Migration Considerations and Techniques for Multiprotocol Label Switching Transport
Profile based Networks and Services
draft-sprecher-mpls-tp-migration-03.txt
Abstract
MPLS-TP defines a packet-based network architecture and a comprehensive set
of tools that allow service providers to reliably deliver next generation services
and applications, in a simple, scalable, and cost-effective way. Such services
are BW-hungry based and require strict guaranteed SLA. Delivering next generation
services over an MPLS-TP based network in an economic way, enables service providers
to remain competitive while increasing their revenues.
This document presents the motivations for migrating from different legacy transport
networks and services to MPLS-TP, and discusses the considerations and strategies
for the migration.
The document also proposes specific activities and techniques needed to ensure
a smooth migration path from the different transport networks and services to MPLS-TP.
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Table of Contents
1.
Introduction
1.1.
Overview of MPLS-TP
1.2.
Motivations for Upgrading Networks
2.
Terminology and References
2.1.
Acronyms
3.
General Migration Strategies
3.1.
Island model
3.2.
Phased model
3.3.
Integrated model
4.
Migrating from TDM
4.1.
Main motivation
4.2.
Migration Activities and Techniques
5.
Migrating from ATM
5.1.
Main motivation
5.2.
Migration activities and Techniques
6.
Migrating from Ethernet
6.1.
Main motivation
6.2.
Migration activities and Techniques
7.
Migrating from MPLS
7.1.
MPLS-TE
7.1.1.
Main motivation
7.1.2.
Migration activities and Techniques
7.2.
IP/MPLS
7.2.1.
Main motivation
7.2.2.
Migration activities and Techniques
8.
Migrating from pre-standard MPLS-TP (T-MPLS)
8.1.
Main motivation
8.2.
Migration activities and Techniques
9.
Manageability Considerations
10.
Security Considerations
11.
IANA Considerations
12.
Acknowledgments
13.
References
13.1.
Normative References
13.2.
Informative References
§
Authors' Addresses
Editors' Note:
This Informational Internet-Draft is aimed at achieving IETF Consensus before
publication as an RFC and will be subject to an IETF Last Call.
[RFC Editor, please remove this note before publication as an RFC and insert the
correct Streams Boilerplate to indicate that the published RFC has IETF Consensus.]
1.
Introduction
1.1.
Overview of MPLS-TP
The Transport Profile for MPLS (MPLS-TP) is being specified in the IETF
as part of a joint effort with the ITU-T to develop a definition of the MPLS
network that will fulfill the strict requirements for transport networks that
are accepted by the ITU-T. This profile will be based on the definitions of
the MPLS, MPLS Traffic Engineering, and Multi-Segment Pseudo-Wire architectures
defined in [RFC3031] (Rosen, E., Viswanathan, A., and R. Callon, “Multiprotocol Label Switching Architecture,” January 2001.), [RFC3985] (Bryant, S. and P. Pate, “Pseudo Wire Emulation Edge-to-Edge (PWE3) Architecture,” March 2005.), and
[RFC5659] (Bocci, M. and S. Bryant, “An Architecture for Multi-Segment Pseudo Wire Emulation Edge-to-Edge,” October 2009.).
The requirements for MPLS-TP are detailed in [RFC5654] (Niven-Jenkins, B., Ed., Brungard, D., Ed., Betts, M., Ed., Sprecher, N., and S. Ueno, “Requirements of an MPLS Transport Profile,” February 2009.). These
requirements were developed in full cooperation between the IETF and ITU-T, and
reflect the needs to adhere to the architecture of MPLS while including the
enhanced level of service transparency, and Operations, Administration, and
Maintenance (OAM) functionality required for stable transport networks. The
requirements for the OAM functionality are further developed and defined in
[MPLS‑TP‑OAM] (Busi, I., Ed. and B. Niven-Jenkins, Ed., “Requirements for OAM in MPLS Transport Networks,” .), providing the list of OAM procedures to be
supported by MPLS-TP.
The architecture for MPLS-TP is defined in [RFC5921] (Bocci, M., Ed., Bryant, S., Ed., Frost, D., Ed., Levrau, L., Ed., and L. Berger, Ed., “A Framework for MPLS in Transport Networks,” .)
and builds upon the experience of the MPLS architecture. The architecture is
designed to allow MPLS-TP networks to operate whether the configuration was
implemented by use of control-plane signaling or a management application.
In addition, the MPLS-TP architecture is designed to support networks that may
not be using IP forwarding and addressing. The framework defines the different
service structures supported by MPLS-TP and the interworking between these
service structures and existing MPLS services. Also defined are the characteristics
of the profile that defines MPLS-TP. This synergy of architectures guarantees the
service provider the ability to provide services with guaranteed and strict Service
Level Agreements in a highly scalable robust network while reducing operational costs.
A main focus of MPLS-TP is the definition of OAM functionality for MPLS
data paths that support the transport services. MPLS-TP provides a comprehensive
set of OAM tools for fault management and performance monitoring, supporting the
network and the services at different nested levels (i.e. at the end-to-end level,
a segment of a path, and link level). The OAM tools may be used to monitor the
network infrastructure, to enhance the general behavior, and performance level of
the network. The tools may also be used to monitor the service level offered to
the end customer, allowing verification of the SLA parameters, and enabling rapid
response in the event of a failure or service degradation. The OAM tools help
reduce OPEX, minimizing the overhead of trouble shooting, and enhancing customer
satisfaction which, in turn, helps to enable the delivery of high-margin premium
services.
The architectural constructs and the methodology of the OAM functionality is
defined by [MPLS‑TP‑OAM‑Fwk] (Busi, I., Ed. and B. Niven-Jenkins, Ed., “A Framework for MPLS in Transport Networks,” .). This includes the definition of
the transport entities that are monitored by the OAM procedures and detailed
description of how the OAM procedures are applied to these transport entities.
A central issue in MPLS-TP OAM is the independence of the OAM from the existence of an
operational control plane in the network. This feature is supported by the
creation of an in-band control channel that is used to transmit the OAM
procedures across the transport paths. A cornerstone of the definition of the
OAM procedures is to use existing IETF OAM tools as the basis of the MPLS-TP
OAM procedures wherever possible, this principle is used as the underlying
foundation for the definition of the OAM tools defined for MPLS-TP.
Protection mechanisms for the MPLS-TP transport paths are described in
[MPLS‑TP‑Surviv] (Sprecher, N. and A. Farrel, “Multiprotocol Label Switching Transport Profile Survivability Framework,” .) and are conformed with different topological
configurations of the network.
1.2.
Motivations for Upgrading Networks
The growth of packet traffic has significantly increased, driven by the high demand
and penetration of new packet-based services and multimedia applications, across the
access, aggregation and core networks and is expected to continue to increase.
With the movement toward packet-based services, the transport network has to evolve
to encompass the provision of packet-aware capabilities while enabling carriers to
leverage their installed, as well as planned, transport infrastructure investments.
Carriers are in need of technologies capable of efficiently supporting packet-based
services and applications on their transport networks with guaranteed Service Level
Agreements (SLAs). The need to increase their revenue while remaining competitive
forces operators to look for the lowest network Total Cost of Ownership (TCO), and
as such requires investment in equipment and facilities (Capital Expenditure (CAPEX))
and Operational Expenditure (OPEX) be minimized.
There are a number of technology options for carriers to meet the challenge of increased
service sophistication and transport efficiency, with increasing usage of hybrid packet-transport
and circuit-transport technology solutions. To address this challenge, it is essential that
packet-transport technology be available that can provide reliability, operational simplicity -
preserving the look and feel to which service providers have accustomed, multi-layer operations,
resiliency, control, and multi-technology management.
Transport carriers require control and deterministic usage of network resources. They need
end-to-end control to engineer network paths and to efficiently utilize network resources.
They require capabilities to support static (management-plane-based) or dynamic (control-plane-based)
provisioning of deterministic, protected, and secured services and their associated resources. For
transport carriers, it is also important to ensure smooth interworking of the packet transport network
with other existing/legacy packet networks, and provide mappings to enable packet transport carriage
over a variety of transport network infrastructures.
MPLS is a maturing packet technology and it is already playing an important role in transport
networks and services. The development of MPLS-TP has proposed a set of compatible technology
enhancements to existing MPLS standards to extent the definition of MPLS toward supporting traditional
transport operational models. These enhancements inherit all the supporting QoS, recovery, control and
data plane mechanisms already defined within standards. MPLS-TP will enable the deployment of packet-based
transport networks that will efficiently scale to support packet services in a simple and cost-effective
way.
2.
Terminology and References
2.1.
Acronyms
This draft uses the following acronyms:
MPLS-TP |
Multiprotocol Label Switching - Transport Protocol |
OAM |
Operations, Administration, and Maintenance |
3.
General Migration Strategies
A migration strategy is necessary for service providers to maintain their installed
base and minimize the investment in new equipment. The migration should be a smooth and
seamless transfer of technology while continuing to support the services that generate
the revenues. This means that the migration strategy should address the following
considerations:
- Cost-effective – Minimize the number of migration steps, stay within budget for
both operating (OPEX) and capital (CAPEX) expenses.
- Service continuity – perform the switchover without a service break to existing
customers and their services.
- Provide a reliable fall-back – don't burn your bridges until the new connections
are secure and robust enough to maintain the service-level agreements.
- Minimum switchover time – when everything is in place need to minimize the
side-effects by minimizing the time needed to have the new service platform performing.
- Aspects of data-plane, OAM and recovery mechanisms, control plane and management-plane
Different migration models have been discussed in the literature. The most basic
model, forklifting the new technology, in our case MPLS-TP, onto the network involves
simultaneously upgrading the entire network to work with the new technology. This
type of migration is very risky if the new technology does not work as expected in
the live network after disabling the legacy technology. In order to minimize the risk,
it could be possible to install an entire parallel network based on MPLS-TP and then
switch over from the legacy network to the MPLS-TP network. However, this would be very
costly, i.e. purchasing equipment for two parallel networks, and again could not
guarantee that the new technology network would work as planned. This, in turn, would
cause a major disruption of services. Therefore, in the following descriptions we
concentrate on the following models:
- Island model – introducing the MPLS-TP in separate sub-domains of the
network. The transport paths may cross the different technology domains that are
connected by gateways. See section 3.1 for more details.
- Phased model – where the existing equipment is slowly upgraded with new
MPLS-TP capabilities as needed. For more details see section 3.2.
- Integrated model – network nodes are either legacy nodes or dual-mode
nodes supporting both legacy and MPLS-TP capabilities. See section 3.3 for more
details.
It should be noted that not all of these models are relevant to migration from
specific legacy technologies. The relevance for each technology of the particular
migration model will be discussed in the sections below that discuss the specific
technologies.
3.1.
Island model
In this migration model presented previously in [RFC5145] (Shiomoto, K., “Framework for MPLS-TE to GMPLS Migration,” March 2008.) the
service provider introduces clusters of MPLS-TP nodes that are interconnected with
the legacy clusters through border nodes. The border nodes act as gateways, that
are responsible for the mapping or adaptation of protocol elements that may be
transmitted between legacy and MPLS-TP nodes.
End-to-end services may traverse between the islands. The configuration of the
transport paths may be "balanced" or "unbalanced". In a
balanced path configuration both endpoints of the path are nodes of the same
technology, but the path may have crossed islands of the other technology in the
middle of the path, see Figure 1 (Balanced island path). An unbalanced path
configuration would be if the path starts at a node of one technology and ends
at a node supporting the second technology, see Figure 1 (Balanced island path).
+----+ +--+ +----+ +--+ +----+ +--+ +----+
|Lgcy| |LN| |Brdr| |TP| |Brdr| |LN| |Lgcy|
| |==========| |==========| |=========| |
..|........Service...Transport...Path.................|...
| |==========| |==========| |=========| |
|Conn| | | |Gtwy| | | |Gtwy| | | |Conn|
+----+ +--+ +----+ +--+ +----+ +--+ +----+
. . . . . .
| Legacy | | MPLS-TP | | Legacy |
|<----Island---->| |<---Island--->| |<---Island--->|
LN - one or more Legacy Nodes
TP - one or more MPLS-TP LSR
Brdr Gtwy - Border node that acts as gateway
Lgcy Conn - Legacy node that where service connects
Figure 1: Balanced island path
|
+----+ +--+ +----+ +--+ +----+
|Lgcy| |LN| |Brdr| |TP| | TP |
| |==========| |==========| |
....|...Service...Transport...Path.......|...
| |==========| |==========| |
|Conn| | | |Gtwy| | | |Conn|
+----+ +--+ +----+ +--+ +----+
. . . .
| Legacy | | MPLS-TP |
|<----Island---->| |<---Island--->|
LN - one or more Legacy Nodes
TP - one or more MPLS-TP LSR
Brdr Gtwy - Border node that acts as gateway
Lgcy Conn - Legacy node that where service connects
TP Conn - MPLS-TP LER
Figure 2: Unbalanced island path
|
The tools that may be used at the border, gateway, nodes may be based
on either layered networks – only when using balanced islands, or
on an interworking or mapping function between protocols. An MPLS-TP
island would provide the layered network solution through the use of
an LSP between TE-links to carry legacy traffic, when possible.
This model is very useful when upgrading the network in stages, where
new MPLS-TP equipment is upgraded in clusters that form an island. These
islands can be slowly expanded and merged until they create a single
MPLS-TP network. Whenever the islands are expanded or merged make-before-break
procedures should be employed in order to keep services running.
3.2.
Phased model
In this model the existing equipment is upgraded with the features and
functionality of the new technology. The new functionality is introduced as
needed, while ensuring interoperability with the legacy technology. This is
highly dependent upon the equipment to support the new functionality and the
support of all the vendors to implement the same functionality.
The advantage of this model is that it allows the service provider to
quickly support enhanced capabilities on his existing equipment. However,
this model is not applicable to all legacy technologies. For this to work
the new capabilities need to be backward compatible with the legacy
technology, and all of the vendors, involved in the migration, need to
implement the new capabilities specified by the service provider.
3.3.
Integrated model
This model allows the operator to run services over two clouds of the
network simultaneously. One cloud would continue to support the legacy
technology, while the second cloud would support the new MPLS-TP services.
The services would be routed to the proper cloud by new "dual-mode"
nodes that would support an integrated MPLS-TP and legacy functionality, see
Figure 3 (Integrated model network). These dual-mode nodes would route the different
services to the paths in the different technology clouds. This avoids the
need for interworking that is required in the island model described in
section 3.1.
______________________________________
_/ Service Provider's Network \
/ ____ ___ ____ \___
_/ _/ \___/ \ _/ \__ \
/ / \__/ ... \_ \___
/ / ....... ... \ \
| +--------| ...Legacy Logical Network .. |---+ |
| |.........\.. .. .. ../....| |
| |. \ ___.... ___ __ _/ .| |
| +----+ \_/ \____/ \___/ \____/ +----+ |
....|Dual| |Dual|...
| | | | | |
****|Mode| ____ ___ ____ |Mode|***
| +----+ _/ \___/ \ _/ \__ +----+ |
\ | * / \__/ \_ *| |
\ | ******* /*** **\****| /
\ +--------| ***MPLS-TP Logical Ntwrk*** |---+ /
\____ \ *** ***** ***** / |
\ \ ___ ****___ ***__ _/ /
\ \_/ \____/ \___/ \____/ ___/
\____________________________________/
.... - Legacy service path
**** - MPLS-TP service path
Figure 3: Integrated model network
|
Gradual migration is supported by this model. The dual-mode nodes are
either legacy nodes that are upgraded to support MPLS-TP functionality.
Services can be switched gradually from the legacy transport paths to the
MPLS-TP paths as they become available, using make-before-break procedures.
Eventually, as all the service paths are transferred to MPLS-TP the legacy
technology cloud can be taken off-line.
4.
Migrating from TDM
4.1.
Main motivation
4.2.
Migration Activities and Techniques
5.
Migrating from ATM
5.1.
Main motivation
5.2.
Migration activities and Techniques
6.
Migrating from Ethernet
6.1.
Main motivation
6.2.
Migration activities and Techniques
7.
Migrating from MPLS
7.1.
MPLS-TE
7.1.1.
Main motivation
7.1.2.
Migration activities and Techniques
7.2.
IP/MPLS
7.2.1.
Main motivation
7.2.2.
Migration activities and Techniques
8.
Migrating from pre-standard MPLS-TP (T-MPLS)
8.1.
Main motivation
8.2.
Migration activities and Techniques
9.
Manageability Considerations
10.
Security Considerations
11.
IANA Considerations
This informational document makes no requests for IANA action.
12.
Acknowledgments
13.
References
13.1. Normative References
[RFC5654] |
Niven-Jenkins, B., Ed., Brungard, D., Ed., Betts, M., Ed., Sprecher, N., and S. Ueno, “Requirements of an MPLS Transport Profile,” RFC 5317, February 2009. |
[MPLS-TP-OAM] |
Busi, I., Ed. and B. Niven-Jenkins, Ed., “Requirements for OAM in MPLS Transport Networks,” draft-ietf-mpls-tp-oam-requirements, Work in Progress. |
[MPLS-TP-OAM-Fwk] |
Busi, I., Ed. and B. Niven-Jenkins, Ed., “A Framework for MPLS in Transport Networks,” draft-ietf-mpls-tp-oam-framework, Work in Progress. |
[MPLS-TP-Surviv] |
Sprecher, N. and A. Farrel, “Multiprotocol Label Switching Transport
Profile Survivability Framework,” draft-ietf-mpls-tp-survive-fwk, Work in Progress. |
13.2. Informative References
[RFC3985] |
Bryant, S. and P. Pate, “Pseudo Wire Emulation Edge-to-Edge (PWE3) Architecture,” RFC 3985, March 2005. |
[RFC3031] |
Rosen, E., Viswanathan, A., and R. Callon, “Multiprotocol Label Switching Architecture,” RFC 3031, January 2001. |
[RFC5659] |
Bocci, M. and S. Bryant, “An Architecture for Multi-Segment Pseudo Wire Emulation
Edge-to-Edge,” RFC 5659, October 2009. |
[RFC5145] |
Shiomoto, K., “Framework for MPLS-TE to GMPLS Migration,” RFC 5145, March 2008. |
[RFC5921] |
Bocci, M., Ed., Bryant, S., Ed., Frost, D., Ed., Levrau, L., Ed., and L. Berger, Ed., “A Framework for MPLS in Transport Networks,” RFC 5921. |
[RFC5920] |
Levrau, L., Ed., “A Framework for MPLS in Transport Networks,” RFC 5920. |
Authors' Addresses
|
Nurit Sprecher |
|
Nokia Siemens Networks |
|
3 Hanagar St. Neve Ne'eman B |
|
Hod Hasharon, 45241 |
|
Israel |
Email: |
nurit.sprecher@nsn.com |
| |
|
Yaacov Weingarten |
|
Nokia Siemens Networks |
|
3 Hanagar St. Neve Ne'eman B |
|
Hod Hasharon, 45241 |
|
Israel |
Email: |
yaacov.weingarten@nsn.com |
| |
|
Kyung-Yeop Hong |
|
Cisco Systems, Inc. |
|
300 Beaver Brook Road |
|
Boxborough, Massachusetts 01719 |
|
USA |
Email: |
hongk@cisco.com |
| |
|
Luyuan Fang |
|
Cisco Systems, Inc. |
|
300 Beaver Brook Road |
|
Boxborough, MA 01719 |
|
USA |
Email: |
lufang@cisco.com |