Network Working Group                                      T. Przygienda
Request for Comments: 5120                                       Z2 Sagl
Category: Standards Track                                        N. Shen
                                                          Cisco Systems
                                                               N. Sheth
                                                       Juniper Networks
                                                          February 2008


               M-ISIS: Multi Topology (MT) Routing in
         Intermediate System to Intermediate Systems (IS-ISs)

Status of This Memo

  This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
  Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
  improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
  Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
  and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

  This document describes an optional mechanism within Intermediate
  System to Intermediate Systems (IS-ISs) used today by many ISPs for
  IGP routing within their clouds.  This document describes how to run,
  within a single IS-IS domain, a set of independent IP topologies that
  we call Multi-Topologies (MTs).  This MT extension can be used for a
  variety of purposes, such as an in-band management network "on top"
  of the original IGP topology, maintaining separate IGP routing
  domains for isolated multicast or IPv6 islands within the backbone,
  or forcing a subset of an address space to follow a different
  topology.

1.  Introduction

  Maintaining multiple MTs for IS-IS [ISO10589] [RFC1195] in a
  backwards-compatible manner necessitates several extensions to the
  packet encoding and additional Shortest Path First (SPF) procedures.
  The problem can be partitioned into the forming of adjacencies and
  advertising of prefixes and reachable intermediate systems within
  each topology.  Having put all the necessary additional information
  in place, it must be properly used by MT capable SPF computation.
  The following sections describe each of the problems separately.  To
  simplify the text, "standard" IS-IS topology is defined to be MT ID
  #0 (zero).






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1.1.  Conventions Used in This Document

  The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
  "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
  document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].

1.2.  Definitions of Terms Used in This Document

  CSNP Complete Sequence Number Packet.  Used to describe all the
       contents of a link state database of IS-IS.

  DIS  Designated Intermediate System.  The intermediate system elected
       to advertise the pseudo-node for a broadcast network.

  IIH  IS-IS Hello.  Packets that are used to discover adjacent
       intermediate systems.

  LSP  Link State Packet.  Packet generated by an intermediate system
       and lists adjacent systems, prefixes, and other information.

  PSNP Partial Sequence Number Packet.  Used to request information
       from an adjacent intermediate system's link state database.

  SPF  Shortest Path First.  An algorithm that takes a database of
       nodes within a domain and builds a tree of connectivity along
       the shortest paths through the entire network.

2.  Maintaining MT Adjacencies

  Each adjacency formed MUST be classified as belonging to a set of MTs
  on the interface.  This is achieved by adding a new TLV into IIH
  packets that advertises to which topologies the interface belongs.
  If MT #0 is the only MT on the interface, it is optional to advertise
  it in the new TLV.  Thus, not including such a TLV in the IIH implies
  MT ID #0 capability only.  Through this exchange of MT capabilities,
  a router is able to advertise the IS TLVs in LSPs with common MT set
  over those adjacencies.

  The case of adjacency contains multiple MTs on an interface, and if
  there exists an overlapping IP address space among the topologies,
  additional mechanisms MUST be used to resolve the topology identity
  of the incoming IP packets on the interface.  See further discussion
  in Section 8.2.2 of this document.








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2.1.  Forming Adjacencies on Point-to-Point Interfaces

  Adjacencies on point-to-point interfaces are formed as usual with
  IS-IS routers not implementing MT extensions.  If a local router does
  not participate in certain MTs, it will not advertise those MT IDs in
  its IIHs and thus will not include that neighbor within its LSPs.  On
  the other hand, if an MT ID is not detected in the remote side's
  IIHs, the local router MUST NOT include that neighbor within its
  LSPs.  The local router SHOULD NOT form an adjacency if they don't
  have at least one common MT over the interface.

2.2.  Forming Adjacencies on Broadcast Interfaces

  On a LAN, all the routers on the LAN that implement the MT extension
  MAY advertise their MT capability TLV in their IIHs.  If there is at
  least one adjacency on the LAN interface that belongs to this MT, the
  MT capable router MUST include the corresponding MT IS Reachable TLV
  in its LSP, otherwise it MAY include this MT IS Reachable TLV in its
  LSP if the LAN interface participates in this MT set.

  Two routers on a LAN SHALL always establish adjacency, regardless of
  whether or not they have a common MT.  This is to ensure all the
  routers on the LAN can correctly elect the same DIS.  The IS SHOULD
  NOT include the MT IS TLV in its LSP if none of the adjacencies on
  the LAN contain this MT.

  The DIS, CSNP, and PSNP functions are not changed by MT extension.

3.  Advertising MT Reachable Intermediate Systems in LSPs

  A router MUST include within its LSPs in the Reachable Intermediate
  Systems TLV-only adjacent nodes that are participating in the
  corresponding topology and advertise such TLVs only if it
  participates itself in the corresponding topology.  The Standard
  Reachable Intermediate Systems TLV is acting here as MT ID #0, the
  equivalent of the newly introduced MT Reachable Intermediate Systems
  TLV.  A router MUST announce the MT IS TLV when there is at least one
  adjacency on the interface that belongs to this MT, otherwise it MAY
  announce the MT IS TLV of an adjacency for a given MT if this
  interface participates in the LAN.

  Since it is not possible to prevent a router that does not understand
  MT extensions from being responsible for the generation of the
  according pseudo-node, it is possible to neither introduce special
  TLVs in the pseudo-node LSPs, nor run distinct DIS elections per MT.
  Therefore, a generated pseudo-node LSP by DIS MUST contain





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  in its IS Reachable TLV all nodes on the LAN as usual, regardless of
  their MT capabilities.  In other words, there is no change to the
  pseudo-node LSP construction.

4.  MTs and Overload, Partition, and Attached Bits

  For each of the MTs, a router could become potentially partitioned,
  overloaded, and attached independently.  To prevent unnecessary
  complexity, MT extensions do not support MT based partition repair.
  The overload, partition, and attached bits in the LSP header only
  reflect the status of the default topology.

  Attached bit and overload bit are part of the MT TLV being
  distributed within a node's LSP fragment zero.  Since each adjacency
  can belong to different MTs, it is possible that some MTs are L2
  attached, and others are not on the same router.  The overload bit in
  the MT TLV can be used to signal the topology being overloaded.  An
  MT-based system is considered overloaded if the overload bit in the
  MT is set.

  Route leaking between the levels SHOULD only be performed within the
  same MT.

5.  Advertising MT Specific IP Prefixes

  Each of the MTs commands its own address space so a new TLV is
  necessary for prefixes stored in MTs other than MT ID #0.  To make
  the encoding less confusing when same prefixes are present in
  multiple MTs and accelerate SPF per MT, rather than adding a sub-TLV
  in Traffic Engineered (TE) extensions, a new TLV is introduced for
  that purpose that closely follows TE encoding [RFC3784].

6.  MT SPF Computation

  Each MT MUST run its own instance of the decision process.  The
  pseudo-node LSPs are used by all topologies during computation.  Each
  non-default topology MAY have its attached bit and overload bit set
  in the MT TLV.  A reverse-connectivity check within SPF MUST follow
  the according MT to assure the bi-directional reachability within the
  same MT.

  The results of each computation SHOULD be stored in a separate
  Routing Information Base (RIB), in normal cases, otherwise
  overlapping addresses in different topologies could lead to
  undesirable routing behavior, such as forwarding loops.  The
  forwarding logic and configuration need to ensure the same MT is
  traversed from the source to the destination for packets.  The
  nexthops derived from the MT SPF MUST belong to the adjacencies



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  conforming to the same MT for correct forwarding.  It is recommended
  for the administrators to ensure consistent configuration of all
  routers in the domain to prevent undesirable forwarding behavior.

  No attempt is made in this document to allow one topology to
  calculate routes using the routing information from another topology
  inside SPF.  Even though it is possible to redistribute and leak
  routes from another IS-IS topology or from external sources, the
  exact mechanism is beyond the scope of this document.

7.  Packet Encoding

  Four new TLVs are added to support MT extensions.  One of them is
  common for the LSPs and IIHs.  Encoding of Intermediate System TLV
  and IPv4 Reachable Prefixes is tied to traffic engineering extensions
  [RFC3784] to simplify the implementation effort.  The main reasons we
  chose to use new TLVs instead of using sub-TLVs inside existing TLV
  type-22 and type-135 are:

     1.  In many cases, multi-topologies are non-congruent, using the
         sub-TLV approach will not save LSP space;

     2.  Many sub-TLVs are already being used in TLV type-22, and many
         more are being proposed while there is a maximum limit on the
         TLV size, from the existing TLVs;

     3.  If traffic engineering or some other applications are being
         applied per topology level later, the new TLVs can
         automatically inherit the same attributes already defined for
         the "standard" topology without going through long standard
         process to redefine them per topology.

7.1.  Multi-Topology TLV

  The TLV number of this TLV is 229.  It contains one or more MTs; the
  router is participating in the following structure:

     x  CODE - 229
     x  LENGTH - total length of the value field, it SHOULD be 2
                 times the number of MT components.
     x  VALUE - one or more 2-byte MT components, structured
                as follows:
                                                         No. of Octets
                     +--------------------------------+
                     |O |A |R |R |        MT ID       |      2
                     +--------------------------------+





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     Bit O represents the OVERLOAD bit for the MT (only valid in LSP
     fragment zero for MTs other than ID #0, otherwise SHOULD be set to
     0 on transmission and ignored on receipt).

     Bit A represents the ATTACH bit for the MT (only valid in LSP
     fragment zero for MTs other than ID #0, otherwise SHOULD be set to
     0 on transmission and ignored on receipt).

     Bits R are reserved, SHOULD be set to 0 on transmission and
     ignored on receipt.

     MT ID is a 12-bit field containing the ID of the topology being
     announced.

  This MT TLV can advertise up to 127 MTs.  It is announced in IIHs and
  LSP fragment 0, and can occur multiple times.  The resulting MT set
  SHOULD be the union of all the MT TLV occurrences in the packet.  Any
  other IS-IS PDU occurrence of this TLV MUST be ignored.  Lack of MT
  TLV in hellos and fragment zero LSPs MUST be interpreted as
  participation of the advertising interface or router in MT ID #0
  only.  If a router advertises MT TLV, it has to advertise all the MTs
  it participates in, specifically including topology ID #0 also.

7.2.  MT Intermediate Systems TLV

  The TLV number of this TLV is 222.  It is aligned with extended IS
  reachability TLV type 22 beside an additional two bytes in front at
  the beginning of the TLV.

     x  CODE - 222
     x  LENGTH - total length of the value field
     x  VALUE - 2-byte MT membership plus the format of extended IS
                reachability TLV, structured as follows:
                                                    No. of Octets
                +--------------------------------+
                |R |R |R |R |        MT ID       |      2
                +--------------------------------+
                | extended IS TLV format         |    11 - 253
                +--------------------------------+
                .                                .
                .                                .
                +--------------------------------+
                | extended IS TLV format         |    11 - 253
                +--------------------------------+

     Bits R are reserved, SHOULD be set to 0 on transmission and
     ignored on receipt.




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     MT ID is a 12-bit field containing the non-zero MT ID of the
     topology being announced.  The TLV MUST be ignored if the ID is
     zero.  This is to ensure the consistent view of the standard
     unicast topology.

     After the 2-byte MT membership format, the MT IS content is in the
     same format as extended IS TLV, type 22 [RFC3784].  It can contain
     up to 23 neighbors of the same MT if no sub-TLVs are used.

  This TLV can occur multiple times.

7.3.  Multi-Topology Reachable IPv4 Prefixes TLV

  The TLV number of this TLV is 235.  It is aligned with extended IP
  reachability TLV type 135 beside an additional two bytes in front.

     x  CODE - 235
     x  LENGTH - total length of the value field
     x  VALUE - 2-byte MT membership plus the format of
                extended IP reachability TLV, structured as follows:

                                                    No. of Octets
                +--------------------------------+
                |R |R |R |R |        MT ID       |      2
                +--------------------------------+
                | extended IP TLV format         |    5 - 253
                +--------------------------------+
                .                                .
                .                                .
                +--------------------------------+
                | extended IP TLV format         |    5 - 253
                +--------------------------------+

     Bits R are reserved, SHOULD be set to 0 on transmission and
     ignored on receipt.

     MT ID is a 12-bit field containing the non-zero ID of the topology
     being announced.  The TLV MUST be ignored if the ID is zero.  This
     is to ensure the consistent view of the standard unicast topology.

     After the 2-byte MT membership format, the MT IPv4 content is in
     the same format as extended IP reachability TLV, type 135
     [RFC3784].

  This TLV can occur multiple times.






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7.4.  Multi-Topology Reachable IPv6 Prefixes TLV

  The TLV number of this TLV is 237.  It is aligned with IPv6
  Reachability TLV type 236 beside an additional two bytes in front.

     x  CODE - 237
     x  LENGTH - total length of the value field
     x  VALUE - 2-byte MT membership plus the format of IPv6
                Reachability TLV, structured as follows:

                                                    No. of Octets
                +--------------------------------+
                |R |R |R |R |        MT ID       |      2
                +--------------------------------+
                | IPv6 Reachability format       |    6 - 253
                +--------------------------------+
                .                                .
                +--------------------------------+
                | IPv6 Reachability format       |    6 - 253
                +--------------------------------+

     Bits R are reserved, SHOULD be set to 0 on transmission and
     ignored on receipt.

     MT ID is a 12-bit field containing the ID of the topology being
     announced.  The TLV MUST be ignored if the ID is zero.

     After the 2-byte MT membership format, the MT IPv6 context is in
     the same format as IPv6 Reachability TLV, type 236 [H01].

  This TLV can occur multiple times.

7.5.  Reserved MT ID Values

  Certain MT topologies are assigned to serve predetermined purposes:

  -  MT ID #0:          Equivalent to the "standard" topology.
  -  MT ID #1:          Reserved for IPv4 in-band management
                        purposes.
  -  MT ID #2:          Reserved for IPv6 routing topology.
  -  MT ID #3:          Reserved for IPv4 multicast routing topology.
  -  MT ID #4:          Reserved for IPv6 multicast routing topology.
  -  MT ID #5:          Reserved for IPv6 in-band management
                        purposes.
  -  MT ID #6-#3995:    Reserved for IETF consensus.
  -  MT ID #3996-#4095: Reserved for development, experimental and
                        proprietary features [RFC3692].




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8.  MT IP Forwarding Considerations

  Using MT extension for IS-IS routing can result in multiple RIBs on
  the system.  In this section, we list some of the known
  considerations for IP forwarding in various MT scenarios.  Certain
  deployment scenarios presented here imply different trade-offs in
  terms of deployment difficulties and advantages obtained.

8.1.  Each MT Belongs to a Distinct Address Family

  In this case, each MT related route is installed into a separate RIB.
  Multiple topologies can share the same IS-IS interface on detecting
  the incoming packet address family.  As an example, IPv4 and IPv6 can
  share the same interface without any further considerations under MT
  ISIS.

8.2.  Some MTs Belong to the Same Address Family

8.2.1.  Each Interface Belongs to One and Only One MT

  In this case, MTs can be used to forward packets from the same
  address family, even with overlapping addresses, since the MTs have
  their dedicated interfaces, and those interfaces can be associated
  with certain MT RIBs and FIBs.

8.2.2.  Multiple MTs Share an Interface with Overlapping Addresses

  Some additional mechanism is needed to select the correct RIBs for
  the incoming IP packets to determine the correct RIB to make a
  forwarding decision.  For example, if the topologies are Quality of
  Service (QoS) partitioned, then the Differentiated Services Code
  Point (DSCP) bits in the IP packet header can be utilized to make the
  decision.  Some IP headers, or even packet data information, MAY be
  checked to make the forwarding table selection, for example, the
  source IP address in the header can be used to determine the desired
  forwarding behavior.

  This topic is not unique to IS-IS or even to Multi-topology, it is a
  local policy and configuration decision to make sure the inbound
  traffic uses the correct forwarding tables.  For example, preferred
  customer packets are sent through a Layer 2 Tunneling Protocol (L2TP)
  towards the high-bandwidth upstream provider, and other packets are
  sent through a different L2TP to a normal-bandwidth provider.  Those
  mechanisms are not part of the L2TP protocol specifications.

  The generic approach of packet to multiple MT RIB mapping over the
  same inbound interface is outside the scope of this document.




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8.2.3.  Multiple MTs Share an Interface with Non-Overlapping Addresses

  When there is no overlap in the address space among all the MTs,
  strictly speaking, the destination address space classifies the
  topology to which a packet belongs.  It is possible to install routes
  from different MTs into a shared RIB.  As an example of such a
  deployment, a special IS-IS topology can be set up for certain
  External Border Gateway Protocol (eBGP) nexthop addresses.

8.3.  Some MTs Are Not Used for Forwarding Purposes

  MT in IS-IS MAY be used even if the resulting RIB is not used for
  forwarding purposes.  As an example, multicast Reverse Path
  Forwarding (RPF) check can be performed on a different RIB than the
  standard unicast RIB, albeit an entirely different RIB is used for
  the multicast forwarding.  However, an incoming packet MUST still be
  clearly identified as belonging to a unique topology.

9.  MT Network Management Considerations

  When multiple IS-IS topologies exist within a domain, some of the
  routers can be configured to participate in a subset of the MTs in
  the network.  This section discusses some of the options we have to
  enable operations or the network management stations to access those
  routers.

9.1.  Create Dedicated Management Topology to Include All the Nodes

  This approach is to set up a dedicated management topology or 'in-
  band' management topology.  This 'mgmt' topology will include all the
  routers need to be managed.  The computed routes in the topology will
  be installed into the 'mgmt' RIB.  In the condition that the 'mgmt'
  topology uses a set of non-overlapping address space with the default
  topology, those 'mgmt' routes can also be optionally installed into
  the default RIB.  The advantages of duplicate 'mgmt' routes in both
  RIBs include:  the network management utilities on the system does
  not have to be modified to use a specific RIB other than the default
  RIB; the 'mgmt' topology can share the same link with the default
  topology if so designed.












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9.2.  Extend the Default Topology to All the Nodes

  Even in the case that default topology is not used on some of the
  nodes in the IP forwarding, we MAY want to extend the default
  topology to those nodes for the purpose of network management.
  Operators SHOULD set high costs on the links that belong to the
  extended portion of the default topology.  This way, the IP data
  traffic will not be forwarded through those nodes during network
  topology changes.

10.  Acknowledgments

  The authors would like to thank Andrew Partan, Dino Farinacci, Derek
  Yeung, Alex Zinin, Stefano Previdi, Heidi Ou, Steve Luong, Pekka
  Savola, Mike Shand, Shankar Vemulapalli, and Les Ginsberg for the
  discussion, their review, comments, and contributions to this
  document.

11.  Security Considerations

  IS-IS security applies to the work presented.  No specific security
  issues with the proposed solutions are known.  The authentication
  procedure for IS-IS PDUs is the same regardless of MT information
  inside the IS-IS PDUs.

  Note that an authentication mechanism, such as the one defined in
  [RFC3567], SHOULD be applied if there is high risk resulting from
  modification of multi-topology information.

  As described in Section 8.2.2, multiple topologies share an interface
  in the same address space, some mechanism beyond IS-IS needs to be
  used to select the right forwarding table for an inbound packet.  A
  misconfiguration on the system or a packet with a spoofed source
  address, for example, can lead to packet loss or unauthorized use of
  premium network resource.

12.  IANA Considerations

  This document defines the following new IS-IS TLV types, which have
  already been reflected in the IANA IS-IS TLV code-point registry:

         Name                    Value

         MT-ISN                  222
         M-Topologies            229
         MT IP. Reach            235
         MT IPv6 IP. Reach       237




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  IANA has created a new registry, "IS-IS Multi-Topology Parameters",
  with the assignments listed in Section 7.5 of this document and
  registration policies [RFC2434] for future assignments.  The MT ID
  values range 6-3995 are allocated through Expert Review; values in
  the range of 3996-4095 are reserved for Private Use.  In all cases,
  assigned values are to be registered with IANA.

13.  References

13.1.  Normative References

  [ISO10589]  ISO.  Intermediate System to Intermediate System Routing
              Exchange Protocol for Use in Conjunction with the
              Protocol for Providing the Connectionless-Mode Network
              Service. ISO 10589, 1992.

  [RFC1195]   Callon, R., "Use of OSI IS-IS for routing in TCP/IP and
              dual environments", RFC 1195, December 1990.

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

  [RFC3692]   Narten, T., "Assigning Experimental and Testing Numbers
              Considered Useful", BCP 82, RFC 3692, January 2004.

  [RFC2434]   Narten, T. and H. Alvestrand, "Guidelines for Writing an
              IANA Considerations Section in RFCs", BCP 26, RFC 2434,
              October 1998.

13.2.  Informative References

  [RFC3567]   Li, T. and R. Atkinson, "Intermediate System to
              Intermediate System (IS-IS) Cryptographic
              Authentication", RFC 3567, July 2003.

  [RFC3784]   Smit, H. and T. Li, "Intermediate System to Intermediate
              System (IS-IS) Extensions for Traffic Engineering (TE)",
              RFC 3784, June 2004.

  [H01]      C. Hopps, "Routing IPv6 with IS-IS", Work in Progress.











Przygienda, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 5120                         M-ISIS                    February 2008


Authors' Addresses

  Tony Przygienda
  Z2 Sagl
  Via Rovello 32
  CH-6942 Savosa
  EMail: [email protected]

  Naiming Shen
  Cisco Systems
  225 West Tasman Drive
  San Jose, CA, 95134 USA
  EMail: [email protected]

  Nischal Sheth
  Juniper Networks
  1194 North Mathilda Avenue
  Sunnyvale, CA 94089 USA
  EMail: [email protected]
































Przygienda, et al.          Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 5120                         M-ISIS                    February 2008


Full Copyright Statement

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