Label Switched Path Stitching with Generalized Multiprotocol Label Switching Traffic Engineering
RFC 5150, “Label Switched Path Stitching with Generalized Multiprotocol Label Switching Traffic Engineering”, is a Proposed Standard document published in February 2008 by A. Ayyangar, K. Kompella, JP. Vasseur, A. Farrel. The canonical text is published by the RFC Editor.
Abstract
In certain scenarios, there may be a need to combine several Generalized Multiprotocol Label Switching (GMPLS) Label Switched Paths (LSPs) such that a single end-to-end (e2e) LSP is realized and all traffic from one constituent LSP is switched onto the next LSP. We will refer to this as "LSP stitching", the key requirement being that a constituent LSP not be allocated to more than one e2e LSP. The constituent LSPs will be referred to as "LSP segments" (S-LSPs).
This document describes extensions to the existing GMPLS signaling protocol (Resource Reservation Protocol-Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE)) to establish e2e LSPs created from S-LSPs, and describes how the LSPs can be managed using the GMPLS signaling and routing protocols.
It may be possible to configure a GMPLS node to switch the traffic from an LSP for which it is the egress, to another LSP for which it is the ingress, without requiring any signaling or routing extensions whatsoever and such that the operation is completely transparent to other nodes. This will also result in LSP stitching in the data plane. However, this document does not cover this scenario of LSP stitching. [STANDARDS-TRACK]
What “Proposed Standard” means
An entry-level standards-track specification: stable, peer-reviewed and a solid basis for implementation, though it may still evolve before becoming an Internet Standard.
The canonical text of RFC 5150 is hosted at rfc-editor.org. Available in TXT,HTML.
- RFC 5149 Service Selection for Mobile IPv6
- RFC 5151 Inter-Domain MPLS and GMPLS Traffic Engineering -- Resource Reservation Protocol-Traffic Engineering Extensions
- RFC 5148 Jitter Considerations in Mobile Ad Hoc Networks
- RFC 5152 A Per-Domain Path Computation Method for Establishing Inter-Domain Traffic Engineering Label Switched Paths
- RFC 5147 URI Fragment Identifiers for the text/plain Media Type
- RFC 5153 IP Flow Information Export Implementation Guidelines
- RFC 5146 Interworking Requirements to Support Operation of MPLS-TE over GMPLS Networks
- RFC 5154 IP over IEEE 802.16 Problem Statement and Goals