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<rfc category="info" docName="draft-gredler-idr-bgplu-epe-16"
     ipr="trust200902">
  <!-- ***** FRONT MATTER ***** -->

  <front>
    <title>Egress Peer Engineering using BGP-LU</title>

    <!-- add 'role="editor"' below for the editors if appropriate -->

    <author fullname="Hannes Gredler" initials="H." role="editor"
            surname="Gredler">
      <organization>RtBrick Inc.</organization>

      <address>
        <email>hannes@rtbrick.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Kaliraj Vairavakkalai" initials="K." role="editor"
            surname="Vairavakkalai">
      <organization>Juniper Networks, Inc.</organization>

      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>1194 N. Mathilda Ave.</street>

          <city>Sunnyvale</city>

          <region>CA</region>

          <code>94089</code>

          <country>US</country>
        </postal>

        <email>kaliraj@juniper.net</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Chandra Ramachandran" initials="C."
            surname="Ramachandran">
      <organization>Juniper Networks, Inc.</organization>

      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>Electra, Exora Business Park Marathahalli - Sarjapur Outer
          Ring Road</street>

          <city>Bangalore</city>

          <region>KA</region>

          <code>560103</code>

          <country>India</country>
        </postal>

        <email>csekar@juniper.net</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Balaji Rajagopalan" initials="B." surname="Rajagopalan">
      <organization>Juniper Networks, Inc.</organization>

      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>Electra, Exora Business Park Marathahalli - Sarjapur Outer
          Ring Road</street>

          <city>Bangalore</city>

          <region>KA</region>

          <code>560103</code>

          <country>India</country>
        </postal>

        <email>balajir@juniper.net</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Ebben Aries" initials="E." surname="Aries">
      <organization>Juniper Networks, Inc.</organization>

      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>1194 N. Mathilda Ave.</street>

          <city>Sunnyvale</city>

          <region>CA</region>

          <code>94089</code>

          <country>US</country>
        </postal>

        <email>earies@juniper.net</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Luyuan Fang" initials="L." surname="Fang">
      <organization>eBay</organization>

      <address>
        <postal>
          <street>411 108th Ave NE</street>

          <city>Bellevue</city>

          <region>WA</region>

          <code>98004</code>

          <country>US</country>
        </postal>

        <email>lufang@ebay.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <date day="14" month="Oct" year="2024"/>

    <area>Routing</area>

    <workgroup>Inter-Domain Routing</workgroup>

    <keyword>MPLS</keyword>

    <keyword>BGP</keyword>

    <keyword>Label advertisement</keyword>

    <keyword>Egress Peer Engineering</keyword>

    <keyword>Traffic Engineering</keyword>

    <abstract>
      <t>The MPLS source routing paradigm provides path control for both
      intra- and inter- Autonomous System (AS) traffic. RSVP-TE is utilized
      for intra-AS path control. This documents outlines how MPLS routers may
      use the BGP labeled unicast protocol (BGP-LU) for doing
      traffic-engineering on inter-AS links.</t>
    </abstract>

    <note title="Requirements Language">
      <t>The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
      "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
      document are to be interpreted as described in <xref
      target="RFC2119">RFC 2119</xref>.</t>
    </note>
  </front>

  <middle>
    <section title="Introduction">
      <t>Today, BGP-LU <xref target="RFC3107"/> is used both as an intra-AS
      <xref target="SEAMLESS-MPLS"/> and inter-AS routing protocol. BGP-LU may
      advertise a MPLS transport path between IGP regions and Autonomous
      Systems. Those paths may span one or more router hops. This document
      describes advertisement and use of one-hop MPLS label-switched paths
      (LSPs) for traffic-engineering the links between Autonomous Systems.</t>

      <t>Consider <xref target="SINGLE_HOP_LSP"/>: an ASBR router (R2)
      advertises a labeled host route for the remote-end IP address of its
      link (IP3). The BGP next-hop gets set to R2s loopback IP address. For
      the advertised Label &lt;N&gt; a forwarding action of 'POP and forward'
      to next-hop (IP3) is installed in R2's MPLS forwarding table. Now
      consider if R2 had several links and R2 would advertise labels for all
      of its inter-AS links. By pushing the corresponding MPLS label &lt;N&gt;
      on the label-stack an ingress router R1 may control the egress peer
      selection.</t>

      <figure anchor="SINGLE_HOP_LSP" title="single-hop LSPs">
        <artwork>
          AS1           :        AS2
                        :
+----+   iBGP   +----+  :  eBGP   +----+
| R1 |----------| R2 |-IP2----IP3-| R3 |
+----+          +----+  :         +----+
                        :
   -----------traffic-flow----------&gt;
   &lt;------------route-flow-----------
        </artwork>
      </figure>

      <t>Of course, since R1 and R2 may not be directly connected to each
      other, if the interior routers within AS1 do not maintain routes to
      external destinations, carrying traffic to such destinations would
      require a tunnel from R1 to R2. Such tunnel could be realized as either
      a MPLS Label Switched Path (LSP), or by GRE <xref
      target="RFC2784"/>.</t>
    </section>

    <section title="Motivation, Rationale and Applicability">
      <t>BGP-LU is often just seen as a 'stitching' protocol for connecting
      Autonomous Systems. BGP-LU is often not viewed as a viable protocol for
      solving the Inter-domain traffic-engineering problem.</t>

      <t>With this document the authors want to clarify the use of BGP-LU for
      Egress Peering traffic-engineering purposes and encourage both
      implementers and network operators to use a widely deployed and
      operationally well understood protocol, rather than inventing new
      protocols or new extensions to the existing protocols.</t>
    </section>

    <section title="Sample Topology">
      <t>The following <xref target="SAMPLE_TOPOLOGY">topology</xref> and IP
      addresses shall be used throughout the Egress Peering Engineering
      advertisement examples.</t>

      <figure anchor="SAMPLE_TOPOLOGY" title="Sample Topology">
        <artwork>
                                 :                  :
           AS 1                  :        AS 2      :     AS 4
                                 :                  :
                                 :      +-----+     :
                           /IP2--:-IP3--|ASBR3|     :
+-----+             +-----+-IP4--:-IP5--+-----+-----------+-----+
| R1  +-------------+ASBR1|      :                        |ASBR6|
+--+--+             +--+--+-IP6--:-IP7--+-----+-----------+-----+
   |                   |   \     :      |ASBR4|     :    /
   |                   |    \    :      +-----+     :   /
   |                   |     IP8-                    ---
   |                   |         \ ................ /
   |                   |          IP9-           ---
   |                   |         :    \         /   :
   |                   |         :     \       /    :
+--+--+             +--+--+      :      +--+--+     :
| R2  +-------------+ASBR2|-IP10-:-IP11-|ASBR5|     :
+-----+             +-----+      :      +-----+     :
                                 :                  :
                                 :        AS3       :
                                 :                  :
	</artwork>
      </figure>

      <section title="Loopback IP addresses and Router-IDs">
        <t><list style="symbols">
            <t>R1: 192.0.2.1/32</t>

            <t>R2: 192.0.2.2/32</t>

            <t>ASBR1: 192.0.2.11/32</t>

            <t>ASBR2: 192.0.2.12/32</t>

            <t>ASBR3: 192.0.2.13/32</t>

            <t>ASBR4: 192.0.2.14/32</t>

            <t>ASBR5: 192.0.2.15/32</t>

            <t>ASBR6: 192.0.2.16/32</t>
          </list></t>
      </section>

      <section title="Link IP addresses">
        <t><list style="symbols">
            <t>ASBR1 (203.0.113.2/31) to ASBR3 (203.0.113.3/31) link #1</t>

            <t>ASBR1 (203.0.113.4/31) to ASBR3 (203.0.113.5/31) link #2</t>

            <t>ASBR1 (203.0.113.6/31) to ASBR4 (203.0.113.7/31)</t>

            <t>ASBR1 (203.0.113.8/31) to ASBR5 (203.0.113.9/31)</t>

            <t>ASBR2 (203.0.113.10/31) to ASBR5 (203.0.113.11/31)</t>
          </list></t>
      </section>
    </section>

    <section title="Service Route Advertisement">
      <t>In <xref target="SELECTIVE_IBGP_NH_REWRITE"/> a simple network layout
      is shown. There are two classes of BGP speakers: <list style="numbers">
          <t>Ingress Routers</t>

          <t>Controllers</t>
        </list></t>

      <t>Ingress routers receive BGP-LU routes from the ASBRs. Each BGP-LU
      route corresponds to an egress link. Furthermore Ingress routers receive
      their service routes using the BGP protocol. The BGP Add-paths extension
      <xref target="RFC7911"/> ensures that multiple paths to a given service
      route may get advertised.</t>

      <t>As outlined in <xref target="RFC9087"/>, Controllers receive BGP-LU
      routes from the ASBRs as well. However the service routes may be
      received either using the BGP protocol plus the BGP Add-paths extension
      <xref target="RFC7911"/> or alternatively The BGP Monitoring protocol
      <xref target="RFC7854"/> (BMP). BMP has support for advertising the
      RIB-In of a BGP router. As such it might be a suitable protocol for
      feeding all potential egress paths of a service-route from a ASBR into a
      controller.</t>
    </section>

    <section title="Egress Next-hop Advertisement">
      <t>An ASBR assigns a distinct label for each of its next-hops facing an
      eBGP peer and advertises it to its internal BGP mesh. The ASBR programs
      a forwarding action 'POP and forward' into the MPLS forwarding table.
      Note that the neighboring AS is not required to support exchanging NLRIs
      with the local AS using BGP-LU. It is the local ASBR (ASBR{1,2}) which
      generates the BGP-LU routes into its iBGP mesh or controller facing
      session(s). The forwarding next-hop for those routes points to the
      link-IP addresses of the remote ASBRs (ASBR{3,4,5}). Note that the
      generated BGP-LU routes always match the BGP next-hop that the remote
      ASBRs set their BGP service routes to, such that the software component
      doing route-resolution understands the association between the BGP
      service route and the BGP-LU forwarding route.</t>

      <section title="iBGP meshing and BGP nexthop rewrite policy">
        <t>Throughout this document we describe how the BGP next-hop of both
        BGP Service Routes and BGP-LU routes shall be rewritten. This may
        clash with existing network deployments and existing network
        configurations guidelines which may mandate to rewrite the BGP
        next-hop when an BGP update enters an AS.</t>

        <t>The Egress peering use case assumes a central controller as shown
        <xref target="SELECTIVE_IBGP_NH_REWRITE"/>. In order to support both
        existing BGP nexthop guidelines and the suggestion described in this
        document, an implementation SHOULD support several internal BGP
        peer-groups: <list style="numbers">
            <t>iBGP peer group for Ingress Routers</t>

            <t>iBGP peer group for Controllers</t>
          </list></t>

        <t>The first peer group MAY be left unchanged and use any existing BGP
        nexthop rewrite policy. The second peer group MUST use the BGP rewrite
        policy described in this document for both service and BGP-LU
        routes.</t>

        <t>Of course a common iBGP peer group and a common rewrite policy may
        be used if the proposed policy is compatible with existing routing
        software implementations of BGP next-hop route resolution.</t>

        <t><figure anchor="SELECTIVE_IBGP_NH_REWRITE"
            title="Selective iBGP NH rewrite">
            <artwork>
+-----------+
| Ingress   |
|  Router   |
+-----------+
     ^
     |
+-----------+
|    BGP    |               +------------+
|   Route   |--------------&gt;| Controller |
| Reflector |               +------------+
+-----------+                     ^
     ^   ^                        |
     |   |                        |
     |   +-------------------+    |
     |                       |    |
     v                       v    v
+-----------+             +-----------+
|    BGP    |             |    BGP    |
|   ASBR1   |    . . .    |   ASBR2   |
+-----------+             +-----------+
        </artwork>
          </figure></t>
      </section>

      <section title="Single-hop eBGP">
        <t>In <xref target="SAMPLE_TOPOLOGY"/> the ASBR{1,5} and ASBR{2,5}
        links are examples for single-hop eBGP advertisements.</t>

        <t><list style="symbols">
            <t>ASBR5 advertises a BGP service (SAFI-1) route {172.16/12} to
            ASBR1 with a BGP next-hop of 203.0.113.9. When ASBR1 re-advertises
            this BGP service route towards its iBGP mesh (R{1,2}) it does not
            overwrite the BGP next-hop, but rather leaves it unchanged.</t>

            <t>ASBR1 advertises a BGP-LU route {203.0.113.9/32, label 100}
            with a BGP next hop of 192.0.2.11. ASBR1 programs a MPLS
            forwarding state of 'POP and forward' to 203.0.113.9 for the
            advertised label 100.</t>

            <t>ASBR5 advertises a BGP service (SAFI-1) route {172.16/12} to
            ASBR2 with a BGP next-hop of 203.0.113.11. When ASBR2
            re-advertises this BGP service route towards its iBGP mesh
            (R{1,2}) it does not overwrite the BGP next-hop, but rather leaves
            it unchanged.</t>

            <t>ASBR2 advertises BGP-LU route {203.0.113.11/32, label 101} with
            a BGP next hop of 192.0.2.12. ASBR2 programs a MPLS forwarding
            state of 'POP and forward' to 203.0.113.11 for the advertised
            label 101.</t>

            <t>Should the operator already be redistributing egress links into
            the network for purposes of BGP next-hop resolution, the BGP-LU
            route {203.0.113.9/32, label 100} will now take precedence due to
            LPM over the previous redistributed prefix {203.0.113.8/31}. If
            the BGP next-hop prefix {203.0.113.9/32} were to be redistributed
            as-is, then standard protocol best-path and preference selection
            mechanisms will be exhausted in order to select the best-path.</t>

            <t>In general, ASBR1 may receive advertisements for the route to
            172.16/12 from ASBR3 and ASBR4, as well as from ASBR5. One of
            these other advertisements may be chosen as the best path by the
            BGP decision process. In order to allow ASBR1 to re-advertise the
            route to 172.16/12 received from ASBR5 with next-hop 203.0.113.9,
            independent of the other advertisements received, ASBR1 and R{1,2}
            need to support the BGP add-paths extension. <xref
            target="RFC7911"/>.</t>
          </list></t>
      </section>

      <section title="Multi-hop eBGP">
        <t>Todays operational practice for load-sharing across parallel links
        is to configure a single multi-hop eBGP session between a pair of
        routers. The IP addresses for the Multi-hop eBGP session are typically
        sourced from the loopback IP interfaces. Note that those IP addresses
        do not share an IP subnet. Most often those loopback IP addresses are
        most specific host routes. Since the BGP next-hops of the received BGP
        service routes are typically rewritten to the remote routers loopback
        IP address they cannot get immediatly resolved by the receiving
        router. To overcome this, the operator configures a static route with
        next-hops pointing to each of the remote-IP addresses of the
        underlying links.</t>

        <t>In <xref target="SAMPLE_TOPOLOGY"/> both ASBR{1,3} links are
        examples of a multi-hop eBGP advertisement. In order to advertise a
        distinct label for a common FEC throughout the iBGP mesh, ASBR1 and
        all the receiving iBGP routers need to support the BGP Add-paths
        extension. <xref target="RFC7911"/>.</t>

        <t><list style="symbols">
            <t>ASBR3 advertises a BGP service (SAFI-1) route {172.16/12} over
            multi-hop eBGP to ASBR1 with a BGP next-hop of 192.0.2.13. When
            ASBR1 re-advertises this BGP service route towards its iBGP mesh
            (R{1,2}) it does not overwrite the BGP next-hop, but rather leaves
            it unchanged. Note that the iBGP routers SHOULD support the BGP
            Add-paths extension <xref target="RFC7911"/> such that ASBR can
            re-advertise all paths to the SAFI-1 route {172.16/12}.</t>

            <t>For link #1, ASBR1 advertises into its iBGP mesh a BGP-LU route
            {192.0.2.13/32, label 102} with a BGP next hop of 192.0.2.11. To
            differentiate this from the link #2 route-advertisement (which
            contains the same FEC) it is setting the path-ID to 1. ASBR1
            programs a MPLS forwarding state of 'POP and forward' to
            203.0.113.3 for the advertised label 102.</t>

            <t>For link #2, ASBR1 advertises into its iBGP mesh a BGP-LU route
            {192.0.2.13/32, label 103} with a BGP next hop of 192.0.2.11. To
            differentiate this from the link #1 route-advertisement (which
            contains the same FEC) it is setting the path-ID to 2. ASBR1
            programs a MPLS forwarding state of 'POP and forward' to
            203.0.113.5 for the advertised label 103.</t>

            <t>Should the operator already be redistributing static routes
            into the network, the BGP next-hop {192.0.2.13} may already be
            resolvable. It is then that standard protocol best-path and
            preference selection mechanisms will be exhausted in order to
            select the best-path.</t>
          </list></t>
      </section>

      <section title="Grouping of Peers">
        <t>In addition to offering a distinct BGP-LU label for each egress
        link, an ASBR MAY want to advertise a BGP-LU label which represents a
        load-balancing forwarding action across a set of peers. The difference
        is here that the ingress node gives up individual link control, but
        rather delegates the load-balancing decision to a particular egress
        router which has the freedom to send the traffic down to any link in
        the Peer Set as identified by the BGP-LU label.</t>

        <t>Assume that ASBR1 wants to advertise a label identifying the Peer
        Set {ASBR3, ASBR4, ASBR5}. <list style="symbols">
            <t>For the two ASBR{1,3} links in <xref
            target="SAMPLE_TOPOLOGY"/>, belonging to Peer Set 1, ASBR1
            advertises a single BGP-LU route {192.0.2.13/32, label 104} with a
            BGP next hop of 192.0.2.11. To differentiate this from the
            ASBR{1,3} single link route-advertisements (which contains the
            same FEC) it is setting the path-ID to 3 and attaching a Peer-Set
            Community 'Peer Set 1'.</t>

            <t>For the ASBR{1,4} link in <xref target="SAMPLE_TOPOLOGY"/>,
            ASBR1 advertises a BGP-LU route {203.0.113.7/32, label 104} with a
            BGP next hop of 192.0.2.11. To differentiate this from the
            ASBR{1,4} single link route-advertisements (which contains the
            same FEC) it is setting the path-ID to 2 and attaching a Peer-Set
            Community 'Peer Set 1'.</t>

            <t>For the ASBR{1,5} link in <xref target="SAMPLE_TOPOLOGY"/>,
            ASBR1 advertises a BGP-LU route {203.0.113.9/32, label 104} with a
            BGP next hop of 192.0.2.11. To differentiate this from the
            ASBR{1,5} single link route-advertisements (which contains the
            same FEC) it is setting the path-ID to 2 and attaching a Peer-Set
            Community 'Peer Set 1'.</t>
          </list> Finally ASBR1 programs a MPLS forwarding state of 'POP and
        load-balance' to {203.0.113.3, 203.0.113.5, 203.0.113.7, 203.0.113.9}
        for the advertised label 104.</t>
      </section>
    </section>

    <!-- end 'Egress Next-hop Advertisement' -->

    <section title="Egress Link Protection">
      <t>It is desirable to provide a local-repair based protection scheme, in
      case a redundant path is available to reach a peer AS. Protection may be
      applied at multiple levels in the routing stack. Since the ASBR has
      insight into both BGP-LU and BGP service advertisements, protection can
      be provided at the BGP-LU, at the BGP service or both levels.</t>

      <section title="FRR backup routes">
        <t>Assume the network operator wants to provide a local-repair
        next-hop for the 172.16/12 BGP service route at ASBR1. The active
        route resolves over the parallel links towards ASBR3. In case the link
        #1 between ASBR{1,3} fails there are now several candidate backup
        paths providing protection against link or node failure.</t>

        <section title="Local links">
          <t>Assuming that the remaining link #2 between ASBR{1,3} has enough
          capacity, and link-protection is sufficient, this link MAY serve as
          temporary backup.</t>

          <t>However if node-protection or additional capacity is desired,
          then the local link between ASBR{1,4} or ASBR{1,5} MAY be used as
          temporary backup.</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Remote BGP-LU labels">
          <t>ASBR1 is both originator and receiver of BGP routing information.
          For this protection method it is required that the ASBRs support the
          <xref target="ADV-BEST-EXTERNAL"/> behavior. ASBR1 receives both the
          BGP-LU and BGP service routes from ASBR2 and therefore can use the
          ASBR2 advertised label as a backup path given that ASBR1 has a
          tunnel towards ASBR2.</t>
        </section>

        <section title="Local IP forwarding tables">
          <t>For protecting plain unicast (Internet) routing information a
          very simple backup scheme could be to recurse to the relevant IP
          forwarding table and do an IP lookup to further determine a new
          egress link.</t>
        </section>
      </section>
    </section>

    <!-- end 'Egress Link Protection' -->

    <section title="Dynamic link utilization">
      <t>For a software component which controls the egress link selection it
      may be desirable to know about a particular egress links current
      utilization, such that it can adjust the traffic that gets sent to a
      particular interface.</t>

      <t>In <xref target="LINK-BW"/> a community for reporting link-bandwidth
      is specified. Rather than reporting the static bandwidth of the link,
      the ASBRs shall report the available bandwidth as seen by the data-plane
      via the link-bandwidth community in their BGP-LU update message.</t>

      <t>It is crucial that ingress routers learn quickly about congestion of
      an egress link and hence it is desired to get timely updates of the
      advertised per-link BGP-LU routes carrying the available bandwidth
      information when the available bandwidth crosses a certain
      (preconfigured) threshold.</t>

      <t>Controllers may also utilize the link-bandwidth community among other
      common mechanisms to retrieve data-plane statistics (e.g. SNMP,
      NETCONF)</t>
    </section>

    <section anchor="Acknowledgements" title="Acknowledgements">
      <t>Many thanks to Yakov Rekhter, Chris Bowers and Jeffrey (Zhaohui)
      Zhang for their detailed review and insightful comments.</t>

      <t>Special thanks to Richard Steenbergen and Tom Scholl who brought up
      the original idea of using MPLS for BGP based egress load-balancing at
      their inspiring talk at Nanog 48.</t>
    </section>

    <section anchor="IANA" title="IANA Considerations">
      <t>This documents does not request any action from IANA.</t>
    </section>

    <section anchor="Security" title="Security Considerations">
      <t>This document does not introduce any change in terms of BGP
      security.</t>
    </section>
  </middle>

  <!--  *****BACK MATTER ***** -->

  <back>
    <references title="Normative References">
      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.2119.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.2784.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.3107.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.7911.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.7854.xml"?>

      <?rfc include="reference.RFC.9087.xml"?>
    </references>

    <references title="Informative References">
      <reference anchor="SEAMLESS-MPLS"
                 target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-mpls-seamless-mpls-07">
        <front>
          <title abbrev="Seamless MPLS">Seamless MPLS Architecture</title>

          <author fullname="Nikolai" initials="" role="editor"
                  surname="Leymann"/>

          <author fullname="Maciek" initials="" role="editor"
                  surname="Konstantynowicz"/>

          <date day="28" month="06" year="2014"/>
        </front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="ADV-BEST-EXTERNAL"
                 target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-idr-best-external-05">
        <front>
          <title abbrev="Advertise Best External">Advertise Best
          External</title>

          <author fullname="Pedro" initials="" role="editor" surname="Marques"/>

          <date day="02" month="01" year="2012"/>
        </front>
      </reference>

      <reference anchor="LINK-BW"
                 target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-idr-link-bandwidth-07">
        <front>
          <title abbrev="Link Bandwidth">Link Bandwidth</title>

          <author fullname="Prodosh" initials="" role="editor"
                  surname="Mohapatra"/>

          <author fullname="Rex" initials="" role="editor" surname="Fernando"/>

          <date day="05" month="03" year="2018"/>
        </front>
      </reference>
    </references>
  </back>
</rfc>
