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<rfc category="info" docName="draft-ietf-spring-sr-for-enhanced-vpn-03"
     ipr="trust200902">
  <front>
    <title abbrev="SR for VPN+">Segment Routing based Virtual Transport
    Network (VTN) for Enhanced VPN</title>

    <author fullname="Jie Dong" initials="J." surname="Dong">
      <organization>Huawei Technologies</organization>

      <address>
        <email>jie.dong@huawei.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Stewart Bryant" initials="S." surname="Bryant">
      <organization>University of Surrey</organization>

      <address>
        <email>stewart.bryant@gmail.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Takuya Miyasaka" initials="T." surname="Miyasaka">
      <organization>KDDI Corporation</organization>

      <address>
        <email>ta-miyasaka@kddi.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Yongqing Zhu" initials="Y." surname="Zhu">
      <organization>China Telecom</organization>

      <address>
        <email>zhuyq8@chinatelecom.cn</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Fengwei Qin" initials="F." surname="Qin">
      <organization>China Mobile</organization>

      <address>
        <email>qinfengwei@chinamobile.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Zhenqiang Li" initials="Z." surname="Li">
      <organization>China Mobile</organization>

      <address>
        <email>li_zhenqiang@hotmail.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <author fullname="Francois Clad" initials="F." surname="Clad">
      <organization>Cisco Systems</organization>

      <address>
        <postal>
          <street/>
        </postal>

        <email>fclad@cisco.com</email>
      </address>
    </author>

    <date day="08" month="September" year="2022"/>

    <workgroup>SPRING Working Group</workgroup>

    <abstract>
      <t>Segment Routing (SR) leverages the source routing paradigm. A node
      steers a packet through an ordered list of instructions, called
      "segments". A segment can represent topological or service based
      instructions. A segment can further be associated with a set of network
      resources used for executing the instruction. Such a segment is called
      resource-aware segment.</t>

      <t>Resource-aware Segment Identifiers (SIDs) may be used to build SR
      paths with a set of reserved network resources. In addition, a group of
      resource-aware SIDs may be used to build SR based virtual underlay
      networks, which have customized network topology and resource attributes
      required by one or a group of customers and/or services. Such virtual
      networks are the SR instantiations of Virtual Transport Networks
      (VTNs).</t>

      <t>This document describes a suggested use of resource-aware SIDs to
      build SR based VTNs.</t>
    </abstract>
  </front>

  <middle>
    <section title="Introduction">
      <t>Segment Routing (SR) <xref target="RFC8402"/> specifies a mechanism
      to steer packets through an ordered list of segments. A segment is
      referred to by its Segment Identifier (SID). With SR, explicit source
      routing can be achieved without introducing per-path state into the
      network. <xref target="I-D.ietf-spring-resource-aware-segments"/>
      extends SR by associating SIDs with network resource attributes (e.g.,
      bandwidth, processing or storage resources). These resource-aware SIDs
      retain their original functionality, with the additional semantics of
      identifying the set of network resources available for the packet
      processing action. On a network segment, multiple resource-aware SIDs
      may be allocated, each of which is associated with a subset of network
      resources assigned to meet the requirements of one or a group of
      customers and/or services.</t>

      <t>Once allocated, Resource-aware SIDs can be used to build SR paths
      with a set of reserved network resources. In addition, a group of
      resource-aware SIDs may be used to build SR based virtual networks,
      which have customized network topology and resource attributes required
      by one or a group of customers and/or services. Such virtual networks
      are the SR instantiations of Virtual Transport Networks (VTNs) as
      defined in <xref target="I-D.ietf-teas-enhanced-vpn"/>, and can be used
      to enable the enhanced VPN (VPN+) services.</t>

      <t>This document describes a suggested use of resource-aware SIDs to
      build SR based VTNs. Although the procedure is illustrated using
      SR-MPLS, this mechanism is applicable to both SR over MPLS data plane
      (SR-MPLS) <xref target="RFC8660"/> and SR over IPv6 data plane (SRv6)
      <xref target="RFC8986"/>.</t>
    </section>

    <section title="Resource-Aware SIDs for VTN">
      <t>A VTN is a virtual underlay network which has a specific network
      topology and a subset of network resources allocated from the physical
      network.</t>

      <t>When SR is used as the data plane to construct VTNs in the network,
      it is necessary to compute and instantiate the SR paths with the
      topology and/or algorithm constraints of the VTN, and steer the traffic
      to only use the set of network resources allocated to the VTN.</t>

      <t>Based on the resource-aware segments defined in <xref
      target="I-D.ietf-spring-resource-aware-segments"/>, a group of
      resource-aware SIDs can be allocated to represent the network segments
      of one VTN. These resource-aware SIDs are associated with the group of
      network resources allocated to the VTN on network nodes and links which
      participate in the VTN. These resource-aware SIDs can also identify the
      network topological or functional instructions associated with the
      VTN.</t>

      <t>The resource-aware SIDs may be allocated either by a centralized
      network controller or by network nodes. The control plane mechanisms for
      advertising the resource-aware SIDs for VTNs can be based on <xref
      target="RFC4915"/>, <xref target="RFC5120"/> and <xref
      target="I-D.ietf-lsr-flex-algo"/> with necessary extensions. This is
      further described in section 3.3.</t>

      <section title="SR-MPLS based VTN">
        <t>This section describes a mechanism of allocating resource-aware
        SIDs to SR-MPLS based VTNs.</t>

        <t>For one IGP link, multiple Adj-SIDs are allocated, each of which is
        associated with a VTN that link participates in, and represents a
        subset of the link resources allocated to the VTN. For one IGP node,
        multiple prefix-SIDs are allocated, each of which is associated with a
        VTN which the node participates in, and identifies the set of network
        resources allocated to the VTN on network nodes which participate in
        the VTN. These set of resources will be used to process packets which
        have the resource-aware SIDs as the active segment.</t>

        <t>In the case of multi-domain VTNs, on an inter-domain link, multiple
        BGP peering SIDs <xref target="RFC9086"/> are allocated, each of which
        is associated with a VTN which spans multiple domains, and represents
        a subset of resources allocated on the inter-domain link.</t>
      </section>

      <section title="SRv6 based VTN">
        <t>This section describes a mechanism of allocating resource-aware
        SRv6 Locators and SIDs to SRv6 based VTNs.</t>

        <t>For a network node, multiple SRv6 Locators are allocated, each of
        which is associated with a VTN the node participates in, and
        identifies the set of network resources allocated to the VTN on
        network nodes which participate in the VTN. The SRv6 SIDs associated
        with a VTN are allocated from the SID space using the VTN-specific
        Locator as the prefix. These SRv6 SIDs can be used to represent
        VTN-specific SRv6 functions, and can identify the set of resources
        used by network nodes to process packets.</t>
      </section>

      <section title="VTN Identification">
        <t>In a simple case, each VTN can be mapped to a unique topology or
        algorithm. Then the VTNs can be distinguished by the topology ID or
        algorithm ID in control plane, and the resource-aware SIDs associated
        with a VTN can be identified using the &lt;topology, algorithm&gt;
        tuple as described in <xref target="RFC8402"/>. In this case, the
        number of VTNs supported in a network relies on the number of
        topologies or algorithms supported.</t>

        <t>In a more complicated case, multiple VTNs may be mapped to the same
        &lt;topology, algorithm&gt; tuple, while each is allocated with a
        separate set of network resources. Then a new VTN identifier (VTN-ID)
        in the control plane is needed to identify the VTN. The resource-aware
        SIDs associated with different VTNs can be distinguished using VTN-IDs
        in the control plane.</t>

        <t>In the data plane, The resource-aware SIDs are used to identify the
        VTN, and are also used to determine the forwarding instructions and
        the set of network resources used for the packet processing
        action.</t>
      </section>

      <section title="Scalability Considerations">
        <t>Since multiple VTNs can be created in a network, and each VTN is
        allocated with a group of resource-aware SIDs, the mechanism of SR
        based VTNs increases the number of SIDs and SRv6 Locators needed in a
        network. There may be some concern, especially about the SR-MPLS
        prefix-SIDs, which are allocated from the Segment Routing Global Block
        (SRGB). The amount of network state will also increase accordingly.
        However, based on the SR paradigm, resource-aware SIDs and the
        associated network state are allocated and maintained per VTN, thus
        per-path network state is avoided in the SR network. In the control
        plane, the amount of information to be distributed for different VTNs
        may also become a concern for the IGP protocols. The scalability of
        resource-aware SIDs based VTNs are further analysed in <xref
        target="I-D.ietf-teas-nrp-scalability"/>.</t>
      </section>
    </section>

    <section title="Procedures">
      <t>This section describes possible procedures for creating SR based VTNs
      and the corresponding forwarding tables and entries. Although it is
      illustrated using SR-MPLS, this mechanism is applicable to both SR-MPLS
      and SRv6.</t>

      <t>Suppose a virtual network is requested by some customer or service.
      One of the basic requirement is that customer or service is allocated
      with some dedicated network resource, so that it does not experience
      unexpected interference from other services in the same network. Other
      possible requirements may include the required topology, bandwidth,
      latency, reliability, etc.</t>

      <t>According to the received requirement, a centralized network
      controller calculates a subset of the underlay network topology to
      support the service. With this topology, the set of network resources
      required on each network element is also determined. The subset of
      network topology and network resources are the two major characteristics
      of a VTN. Depending on the service requirement, the network topology and
      network resource of this VTN can be dedicated for an individual customer
      or service, or can be shared by a group of customers and/or
      services.</t>

      <t>Based on the mechanisms described in section 2, a group of
      resource-aware SIDs can be allocated for the VTN. With SR-MPLS, it is a
      group of prefix-SIDs and adj-SIDs which are allocated to identify the
      network nodes and links in the VTN, and also identify the set of network
      resources allocated on these network nodes and links for the VTN. As the
      resource-aware SIDs can be allocated either by a centralized network
      controller or by the network nodes, control plane protocols such as IGP
      (e.g., IS-IS or OSPF) and BGP-LS can be used to distribute the SIDs and
      the associated resource and topology information of a VTN to other nodes
      in the same VTN and also to the controller, so that both the network
      nodes and the controller can generate the VTN-specific forwarding table
      or forwarding entries based on the resource-aware SIDs of the VTN. The
      detailed control plane mechanisms and possible extensions are described
      in the accompanying documents and are out of the scope of this
      document.</t>

      <section title="VTN Topology and Resource Planning ">
        <t>A centralized network controller can be responsible for the
        planning of a VTN to meet the received service request. The controller
        needs to collect the information on network connectivity, network
        resources, network performance and any other relevant network states
        from the underlay network. This can be done using either IGP TE
        extensions such as <xref target="RFC5305"/> <xref target="RFC3630"/>
        <xref target="RFC7471"/> <xref target="RFC8570"/>, and/or BGP-LS <xref
        target="RFC7752"/> <xref target="RFC8571"/>, or any other form of
        control plane signaling.</t>

        <t>Based on the information collected from the underlay network, the
        controller obtains the underlay network topology and the information
        about the allocated and available network resources. When a service
        request is received, the controller determines the subset of the
        network topology, and the set of the resources needed on each network
        segment (e.g., links and nodes) in the sub-topology to meet the
        service requirements, whilst maintaining the needs of the existing
        services that are using the same network. The subset of the network
        topology and network resources will be used to constitute a VTN, and
        will be used as the virtual underlay network of the requested
        service.</t>
      </section>

      <section title="VTN Network Resource and SID Allocation">
        <t>According to the result of VTN planning, the network controller
        instructs the set of network nodes involved to join a specific VTN and
        allocate the required set of network resources for the VTN. This may
        be done with Netconf/YANG <xref target="RFC6241"/> <xref
        target="RFC7950"/> or with any other control or management plane
        mechanism with necessary extensions. Thus, the controller not only
        allocates the resources to the newly computed VTN but also keeps track
        of the remaining available resources in order to cope with subsequent
        VTN requests.</t>

        <t>On each network node involved in the VTN, a set of network
        resources (e.g., link bandwidth) are allocated to the VTN. Such set of
        network resources can be dedicated for the processing of traffic in
        that VTN, and cannot be used by traffic in other VTNs. Note it is also
        possible that a group of VTNs may share a set of network resources on
        some network segments. A group of resource-aware SIDs, such as
        prefix-SIDs and adj-SIDs are allocated to identify both the network
        segments and the set of resources allocated on the network segments
        for the VTN. Such group of resource-aware SIDs, e.g., prefix-SIDs and
        adj-SIDs are used as the data plane identifiers of the nodes and links
        in the VTN.</t>

        <t>In the underlying forwarding plane, there can be multiple ways of
        allocating a subset of network resources to a VTN. The candidate data
        plane technologies to support resource partitioning or reservation can
        be found in <xref target="I-D.ietf-teas-enhanced-vpn"/>. The
        resource-aware SIDs are considered as abstract data plane identifiers
        in the network layer, which can work with various network resource
        partitioning or reservation mechanisms in the underlying forwarding
        plane.</t>

        <t><figure>
            <artwork align="center"><![CDATA[ 
    Prefix-SIDs:                         Prefix-SIDs:
      r:101                               r:102
      g:201   Adj-SIDs:                   g:202
      b:301      r:1001:1G    r:1001:1G   b:302
         +-----+ g:2001:2G    g:2001:2G +-----+
         |  A  | b:3001:1G    b:3001:1G |  B  |Adj-SIDs: 
         |     +------------------------+     + r:1003:1G
Adj-SIDs +--+--+                        +--+--+\g:2003:2G
   r:1002:1G|                     r:1002:1G|    \
   g:2002:2G|                     g:2002:2G|     \ r:1001:1G
   b:3002:3G|                     b:3002:2G|      \g:2001:2G
            |                              |       \ +-----+Prefix-SIDs:
            |                              |        \+  E  |   r:105
            |                              |        /+     |   g:205
   r:1001:1G|                     r:1002:1G|       / +-----+
   g:2001:2G|                     g:2002:2G|      /r:1002:1G
   b:3001:3G|                     b:3002:2G|     / g:2002:2G
         +--+--+                        +--+--+ /
         |     |                        |     |/r:1003:1G
         |  C  +------------------------+  D  + g:2003:2G
         +-----+ r:1002:1G    r:1001:1G +-----+
  Prefix-SIDs:   g:2002:1G    g:2001:1G   Prefix-SIDs:
      r:103      b:3002:2G    b:3001:2G     r:104
      g:203                                 g:204
      b:303                                 b:304

      Figure 1. SID and resource allocation for multiple VTNs
]]></artwork>
          </figure></t>

        <t>Figure 1 shows an example of providing multiple VTNs in an SR based
        network. Note that the format of the SIDs in this figure is for
        illustration, both SR-MPLS and SRv6 can be used as the data plane. In
        this example, three VTNs: red (r) , green (g) and blue (b) are created
        to carry traffic of different customers or services. Both the red and
        green VTNs consist of nodes A, B, C, D, and E with all their
        interconnecting links, whilst the blue VTN only consists of nodes A,
        B, C and D with all their interconnecting links. Note that different
        VTNs may have a set of shared nodes and links. On each node, a
        resource-aware prefix-SID is allocated for each VTN it participates
        in. And on each link, a resource-aware adj-SID is allocated for each
        VTN it participates in.</t>

        <t>In Figure 1, the notation x:nnnn:y means that in VTN x, the adj-SID
        nnnn will steer the packet over a link which has bandwidth y reserved
        for that VTN. For example, r:1002:1G in link C-&gt;D says that the VTN
        red has a reserved bandwidth of 1Gb/s on link C-&gt;D, and will be
        used by packets arriving at node C with an adj-SID 1002 at the top of
        the label stack. Similarly, on each node, a resource-aware prefix-SID
        is allocated for each VTN it participates in. Each resource-aware
        adj-SID can be associated with a set of link resources (e.g.,
        bandwidth) allocated to different VTNs, so that different adj-SIDs can
        be used to steer service traffic into different set of link resources
        in packet forwarding. A resource-aware prefix-SIDs in a VTN can be
        associated with the set of network resources allocated to this VTN on
        each involved network node and link. Thus the prefix-SIDs can be used
        to build loose SR path within a VTN, and can be used by the transit
        nodes to steer traffic into the set of local network resources
        allocated to the VTN.</t>
      </section>

      <section title="Construction of SR based VTNs">
        <t>The network controller needs to obtain the information of all the
        VTNs in the network it oversees, including the resource-aware SIDs and
        their associated network resources and topology information. Based on
        this information, the controller can have a global view of the VTN
        topology, network resources and the associated SIDs, so as to perform
        VTN-specific explicit path computation, taking both the topology and
        resource constraints of the VTN into consideration, and use the
        resource-aware SIDs to build the SID list for the explicit path. The
        controller may also compute the shortest paths in the VTN based on the
        resource-aware prefix-SIDs.</t>

        <t>The network nodes also need to obtain the information of the VTNs
        they participate in, including the resource-aware SIDs and their
        associated network resources and topology information. Based on the
        collected information, the network nodes which are the headend of a
        path can perform VTN-specific path computation, and build the SID list
        using the collected resource-aware adj-SIDs and prefix-SIDs. The
        network nodes also need to generate the forwarding entries for the
        resource-aware prefix-SIDs in each VTN they participates in, and
        associate these forwarding entries with the set of local network
        resources (e.g., a set of bandwidth on the outgoing interface)
        allocated to the corresponding VTN.</t>

        <t>Thus after receiving the network controller's instruction of
        network resource and SID allocation, each network node needs to
        advertise the identifier of the VTNs it participates in, the group of
        resource-aware SIDs allocated to each VTN, and the resource attributes
        (e.g., bandwidth) associated with the resource-aware SIDs in the
        network. Each resource-aware adj-SID is advertised with the set of
        associated link resources, and each resource-aware prefix-SID is
        advertised with the identifier of the associated VTN, as all the
        prefix-SIDs in a VTN are associated with the same set of network
        resources allocated to the VTN. Note that as described in section 2.3,
        the VTNs can be identified in the control plane either using existing
        identifiers, such as the MT-ID or Flex-Algo ID, or using a newly
        defined VTN ID.</t>

        <t>The IGP mechanisms which reuse the existing IDs such as
        Multi-Topology <xref target="RFC5120"/> or Flex-Algo <xref
        target="I-D.ietf-lsr-flex-algo"/> as the identifier of VTNs, and
        distribute the resource-aware SIDs and the associated topology and
        resource information are described in <xref
        target="I-D.ietf-lsr-isis-sr-vtn-mt"/> and <xref
        target="I-D.zhu-lsr-isis-sr-vtn-flexalgo"/> respectively. The
        corresponding BGP-LS mechanisms which can be used to distribute both
        the intra-domain VTN information and the inter-domain VTN-specific
        link information to the controller are described in <xref
        target="I-D.ietf-idr-bgpls-sr-vtn-mt"/> and <xref
        target="I-D.zhu-idr-bgpls-sr-vtn-flexalgo"/> respectively. Note that
        with these mechanisms, the number of VTNs supported relies on the
        number of topologies or algorithms supported.</t>

        <t>The IGP mechanisms described in <xref
        target="I-D.dong-lsr-sr-enhanced-vpn"/> introduce a new VTN-ID in the
        control plane, so that multiple VTNs can be mapped to the same
        &lt;topology, algorithm&gt; tuple, while each VTN can have different
        resource attributes. This allows flexible combination of network
        topology and network resources attributes to build a large number of
        VTNs with a relatively small number of topologies or algorithms. The
        corresponding BGP-LS mechanisms which can be used to distribute the
        intra-domain VTN information and the inter-domain VTN-specific link
        information to the controller are described in <xref
        target="I-D.dong-idr-bgpls-sr-enhanced-vpn"/>.</t>

        <t>Figure 2 shows the three SR based VTNs created in the network in
        Figure 1.</t>

        <t><figure>
            <artwork align="center"><![CDATA[
      1001  1001                 2001  2001                 3001  3001
   101---------102            201---------202            301---------302
    |           | \1003        |           | \2003        |           |
1002|       1002|  \ 1001  2002|       2002|  \ 2001  3002|       3002|
    |           |  105         |           |  205         |           |
1001|       1002|  / 1002  2001|       2002|  / 2002  3001|       3002|
    |           | / 1003       |           | / 2003       |           |
   103---------104            203---------204            303---------304
      1002  1001                 2002  2001                 3002  3001
       VTN Red                   VTN Green                   VTN Blue

         Figure 2. SR based VTNs with different groups of SIDs]]></artwork>
          </figure></t>

        <t>For each SR based VTN, SR paths are computed within the VTN, taking
        the VTN topology and resources as constraints. The SR path can be an
        explicit path instantiated using SR policy <xref target="RFC9256"/>,
        in which the SID-list is built only with the SIDs allocated to the
        VTN. The SR path can also be an IGP computed path associated with a
        prefix-SID or SRv6 End SID allocated by a node for the VTN, the IGP
        path computation is also based on the topology and/or algorithm
        constraints of the VTN. Different SR paths in the same VTN may use
        shared network resources when they use the same resource-aware SIDs
        allocated to the VTN, while SR paths in different VTNs are steered to
        use different set of network resources even when they traverse the
        same network links or nodes. These VTN-specific SR paths need to be
        installed in the corresponding forwarding tables.</t>

        <t>For example, to create an explicit path A-B-D-E in VTN red in
        Figure 2, the SR SID-list encapsulated in the service packet would be
        (1001, 1002, 1003). For the same explicit path A-B-D-E in VTN green,
        the SR segment list would be (2001, 2002, 2003). In the case where we
        wish to construct a loose path A-D-E in VTN green, the service packet
        should be encapsulated with the SR SID-list (201, 204, 205). At node
        A, the packet can be sent towards D via either node B or C using the
        network resources allocated by these nodes for VTN green. At node D
        the packet is forwarded to E using the link and node resource
        allocated for VTN green. Similarly, a packet to be sent via loose path
        A-D-E in VTN red would be encapsulated with segment list (101, 104,
        105). In the case where an IGP computed path can meet the service
        requirement, the packet can be simply encapsulated with the prefix-SID
        of egress node E in the corresponding VTN.</t>
      </section>

      <section title="Mapping Service to SR based VTN">
        <t>Network services can be provisioned using SR based VTNs as the
        virtual underlay networks. For example, different services may be
        provisioned in different SR based VTNs, each of which would use the
        network resources allocated to the VTN, so that their data traffic
        will not interfere with each other. In another case, a group of
        services which have similar characteristics and requirements may be
        provisioned in the same VTN, in this case the network resources
        allocated to the VTN are only shared among this group of services, but
        will not be shared with other services in the network. The steering of
        service traffic to SR based VTNs can be based on either local policy
        or the mechanisms as defined in <xref target="RFC9256"/>.</t>
      </section>

      <section title="VTN Visibility to Customers">
        <t>VTNs can be used by network operators to organize and split their
        network infrastructure into different virtual underlay networks for
        different customers or services. Some customers may also request
        different granularity of visibility to the VTN which is used to
        deliver the service. Depending on the requirement, VTNs may be exposed
        to the customer either as a virtual network with both the edge nodes
        and the intermediate nodes, or a set of paths with some of the transit
        nodes, or simply a set of virtual connections between the endpoints
        without any transit node information. The visibility may be delivered
        through different possible mechanisms, such as IGPs (e.g., IS-IS,
        OSPF), BGP-LS or Netconf/YANG. On the other hand, network operators
        may want to restrict the visibility of the underlay network
        information it delivers to the customer by either hiding the transit
        nodes between sites (and only delivering the endpoints connectivity),
        or by hiding portions of the transit nodes (summarizing the path into
        fewer nodes). The information of VTNs which are not used by the
        customer should also be filtered. Mechanisms such as BGP-LS allow the
        flexibility of the advertisement of aggregated virtual network
        information and configurable filtering policies.</t>
      </section>
    </section>

    <section title="Characteristics of SR based VTNs">
      <t>The mechanism described in this document provides several key
      characteristics:</t>

      <t><list style="symbols">
          <t>Customization: Different customized VTNs can be created in a
          shared network to meet different customers' connectivity and service
          requirement. The customers are only aware of the topology and
          attributes of their own VTNs, and provision services on the VTN
          instead of the physical network. This provides a practical mechanism
          to support network slicing.</t>

          <t>Resource Isolation: The computation and instantiation of SR paths
          in one VTN can be independent from other VTNs or other services in
          the network. In addition, a VTN can be associated with a set of
          dedicated network resources, which can avoid resource competition
          and performance interference from other VTNs or other services in
          the network. This mechanism also allows resource sharing between
          different service flows of the same customer, or between a group of
          services which are provisioned in the same VTN. This gives the
          operators and the customers the flexibility in network planning and
          service provisioning. In a VTN, the performance of critical services
          can be further ensured using other mechanisms, e.g., those as
          defined in <xref target="DetNet"/>.</t>

          <t>Scalability: The introduction of resource aware SIDs for
          different VTNs would increase the amount of SIDs and state in the
          network. While the increased network state is considered an
          inevitable price in meeting the requirements of some customers or
          services, the SR based VTN mechanism seeks to achieve a balance
          between the state limitations of traditional end-to-end TE mechanism
          and the lack of resource awareness in classic segment routing.
          Following the segment routing paradigm, network resources are
          allocated on network segments in a per VTN manner and represented as
          SIDs, this ensures that there is no per-path state introduced in the
          network. In addition, operators can choose the granularity of
          resource allocation on different network segments. In network
          segments where resource is scarce such that the service requirement
          may not always be met, this approach can be used to allocate a set
          of resources to a VTN which contains such network segment to avoid
          possible competition. By contrast, in other segment of the network
          where resource is considered plentiful, the resource may be shared
          between a number of VTNs. The decision to do this is in the hands of
          the operator.</t>
        </list></t>
    </section>

    <section title="Service Assurance of VTNs">
      <t>In order to provide assurance for services provisioned in the SR
      based VTNs, it is necessary to instrument the network at multiple
      levels, e.g., in both the underlay network level and the VTN level. The
      operator or the customer may also monitor and measure the performance of
      the services carried by the VTN. In principle these can be achieved
      using existing or in development techniques in IETF, such as network
      telemetry <xref target="RFC9232"/>. The detailed mechanisms are out of
      the scope of this document.</t>

      <t>In case of failure or service performance degradation in a VTN, it is
      necessary that some recovery mechanisms, e.g., local protection or
      end-to-end protection mechanism is used to switch the traffic to another
      path in the same VTN which could meet the service performance
      requirement. Care must be taken that the service or path recovery
      mechanism in one VTN does not impact other VTNs in the same network.</t>
    </section>

    <section anchor="IANA" title="IANA Considerations">
      <t>This document makes no request of IANA.</t>

      <t>Note to RFC Editor: this section may be removed on publication as an
      RFC.</t>
    </section>

    <section anchor="Security" title="Security Considerations">
      <t>The security considerations of segment routing and resource-aware
      SIDs are applicable to this document.</t>

      <t>The SR VTNs may be used carry services with specific SLA parameters.
      An attack can be directly targeted at the customer application by
      disrupting the SLA, and can be targeted at the network operator by
      causing them to violate their SLA, triggering commercial consequences.
      By rigorously policing ingress traffic and carefully provisioning the
      resources provided to the VTN, this type of attack can be prevented.
      However care needs to be taken when shared resources are provided
      between VTNs at some point in the network, and when the network needs to
      be reconfigured as part of ongoing maintenance or in response to a
      failure.</t>

      <t>Considering the scalability of the SR VTN mechanism, the system may
      be destabilised by an attack or accident) that causes a large number of
      VTNs to be configured. This can be mitigated by placing thresholds (for
      alarms or cut-off) in the configuration process.</t>

      <t>The details of the underlying network should not be exposed to third
      parties, some abstraction would be needed, this is also to prevent
      attacks aimed at exploiting a shared resource between VTNs.</t>
    </section>

    <section title="Contributors">
      <t><figure>
          <artwork><![CDATA[Zhenbin Li
Email: lizhenbin@huawei.com

Zhibo Hu
Email: huzhibo@huawei.com
]]></artwork>
        </figure></t>
    </section>

    <section anchor="Acknowledgements" title="Acknowledgements">
      <t>The authors would like to thank Mach Chen, Stefano Previdi, Charlie
      Perkins, Bruno Decraene, Loa Andersson, Alexander Vainshtein, Joel
      Halpern, James Guichard, Adrian Farrel and Shunsuke Homma for the
      valuable discussion and suggestions to this document.</t>
    </section>
  </middle>

  <back>
    <references title="Normative References">
      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.8402'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.8660'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.I-D.ietf-teas-enhanced-vpn'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.I-D.ietf-spring-resource-aware-segments'?>
    </references>

    <references title="Informative References">
      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.3209'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.3630'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.4915'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.5120'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.5305'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.5440'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.6241'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.7471'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.7752'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.7950'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.8570'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.8571'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.8986'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.9086'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.9232'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.RFC.9256'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.I-D.dong-lsr-sr-enhanced-vpn'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.I-D.ietf-lsr-isis-sr-vtn-mt'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.I-D.zhu-lsr-isis-sr-vtn-flexalgo'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.I-D.ietf-idr-bgpls-sr-vtn-mt'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.I-D.zhu-idr-bgpls-sr-vtn-flexalgo'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.I-D.dong-idr-bgpls-sr-enhanced-vpn'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.I-D.ietf-lsr-flex-algo'?>

      <?rfc include='reference.I-D.ietf-teas-nrp-scalability'?>

      <reference anchor="DetNet"
                 target="https://datatracker.ietf.org/wg/detnet">
        <front>
          <title>DetNet WG</title>

          <author>
            <organization/>
          </author>

          <date year="2016"/>
        </front>
      </reference>
    </references>
  </back>
</rfc>
