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diff --git a/doc/rfc/rfc3946.txt b/doc/rfc/rfc3946.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8a081c0 --- /dev/null +++ b/doc/rfc/rfc3946.txt @@ -0,0 +1,1459 @@ + + + + + + +Network Working Group E. Mannie +Request for Comments: 3946 Consultant +Category: Standards Track D. Papadimitriou + Alcatel + October 2004 + + + Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching (GMPLS) Extensions for + Synchronous Optical Network (SONET) and + Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) Control + +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. + +Copyright Notice + + Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004). + +Abstract + + This document is a companion to the Generalized Multi-Protocol Label + Switching (GMPLS) signaling. It defines the Synchronous Optical + Network (SONET)/Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH) technology + specific information needed when using GMPLS signaling. + +Table of Contents + + 1. Introduction ................................................. 2 + 2. SONET and SDH Traffic Parameters ............................. 2 + 2.1. SONET/SDH Traffic Parameters ........................... 3 + 2.2. RSVP-TE Details ........................................ 9 + 2.3. CR-LDP Details ......................................... 9 + 3. SONET and SDH Labels ......................................... 10 + 4. Acknowledgments .............................................. 15 + 5. Security Considerations ...................................... 16 + 6. IANA Considerations .......................................... 16 + 7. References ................................................... 16 + 7.1. Normative References ................................... 16 + Appendix 1 - Signal Type Values Extension for VC-3 ............... 18 + Annex 1 - Examples ............................................... 18 + Contributors ..................................................... 21 + Authors' Addresses ............................................... 25 + Full Copyright Statement ......................................... 26 + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 1] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + +1. Introduction + + As described in [RFC3945], Generalized MPLS (GMPLS) extends MPLS from + supporting packet (Packet Switching Capable - PSC) interfaces and + switching to include support of four new classes of interfaces and + switching: Layer-2 Switch Capable (L2SC), Time-Division Multiplex + (TDM), Lambda Switch Capable (LSC) and Fiber-Switch Capable (FSC). A + functional description of the extensions to MPLS signaling needed to + support the new classes of interfaces and switching is provided in + [RFC3471]. [RFC3473] describes RSVP-TE specific formats and + mechanisms needed to support all five classes of interfaces, and CR- + LDP extensions can be found in [RFC3472]. This document presents + details that are specific to Synchronous Optical Network + (SONET)/Synchronous Digital Hierarchy (SDH). Per [RFC3471], + SONET/SDH specific parameters are carried in the signaling protocol + in traffic parameter specific objects. + + 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]. + + Moreover, the reader is assumed to be familiar with the terminology + in ANSI [T1.105], ITU-T [G.707] as well as [RFC3471], [RFC3472], and + [RFC3473]. The following abbreviations are used in this document: + + DCC: Data Communications Channel. + LOVC: Lower Order Virtual Container + HOVC: Higher Order Virtual Container + MS: Multiplex Section. + MSOH: Multiplex Section overhead. + POH: Path overhead. + RS: Regenerator Section. + RSOH: Regenerator section overhead. + SDH: Synchronous digital hierarchy. + SOH: Section overhead. + SONET: Synchronous Optical Network. + SPE: Synchronous Payload Envelope. + STM(-N): Synchronous Transport Module (-N) (SDH). + STS(-N): Synchronous Transport Signal-Level N (SONET). + VC-n: Virtual Container-n (SDH). + VTn: Virtual Tributary-n (SONET). + +2. SONET and SDH Traffic Parameters + + This section defines the GMPLS traffic parameters for SONET/SDH. The + protocol specific formats, for the SONET/SDH-specific RSVP-TE objects + and CR-LDP TLVs are described in sections 2.2 and 2.3 respectively. + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 2] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + These traffic parameters specify indeed a base set of capabilities + for SONET ANSI [T1.105] and SDH ITU-T [G.707] such as concatenation + and transparency. Other documents may further enhance this set of + capabilities in the future. For instance, signaling for SDH over PDH + ITU-T G.832 or sub-STM-0 ITU-T G.708 interfaces could be defined. + + The traffic parameters defined hereafter (see Section 2.1) MUST be + used when the label is encoded as SUKLM as defined in this memo (see + Section 3). They MUST also be used when requesting one of Section/RS + or Line/MS overhead transparent STS-1/STM-0, STS-3*N/STM-N (N=1, 4, + 16, 64, 256) signals. + + The traffic parameters and label encoding defined in [RFC3471], + Section 3.2, MUST be used for fully transparent STS-1/STM-0, + STS-3*N/STM-N (N=1, 4, 16, 64, 256) signal requests. A fully + transparent signal is one for which all overhead is left unmodified + by intermediate nodes, i.e., when all defined Transparency (T) bits + would be set if the traffic parameters defined in section 2.1 were + used. + +2.1. SONET/SDH Traffic Parameters + + The traffic parameters for SONET/SDH are organized as follows: + + 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 + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + | Signal Type | RCC | NCC | + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + | NVC | Multiplier (MT) | + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + | Transparency (T) | + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + | Profile (P) | + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + + Annex 1 lists examples of SONET and SDH signal coding. + + Signal Type (ST): 8 bits + + This field indicates the type of Elementary Signal that comprises the + requested LSP. Several transforms can be applied successively on the + Elementary Signal to build the Final Signal being actually requested + for the LSP. + + Each transform application is optional and must be ignored if zero, + except the Multiplier (MT) that cannot be zero and is ignored if + equal to one. + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 3] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + Transforms must be applied strictly in the following order: + + - First, contiguous concatenation (by using the RCC and NCC fields) + can be optionally applied on the Elementary Signal, resulting in a + contiguously concatenated signal. + + - Second, virtual concatenation (by using the NVC field) can be + optionally applied on the Elementary Signal resulting in a + virtually concatenated signal. + + - Third, some transparency (by using the Transparency field) can be + optionally specified when requesting a frame as signal rather than + an SPE or VC based signal. + + - Fourth, a multiplication (by using the Multiplier field) can be + optionally applied either directly on the Elementary Signal, or on + the contiguously concatenated signal obtained from the first + phase, or on the virtually concatenated signal obtained from the + second phase, or on these signals combined with some transparency. + + Permitted Signal Type values for SONET/SDH are: + + Value Type (Elementary Signal) + ----- ------------------------ + 1 VT1.5 SPE / VC-11 + 2 VT2 SPE / VC-12 + 3 VT3 SPE + 4 VT6 SPE / VC-2 + 5 STS-1 SPE / VC-3 + 6 STS-3c SPE / VC-4 + 7 STS-1 / STM-0 (only when requesting transparency) + 8 STS-3 / STM-1 (only when requesting transparency) + 9 STS-12 / STM-4 (only when requesting transparency) + 10 STS-48 / STM-16 (only when requesting transparency) + 11 STS-192 / STM-64 (only when requesting transparency) + 12 STS-768 / STM-256 (only when requesting transparency) + + A dedicated signal type is assigned to a SONET STS-3c SPE instead of + coding it as a contiguous concatenation of three STS-1 SPEs. This is + done in order to provide easy interworking between SONET and SDH + signaling. + + Appendix 1 adds one signal type (optional) to the above values. + + Requested Contiguous Concatenation (RCC): 8 bits + + This field is used to request the optional SONET/SDH contiguous + concatenation of the Elementary Signal. + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 4] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + This field is a vector of flags. Each flag indicates the support of + a particular type of contiguous concatenation. Several flags can be + set at the same time to indicate a choice. + + These flags allow an upstream node to indicate to a downstream node + the different types of contiguous concatenation that it supports. + However, the downstream node decides which one to use according to + its own rules. + + A downstream node receiving simultaneously more than one flag chooses + a particular type of contiguous concatenation, if any supported, and + based on criteria that are out of this document scope. A downstream + node that doesn't support any of the concatenation types indicated by + the field must refuse the LSP request. In particular, it must refuse + the LSP request if it doesn't support contiguous concatenation at + all. + + When several flags have been set, the upstream node retrieves the + (single) type of contiguous concatenation the downstream node has + selected by looking at the position indicated by the first label and + the number of label(s) as returned by the downstream node (see also + Section 3). + + The entire field is set to zero to indicate that no contiguous + concatenation is requested at all (default value). A non-zero field + indicates that some contiguous concatenation is requested. + + The following flag is defined: + + Flag 1 (bit 1): Standard contiguous concatenation. + + Flag 1 indicates that the standard SONET/SDH contiguous concatenation + as defined in [T1.105]/[G.707] is supported. Note that bit 1 is the + low order bit. Other flags are reserved for extensions, if not used + they must be set to zero when sent, and should be ignored when + received. + + See note 1 hereafter in the section on the NCC about the SONET + contiguous concatenation of STS-1 SPEs when the number of components + is a multiple of three. + + Number of Contiguous Components (NCC): 16 bits + + This field indicates the number of identical SONET SPEs/SDH VCs + (i.e., Elementary Signal) that are requested to be concatenated, as + specified in the RCC field. + + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 5] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + Note 1: when requesting a SONET STS-Nc SPE with N=3*X, the + Elementary Signal to use must always be an STS-3c_SPE signal type + and the value of NCC must always be equal to X. This allows also + facilitating the interworking between SONET and SDH. In + particular, it means that the contiguous concatenation of three + STS-1 SPEs can not be requested because according to this + specification, this type of signal must be coded using the STS-3c + SPE signal type. + + Note 2: when requesting a transparent STS-N/STM-N signal + limited to a single contiguously concatenated STS-Nc_SPE/VC-4-Nc, + the signal type must be STS-N/STM-N, RCC with flag 1 and NCC set + to 1. + + The NCC value must be consistent with the type of contiguous + concatenation being requested in the RCC field. In particular, this + field is irrelevant if no contiguous concatenation is requested (RCC + = 0), in that case it must be set to zero when sent, and should be + ignored when received. A RCC value different from 0 must imply a + number of contiguous components greater than 1. + + Number of Virtual Components (NVC): 16 bits + + This field indicates the number of signals that are requested to be + virtually concatenated. These signals are all of the same type by + definition. They are Elementary Signal SPEs/VCs for which signal + types are defined in this document, i.e., VT1.5_SPE/VC-11, + VT2_SPE/VC-12, VT3_SPE, VT6_SPE/VC-2, STS-1_SPE/VC-3 or + STS-3c_SPE/VC-4. + + This field is set to 0 (default value) to indicate that no virtual + concatenation is requested. + + Multiplier (MT): 16 bits + + This field indicates the number of identical signals that are + requested for the LSP, i.e., that form the Final Signal. These + signals can be either identical Elementary Signals, or identical + contiguously concatenated signals, or identical virtually + concatenated signals. Note that all these signals belong thus to the + same LSP. + + The distinction between the components of multiple virtually + concatenated signals is done via the order of the labels that are + specified in the signaling. The first set of labels must describe + the first component (set of individual signals belonging to the first + + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 6] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + virtual concatenated signal), the second set must describe the second + component (set of individual signals belonging to the second virtual + concatenated signal) and so on. + + This field is set to one (default value) to indicate that exactly one + instance of a signal is being requested. Intermediate and egress + nodes MUST verify that the node itself and the interfaces on which + the LSP will be established can support the requested multiplier + value. If the requested values can not be supported, the receiver + node MUST generate a PathErr/NOTIFICATION message (see Section + 2.2/2.3, respectively). + + Zero is an invalid value. If received, the node MUST generate a + PathErr/NOTIFICATION message (see Section 2.2/2.3, respectively). + + Note 1: when requesting a transparent STS-N/STM-N signal limited to a + single contiguously concatenated STS-Nc-SPE/VC-4-Nc, the multiplier + field MUST be equal to 1 (only valid value). + + Transparency (T): 32 bits + + This field is a vector of flags that indicates the type of + transparency being requested. Several flags can be combined to + provide different types of transparency. Not all combinations are + necessarily valid. The default value for this field is zero, i.e., + no transparency requested. + + Transparency, as defined from the point of view of this signaling + specification, is only applicable to the fields in the SONET/SDH + frame overheads. In the SONET case, these are the fields in the + Section Overhead (SOH), and the Line Overhead (LOH). In the SDH + case, these are the fields in the Regenerator Section Overhead + (RSOH), the Multiplex Section overhead (MSOH), and the pointer fields + between the two. With SONET, the pointer fields are part of the LOH. + + Note as well that transparency is only applicable when using the + following Signal Types: STS-1/STM-0, STS-3/STM-1, STS-12/STM-4, + STS-48/STM-16, STS-192/STM-64 and STS-768/STM-256. At least one + transparency type must be specified when requesting such a signal + type. + + Transparency indicates precisely which fields in these overheads must + be delivered unmodified at the other end of the LSP. An ingress LSR + requesting transparency will pass these overhead fields that must be + delivered to the egress LSR without any change. From the ingress and + egress LSRs point of views, these fields must be seen as unmodified. + + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 7] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + Transparency is not applied at the interfaces with the initiating and + terminating LSRs, but is only applied between intermediate LSRs. + + The transparency field is used to request an LSP that supports the + requested transparency type; it may also be used to setup the + transparency process to be applied at each intermediate LSR. + + The different transparency flags are the following: + + Flag 1 (bit 1): Section/Regenerator Section layer. + Flag 2 (bit 2): Line/Multiplex Section layer. + + Where bit 1 is the low order bit. Other flags are reserved, they + should be set to zero when sent, and should be ignored when received. + A flag is set to one to indicate that the corresponding transparency + is requested. + + Intermediate and egress nodes MUST verify that the node itself and + the interfaces on which the LSP will be established can support the + requested transparency. If the requested flags can not be supported, + the receiver node MUST generate a PathErr/NOTIFICATION message (see + Section 2.2/2.3, respectively). + + Section/Regenerator Section layer transparency means that the entire + frames must be delivered unmodified. This implies that pointers + cannot be adjusted. When using Section/Regenerator Section layer + transparency all other flags MUST be ignored. + + Line/Multiplex Section layer transparency means that the LOH/MSOH + must be delivered unmodified. This implies that pointers cannot be + adjusted. + + Profile (P): 32 bits + + This field is intended to indicate particular capabilities that must + be supported for the LSP, for example monitoring capabilities. + + No standard profile is currently defined and this field SHOULD be set + to zero when transmitted and SHOULD be ignored when received. + + In the future TLV based extensions may be created. + + + + + + + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 8] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + +2.2. RSVP-TE Details + + For RSVP-TE, the SONET/SDH traffic parameters are carried in the + SONET/SDH SENDER_TSPEC and FLOWSPEC objects. The same format is used + both for SENDER_TSPEC object and FLOWSPEC objects. The content of + the objects is defined above in Section 2.1. The objects have the + following class and type: + + For SONET ANSI T1.105 and SDH ITU-T G.707: + + SONET/SDH SENDER_TSPEC object: Class = 12, C-Type = 4 + SONET/SDH FLOWSPEC object: Class = 9, C-Type = 4 + + There is no Adspec associated with the SONET/SDH SENDER_TSPEC. + Either the Adspec is omitted or an int-serv Adspec with the Default + General Characterization Parameters and Guaranteed Service fragment + is used, see [RFC2210]. + + For a particular sender in a session the contents of the FLOWSPEC + object received in a Resv message SHOULD be identical to the contents + of the SENDER_TSPEC object received in the corresponding Path + message. If the objects do not match, a ResvErr message with a + "Traffic Control Error/Bad Flowspec value" error SHOULD be generated. + + Intermediate and egress nodes MUST verify that the node itself and + the interfaces on which the LSP will be established can support the + requested Signal Type, RCC, NCC, NVC and Multiplier (as defined in + Section 2.1). If the requested value(s) can not be supported, the + receiver node MUST generate a PathErr message with a "Traffic Control + Error/ Service unsupported" indication (see [RFC2205]). + + In addition, if the MT field is received with a zero value, the node + MUST generate a PathErr message with a "Traffic Control Error/Bad + Tspec value" indication (see [RFC2205]). + + Intermediate nodes MUST also verify that the node itself and the + interfaces on which the LSP will be established can support the + requested Transparency (as defined in Section 2.1). If the requested + value(s) can not be supported, the receiver node MUST generate a + PathErr message with a "Traffic Control Error/Service unsupported" + indication (see [RFC2205]). + +2.3. CR-LDP Details + + For CR-LDP, the SONET/SDH traffic parameters are carried in the + SONET/SDH Traffic Parameters TLV. The content of the TLV is defined + above in Section 2.1. The header of the TLV has the following + format: + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 9] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + 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 + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + |U|F| Type | Length | + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + + The type field for the SONET/SDH Traffic Parameters TLV is: 0x0838. + + Intermediate and egress nodes MUST verify that the node itself and + the interfaces on which the LSP will be established can support the + requested Signal Type, RCC, NCC, NVC and Multiplier (as defined in + Section 2.1). If the requested value(s) can not be supported, the + receiver node MUST generate a NOTIFICATION message with a "Resource + Unavailable" status code (see [RFC3212]). + + In addition, if the MT field is received with a zero value, the node + MUST generate a NOTIFICATION message with a "Resource Unavailable" + status code (see [RFC3212]). + + Intermediate nodes MUST also verify that the node itself and the + interfaces on which the LSP will be established can support the + requested Transparency (as defined in Section 2.1). If the requested + value(s) can not be supported, the receiver node MUST generate a + NOTIFICATION message with a "Resource Unavailable" status code (see + [RFC3212]). + +3. SONET and SDH Labels + + SONET and SDH each define a multiplexing structure. Both structures + are trees whose roots are respectively an STS-N or an STM-N; and + whose leaves are the signals that can be transported via the time- + slots and switched between time-slots within an ingress port and + time-slots within an egress port, i.e., a VTx SPE, an STS-x SPE or a + VC-x. A SONET/SDH label will identify the exact position (i.e., + first time-slot) of a particular VTx SPE, STS-x SPE or VC-x signal in + a multiplexing structure. SONET and SDH labels are carried in the + Generalized Label per [RFC3473] and [RFC3472]. + + Note that by time-slots we mean the time-slots as they appear + logically and sequentially in the multiplex, not as they appear after + any possible interleaving. + + These multiplexing structures will be used as naming trees to create + unique multiplex entry names or labels. The same format of label is + used for SONET and SDH. As explained in [RFC3471], a label does not + identify the "class" to which the label belongs. This is implicitly + determined by the link on which the label is used. + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 10] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + In case of signal concatenation or multiplication, a list of labels + can appear in the Label field of a Generalized Label. + + In case of contiguous concatenation, only one label appears in the + Label field. This label identifies the lowest time-slot occupied by + the contiguously concatenated signal. By lowest time-slot we mean + the one having the lowest label (value) when compared as integer + values, i.e., the time-slot occupied by the first component signal of + the concatenated signal encountered when descending the tree. + + In case of virtual concatenation, the explicit ordered list of all + labels in the concatenation is given. Each label indicates the first + time-slot occupied by a component of the virtually concatenated + signal. The order of the labels must reflect the order of the + payloads to concatenate (not the physical order of time-slots). The + above representation limits virtual concatenation to remain within a + single (component) link; it imposes as such a restriction compared to + the ANSI [T1.105]/ITU-T [G.707] recommendations. + + The standard definition for virtual concatenation allows each virtual + concatenation components to travel over diverse paths. Within GMPLS, + virtual concatenation components must travel over the same + (component) link if they are part of the same LSP. This is due to + the way that labels are bound to a (component) link. Note however, + that the routing of components on different paths is indeed + equivalent to establishing different LSPs, each one having its own + route. Several LSPs can be initiated and terminated between the same + nodes and their corresponding components can then be associated + together (i.e., virtually concatenated). + + In case of multiplication (i.e., using the multiplier transform), the + explicit ordered list of all labels that take part in the Final + Signal is given. In case of multiplication of virtually concatenated + signals, the first set of labels indicates the time-slots occupied by + the first virtually concatenated signal, the second set of labels + indicates the time-slots occupied by the second virtually + concatenated signal, and so on. The above representation limits + multiplication to remain within a single (component) link. + + The format of the label for SONET and/or SDH TDM-LSR link is: + + 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 + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + | S | U | K | L | M | + +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ + + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 11] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + This is an extension of the numbering scheme defined in [G.707] + sections 7.3.7 to 7.3.13, i.e., the (K, L, M) numbering. Note that + the higher order numbering scheme defined in [G.707] sections 7.3.1 + to 7.3.6 is not used here. + + Each letter indicates a possible branch number starting at the parent + node in the multiplex structure. Branches are considered as numbered + in increasing order, starting from the top of the multiplexing + structure. The numbering starts at 1, zero is used to indicate a + non-significant or ignored field. + + When a field is not significant or ignored in a particular context it + MUST be set to zero when transmitted, and MUST be ignored when + received. + + When a hierarchy of SONET/SDH LSPs is used, a higher order LSP with a + given bandwidth can be used to carry lower order LSPs. Remember here + that a higher order LSP is established through a SONET/SDH higher + order path layer network and a lower order LSP, through a SONET/SDH + lower order path layer network (see also ITU-T G.803, Section 3 for + the corresponding definitions). In this context, the higher order + SONET/SDH LSP behaves as a "virtual link" with a given bandwidth + (e.g., VC-3), it may also be used as a Forwarding Adjacency. A lower + order SONET/SDH LSP can be established through that higher order LSP. + Since a label is local to a (virtual) link, the highest part of that + label (i.e., the S, U and K fields) is non-significant and is set to + zero, i.e., the label is "0,0,0,L,M". Similarly, if the structure of + the lower order LSP is unknown or not relevant, the lowest part of + that label (i.e., the L and M fields) is non-significant and is set + to zero, i.e., the label is "S,U,K,0,0". + + For instance, a VC-3 LSP can be used to carry lower order LSPs. In + that case the labels allocated between the two ends of the VC-3 LSP + for the lower order LSPs will have S, U and K set to zero, i.e., + non-significant, while L and M will be used to indicate the signal + allocated in that VC-3. + + In case of tunneling such as VC-4 containing VC-3 containing + VC-12/VC-11 where the SUKLM structure is not adequate to represent + the full signal structure, a hierarchical approach must be used, + i.e., per layer network signaling. + + The possible values of S, U, K, L and M are defined as follows: + + 1. S=1->N is the index of a particular STS-3/AUG-1 inside an + STS-N/STM-N multiplex. S is only significant for SONET STS-N + (N>1) and SDH STM-N (N>0). S must be 0 and ignored for STS-1 and + STM-0. + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 12] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + 2. U=1->3 is the index of a particular STS-1_SPE/VC-3 within an + STS-3/AUG-1. U is only significant for SONET STS-N (N>1) and SDH + STM-N (N>0). U must be 0 and ignored for STS-1 and STM-0. + + 3. K=1->3 is the index of a particular TUG-3 within a VC-4. K is + only significant for an SDH VC-4 structured in TUG-3s. K must be + 0 and ignored in all other cases. + + 4. L=1->7 is the index of a particular VT_Group/TUG-2 within an + STS-1_SPE/TUG-3 or VC-3. L must be 0 and ignored in all other + cases. + + 5. M is the index of a particular VT1.5_SPE/VC-11, VT2_SPE/VC-12 or + VT3_SPE within a VT_Group/TUG-2. M=1->2 indicates a specific VT3 + SPE inside the corresponding VT Group, these values MUST NOT be + used for SDH since there is no equivalent of VT3 with SDH. M=3->5 + indicates a specific VT2_SPE/VC-12 inside the corresponding + VT_Group/TUG-2. M=6->9 indicates a specific VT1.5_SPE/VC-11 + inside the corresponding VT_Group/TUG-2. + + Note that a label always has to be interpreted according the + SONET/SDH traffic parameters, i.e., a label by itself does not allow + knowing which signal is being requested (a label is context + sensitive). + + The label format defined in this section, referred to as SUKLM, MUST + be used for any SONET/SDH signal requests that are not transparent + i.e., when all Transparency (T) bits defined in section 2.1 are set + to zero. Any transparent STS-1/STM-0/STS-3*N/STM-N (N=1, 4, 16, 64, + 256) signal request MUST use a label format as defined in [RFC3471]. + + The S encoding is summarized in the following table: + + S SDH SONET + ------------------------------------------------ + 0 other other + 1 1st AUG-1 1st STS-3 + 2 2nd AUG-1 2nd STS-3 + 3 3rd AUG-1 3rd STS-3 + 4 4rd AUG-1 4rd STS-3 + : : : + N Nth AUG-1 Nth STS-3 + + + + + + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 13] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + The U encoding is summarized in the following table: + + U SDH AUG-1 SONET STS-3 + ------------------------------------------------- + 0 other other + 1 1st VC-3 1st STS-1 SPE + 2 2nd VC-3 2nd STS-1 SPE + 3 3rd VC-3 3rd STS-1 SPE + + The K encoding is summarized in the following table: + + K SDH VC-4 + --------------- + 0 other + 1 1st TUG-3 + 2 2nd TUG-3 + 3 3rd TUG-3 + + The L encoding is summarized in the following table: + + L SDH TUG-3 SDH VC-3 SONET STS-1 SPE + ------------------------------------------------- + 0 other other other + 1 1st TUG-2 1st TUG-2 1st VTG + 2 2nd TUG-2 2nd TUG-2 2nd VTG + 3 3rd TUG-2 3rd TUG-2 3rd VTG + 4 4th TUG-2 4th TUG-2 4th VTG + 5 5th TUG-2 5th TUG-2 5th VTG + 6 6th TUG-2 6th TUG-2 6th VTG + 7 7th TUG-2 7th TUG-2 7th VTG + + The M encoding is summarized in the following table: + + M SDH TUG-2 SONET VTG + ------------------------------------------------- + 0 other other + 1 - 1st VT3 SPE + 2 - 2nd VT3 SPE + 3 1st VC-12 1st VT2 SPE + 4 2nd VC-12 2nd VT2 SPE + 5 3rd VC-12 3rd VT2 SPE + 6 1st VC-11 1st VT1.5 SPE + 7 2nd VC-11 2nd VT1.5 SPE + 8 3rd VC-11 3rd VT1.5 SPE + 9 4th VC-11 4th VT1.5 SPE + + + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 14] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + Examples of labels: + + Example 1: the label for the STS-3c_SPE/VC-4 in the Sth STS-3/AUG-1 + is: S>0, U=0, K=0, L=0, M=0. + + Example 2: the label for the VC-3 within the Kth-1 TUG-3 within + the VC-4 in the Sth AUG-1 is: S>0, U=0, K>0, L=0, M=0. + + Example 3: the label for the Uth-1 STS-1_SPE/VC-3 within the Sth + STS-3/AUG-1 is: S>0, U>0, K=0, L=0, M=0. + + Example 4: the label for the VT6/VC-2 in the Lth-1 VT Group/TUG-2 + in the Uth-1 STS-1_SPE/VC-3 within the Sth STS-3/AUG-1 is: S>0, + U>0, K=0, L>0, M=0. + + Example 5: the label for the 3rd VT1.5_SPE/VC-11 in the Lth-1 VT + Group/TUG-2 within the Uth-1 STS-1_SPE/VC-3 within the Sth STS- + 3/AUG-1 is: S>0, U>0, K=0, L>0, M=8. + + Example 6: the label for the STS-12c/VC-4-4c which uses the 9th + STS-3/AUG-1 as its first timeslot is: S=9, U=0, K=0, L=0, M=0. + + In case of contiguous concatenation, the label that is used is the + lowest label (value) of the contiguously concatenated signal as + explained before. The higher part of the label indicates where the + signal starts and the lowest part is not significant. + + In case of STM-0/STS-1, the values of S, U and K must be equal to + zero according to the field coding rules. For instance, when + requesting a VC-3 in an STM-0 the label is S=0, U=0, K=0, L=0, M=0. + When requesting a VC-11 in a VC-3 in an STM-0 the label is S=0, U=0, + K=0, L>0, M=6..9. + + Note: when a Section/RS or Line/MS transparent STS-1/STM-0/STS- + 3*N/STM-N (N=1, 4, 16, 64, 256) signal is requested, the SUKLM label + format and encoding is not applicable and the label encoding MUST + follow the rules defined in [RFC3471] Section 3.2. + +4. Acknowledgments + + Valuable comments and input were received from the CCAMP mailing list + where outstanding discussions took place. + + + + + + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 15] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + +5. Security Considerations + + This document introduces no new security considerations to either + [RFC3473] or [RFC3472]. GMPLS security is described in section 11 of + [RFC3471] and refers to [RFC3209] for RSVP-TE and to [RFC3212] for + CR-LDP. + +6. IANA Considerations + + Three values have been defined by IANA for this document: + + Two RSVP C-Types in registry: + http://www.iana.org/assignments/rsvp-parameters + + - A SONET/SDH SENDER_TSPEC object: Class = 12, C-Type = 4 (see + section 2.2). + + - A SONET/SDH FLOWSPEC object: Class = 9, C-Type = 4 (see section + 2.2). + + One LDP TLV Type in registry: + http://www.iana.org/assignments/ldp-namespaces + + - A type field for the SONET/SDH Traffic Parameters TLV (see section + 2.3). + +7. References + +7.1. Normative References + + [G.707] ITU-T Recommendation G.707, "Network Node Interface for + the Synchronous Digital Hierarchy", October 2000. + + [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate + Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997. + + [RFC2205] Braden, R., Zhang, L., Berson, S., Herzog, S., and S. + Jamin, "Resource ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP) -- Version + 1 Functional Specification", RFC 2205, September 1997. + + [RFC2210] Wroclawski, J., "The Use of RSVP with IETF Integrated + Services", RFC 2210, September 1997. + + [RFC3209] Awduche, D., Berger, L., Gan, D., Li, T., Srinivasan, + V., and G. Swallow, "RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for LSP + Tunnels", RFC 3209, December 2001. + + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 16] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + [RFC3212] Jamoussi, B., Andersson, L., Callon, R., Dantu, R., Wu, + L., Doolan, P., Worster, T., Feldman, N., Fredette, A., + Girish, M., Gray, E., Heinanen, J., Kilty, T., and A. + Malis, "Constraint-Based LSP Setup using LDP", RFC 3212, + January 2002. + + [RFC3471] Berger, L., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching + (MPLS) Signaling Functional Description", RFC 3471, + January 2003. + + [RFC3472] Ashwood-Smith, P. and L. Berger, "Generalized + Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS) Signaling + - Constraint-based Routed Label Distribution Protocol + (CR-LDP) Extensions", RFC 3472, January 2003. + + [RFC3473] Berger, L., "Generalized Multi-Protocol Label Switching + (MPLS) Signaling - Resource ReserVation Protocol Traffic + Engineering (RSVP-TE) Extensions", RFC 3473, January + 2003. + + [RFC3945] Mannie, E., Ed., "Generalized Multiprotocol Label + Switching (GMPLS) Architecture", RFC 3945, October 2004. + + [T1.105] "Synchronous Optical Network (SONET): Basic Description + Including Multiplex Structure, Rates, and Formats", ANSI + T1.105, October 2000. + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 17] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + +Appendix 1 - Signal Type Values Extension for VC-3 + + This appendix defines the following optional additional Signal Type + value for the Signal Type field of section 2.1: + + Value Type + ----- --------------------- + 20 "VC-3 via AU-3 at the end" + + According to the ITU-T [G.707] recommendation a VC-3 in the TU- + 3/TUG-3/VC-4/AU-4 branch of the SDH multiplex cannot be structured in + TUG-2s, however a VC-3 in the AU-3 branch can be. In addition, a VC-3 + could be switched between the two branches if required. + + A VC-3 circuit could be terminated on an ingress interface of an LSR + (e.g., forming a VC-3 forwarding adjacency). This LSR could then want + to demultiplex this VC-3 and switch internal low order LSPs. For + implementation reasons, this could be only possible if the LSR + receives the VC-3 in the AU-3 branch. E.g., for an LSR not able to + switch internally from a TU-3 branch to an AU-3 branch on its + incoming interface before demultiplexing and then switching the + content with its switch fabric. + + In that case it is useful to indicate that the VC-3 LSP must be + terminated at the end in the AU-3 branch instead of the TU-3 branch. + + This is achieved by using the "VC-3 via AU-3 at the end" signal type. + This information can be used, for instance, by the penultimate LSR to + switch an incoming VC-3 received in any branch to the AU-3 branch on + the outgoing interface to the destination LSR. + + The "VC-3 via AU-3 at the end" signal type does not imply that the + VC-3 must be switched via the AU-3 branch at some other places in the + network. The VC-3 signal type just indicates that a VC-3 in any + branch is suitable. + +Annex 1 - Examples + + This annex defines examples of SONET and SDH signal coding. Their + objective is to help the reader to understand how works the traffic + parameter coding and not to give examples of typical SONET or SDH + signals. + + As stated above, signal types are Elementary Signals to which + successive concatenation, multiplication and transparency transforms + can be applied to obtain Final Signals. + + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 18] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + 1. A VC-4 signal is formed by the application of RCC with value 0, + NCC with value 0, NVC with value 0, MT with value 1 and T with + value 0 to a VC-4 Elementary Signal. + + 2. A VC-4-7v signal is formed by the application of RCC with value + 0, NCC with value 0, NVC with value 7 (virtual concatenation of + 7 components), MT with value 1 and T with value 0 to a VC-4 + Elementary Signal. + + 3. A VC-4-16c signal is formed by the application of RCC with flag + 1 (standard contiguous concatenation), NCC with value 16, NVC + with value 0, MT with value 1 and T with value 0 to a VC-4 + Elementary Signal. + + 4. An STM-16 signal with Multiplex Section layer transparency is + formed by the application of RCC with value 0, NCC with value 0, + NVC with value 0, MT with value 1 and T with flag 2 to an STM-16 + Elementary Signal. + + 5. An STM-4 signal with Multiplex Section layer transparency is + formed by the application of RCC with flag 0, NCC with value 0, + NVC with value 0, MT with value 1 and T with flag 2 applied to + an STM-4 Elementary Signal. + + 6. An STM-256 signal with Multiplex Section layer transparency is + formed by the application of RCC with flag 0, NCC with value 0, + NVC with value 0, MT with value 1 and T with flag 2 applied to + an STM-256 Elementary Signal. + + 7. An STS-1 SPE signal is formed by the application of RCC with + value 0, NCC with value 0, NVC with value 0, MT with value 1 and + T with value 0 to an STS-1 SPE Elementary Signal. + + 8. An STS-3c SPE signal is formed by the application of RCC with + value 1 (standard contiguous concatenation), NCC with value 1, + NVC with value 0, MT with value 1 and T with value 0 to an STS- + 3c SPE Elementary Signal. + + 9. An STS-48c SPE signal is formed by the application of RCC with + flag 1 (standard contiguous concatenation), NCC with value 16, + NVC with value 0, MT with value 1 and T with value 0 to an STS- + 3c SPE Elementary Signal. + + 10. An STS-1-3v SPE signal is formed by the application of RCC with + value 0, NVC with value 3 (virtual concatenation of 3 + components), MT with value 1 and T with value 0 to an STS-1 SPE + Elementary Signal. + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 19] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + 11. An STS-3c-9v SPE signal is formed by the application of RCC with + value 1, NCC with value 1, NVC with value 9 (virtual + concatenation of 9 STS-3c), MT with value 1 and T with value 0 + to an STS-3c SPE Elementary Signal. + + 12. An STS-12 signal with Section layer (full) transparency is + formed by the application of RCC with value 0, NVC with value 0, + MT with value 1 and T with flag 1 to an STS-12 Elementary + Signal. + + 13. 3 x STS-768c SPE signal is formed by the application of RCC with + flag 1, NCC with value 256, NVC with value 0, MT with value 3, + and T with value 0 to an STS-3c SPE Elementary Signal. + + 14. 5 x VC-4-13v composed signal is formed by the application of RCC + with value 0, NVC with value 13, MT with value 5 and T with + value 0 to a VC-4 Elementary Signal. + + The encoding of these examples is summarized in the following table: + + Signal ST RCC NCC NVC MT T + -------------------------------------------------------- + VC-4 6 0 0 0 1 0 + VC-4-7v 6 0 0 7 1 0 + VC-4-16c 6 1 16 0 1 0 + STM-16 MS transparent 10 0 0 0 1 2 + STM-4 MS transparent 9 0 0 0 1 2 + STM-256 MS transparent 12 0 0 0 1 2 + STS-1 SPE 5 0 0 0 1 0 + STS-3c SPE 6 1 1 0 1 0 + STS-48c SPE 6 1 16 0 1 0 + STS-1-3v SPE 5 0 0 3 1 0 + STS-3c-9v SPE 6 1 1 9 1 0 + STS-12 Section transparent 9 0 0 0 1 1 + 3 x STS-768c SPE 6 1 256 0 3 0 + 5 x VC-4-13v 6 0 0 13 5 0 + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 20] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + +Contributors + + Contributors are listed by alphabetical order: + + Stefan Ansorge (Alcatel) + Lorenzstrasse 10 + 70435 Stuttgart, Germany + + EMail: stefan.ansorge@alcatel.de + + + Peter Ashwood-Smith (Nortel) + PO. Box 3511 Station C, + Ottawa, ON K1Y 4H7, Canada + + EMail:petera@nortelnetworks.com + + + Ayan Banerjee (Calient) + 5853 Rue Ferrari + San Jose, CA 95138, USA + + EMail: abanerjee@calient.net + + + Lou Berger (Movaz) + 7926 Jones Branch Drive + McLean, VA 22102, USA + + EMail: lberger@movaz.com + + + Greg Bernstein (Ciena) + 10480 Ridgeview Court + Cupertino, CA 94014, USA + + EMail: greg@ciena.com + + + Angela Chiu (Celion) + One Sheila Drive, Suite 2 + Tinton Falls, NJ 07724-2658 + + EMail: angela.chiu@celion.com + + + + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 21] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + John Drake (Calient) + 5853 Rue Ferrari + San Jose, CA 95138, USA + + EMail: jdrake@calient.net + + + Yanhe Fan (Axiowave) + 100 Nickerson Road + Marlborough, MA 01752, USA + + EMail: yfan@axiowave.com + + + Michele Fontana (Alcatel) + Via Trento 30, + I-20059 Vimercate, Italy + + EMail: michele.fontana@alcatel.it + + + Gert Grammel (Alcatel) + Lorenzstrasse, 10 + 70435 Stuttgart, Germany + + EMail: gert.grammel@alcatel.de + + + Juergen Heiles (Siemens) + Hofmannstr. 51 + D-81379 Munich, Germany + + EMail: juergen.heiles@siemens.com + + + Suresh Katukam (Cisco) + 1450 N. McDowell Blvd, + Petaluma, CA 94954-6515, USA + + EMail: suresh.katukam@cisco.com + + + Kireeti Kompella (Juniper) + 1194 N. Mathilda Ave. + Sunnyvale, CA 94089, USA + + EMail: kireeti@juniper.net + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 22] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + + Jonathan P. Lang (Calient) + 25 Castilian + Goleta, CA 93117, USA + + EMail: jplang@calient.net + + + Fong Liaw (Solas Research) + + EMail: fongliaw@yahoo.com + + + Zhi-Wei Lin (Lucent) + 101 Crawfords Corner Rd + Holmdel, NJ 07733-3030, USA + + EMail: zwlin@lucent.com + + + Ben Mack-Crane (Tellabs) + + EMail: ben.mack-crane@tellabs.com + + + Dimitrios Pendarakis (Tellium) + 2 Crescent Place, P.O. Box 901 + Oceanport, NJ 07757-0901, USA + + EMail: dpendarakis@tellium.com + + + Mike Raftelis (White Rock) + 18111 Preston Road + Dallas, TX 75252, USA + + + Bala Rajagopalan (Tellium) + 2 Crescent Place, P.O. Box 901 + Oceanport, NJ 07757-0901, USA + + EMail: braja@tellium.com + + + + + + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 23] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + + Yakov Rekhter (Juniper) + 1194 N. Mathilda Ave. + Sunnyvale, CA 94089, USA + + EMail: yakov@juniper.net + + + Debanjan Saha (Tellium) + 2 Crescent Place, P.O. Box 901 + Oceanport, NJ 07757-0901, USA + + EMail: dsaha@tellium.com + + + Vishal Sharma (Metanoia) + 335 Elan Village Lane + San Jose, CA 95134, USA + + EMail: vsharma87@yahoo.com + + + George Swallow (Cisco) + 250 Apollo Drive + Chelmsford, MA 01824, USA + + EMail: swallow@cisco.com + + + Z. Bo Tang (Tellium) + 2 Crescent Place, P.O. Box 901 + Oceanport, NJ 07757-0901, USA + + EMail: btang@tellium.com + + + Eve Varma (Lucent) + 101 Crawfords Corner Rd + Holmdel, NJ 07733-3030, USA + + EMail: evarma@lucent.com + + + Yangguang Xu (Lucent) + 21-2A41, 1600 Osgood Street + North Andover, MA 01845, USA + + EMail: xuyg@lucent.com + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 24] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + +Authors' Addresses + + Eric Mannie (Consultant) + Avenue de la Folle Chanson, 2 + B-1050 Brussels, Belgium + Phone: +32 2 648-5023 + Mobile: +32 (0)495-221775 + + EMail: eric_mannie@hotmail.com + + + Dimitri Papadimitriou (Alcatel) + Francis Wellesplein 1, + B-2018 Antwerpen, Belgium + Phone: +32 3 240-8491 + + EMail: dimitri.papadimitriou@alcatel.be + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +Mannie & Papadimitriou Standards Track [Page 25] + +RFC 3946 GMPLS Extensions for SONET/SDH Control October 2004 + + +Full Copyright Statement + + Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004). + + This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions + contained in BCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors + retain all their rights. + + This document and the information contained herein are provided on an + "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS + OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET + ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, + INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE + INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED + WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. + +Intellectual Property + + The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any + Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to + pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in + this document or the extent to which any license under such rights + might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has + made any independent effort to identify any such rights. 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