Internet-Draft | Destination-IP-Origin-AS Filter | February 2022 |
Wang, et al. | Expires 16 August 2022 | [Page] |
BGP Flowspec mechanism (BGP-FS) [RFC8955] [RFC8956] propagates both traffic Flow Specifications and Traffic Filtering Actions by making use of the BGP NLRI and the BGP Extended Community encoding formats. This document specifies a new BGP-FS component type to support AS-level filtering. The match field is the origin AS number of the destination IP address that is encoded in the Flowspec NLRI. This function is applied in a single administrative domain.¶
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 [RFC2119].¶
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BGP Flow Specification (BGP-FS) [RFC8955] [RFC8956] defines a new BGP NLRI to distribute traffic flow specification rules via BGP ([RFC4271]). BGP-FS policies have a match condition that may be n-tuple match in a policy, and an action that modifies the packet and forwards/drops the packet. Via BGP, new filter rules can be sent to all BGP peers simultaneously without changing router configuration, and the BGP peer can install these routes in the forwarding table. BGP-FS defines Network Layer Reachability Information (NLRI) format used to distribute traffic flow specification rules. NLRI (AFI=1, SAFI=133) is for IPv4 unicast filtering. NLRI (AFI=1, SAFI=134) is for BGP/MPLS VPN filtering.[I-D.ietf-idr-flowspec-l2vpn][I-D.ietf-idr-flowspec-l2vpn] extends the flow-spec rules for layer 2 Ethernet packets.¶
This document specifies a new BGP-FS component type to support AS-level filtering. The match field is the origin AS number of the destination IP address that is encoded in the Flowspec NLRI. This function is applied in a single administrative domain.¶
This document proposes a new flow specification component type that is encoded in the BGP Flowspec NLRI. The following new component type is defined.¶
Type TBD1 - Destination-IP-Origin-AS¶
Encoding: <type (1 octet), [op, value]+>¶
Contains a set of {operator, value} pairs that are used to match the Destination-IP-Origin-AS (i.e. the origin AS number of the destination IP address).¶
The operator byte is encoded as:¶
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+ | e | a | len | 0 |lt |gt |eq | +---+---+---+---+---+---+---+---+¶
Where:¶
e - end-of-list bit. Set in the last {op, value} pair in the list.¶
a - AND bit. If unset, the previous term is logically ORed with the current one. If set, the operation is a logical AND. It MUST be unset in the Destination-IP-Origin-AS filter.¶
len - The length of the value field for this operator given as (1 << len). This encodes 1 (len=00), 2 (len=01), 4 (len=10), and 8 (len=11) octets.¶
lt - less than comparison between data and value.¶
gt - greater than comparison between data and value.¶
eq - equality between data and value.¶
The bits lt, gt, and eq can be combined to produce match the Destination-IP-Origin-AS filter or a range of Destination-IP-Origin-AS filter(e.g. less than AS1 and greater than AS2).¶
The value field is encoded as:¶
0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 +---------------------------------------------------------------+ ~ Destination-IP-Origin-AS (4 octets) ~ +---------------------------------------------------------------+¶
Per section 10 of [RFC8955] , If a receiving BGP speaker cannot support this new Flow Specification component type, it MUST discard the NLRI value field that contains such unknown components. Since the NLRI field encoding (Section 4 of [RFC8955]) is defined in the form of a 2-tuple <length, NLRI value>, message decoding can skip over the unknown NLRI value and continue with subsequent remaining NLRI.¶
This section describes how to use this function in a simple scenario. Considering the topology shown in Figure 1. In AS64597's R1, if the ISP AS64597 wants to redirect all packets originating from IP Prefix 61 to AS64598, first go to R3, then forward them to AS64598", the ISP AS64597 can use the traditional method or the method defining in this draft.¶
+---------+ | BGP FS | | Server | +----|----+ | | / / ************/************ IP Prefix 81 * / * IP Prefix 82 IP Prefix 61 * / AS64597 * IP Prefix 83 * / * IP Prefix 84 +-------+ * +---+/ +---+ * +-------+ +AS64596+-------+ R1+---------+ R2|------+AS64598+ +-------+ * +-+-+\ +---+ */ +-------+ * \ |\ / * \ | \ /* IP Prefix 91 * \ | /\* IP Prefix 92 * \ | / \ IP Prefix 93 * \ |/ *\ IP Prefix 94 * \ +-+-+ * \ +-------+ * \-+ R3+------+AS64599+ * +---+ * +-------+ * * ************************* Figure 1: Redirect the traffic using Flowspec¶
Using the traditional method, the ISP AS64597 needs to setup multiple "Destination Prefix + Source Prefix" rules in Router R1 as following:¶
+--------------+--------------+-------------------------+ | Destination | Source Prefix| Redirect to IP Nexthop | | Prefix | | | +--------------+--------------+-------------------------+ | IP Prefix 81 | IP Prefix 61 | R3 | +--------------+--------------+-------------------------+ | IP Prefix 82 | IP Prefix 61 | R3 | +--------------+--------------+-------------------------+ | IP Prefix 83 | IP Prefix 61 | R3 | +--------------+--------------+-------------------------+ | IP Prefix 84 | IP Prefix 61 | R3 | +--------------+--------------+-------------------------+ | More... | +--------------+--------------+-------------------------+ Figure 2: Using the traditional method to redirect the traffic¶
Using the method defining in this draft, the ISP AS64597 needs to setup only one "Destination Origin AS + Source Prefix" rule in Router R1 as following:¶
+--------------+--------------+-------------------------+ | Destination | Source Prefix| Redirect to IP Nexthop | | IP Origin AS | | | +--------------+--------------+-------------------------+ | 64598 | IP Prefix 61 | R3 | +--------------+--------------+-------------------------+ Figure 3: Using the AS-level filtering method to redirect the traffic¶
Obviously, the new method defining in this draft saves a lot of entry spaces on the control plane and forwarding plane, and it would greatly simplify the operation of the control plane, and the more destination prefixes an AS has, the more obvious the benefit.¶
No new security issues are introduced to the BGP protocol by this specification.¶
IANA is requested to a new entry in "Flow Spec component types registry" with the following values:¶
+----------------------------------------------------------+ | Type | RFC or Draft | Description | +----------------------------------------------------------+ | TBD1 | This Draft | Destination-IP-Origin-AS | +----------------------------------------------------------+¶
TBD¶
The authors would like to acknowledge the review and inputs from Gang Yan, Zhenbin Li, Rainbow Wu, Jie Dong and Ziqing Cao.¶