Internet-Draft | PM with Alternate Marking Method in SFC | March 2021 |
Mirsky, et al. | Expires 1 October 2021 | [Page] |
This document describes how the alternate marking method can be used as the efficient performance measurement method taking advantage of the actual data flows in a Service Function Chaining (SFC) domain.¶
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[RFC7665] introduced the architecture of a Service Function Chain (SFC) in the network and defined its components. These include Classifier, Service Function Forwarder (SFF), Service Function (SF), and Service Function proxy. [RFC8924] provides a reference framework for Operations, Administration and Maintenance (OAM) for SFC. [RFC8321] describes the hybrid performance measurement method, which can be used to measure packet loss, latency, and jitter on live traffic. Because this method is based on marking consecutive batches of packets, the procedure is often referred to as Alternate Marking Method (AMM).¶
This document defines how packet loss and delay metrics of a service flow over end-to-end (E2E) Service Function Path (SFP) or any SFP segment can be measured using AMM. This document is aligned with the SFC OAM Performance Measurement requirements defined in [RFC8924]. It states that any SFC-aware network device must have the ability to perform loss and delay measurements over the service function chain as a unit, i.e., E2E, or to a specific segment of service function through the SFC. Besides, AMM can be used in combination with [I-D.ietf-sfc-ioam-nsh] complementing it in achieving the SFC performance measurement objective.¶
AMM: Alternate Marking Method¶
OAM: Operations, Administration and Maintenance¶
SFC: Service Function Chain¶
SFP: Service Function Path¶
SF: Service Function¶
SFF: Service Function Forwarder¶
SPI: Service Path Identifier¶
NSH: Network Service Header¶
E2E end-to-end¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
[RFC8300] defines the format of the Network Service Header (NSH).¶
This document defines the one-bit long field, referred to as Mark field (M in Figure 1, as part of NSH Base and designated for the alternate marking performance measurement method [RFC8321]. The Mark field MUST be set to 0 at initialization of NSH and ignored on the receipt when the method is not in use. The Mark field MUST NOT be used in defining forwarding and/or quality of service treatment of an SFC packet. The Mark field MUST be used only for the performance measurement of data traffic in the SFC layer. Though the setting of the field to any value likely not affect forwarding and/or quality of service treatment of a packet, the alternate marking method in the SFC layer is characterized as an example of a hybrid performance measurement method according to [RFC7799].¶
The marking method can be successfully used in the SFC. Without limiting any generality consider SFC presented in Figure 2. Any combination of markings, Loss and/or Delay, can be applied to a service flow by any SFC component at either ingress or egress point to perform node, link, segment, or E2E measurement to detect performance degradation defects and localize them efficiently.¶
An SFP might include a Re-classifier. Processing of an SFC packet by the Re-classifier might result in that packet being directed to a different SFP identified, for example, by Service Path Identifier's (SPI) value A'. In that case, the Re-classifier MUST set the value of the Mark field according to the local AMM policy defined for the SPI's value A'. Note that the default AMM policy is to set the value of the Mark field to 0.¶
Using the marking method, a component of the SFC creates distinct sub-flows in the particular service traffic over SFC. Each sub-flow consists of consecutive blocks that are unambiguously recognizable by a monitoring point at any component of the SFC and can be measured to calculate packet loss and/or packet delay metrics.¶
As explained in the [RFC8321], marking can be applied to delineate blocks of packets based either on the equal number of packets in a block or based on the same time interval. The latter method offers better control as it allows a better account for capabilities of downstream nodes to report statistics related to batches of packets and, at the same time, time resolution that affects defect detection interval.¶
The Mark flag is used to create distinctive flows to measure the packet loss by switching the value of the Mark flag every N-th packet or at specified time intervals. Delay metrics MAY be calculated with the alternate flow using any of the following methods:¶
There is also a scheme that method allows measurement of minimum and maximum delays for the monitored flow using a single marking flag. This methodology is described in [I-D.mizrahi-ippm-compact-alternate-marking]. The concept is that in the middle of each block of packets with a certain value of the M flag, a single packet has the M flag inverted. By examining the stream, the packets with the inverted bit can be easily identified and employed for delay measurement. This variation of AMM is advantageous because it requires only one bit from each packet, and such bits are always in short supply.¶
Residence time is the variable part of the propagation delay that a packet experiences while traversing a network, e.g., SFC. Residence Time over an SFC is the sum of the nodal residence times, i.e., periods that the packet spent in each SFF that composes the SFC. The nodal residence time in SFC itself is the sum of sub-nodal residence times that the packet spent in each of SFs that are part of the given SFC and are mapped to the SFF. The residence time and deviation of the residence time metrics may include any combination of minimum, maximum values over the measurement period. It also may include mean, median, and percentiles calculated values. These metrics may be used to evaluate the performance of the SFC and its elements before and during its operation.¶
Use of the specially marked packets simplifies residence time measurement and correlation of the measured metrics over the E2E SFC. For example, AMM may be used as described in Section 4.2 to identify packets in the data flow to be used to measure the residence time. The nodal and sub-nodal residence time metrics can be locally calculated and then collected using either in-band or out-band OAM mechanisms.¶
This document requests IANA to allocate the one-bit field from NSH Base Header Bits [RFC8300] as the Mark field of NSH as the following:¶
Bit Position | Description | Reference |
---|---|---|
TBA | Mark field | This document |
This document defines the use of AMM in an SFC domain and thus all security considerations specific to SFC discussed in [RFC7665] and [RFC8300] are applicable. By introducing AMM into the SFC environment, it inherits all security considerations discussed in [RFC8321]. A new Mark flag is defined in this specification to be used by AMM. Processing of AMM does require additional computational resources and creates a certain amount of state information per AMM flow performance metrics. An implementation MUST provide control over the number of concurrent AMM flows that a node process.¶
TBD¶