Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                       W. Sun, Ed.
Request for Comments: 6777                                          SJTU
Category: Standards Track                                  G. Zhang, Ed.
ISSN: 2070-1721                                                     CATR
                                                                 J. Gao
                                                                 Huawei
                                                                 G. Xie
                                                           UC Riverside
                                                             R. Papneja
                                                                 Huawei
                                                          November 2012


Label Switched Path (LSP) Data Path Delay Metrics in Generalized MPLS
           and MPLS Traffic Engineering (MPLS-TE) Networks

Abstract

  When setting up a Label Switched Path (LSP) in Generalized MPLS
  (GMPLS) and MPLS Traffic Engineering (MPLS-TE) networks, the
  completion of the signaling process does not necessarily mean that
  the cross-connection along the LSP has been programmed accordingly
  and in a timely manner.  Meanwhile, the completion of the signaling
  process may be used by LSP users or applications that control their
  use as an indication that the data path has become usable.  The
  existence of the inconsistency between the signaling messages and
  cross-connection programming, and the possible failure of cross-
  connection programming, if not properly treated, will result in data
  loss or even application failure.  Characterization of this
  performance can thus help designers to improve the way in which LSPs
  are used and to make applications or tools that depend on and use
  LSPs more robust.  This document defines a series of performance
  metrics to evaluate the connectivity of the data path in the
  signaling process.

Status of This Memo

  This is an Internet Standards Track document.

  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).  Further information on
  Internet Standards is available in 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/rfc6777.



Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2012 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
  the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
  described in the Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................4
  2. Conventions Used in This Document ...............................5
  3. Overview of Performance Metrics .................................5
  4. Terms Used in This Document .....................................6
  5. A Singleton Definition for RRFD .................................7
     5.1. Motivation .................................................7
     5.2. Metric Name ................................................7
     5.3. Metric Parameters ..........................................7
     5.4. Metric Units ...............................................7
     5.5. Definition .................................................8
     5.6. Discussion .................................................8
     5.7. Methodologies ..............................................9
  6. A Singleton Definition for RSRD ................................10
     6.1. Motivation ................................................10
     6.2. Metric Name ...............................................10
     6.3. Metric Parameters .........................................10
     6.4. Metric Units ..............................................11
     6.5. Definition ................................................11
     6.6. Discussion ................................................11
     6.7. Methodologies .............................................12
  7. A Singleton Definition for PRFD ................................13
     7.1. Motivation ................................................13
     7.2. Metric Name ...............................................13
     7.3. Metric Parameters .........................................13
     7.4. Metric Units ..............................................13
     7.5. Definition ................................................14
     7.6. Discussion ................................................14
     7.7. Methodologies .............................................15






Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


  8. A Singleton Definition for PSFD ................................16
     8.1. Motivation ................................................16
     8.2. Metric Name ...............................................16
     8.3. Metric Parameters .........................................16
     8.4. Metric Units ..............................................16
     8.5. Definition ................................................17
     8.6. Discussion ................................................17
     8.7. Methodologies .............................................18
  9. A Singleton Definition for PSRD ................................19
     9.1. Motivation ................................................19
     9.2. Metric Name ...............................................19
     9.3. Metric Parameters .........................................19
     9.4. Metric Units ..............................................19
     9.5. Definition ................................................20
     9.6. Discussion ................................................20
     9.7. Methodologies .............................................21
  10. A Definition for Samples of Data Path Delay ...................22
     10.1. Metric Name ..............................................22
     10.2. Metric Parameters ........................................22
     10.3. Metric Units .............................................22
     10.4. Definition ...............................................22
     10.5. Discussion ...............................................23
     10.6. Methodologies ............................................23
     10.7. Typical Testing Cases ....................................23
          10.7.1. With No LSP in the Network ........................23
          10.7.2. With a Number of LSPs in the Network ..............24
  11. Some Statistics Definitions for Metrics to Report .............24
     11.1. The Minimum of the Metric ................................24
     11.2. The Median of the Metric .................................24
     11.3. The Percentile of the Metric .............................24
     11.4. Failure Probability ......................................25
          11.4.1. Failure Count .....................................25
          11.4.2. Failure Ratio .....................................25
  12. Security Considerations .......................................25
  13. References ....................................................26
     13.1. Normative References .....................................26
     13.2. Informative References ...................................26
  Appendix A. Acknowledgements ......................................27
  Appendix B. Contributors ..........................................28












Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


1.  Introduction

  Label Switched Paths (LSPs) are established, controlled, and
  allocated for use by management tools or directly by the components
  that use them.  In this document, we call such management tools and
  the components that use LSPs "applications".  Such applications may
  be Network Management Systems (NMSs); hardware or software components
  that forward data onto virtual links; programs or tools that use
  dedicated links; or any other user of an LSP.

  Ideally, the completion of the signaling process means that the
  signaled LSP is ready to carry traffic.  However, in actual
  implementations, vendors may choose to program the cross-connection
  in a pipelined manner, so that the overall LSP provisioning delay can
  be reduced.  In such situations, the data path may not be ready for
  use instantly after the signaling process completes.  Implementation
  deficiency may also cause inconsistency between the signaling process
  and data path provisioning.  For example, if the data plane fails to
  program the cross-connection accordingly but does not manage to
  report this to the control plane, the signaling process may complete
  successfully while the corresponding data path will never become
  functional at all.

  On the other hand, the completion of the signaling process may be
  used in many cases as an indication of data path connectivity.  For
  example, when invoking through the User-Network Interface (UNI)
  [RFC4208], a client device or an application may use the reception of
  the correct Resv message as an indication that the data path is fully
  functional and start to transmit traffic.  This will result in data
  loss or even application failure.

  Although RSVP(-TE) specifications have suggested that the cross-
  connections are programmed before signaling messages are propagated
  upstream, it is still worthwhile to verify the conformance of an
  implementation and measure the delay, when necessary.

  This document defines a series of performance metrics to evaluate the
  connectivity of the data path during the signaling process.  The
  metrics defined in this document complement the control plane metrics
  defined in [RFC5814].  These metrics can be used to verify the
  conformance of implementations against related specifications, as
  elaborated in [RFC6383].  They also can be used to build more robust
  applications.








Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


2.  Conventions Used in This Document

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].

3.  Overview of Performance Metrics

  In this memo, we define five performance metrics to characterize the
  performance of data path provisioning with GMPLS/MPLS-TE signaling.
  These metrics complement the metrics defined in [RFC5814], in the
  sense that the completion of the signaling process for an LSP and the
  programming of cross-connections along the LSP may not be consistent.
  The performance metrics in [RFC5814] characterize the performance of
  LSP provisioning from the pure signaling point of view, while the
  metric in this document takes into account the validity of the data
  path.

  The five metrics are:

  o  Resv Received, Forward Data (RRFD) - the delay between the point
     when the Resv message is received by the ingress node and the
     forward data path becomes ready for use.

  o  Resv Sent, Reverse Data (RSRD) - the delay between the point when
     the Resv message is sent by the egress node and the reverse data
     path becomes ready for use.

  o  PATH Received, Forward Data (PRFD) - the delay between the point
     when the PATH message is received by the egress node and the
     forward data path becomes ready for use.

  o  PATH Sent, Forward Data (PSFD) - the delay between the point when
     the PATH message is sent by the ingress node and the forward data
     path becomes ready for use.

  o  PATH Sent, Reverse Data (PSRD) - the delay between the point when
     the PATH message is sent by the ingress node and the reverse data
     path becomes ready for use.

  As in [RFC5814], we continue to use the structures and notions
  introduced and discussed in the IP Performance Metrics (IPPM)
  Framework documents [RFC2330] [RFC2679] [RFC2681].  The reader is
  assumed to be familiar with the notions in those documents.  The
  reader is also assumed to be familiar with the definitions in
  [RFC5814].





Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


4.  Terms Used in This Document

  o  Forward data path - the data path from the ingress node to the
     egress node.  Instances of a forward data path include the data
     path of a unidirectional LSP and a data path from the ingress node
     to the egress node in a bidirectional LSP.

  o  Reverse data path - the data path from the egress node to the
     ingress node in a bidirectional LSP.

  o  Data path delay - the time needed to complete the data path
     configuration, in relation to the signaling process.  Five types
     of data path delay are defined in this document, namely RRFD,
     RSRD, PRFD, PSFD, and PSRD.  Data path delay as used in this
     document must be distinguished from the transmission delay along
     the data path, i.e., the time needed to transmit traffic from one
     side of the data path to the other.

  o  Error-free signal - data-plane-specific indication of connectivity
     of the data path.  For example, for interfaces capable of packet
     switching, the reception of the first error-free packet from one
     side of the LSP to the other may be used as the error-free signal.
     For Synchronous Digital Hierarchy/Synchronous Optical Network
     (SDH/SONET) cross-connects, the disappearance of alarm can be used
     as the error-free signal.  Throughout this document, we will use
     "error-free signal" as a general term.  An implementation must
     choose a proper data path signal that is specific to the data path
     technology being tested.

  o  Ingress/egress node - in this memo, an ingress/egress node means a
     measurement endpoint with both control plane and data plane
     features.  Typically, the control plane part on an ingress/egress
     node interacts with the control plane of the network under test.
     The data plane part of an ingress/egress node will generate data
     path signals and send the signal to the data plane of the network
     under test, or receive data path signals from the network under
     test.














Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


5.  A Singleton Definition for RRFD

  This part defines a metric for forward data path delay when an LSP is
  set up.

  As described in [RFC6383], the completion of the RSVP-TE signaling
  process does not necessarily mean that the cross-connections along
  the LSP being set up are in place and ready to carry traffic.  This
  metric defines the time difference between the reception of a Resv
  message by the ingress node and the completion of the cross-
  connection programming along the forward data path.

5.1.  Motivation

  RRFD is useful for the following reasons:

  o  For the reasons described in [RFC6383], the data path may not be
     ready for use instantly after the completion of the RSVP-TE
     signaling process.  The delay itself is part of the implementation
     performance.

  o  The completion of the signaling process may be used by application
     designers as an indication of data path connectivity.  The
     existence of this delay and the potential failure of cross-
     connection programming, if not properly treated, will result in
     data loss or application failure.  The typical value of this delay
     can thus help designers to improve the application model.

5.2.  Metric Name

  RRFD = Resv Received, Forward Data path

5.3.  Metric Parameters

  o  ID0, the ingress Label Switching Router (LSR) ID

  o  ID1, the egress LSR ID

  o  T, a time when the setup is attempted

5.4.  Metric Units

  The value of RRFD is either a real number of milliseconds or
  undefined.







Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


5.5.  Definition

  For a real number dT,

     RRFD from ingress node ID0 to egress node ID1 at T is dT

  means that

  o  ingress node ID0 sends a PATH message to egress node ID1,

  o  the last bit of the corresponding Resv message is received by
     ingress node ID0 at T, and

  o  an error-free signal is received by egress node ID1 by using a
     data-plane-specific test pattern at T+dT.

5.6.  Discussion

  The following issues are likely to come up in practice:

  o  The accuracy of RRFD depends on the clock resolution of both the
     ingress node and egress node.  Clock synchronization between the
     ingress node and egress node is required.

  o  The accuracy of RRFD is also dependent on how the error-free
     signal is received and may differ significantly when the
     underlying data plane technology is different.  For instance, for
     an LSP between a pair of Ethernet interfaces, the ingress node may
     use a rate-based method to verify the connectivity of the data
     path and use the reception of the first error-free frame as the
     error-free signal.  In this case, the interval between two
     successive frames has a significant impact on accuracy.  It is
     RECOMMENDED that the ingress node use small intervals, under the
     condition that the injected traffic does not exceed the capacity
     of the forward data path.  The value of such intervals MUST be
     reported.

  o  The accuracy of RRFD is also dependent on the time needed to
     propagate the error-free signal from the ingress node to the
     egress node.  A typical value for propagating the error-free
     signal from the ingress node to the egress node under the same
     measurement setup MAY be reported.  The methodology to obtain such
     values is outside the scope of this document.

  o  The accuracy of this metric is also dependent on the physical-
     layer serialization/deserialization of the test signal for certain
     data path technologies.  For instance, for an LSP between a pair




Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


     of low-speed Ethernet interfaces, the time needed to serialize/
     deserialize a large frame may not be negligible.  In this case, it
     is RECOMMENDED that the ingress node use small frames.  The
     average length of the frame MAY be reported.

  o  It is possible that under some implementations, a node may program
     the cross-connection before it sends a PATH message further
     downstream, and the data path may be ready for use before a Resv
     message reaches the ingress node.  In such cases, RRFD can be a
     negative value.  It is RECOMMENDED that a PRFD measurement be
     carried out to further characterize the forward data path delay
     when a negative RRFD value is observed.

  o  If an error-free signal is received by the egress node before a
     PATH message is sent on the ingress node, an error MUST be
     reported and the measurement SHOULD terminate.

  o  If the corresponding Resv message is received but no error-free
     signal is received by the egress node within a reasonable period
     of time, i.e., a threshold, RRFD MUST be treated as undefined.
     The value of the threshold MUST be reported.

  o  If the LSP setup fails, this metric value MUST NOT be counted.

5.7.  Methodologies

  Generally, the methodology would proceed as follows:

  o  Make sure that the network has enough resources to set up the
     requested LSP.

  o  Start the data path measurement and/or monitoring procedures on
     the ingress node and egress node.  If an error-free signal is
     received by the egress node before a PATH message is sent, report
     an error and terminate the measurement.

  o  At the ingress node, form the PATH message according to the LSP
     requirements and send the message towards the egress node.

  o  Upon receiving the last bit of the corresponding Resv message,
     take the timestamp (T1) on the ingress node as soon as possible.

  o  When an error-free signal is observed on the egress node, take the
     timestamp (T2) as soon as possible.  An estimate of RRFD (T2 - T1)
     can be computed.






Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


  o  If the corresponding Resv message arrives but no error-free signal
     is received within a reasonable period of time by the ingress
     node, RRFD is deemed to be undefined.

  o  If the LSP setup fails, RRFD is not counted.

6.  A Singleton Definition for RSRD

  This part defines a metric for reverse data path delay when an LSP is
  set up.

  As described in [RFC6383], the completion of the RSVP-TE signaling
  process does not necessarily mean that the cross-connections along
  the LSP being set up are in place and ready to carry traffic.  This
  metric defines the time difference between the completion of the
  signaling process and the completion of the cross-connection
  programming along the reverse data path.  This metric MAY be used
  together with RRFD to characterize the data path delay of a
  bidirectional LSP.

6.1.  Motivation

  RSRD is useful for the following reasons:

  o  For the reasons described in [RFC6383], the data path may not be
     ready for use instantly after the completion of the RSVP-TE
     signaling process.  The delay itself is part of the implementation
     performance.

  o  The completion of the signaling process may be used by application
     designers as an indication of data path connectivity.  The
     existence of this delay and the possible failure of cross-
     connection programming, if not properly treated, will result in
     data loss or application failure.  The typical value of this delay
     can thus help designers to improve the application model.

6.2.  Metric Name

  RSRD = Resv Sent, Reverse Data path

6.3.  Metric Parameters

  o  ID0, the ingress LSR ID

  o  ID1, the egress LSR ID

  o  T, a time when the setup is attempted




Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


6.4.  Metric Units

  The value of RSRD is either a real number of milliseconds or
  undefined.

6.5.  Definition

  For a real number dT,

     RSRD from ingress node ID0 to egress node ID1 at T is dT

  means that

  o  ingress node ID0 sends a PATH message to egress node ID1,

  o  the last bit of the corresponding Resv message is sent by egress
     node ID1 at T, and

  o  an error-free signal is received by the ingress node ID0 using a
     data-plane-specific test pattern at T+dT.

6.6.  Discussion

  The following issues are likely to come up in practice:

  o  The accuracy of RSRD depends on the clock resolution of both the
     ingress node and egress node.  Clock synchronization between the
     ingress node and egress node is required.

  o  The accuracy of RSRD is also dependent on how the error-free
     signal is received and may differ significantly when the
     underlying data plane technology is different.  For instance, for
     an LSP between a pair of Ethernet interfaces, the egress node
     (sometimes the tester) may use a rate-based method to verify the
     connectivity of the data path and use the reception of the first
     error-free frame as the error-free signal.  In this case, the
     interval between two successive frames has a significant impact on
     accuracy.  It is RECOMMENDED in this case that the egress node use
     small intervals, under the condition that the injected traffic
     does not exceed the capacity of the reverse data path.  The value
     of the interval MUST be reported.

  o  The accuracy of RSRD is also dependent on the time needed to
     propagate the error-free signal from the egress node to the
     ingress node.  A typical value for propagating the error-free
     signal from the egress node to the ingress node under the same
     measurement setup MAY be reported.  The methodology to obtain such
     values is outside the scope of this document.



Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


  o  The accuracy of this metric is also dependent on the physical-
     layer serialization/deserialization of the test signal for certain
     data path technologies.  For instance, for an LSP between a pair
     of low-speed Ethernet interfaces, the time needed to serialize/
     deserialize a large frame may not be negligible.  In this case, it
     is RECOMMENDED that the egress node use small frames.  The average
     length of the frame MAY be reported.

  o  If the corresponding Resv message is sent but no error-free signal
     is received by the ingress node within a reasonable period of
     time, i.e., a threshold, RSRD MUST be treated as undefined.  The
     value of the threshold MUST be reported.

  o  If an error-free signal is received before a PATH message is sent
     on the ingress node, an error MUST be reported and the measurement
     SHOULD terminate.

  o  If the LSP setup fails, this metric value MUST NOT be counted.

6.7.  Methodologies

  Generally, the methodology would proceed as follows:

  o  Make sure that the network has enough resources to set up the
     requested LSP.

  o  Start the data path measurement and/or monitoring procedures on
     the ingress node and egress node.  If an error-free signal is
     received by the ingress node before a PATH message is sent, report
     an error and terminate the measurement.

  o  At the ingress node, form the PATH message according to the LSP
     requirements and send the message towards the egress node.

  o  Upon sending the last bit of the corresponding Resv message, take
     the timestamp (T1) on the egress node as soon as possible.

  o  When an error-free signal is observed on the ingress node, take
     the timestamp (T2) as soon as possible.  An estimate of RSRD
     (T2 - T1) can be computed.

  o  If the LSP setup fails, RSRD is not counted.

  o  If no error-free signal is received within a reasonable period of
     time by the ingress node, RSRD is deemed to be undefined.






Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


7.  A Singleton Definition for PRFD

  This part defines a metric for forward data path delay when an LSP is
  set up.

  In an RSVP-TE implementation, when setting up an LSP, each node may
  choose to program the cross-connection before it sends a PATH message
  further downstream.  In this case, the forward data path may become
  ready for use before the signaling process completes, i.e., before
  the Resv message reaches the ingress node.  This metric can be used
  to identify such an implementation practice and give useful
  information to application designers.

7.1.  Motivation

  PRFD is useful for the following reasons:

  o  PRFD can be used to identify an RSVP-TE implementation practice in
     which cross-connections are programmed before a PATH message is
     sent downstream.

  o  The value of PRFD may also help application designers to fine-tune
     their application model.

7.2.  Metric Name

  PRFD = PATH Received, Forward Data path

7.3.  Metric Parameters

  o  ID0, the ingress LSR ID

  o  ID1, the egress LSR ID

  o  T, a time when the setup is attempted

7.4.  Metric Units

  The value of PRFD is either a real number of milliseconds or
  undefined.











Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


7.5.  Definition

  For a real number dT,

     PRFD from ingress node ID0 to egress node ID1 at T is dT

  means that

  o  ingress node ID0 sends a PATH message to egress node ID1,

  o  the last bit of the PATH message is received by egress node ID1 at
     T, and

  o  an error-free signal is received by the egress node ID1 using a
     data-plane-specific test pattern at T+dT.

7.6.  Discussion

  The following issues are likely to come up in practice:

  o  The accuracy of PRFD depends on the clock resolution of the egress
     node.  Clock synchronization between the ingress node and egress
     node is not required.

  o  The accuracy of PRFD is also dependent on how the error-free
     signal is received and may differ significantly when the
     underlying data plane technology is different.  For instance, for
     an LSP between a pair of Ethernet interfaces, the egress node
     (sometimes the tester) may use a rate-based method to verify the
     connectivity of the data path and use the reception of the first
     error-free frame as the error-free signal.  In this case, the
     interval between two successive frames has a significant impact on
     accuracy.  It is RECOMMENDED in this case that the ingress node
     use small intervals, under the condition that the injected traffic
     does not exceed the capacity of the forward data path.  The value
     of the interval MUST be reported.

  o  The accuracy of PRFD is also dependent on the time needed to
     propagate the error-free signal from the ingress node to the
     egress node.  A typical value for propagating the error-free
     signal from the ingress node to the egress node under the same
     measurement setup MAY be reported.  The methodology to obtain such
     values is outside the scope of this document.

  o  The accuracy of this metric is also dependent on the physical-
     layer serialization/deserialization of the test signal for certain
     data path technologies.  For instance, for an LSP between a pair




Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


     of low-speed Ethernet interfaces, the time needed to serialize/
     deserialize a large frame may not be negligible.  In this case, it
     is RECOMMENDED that the ingress node use small frames.  The
     average length of the frame MAY be reported.

  o  If an error-free signal is received before a PATH message is sent,
     an error MUST be reported and the measurement SHOULD terminate.

  o  If the LSP setup fails, this metric value MUST NOT be counted.

  o  This metric SHOULD be used together with RRFD.  It is RECOMMENDED
     that a PRFD measurement be carried out after a negative RRFD value
     has already been observed.

7.7.  Methodologies

  Generally, the methodology would proceed as follows:

  o  Make sure that the network has enough resources to set up the
     requested LSP.

  o  Start the data path measurement and/or monitoring procedures on
     the ingress node and egress node.  If an error-free signal is
     received by the egress node before a PATH message is sent, report
     an error and terminate the measurement.

  o  At the ingress node, form the PATH message according to the LSP
     requirements and send the message towards the egress node.

  o  Upon receiving the last bit of the PATH message, take the
     timestamp (T1) on the egress node as soon as possible.

  o  When an error-free signal is observed on the egress node, take the
     timestamp (T2) as soon as possible.  An estimate of PRFD (T2 - T1)
     can be computed.

  o  If the LSP setup fails, PRFD is not counted.

  o  If no error-free signal is received within a reasonable period of
     time by the egress node, PRFD is deemed to be undefined.











Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


8.  A Singleton Definition for PSFD

  This part defines a metric for forward data path delay when an LSP is
  set up.

  As described in [RFC6383], the completion of the RSVP-TE signaling
  process does not necessarily mean that the cross-connections along
  the LSP being set up are in place and ready to carry traffic.  This
  metric defines the time difference between the point when the PATH
  message is sent by the ingress node and the completion of the cross-
  connection programming along the LSP forward data path.

8.1.  Motivation

  PSFD is useful for the following reasons:

  o  For the reasons described in [RFC6383], the data path setup delay
     may not be consistent with the control plane LSP setup delay.  The
     data path setup delay metric is more precise for LSP setup
     performance measurement.

  o  The completion of the signaling process may be used by application
     designers as an indication of data path connectivity.  The
     difference between the control plane setup delay and data path
     delay, and the potential failure of cross-connection programming,
     if not properly treated, will result in data loss or application
     failure.  This metric can thus help designers to improve the
     application model.

8.2.  Metric Name

  PSFD = PATH Sent, Forward Data path

8.3.  Metric Parameters

  o  ID0, the ingress LSR ID

  o  ID1, the egress LSR ID

  o  T, a time when the setup is attempted

8.4.  Metric Units

  The value of PSFD is either a real number of milliseconds or
  undefined.






Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


8.5.  Definition

  For a real number dT,

     PSFD from ingress node ID0 to egress node ID1 at T is dT

  means that

  o  ingress node ID0 sends the first bit of a PATH message to egress
     node ID1 at T, and

  o  an error-free signal is received by the egress node ID1 using a
     data-plane-specific test pattern at T+dT.

8.6.  Discussion

  The following issues are likely to come up in practice:

  o  The accuracy of PSFD depends on the clock resolution of both the
     ingress node and egress node.  Clock synchronization between the
     ingress node and egress node is required.

  o  The accuracy of PSFD is also dependent on how the error-free
     signal is received and may differ significantly when the
     underlying data plane technology is different.  For instance, for
     an LSP between a pair of Ethernet interfaces, the ingress node may
     use a rate-based method to verify the connectivity of the data
     path and use the reception of the first error-free frame as the
     error-free signal.  In this case, the interval between two
     successive frames has a significant impact on accuracy.  It is
     RECOMMENDED that the ingress node use small intervals, under the
     condition that the injected traffic does not exceed the capacity
     of the forward data path.  The value of the interval MUST be
     reported.

  o  The accuracy of PSFD is also dependent on the time needed to
     propagate the error-free signal from the ingress node to the
     egress node.  A typical value for propagating the error-free
     signal from the ingress node to the egress node under the same
     measurement setup MAY be reported.  The methodology to obtain such
     values is outside the scope of this document.

  o  The accuracy of this metric is also dependent on the physical-
     layer serialization/deserialization of the test signal for certain
     data path technologies.  For instance, for an LSP between a pair






Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


     of low-speed Ethernet interfaces, the time needed to serialize/
     deserialize a large frame may not be negligible.  In this case, it
     is RECOMMENDED that the ingress node use small frames.  The
     average length of the frame MAY be reported.

  o  If an error-free signal is received before a PATH message is sent,
     an error MUST be reported and the measurement SHOULD terminate.

  o  If the LSP setup fails, this metric value MUST NOT be counted.

  o  If the PATH message is sent by the ingress node but no error-free
     signal is received by the egress node within a reasonable period
     of time, i.e., a threshold, PSFD MUST be treated as undefined.
     The value of the threshold MUST be reported.

8.7.  Methodologies

  Generally, the methodology would proceed as follows:

  o  Make sure that the network has enough resources to set up the
     requested LSP.

  o  Start the data path measurement and/or monitoring procedures on
     the ingress node and egress node.  If an error-free signal is
     received by the egress node before a PATH message is sent, report
     an error and terminate the measurement.

  o  At the ingress node, form the PATH message according to the LSP
     requirements and send the message towards the egress node.  A
     timestamp (T1) may be stored locally in the ingress node when the
     PATH message packet is sent towards the egress node.

  o  When an error-free signal is observed on the egress node, take the
     timestamp (T2) as soon as possible.  An estimate of PSFD (T2 - T1)
     can be computed.

  o  If the LSP setup fails, PSFD is not counted.

  o  If no error-free signal is received within a reasonable period of
     time by the egress node, PSFD is deemed to be undefined.











Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


9.  A Singleton Definition for PSRD

  This part defines a metric for reverse data path delay when an LSP is
  set up.

  This metric defines the time difference between the point when the
  ingress node sends the PATH message and the completion of the cross-
  connection programming along the LSP reverse data path.  This metric
  MAY be used together with PSFD to characterize the data path delay of
  a bidirectional LSP.

9.1.  Motivation

  PSRD is useful for the following reasons:

  o  For the reasons described in [RFC6383], the data path setup delay
     may not be consistent with the control plane LSP setup delay.  The
     data path setup delay metric is more precise for LSP setup
     performance measurement.

  o  The completion of the signaling process may be used by application
     designers as an indication of data path connectivity.  The
     difference between the control plane setup delay and data path
     delay, and the potential failure of cross-connection programming,
     if not properly treated, will result in data loss or application
     failure.  This metric can thus help designers to improve the
     application model.

9.2.  Metric Name

  PSRD = PATH Sent, Reverse Data path

9.3.  Metric Parameters

  o  ID0, the ingress LSR ID

  o  ID1, the egress LSR ID

  o  T, a time when the setup is attempted

9.4.  Metric Units

  The value of PSRD is either a real number of milliseconds or
  undefined.







Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


9.5.  Definition

  For a real number dT,

     PSRD from ingress node ID0 to egress node ID1 at T is dT

  means that

  o  ingress node ID0 sends the first bit of a PATH message to egress
     node ID1 at T, and

  o  an error-free signal is received through the reverse data path
     by the ingress node ID0 using a data-plane-specific test pattern
     at T+dT.

9.6.  Discussion

  The following issues are likely to come up in practice:

  o  The accuracy of PSRD depends on the clock resolution of the
     ingress node.  Clock synchronization between the ingress node and
     egress node is not required.

  o  The accuracy of PSRD is also dependent on how the error-free
     signal is received and may differ significantly when the
     underlying data plane technology is different.  For instance, for
     an LSP between a pair of Ethernet interfaces, the egress node may
     use a rate-based method to verify the connectivity of the data
     path and use the reception of the first error-free frame as the
     error-free signal.  In this case, the interval between two
     successive frames has a significant impact on accuracy.  It is
     RECOMMENDED that the egress node use small intervals, under the
     condition that the injected traffic does not exceed the capacity
     of the forward data path.  The value of the interval MUST be
     reported.

  o  The accuracy of PSRD is also dependent on the time needed to
     propagate the error-free signal from the egress node to the
     ingress node.  A typical value for propagating the error-free
     signal from the egress node to the ingress node under the same
     measurement setup MAY be reported.  The methodology to obtain such
     values is outside the scope of this document.

  o  The accuracy of this metric is also dependent on the physical-
     layer serialization/deserialization of the test signal for certain
     data path technologies.  For instance, for an LSP between a pair





Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


     of low-speed Ethernet interfaces, the time needed to serialize/
     deserialize a large frame may not be negligible.  In this case, it
     is RECOMMENDED that the egress node use small frames.  The average
     length of the frame MAY be reported.

  o  If an error-free signal is received before a PATH message is sent,
     an error MUST be reported and the measurement SHOULD terminate.

  o  If the LSP setup fails, this metric value MUST NOT be counted.

  o  If the PATH message is sent by the ingress node but no error-free
     signal is received by the ingress node within a reasonable period
     of time, i.e., a threshold, PSRD MUST be treated as undefined.
     The value of the threshold MUST be reported.

9.7.  Methodologies

  Generally, the methodology would proceed as follows:

  o  Make sure that the network has enough resources to set up the
     requested LSP.

  o  Start the data path measurement and/or monitoring procedures on
     the ingress node and egress node.  If an error-free signal is
     received by the egress node before a PATH message is sent, report
     an error and terminate the measurement.

  o  At the ingress node, form the PATH message according to the LSP
     requirements and send the message towards the egress node.  A
     timestamp (T1) may be stored locally in the ingress node when the
     PATH message packet is sent towards the egress node.

  o  When an error-free signal is observed on the ingress node, take
     the timestamp (T2) as soon as possible.  An estimate of PSRD
     (T2 - T1) can be computed.

  o  If the LSP setup fails, PSRD is not counted.

  o  If no error-free signal is received within a reasonable period of
     time by the ingress node, PSRD is deemed to be undefined.











Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


10.  A Definition for Samples of Data Path Delay

  In Sections 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9, we defined the singleton metrics of
  data path delay.  Now, we define how to get one particular sample of
  such a delay.  Sampling is done to select a particular portion of
  singleton values of the given parameters.  As in [RFC2330], we use
  Poisson sampling as an example.

10.1.  Metric Name

  Type <X> data path delay sample, where X is either RRFD, RSRD, PRFD,
  PSFD, or PSRD.

10.2.  Metric Parameters

  o  ID0, the ingress LSR ID

  o  ID1, the egress LSR ID

  o  T0, a time

  o  Tf, a time

  o  Lambda, a rate in reciprocal milliseconds

  o  Th, the LSP holding time

  o  Td, the maximum waiting time for successful LSP setup

  o  Ts, the maximum waiting time for an error-free signal

10.3.  Metric Units

  A sequence of pairs; the elements of each pair are:

  o  T, a time when setup is attempted

  o  dT, either a real number of milliseconds or undefined

10.4.  Definition

  Given T0, Tf, and Lambda, compute a pseudo-random Poisson process
  beginning at or before T0, with average arrival rate Lambda, and
  ending at or after Tf.  Those time values greater than or equal to T0
  and less than or equal to Tf are then selected.  At each of the times
  in this process, we obtain the value of a data path delay sample of
  type <X> at this time.  The value of the sample is the sequence made




Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


  up of the resulting <time, type <X> data path delay> pairs.  If there
  are no such pairs, the sequence is of length zero and the sample is
  said to be empty.

10.5.  Discussion

  The following issues are likely to come up in practice:

  o  The parameters Lambda, Th, and Td should be carefully chosen, as
     explained in the discussions for LSP setup delay (see [RFC5814]).

  o  The parameter Ts should be carefully chosen and MUST be reported
     along with the LSP forward/reverse data path delay sample.

10.6.  Methodologies

  Generally, the methodology would proceed as follows:

  o  Select specific times, using the specified Poisson arrival
     process.

  o  Set up the LSP and obtain the value of type <X> data path delay.

  o  Release the LSP after Th, and wait for the next Poisson arrival
     process.

10.7.  Typical Testing Cases

10.7.1.  With No LSP in the Network

10.7.1.1.  Motivation

  Data path delay with no LSP in the network is important because this
  reflects the inherent delay of a device implementation.  The minimum
  value provides an indication of the delay that will likely be
  experienced when an LSP data path is configured under light traffic
  load.

10.7.1.2.  Methodologies

  Make sure that there is no LSP in the network, and proceed with the
  methodologies described in Section 10.6.









Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


10.7.2.  With a Number of LSPs in the Network

10.7.2.1.  Motivation

  Data path delay with a number of LSPs in the network is important
  because it reflects the performance of an operational network with
  considerable load.  This delay may vary significantly as the number
  of existing LSPs varies.  It can be used as a scalability metric of a
  device implementation.

10.7.2.2.  Methodologies

  o  Set up the required number of LSPs.

  o  Wait until the network reaches a stable state.

  o  Then proceed with the methodologies described in Section 10.6.

11.  Some Statistics Definitions for Metrics to Report

  Given the samples of the performance metric, we now offer several
  statistics of these samples to report.  From these statistics, we can
  draw some useful conclusions regarding a GMPLS network.  The value of
  these metrics is either a real number of milliseconds or undefined.
  In the following discussion, we only consider the finite values.

11.1.  The Minimum of the Metric

  The minimum of the metric is the minimum of all the dT values in the
  sample.  In computing this, undefined values SHOULD be treated as
  infinitely large.  Note that this means that the minimum could thus
  be undefined if all the dT values are undefined.  In addition, the
  metric minimum SHOULD be set to undefined if the sample is empty.

11.2.  The Median of the Metric

  The median of the metric is the median of the dT values in the given
  sample.  In computing the median, the undefined values MUST NOT be
  included.  The median SHOULD be set to undefined if all the dT values
  are undefined, or if the sample is empty.  When the number of defined
  values in the given sample is small, the metric median may not be
  typical and SHOULD be used carefully.

11.3.  The Percentile of the Metric

  The "empirical distribution function" (EDF) of a set of scalar
  measurements is a function F(x), which, for any x, gives the
  fractional proportion of the total measurements that were <= x.



Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


  Given a percentage X, the Xth percentile of the metric means the
  smallest value of x for which F(x) >= X.  In computing the
  percentile, undefined values MUST NOT be included.

  See [RFC2330] for further details.

11.4.  Failure Probability

  Given the samples of the performance metric, we now offer two
  statistics of failure events of these samples to report: Failure
  Count and Failure Ratio.  The two statistics can be applied to both
  the forward data path and reverse data path.  For example, when a
  sample of RRFD has been obtained, the forward data path failure
  statistics can be obtained, while a sample of RSRD can be used to
  calculate the reverse data path failure statistics.  Detailed
  definitions of Failure Count and Failure Ratio are given below.

11.4.1.  Failure Count

  Failure Count is defined as the number of the undefined value of the
  corresponding performance metric in a sample.  The value of Failure
  Count is an integer.

11.4.2.  Failure Ratio

  Failure Ratio is the percentage of the number of failure events to
  the total number of requests in a sample.  Here, a failure event
  means that the signaling completes with no error, while no error-free
  signal is observed.  The calculation for Failure Ratio is defined as
  follows:

  Failure Ratio = Number of undefined value/(Number of valid metric
  values + Number of undefined value) * 100%.

12.  Security Considerations

  In the control plane, since the measurement endpoints must be
  conformant to signaling specifications and behave as normal signaling
  endpoints, it will not incur security issues other than normal LSP
  provisioning.  However, the measurement parameters must be carefully
  selected so that the measurements inject trivial amounts of
  additional traffic into the networks they measure.  If they inject
  "too much" traffic, they can skew the results of the measurement and
  in extreme cases cause congestion and denial of service.

  In the data plane, the measurement endpoint MUST use a signal that is
  consistent with what is specified in the control plane.  For example,
  in a packet switched case, the traffic injected into the data plane



Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


  MUST NOT exceed the specified rate in the corresponding LSP setup
  request.  In a wavelength switched case, the measurement endpoint
  MUST use the specified or negotiated lambda with appropriate power.

  The security considerations pertaining to the original RSVP protocol
  [RFC2205] and its TE extensions [RFC3209] also remain relevant.

13.  References

13.1.  Normative References

  [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
             Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

  [RFC2205]  Braden, B., Zhang, L., Berson, S., Herzog, S., and S.
             Jamin, "Resource ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP) -- Version 1
             Functional Specification", RFC 2205, September 1997.

  [RFC2679]  Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A One-way
             Delay Metric for IPPM", RFC 2679, September 1999.

  [RFC2681]  Almes, G., Kalidindi, S., and M. Zekauskas, "A Round-trip
             Delay Metric for IPPM", RFC 2681, September 1999.

  [RFC3209]  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.

13.2.  Informative References

  [RFC2330]  Paxson, V., Almes, G., Mahdavi, J., and M. Mathis,
             "Framework for IP Performance Metrics", RFC 2330,
             May 1998.

  [RFC4208]  Swallow, G., Drake, J., Ishimatsu, H., and Y. Rekhter,
             "Generalized Multiprotocol Label Switching (GMPLS) User-
             Network Interface (UNI): Resource ReserVation Protocol-
             Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE) Support for the Overlay
             Model", RFC 4208, October 2005.

  [RFC5814]  Sun, W. and G. Zhang, "Label Switched Path (LSP) Dynamic
             Provisioning Performance Metrics in Generalized MPLS
             Networks", RFC 5814, March 2010.

  [RFC6383]  Shiomoto, K. and A. Farrel, "Advice on When It Is Safe to
             Start Sending Data on Label Switched Paths Established
             Using RSVP-TE", RFC 6383, September 2011.




Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


Appendix A.  Acknowledgements

  We wish to thank Adrian Farrel, Lou Berger, and Al Morton for their
  comments and help.  We also wish to thank Klaas Wierenga and Alexey
  Melnikov for their reviews.

  This document contains ideas as well as text that have appeared in
  existing IETF documents.  The authors wish to thank G. Almes, S.
  Kalidindi, and M. Zekauskas.

  We also wish to thank Weisheng Hu, Yaohui Jin, and Wei Guo in the
  state key laboratory of advanced optical communication systems and
  networks for their valuable comments.  We also wish to thank the
  National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) and the
  863 program of China for their support.




































Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


Appendix B.  Contributors

  Bin Gu
  IXIA
  Oriental Kenzo Plaza 8M, 48 Dongzhimen Wai Street
  Dongcheng District
  Beijing  200240
  China

  Phone: +86 13611590766
  EMail: [email protected]


  Xueqin Wei
  Fiberhome Telecommunication Technology Co., Ltd.
  Wuhan
  China

  Phone: +86 13871127882
  EMail: [email protected]


  Tomohiro Otani
  KDDI R&D Laboratories, Inc.
  2-1-15 Ohara Kamifukuoka Saitama
  356-8502
  Japan

  Phone: +81-49-278-7357
  EMail: [email protected]


  Ruiquan Jing
  China Telecom Beijing Research Institute
  118 Xizhimenwai Avenue
  Beijing  100035
  China

  Phone: +86-10-58552000
  EMail: [email protected]











Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 6777               LSP Data Path Delay Metrics         November 2012


Authors' Addresses

  Weiqiang Sun (editor)
  Shanghai Jiao Tong University
  800 Dongchuan Road
  Shanghai  200240
  China

  Phone: +86 21 3420 5359
  EMail: [email protected]


  Guoying Zhang (editor)
  China Academy of Telecommunication Research, MIIT, China
  No. 52 Hua Yuan Bei Lu, Haidian District
  Beijing  100191
  China

  Phone: +86 1062300103
  EMail: [email protected]


  Jianhua Gao
  Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
  China

  Phone: +86 755 28973237
  EMail: [email protected]


  Guowu Xie
  University of California, Riverside
  900 University Ave.
  Riverside, CA  92521
  USA

  Phone: +1 951 237 8825
  EMail: [email protected]


  Rajiv Papneja
  Huawei Technologies
  Santa Clara, CA  95050
  Reston, VA  20190
  USA

  EMail: [email protected]




Sun, et al.                  Standards Track                   [Page 29]