Network Working Group                                           D. Thaler
Request for Comments: 2991                                      Microsoft
Category: Informational                                          C. Hopps
                                                    NextHop Technologies
                                                           November 2000


     Multipath Issues in Unicast and Multicast Next-Hop Selection

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 (2000).  All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

  Various routing protocols, including Open Shortest Path First (OSPF)
  and Intermediate System to Intermediate System (ISIS), explicitly
  allow "Equal-Cost Multipath" (ECMP) routing.  Some router
  implementations also allow equal-cost multipath usage with RIP and
  other routing protocols.  The effect of multipath routing on a
  forwarder is that the forwarder potentially has several next-hops for
  any given destination and must use some method to choose which next-
  hop should be used for a given data packet.

1.  Introduction

  Various routing protocols, including OSPF and ISIS, explicitly allow
  "Equal-Cost Multipath" routing.  Some router implementations also
  allow equal-cost multipath usage with RIP and other routing
  protocols.  Using equal-cost multipath means that if multiple equal-
  cost routes to the same destination exist, they can be discovered and
  used to provide load balancing among redundant paths.

  The effect of multipath routing on a forwarder is that the forwarder
  potentially has several next-hops for any given destination and must
  use some method to choose which next-hop should be used for a given
  data packet.  This memo summarizes current practices, problems, and
  solutions.







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2.  Concerns

  Several router implementations allow multipath forwarding.  This is
  sometimes done naively via round-robin, where each packet matching a
  given destination route is forwarded using the subsequent next-hop,
  in a round-robin fashion.  This does provide a form of load
  balancing, but there are several problems with approaches such as
  round-robin or random:

  Variable Path MTU
        Since each of the redundant paths may have a different MTU,
        this means that the overall path MTU can change on a packet-
        by-packet basis, negating the usefulness of path MTU discovery.

  Variable Latencies
        Since each of the redundant paths may have a different latency
        involved, having packets take separate paths can cause packets
        to always arrive out of order, increasing delivery latency and
        buffering requirements.

        Packet reordering causes TCP to believe that loss has taken
        place when packets with higher sequence numbers arrive before
        an earlier one.  When three or more packets are received before
        a "late" packet, TCP enters a mode called "fast-retransmit" [6]
        which consumes extra bandwidth (which could potentially cause
        more loss, decreasing throughput) as it attempts to
        unnecessarily retransmit the delayed packet(s).  Hence,
        reordering can be detrimental to network performance.

  Debugging
        Common debugging utilities such as ping and traceroute are much
        less reliable in the presence of multiple paths and may even
        present completely wrong results.

  In multicast routing, the problem with multiple paths is that
  multicast routing protocols prevent loops and duplicates by
  constructing a single tree to all receivers of the same group
  address.  Multicast routing protocols deployed today (DVMRP, PIM-DM,
  PIM-SM) [2] construct shortest-path trees rooted at either the
  source, or another router known as a Core or Rendezvous Point.
  Hence, the way they ensure that duplicates will not arise is that a
  given tree must use only a single next-hop towards the root of the
  tree.








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3.  Requirements

  In the remainder of this document, we will use the term "flow" to
  represent the granularity at which the router keeps state (if at all)
  for classes of traffic.  The exact definition of a flow may depend on
  the actual implementation.  For example, a flow might be identified
  solely by destination address, or it might be identified by (source
  address, destination address, protocol id) triplet.  Hence "flow" is
  not necessarily synonymous with the term "microflow" as used in RFC
  2474 [7], which also includes port numbers.  Indeed, including
  transport-layer information in the next-hop selection process can
  actually be problematic.  For example, if packets are fragmented, the
  transport-layer information may not be available in every packet.
  Furthermore, having the choice of path depend on transport-layer
  fields may negate the benefit of caching information such as MTU for
  use in subsequent connections between the same endpoints.

  All of the problems outlined in the previous section arise when
  packets in the same unicast or multicast "flow" are split among
  multiple paths.  The natural solution is therefore to ensure that
  packets for the same flow always use the same path.

  Two additional features are desirable:

  Minimal disruption
        When multipath is used, meaning that multiple routes contribute
        valid next-hops, the chances are higher of routes being added
        and deleted from consideration than when only the "best" route
        is used (in which case metric changes in alternate routes have
        no effect on traffic paths).  Since a higher number of routes
        may actually be used for forwarding when multipath is in use,
        the potential for packet reordering and packet loss due to
        route flaps can be much greater than when not using multipath.
        Hence, it is desirable to minimize the number of active flows
        affected by the addition or deletion of another next-hop.

  Fast implementation
        The amount of additional computation required to forward a
        packet should be small.  For example, when doing round-robin,
        this computation might consist of incrementing (modulo the
        number of next-hops) a next-hop index.

4.  Solutions

  We now provide three possible methods for improving the performance
  of multipath and then discuss their applicability to unicast and
  multicast forwarding.




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  Modulo-N Hash
        To select a next-hop from the list of N next-hops, the router
        performs a modulo-N hash over the packet header fields that
        identify a flow.  This has the advantage of being fast, at the
        expense of (N-1)/N of all flows changing paths whenever a
        next-hop is added or removed.

  Hash-Threshold
        The router first selects a key by performing a hash over the
        packet header fields that identify the flow.  The N next-hops
        have been assigned unique regions in the hash function's output
        space.  By comparing the hash value against region boundaries
        the router can determine which region the hash value belongs to
        and thus which next-hop to use.  This method has the advantage
        of only affecting flows near the region boundaries (or
        thresholds) when next-hops are added or removed.  For ECMP
        hash-threshold's lookup can be done with a simple division
        (hash_value / fixed_region_size).  When a next-hop is added or
        removed, between 1/4 and 1/2 of all flows change paths.  An
        analysis of this method can be found in [3].

  Highest Random Weight (HRW)
        The router computes a key for EACH next-hop by performing a
        hash over the packet header fields that identify the flow, as
        well as over the address of the next-hop.  The router then
        chooses the next-hop with the highest resulting key value [4].
        This has the advantage of minimizing the number of flows
        affected by a next-hop addition or deletion (only 1/N of them),
        but is approximately N times as expensive as a modulo-N hash.

  The applicability of these three alternatives depends on (at least)
  two factors: whether the forwarder maintains per-flow state, and how
  precious CPU is to a multipath forwarder.

  Some routers may maintain per-flow state for reasons other than for
  supporting multipath.  For example, routers typically keep per-flow
  state for multicast flows so that they can maintain the list of
  interfaces to which packets in the flow should be copied.

  If per-flow state is maintained in a multipath forwarder, then
  computation of the next-hop can be done by the router at state
  creation time.  This entails no additional computations at packet
  forwarding time compared with normal forwarding to a single next-hop,
  since the next-hop is precomputed.  In this case, any method can be
  used, including round-robin, random, modulo-N, hash-threshold or HRW.
  Hash functions such as modulo-N, hash-threshold and HRW are better if
  the forwarder state may be deleted for any reason during the lifetime
  of a flow since subsequent next-hop computations by the router will



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  always select the same path.  This also improves the usefulness of
  debugging utilities such as traceroute.  Finally, to maximize the
  stability of paths (and hence the usefulness of traceroute, etc.),
  the use of HRW is recommended over the other methods mentioned
  herein.

  If per-flow state is not maintained by the forwarder, then using
  multiple next-hops requires that the next-hop be calculated at packet
  arrival time.  When CPU is more precious than stability of flow
  paths, hash-threshold is recommended over the other methods mentioned
  herein.

4.1.  Unicast Forwarding

  Depending on the implementation, unicast forwarding may or may not
  keep per-flow state.  We recommend that where forwarder
  implementations keep flow state, routers should use HRW at state
  creation time (and next-hop deletion time) to select the next-hop,
  and that forwarders without per-flow state use hash-threshold.

4.2.  Multicast Forwarding

  Today's multicast forwarding engines use a cache of forwarding
  entries indexed by group (or group prefix) and source (or source
  prefix).  This means that today's multicast forwarder's always keep
  per-flow state, although for some multicast routing protocols, the
  "flow" may be fairly coarse (e.g., traffic from all sources to the
  same destination).  Since per-flow state is kept by the forwarder, it
  is recommended that the router always use HRW to select the next-hop.

  Routers using explicit-joining protocols such as PIM-SM [5] should
  thus use the multipath information when determining to which neighbor
  a join message should be sent.  For example, when multiple next-hops
  exist for a given Rendezvous Point (RP) toward which a (*,G) Join
  should be sent, it is recommended that HRW be used to select the
  next-hop to use for each group.

5.  Applicability

  The algorithms discussed above (except round-robin) all rely on some
  form of hash function.  Equal flow distribution is achieved when the
  hash function is uniformly distributed.  Since the commonly used hash
  functions only become uniformly distributed when the number of inputs
  is relatively large, these algorithms are more applicable to routers
  used to route many flows, than in, for example, a small business
  setting.





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6.  Redundant Parallel Links

  A related problem occurs when multiple parallel links are used
  between the same pair of routers.  A common solution is to bundle the
  two links together into a "super"-link when is then used for routing.
  For multicast forwarding, this results in the two links being reduced
  to a single next-hop (over the combined link) which can be used to
  prevent duplicates.  When a unicast or multicast packet is queued to
  the combined link, some method, such as those discussed earlier, is
  still required to determine the physical link on which to transmit
  the packet.  If the parallel links are identical, then most of the
  concerns discussed in this document are avoided with the combined
  link.  The exception is packet reordering, which can still occur with
  round-robin, adversely affecting TCP.

7.  Security Considerations

  This document discusses issues with various methods of choosing a
  next-hop from among multiple valid next-hops.  As such, it does not
  directly impact the security of the Internet infrastructure or its
  applications.

  One issue that is worth mentioning, however, is that when next-hop
  selection is predictable, an attacker can synthesize traffic that
  will all hash the same, making it possible to launch a denial-of-
  service attack that overloads a particular path.  Since a special
  case of this is when the same (single) next-hop is always selected,
  such an attack is easiest when multipath is not being used.
  Introducing multipath routing can make such an attack more difficult;
  the more unpredictable the hash is, the harder it becomes to conduct
  a denial-of-service attack against any single link.




















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8.  References

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

  [2]  Maufer, T., "Deploying IP Multicast in the Enterprise",
       Prentice-Hall, 1998.

  [3]  Hopps, C., "Analysis of an Equal-Cost Multi-Path Algorithm", RFC
       2992, November 2000.

  [4]  Thaler, D., and C.V. Ravishankar, "Using Name-Based Mappings to
       Increase Hit Rates", IEEE/ACM Transactions on Networking,
       February 1998.

  [5]  Estrin, D., Farinacci, D., Helmy, A., Thaler, D., Deering, S.,
       Handley, M., Jacobson, V., Liu, C., Sharma, P. and L. Wei,
       "Protocol Independent Multicast-Sparse Mode (PIM-SM): Protocol
       Specification", RFC 2362, June 1998.

  [6]  Allman, M., Paxson, V. and W. Stevens, "TCP Congestion Control",
       RFC 2581, April 1999.

  [7]  Nichols, K., Blake, S., Baker, F. and D. Black., "Definition of
       the Differentiated Services Field (DS Field) in the IPv4 and
       IPv6 Headers", RFC 2474, December 1998.


























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9.  Authors' Addresses

  Dave Thaler
  Microsoft
  One Microsoft Way
  Redmond, WA  98052

  Phone: +1 425 703 8835
  EMail: [email protected]


  Christian E. Hopps
  NextHop Technologies, Inc.
  517 W. William Street
  Ann Arbor, MI 48103-4943
  U.S.A

  Phone: +1 734 936 0291
  EMail: [email protected]
































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10.  Full Copyright Statement

  Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.

  This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to
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  or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published
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  The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be
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  TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING
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Acknowledgement

  Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the
  Internet Society.



















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