Network Working Group                                           E. Rosen
Request for Comments: 2547                                    Y. Rekhter
Category: Informational                              Cisco Systems, Inc.
                                                             March 1999


                            BGP/MPLS VPNs

Status of this Memo

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

Copyright Notice

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  This document describes a method by which a Service Provider with an
  IP backbone may provide VPNs (Virtual Private Networks) for its
  customers.  MPLS (Multiprotocol Label Switching) is used for
  forwarding packets over the backbone, and BGP (Border Gateway
  Protocol) is used for distributing routes over the backbone.  The
  primary goal of this method is to support the outsourcing of IP
  backbone services for enterprise networks. It does so in a manner
  which is simple for the enterprise, while still scalable and flexible
  for the Service Provider, and while allowing the Service Provider to
  add value. These techniques can also be used to provide a VPN which
  itself provides IP service to customers.

Table of Contents

  1          Introduction  .......................................   2
  1.1        Virtual Private Networks  ...........................   2
  1.2        Edge Devices  .......................................   3
  1.3        VPNs with Overlapping Address Spaces  ...............   4
  1.4        VPNs with Different Routes to the Same System  ......   4
  1.5        Multiple Forwarding Tables in PEs  ..................   5
  1.6        SP Backbone Routers  ................................   5
  1.7        Security  ...........................................   5
  2          Sites and CEs  ......................................   6
  3          Per-Site Forwarding Tables in the PEs  ..............   6
  3.1        Virtual Sites  ......................................   8
  4          VPN Route Distribution via BGP  .....................   8
  4.1        The VPN-IPv4 Address Family  ........................   9
  4.2        Controlling Route Distribution  .....................  10



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  4.2.1      The Target VPN Attribute  ...........................  10
  4.2.2      Route Distribution Among PEs by BGP  ................  12
  4.2.3      The VPN of Origin Attribute  ........................  13
  4.2.4      Building VPNs using Target and Origin Attributes  ...  14
  5          Forwarding Across the Backbone  .....................  15
  6          How PEs Learn Routes from CEs  ......................  16
  7          How CEs learn Routes from PEs  ......................  19
  8          What if the CE Supports MPLS?  ......................  19
  8.1        Virtual Sites  ......................................  19
  8.2        Representing an ISP VPN as a Stub VPN  ..............  20
  9          Security  ...........................................  20
  9.1        Point-to-Point Security Tunnels between CE Routers  .  21
  9.2        Multi-Party Security Associations  ..................  21
  10         Quality of Service  .................................  22
  11         Scalability  ........................................  22
  12         Intellectual Property Considerations  ...............  23
  13         Security Considerations  ............................  23
  14         Acknowledgments  ....................................  23
  15         Authors' Addresses  .................................  24
  16         References  .........................................  24
  17         Full Copyright Statement.............................  25

1. Introduction

1.1. Virtual Private Networks

  Consider a set of "sites" which are attached to a common network
  which we may call the "backbone". Let's apply some policy to create a
  number of subsets of that set, and let's impose the following rule:
  two sites may have IP interconnectivity over that backbone only if at
  least one of these subsets contains them both.

  The subsets we have created are "Virtual Private Networks" (VPNs).
  Two sites have IP connectivity over the common backbone only if there
  is some VPN which contains them both.  Two sites which have no VPN in
  common have no connectivity over that backbone.

  If all the sites in a VPN are owned by the same enterprise, the VPN
  is a corporate "intranet".  If the various sites in a VPN are owned
  by different enterprises, the VPN is an "extranet".  A site can be in
  more than one VPN; e.g., in an intranet and several extranets.  We
  regard both intranets and extranets as VPNs. In general, when we use
  the term VPN we will not be distinguishing between intranets and
  extranets.

  We wish to consider the case in which the backbone is owned and
  operated by one or more Service Providers (SPs).  The owners of the
  sites are the "customers" of the SPs.  The policies that determine



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  whether a particular collection of sites is a VPN are the policies of
  the customers.  Some customers will want the implementation of these
  policies to be entirely the responsibility of the SP.  Other
  customers may want to implement these policies themselves, or to
  share with the SP the responsibility for implementing these policies.
  In this document, we are primarily discussing mechanisms that may be
  used to implement these policies.  The mechanisms we describe are
  general enough to allow these policies to be implemented either by
  the SP alone, or by a VPN customer together with the SP.  Most of the
  discussion is focused on the former case, however.

  The mechanisms discussed in this document allow the implementation of
  a wide range of policies. For example, within a given VPN, we can
  allow every site to have a direct route to every other site ("full
  mesh"), or we can restrict certain pairs of sites from having direct
  routes to each other ("partial mesh").

  In this document, we are particularly interested in the case where
  the common backbone offers an IP service.  We are primarily concerned
  with the case in which an enterprise is outsourcing its backbone to a
  service provider, or perhaps to a set of service providers, with
  which it maintains contractual relationships.  We are not focused on
  providing VPNs over the public Internet.

  In the rest of this introduction, we specify some properties which
  VPNs should have.  The remainder of this document outlines a VPN
  model which has all these properties.  The VPN Model of this document
  appears to be an instance of the framework described in [4].

1.2. Edge Devices

  We suppose that at each site, there are one or more Customer Edge
  (CE) devices, each of which is attached via some sort of data link
  (e.g., PPP, ATM, ethernet, Frame Relay, GRE tunnel, etc.)  to one or
  more Provider Edge (PE) routers.

  If a particular site has a single host, that host may be the CE
  device.  If a particular site has a single subnet, that the CE device
  may be a switch.  In general, the CE device can be expected to be a
  router, which we call the CE router.

  We will say that a PE router is attached to a particular VPN if it is
  attached to a CE device which is in that VPN.  Similarly, we will say
  that a PE router is attached to a particular site if it is attached
  to a CE device which is in that site.

  When the CE device is a router, it is a routing peer of the PE(s) to
  which it is attached, but is not a routing peer of CE routers at



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  other sites.  Routers at different sites do not directly exchange
  routing information with each other; in fact, they do not even need
  to know of each other at all (except in the case where this is
  necessary for security purposes, see section 9).  As a consequence,
  very large VPNs (i.e., VPNs with a very large number of sites) are
  easily supported, while the routing strategy for each individual site
  is greatly simplified.

  It is important to maintain clear administrative boundaries between
  the SP and its customers (cf. [4]).  The PE and P routers should be
  administered solely by the SP, and the SP's customers should not have
  any management access to it.  The CE devices should be administered
  solely by the customer (unless the customer has contracted the
  management services out to the SP).

1.3. VPNs with Overlapping Address Spaces

  We assume that any two non-intersecting VPNs (i.e., VPNs with no
  sites in common) may have overlapping address spaces; the same
  address may be reused, for different systems, in different VPNs.  As
  long as a given endsystem has an address which is unique within the
  scope of the VPNs that it belongs to, the endsystem itself does not
  need to know anything about VPNs.

  In this model, the VPN owners do not have a backbone to administer,
  not even a "virtual backbone". Nor do the SPs have to administer a
  separate backbone or "virtual backbone" for each VPN.  Site-to-site
  routing in the backbone is optimal (within the constraints of the
  policies used to form the VPNs), and is not constrained in any way by
  an artificial "virtual topology" of tunnels.

1.4. VPNs with Different Routes to the Same System

  Although a site may be in multiple VPNs, it is not necessarily the
  case that the route to a given system at that site should be the same
  in all the VPNs.  Suppose, for example, we have an intranet
  consisting of sites A, B, and C, and an extranet consisting of A, B,
  C, and the "foreign" site D.  Suppose that at site A there is a
  server, and we want clients from B, C, or D to be able to use that
  server.  Suppose also that at site B there is a firewall.  We want
  all the traffic from site D to the server to pass through the
  firewall, so that traffic from the extranet can be access controlled.
  However, we don't want traffic from C to pass through the firewall on
  the way to the server, since this is intranet traffic.

  This means that it needs to be possible to set up two routes to the
  server.  One route, used by sites B and C, takes the traffic directly
  to site A.  The second route, used by site D, takes the traffic



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  instead to the firewall at site B.  If the firewall allows the
  traffic to pass, it then appears to be traffic coming from site B,
  and follows the route to site A.

1.5. Multiple Forwarding Tables in PEs

  Each PE router needs to maintain a number of separate forwarding
  tables.  Every site to which the PE is attached must be mapped to one
  of those forwarding tables.  When a packet is received from a
  particular site, the forwarding table associated with that site is
  consulted in order to determine how to route the packet.  The
  forwarding table associated with a particular site S is populated
  only with routes that lead to other sites which have at least one VPN
  in common with S. This prevents communication between sites which
  have no VPN in common, and it allows two VPNs with no site in common
  to use address spaces that overlap with each other.

1.6. SP Backbone Routers

  The SP's backbone consists of the PE routers, as well as other
  routers (P routers) which do not attach to CE devices.

  If every router in an SP's backbone had to maintain routing
  information for all the VPNs supported by the SP, this model would
  have severe scalability problems; the number of sites that could be
  supported would be limited by the amount of routing information that
  could be held in a single router.  It is important to require
  therefore that the routing information about a particular VPN be
  present ONLY in those PE routers which attach to that VPN.  In
  particular, the P routers should not need to have ANY per-VPN routing
  information whatsoever.

  VPNs may span multiple service providers. We assume though that when
  the path between PE routers crosses a boundary between SP networks,
  it does so via a private peering arrangement, at which there exists
  mutual trust between the two providers. In particular, each provider
  must trust the other to pass it only correct routing information, and
  to pass it labeled (in the sense of MPLS [9]) packets only if those
  packets have been labeled by trusted sources. We also assume that it
  is possible for label switched paths to cross the boundary between
  service providers.

1.7. Security

  A VPN model should, even without the use of cryptographic security
  measures, provide a level of security equivalent to that obtainable
  when a level 2 backbone (e.g., Frame Relay) is used.  That is, in the
  absence of misconfiguration or deliberate interconnection of



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  different VPNs, it should not be possible for systems in one VPN to
  gain access to systems in another VPN.

  It should also be possible to deploy standard security procedures.

2. Sites and CEs

  From the perspective of a particular backbone network, a set of IP
  systems constitutes a site if those systems have mutual IP
  interconnectivity, and communication between them occurs without use
  of the backbone. In general, a site will consist of a set of systems
  which are in geographic proximity.  However, this is not universally
  true; two geographic locations connected via a leased line, over
  which OSPF is running, will constitute a single site, because
  communication between the two locations does not involve the use of
  the backbone.

  A CE device is always regarded as being in a single site (though as
  we shall see, a site may consist of multiple "virtual sites"). A
  site, however, may belong to multiple VPNs.

  A PE router may attach to CE devices in any number of different
  sites, whether those CE devices are in the same or in different VPNs.
  A CE device may, for robustness, attach to multiple PE routers, of
  the same or of different service providers.  If the CE device is a
  router, the PE router and the CE router will appear as router
  adjacencies to each other.

  While the basic unit of interconnection is the site, the architecture
  described herein allows a finer degree of granularity in the control
  of interconnectivity. For example, certain systems at a site may be
  members of an intranet as well as members of one or more extranets,
  while other systems at the same site may be restricted to being
  members of the intranet only.

3. Per-Site Forwarding Tables in the PEs

  Each PE router maintains one or more "per-site forwarding tables".
  Every site to which the PE router is attached is associated with one
  of these tables.  A particular packet's IP destination address is
  looked up in a particular per-site forwarding table only if that
  packet has arrived directly from a site which is associated with that
  table.

  How are the per-site forwarding tables populated?






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  As an example, let PE1, PE2, and PE3 be three PE routers, and let
  CE1, CE2, and CE3 be three CE routers. Suppose that PE1 learns, from
  CE1, the routes which are reachable at CE1's site.  If PE2 and PE3
  are attached respectively to CE2 and CE3, and there is some VPN V
  containing CE1, CE2, and CE3, then PE1 uses BGP to distribute to PE2
  and PE3 the routes which it has learned from CE1.  PE2 and PE3 use
  these routes to populate the forwarding tables which they associate
  respectively with the sites of CE2 and CE3.  Routes from sites which
  are not in VPN V do not appear in these forwarding tables, which
  means that packets from CE2 or CE3 cannot be sent to sites which are
  not in VPN V.

  If a site is in multiple VPNs, the forwarding table associated with
  that site can contain routes from the full set of VPNs of which the
  site is a member.

  A PE generally maintains only one forwarding table per site, even if
  it is multiply connected to that site.  Also, different sites can
  share the same forwarding table if they are meant to use exactly the
  same set of routes.

  Suppose a packet is received by a PE router from a particular
  directly attached site, but the packet's destination address does not
  match any entry in the forwarding table associated with that site.
  If the SP is not providing Internet access for that site, then the
  packet is discarded as undeliverable.  If the SP is providing
  Internet access for that site, then the PE's Internet forwarding
  table will be consulted.  This means that in general, only one
  forwarding table per PE need ever contain routes from the Internet,
  even if Internet access is provided.

  To maintain proper isolation of one VPN from another, it is important
  that no router in the backbone accept a labeled packet from any
  adjacent non-backbone device unless (a) the label at the top of the
  label stack was actually distributed by the backbone router to the
  non-backbone device, and (b) the backbone router can determine that
  use of that label will cause the packet to leave the backbone before
  any labels lower in the stack will be inspected, and before the IP
  header will be inspected.  These restrictions are necessary in order
  to prevent packets from entering a VPN where they do not belong.

  The per-site forwarding tables in a PE are ONLY used for packets
  which arrive from a site which is directly attached to the PE.  They
  are not used for routing packets which arrive from other routers that
  belong to the SP backbone.  As a result, there may be multiple
  different routes to the same system, where the route followed by a
  given packet is determined by the site from which the packet enters
  the backbone.  E.g., one may have one route to a given system for



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  packets from the extranet (where the route leads to a firewall), and
  a different route to the same system for packets from the intranet
  (including packets that have already passed through the firewall).

3.1. Virtual Sites

  In some cases, a particular site may be divided by the customer into
  several virtual sites, perhaps by the use of VLANs.  Each virtual
  site may be a member of a different set of VPNs. The PE then needs to
  contain a separate forwarding table for each virtual site.  For
  example, if a CE supports VLANs, and wants each VLAN mapped to a
  separate VPN, the packets sent between CE and PE could be contained
  in the site's VLAN encapsulation, and this could be used by the PE,
  along with the interface over which the packet is received, to assign
  the packet to a particular virtual site.

  Alternatively, one could divide the interface into multiple "sub-
  interfaces" (particularly if the interface is Frame Relay or ATM),
  and assign the packet to a VPN based on the sub-interface over which
  it arrives.  Or one could simply use a different interface for each
  virtual site.  In any case, only one CE router is ever needed per
  site, even if there are multiple virtual sites.  Of course, a
  different CE router could be used for each virtual site, if that is
  desired.

  Note that in all these cases, the mechanisms, as well as the policy,
  for controlling which traffic is in which VPN are in the hand of the
  customer.

  If it is desired to have a particular host be in multiple virtual
  sites, then that host must determine, for each packet, which virtual
  site the packet is associated with.  It can do this, e.g., by sending
  packets from different virtual sites on different VLANs, our out
  different network interfaces.

  These schemes do NOT require the CE to support MPLS.  Section 8
  contains a brief discussion of how the CE might support multiple
  virtual sites if it does support MPLS.

4. VPN Route Distribution via BGP

  PE routers use BGP to distribute VPN routes to each other (more
  accurately, to cause VPN routes to be distributed to each other).

  A BGP speaker can only install and distribute one route to a given
  address prefix.  Yet we allow each VPN to have its own address space,
  which means that the same address can be used in any number of VPNs,
  where in each VPN the address denotes a different system.  It follows



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  that we need to allow BGP to install and distribute multiple routes
  to a single IP address prefix.  Further, we must ensure that POLICY
  is used to determine which sites can be use which routes; given that
  several such routes are installed by BGP, only one such must appear
  in any particular per-site forwarding table.

  We meet these goals by the use of a new address family, as specified
  below.

4.1. The VPN-IPv4 Address Family

  The BGP Multiprotocol Extensions [3] allow BGP to carry routes from
  multiple "address families".  We introduce the notion of the "VPN-
  IPv4 address family".  A VPN-IPv4 address is a 12-byte quantity,
  beginning with an 8-byte "Route Distinguisher (RD)" and ending with a
  4-byte IPv4 address.  If two VPNs use the same IPv4 address prefix,
  the PEs translate these into unique VPN-IPv4 address prefixes.  This
  ensures that if the same address is used in two different VPNs, it is
  possible to install two completely different routes to that address,
  one for each VPN.

  The RD does not by itself impose any semantics; it contains no
  information about the origin of the route or about the set of VPNs to
  which the route is to be distributed.  The purpose of the RD is
  solely to allow one to create distinct routes to a common IPv4
  address prefix.  Other means are used to determine where to
  redistribute the route (see section 4.2).

  The RD can also be used to create multiple different routes to the
  very same system.  In section 3, we gave an example where the route
  to a particular server had to be different for intranet traffic than
  for extranet traffic.  This can be achieved by creating two different
  VPN-IPv4 routes that have the same IPv4 part, but different RDs.
  This allows BGP to install multiple different routes to the same
  system, and allows policy to be used (see section 4.2.3) to decide
  which packets use which route.

  The RDs are structured so that every service provider can administer
  its own "numbering space" (i.e., can make its own assignments of
  RDs), without conflicting with the RD assignments made by any other
  service provider.  An RD consists of a two-byte type field, an
  administrator field, and an assigned number field.  The value of the
  type field determines the lengths of the other two fields, as well as
  the semantics of the administrator field.  The administrator field
  identifies an assigned number authority, and the assigned number
  field contains a number which has been assigned, by the identified
  authority, for a particular purpose.  For example, one could have an
  RD whose administrator field contains an Autonomous System number



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  (ASN), and whose (4-byte) number field contains a number assigned by
  the SP to whom IANA has assigned that ASN.  RDs are given this
  structure in order to ensure that an SP which provides VPN backbone
  service can always create a unique RD when it needs to do so.
  However, the structuring provides no semantics. When BGP compares two
  such address prefixes, it ignores the structure entirely.

  If the Administrator subfield and the Assigned Number subfield of a
  VPN-IPv4 address are both set to all zeroes, the VPN-IPv4 address is
  considered to have exactly the same meaning as the corresponding
  globally unique IPv4 address. In particular, this VPN-IPv4 address
  and the corresponding globally unique IPv4 address will be considered
  comparable by BGP. In all other cases, a VPN-IPv4 address and its
  corresponding globally unique IPv4 address will be considered
  noncomparable by BGP.

  A given per-site forwarding table will only have one VPN-IPv4 route
  for any given IPv4 address prefix.  When a packet's destination
  address is matched against a VPN-IPv4 route, only the IPv4 part is
  actually matched.

  A PE needs to be configured to associate routes which lead to
  particular CE with a particular RD.  The PE may be configured to
  associate all routes leading to the same CE with the same RD, or it
  may be configured to associate different routes with different RDs,
  even if they lead to the same CE.

4.2. Controlling Route Distribution

  In this section, we discuss the way in which the distribution of the
  VPN-IPv4 routes is controlled.

4.2.1. The Target VPN Attribute

  Every per-site forwarding table is associated with one or more
  "Target VPN" attributes.

  When a VPN-IPv4 route is created by a PE router, it is associated
  with one or more "Target VPN" attributes.  These are carried in BGP
  as attributes of the route.

  Any route associated with Target VPN T must be distributed to every
  PE router that has a forwarding table associated with Target VPN T.
  When such a route is received by a PE router, it is eligible to be
  installed in each of the PE's per-site forwarding tables that is
  associated with Target VPN T. (Whether it actually gets installed
  depends on the outcome of the BGP decision process.)




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  In essence, a Target VPN attribute identifies a set of sites.
  Associating a particular Target VPN attribute with a route allows
  that route to be placed in the per-site forwarding tables that are
  used for routing traffic which is received from the corresponding
  sites.

  There is a set of Target VPNs that a PE router attaches to a route
  received from site S. And there is a set of Target VPNs that a PE
  router uses to determine whether a route received from another PE
  router could be placed in the forwarding table associated with site
  S. The two sets are distinct, and need not be the same.

  The function performed by the Target VPN attribute is similar to that
  performed by the BGP Communities Attribute.  However, the format of
  the latter is inadequate, since it allows only a two-byte numbering
  space.  It would be fairly straightforward to extend the BGP
  Communities Attribute to provide a larger numbering space.  It should
  also be possible to structure the format, similar to what we have
  described for RDs (see section 4.1), so that a type field defines the
  length of an administrator field, and the remainder of the attribute
  is a number from the specified administrator's numbering space.

  When a BGP speaker has received two routes to the same VPN-IPv4
  prefix, it chooses one, according to the BGP rules for route
  preference.

  Note that a route can only have one RD, but it can have multiple
  Target VPNs.  In BGP, scalability is improved if one has a single
  route with multiple attributes, as opposed to multiple routes.  One
  could eliminate the Target VPN attribute by creating more routes
  (i.e., using more RDs), but the scaling properties would be less
  favorable.

  How does a PE determine which Target VPN attributes to associate with
  a given route?  There are a number of different possible ways.  The
  PE might be configured to associate all routes that lead to a
  particular site with a particular Target VPN.  Or the PE might be
  configured to associate certain routes leading to a particular site
  with one Target VPN, and certain with another.  Or the CE router,
  when it distributes these routes to the PE (see section 6), might
  specify one or more Target VPNs for each route.  The latter method
  shifts the control of the mechanisms used to implement the VPN
  policies from the SP to the customer.  If this method is used, it may
  still be desirable to have the PE eliminate any Target VPNs that,
  according to its own configuration, are not allowed, and/or to add in
  some Target VPNs that according to its own configuration are
  mandatory.




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  It might be more accurate, if less suggestive, to call this attribute
  the "Route Target" attribute instead of the "VPN Target" attribute.
  It really identifies only a set of sites which will be able to use
  the route, without prejudice to whether those sites constitute what
  might intuitively be called a VPN.

4.2.2. Route Distribution Among PEs by BGP

  If two sites of a VPN attach to PEs which are in the same Autonomous
  System, the PEs can distribute VPN-IPv4 routes to each other by means
  of an IBGP connection between them.  Alternatively, each can have an
  IBGP connection to a route reflector.

  If two sites of VPN are in different Autonomous Systems (e.g.,
  because they are connected to different SPs), then a PE router will
  need to use IBGP to redistribute VPN-IPv4 routes either to an
  Autonomous System Border Router (ASBR), or to a route reflector of
  which an ASBR is a client.  The ASBR will then need to use EBGP to
  redistribute those routes to an ASBR in another AS.  This allows one
  to connect different VPN sites to different Service Providers.
  However, VPN-IPv4 routes should only be accepted on EBGP connections
  at private peering points, as part of a trusted arrangement between
  SPs.  VPN-IPv4 routes should neither be distributed to nor accepted
  from the public Internet.

  If there are many VPNs having sites attached to different Autonomous
  Systems, there does not need to be a single ASBR between those two
  ASes which holds all the routes for all the VPNs; there can be
  multiple ASBRs, each of which holds only the routes for a particular
  subset of the VPNs.

  When a PE router distributes a VPN-IPv4 route via BGP, it uses its
  own address as the "BGP next hop".  It also assigns and distributes
  an MPLS label.  (Essentially, PE routers distribute not VPN-IPv4
  routes, but Labeled VPN-IPv4 routes. Cf. [8]) When the PE processes a
  received packet that has this label at the top of the stack, the PE
  will pop the stack, and send the packet directly to the site from to
  which the route leads.  This will usually mean that it just sends the
  packet to the CE router from which it learned the route.  The label
  may also determine the data link encapsulation.

  In most cases, the label assigned by a PE will cause the packet to be
  sent directly to a CE, and the PE which receives the labeled packet
  will not look up the packet's destination address in any forwarding
  table.  However, it is also possible for the PE to assign a label
  which implicitly identifies a particular forwarding table.  In this
  case, the PE receiving a packet that label would look up the packet's
  destination address in one of its forwarding tables.  While this can



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  be very useful in certain circumstances, we do not consider it
  further in this paper.

  Note that the MPLS label that is distributed in this way is only
  usable if there is a label switched path between the router that
  installs a route and the BGP next hop of that route.  We do not make
  any assumption about the procedure used to set up that label switched
  path.  It may be set up on a pre-established basis, or it may be set
  up when a route which would need it is installed.  It may be a "best
  effort" route, or it may be a traffic engineered route.  Between a
  particular PE router and its BGP next hop for a particular route
  there may be one LSP, or there may be several, perhaps with different
  QoS characteristics.  All that matters for the VPN architecture is
  that some label switched path between the router and its BGP next hop
  exists.

  All the usual techniques for using route reflectors [2] to improve
  scalability, e.g., route reflector hierarchies, are available.  If
  route reflectors are used, there is no need to have any one route
  reflector know all the VPN-IPv4 routes for all the VPNs supported by
  the backbone.  One can have separate route reflectors, which do not
  communicate with each other, each of which supports a subset of the
  total set of VPNs.

  If a given PE router is not attached to any of the Target VPNs of a
  particular route, it should not receive that route; the other PE or
  route reflector which is distributing routes to it should apply
  outbound filtering to avoid sending it unnecessary routes.  Of
  course, if a PE router receives a route via BGP, and that PE is not
  attached to any of the route's target VPNs, the PE should apply
  inbound filtering to the route, neither installing nor redistributing
  it.

  A router which is not attached to any VPN, i.e., a P router, never
  installs any VPN-IPv4 routes at all.

  These distribution rules ensure that there is no one box which needs
  to know all the VPN-IPv4 routes that are supported over the backbone.
  As a result, the total number of such routes that can be supported
  over the backbone is not bound by the capacity of any single device,
  and therefore can increase virtually without bound.

4.2.3. The VPN of Origin Attribute

  A VPN-IPv4 route may be optionally associated with a VPN of Origin
  attribute.  This attribute uniquely identifies a set of sites, and
  identifies the corresponding route as having come from one of the
  sites in that set.  Typical uses of this attribute might be to



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  identify the enterprise which owns the site where the route leads, or
  to identify the site's intranet.  However, other uses are also
  possible.  This attribute could be encoded as an extended BGP
  communities attribute.

  In situations in which it is necessary to identify the source of a
  route, it is this attribute, not the RD, which must be used.  This
  attribute may be used when "constructing" VPNs, as described below.

  It might be more accurate, if less suggestive, to call this attribute
  the "Route Origin" attribute instead of the "VPN of Origin"
  attribute.  It really identifies the route only has having come from
  one of a particular set of sites, without prejudice as to whether
  that particular set of sites really constitutes a VPN.

4.2.4. Building VPNs using Target and Origin Attributes

  By setting up the Target VPN and VPN of Origin attributes properly,
  one can construct different kinds of VPNs.

  Suppose it is desired to create a Closed User Group (CUG) which
  contains a particular set of sites. This can be done by creating a
  particular Target VPN attribute value to represent the CUG. This
  value then needs to be associated with the per-site forwarding tables
  for each site in the CUG, and it needs to be associated with every
  route learned from a site in the CUG.  Any route which has this
  Target VPN attribute will need to be redistributed so that it reaches
  every PE router attached to one of the sites in the CUG.

  Alternatively, suppose one desired, for whatever reason, to create a
  "hub and spoke" kind of VPN.  This could be done by the use of two
  Target Attribute values, one meaning "Hub" and one meaning "Spoke".
  Then routes from the spokes could be distributed to the hub, without
  causing routes from the hub to be distributed to the spokes.

  Suppose one has a number of sites which are in an intranet and an
  extranet, as well as a number of sites which are in the intranet
  only.  Then there may be both intranet and extranet routes which have
  a Target VPN identifying the entire set of sites.  The sites which
  are to have intranet routes only can filter out all routes with the
  "wrong" VPN of Origin.

  These two attributes allow great flexibility in allowing one to
  control the distribution of routing information among various sets of
  sites, which in turn provides great flexibility in constructing VPNs.






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5. Forwarding Across the Backbone

  If the intermediate routes in the backbone do not have any
  information about the routes to the VPNs, how are packets forwarded
  from one VPN site to another?

  This is done by means of MPLS with a two-level label stack.

  PE routers (and ASBRs which redistribute VPN-IPv4 addresses) need to
  insert /32 address prefixes for themselves into the IGP routing
  tables of the backbone.  This enables MPLS, at each node in the
  backbone network, to assign a label corresponding to the route to
  each PE router.  (Certain procedures for setting up label switched
  paths in the backbone may not require the presence of the /32 address
  prefixes.)

  When a PE receives a packet from a CE device, it chooses a particular
  per-site forwarding table in which to look up the packet's
  destination address.  Assume that a match is found.

  If the packet is destined for a CE device attached to this same PE,
  the packet is sent directly to that CE device.

  If the packet is not destined for a CE device attached to this same
  PE, the packet's "BGP Next Hop" is found, as well as the label which
  that BGP next hop assigned for the packet's destination address. This
  label is pushed onto the packet's label stack, and becomes the bottom
  label.  Then the PE looks up the IGP route to the BGP Next Hop, and
  thus determines the IGP next hop, as well as the label assigned to
  the address of the BGP next hop by the IGP next hop.  This label gets
  pushed on as the packet's top label, and the packet is then forwarded
  to the IGP next hop.  (If the BGP next hop is the same as the IGP
  next hop, the second label may not need to be pushed on, however.)

  At this point, MPLS will carry the packet across the backbone and
  into the appropriate CE device.  That is, all forwarding decisions by
  P routers and PE routers are now made by means of MPLS, and the
  packet's IP header is not looked at again until the packet reaches
  the CE device.  The final PE router will pop the last label from the
  MPLS label stack before sending the packet to the CE device, thus the
  CE device will just see an ordinary IP packet.  (Though see section 8
  for some discussion of the case where the CE desires to received
  labeled packets.)

  When a packet enters the backbone from a particular site via a
  particular PE router, the packet's route is determined by the
  contents of the forwarding table which that PE router associated with
  that site.  The forwarding tables of the PE router where the packet



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  leaves the backbone are not relevant.  As a result, one may have
  multiple routes to the same system, where the particular route chosen
  for a particular packet is based on the site from which the packet
  enters the backbone.

  Note that it is the two-level labeling that makes it possible to keep
  all the VPN routes out of the P routers, and this in turn is crucial
  to ensuring the scalability of the model.  The backbone does not even
  need to have routes to the CEs, only to the PEs.

6. How PEs Learn Routes from CEs

  The PE routers which attach to a particular VPN need to know, for
  each of that VPN's sites, which addresses in that VPN are at each
  site.

  In the case where the CE device is a host or a switch, this set of
  addresses will generally be configured into the PE router attaching
  to that device.  In the case where the CE device is a router, there
  are a number of possible ways that a PE router can obtain this set of
  addresses.

  The PE translates these addresses into VPN-IPv4 addresses, using a
  configured RD.  The PE then treats these VPN-IPv4 routes as input to
  BGP.  In no case will routes from a site ever be leaked into the
  backbone's IGP.

  Exactly which PE/CE route distribution techniques are possible
  depends on whether a particular CE is in a "transit VPN" or not.  A
  "transit VPN" is one which contains a router that receives routes
  from a "third party" (i.e., from a router which is not in the VPN,
  but is not a PE router), and that redistributes those routes to a PE
  router.  A VPN which is not a transit VPN is a "stub VPN".  The vast
  majority of VPNs, including just about all corporate enterprise
  networks, would be expected to be "stubs" in this sense.

  The possible PE/CE distribution techniques are:

     1. Static routing (i.e., configuration) may be used. (This is
        likely to be useful only in stub VPNs.)

     2. PE and CE routers may be RIP peers, and the CE may use RIP to
        tell the PE router the set of address prefixes which are
        reachable at the CE router's site.  When RIP is configured in
        the CE, care must be taken to ensure that address prefixes from
        other sites (i.e., address prefixes learned by the CE router
        from the PE router) are never advertised to the PE.  More
        precisely: if a PE router, say PE1, receives a VPN-IPv4 route



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        R1, and as a result distributes an IPv4 route R2 to a CE, then
        R2 must not be distributed back from that CE's site to a PE
        router, say PE2, (where PE1 and PE2 may be the same router or
        different routers), unless PE2 maps R2 to a VPN-IPv4 route
        which is different than (i.e., contains a different RD than)
        R1.

     3. The PE and CE routers may be OSPF peers.  In this case, the
        site should be a single OSPF area, the CE should be an ABR in
        that area, and the PE should be an ABR which is not in that
        area.  Also, the PE should report no router links other than
        those to the CEs which are at the same site. (This technique
        should be used only in stub VPNs.)

     4. The PE and CE routers may be BGP peers, and the CE router may
        use BGP (in particular, EBGP to tell the PE router the set of
        address prefixes which are at the CE router's site. (This
        technique can be used in stub VPNs or transit VPNs.)

        From a purely technical perspective, this is by far the best
        technique:

             a) Unlike the IGP alternatives, this does not require the
                PE to run multiple routing algorithm instances in order
                to talk to multiple CEs

             b) BGP is explicitly designed for just this function:
                passing routing information between systems run by
                different administrations

             c) If the site contains "BGP backdoors", i.e., routers
                with BGP connections to routers other than PE routers,
                this procedure will work correctly in all
                circumstances.  The other procedures may or may not
                work, depending on the precise circumstances.

             d) Use of BGP makes it easy for the CE to pass attributes
                of the routes to the PE.  For example, the CE may
                suggest a particular Target for each route, from among
                the Target attributes that the PE is authorized to
                attach to the route.

         On the other hand, using BGP is likely to be something new for
         the CE administrators, except in the case where the customer
         itself is already an Internet Service Provider (ISP).






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         If a site is not in a transit VPN, note that it need not have
         a unique Autonomous System Number (ASN).  Every CE whose site
         which is not in a transit VPN can use the same ASN.  This can
         be chosen from the private ASN space, and it will be stripped
         out by the PE.  Routing loops are prevented by use of the Site
         of Origin Attribute (see below).

         If a set of sites constitute a transit VPN, it is convenient
         to represent them as a BGP Confederation, so that the internal
         structure of the VPN is hidden from any router which is not
         within the VPN.  In this case, each site in the VPN would need
         two BGP connections to the backbone, one which is internal to
         the confederation and one which is external to it.  The usual
         intra-confederation procedures would have to be slightly
         modified in order to take account for the fact that the
         backbone and the sites may have different policies.  The
         backbone is a member of the confederation on one of the
         connections, but is not a member on the other.  These
         techniques may be useful if the customer for the VPN service
         is an ISP.  This technique allows a customer that is an ISP to
         obtain VPN backbone service from one of its ISP peers.

         (However, if a VPN customer is itself an ISP, and its CE
         routers support MPLS, a much simpler technique can be used,
         wherein the ISP is regarded as a stub VPN.  See section 8.)

  When we do not need to distinguish among the different ways in which
  a PE can be informed of the address prefixes which exist at a given
  site, we will simply say that the PE has "learned" the routes from
  that site.

  Before a PE can redistribute a VPN-IPv4 route learned from a site, it
  must assign certain attributes to the route. There are three such
  attributes:

     - Site of Origin

       This attribute uniquely identifies the site from which the PE
       router learned the route.  All routes learned from a particular
       site must be assigned the same Site of Origin attribute, even if
       a site is multiply connected to a single PE, or is connected to
       multiple PEs.  Distinct Site of Origin attributes must be used
       for distinct sites.  This attribute could be encoded as an
       extended BGP communities attribute (section 4.2.1).

     - VPN of Origin

       See section 4.2.1.



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     - Target VPN

       See section 4.2.1.

7. How CEs learn Routes from PEs

  In this section, we assume that the CE device is a router.

  In general, a PE may distribute to a CE any route which the PE has
  placed in the forwarding table which it uses to route packets from
  that CE.  There is one exception: if a route's Site of Origin
  attribute identifies a particular site, that route must never be
  redistributed to any CE at that site.

  In most cases, however, it will be sufficient for the PE to simply
  distribute the default route to the CE.  (In some cases, it may even
  be sufficient for the CE to be configured with a default route
  pointing to the PE.)  This will generally work at any site which does
  not itself need to distribute the default route to other sites.
  (E.g., if one site in a corporate VPN has the corporation's access to
  the Internet, that site might need to have default distributed to the
  other site, but one could not distribute default to that site
  itself.)

  Whatever procedure is used to distribute routes from CE to PE will
  also be used to distribute routes from PE to CE.

8. What if the CE Supports MPLS?

  In the case where the CE supports MPLS, AND is willing to import the
  complete set of routes from its VPNs, the PE can distribute to it a
  label for each such route.  When the PE receives a packet from the CE
  with such a label, it (a) replaces that label with the corresponding
  label that it learned via BGP, and (b) pushes on a label
  corresponding to the BGP next hop for the corresponding route.

8.1. Virtual Sites

  If the CE/PE route distribution is done via BGP, the CE can use MPLS
  to support multiple virtual sites.  The CE may itself contain a
  separate forwarding table for each virtual site, which it populates
  as indicated by the VPN of Origin and Target VPN attributes of the
  routes it receives from the PE.  If the CE receives the full set of
  routes from the PE, the PE will not need to do any address lookup at
  all on packets received from the CE.  Alternatively, the PE may in
  some cases be able to distribute to the CE a single (labeled) default
  route for each VPN.  Then when the PE receives a labeled packet from




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  the CE, it would know which forwarding table to look in; the label
  placed on the packet by the CE would identify only the virtual site
  from which the packet is coming.

8.2. Representing an ISP VPN as a Stub VPN

  If a particular VPN is actually an ISP, but its CE routers support
  MPLS, then the VPN can actually be treated as a stub VPN.  The CE and
  PE routers need only exchange routes which are internal to the VPN.
  The PE router would distribute to the CE router a label for each of
  these routes.  Routers at different sites in the VPN can then become
  BGP peers.  When the CE router looks up a packet's destination
  address, the routing lookup always resolves to an internal address,
  usually the address of the packet's BGP next hop.  The CE labels the
  packet appropriately and sends the packet to the PE.

9. Security

  Under the following conditions:

     a) labeled packets are not accepted by backbone routers from
        untrusted or unreliable sources, unless it is known that such
        packets will leave the backbone before the IP header or any
        labels lower in the stack will be inspected, and

     b) labeled VPN-IPv4 routes are not accepted from untrusted or
        unreliable sources,

  the security provided by this architecture is virtually identical to
  that provided to VPNs by Frame Relay or ATM backbones.

  It is worth noting that the use of MPLS makes it much simpler to
  provide this level of security than would be possible if one
  attempted to use some form of IP-within-IP tunneling in place of
  MPLS.  It is a simple matter to refuse to accept a labeled packet
  unless the first of the above conditions applies to it.  It is rather
  more difficult to configure the a router to refuse to accept an IP
  packet if that packet is an IP-within-IP tunnelled packet which is
  going to a "wrong" place.

  The use of MPLS also allows a VPN to span multiple SPs without
  depending in any way on the inter-domain distribution of IPv4 routing
  information.

  It is also possible for a VPN user to provide himself with enhanced
  security by making use of Tunnel Mode IPSEC [5].  This is discussed
  in the remainder of this section.




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9.1. Point-to-Point Security Tunnels between CE Routers

  A security-conscious VPN user might want to ensure that some or all
  of the packets which traverse the backbone are authenticated and/or
  encrypted. The standard way to obtain this functionality today would
  be to create a "security tunnel" between every pair of CE routers in
  a VPN, using IPSEC Tunnel Mode.

  However, the procedures described so far do not enable the CE router
  transmitting a packet to determine the identify of the next CE router
  that the packet will traverse.  Yet that information is required in
  order to use Tunnel Mode IPSEC.  So we must extend those procedures
  to make this information available.

  A way to do this is suggested in [6].  Every VPN-IPv4 route can have
  an attribute which identifies the next CE router that will be
  traversed if that route is followed.  If this information is provided
  to all the CE routers in the VPN, standard IPSEC Tunnel Mode can be
  used.

  If the CE and PE are BGP peers, it is natural to present this
  information as a BGP attribute.

  Each CE that is to use IPSEC should also be configured with a set of
  address prefixes, such that it is prohibited from sending insecure
  traffic to any of those addresses.  This prevents the CE from sending
  insecure traffic if, for some reason, it fails to obtain the
  necessary information.

  When MPLS is used to carry packets between the two endpoints of an
  IPSEC tunnel, the IPSEC outer header does not really perform any
  function.  It might be beneficial to develop a form of IPSEC tunnel
  mode which allows the outer header to be omitted when MPLS is used.

9.2. Multi-Party Security Associations

  Instead of setting up a security tunnel between each pair of CE
  routers, it may be advantageous to set up a single, multiparty
  security association. In such a security association, all the CE
  routers which are in a particular VPN would share the same security
  parameters (.e.g., same secret, same algorithm, etc.). Then the
  ingress CE wouldn't have to know which CE is the next one to receive
  the data, it would only have to know which VPN the data is going to.
  A CE which is in multiple VPNs could use different security
  parameters for each one, thus protecting, e.g., intranet packets from
  being exposed to the extranet.





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  With such a scheme, standard Tunnel Mode IPSEC could not be used,
  because there is no way to fill in the IP destination address field
  of the "outer header".  However, when MPLS is used for forwarding,
  there is no real need for this outer header anyway; the PE router can
  use MPLS to get a packet to a tunnel endpoint without even knowing
  the IP address of that endpoint; it only needs to see the IP
  destination address of the "inner header".

  A significant advantage of a scheme like this is that it makes
  routing changes (in particular, a change of egress CE for a
  particular address prefix) transparent to the security mechanism.
  This could be particularly important in the case of multi-provider
  VPNs, where the need to distribute information about such routing
  changes simply to support the security mechanisms could result in
  scalability issues.

  Another advantage is that it eliminates the need for the outer IP
  header, since the MPLS encapsulation performs its role.

10. Quality of Service

  Although not the focus of this paper, Quality of Service is a key
  component of any VPN service.  In MPLS/BGP VPNs, existing L3 QoS
  capabilities can be applied to labeled packets through the use of the
  "experimental" bits in the shim header [10], or, where ATM is used as
  the backbone, through the use of ATM QoS capabilities.  The traffic
  engineering work discussed in [1] is also directly applicable to
  MPLS/BGP VPNs.  Traffic engineering could even be used to establish
  LSPs with particular QoS characteristics between particular pairs of
  sites, if that is desirable.  Where an MPLS/BGP VPN spans multiple
  SPs, the architecture described in [7] may be useful.  An SP may
  apply either intserv or diffserv capabilities to a particular VPN, as
  appropriate.

11. Scalability

  We have discussed scalability issues throughout this paper.  In this
  section, we briefly summarize the main characteristics of our model
  with respect to scalability.

  The Service Provider backbone network consists of (a) PE routers, (b)
  BGP Route Reflectors, (c) P routers (which are neither PE routers nor
  Route Reflectors), and, in the case of multi-provider VPNs, (d)
  ASBRs.







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  P routers do not maintain any VPN routes.  In order to properly
  forward VPN traffic, the P routers need only maintain routes to the
  PE routers and the ASBRs. The use of two levels of labeling is what
  makes it possible to keep the VPN routes out of the P routers.

  A PE router to maintains VPN routes, but only for those VPNs to which
  it is directly attached.

  Route reflectors and ASBRs can be partitioned among VPNs so that each
  partition carries routes for only a subset of the VPNs provided by
  the Service Provider. Thus no single Route Reflector or ASBR is
  required to maintain routes for all the VPNs.

  As a result, no single component within the Service Provider network
  has to maintain all the routes for all the VPNs.  So the total
  capacity of the network to support increasing numbers of VPNs is not
  limited by the capacity of any individual component.

12. Intellectual Property Considerations

  Cisco Systems may seek patent or other intellectual property
  protection for some of all of the technologies disclosed in this
  document. If any standards arising from this document are or become
  protected by one or more patents assigned to Cisco Systems, Cisco
  intends to disclose those patents and license them on reasonable and
  non-discriminatory terms.

13. Security Considerations

  Security issues are discussed throughout this memo.

14. Acknowledgments

  Significant contributions to this work have been made by Ravi
  Chandra, Dan Tappan and Bob Thomas.
















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15. Authors' Addresses

  Eric C. Rosen
  Cisco Systems, Inc.
  250 Apollo Drive
  Chelmsford, MA, 01824

  EMail: [email protected]


  Yakov Rekhter
  Cisco Systems, Inc.
  170 Tasman Drive
  San Jose, CA, 95134

  EMail: [email protected]

16. References

  [1] Awduche, Berger,  Gan, Li, Swallow, and Srinavasan,  "Extensions
      to RSVP for LSP Tunnels", Work in Progress.

  [2] Bates, T. and R. Chandrasekaran, "BGP Route Reflection: An
      alternative to full mesh IBGP", RFC 1966, June 1996.

  [3] Bates, T., Chandra, R., Katz, D. and Y. Rekhter, "Multiprotocol
      Extensions for BGP4", RFC 2283, February 1998.

  [4] Gleeson, Heinanen, and Armitage, "A Framework for IP Based
      Virtual Private Networks", Work in Progress.

  [5] Kent and Atkinson, "Security Architecture for the Internet
      Protocol", RFC 2401, November 1998.

  [6] Li, "CPE based VPNs using MPLS", October 1998, Work in Progress.

  [7] Li, T. and Y. Rekhter, "A Provider Architecture for
      Differentiated Services and Traffic Engineering (PASTE)", RFC
      2430, October 1998.

  [8] Rekhter and Rosen, "Carrying Label Information in BGP4", Work in
      Progress.

  [9] Rosen, Viswanathan, and Callon, "Multiprotocol Label Switching
      Architecture", Work in Progress.

 [10] Rosen, Rekhter, Tappan, Farinacci, Fedorkow, Li, and Conta, "MPLS
      Label Stack Encoding", Work in Progress.



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17.  Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999).  All Rights Reserved.

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

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

  This document and the information contained herein is provided on an
  "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING
  TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
  BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION
  HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
  MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
























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