Difference between revisions of "RFC3101"

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Network Working Group                                          P. Murphy
 
Network Working Group                                          P. Murphy
 
Request for Comments: 3101                          US Geological Survey
 
Request for Comments: 3101                          US Geological Survey
 
Obsoletes: 1587                                            January 2003
 
Obsoletes: 1587                                            January 2003
 
Category: Standards Track
 
Category: Standards Track
 
  
 
             The OSPF Not-So-Stubby Area (NSSA) Option
 
             The OSPF Not-So-Stubby Area (NSSA) Option
Line 33: Line 26:
 
importing AS external routes in a limited fashion.
 
importing AS external routes in a limited fashion.
  
The OSPF NSSA Option was originally defined in [[RFC1587|RFC 1587]].  The
+
The OSPF NSSA Option was originally defined in RFC 1587.  The
functional differences between this memo and [[RFC1587|RFC 1587]] are explained
+
functional differences between this memo and RFC 1587 are explained
 
in Appendix F.  All differences, while expanding capability, are
 
in Appendix F.  All differences, while expanding capability, are
 
backward-compatible in nature.  Implementations of this memo and of
 
backward-compatible in nature.  Implementations of this memo and of
[[RFC1587|RFC 1587]] will interoperate.
+
RFC 1587 will interoperate.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
Table Of Contents
 
Table Of Contents
Line 85: Line 59:
 
Appendix D: Configuration Parameters ......................... 27
 
Appendix D: Configuration Parameters ......................... 27
 
Appendix E: The P-bit Policy Paradox ......................... 28
 
Appendix E: The P-bit Policy Paradox ......................... 28
Appendix F: Differences from [[RFC1587|RFC 1587]] ........................ 30
+
Appendix F: Differences from RFC 1587 ........................ 30
 
Author's Addresses ........................................... 32
 
Author's Addresses ........................................... 32
 
Full Copyright Statement ..................................... 33
 
Full Copyright Statement ..................................... 33
  
1.0  Overview
+
=== Overview ===
  
1.1  Motivation - Transit Networks
+
=== Motivation - Transit Networks ===
  
 
Wide-area transit networks often have connections to moderately
 
Wide-area transit networks often have connections to moderately
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subnets of 130.57 and network 192.31.114, all of which are learned by
 
subnets of 130.57 and network 192.31.114, all of which are learned by
 
RIP on router BR18.
 
RIP on router BR18.
 
 
 
 
  
 
               192.31.114
 
               192.31.114
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and BR10.
 
and BR10.
  
 
+
=== Motivation - Corporate Networks ===
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
1.2  Motivation - Corporate Networks
 
  
 
In a corporate network that supports a large corporate infrastructure
 
In a corporate network that supports a large corporate infrastructure
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                     |      Area 2 cloud      |
 
                     |      Area 2 cloud      |
 
                     +-----192.168.208/22------+
 
                     +-----192.168.208/22------+
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
The current standard OSPF stub area has no mechanism to support the
 
The current standard OSPF stub area has no mechanism to support the
Line 226: Line 182:
 
A0.
 
A0.
  
1.3 Proposed Solution
+
=== Proposed Solution ===
  
 
This document describes a new optional type of OSPF area, somewhat
 
This document describes a new optional type of OSPF area, somewhat
Line 265: Line 221:
 
       routers, though the information that they contain may be
 
       routers, though the information that they contain may be
 
       propagated into the backbone area.  (See Section 3.2.)
 
       propagated into the backbone area.  (See Section 3.2.)
 
 
 
 
  
 
In order to allow limited exchange of external information across an
 
In order to allow limited exchange of external information across an
Line 318: Line 270:
 
In our transit topology example the subnets of 130.57 and network
 
In our transit topology example the subnets of 130.57 and network
 
192.31.114 will still be learned by RIP on router BR18, but now both
 
192.31.114 will still be learned by RIP on router BR18, but now both
 
 
 
 
  
 
BR10 and BR18 can be in an NSSA and all of BBN Planet's external
 
BR10 and BR18 can be in an NSSA and all of BBN Planet's external
Line 338: Line 286:
 
is the translator of Area 2.
 
is the translator of Area 2.
  
2.0  NSSA Intra-Area Implementation Details
+
=== NSSA Intra-Area Implementation Details ===
  
2.1  The N-bit
+
=== The N-bit ===
  
 
The N-bit ensures that all members of an NSSA agree on the area's
 
The N-bit ensures that all members of an NSSA agree on the area's
Line 360: Line 308:
 
dropped.
 
dropped.
  
2.2  Type-7 Address Ranges
+
=== Type-7 Address Ranges ===
  
 
NSSA border routers may be configured with Type-7 address ranges.
 
NSSA border routers may be configured with Type-7 address ranges.
Line 371: Line 319:
 
all Type-5 capable areas.  Section 3.2 details how Type-5 LSAs are
 
all Type-5 capable areas.  Section 3.2 details how Type-5 LSAs are
 
generated from Type-7 address ranges.
 
generated from Type-7 address ranges.
 
 
 
 
  
 
A Type-7 address range includes the following configurable items.
 
A Type-7 address range includes the following configurable items.
Line 384: Line 328:
 
   o  An external route tag.
 
   o  An external route tag.
  
2.3  Type-7 LSAs
+
=== Type-7 LSAs ===
  
 
External routes are imported into NSSAs as Type-7 LSAs by NSSA AS
 
External routes are imported into NSSAs as Type-7 LSAs by NSSA AS
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   6. Those Type-7 LSAs that are to be translated into Type-5 LSAs
 
   6. Those Type-7 LSAs that are to be translated into Type-5 LSAs
 
       must have their forwarding address set.
 
       must have their forwarding address set.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
Type-5 LSAs that are translations of Type-7 LSAs copy the Type-7
 
Type-5 LSAs that are translations of Type-7 LSAs copy the Type-7
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with the metrics and path types of Type-7 LSAs.
 
with the metrics and path types of Type-7 LSAs.
  
2.4 Originating Type-7 LSAs
+
=== Originating Type-7 LSAs ===
  
 
NSSA AS boundary routers may only originate Type-7 LSAs into NSSAs.
 
NSSA AS boundary routers may only originate Type-7 LSAs into NSSAs.
Line 475: Line 410:
 
P-bit is clear the LSA is not translated into a Type-5 LSA by NSSA
 
P-bit is clear the LSA is not translated into a Type-5 LSA by NSSA
 
border routers.
 
border routers.
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
When an NSSA border router originates both a Type-5 LSA and a Type-7
 
When an NSSA border router originates both a Type-5 LSA and a Type-7
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LSAs, the metric type (1 or 2) should also be configurable.
 
LSAs, the metric type (1 or 2) should also be configurable.
  
2.5 Calculating Type-7 AS External Routes
+
=== Calculating Type-7 AS External Routes ===
  
 
This calculation must be run when Type-7 LSAs are processed during
 
This calculation must be run when Type-7 LSAs are processed during
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routers may be unexpectedly diverted into the NSSA.  (See Appendix
 
routers may be unexpectedly diverted into the NSSA.  (See Appendix
 
E.)
 
E.)
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
An NSSA border router should examine both Type-5 LSAs and Type-7 LSAs
 
An NSSA border router should examine both Type-5 LSAs and Type-7 LSAs
Line 582: Line 506:
 
       list:
 
       list:
  
 
+
         o  The calculating router is a border router and the LSA has
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
         o  The calculating router is a border router and the LSA has
 
 
             its P-bit clear.  Appendix E describes a technique
 
             its P-bit clear.  Appendix E describes a technique
 
             whereby an NSSA border router installs a Type-7 default
 
             whereby an NSSA border router installs a Type-7 default
Line 634: Line 552:
 
       matching routing table entry must specify an intra-area path
 
       matching routing table entry must specify an intra-area path
 
       through the LSA's originating NSSA.  If no such path exists
 
       through the LSA's originating NSSA.  If no such path exists
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
       then do nothing with this LSA and consider the next in the
 
       then do nothing with this LSA and consider the next in the
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           paths of non-backbone regular OSPF areas.
 
           paths of non-backbone regular OSPF areas.
 
           [NSSA]
 
           [NSSA]
 
 
 
 
  
 
       (d) If the new AS external path is still indistinguishable
 
       (d) If the new AS external path is still indistinguishable
Line 717: Line 625:
 
           [NSSA]
 
           [NSSA]
  
2.6 Incremental Updates
+
=== Incremental Updates ===
  
 
Incremental updates for Type-7 LSAs should be treated the same as
 
Incremental updates for Type-7 LSAs should be treated the same as
Line 734: Line 642:
 
routing table entry for N should be invalidated.
 
routing table entry for N should be invalidated.
  
2.7 Optionally Importing Summary Routes
+
=== Optionally Importing Summary Routes ===
  
 
In order for OSPF's summary routing to not be obscured by an NSSA's
 
In order for OSPF's summary routing to not be obscured by an NSSA's
Line 742: Line 650:
 
new area configuration parameter, ImportSummaries, is defined in
 
new area configuration parameter, ImportSummaries, is defined in
 
Appendix D.  When ImportSummaries is set to enabled, summary routes
 
Appendix D.  When ImportSummaries is set to enabled, summary routes
 
 
 
 
  
 
are imported.  When it is set to disabled, summary routes are not
 
are imported.  When it is set to disabled, summary routes are not
Line 760: Line 664:
 
Type-7 default LSAs.
 
Type-7 default LSAs.
  
3.0 Intra-AS Implementation Details
+
=== Intra-AS Implementation Details ===
  
3.1 Type-7 Translator Election
+
=== Type-7 Translator Election ===
  
 
It is not recommended that multiple NSSA border routers perform
 
It is not recommended that multiple NSSA border routers perform
Line 795: Line 699:
 
Appendix B.)  By default routers clear bit Nt when originating
 
Appendix B.)  By default routers clear bit Nt when originating
 
router-LSAs.  However, when an NSSA border router has its
 
router-LSAs.  However, when an NSSA border router has its
 
 
 
 
  
 
NSSATranslatorState enabled, it sets bit Nt in the router-LSA it
 
NSSATranslatorState enabled, it sets bit Nt in the router-LSA it
Line 840: Line 740:
 
parameter has been defined as 40 seconds. (See Appendix D.)
 
parameter has been defined as 40 seconds. (See Appendix D.)
  
3.2 Translating Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs
+
=== Translating Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs ===
  
 
This step is performed as part of the NSSA's Dijkstra calculation
 
This step is performed as part of the NSSA's Dijkstra calculation
Line 847: Line 747:
 
then this translation algorithm should be skipped.  Only installed
 
then this translation algorithm should be skipped.  Only installed
  
 
+
Type-7 LSAs and those non-default Type-7 LSAs originated by the
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Type-7 LSAs and those non-default Type-7 LSAs originated by the
 
 
router itself should be examined.  Locally sourced Type-7 LSAs should
 
router itself should be examined.  Locally sourced Type-7 LSAs should
 
be processed first.
 
be processed first.
Line 899: Line 793:
 
       the link-state ID can also have one or more of the network's
 
       the link-state ID can also have one or more of the network's
 
       "host" bits set).
 
       "host" bits set).
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
   (3) Else the Type-7 LSA must be aggregated by the most specific
 
   (3) Else the Type-7 LSA must be aggregated by the most specific
Line 950: Line 838:
 
       Thus at most a single Type-5 LSA is originated for each Type-7
 
       Thus at most a single Type-5 LSA is originated for each Type-7
 
       address range.
 
       address range.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
For example, given a Type-7 address range of [10.0.0.0, 255.0.0.0]
 
For example, given a Type-7 address range of [10.0.0.0, 255.0.0.0]
Line 1,000: Line 880:
 
the Type-7 address range.
 
the Type-7 address range.
  
3.3 Flushing Translated Type-7 LSAs
+
=== Flushing Translated Type-7 LSAs ===
  
 
If an NSSA border router has either translated or aggregated an
 
If an NSSA border router has either translated or aggregated an
Line 1,007: Line 887:
 
flushed or reoriginated as a translation or aggregation of other
 
flushed or reoriginated as a translation or aggregation of other
 
Type-7 LSAs.
 
Type-7 LSAs.
 
 
 
 
  
 
If an NSSA border router is translating Type-7 LSA's into Type-5
 
If an NSSA border router is translating Type-7 LSA's into Type-5
Line 1,026: Line 902:
 
changes its translators frequently.
 
changes its translators frequently.
  
4.0 Security Considerations
+
=== Security Considerations ===
  
 
There are two types of issues that need be addressed when looking at
 
There are two types of issues that need be addressed when looking at
Line 1,061: Line 937:
 
security mechanisms, see Sections 8.1, 8.2, and Appendix D of [OSPF].
 
security mechanisms, see Sections 8.1, 8.2, and Appendix D of [OSPF].
  
 
+
[DIGI] describes the extensions to OSPF required to add digital
 
 
 
 
 
 
[DIGI] describes the extensions to OSPF required to add digital
 
 
signature authentication to Link State data and to provide a
 
signature authentication to Link State data and to provide a
 
certification mechanism for router data.  [DIGI] also describes the
 
certification mechanism for router data.  [DIGI] also describes the
Line 1,090: Line 962:
 
overflows.
 
overflows.
  
5.0 Acknowledgements
+
=== Acknowledgements ===
  
 
This document was produced by the OSPF Working Group, chaired by John
 
This document was produced by the OSPF Working Group, chaired by John
Line 1,108: Line 980:
 
   Doug Williams      IBM
 
   Doug Williams      IBM
  
were acknowledged in the predecessor of this document, [[RFC1587|RFC 1587]].
+
were acknowledged in the predecessor of this document, RFC 1587.
  
 +
=== Contributors ===
  
 
+
This document, RFC 3101, adds new sections, features, edits, and
 
+
revisions to its predecessor, RFC 1587, "The OSPF NSSA Option",
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
6.0 Contributors
 
 
 
This document, [[RFC3101|RFC 3101]], adds new sections, features, edits, and
 
revisions to its predecessor, [[RFC1587|RFC 1587]], "The OSPF NSSA Option",
 
 
authored by Rob Coltun, Movaz Networks, and Vince Fuller.  Content
 
authored by Rob Coltun, Movaz Networks, and Vince Fuller.  Content
from [[RFC1587|RFC 1587]] is used throughout [[RFC3101|RFC 3101]].  In addition to adding new
+
from RFC 1587 is used throughout RFC 3101.  In addition to adding new
 
features, this document makes the NSSA specification consistent with
 
features, this document makes the NSSA specification consistent with
the OSPFv2 specification, [[RFC2328|RFC 2328]], authored by John Moy, Sycamore
+
the OSPFv2 specification, RFC 2328, authored by John Moy, Sycamore
 
Networks, Inc.  Section 2.5, Calculating Type-7 AS External Routes,
 
Networks, Inc.  Section 2.5, Calculating Type-7 AS External Routes,
 
and Section 2.6,  Incremental Updates, rely heavily on text in RFC
 
and Section 2.6,  Incremental Updates, rely heavily on text in RFC
 
2328's Section 16.4 and Section 16.6 respectively.  Section 4.0,
 
2328's Section 16.4 and Section 16.6 respectively.  Section 4.0,
 
Security Considerations, is an edit of similar content in Rob
 
Security Considerations, is an edit of similar content in Rob
Coltun's [[RFC2370|RFC 2370]], "The OSPF Opaque LSA option", Section 6.0.
+
Coltun's RFC 2370, "The OSPF Opaque LSA option", Section 6.0.
  
 
Acee Lindem, Redback Networks, Inc, is also recognized for the first
 
Acee Lindem, Redback Networks, Inc, is also recognized for the first
Line 1,136: Line 1,000:
 
implementation resulted in substantive content change.
 
implementation resulted in substantive content change.
  
7.0 References
+
=== References ===
  
 
[DIGI]    Murphy, S., Badger, M. and B. Wellington, "OSPF with
 
[DIGI]    Murphy, S., Badger, M. and B. Wellington, "OSPF with
           Digital Signatures", [[RFC2154|RFC 2154]], June 1997.
+
           Digital Signatures", RFC 2154, June 1997.
  
[MUEX]    Moy, J., "Multicast Extensions to OSPF", [[RFC1584|RFC 1584]], March
+
[MUEX]    Moy, J., "Multicast Extensions to OSPF", RFC 1584, March
 
           1994.
 
           1994.
  
[OSPF]    Moy, J., "OSPF Version 2", [[RFC2328|RFC 2328]], April 1998.
+
[OSPF]    Moy, J., "OSPF Version 2", RFC 2328, April 1998.
  
[OPAQUE]  Coltun, R., "The OSPF Opaque LSA Option", [[RFC2370|RFC 2370]], July
+
[OPAQUE]  Coltun, R., "The OSPF Opaque LSA Option", RFC 2370, July
 
           1998.
 
           1998.
  
[OVERFLOW] Moy, J., "OSPF Database Overflow", [[RFC1765|RFC 1765]], March 1995.
+
[OVERFLOW] Moy, J., "OSPF Database Overflow", RFC 1765, March 1995.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 +
Appendix A: The Options Field
  
 +
The OSPF options field is present in OSPF Hello packets, Database
 +
Description packets and all link state advertisements.  See [OSPF]
 +
Appendix A.2 and [OPAQUE] Appendix A.1 for a description of the
 +
options field.  Six bits are assigned but only two (the E-bit and the
 +
N/P bit) are described completely in this section.
  
 +
              --------------------------------------
 +
              | * | O | DC | EA | N/P | MC | E | * |
 +
              --------------------------------------
  
 +
                  The Type-7 LSA options field
  
 +
  E-bit:  Type-5 AS-external-LSAs are not flooded into/through OSPF
 +
          stub areas and NSSAs.  The E-bit ensures that all members
 +
          of a stub area or NSSA agree on that area configuration.
 +
          The E-bit is meaningful only in OSPF Hello and Database
 +
          Description packets.  When the E-bit is clear in the Hello
 +
          packet sent out a particular interface, it means that the
 +
          router will neither send nor receive Type-5 AS-external-
 +
          LSAs on that interface (in other words, the interface
 +
          connects to a stub area or NSSA).  Two routers will not
 +
          become neighbors unless they agree on the state of the E-
 +
          bit.
  
 +
  N-bit:  The N-bit describes the router's NSSA capability.  The N-
 +
          bit is used only in Hello packets and ensures that all
 +
          members of an NSSA agree on that area's configuration.
 +
          When the N-bit is set in the Hello packet that is sent out
 +
          a particular interface, it means that the router will send
 +
          and receive Type-7 LSAs on that interface.  Two routers
 +
          will not form an adjacency unless they agree on the state
 +
          of the N-bit.  If the N-bit is set in the options field,
 +
          the E-bit must be clear.
  
 +
  P-bit:  The P-bit is used only in the Type-7 LSA header.  It flags
 +
          the NSSA border router to translate the Type-7 LSA into a
 +
          Type-5 LSA.  The default setting for the P-bit is clear.
  
 +
Appendix B: Router-LSAs
  
 +
Router-LSAs are the Type-1 LSAs.  Each router in an area originates a
 +
router-LSA.  The LSA describes the state and cost of the router's
 +
links (i.e., interfaces) to the area.  All of the router's links to
 +
the area must be described in a single router-LSA.  For details
 +
concerning the construction of router-LSAs, see [OSPF] Section
 +
12.4.1.
  
 +
    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
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  |            LS age            |    Options  |      1      |
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  |                        Link State ID                          |
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  |                    Advertising Router                        |
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  |                    LS sequence number                        |
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  |        LS checksum          |            length            |
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  |  0  Nt|W|V|E|B|        0      |            # links            |
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  |                          Link ID                              |
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  |                        Link Data                            |
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  |    Type      |    # TOS    |        TOS 0 metric          |
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  |      TOS      |        0      |            metric            |
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  |                              ...                              |
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  |      TOS      |        0      |            metric            |
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  |                          Link ID                              |
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  |                        Link Data                            |
 +
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +
  |                              ...                              |
  
 +
In router-LSAs, the Link State ID field is set to the router's OSPF
 +
Router ID.  Router-LSAs are flooded throughout a single area only.
  
 +
  bit V
 +
      When set, the router is an endpoint of one or more fully
 +
      adjacent virtual links having the described area as their
 +
      transit area (V is for virtual link endpoint).
  
 +
  bit E
 +
      When set, the router is an AS boundary router (E is for
 +
      external).  ALL NSSA border routers set bit E in those
 +
      router-LSAs originated into directly attached Type-5 capable
 +
      areas.  An NSSA's AS boundary routers also set bit E in their
 +
      router-LSAs originated into the NSSA.  (See Section 3.1 for
 +
      details.)
  
 +
  bit B
 +
      When set, the router is an area border router (B is for
 +
      border).
  
 +
  bit W
 +
      When set, the router is a wild-card multicast receiver (W is
 +
      for wild).
  
 +
  bit Nt
 +
      When set, the router is an NSSA border router that is
 +
      unconditionally translating Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs (Nt
 +
      stands for NSSA translation).  Note that such routers have
 +
      their NSSATranslatorRole area configuration parameter set to
 +
      Always.  (See Appendix D and Section 3.1.)
  
Appendix A: The Options Field
+
The remainder of the router-LSAs specification is defined in [OSPF]
 
+
Section A.4.2.
The OSPF options field is present in OSPF Hello packets, Database
 
Description packets and all link state advertisements.  See [OSPF]
 
Appendix A.2 and [OPAQUE] Appendix A.1 for a description of the
 
options field.  Six bits are assigned but only two (the E-bit and the
 
N/P bit) are described completely in this section.
 
 
 
              --------------------------------------
 
              | * | O | DC | EA | N/P | MC | E | * |
 
              --------------------------------------
 
 
 
                  The Type-7 LSA options field
 
 
 
  E-bit:  Type-5 AS-external-LSAs are not flooded into/through OSPF
 
          stub areas and NSSAs.  The E-bit ensures that all members
 
          of a stub area or NSSA agree on that area configuration.
 
          The E-bit is meaningful only in OSPF Hello and Database
 
          Description packets.  When the E-bit is clear in the Hello
 
          packet sent out a particular interface, it means that the
 
          router will neither send nor receive Type-5 AS-external-
 
          LSAs on that interface (in other words, the interface
 
          connects to a stub area or NSSA). Two routers will not
 
          become neighbors unless they agree on the state of the E-
 
          bit.
 
 
 
  N-bit:  The N-bit describes the router's NSSA capability.  The N-
 
          bit is used only in Hello packets and ensures that all
 
          members of an NSSA agree on that area's configuration.
 
          When the N-bit is set in the Hello packet that is sent out
 
          a particular interface, it means that the router will send
 
          and receive Type-7 LSAs on that interface.  Two routers
 
          will not form an adjacency unless they agree on the state
 
          of the N-bit.  If the N-bit is set in the options field,
 
          the E-bit must be clear.
 
 
 
  P-bit:  The P-bit is used only in the Type-7 LSA header.  It flags
 
          the NSSA border router to translate the Type-7 LSA into a
 
          Type-5 LSA.  The default setting for the P-bit is clear.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 +
Appendix C: Type-7 LSA Packet Format
  
 +
    0                                32
 +
    ------------------------------------
 +
    |                | Options |  7  |
 +
    |                -------------------
 +
    |        Link-State Header        |
 +
    |                                  |
 +
    ------------------------------------
 +
    | Network Mask                    |
 +
    ------------------------------------  ______
 +
    |E| TOS  |        metric          |  .
 +
    ------------------------------------  .  repeated for each TOS
 +
    | Forwarding Address              |  .
 +
    ------------------------------------  .
 +
    | External Route Tag              |  ______
 +
    ------------------------------------
  
 +
The definitions of the link-state ID, network mask, metrics and
 +
external route tag are the same as the definitions for Type-5 LSAs
 +
(See [OSPF] Appendix A.4.5), except for the forwarding address and
 +
the N/P-bit.  The Options field must have the N/P bit set as
 +
described in Appendix A when the originating router desires that the
 +
external route be propagated throughout the OSPF domain.
  
 +
Forwarding address
 +
  Data traffic for the advertised destination will be forwarded to
 +
  this address.  If the forwarding address is set to 0.0.0.0, data
 +
  traffic will be forwarded to the LSA's originator (i.e., the
 +
  responsible NSSA AS boundary router).  Normally the next hop
 +
  address of an installed AS external route learned by an NSSA ASBR
 +
  from an adjacent AS points at one of the adjacent AS's gateway
 +
  routers.  If this address belongs to a network connected to the
 +
  NSSA ASBR via one of its NSSAs' active interfaces, then it is the
 +
  forwarding address for the route's Type-7 LSA originated into this
 +
  NSSA.  For an NSSA with no such network the forwarding address is
 +
  either an address from one of its active interfaces or 0.0.0.0.
 +
  If the P-bit is set, the forwarding address must be non-zero,
 +
  otherwise it may be 0.0.0.0. (See Section 2.3 for details.)
  
 +
Appendix D:  Configuration Parameters
  
 +
[OSPF] Appendix C.2 lists the area configuration parameters.  The
 +
area ID and the list of address ranges for Type-3 summary routes
 +
remain unchanged.  Section 2.2 of this document lists the
 +
configuration parameters for Type-7 address ranges.  The following
 +
area configuration parameters have been added:
  
 +
  NSSATranslatorRole
  
 +
      Specifies whether or not an NSSA border router will
 +
      unconditionally translate Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs.  When
 +
      it is set to Always, an NSSA border router always translates
 +
      Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs regardless of the translator state
 +
      of other NSSA border routers.  When it is set to Candidate, an
 +
      NSSA border router participates in the translator election
 +
      process described in Section 3.1.  The default setting is
 +
      Candidate.
  
 +
  TranslatorStabilityInterval
 +
 +
      Defines the length of time an elected Type-7 translator will
 +
      continue to perform its translator duties once it has
 +
      determined that its translator status has been deposed by
 +
      another NSSA border router translator as described in Section
 +
      3.1 and 3.3.  The default setting is 40 seconds.
 +
 +
  ImportSummaries
  
Appendix B: Router-LSAs
+
       When set to enabled, OSPF's summary routes are imported into
 
+
       the NSSA as Type-3 summary-LSAs.  When set to disabled, summary
Router-LSAs are the Type-1 LSAs.  Each router in an area originates a
+
       routes are not imported into the NSSA.  The default setting is
router-LSA.  The LSA describes the state and cost of the router's
+
       enabled.
links (i.e., interfaces) to the area.  All of the router's links to
+
 
the area must be described in a single router-LSA.  For details
+
Implementations must provide a vehicle for setting the P-bit when
concerning the construction of router-LSAs, see [OSPF] Section
+
external routes are imported into the NSSA as Type-7 LSAs.  Without
12.4.1.
+
configuration, the default setting of the P-bit is clear.  (See
 
+
Section 2.3 and Appendix B.)
    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
+
For NSSAs the ExternalRoutingCapability area configuration parameter
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
+
must be set to accept Type-7 external routes.  Additionally there
  |            LS age            |    Options  |      1      |
+
must be a way of configuring the metric of the default LSA that a
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
+
border router advertises into its directly attached NSSAs. If a
  |                        Link State ID                          |
+
Type-7 default LSA is advertised, its metric type (1 or 2) should
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
+
also be configurable.
  |                    Advertising Router                        |
 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 
  |                    LS sequence number                        |
 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 
  |        LS checksum          |            length            |
 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 
  |  0  Nt|W|V|E|B|        0      |            # links            |
 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 
  |                          Link ID                              |
 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 
  |                        Link Data                            |
 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 
  |    Type      |    # TOS    |        TOS 0 metric          |
 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 
  |      TOS      |        0      |            metric            |
 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 
  |                              ...                              |
 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 
  |      TOS      |        0      |            metric            |
 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 
  |                          Link ID                              |
 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 
  |                        Link Data                            |
 
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 
  |                              ...                              |
 
 
 
In router-LSAs, the Link State ID field is set to the router's OSPF
 
Router ID.  Router-LSAs are flooded throughout a single area only.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  bit V
 
      When set, the router is an endpoint of one or more fully
 
      adjacent virtual links having the described area as their
 
      transit area (V is for virtual link endpoint).
 
 
 
  bit E
 
      When set, the router is an AS boundary router (E is for
 
      external).  ALL NSSA border routers set bit E in those
 
      router-LSAs originated into directly attached Type-5 capable
 
      areas.  An NSSA's AS boundary routers also set bit E in their
 
      router-LSAs originated into the NSSA.  (See Section 3.1 for
 
      details.)
 
 
 
  bit B
 
      When set, the router is an area border router (B is for
 
      border).
 
 
 
  bit W
 
      When set, the router is a wild-card multicast receiver (W is
 
      for wild).
 
 
 
  bit Nt
 
      When set, the router is an NSSA border router that is
 
      unconditionally translating Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs (Nt
 
      stands for NSSA translation).  Note that such routers have
 
      their NSSATranslatorRole area configuration parameter set to
 
      Always.  (See Appendix D and Section 3.1.)
 
 
 
The remainder of the router-LSAs specification is defined in [OSPF]
 
Section A.4.2.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Appendix C: Type-7 LSA Packet Format
 
 
 
    0                                32
 
    ------------------------------------
 
    |                | Options |  7  |
 
    |                -------------------
 
    |        Link-State Header        |
 
    |                                  |
 
    ------------------------------------
 
    | Network Mask                    |
 
    ------------------------------------  ______
 
    |E| TOS  |        metric          |  .
 
    ------------------------------------  .  repeated for each TOS
 
    | Forwarding Address              |  .
 
    ------------------------------------  .
 
    | External Route Tag              |  ______
 
    ------------------------------------
 
 
 
The definitions of the link-state ID, network mask, metrics and
 
external route tag are the same as the definitions for Type-5 LSAs
 
(See [OSPF] Appendix A.4.5), except for the forwarding address and
 
the N/P-bit.  The Options field must have the N/P bit set as
 
described in Appendix A when the originating router desires that the
 
external route be propagated throughout the OSPF domain.
 
 
 
Forwarding address
 
  Data traffic for the advertised destination will be forwarded to
 
  this address.  If the forwarding address is set to 0.0.0.0, data
 
  traffic will be forwarded to the LSA's originator (i.e., the
 
  responsible NSSA AS boundary router).  Normally the next hop
 
  address of an installed AS external route learned by an NSSA ASBR
 
  from an adjacent AS points at one of the adjacent AS's gateway
 
  routers.  If this address belongs to a network connected to the
 
  NSSA ASBR via one of its NSSAs' active interfaces, then it is the
 
  forwarding address for the route's Type-7 LSA originated into this
 
  NSSA.  For an NSSA with no such network the forwarding address is
 
  either an address from one of its active interfaces or 0.0.0.0.
 
  If the P-bit is set, the forwarding address must be non-zero,
 
  otherwise it may be 0.0.0.0. (See Section 2.3 for details.)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Appendix D:  Configuration Parameters
 
 
 
[OSPF] Appendix C.2 lists the area configuration parameters.  The
 
area ID and the list of address ranges for Type-3 summary routes
 
remain unchanged.  Section 2.2 of this document lists the
 
configuration parameters for Type-7 address ranges.  The following
 
area configuration parameters have been added:
 
 
 
  NSSATranslatorRole
 
 
 
      Specifies whether or not an NSSA border router will
 
      unconditionally translate Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs.  When
 
      it is set to Always, an NSSA border router always translates
 
      Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs regardless of the translator state
 
      of other NSSA border routers.  When it is set to Candidate, an
 
      NSSA border router participates in the translator election
 
      process described in Section 3.1.  The default setting is
 
      Candidate.
 
 
 
  TranslatorStabilityInterval
 
 
 
      Defines the length of time an elected Type-7 translator will
 
      continue to perform its translator duties once it has
 
      determined that its translator status has been deposed by
 
      another NSSA border router translator as described in Section
 
      3.1 and 3.3.  The default setting is 40 seconds.
 
 
 
  ImportSummaries
 
 
 
       When set to enabled, OSPF's summary routes are imported into
 
       the NSSA as Type-3 summary-LSAs.  When set to disabled, summary
 
       routes are not imported into the NSSA.  The default setting is
 
       enabled.
 
 
 
Implementations must provide a vehicle for setting the P-bit when
 
external routes are imported into the NSSA as Type-7 LSAs.  Without
 
configuration, the default setting of the P-bit is clear.  (See
 
Section 2.3 and Appendix B.)
 
 
 
For NSSAs the ExternalRoutingCapability area configuration parameter
 
must be set to accept Type-7 external routes.  Additionally there
 
must be a way of configuring the metric of the default LSA that a
 
border router advertises into its directly attached NSSAs. If a
 
Type-7 default LSA is advertised, its metric type (1 or 2) should
 
also be configurable.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Appendix E: The P-bit Policy Paradox.
 
 
 
Non-default Type-7 LSAs with the P-bit clear may be installed in the
 
OSPF routing table of NSSA border routers.  (See Section 2.5.)  These
 
LSAs are not propagated throughout the OSPF domain as translated
 
Type-5 LSAs.  (See Section 3.2.)  Thus, traffic that is external to
 
an NSSA and that passes through one of the NSSA's border routers may
 
be hijacked into the NSSA by a route installed from a Type-7 LSA with
 
the P-bit clear.  This may be contrary to the expected path at the
 
source of the traffic.  It may also violate the routing policy
 
intended by the Type-7 LSA's clear P-bit.  A Type-7 address range
 
that is configured with DoNotAdvertise exhibits the same paradox for
 
any installed Type-7 LSAs it subsumes, regardless of the P-bit
 
setting.
 
 
 
This paradox is best illustrated by the following example.  Consider
 
an OSPF domain (AS 1842) with connections for default Internet
 
routing and to external AS 4156.  NSSA 1 and OSPF Area 2 are
 
partially defined in the following diagram:
 
 
 
                          AS 4156
 
                            |
 
        Area 2              |
 
                            |
 
          A2                A0  Area 0      C0-----Internet
 
          |                |                |      Default
 
          |                |                |
 
          |                |                |
 
          +-----------------B0---------------+
 
                            /\
 
                            /  \
 
                          /    \
 
      Internet------------A1    B1------AS 4156 (P-bit clear)
 
      Default (P-bit set)
 
                              NSSA 1
 
 
 
Here A0, B0, and C0 are Area 0 routers, A1 and B1 are NSSA 1 routers,
 
and A2 is an Area 2 router.  B0 is a border router for both NSSA 1
 
and Area 2.
 
 
 
If the Type-7 external routes imported by B1 for AS 4156 are
 
installed on B0 so that the NSSA 1 tree below A1 can take advantage
 
of them, then A2's traffic to AS 4156 is hijacked through B0 by B1,
 
rather than its computed path through A0.
 
 
 
An NSSA border router's installed Type-7 default LSAs will exhibit
 
this paradox when it possesses a Type-7 address range [0,0]
 
configured with DoNotAdvertise, as these LSAs are not propagated even
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
though their P-bit is set.  In the example above, if A1's default is
 
installed on B0, which has a configured Type-7 address range [0,0]
 
with DoNotAdvertise set, then A2's Internet traffic is hijacked
 
through B0 by A1 rather than the computed path through C0.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Appendix F: Differences from [[RFC1587|RFC 1587]]
 
 
 
This section documents the differences between this memo and RFC
 
1587.  All differences are backward-compatible.  Implementations of
 
this memo and of [[RFC1587|RFC 1587]] will interoperate.
 
 
 
F.1 Enhancements to the import of OSPF's summary routes.
 
 
 
The import of OSPF's summary routes into an NSSA as Type-3 summary-
 
LSAs is now optional.  In [[RFC1587|RFC 1587]] the import of summary routes was
 
mandated in order to guarantee that inter-area summary routing was
 
not obscured by an NSSA's Type-7 AS-external-LSAs. The current
 
recommended default behavior is to import summary routes.  When
 
summary routes are not imported into an NSSA, the default LSA
 
originated by its border routers must be a Type-3 summary-LSA.
 
 
 
See Sections 1.3 and 2.7 for details.
 
 
 
F.2 Changes to Type-7 LSAs.
 
 
 
The setting of the forwarding address in Type-7 LSAs has been further
 
refined.
 
 
 
See Section 2.3 for details.
 
 
 
F.3 Changes to the Type-7 AS external routing calculation.
 
 
 
The Type-7 external route calculation has been revised.  Most
 
notably:
 
 
 
  o  The path preference defined in [OSPF] Section 16.4.1 has been
 
      included.
 
 
 
  o  A Type-7 default route with the P-bit clear will not be
 
      installed on an NSSA border router.  This protects the default
 
      routing of other OSPF Areas.  (See Appendix E.)
 
 
 
  o  The LSA type of two AS-external-LSAs plays no role in
 
      determining path preference except when the LSAs are
 
      functionally the same (i.e., same destination, cost and non-
 
      zero forwarding address).
 
 
 
See Section 2.5 for details.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
F.4 Changes to translating Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs
 
 
 
The translator election algorithm of [[RFC1587|RFC 1587]] has been updated to
 
close a bug that results when the translator with the highest router
 
ID loses connectivity to the AS's transit topology.  The default
 
translator election process occurs only in the absence of an existing
 
translator.
 
 
 
The identity of the translator is optionally configurable, with more
 
than one allowed.  This allows the network designer to choose the
 
most cost effective intra-AS route for NSSA originated Type-5 LSA
 
aggregations of Type-7 LSAs.
 
 
 
Self-originated non-default Type-7 LSAs are now included in the
 
translation process.
 
 
 
The translation process has been strengthened to close some of the
 
weak points of [[RFC1587|RFC 1587]].
 
 
 
See Sections 3.1 and 3.2 for details.
 
 
 
F.5 Changes to flushing translated Type-7 LSAs
 
 
 
An NSSA border router, which was elected by the augmented [[RFC1587|RFC 1587]]
 
translator selection process defined in Section 3.1 and which has
 
been deposed from its translation duties by another NSSA border
 
router, flushes its self-originated Type-5 LSAs that resulted from
 
the aggregation of Type-7 LSAs.  This prevents these obsolete
 
aggregations from short circuiting the preferred path through the new
 
translator(s).  A deposed translator continues to maintain its self-
 
originated Type-5 LSAs resulting from translation until they age out
 
normally.
 
 
 
See Section 3.3 for details.
 
 
 
F.6 P-bit additions
 
 
 
The P-bit default has been defined as clear.  [[RFC1587|RFC 1587]] had no default
 
setting. (See Appendix C.)
 
 
 
A discussion on the packet forwarding impact of installing Type-7
 
LSAs with the P-bit clear on NSSA border routers has been added as
 
Appendix E.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Author's Addresses
 
 
 
Pat Murphy
 
US Geological Survey
 
345 Middlefield Road
 
Menlo Park, California 94560
 
 
 
Phone: (650) 329-4044
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 +
Appendix E: The P-bit Policy Paradox.
  
 +
Non-default Type-7 LSAs with the P-bit clear may be installed in the
 +
OSPF routing table of NSSA border routers.  (See Section 2.5.)  These
 +
LSAs are not propagated throughout the OSPF domain as translated
 +
Type-5 LSAs.  (See Section 3.2.)  Thus, traffic that is external to
 +
an NSSA and that passes through one of the NSSA's border routers may
 +
be hijacked into the NSSA by a route installed from a Type-7 LSA with
 +
the P-bit clear.  This may be contrary to the expected path at the
 +
source of the traffic.  It may also violate the routing policy
 +
intended by the Type-7 LSA's clear P-bit.  A Type-7 address range
 +
that is configured with DoNotAdvertise exhibits the same paradox for
 +
any installed Type-7 LSAs it subsumes, regardless of the P-bit
 +
setting.
  
 +
This paradox is best illustrated by the following example.  Consider
 +
an OSPF domain (AS 1842) with connections for default Internet
 +
routing and to external AS 4156.  NSSA 1 and OSPF Area 2 are
 +
partially defined in the following diagram:
  
 +
                          AS 4156
 +
                            |
 +
        Area 2              |
 +
                            |
 +
          A2                A0  Area 0      C0-----Internet
 +
          |                |                |      Default
 +
          |                |                |
 +
          |                |                |
 +
          +-----------------B0---------------+
 +
                            /\
 +
                            /  \
 +
                          /    \
 +
      Internet------------A1    B1------AS 4156 (P-bit clear)
 +
      Default (P-bit set)
 +
                              NSSA 1
  
 +
Here A0, B0, and C0 are Area 0 routers, A1 and B1 are NSSA 1 routers,
 +
and A2 is an Area 2 router.  B0 is a border router for both NSSA 1
 +
and Area 2.
  
 +
If the Type-7 external routes imported by B1 for AS 4156 are
 +
installed on B0 so that the NSSA 1 tree below A1 can take advantage
 +
of them, then A2's traffic to AS 4156 is hijacked through B0 by B1,
 +
rather than its computed path through A0.
  
 +
An NSSA border router's installed Type-7 default LSAs will exhibit
 +
this paradox when it possesses a Type-7 address range [0,0]
 +
configured with DoNotAdvertise, as these LSAs are not propagated even
  
 +
though their P-bit is set.  In the example above, if A1's default is
 +
installed on B0, which has a configured Type-7 address range [0,0]
 +
with DoNotAdvertise set, then A2's Internet traffic is hijacked
 +
through B0 by A1 rather than the computed path through C0.
  
 +
Appendix F: Differences from RFC 1587
  
 +
This section documents the differences between this memo and RFC
 +
1587.  All differences are backward-compatible.  Implementations of
 +
this memo and of RFC 1587 will interoperate.
  
 +
F.1 Enhancements to the import of OSPF's summary routes.
  
 +
The import of OSPF's summary routes into an NSSA as Type-3 summary-
 +
LSAs is now optional.  In RFC 1587 the import of summary routes was
 +
mandated in order to guarantee that inter-area summary routing was
 +
not obscured by an NSSA's Type-7 AS-external-LSAs. The current
 +
recommended default behavior is to import summary routes.  When
 +
summary routes are not imported into an NSSA, the default LSA
 +
originated by its border routers must be a Type-3 summary-LSA.
  
 +
See Sections 1.3 and 2.7 for details.
  
 +
F.2 Changes to Type-7 LSAs.
  
 +
The setting of the forwarding address in Type-7 LSAs has been further
 +
refined.
  
 +
See Section 2.3 for details.
  
 +
F.3 Changes to the Type-7 AS external routing calculation.
  
 +
The Type-7 external route calculation has been revised.  Most
 +
notably:
  
 +
  o  The path preference defined in [OSPF] Section 16.4.1 has been
 +
      included.
  
 +
  o  A Type-7 default route with the P-bit clear will not be
 +
      installed on an NSSA border router.  This protects the default
 +
      routing of other OSPF Areas.  (See Appendix E.)
  
 +
  o  The LSA type of two AS-external-LSAs plays no role in
 +
      determining path preference except when the LSAs are
 +
      functionally the same (i.e., same destination, cost and non-
 +
      zero forwarding address).
  
 +
See Section 2.5 for details.
  
 +
F.4 Changes to translating Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs
  
 +
The translator election algorithm of RFC 1587 has been updated to
 +
close a bug that results when the translator with the highest router
 +
ID loses connectivity to the AS's transit topology.  The default
 +
translator election process occurs only in the absence of an existing
 +
translator.
  
 +
The identity of the translator is optionally configurable, with more
 +
than one allowed.  This allows the network designer to choose the
 +
most cost effective intra-AS route for NSSA originated Type-5 LSA
 +
aggregations of Type-7 LSAs.
  
 +
Self-originated non-default Type-7 LSAs are now included in the
 +
translation process.
  
 +
The translation process has been strengthened to close some of the
 +
weak points of RFC 1587.
  
 +
See Sections 3.1 and 3.2 for details.
 +
 +
F.5 Changes to flushing translated Type-7 LSAs
 +
 +
An NSSA border router, which was elected by the augmented RFC 1587
 +
translator selection process defined in Section 3.1 and which has
 +
been deposed from its translation duties by another NSSA border
 +
router, flushes its self-originated Type-5 LSAs that resulted from
 +
the aggregation of Type-7 LSAs.  This prevents these obsolete
 +
aggregations from short circuiting the preferred path through the new
 +
translator(s).  A deposed translator continues to maintain its self-
 +
originated Type-5 LSAs resulting from translation until they age out
 +
normally.
  
 +
See Section 3.3 for details.
  
 +
F.6 P-bit additions
  
 +
The P-bit default has been defined as clear.  RFC 1587 had no default
 +
setting. (See Appendix C.)
 +
 +
A discussion on the packet forwarding impact of installing Type-7
 +
LSAs with the P-bit clear on NSSA border routers has been added as
 +
Appendix E.
  
 +
Author's Addresses
  
 +
Pat Murphy
 +
US Geological Survey
 +
345 Middlefield Road
 +
Menlo Park, California 94560
  
 +
Phone: (650) 329-4044
 +
  
 
Full Copyright Statement
 
Full Copyright Statement

Revision as of 10:34, 24 September 2020

Network Working Group P. Murphy Request for Comments: 3101 US Geological Survey Obsoletes: 1587 January 2003 Category: Standards Track

           The OSPF Not-So-Stubby Area (NSSA) Option

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 (2003). All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

This memo documents an optional type of Open Shortest Path First (OSPF) area that is somewhat humorously referred to as a "not-so- stubby" area (or NSSA). NSSAs are similar to the existing OSPF stub area configuration option but have the additional capability of importing AS external routes in a limited fashion.

The OSPF NSSA Option was originally defined in RFC 1587. The functional differences between this memo and RFC 1587 are explained in Appendix F. All differences, while expanding capability, are backward-compatible in nature. Implementations of this memo and of RFC 1587 will interoperate.

Table Of Contents

1.0 Overview ................................................. 2

  1.1 Motivation - Transit Networks .........................  2
  1.2 Motivation - Corporate Networks .......................  4
  1.3 Proposed Solution .....................................  5

2.0 NSSA Intra-Area Implementation Details ................... 7

  2.1 The N-bit .............................................  7
  2.2 Type-7 Address Ranges .................................  7
  2.3 Type-7 LSAs ...........................................  8
  2.4 Originating Type-7 LSAs ...............................  9
  2.5 Calculating Type-7 AS External Routes ................. 10
  2.6 Incremental Updates ................................... 14
  2.7 Optionally Importing Summary Routes ................... 14

3.0 Intra-AS Implementation Details .......................... 15

  3.1 Type-7 Translator Election ............................ 15
  3.2 Translating Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs .............. 16
  3.3 Flushing Translated Type-7 LSAs ....................... 19

4.0 Security Considerations .................................. 20 5.0 Acknowledgements ......................................... 21 6.0 Contributors ............................................. 22 7.0 References ............................................... 22 Appendix A: The Options Field ................................ 23 Appendix B: Router-LSAs ...................................... 24 Appendix C: Type-7 LSA Packet Format ......................... 26 Appendix D: Configuration Parameters ......................... 27 Appendix E: The P-bit Policy Paradox ......................... 28 Appendix F: Differences from RFC 1587 ........................ 30 Author's Addresses ........................................... 32 Full Copyright Statement ..................................... 33

Overview

Motivation - Transit Networks

Wide-area transit networks often have connections to moderately complex "leaf" sites. A leaf site may have multiple IP network numbers assigned to it. Typically, one of the leaf site's networks is directly connected to a router provided and administered by the transit network while the others are distributed throughout and administered by the site. From the transit network's perspective, all of the network numbers associated with the site make up a single "stub" entity. For example, BBN Planet has one site composed of a class-B network, 130.57.0.0, and a class-C network, 192.31.114.0. From BBN Planet's perspective, this configuration looks something like the diagram on the next page, where the "cloud" consists of the subnets of 130.57 and network 192.31.114, all of which are learned by RIP on router BR18.

              192.31.114
                  |
                (cloud)
            -------------- 130.57.4
                  |
                  |
               ------ 131.119.13 ------
               |BR18|------------|BR10|
               ------            ------
                                    |
                                    V
                            to BBN Planet "core" OSPF system

Topologically, this cloud looks very much like an OSPF stub area. The advantages of running the cloud as an OSPF stub area are:

  1. External routes learned from OSPF's Type-5 AS-external-LSAs are
     not advertised beyond the router labeled "BR10".  This is
     advantageous because the link between BR10 and BR18 may be a
     low-speed link or the router BR18 may have limited resources.
  2. The transit network is abstracted to the "leaf" router BR18 by
     advertising only a default route across the link between BR10
     and BR18.
  3. The cloud becomes a single, manageable "leaf" with respect to
     the transit network.
  4. The cloud can become, logically, a part of the transit
     network's OSPF routing system.

However, the original definition of the OSPF protocol (See [OSPF]) imposes topological limitations that restrict simple cloud topologies from becoming OSPF stub areas. In particular, it is illegal for a stub area to import routes external to OSPF; thus it is not possible for routers BR18 and BR10 to both be members of the stub area and to import into OSPF as Type-5 AS-external-LSAs routes learned from RIP or other IP routing protocols. In order to run OSPF out to BR18, BR18 must be a member of a non-stub area or the OSPF backbone before it can import routes other than its directly connected network(s). Since it is not acceptable for BR18 to maintain all of BBN Planet's Type-5 AS external routes, BBN Planet is forced by OSPF's topological limitations to only run OSPF out to BR10 and to run RIP between BR18 and BR10.

Motivation - Corporate Networks

In a corporate network that supports a large corporate infrastructure it is not uncommon for its OSPF domain to have a complex non-zero area infrastructure that injects large routing tables into its Area 0 backbone. Organizations within the corporate infrastructure may routinely multi-home their non-zero OSPF areas to strategically located Area 0 backbone routers, either to provide backbone redundancy or to increase backbone connectivity or both. Because of these large routing tables, OSPF aggregation via summarization is routinely used and recommended. Stub areas are also recommended to keep the size of the routing tables of non-backbone routers small. Organizations within the corporation are administratively autonomous and compete for corporate backbone resources. They also want isolation from each other in order to protect their own network resources within the organization.

Consider the typical example configuration shown below where routers A1, B1 and A2, B2 are connected to Area 1 and Area 2 respectively, and where routers A0 and B0 are Area 0 border routers that connect to both Area 1 and Area 2. Assume the 192.168.192/20 and 192.168.208/22 clouds are subnetted with a protocol different from the corporate OSPF instance. These other protocols could be RIP, IGRP, or second and third OSPF instances separate from the corporate OSPF backbone instance.

Area 1 and Area 2 would like to be stub areas to minimize the size of their link state databases. It is also desirable to originate two aggregated external advertisements for the subnets of 192.168.192/20 and 192.168.208/22 in such a way that the preferred path to 192.168.192/20 is through A0 and the preferred path to 192.168.208/22 is through B0.

              +---A0------Area 0 cloud------B0---+
              |   |                          |   |
              |   |                          |   |
              |   |T1                   56kbs|   |
         56kbs|   |                          |   |T1
              |   |                          |   |
              |   |       Area 1 cloud       |   |
              |   A1-----192.168.192/20-----B1   |
              |                                  |
              +---A2                        B2---+
                   |                         |
                   |      Area 2 cloud       |
                   +-----192.168.208/22------+

The current standard OSPF stub area has no mechanism to support the redistribution of routes for the subnets of 192.168.192/20 and 192.168.208/22 within a stub area or the ability to aggregate a range of external routes in any OSPF area. Any solution to this dilemma must also honor Area 1's path of choice to 192.168.192/20 through A0 with redundancy through B0 while at the same time honoring Area 2's path of choice to 192.168.208/20 through B0 with redundancy through A0.

Proposed Solution

This document describes a new optional type of OSPF area, somewhat humorously referred to as a "not-so-stubby" area (or NSSA), which has the capability of importing external routes in a limited fashion.

The OSPF specification defines two general classes of area configuration. The first allows Type-5 LSAs to be flooded throughout the area. In this configuration, Type-5 LSAs may be originated by routers internal to the area or flooded into the area by area border routers. These areas, referred to herein as Type-5 capable areas (or just plain areas in the OSPF specification), are distinguished by the fact that they can carry transit traffic. The backbone is always a Type-5 capable area. The second type of area configuration, called stub, does not allow Type-5 LSAs to be propagated into/throughout the area and instead depends on default routing to external destinations.

NSSAs are defined in much the same manner as existing stub areas. To support NSSAs, a new option bit (the "N" bit) and a new type of LSA (Type-7) are defined. The "N" bit ensures that routers belonging to an NSSA agree on its configuration. Similar to the stub area's use of the "E" bit, both NSSA neighbors must agree on the setting of the "N" bit or the OSPF neighbor adjacency will not form.

Type-7 LSAs provide for carrying external route information within an NSSA. Type-7 LSAs have virtually the same syntax as Type-5 LSAs with the obvious exception of the link-state type. (See section 2.3 for more details.) Both LSAs are considered a type of OSPF AS- external-LSA. There are two major semantic differences between Type-5 LSAs and Type-7 LSAs.

  o  Type-7 LSAs may be originated by and advertised throughout an
     NSSA; as with stub areas, Type-5 LSAs are not flooded into
     NSSAs and do not originate there.
  o  Type-7 LSAs are advertised only within a single NSSA; they are
     not flooded into the backbone area or any other area by border
     routers, though the information that they contain may be
     propagated into the backbone area.  (See Section 3.2.)

In order to allow limited exchange of external information across an NSSA border, NSSA border routers will translate selected Type-7 LSAs received from the NSSA into Type-5 LSAs. These Type-5 LSAs will be flooded to all Type-5 capable areas. NSSA border routers may be configured with address ranges so that multiple Type-7 LSAs may be aggregated into a single Type-5 LSA. The NSSA border routers that perform translation are configurable. In the absence of a configured translator one is elected.

In addition, an NSSA border router should originate a default LSA (IP network is 0.0.0.0/0) into the NSSA. Default routes are necessary because NSSAs do not receive full routing information and must have a default route in order to route to AS-external destinations. Like stub areas, NSSAs may be connected to the Area 0 backbone at more than one NSSA border router, but may not be used as a transit area. Note that a Type-7 default LSA originated by an NSSA border router is never translated into a Type-5 LSA, however, a Type-7 default LSA originated by an NSSA internal AS boundary router (one that is not an NSSA border router) may be translated into a Type-5 LSA.

Like stub areas, NSSA border routers optionally import summary routes into their NSSAs as Type-3 summary-LSAs. If the import is disabled, particular care should be taken to ensure that summary routing is not obscured by an NSSA's Type-7 AS-external-LSAs. This may happen when the AS's other IGPs, like RIP and ISIS, leak routing information into the NSSA. In these cases all summary routes should be imported into the NSSA. The recommended default behavior is to import summary routes into NSSAs. Since Type-5 AS-external-LSAs are not flooded into NSSAs, NSSA border routers should not originate Type-4 summary- LSAs into their NSSAs. Also an NSSA's border routers never originate Type-4 summary-LSAs for the NSSA's AS boundary routers, since Type-7 AS-external-LSAs are never flooded beyond the NSSA's border.

When summary routes are not imported into an NSSA, the default LSA originated into it by its border routers must be a Type-3 summary- LSA. This default summary-LSA insures intra-AS connectivity to the rest of the OSPF domain, as its default summary route is preferred over the default route of a Type-7 default LSA. Without a default summary route the OSPF domain's inter-area traffic, which is normally forwarded by summary routes, might exit the AS via the default route of a Type-7 default LSA originated by an NSSA internal router. The Type-7 default LSAs originated by NSSA internal routers and the no- summary option are mutually exclusive features. When summary routes are imported into the NSSA, the default LSA originated by a NSSA border router into the NSSA should be a Type-7 LSA.

In our transit topology example the subnets of 130.57 and network 192.31.114 will still be learned by RIP on router BR18, but now both

BR10 and BR18 can be in an NSSA and all of BBN Planet's external routes are hidden from BR18; BR10 becomes an NSSA border router and BR18 becomes an AS boundary router internal to the NSSA. BR18 will import the subnets of 130.57 and network 192.31.114 as Type-7 LSAs into the NSSA. BR10 then translates these routes into Type-5 LSAs and floods them into BBN Planet's backbone.

In our corporate topology example if Area 1 and Area 2 are NSSAs the external paths to the subnets of the address ranges 192.168.192/20 and 192.168.208/22 can be redistributed as Type-7 LSAs throughout Area 1 and Area 2 respectively, and then aggregated during the translation process into separate Type-5 LSAs that are flooded into Area 0. A0 may be configured as Area 1's translator even though B0 is the translator of Area 2.

NSSA Intra-Area Implementation Details

The N-bit

The N-bit ensures that all members of an NSSA agree on the area's configuration. Together, the N-bit and E-bit reflect an interface's (and consequently the interface's associated area) external LSA flooding capability. As explained in [OSPF] Section 10.5, if Type-5 LSAs are not flooded into/throughout the area, the E-bit must be clear in the option field of the received Hello packets. Interfaces associated with an NSSA will not send or receive Type-5 LSAs on that interface but may send and receive Type-7 LSAs. Therefore, if the N-bit is set in the options field, the E-bit must be clear.

To support the NSSA option an additional check must be made in the function that handles the receiving of the Hello packet to verify that both the N-bit and the E-bit found in the Hello packet's option field match the area type and ExternalRoutingCapability of the area of the receiving interface. A mismatch in the options causes processing of the received Hello packet to stop and the packet to be dropped.

Type-7 Address Ranges

NSSA border routers may be configured with Type-7 address ranges. Each Type-7 address range is defined as an [address,mask] pair. Many separate Type-7 networks may fall into a single Type-7 address range, just as a subnetted network is composed of many separate subnets. NSSA border routers may aggregate Type-7 routes by advertising a single Type-5 LSA for each Type-7 address range. The Type-5 LSA resulting from a Type-7 address range match will be distributed to all Type-5 capable areas. Section 3.2 details how Type-5 LSAs are generated from Type-7 address ranges.

A Type-7 address range includes the following configurable items.

  o  An [address,mask] pair.
  o  A status indication of either Advertise or DoNotAdvertise.
  o  An external route tag.

Type-7 LSAs

External routes are imported into NSSAs as Type-7 LSAs by NSSA AS boundary routers. An NSSA AS boundary router (ASBR) is a router that has an interface associated with the NSSA and is exchanging routing information with routers belonging to another AS. Like OSPF ASBRs, an NSSA router indicates it is an NSSA ASBR by setting the E-bit in its router-LSA. As with Type-5 LSAs a separate Type-7 LSA is originated for each destination network. To support NSSAs the link- state database must therefore be expanded to contain Type-7 LSAs.

Type-7 LSAs are identical to Type-5 LSAs except for the following (see [OSPF] Section 12.4.4, "AS external links").

  1. The Type field in the LSA header is 7.
  2. Type-7 LSAs are only flooded within the originating NSSA.  The
     flooding of Type-7 LSAs follows the same rules as the flooding
     of Type-1 and Type-2 LSAs.
  3. Type-7 LSAs are only listed within the OSPF area data
     structures of their respective NSSAs, making them area
     specific.  Type-5 LSAs, which are flooded to all Type-5 capable
     areas, have global scope and are listed in the OSPF protocol
     data structure.
  4. NSSA border routers select which Type-7 LSAs are translated
     into Type-5 LSAs and flooded into the OSPF domain's transit
     topology.
  5. Type-7 LSAs have a propagate (P) bit that, when set, tells an
     NSSA border router to translate a Type-7 LSA into a Type-5 LSA.
  6. Those Type-7 LSAs that are to be translated into Type-5 LSAs
     must have their forwarding address set.

Type-5 LSAs that are translations of Type-7 LSAs copy the Type-7 LSAs' non-zero forwarding addresses. Only those Type-5 LSAs that are aggregations of Type-7 LSAs may have 0.0.0.0 as a forwarding address. (See Section 3.2 for details.) Non-zero forwarding addresses produce efficient inter-area routing to an NSSA's AS external destinations when it has multiple border routers. Also the non-zero forwarding addresses of Type-7 LSAs ease the process of their translation into Type-5 LSAs, as NSSA border routers are not required to compute them.

Normally the next hop address of an installed AS external route learned by an NSSA ASBR from an adjacent AS points at one of the adjacent AS's gateway routers. If this address belongs to a network connected to the NSSA ASBR via one of its NSSAs' active interfaces, then the NSSA ASBR copies this next hop address into the forwarding address field of the route's Type-7 LSA that is originated into this NSSA, as is currently done with Type-5 LSAs. (See [OSPF] Section 12.4.4.1.) For an NSSA with no such network the forwarding address field may only be filled with an address from one of the its active interfaces or 0.0.0.0. If the P-bit is set, the forwarding address must be non-zero; otherwise it may be 0.0.0.0. If an NSSA requires the P-bit be set and a non-zero forwarding address is unavailable, then the route's Type-7 LSA is not originated into this NSSA.

When a router is forced to pick a forwarding address for a Type-7 LSA, preference should be given first to the router's internal addresses (provided internal addressing is supported). If internal addresses are not available, preference should be given to the router's active OSPF stub network addresses. These choices avoid the possible extra hop that may happen when a transit network's address is used. When the interface whose IP address is the LSA's forwarding address transitions to a Down state (see [OSPF] Section 9.3), the router must select a new forwarding address for the LSA and then re- originate it. If one is not available the LSA should be flushed.

The metrics and path types of Type-5 LSAs are directly comparable with the metrics and path types of Type-7 LSAs.

Originating Type-7 LSAs

NSSA AS boundary routers may only originate Type-7 LSAs into NSSAs. An NSSA internal AS boundary router must set the P-bit in the LSA header's option field of any Type-7 LSA whose network it wants advertised into the OSPF domain's full transit topology. The LSAs of these networks must have a valid non-zero forwarding address. If the P-bit is clear the LSA is not translated into a Type-5 LSA by NSSA border routers.

When an NSSA border router originates both a Type-5 LSA and a Type-7 LSA for the same network, then the P-bit must be clear in the Type-7 LSA so that it isn't translated into a Type-5 LSA by another NSSA border router. If the border router only originates a Type-7 LSA, it may set the P-bit so that the network may be aggregated/propagated during Type-7 translation. If an NSSA's border router originates a Type-5 LSA with a forwarding address from the NSSA, it should also originate a Type-7 LSA into the NSSA. If two NSSA routers, both reachable from one another over the NSSA, originate functionally equivalent Type-7 LSAs (i.e., same destination, cost and non-zero forwarding address), then the router having the least preferred LSA should flush its LSA. (See [OSPF] Section 12.4.4.1.) Preference between two Type-7 LSAs is determined by the following tie breaker rules:

  1. An LSA with the P-bit set is preferred over one with the P-bit
     clear.
  2. If the P-bit settings are the same, the LSA with the higher
     router ID is preferred.

A Type-7 default LSA for the network 0.0.0.0/0 may be originated into the NSSA by any NSSA router. The Type-7 default LSA originated by an NSSA border router must have the P-bit clear. An NSSA ASBR that is not an NSSA border router may originate a Type-7 default LSA with the P-bit set. A Type-7 default LSA may be installed by NSSA border routers if and only if its P-bit is set. (See Appendix E.)

NSSA border routers must originate an LSA for the default destination into all their directly attached NSSAs in order to support intra-AS routing and inter-AS routing. This default destination is advertised in either a Type-3 LSA or a Type-7 LSA, as described in Section 2.7. The default LSA's metric should be configurable. For Type-7 default LSAs, the metric type (1 or 2) should also be configurable.

Calculating Type-7 AS External Routes

This calculation must be run when Type-7 LSAs are processed during the AS external route calculation. This calculation may process Type-5 LSAs, but it is written that way only for comparison sake.

Non-default Type-7 LSAs with the P-bit clear may be installed in the OSPF routing table of NSSA border routers. Since these LSAs are not propagated throughout the OSPF domain, traffic that originates external to an NSSA and that passes through one of the NSSA's border routers may be unexpectedly diverted into the NSSA. (See Appendix E.)

An NSSA border router should examine both Type-5 LSAs and Type-7 LSAs if either Type-5 or Type-7 routes need to be updated or recalculated. This is done as part of the AS external route calculation. An NSSA internal router should examine Type-7 LSAs when Type-7 routes need to be recalculated.

What follows is only a modest modification of [OSPF] Section 16.4. Original paragraphs are tagged with [OSPF]. Paragraphs with minor changes are tagged with ~[OSPF]. Paragraphs specific to NSSA are tagged with [NSSA].

AS external routes are calculated by examining AS-external-LSAs, be they Type-5 or Type-7. Each of the AS-external-LSAs is considered in turn. Most AS-external-LSAs describe routes to specific IP destinations. An AS-external-LSA can also describe a default route for the Autonomous System (Destination ID = DefaultDestination, network/subnet mask = 0x00000000). For each AS-external-LSA: ~[OSPF]

  (1) If the metric specified by the LSA is LSInfinity, or if the
      age of the LSA equals MaxAge, then examine the next LSA.
      [OSPF]
  (2) If the LSA was originated by the calculating router itself,
      examine the next LSA.
      [OSPF]
  (3) Call the destination described by the LSA N.  N's address is
      obtained by masking the LSA's Link State ID with the
      network/subnet mask contained in the body of the LSA.  Look up
      the routing table entries that match the LSA's type for the AS
      boundary router (ASBR) that originated the LSA.  For a Type-5
      LSA, routing table entries may only be selected from each
      attached Type-5 capable area.  Since the flooding scope of a
      Type-7 LSA is restricted to the originating NSSA, the routing
      table entry of its ASBR must be found in the originating NSSA.
      If no entries exist for the ASBR (i.e. the ASBR is unreachable
      over the transit topology for a Type-5 LSA, or, for a Type-7
      LSA, it is unreachable over the LSA's originating NSSA), do
      nothing with this LSA and consider the next in the list.
      [NSSA]
      Else if the destination is a Type-7 default route (destination
      ID = DefaultDestination) and one of the following is true,
      then do nothing with this LSA and consider the next in the
      list:
        o  The calculating router is a border router and the LSA has
           its P-bit clear.  Appendix E describes a technique
           whereby an NSSA border router installs a Type-7 default
           LSA without propagating it.
        o  The calculating router is a border router and is
           suppressing the import of summary routes as Type-3
           summary-LSAs.
        [NSSA]
      Else, this LSA describes an AS external path to destination N.
      Examine the forwarding address specified in the AS-external-
      LSA.  This indicates the IP address to which packets for the
      destination should be forwarded.
      [OSPF]
      If the forwarding address is set to 0.0.0.0 then packets
      should be sent to the ASBR itself.  If the LSA is Type-5, from
      among the multiple non-NSSA routing table entries for the ASBR
      (both NSSA and non-NSSA ASBR entries might exists on an NSSA
      border router), select the preferred entry as follows:
      ~[OSPF]
        If RFC1583Compatibility is set to "disabled", prune the set
        of routing table entries for the ASBR as described in OSPF
        Section 16.4.1.  In any case, among the remaining routing
        table entries, select the routing table entry with the least
        cost; when there are multiple least cost routing table
        entries the entry whose associated area has the largest OSPF
        Area ID (when considered as an unsigned 32-bit integer) is
        chosen.
        [OSPF]
      Since a Type-7 LSA only has area-wide flooding scope, when its
      forwarding address is set to 0.0.0.0, its ASBR's routing table
      entry must be chosen from the originating NSSA.  Here no
      pruning is necessary since this entry always contains non-
      backbone intra-area paths.
      [NSSA]
      If the forwarding address is non-zero look up the forwarding
      address in the routing table.  For a Type-5 LSA the matching
      routing table entry must specify an intra-area or inter-area
      path through a Type-5 capable area.  For a Type-7 LSA the
      matching routing table entry must specify an intra-area path
      through the LSA's originating NSSA.  If no such path exists
      then do nothing with this LSA and consider the next in the
      list.
      [NSSA]
  (4) Let X be the cost specified by the preferred routing table
      entry for the ASBR/forwarding address, and Y the cost
      specified in the LSA.  X is in terms of the link state metric,
      and Y is a type 1 or 2 external metric.
      [OSPF]
  (5) Now, look up the routing table entry for the destination N.
      If no entry exists for N, install the AS external path to N,
      with the next hop equal to the list of next hops to the
      ASBR/forwarding address, and advertising router equal to the
      ASBR.  If the external metric type is 1, then the path-type is
      set to Type-1 external and the cost is equal to X + Y.  If the
      external metric type is 2, the path-type is set to Type-2
      external, the link-state component of the route's cost is X,
      and the type 2 cost is Y.
      [OSPF]
  (6) Otherwise compare the AS external path described by the LSA
      with the existing paths in N's routing table entry.  If the
      new path is preferred, it replaces the present paths in N's
      routing table entry.  If the new path is of equal preference,
      it is added to the present paths in N's routing table entry.
      [OSPF]
      Preference is defined as follows:
      (a) Intra-area and inter-area paths are always preferred over
          AS external paths.
          [OSPF]
      (b) Type 1 external paths are always preferred over type 2
          external paths.  When all paths are type 2 external paths,
          the paths with the smallest advertised type 2 metric are
          always preferred.
          [OSPF]
      (c) If the new AS external path is still indistinguishable
          from the current paths in N's routing table entry, and
          RFC1583Compatibility is set to "disabled", select the
          preferred paths based on the intra-AS paths to the
          ASBR/forwarding addresses, as specified in Section 16.4.1.
          Here intra-NSSA paths are equivalent to the intra-area
          paths of non-backbone regular OSPF areas.
          [NSSA]
      (d) If the new AS external path is still indistinguishable
          from the current paths in N's routing table entry, select
          the preferred path based on a least cost comparison.  Type
          1 external paths are compared by looking at the sum of the
          distance to the ASBR/forwarding addresses and the
          advertised type 1 metric (X+Y).  Type 2 external paths
          advertising equal type 2 metrics are compared by looking
          at the distance to the ASBR/forwarding addresses.
          ~[OSPF]
      (e) If the current LSA is functionally the same as an
          installed LSA (i.e., same destination, cost and non-zero
          forwarding address) then apply the following priorities in
          deciding which LSA is preferred:
             1. A Type-7 LSA with the P-bit set.
             2. A Type-5 LSA.
             3. The LSA with the higher router ID.
          [NSSA]

Incremental Updates

Incremental updates for Type-7 LSAs should be treated the same as incremental updates for Type-5 LSAs (see [OSPF] Section 16.6). When a new instance of a Type-7 LSA is received it is not necessary to recalculate the entire routing table. Call the destination described by the Type-7 LSA N. N's address is obtained by masking the LSA's Link State ID with the network/subnet mask contained in the body of the LSA. If there is already an intra-area or inter-area route to the destination, no recalculation is necessary (internal routes take precedence).

Otherwise, the procedure in the preceding section will have to be performed but only for the external routes (Type-5 and Type-7) whose destination is N. Before this procedure is performed, the present routing table entry for N should be invalidated.

Optionally Importing Summary Routes

In order for OSPF's summary routing to not be obscured by an NSSA's Type-7 AS-external-LSAs, all NSSA border router implementations must support the optional import of summary routes into NSSAs as Type-3 summary-LSAs. The default behavior is to import summary routes. A new area configuration parameter, ImportSummaries, is defined in Appendix D. When ImportSummaries is set to enabled, summary routes

are imported. When it is set to disabled, summary routes are not imported. The default setting is enabled.

When OSPF's summary routes are not imported, the default LSA originated by an NSSA border router into the NSSA should be a Type-3 summary-LSA. This protects the NSSA from routing intra-AS traffic out the AS via the default route of a Type-7 default LSA originating from one of the NSSA's internal routers. When summary routes are imported into the NSSA, the default LSA originated by an NSSA border router must not be a Type-3 summary-LSA; otherwise its default route would be chosen over the potentially more preferred default routes of Type-7 default LSAs.

Intra-AS Implementation Details

Type-7 Translator Election

It is not recommended that multiple NSSA border routers perform Type-7 to Type-5 translation unless it is required to route packets efficiently through Area 0 to an NSSA partitioned by Type-7 address ranges. It is normally sufficient to have only one NSSA border router perform the translation. Excessive numbers of Type-7 translators unnecessarily increase the size of the OSPF link state data base.

A new area configuration parameter, NSSATranslatorRole, is defined in Appendix D. It specifies whether or not an NSSA router will unconditionally translate Type-7 LSAs to Type-5 LSAs when acting as an NSSA border router. Configuring the identity of the translator can be used to bias the routing to aggregated destinations. When NSSATranslatorRole is set to Always, Type-7 LSAs are always translated regardless of the translator state of other NSSA border routers. When NSSATranslatorRole is set to Candidate an NSSA border router will participate in the translator election process described below.

A new area parameter, NSSATranslatorState, is maintained in an NSSA's OSPF area data structure. By default all NSSA routers initialize NSSATranslatorState to disabled. When an NSSA border router's NSSATranslatorState changes from disabled to either enabled or elected, it begins translating the NSSA's Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs. When its NSSATranslatorState changes from either enabled or elected to disabled, it ceases translating the NSSA's Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs. (See paragraphs below.)

A new bit, Nt, is defined for the router-LSAs of NSSAs. (See Appendix B.) By default routers clear bit Nt when originating router-LSAs. However, when an NSSA border router has its

NSSATranslatorState enabled, it sets bit Nt in the router-LSA it originates into the NSSA. An NSSA router whose NSSATranslatorRole is set to Always should re-originate a router-LSA into the NSSA whenever its NSSATranslatorState changes.

When an NSSA router with the NSSA's NSSATranslatorRole set to Always attains border router status, it should change NSSATranslatorState from disabled to enabled. When it loses border router status, it should change NSSATranslatorState from enabled to disabled.

All NSSA border routers must set the E-bit in the Type-1 router-LSAs of their directly attached non-stub areas, even when they are not translating. This allows other NSSA border routers to see their ASBR status across the AS's transit topology. Failure to do so may cause the election algorithm to elect unnecessary translators. Every NSSA border router is a potential translator.

An NSSA border router whose NSSA's NSSATranslatorRole is set to Candidate must maintain a list of the NSSA's border routers that are reachable both over the NSSA and as ASBRs over the AS's transit topology. Any change in this list, or to the Nt bit settings of members of this list, causes the NSSA border router to reevaluate its NSSATranslatorState. If there exists another border router in this list whose router-LSA has bit Nt set or who has a higher router ID, then its NSSATranslatorState is disabled. Otherwise its NSSATranslatorState is elected.

An elected translator will continue to perform translation duties until supplanted by a reachable NSSA border router whose Nt bit is set or whose router ID is greater. Such an event may happen when an NSSA router with NSSATranslatorRole set to Always regains border router status, or when a partitioned NSSA becomes whole. If an elected translator determines its services are no longer required, it continues to perform its translation duties for the additional time interval defined by a new area configuration parameter, TranslatorStabilityInterval. This minimizes excessive flushing of translated Type-7 LSAs and provides for a more stable translator transition. The default value for the TranslatorStabilityInterval parameter has been defined as 40 seconds. (See Appendix D.)

Translating Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs

This step is performed as part of the NSSA's Dijkstra calculation after Type-5 and Type-7 routes have been calculated. If the calculating router is currently not an NSSA border router translator, then this translation algorithm should be skipped. Only installed

Type-7 LSAs and those non-default Type-7 LSAs originated by the router itself should be examined. Locally sourced Type-7 LSAs should be processed first.

Note that it is possible for a Type-5 LSA generated by translation to supplant a Type-5 LSA originating from a local OSPF external source. Future reoriginations of the locally sourced Type-5 LSA should be suppressed until the Type-5 LSA generated by translation is flushed.

A Type-7 LSA and a Type-7 address range best match one another if there does not exist a more specific Type-7 address range that contains the LSA's network. For each eligible Type-7 LSA perform the following:

  (1) If the Type-7 LSA has the P-bit clear, or its forwarding
      address is set to 0.0.0.0, or the most specific Type-7 address
      range that subsumes the LSA's network has DoNotAdvertise
      status, then do nothing with this Type-7 LSA and consider the
      next one in the list.  Otherwise term the LSA as translatable
      and proceed with step (2).
  (2) If the Type-7 LSA is not contained in any explicitly
      configured Type-7 address range and the calculating router has
      the highest router ID amongst NSSA translators that have
      originated a functionally equivalent Type-5 LSA (i.e. same
      destination, cost and non-zero forwarding address) and that
      are reachable over area 0 and the NSSA, then a Type-5 LSA
      should be generated if there is currently no Type-5 LSA
      originating from this router corresponding to the Type-7 LSA's
      network, or there is an existing Type-5 LSA and either it
      corresponds to a local OSPF external source whose path type
      and metric is less preferred (see Section 2.5 step (6), parts
      (b) and (d)), or it doesn't and the Type-5 LSA's path type or
      cost(s) have changed (See Section 2.5 step (5)) or the
      forwarding address no longer maps to a translatable Type-7
      LSA.
      The newly originated Type-5 LSA will describe the same network
      and have the same network mask, path type, metric, forwarding
      address and external route tag as the Type-7 LSA.  The
      advertising router field will be the router ID of this NSSA
      border router.  The link-state ID is equal to the LSA's
      network address (in the case of multiple originations of
      Type-5 LSAs with the same network address but different mask,
      the link-state ID can also have one or more of the network's
      "host" bits set).
  (3) Else the Type-7 LSA must be aggregated by the most specific
      Type-7 address range that subsumes it.  If this Type-7 address
      range has the same [address,mask] pair as the LSA's network
      and no other translatable Type-7 LSA with a different network
      best matches this range, then flag the LSA as not contained in
      any explicitly configured Type-7 address range and process the
      LSA as described in step (2).  Otherwise compute the path type
      and metric for this Type-7 address range as described below.
      The path type and metric of the Type-7 address range is
      determined from the path types and metrics of those
      translatable Type-7 LSAs that best match the range plus any
      locally sourced Type-5 LSAs whose network has the same
      [address,mask] pair.  If any of these LSAs have a path type of
      2, the range's path type is 2, otherwise it is 1.  If the
      range's path type is 1 its metric is the highest cost amongst
      these LSAs; if the range's path type is 2 its metric is the
      highest Type-2 cost + 1 amongst these LSAs.  (See Section 2.5
      step (5).)  1 is added to the Type-2 cost to ensure that the
      translated Type-5 LSA does not appear closer on the NSSA
      border than a translatable Type-7 LSA whose network has the
      same [address,mask] pair and Type-2 cost.
      A Type-5 LSA is generated from the Type-7 address range when
      there is currently no Type-5 LSA originated by this router
      whose network has the same [address,mask] pair as the range or
      there is but either its path type or metric has changed or its
      forwarding address is non-zero.
      The newly generated Type-5 LSA will have a link-state ID equal
      to the Type-7 address range's address (in the case of multiple
      originations of Type-5 LSAs with the same network address but
      different mask, the link-state ID can also have one or more of
      the range's "host" bits set).  The advertising router field
      will be the router ID of this area border router.  The network
      mask and the external route tag are set to the range's
      configured values.  The forwarding address is set to 0.0.0.0.
      The path type and metric are set to the range's path type and
      metric as defined and computed above.
      The pending processing of other translation eligible Type-7
      LSAs that best match this Type-7 address range is suppressed.
      Thus at most a single Type-5 LSA is originated for each Type-7
      address range.

For example, given a Type-7 address range of [10.0.0.0, 255.0.0.0] that subsumes the following Type-7 routes:

             10.1.0.0/24 path type 1, cost 10
             10.2.0.0/24 path type 1, cost 11
             10.3.0.0/24 path type 2, type 2 cost 5

a Type-5 LSA would be generated with a path type of 2 and a metric 6.

Given a Type-7 address range of [10.0.0.0, 255.0.0.0] that subsumes the following Type-7 routes:

             10.1.0.0/24 path type 1, cost 10
             10.2.0.0/24 path type 1, cost 11
             10.3.0.0/24 path type 1, cost 5

a Type-5 LSA will be generated with a path type of 1 and a metric 11.

These Type-7 address range metric and path type rules will avoid routing loops in the event that path types 1 and 2 are both used within the area.

As with all newly originated Type-5 LSAs, a Type-5 LSA that is the result of a Type-7 LSA translation or aggregation is flooded to all attached Type-5 capable areas.

Like Type-3 address ranges, a Type-7 address range performs the dual function of setting propagation policy via its Advertise/DoNotAdvertise parameter and aggregation via its network address and mask pair. Unlike the origination of Type-3 summary-LSAs, the translation of a Type-7 LSA into a Type-5 LSA may result in more efficient routing when the forwarding address is set, as is done during step (2) of the translation procedure.

Another important feature of this translation process is that it allows a Type-7 address range to apply different properties (aggregation, forwarding address, and Advertise/DoNotAdvertise status) for the Type-7 routes it subsumes, versus those Type-7 routes subsumed by other more specific Type-7 address ranges contained in the Type-7 address range.

Flushing Translated Type-7 LSAs

If an NSSA border router has either translated or aggregated an installed Type-7 LSA into a Type-5 LSA that should no longer be translated or aggregated, then the Type-5 LSA should either be flushed or reoriginated as a translation or aggregation of other Type-7 LSAs.

If an NSSA border router is translating Type-7 LSA's into Type-5 LSA's with NSSATranslatorState set to elected and the NSSA border router has determined that its translator election status has been deposed by another NSSA border router (see Section 3.1), then, as soon as the TranslatorStabilityInterval has expired without the router reelecting itself as a translator, Type-5 LSAs that are generated by aggregating Type-7 LSAs into their best matched Type-7 address ranges (see Section 3.2, Step (3)) are flushed. Conversely Type-5 LSAs generated by translating Type-7 LSAs are not immediately flushed, but are allowed to remain in the OSPF routing domain as if the originator is still an elected translator. This minimizes the flushing and flooding impact on the transit topology of an NSSA that changes its translators frequently.

Security Considerations

There are two types of issues that need be addressed when looking at protecting routing protocols from misconfigurations and malicious attacks. The first is authentication and certification of routing protocol information. The second is denial of service attacks resulting from repetitive origination of the same router advertisement or origination of a large number of distinct advertisements resulting in database overflow. Note that both of these concerns exist independently of a router's support for the NSSA option.

The OSPF protocol addresses authentication concerns by authenticating OSPF protocol exchanges. OSPF supports multiple types of authentication; the type of authentication in use can be configured on a per network segment basis. One of OSPF's authentication types, namely the Cryptographic authentication option, is believed to be secure against passive attacks and provides significant protection against active attacks. When using the Cryptographic authentication option, each router appends a "message digest" to its transmitted OSPF packets. Receivers then use the shared secret key and the received digest to verify that each received OSPF packet is authentic.

The quality of the security provided by the Cryptographic authentication option depends completely on the strength of the message digest algorithm (MD5 is currently the only message digest algorithm specified), the strength of the key being used, and the correct implementation of the security mechanism in all communicating OSPF implementations. It also requires that all parties maintain the secrecy of the shared secret key. None of the standard OSPF authentication types provide confidentiality, nor do they protect against traffic analysis. For more information on the standard OSPF security mechanisms, see Sections 8.1, 8.2, and Appendix D of [OSPF].

[DIGI] describes the extensions to OSPF required to add digital signature authentication to Link State data and to provide a certification mechanism for router data. [DIGI] also describes the added LSA processing and key management as well as a method for migration from or co-existence with standard OSPF V2.

OSPF addresses repetitive origination of advertisements by mandating a limit on how frequent new instances of any particular LSA can be originated and accepted during the flooding procedure. The frequency at which new LSA instances may be originated is set to once every MinLSInterval seconds, whose value is 5 seconds. (See [OSPF] Section 12.4.) The frequency at which new LSA instances are accepted during flooding is once every MinLSArrival seconds, whose value is set to 1 second. (See [OSPF] Section 13, Appendix B, and G.1.)

Proper operation of the OSPF protocol requires that all OSPF routers maintain an identical copy of the OSPF link state database. However, when the size of the link state database becomes very large, some routers may be unable to keep the entire database due to resource shortages; this is termed "database overflow". When database overflow is anticipated, the routers with limited resources can be accommodated by configuring OSPF stub areas and NSSAs. [OVERFLOW] details a way of gracefully handling unanticipated database overflows.

Acknowledgements

This document was produced by the OSPF Working Group, chaired by John Moy.

In addition, the comments of the following individuals are also acknowledged:

  Antoni Przygienda  Redback Networks, Inc
  Alex Zinin         cisco

It is also noted that comments from

  Phani Jajjarvarpu  cisco
  Dino Farinacci     cisco
  Jeff Honig         Cornell University
  Doug Williams      IBM

were acknowledged in the predecessor of this document, RFC 1587.

Contributors

This document, RFC 3101, adds new sections, features, edits, and revisions to its predecessor, RFC 1587, "The OSPF NSSA Option", authored by Rob Coltun, Movaz Networks, and Vince Fuller. Content from RFC 1587 is used throughout RFC 3101. In addition to adding new features, this document makes the NSSA specification consistent with the OSPFv2 specification, RFC 2328, authored by John Moy, Sycamore Networks, Inc. Section 2.5, Calculating Type-7 AS External Routes, and Section 2.6, Incremental Updates, rely heavily on text in RFC 2328's Section 16.4 and Section 16.6 respectively. Section 4.0, Security Considerations, is an edit of similar content in Rob Coltun's RFC 2370, "The OSPF Opaque LSA option", Section 6.0.

Acee Lindem, Redback Networks, Inc, is also recognized for the first full known implementation of this specification. Acee's implementation resulted in substantive content change.

References

[DIGI] Murphy, S., Badger, M. and B. Wellington, "OSPF with

          Digital Signatures", RFC 2154, June 1997.

[MUEX] Moy, J., "Multicast Extensions to OSPF", RFC 1584, March

          1994.

[OSPF] Moy, J., "OSPF Version 2", RFC 2328, April 1998.

[OPAQUE] Coltun, R., "The OSPF Opaque LSA Option", RFC 2370, July

          1998.

[OVERFLOW] Moy, J., "OSPF Database Overflow", RFC 1765, March 1995.

Appendix A: The Options Field

The OSPF options field is present in OSPF Hello packets, Database Description packets and all link state advertisements. See [OSPF] Appendix A.2 and [OPAQUE] Appendix A.1 for a description of the options field. Six bits are assigned but only two (the E-bit and the N/P bit) are described completely in this section.

              --------------------------------------
              | * | O | DC | EA | N/P | MC | E | * |
              --------------------------------------
                  The Type-7 LSA options field
  E-bit:  Type-5 AS-external-LSAs are not flooded into/through OSPF
          stub areas and NSSAs.  The E-bit ensures that all members
          of a stub area or NSSA agree on that area configuration.
          The E-bit is meaningful only in OSPF Hello and Database
          Description packets.  When the E-bit is clear in the Hello
          packet sent out a particular interface, it means that the
          router will neither send nor receive Type-5 AS-external-
          LSAs on that interface (in other words, the interface
          connects to a stub area or NSSA).  Two routers will not
          become neighbors unless they agree on the state of the E-
          bit.
  N-bit:  The N-bit describes the router's NSSA capability.  The N-
          bit is used only in Hello packets and ensures that all
          members of an NSSA agree on that area's configuration.
          When the N-bit is set in the Hello packet that is sent out
          a particular interface, it means that the router will send
          and receive Type-7 LSAs on that interface.  Two routers
          will not form an adjacency unless they agree on the state
          of the N-bit.  If the N-bit is set in the options field,
          the E-bit must be clear.
  P-bit:  The P-bit is used only in the Type-7 LSA header.  It flags
          the NSSA border router to translate the Type-7 LSA into a
          Type-5 LSA.  The default setting for the P-bit is clear.

Appendix B: Router-LSAs

Router-LSAs are the Type-1 LSAs. Each router in an area originates a router-LSA. The LSA describes the state and cost of the router's links (i.e., interfaces) to the area. All of the router's links to the area must be described in a single router-LSA. For details concerning the construction of router-LSAs, see [OSPF] Section 12.4.1.

   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
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |            LS age             |     Options   |       1       |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                        Link State ID                          |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                     Advertising Router                        |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                     LS sequence number                        |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |         LS checksum           |             length            |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |  0  Nt|W|V|E|B|        0      |            # links            |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                          Link ID                              |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                         Link Data                             |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |     Type      |     # TOS     |        TOS 0 metric           |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |      TOS      |        0      |            metric             |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                              ...                              |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |      TOS      |        0      |            metric             |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                          Link ID                              |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                         Link Data                             |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |                              ...                              |

In router-LSAs, the Link State ID field is set to the router's OSPF Router ID. Router-LSAs are flooded throughout a single area only.

  bit V
      When set, the router is an endpoint of one or more fully
      adjacent virtual links having the described area as their
      transit area (V is for virtual link endpoint).
  bit E
      When set, the router is an AS boundary router (E is for
      external).  ALL NSSA border routers set bit E in those
      router-LSAs originated into directly attached Type-5 capable
      areas.  An NSSA's AS boundary routers also set bit E in their
      router-LSAs originated into the NSSA.  (See Section 3.1 for
      details.)
  bit B
      When set, the router is an area border router (B is for
      border).
  bit W
      When set, the router is a wild-card multicast receiver (W is
      for wild).
  bit Nt
      When set, the router is an NSSA border router that is
      unconditionally translating Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs (Nt
      stands for NSSA translation).  Note that such routers have
      their NSSATranslatorRole area configuration parameter set to
      Always.  (See Appendix D and Section 3.1.)

The remainder of the router-LSAs specification is defined in [OSPF] Section A.4.2.

Appendix C: Type-7 LSA Packet Format

    0                                 32
    ------------------------------------
    |                | Options |   7   |
    |                -------------------
    |        Link-State Header         |
    |                                  |
    ------------------------------------
    | Network Mask                     |
    ------------------------------------  ______
    |E| TOS  |        metric           |  .
    ------------------------------------  .  repeated for each TOS
    | Forwarding Address               |  .
    ------------------------------------  .
    | External Route Tag               |  ______
    ------------------------------------

The definitions of the link-state ID, network mask, metrics and external route tag are the same as the definitions for Type-5 LSAs (See [OSPF] Appendix A.4.5), except for the forwarding address and the N/P-bit. The Options field must have the N/P bit set as described in Appendix A when the originating router desires that the external route be propagated throughout the OSPF domain.

Forwarding address

  Data traffic for the advertised destination will be forwarded to
  this address.  If the forwarding address is set to 0.0.0.0, data
  traffic will be forwarded to the LSA's originator (i.e., the
  responsible NSSA AS boundary router).  Normally the next hop
  address of an installed AS external route learned by an NSSA ASBR
  from an adjacent AS points at one of the adjacent AS's gateway
  routers.  If this address belongs to a network connected to the
  NSSA ASBR via one of its NSSAs' active interfaces, then it is the
  forwarding address for the route's Type-7 LSA originated into this
  NSSA.  For an NSSA with no such network the forwarding address is
  either an address from one of its active interfaces or 0.0.0.0.
  If the P-bit is set, the forwarding address must be non-zero,
  otherwise it may be 0.0.0.0. (See Section 2.3 for details.)

Appendix D: Configuration Parameters

[OSPF] Appendix C.2 lists the area configuration parameters. The area ID and the list of address ranges for Type-3 summary routes remain unchanged. Section 2.2 of this document lists the configuration parameters for Type-7 address ranges. The following area configuration parameters have been added:

  NSSATranslatorRole
     Specifies whether or not an NSSA border router will
     unconditionally translate Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs.  When
     it is set to Always, an NSSA border router always translates
     Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs regardless of the translator state
     of other NSSA border routers.  When it is set to Candidate, an
     NSSA border router participates in the translator election
     process described in Section 3.1.  The default setting is
     Candidate.
  TranslatorStabilityInterval
     Defines the length of time an elected Type-7 translator will
     continue to perform its translator duties once it has
     determined that its translator status has been deposed by
     another NSSA border router translator as described in Section
     3.1 and 3.3.  The default setting is 40 seconds.
  ImportSummaries
     When set to enabled, OSPF's summary routes are imported into
     the NSSA as Type-3 summary-LSAs.  When set to disabled, summary
     routes are not imported into the NSSA.  The default setting is
     enabled.

Implementations must provide a vehicle for setting the P-bit when external routes are imported into the NSSA as Type-7 LSAs. Without configuration, the default setting of the P-bit is clear. (See Section 2.3 and Appendix B.)

For NSSAs the ExternalRoutingCapability area configuration parameter must be set to accept Type-7 external routes. Additionally there must be a way of configuring the metric of the default LSA that a border router advertises into its directly attached NSSAs. If a Type-7 default LSA is advertised, its metric type (1 or 2) should also be configurable.

Appendix E: The P-bit Policy Paradox.

Non-default Type-7 LSAs with the P-bit clear may be installed in the OSPF routing table of NSSA border routers. (See Section 2.5.) These LSAs are not propagated throughout the OSPF domain as translated Type-5 LSAs. (See Section 3.2.) Thus, traffic that is external to an NSSA and that passes through one of the NSSA's border routers may be hijacked into the NSSA by a route installed from a Type-7 LSA with the P-bit clear. This may be contrary to the expected path at the source of the traffic. It may also violate the routing policy intended by the Type-7 LSA's clear P-bit. A Type-7 address range that is configured with DoNotAdvertise exhibits the same paradox for any installed Type-7 LSAs it subsumes, regardless of the P-bit setting.

This paradox is best illustrated by the following example. Consider an OSPF domain (AS 1842) with connections for default Internet routing and to external AS 4156. NSSA 1 and OSPF Area 2 are partially defined in the following diagram:

                          AS 4156
                            |
        Area 2              |
                            |
          A2                A0   Area 0      C0-----Internet
          |                 |                |      Default
          |                 |                |
          |                 |                |
          +-----------------B0---------------+
                            /\
                           /  \
                          /    \
     Internet------------A1    B1------AS 4156 (P-bit clear)
     Default (P-bit set)
                             NSSA 1

Here A0, B0, and C0 are Area 0 routers, A1 and B1 are NSSA 1 routers, and A2 is an Area 2 router. B0 is a border router for both NSSA 1 and Area 2.

If the Type-7 external routes imported by B1 for AS 4156 are installed on B0 so that the NSSA 1 tree below A1 can take advantage of them, then A2's traffic to AS 4156 is hijacked through B0 by B1, rather than its computed path through A0.

An NSSA border router's installed Type-7 default LSAs will exhibit this paradox when it possesses a Type-7 address range [0,0] configured with DoNotAdvertise, as these LSAs are not propagated even

though their P-bit is set. In the example above, if A1's default is installed on B0, which has a configured Type-7 address range [0,0] with DoNotAdvertise set, then A2's Internet traffic is hijacked through B0 by A1 rather than the computed path through C0.

Appendix F: Differences from RFC 1587

This section documents the differences between this memo and RFC 1587. All differences are backward-compatible. Implementations of this memo and of RFC 1587 will interoperate.

F.1 Enhancements to the import of OSPF's summary routes.

The import of OSPF's summary routes into an NSSA as Type-3 summary- LSAs is now optional. In RFC 1587 the import of summary routes was mandated in order to guarantee that inter-area summary routing was not obscured by an NSSA's Type-7 AS-external-LSAs. The current recommended default behavior is to import summary routes. When summary routes are not imported into an NSSA, the default LSA originated by its border routers must be a Type-3 summary-LSA.

See Sections 1.3 and 2.7 for details.

F.2 Changes to Type-7 LSAs.

The setting of the forwarding address in Type-7 LSAs has been further refined.

See Section 2.3 for details.

F.3 Changes to the Type-7 AS external routing calculation.

The Type-7 external route calculation has been revised. Most notably:

  o  The path preference defined in [OSPF] Section 16.4.1 has been
     included.
  o  A Type-7 default route with the P-bit clear will not be
     installed on an NSSA border router.  This protects the default
     routing of other OSPF Areas.  (See Appendix E.)
  o  The LSA type of two AS-external-LSAs plays no role in
     determining path preference except when the LSAs are
     functionally the same (i.e., same destination, cost and non-
     zero forwarding address).

See Section 2.5 for details.

F.4 Changes to translating Type-7 LSAs into Type-5 LSAs

The translator election algorithm of RFC 1587 has been updated to close a bug that results when the translator with the highest router ID loses connectivity to the AS's transit topology. The default translator election process occurs only in the absence of an existing translator.

The identity of the translator is optionally configurable, with more than one allowed. This allows the network designer to choose the most cost effective intra-AS route for NSSA originated Type-5 LSA aggregations of Type-7 LSAs.

Self-originated non-default Type-7 LSAs are now included in the translation process.

The translation process has been strengthened to close some of the weak points of RFC 1587.

See Sections 3.1 and 3.2 for details.

F.5 Changes to flushing translated Type-7 LSAs

An NSSA border router, which was elected by the augmented RFC 1587 translator selection process defined in Section 3.1 and which has been deposed from its translation duties by another NSSA border router, flushes its self-originated Type-5 LSAs that resulted from the aggregation of Type-7 LSAs. This prevents these obsolete aggregations from short circuiting the preferred path through the new translator(s). A deposed translator continues to maintain its self- originated Type-5 LSAs resulting from translation until they age out normally.

See Section 3.3 for details.

F.6 P-bit additions

The P-bit default has been defined as clear. RFC 1587 had no default setting. (See Appendix C.)

A discussion on the packet forwarding impact of installing Type-7 LSAs with the P-bit clear on NSSA border routers has been added as Appendix E.

Author's Addresses

Pat Murphy US Geological Survey 345 Middlefield Road Menlo Park, California 94560

Phone: (650) 329-4044 EMail: [email protected]

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