Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                       S. Poretsky
Request for Comments: 6413                          Allot Communications
Category: Informational                                        B. Imhoff
ISSN: 2070-1721                                         Juniper Networks
                                                          K. Michielsen
                                                          Cisco Systems
                                                          November 2011


Benchmarking Methodology for Link-State IGP Data-Plane Route Convergence

Abstract

  This document describes the methodology for benchmarking Link-State
  Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP) Route Convergence.  The methodology
  is to be used for benchmarking IGP convergence time through
  externally observable (black-box) data-plane measurements.  The
  methodology can be applied to any link-state IGP, such as IS-IS and
  OSPF.

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/rfc6413.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2011 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



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  the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
  described in the Simplified BSD License.

  This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF
  Contributions published or made publicly available before November
  10, 2008.  The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this
  material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow
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  it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other
  than English.

Table of Contents

  1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
    1.1.  Motivation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
    1.2.  Factors for IGP Route Convergence Time . . . . . . . . . .  4
    1.3.  Use of Data Plane for IGP Route Convergence
          Benchmarking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  5
    1.4.  Applicability and Scope  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
  2.  Existing Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
  3.  Test Topologies  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
    3.1.  Test Topology for Local Changes  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
    3.2.  Test Topology for Remote Changes . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
    3.3.  Test Topology for Local ECMP Changes . . . . . . . . . . . 10
    3.4.  Test Topology for Remote ECMP Changes  . . . . . . . . . . 11
    3.5.  Test topology for Parallel Link Changes  . . . . . . . . . 11
  4.  Convergence Time and Loss of Connectivity Period . . . . . . . 12
    4.1.  Convergence Events without Instant Traffic Loss  . . . . . 13
    4.2.  Loss of Connectivity (LoC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
  5.  Test Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
    5.1.  IGP Selection  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
    5.2.  Routing Protocol Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
    5.3.  IGP Topology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
    5.4.  Timers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
    5.5.  Interface Types  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
    5.6.  Offered Load . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
    5.7.  Measurement Accuracy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
    5.8.  Measurement Statistics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
    5.9.  Tester Capabilities  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
  6.  Selection of Convergence Time Benchmark Metrics and Methods  . 20
    6.1.  Loss-Derived Method  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
      6.1.1.  Tester Capabilities  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
      6.1.2.  Benchmark Metrics  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
      6.1.3.  Measurement Accuracy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21



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    6.2.  Rate-Derived Method  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
      6.2.1.  Tester Capabilities  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
      6.2.2.  Benchmark Metrics  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
      6.2.3.  Measurement Accuracy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
    6.3.  Route-Specific Loss-Derived Method . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
      6.3.1.  Tester Capabilities  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
      6.3.2.  Benchmark Metrics  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
      6.3.3.  Measurement Accuracy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
  7.  Reporting Format . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
  8.  Test Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
    8.1.  Interface Failure and Recovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
      8.1.1.  Convergence Due to Local Interface Failure and
              Recovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
      8.1.2.  Convergence Due to Remote Interface Failure and
              Recovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
      8.1.3.  Convergence Due to ECMP Member Local Interface
              Failure and Recovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
      8.1.4.  Convergence Due to ECMP Member Remote Interface
              Failure and Recovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
      8.1.5.  Convergence Due to Parallel Link Interface Failure
              and Recovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
    8.2.  Other Failures and Recoveries  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
      8.2.1.  Convergence Due to Layer 2 Session Loss and
              Recovery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
      8.2.2.  Convergence Due to Loss and Recovery of IGP
              Adjacency  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34
      8.2.3.  Convergence Due to Route Withdrawal and
              Re-Advertisement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
    8.3.  Administrative Changes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
      8.3.1.  Convergence Due to Local Interface Administrative
              Changes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
      8.3.2.  Convergence Due to Cost Change . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
  9.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39
  10. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
  11. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
    11.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
    11.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41














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1.  Introduction

1.1.  Motivation

  Convergence time is a critical performance parameter.  Service
  Providers use IGP convergence time as a key metric of router design
  and architecture.  Fast network convergence can be optimally achieved
  through deployment of fast converging routers.  Customers of Service
  Providers use packet loss due to Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP)
  convergence as a key metric of their network service quality.  IGP
  route convergence is a Direct Measure of Quality (DMOQ) when
  benchmarking the data plane.  The fundamental basis by which network
  users and operators benchmark convergence is packet loss and other
  packet impairments, which are externally observable events having
  direct impact on their application performance.  For this reason, it
  is important to develop a standard methodology for benchmarking link-
  state IGP convergence time through externally observable (black-box)
  data-plane measurements.  All factors contributing to convergence
  time are accounted for by measuring on the data plane.

1.2.  Factors for IGP Route Convergence Time

  There are four major categories of factors contributing to the
  measured IGP convergence time.  As discussed in [Vi02], [Ka02],
  [Fi02], [Al00], [Al02], and [Fr05], these categories are Event
  Detection, Shortest Path First (SPF) Processing, Link State
  Advertisement (LSA) / Link State Packet (LSP) Advertisement, and
  Forwarding Information Base (FIB) Update.  These have numerous
  components that influence the convergence time, including but not
  limited to the list below:

  o  Event Detection

     *  Physical-Layer Failure/Recovery Indication Time

     *  Layer 2 Failure/Recovery Indication Time

     *  IGP Hello Dead Interval

  o  SPF Processing

     *  SPF Delay Time

     *  SPF Hold Time

     *  SPF Execution Time





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  o  LSA/LSP Advertisement

     *  LSA/LSP Generation Time

     *  LSA/LSP Flood Packet Pacing

     *  LSA/LSP Retransmission Packet Pacing

  o  FIB Update

     *  Tree Build Time

     *  Hardware Update Time

  o  Increased Forwarding Delay due to Queueing

  The contribution of each of the factors listed above will vary with
  each router vendor's architecture and IGP implementation.  Routers
  may have a centralized forwarding architecture, in which one
  forwarding table is calculated and referenced for all arriving
  packets, or a distributed forwarding architecture, in which the
  central forwarding table is calculated and distributed to the
  interfaces for local look-up as packets arrive.  The distributed
  forwarding tables are typically maintained (loaded and changed) in
  software.

  The variation in router architecture and implementation necessitates
  the design of a convergence test that considers all of these
  components contributing to convergence time and is independent of the
  Device Under Test (DUT) architecture and implementation.  The benefit
  of designing a test for these considerations is that it enables
  black-box testing in which knowledge of the routers' internal
  implementation is not required.  It is then possible to make valid
  use of the convergence benchmarking metrics when comparing routers
  from different vendors.

  Convergence performance is tightly linked to the number of tasks a
  router has to deal with.  As the most important tasks are mainly
  related to the control plane and the data plane, the more the DUT is
  stressed as in a live production environment, the closer performance
  measurement results match the ones that would be observed in a live
  production environment.

1.3.  Use of Data Plane for IGP Route Convergence Benchmarking

  Customers of Service Providers use packet loss and other packet
  impairments as metrics to calculate convergence time.  Packet loss
  and other packet impairments are externally observable events having



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  direct impact on customers' application performance.  For this
  reason, it is important to develop a standard router benchmarking
  methodology that is a Direct Measure of Quality (DMOQ) for measuring
  IGP convergence.  An additional benefit of using packet loss for
  calculation of IGP Route Convergence time is that it enables black-
  box tests to be designed.  Data traffic can be offered to the Device
  Under Test (DUT), an emulated network event can be forced to occur,
  and packet loss and other impaired packets can be externally measured
  to calculate the convergence time.  Knowledge of the DUT architecture
  and IGP implementation is not required.  There is no need to rely on
  the DUT to produce the test results.  There is no need to build
  intrusive test harnesses for the DUT.  All factors contributing to
  convergence time are accounted for by measuring on the data plane.

  Other work of the Benchmarking Methodology Working Group (BMWG)
  focuses on characterizing single router control-plane convergence.
  See [Ma05], [Ma05t], and [Ma05c].

1.4.  Applicability and Scope

  The methodology described in this document can be applied to IPv4 and
  IPv6 traffic and link-state IGPs such as IS-IS [Ca90][Ho08], OSPF
  [Mo98][Co08], and others.  IGP adjacencies established over any kind
  of tunnel (such as Traffic Engineering tunnels) are outside the scope
  of this document.  Convergence time benchmarking in topologies with
  IGP adjacencies that are not point-to-point will be covered in a
  later document.  Convergence from Bidirectional Forwarding Detection
  (BFD) is outside the scope of this document.  Non-Stop Forwarding
  (NSF), Non-Stop Routing (NSR), Graceful Restart (GR), and any other
  High Availability mechanism are outside the scope of this document.
  Fast reroute mechanisms such as IP Fast-Reroute [Sh10i] or MPLS Fast-
  Reroute [Pa05] are outside the scope of this document.

2.  Existing Definitions

  The keywords "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14, RFC 2119
  [Br97].  RFC 2119 defines the use of these keywords to help make the
  intent of Standards Track documents as clear as possible.  While this
  document uses these keywords, this document is not a Standards Track
  document.

  This document uses much of the terminology defined in [Po11t].  For
  any conflicting content, this document supersedes [Po11t].  This
  document uses existing terminology defined in other documents issued
  by the Benchmarking Methodology Working Group (BMWG).  Examples
  include, but are not limited to:



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        Throughput                         [Br91], Section 3.17
        Offered Load                       [Ma98], Section 3.5.2
        Forwarding Rate                    [Ma98], Section 3.6.1
        Device Under Test (DUT)            [Ma98], Section 3.1.1
        System Under Test (SUT)            [Ma98], Section 3.1.2
        Out-of-Order Packet                [Po06], Section 3.3.4
        Duplicate Packet                   [Po06], Section 3.3.5
        Stream                             [Po06], Section 3.3.2
        Forwarding Delay                   [Po06], Section 3.2.4
        IP Packet Delay Variation (IPDV)   [De02], Section 1.2
        Loss Period                        [Ko02], Section 4

3.  Test Topologies

3.1.  Test Topology for Local Changes

  Figure 1 shows the test topology to measure IGP convergence time due
  to local Convergence Events such as Local Interface failure and
  recovery (Section 8.1.1), Layer 2 session failure and recovery
  (Section 8.2.1), and IGP adjacency failure and recovery
  (Section 8.2.2).  This topology is also used to measure IGP
  convergence time due to route withdrawal and re-advertisement
  (Section 8.2.3) and to measure IGP convergence time due to route cost
  change (Section 8.3.2) Convergence Events.  IGP adjacencies MUST be
  established between Tester and DUT: one on the Ingress Interface, one
  on the Preferred Egress Interface, and one on the Next-Best Egress
  Interface.  For this purpose, the Tester emulates three routers (RTa,
  RTb, and RTc), each establishing one adjacency with the DUT.

                              -------
                              |     | Preferred        .......
                              |     |------------------. RTb .
           .......    Ingress |     | Egress Interface .......
           . RTa .------------| DUT |
           .......  Interface |     | Next-Best        .......
                              |     |------------------. RTc .
                              |     | Egress Interface .......
                              -------

        Figure 1: IGP convergence test topology for local changes

  Figure 2 shows the test topology to measure IGP convergence time due
  to local Convergence Events with a non-Equal Cost Multipath (ECMP)
  Preferred Egress Interface and ECMP Next-Best Egress Interfaces
  (Section 8.1.1).  In this topology, the DUT is configured with each
  Next-Best Egress Interface as a member of a single ECMP set.  The
  Preferred Egress Interface is not a member of an ECMP set.  The
  Tester emulates N+2 neighbor routers (N>0): one router for the



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  Ingress Interface (RTa), one router for the Preferred Egress
  Interface (RTb), and N routers for the members of the ECMP set
  (RTc1...RTcN).  IGP adjacencies MUST be established between Tester
  and DUT: one on the Ingress Interface, one on the Preferred Egress
  Interface, and one on each member of the ECMP set.  When the test
  specifies to observe the Next-Best Egress Interface statistics, the
  combined statistics for all ECMP members should be observed.

                              -------
                              |     | Preferred        .......
                              |     |------------------. RTb .
                              |     | Egress Interface .......
                              |     |
                              |     | ECMP Set         ........
           .......    Ingress |     |------------------. RTc1 .
           . RTa .------------| DUT | Interface 1      ........
           .......  Interface |     |       .
                              |     |       .
                              |     |       .
                              |     | ECMP Set         ........
                              |     |------------------. RTcN .
                              |     | Interface N      ........
                              -------

   Figure 2: IGP convergence test topology for local changes with non-
                        ECMP to ECMP convergence

3.2.  Test Topology for Remote Changes

  Figure 3 shows the test topology to measure IGP convergence time due
  to Remote Interface failure and recovery (Section 8.1.2).  In this
  topology, the two routers DUT1 and DUT2 are considered the System
  Under Test (SUT) and SHOULD be identically configured devices of the
  same model.  IGP adjacencies MUST be established between Tester and
  SUT, one on the Ingress Interface, one on the Preferred Egress
  Interface, and one on the Next-Best Egress Interface.  For this
  purpose, the Tester emulates three routers (RTa, RTb, and RTc).  In
  this topology, a packet forwarding loop, also known as micro-loop
  (see [Sh10]), may occur transiently between DUT1 and DUT2 during
  convergence.











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                         --------
                         |      |  -------- Preferred        .......
                         |      |--| DUT2 |------------------. RTb .
      .......    Ingress |      |  -------- Egress Interface .......
      . RTa .------------| DUT1 |
      .......  Interface |      | Next-Best                  .......
                         |      |----------------------------. RTc .
                         |      | Egress Interface           .......
                         --------

       Figure 3: IGP convergence test topology for remote changes

  Figure 4 shows the test topology to measure IGP convergence time due
  to remote Convergence Events with a non-ECMP Preferred Egress
  Interface and ECMP Next-Best Egress Interfaces (Section 8.1.2).  In
  this topology the two routers DUT1 and DUT2 are considered System
  Under Test (SUT) and MUST be identically configured devices of the
  same model.  Router DUT1 is configured with the Next-Best Egress
  Interface an ECMP set of interfaces.  The Preferred Egress Interface
  of DUT1 is not a member of an ECMP set.  The Tester emulates N+2
  neighbor routers (N>0), one for the Ingress Interface (RTa), one for
  DUT2 (RTb) and one for each member of the ECMP set (RTc1...RTcN).
  IGP adjacencies MUST be established between Tester and SUT, one on
  each interface of the SUT.  For this purpose each of the N+2 routers
  emulated by the Tester establishes one adjacency with the SUT.  In
  this topology, there is a possibility of a packet-forwarding loop
  that may occur transiently between DUT1 and DUT2 during convergence
  (micro-loop, see [Sh10]).  When the test specifies to observe the
  Next-Best Egress Interface statistics, the combined statistics for
  all members of the ECMP set should be observed.





















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                        --------
                        |      |  -------- Preferred        .......
                        |      |--| DUT2 |------------------. RTb .
                        |      |  -------- Egress Interface .......
                        |      |
                        |      | ECMP Set                   ........
     .......    Ingress |      |----------------------------. RTc1 .
     . RTa .------------| DUT1 | Interface 1                ........
     .......  Interface |      |       .
                        |      |       .
                        |      |       .
                        |      | ECMP Set                   ........
                        |      |----------------------------. RTcN .
                        |      | Interface N                ........
                        --------

     Figure 4: IGP convergence test topology for remote changes with
                      non-ECMP to ECMP convergence

3.3.  Test Topology for Local ECMP Changes

  Figure 5 shows the test topology to measure IGP convergence time due
  to local Convergence Events of a member of an Equal Cost Multipath
  (ECMP) set (Section 8.1.3).  In this topology, the DUT is configured
  with each egress interface as a member of a single ECMP set and the
  Tester emulates N+1 next-hop routers, one for the Ingress Interface
  (RTa) and one for each member of the ECMP set (RTb1...RTbN).  IGP
  adjacencies MUST be established between Tester and DUT, one on the
  Ingress Interface and one on each member of the ECMP set.  For this
  purpose, each of the N+1 routers emulated by the Tester establishes
  one adjacency with the DUT.  When the test specifies to observe the
  Next-Best Egress Interface statistics, the combined statistics for
  all ECMP members except the one affected by the Convergence Event
  should be observed.

                                -------
                                |     | ECMP Set    ........
                                |     |-------------. RTb1 .
                                |     | Interface 1 ........
             .......    Ingress |     |       .
             . RTa .------------| DUT |       .
             .......  Interface |     |       .
                                |     | ECMP Set    ........
                                |     |-------------. RTbN .
                                |     | Interface N ........
                                -------

     Figure 5: IGP convergence test topology for local ECMP changes



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3.4.  Test Topology for Remote ECMP Changes

  Figure 6 shows the test topology to measure IGP convergence time due
  to remote Convergence Events of a member of an Equal Cost Multipath
  (ECMP) set (Section 8.1.4).  In this topology, the two routers DUT1
  and DUT2 are considered the System Under Test (SUT) and MUST be
  identically configured devices of the same model.  Router DUT1 is
  configured with each egress interface as a member of a single ECMP
  set, and the Tester emulates N+1 neighbor routers (N>0), one for the
  Ingress Interface (RTa) and one for each member of the ECMP set
  (RTb1...RTbN).  IGP adjacencies MUST be established between Tester
  and SUT, one on each interface of the SUT.  For this purpose, each of
  the N+1 routers emulated by the Tester establishes one adjacency with
  the SUT (N-1 emulated routers are adjacent to DUT1 egress interfaces,
  one emulated router is adjacent to DUT1 Ingress Interface, and one
  emulated router is adjacent to DUT2).  In this topology, there is a
  possibility of a packet-forwarding loop that may occur transiently
  between DUT1 and DUT2 during convergence (micro-loop, see [Sh10]).
  When the test specifies to observe the Next-Best Egress Interface
  statistics, the combined statistics for all ECMP members except the
  one affected by the Convergence Event should be observed.

                          --------
                          |      | ECMP Set    --------   ........
                          |      |-------------| DUT2 |---. RTb1 .
                          |      | Interface 1 --------   ........
                          |      |
                          |      | ECMP Set               ........
       .......    Ingress |      |------------------------. RTb2 .
       . RTa .------------| DUT1 | Interface 2            ........
       .......  Interface |      |       .
                          |      |       .
                          |      |       .
                          |      | ECMP Set               ........
                          |      |------------------------. RTbN .
                          |      | Interface N            ........
                          --------

     Figure 6: IGP convergence test topology for remote ECMP changes

3.5.  Test topology for Parallel Link Changes

  Figure 7 shows the test topology to measure IGP convergence time due
  to local Convergence Events with members of a Parallel Link
  (Section 8.1.5).  In this topology, the DUT is configured with each
  egress interface as a member of a Parallel Link and the Tester
  emulates two neighbor routers, one for the Ingress Interface (RTa)
  and one for the Parallel Link members (RTb).  IGP adjacencies MUST be



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  established on the Ingress Interface and on all N members of the
  Parallel Link between Tester and DUT (N>0).  For this purpose, the
  routers emulated by the Tester establishes N+1 adjacencies with the
  DUT.  When the test specifies to observe the Next-Best Egress
  Interface statistics, the combined statistics for all Parallel Link
  members except the one affected by the Convergence Event should be
  observed.

                               -------                .......
                               |     | Parallel Link  .     .
                               |     |----------------.     .
                               |     | Interface 1    .     .
            .......    Ingress |     |       .        .     .
            . RTa .------------| DUT |       .        . RTb .
            .......  Interface |     |       .        .     .
                               |     | Parallel Link  .     .
                               |     |----------------.     .
                               |     | Interface N    .     .
                               -------                .......

    Figure 7: IGP convergence test topology for Parallel Link changes

4.  Convergence Time and Loss of Connectivity Period

  Two concepts will be highlighted in this section: convergence time
  and loss of connectivity period.

  The Route Convergence [Po11t] time indicates the period in time
  between the Convergence Event Instant [Po11t] and the instant in time
  the DUT is ready to forward traffic for a specific route on its Next-
  Best Egress Interface and maintains this state for the duration of
  the Sustained Convergence Validation Time [Po11t].  To measure Route
  Convergence time, the Convergence Event Instant and the traffic
  received from the Next-Best Egress Interface need to be observed.

  The Route Loss of Connectivity Period [Po11t] indicates the time
  during which traffic to a specific route is lost following a
  Convergence Event until Full Convergence [Po11t] completes.  This
  Route Loss of Connectivity Period can consist of one or more Loss
  Periods [Ko02].  For the test cases described in this document, it is
  expected to have a single Loss Period.  To measure the Route Loss of
  Connectivity Period, the traffic received from the Preferred Egress
  Interface and the traffic received from the Next-Best Egress
  Interface need to be observed.

  The Route Loss of Connectivity Period is most important since that
  has a direct impact on the network user's application performance.




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  In general, the Route Convergence time is larger than or equal to the
  Route Loss of Connectivity Period.  Depending on which Convergence
  Event occurs and how this Convergence Event is applied, traffic for a
  route may still be forwarded over the Preferred Egress Interface
  after the Convergence Event Instant, before converging to the Next-
  Best Egress Interface.  In that case, the Route Loss of Connectivity
  Period is shorter than the Route Convergence time.

  At least one condition needs to be fulfilled for Route Convergence
  time to be equal to Route Loss of Connectivity Period.  The condition
  is that the Convergence Event causes an instantaneous traffic loss
  for the measured route.  A fiber cut on the Preferred Egress
  Interface is an example of such a Convergence Event.

  A second condition applies to Route Convergence time measurements
  based on Connectivity Packet Loss [Po11t].  This second condition is
  that there is only a single Loss Period during Route Convergence.
  For the test cases described in this document, the second condition
  is expected to apply.

4.1.  Convergence Events without Instant Traffic Loss

  To measure convergence time benchmarks for Convergence Events caused
  by a Tester, such as an IGP cost change, the Tester MAY start to
  discard all traffic received from the Preferred Egress Interface at
  the Convergence Event Instant, or MAY separately observe packets
  received from the Preferred Egress Interface prior to the Convergence
  Event Instant.  This way, these Convergence Events can be treated the
  same as Convergence Events that cause instantaneous traffic loss.

  To measure convergence time benchmarks without instantaneous traffic
  loss (either real or induced by the Tester) at the Convergence Event
  Instant, such as a reversion of a link failure Convergence Event, the
  Tester SHALL only observe packet statistics on the Next-Best Egress
  Interface.  If using the Rate-Derived method to benchmark convergence
  times for such Convergence Events, the Tester MUST collect a
  timestamp at the Convergence Event Instant.  If using a loss-derived
  method to benchmark convergence times for such Convergence Events,
  the Tester MUST measure the period in time between the Start Traffic
  Instant and the Convergence Event Instant.  To measure this period in
  time, the Tester can collect timestamps at the Start Traffic Instant
  and the Convergence Event Instant.

  The Convergence Event Instant together with the receive rate
  observations on the Next-Best Egress Interface allow the derivation
  of the convergence time benchmarks using the Rate-Derived Method
  [Po11t].




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  By observing packets on the Next-Best Egress Interface only, the
  observed Impaired Packet count is the number of Impaired Packets
  between Traffic Start Instant and Convergence Recovery Instant.  To
  measure convergence times using a loss-derived method, the Impaired
  Packet count between the Convergence Event Instant and the
  Convergence Recovery Instant is needed.  The time between Traffic
  Start Instant and Convergence Event Instant must be accounted for.
  An example may clarify this.

  Figure 8 illustrates a Convergence Event without instantaneous
  traffic loss for all routes.  The top graph shows the Forwarding Rate
  over all routes, the bottom graph shows the Forwarding Rate for a
  single route Rta.  Some time after the Convergence Event Instant, the
  Forwarding Rate observed on the Preferred Egress Interface starts to
  decrease.  In the example, route Rta is the first route to experience
  packet loss at time Ta.  Some time later, the Forwarding Rate
  observed on the Next-Best Egress Interface starts to increase.  In
  the example, route Rta is the first route to complete convergence at
  time Ta'.
































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          ^
     Fwd  |
     Rate |-------------                    ............
          |             \                  .
          |              \                .
          |               \              .
          |                \            .
          |.................-.-.-.-.-.-.----------------
          +----+-------+---------------+----------------->
          ^    ^       ^               ^             time
         T0   CEI      Ta              Ta'

          ^
     Fwd  |
     Rate |-------------               .................
     Rta  |            |               .
          |            |               .
          |.............-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.----------------
          +----+-------+---------------+----------------->
          ^    ^       ^               ^             time
         T0   CEI      Ta              Ta'

          Preferred Egress Interface: ---
          Next-Best Egress Interface: ...

          T0  : Start Traffic Instant
          CEI : Convergence Event Instant
          Ta  : the time instant packet loss for route Rta starts
          Ta' : the time instant packet impairment for route Rta ends

                                Figure 8

  If only packets received on the Next-Best Egress Interface are
  observed, the duration of the loss period for route Rta can be
  calculated from the received packets as in Equation 1.  Since the
  Convergence Event Instant is the start time for convergence time
  measurement, the period in time between T0 and CEI needs to be
  subtracted from the calculated result to become the convergence time,
  as in Equation 2.

  Next-Best Egress Interface loss period
      = (packets transmitted
          - packets received from Next-Best Egress Interface) / tx rate
      = Ta' - T0

                               Equation 1





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        convergence time
            = Next-Best Egress Interface loss period - (CEI - T0)
            = Ta' - CEI

                               Equation 2

4.2.  Loss of Connectivity (LoC)

  Route Loss of Connectivity Period SHOULD be measured using the Route-
  Specific Loss-Derived Method.  Since the start instant and end
  instant of the Route Loss of Connectivity Period can be different for
  each route, these cannot be accurately derived by only observing
  global statistics over all routes.  An example may clarify this.

  Following a Convergence Event, route Rta is the first route for which
  packet impairment starts; the Route Loss of Connectivity Period for
  route Rta starts at time Ta.  Route Rtb is the last route for which
  packet impairment starts; the Route Loss of Connectivity Period for
  route Rtb starts at time Tb with Tb>Ta.

                 ^
            Fwd  |
            Rate |--------                       -----------
                 |        \                     /
                 |         \                   /
                 |          \                 /
                 |           \               /
                 |            ---------------
                 +------------------------------------------>
                          ^   ^             ^    ^      time
                         Ta   Tb           Ta'   Tb'
                                           Tb''  Ta''

           Figure 9: Example Route Loss Of Connectivity Period

  If the DUT implementation were such that route Rta would be the first
  route for which traffic loss ends at time Ta' (with Ta'>Tb), and
  route Rtb would be the last route for which traffic loss ends at time
  Tb' (with Tb'>Ta').  By only observing global traffic statistics over
  all routes, the minimum Route Loss of Connectivity Period would be
  measured as Ta'-Ta.  The maximum calculated Route Loss of
  Connectivity Period would be Tb'-Ta.  The real minimum and maximum
  Route Loss of Connectivity Periods are Ta'-Ta and Tb'-Tb.
  Illustrating this with the numbers Ta=0, Tb=1, Ta'=3, and Tb'=5 would
  give a Loss of Connectivity Period between 3 and 5 derived from the
  global traffic statistics, versus the real Loss of Connectivity
  Period between 3 and 4.




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  If the DUT implementation were such that route Rtb would be the first
  for which packet loss ends at time Tb'' and route Rta would be the
  last for which packet impairment ends at time Ta'', then the minimum
  and maximum Route Loss of Connectivity Periods derived by observing
  only global traffic statistics would be Tb''-Ta and Ta''-Ta.  The
  real minimum and maximum Route Loss of Connectivity Periods are
  Tb''-Tb and Ta''-Ta.  Illustrating this with the numbers Ta=0, Tb=1,
  Ta''=5, Tb''=3 would give a Loss of Connectivity Period between 3 and
  5 derived from the global traffic statistics, versus the real Loss of
  Connectivity Period between 2 and 5.

  The two implementation variations in the above example would result
  in the same derived minimum and maximum Route Loss of Connectivity
  Periods when only observing the global packet statistics, while the
  real Route Loss of Connectivity Periods are different.

5.  Test Considerations

5.1.  IGP Selection

  The test cases described in Section 8 can be used for link-state
  IGPs, such as IS-IS or OSPF.  The IGP convergence time test
  methodology is identical.

5.2.  Routing Protocol Configuration

  The obtained results for IGP convergence time may vary if other
  routing protocols are enabled and routes learned via those protocols
  are installed.  IGP convergence times SHOULD be benchmarked without
  routes installed from other protocols.  Any enabled IGP routing
  protocol extension (such as extensions for Traffic Engineering) and
  any enabled IGP routing protocol security mechanism must be reported
  with the results.

5.3.  IGP Topology

  The Tester emulates a single IGP topology.  The DUT establishes IGP
  adjacencies with one or more of the emulated routers in this single
  IGP topology emulated by the Tester.  See test topology details in
  Section 3.  The emulated topology SHOULD only be advertised on the
  DUT egress interfaces.

  The number of IGP routes and number of nodes in the topology, and the
  type of topology will impact the measured IGP convergence time.  To
  obtain results similar to those that would be observed in an
  operational network, it is RECOMMENDED that the number of installed
  routes and nodes closely approximate that of the network (e.g.,
  thousands of routes with tens or hundreds of nodes).



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  The number of areas (for OSPF) and levels (for IS-IS) can impact the
  benchmark results.

5.4.  Timers

  There are timers that may impact the measured IGP convergence times.
  The benchmark metrics MAY be measured at any fixed values for these
  timers.  To obtain results similar to those that would be observed in
  an operational network, it is RECOMMENDED to configure the timers
  with the values as configured in the operational network.

  Examples of timers that may impact measured IGP convergence time
  include, but are not limited to:

     Interface failure indication

     IGP hello timer

     IGP dead-interval or hold-timer

     Link State Advertisement (LSA) or Link State Packet (LSP)
     generation delay

     LSA or LSP flood packet pacing

     Route calculation delay

5.5.  Interface Types

  All test cases in this methodology document can be executed with any
  interface type.  The type of media may dictate which test cases may
  be executed.  Each interface type has a unique mechanism for
  detecting link failures, and the speed at which that mechanism
  operates will influence the measurement results.  All interfaces MUST
  be the same media and Throughput [Br91][Br99] for each test case.
  All interfaces SHOULD be configured as point-to-point.

5.6.  Offered Load

  The Throughput of the device, as defined in [Br91] and benchmarked in
  [Br99] at a fixed packet size, needs to be determined over the
  preferred path and over the next-best path.  The Offered Load SHOULD
  be the minimum of the measured Throughput of the device over the
  primary path and over the backup path.  The packet size is selectable
  and MUST be recorded.  Packet size is measured in bytes and includes
  the IP header and payload.





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  The destination addresses for the Offered Load MUST be distributed
  such that all routes or a statistically representative subset of all
  routes are matched and each of these routes is offered an equal share
  of the Offered Load.  It is RECOMMENDED to send traffic matching all
  routes, but a statistically representative subset of all routes can
  be used if required.

  Splitting traffic flows across multiple paths (as with ECMP or
  Parallel Link sets) is in general done by hashing on various fields
  on the IP or contained headers.  The hashing is typically based on
  the IP source and destination addresses, the protocol ID, and higher-
  layer flow-dependent fields such as TCP/UDP ports.  In practice,
  within a network core, the hashing is based mainly or exclusively on
  the IP source and destination addresses.  Knowledge of the hashing
  algorithm used by the DUT is not always possible beforehand and would
  violate the black-box spirit of this document.  Therefore, it is
  RECOMMENDED to use a randomly distributed range of source and
  destination IP addresses, protocol IDs, and higher-layer flow-
  dependent fields for the packets of the Offered Load (see also
  [Ne07]).  The content of the Offered Load MUST remain the same during
  the test.  It is RECOMMENDED to repeat a test multiple times with
  different random ranges of the header fields such that convergence
  time benchmarks are measured for different distributions of traffic
  over the available paths.

  In the Remote Interface failure test cases using topologies 3, 4, and
  6, there is a possibility of a packet-forwarding loop that may occur
  transiently between DUT1 and DUT2 during convergence (micro-loop, see
  [Sh10]).  The Time To Live (TTL) or Hop Limit value of the packets
  sent by the Tester may influence the benchmark measurements since it
  determines which device in the topology may send an ICMP Time
  Exceeded Message for looped packets.

  The duration of the Offered Load MUST be greater than the convergence
  time plus the Sustained Convergence Validation Time.

  Offered load should send a packet to each destination before sending
  another packet to the same destination.  It is RECOMMENDED that the
  packets be transmitted in a round-robin fashion with a uniform
  interpacket delay.

5.7.  Measurement Accuracy

  Since Impaired Packet count is observed to measure the Route
  Convergence Time, the time between two successive packets offered to
  each individual route is the highest possible accuracy of any
  Impaired-Packet-based measurement.  The higher the traffic rate
  offered to each route, the higher the possible measurement accuracy.



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  Also see Section 6 for method-specific measurement accuracy.

5.8.  Measurement Statistics

  The benchmark measurements may vary for each trial, due to the
  statistical nature of timer expirations, CPU scheduling, etc.
  Evaluation of the test data must be done with an understanding of
  generally accepted testing practices regarding repeatability,
  variance, and statistical significance of a small number of trials.

5.9.  Tester Capabilities

  It is RECOMMENDED that the Tester used to execute each test case have
  the following capabilities:

  1.  Ability to establish IGP adjacencies and advertise a single IGP
      topology to one or more peers.

  2.  Ability to measure Forwarding Delay, Duplicate Packets, and Out-
      of-Order Packets.

  3.  An internal time clock to control timestamping, time
      measurements, and time calculations.

  4.  Ability to distinguish traffic load received on the Preferred and
      Next-Best Interfaces [Po11t].

  5.  Ability to disable or tune specific Layer 2 and Layer 3 protocol
      functions on any interface(s).

  The Tester MAY be capable of making non-data-plane convergence
  observations and using those observations for measurements.  The
  Tester MAY be capable of sending and receiving multiple traffic
  Streams [Po06].

  Also see Section 6 for method-specific capabilities.

6.  Selection of Convergence Time Benchmark Metrics and Methods

  Different convergence time benchmark methods MAY be used to measure
  convergence time benchmark metrics.  The Tester capabilities are
  important criteria to select a specific convergence time benchmark
  method.  The criteria to select a specific benchmark method include,
  but are not limited to:







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  Tester capabilities:               Sampling Interval, number of
                                     Stream statistics to collect
  Measurement accuracy:              Sampling Interval, Offered Load,
                                     number of routes
  Test specification:                number of routes
  DUT capabilities:                  Throughput, IP Packet Delay
                                     Variation

6.1.  Loss-Derived Method

6.1.1.  Tester Capabilities

  To enable collecting statistics of Out-of-Order Packets per flow (see
  [Th00], Section 3), the Offered Load SHOULD consist of multiple
  Streams [Po06], and each Stream SHOULD consist of a single flow.  If
  sending multiple Streams, the measured traffic statistics for all
  Streams MUST be added together.

  In order to verify Full Convergence completion and the Sustained
  Convergence Validation Time, the Tester MUST measure Forwarding Rate
  each Packet Sampling Interval.

  The total number of Impaired Packets between the start of the traffic
  and the end of the Sustained Convergence Validation Time is used to
  calculate the Loss-Derived Convergence Time.

6.1.2.  Benchmark Metrics

  The Loss-Derived Method can be used to measure the Loss-Derived
  Convergence Time, which is the average convergence time over all
  routes, and to measure the Loss-Derived Loss of Connectivity Period,
  which is the average Route Loss of Connectivity Period over all
  routes.

6.1.3.  Measurement Accuracy

  The actual value falls within the accuracy interval [-(number of
  destinations/Offered Load), +(number of destinations/Offered Load)]
  around the value as measured using the Loss-Derived Method.












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6.2.  Rate-Derived Method

6.2.1.  Tester Capabilities

  To enable collecting statistics of Out-of-Order Packets per flow (see
  [Th00], Section 3), the Offered Load SHOULD consist of multiple
  Streams [Po06], and each Stream SHOULD consist of a single flow.  If
  sending multiple Streams, the measured traffic statistics for all
  Streams MUST be added together.

  The Tester measures Forwarding Rate each Sampling Interval.  The
  Packet Sampling Interval influences the observation of the different
  convergence time instants.  If the Packet Sampling Interval is large
  compared to the time between the convergence time instants, then the
  different time instants may not be easily identifiable from the
  Forwarding Rate observation.  The presence of IP Packet Delay
  Variation (IPDV) [De02] may cause fluctuations of the Forwarding Rate
  observation and can prevent correct observation of the different
  convergence time instants.

  The Packet Sampling Interval MUST be larger than or equal to the time
  between two consecutive packets to the same destination.  For maximum
  accuracy, the value for the Packet Sampling Interval SHOULD be as
  small as possible, but the presence of IPDV may require the use of a
  larger Packet Sampling Interval.  The Packet Sampling Interval MUST
  be reported.

  IPDV causes fluctuations in the number of received packets during
  each Packet Sampling Interval.  To account for the presence of IPDV
  in determining if a convergence instant has been reached, Forwarding
  Delay SHOULD be observed during each Packet Sampling Interval.  The
  minimum and maximum number of packets expected in a Packet Sampling
  Interval in presence of IPDV can be calculated with Equation 3.

   number of packets expected in a Packet Sampling Interval
     in presence of IP Packet Delay Variation
       = expected number of packets without IP Packet Delay Variation
         +/-( (maxDelay - minDelay) * Offered Load)
   where minDelay and maxDelay indicate (respectively) the minimum and
     maximum Forwarding Delay of packets received during the Packet
     Sampling Interval

                               Equation 3

  To determine if a convergence instant has been reached, the number of
  packets received in a Packet Sampling Interval is compared with the
  range of expected number of packets calculated in Equation 3.




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6.2.2.  Benchmark Metrics

  The Rate-Derived Method SHOULD be used to measure First Route
  Convergence Time and Full Convergence Time.  It SHOULD NOT be used to
  measure Loss of Connectivity Period (see Section 4).

6.2.3.  Measurement Accuracy

  The measurement accuracy interval of the Rate-Derived Method depends
  on the metric being measured or calculated and the characteristics of
  the related transition.  IP Packet Delay Variation (IPDV) [De02] adds
  uncertainty to the amount of packets received in a Packet Sampling
  Interval, and this uncertainty adds to the measurement error.  The
  effect of IPDV is not accounted for in the calculation of the
  accuracy intervals below.  IPDV is of importance for the convergence
  instants where a variation in Forwarding Rate needs to be observed.
  This is applicable to the Convergence Recovery Instant for all
  topologies, and for topologies with ECMP it also applies to the
  Convergence Event Instant and the First Route Convergence Instant.
  and for topologies with ECMP also Convergence Event Instant and First
  Route Convergence Instant).

  If the Convergence Event Instant is observed on the data plane using
  the Rate Derived Method, it needs to be instantaneous for all routes
  (see Section 4.1).  The actual value of the Convergence Event Instant
  falls within the accuracy interval [-(Packet Sampling Interval +
  1/Offered Load), +0] around the value as measured using the Rate-
  Derived Method.

  If the Convergence Recovery Transition is non-instantaneous for all
  routes, then the actual value of the First Route Convergence Instant
  falls within the accuracy interval [-(Packet Sampling Interval + time
  between two consecutive packets to the same destination), +0] around
  the value as measured using the Rate-Derived Method, and the actual
  value of the Convergence Recovery Instant falls within the accuracy
  interval [-(2 * Packet Sampling Interval), -(Packet Sampling Interval
  - time between two consecutive packets to the same destination)]
  around the value as measured using the Rate-Derived Method.

  The term "time between two consecutive packets to the same
  destination" is added in the above accuracy intervals since packets
  are sent in a particular order to all destinations in a stream, and
  when part of the routes experience packet loss, it is unknown where
  in the transmit cycle packets to these routes are sent.  This
  uncertainty adds to the error.






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  The accuracy intervals of the derived metrics First Route Convergence
  Time and Rate-Derived Convergence Time are calculated from the above
  convergence instants accuracy intervals.  The actual value of First
  Route Convergence Time falls within the accuracy interval [-(Packet
  Sampling Interval + time between two consecutive packets to the same
  destination), +(Packet Sampling Interval + 1/Offered Load)] around
  the calculated value.  The actual value of Rate-Derived Convergence
  Time falls within the accuracy interval [-(2 * Packet Sampling
  Interval), +(time between two consecutive packets to the same
  destination + 1/Offered Load)] around the calculated value.

6.3.  Route-Specific Loss-Derived Method

6.3.1.  Tester Capabilities

  The Offered Load consists of multiple Streams.  The Tester MUST
  measure Impaired Packet count for each Stream separately.

  In order to verify Full Convergence completion and the Sustained
  Convergence Validation Time, the Tester MUST measure Forwarding Rate
  each Packet Sampling Interval.  This measurement at each Packet
  Sampling Interval MAY be per Stream.

  Only the total number of Impaired Packets measured per Stream at the
  end of the Sustained Convergence Validation Time is used to calculate
  the benchmark metrics with this method.

6.3.2.  Benchmark Metrics

  The Route-Specific Loss-Derived Method SHOULD be used to measure
  Route-Specific Convergence Times.  It is the RECOMMENDED method to
  measure Route Loss of Connectivity Period.

  Under the conditions explained in Section 4, First Route Convergence
  Time and Full Convergence Time, as benchmarked using Rate-Derived
  Method, may be equal to the minimum and maximum (respectively) of the
  Route-Specific Convergence Times.

6.3.3.  Measurement Accuracy

  The actual value falls within the accuracy interval [-(number of
  destinations/Offered Load), +(number of destinations/Offered Load)]
  around the value as measured using the Route-Specific Loss-Derived
  Method.







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7.  Reporting Format

  For each test case, it is RECOMMENDED that the reporting tables below
  be completed.  All time values SHOULD be reported with a sufficiently
  high resolution (fractions of a second sufficient to distinguish
  significant differences between measured values).

    Parameter                             Units
    ------------------------------------- ---------------------------
    Test Case                             test case number
    Test Topology                         Test Topology Figure number
    IGP                                   (IS-IS, OSPF, other)
    Interface Type                        (GigE, POS, ATM, other)
    Packet Size offered to DUT            bytes
    Offered Load                          packets per second
    IGP Routes Advertised to DUT          number of IGP routes
    Nodes in Emulated Network             number of nodes
    Number of Parallel or ECMP links      number of links
    Number of Routes Measured             number of routes
    Packet Sampling Interval on Tester    seconds
    Forwarding Delay Threshold            seconds

    Timer Values configured on DUT:
     Interface Failure Indication Delay   seconds
     IGP Hello Timer                      seconds
     IGP Dead-Interval or Hold-Time       seconds
     LSA/LSP Generation Delay             seconds
     LSA/LSP Flood Packet Pacing          seconds
     LSA/LSP Retransmission Packet Pacing seconds
     Route Calculation Delay              seconds

  Test Details:

     Describe the IGP extensions and IGP security mechanisms that are
     configured on the DUT.

     Describe how the various fields on the IP and contained headers
     for the packets for the Offered Load are generated (Section 5.6).

     If the Offered Load matches a subset of routes, describe how this
     subset is selected.

     Describe how the Convergence Event is applied; does it cause
     instantaneous traffic loss or not?

  The table below should be completed for the initial Convergence Event
  and the reversion Convergence Event.




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   Parameter                                   Units
   ------------------------------------------- ----------------------
   Convergence Event                           (initial or reversion)

   Traffic Forwarding Metrics:
    Total number of packets offered to DUT     number of packets
    Total number of packets forwarded by DUT   number of packets
    Connectivity Packet Loss                   number of packets
    Convergence Packet Loss                    number of packets
    Out-of-Order Packets                       number of packets
    Duplicate Packets                          number of packets
    Excessive Forwarding Delay Packets         number of packets

   Convergence Benchmarks:
    Rate-Derived Method:
     First Route Convergence Time              seconds
     Full Convergence Time                     seconds
    Loss-Derived Method:
     Loss-Derived Convergence Time             seconds
    Route-Specific Loss-Derived Method:
     Route-Specific Convergence Time[n]        array of seconds
     Minimum Route-Specific Convergence Time   seconds
     Maximum Route-Specific Convergence Time   seconds
     Median Route-Specific Convergence Time    seconds
     Average Route-Specific Convergence Time   seconds

   Loss of Connectivity Benchmarks:
    Loss-Derived Method:
     Loss-Derived Loss of Connectivity Period  seconds
    Route-Specific Loss-Derived Method:
     Route Loss of Connectivity Period[n]      array of seconds
     Minimum Route Loss of Connectivity Period seconds
     Maximum Route Loss of Connectivity Period seconds
     Median Route Loss of Connectivity Period  seconds
     Average Route Loss of Connectivity Period seconds

8.  Test Cases

  It is RECOMMENDED that all applicable test cases be performed for
  best characterization of the DUT.  The test cases follow a generic
  procedure tailored to the specific DUT configuration and Convergence
  Event [Po11t].  This generic procedure is as follows:

  1.   Establish DUT and Tester configurations and advertise an IGP
       topology from Tester to DUT.

  2.   Send Offered Load from Tester to DUT on Ingress Interface.




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  3.   Verify traffic is routed correctly.  Verify if traffic is
       forwarded without Impaired Packets [Po06].

  4.   Introduce Convergence Event [Po11t].

  5.   Measure First Route Convergence Time [Po11t].

  6.   Measure Full Convergence Time [Po11t].

  7.   Stop Offered Load.

  8.   Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period [Po11t].  At the same time,
       measure number of Impaired Packets [Po11t].

  9.   Wait sufficient time for queues to drain.  The duration of this
       time period MUST be larger than or equal to the Forwarding Delay
       Threshold.

  10.  Restart Offered Load.

  11.  Reverse Convergence Event.

  12.  Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  13.  Measure Full Convergence Time.

  14.  Stop Offered Load.

  15.  Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets [Po11t].

8.1.  Interface Failure and Recovery

8.1.1.  Convergence Due to Local Interface Failure and Recovery

  Objective:

     To obtain the IGP convergence measurements for Local Interface
     failure and recovery events.  The Next-Best Egress Interface can
     be a single interface (Figure 1) or an ECMP set (Figure 2).  The
     test with ECMP topology (Figure 2) is OPTIONAL.






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  Procedure:

  1.   Advertise an IGP topology from Tester to DUT using the topology
       shown in Figures 1 or 2.

  2.   Send Offered Load from Tester to DUT on Ingress Interface.

  3.   Verify traffic is forwarded over Preferred Egress Interface.

  4.   Remove link on the Preferred Egress Interface of the DUT.  This
       is the Convergence Event.

  5.   Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  6.   Measure Full Convergence Time.

  7.   Stop Offered Load.

  8.   Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times and Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time.  At the same time, measure number of Impaired
       Packets.

  9.   Wait sufficient time for queues to drain.

  10.  Restart Offered Load.

  11.  Restore link on the Preferred Egress Interface of the DUT.

  12.  Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  13.  Measure Full Convergence Time.

  14.  Stop Offered Load.

  15.  Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets.

8.1.2.  Convergence Due to Remote Interface Failure and Recovery

  Objective:

     To obtain the IGP convergence measurements for Remote Interface
     failure and recovery events.  The Next-Best Egress Interface can
     be a single interface (Figure 3) or an ECMP set (Figure 4).  The
     test with ECMP topology (Figure 4) is OPTIONAL.




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  Procedure:

  1.   Advertise an IGP topology from Tester to SUT using the topology
       shown in Figures 3 or 4.

  2.   Send Offered Load from Tester to SUT on Ingress Interface.

  3.   Verify traffic is forwarded over Preferred Egress Interface.

  4.   Remove link on the interface of the Tester connected to the
       Preferred Egress Interface of the SUT.  This is the Convergence
       Event.

  5.   Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  6.   Measure Full Convergence Time.

  7.   Stop Offered Load.

  8.   Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times and Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time.  At the same time, measure number of Impaired
       Packets.

  9.   Wait sufficient time for queues to drain.

  10.  Restart Offered Load.

  11.  Restore link on the interface of the Tester connected to the
       Preferred Egress Interface of the SUT.

  12.  Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  13.  Measure Full Convergence Time.

  14.  Stop Offered Load.

  15.  Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets.

  Discussion:

     In this test case, there is a possibility of a packet-forwarding
     loop that may occur transiently between DUT1 and DUT2 during
     convergence (micro-loop, see [Sh10]), which may increase the
     measured convergence times and loss of connectivity periods.




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RFC 6413          IGP Convergence Benchmark Methodology    November 2011


8.1.3.  Convergence Due to ECMP Member Local Interface Failure and
       Recovery

  Objective:

     To obtain the IGP convergence measurements for Local Interface
     link failure and recovery events of an ECMP Member.

  Procedure:

  1.   Advertise an IGP topology from Tester to DUT using the test
       setup shown in Figure 5.

  2.   Send Offered Load from Tester to DUT on Ingress Interface.

  3.   Verify traffic is forwarded over the ECMP member interface of
       the DUT that will be failed in the next step.

  4.   Remove link on one of the ECMP member interfaces of the DUT.
       This is the Convergence Event.

  5.   Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  6.   Measure Full Convergence Time.

  7.   Stop Offered Load.

  8.   Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times and Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time.  At the same time, measure number of Impaired
       Packets.

  9.   Wait sufficient time for queues to drain.

  10.  Restart Offered Load.

  11.  Restore link on the ECMP member interface of the DUT.

  12.  Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  13.  Measure Full Convergence Time.

  14.  Stop Offered Load.

  15.  Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets.




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RFC 6413          IGP Convergence Benchmark Methodology    November 2011


8.1.4.  Convergence Due to ECMP Member Remote Interface Failure and
       Recovery

  Objective:

     To obtain the IGP convergence measurements for Remote Interface
     link failure and recovery events for an ECMP Member.

  Procedure:

  1.   Advertise an IGP topology from Tester to DUT using the test
       setup shown in Figure 6.

  2.   Send Offered Load from Tester to DUT on Ingress Interface.

  3.   Verify traffic is forwarded over the ECMP member interface of
       the DUT that will be failed in the next step.

  4.   Remove link on the interface of the Tester to R2.  This is the
       Convergence Event Trigger.

  5.   Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  6.   Measure Full Convergence Time.

  7.   Stop Offered Load.

  8.   Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times and Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time.  At the same time, measure number of Impaired
       Packets.

  9.   Wait sufficient time for queues to drain.

  10.  Restart Offered Load.

  11.  Restore link on the interface of the Tester to R2.

  12.  Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  13.  Measure Full Convergence Time.

  14.  Stop Offered Load.

  15.  Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets.




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  Discussion:

     In this test case, there is a possibility of a packet-forwarding
     loop that may occur temporarily between DUT1 and DUT2 during
     convergence (micro-loop, see [Sh10]), which may increase the
     measured convergence times and loss of connectivity periods.

8.1.5.  Convergence Due to Parallel Link Interface Failure and Recovery

  Objective:

     To obtain the IGP convergence measurements for local link failure
     and recovery events for a member of a parallel link.  The links
     can be used for data load-balancing

  Procedure:

  1.   Advertise an IGP topology from Tester to DUT using the test
       setup shown in Figure 7.

  2.   Send Offered Load from Tester to DUT on Ingress Interface.

  3.   Verify traffic is forwarded over the parallel link member that
       will be failed in the next step.

  4.   Remove link on one of the parallel link member interfaces of the
       DUT.  This is the Convergence Event.

  5.   Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  6.   Measure Full Convergence Time.

  7.   Stop Offered Load.

  8.   Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times and Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time.  At the same time, measure number of Impaired
       Packets.

  9.   Wait sufficient time for queues to drain.

  10.  Restart Offered Load.

  11.  Restore link on the Parallel Link member interface of the DUT.

  12.  Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  13.  Measure Full Convergence Time.




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  14.  Stop Offered Load.

  15.  Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets.

8.2.  Other Failures and Recoveries

8.2.1.  Convergence Due to Layer 2 Session Loss and Recovery

  Objective:

     To obtain the IGP convergence measurements for a local Layer 2
     loss and recovery.

  Procedure:

  1.   Advertise an IGP topology from Tester to DUT using the topology
       shown in Figure 1.

  2.   Send Offered Load from Tester to DUT on Ingress Interface.

  3.   Verify traffic is routed over Preferred Egress Interface.

  4.   Remove Layer 2 session from Preferred Egress Interface of the
       DUT.  This is the Convergence Event.

  5.   Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  6.   Measure Full Convergence Time.

  7.   Stop Offered Load.

  8.   Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets.

  9.   Wait sufficient time for queues to drain.

  10.  Restart Offered Load.

  11.  Restore Layer 2 session on Preferred Egress Interface of the
       DUT.

  12.  Measure First Route Convergence Time.




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  13.  Measure Full Convergence Time.

  14.  Stop Offered Load.

  15.  Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets.

  Discussion:

     When removing the Layer 2 session, the physical layer must stay
     up.  Configure IGP timers such that the IGP adjacency does not
     time out before Layer 2 failure is detected.

     To measure convergence time, traffic SHOULD start dropping on the
     Preferred Egress Interface on the instant the Layer 2 session is
     removed.  Alternatively, the Tester SHOULD record the time the
     instant Layer 2 session is removed, and traffic loss SHOULD only
     be measured on the Next-Best Egress Interface.  For loss-derived
     benchmarks, the time of the Start Traffic Instant SHOULD be
     recorded as well.  See Section 4.1.

8.2.2.  Convergence Due to Loss and Recovery of IGP Adjacency

  Objective:

     To obtain the IGP convergence measurements for loss and recovery
     of an IGP Adjacency.  The IGP adjacency is removed on the Tester
     by disabling processing of IGP routing protocol packets on the
     Tester.

  Procedure:

  1.   Advertise an IGP topology from Tester to DUT using the topology
       shown in Figure 1.

  2.   Send Offered Load from Tester to DUT on Ingress Interface.

  3.   Verify traffic is routed over Preferred Egress Interface.

  4.   Remove IGP adjacency from the Preferred Egress Interface while
       the Layer 2 session MUST be maintained.  This is the Convergence
       Event.

  5.   Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  6.   Measure Full Convergence Time.



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RFC 6413          IGP Convergence Benchmark Methodology    November 2011


  7.   Stop Offered Load.

  8.   Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets.

  9.   Wait sufficient time for queues to drain.

  10.  Restart Offered Load.

  11.  Restore IGP session on Preferred Egress Interface of the DUT.

  12.  Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  13.  Measure Full Convergence Time.

  14.  Stop Offered Load.

  15.  Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets.

  Discussion:

     Configure Layer 2 such that Layer 2 does not time out before IGP
     adjacency failure is detected.

     To measure convergence time, traffic SHOULD start dropping on the
     Preferred Egress Interface on the instant the IGP adjacency is
     removed.  Alternatively, the Tester SHOULD record the time the
     instant the IGP adjacency is removed and traffic loss SHOULD only
     be measured on the Next-Best Egress Interface.  For loss-derived
     benchmarks, the time of the Start Traffic Instant SHOULD be
     recorded as well.  See Section 4.1.

8.2.3.  Convergence Due to Route Withdrawal and Re-Advertisement

  Objective:

     To obtain the IGP convergence measurements for route withdrawal
     and re-advertisement.








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  Procedure:

  1.   Advertise an IGP topology from Tester to DUT using the topology
       shown in Figure 1.  The routes that will be withdrawn MUST be a
       set of leaf routes advertised by at least two nodes in the
       emulated topology.  The topology SHOULD be such that before the
       withdrawal the DUT prefers the leaf routes advertised by a node
       "nodeA" via the Preferred Egress Interface, and after the
       withdrawal the DUT prefers the leaf routes advertised by a node
       "nodeB" via the Next-Best Egress Interface.

  2.   Send Offered Load from Tester to DUT on Ingress Interface.

  3.   Verify traffic is routed over Preferred Egress Interface.

  4.   The Tester withdraws the set of IGP leaf routes from nodeA.
       This is the Convergence Event.  The withdrawal update message
       SHOULD be a single unfragmented packet.  If the routes cannot be
       withdrawn by a single packet, the messages SHOULD be sent using
       the same pacing characteristics as the DUT.  The Tester MAY
       record the time it sends the withdrawal message(s).

  5.   Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  6.   Measure Full Convergence Time.

  7.   Stop Offered Load.

  8.   Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets.

  9.   Wait sufficient time for queues to drain.

  10.  Restart Offered Load.

  11.  Re-advertise the set of withdrawn IGP leaf routes from nodeA
       emulated by the Tester.  The update message SHOULD be a single
       unfragmented packet.  If the routes cannot be advertised by a
       single packet, the messages SHOULD be sent using the same pacing
       characteristics as the DUT.  The Tester MAY record the time it
       sends the update message(s).

  12.  Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  13.  Measure Full Convergence Time.




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  14.  Stop Offered Load.

  15.  Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets.

  Discussion:

     To measure convergence time, traffic SHOULD start dropping on the
     Preferred Egress Interface on the instant the routes are withdrawn
     by the Tester.  Alternatively, the Tester SHOULD record the time
     the instant the routes are withdrawn, and traffic loss SHOULD only
     be measured on the Next-Best Egress Interface.  For loss-derived
     benchmarks, the time of the Start Traffic Instant SHOULD be
     recorded as well.  See Section 4.1.

8.3.  Administrative Changes

8.3.1.  Convergence Due to Local Interface Administrative Changes

  Objective:

     To obtain the IGP convergence measurements for administratively
     disabling and enabling a Local Interface.

  Procedure:

  1.   Advertise an IGP topology from Tester to DUT using the topology
       shown in Figure 1.

  2.   Send Offered Load from Tester to DUT on Ingress Interface.

  3.   Verify traffic is routed over Preferred Egress Interface.

  4.   Administratively disable the Preferred Egress Interface of the
       DUT.  This is the Convergence Event.

  5.   Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  6.   Measure Full Convergence Time.

  7.   Stop Offered Load.

  8.   Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets.



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  9.   Wait sufficient time for queues to drain.

  10.  Restart Offered Load.

  11.  Administratively enable the Preferred Egress Interface of the
       DUT.

  12.  Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  13.  Measure Full Convergence Time.

  14.  Stop Offered Load.

  15.  Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets.

8.3.2.  Convergence Due to Cost Change

  Objective:

     To obtain the IGP convergence measurements for route cost change.

  Procedure:

  1.   Advertise an IGP topology from Tester to DUT using the topology
       shown in Figure 1.

  2.   Send Offered Load from Tester to DUT on Ingress Interface.

  3.   Verify traffic is routed over Preferred Egress Interface.

  4.   The Tester, emulating the neighbor node, increases the cost for
       all IGP routes at the Preferred Egress Interface of the DUT so
       that the Next-Best Egress Interface becomes the preferred path.
       The update message advertising the higher cost MUST be a single
       unfragmented packet.  This is the Convergence Event.  The Tester
       MAY record the time it sends the update message advertising the
       higher cost on the Preferred Egress Interface.

  5.   Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  6.   Measure Full Convergence Time.

  7.   Stop Offered Load.





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  8.   Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets.

  9.   Wait sufficient time for queues to drain.

  10.  Restart Offered Load.

  11.  The Tester, emulating the neighbor node, decreases the cost for
       all IGP routes at the Preferred Egress Interface of the DUT so
       that the Preferred Egress Interface becomes the preferred path.
       The update message advertising the lower cost MUST be a single
       unfragmented packet.

  12.  Measure First Route Convergence Time.

  13.  Measure Full Convergence Time.

  14.  Stop Offered Load.

  15.  Measure Route-Specific Convergence Times, Loss-Derived
       Convergence Time, Route Loss of Connectivity Periods, and Loss-
       Derived Loss of Connectivity Period.  At the same time, measure
       number of Impaired Packets.

  Discussion:

     To measure convergence time, traffic SHOULD start dropping on the
     Preferred Egress Interface on the instant the cost is changed by
     the Tester.  Alternatively, the Tester SHOULD record the time the
     instant the cost is changed, and traffic loss SHOULD only be
     measured on the Next-Best Egress Interface.  For loss-derived
     benchmarks, the time of the Start Traffic Instant SHOULD be
     recorded as well.  See Section 4.1.

9.  Security Considerations

  Benchmarking activities as described in this memo are limited to
  technology characterization using controlled stimuli in a laboratory
  environment, with dedicated address space and the constraints
  specified in the sections above.

  The benchmarking network topology will be an independent test setup
  and MUST NOT be connected to devices that may forward the test
  traffic into a production network or misroute traffic to the test
  management network.




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  Further, benchmarking is performed on a "black-box" basis, relying
  solely on measurements observable external to the DUT/SUT.

  Special capabilities SHOULD NOT exist in the DUT/SUT specifically for
  benchmarking purposes.  Any implications for network security arising
  from the DUT/SUT SHOULD be identical in the lab and in production
  networks.

10.  Acknowledgements

  Thanks to Sue Hares, Al Morton, Kevin Dubray, Ron Bonica, David Ward,
  Peter De Vriendt, Anuj Dewagan, Julien Meuric, Adrian Farrel, Stewart
  Bryant, and the Benchmarking Methodology Working Group for their
  contributions to this work.

11.  References

11.1.  Normative References

  [Br91]   Bradner, S., "Benchmarking terminology for network
           interconnection devices", RFC 1242, July 1991.

  [Br97]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
           Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [Br99]   Bradner, S. and J. McQuaid, "Benchmarking Methodology for
           Network Interconnect Devices", RFC 2544, March 1999.

  [Ca90]   Callon, R., "Use of OSI IS-IS for routing in TCP/IP and dual
           environments", RFC 1195, December 1990.

  [Co08]   Coltun, R., Ferguson, D., Moy, J., and A. Lindem, "OSPF for
           IPv6", RFC 5340, July 2008.

  [De02]   Demichelis, C. and P. Chimento, "IP Packet Delay Variation
           Metric for IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)", RFC 3393,
           November 2002.

  [Ho08]   Hopps, C., "Routing IPv6 with IS-IS", RFC 5308,
           October 2008.

  [Ko02]   Koodli, R. and R. Ravikanth, "One-way Loss Pattern Sample
           Metrics", RFC 3357, August 2002.

  [Ma05]   Manral, V., White, R., and A. Shaikh, "Benchmarking Basic
           OSPF Single Router Control Plane Convergence", RFC 4061,
           April 2005.




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RFC 6413          IGP Convergence Benchmark Methodology    November 2011


  [Ma05c]  Manral, V., White, R., and A. Shaikh, "Considerations When
           Using Basic OSPF Convergence Benchmarks", RFC 4063,
           April 2005.

  [Ma05t]  Manral, V., White, R., and A. Shaikh, "OSPF Benchmarking
           Terminology and Concepts", RFC 4062, April 2005.

  [Ma98]   Mandeville, R., "Benchmarking Terminology for LAN Switching
           Devices", RFC 2285, February 1998.

  [Mo98]   Moy, J., "OSPF Version 2", STD 54, RFC 2328, April 1998.

  [Ne07]   Newman, D. and T. Player, "Hash and Stuffing: Overlooked
           Factors in Network Device Benchmarking", RFC 4814,
           March 2007.

  [Pa05]   Pan, P., Swallow, G., and A. Atlas, "Fast Reroute Extensions
           to RSVP-TE for LSP Tunnels", RFC 4090, May 2005.

  [Po06]   Poretsky, S., Perser, J., Erramilli, S., and S. Khurana,
           "Terminology for Benchmarking Network-layer Traffic Control
           Mechanisms", RFC 4689, October 2006.

  [Po11t]  Poretsky, S., Imhoff, B., and K. Michielsen, "Terminology
           for Benchmarking Link-State IGP Data-Plane Route
           Convergence", RFC 6412, November 2011.

  [Sh10]   Shand, M. and S. Bryant, "A Framework for Loop-Free
           Convergence", RFC 5715, January 2010.

  [Sh10i]  Shand, M. and S. Bryant, "IP Fast Reroute Framework",
           RFC 5714, January 2010.

  [Th00]   Thaler, D. and C. Hopps, "Multipath Issues in Unicast and
           Multicast Next-Hop Selection", RFC 2991, November 2000.

11.2.  Informative References

  [Al00]   Alaettinoglu, C., Jacobson, V., and H. Yu, "Towards
           Millisecond IGP Convergence", NANOG 20, October 2000.

  [Al02]   Alaettinoglu, C. and S. Casner, "ISIS Routing on the Qwest
           Backbone: a Recipe for Subsecond ISIS Convergence",
           NANOG 24, February 2002.

  [Fi02]   Filsfils, C., "Tutorial: Deploying Tight-SLA Services on an
           Internet Backbone: ISIS Fast Convergence and Differentiated
           Services Design", NANOG 25, June 2002.



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RFC 6413          IGP Convergence Benchmark Methodology    November 2011


  [Fr05]   Francois, P., Filsfils, C., Evans, J., and O. Bonaventure,
           "Achieving SubSecond IGP Convergence in Large IP Networks",
           ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review v.35 n.3,
           July 2005.

  [Ka02]   Katz, D., "Why are we scared of SPF? IGP Scaling and
           Stability", NANOG 25, June 2002.

  [Vi02]   Villamizar, C., "Convergence and Restoration Techniques for
           ISP Interior Routing", NANOG 25, June 2002.

Authors' Addresses

  Scott Poretsky
  Allot Communications
  300 TradeCenter
  Woburn, MA  01801
  USA

  Phone: + 1 508 309 2179
  EMail: [email protected]


  Brent Imhoff
  Juniper Networks
  1194 North Mathilda Ave
  Sunnyvale, CA  94089
  USA

  Phone: + 1 314 378 2571
  EMail: [email protected]


  Kris Michielsen
  Cisco Systems
  6A De Kleetlaan
  Diegem, BRABANT  1831
  Belgium

  EMail: [email protected]











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