Resource Reservation Protocol Proxy Approaches
RFC 5945, “Resource Reservation Protocol Proxy Approaches”, is an Informational document published in October 2010 by F. Le Faucheur, J. Manner, D. Wing, A. Guillou. The canonical text is published by the RFC Editor.
Abstract
The Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) can be used to make end-to- end resource reservations in an IP network in order to guarantee the quality of service required by certain flows. RSVP assumes that both the data sender and receiver of a given flow take part in RSVP signaling. Yet, there are use cases where resource reservation is required, but the receiver, the sender, or both, is not RSVP-capable. This document presents RSVP proxy behaviors allowing RSVP routers to initiate or terminate RSVP signaling on behalf of a receiver or a sender that is not RSVP-capable. This allows resource reservations to be established on a critical subset of the end-to-end path. This document reviews conceptual approaches for deploying RSVP proxies and discusses how RSVP reservations can be synchronized with application requirements, despite the sender, receiver, or both not participating in RSVP. This document also points out where extensions to RSVP (or to other protocols) may be needed for deployment of a given RSVP proxy approach. However, such extensions are outside the scope of this document. Finally, practical use cases for RSVP proxy are described. This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is published for informational purposes.
What “Informational” means
Published for the general information of the community. It does not define an IETF standard and carries no standards-track status.
The canonical text of RFC 5945 is hosted at rfc-editor.org. Available in TXT,HTML.
- RFC 5944 IP Mobility Support for IPv4, Revised
- RFC 5946 Resource Reservation Protocol Extensions for Path-Triggered RSVP Receiver Proxy
- RFC 5943 A Dedicated Routing Policy Specification Language Interface Identifier for Operational Testing
- RFC 5947 Requirements for Multiple Address of Record Reachability Information in the Session Initiation Protocol
- RFC 5942 IPv6 Subnet Model: The Relationship between Links and Subnet Prefixes
- RFC 5948 Transmission of IPv4 Packets over the IP Convergence Sublayer of IEEE 802.16
- RFC 5941 Sharing Transaction Fraud Data
- RFC 5949 Fast Handovers for Proxy Mobile IPv6