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Introduction of MultiProtocol Label Switching

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Introduction of. Multi-Protocol Label Switching. Yi-Lun Chen. 2. Outline. Label Switching ... Upper layer protocol is inferable from value of the bottom level ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Introduction of MultiProtocol Label Switching


1
Introduction of Multi-Protocol Label Switching
  • Yi-Lun Chen

2
Outline
  • Label Switching
  • MPLS Architecture
  • Label Distribution Protocols
  • Summary

3
Whats Label Switching?
Some ways from A to B
  • Broadcast
  • Go everywhere, stop when arriving B
  • Hop by Hop routing
  • Continuously find the closest way to B
  • Source Routing
  • A to B using the intermediate node list carried
    by the packet

4
Label Switching
  • Pre-reserve a path from A to B, identify packet
    with label, and sign this path in all
    intermediate nodes

C
A
Packet with labeled 1
B
Packet with labeled 2
5
Route at edge,switch in core
Continually, Route at Edge
Switch in core
Route at Edge
IP
IP
IP Forwarding
IP Forwarding
LABEL SWITCHING
6
Why use Label Switching?
  • Speed and Delay
  • Routing Table lookup need time
  • Scalability
  • The scope of a label is between two routing peers
  • Label can be reused
  • Simplicity
  • Just do it Forward a packet based on its label
  • Resource Control
  • We can reserve path with QoS conditions
  • Route Control
  • Policy-based Routing and Traffic Engineering
    could be done

7
MPLS just do
  • Pre-build path
  • Use labels to be the transport media
  • Multi-level label switching

8
Outline
  • Label Switching
  • MPLS Architecture
  • Label Distribution Protocols
  • Summary

9
Hybrid of two mechanisms
  • Build label paths and use them
  • MPLS combine the packet routing and circuit
    switching

10
Path Distribution example
  • We want to bind labels from domain 12.3 to
    domain 45.6

1
45.6
3
Router decide by itself
2
3
1
Router decide by itself
2
1
3
45.7
12.3
2
11
Use the path
  • Packet from domain 12.3 to domain 45.6

1
45.6
3
2
3
1
2
1
3
45.7
12.3
2
12
LSP Label Switched Path
  • A tree rooted by destination
  • Unidirectional
  • Could be built by existing IP Routing Table

Destination
13
Label Encapsulation
  • May use existing format or new shim label

IP PAYLOAD
Upper Layer
For multi-level label stack
Shim Label .
VPI
VCI
DLCI
Shim Label
Label
14
ATM
  • Top level labels use VPI/VCI fields
  • Further fields in stack are encoded with shim
    header

15
PPP Ethernet Data Links
  • Add shim label between Layer 2 and Layer 3
  • Upper layer protocol is inferable from value of
    the bottom level of the stack

16
Do label switching in LSR
IP
IP
  • Encapsulate in Ingress LSR
  • Forwarding in intermediate LSR
  • Decapsulate in Egress LSR

17
Make switching decisions in Ingress LSR
  • FEC (Forwarding Equivalence Class)
  • A subset of packets that are all treated the same
    way by a router
  • NHLFE (Next Hop Label Forwarding Entry)
  • Lookup when doing switch
  • Containing label push/pop/swap and next hop
    information
  • FTN (FEC-To-NHLFE map)
  • Map FEC to a (set of) NHLFEs

Make Decisions in Ingress LSR
  • Match the corresponding FEC
  • Find NHLFE using FTN and FEC
  • Process packet with the information containing in
    the NHLFE

18
Make switching decisions in Intermediate/Egress
LSR
  • ILM (Incoming Label Map)
  • Lookup when doing switch
  • Containing label push/pop/swap and next hop
    information

Make Decisions in Intermediate/Egress LSR
  • Find ILM using incoming label
  • Map the result to the NHLFE
  • Process packet with the information containing in
    the NHLFE

Must consider TTL and MTU
19
Build LSP
  • Using Label Distribution Protocols (LDP)
  • 2 methods to build LSP
  • By Hop-by-Hop
  • By Explicitly Routed

20
Outline
  • Label Switching
  • MPLS Architecture
  • Label Distribution Protocols
  • Summary
  • LDP Concept
  • CR-LDP and RSVP-TE

21
What does LDP want to do?
  • Negotiation of binding label between LSRs

OK! Label 10 For 12.0.0.0/8
To 12.0.0.0/8 Use Label 10
  • Can distribute Label Switched Network in two ways
  • Piggyback on existing routing protocol
  • Create dedicated LDP

22
Label mapping between peers
FEC-Label Binding
FEC-Label Binding
Binding Request
  • 2 Mapping methods

  • 2.Downstream-on-demand
  • Upstream LSR send explicit request to downstream
    LSR for binding
  • Downstream LSR start binding after receiving
    Request
  • 1.Downstream Unsolicited
  • Downstream LSR can initiate binding without
    Explicit Request

23
Path distribution control
  • 2 Control methods

  • 2.Ordered Control
  • LSR do mapping and return Label mapping message
    when
  • Receiving Label mapping message from next-hop
  • This LSR is the Egress
  • 1.Independent Control
  • LSR return label binding at any time it desires
  • Dont need to wait for Label Mapping message from
    the next hop

24
Label retention control
  • 2 methods

Valid Next Hop
  • 2.Conservative Label Retention
  • Only maintain binding from the valid next hop
  • Fewer labels need to maintain
  • When route change, it must rebinding label from
    new next-hop
  • 1.Liberal Label Retention
  • Maintains all binding from LSRs other than the
    valid next hop
  • Maintains many more labels
  • Can use these binding immediately when next hop
    change

25
LDP Standard messages
  • Defined in MPLS-LDP RFC 3036
  • TLV (Type-Length Value) Encoding for many
    information
  • 4 different message areas
  • Peer discovery
  • Session management
  • Label distribution
  • Notification
  • Address
  • Address Withdraw
  • Label Request
  • Label Mapping
  • Label Withdraw
  • Label Release
  • Label Abort Request
  • Notification
  • Hello
  • Initialization
  • KeepAlive

26
CR-LDP
  • Constraint-based Routing LDP
  • Setup path with explicit route
  • Defined in RFC 3213, RFC 3214
  • Use LDP messages
  • Request
  • Map
  • Notification
  • Add some parameters for more purposes
  • ER (Explicit Route)
  • Traffic Parameters etc
  • Have no any dependency with non-MPLS protocols
  • Can inter-work with other LDPs

27
LSP Setup
LSR B
LSR C
LSR D
LSR A
ER Label Switched Path
Ingress
Egress
28
QoS conditionCR-LDP Traffic parameters
  • Using Token Bucket to achieve QoS control
  • CDR and CBS
  • CDR is the max rate that LSP commits to be
    available
  • CBS is the max burst size allowed at CDR
  • Frequency for the period of CDR
  • Imply the granularity of resource reservation
  • PDR and PBS
  • PDR is the max rate could sent to the LSP
  • PBS is the max burst size allowed at PDR
  • Weight means the path priority
  • Determines the relative priority of multiple
    LSPs when congestion or excess bandwidth
  • EBS
  • As an additional limit on the CDRs token bucket

29
RSVP-TE
  • Resource Reservation Protocol Extensions for
    Traffic Engineering
  • Extension of RSVP protocol
  • To support Label distributing
  • Defined in RFC 3209
  • Do label mapping process when exchange RSVP
    messages
  • PATH message for label request
  • RESV message for label binding
  • QoS support from RSVP capability

30
LSP setup with RSVP
  • Similar to the conventional RSVP message flow

LSR B
LSR C
LSR D
LSR A
Label Switched Path
Ingress
Egress
31
Outline
  • Label Switching
  • MPLS Architecture
  • Label Distribution Protocols
  • Summary

32
Label Switching
Routing
OSPF, IS-IS, BGP, RIP
Forwarding
MPLS
  • Build path in upper layer , use path in MPLS
    layer
  • More efficiency

33
Traffic Engineering
  • Traffic Engineering provide more flexibility
  • MPLS is suitable to TE

34
VPN in core
  • Its a TE application
  • Bring industries more security and convenient

MPLS Tunnel
MPLS Core Network
35
Upper Layer Consistency with different data link
layer
  • Network can across multiple layer 2 technologies

IPetc
MPLS

Frame Relay
PPP (SONET, DS-3 etc.)
ATM
Ethernet
36
Summary
  • MPLS brings us many benefits
  • MPLS is between Layer 2 and Layer 3
  • It is faster than traditional Layer 3 routing
  • It is Layer 2 independent
  • ATM, Frame Relay, Ethernet etc could co-work in
    MPLS core network
  • MPLS is a mixed technology of packet routing and
    circuit switching
  • It is suitable to support QoS condition
  • It is suitable to achieve Traffic Engineering

37
Reference
  • 1 RFC 3031, Multiprotocol Label Switching
    Architecture, E. Rosen, A. Viswanathan, R.
    Collon, Jan 2001
  • 2 RFC 3032, MPLS Label Stack Encoding, E.
    Rosen, D.Tappan, G.Fedorkow, Y.Rekhter,
    D.Farinacci, T. Li, A. Conta, Jan 2001
  • 3 RFC 3036, LDP Specification, L.Andersson,
    P.Doolan, N.Feldman, A.Fredette, B.Thomas , Jan
    2001
  • 4 Uyless Blank, MPLS and Label Switching
    Networks, Prentice Hall
  • 5 Osama Aboul-Magd, Bilel Jamoussi, QoS and
    Service Interworking Using Constraint-Route Label
    Distribution Protocol(CR-LDP), IEEE
    Communications Magazine, May 2001
  • 6 Interworking, Traffic Engineering, and
    Quality of Service in Carrier Networks, Nortel
    Networks, 2000
  • 7 Peter Ashwood-Smith, Bilel N. Jamoussi, MPLS
    Tutorial, Nortel Networks, 1999
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