Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                           N. Finn
Request for Comments: 8557                   Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd
Category: Informational                                       P. Thubert
ISSN: 2070-1721                                                    Cisco
                                                               May 2019


              Deterministic Networking Problem Statement

Abstract

  This paper documents the needs in various industries to establish
  multi-hop paths for characterized flows with deterministic
  properties.

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 candidates for any level of Internet
  Standard; see Section 2 of RFC 7841.

  Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
  and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
  https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8557.

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (c) 2019 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
  (https://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.






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Table of Contents

  1. Introduction ....................................................2
  2. On Deterministic Networking .....................................4
  3. Problem Statement ...............................................6
     3.1. Supported Topologies .......................................6
     3.2. Flow Characterization ......................................6
     3.3. Centralized Path Computation and Installation ..............7
     3.4. Distributed Path Setup .....................................8
     3.5. Duplicated Data Format .....................................8
  4. Security Considerations .........................................9
  5. IANA Considerations .............................................9
  6. Informative References .........................................10
  Acknowledgments ...................................................11
  Authors' Addresses ................................................11

1.  Introduction

  "Deterministic Networking Use Cases" [RFC8578] illustrates that
  beyond the classical case of Industrial Automation and Control
  Systems (IACSs) there are in fact multiple industries with strong,
  and relatively similar, needs for deterministic network services with
  latency guarantees and ultra-low packet loss.

  The generalization of the needs for more deterministic networks has
  led to the IEEE 802.1 Audio Video Bridging (AVB) Task Group becoming
  the Time-Sensitive Networking (TSN) [IEEE-802.1TSNTG] Task Group
  (TG), with a much-expanded constituency from the industrial and
  vehicular markets.

  Along with this expansion, the networks considered here are becoming
  larger and structured, requiring deterministic forwarding beyond the
  LAN boundaries.  For instance, an IACS segregates the network along
  the broad lines of the Purdue Enterprise Reference Architecture
  (PERA) [ISA95], typically using deterministic LANs for Purdue level 2
  control systems, whereas public infrastructures such as electricity
  automation require deterministic properties over the wide area.
  Implementers have come to realize that the convergence of IT and
  Operation Technology (OT) networks requires Layer 3, as well as
  Layer 2, capabilities.

  While the initial user base has focused almost entirely on Ethernet
  physical media and Ethernet-based bridging protocols from several
  Standards Development Organizations (SDOs), the need for Layer 3, as
  expressed above, must not be confined to Ethernet and Ethernet-like
  media.  While such media must be encompassed by any useful
  Deterministic Networking (DetNet) architecture, cooperation between
  the IETF and other SDOs must not be limited to the IEEE or the



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  IEEE 802 organizations.  Furthermore, while both completed and
  ongoing work in other SDOs, and in IEEE 802 in particular, provides
  an obvious starting point for a DetNet architecture, we must not
  assume that these other SDOs' work confines the space in which the
  DetNet architecture progresses.

  The properties of deterministic networks will have specific
  requirements for the use of routed networks to support these
  applications, and a new model must be proposed to integrate this
  determinism in IT implementations.  The proposed model should enable
  a fully scheduled operation orchestrated by a central controller and
  may support a more distributed operation with (probably lesser)
  capabilities.  At any rate, the model should not compromise the
  ability of a network to keep carrying the sorts of traffic that is
  already carried today in conjunction with new, more deterministic
  flows.  Note: "Deterministic Networking Architecture" [DetNet-Arch]
  was produced by the DetNet Working Group to describe that model.

  At the time of this writing, it is expected that

  o  once the abstract model is agreed upon, the IETF will specify
     (1) the signaling elements to be used to establish a path and
     (2) the tagging elements to be used to identify the flows that are
     to be forwarded along that path

  o  the IETF will specify the necessary protocols or protocol
     additions, based on relevant IETF technologies, to implement the
     selected model

  A desirable outcome of the work is the ability to establish a
  multi-hop path over the IP or MPLS network for a particular flow with
  given timing and precise throughput requirements and to carry this
  particular flow along the multi-hop path with such characteristics as
  low latency and ultra-low jitter, reordering and/or replication and
  elimination of packets over non-congruent paths for a higher delivery
  ratio, and/or zero congestion loss, regardless of the amount of other
  flows in the network.

  Depending on the network capabilities and the current state, requests
  to establish a path by an end node or a network management entity may
  be granted or rejected, an existing path may be moved or removed, and
  DetNet flows exceeding their contract may face packet
  declassification and drop.








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2.  On Deterministic Networking

  The Internet is not the only digital network that has grown
  dramatically over the last 30-40 years.  Video and audio
  entertainment, as well as control systems for machinery,
  manufacturing processes, and vehicles, are also ubiquitous and are
  now based almost entirely on digital technologies.  Over the past
  10 years, engineers in these fields have come to realize that
  significant advantages in both cost and the ability to accelerate
  growth can be obtained by basing all of these disparate digital
  technologies on packet networks.

  The goals of Deterministic Networking are to (1) enable the migration
  of applications with critical timing and reliability issues that
  currently use special-purpose fieldbus technologies (High-Definition
  Multimedia Interface (HDMI), Controller Area Network (CAN bus),
  PROFIBUS [PROFIBUS], etc. ... even RS-232!) to packet technologies in
  general and to IP in particular and (2) support both these new
  applications and existing packet network applications over the same
  physical network.  In other words, a deterministic network is
  backwards compatible with (capable of transporting) statistically
  multiplexed traffic while preserving the properties of the accepted
  deterministic flows.

  [RFC8578] indicates that applications in multiple fields need some or
  all of a suite of features that includes:

  1.  Time synchronization of all host and network nodes (routers
      and/or bridges), accurate to something between 10 nanoseconds and
      10 microseconds, depending on the application.

  2.  Support for deterministic packet flows that:

      *  Can be unicast or multicast.

      *  Need absolute guarantees of minimum and maximum latency
         end to end across the network; sometimes a tight jitter is
         required as well.

      *  Need a packet loss ratio beyond the classical range for a
         particular medium, in the range of 10^-9 to 10^-12 or better
         on Ethernet and on the order of 10^-5 in wireless sensor mesh
         networks.

      *  Can, in total, absorb more than half of the network's
         available bandwidth (that is, massive over-provisioning is
         ruled out as a solution).




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      *  Cannot suffer throttling, congestion feedback, or any other
         network-imposed transmission delay, although the flows can be
         meaningfully characterized by either (1) a fixed, repeating
         transmission schedule or (2) a maximum bandwidth and packet
         size.

  3.  Multiple methods for scheduling, shaping, limiting, and otherwise
      controlling the transmission of critical packets at each hop
      through the network data plane.

  4.  Robust defenses against misbehaving hosts, routers, or bridges,
      in both the data plane and the control plane, with guarantees
      that a critical flow within its guaranteed resources cannot be
      affected by other flows, whatever the pressures on the network.
      For more on the specific threats against DetNet, see
      "Deterministic Networking (DetNet) Security Considerations"
      [DetNet-Security].

  5.  One or more methods for reserving resources in bridges and
      routers to carry these flows.

  Time-synchronization techniques need not be addressed by an IETF
  working group; there are a number of standards available for this
  purpose, including IEEE 1588 [IEEE-1588], IEEE 802.1AS [IEEE-8021AS],
  and more.

  The needs related to multicast, latency, loss ratio, and throttling
  avoidance exist because the algorithms employed by the applications
  demand it.  They are not simply the transliteration of fieldbus needs
  to a packet-based fieldbus simulation; they also reflect fundamental
  mathematics of the control of a physical system.

  With classical forwarding of latency-sensitive and loss-sensitive
  packets across a network, interactions among different critical flows
  introduce fundamental uncertainties in delivery schedules.  The
  details of the queuing, shaping, and scheduling algorithms employed
  by each bridge or router to control the output sequence on a given
  port affect the detailed makeup of the output stream, e.g., how
  finely a given flow's packets are mixed among those of other flows.

  This, in turn, has a strong effect on the buffer requirements, and
  hence the latency guarantees deliverable, by the next bridge or
  router along the path.  For this reason, the IEEE 802.1 TSN TG has
  defined a new set of queuing, shaping, and scheduling algorithms that
  enable each bridge or router to compute the exact number of buffers
  to be allocated for each flow or class of flows.





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  Networking protocols commonly need robustness.  Note that robustness
  plays a particularly important part in real-time control networks,
  where expensive equipment, and even lives, can be lost due to
  misbehaving equipment.

  Reserving resources before packet transmission is the one fundamental
  shift in the behavior of network applications that is impossible to
  avoid.  In the first place, a network cannot deliver finite latency
  and practically zero packet loss to an arbitrarily high offered load.
  Secondly, achieving practically zero packet loss for unthrottled
  (though bandwidth-limited) flows means that bridges and routers have
  to dedicate buffer resources to specific flows or classes of flows.
  The requirements of each reservation have to be translated into the
  parameters that control each host's, bridge's, and router's queuing,
  shaping, and scheduling functions and delivered to the hosts,
  bridges, and routers.

3.  Problem Statement

3.1.  Supported Topologies

  In some use cases, the end point that runs the application is
  involved in the Deterministic Networking operation -- for instance,
  by controlling certain aspects of its throughput, such as rate or
  precise time of emission.  In such a case, the deterministic path is
  end to end from application host to application host.

  On the other end, the deterministic portion of a path may be a tunnel
  between an ingress point and an egress router.  In any case, routers
  and switches in between should not need to be aware of whether the
  path is end to end or a tunnel.

  While it is clear that DetNet does not aim to set up deterministic
  paths over the global Internet, there is still a lack of clarity
  regarding the limits of a domain where a deterministic path can be
  set up.  These limits may depend on the technology that is used to
  set the path up, whether it is centralized or distributed.

3.2.  Flow Characterization

  Deterministic forwarding can only apply to flows with such
  well-defined characteristics as periodicity and burstiness.  Before a
  path can be established to serve them, the expression of those
  characteristics, and how the network can serve them (for instance, in
  shaping and forwarding operations), must be specified.






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3.3.  Centralized Path Computation and Installation

  A centralized routing model, such as that provided with a Path
  Computation Element (PCE) (see [RFC4655]), enables global and
  per-flow optimizations.  This type of model is attractive, but a
  number of issues remain to be solved -- in particular:

  o  whether and how the path computation can be installed by

     *  an end device or

     *  a network management entity

     and

  o  how the path is set up -- either

     *  by installing state at each hop with a direct interaction
        between the forwarding device and the PCE or

     *  along a path by injecting a source-routed request at one end of
        the path, following classical Traffic Engineering (TE) models

  To enable a centralized model, DetNet should produce a description of
  the high-level interaction and data models to:

  o  report the topology and device capabilities to the central
     controller

  o  establish a direct interface between the centralized PCE and each
     device under its control in order to enable vertical signaling

  o  request a path setup for a new flow with particular
     characteristics over the service interface and control it through
     its life cycle

  o  provide support for life-cycle management for a path
     (instantiate/modify/update/delete)

  o  provide support for adaptability to cope with such various events
     as loss of a link

  o  expose the status of the path to the end devices (User-Network
     Interfaces (UNIs))







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  o  provide additional reliability through redundancy, particularly
     with Packet Replication, Elimination, and Ordering Functions
     (PREOF), where redundant paths may deliver packets out of order
     and PREOF may need to correct the ordering

  o  indicate the flows and packet sequences in-band with the flows.
     This is needed for flows that require PREOF in order to isolate
     duplicates and reorder packets at the end of the sequence

3.4.  Distributed Path Setup

  Whether a distributed alternative without a PCE can be valuable could
  be studied as well.  Such an alternative could, for instance, build
  upon Resource Reservation Protocol - TE (RSVP-TE) flows [RFC3209].
  But the focus of the work should be to deliver the centralized
  approach first.

  To enable functionality similar to that of RSVP-TE, the following
  steps would take place:

  1.  Neighbors and their capabilities would be discovered and exposed
      to compute a path that would fit the DetNet constraints --
      typically those of latency, time precision, and resource
      availability.

  2.  A constrained path would be calculated with an improved version
      of Constrained Shortest Path First (CSPF) that is aware of
      DetNet.

  3.  The path may be installed using a control protocol such as
      RSVP-TE, extended to enable flow identification and install new
      per-hop behavior such as Packet Replication, Elimination, and
      Ordering, and to reserve physical resources for the flow.  In
      that case, traffic flows could be transported through an MPLS-TE
      tunnel, using the reserved resources for this flow at each hop.

3.5.  Duplicated Data Format

  In some cases, the duplication and elimination of packets over
  non-congruent paths are required to achieve a sufficiently high
  delivery ratio to meet application needs.  In these cases, a small
  number of packet formats and supporting protocols are required
  (preferably just one of each) to serialize the packets of a DetNet
  stream at one point in the network, replicate them at one or more
  points in the network, and discard duplicates at one or more other
  points in the network, including perhaps the destination host.  Using
  an existing solution would be preferable to inventing a new one.




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4.  Security Considerations

  Security in the context of Deterministic Networking has an added
  dimension; the time of delivery of a packet can be just as important
  as the contents of the packet itself.  A man-in-the-middle attack,
  for example, can impose and then systematically adjust additional
  delays into a link, and thus disrupt or subvert a real-time
  application without having to crack any encryption methods employed.
  See [RFC7384] for an exploration of this issue in a related context.

  Typical control networks today rely on complete physical isolation to
  prevent rogue access to network resources.  DetNet enables the
  virtualization of those networks over a converged IT/OT
  infrastructure.  Doing so, DetNet introduces an additional risk of
  flows interacting and interfering with one another as they share
  physical resources such as Ethernet trunks and the radio spectrum.
  The requirement is that there is no possible data leak from and into
  a deterministic flow.  Stated more generally, there is no possible
  influence whatsoever from the outside on a deterministic flow.  The
  expectation is that physical resources are effectively associated
  with a given flow at a given point in time.  In that model, the
  time-sharing of physical resources becomes transparent to the
  individual flows, as these flows have no clue regarding whether or
  not the resources are used by other flows at other times.

  The overall security of a deterministic system must cover:

  o  the protection of the signaling protocol

  o  the authentication and authorization of the controlling nodes,
     including plug-and-play participating end systems

  o  the identification and shaping of the flows

  o  the isolation of flows from leakage and other influences from any
     activity sharing physical resources

  The specific threats against DetNet are further discussed in
  [DetNet-Security].

5.  IANA Considerations

  This document has no IANA actions.








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6.  Informative References

  [DetNet-Arch]
             Finn, N., Thubert, P., Varga, B., and J. Farkas,
             "Deterministic Networking Architecture", Work in
             Progress, draft-ietf-detnet-architecture-13, May 2019.

  [DetNet-Security]
             Mizrahi, T., Grossman, E., Ed., Hacker, A., Das, S.,
             Dowdell, J., Austad, H., Stanton, K., and N. Finn,
             "Deterministic Networking (DetNet) Security
             Considerations", Work in Progress,
             draft-ietf-detnet-security-04, March 2019.

  [IEEE-1588]
             IEEE, "IEEE Standard for a Precision Clock Synchronization
             Protocol for Networked Measurement and Control Systems",
             IEEE Standard 1588-2008, <https://standards.ieee.org/
             findstds/standard/1588-2008.html>.

  [IEEE-802.1TSNTG]
             IEEE Standards Association, "IEEE 802.1 Time-Sensitive
             Networking Task Group",
             <http://www.ieee802.org/1/pages/avbridges.html>.

  [IEEE-8021AS]
             IEEE, "IEEE Standard for Local and Metropolitan Area
             Networks - Timing and Synchronization for Time-Sensitive
             Applications in Bridged Local Area Networks",
             IEEE 802.1AS-2011,
             <http://www.ieee802.org/1/pages/802.1as.html>.

  [ISA95]    ANSI/ISA, "Enterprise-Control System Integration - Part 1:
             Models and Terminology", <https://www.isa.org/isa95/>.

  [PROFIBUS] IEC, "PROFIBUS Standard - DP Specification (IEC 61158
             Type 3)", <https://www.profibus.com/>.

  [RFC3209]  Awduche, D., Berger, L., Gan, D., Li, T., Srinivasan, V.,
             and G. Swallow, "RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for LSP
             Tunnels", RFC 3209, DOI 10.17487/RFC3209, December 2001,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3209>.

  [RFC4655]  Farrel, A., Vasseur, J.-P., and J. Ash, "A Path
             Computation Element (PCE)-Based Architecture", RFC 4655,
             DOI 10.17487/RFC4655, August 2006,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4655>.




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  [RFC7384]  Mizrahi, T., "Security Requirements of Time Protocols in
             Packet Switched Networks", RFC 7384, DOI 10.17487/RFC7384,
             October 2014, <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7384>.

  [RFC8578]  Grossman, E., Ed., "Deterministic Networking Use Cases",
             RFC 8578, DOI 10.17487/RFC8578, May 2019,
             <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8578>.

Acknowledgments

  The authors wish to thank Lou Berger, Pat Thaler, Jouni Korhonen,
  Janos Farkas, Stewart Bryant, Andrew Malis, Ethan Grossman, Patrick
  Wetterwald, Subha Dhesikan, Matthew Miller, Erik Nordmark, George
  Swallow, Rodney Cummings, Ines Robles, Shwetha Bhandari, Rudy Klecka,
  Anca Zamfir, David Black, Thomas Watteyne, Shitanshu Shah, Kiran
  Makhijani, Craig Gunther, Warren Kumari, Wilfried Steiner, Marcel
  Kiessling, Karl Weber, Alissa Cooper, and Benjamin Kaduk for their
  various contributions to this work.

Authors' Addresses

  Norman Finn
  Huawei Technologies Co. Ltd
  3755 Avocado Blvd.
  PMB 436
  La Mesa, California  91941
  United States of America

  Phone: +1 925 980 6430
  Email: [email protected]


  Pascal Thubert
  Cisco Systems, Inc.
  Building D, 45 Allee des Ormes - BP1200
  Mougins - Sophia Antipolis  06254
  France

  Phone: +33 4 97 23 26 34
  Email: [email protected]











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