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CS221: IPv6

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Routing, Addressing, and Naming Switching in the Internet Christophe Jelger Post-doctoral researcher Christophe.Jelger_at_unibas.ch – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CS221: IPv6


1
Routing, Addressing, and Naming Switching in
the Internet
Christophe Jelger Post-doctoral
researcher Christophe.Jelger_at_unibas.ch
2
Today's lecture
  • MPLS MultiProtocol Label Switching.
  • Metropolitan Ethernet.
  • The Spanning Tree Protocol (SPT) for Ethernet
    networks.

3
MPLS MultiProtocol Label Switching (1)
  • What is it all about?
  • The Internet grew from circuit-switched
    (telephone) networks to packet switched networks.
  • Telcos were offering leased lines to
    inter-connect networks located at different
    locations (e.g. the world-wide branches of a
    large company).
  • Circuit-switching was very well known and
    provided a clear separation of services with
    different levels of quality.
  • Circuit-switching was offering a higher level of
    control in the core of the ISPs' networks.
  • Technologies like ATM were offering virtual
    circuits and a relatively high level of traffic
    enginneering capabilities.
  • With the growth of IP, telcos/ISPs needed a new
    technology to provide this kind of services in an
    IP-friendly manner.

4
MPLS MultiProtocol Label Switching (2)
  • History MPLS was hence initially designed to
  • Provide a more IP-friendly data-carrying
    technology than ATM.
  • Running IP over ATM was complex, and ATM small
    cells (53 bytes) were becoming an overhead when
    carrying potentially large IP packets.
  • Allow the creation of simple high-speed "IP
    switches".
  • At that time, IP forwarding was not entirely
    feasible in hardware (because of the
    longest-prefix-match forwarding scheme).
  • No longer an issue in modern routers, although
    "switching is still faster than routing".
  • Create a "shim" 2.5 layer to unify data-carrying
    technologies.
  • MPLS used over existing ATM and FrameRelay
    infrastructures.
  • IP used directly over MPLS.

5
MPLS MultiProtocol Label Switching (3)
  • What is the goal of MPLS today?
  • ISPs need to separate/isolate different kinds of
    traffic (IP, voice, video, business-critical
    applications, etc) in their core network(s). In
    practice, MPLS is used to provide
  • Virtual Private Networks (VPNs).
  • Quality of Services (e.g. guaranteed bandwidth
    between some points in the network).
  • Traffic Enginnering (e.g. load balance traffic
    over all links of a network).
  • To do this, MPLS introduces the notion of FEC
    Forwarding Equivalence Class.
  • A FEC is a group of IP packets which are
    forwarded in the same manner inside an MPLS
    network.
  • In practice, a classifier inspects each IP packet
    entering an MPLS network and decides to which
    FEC it belongs.

6
MPLS MultiProtocol Label Switching (4)
  • How does it work?
  • MPLS uses label switching to forward packets.
  • Fowarding is based on "exact match" this is much
    faster than IP's longest-prefix match.
  • A label is a short (4 bytes) locally-significant
    identifier used to identify a Forwarding
    Equivalence Class (FEC). MPLS labels have the
    following format
  • label value 20 bits, unstructured (flat)
  • exp 3 bits, currently used as Class of Service
    (CoS) field
  • S bit "bottom of stack" indicator (when labels
    are stacked)
  • Time To Live 8 bits.

label value
exp
S
TTL
32 bits
7
MPLS MultiProtocol Label Switching (5)
  • The forwarding of packets inside an MPLS network.
  • Labels are used to identify Label-Switched Paths
    (LSPs).
  • The mapping between IP packets FECs and LSPs is
    done by Label Switched Routers (LSRs) at the
    edges of the MPLS network.

13 ? pop, oif1
Packets for 10.1.2.3.0/24 (blue) 10.1.2.4.0/24
(red)
Forwarding is based on label
1
13
Ingress LSR
subnet 10.1.3.0/24
1
Egress LSR
17
1
21
2
44
subnet 10.1.2.0/24
Assigns each IP packet to the appropriate FEC and
adds appropriate label to IP packet
17 ? swap(13), oif1 21 ? swap(44), oif2
1
subnet 10.1.4.0/24
44 ? pop, oif1
10.1.3.0/24 ? push(17), oif1 10.1.4.0/24 ?
push(21), oif1
8
MPLS MultiProtocol Label Switching (6)
  • The forwarding of packets inside an MPLS network.
  • FECs can be encasulated inside other FECs we end
    up with stacks of labels. This is useful to
    create "trunks" and reduce state in the core MPLS
    network.

Packets for 10.1.2.3.0/24 (blue) 10.1.2.4.0/24
(red)
13 ? pop, oif1
Forwarding is based on label
1
17
13
subnet 10.1.3.0/24
1
17
11
17
6
1
1
21
6
2
21
11
21
44
6 ? swap(11), oif1
11 ? pop 17 ? swap(13), oif1 21 ? swap(44), oif2
1
17 ? push(6), oif1 21 ? push(6), oif1
subnet 10.1.4.0/24
44 ? pop, oif1
9
MPLS MultiProtocol Label Switching (7)
  • The distribution of labels.
  • For each hop, the label is chosen by the
    downstream LSR and passed to the upstream LSR.
    Hence labels are distributed "against the flow of
    packets".
  • The distribution of labels can be done "in
    collaboration" with an intra-domain routing
    protocol like OSPF or IS-IS.
  • There are currently 2 protocols to distribute
    labels
  • LDP Label Distribution Protocol.
  • RSVP-TE Resource reSerVation Protocol for
    Traffic Engineering.

10
MPLS MultiProtocol Label Switching (8)
  • The distribution of labels.
  • A simplified example.

The LSR chooses a label
13 ? pop, oif1
Request PATH 10.1.3.0/24
Reply RESV label 13
Reply RESV label 17
Request PATH 10.1.3.0/24
1
Ingress LSR
subnet 10.1.3.0/24
1
Egress LSR
1
2
subnet 10.1.2.0/24
17 ? swap(13), oif1
1
The LSR chooses a label
10.1.3.0/24 ? push(17), oif1
subnet 10.1.4.0/24
11
MPLS MultiProtocol Label Switching (9)
  • MPLS in the Internet today.
  • MPLS is used extensively by most ISPs. An
    extended version called GMPLS (Generalized MPLS)
    is also used to setup LSPs over optical fiber
    technologies (SONET/SDH and DWDM).
  • With "Metro Ethernet" networks, MPLS is used to
    provide "pseudowires" between Ethernet switched
    networks.
  • MPLS is still evolving the IETF mpls working
    group is very active, with many internet drafts
    still active and various mechanisms still being
    standardized (e.g. lsp-ping, security, network
    management, etc).

12
Metro/Carrier Ethernet (1)
  • According to some studies, 95 of today's
    Internet traffic starts and ends as Ethernet
    (end-sites are using Ethernet networks).
  • In the mean time, ISPs/carriers used everything
    but Ethernet in their backbone networks.
  • Ethernet is becoming extremely cheap with very
    high data rates.
  • In contrast, data carrying technologies
    (SONET/SDH, MPLS) are relatively expensive.
  • 10 Gb/s already there, 40 Gb/s and 100 Gb/s are
    on their way.
  • However, Ethernet is too "dumb" for carriers.
  • Backbone networks require advanced services like
    QoS, network management, traffic engineering, etc.

13
Metro/Carrier Ethernet (2)
  • Metro/Carrier Ethernet is a set of technologies
    and products.
  • The terms "metro" and "carrier" are more or less
    used to describe the same technologies. However
    "metro" is targeted more at customers networks,
    while "carrier" is targeted more at ISPs.
  • Many manufacturers, standards, and deployment
    styles.
  • Common denominator is Ethernet for example, one
    typical obejctive is to inter-connect Ethernet
    VLANs via a backbone network (e.g. to
    inter-connect the networks located at different
    branches of a large organization).

14
Metro/Carrier Ethernet (3)
  • Metro/Carrier Ethernet some protocols.
  • IEEE 802.1Q tunneling, or "tag stacking", or
    "QinQ".
  • Very similar to MPLS labeling and label stacking,
    but with Ethernet VLAN tagging technologies the
    goal is to inter-connect customers' VLANs without
    any "collision of VLAN ids/tags".

Image from http//www.cisco.com/warp/public/cc/pd
/si/casi/ca6000/prodlit/65met_wp.htm
15
Metro/Carrier Ethernet (4)
  • Metro/Carrier Ethernet some protocols.
  • IEEE 802.1Q tunneling, or "tag stacking", or
    "QinQ".
  • Also known as 802.1ad or "Provider bridges".

CPE Customer Premises Equipment
PE Provider Edge
Image from http//www.cisco.com/warp/public/cc/pd
/si/casi/ca6000/prodlit/65met_wp.htm
16
Metro/Carrier Ethernet (5)
  • Metro/Carrier Ethernet scalability.
  • QinQ is limited to 4094 tags/customers, and there
    is a scalability issue with the size of
    forwarding tables.
  • To remediate this, new standards have been
    defined
  • IEEE 802.1ah or "Backbone Provider Bridges" or
    "MAC-in-MAC".
  • Introduces encapsulation techniques of Ethernet
    in Ethernet.
  • IEEE 802.1Qay-TE a carrier grade extension of
    802.1ah with traffic engineering, MPLS
    compatibility, deterministic delivery.
  • HVLAN proposed extension to introduce
    hierarchical VLAN tagging with a CIDR-style "bast
    match" forwarding.
  • Sound like re-inventing the wheel?
  • New variants (with new names) of MPLS, IP, SONET,
    ATM?

17
Metro/Carrier Ethernet (6)
  • Currently an extremely active area.
  • Plenty standards on their way.
  • IETF vs. IEEE battle.
  • Vendors battle with competing technologies and
    protocols.
  • Development seems to be fully driven by the
    market (and not always by technical advances).
  • ISPs want to save cost to extend their
    infrastructures.
  • Customers want to pay less.
  • Vendors want to sell new equipments.
  • Network deployments is really becoming "à la
    carte"
  • e.g. MPLS over Ethernet? Eth. over MPLS? Eth.
    over MPLS over Eth.?
  • A palette of technologies, costs, and services.
    Not clear who wins

18
The spanning tree protocol (SPT).
  • A spanning tree of a graph is a sub-graph that
    contains all the vertices (nodes) and is a tree.
  • Note that a given graph usually have multiple
    spanning trees.

19
The spanning tree protocol (2).
  • In a bridged Ethernet network, the main objective
    of STP is to prevent loops in a topology with
    redundant paths.
  • How? Redundant links are de-activated (for
    forwarding).
  • One goal is to prevent the "broadcast storm
    problem".

Broadcast loop
Loop is prevented
A
A
ARP REQ B?
ARP REQ B?
B
B
Ethernet switch.
20
The spanning tree protocol (3).
  • Another goal is to prevent duplicate frames to be
    received.

A
data sent to B
B
Duplicate frame is received!
Ethernet switch.
21
The spanning tree protocol (4).
  • Loops also generate inconsistent and unstable
    states.
  • e.g. a switch learns on which port a machine is
    connected by looking at the source MAC address of
    Ethernet frames.

Switch learns A is on right port
Switch learns A is on left port
A
data sent to B
B
Ethernet switch.
  • Also note Ethernet frames have no TTL !
  • i.e. they can potentially re-circulate forever!

22
The spanning tree protocol (5).
  • Centralized algorithms are not desirable in
    practice but are interesting to study the
    problem.
  • E.g. Kruskal, Prim, Boruvka, and Dijkstra
    algorithms.
  • Challenges for distributed algorithms
  • To converge (!) only one active spanning tree
    during steady-state.
  • To converge rapidly after topology change (Rapid
    STP).
  • Should remain simple for low-cost implementation.
  • Very old and well studied algorithm.
  • For Ethernet, it is standardized today by IEEE
    802.1D (1990).
  • Since 2004, RSTP replaces STP in the standard.

23
The spanning tree protocol (6).
  • Basic operation of STP All switches
    participating in STP gather information on other
    switches in the network through an exchange of
    data messages.
  • These messages are bridge protocol data units
    (BPDUs). This exchange of messages results in the
    following
  • The election of a unique root switch.
  • The election of a designated switch for every
    switched LAN segment.
  • The removal of loops in the switched network by
    placing redundant switch ports in a backup state.
  • The root switch is the logical center of the
    spanning-tree topology. All paths that are not
    needed to reach the root switch from anywhere in
    the switched network are placed in backup mode.

24
The spanning tree protocol (7).
  • Electing a root bridge.
  • Each switch has a MAC address and a configurable
    priority number both of these numbers make up
    the Bridge Identification or BID.
  • The BID is used to elect a root bridge based upon
    the lowest priority number if this is a tie then
    the numerically lowest MAC address wins.
  • Upon startup all bridges send BPDUs. Once found,
    only the root bridge sends BPDUs (e.g. every 2
    seconds).
  • Typical forwarding algo Forward a BPDU if and
    only if BID lt my_BID.Stop sending my own BPDUs
    if I see BPDUs with BID lt my_BID.

25
The spanning tree protocol (8).
  • Format for the BID.

26
The spanning tree protocol (9).
  • Finding shortest paths to the root bridge.
  • Each bridge must keep one and only one active
    link to the root bridge.
  • Link with lowest cost is kept as root link (root
    port).
  • Redundant links are blocked.
  • Shortest path is based on cumulative link cost.
  • Link costs are based on the speed of the link.

27
The spanning tree protocol (10).
Root port
Root port
28
The spanning tree protocol (11).
  • Electing a designated port for each segment.
  • Port announcing lowest cost is elected as
    designated port for segment.

Root port
Root port
29
The spanning tree protocol (12).
  • After convergence is reached there is
  • One spanning tree per Ethernet network.
  • One root bridge.
  • One root port per non-root bridge.
  • One designated port per segment.
  • All other ports are blocked.
  • Note that it's possible to have one spanning tree
    per Ethernet VLAN.

30
The spanning tree protocol (13).
  • In 2004 STP is replaced in the standard by Rapid
    STP.
  • Convergence of STP takes up to 50 seconds.
  • Detection of lost BPDUs 20 seconds (root
    bridge lost).
  • Listening phase (no data forwarding) 15
    seconds.
  • Learning phase (no data forwarding) 15 seconds.
  • Changes introduced by RSTP are
  • All bridges periodically generate BPDUs costs
    are updated more rapidly.
  • Links are point-to-point, edge-type, shared
    failures are detected more rapidly (e.g. non
    bridge-to-bridge ports are ignored).
  • Network convergence is up to 15 seconds.

31
The rapid spanning tree protocol (14).
32
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