RFC 3386 · INFORMATIONAL · 2002

Network Hierarchy and Multilayer Survivability

Overview

RFC 3386, “Network Hierarchy and Multilayer Survivability”, is an Informational document published in November 2002 by W. Lai, D. McDysan. The canonical text is published by the RFC Editor.

Abstract

This document is the deliverable out of the Network Hierarchy and Survivability Techniques Design Team established within the Traffic Engineering Working Group. This team collected and documented current and near term requirements for survivability and hierarchy in service provider environments. For clarity, an expanded set of definitions is included. The team determined that there appears to be a need to define a small set of interoperable survivability approaches in packet and non-packet networks. Suggested approaches include path-based as well as one that repairs connections in proximity to the network fault. They operate primarily at a single network layer. For hierarchy, there did not appear to be a driving near-term need for work on 'vertical hierarchy,' defined as communication between network layers such as TDM/optical and MPLS. In particular, instead of direct exchange of signaling and routing between vertical layers, some looser form of coordination and communication, such as the specification of hold-off timers, is a nearer term need. For 'horizontal hierarchy' in data networks, there are several pressing needs. The requirement is to be able to set up many LSPs in a service provider network with hierarchical IGP. This is necessary to support layer 2 and layer 3 VPN services that require edge-to- edge signaling across a core network. Please send comments to te-wg@ops.ietf.org

Abstract as published in the RFC, via rfc-editor.org.

What “Informational” means

Published for the general information of the community. It does not define an IETF standard and carries no standards-track status.

Read this RFC

The canonical text of RFC 3386 is hosted at rfc-editor.org. Available in TXT,HTML.

Other RFCs from 2002

Who Is Online

In total there are 31 users online: 0 registered, 26 guests and 5 bots.

Most users ever online was 1,226 on 13 Jun 2026, 3:56 am.

Bots: AhrefsBot Applebot Bingbot Other Bot SemrushBot

Users active in the past 15 minutes. Total registered members: 354