RFC5287

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Network Working Group A. Vainshtein Request for Comments: 5287 ECI Telecom Category: Standards Track Y(J). Stein

                                             RAD Data Communications
                                                         August 2008
         Control Protocol Extensions for the Setup of
 Time-Division Multiplexing (TDM) Pseudowires in MPLS Networks

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.

Abstract

This document defines extension to the Pseudowire Emulation Edge-to- Edge (PWE3) control protocol RFC 4447 and PWE3 IANA allocations RFC 4446 required for the setup of Time-Division Multiplexing (TDM) pseudowires in MPLS networks.

4. Extending CESoPSN Basic NxDS0 Services with CE

Introduction

This document defines an extension to the PWE3 control protocol RFC4447 and PWE3 IANA allocations RFC4446 required for the setup of TDM pseudowires in MPLS networks.

Structure-agnostic TDM pseudowires have been specified in RFC4553, and structure-aware ones have been specified in RFC5086 and RFC5087.

RFC4447 defines extensions to the Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) RFC5036 that are required to exchange PW labels for PWs emulating various Layer 2 services (Ethernet, Frame Relay (FR), Asynchronous Transfer Mode (ATM), High-Level Data Link Control (HDLC), etc.). The setup of TDM PWs requires both interpretation of the existing information elements of these extensions and exchange of additional information.

The setup of TDM PWs using L2TPv3 will be defined in a separate document.

The status of attachment circuits of TDM PWs can be exchanged between the terminating Provider Edges (PEs) using the PW Status mechanism defined in RFC4447 without any changes. However, usage of this mechanism is NOT RECOMMENDED for TDM PWs since the indication of the status of the TDM attachment circuits is carried in-band in the data plane.

The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC2119.

PW FEC for Setup of TDM PWs

RFC4447 uses the LDP Label Mapping message RFC5036 for advertising the FEC-to-PW Label binding, and defines two types of PW Forwarding Equivalence Classes (FECs) that can be used for this purpose:

1. PWId FEC (FEC 128). This FEC contains:

  a) PW type
  b) Control bit (indicates presence of the control word)
  c) Group ID
  d) PW ID
  e) Interface parameters Sub-TLV

2. Generalized PW FEC (FEC 129). This FEC contains only:

  a) PW type
  b) Control bit
  c) Attachment Group Identifier (AGI), Source Attachment Individual
     Identifier (SAII), and Target Attachment Individual Identifier
     (TAII) that replace the PW ID

The Group ID and the Interface Parameters are contained in separate TLVs, called the PW Grouping TLV and the Interface Parameters TLV.

Either of these types of PW FEC MAY be used for the setup of TDM PWs with the appropriate selection of PW types and interface parameters.

The PW types for TDM PWs are allocated in RFC4446 as follows:

o 0x0011 Structure-agnostic E1 over Packet RFC4553 o 0x0012 Structure-agnostic T1 (DS1) over Packet RFC4553 o 0x0013 Structure-agnostic E3 over Packet RFC4553 o 0x0014 Structure-agnostic T3 (DS3) over Packet RFC4553 o 0x0015 CESoPSN basic mode RFC5086 o 0x0016 TDMoIP AAL1 mode RFC5087 o 0x0017 CESoPSN TDM with CAS RFC5086 o 0x0018 TDMoIP AAL2 mode RFC5087

The two endpoints MUST agree on the PW type, as both directions of the PW are required to be of the same type.

The Control bit MUST always be set for TDM PWs since all TDM PW encapsulations always use a control word.

PW type 0x0012 MUST also be used for the setup of structure-agnostic TDM PWs between a pair of J1 attachment circuits (see RFC4805).

Interface Parameters for TDM PWs

Overview

The interface parameters that are relevant for the setup of the TDM PWs are listed below.


| Interface Parameter | Sub-TLV ID | Length | Description | |-----------------------|------------|--------|-------------| | CEP/TDM Payload Bytes | 0x04 | 4 |Section 3.2 | |-----------------------|------------|--------|-------------| | CEP/TDM Bit-Rate | 0x07 | 6 |Section 3.3 | |-----------------------|------------|--------|-------------| | Number of TDMoIP AAL1 | 0x0E | 4 |Section 3.4 | | Cells per Packet | | | | |-----------------------|-------=----|--------|-------------| | TDMoIP AAL1 Mode | 0x10 | 4 |Section 3.5 | |-----------------------|------------|--------|-------------| | TDMoIP AAL2 Options | 0x11 | 8 or |Section 3.6 | | | | larger | | | | |see note| | |-----------------------|------------|--------|-------------| | Fragmentation | 0x09 | 4 |Section 3.7 | | Indicator | | | | |-----------------------|------------|--------|-------------| | TDM Options | 0x0B | 4, 8, |Section 3.8 | | | | or 12 | |


If not explicitly indicated otherwise in the appropriate description, the value of the interface parameter is interpreted as an unsigned integer of the appropriate size (16 or 32 bits).

Note: The length of basic TDMoIP AAL2 Options interface parameter is 8 bytes, and when the optional Channel ID (CID) mapping bases field is used, there is one additional byte for each trunk transported. Thus, if 1 trunk is being supported, this message occupies 9 bytes. Since there can be no more than 248 CIDs in a given PW, this can never exceed 256 (this when each channel comes from a different trunk). 248 channels translates to less than 9 E1s, and so, for this case, the length is

no more than 17 bytes. A single PE is not required to support more than 10 AAL2 PWs (i.e., up to 2480 individual channels, which is more than carried by a fully populated STM1). Thus, the memory required to store all the AAL2 mapping information is typically between 80 and 170 bytes per PE.

CEP/TDM Payload Bytes

This parameter is used for the setup of all SAToP and CESoPSN PWs (i.e., PW types 0x0011, 0x0012, 0x0013, 0x0014, 0x0015, and 0x0017) and employs the following semantics:

1. The two endpoints of a TDM PW MUST agree on the same value of this

  parameter for the PW to be set up successfully.

2. Presence of this parameter in the PWId FEC or in the Interface

  Parameters Field TLV is OPTIONAL.  If this parameter is omitted,
  default payload size defined for the corresponding service (see
  RFC4553, RFC5086) MUST be assumed.

3. For structure-agnostic emulation, any value consistent with the

  MTU of the underlying PSN MAY be specified.

4. For CESoPSN PWs:

  a) The specified value P MUST be an integer multiple of N, where N
     is the number of timeslots in the attachment circuit.
  b) For trunk-specific NxDS0 with CAS:
     i) (P/N) MUST be an integer factor of the number of frames per
        corresponding trunk multiframe (i.e., 16 for an E1 trunk and
        24 for a T1 or J1 trunk).
    ii) The size of the signaling sub-structure is not accounted for
        in the specified value P.

5. This parameter MUST NOT be used for the setup of TDMoIP PWs (i.e.,

  PWs with PW types 0x0016 and 0x0018).

CEP/TDM Bit-Rate (0x07)

This interface parameter represents the bit-rate of the TDM service in multiples of the "basic" 64 Kbit/s rate. Its usage for all types of TDM PWs assumes the following semantics:

1. This interface parameter MAY be omitted if the attachment circuit

  bit-rate can be unambiguously derived from the PW type (i.e., for
  structure-agnostic emulation of E1, E3, and T3 circuits).  If this
  value is omitted for the structure-agnostic emulation of T1 PW
  type, the basic emulation mode MUST be assumed.

2. If present, only the following values MUST be specified for

  structure-agnostic emulation (see RFC4553:
  a) Structure-agnostic E1 emulation  - 32
  b) Structure-agnostic T1 emulation:
     i) MUST be set to 24 in the basic emulation mode
    ii) MUST be set to 25 for the "Octet-aligned T1" emulation mode
  c) Structure-agnostic E3 emulation  - 535
  d) Structure-agnostic T3 emulation  - 699

3. For all kinds of structure-aware emulation, this parameter MUST be

  set to N, where N is the number of DS0 channels in the
  corresponding attachment circuit.

Note: The value 24 does not represent the actual bit-rate of the T1 or J1 circuit (1,544 Mbit/s) in units of 64 kbit/s. The values mentioned above are used for convenience.

Note: A 4-byte space is reserved for this parameter for compatibility with RFC4842.

Number of TDMoIP AAL1 Cells per Packet

This parameter MAY be present for TDMoIP AAL1 mode PWs (PW type 0x0016) and specifies the number of 48-byte AAL1 PDUs per MPLS packet. Any values consistent with the MTU of the underlying PSN MAY be specified. If this parameter is not specified, it defaults to 1 PDU per packet for low bit-rates (CEP/TDM Bit-Rate less than or equal to 32), and to 5 for high bit-rates (CEP/TDM Bit-Rate of 535 or 699).

TDMoIP AAL1 Mode

This parameter MAY be present for TDMoIP AAL1 mode PWs (PW type 0x0016) and specifies the AAL1 mode. If this parameter is not present, the AAL1 mode defaults to "structured". When specified, the values have the following significance:

  0 - unstructured AAL1
  2 - structured AAL1
  3 - structured AAL1 with CAS

The two endpoints MUST agree on the TDMoIP AAL1 mode.

TDMoIP AAL2 Options

This parameter MUST be present for TDMoIP AAL2 mode PWs (PW type 0x0018) and has the following format:

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | 0x11 | Length | V | ENCODING | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Maximum Duration | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | CID mapping bases | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

The fields in this parameter are defined as follows:

V defines the Voice Activity Detection (VAD) capabilities. Its values have the following significance:

  0 means that activity is only indicated by signaling.
  1 means that voice activity detection is employed.
  3 means this channel is always active.  In particular, this
    channel may be used for timing recovery.

Encoding specifies native signal processing performed on the payload. When no native signal processing is performed (i.e., G.711 encoding), this field MUST be zero. Other specific values that can be used in this field are beyond the scope of this specification, but the two directions MUST match for the PW setup to succeed.

Maximum Duration specifies the maximum time allowed for filling an AAL2 PDU, in units of 125 microseconds. For unencoded 64 kbps channels, this numerically equals the maximum number of bytes per PDU and MUST be less than 64. For other encoding parameters, larger values may be attained.

CID mapping bases is an OPTIONAL parameter; its existence and length are determined by the length field. If the mapping of AAL2 CID values to a physical interface and time slot is statically configured, or if AAL2 switching [Q.2630.1] is employed, this parameter MUST NOT appear. When it is present, and the channels belong to N physical interfaces (i.e., N E1s or T1s), it MUST be N bytes in length. Each byte represents a number to be subtracted from the CID to get the timeslot number for each physical interface. For example, if the CID mapping bases parameter consists of the bytes 20 and 60, this signifies that timeslot 1 of trunk 1 corresponds to CID 21, and timeslot 1 of trunk 2 is called 61.

Fragmentation Indicator

This interface parameter is specified in RFC4446, and its usage is explained in RFC4623. It MUST be omitted in the FEC of all TDM PWs excluding trunk-specific NxDS0 services with CAS using the CESoPSN encapsulation. In the case of these services, it MUST be present in the PW FEC if the payload size specified value P differs from Nx(number of frames per trunk multiframe).

TDM Options

This is a new interface parameter. Its Interface Parameter ID (0x0B) has been assigned by IANA, and its format is shown in Figure 1 below:

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

+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | Parameter ID | Length |R|D|F|X|SP |CAS| RSVD-1 | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |0| PT | RSVD-2 | FREQ | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | SSRC | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

Figure 1. Format of the TDM Options Interface Parameter Sub-TLV

The fields shown in this diagram are used as follows:

Parameter ID Identifies the TDM PW Options interface

                   parameter, 0x0B.

Length 4, 8, or 12 (see below).

R The RTP Header Usage bit: if set, indicates that

                   the PW endpoint distributing this FEC expects to
                   receive RTP header in the encapsulation.  RTP
                   header will be used only if both endpoints expect
                   to receive it.  If this bit is cleared, Length
                   MUST be set to 4; otherwise, it MUST be either 8
                   or 12 (see below).  If the peer PW endpoint
                   cannot meet this requirement, the Label Mapping
                   message containing the FEC in question MUST be
                   rejected with the appropriate status code (see
                   Section 4 below).

D The Differential timestamping Mode bit: if set,

                   indicates that the PW endpoint distributing this
                   FEC expects the peer to use Differential
                   timestamping mode in the packets sent to it.  If
                   the peer PW endpoint cannot meet this
                   requirement, the Label Mapping message containing
                   the FEC in question MUST be rejected with the
                   appropriate status code (see Section 4 below).

F, X Reserved for future extensions. MUST be cleared

                   when distributed and MUST be ignored upon
                   reception.

SP Encodes support for the CESoPSN signaling packets

                   (see RFC5086):
                   o  '00' for PWs that do not use signaling packets
                   o  '01' for CESoPSN PWs carrying TDM data packets
                       and expecting Customer Edge (CE) application
                       signaling packets in a separate PW
                   o  '10' for a PW carrying CE application
                       signaling packets with the data packets in a
                       separate PW
                   o  '11' for CESoPSN PWs carrying TDM data and CE
                       application signaling on the same PW

CAS MUST be cleared for all types of TDM PWs

                   excluding trunk-specific NxDS0 services with CAS.
                   For these services, it encodes the trunk framing
                   like the following:
                      o  '01' - an E1 trunk
                      o  '10' - a T1/ESF trunk
                      o  '11' - a T1 SF trunk

RSVD-1 and RSVD-2 Reserved bits, which MUST be set to 0 by the PW

                   endpoint distributing this FEC and MUST be
                   ignored by the receiver.

PT Indicates the value of Payload Type in the RTP

                   header expected by the PW endpoint distributing
                   this FEC.  A value of 0 means that the PT value
                   check will not be used for detecting malformed
                   packets.

FREQ Frequency of timestamping clock in units of 8

                   kHz.

SSRC Indicates the value of the Synchronization source

                   ID (SSRC ID) in the RTP header expected by the PW
                   endpoint distributing this FEC.  A value of 0
                   means that the SSRC ID value check will not be
                   used for detecting misconnections.
                   Alternatively, Length can be set to 8 in this
                   case.

Notes:

1. This interface parameter MAY be omitted in the following cases:

  a) SAToP PWs that do not use RTP header RFC4553.
  b) Basic CESoPSN NxDS0 services without CE application signaling
     RFC5086.
  c) TDMoIP AAL1 mode 0 or 2 PWs that do not use RTP .
  d) TDMoIP AAL2 PWs that do not relay CAS signaling and do not use
     RTP.

2. This interface parameter MUST be present in the following cases:

  a) All TDM PWs that use RTP headers.
  b) CESoPSN PWs that carry basic NxDS0 services and use CESoPSN
     signaling packets to carry CE application signaling.  This case
     is discussed in detail in Section 4 below.
  c) CESoPSN PWs that carry trunk-specific NxDS0 services with CAS.
  d) TDMoIP AAL1 mode 1 PWs.
  e) TDMoIP AAL2 PWs that relay CAS signaling.

3. If RTP header and possibly the Differential timestamping mode are

  used, the value of the Length field MUST be set to 8 or 12 in
  order to accommodate the Timestamping Clock Frequency and SSRC
  fields.

4. Usage or non-usage of the RTP header MUST match for the two

  directions making up the TDM PW.  However, it is possible to use
  the Differential timestamping mode in just one direction.

Extending CESoPSN Basic NxDS0 Services with CE Application Signaling

RFC5086 states that basic NxDS0 services can be extended to carry CE application signaling (e.g., CAS) in special signaling packets carried in a separate PW.

The following rules define the setup of matching pairs of CESoPSN PWs using the PW ID FEC and the extensions defined above:

1. The two PWs MUST:

  a) Have the same PW type.
  b) Use the same setup method (i.e., either both use the PWId FEC,
     or both use the Generalized PW FEC).
  c) Have the same values of all the Interface Parameters listed in
     Section 3.1 above with the exception of the code point in the
     SP field of the TDM Options parameter:
     i) For the PW carrying TDM data packets, the SP bits MUST be
        set to '01'.
    ii) For the PW carrying the signaling packets, the SP bits MUST
        set to '10'.

2. If the PWId FEC has been used:

  a) The value of PW ID for the CESoPSN PW carrying TDM data packets
     MUST be even.
  b) The value of PW ID for the CESoPSN PW carrying CE application
     signaling MUST be the next (odd) value after the (even) PW ID
     of the CESoPSN PW carrying TDM data packets.

When using the Generalized PW FEC for the setup of the two PWs, no specific rules for matching the two FECs are defined. Implementation-specific mechanisms MAY be employed to verify the proper matching of the TDM data PW with its associated CE signaling PW.

If one of the two associated PWs has been established and the other failed to be established, or for any reason fails after having been established, the established PW MUST be torn down.

LDP Status Codes

In addition to the status codes defined in Sections 5.1 and 7.2 of RFC4447, the following status codes defined in RFC4446 MUST be used to indicate the reason of failure to establish a TDM PW:

1. Incompatible bit-rate:

  a) In the case of a mismatch of T1 encapsulation modes (basic vs.
     octet-aligned).
  b) In the case of a mismatch in the number of timeslots for NxDS0
     basic services or trunk-specific NxDS0 services with CAS.

2. CEP/TDM misconfiguration:

  a) In the case of a mismatch in the desired usage of RTP header.
  b) In the case of a mismatch of the desired Timestamping Clock
     Frequency.
  c) In the case of a mismatch of expected signaling packets
     behavior for basic CESoPSN NxDS0 services extended to carry CE
     application signaling in separate signaling packets.
  d) In the case of trunk-specific NxDS0 services with CAS if the
     framing types of the trunks are different.
  e) In the case of TDMoIP AAL1 PWs with different AAL1 modes
     specified by the endpoints.

3. The generic misconfiguration error MAY be used to indicate any

  setup failure not covered above.

In cases 2a, 2b, 2c, and 2e above, the user MAY reconfigure the endpoints and attempt to set up the PW once again.

In the case of 2d, the failure is fatal.

Note that setting of the Control bit (see Section 2 above) to zero MUST result in an LDP status of "Illegal C-Bit".

Using the PW Status TLV

The TDM PW control word carries status indications for both attachment circuits (L and M fields) and the PSN (R field) indication (see RFC4553, RFC5086, and RFC5087). Similar functionality is available via use of the PW Status TLV (see Section 5.4.2 of RFC4447). If the latter mechanism is employed, the signaling PE sends its peer a PW Status TLV for this PW, setting the appropriate bits (see Section 3.5 of RFC4446):

  o  Pseudowire Not Forwarding
  o  Local Attachment Circuit (ingress) Receive Fault
  o  Local Attachment Circuit (egress) Transmit Fault
  o  Local PSN-facing PW (ingress) Receive Fault
  o  Local PSN-facing PW (egress) Transmit Fault

As long as the TDM PW interworking function is operational, usage of the Status TLV is NOT RECOMMENDED in order to avoid contention between status indications reported by the data and control plane. However, if the TDM PW interworking function (IWF) itself fails while the PWE3 control plane remains operational, a Status TLV with all of the above bits set SHOULD be sent.

IANA Considerations

Most of the IANA assignments required by this document are already listed in RFC4446. Additional assignments have been made for four Interface Parameter Sub-TLV types (see Section 3.1):

  o  TDM Options (0x0B)
  o  Number of TDMoIP AAL1 cells per packet (0x0E)
  o  TDMoIP AAL1 mode (0x10)
  o  TDMoIP AAL2 Options (0x11)

Security Considerations

This document does not have any additional impact on the security of PWs above that of basic LDP-based setup of PWs specified in RFC4447.

Acknowledgements

Sharon Galtzur has reviewed one of the previous versions of this document. Y. (J.) Stein would like to thank Barak Schlosser for helpful discussions.

10. References

10.1. Normative References

RFC2119 Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate

          Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.

RFC5036 Andersson, L., Ed., Minei, I., Ed., and B. Thomas, Ed.,

          "LDP Specification", RFC 5036, October 2007.

RFC4447 Martini, L., Ed., Rosen, E., El-Aawar, N., Smith, T., and

          G. Heron, "Pseudowire Setup and Maintenance Using the
          Label Distribution Protocol (LDP)", RFC 4447, April 2006.

RFC4446 Martini, L., "IANA Allocations for Pseudowire Edge to Edge

          Emulation (PWE3)", BCP 116, RFC 4446, April 2006.

RFC4623 Malis, A. and M. Townsley, "Pseudowire Emulation Edge-to-

          Edge (PWE3) Fragmentation and Reassembly", RFC 4623,
          August 2006.

RFC4553 Vainshtein, A., Ed., and YJ. Stein, Ed., "Structure-

          Agnostic Time Division Multiplexing (TDM) over Packet
          (SAToP)", RFC 4553, June 2006.

10.2. Informative References

RFC5086 Vainshtein, A., Ed., Sasson, I., Metz, E., Frost, T., and

          P. Pate, "Structure-Aware Time Division Multiplexed (TDM)
          Circuit Emulation Service over Packet Switched Network
          (CESoPSN)", RFC 5086, December 2007.

RFC5087 Y(J). Stein, Shashoua, R., Insler, R., and M. Anavi, "Time

          Division Multiplexing over IP (TDMoIP)", RFC 5087,
          December 2007.

[Q.2630.1] ITU-T Recommendation Q.2630.1, December 1999, AAL type 2

          signaling protocol - Capability set 1

RFC4805 Nicklass, O., Ed., "Definitions of Managed Objects for the

          DS1, J1, E1, DS2, and E2 Interface Types", RFC 4805, March
          2007.

RFC4842 Malis, A., Pate, P., Cohen, R., Ed., and D. Zelig,

          "Synchronous Optical Network/Synchronous Digital Hierarchy
          (SONET/SDH) Circuit Emulation over Packet (CEP)", RFC
          4842, April 2007.

Authors' Addresses

Alexander ("Sasha") Vainshtein ECI Telecom 30 ha-Sivim St., PO Box 500 Petah-Tiqva, 49517 Israel

EMail: [email protected]

Yaakov (Jonathan) Stein RAD Data Communications 24 Raoul Wallenberg St., Bldg C Tel Aviv 69719 ISRAEL

Phone: +972 3 645-5389 EMail: [email protected]

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