Aawar, N., Smith, T., and G. Heron,
                  "Pseudowire Setup and Maintenance using the Label
                  Distribution Protocol", work in progress.

  [MPLS-ENCAP]    Rosen, E., Tappan, D., Fedorkow, G., Rekhter, Y.,
                  Farinacci, D., Li, T., and A. Conta, "MPLS Label
                  Stack Encoding", RFC 3032, January 2001.

  [MPLS-VPN]      Rosen, E. and Y. Rekhter, "BGP/MPLS VPNs", RFC 2547,
                  March 1999.

  [ROHC-REORD]    Pelletier, G., Jonsson, L-E., and K. Sandlund,
                  "RObust Header Compression (ROHC): ROHC over Channels
                  that can Reorder Packets", work in progress.










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9.  Acknowledgements

  The authors wish to thank the following people (in alphabetical
  order) for their helpful comments and suggestions:  Loa Andersson,
  Scott Brim, Thomas Eriksson, Victoria Fineberg, Lars-Erik Jonsson,
  Allison Mankin, Colin Perkins, Kristofer Sandlund, and Magnus
  Westerlund.

Authors' Addresses

  Jerry Ash
  AT&T
  Room MT D5-2A01
  200 Laurel Avenue
  Middletown, NJ 07748, USA
  Phone: +1 732-420-4578
  EMail: [email protected]


  Bur Goode
  AT&T
  Phone: + 1 203-341-8705
  EMail: [email protected]


  Jim Hand
  AT&T
  Room MT A2-1A03
  200 Laurel Avenue
  Middletown, NJ 07748, USA
  Phone: +1 732-420-3017
  EMail: [email protected]


  Raymond Zhang
  BT Infonet
  2160 E. Grand Ave.
  El Segundo, CA 90025 USA
  EMail: [email protected]












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Full Copyright Statement

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Acknowledgement

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  Internet Society.







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