Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Q. Wu, Ed.
Request for Comments: 8299 Huawei
Obsoletes: 8049 S. Litkowski
Category: Standards Track Orange
ISSN: 2070-1721 L. Tomotaki
Verizon
K. Ogaki
KDDI Corporation
January 2018
YANG Data Model for L3VPN Service Delivery
Abstract
This document defines a YANG data model that can be used for
communication between customers and network operators and to deliver
a Layer 3 provider-provisioned VPN service. This document is limited
to BGP PE-based VPNs as described in RFCs 4026, 4110, and 4364. This
model is intended to be instantiated at the management system to
deliver the overall service. It is not a configuration model to be
used directly on network elements. This model provides an abstracted
view of the Layer 3 IP VPN service configuration components. It will
be up to the management system to take this model as input and use
specific configuration models to configure the different network
elements to deliver the service. How the configuration of network
elements is done is out of scope for this document.
This document obsoletes RFC 8049; it replaces the unimplementable
module in that RFC with a new module with the same name that is not
backward compatible. The changes are a series of small fixes to the
YANG module and some clarifications to the text.
Status of This Memo
This is an Internet Standards Track document.
This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has
received public review and has been approved for publication by the
Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Further information on
Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.
Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8299.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 1]
RFC 8299 YANG Data Model for L3VPN Service Delivery January 2018
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2018 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
(https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
publication of this document. Please review these documents
carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must
include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
described in the Simplified BSD License.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction ....................................................4
1.1. Terminology ................................................4
1.2. Requirements Language ......................................5
1.3. Tree Diagrams ..............................................5
1.4. Summary of Changes from RFC 8049 ...........................5
1.4.1. Implementation Issues with RFC 8049 .................7
1.4.2. Impact Assessment ...................................7
2. Acronyms ........................................................8
3. Definitions ....................................................10
4. Layer 3 IP VPN Service Model ...................................10
5. Service Data Model Usage .......................................11
6. Design of the Data Model .......................................12
6.1. Features and Augmentation .................................22
6.2. VPN Service Overview ......................................22
6.2.1. VPN Service Topology ...............................23
6.2.2. Cloud Access .......................................26
6.2.3. Multicast Service ..................................29
6.2.4. Extranet VPNs ......................................30
6.3. Site Overview .............................................32
6.3.1. Devices and Locations ..............................33
6.3.2. Site Network Accesses ..............................34
6.4. Site Role .................................................36
6.5. Site Belonging to Multiple VPNs ...........................37
6.5.1. Site VPN Flavor ....................................37
6.5.2. Attaching a Site to a VPN ..........................41
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6.6. Deciding Where to Connect the Site ........................47
6.6.1. Constraint: Device .................................48
6.6.2. Constraint/Parameter: Site Location ................48
6.6.3. Constraint/Parameter: Access Type ..................49
6.6.4. Constraint: Access Diversity .......................50
6.6.5. Infeasible Access Placement ........................59
6.6.6. Examples of Access Placement .......................60
6.6.7. Route Distinguisher and VRF Allocation .............80
6.7. Site Network Access Availability ..........................81
6.8. Traffic Protection ........................................82
6.9. Security ..................................................83
6.9.1. Authentication .....................................83
6.9.2. Encryption .........................................84
6.10. Management ...............................................85
6.11. Routing Protocols ........................................86
6.11.1. Handling of Dual Stack ............................87
6.11.2. LAN Directly Connected to SP Network ..............88
6.11.3. LAN Directly Connected to SP Network with
Redundancy ........................................89
6.11.4. Static Routing ....................................89
6.11.5. RIP Routing .......................................89
6.11.6. OSPF Routing ......................................90
6.11.7. BGP Routing .......................................92
6.12. Service ..................................................93
6.12.1. Bandwidth .........................................94
6.12.2. MTU ...............................................94
6.12.3. QoS ...............................................94
6.12.4. Multicast ........................................103
6.13. Enhanced VPN Features ...................................104
6.13.1. Carriers' Carriers ...............................104
6.14. External ID References ..................................105
6.15. Defining NNIs ...........................................105
6.15.1. Defining an NNI with the Option A Flavor .........107
6.15.2. Defining an NNI with the Option B Flavor .........111
6.15.3. Defining an NNI with the Option C Flavor .........113
7. Service Model Usage Example ...................................114
8. Interaction with Other YANG Models ............................120
9. YANG Module ...................................................125
10. Security Considerations ......................................184
11. IANA Considerations ..........................................185
12. References ...................................................185
12.1. Normative References ....................................185
12.2. Informative References ..................................187
Acknowledgements .................................................188
Contributors .....................................................188
Authors' Addresses ...............................................188
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 3]
RFC 8299 YANG Data Model for L3VPN Service Delivery January 2018
1. Introduction
This document defines a Layer 3 VPN service data model written in
YANG. The model defines service configuration elements that can be
used in communication protocols between customers and network
operators. Those elements can also be used as input to automated
control and configuration applications.
This document obsoletes [RFC8049]; it creates a new module with the
same name as the module defined in [RFC8049]. The changes from
[RFC8049] are listed in full in Section 1.4. They are small in
scope, but include fixes to the module to make it possible to
implement.
The YANG module described in [RFC8049] cannot be implemented because
of issues around the use of XPATH. These issues are explained in
Section 1.4.1.
Section 11 of [RFC7950] describes when it is permissible to reuse a
module name. Section 1.4.2 provides an impact assessment in this
context.
1.1. Terminology
The following terms are defined in [RFC6241] and are not redefined
here:
o client
o configuration data
o server
o state data
The following terms are defined in [RFC7950] and are not redefined
here:
o augment
o data model
o data node
The terminology for describing YANG data models is found in
[RFC7950].
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 4]
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This document presents some configuration examples using XML
representation.
1.2. Requirements Language
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
"OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP
14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all
capitals, as shown here.
1.3. Tree Diagrams
A simplified graphical representation of the data model is presented
in Section 6.
The meanings of the symbols in these diagrams are as follows:
o Brackets "[" and "]" enclose list keys.
o Curly braces "{" and "}" contain names of optional features that
make the corresponding node conditional.
o Abbreviations before data node names: "rw" means configuration
data (read-write), and "ro" means state data (read-only).
o Symbols after data node names: "?" means an optional node, and "*"
denotes a "list" or "leaf-list".
o Parentheses enclose choice and case nodes, and case nodes are also
marked with a colon (":").
o Ellipsis ("...") stands for contents of subtrees that are not
shown.
1.4. Summary of Changes from RFC 8049
This document revises and obsoletes L3VPN Service Model [RFC8049],
drawing on insights gained from L3VPN Service Model deployments and
on feedback from the community. The major changes are as follows:
o Change type from 16-bit integer to string for the leaf id under
"qos-classification-policy" container.
o Stick to using ordered-by user and remove inefficiency to map
service model sequence number to device model sequence number.
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o Remove mandating the use of deviations and add "if-feature target-
sites" under the leaf-list target-sites in Section 6.12.2.1 of
[RFC8049].
o Change in keywords from [RFC2119] and [RFC8174] on operation of
the management system in the third paragraph of Section 6.6,
Section 6.6.5, and Section 7.
o Fix incomplete description statements.
o Add YANG statement to check that Stateless Address
Autoconfiguration (SLAAC) parameters are used only for IPv6.
o Fix strange wording in Section 6.11.7.
o Change the use of the absolute paths to the use of relative paths
in the "must" statement or "path" statement for vpn-policy-id leaf
node, management container, location leaf node, devices container,
location case, location-reference leaf, device case, device-
reference leaf to make configuration is only applicable to the
current sites.
o Change "must" statement to "when" statement for management
container device container.
o Fix optional parameter issues by adding a default or description
for others or make some of them mandatory.
o Define new grouping vpn-profile-cfg for all the identifiers
provided by SP to the customer. The identifiers include cloud-
identifier, std-qos-profile, OAM profile-name, and provider-
profile for encryption.
o Add in the XPATH string representation of identityrefs and remove
unqualified name. Change from YANG 1.0 Support to YANG 1.1
Support.
o Remove "when" statement from leaf nat44-customer-address.
o Fixed broken example and Add mandatory element in the examples.
o Remove redundant parameters in the cloud access.
o Specify provider address and a list of start-end addresses from
provider address for DHCP case.
o Add a few text to clarify what the site is in Section 6.3.
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o Add multi-filter and multiVPN per entry support for VPN policy.
o Modify description for svc-input-bandwidth leaf and svc-output-
bandwidth leaf to make it consistent with the text in
Section 6.12.1.
o Clarify the rational of the model in the Section 5.
o Add text to clarify the way to achieve Per-VPN QoS policy.
1.4.1. Implementation Issues with RFC 8049
[RFC8049] made an initial attempt to define a YANG data model
forL3VPN services. After it was published it was discovered that,
while the YANG compiled it was broken from an implementation
perspective. That is, it was impossible to build a functional
implementation of the module.
Section 1.4 provides a full list of the changes since [RFC8049].
Some of these changes remove ambiguities from the documented YANG,
while other changes fix the implementation issues.
1. Several uses of 'must' expressions in the module were broken
badly enough that the module was not usable in the form it was
published. While some compilers and YANG checkers found no
issues (most YANG tools do not attempt to parse these
expressions), other tools that really understand the XPATH in the
expressions refused to compile them.
The changes needed to fix these expressions were small and local.
2. The second issue relates to how Access Control List (ACL) rules
were sorted. In [RFC8049] the English language text and the text
in the YANG definition contradicted each other. Furthermore, the
model used classic ACL rule numbering notation for something that
was semantically very different (ordered-by user) in the YANG
thus creating the potential for misunderstanding.
3. Further to point 2, the ACL modeling in [RFC8049] was
incompatible with work going on in other IETF documents such as
[ACL-YANG].
1.4.2. Impact Assessment
When changing the content of a YANG module, care must be taken to
ensure that there are no interoperability issues caused by a failure
to enable backward compatibility.
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Section 11 of [RFC7950] clearly describes the circumstances under
which it is not acceptable to maintain a module name.
...changes to published modules are not allowed if they have any
potential to cause interoperability problems between a client
using an original specification and a server using an updated
specification.
The module defined in this document is not backward compatible with
that defined in [RFC8049], but it is important to understand that
there is no possibility of an interoperability issue between the
module defined in this document and that presented in [RFC8049]
because that module could not be implemented for the reasons
described in Section 1.4.1. Thus, noting the rules set out in
[RFC7950], it was decided to retain the module name in this document.
2. Acronyms
AAA: Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting.
ACL: Access Control List.
ADSL: Asymmetric DSL.
AH: Authentication Header.
AS: Autonomous System.
ASBR: Autonomous System Border Router.
ASM: Any-Source Multicast.
BAS: Broadband Access Switch.
BFD: Bidirectional Forwarding Detection.
BGP: Border Gateway Protocol.
BSR: Bootstrap Router.
CE: Customer Edge.
CLI: Command Line Interface.
CsC: Carriers' Carriers.
CSP: Cloud Service Provider.
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DHCP: Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol.
DSLAM: Digital Subscriber Line Access Multiplexer.
ESP: Encapsulating Security Payload.
GRE: Generic Routing Encapsulation.
IGMP: Internet Group Management Protocol.
LAN: Local Area Network.
MLD: Multicast Listener Discovery.
MTU: Maximum Transmission Unit.
NAT: Network Address Translation.
NETCONF: Network Configuration Protocol.
NNI: Network-to-Network Interface.
OAM: Operations, Administration, and Maintenance.
OSPF: Open Shortest Path First.
OSS: Operations Support System.
PE: Provider Edge.
PIM: Protocol Independent Multicast.
POP: Point of Presence.
QoS: Quality of Service.
RD: Route Distinguisher.
RIP: Routing Information Protocol.
RP: Rendezvous Point.
RT: Route Target.
SFTP: Secure FTP.
SLA: Service Level Agreement.
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SLAAC: Stateless Address Autoconfiguration.
SP: Service Provider.
SPT: Shortest Path Tree.
SSM: Source-Specific Multicast.
VM: Virtual Machine.
VPN: Virtual Private Network.
VRF: VPN Routing and Forwarding.
VRRP: Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol.
3. Definitions
Customer Edge (CE) Device: A CE is equipment dedicated to a
particular customer; it is directly connected (at Layer 3) to one or
more PE devices via attachment circuits. A CE is usually located at
the customer premises and is usually dedicated to a single VPN,
although it may support multiple VPNs if each one has separate
attachment circuits.
Provider Edge (PE) Device: A PE is equipment managed by the SP; it
can support multiple VPNs for different customers and is directly
connected (at Layer 3) to one or more CE devices via attachment
circuits. A PE is usually located at an SP point of presence (POP)
and is managed by the SP.
PE-Based VPNs: The PE devices know that certain traffic is VPN
traffic. They forward the traffic (through tunnels) based on the
destination IP address of the packet and, optionally, based on other
information in the IP header of the packet. The PE devices are
themselves the tunnel endpoints. The tunnels may make use of various
encapsulations to send traffic over the SP network (such as, but not
restricted to, GRE, IP-in-IP, IPsec, or MPLS tunnels).
4. Layer 3 IP VPN Service Model
A Layer 3 IP VPN service is a collection of sites that are authorized
to exchange traffic between each other over a shared IP
infrastructure. This Layer 3 VPN service model aims at providing a
common understanding of how the corresponding IP VPN service is to be
deployed over the shared infrastructure. This service model is
limited to BGP PE-based VPNs as described in [RFC4026], [RFC4110],
and [RFC4364].
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5. Service Data Model Usage
l3vpn-svc |
Model |
|
+------------------+ +-----+
| Orchestration | < --- > | OSS |
+------------------+ +-----+
| |
+----------------+ |
| Config manager | |
+----------------+ |
| |
| NETCONF/CLI ...
| |
+------------------------------------------------+
Network
+++++++
+ AAA +
+++++++
++++++++ Bearer ++++++++ ++++++++ ++++++++
+ CE A + ----------- + PE A + + PE B + ---- + CE B +
++++++++ Connection ++++++++ ++++++++ ++++++++
Site A Site B
The idea of the L3 IP VPN service model is to propose an abstracted
interface between customers and network operators to manage
configuration of components of an L3VPN service. The model is
intended to be used in a mode where the network operator's system is
the server and the customer's system is the client. A typical
scenario would be to use this model as an input for an orchestration
layer that will be responsible for translating it to an orchestrated
configuration of network elements that will be part of the service.
The network elements can be routers but can also be servers (like
AAA); the network's configuration is not limited to these examples.
The configuration of network elements can be done via the CLI,
NETCONF/RESTCONF [RFC6241] [RFC8040] coupled with YANG data models of
a specific configuration (BGP, VRF, BFD, etc.), or some other
technique, as preferred by the operator.
The usage of this service model is not limited to this example; it
can be used by any component of the management system but not
directly by network elements.
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6. Design of the Data Model
The YANG module is divided into two main containers: "vpn-services"
and "sites".
The "vpn-service" list under the vpn-services container defines
global parameters for the VPN service for a specific customer.
A "site" is composed of at least one "site-network-access" and, in
the case of multihoming, may have multiple site-network-access
points. The site-network-access attachment is done through a
"bearer" with an "ip-connection" on top. The bearer refers to
properties of the attachment that are below Layer 3, while the
connection refers to properties oriented to the Layer 3 protocol.
The bearer may be allocated dynamically by the SP, and the customer
may provide some constraints or parameters to drive the placement of
the access.
Authorization of traffic exchange is done through what we call a VPN
policy or VPN service topology defining routing exchange rules
between sites.
The figure below describes the overall structure of the YANG module:
module: ietf-l3vpn-svc
+--rw l3vpn-svc
+--rw vpn-profiles
| +--rw valid-provider-identifiers
| +--rw cloud-identifier* [id] {cloud-access}?
| | +--rw id string
| +--rw encryption-profile-identifier* [id]
| | +--rw id string
| +--rw qos-profile-identifier* [id]
| | +--rw id string
| +--rw bfd-profile-identifier* [id]
| +--rw id string
+--rw vpn-services
| +--rw vpn-service* [vpn-id]
| +--rw vpn-id svc-id
| +--rw customer-name? string
| +--rw vpn-service-topology? identityref
| +--rw cloud-accesses {cloud-access}?
| | +--rw cloud-access* [cloud-identifier]
| | +--rw cloud-identifier leafref
| | +--rw (list-flavor)?
| | | +--:(permit-any)
| | | | +--rw permit-any? empty
| | | +--:(deny-any-except)
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| | | | +--rw permit-site*
| | | | -> /l3vpn-svc/sites/site/site-id
| | | +--:(permit-any-except)
| | | +--rw deny-site*
| | | -> /l3vpn-svc/sites/site/site-id
| | +--rw address-translation
| | +--rw nat44
| | +--rw enabled? boolean
| | +--rw nat44-customer-address?
| | inet:ipv4-address
| +--rw multicast {multicast}?
| | +--rw enabled? boolean
| | +--rw customer-tree-flavors
| | | +--rw tree-flavor* identityref
| | +--rw rp
| | +--rw rp-group-mappings
| | | +--rw rp-group-mapping* [id]
| | | +--rw id uint16
| | | +--rw provider-managed
| | | | +--rw enabled? boolean
| | | | +--rw rp-redundancy? boolean
| | | | +--rw optimal-traffic-delivery? boolean
| | | +--rw rp-address inet:ip-address
| | | +--rw groups
| | | +--rw group* [id]
| | | +--rw id uint16
| | | +--rw (group-format)
| | | +--:(singleaddress)
| | | | +--rw group-address?
| | | | inet:ip-address
| | | +--:(startend)
| | | +--rw group-start?
| | | | inet:ip-address
| | | +--rw group-end?
| | | inet:ip-address
| | +--rw rp-discovery
| | +--rw rp-discovery-type? identityref
| | +--rw bsr-candidates
| | +--rw bsr-candidate-address* inet:ip-address
| +--rw carrierscarrier? boolean {carrierscarrier}?
| +--rw extranet-vpns {extranet-vpn}?
| +--rw extranet-vpn* [vpn-id]
| +--rw vpn-id svc-id
| +--rw local-sites-role? identityref
+--rw sites
+--rw site* [site-id]
+--rw site-id svc-id
+--rw requested-site-start? yang:date-and-time
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+--rw requested-site-stop? yang:date-and-time
+--rw locations
| +--rw location* [location-id]
| +--rw location-id svc-id
| +--rw address? string
| +--rw postal-code? string
| +--rw state? string
| +--rw city? string
| +--rw country-code? string
+--rw devices
| +--rw device* [device-id]
| +--rw device-id svc-id
| +--rw location
| | -> ../../../locations/location/location-id
| +--rw management
| +--rw address-family? address-family
| +--rw address inet:ip-address
+--rw site-diversity {site-diversity}?
| +--rw groups
| +--rw group* [group-id]
| +--rw group-id string
+--rw management
| +--rw type identityref
+--rw vpn-policies
| +--rw vpn-policy* [vpn-policy-id]
| +--rw vpn-policy-id svc-id
| +--rw entries* [id]
| +--rw id svc-id
| +--rw filters
| | +--rw filter* [type]
| | +--rw type identityref
| | +--rw lan-tag* string
| | | {lan-tag}?
| | +--rw ipv4-lan-prefix* inet:ipv4-prefix
| | | {ipv4}?
| | +--rw ipv6-lan-prefix* inet:ipv6-prefix
| | {ipv6}?
| +--rw vpn* [vpn-id]
| +--rw vpn-id leafref
| +--rw site-role? identityref
+--rw site-vpn-flavor? identityref
+--rw maximum-routes
| +--rw address-family* [af]
| +--rw af address-family
| +--rw maximum-routes? uint32
+--rw security
| +--rw authentication
| +--rw encryption {encryption}?
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| +--rw enabled? boolean
| +--rw layer? enumeration
| +--rw encryption-profile
| +--rw (profile)?
| +--:(provider-profile)
| | +--rw profile-name? leafref
| +--:(customer-profile)
| +--rw algorithm? string
| +--rw (key-type)?
| +--:(psk)
| +--rw preshared-key? string
+--rw service
| +--rw qos {qos}?
| | +--rw qos-classification-policy
| | | +--rw rule* [id]
| | | +--rw id string
| | | +--rw (match-type)?
| | | | +--:(match-flow)
| | | | | +--rw match-flow
| | | | | +--rw dscp? inet:dscp
| | | | | +--rw dot1p? uint8
| | | | | +--rw ipv4-src-prefix?
| | | | | | inet:ipv4-prefix
| | | | | +--rw ipv6-src-prefix?
| | | | | | inet:ipv6-prefix
| | | | | +--rw ipv4-dst-prefix?
| | | | | | inet:ipv4-prefix
| | | | | +--rw ipv6-dst-prefix?
| | | | | | inet:ipv6-prefix
| | | | | +--rw l4-src-port?
| | | | | | inet:port-number
| | | | | +--rw target-sites* svc-id
| | | | | | {target-sites}?
| | | | | +--rw l4-src-port-range
| | | | | | +--rw lower-port? inet:port-number
| | | | | | +--rw upper-port? inet:port-number
| | | | | +--rw l4-dst-port?
| | | | | | inet:port-number
| | | | | +--rw l4-dst-port-range
| | | | | | +--rw lower-port? inet:port-number
| | | | | | +--rw upper-port? inet:port-number
| | | | | +--rw protocol-field? union
| | | | +--:(match-application)
| | | | +--rw match-application? identityref
| | | +--rw target-class-id? string
| | +--rw qos-profile
| | +--rw (qos-profile)?
| | +--:(standard)
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| | | +--rw profile? leafref
| | +--:(custom)
| | +--rw classes {qos-custom}?
| | +--rw class* [class-id]
| | +--rw class-id string
| | +--rw direction? identityref
| | +--rw rate-limit? decimal64
| | +--rw latency
| | | +--rw (flavor)?
| | | +--:(lowest)
| | | | +--rw use-lowest-latency?
| | | | empty
| | | +--:(boundary)
| | | +--rw latency-boundary?
| | | uint16
| | +--rw jitter
| | | +--rw (flavor)?
| | | +--:(lowest)
| | | | +--rw use-lowest-jitter?
| | | | empty
| | | +--:(boundary)
| | | +--rw latency-boundary?
| | | uint32
| | +--rw bandwidth
| | +--rw guaranteed-bw-percent
| | | decimal64
| | +--rw end-to-end? empty
| +--rw carrierscarrier {carrierscarrier}?
| | +--rw signalling-type? enumeration
| +--rw multicast {multicast}?
| +--rw multicast-site-type? enumeration
| +--rw multicast-address-family
| | +--rw ipv4? boolean {ipv4}?
| | +--rw ipv6? boolean {ipv6}?
| +--rw protocol-type? enumeration
+--rw traffic-protection {fast-reroute}?
| +--rw enabled? boolean
+--rw routing-protocols
| +--rw routing-protocol* [type]
| +--rw type identityref
| +--rw ospf {rtg-ospf}?
| | +--rw address-family* address-family
| | +--rw area-address yang:dotted-quad
| | +--rw metric? uint16
| | +--rw sham-links {rtg-ospf-sham-link}?
| | +--rw sham-link* [target-site]
| | +--rw target-site svc-id
| | +--rw metric? uint16
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 16]
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| +--rw bgp {rtg-bgp}?
| | +--rw autonomous-system uint32
| | +--rw address-family* address-family
| +--rw static
| | +--rw cascaded-lan-prefixes
| | +--rw ipv4-lan-prefixes* [lan next-hop]
| | | {ipv4}?
| | | +--rw lan inet:ipv4-prefix
| | | +--rw lan-tag? string
| | | +--rw next-hop inet:ipv4-address
| | +--rw ipv6-lan-prefixes* [lan next-hop]
| | {ipv6}?
| | +--rw lan inet:ipv6-prefix
| | +--rw lan-tag? string
| | +--rw next-hop inet:ipv6-address
| +--rw rip {rtg-rip}?
| | +--rw address-family* address-family
| +--rw vrrp {rtg-vrrp}?
| +--rw address-family* address-family
+--ro actual-site-start? yang:date-and-time
+--ro actual-site-stop? yang:date-and-time
+--rw site-network-accesses
+--rw site-network-access* [site-network-access-id]
+--rw site-network-access-id svc-id
+--rw site-network-access-type? identityref
+--rw (location-flavor)
| +--:(location)
| | +--rw location-reference? leafref
| +--:(device)
| +--rw device-reference?
| -> ../../../devices/device/device-id
+--rw access-diversity {site-diversity}?
| +--rw groups
| | +--rw group* [group-id]
| | +--rw group-id string
| +--rw constraints
| +--rw constraint* [constraint-type]
| +--rw constraint-type identityref
| +--rw target
| +--rw (target-flavor)?
| +--:(id)
| | +--rw group* [group-id]
| | +--rw group-id string
| +--:(all-accesses)
| | +--rw all-other-accesses? empty
| +--:(all-groups)
| +--rw all-other-groups? empty
+--rw bearer
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 17]
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| +--rw requested-type {requested-type}?
| | +--rw requested-type? string
| | +--rw strict? boolean
| +--rw always-on? boolean {always-on}?
| +--rw bearer-reference? string
| {bearer-reference}?
+--rw ip-connection
| +--rw ipv4 {ipv4}?
| | +--rw address-allocation-type? identityref
| | +--rw provider-dhcp
| | | +--rw provider-address?
| | | | inet:ipv4-address
| | | +--rw prefix-length? uint8
| | | +--rw (address-assign)?
| | | +--:(number)
| | | | +--rw number-of-dynamic-address?
| | | | uint16
| | | +--:(explicit)
| | | +--rw customer-addresses
| | | +--rw address-group* [group-id]
| | | +--rw group-id string
| | | +--rw start-address?
| | | | inet:ipv4-address
| | | +--rw end-address?
| | | inet:ipv4-address
| | +--rw dhcp-relay
| | | +--rw provider-address?
| | | | inet:ipv4-address
| | | +--rw prefix-length? uint8
| | | +--rw customer-dhcp-servers
| | | +--rw server-ip-address*
| | | inet:ipv4-address
| | +--rw addresses
| | +--rw provider-address? inet:ipv4-address
| | +--rw customer-address? inet:ipv4-address
| | +--rw prefix-length? uint8
| +--rw ipv6 {ipv6}?
| | +--rw address-allocation-type? identityref
| | +--rw provider-dhcp
| | | +--rw provider-address?
| | | | inet:ipv6-address
| | | +--rw prefix-length? uint8
| | | +--rw (address-assign)?
| | | +--:(number)
| | | | +--rw number-of-dynamic-address?
| | | | uint16
| | | +--:(explicit)
| | | +--rw customer-addresses
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 18]
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| | | +--rw address-group* [group-id]
| | | +--rw group-id string
| | | +--rw start-address?
| | | | inet:ipv6-address
| | | +--rw end-address?
| | | inet:ipv6-address
| | +--rw dhcp-relay
| | | +--rw provider-address?
| | | | inet:ipv6-address
| | | +--rw prefix-length? uint8
| | | +--rw customer-dhcp-servers
| | | +--rw server-ip-address*
| | | inet:ipv6-address
| | +--rw addresses
| | +--rw provider-address? inet:ipv6-address
| | +--rw customer-address? inet:ipv6-address
| | +--rw prefix-length? uint8
| +--rw oam
| +--rw bfd {bfd}?
| +--rw enabled? boolean
| +--rw (holdtime)?
| +--:(fixed)
| | +--rw fixed-value? uint32
| +--:(profile)
| +--rw profile-name? leafref
+--rw security
| +--rw authentication
| +--rw encryption {encryption}?
| +--rw enabled? boolean
| +--rw layer? enumeration
| +--rw encryption-profile
| +--rw (profile)?
| +--:(provider-profile)
| | +--rw profile-name? leafref
| +--:(customer-profile)
| +--rw algorithm? string
| +--rw (key-type)?
| +--:(psk)
| +--rw preshared-key? string
+--rw service
| +--rw svc-input-bandwidth uint64
| +--rw svc-output-bandwidth uint64
| +--rw svc-mtu uint16
| +--rw qos {qos}?
| | +--rw qos-classification-policy
| | | +--rw rule* [id]
| | | +--rw id string
| | | +--rw (match-type)?
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 19]
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| | | | +--:(match-flow)
| | | | | +--rw match-flow
| | | | | +--rw dscp?
| | | | | | inet:dscp
| | | | | +--rw dot1p? uint8
| | | | | +--rw ipv4-src-prefix?
| | | | | | inet:ipv4-prefix
| | | | | +--rw ipv6-src-prefix?
| | | | | | inet:ipv6-prefix
| | | | | +--rw ipv4-dst-prefix?
| | | | | | inet:ipv4-prefix
| | | | | +--rw ipv6-dst-prefix?
| | | | | | inet:ipv6-prefix
| | | | | +--rw l4-src-port?
| | | | | | inet:port-number
| | | | | +--rw target-sites* svc-id
| | | | | | {target-sites}?
| | | | | +--rw l4-src-port-range
| | | | | | +--rw lower-port?
| | | | | | | inet:port-number
| | | | | | +--rw upper-port?
| | | | | | inet:port-number
| | | | | +--rw l4-dst-port?
| | | | | | inet:port-number
| | | | | +--rw l4-dst-port-range
| | | | | | +--rw lower-port?
| | | | | | | inet:port-number
| | | | | | +--rw upper-port?
| | | | | | inet:port-number
| | | | | +--rw protocol-field? union
| | | | +--:(match-application)
| | | | +--rw match-application?
| | | | identityref
| | | +--rw target-class-id? string
| | +--rw qos-profile
| | +--rw (qos-profile)?
| | +--:(standard)
| | | +--rw profile? leafref
| | +--:(custom)
| | +--rw classes {qos-custom}?
| | +--rw class* [class-id]
| | +--rw class-id string
| | +--rw direction? identityref
| | +--rw rate-limit? decimal64
| | +--rw latency
| | | +-rw (flavor)?
| | | +--:(lowest)
| | | | +-rw use-lowest-latency?
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 20]
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| | | | empty
| | | +--:(boundary)
| | | +-rw latency-boundary?
| | | uint16
| | +--rw jitter
| | | +-rw (flavor)?
| | | +--:(lowest)
| | | | +--rw use-lowest-jitter?
| | | | empty
| | | +--:(boundary)
| | | +--rw latency-boundary?
| | | uint32
| | +--rw bandwidth
| | +--rw guaranteed-bw-percent
| | | decimal64
| | +--rw end-to-end?
| | empty
| +--rw carrierscarrier {carrierscarrier}?
| | +--rw signalling-type? enumeration
| +--rw multicast {multicast}?
| +--rw multicast-site-type? enumeration
| +--rw multicast-address-family
| | +--rw ipv4? boolean {ipv4}?
| | +--rw ipv6? boolean {ipv6}?
| +--rw protocol-type? enumeration
+--rw routing-protocols
| +--rw routing-protocol* [type]
| +--rw type identityref
| +--rw ospf {rtg-ospf}?
| | +--rw address-family* address-family
| | +--rw area-address yang:dotted-quad
| | +--rw metric? uint16
| | +--rw sham-links {rtg-ospf-sham-link}?
| | +--rw sham-link* [target-site]
| | +--rw target-site svc-id
| | +--rw metric? uint16
| +--rw bgp {rtg-bgp}?
| | +--rw autonomous-system uint32
| | +--rw address-family* address-family
| +--rw static
| | +--rw cascaded-lan-prefixes
| | +--rw ipv4-lan-prefixes*
| | | [lan next-hop] {ipv4}?
| | | +--rw lan inet:ipv4-prefix
| | | +--rw lan-tag? string
| | | +--rw next-hop inet:ipv4-address
| | +--rw ipv6-lan-prefixes*
| | [lan next-hop] {ipv6}?
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| | +--rw lan inet:ipv6-prefix
| | +--rw lan-tag? string
| | +--rw next-hop inet:ipv6-address
| +--rw rip {rtg-rip}?
| | +--rw address-family* address-family
| +--rw vrrp {rtg-vrrp}?
| +--rw address-family* address-family
+--rw availability
| +--rw access-priority? uint32
+--rw vpn-attachment
+--rw (attachment-flavor)
+--:(vpn-policy-id)
| +--rw vpn-policy-id? leafref
+--:(vpn-id)
+--rw vpn-id? leafref
+--rw site-role? identityref
6.1. Features and Augmentation
The model defined in this document implements many features that
allow implementations to be modular. As an example, an
implementation may support only IPv4 VPNs (IPv4 feature), IPv6 VPNs
(IPv6 feature), or both (by advertising both features). The routing
protocols proposed to the customer may also be enabled through
features. This model also defines some features for options that are
more advanced, such as support for extranet VPNs (Section 6.2.4),
site diversity (Section 6.6), and QoS (Section 6.12.3).
In addition, as for any YANG data model, this service model can be
augmented to implement new behaviors or specific features. For
example, this model uses different options for IP address
assignments; if those options do not fulfill all requirements, new
options can be added through augmentation.
6.2. VPN Service Overview
A vpn-service list item contains generic information about the VPN
service. The "vpn-id" provided in the vpn-service list refers to an
internal reference for this VPN service, while the customer name
refers to a more-explicit reference to the customer. This identifier
is purely internal to the organization responsible for the VPN
service.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 22]
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6.2.1. VPN Service Topology
The type of VPN service topology is required for configuration. Our
proposed model supports any-to-any, Hub and Spoke (where Hubs can
exchange traffic), and "Hub and Spoke disjoint" (where Hubs cannot
exchange traffic). New topologies could be added via augmentation.
By default, the any-to-any VPN service topology is used.
6.2.1.1. Route Target Allocation
A Layer 3 PE-based VPN is built using route targets (RTs) as
described in [RFC4364]. The management system is expected to
automatically allocate a set of RTs upon receiving a VPN service
creation request. How the management system allocates RTs is out of
scope for this document, but multiple ways could be envisaged, as
described below.
Management system
<------------------------------------------------->
Request RT
+-----------------------+ Topo a2a +----------+
RESTCONF | | -----> | |
User ------------- | Service Orchestration | | Network |
l3vpn-svc | | <----- | OSS |
Model +-----------------------+ Response +----------+
RT1, RT2
In the example above, a service orchestration, owning the
instantiation of this service model, requests RTs to the network OSS.
Based on the requested VPN service topology, the network OSS replies
with one or multiple RTs. The interface between this service
orchestration and the network OSS is out of scope for this document.
+---------------------------+
RESTCONF | |
User ------------- | Service Orchestration |
l3vpn-svc | |
Model | |
| RT pool: 10:1->10:10000 |
| RT pool: 20:50->20:5000 |
+---------------------------+
In the example above, a service orchestration, owning the
instantiation of this service model, owns one or more pools of RTs
(specified by the SP) that can be allocated. Based on the requested
VPN service topology, it will allocate one or multiple RTs from the
pool.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 23]
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The mechanisms shown above are just examples and should not be
considered an exhaustive list of solutions.
6.2.1.2. Any-to-Any
+------------------------------------------------------------+
| VPN1_Site1 ------ PE1 PE2 ------ VPN1_Site2 |
| |
| VPN1_Site3 ------ PE3 PE4 ------ VPN1_Site4 |
+------------------------------------------------------------+
Any-to-Any VPN Service Topology
In the any-to-any VPN service topology, all VPN sites can communicate
with each other without any restrictions. The management system that
receives an any-to-any IP VPN service request through this model is
expected to assign and then configure the VRF and RTs on the
appropriate PEs. In the any-to-any case, a single RT is generally
required, and every VRF imports and exports this RT.
6.2.1.3. Hub and Spoke
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
| Hub_Site1 ------ PE1 PE2 ------ Spoke_Site1 |
| +----------------------------------+
| |
| +----------------------------------+
| Hub_Site2 ------ PE3 PE4 ------ Spoke_Site2 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Hub-and-Spoke VPN Service Topology
In the Hub-and-Spoke VPN service topology, all Spoke sites can
communicate only with Hub sites but not with each other, and Hubs can
also communicate with each other. The management system that owns an
any-to-any IP VPN service request through this model is expected to
assign and then configure the VRF and RTs on the appropriate PEs. In
the Hub-and-Spoke case, two RTs are generally required (one RT for
Hub routes and one RT for Spoke routes). A Hub VRF that connects Hub
sites will export Hub routes with the Hub RT and will import Spoke
routes through the Spoke RT. It will also import the Hub RT to allow
Hub-to-Hub communication. A Spoke VRF that connects Spoke sites will
export Spoke routes with the Spoke RT and will import Hub routes
through the Hub RT.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 24]
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The management system MUST take into account constraints on Hub-and-
Spoke connections. For example, if a management system decides to
mesh a Spoke site and a Hub site on the same PE, it needs to mesh
connections in different VRFs, as shown in the figure below.
Hub_Site ------- (VRF_Hub) PE1
(VRF_Spoke)
/ |
Spoke_Site1 -------------------+ |
|
Spoke_Site2 -----------------------+
6.2.1.4. Hub and Spoke Disjoint
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
| Hub_Site1 ------ PE1 PE2 ------ Spoke_Site1 |
+--------------------------+ +-------------------------------+
| |
+--------------------------+ +-------------------------------+
| Hub_Site2 ------ PE3 PE4 ------ Spoke_Site2 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
Hub and Spoke Disjoint VPN Service Topology
In the Hub and Spoke disjoint VPN service topology, all Spoke sites
can communicate only with Hub sites but not with each other, and Hubs
cannot communicate with each other. The management system that owns
an any-to-any IP VPN service request through this model is expected
to assign and then configure the VRF and RTs on the appropriate PEs.
In the Hub-and-Spoke case, two RTs are required (one RT for Hub
routes and one RT for Spoke routes). A Hub VRF that connects Hub
sites will export Hub routes with the Hub RT and will import Spoke
routes through the Spoke RT. A Spoke VRF that connects Spoke sites
will export Spoke routes with the Spoke RT and will import Hub routes
through the Hub RT.
The management system MUST take into account constraints on Hub-and-
Spoke connections, as in the previous case.
Hub and Spoke disjoint can also be seen as multiple Hub-and-Spoke
VPNs (one per Hub) that share a common set of Spoke sites.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 25]
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6.2.2. Cloud Access
The proposed model provides cloud access configuration via the
"cloud-accesses" container. The usage of cloud-access is targeted
for the public cloud. An Internet access can also be considered a
public cloud access service. The cloud-accesses container provides
parameters for network address translation and authorization rules.
A private cloud access may be addressed through NNIs, as described in
Section 6.15.
A cloud identifier is used to reference the target service. This
identifier is local to each administration.
The model allows for source address translation before accessing the
cloud. IPv4-to-IPv4 address translation (NAT44) is the only
supported option, but other options can be added through
augmentation. If IP source address translation is required to access
the cloud, the "enabled" leaf MUST be set to true in the "nat44"
container. An IP address may be provided in the "customer-address"
leaf if the customer is providing the IP address to be used for the
cloud access. If the SP is providing this address, "customer-
address" is not necessary, as it can be picked from a pool of SPs.
By default, all sites in the IP VPN MUST be authorized to access the
cloud. If restrictions are required, a user MAY configure the
"permit-site" or "deny-site" leaf-list. The permit-site leaf-list
defines the list of sites authorized for cloud access. The deny-site
leaf-list defines the list of sites denied for cloud access. The
model supports both "deny-any-except" and "permit-any-except"
authorization.
How the restrictions will be configured on network elements is out of
scope for this document.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 26]
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IP VPN
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ ++++++++++++
+ Site 3 + --- + Cloud 1 +
+ Site 1 + ++++++++++++
+ +
+ Site 2 + --- ++++++++++++
+ + + Internet +
+ Site 4 + ++++++++++++
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
|
+++++++++++
+ Cloud 2 +
+++++++++++
In the example above, we configure the global VPN to access the
Internet by creating a cloud-access pointing to the cloud identifier
for the Internet service. No authorized sites will be configured, as
all sites are required to access the Internet. The "address-
translation/nat44/enabled" leaf will be set to true.
123456487
INTERNET
true
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 27]
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If Site 1 and Site 2 require access to Cloud 1, a new cloud-access
pointing to the cloud identifier of Cloud 1 will be created. The
permit-site leaf-list will be filled with a reference to Site 1 and
Site 2.
123456487
Cloud1
site1
site2
If all sites except Site 1 require access to Cloud 2, a new cloud-
access pointing to the cloud identifier of Cloud 2 will be created.
The deny-site leaf-list will be filled with a reference to Site 1.
123456487
Cloud2
site1
A service with more than one cloud access is functionally identical
to multiple services each with a single cloud access, where the sites
that belong to each service in the latter case correspond with the
authorized sites for each cloud access in the former case. However,
defining a single service with multiple cloud accesses may be
operationally simpler.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 28]
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6.2.3. Multicast Service
Multicast in IP VPNs is described in [RFC6513].
If multicast support is required for an IP VPN, some global multicast
parameters are required as input for the service request.
Users of this model will need to provide the flavors of trees that
will be used by customers within the IP VPN (customer tree). The
proposed model supports bidirectional, shared, and source-based trees
(and can be augmented). Multiple flavors of trees can be supported
simultaneously.
Operator network
______________
/ \
| |
(SSM tree) |
Recv (IGMPv3) -- Site2 ------- PE2 |
| PE1 --- Site1 --- Source1
| | \
| | -- Source2
| |
(ASM tree) |
Recv (IGMPv2) -- Site3 ------- PE3 |
| |
(SSM tree) |
Recv (IGMPv3) -- Site4 ------- PE4 |
| / |
Recv (IGMPv2) -- Site5 -------- |
(ASM tree) |
| |
\_______________/
When an ASM flavor is requested, this model requires that the "rp"
and "rp-discovery" parameters be filled. Multiple RP-to-group
mappings can be created using the "rp-group-mappings" container. For
each mapping, the SP can manage the RP service by setting the
"provider-managed/enabled" leaf to true. In the case of a provider-
managed RP, the user can request RP redundancy and/or optimal traffic
delivery. Those parameters will help the SP select the appropriate
technology or architecture to fulfill the customer service
requirement: for instance, in the case of a request for optimal
traffic delivery, an SP may use Anycast-RP or RP-tree-to-SPT
switchover architectures.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 29]
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In the case of a customer-managed RP, the RP address must be filled
in the RP-to-group mappings using the "rp-address" leaf. This leaf
is not needed for a provider-managed RP.
Users can define a specific mechanism for RP discovery, such as the
"auto-rp", "static-rp", or "bsr-rp" modes. By default, the model
uses "static-rp" if ASM is requested. A single rp-discovery
mechanism is allowed for the VPN. The "rp-discovery" container can
be used for both provider-managed and customer-managed RPs. In the
case of a provider-managed RP, if the user wants to use "bsr-rp" as a
discovery protocol, an SP should consider the provider-managed
"rp-group-mappings" for the "bsr-rp" configuration. The SP will then
configure its selected RPs to be "bsr-rp-candidates". In the case of
a customer-managed RP and a "bsr-rp" discovery mechanism, the
"rp-address" provided will be the bsr-rp candidate.
6.2.4. Extranet VPNs
There are some cases where a particular VPN needs access to resources
(servers, hosts, etc.) that are external. Those resources may be
located in another VPN.
+-----------+ +-----------+
/ \ / \
Site A -- | VPN A | --- | VPN B | --- Site B
\ / \ / (Shared
+-----------+ +-----------+ resources)
In the figure above, VPN B has some resources on Site B that need to
be available to some customers/partners. VPN A must be able to
access those VPN B resources.
Such a VPN connection scenario can be achieved via a VPN policy as
defined in Section 6.5.2.2. But there are some simple cases where a
particular VPN (VPN A) needs access to all resources in another VPN
(VPN B). The model provides an easy way to set up this connection
using the "extranet-vpns" container.
The extranet-vpns container defines a list of VPNs a particular VPN
wants to access. The extranet-vpns container must be used on
customer VPNs accessing extranet resources in another VPN. In the
figure above, in order to provide VPN A with access to VPN B, the
extranet-vpns container needs to be configured under VPN A with an
entry corresponding to VPN B. There is no service configuration
requirement on VPN B.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 30]
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Readers should note that even if there is no configuration
requirement on VPN B, if VPN A lists VPN B as an extranet, all sites
in VPN B will gain access to all sites in VPN A.
The "site-role" leaf defines the role of the local VPN sites in the
target extranet VPN service topology. Site roles are defined in
Section 6.4. Based on this, the requirements described in
Section 6.4 regarding the site-role leaf are also applicable here.
In the example below, VPN A accesses VPN B resources through an
extranet connection. A Spoke role is required for VPN A sites, as
sites from VPN A must not be able to communicate with each other
through the extranet VPN connection.
VPNB
hub-spoke
VPNA
any-to-any
VPNB
spoke-role
This model does not define how the extranet configuration will be
achieved.
Any VPN interconnection scenario that is more complex (e.g., only
certain parts of sites on VPN A accessing only certain parts of sites
on VPN B) needs to be achieved using a VPN attachment as defined in
Section 6.5.2, and especially a VPN policy as defined in
Section 6.5.2.2.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 31]
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6.3. Site Overview
A site represents a connection of a customer office to one or more
VPN services. Each site is associated with one or more locations.
+-------------+
/ \
+------------------+ +-----| VPN1 |
| | | \ /
| New York Office |------ (site) -----+ +-------------+
| | | +-------------+
+------------------+ | / \
+-----| VPN2 |
\ /
+-------------+
A site has several characteristics:
o Unique identifier (site-id): uniquely identifies the site within
the overall network infrastructure. The identifier is a string
that allows any encoding for the local administration of the VPN
service.
o Locations (locations): site location information that allows easy
retrieval of information from the nearest available resources. A
site may be composed of multiple locations. Alternatively, two or
more sites can be associated with the same location, by
referencing the same location ID.
o Devices (devices): allows the customer to request one or more
customer premises equipment entities from the SP for a particular
site.
o Management (management): defines the type of management for the
site -- for example, co-managed, customer-managed, or provider-
managed. See Section 6.10.
o Site network accesses (site-network-accesses): defines the list of
network accesses associated with the sites, and their properties
-- especially bearer, connection, and service parameters.
A site-network-access represents an IP logical connection of a site.
A site may have multiple site-network-accesses.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 32]
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+------------------+ Site
| |-----------------------------------
| |****** (site-network-access#1) ******
| New York Office |
| |****** (site-network-access#2) ******
| |-----------------------------------
+------------------+
Multiple site-network-accesses are used, for instance, in the case of
multihoming. Some other meshing cases may also include multiple
site-network-accesses.
The site configuration is viewed as a global entity; we assume that
it is mostly the management system's role to split the parameters
between the different elements within the network. For example, in
the case of the site-network-access configuration, the management
system needs to split the overall parameters between the PE
configuration and the CE configuration.
6.3.1. Devices and Locations
A site may be composed of multiple locations. All the locations will
need to be configured as part of the "locations" container and list.
A typical example of a multi-location site is a headquarters office
in a city composed of multiple buildings. Those buildings may be
located in different parts of the city and may be linked by intra-
city fibers (customer metropolitan area network). In such a case,
when connecting to a VPN service, the customer may ask for
multihoming based on its distributed locations.
New York Site
+------------------+ Site
| +--------------+ |-----------------------------------
| | Manhattan | |****** (site-network-access#1) ******
| +--------------+ |
| +--------------+ |
| | Brooklyn | |****** (site-network-access#2) ******
| +--------------+ |
| |-----------------------------------
+------------------+
A customer may also request some premises equipment entities (CEs)
from the SP via the "devices" container. Requesting a CE implies a
provider-managed or co-managed model. A particular device must be
ordered to a particular already-configured location. This would help
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the SP send the device to the appropriate postal address. In a
multi-location site, a customer may, for example, request a CE for
each location on the site where multihoming must be implemented. In
the figure above, one device may be requested for the Manhattan
location and one other for the Brooklyn location.
By using devices and locations, the user can influence the
multihoming scenario he wants to implement: single CE, dual CE, etc.
6.3.2. Site Network Accesses
As mentioned earlier, a site may be multihomed. Each IP network
access for a site is defined in the "site-network-accesses"
container. The site-network-access parameter defines how the site is
connected on the network and is split into three main classes of
parameters:
o bearer: defines requirements of the attachment (below Layer 3).
o connection: defines Layer 3 protocol parameters of the attachment.
o availability: defines the site's availability policy. The
availability parameters are defined in Section 6.7.
The site-network-access has a specific type (site-network-access-
type). This document defines two types:
o point-to-point: describes a point-to-point connection between the
SP and the customer.
o multipoint: describes a multipoint connection between the SP and
the customer.
The type of site-network-access may have an impact on the parameters
offered to the customer, e.g., an SP may not offer encryption for
multipoint accesses. It is up to the provider to decide what
parameter is supported for point-to-point and/or multipoint accesses;
this topic is out of scope for this document. Some containers
proposed in the model may require extensions in order to work
properly for multipoint accesses.
6.3.2.1. Bearer
The bearer container defines the requirements for the site attachment
to the provider network that are below Layer 3.
The bearer parameters will help determine the access media to be
used. This is further described in Section 6.6.3.
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6.3.2.2. Connection
The "ip-connection" container defines the protocol parameters of the
attachment (IPv4 and IPv6). Depending on the management mode, it
refers to PE-CE addressing or CE-to-customer-LAN addressing. In any
case, it describes the responsibility boundary between the provider
and the customer. For a customer-managed site, it refers to the
PE-CE connection. For a provider-managed site, it refers to the
CE-to-LAN connection.
6.3.2.2.1. IP Addressing
An IP subnet can be configured for either IPv4 or IPv6 Layer 3
protocols. For a dual-stack connection, two subnets will be
provided, one for each address family.
The "address-allocation-type" determines how the address allocation
needs to be done. The current model defines five ways to perform IP
address allocation:
o provider-dhcp: The provider will provide DHCP service for customer
equipment; this is applicable to either the "IPv4" container or
the "IPv6" container.
o provider-dhcp-relay: The provider will provide DHCP relay service
for customer equipment; this is applicable to both IPv4 and IPv6
addressing. The customer needs to populate the DHCP server list
to be used.
o static-address: Addresses will be assigned manually; this is
applicable to both IPv4 and IPv6 addressing.
o slaac: This parameter enables stateless address autoconfiguration
[RFC4862]. This is applicable to IPv6 only.
o provider-dhcp-slaac: The provider will provide DHCP service for
customer equipment, as well as stateless address
autoconfiguration. This is applicable to IPv6 only.
In the dynamic addressing mechanism, the SP is expected to provide at
least the IP address, prefix length, and default gateway information.
In the case of multiple site-network-access points belonging to the
same VPN, address space allocated for one site-network-access should
not conflict with one allocated for other site-network-accesses.
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6.3.2.2.2. OAM
A customer may require a specific IP connectivity fault detection
mechanism on the IP connection. The model supports BFD as a fault
detection mechanism. This can be extended with other mechanisms via
augmentation. The provider can propose some profiles to the
customer, depending on the service level the customer wants to
achieve. Profile names must be communicated to the customer. This
communication is out of scope for this document. Some fixed values
for the holdtime period may also be imposed by the customer if the
provider allows the customer this function.
The "oam" container can easily be augmented by other mechanisms; in
particular, work done by the LIME Working Group
(https://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/lime/charter/) may be reused in
applicable scenarios.
6.3.2.3. Inheritance of Parameters Defined at Site Level and Site
Network Access Level
Some parameters can be configured at both the site level and the
site-network-access level, e.g., routing, services, security.
Inheritance applies when parameters are defined at the site level.
If a parameter is configured at both the site level and the access
level, the access-level parameter MUST override the site-level
parameter. Those parameters will be described later in this
document.
In terms of provisioning impact, it will be up to the implementation
to decide on the appropriate behavior when modifying existing
configurations. But the SP will need to communicate to the user
about the impact of using inheritance. For example, if we consider
that a site has already provisioned three site-network-accesses, what
will happen if a customer changes a service parameter at the site
level? An implementation of this model may update the service
parameters of all already-provisioned site-network-accesses (with
potential impact on live traffic), or it may take into account this
new parameter only for the new sites.
6.4. Site Role
A VPN has a particular service topology, as described in
Section 6.2.1. As a consequence, each site belonging to a VPN is
assigned with a particular role in this topology. The site-role leaf
defines the role of the site in a particular VPN topology.
In the any-to-any VPN service topology, all sites MUST have the same
role, which will be "any-to-any-role".
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In the Hub-and-Spoke VPN service topology or the Hub and Spoke
disjoint VPN service topology, sites MUST have a Hub role or a Spoke
role.
6.5. Site Belonging to Multiple VPNs
6.5.1. Site VPN Flavor
A site may be part of one or multiple VPNs. The "site-vpn-flavor"
defines the way the VPN multiplexing is done. The current version of
the model supports four flavors:
o site-vpn-flavor-single: The site belongs to only one VPN.
o site-vpn-flavor-multi: The site belongs to multiple VPNs, and all
the logical accesses of the sites belong to the same set of VPNs.
o site-vpn-flavor-sub: The site belongs to multiple VPNs with
multiple logical accesses. Each logical access may map to
different VPNs (one or many).
o site-vpn-flavor-nni: The site represents an option A NNI.
6.5.1.1. Single VPN Attachment: site-vpn-flavor-single
The figure below describes a single VPN attachment. The site
connects to only one VPN.
+--------+
+------------------+ Site / \
| |-----------------------------| |
| |***(site-network-access#1)***| VPN1 |
| New York Office | | |
| |***(site-network-access#2)***| |
| |-----------------------------| |
+------------------+ \ /
+--------+
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6.5.1.2. MultiVPN Attachment: site-vpn-flavor-multi
The figure below describes a site connected to multiple VPNs.
+---------+
+---/----+ \
+------------------+ Site / | \ |
| |--------------------------------- | |VPN B|
| |***(site-network-access#1)******* | | |
| New York Office | | | | |
| |***(site-network-access#2)******* \ | /
| |-----------------------------| VPN A+-----|---+
+------------------+ \ /
+--------+
In the example above, the New York office is multihomed. Both
logical accesses are using the same VPN attachment rules, and both
are connected to VPN A and VPN B.
Reaching VPN A or VPN B from the New York office will be done via
destination-based routing. Having the same destination reachable
from the two VPNs may cause routing troubles. The customer
administration's role in this case would be to ensure the appropriate
mapping of its prefixes in each VPN.
6.5.1.3. SubVPN Attachment: site-vpn-flavor-sub
The figure below describes a subVPN attachment. The site connects to
multiple VPNs, but each logical access is attached to a particular
set of VPNs. A typical use case for a subVPN is a customer site used
by multiple affiliates with private resources for each affiliate that
cannot be shared (communication between the affiliates is prevented).
It is similar to having separate sites, but in the case of a SubVPN,
the customer can share some physical components at a single location,
while maintaining strong communication isolation between the
affiliates. In this example, site-network-access#1 is attached to
VPN B, while site-network-access#2 is attached to VPN A.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 38]
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+------------------+ Site +--------+
| |----------------------------------/ \
| |****(site-network-access#1)******| VPN B |
| New York Office | \ /
| | +--------+
| | +--------+
| | / \
| |****(site-network-access#2)******| VPN A |
| | \ /
| | +--------+
| |-----------------------------------
+------------------+
A multiVPN can be implemented in addition to a subVPN; as a
consequence, each site-network-access can access multiple VPNs. In
the example below, site-network-access#1 is mapped to VPN B and VPN
C, while site-network-access#2 is mapped to VPN A and VPN D.
+-----------------+ Site +------+
| |--------------------------------/ +-----+
| |****(site-network-access#1)****| VPN B / \
| New York Office | \ | VPN C |
| | +-----\ /
| | +-----+
| |
| | +-------+
| | / +-----+
| |****(site-network-access#2)****| VPN A / \
| | \ | VPN D |
| | +------\ /
| |--------------------------------- +-----+
+-----------------+
Multihoming is also possible with subVPNs; in this case, site-
network-accesses are grouped, and a particular group will have access
to the same set of VPNs. In the example below, site-network-access#1
and site-network-access#2 are part of the same group (multihomed
together) and are mapped to VPN B and VPN C; in addition, site-
network-access#3 and site-network-access#4 are part of the same group
(multihomed together) and are mapped to VPN A and VPN D.
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+-----------------+ Site +------+
| |---------------------------------/ +-----+
| |****(site-network-access#1)*****| VPN B / \
| New York Office |****(site-network-access#2)***** \ | VPN C |
| | +-----\ /
| | +-----+
| |
| | +------+
| | / +-----+
| |****(site-network-access#3)*****| VPN A / \
| |****(site-network-access#4)***** \ | VPN D |
| | +-----\ /
| |---------------------------------- +-----+
+-----------------+
In terms of service configuration, a subVPN can be achieved by
requesting that the site-network-access use the same bearer (see
Section 6.6.4 for more details).
6.5.1.4. NNI: site-vpn-flavor-nni
A Network-to-Network Interface (NNI) scenario may be modeled using
the sites container (see Section 6.15.1). Using the sites container
to model an NNI is only one possible option for NNIs (see
Section 6.15). This option is called "option A" by reference to the
option A NNI defined in [RFC4364]. It is helpful for the SP to
indicate that the requested VPN connection is not a regular site but
rather is an NNI, as specific default device configuration parameters
may be applied in the case of NNIs (e.g., ACLs, routing policies).
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 40]
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SP A SP B
------------------- -------------------
/ \ / \
| | | |
| ++++++++ Inter-AS link ++++++++ |
| + +_______________+ + |
| + (VRF1)---(VPN1)----(VRF1) + |
| + ASBR + + ASBR + |
| + (VRF2)---(VPN2)----(VRF2) + |
| + +_______________+ + |
| ++++++++ ++++++++ |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| ++++++++ Inter-AS link ++++++++ |
| + +_______________+ + |
| + (VRF1)---(VPN1)----(VRF1) + |
| + ASBR + + ASBR + |
| + (VRF2)---(VPN2)----(VRF2) + |
| + +_______________+ + |
| ++++++++ ++++++++ |
| | | |
| | | |
\ / \ /
------------------- -------------------
The figure above describes an option A NNI scenario that can be
modeled using the sites container. In order to connect its customer
VPNs (VPN1 and VPN2) in SP B, SP A may request the creation of some
site-network-accesses to SP B. The site-vpn-flavor-nni will be used
to inform SP B that this is an NNI and not a regular customer site.
The site-vpn-flavor-nni may be multihomed and multiVPN as well.
6.5.2. Attaching a Site to a VPN
Due to the multiple site-vpn flavors, the attachment of a site to an
IP VPN is done at the site-network-access (logical access) level
through the "vpn-attachment" container. The vpn-attachment container
is mandatory. The model provides two ways to attach a site to a VPN:
o By referencing the target VPN directly.
o By referencing a VPN policy for attachments that are more complex.
A choice is implemented to allow the user to choose the flavor that
provides the best fit.
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6.5.2.1. Referencing a VPN
Referencing a vpn-id provides an easy way to attach a particular
logical access to a VPN. This is the best way in the case of a
single VPN attachment or subVPN with a single VPN attachment per
logical access. When referencing a vpn-id, the site-role setting
must be added to express the role of the site in the target VPN
service topology.
VPNA
VPNB
SITE1
L1
customer-managed
layer3
LA1
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
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10000000
10000000
layer3
L1
VPNA
spoke-role
LA2
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
layer3
L1
VPNB
spoke-role
The example of a corresponding XML snippet above describes a subVPN
case where a site (SITE1) has two logical accesses (LA1 and LA2),
with LA1 attached to VPNA and LA2 attached to VPNB.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 43]
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6.5.2.2. VPN Policy
The "vpn-policy" list helps express a multiVPN scenario where a
logical access belongs to multiple VPNs. Multiple VPN policies can
be created to handle the subVPN case where each logical access is
part of a different set of VPNs.
As a site can belong to multiple VPNs, the vpn-policy list may be
composed of multiple entries. A filter can be applied to specify
that only some LANs of the site should be part of a particular VPN.
Each time a site (or LAN) is attached to a VPN, the user must
precisely describe its role (site-role) within the target VPN service
topology.
+--------------------------------------------------------------+
| Site1 ------ PE7 |
+-------------------------+ (VPN2) |
| |
+-------------------------+ |
| Site2 ------ PE3 PE4 ------ Site3 |
+----------------------------------+ |
| |
+------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| Site4 ------ PE5 | PE6 ------ Site5 | |
| | |
| (VPN3) | |
+------------------------------------------------------------+ |
| |
+---------------------------+
In the example above, Site5 is part of two VPNs: VPN3 and VPN2. It
will play a Hub role in VPN2 and an any-to-any role in VPN3. We can
express such a multiVPN scenario with the following XML snippet:
VPN2
VPN3
Site5
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 44]
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D1
provider-managed
layer3
POLICY1
ENTRY1
VPN2
hub-role
ENTRY2
VPN3
any-to-any-role
LA1
D1
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
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layer3
POLICY1
Now, if a more-granular VPN attachment is necessary, filtering can be
used. For example, if only LAN1 from Site5 must be attached to VPN2
as a Hub and only LAN2 must be attached to VPN3, the following XML
snippet can be used:
VPN2
VPN3
Site5
POLICY1
ENTRY1
lan
LAN1
VPN2
hub-role
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 46]
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ENTRY2
lan
LAN2
VPN3
any-to-any-role
LA1
POLICY1
6.6. Deciding Where to Connect the Site
The management system will have to determine where to connect each
site-network-access of a particular site to the provider network
(e.g., PE, aggregation switch).
The current model defines parameters and constraints that can
influence the meshing of the site-network-access.
The management system MUST honor all customer constraints, or if a
constraint is too strict and cannot be fulfilled, the management
system MUST NOT provision the site and MUST provide information to
the user about which constraints could not be fulfilled. How the
information is provided is out of scope for this document. Whether
or not to relax the constraint would then be left up to the user.
Parameters such as site location (see Section 6.6.2) and access type
are just hints (see Section 6.6.3) for the management system for
service placement.
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In addition to parameters and constraints, the management system's
decision MAY be based on any other internal constraints that are left
up to the SP: least load, distance, etc.
6.6.1. Constraint: Device
In the case of provider management or co-management, one or more
devices have been ordered by the customer to a particular already-
configured location. The customer may force a particular site-
network-access to be connected on a particular device that he
ordered.
New York Site
+------------------+ Site
| +--------------+ |-----------------------------------
| | Manhattan | |
| | CE1********* (site-network-access#1) ******
| +--------------+ |
| +--------------+ |
| | Brooklyn CE2********* (site-network-access#2) ******
| +--------------+ |
| |-----------------------------------
+------------------+
In the figure above, site-network-access#1 is associated with CE1 in
the service request. The SP must ensure the provisioning of this
connection.
6.6.2. Constraint/Parameter: Site Location
The location information provided in this model MAY be used by a
management system to determine the target PE to mesh the site (SP
side). A particular location must be associated with each site
network access when configuring it. The SP MUST honor the
termination of the access on the location associated with the site
network access (customer side). The "country-code" in the site
location SHOULD be expressed as an ISO ALPHA-2 code.
The site-network-access location is determined by the "location-
flavor". In the case of a provider-managed or co-managed site, the
user is expected to configure a "device-reference" (device case) that
will bind the site-network-access to a particular device that the
customer ordered. As each device is already associated with a
particular location, in such a case the location information is
retrieved from the device location. In the case of a customer-
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managed site, the user is expected to configure a "location-
reference" (location case); this provides a reference to an existing
configured location and will help with placement.
POP#1 (New York)
+---------+
| PE1 |
Site #1 ---... | PE2 |
(Atlantic City) | PE3 |
+---------+
POP#2 (Washington)
+---------+
| PE4 |
| PE5 |
| PE6 |
+---------+
POP#3 (Philadelphia)
+---------+
| PE7 |
Site #2 CE#1---... | PE8 |
(Reston) | PE9 |
+---------+
In the example above, Site #1 is a customer-managed site with a
location L1, while Site #2 is a provider-managed site for which a CE
(CE#1) was ordered. Site #2 is configured with L2 as its location.
When configuring a site-network-access for Site #1, the user will
need to reference location L1 so that the management system will know
that the access will need to terminate on this location. Then, for
distance reasons, this management system may mesh Site #1 on a PE in
the Philadelphia POP. It may also take into account resources
available on PEs to determine the exact target PE (e.g., least
loaded). For Site #2, the user is expected to configure the site-
network-access with a device-reference to CE#1 so that the management
system will know that the access must terminate on the location of
CE#1 and must be connected to CE#1. For placement of the SP side of
the access connection, in the case of the nearest PE used, it may
mesh Site #2 on the Washington POP.
6.6.3. Constraint/Parameter: Access Type
The management system needs to elect the access media to connect the
site to the customer (for example, xDSL, leased line, Ethernet
backhaul). The customer may provide some parameters/constraints that
will provide hints to the management system.
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The bearer container information SHOULD be the first piece of
information considered when making this decision:
o The "requested-type" parameter provides information about the
media type that the customer would like to use. If the "strict"
leaf is equal to "true", this MUST be considered a strict
constraint so that the management system cannot connect the site
with another media type. If the "strict" leaf is equal to "false"
(default) and if the requested media type cannot be fulfilled, the
management system can select another media type. The supported
media types SHOULD be communicated by the SP to the customer via a
mechanism that is out of scope for this document.
o The "always-on" leaf defines a strict constraint: if set to true,
the management system MUST elect a media type that is "always-on"
(e.g., this means no dial access type).
o The "bearer-reference" parameter is used in cases where the
customer has already ordered a network connection to the SP apart
from the IP VPN site and wants to reuse this connection. The
string used is an internal reference from the SP and describes the
already-available connection. This is also a strict requirement
that cannot be relaxed. How the reference is given to the
customer is out of scope for this document, but as a pure example,
when the customer ordered the bearer (through a process that is
out of scope for this model), the SP may have provided the bearer
reference that can be used for provisioning services on top.
Any other internal parameters from the SP can also be used. The
management system MAY use other parameters, such as the requested
"svc-input-bandwidth" and "svc-output-bandwidth", to help decide
which access type to use.
6.6.4. Constraint: Access Diversity
Each site-network-access may have one or more constraints that would
drive the placement of the access. By default, the model assumes
that there are no constraints, but allocation of a unique bearer per
site-network-access is expected.
In order to help with the different placement scenarios, a site-
network-access may be tagged using one or multiple group identifiers.
The group identifier is a string, so it can accommodate both explicit
naming of a group of sites (e.g., "multihomed-set1" or "subVPN") and
the use of a numbered identifier (e.g., 12345678). The meaning of
each group-id is local to each customer administrator, and the
management system MUST ensure that different customers can use the
same group-ids. One or more group-ids can also be defined at the
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site level; as a consequence, all site-network-accesses under the
site MUST inherit the group-ids of the site they belong to. When, in
addition to the site group-ids some group-ids are defined at the
site-network-access level, the management system MUST consider the
union of all groups (site level and site network access level) for
this particular site-network-access.
For an already-configured site-network-access, each constraint MUST
be expressed against a targeted set of site-network-accesses. This
site-network-access MUST never be taken into account in the targeted
set -- for example, "My site-network-access S must not be connected
on the same POP as the site-network-accesses that are part of Group
10." The set of site-network-accesses against which the constraint
is evaluated can be expressed as a list of groups, "all-other-
accesses", or "all-other-groups". The all-other-accesses option
means that the current site-network-access constraint MUST be
evaluated against all the other site-network-accesses belonging to
the current site. The all-other-groups option means that the
constraint MUST be evaluated against all groups that the current
site-network-access does not belong to.
The current model defines multiple constraint-types:
o pe-diverse: The current site-network-access MUST NOT be connected
to the same PE as the targeted site-network-accesses.
o pop-diverse: The current site-network-access MUST NOT be connected
to the same POP as the targeted site-network-accesses.
o linecard-diverse: The current site-network-access MUST NOT be
connected to the same linecard as the targeted site-network-
accesses.
o bearer-diverse: The current site-network-access MUST NOT use
common bearer components compared to bearers used by the targeted
site-network-accesses. "bearer-diverse" provides some level of
diversity at the access level. As an example, two bearer-diverse
site-network-accesses must not use the same DSLAM, BAS, or Layer 2
switch.
o same-pe: The current site-network-access MUST be connected to the
same PE as the targeted site-network-accesses.
o same-bearer: The current site-network-access MUST be connected
using the same bearer as the targeted site-network-accesses.
These constraint-types can be extended through augmentation.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 51]
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Each constraint is expressed as "The site-network-access S must be
(e.g., pe-diverse, pop-diverse) from these
site-network-accesses."
The group-id used to target some site-network-accesses may be the
same as the one used by the current site-network-access. This eases
the configuration of scenarios where a group of site-network-access
points has a constraint between the access points in the group. As
an example, if we want a set of sites (Site#1 to Site#5) to be
connected on different PEs, we can tag them with the same group-id
and express a pe-diverse constraint for this group-id with the
following XML snippet:
VPNA
SITE1
L1
customer-managed
1
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 52]
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layer3
L1
10
pe-diverse
10
VPNA
spoke-role
SITE2
L1
customer-managed
layer3
1
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 53]
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provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
layer3
L1
10
pe-diverse
10
VPNA
spoke-role
...
SITE5
L1
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 54]
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customer-managed
layer3
1
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
layer3
L1
10
pe-diverse
10
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 55]
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VPNA
spoke-role
The group-id used to target some site-network-accesses may also be
different than the one used by the current site-network-access. This
can be used to express that a group of sites has some constraints
against another group of sites, but there is no constraint within the
group. For example, we consider a set of six sites and two groups;
we want to ensure that a site in the first group must be pop-diverse
from a site in the second group. The example of a corresponding XML
snippet is described as follows:
VPNA
SITE1
1
10
pop-diverse
20
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 56]
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VPNA
spoke-role
SITE2
1
10
pop-diverse
20
VPNA
spoke-role
...
SITE5
1
20
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 57]
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pop-diverse
10
VPNA
spoke-role
SITE6
L1
customer-managed
layer3
1
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 58]
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10000000
10000000
layer3
L1
20
pop-diverse
10
VPNA
spoke-role
6.6.5. Infeasible Access Placement
Some infeasible access placement scenarios could be created via the
proposed configuration framework. Such infeasible access placement
scenarios could result from constraints that are too restrictive,
leading to infeasible access placement in the network or conflicting
constraints that would also lead to infeasible access placement. An
example of conflicting rules would be to request that site-network-
access#1 be pe-diverse from site-network-access#2 and to request at
the same time that site-network-access#2 be on the same PE as site-
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 59]
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network-access#1. When the management system cannot determine the
placement of a site-network-access, it MUST return an error message
indicating that placement was not possible.
6.6.6. Examples of Access Placement
6.6.6.1. Multihoming
The customer wants to create a multihomed site. The site will be
composed of two site-network-accesses; for resiliency purposes, the
customer wants the two site-network-accesses to be meshed on
different POPs.
POP#1
+-------+ +---------+
| | | PE1 |
| |---site-network-access#1----| PE2 |
| | | PE3 |
| | +---------+
| Site#1|
| | POP#2
| | +---------+
| | | PE4 |
| |---site-network-access#2----| PE5 |
| | | PE6 |
| | +---------+
+-------+
This scenario can be expressed with the following XML snippet:
VPNA
SITE1
L1
customer-managed
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 60]
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layer3
1
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
layer3
L1
10
pop-diverse
20
VPNA
spoke-role
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 61]
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2
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
layer3
L1
20
pop-diverse
10
VPNA
spoke-role
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 62]
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But it can also be expressed with the following XML snippet:
VPNA
SITE1
1
pop-diverse
VPNA
spoke-role
2
pop-diverse
VPNA
spoke-role
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 63]
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6.6.6.2. Site Offload
The customer has six branch offices in a particular region, and he
wants to prevent having all branch offices connected on the same PE.
He wants to express that three branch offices cannot be connected on
the same linecard. Also, the other branch offices must be connected
on a different POP. Those other branch offices cannot also be
connected on the same linecard.
POP#1
+---------+
| PE1 |
Office#1 ---... | PE2 |
Office#2 ---... | PE3 |
Office#3 ---... | PE4 |
+---------+
POP#2
+---------+
Office#4 ---... | PE5 |
Office#5 ---... | PE6 |
Office#6 ---... | PE7 |
+---------+
This scenario can be expressed as follows:
o We need to create two groups of sites: Group#10, which is composed
of Office#1, Office#2, and Office#3; and Group#20, which is
composed of Office#4, Office#5, and Office#6.
o Sites within Group#10 must be pop-diverse from sites within
Group#20, and vice versa.
o Sites within Group#10 must be linecard-diverse from other sites in
Group#10 (same for Group#20).
VPNA
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 64]
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Office1
L1
customer-managed
layer3
1
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
layer3
L1
10
pop-diverse
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 65]
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20
linecard-diverse
10
VPNA
spoke-role
Office2
L1
customer-managed
layer3
1
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 66]
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1514
10000000
10000000
layer3
L1
10
pop-diverse
20
linecard-diverse
10
VPNA
spoke-role
Office3
L1
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 67]
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customer-managed
layer3
1
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
layer3
L1
10
pop-diverse
20
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 68]
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linecard-diverse
10
VPNA
spoke-role
Office4
L1
customer-managed
layer3
1
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 69]
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layer3
L1
20
pop-diverse
10
linecard-diverse
20
VPNA
spoke-role
Office5
L1
customer-managed
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 70]
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layer3
1
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
layer3
L1
20
pop-diverse
10
linecard-diverse
20
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 71]
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VPNA
spoke-role
Office6
L1
customer-managed
layer3
1
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
layer3
L1
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 72]
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20
pop-diverse
10
linecard-diverse
20
VPNA
spoke-role
6.6.6.3. Parallel Links
To increase its site bandwidth at lower cost, a customer wants to
order two parallel site-network-accesses that will be connected to
the same PE.
*******site-network-access#1**********
Site 1 *******site-network-access#2********** PE1
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 73]
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This scenario can be expressed with the following XML snippet:
VPNB
SITE1
1
PE-linkgrp-1
same-pe
PE-linkgrp-1
VPNB
spoke-role
2
PE-linkgrp-1
same-pe
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 74]
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PE-linkgrp-1
VPNB
spoke-role
6.6.6.4. SubVPN with Multihoming
A customer has a site that is dual-homed. The dual-homing must be
done on two different PEs. The customer also wants to implement two
subVPNs on those multihomed accesses.
+-----------------+ Site +------+
| |---------------------------------/ +-----+
| |****(site-network-access#1)*****| VPN B / \
| New York Office |****(site-network-access#2)************| VPN C |
| | +-----\ /
| | +-----+
| |
| | +------+
| | / +-----+
| |****(site-network-access#3)*****| VPN B / \
| |****(site-network-access#4)************| VPN C |
| | +-----\ /
| |----------------------------------- +-----+
+-----------------+
This scenario can be expressed as follows:
o The site will have four site network accesses (two subVPNs coupled
via dual-homing).
o Site-network-access#1 and site-network-access#3 will correspond to
the multihoming of subVPN B. A PE-diverse constraint is required
between them.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 75]
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o Site-network-access#2 and site-network-access#4 will correspond to
the multihoming of subVPN C. A PE-diverse constraint is required
between them.
o To ensure proper usage of the same bearer for the subVPN, site-
network-access#1 and site-network-access#2 must share the same
bearer as site-network-access#3 and site-network-access#4.
VPNB
VPNC
SITE1
L1
customer-managed
layer3
1
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 76]
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10000000
layer3
L1
dualhomed-1
pe-diverse
dualhomed-2
same-bearer
dualhomed-1
VPNB
spoke-role
2
dualhomed-1
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 77]
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pe-diverse
dualhomed-2
same-bearer
dualhomed-1
VPNC
spoke-role
3
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
layer3
L1
dualhomed-2
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 78]
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pe-diverse
dualhomed-1
same-bearer
dualhomed-2
VPNB
spoke-role
4
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
layer3
L1
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 79]
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dualhomed-2
pe-diverse
dualhomed-1
same-bearer
dualhomed-2
VPNC
spoke-role
6.6.7. Route Distinguisher and VRF Allocation
The route distinguisher (RD) is a critical parameter of PE-based
L3VPNs as described in [RFC4364] that provides the ability to
distinguish common addressing plans in different VPNs. As for route
targets (RTs), a management system is expected to allocate a VRF on
the target PE and an RD for this VRF.
If a VRF already exists on the target PE and the VRF fulfills the
connectivity constraints for the site, there is no need to recreate
another VRF, and the site MAY be meshed within this existing VRF.
How the management system checks that an existing VRF fulfills the
connectivity constraints for a site is out of scope for this
document.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 80]
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If no such VRF exists on the target PE, the management system has to
initiate the creation of a new VRF on the target PE and has to
allocate a new RD for this new VRF.
The management system MAY apply a per-VPN or per-VRF allocation
policy for the RD, depending on the SP's policy. In a per-VPN
allocation policy, all VRFs (dispatched on multiple PEs) within a VPN
will share the same RD value. In a per-VRF model, all VRFs should
always have a unique RD value. Some other allocation policies are
also possible, and this document does not restrict the allocation
policies to be used.
The allocation of RDs MAY be done in the same way as RTs. The
examples provided in Section 6.2.1.1 could be reused in this
scenario.
Note that an SP MAY configure a target PE for an automated allocation
of RDs. In this case, there will be no need for any backend system
to allocate an RD value.
6.7. Site Network Access Availability
A site may be multihomed, meaning that it has multiple site-network-
access points. Placement constraints defined in previous sections
will help ensure physical diversity.
When the site-network-accesses are placed on the network, a customer
may want to use a particular routing policy on those accesses.
The "site-network-access/availability" container defines parameters
for site redundancy. The "access-priority" leaf defines a preference
for a particular access. This preference is used to model load-
balancing or primary/backup scenarios. The higher the access-
priority value, the higher the preference will be.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 81]
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The figure below describes how the access-priority attribute can be
used.
Hub#1 LAN (Primary/backup) Hub#2 LAN (Load-sharing)
| |
| access-priority 1 access-priority 1 |
|--- CE1 ------- PE1 PE3 --------- CE3 --- |
| |
| |
|--- CE2 ------- PE2 PE4 --------- CE4 --- |
| access-priority 2 access-priority 1 |
PE5
|
|
|
CE5
|
Spoke#1 site (Single-homed)
In the figure above, Hub#2 requires load-sharing, so all the site-
network-accesses must use the same access-priority value. On the
other hand, as Hub#1 requires a primary site-network-access and a
backup site-network-access, a higher access-priority setting will be
configured on the primary site-network-access.
Scenarios that are more complex can be modeled. Let's consider a Hub
site with five accesses to the network (A1,A2,A3,A4,A5). The
customer wants to load-share its traffic on A1,A2 in the nominal
situation. If A1 and A2 fail, the customer wants to load-share its
traffic on A3 and A4; finally, if A1 to A4 are down, he wants to use
A5. We can model this easily by configuring the following access-
priority values: A1=100, A2=100, A3=50, A4=50, A5=10.
The access-priority scenario has some limitations. An access-
priority scenario like the previous one with five accesses but with
the constraint of having traffic load-shared between A3 and A4 in the
case where A1 OR A2 is down is not achievable. But the authors
believe that using the access-priority attribute will cover most of
the deployment use cases and that the model can still be extended via
augmentation to support additional use cases.
6.8. Traffic Protection
The service model supports the ability to protect the traffic for a
site. Such protection provides a better level of availability in
multihoming scenarios by, for example, using local-repair techniques
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 82]
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in case of failures. The associated level of service guarantee would
be based on an agreement between the customer and the SP and is out
of scope for this document.
Site#1 Site#2
CE1 ----- PE1 -- P1 P3 -- PE3 ---- CE3
| | |
| | |
CE2 ----- PE2 -- P2 P4 -- PE4 ---- CE4
/
/
CE5 ----+
Site#3
In the figure above, we consider an IP VPN service with three sites,
including two dual-homed sites (Site#1 and Site#2). For dual-homed
sites, we consider PE1-CE1 and PE3-CE3 as primary and PE2-CE2,PE4-CE4
as backup for the example (even if protection also applies to load-
sharing scenarios).
In order to protect Site#2 against a failure, a user may set the
"traffic-protection/enabled" leaf to true for Site#2. How the
traffic protection will be implemented is out of scope for this
document. However, in such a case, we could consider traffic coming
from a remote site (Site#1 or Site#3), where the primary path would
use PE3 as the egress PE. PE3 may have preprogrammed a backup
forwarding entry pointing to the backup path (through PE4-CE4) for
all prefixes going through the PE3-CE3 link. How the backup path is
computed is out of scope for this document. When the PE3-CE3 link
fails, traffic is still received by PE3, but PE3 automatically
switches traffic to the backup entry; the path will therefore be
PE1-P1-(...)-P3-PE3-PE4-CE4 until the remote PEs reconverge and use
PE4 as the egress PE.
6.9. Security
The "security" container defines customer-specific security
parameters for the site. The security options supported in the model
are limited but may be extended via augmentation.
6.9.1. Authentication
The current model does not support any authentication parameters for
the site connection, but such parameters may be added in the
"authentication" container through augmentation.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 83]
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6.9.2. Encryption
Traffic encryption can be requested on the connection. It may be
performed at Layer 2 or Layer 3 by selecting the appropriate
enumeration in the "layer" leaf. For example, an SP may use IPsec
when a customer requests Layer 3 encryption. The encryption profile
can be SP defined or customer specific.
When an SP profile is used and a key (e.g., a pre-shared key) is
allocated by the provider to be used by a customer, the SP should
provide a way to communicate the key in a secured way to the
customer.
When a customer profile is used, the model supports only a pre-shared
key for authentication of the site connection, with the pre-shared
key provided through the NETCONF or RESTCONF request. A secure
channel must be used to ensure that the pre-shared key cannot be
intercepted.
For security reasons, it may be necessary for the customer to change
the pre-shared key on a regular basis. To perform a key change, the
user can ask the SP to change the pre-shared key by submitting a new
pre-shared key for the site configuration (as shown below with a
corresponding XML snippet). This mechanism might not be hitless.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 84]
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VPNA
SITE1
1
MY_NEW_KEY
A hitless key change mechanism may be added through augmentation.
Other key-management methodologies (e.g., PKI) may be added through
augmentation.
6.10. Management
The model defines three types of common management options:
o provider-managed: The CE router is managed only by the provider.
In this model, the responsibility boundary between the SP and the
customer is between the CE and the customer network.
o customer-managed: The CE router is managed only by the customer.
In this model, the responsibility boundary between the SP and the
customer is between the PE and the CE.
o co-managed: The CE router is primarily managed by the provider; in
addition, the SP allows customers to access the CE for
configuration/monitoring purposes. In the co-managed mode, the
responsibility boundary is the same as the responsibility boundary
for the provider-managed model.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 85]
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Based on the management model, different security options MAY be
derived.
In the co-managed case, the model defines options for the management
address family (IPv4 or IPv6) and the associated management address.
6.11. Routing Protocols
"routing-protocol" defines which routing protocol must be activated
between the provider and the customer router. The current model
supports the following settings: bgp, rip, ospf, static, direct, and
vrrp.
The routing protocol defined applies at the provider-to-customer
boundary. Depending on how the management model is administered, it
may apply to the PE-CE boundary or the CE-to-customer boundary. In
the case of a customer-managed site, the routing protocol defined
will be activated between the PE and the CE router managed by the
customer. In the case of a provider-managed site, the routing
protocol defined will be activated between the CE managed by the SP
and the router or LAN belonging to the customer. In this case, we
expect the PE-CE routing to be configured based on the SP's rules, as
both are managed by the same entity.
Rtg protocol
192.0.2.0/24 ----- CE ----------------- PE1
Customer-managed site
Rtg protocol
Customer router ----- CE ----------------- PE1
Provider-managed site
All the examples below will refer to a scenario for a customer-
managed site.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 86]
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6.11.1. Handling of Dual Stack
All routing protocol types support dual stack by using the "address-
family" leaf-list.
Example of a corresponding XML snippet with dual stack using the same
routing protocol:
VPNA
SITE1
static
192.0.2.0/24
203.0.113.1
2001:db8::1/64
2001:db8::2
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 87]
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Example of a corresponding XML snippet with dual stack using two
different routing protocols:
VPNA
SITE1
rip
ipv4
ospf
ipv6
4.4.4.4
6.11.2. LAN Directly Connected to SP Network
The routing protocol type "direct" SHOULD be used when a customer LAN
is directly connected to the provider network and must be advertised
in the IP VPN.
LAN attached directly to provider network:
192.0.2.0/24 ----- PE1
In this case, the customer has a default route to the PE address.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 88]
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6.11.3. LAN Directly Connected to SP Network with Redundancy
The routing protocol type "vrrp" SHOULD be used and advertised in the
IP VPN when
o the customer LAN is directly connected to the provider network,
and
o LAN redundancy is expected.
LAN attached directly to provider network with LAN redundancy:
192.0.2.0/24 ------ PE1
|
+--- PE2
In this case, the customer has a default route to the SP network.
6.11.4. Static Routing
The routing protocol type "static" MAY be used when a customer LAN is
connected to the provider network through a CE router and must be
advertised in the IP VPN. In this case, the static routes give next
hops (nh) to the CE and to the PE. The customer has a default route
to the SP network.
Static rtg
192.0.2.0/24 ------ CE -------------- PE
| |
| Static route 192.0.2.0/24 nh CE
Static route 0.0.0.0/0 nh PE
6.11.5. RIP Routing
The routing protocol type "rip" MAY be used when a customer LAN is
connected to the provider network through a CE router and must be
advertised in the IP VPN. For IPv4, the model assumes that RIP
version 2 is used.
In the case of dual-stack routing requested through this model, the
management system will be responsible for configuring RIP (including
the correct version number) and associated address families on
network elements.
RIP rtg
192.0.2.0/24 ------ CE -------------- PE
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 89]
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6.11.6. OSPF Routing
The routing protocol type "ospf" MAY be used when a customer LAN is
connected to the provider network through a CE router and must be
advertised in the IP VPN.
It can be used to extend an existing OSPF network and interconnect
different areas. See [RFC4577] for more details.
+---------------------+
| |
OSPF | | OSPF
area 1 | | area 2
(OSPF | | (OSPF
area 1) --- CE ---------- PE PE ----- CE --- area 2)
| |
+---------------------+
The model also defines an option to create an OSPF sham link between
two sites sharing the same area and having a backdoor link. The sham
link is created by referencing the target site sharing the same OSPF
area. The management system will be responsible for checking to see
if there is already a sham link configured for this VPN and area
between the same pair of PEs. If there is no existing sham link, the
management system will provision one. This sham link MAY be reused
by other sites.
+------------------------+
| |
| |
| PE (--sham link--)PE |
| | | |
+----|----------------|--+
| OSPF area 1 | OSPF area 1
| |
CE1 CE2
| |
(OSPF area 1) (OSPF area 1)
| |
+----------------+
Regarding dual-stack support, the user MAY specify both IPv4 and IPv6
address families, if both protocols should be routed through OSPF.
As OSPF uses separate protocol instances for IPv4 and IPv6, the
management system will need to configure both OSPF version 2 and OSPF
version 3 on the PE-CE link.
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Other OSPF parameters, such as timers, are typically set by the SP
and communicated to the customer outside the scope of this model.
Example of a corresponding XML snippet with OSPF routing parameters
in the service model:
VPNA
SITE1
ospf
0.0.0.1
ipv4
ipv6
Example of PE configuration done by the management system:
router ospf 10
area 0.0.0.1
interface Ethernet0/0
!
router ospfv3 10
area 0.0.0.1
interface Ethernet0/0
!
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6.11.7. BGP Routing
The routing protocol type "bgp" MAY be used when a customer LAN is
connected to the provider network through a CE router and must be
advertised in the IP VPN.
BGP rtg
192.0.2.0/24 ------ CE -------------- PE
The session addressing will be derived from connection parameters as
well as the SP's knowledge of the addressing plan that is in use.
In the case of dual-stack access, the user MAY request BGP routing
for both IPv4 and IPv6 by specifying both address families. It will
be up to the SP and management system to determine how to describe
the configuration (two BGP sessions, single, multi-session, etc.).
This, along with other BGP parameters such as timers, is communicated
to the customer outside the scope of this model.
The service configuration below activates BGP on the PE-CE link for
both IPv4 and IPv6.
BGP activation requires the SP to know the address of the customer
peer. If the site-network-access connection addresses are used for
BGP peering, the "static-address" allocation type for the IP
connection MUST be used. Other peering mechanisms are outside the
scope of this model. An example of a corresponding XML snippet is
described as follows:
VPNA
SITE1
bgp
65000
ipv4
ipv6
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Depending on the SP flavor, a management system can divide this
service configuration into different flavors, as shown by the
following examples.
Example of PE configuration done by the management system (single
IPv4 transport session):
router bgp 100
neighbor 203.0.113.2 remote-as 65000
address-family ipv4 vrf Cust1
neighbor 203.0.113.2 activate
address-family ipv6 vrf Cust1
neighbor 203.0.113.2 activate
neighbor 203.0.113.2 route-map SET-NH-IPV6 out
Example of PE configuration done by the management system (two
sessions):
router bgp 100
neighbor 203.0.113.2 remote-as 65000
neighbor 2001::2 remote-as 65000
address-family ipv4 vrf Cust1
neighbor 203.0.113.2 activate
address-family ipv6 vrf Cust1
neighbor 2001::2 activate
Example of PE configuration done by the management system (multi-
session):
router bgp 100
neighbor 203.0.113.2 remote-as 65000
neighbor 203.0.113.2 multisession per-af
address-family ipv4 vrf Cust1
neighbor 203.0.113.2 activate
address-family ipv6 vrf Cust1
neighbor 203.0.113.2 activate
neighbor 203.0.113.2 route-map SET-NH-IPV6 out
6.12. Service
The service defines service parameters associated with the site.
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6.12.1. Bandwidth
The service bandwidth refers to the bandwidth requirement between the
PE and the CE (WAN link bandwidth). The requested bandwidth is
expressed as svc-input-bandwidth and svc-output-bandwidth in bits per
second. The input/output direction uses the customer site as a
reference: "input bandwidth" means download bandwidth for the site,
and "output bandwidth" means upload bandwidth for the site.
The service bandwidth is only configurable at the site-network-access
level.
Using a different input and output bandwidth will allow the SP to
determine if the customer allows for asymmetric bandwidth access,
such as ADSL. It can also be used to set rate-limiting in a
different way for uploading and downloading on a symmetric bandwidth
access.
The bandwidth is a service bandwidth expressed primarily as IP
bandwidth, but if the customer enables MPLS for Carriers' Carriers
(CsC), this becomes MPLS bandwidth.
6.12.2. MTU
The service MTU refers to the maximum PDU size that the customer may
use. If the customer sends packets that are longer than the
requested service MTU, the network may discard it (or for IPv4,
fragment it).
6.12.3. QoS
The model defines QoS parameters in an abstracted way:
o qos-classification-policy: policy that defines a set of ordered
rules to classify customer traffic.
o qos-profile: QoS scheduling profile to be applied.
6.12.3.1. QoS Classification
QoS classification rules are handled by the "qos-classification-
policy" container. The qos-classification-policy container is an
ordered list of rules that match a flow or application and set the
appropriate target class of service (target-class-id). The user can
define the match using an application reference or a flow definition
that is more specific (e.g., based on Layer 3 source and destination
addresses, Layer 4 ports, and Layer 4 protocol). When a flow
definition is used, the user can employ a "target-sites" leaf-list to
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identify the destination of a flow rather than using destination IP
addresses. In such a case, an association between the site
abstraction and the IP addresses used by this site must be done
dynamically. How this association is done is out of scope for this
document. The association of a site to an IP VPN is done through the
"vpn-attachment" container. Therefore, the user can also employ
"target-sites" leaf-list and "vpn-attachment" to identify the
destination of a flow targeted to a specific VPN service. A rule
that does not have a match statement is considered a match-all rule.
An SP may implement a default terminal classification rule if the
customer does not provide it. It will be up to the SP to determine
its default target class. The current model defines some
applications, but new application identities may be added through
augmentation. The exact meaning of each application identity is up
to the SP, so it will be necessary for the SP to advise the customer
on the usage of application matching.
Where the classification is done depends on the SP's implementation
of the service, but classification concerns the flow coming from the
customer site and entering the network.
Provider network
+-----------------------+
192.0.2.0/24
198.51.100.0/24 ---- CE --------- PE
Traffic flow
---------->
In the figure above, the management system should implement the
classification rule:
o in the ingress direction on the PE interface, if the CE is
customer-managed.
o in the ingress direction on the CE interface connected to the
customer LAN, if the CE is provider-managed.
The figure below describes a sample service description of QoS
classification for a site:
VPNA
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SITE1
SvrA-http
192.0.2.0/24
203.0.113.1/32
80
tcp
DATA2
SvrA-ftp
192.0.2.0/24
203.0.113.1/32
21
tcp
DATA2
p2p
p2p
DATA3
any
DATA1
In the example above:
o HTTP traffic from the 192.0.2.0/24 LAN destined for 203.0.113.1/32
will be classified in DATA2.
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o FTP traffic from the 192.0.2.0/24 LAN destined for 203.0.113.1/32
will be classified in DATA2.
o Peer-to-peer traffic will be classified in DATA3.
o All other traffic will be classified in DATA1.
The order of rule list entries is defined by the user. The
management system responsible for translating those rules in network
element configuration MUST keep the same processing order in network
element configuration.
6.12.3.2. QoS Profile
The user can choose either a standard profile provided by the
operator or a custom profile. The "qos-profile" container defines
the traffic-scheduling policy to be used by the SP.
Provider network
+-----------------------+
192.0.2.0/24
198.51.100.0/24 ---- CE --------- PE
\ /
qos-profile
A custom QoS profile is defined as a list of classes of services and
associated properties. The properties are as follows:
o direction: used to specify the direction to which the QoS profile
is applied. This model supports three direction settings: "Site-
to-WAN", "WAN-to-Site", and "both". By default, the "both"
direction value is used. If the direction is "both", the provider
should ensure scheduling according to the requested policy in both
traffic directions (SP to customer and customer to SP). As an
example, a device-scheduling policy may be implemented on both the
PE side and the CE side of the WAN link. If the direction is
"WAN-to-Site", the provider should ensure scheduling from the SP
network to the customer site. As an example, a device-scheduling
policy may be implemented only on the PE side of the WAN link
towards the customer.
o rate-limit: used to rate-limit the class of service. The value is
expressed as a percentage of the global service bandwidth. When
the qos-profile container is implemented on the CE side,
svc-output-bandwidth is taken into account as a reference. When
it is implemented on the PE side, svc-input-bandwidth is used.
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o latency: used to define the latency constraint of the class. The
latency constraint can be expressed as the lowest possible latency
or a latency boundary expressed in milliseconds. How this latency
constraint will be fulfilled is up to the SP's implementation of
the service: a strict priority queuing may be used on the access
and in the core network, and/or a low-latency routing
configuration may be created for this traffic class.
o jitter: used to define the jitter constraint of the class. The
jitter constraint can be expressed as the lowest possible jitter
or a jitter boundary expressed in microseconds. How this jitter
constraint will be fulfilled is up to the SP's implementation of
the service: a strict priority queuing may be used on the access
and in the core network, and/or a jitter-aware routing
configuration may be created for this traffic class.
o bandwidth: used to define a guaranteed amount of bandwidth for the
class of service. It is expressed as a percentage. The
"guaranteed-bw-percent" parameter uses available bandwidth as a
reference. When the qos-profile container is implemented on the
CE side, svc-output-bandwidth is taken into account as a
reference. When it is implemented on the PE side, svc-input-
bandwidth is used. By default, the bandwidth reservation is only
guaranteed at the access level. The user can use the "end-to-end"
leaf to request an end-to-end bandwidth reservation, including
across the MPLS transport network. (In other words, the SP will
activate something in the MPLS core to ensure that the bandwidth
request from the customer will be fulfilled by the MPLS core as
well.) How this is done (e.g., RSVP reservation, controller
reservation) is out of scope for this document.
In addition, due to network conditions, some constraints may not be
completely fulfilled by the SP; in this case, the SP should advise
the customer about the limitations. How this communication is done
is out of scope for this document.
Example of service configuration using a standard QoS profile with
the following corresponding XML snippet:
GOLD
PLATINUM
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VPNA
SITE1
L1
1245HRTFGJGJ154654
VPNA
spoke-role
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
layer3
L1
100000000
100000000
1514
PLATINUM
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555555AAAA2344
VPNA
spoke-role
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
layer3
L1
2000000
2000000
1514
GOLD
Example of service configuration using a custom QoS profile with the
following corresponding XML snippet:
GOLD
PLATINUM
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VPNA
SITE1
L1
Site1
L1
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
layer3
L1
VPNA
spoke-role
100000000
100000000
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REAL_TIME
both
10
80
DATA1
70
80
DATA2
200
5
The custom QoS profile for Site1 defines a REAL_TIME class with a
latency constraint expressed as the lowest possible latency. It also
defines two data classes -- DATA1 and DATA2. The two classes express
a latency boundary constraint as well as a bandwidth reservation, as
the REAL_TIME class is rate-limited to 10% of the service bandwidth
(10% of 100 Mbps = 10 Mbps). In cases where congestion occurs, the
REAL_TIME traffic can go up to 10 Mbps (let's assume that only 5 Mbps
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are consumed). DATA1 and DATA2 will share the remaining bandwidth
(95 Mbps) according to their percentage. So, the DATA1 class will be
served with at least 76 Mbps of bandwidth, while the DATA2 class will
be served with at least 4.75 Mbps. The latency boundary information
of the data class may help the SP define a specific buffer tuning or
a specific routing within the network. The maximum percentage to be
used is not limited by this model but MUST be limited by the
management system according to the policies authorized by the SP.
6.12.4. Multicast
The "multicast" container defines the type of site in the customer
multicast service topology: source, receiver, or both. These
parameters will help the management system optimize the multicast
service. Users can also define the type of multicast relationship
with the customer: router (requires a protocol such as PIM), host
(IGMP or MLD), or both. An address family (IPv4, IPv6, or both) can
also be defined.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 103]
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6.13. Enhanced VPN Features
6.13.1. Carriers' Carriers
In the case of CsC [RFC4364], a customer may want to build an MPLS
service using an IP VPN to carry its traffic.
LAN customer1
|
|
CE1
|
| -------------
(vrf_cust1)
CE1_ISP1
| ISP1 POP
| MPLS link
| -------------
|
(vrf ISP1)
PE1
(...) Provider backbone
PE2
(vrf ISP1)
|
| ------------
|
| MPLS link
| ISP1 POP
CE2_ISP1
(vrf_cust1)
| ------------
|
CE2
|
LAN customer1
In the figure above, ISP1 resells an IP VPN service but has no core
network infrastructure between its POPs. ISP1 uses an IP VPN as the
core network infrastructure (belonging to another provider) between
its POPs.
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In order to support CsC, the VPN service must indicate MPLS support
by setting the "carrierscarrier" leaf to true in the vpn-service
list. The link between CE1_ISP1/PE1 and CE2_ISP1/PE2 must also run
an MPLS signalling protocol. This configuration is done at the site
level.
In the proposed model, LDP or BGP can be used as the MPLS signalling
protocol. In the case of LDP, an IGP routing protocol MUST also be
activated. In the case of BGP signalling, BGP MUST also be
configured as the routing protocol.
If CsC is enabled, the requested "svc-mtu" leaf will refer to the
MPLS MTU and not to the IP MTU.
6.14. External ID References
The service model sometimes refers to external information through
identifiers. As an example, to order a cloud-access to a particular
cloud service provider (CSP), the model uses an identifier to refer
to the targeted CSP. If a customer is directly using this service
model as an API (through REST or NETCONF, for example) to order a
particular service, the SP should provide a list of authorized
identifiers. In the case of cloud-access, the SP will provide the
associated identifiers for each available CSP. The same applies to
other identifiers, such as std-qos-profile, OAM profile-name, and
provider-profile for encryption.
How an SP provides the meanings of those identifiers to the customer
is out of scope for this document.
6.15. Defining NNIs
An autonomous system (AS) is a single network or group of networks
that is controlled by a common system administration group and that
uses a single, clearly defined routing protocol. In some cases, VPNs
need to span different ASes in different geographic areas or span
different SPs. The connection between ASes is established by the SPs
and is seamless to the customer. Examples include
o a partnership between SPs (e.g., carrier, cloud) to extend their
VPN service seamlessly.
o an internal administrative boundary within a single SP (e.g.,
backhaul versus core versus data center).
NNIs (network-to-network interfaces) have to be defined to extend the
VPNs across multiple ASes.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 105]
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[RFC4364] defines multiple flavors of VPN NNI implementations. Each
implementation has pros and cons; this topic is outside the scope of
this document. For example, in an Inter-AS option A, autonomous
system border router (ASBR) peers are connected by multiple
interfaces with at least one of those interfaces spanning the two
ASes while being present in the same VPN. In order for these ASBRs
to signal unlabeled IP prefixes, they associate each interface with a
VPN routing and forwarding (VRF) instance and a Border Gateway
Protocol (BGP) session. As a result, traffic between the back-to-
back VRFs is IP. In this scenario, the VPNs are isolated from each
other, and because the traffic is IP, QoS mechanisms that operate on
IP traffic can be applied to achieve customer service level
agreements (SLAs).
-------- -------------- -----------
/ \ / \ / \
| Cloud | | | | |
| Provider |-----NNI-----| |----NNI---| Data Center |
| #1 | | | | |
\ / | | \ /
-------- | | -----------
| |
-------- | My network | -----------
/ \ | | / \
| Cloud | | | | |
| Provider |-----NNI-----| |---NNI---| L3VPN |
| #2 | | | | Partner |
\ / | | | |
-------- | | | |
\ / | |
-------------- \ /
| -----------
|
NNI
|
|
-------------------
/ \
| |
| |
| |
| L3VPN Partner |
| |
\ /
-------------------
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The figure above describes an SP network called "My network" that has
several NNIs. This network uses NNIs to:
o increase its footprint by relying on L3VPN partners.
o connect its own data center services to the customer IP VPN.
o enable the customer to access its private resources located in a
private cloud owned by some CSPs.
6.15.1. Defining an NNI with the Option A Flavor
AS A AS B
------------------- -------------------
/ \ / \
| | | |
| ++++++++ Inter-AS link ++++++++ |
| + +_______________+ + |
| + (VRF1)---(VPN1)----(VRF1) + |
| + ASBR + + ASBR + |
| + (VRF2)---(VPN2)----(VRF2) + |
| + +_______________+ + |
| ++++++++ ++++++++ |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| ++++++++ Inter-AS link ++++++++ |
| + +_______________+ + |
| + (VRF1)---(VPN1)----(VRF1) + |
| + ASBR + + ASBR + |
| + (VRF2)---(VPN2)----(VRF2) + |
| + +_______________+ + |
| ++++++++ ++++++++ |
| | | |
| | | |
\ / \ /
------------------- -------------------
In option A, the two ASes are connected to each other with physical
links on ASBRs. For resiliency purposes, there may be multiple
physical connections between the ASes. A VPN connection -- physical
or logical (on top of physical) -- is created for each VPN that needs
to cross the AS boundary, thus providing a back-to-back VRF model.
From a service model's perspective, this VPN connection can be seen
as a site. Let's say that AS B wants to extend some VPN connections
for VPN C on AS A. The administrator of AS B can use this service
model to order a site on AS A. All connection scenarios could be
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realized using the features of the current model. As an example, the
figure above shows two physical connections that have logical
connections per VPN overlaid on them. This could be seen as a dual-
homed subVPN scenario. Also, the administrator of AS B will be able
to choose the appropriate routing protocol (e.g., E-BGP) to
dynamically exchange routes between ASes.
This document assumes that the option A NNI flavor SHOULD reuse the
existing VPN site modeling.
Example: a customer wants its CSP A to attach its virtual network N
to an existing IP VPN (VPN1) that he has from L3VPN SP B.
CSP A L3VPN SP B
----------------- -------------------
/ \ / \
| | | | |
| VM --| ++++++++ NNI ++++++++ |--- VPN1
| | + +_________+ + | Site#1
| |--------(VRF1)---(VPN1)--(VRF1)+ |
| | + ASBR + + ASBR + |
| | + +_________+ + |
| | ++++++++ ++++++++ |
| VM --| | | |--- VPN1
| |Virtual | | | Site#2
| |Network | | |
| VM --| | | |--- VPN1
| | | | | Site#3
\ / \ /
----------------- -------------------
|
|
VPN1
Site#4
To create the VPN connectivity, the CSP or the customer may use the
L3VPN service model that SP B exposes. We could consider that, as
the NNI is shared, the physical connection (bearer) between CSP A and
SP B already exists. CSP A may request through a service model the
creation of a new site with a single site-network-access (single-
homing is used in the figure). As a placement constraint, CSP A may
use the existing bearer reference it has from SP A to force the
placement of the VPN NNI on the existing link. The XML snippet below
illustrates a possible configuration request to SP B:
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 108]
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GOLD
PLATINUM
VPN1
CSP_A_attachment
layer3
L1
1
NY
US
site-vpn-flavor-nni
bgp
500
ipv4
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CSP_A_VN1
L1
provider-dhcp
provider-dhcp
static-address
203.0.113.1
203.0.113.2
30
450000000
450000000
1514
layer3
VPN1
any-to-any-role
customer-managed
The case described above is different from a scenario using the
cloud-accesses container, as the cloud-access provides a public cloud
access while this example enables access to private resources located
in a CSP network.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 110]
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6.15.2. Defining an NNI with the Option B Flavor
AS A AS B
------------------- -------------------
/ \ / \
| | | |
| ++++++++ Inter-AS link ++++++++ |
| + +_______________+ + |
| + + + + |
| + ASBR +<---MP-BGP---->+ ASBR + |
| + + + + |
| + +_______________+ + |
| ++++++++ ++++++++ |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| ++++++++ Inter-AS link ++++++++ |
| + +_______________+ + |
| + + + + |
| + ASBR +<---MP-BGP---->+ ASBR + |
| + + + + |
| + +_______________+ + |
| ++++++++ ++++++++ |
| | | |
| | | |
\ / \ /
------------------- -------------------
In option B, the two ASes are connected to each other with physical
links on ASBRs. For resiliency purposes, there may be multiple
physical connections between the ASes. The VPN "connection" between
ASes is done by exchanging VPN routes through MP-BGP [RFC4760].
There are multiple flavors of implementations of such an NNI. For
example:
1. The NNI is internal to the provider and is situated between a
backbone and a data center. There is enough trust between the
domains to not filter the VPN routes. So, all the VPN routes are
exchanged. RT filtering may be implemented to save some
unnecessary route states.
2. The NNI is used between providers that agreed to exchange VPN
routes for specific RTs only. Each provider is authorized to use
the RT values from the other provider.
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3. The NNI is used between providers that agreed to exchange VPN
routes for specific RTs only. Each provider has its own RT
scheme. So, a customer spanning the two networks will have
different RTs in each network for a particular VPN.
Case 1 does not require any service modeling, as the protocol enables
the dynamic exchange of necessary VPN routes.
Case 2 requires that an RT-filtering policy on ASBRs be maintained.
From a service modeling point of view, it is necessary to agree on
the list of RTs to authorize.
In Case 3, both ASes need to agree on the VPN RT to exchange, as well
as how to map a VPN RT from AS A to the corresponding RT in AS B (and
vice versa).
Those modelings are currently out of scope for this document.
CSP A L3VPN SP B
----------------- ------------------
/ \ / \
| | | | |
| VM --| ++++++++ NNI ++++++++ |--- VPN1
| | + +__________+ + | Site#1
| |-------+ + + + |
| | + ASBR +<-MP-BGP->+ ASBR + |
| | + +__________+ + |
| | ++++++++ ++++++++ |
| VM --| | | |--- VPN1
| |Virtual | | | Site#2
| |Network | | |
| VM --| | | |--- VPN1
| | | | | Site#3
\ / | |
----------------- | |
\ /
------------------
|
|
VPN1
Site#4
The example above describes an NNI connection between CSP A and SP
network B. Both SPs do not trust themselves and use a different RT
allocation policy. So, in terms of implementation, the customer VPN
has a different RT in each network (RT A in CSP A and RT B in SP
network B). In order to connect the customer virtual network in CSP
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A to the customer IP VPN (VPN1) in SP network B, CSP A should request
that SP network B open the customer VPN on the NNI (accept the
appropriate RT). Who does the RT translation depends on the
agreement between the two SPs: SP B may permit CSP A to request VPN
(RT) translation.
6.15.3. Defining an NNI with the Option C Flavor
AS A AS B
------------------- -------------------
/ \ / \
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| ++++++++ Multihop E-BGP ++++++++ |
| + + + + |
| + + + + |
| + RGW +<----MP-BGP---->+ RGW + |
| + + + + |
| + + + + |
| ++++++++ ++++++++ |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| ++++++++ Inter-AS link ++++++++ |
| + +_______________+ + |
| + + + + |
| + ASBR + + ASBR + |
| + + + + |
| + +_______________+ + |
| ++++++++ ++++++++ |
| | | |
| | | |
| | | |
| ++++++++ Inter-AS link ++++++++ |
| + +_______________+ + |
| + + + + |
| + ASBR + + ASBR + |
| + + + + |
| + +_______________+ + |
| ++++++++ ++++++++ |
| | | |
| | | |
\ / \ /
------------------- -------------------
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 113]
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From a VPN service's perspective, the option C NNI is very similar to
option B, as an MP-BGP session is used to exchange VPN routes between
the ASes. The difference is that the forwarding plane and the
control plane are on different nodes, so the MP-BGP session is
multihop between routing gateway (RGW) nodes.
From a VPN service's point of view, modeling options B and C will be
identical.
7. Service Model Usage Example
As explained in Section 5, this service model is intended to be
instantiated at a management layer and is not intended to be used
directly on network elements. The management system serves as a
central point of configuration of the overall service.
This section provides an example of how a management system can use
this model to configure an IP VPN service on network elements.
In this example, we want to achieve the provisioning of a VPN service
for three sites using a Hub-and-Spoke VPN service topology. One of
the sites will be dual-homed, and load-sharing is expected.
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
| Hub_Site ------ PE1 PE2 ------ Spoke_Site1 |
| | +----------------------------------+
| | |
| | +----------------------------------+
| Hub_Site ------ PE3 PE4 ------ Spoke_Site2 |
+-------------------------------------------------------------+
The following XML snippet describes the overall simplified service
configuration of this VPN.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 114]
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GOLD
PLATINUM
12456487
hub-spoke
When receiving the request for provisioning the VPN service, the
management system will internally (or through communication with
another OSS component) allocate VPN RTs. In this specific case, two
RTs will be allocated (100:1 for Hub and 100:2 for Spoke). The
output of corresponding XML snippet below describes the configuration
of Spoke_Site1.
GOLD
PLATINUM
12456487
hub-spoke
Spoke_Site1
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 115]
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D1
1
NY
US
layer3
bgp
500
ipv4
ipv6
Spoke_Site1
D1
20
pe-diverse
10
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 116]
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static-address
203.0.113.254
203.0.113.2
24
static-address
2001:db8::1
2001:db8::2
64
450000000
450000000
1514
layer3
12456487
spoke-role
provider-managed
When receiving the request for provisioning Spoke_Site1, the
management system MUST allocate network resources for this site. It
MUST first determine the target network elements to provision the
access, particularly the PE router (and perhaps also an aggregation
switch). As described in Section 6.6, the management system SHOULD
use the location information and MUST use the access-diversity
constraint to find the appropriate PE. In this case, we consider
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 117]
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that Spoke_Site1 requires PE diversity with the Hub and that the
management system allocates PEs based on the least distance. Based
on the location information, the management system finds the
available PEs in the area nearest the customer and picks one that
fits the access-diversity constraint.
When the PE is chosen, the management system needs to allocate
interface resources on the node. One interface is selected from the
pool of available PEs. The management system can start provisioning
the chosen PE node via whatever means the management system prefers
(e.g., NETCONF, CLI). The management system will check to see if a
VRF that fits its needs is already present. If not, it will
provision the VRF: the RD will be derived from the internal
allocation policy model, and the RTs will be derived from the VPN
policy configuration of the site (the management system allocated
some RTs for the VPN). As the site is a Spoke site (site-role), the
management system knows which RTs must be imported and exported. As
the site is provider-managed, some management RTs may also be added
(100:5000). Standard provider VPN policies MAY also be added in the
configuration.
Example of generated PE configuration:
ip vrf Customer1
export-map STD-CUSTOMER-EXPORT <---- Standard SP configuration
route-distinguisher 100:3123234324
route-target import 100:1
route-target import 100:5000 <---- Standard SP configuration
route-target export 100:2 for provider-managed CE
!
When the VRF has been provisioned, the management system can start
configuring the access on the PE using the allocated interface
information. IP addressing is chosen by the management system. One
address will be picked from an allocated subnet for the PE, and
another will be used for the CE configuration. Routing protocols
will also be configured between the PE and CE; because this model is
provider-managed, the choices are left to the SP. BGP was chosen for
this example. This choice is independent of the routing protocol
chosen by the customer. BGP will be used to configure the CE-to-LAN
connection as requested in the service model. Peering addresses will
be derived from those of the connection. As the CE is provider-
managed, the CE's AS number can be automatically allocated by the
management system. Standard configuration templates provided by the
SP may also be added.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 118]
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Example of generated PE configuration:
interface Ethernet1/1/0.10
encapsulation dot1q 10
ip vrf forwarding Customer1
ip address 198.51.100.1 255.255.255.252 <---- Comes from
automated allocation
ipv6 address 2001:db8::10:1/64
ip access-group STD-PROTECT-IN <---- Standard SP config
!
router bgp 100
address-family ipv4 vrf Customer1
neighbor 198.51.100.2 remote-as 65000 <---- Comes from
automated allocation
neighbor 198.51.100.2 route-map STD in <---- Standard SP config
neighbor 198.51.100.2 filter-list 10 in <---- Standard SP config
!
address-family ipv6 vrf Customer1
neighbor 2001:db8::0a10:2 remote-as 65000 <---- Comes from
automated allocation
neighbor 2001:db8::0a10:2 route-map STD in <---- Standard SP
config
neighbor 2001:db8::0a10:2 filter-list 10 in <---- Standard SP
config
!
ip route vrf Customer1 192.0.2.1 255.255.255.255 198.51.100.2
! Static route for provider administration of CE
!
As the CE router is not reachable at this stage, the management
system can produce a complete CE configuration that can be manually
uploaded to the node before sending the CE configuration to the
customer premises. The CE configuration will be built in the same
way as the PE would be configured. Based on the CE type (vendor/
model) allocated to the customer as well as the bearer information,
the management system knows which interface must be configured on the
CE. PE-CE link configuration is expected to be handled automatically
using the SP OSS, as both resources are managed internally. CE-to-
LAN-interface parameters such as IP addressing are derived from the
ip-connection container, taking into account how the management
system distributes addresses between the PE and CE within the subnet.
This will allow a plug-and-play configuration for the CE to be
created.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 119]
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Example of generated CE configuration:
interface Loopback10
description "Administration"
ip address 192.0.2.1 255.255.255.255
!
interface FastEthernet10
description "WAN"
ip address 198.51.100.2 255.255.255.252 <---- Comes from
automated allocation
ipv6 address 2001:db8::0a10:2/64
!
interface FastEthernet11
description "LAN"
ip address 203.0.113.254 255.255.255.0 <---- Comes from the
ip-connection container
ipv6 address 2001:db8::1/64
!
router bgp 65000
address-family ipv4
redistribute static route-map STATIC2BGP <---- Standard SP
configuration
neighbor 198.51.100.1 remote-as 100 <---- Comes from
automated allocation
neighbor 203.0.113.2 remote-as 500 <---- Comes from the
ip-connection container
address-family ipv6
redistribute static route-map STATIC2BGP <---- Standard SP
configuration
neighbor 2001:db8::0a10:1 remote-as 100 <---- Comes from
automated allocation
neighbor 2001:db8::2 remote-as 500 <---- Comes from the
ip-connection container
!
route-map STATIC2BGP permit 10
match tag 10
!
8. Interaction with Other YANG Models
As expressed in Section 5, this service model is intended to be
instantiated in a management system and not directly on network
elements.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 120]
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The management system's role will be to configure the network
elements. The management system may be modular, so the component
instantiating the service model (let's call it "service component")
and the component responsible for network element configuration
(let's call it "configuration component") may be different.
l3vpn-svc |
Model |
|
+---------------------+
| Service component | Service datastore
+---------------------+
|
|
+---------------------+
+----| Config component |------+
/ +---------------------+ \ Network
/ / \ \ Configuration
/ / \ \ models
/ / \ \
++++++++ ++++++++ ++++++++ ++++++++
+ CE A + ------- + PE A + + PE B + ----- + CE B + Config
++++++++ ++++++++ ++++++++ ++++++++ datastore
Site A Site B
In the previous sections, we provided some examples of the
translation of service provisioning requests to router configuration
lines. In the NETCONF/YANG ecosystem, we expect NETCONF/YANG to be
used between the configuration component and network elements to
configure the requested services on those elements.
In this framework, specifications are expected to provide specific
YANG modeling of service components on network elements. There will
be a strong relationship between the abstracted view provided by this
service model and the detailed configuration view that will be
provided by specific configuration models for network elements.
The authors of this document anticipate definitions of YANG modules
for the network elements listed below. Note that this list is not
exhaustive:
o VRF definition, including VPN policy expression.
o Physical interface.
o IP layer (IPv4, IPv6).
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 121]
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o QoS: classification, profiles, etc.
o Routing protocols: support of configuration of all protocols
listed in the document, as well as routing policies associated
with those protocols.
o Multicast VPN.
o Network address translation.
Example of a corresponding XML snippet with a VPN site request at the
service level, using this model:
GOLD
PLATINUM
VPN1
hub-spoke
Site A
layer3
L1
1
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static-address
203.0.113.254
203.0.113.2
24
provider-dhcp
1514
10000000
10000000
L1
VPNPOL1
static
198.51.100.0/30
203.0.113.2
customer-managed
VPNPOL1
1
VPN1
any-to-any-role
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In the service example above, the service component is expected to
request that the configuration component of the management system
provide the configuration of the service elements. If we consider
that the service component selected a PE (PE A) as the target PE for
the site, the configuration component will need to push the
configuration to PE A. The configuration component will use several
YANG data models to define the configuration to be applied to PE A.
The XML snippet configuration of PE A might look like this:
eth0
ianaift:ethernetCsmacd
Link to CE A.
203.0.113.254
24
true
VRF_CustA
l3vpn-network:vrf
VRF for Customer A
100:1546542343
100:1
100:1
eth0
rt:static
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st0
198.51.100.0/30
203.0.113.2
9. YANG Module
file "ietf-l3vpn-svc@2018-01-19.yang"
module ietf-l3vpn-svc {
yang-version 1.1;
namespace "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-l3vpn-svc";
prefix l3vpn-svc;
import ietf-inet-types {
prefix inet;
}
import ietf-yang-types {
prefix yang;
}
import ietf-netconf-acm {
prefix nacm;
}
organization
"IETF L3SM Working Group";
contact
"WG List:
Editor:
L3SM WG
Chairs:
Adrian Farrel, Qin Wu
";
description
"This YANG module defines a generic service configuration
model for Layer 3 VPNs. This model is common across all
vendor implementations.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 125]
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Copyright (c) 2018 IETF Trust and the persons
identified as authors of the code. All rights reserved.
Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or
without modification, is permitted pursuant to, and subject
to the license terms contained in, the Simplified BSD License
set forth in Section 4.c of the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions
Relating to IETF Documents
(https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info).
This version of this YANG module is part of RFC 8299; see
the RFC itself for full legal notices.";
revision 2018-01-19 {
description
"Revision of RFC 8049 to fix implementation issues.";
reference
"RFC 8299";
}
revision 2017-01-27 {
description
"Initial document.";
reference
"RFC 8049.";
}
/* Features */
feature cloud-access {
description
"Allows the VPN to connect to a CSP.";
}
feature multicast {
description
"Enables multicast capabilities in a VPN.";
}
feature ipv4 {
description
"Enables IPv4 support in a VPN.";
}
feature ipv6 {
description
"Enables IPv6 support in a VPN.";
}
feature lan-tag {
description
"Enables LAN Tag support in a VPN Policy filter.";
}
feature carrierscarrier {
description
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"Enables support of CsC.";
}
feature extranet-vpn {
description
"Enables support of extranet VPNs.";
}
feature site-diversity {
description
"Enables support of site diversity constraints.";
}
feature encryption {
description
"Enables support of encryption.";
}
feature qos {
description
"Enables support of classes of services.";
}
feature qos-custom {
description
"Enables support of the custom QoS profile.";
}
feature rtg-bgp {
description
"Enables support of the BGP routing protocol.";
}
feature rtg-rip {
description
"Enables support of the RIP routing protocol.";
}
feature rtg-ospf {
description
"Enables support of the OSPF routing protocol.";
}
feature rtg-ospf-sham-link {
description
"Enables support of OSPF sham links.";
}
feature rtg-vrrp {
description
"Enables support of the VRRP routing protocol.";
}
feature fast-reroute {
description
"Enables support of Fast Reroute.";
}
feature bfd {
description
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 127]
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"Enables support of BFD.";
}
feature always-on {
description
"Enables support of the 'always-on' access constraint.";
}
feature requested-type {
description
"Enables support of the 'requested-type' access constraint.";
}
feature bearer-reference {
description
"Enables support of the 'bearer-reference' access constraint.";
}
feature target-sites {
description
"Enables support of the 'target-sites' match flow parameter.";
}
/* Typedefs */
typedef svc-id {
type string;
description
"Defines a type of service component identifier.";
}
typedef template-id {
type string;
description
"Defines a type of service template identifier.";
}
typedef address-family {
type enumeration {
enum ipv4 {
description
"IPv4 address family.";
}
enum ipv6 {
description
"IPv6 address family.";
}
}
description
"Defines a type for the address family.";
}
/* Identities */
identity site-network-access-type {
description
"Base identity for site-network-access type.";
}
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 128]
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identity point-to-point {
base site-network-access-type;
description
"Identity for point-to-point connection.";
}
identity multipoint {
base site-network-access-type;
description
"Identity for multipoint connection.
Example: Ethernet broadcast segment.";
}
identity placement-diversity {
description
"Base identity for site placement constraints.";
}
identity bearer-diverse {
base placement-diversity;
description
"Identity for bearer diversity.
The bearers should not use common elements.";
}
identity pe-diverse {
base placement-diversity;
description
"Identity for PE diversity.";
}
identity pop-diverse {
base placement-diversity;
description
"Identity for POP diversity.";
}
identity linecard-diverse {
base placement-diversity;
description
"Identity for linecard diversity.";
}
identity same-pe {
base placement-diversity;
description
"Identity for having sites connected on the same PE.";
}
identity same-bearer {
base placement-diversity;
description
"Identity for having sites connected using the same bearer.";
}
identity customer-application {
description
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 129]
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"Base identity for customer application.";
}
identity web {
base customer-application;
description
"Identity for Web application (e.g., HTTP, HTTPS).";
}
identity mail {
base customer-application;
description
"Identity for mail application.";
}
identity file-transfer {
base customer-application;
description
"Identity for file transfer application (e.g., FTP, SFTP).";
}
identity database {
base customer-application;
description
"Identity for database application.";
}
identity social {
base customer-application;
description
"Identity for social-network application.";
}
identity games {
base customer-application;
description
"Identity for gaming application.";
}
identity p2p {
base customer-application;
description
"Identity for peer-to-peer application.";
}
identity network-management {
base customer-application;
description
"Identity for management application
(e.g., Telnet, syslog, SNMP).";
}
identity voice {
base customer-application;
description
"Identity for voice application.";
}
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 130]
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identity video {
base customer-application;
description
"Identity for video conference application.";
}
identity embb {
base customer-application;
description
"Identity for an enhanced Mobile Broadband (eMBB)
application. Note that an eMBB application demands
network performance with a wide variety of
characteristics, such as data rate, latency,
loss rate, reliability, and many other parameters.";
}
identity urllc {
base customer-application;
description
"Identity for an Ultra-Reliable and Low Latency
Communications (URLLC) application. Note that a
URLLC application demands network performance
with a wide variety of characteristics, such as latency,
reliability, and many other parameters.";
}
identity mmtc {
base customer-application;
description
"Identity for a massive Machine Type
Communications (mMTC) application. Note that an
mMTC application demands network performance
with a wide variety of characteristics, such as data
rate, latency, loss rate, reliability, and many
other parameters.";
}
identity site-vpn-flavor {
description
"Base identity for the site VPN service flavor.";
}
identity site-vpn-flavor-single {
base site-vpn-flavor;
description
"Base identity for the site VPN service flavor.
Used when the site belongs to only one VPN.";
}
identity site-vpn-flavor-multi {
base site-vpn-flavor;
description
"Base identity for the site VPN service flavor.
Used when a logical connection of a site
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 131]
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belongs to multiple VPNs.";
}
identity site-vpn-flavor-sub {
base site-vpn-flavor;
description
"Base identity for the site VPN service flavor.
Used when a site has multiple logical connections.
Each connection may belong to different multiple VPNs.";
}
identity site-vpn-flavor-nni {
base site-vpn-flavor;
description
"Base identity for the site VPN service flavor.
Used to describe an NNI option A connection.";
}
identity management {
description
"Base identity for site management scheme.";
}
identity co-managed {
base management;
description
"Base identity for co-managed site.";
}
identity customer-managed {
base management;
description
"Base identity for customer-managed site.";
}
identity provider-managed {
base management;
description
"Base identity for provider-managed site.";
}
identity address-allocation-type {
description
"Base identity for address-allocation-type for PE-CE link.";
}
identity provider-dhcp {
base address-allocation-type;
description
"Provider network provides DHCP service to customer.";
}
identity provider-dhcp-relay {
base address-allocation-type;
description
"Provider network provides DHCP relay service to customer.";
}
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 132]
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identity provider-dhcp-slaac {
base address-allocation-type;
description
"Provider network provides DHCP service to customer,
as well as SLAAC.";
}
identity static-address {
base address-allocation-type;
description
"Provider-to-customer addressing is static.";
}
identity slaac {
base address-allocation-type;
description
"Use IPv6 SLAAC.";
}
identity site-role {
description
"Base identity for site type.";
}
identity any-to-any-role {
base site-role;
description
"Site in an any-to-any IP VPN.";
}
identity spoke-role {
base site-role;
description
"Spoke site in a Hub-and-Spoke IP VPN.";
}
identity hub-role {
base site-role;
description
"Hub site in a Hub-and-Spoke IP VPN.";
}
identity vpn-topology {
description
"Base identity for VPN topology.";
}
identity any-to-any {
base vpn-topology;
description
"Identity for any-to-any VPN topology.";
}
identity hub-spoke {
base vpn-topology;
description
"Identity for Hub-and-Spoke VPN topology.";
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 133]
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}
identity hub-spoke-disjoint {
base vpn-topology;
description
"Identity for Hub-and-Spoke VPN topology
where Hubs cannot communicate with each other.";
}
identity multicast-tree-type {
description
"Base identity for multicast tree type.";
}
identity ssm-tree-type {
base multicast-tree-type;
description
"Identity for SSM tree type.";
}
identity asm-tree-type {
base multicast-tree-type;
description
"Identity for ASM tree type.";
}
identity bidir-tree-type {
base multicast-tree-type;
description
"Identity for bidirectional tree type.";
}
identity multicast-rp-discovery-type {
description
"Base identity for RP discovery type.";
}
identity auto-rp {
base multicast-rp-discovery-type;
description
"Base identity for Auto-RP discovery type.";
}
identity static-rp {
base multicast-rp-discovery-type;
description
"Base identity for static type.";
}
identity bsr-rp {
base multicast-rp-discovery-type;
description
"Base identity for BSR discovery type.";
}
identity routing-protocol-type {
description
"Base identity for routing protocol type.";
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 134]
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}
identity ospf {
base routing-protocol-type;
description
"Identity for OSPF protocol type.";
}
identity bgp {
base routing-protocol-type;
description
"Identity for BGP protocol type.";
}
identity static {
base routing-protocol-type;
description
"Identity for static routing protocol type.";
}
identity rip {
base routing-protocol-type;
description
"Identity for RIP protocol type.";
}
identity vrrp {
base routing-protocol-type;
description
"Identity for VRRP protocol type.
This is to be used when LANs are directly connected
to PE routers.";
}
identity direct {
base routing-protocol-type;
description
"Identity for direct protocol type.";
}
identity protocol-type {
description
"Base identity for protocol field type.";
}
identity tcp {
base protocol-type;
description
"TCP protocol type.";
}
identity udp {
base protocol-type;
description
"UDP protocol type.";
}
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 135]
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identity icmp {
base protocol-type;
description
"ICMP protocol type.";
}
identity icmp6 {
base protocol-type;
description
"ICMPv6 protocol type.";
}
identity gre {
base protocol-type;
description
"GRE protocol type.";
}
identity ipip {
base protocol-type;
description
"IP-in-IP protocol type.";
}
identity hop-by-hop {
base protocol-type;
description
"Hop-by-Hop IPv6 header type.";
}
identity routing {
base protocol-type;
description
"Routing IPv6 header type.";
}
identity esp {
base protocol-type;
description
"ESP header type.";
}
identity ah {
base protocol-type;
description
"AH header type.";
}
identity vpn-policy-filter-type {
description
"Base identity for VPN Policy filter type.";
}
identity ipv4 {
base vpn-policy-filter-type;
description
"Identity for IPv4 Prefix filter type.";
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 136]
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}
identity ipv6 {
base vpn-policy-filter-type;
description
"Identity for IPv6 Prefix filter type.";
}
identity lan {
base vpn-policy-filter-type;
description
"Identity for LAN Tag filter type.";
}
identity qos-profile-direction {
description
"Base identity for QoS profile direction.";
}
identity site-to-wan {
base qos-profile-direction;
description
"Identity for Site-to-WAN direction.";
}
identity wan-to-site {
base qos-profile-direction;
description
"Identity for WAN-to-Site direction.";
}
identity both {
base qos-profile-direction;
description
"Identity for both WAN-to-Site direction
and Site-to-WAN direction.";
}
/* Groupings */
grouping vpn-service-cloud-access {
container cloud-accesses {
if-feature cloud-access;
list cloud-access {
key cloud-identifier;
leaf cloud-identifier {
type leafref {
path "/l3vpn-svc/vpn-profiles/"+
"valid-provider-identifiers/cloud-identifier/id";
}
description
"Identification of cloud service.
Local administration meaning.";
}
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 137]
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choice list-flavor {
case permit-any {
leaf permit-any {
type empty;
description
"Allows all sites.";
}
}
case deny-any-except {
leaf-list permit-site {
type leafref {
path "/l3vpn-svc/sites/site/site-id";
}
description
"Site ID to be authorized.";
}
}
case permit-any-except {
leaf-list deny-site {
type leafref {
path "/l3vpn-svc/sites/site/site-id";
}
description
"Site ID to be denied.";
}
}
description
"Choice for cloud access policy. By
default, all sites in the IP VPN MUST
be authorized to access the cloud.";
}
container address-translation {
container nat44 {
leaf enabled {
type boolean;
default false;
description
"Controls whether or not Network address
translation from IPv4 to IPv4 (NAT44)
[RFC3022] is required.";
}
leaf nat44-customer-address {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
"Address to be used for network address
translation from IPv4 to IPv4. This is
to be used if the customer is providing
the IPv4 address. If the customer address
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 138]
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is not set, the model assumes that the
provider will allocate the address.";
}
description
"IPv4-to-IPv4 translation.";
}
description
"Container for NAT.";
}
description
"Cloud access configuration.";
}
description
"Container for cloud access configurations.";
}
description
"Grouping for VPN cloud definition.";
}
grouping multicast-rp-group-cfg {
choice group-format {
mandatory true;
case singleaddress {
leaf group-address {
type inet:ip-address;
description
"A single multicast group address.";
}
}
case startend {
leaf group-start {
type inet:ip-address;
description
"The first multicast group address in
the multicast group address range.";
}
leaf group-end {
type inet:ip-address;
description
"The last multicast group address in
the multicast group address range.";
}
}
description
"Choice for multicast group format.";
}
description
"This grouping defines multicast group or
multicast groups for RP-to-group mapping.";
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 139]
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}
grouping vpn-service-multicast {
container multicast {
if-feature multicast;
leaf enabled {
type boolean;
default false;
description
"Enables multicast.";
}
container customer-tree-flavors {
leaf-list tree-flavor {
type identityref {
base multicast-tree-type;
}
description
"Type of tree to be used.";
}
description
"Type of trees used by customer.";
}
container rp {
container rp-group-mappings {
list rp-group-mapping {
key id;
leaf id {
type uint16;
description
"Unique identifier for the mapping.";
}
container provider-managed {
leaf enabled {
type boolean;
default false;
description
"Set to true if the Rendezvous Point (RP)
must be a provider-managed node. Set to false
if it is a customer-managed node.";
}
leaf rp-redundancy {
type boolean;
default false;
description
"If true, a redundancy mechanism for the RP
is required.";
}
leaf optimal-traffic-delivery {
type boolean;
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default false;
description
"If true, the SP must ensure that
traffic uses an optimal path. An SP may use
Anycast RP or RP-tree-to-SPT switchover
architectures.";
}
description
"Parameters for a provider-managed RP.";
}
leaf rp-address {
when "../provider-managed/enabled = 'false'" {
description
"Relevant when the RP is not provider-managed.";
}
type inet:ip-address;
mandatory true;
description
"Defines the address of the RP.
Used if the RP is customer-managed.";
}
container groups {
list group {
key id;
leaf id {
type uint16;
description
"Identifier for the group.";
}
uses multicast-rp-group-cfg;
description
"List of multicast groups.";
}
description
"Multicast groups associated with the RP.";
}
description
"List of RP-to-group mappings.";
}
description
"RP-to-group mappings parameters.";
}
container rp-discovery {
leaf rp-discovery-type {
type identityref {
base multicast-rp-discovery-type;
}
default static-rp;
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description
"Type of RP discovery used.";
}
container bsr-candidates {
when "derived-from-or-self(../rp-discovery-type, "+
"'l3vpn-svc:bsr-rp')" {
description
"Only applicable if discovery type
is BSR-RP.";
}
leaf-list bsr-candidate-address {
type inet:ip-address;
description
"Address of BSR candidate.";
}
description
"Container for List of Customer
BSR candidate's addresses.";
}
description
"RP discovery parameters.";
}
description
"RP parameters.";
}
description
"Multicast global parameters for the VPN service.";
}
description
"Grouping for multicast VPN definition.";
}
grouping vpn-service-mpls {
leaf carrierscarrier {
if-feature carrierscarrier;
type boolean;
default false;
description
"The VPN is using CsC, and so MPLS is required.";
}
description
"Grouping for MPLS CsC definition.";
}
grouping customer-location-info {
container locations {
list location {
key location-id;
leaf location-id {
type svc-id;
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description
"Identifier for a particular location.";
}
leaf address {
type string;
description
"Address (number and street) of the site.";
}
leaf postal-code {
type string;
description
"Postal code of the site.";
}
leaf state {
type string;
description
"State of the site. This leaf can also be
used to describe a region for a country that
does not have states.";
}
leaf city {
type string;
description
"City of the site.";
}
leaf country-code {
type string {
pattern '[A-Z]{2}';
}
description
"Country of the site.
Expressed as ISO ALPHA-2 code.";
}
description
"Location of the site.";
}
description
"List of locations for the site.";
}
description
"This grouping defines customer location parameters.";
}
grouping site-group {
container groups {
list group {
key group-id;
leaf group-id {
type string;
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description
"Group-id the site belongs to.";
}
description
"List of group-ids.";
}
description
"Groups the site or site-network-access belongs to.";
}
description
"Grouping definition to assign
group-ids to site or site-network-access.";
}
grouping site-diversity {
container site-diversity {
if-feature site-diversity;
uses site-group;
description
"Diversity constraint type. All
site-network-accesses will inherit
the group values defined here.";
}
description
"This grouping defines site
diversity parameters.";
}
grouping access-diversity {
container access-diversity {
if-feature site-diversity;
uses site-group;
container constraints {
list constraint {
key constraint-type;
leaf constraint-type {
type identityref {
base placement-diversity;
}
description
"Diversity constraint type.";
}
container target {
choice target-flavor {
default id;
case id {
list group {
key group-id;
leaf group-id {
type string;
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description
"The constraint will be applied against
this particular group-id for this site
network access level.";
}
description
"List of group-ids associated with one specific
constraint for this site network access level.";
}
}
case all-accesses {
leaf all-other-accesses {
type empty;
description
"The constraint will be applied against
all other site network accesses of this site.";
}
}
case all-groups {
leaf all-other-groups {
type empty;
description
"The constraint will be applied against
all other groups managed by the customer.";
}
}
description
"Choice for the target flavor definition.";
}
description
"The constraint will be applied against a
Specific target, and the target can be a list
of group-ids,all other site network accesses of
this site, or all other groups managed by the
customer.";
}
description
"List of constraints.";
}
description
"Placement constraints for this site network access.";
}
description
"Diversity parameters.";
}
description
"This grouping defines access diversity parameters.";
}
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 145]
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grouping operational-requirements {
leaf requested-site-start {
type yang:date-and-time;
description
"Optional leaf indicating requested date and
time when the service at a particular site is
expected to start.";
}
leaf requested-site-stop {
type yang:date-and-time;
description
"Optional leaf indicating requested date and
time when the service at a particular site is
expected to stop.";
}
description
"This grouping defines some operational
parameters.";
}
grouping operational-requirements-ops {
leaf actual-site-start {
type yang:date-and-time;
config false;
description
"Optional leaf indicating actual date and
time when the service at a particular site
actually started.";
}
leaf actual-site-stop {
type yang:date-and-time;
config false;
description
"Optional leaf indicating actual date and
time when the service at a particular site
actually stopped.";
}
description
"This grouping defines some operational
parameters.";
}
grouping flow-definition {
container match-flow {
leaf dscp {
type inet:dscp;
description
"DSCP value.";
}
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leaf dot1p {
type uint8 {
range "0..7";
}
description
"802.1p matching.";
}
leaf ipv4-src-prefix {
type inet:ipv4-prefix;
description
"Match on IPv4 src address.";
}
leaf ipv6-src-prefix {
type inet:ipv6-prefix;
description
"Match on IPv6 src address.";
}
leaf ipv4-dst-prefix {
type inet:ipv4-prefix;
description
"Match on IPv4 dst address.";
}
leaf ipv6-dst-prefix {
type inet:ipv6-prefix;
description
"Match on IPv6 dst address.";
}
leaf l4-src-port {
type inet:port-number;
must "current() < ../l4-src-port-range/lower-port or "+
"current() > ../l4-src-port-range/upper-port" {
description
"If l4-src-port and l4-src-port-range/lower-port and
upper-port are set at the same time, l4-src-port
should not overlap with l4-src-port-range.";
}
description
"Match on Layer 4 src port.";
}
leaf-list target-sites {
if-feature target-sites;
type svc-id;
description
"Identify a site as traffic destination.";
}
container l4-src-port-range {
leaf lower-port {
type inet:port-number;
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description
"Lower boundary for port.";
}
leaf upper-port {
type inet:port-number;
must ". >= ../lower-port" {
description
"Upper boundary for port. If it
exists, the upper boundary must be
higher than the lower boundary.";
}
description
"Upper boundary for port.";
}
description
"Match on Layer 4 src port range. When
only the lower-port is present, it represents
a single port. When both the lower-port and
upper-port are specified, it implies
a range inclusive of both values.";
}
leaf l4-dst-port {
type inet:port-number;
must "current() < ../l4-dst-port-range/lower-port or "+
"current() > ../l4-dst-port-range/upper-port" {
description
"If l4-dst-port and l4-dst-port-range/lower-port
and upper-port are set at the same time,
l4-dst-port should not overlap with
l4-src-port-range.";
}
description
"Match on Layer 4 dst port.";
}
container l4-dst-port-range {
leaf lower-port {
type inet:port-number;
description
"Lower boundary for port.";
}
leaf upper-port {
type inet:port-number;
must ". >= ../lower-port" {
description
"Upper boundary must be
higher than lower boundary.";
}
description
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 148]
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"Upper boundary for port. If it exists,
upper boundary must be higher than lower
boundary.";
}
description
"Match on Layer 4 dst port range. When only
lower-port is present, it represents a single
port. When both lower-port and upper-port are
specified, it implies a range inclusive of both
values.";
}
leaf protocol-field {
type union {
type uint8;
type identityref {
base protocol-type;
}
}
description
"Match on IPv4 protocol or IPv6 Next Header field.";
}
description
"Describes flow-matching criteria.";
}
description
"Flow definition based on criteria.";
}
grouping site-service-basic {
leaf svc-input-bandwidth {
type uint64;
units bps;
mandatory true;
description
"From the customer site's perspective, the service
input bandwidth of the connection or download
bandwidth from the SP to the site.";
}
leaf svc-output-bandwidth {
type uint64;
units bps;
mandatory true;
description
"From the customer site's perspective, the service
output bandwidth of the connection or upload
bandwidth from the site to the SP.";
}
leaf svc-mtu {
type uint16;
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 149]
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units bytes;
mandatory true;
description
"MTU at service level. If the service is IP,
it refers to the IP MTU. If CsC is enabled,
the requested 'svc-mtu' leaf will refer to the
MPLS MTU and not to the IP MTU.";
}
description
"Defines basic service parameters for a site.";
}
grouping site-protection {
container traffic-protection {
if-feature fast-reroute;
leaf enabled {
type boolean;
default false;
description
"Enables traffic protection of access link.";
}
description
"Fast Reroute service parameters for the site.";
}
description
"Defines protection service parameters for a site.";
}
grouping site-service-mpls {
container carrierscarrier {
if-feature carrierscarrier;
leaf signalling-type {
type enumeration {
enum ldp {
description
"Use LDP as the signalling protocol
between the PE and the CE. In this case,
an IGP routing protocol must also be activated.";
}
enum bgp {
description
"Use BGP (as per RFC 8277) as the signalling protocol
between the PE and the CE.
In this case, BGP must also be configured as
the routing protocol.";
}
}
default bgp;
description
"MPLS signalling type.";
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}
description
"This container is used when the customer provides
MPLS-based services. This is only used in the case
of CsC (i.e., a customer builds an MPLS service using
an IP VPN to carry its traffic).";
}
description
"Defines MPLS service parameters for a site.";
}
grouping site-service-qos-profile {
container qos {
if-feature qos;
container qos-classification-policy {
list rule {
key id;
ordered-by user;
leaf id {
type string;
description
"A description identifying the
qos-classification-policy rule.";
}
choice match-type {
default match-flow;
case match-flow {
uses flow-definition;
}
case match-application {
leaf match-application {
type identityref {
base customer-application;
}
description
"Defines the application to match.";
}
}
description
"Choice for classification.";
}
leaf target-class-id {
type string;
description
"Identification of the class of service.
This identifier is internal to the administration.";
}
description
"List of marking rules.";
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}
description
"Configuration of the traffic classification policy.";
}
container qos-profile {
choice qos-profile {
description
"Choice for QoS profile.
Can be standard profile or customized profile.";
case standard {
description
"Standard QoS profile.";
leaf profile {
type leafref {
path "/l3vpn-svc/vpn-profiles/valid-provider-identifiers"+
"/qos-profile-identifier/id";
}
description
"QoS profile to be used.";
}
}
case custom {
description
"Customized QoS profile.";
container classes {
if-feature qos-custom;
list class {
key class-id;
leaf class-id {
type string;
description
"Identification of the class of service.
This identifier is internal to the
administration.";
}
leaf direction {
type identityref {
base qos-profile-direction;
}
default both;
description
"The direction to which the QoS profile
is applied.";
}
leaf rate-limit {
type decimal64 {
fraction-digits 5;
range "0..100";
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 152]
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}
units percent;
description
"To be used if the class must be rate-limited.
Expressed as percentage of the service
bandwidth.";
}
container latency {
choice flavor {
case lowest {
leaf use-lowest-latency {
type empty;
description
"The traffic class should use the path with the
lowest latency.";
}
}
case boundary {
leaf latency-boundary {
type uint16;
units msec;
default 400;
description
"The traffic class should use a path with a
defined maximum latency.";
}
}
description
"Latency constraint on the traffic class.";
}
description
"Latency constraint on the traffic class.";
}
container jitter {
choice flavor {
case lowest {
leaf use-lowest-jitter {
type empty;
description
"The traffic class should use the path with the
lowest jitter.";
}
}
case boundary {
leaf latency-boundary {
type uint32;
units usec;
default 40000;
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description
"The traffic class should use a path with a
defined maximum jitter.";
}
}
description
"Jitter constraint on the traffic class.";
}
description
"Jitter constraint on the traffic class.";
}
container bandwidth {
leaf guaranteed-bw-percent {
type decimal64 {
fraction-digits 5;
range "0..100";
}
units percent;
mandatory true;
description
"To be used to define the guaranteed bandwidth
as a percentage of the available service bandwidth.";
}
leaf end-to-end {
type empty;
description
"Used if the bandwidth reservation
must be done on the MPLS network too.";
}
description
"Bandwidth constraint on the traffic class.";
}
description
"List of classes of services.";
}
description
"Container for list of classes of services.";
}
}
}
description
"QoS profile configuration.";
}
description
"QoS configuration.";
}
description
"This grouping defines QoS parameters for a site.";
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}
grouping site-security-authentication {
container authentication {
description
"Authentication parameters.";
}
description
"This grouping defines authentication parameters for a site.";
}
grouping site-security-encryption {
container encryption {
if-feature encryption;
leaf enabled {
type boolean;
default false;
description
"If true, traffic encryption on the connection is required.";
}
leaf layer {
when "../enabled = 'true'" {
description
"Require a value for layer when enabled is true.";
}
type enumeration {
enum layer2 {
description
"Encryption will occur at Layer 2.";
}
enum layer3 {
description
"Encryption will occur at Layer 3.
For example, IPsec may be used when
a customer requests Layer 3 encryption.";
}
}
description
"Layer on which encryption is applied.";
}
container encryption-profile {
choice profile {
case provider-profile {
leaf profile-name {
type leafref {
path "/l3vpn-svc/vpn-profiles/valid-provider-identifiers"+
"/encryption-profile-identifier/id";
}
description
"Name of the SP profile to be applied.";
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 155]
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}
}
case customer-profile {
leaf algorithm {
type string;
description
"Encryption algorithm to be used.";
}
choice key-type {
default psk;
case psk {
leaf preshared-key {
type string;
description
"Pre-Shared Key (PSK) coming from the customer.";
}
}
description
"Type of keys to be used.";
}
}
description
"Choice of encryption profile. The encryption
profile can be the provider profile or customer profile.";
}
description
"Profile of encryption to be applied.";
}
description
"Encryption parameters.";
}
description
"This grouping defines encryption parameters for a site.";
}
grouping site-attachment-bearer {
container bearer {
container requested-type {
if-feature requested-type;
leaf requested-type {
type string;
description
"Type of requested bearer: Ethernet, DSL,
Wireless, etc. Operator specific.";
}
leaf strict {
type boolean;
default false;
description
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"Defines whether requested-type is a preference
or a strict requirement.";
}
description
"Container for requested-type.";
}
leaf always-on {
if-feature always-on;
type boolean;
default true;
description
"Request for an always-on access type.
For example, this could mean no dial access type.";
}
leaf bearer-reference {
if-feature bearer-reference;
type string;
description
"This is an internal reference for the SP.";
}
description
"Bearer-specific parameters.
To be augmented.";
}
description
"Defines physical properties of a site attachment.";
}
grouping site-routing {
container routing-protocols {
list routing-protocol {
key type;
leaf type {
type identityref {
base routing-protocol-type;
}
description
"Type of routing protocol.";
}
container ospf {
when "derived-from-or-self(../type, 'l3vpn-svc:ospf')" {
description
"Only applies when protocol is OSPF.";
}
if-feature rtg-ospf;
leaf-list address-family {
type address-family;
min-elements "1";
description
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"If OSPF is used on this site, this node
contains a configured value. This node
contains at least one address family
to be activated.";
}
leaf area-address {
type yang:dotted-quad;
mandatory true;
description
"Area address.";
}
leaf metric {
type uint16;
default 1;
description
"Metric of the PE-CE link. It is used
in the routing state calculation and
path selection.";
}
container sham-links {
if-feature rtg-ospf-sham-link;
list sham-link {
key target-site;
leaf target-site {
type svc-id;
description
"Target site for the sham link connection.
The site is referred to by its ID.";
}
leaf metric {
type uint16;
default 1;
description
"Metric of the sham link. It is used in
the routing state calculation and path
selection. The default value is set
to 1.";
}
description
"Creates a sham link with another site.";
}
description
"List of sham links.";
}
description
"OSPF-specific configuration.";
}
container bgp {
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when "derived-from-or-self(../type, 'l3vpn-svc:bgp')" {
description
"Only applies when protocol is BGP.";
}
if-feature rtg-bgp;
leaf autonomous-system {
type uint32;
mandatory true;
description
"Customer AS number in case the customer
requests BGP routing.";
}
leaf-list address-family {
type address-family;
min-elements "1";
description
"If BGP is used on this site, this node
contains a configured value. This node
contains at least one address family
to be activated.";
}
description
"BGP-specific configuration.";
}
container static {
when "derived-from-or-self(../type, 'l3vpn-svc:static')" {
description
"Only applies when protocol is static.
BGP activation requires the SP to know
the address of the customer peer. When
BGP is enabled, the 'static-address'
allocation type for the IP connection
MUST be used.";
}
container cascaded-lan-prefixes {
list ipv4-lan-prefixes {
if-feature ipv4;
key "lan next-hop";
leaf lan {
type inet:ipv4-prefix;
description
"LAN prefixes.";
}
leaf lan-tag {
type string;
description
"Internal tag to be used in VPN policies.";
}
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 159]
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leaf next-hop {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
"Next-hop address to use on the customer side.";
}
description
"List of LAN prefixes for the site.";
}
list ipv6-lan-prefixes {
if-feature ipv6;
key "lan next-hop";
leaf lan {
type inet:ipv6-prefix;
description
"LAN prefixes.";
}
leaf lan-tag {
type string;
description
"Internal tag to be used in VPN policies.";
}
leaf next-hop {
type inet:ipv6-address;
description
"Next-hop address to use on the customer side.";
}
description
"List of LAN prefixes for the site.";
}
description
"LAN prefixes from the customer.";
}
description
"Configuration specific to static routing.";
}
container rip {
when "derived-from-or-self(../type, 'l3vpn-svc:rip')" {
description
"Only applies when the protocol is RIP. For IPv4,
the model assumes that RIP version 2 is used.";
}
if-feature rtg-rip;
leaf-list address-family {
type address-family;
min-elements "1";
description
"If RIP is used on this site, this node
contains a configured value. This node
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contains at least one address family
to be activated.";
}
description
"Configuration specific to RIP routing.";
}
container vrrp {
when "derived-from-or-self(../type, 'l3vpn-svc:vrrp')" {
description
"Only applies when protocol is VRRP.";
}
if-feature rtg-vrrp;
leaf-list address-family {
type address-family;
min-elements "1";
description
"If VRRP is used on this site, this node
contains a configured value. This node contains
at least one address family to be activated.";
}
description
"Configuration specific to VRRP routing.";
}
description
"List of routing protocols used on
the site. This list can be augmented.";
}
description
"Defines routing protocols.";
}
description
"Grouping for routing protocols.";
}
grouping site-attachment-ip-connection {
container ip-connection {
container ipv4 {
if-feature ipv4;
leaf address-allocation-type {
type identityref {
base address-allocation-type;
}
must "not(derived-from-or-self(current(), 'l3vpn-svc:slaac') or "+
"derived-from-or-self(current(), "+
"'l3vpn-svc:provider-dhcp-slaac'))" {
error-message "SLAAC is only applicable to IPv6";
}
description
"Defines how addresses are allocated.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 161]
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If there is no value for the address
allocation type, then IPv4 is not enabled.";
}
container provider-dhcp {
when "derived-from-or-self(../address-allocation-type, "+
"'l3vpn-svc:provider-dhcp')" {
description
"Only applies when addresses are allocated by DHCP.";
}
leaf provider-address {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
"Address of provider side. If provider-address is not
specified, then prefix length should not be specified
either. It also implies provider-dhcp allocation is
not enabled. If provider-address is specified, then
the prefix length may or may not be specified.";
}
leaf prefix-length {
type uint8 {
range "0..32";
}
must "(../provider-address)" {
error-message
"If the prefix length is specified, provider-address
must also be specified.";
description
"If the prefix length is specified, provider-address
must also be specified.";
}
description
"Subnet prefix length expressed in bits.
If not specified, or specified as zero,
this means the customer leaves the actual
prefix length value to the provider.";
}
choice address-assign {
default number;
case number {
leaf number-of-dynamic-address {
type uint16;
default 1;
description
"Describes the number of IP addresses
the customer requires.";
}
}
case explicit {
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 162]
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container customer-addresses {
list address-group {
key "group-id";
leaf group-id {
type string;
description
"Group-id for the address range from
start-address to end-address.";
}
leaf start-address {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
"First address.";
}
leaf end-address {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
"Last address.";
}
description
"Describes IP addresses allocated by DHCP.
When only start-address or only end-address
is present, it represents a single address.
When both start-address and end-address are
specified, it implies a range inclusive of both
addresses. If no address is specified, it implies
customer addresses group is not supported.";
}
description
"Container for customer addresses is allocated by DHCP.";
}
}
description
"Choice for the way to assign addresses.";
}
description
"DHCP allocated addresses related parameters.";
}
container dhcp-relay {
when "derived-from-or-self(../address-allocation-type, "+
"'l3vpn-svc:provider-dhcp-relay')" {
description
"Only applies when provider is required to implement
DHCP relay function.";
}
leaf provider-address {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 163]
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"Address of provider side. If provider-address is not
specified, then prefix length should not be specified
either. It also implies provider-dhcp allocation is
not enabled. If provider-address is specified, then
prefix length may or may not be specified.";
}
leaf prefix-length {
type uint8 {
range "0..32";
}
must "(../provider-address)" {
error-message
"If prefix length is specified, provider-address
must also be specified.";
description
"If prefix length is specified, provider-address
must also be specified.";
}
description
"Subnet prefix length expressed in bits. If not
specified, or specified as zero, this means the
customer leaves the actual prefix length value
to the provider.";
}
container customer-dhcp-servers {
leaf-list server-ip-address {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
"IP address of customer DHCP server.";
}
description
"Container for list of customer DHCP servers.";
}
description
"DHCP relay provided by operator.";
}
container addresses {
when "derived-from-or-self(../address-allocation-type, "+
"'l3vpn-svc:static-address')" {
description
"Only applies when protocol allocation type is static.";
}
leaf provider-address {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
"IPv4 Address List of the provider side.
When the protocol allocation type is static,
the provider address must be configured.";
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 164]
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}
leaf customer-address {
type inet:ipv4-address;
description
"IPv4 Address of customer side.";
}
leaf prefix-length {
type uint8 {
range "0..32";
}
description
"Subnet prefix length expressed in bits.
It is applied to both provider-address
and customer-address.";
}
description
"Describes IPv4 addresses used.";
}
description
"IPv4-specific parameters.";
}
container ipv6 {
if-feature ipv6;
leaf address-allocation-type {
type identityref {
base address-allocation-type;
}
description
"Defines how addresses are allocated.
If there is no value for the address
allocation type, then IPv6 is
not enabled.";
}
container provider-dhcp {
when "derived-from-or-self(../address-allocation-type, "+
"'l3vpn-svc:provider-dhcp') "+
"or derived-from-or-self(../address-allocation-type, "+
"'l3vpn-svc:provider-dhcp-slaac')" {
description
"Only applies when addresses are allocated by DHCP.";
}
leaf provider-address {
type inet:ipv6-address;
description
"Address of the provider side. If provider-address
is not specified, then prefix length should not be
specified either. It also implies provider-dhcp
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 165]
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allocation is not enabled. If provider-address is
specified, then prefix length may or may
not be specified.";
}
leaf prefix-length {
type uint8 {
range "0..128";
}
must "(../provider-address)" {
error-message
"If prefix length is specified, provider-address
must also be specified.";
description
"If prefix length is specified, provider-address
must also be specified.";
}
description
"Subnet prefix length expressed in bits. If not
specified, or specified as zero, this means the
customer leaves the actual prefix length value
to the provider.";
}
choice address-assign {
default number;
case number {
leaf number-of-dynamic-address {
type uint16;
default 1;
description
"Describes the number of IP addresses the customer
requires.";
}
}
case explicit {
container customer-addresses {
list address-group {
key "group-id";
leaf group-id {
type string;
description
"Group-id for the address range from
start-address to end-address.";
}
leaf start-address {
type inet:ipv6-address;
description
"First address.";
}
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 166]
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leaf end-address {
type inet:ipv6-address;
description
"Last address.";
}
description
"Describes IP addresses allocated by DHCP. When only
start-address or only end-address is present, it
represents a single address. When both start-address
and end-address are specified, it implies a range
inclusive of both addresses. If no address is
specified, it implies customer addresses group is
not supported.";
}
description
"Container for customer addresses allocated by DHCP.";
}
}
description
"Choice for the way to assign addresses.";
}
description
"DHCP allocated addresses related parameters.";
}
container dhcp-relay {
when "derived-from-or-self(../address-allocation-type, "+
"'l3vpn-svc:provider-dhcp-relay')" {
description
"Only applies when the provider is required
to implement DHCP relay function.";
}
leaf provider-address {
type inet:ipv6-address;
description
"Address of the provider side. If provider-address is
not specified, then prefix length should not be
specified either. It also implies provider-dhcp
allocation is not enabled. If provider address
is specified, then prefix length may or may
not be specified.";
}
leaf prefix-length {
type uint8 {
range "0..128";
}
must "(../provider-address)" {
error-message
"If prefix length is specified, provider-address
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 167]
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must also be specified.";
description
"If prefix length is specified, provider-address
must also be specified.";
}
description
"Subnet prefix length expressed in bits. If not
specified, or specified as zero, this means the
customer leaves the actual prefix length value
to the provider.";
}
container customer-dhcp-servers {
leaf-list server-ip-address {
type inet:ipv6-address;
description
"This node contains the IP address of
the customer DHCP server. If the DHCP relay
function is implemented by the
provider, this node contains the
configured value.";
}
description
"Container for list of customer DHCP servers.";
}
description
"DHCP relay provided by operator.";
}
container addresses {
when "derived-from-or-self(../address-allocation-type, "+
"'l3vpn-svc:static-address')" {
description
"Only applies when protocol allocation type is static.";
}
leaf provider-address {
type inet:ipv6-address;
description
"IPv6 Address of the provider side. When the protocol
allocation type is static, the provider address
must be configured.";
}
leaf customer-address {
type inet:ipv6-address;
description
"The IPv6 Address of the customer side.";
}
leaf prefix-length {
type uint8 {
range "0..128";
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 168]
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}
description
"Subnet prefix length expressed in bits.
It is applied to both provider-address and
customer-address.";
}
description
"Describes IPv6 addresses used.";
}
description
"IPv6-specific parameters.";
}
container oam {
container bfd {
if-feature bfd;
leaf enabled {
type boolean;
default false;
description
"If true, BFD activation is required.";
}
choice holdtime {
default fixed;
case fixed {
leaf fixed-value {
type uint32;
units msec;
description
"Expected BFD holdtime expressed in msec. The customer
may impose some fixed values for the holdtime period
if the provider allows the customer use this function.
If the provider doesn't allow the customer to use this
function, the fixed-value will not be set.";
}
}
case profile {
leaf profile-name {
type leafref {
path "/l3vpn-svc/vpn-profiles/valid-provider-identifiers/"+
"bfd-profile-identifier/id";
}
description
"Well-known SP profile name. The provider can propose
some profiles to the customer, depending on the service
level the customer wants to achieve. Profile names
must be communicated to the customer.";
}
description
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 169]
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"Well-known SP profile.";
}
description
"Choice for holdtime flavor.";
}
description
"Container for BFD.";
}
description
"Defines the Operations, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM)
mechanisms used on the connection. BFD is set as a fault
detection mechanism, but the 'oam' container can easily
be augmented by other mechanisms";
}
description
"Defines connection parameters.";
}
description
"This grouping defines IP connection parameters.";
}
grouping site-service-multicast {
container multicast {
if-feature multicast;
leaf multicast-site-type {
type enumeration {
enum receiver-only {
description
"The site only has receivers.";
}
enum source-only {
description
"The site only has sources.";
}
enum source-receiver {
description
"The site has both sources and receivers.";
}
}
default source-receiver;
description
"Type of multicast site.";
}
container multicast-address-family {
leaf ipv4 {
if-feature ipv4;
type boolean;
default false;
description
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 170]
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"Enables IPv4 multicast.";
}
leaf ipv6 {
if-feature ipv6;
type boolean;
default false;
description
"Enables IPv6 multicast.";
}
description
"Defines protocol to carry multicast.";
}
leaf protocol-type {
type enumeration {
enum host {
description
"Hosts are directly connected to the provider network.
Host protocols such as IGMP or MLD are required.";
}
enum router {
description
"Hosts are behind a customer router.
PIM will be implemented.";
}
enum both {
description
"Some hosts are behind a customer router, and
some others are directly connected to the
provider network. Both host and routing protocols
must be used. Typically, IGMP and PIM will be
implemented.";
}
}
default "both";
description
"Multicast protocol type to be used with the customer site.";
}
description
"Multicast parameters for the site.";
}
description
"Multicast parameters for the site.";
}
grouping site-management {
container management {
leaf type {
type identityref {
base management;
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 171]
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}
mandatory true;
description
"Management type of the connection.";
}
description
"Management configuration.";
}
description
"Management parameters for the site.";
}
grouping site-devices {
container devices {
when "derived-from-or-self(../management/type, "+
"'l3vpn-svc:provider-managed') or "+
"derived-from-or-self(../management/type, 'l3vpn-svc:co-managed')" {
description
"Applicable only for provider-managed or
co-managed device.";
}
list device {
key device-id;
leaf device-id {
type svc-id;
description
"Identifier for the device.";
}
leaf location {
type leafref {
path "../../../locations/"+
"location/location-id";
}
mandatory true;
description
"Location of the device.";
}
container management {
when "derived-from-or-self(../../../management/type,"+
"'l3vpn-svc:co-managed')" {
description
"Applicable only for co-managed device.";
}
leaf address-family {
type address-family;
description
"Address family used for management.";
}
leaf address {
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 172]
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when "(../address-family)" {
description
"If address-family is specified, then address should
also be specified. If address-family is not specified,
then address should also not be specified.";
}
type inet:ip-address;
mandatory true;
description
"Management address.";
}
description
"Management configuration. Applicable only for
co-managed device.";
}
description
"List of devices requested by customer.";
}
description
"Device configuration.";
}
description
"Grouping for device allocation.";
}
grouping site-vpn-flavor {
leaf site-vpn-flavor {
type identityref {
base site-vpn-flavor;
}
default site-vpn-flavor-single;
description
"Defines the way the VPN multiplexing is done, e.g., whether
the site belongs to a single VPN site or a multiVPN; or, in the case
of a multiVPN, whether the logical accesses of the sites belong
to the same set of VPNs or each logical access maps to
different VPNs.";
}
description
"Grouping for site VPN flavor.";
}
grouping site-vpn-policy {
container vpn-policies {
list vpn-policy {
key vpn-policy-id;
leaf vpn-policy-id {
type svc-id;
description
"Unique identifier for the VPN policy.";
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 173]
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}
list entries {
key id;
leaf id {
type svc-id;
description
"Unique identifier for the policy entry.";
}
container filters {
list filter {
key type;
ordered-by user;
leaf type {
type identityref {
base vpn-policy-filter-type;
}
description
"Type of VPN Policy filter.";
}
leaf-list lan-tag {
when "derived-from-or-self(../type, 'l3vpn-svc:lan')" {
description
"Only applies when the VPN Policy filter is a
LAN Tag filter.";
}
if-feature lan-tag;
type string;
description
"List of 'lan-tag' items to be matched. LAN Tag
is an Internal tag to be used in VPN policies ";
}
leaf-list ipv4-lan-prefix {
when "derived-from-or-self(../type, 'l3vpn-svc:ipv4')" {
description
"Only applies when VPN Policy filter is IPv4 Prefix filter.";
}
if-feature ipv4;
type inet:ipv4-prefix;
description
"List of IPv4 prefixes as LAN Prefixes to be matched.";
}
leaf-list ipv6-lan-prefix {
when "derived-from-or-self(../type, 'l3vpn-svc:ipv6')" {
description
"Only applies when VPN Policy filter is IPv6 Prefix filter.";
}
if-feature ipv6;
type inet:ipv6-prefix;
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 174]
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description
"List of IPv6 prefixes as LAN prefixes to be matched.";
}
description
"List of filters used on the site. This list can
be augmented.";
}
description
"If a more-granular VPN attachment is necessary, filtering can
be used. If used, it permits the splitting of site LANs among
multiple VPNs. The Site LAN can be split based on either LAN
Tag or LAN prefix. If no filter is used, all the LANs will be
part of the same VPNs with the same role.";
}
list vpn {
key vpn-id;
leaf vpn-id {
type leafref {
path "/l3vpn-svc/vpn-services/"+
"vpn-service/vpn-id";
}
mandatory true;
description
"Reference to an IP VPN.";
}
leaf site-role {
type identityref {
base site-role;
}
default any-to-any-role;
description
"Role of the site in the IP VPN.";
}
description
"List of VPNs the LAN is associated with.";
}
description
"List of entries for export policy.";
}
description
"List of VPN policies.";
}
description
"VPN policy.";
}
description
"VPN policy parameters for the site.";
}
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 175]
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grouping site-maximum-routes {
container maximum-routes {
list address-family {
key af;
leaf af {
type address-family;
description
"Address family.";
}
leaf maximum-routes {
type uint32;
description
"Maximum prefixes the VRF can accept
for this address family.";
}
description
"List of address families.";
}
description
"Defines 'maximum-routes' for the VRF.";
}
description
"Defines 'maximum-routes' for the site.";
}
grouping site-security {
container security {
uses site-security-authentication;
uses site-security-encryption;
description
"Site-specific security parameters.";
}
description
"Grouping for security parameters.";
}
grouping site-service {
container service {
uses site-service-qos-profile;
uses site-service-mpls;
uses site-service-multicast;
description
"Service parameters on the attachment.";
}
description
"Grouping for service parameters.";
}
grouping site-network-access-service {
container service {
uses site-service-basic;
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 176]
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uses site-service-qos-profile;
uses site-service-mpls;
uses site-service-multicast;
description
"Service parameters on the attachment.";
}
description
"Grouping for service parameters.";
}
grouping vpn-extranet {
container extranet-vpns {
if-feature extranet-vpn;
list extranet-vpn {
key vpn-id;
leaf vpn-id {
type svc-id;
description
"Identifies the target VPN the local VPN want to access.";
}
leaf local-sites-role {
type identityref {
base site-role;
}
default any-to-any-role;
description
"This describes the role of the
local sites in the target VPN topology. In the any-to-any VPN
service topology, the local sites must have the same role, which
will be 'any-to-any-role'. In the Hub-and-Spoke VPN service
topology or the Hub-and-Spoke disjoint VPN service topology,
the local sites must have a Hub role or a Spoke role.";
}
description
"List of extranet VPNs or target VPNs the local VPN is
attached to.";
}
description
"Container for extranet VPN configuration.";
}
description
"Grouping for extranet VPN configuration.
This provides an easy way to interconnect
all sites from two VPNs.";
}
grouping site-attachment-availability {
container availability {
leaf access-priority {
type uint32;
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 177]
RFC 8299 YANG Data Model for L3VPN Service Delivery January 2018
default 100;
description
"Defines the priority for the access.
The higher the access-priority value,
the higher the preference of the
access will be.";
}
description
"Availability parameters (used for multihoming).";
}
description
"Defines availability parameters for a site.";
}
grouping access-vpn-policy {
container vpn-attachment {
choice attachment-flavor {
case vpn-policy-id {
leaf vpn-policy-id {
type leafref {
path "../../../../"+
"vpn-policies/vpn-policy/"+
"vpn-policy-id";
}
description
"Reference to a VPN policy. When referencing VPN
policy for attachment, the vpn-policy-id must be
configured.";
}
}
case vpn-id {
leaf vpn-id {
type leafref {
path "/l3vpn-svc/vpn-services"+
"/vpn-service/vpn-id";
}
description
"Reference to an IP VPN. Referencing a vpn-id provides
an easy way to attach a particular logical access to
a VPN. In this case, vpn-id must be configured.";
}
leaf site-role {
type identityref {
base site-role;
}
default any-to-any-role;
description
"Role of the site in the IP VPN. When referencing a vpn-id,
the site-role setting must be added to express the role of
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 178]
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the site in the target VPN service topology.";
}
}
mandatory true;
description
"Choice for VPN attachment flavor. A choice is implemented
to allow the user to choose the flavor that provides the
best fit.";
}
description
"Defines VPN attachment of a site.";
}
description
"Defines the VPN attachment rules for
a site's logical access.";
}
grouping vpn-profile-cfg {
container valid-provider-identifiers {
list cloud-identifier {
if-feature cloud-access;
key id;
leaf id {
type string;
description
"Identification of cloud service.
Local administration meaning.";
}
description
"List for Cloud Identifiers.";
}
list encryption-profile-identifier {
key id;
leaf id {
type string;
description
"Identification of the SP encryption profile
to be used. Local administration meaning.";
}
description
"List for encryption profile identifiers.";
}
list qos-profile-identifier {
key id;
leaf id {
type string;
description
"Identification of the QoS Profile to be used.
Local administration meaning.";
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 179]
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}
description
"List for QoS Profile Identifiers.";
}
list bfd-profile-identifier {
key id;
leaf id {
type string;
description
"Identification of the SP BFD Profile to be used.
Local administration meaning.";
}
description
"List for BFD Profile identifiers.";
}
nacm:default-deny-write;
description
"Container for Valid Provider Identifies.";
}
description
"Grouping for VPN Profile configuration.";
}
grouping vpn-svc-cfg {
leaf vpn-id {
type svc-id;
description
"VPN identifier. Local administration meaning.";
}
leaf customer-name {
type string;
description
"Name of the customer that actually uses the VPN service.
In the case that any intermediary (e.g., Tier-2 provider
or partner) sells the VPN service to their end user
on behalf of the original service provider (e.g., Tier-1
provider), the original service provider may require the
customer name to provide smooth activation/commissioning
and operation for the service.";
}
leaf vpn-service-topology {
type identityref {
base vpn-topology;
}
default any-to-any;
description
"VPN service topology.";
}
uses vpn-service-cloud-access;
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 180]
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uses vpn-service-multicast;
uses vpn-service-mpls;
uses vpn-extranet;
description
"Grouping for VPN service configuration.";
}
grouping site-top-level-cfg {
uses operational-requirements;
uses customer-location-info;
uses site-devices;
uses site-diversity;
uses site-management;
uses site-vpn-policy;
uses site-vpn-flavor;
uses site-maximum-routes;
uses site-security;
uses site-service;
uses site-protection;
uses site-routing;
description
"Grouping for site top-level configuration.";
}
grouping site-network-access-top-level-cfg {
leaf site-network-access-type {
type identityref {
base site-network-access-type;
}
default point-to-point;
description
"Describes the type of connection, e.g.,
point-to-point or multipoint.";
}
choice location-flavor {
case location {
when "derived-from-or-self(../../management/type, "+
"'l3vpn-svc:customer-managed')" {
description
"Applicable only for customer-managed device.";
}
leaf location-reference {
type leafref {
path "../../../locations/location/location-id";
}
description
"Location of the site-network-access.";
}
}
case device {
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when "derived-from-or-self(../../management/type, "+
"'l3vpn-svc:provider-managed') or "+
"derived-from-or-self(../../management/type, "+
"'l3vpn-svc:co-managed')" {
description
"Applicable only for provider-managed or co-managed device.";
}
leaf device-reference {
type leafref {
path "../../../devices/device/device-id";
}
description
"Identifier of CE to use.";
}
}
mandatory true;
description
"Choice of how to describe the site's location.";
}
uses access-diversity;
uses site-attachment-bearer;
uses site-attachment-ip-connection;
uses site-security;
uses site-network-access-service;
uses site-routing;
uses site-attachment-availability;
uses access-vpn-policy;
description
"Grouping for site network access top-level configuration.";
}
/* Main blocks */
container l3vpn-svc {
container vpn-profiles {
uses vpn-profile-cfg;
description
"Container for VPN Profiles.";
}
container vpn-services {
list vpn-service {
key vpn-id;
uses vpn-svc-cfg;
description
"List of VPN services.";
}
description
"Top-level container for the VPN services.";
}
container sites {
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list site {
key site-id;
leaf site-id {
type svc-id;
description
"Identifier of the site.";
}
uses site-top-level-cfg;
uses operational-requirements-ops;
container site-network-accesses {
list site-network-access {
key site-network-access-id;
leaf site-network-access-id {
type svc-id;
description
"Identifier for the access.";
}
uses site-network-access-top-level-cfg;
description
"List of accesses for a site.";
}
description
"List of accesses for a site.";
}
description
"List of sites.";
}
description
"Container for sites.";
}
description
"Main container for L3VPN service configuration.";
}
}
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10. Security Considerations
The YANG module specified in this document defines a schema for data
that is designed to be accessed via network management protocols such
as NETCONF [RFC6241] or RESTCONF [RFC8040]. The lowest NETCONF layer
is the secure transport layer, and the mandatory-to-implement secure
transport is Secure Shell (SSH) [RFC6242]. The lowest RESTCONF layer
is HTTPS, and the mandatory-to-implement secure transport is TLS
[RFC5246].
The NETCONF access control model [RFC6536]provides the means to
restrict access for particular NETCONF or RESTCONF users to a
preconfigured subset of all available NETCONF or RESTCONF protocol
operations and content.
There are a number of data nodes defined in this YANG module that are
writable/creatable/deletable (i.e., config true, which is the
default). These data nodes may be considered sensitive or vulnerable
in some network environments. Write operations (e.g., edit-config)
to these data nodes without proper protection can have a negative
effect on network operations. These are the subtrees and data nodes
and their sensitivity/vulnerability:
o /l3vpn-svc/vpn-services/vpn-service
The entries in the list above include the whole vpn service
configurations which the customer subscribes, and indirectly
create or modify the PE and CE device configurations. Unexpected
changes to these entries could lead to service disruption and/or
network misbehavior.
o /l3vpn-svc/sites/site
The entries in the list above include the customer site
configurations. As above, unexpected changes to these entries
could lead to service disruption and/or network misbehavior.
Some of the readable data nodes in this YANG module may be considered
sensitive or vulnerable in some network environments. It is thus
important to control read access (e.g., via get, get-config, or
notification) to these data nodes. These are the subtrees and data
nodes and their sensitivity/vulnerability:
o /l3vpn-svc/vpn-services/vpn-service
o /l3vpn-svc/sites/site
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The entries in the lists above include customer-proprietary or
confidential information, e.g., customer-name, site location, what
service the customer subscribes.
The data model defines some security parameters than can be extended
via augmentation as part of the customer service request; those
parameters are described in Section 6.9.
11. IANA Considerations
IANA has assigned a new URI from the "IETF XML Registry" [RFC3688].
URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-l3vpn-svc
Registrant Contact: The IESG
XML: N/A; the requested URI is an XML namespace.
IANA has recorded a YANG module name in the "YANG Module Names"
registry [RFC6020] as follows:
Name: ietf-l3vpn-svc
Namespace: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-l3vpn-svc
Prefix: l3vpn-svc
Reference: RFC 8299
IANA previously assigned the URI and YANG module as described in
[RFC8049]. IANA has updated the references for these entries to
refer to this document.
12. References
12.1. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
.
[RFC3022] Srisuresh, P. and K. Egevang, "Traditional IP Network
Address Translator (Traditional NAT)", RFC 3022,
DOI 10.17487/RFC3022, January 2001,
.
[RFC3688] Mealling, M., "The IETF XML Registry", BCP 81, RFC 3688,
DOI 10.17487/RFC3688, January 2004,
.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 185]
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[RFC4364] Rosen, E. and Y. Rekhter, "BGP/MPLS IP Virtual Private
Networks (VPNs)", RFC 4364, DOI 10.17487/RFC4364, February
2006, .
[RFC4577] Rosen, E., Psenak, P., and P. Pillay-Esnault, "OSPF as the
Provider/Customer Edge Protocol for BGP/MPLS IP Virtual
Private Networks (VPNs)", RFC 4577, DOI 10.17487/RFC4577,
June 2006, .
[RFC4862] Thomson, S., Narten, T., and T. Jinmei, "IPv6 Stateless
Address Autoconfiguration", RFC 4862,
DOI 10.17487/RFC4862, September 2007,
.
[RFC5246] Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security
(TLS) Protocol Version 1.2", RFC 5246,
DOI 10.17487/RFC5246, August 2008,
.
[RFC6020] Bjorklund, M., Ed., "YANG - A Data Modeling Language for
the Network Configuration Protocol (NETCONF)", RFC 6020,
DOI 10.17487/RFC6020, October 2010,
.
[RFC6241] Enns, R., Ed., Bjorklund, M., Ed., Schoenwaelder, J., Ed.,
and A. Bierman, Ed., "Network Configuration Protocol
(NETCONF)", RFC 6241, DOI 10.17487/RFC6241, June 2011,
.
[RFC6242] Wasserman, M., "Using the NETCONF Protocol over Secure
Shell (SSH)", RFC 6242, DOI 10.17487/RFC6242, June 2011,
.
[RFC6513] Rosen, E., Ed. and R. Aggarwal, Ed., "Multicast in MPLS/
BGP IP VPNs", RFC 6513, DOI 10.17487/RFC6513, February
2012, .
[RFC6536] Bierman, A. and M. Bjorklund, "Network Configuration
Protocol (NETCONF) Access Control Model", RFC 6536,
DOI 10.17487/RFC6536, March 2012,
.
[RFC7950] Bjorklund, M., Ed., "The YANG 1.1 Data Modeling Language",
RFC 7950, DOI 10.17487/RFC7950, August 2016,
.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 186]
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[RFC8040] Bierman, A., Bjorklund, M., and K. Watsen, "RESTCONF
Protocol", RFC 8040, DOI 10.17487/RFC8040, January 2017,
.
[RFC8049] Litkowski, S., Tomotaki, L., and K. Ogaki, "YANG Data
Model for L3VPN Service Delivery", RFC 8049,
DOI 10.17487/RFC8049, February 2017,
.
[RFC8174] Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC
2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174,
May 2017, .
12.2. Informative References
[ACL-YANG] Jethanandani, M., Huang, L., Agarwal, S., and D. Blair,
"Network Access Control List (ACL) YANG Data Model", Work
in Progress, draft-ietf-netmod-acl-model-14, October 2017.
[RFC4026] Andersson, L. and T. Madsen, "Provider Provisioned Virtual
Private Network (VPN) Terminology", RFC 4026,
DOI 10.17487/RFC4026, March 2005,
.
[RFC4110] Callon, R. and M. Suzuki, "A Framework for Layer 3
Provider-Provisioned Virtual Private Networks (PPVPNs)",
RFC 4110, DOI 10.17487/RFC4110, July 2005,
.
[RFC4760] Bates, T., Chandra, R., Katz, D., and Y. Rekhter,
"Multiprotocol Extensions for BGP-4", RFC 4760,
DOI 10.17487/RFC4760, January 2007,
.
[RFC8277] Rosen, E., "Using BGP to Bind MPLS Labels to Address
Prefixes", RFC 8277, DOI 10.17487/RFC8277, October 2017,
.
Wu, et al. Standards Track [Page 187]
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Acknowledgements
Maxim Klyus, Luis Miguel Contreras, Gregory Mirsky, Zitao Wang, Jing
Zhao, Kireeti Kompella, Eric Rosen, Aijun Wang, Michael Scharf,
Xufeng Liu, David Ball, Lucy Yong, Jean-Philippe Landry, and Andrew
Leu provided useful review to this document.
Jan Lindblad reviewed RFC 8049 and found some bugs, and his thorough
YANG Doctor review on the YANG Module is valuable input. David Ball
also provided a second review on RFC 8049.
Many thanks to these people.
Contributors
The authors would like to thank Rob Shakir for his major
contributions to the initial modeling and use cases.
Adrian Farrel prepared the editorial revisions for this document.
Authors' Addresses
Qin Wu (editor)
Huawei Technologies
Email: bill.wu@huawei.com
Stephane Litkowski
Orange Business Services
Email: stephane.litkowski@orange.com
Luis Tomotaki
Verizon
Email: luis.tomotaki@verizon.com
Kenichi Ogaki
KDDI Corporation
Email: ke-oogaki@kddi.com
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