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In the core of a high capacity network, service differentiation may still be needed to support applications' utilization of the network. Applications with similar traffic characteristics and performance requirements are mapped into diffserv service classes based on end-to-end behavior requirements of the applications. However, some network segments may be configured in such a way that a single forwarding treatment may satisfy the traffic characteristics and performance requirements of two or more service classes. In these cases, it may be desirable to aggregate two or more diffserv service classes into a single forwarding treatment. This document provides guidelines for the aggregation of diffserv service classes into forwarding treatments.
1.
Introduction
1.1.
Requirements Notation
2.
Terminology
3.
Overview of Service Class Aggregation
4.
Service Classes to Treatment Aggregate Mapping
4.1.
Mapping Service Classes into Four Treatment Aggregates
4.1.1.
Network Control Treatment Aggregate
4.1.2.
Real Time Treatment Aggregate
4.1.3.
Assured Elastic Treatment Aggregate
4.1.4.
Elastic Treatment Aggregate
5.
Treatment Aggregates and Inter-Provider Relationships
6.
Security Considerations
7.
IANA Considerations
8.
Acknowledgements
Appendix A.
Using MPLS for Treatment Aggregates
Appendix A.1.
Network Control Treatment Aggregate with E-LSP
Appendix A.2.
Real Time Treatment Aggregate with E-LSP
Appendix A.3.
Assured Elastic Treatment Aggregate with E-LSP
Appendix A.4.
Elastic Treatment Aggregate with E-LSP
Appendix A.5.
Treatment Aggregates and L-LSP
9.
References
9.1.
Normative References
9.2.
Informative References
§
Authors' Addresses
§
Intellectual Property and Copyright Statements
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In the core of a high capacity network, it is common for the network to be engineered in such a way that a major link, switch, or router can fail and the result will be a routed network that still meets ambient SLAs (Service Level Agreements). The implication of this is that there is sufficient capacity on any given link such that all SLAs sold can be simultaneously supported at their respective maximum rates, and that this remains true after re-routing (either IP re-routing or MPLS (Multi Protocol Label Switching) protection-mode switching) has occurred.
Over-provisioning is generally considered to meet the requirements of all traffic without further QoS treatment, and in the general case that is true in high capacity backbones. However, as the process of network convergence continues, and with the increasing speed of the access networks, certain services may still have issues. Delay, jitter, and occasional loss are perfectly acceptable for elastic applications. However, sub-second surges that occur in the best-designed of networks [MOON] (Choi, B., Moon, S., Zhang, Z., Papagiannaki, K., and C. Diot, “Analysis of Point-To-Point Packet Delay in an Operational Network,” March 2004.) affect real-time applications. Moreover, DOS loads, worms, and network disruptions such as that of 11 September 2001 affect routing [RENESYS] (Ogielski, A. and J. Cowie, “Internet Routing Behavior on 9/11,” March 2002.). Our objective is to prevent disruption to routing (which in turn affects all services), protect real-time jitter-sensitive services, while minimizing loss and delay of sensitive elastic traffic.
The document "Diffserv Service Classes" (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594] defines a set of basic diffserv classes from the points of view of the application requiring specific end-to-end behaviors from the network. The service classes are differentiated based on the application payload’s tolerance to packet loss, delay, and delay variation (jitter). Different degrees of these criteria form the foundation for supporting the needs of real-time and elastic traffic. The "Diffserv Service Classes" (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594] document also provides recommendations for the treatment method of these service classes. But, at some network segments of the end-to-end path, the number of levels of network treatment differentiation may be less than the number of service classes that the network segment needs to support. In such a situation, that network segment may use the same treatment to support more than one service class. In this document we provide guidelines on how multiple service classes may be aggregated into a forwarding treatment aggregate. Having the IP traffic belonging to service classes, expressed using the DSCP (DiffServ Code Point), as described by "Diffserv Service Classes" (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594]. Note that in a given domain, we may recommend that the supported service classes be aggregated into forwarding treatment aggregates; however, this does not mean all service classes need to be supported and hence not all forwarding treatment aggregates need to be supported. A domain may support fewer or greater number of forwarding treatment aggregates. Which service classes and which forwarding treatment aggregates are supported by a domain is up to the domain administration and may be influenced by business reasons or other reasons (e.g. operational considerations).
In this document, we've provided:
The treatment aggregate recommendations are designed to aggregate the service classes (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594] in such a manner as to protect real-time traffic and routing, on the assumption that real-time sessions are protected from each other by admission at the edge. The recommendation given is one possible way of performing the aggregation, there may be other way of aggregation, for example into fewer treatment aggregates or more treatment aggregates.
In the appendix, an example of aggregation over MPLS networks using E-LSP to realize the treatment aggregates is provided. Note that the MPLS E-LSP is just an example; this document does not exclude the use of other methods. This example only considers aggregation of IP traffic into E-LSP. The use of E-LSP by none-IP traffic is not discussed.
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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 (Bradner, S., “Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels,” March 1997.) [RFC2119].
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This document assumes the reader is familiar with the terms used in differentiated services. This document provides the definitions for new terms introduced by this document and references information defined in RFCs for existing terms not commonly used in differentiated services.
For new terms introduced by this document, we provide the definition here:
For terms from existing RFCs, we provide the reference to the appropriate section of the relevant RFC that contain the definition:
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In diffserv domains where less fine-grained traffic treatment differentiation is provided, aggregation of the different service classes (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594] may be required.
These aggregations have the following requirements:
In addition to the above requirements, we have the following suggestions:
This document only describes the aggregation of IP traffic based on the use of Diffserv Service Classes (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594].
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The service class and DSCP selection in "Diffserv Service Classes" (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594] has been defined to allow, in many instances, mapping of two or possibly more service classes into a single forwarding treatment aggregate. Notice that there is a relationship/trade-off between link speed, queue depth, delay, and jitter. The degree of aggregation and hence the number of treatment aggregates will depend on whether the speed of the links and scheduler behavior, being used to implement the aggregation, can minimize the effects of mixing traffic with different packet sizes and transmit rates on queue depth, and their impacts on loss, delay, and jitter. A general rule-of-thumb is that higher link speeds allow for more aggregation/smaller number of treatment aggregates, assuming link utilization is within the engineered level.
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This section provides an example of mapping all the service classes defined in RFC 4594 (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594] into four treatment aggregates. The use of four treatment aggregates assumes that the resources allocated to each treatment aggregate are sufficient to honor the required behavior of each service class (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594] in each of the four treatment aggregates. We use the performance requirement (tolerance to loss, delay, and jitter) from the application/end-user as a guide on how to map the service classes into treatment aggregates. We have also used Section 3.1 of RFC 1633 (Braden, B., Clark, D., and S. Shenker, “Integrated Services in the Internet Architecture: an Overview,” June 1994.) [RFC1633] to provide us with guidance on the definition of Real-Time and Elastic applications. An overview of the mapping between service classes and the four treatment aggregates is provided by Figure 1, with the mapping being based on performance requirements. In Figure 1, the right side columns of “Service Class”, “Tolerance to Loss/Delay/Jitter” are from Figure 2 of Diffserv Service Classes (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594].
It is recommended that certain service classes be mapped into specific treatment aggregates. But this does not mean that all the service classes recommended for that treatment aggregate need to be supported. Hence, for a given domain, a treatment aggregate may contain only a subset of the service classes recommended in this document, they being the service classes supported by that domain. A domain’s treatment of non-supported service classes should be based on the domain’s local policy. This local policy may be influenced by its agreement with its customers. Such treatment may use the Elastic Treatment Aggregate, dropping the packets, or some other arrangements.
Our example of four treatment aggregates is based on the basic differences in performance requirement from the application/end-user perspective. A domain may choose to support more or fewer treatment aggregates. For example, only supporting three treatment aggregates, and with mapping any network control traffic into the Assured Elastic treatment aggregate. This is a choice the administrative domain has. Hence this example of four treatment aggregates does not represent a minimum required set of treatment aggregates one must implement; nor does it represent the maximum set of treatment aggregates one can implement.
--------------------------------------------------------------------- |Treatment | Tolerance to ||Service Class | Tolerance to | |Aggregate | Loss |Delay |Jitter|| | Loss |Delay |Jitter| |==========+======+======+======++===============+======+======+======| | Network | Low | Low | Yes || Network | Low | Low | Yes | | Control | | | || Control | | | | |==========+======+======+======++===============+======+======+======| | Real | Very | Very | Very || Telephony | VLow | VLow | VLow | | Time | Low | Low | Low ||---------------+------+------+------| | | | | || Signaling | Low | Low | Yes | | | | | ||---------------+------+------+------| | | | | || Multimedia |Low - | Very | Low | | | | | || Conferencing |Medium| Low | | | | | | ||---------------+------+------+------| | | | | || Real-time | Low | Very | Low | | | | | || Interactive | | Low | | | | | | ||---------------+------+------+------| | | | | || Broadcast | Very |Medium| Low | | | | | || Video | Low | | | |==========+======+======+======++===============+======+======+======| | Assured | Low |Low - | Yes || Multimedia |Low - |Medium| Yes | | Elastic | |Medium| || Streaming |Medium| | | | | | | ||---------------+------+------+------| | | | | || Low Latency | Low |Low - | Yes | | | | | || Data | |Medium| | | | | | ||---------------+------+------+------| | | | | || OAM | Low |Medium| Yes | | | | | ||---------------+------+------+------| | | | | ||High Throughput| Low |Medium| Yes | | | | | || Data | |- High| | |==========+======+======+======++===============+======+======+======| | Elastic | Not Specified || Standard | Not Specified | | | | | ||---------------+------+------+------| | | | | || Low Priority | High | High | Yes | | | | | || Data | | | | ---------------------------------------------------------------------
Figure 1: Treatment Aggregate and Service Class Performance Requirements |
As we are recommending to preserve the notion of the individual end-to-end service classes, we also recommend that the original DSCP field marking not be changed when treatment aggregates are used. Instead, classifiers that select packets based on the contents of the DSCP field should be used to direct packets from the member DiffServ Service Classes into the queue that handles each of the treatment aggregates, without remarking the DSCP field of the packets. This is summarized in Figure 2, which shows the behavior each Treatment Aggregate should have, and the DSCP field marking of the packets that should be classified into each of the treatment aggregates.
------------------------------------------------------------ |Treatment |Treatment || DSCP | |Aggregate |Aggregate || | | |Behavior || | |==========+==========++=====================================| | Network | CS || CS6 | | Control |(RFC 2474)|| | |==========+==========++=====================================| | Real | EF || EF, CS5, AF41, AF42, AF43, CS4, CS3 | | Time |(RFC 3246)|| | |==========+==========++=====================================| | Assured | AF || CS2, AF31, AF21, AF11 | | Elastic |(RFC 2597)||-------------------------------------| | | || AF32, AF22, AF12 | | | ||-------------------------------------| | | || AF33, AF23, AF13 | |==========+==========++=====================================| | Elastic | Default || Default, (CS0) | | |(RFC 2474)||-------------------------------------| | | || CS1 | ------------------------------------------------------------
Figure 2: Treatment Aggregate Behavior |
Notes for Figure 2: For Assured Elastic and Elastic Treatment Aggregates, please see sections 4.1.3 and 4.1.4, respectively, for details on additional priority within the Treatment Aggregate.
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The Network Control Treatment Aggregate aggregates all service classes that are functionally necessary for the survival of a network during a DOS attack or other high traffic load interval. The theory is that whatever else is true, the network must protect itself. This includes the traffic that "Diffserv Service Classes" (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594] characterizes as being included in the Network Control Service Class.
Traffic in the Network Control treatment aggregate should be carried in a common queue or class with a PHB as described in RFC 2474 (Nichols, K., Blake, S., Baker, F., and D. Black, “Definition of the Differentiated Services Field (DS Field) in the IPv4 and IPv6 Headers,” December 1998.) [RFC2474] section 4.2.2.2 for Class Selector (CS). This treatment aggregate should have a lower probability of packet loss, bearing a relatively deep target mean queue depth (min-threshold if RED (Random Early Detection) is being used).
Please notice this Network Control Treatment Aggregate is meant to be used for the customer's network control traffic. The provider may choose to treat its own network control traffic differently, perhaps in its own service class that is not aggregated with the customer's network control traffic.
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The Real Time Treatment Aggregate aggregates all real-time (inelastic) service classes. The theory is that real-time traffic is admitted under some model and controlled by a SLA managed at the edge of the network prior to aggregation. As such, there is a predictable and enforceable upper bound on the traffic that can enter such a queue, and to provide predictable variation in delay it must be protected from bursts of elastic traffic. The predictability of traffic level may be based upon admission control for a well known community of interest (e.g., a point-point service) and/or based upon historical measurements.
This treatment aggregate may include the following service classes from the Diffserv Service Classes (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594], in addition to other locally defined classes: Telephony, Signaling, Multimedia Conferencing, Real-time Interactive, Broadcast Video.
Traffic in each service class that is going to be aggregated into the treatment aggregate should be conditioned prior to aggregation. It is recommended that per service class admission control procedures be used followed by per service class policing so that any individual service class does not generate more than what it is allowed. Furthermore, additional admission control and policing may be used on the sum of all traffic aggregated into this treatment aggregate.
Traffic in the Real Time treatment aggregate should be carried in a common queue or class with a PHB (Per Hop Behavior) as described in RFC 3246 (Davie, B., Charny, A., Bennet, J., Benson, K., Le Boudec, J., Courtney, W., Davari, S., Firoiu, V., and D. Stiliadis, “An Expedited Forwarding PHB (Per-Hop Behavior),” March 2002.) [RFC3246] and RFC 3247 (Charny, A., Bennet, J., Benson, K., Boudec, J., Chiu, A., Courtney, W., Davari, S., Firoiu, V., Kalmanek, C., and K. Ramakrishnan, “Supplemental Information for the New Definition of the EF PHB (Expedited Forwarding Per-Hop Behavior),” March 2002.) [RFC3247].
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The Assured Elastic Treatment Aggregate aggregates all elastic traffic that uses the Assured Forwarding model as described in RFC 2597 (Heinanen, J., Baker, F., Weiss, W., and J. Wroclawski, “Assured Forwarding PHB Group,” June 1999.) [RFC2597]. The premise of such a service is that a SLA is negotiated which includes a "committed rate" and the ability to exceed that rate (and perhaps a second "excess rate") in exchange for a higher probability of loss using Active Queue Management (AQM) (Braden, B., Clark, D., Crowcroft, J., Davie, B., Deering, S., Estrin, D., Floyd, S., Jacobson, V., Minshall, G., Partridge, C., Peterson, L., Ramakrishnan, K., Shenker, S., Wroclawski, J., and L. Zhang, “Recommendations on Queue Management and Congestion Avoidance in the Internet,” April 1998.) [RFC2309] or Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) marking [RFC3168] (Ramakrishnan, K., Floyd, S., and D. Black, “The Addition of Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) to IP,” September 2001.) for the portion of traffic deemed to be in excess.
This treatment aggregate may include the following service classes from the Diffserv Service Classes (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594], in addition to other locally defined classes: Multimedia Streaming, Low Latency Data, OAM, High Throughput Data.
The DSCP values belonging to the AF PHB group and class selector of the original service classes remain an important consideration and should be preserved during aggregation. This treatment aggregate should maintain the AF PHB group marking of the original packet. For example, AF3x marked packets should remain AF3x marked within this treatment aggregate. In addition, the class selector DSCP value should not be changed. Traffic bearing these DSCPs is carried in a common queue or class with a PHB as described in RFC 2597 (Heinanen, J., Baker, F., Weiss, W., and J. Wroclawski, “Assured Forwarding PHB Group,” June 1999.) [RFC2597]. In effect, appropriate target rate thresholds have been applied at the edge, dividing traffic into AFn1 (committed, for any value of n), AFn2, and AFn3 (excess). The service should be engineered so that AFn1 and CS2 marked packet flows have sufficient bandwidth in the network to provide high assurance of delivery. Since the traffic is elastic and responds dynamically to packet loss, Active Queue Management (Braden, B., Clark, D., Crowcroft, J., Davie, B., Deering, S., Estrin, D., Floyd, S., Jacobson, V., Minshall, G., Partridge, C., Peterson, L., Ramakrishnan, K., Shenker, S., Wroclawski, J., and L. Zhang, “Recommendations on Queue Management and Congestion Avoidance in the Internet,” April 1998.) [RFC2309] should be used primarily to reduce the forwarding rate to the minimum assured rate at congestion points. The probability of loss of AFn1 and CS2 traffic must not exceed the probability of loss of AFn2 traffic, which in turn must not exceed the probability of loss of AFn3 traffic.
If RED [RFC2309] (Braden, B., Clark, D., Crowcroft, J., Davie, B., Deering, S., Estrin, D., Floyd, S., Jacobson, V., Minshall, G., Partridge, C., Peterson, L., Ramakrishnan, K., Shenker, S., Wroclawski, J., and L. Zhang, “Recommendations on Queue Management and Congestion Avoidance in the Internet,” April 1998.) is used as an AQM algorithm, the min-threshold specifies a target queue depth for each of AFn1+CS2, AFn2, AFn3, and the max-threshold specifies the queue depth above which all traffic with such a DSCP is dropped or ECN marked. Thus, in this Treatment Aggregate, the following inequalities SHOULD hold in queue configurations:
Note: This configuration tends to drop AFn3 traffic before AFn2 and AFn2 before AFn1 and CS2. Many other AQM algorithms exist and are used; they should be configured to achieve a similar result.
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The Elastic Treatment Aggregate aggregates all remaining elastic traffic. The premise of such a service is that there is no intrinsic SLA differentiation of traffic, but that AQM (Braden, B., Clark, D., Crowcroft, J., Davie, B., Deering, S., Estrin, D., Floyd, S., Jacobson, V., Minshall, G., Partridge, C., Peterson, L., Ramakrishnan, K., Shenker, S., Wroclawski, J., and L. Zhang, “Recommendations on Queue Management and Congestion Avoidance in the Internet,” April 1998.) [RFC2309] or ECN flagging (Ramakrishnan, K., Floyd, S., and D. Black, “The Addition of Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) to IP,” September 2001.) [RFC3168] is appropriate for such traffic.
This treatment aggregate may include the following service classes from the Diffserv Service Classes (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594], in addition to other locally defined classes: Standard, Low Priority Data.
Treatment aggregates should be well specified, each indicating the service classes it will handle. But in cases where unspecified or unknown service classes are encountered, they may be dropped or be treated using the Elastic Treatment Aggregate. The choice of how to treat unspecified service classes should be well defined, based on some agreements.
Traffic in the Elastic treatment aggregate should be carried in a common queue or class with a PHB as described in RFC 2474 (Nichols, K., Blake, S., Baker, F., and D. Black, “Definition of the Differentiated Services Field (DS Field) in the IPv4 and IPv6 Headers,” December 1998.) [RFC2474] section 4.1: A Default PHB. The AQM thresholds for Elastic traffic MAY be separately set, so that Low Priority Data traffic is dropped before Standard traffic, but this is not a requirement.
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When Treatment Aggregates are used at provider boundaries, we recommend that the Inter-Provider Relationship be based on Diffserv Service Classes (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594]. This allows the admission control into each Treatment Aggregate of a provider domain to be based on the admission control of traffic into the supported Service Classes, as indicated by the discussion in section 4 of this document.
If the Inter-Provider Relationship needs to be based on Treatment Aggregates specified by this document, then the exact Treatment Aggregate content and representation must be agreed to by the peering providers.
Some additional work on Inter-Provider Relationships is provided by Inter-provider QoS (MIT Communications Futures Program, “Inter-provider Quality of Service,” November 2006.) [MITCFPInterProviderQoS], where details on supporting realtime services between service providers are discussed. Some related work in ITU-T provided by Appendix VI of Y.1541 [ITU.Y1541.Feb2006] (International Telecommunications Union, “Network performance objectives for IP-based services,” February 2006.) may also help with inter-provider relationships, especially with international providers.
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This document discusses the policy of using Differentiated Services and its service classes. If implemented as described, it should require that the network do nothing that the network has not already allowed. If that is the case, no new security issues should arise from the use of such a policy.
As this document is based on Diffserv Service Classes (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594], the Security Consideration discussion of no new security issues indicated by Diffserv Service Classes (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594] also applies to treatment aggregates of this document.
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This document does not request any IANA considerations.
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This document has benefited from discussions with numerous people, especially Shane Amante, Brian Carpenter, and Dave McDysan. It has also benefited from detailed reviews by David Black, Marvin Krym, Bruce Davie, Fil Dickinson, and Julie Ann Connary.
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RFC 2983 on DiffServ and Tunnels (Black, D., “Differentiated Services and Tunnels,” October 2000.) [RFC2983] and RFC 3270 on MPLS Support of DiffServ (Le Faucheur, F., Wu, L., Davie, B., Davari, S., Vaananen, P., Krishnan, R., Cheval, P., and J. Heinanen, “Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS) Support of Differentiated Services,” May 2002.) [RFC3270] provide a very good background on this topic. This document provides an example of using the E-LSP, EXP Inferred PHB Scheduled Class (PSC) Label Switched Path (LSP), defined by MPLS Support of DiffServ (Le Faucheur, F., Wu, L., Davie, B., Davari, S., Vaananen, P., Krishnan, R., Cheval, P., and J. Heinanen, “Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS) Support of Differentiated Services,” May 2002.) [RFC3270] for realizing the Treatment Aggregates.
When Treatment Aggregates are represented in MPLS using EXP Inferred PSC LSP, we recommend the following usage of the MPLS EXP field for Treatment Aggregates.
------------------------------------------- |Treatment || MPLS || DSCP | DSCP | |Aggregate || EXP || name | value | |==========++======++=========|=============| | Network || 110 || CS6 | 110000 | | Control || || | | |==========++======++=========|=============| | Real || 100 || EF | 101110 | | Time || ||---------|-------------| | || || CS5 | 101000 | | || ||---------|-------------| | || ||AF41,AF42|100010,100100| | || || AF43 | 100110 | | || ||---------|-------------| | || || CS4 | 100000 | | || ||---------|-------------| | || || CS3 | 011000 | |==========++======++=========|=============| | Assured || 010* || CS2 | 010000 | | Elastic || || AF31 | 011010 | | || || AF21 | 010010 | | || || AF11 | 001010 | | ||------||---------|-------------| | || 011* || AF32 | 011100 | | || || AF22 | 010100 | | || || AF12 | 001100 | | || || AF33 | 011110 | | || || AF23 | 010110 | | || || AF13 | 001110 | |==========++======++=========|=============| | Elastic || 000* || Default | 000000 | | || || (CS0) | | | ||------||---------|-------------| | || 001* || CS1 | 001000 | -------------------------------------------
Figure 3: Treatment Aggregate and MPLS EXP Field Usage |
Notes *: For Assured Elastic (and Elastic) Treatment Aggregate, the usage of 010 or 011 (000 or 001) as EXP field value depends on the drop probability. Packets in the LSP with EXP field of 011 (001) have a higher probability of being dropped than packets with an EXP field of 010 (000).
The above table indicates the recommended usage of EXP fields for Treatment Aggregates. Because many deployments of MPLS are on a per domain basis, each domain has total control of its EXP usage and each domain may use a different EXP field allocation for the domain's supported Treatment Aggregates.
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The usage of E-LSP for Network Control Treatment Aggregate needs to adhere to the recommendations indicated in section 4.1.1 of this document and section 3.2 of "Diffserv Service Classes" (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594]. Reinforcing these recommendations, there should be no drop precedence associated with the MPLS PSC used for Network Control Treatment Aggregate because dropping of Network Control Treatment Aggregate traffic should be prevented.
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In addition to the recommendations provided in section 4.1.2 of this document and in member service classes' sections of "Diffserv Service Classes" (Babiarz, J., Chan, K., and F. Baker, “Configuration Guidelines for DiffServ Service Classes,” August 2006.) [RFC4594], we want to indicate that Real Time Treatment Aggregate traffic should not be dropped, as some of the applications whose traffic is carried in the Real Time Treatment Aggregate do not react well to dropped packets. As indicated in section 4.1.2 of this document, admission control should be performed on each Service Class contributing to the Real Time Treatment Aggregate to prevent packet loss due to insufficient resources allocated to Real Time Treatment Aggregate. Further, admission control and policing may also be applied on the sum of all traffic aggregated into this treatment aggregate.
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EXP field markings of 010 and 011 are used for the Assured Elastic Treatment Aggregate. The two encodings are used to provide two levels of drop precedence indications, with 010 encoded traffic having a lower probability of being dropped than 011 encoded traffic. This provides for the mapping of CS2, AF31, AF21, and AF11 into EXP 010; and AF32, AF22, AF12 and AF33, AF23, AF13 into EXP 011. If the domain chooses to support only one drop precedence for this treatment aggregate, we recommend the use of 010 for EXP field marking.
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EXP field markings of 000 and 001 are used for the Elastic Treatment Aggregate. The two encodings are used to provide two levels of drop precedence indications, with 000 encoded traffic having a lower probability of being dropped than 001 encoded traffic. This provides for the mapping of Default/CS0 into 000; and CS1 into 001. Notice that with this mapping, during congestion, CS1 marked traffic may be starved. If the domain chooses to support only one drop precedence for this treatment aggregate, we recommend the use of 000 for EXP field marking.
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Because L-LSP (Label Only Inferred PSC LSP) supports a single PSC per LSP, the support of each Treatment Aggregate is on a per LSP basis. This document does not further specify any additional recommendation (beyond what has been indicated in section 4 of this document) for Treatment Aggregate to L-LSP mapping, leaving this to each individual MPLS domain administrations.
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[MOON] | Choi, B., Moon, S., Zhang, Z., Papagiannaki, K., and C. Diot, “Analysis of Point-To-Point Packet Delay in an Operational Network,” INFOCOMM 2004, March 2004. |
[RENESYS] | Ogielski, A. and J. Cowie, “Internet Routing Behavior on 9/11,” March 2002. |
[RFC3086] | Nichols, K. and B. Carpenter, “Definition of Differentiated Services Per Domain Behaviors and Rules for their Specification,” RFC 3086, April 2001 (TXT). |
[MITCFPInterProviderQoS] | MIT Communications Futures Program, “Inter-provider Quality of Service,” November 2006. |
[ITU.Y1541.Feb2006] | International Telecommunications Union, “Network performance objectives for IP-based services,” February 2006. |
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Kwok Ho Chan | |
Nortel | |
600 Technology Park Drive | |
Billerica, MA 01821 | |
US | |
Phone: | +1-978-288-8175 |
Fax: | +1-978-288-8700 |
Email: | khchan@nortel.com |
Jozef Z. Babiarz | |
Nortel | |
3500 Carling Avenue | |
Ottawa, Ont. K2H 8E9 | |
Canada | |
Phone: | +1-613-763-6098 |
Fax: | +1-613-768-2231 |
Email: | babiarz@nortel.com |
Fred Baker | |
Cisco Systems | |
1121 Via Del Rey | |
Santa Barbara, CA 93117 | |
US | |
Phone: | +1-408-526-4257 |
Fax: | +1-413-473-2403 |
Email: | fred@cisco.com |
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