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PROPOSED STANDARD
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) P. Mohapatra
Request for Comments: 7311 Sproute Networks
Category: Standards Track R. Fernando
ISSN: 2070-1721 E. Rosen
Cisco Systems, Inc.
J. Uttaro
AT&T
August 2014
The Accumulated IGP Metric Attribute for BGP
Abstract
Routing protocols that have been designed to run within a single
administrative domain (IGPs) generally do so by assigning a metric to
each link and then choosing, as the installed path between two nodes,
the path for which the total distance (sum of the metric of each link
along the path) is minimized. BGP, designed to provide routing over
a large number of independent administrative domains (autonomous
systems), does not make its path-selection decisions through the use
of a metric. It is generally recognized that any attempt to do so
would incur significant scalability problems as well as inter-
administration coordination problems. However, there are deployments
in which a single administration runs several contiguous BGP
networks. In such cases, it can be desirable, within that single
administrative domain, for BGP to select paths based on a metric,
just as an IGP would do. The purpose of this document is to provide
a specification for doing so.
Status of This Memo
This is an Internet Standards Track document.
This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force
(IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has
received public review and has been approved for publication by the
Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Further information on
Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 5741.
Information about the current status of this document, any errata,
and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at
http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7311.
Mohapatra, et al. Standards Track [Page 1]
RFC 7311 AIGP Metric Attribute for BGP August 2014
Copyright Notice
Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
(http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
publication of this document. Please review these documents
carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must
include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
described in the Simplified BSD License.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction ....................................................3
2. Specification of Requirements ...................................4
3. AIGP Attribute ..................................................4
3.1. Applicability Restrictions and Cautions ....................6
3.2. Handling a Malformed AIGP Attribute ........................6
3.3. Restrictions on Sending/Receiving ..........................6
3.4. Creating and Modifying the AIGP Attribute ..................7
3.4.1. Originating the AIGP Attribute ......................7
3.4.2. Modifications by the Originator .....................8
3.4.3. Modifications by a Non-Originator ...................8
4. Decision Process ...............................................10
4.1. When a Route Has an AIGP Attribute ........................11
4.2. When the Route to the Next Hop Has an AIGP Attribute ......11
5. Deployment Considerations ......................................12
6. IANA Considerations ............................................13
7. Security Considerations ........................................13
8. Acknowledgments ................................................13
9. References .....................................................14
9.1. Normative Reference .......................................14
9.2. Informative References ....................................14
Mohapatra, et al. Standards Track [Page 2]
RFC 7311 AIGP Metric Attribute for BGP August 2014
1. Introduction
There are many routing protocols that have been designed to run
within a single administrative domain. These are known collectively
as "Interior Gateway Protocols" (IGPs). Typically, each link is
assigned a particular "metric" value. The path between two nodes can
then be assigned a "distance", which is the sum of the metrics of all
the links that belong to that path. An IGP selects the "shortest"
(minimal distance) path between any two nodes, perhaps subject to the
constraint that if the IGP provides multiple "areas", it may prefer
the shortest path within an area to a path that traverses more than
one area. Typically, the administration of the network has some
routing policy that can be approximated by selecting shortest paths
in this way.
BGP, as distinguished from the IGPs, was designed to run over an
arbitrarily large number of administrative domains ("autonomous
systems" or "ASes") with limited coordination among the various
administrations. BGP does not make its path-selection decisions
based on a metric; there is no such thing as an "inter-AS metric".
There are two fundamental reasons for this:
- The distance between two nodes in a common administrative domain
may change at any time due to events occurring in that domain.
These changes are not propagated around the Internet unless they
actually cause the border routers of the domain to select routes
with different BGP attributes for some set of address prefixes.
This accords with a fundamental principle of scaling, viz., that
changes with only local significance must not have global effects.
If local changes in distance were always propagated around the
Internet, this principle would be violated.
- A basic principle of inter-domain routing is that the different
administrative domains may have their own policies, which do not
have to be revealed to other domains and which certainly do not
have to be agreed to by other domains. Yet, the use of an inter-
AS metric in the Internet would have exactly these effects.
There are, however, deployments in which a single administration runs
a network that has been sub-divided into multiple, contiguous ASes,
each running BGP. There are several reasons why a single
administrative domain may be broken into several ASes (which, in this
case, are not really autonomous.) It may be that the existing IGPs
do not scale well in the particular environment; it may be that a
more generalized topology is desired than could be obtained by use of
a single IGP domain; it may be that a more finely grained routing
policy is desired than can be supported by an IGP. In such
deployments, it can be useful to allow BGP to make its routing
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decisions based on the IGP metric, so that BGP chooses the shortest
path between two nodes, even if the nodes are in two different ASes
within that same administrative domain.
There are, in fact, some implementations that already do something
like this, using BGP's MULTI_EXIT_DISC (MED) attribute to carry a
value based on IGP metrics. However, that doesn't really provide
IGP-like shortest path routing, as the BGP decision process gives
priority to other factors, such as the AS_PATH length. Also, the
standard procedures for use of the MED do not ensure that the IGP
metric is properly accumulated so that it covers all the links along
the path.
In this document, we define a new optional, non-transitive BGP
attribute, called the "Accumulated IGP Metric Attribute", or "AIGP
attribute", and specify the procedures for using it.
The specified procedures prevent the AIGP attribute from "leaking
out" past an administrative domain boundary into the Internet. We
will refer to the set of ASes in a common administrative domain as an
"AIGP administrative domain".
The specified procedures also ensure that the value in the AIGP
attribute has been accumulated all along the path from the
destination, i.e., that the AIGP attribute does not appear when there
are "gaps" along the path where the IGP metric is unknown.
2. Specification of Requirements
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 [RFC2119].
3. AIGP Attribute
The AIGP attribute is an optional, non-transitive BGP path attribute.
The attribute type code for the AIGP attribute is 26.
The value field of the AIGP attribute is defined here to be a set of
elements encoded as "Type/Length/Value" (i.e., a set of TLVs). Each
such TLV is encoded as shown in Figure 1.
Mohapatra, et al. Standards Track [Page 4]
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0 1 2 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
| Type | Length | |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |
~ ~
| Value |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+..........................
Figure 1: AIGP TLV
- Type: A single octet encoding the TLV Type. Only type 1, "AIGP
TLV", is defined in this document. Use of other TLV types is
outside the scope of this document.
- Length: Two octets encoding the length in octets of the TLV,
including the Type and Length fields. The length is encoded as an
unsigned binary integer. (Note that the minimum length is 3,
indicating that no Value field is present.)
- Value: A field containing zero or more octets.
This document defines only a single such TLV, the "AIGP TLV". The
AIGP TLV is encoded as follows:
- Type: 1
- Length: 11
- Value: Accumulated IGP Metric.
The value field of the AIGP TLV is always 8 octets long, and its
value is interpreted as an unsigned 64-bit integer. IGP metrics
are frequently expressed as 4-octet values. By using an 8-octet
field, we ensure that the AIGP attribute can be used to hold the
sum of an arbitrary number of 4-octet values.
When an AIGP attribute is created, it SHOULD contain no more than one
AIGP TLV. However, if it contains more than one AIGP TLV, only the
first one is used as described in Sections 3.4 and 4. In the
remainder of this document, we will use the term "value of the AIGP
TLV" to mean the value of the first AIGP TLV in the AIGP attribute.
Any other AIGP TLVs in the AIGP attribute MUST be passed along
unchanged if the AIGP attribute is passed along.
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3.1. Applicability Restrictions and Cautions
This document only considers the use of the AIGP attribute in
networks where each router uses tunneling of some sort to deliver a
packet to its BGP next hop. Use of the AIGP attribute in other
scenarios is outside the scope of this document.
If a Route Reflector supports the AIGP attribute but some of its
clients do not, then the routing choices that result may not all
reflect the intended routing policy.
3.2. Handling a Malformed AIGP Attribute
When receiving a BGP Update message containing a malformed AIGP
attribute, the attribute MUST be treated exactly as if it were an
unrecognized non-transitive attribute. That is, it "MUST be quietly
ignored and not passed along to other BGP peers" (see [BGP], Section
5). This is equivalent to the "attribute discard" action specified
in [BGP-ERROR].
Note that an AIGP attribute MUST NOT be considered to be malformed
because it contains more than one TLV of a given type or because it
contains TLVs of unknown types.
If a BGP path attribute is received that has the AIGP attribute
codepoint but also has the transitive bit set, the attribute MUST be
considered to be a malformed AIGP attribute and MUST be discarded as
specified in this section.
If an AIGP attribute is received and its first AIGP TLV contains the
maximum value 0xffffffffffffffff, the attribute SHOULD be considered
to be malformed and SHOULD be discarded as specified in this section.
(Since the TLV value cannot be increased any further, it is not
useful for metric-based path selection.)
3.3. Restrictions on Sending/Receiving
An implementation that supports the AIGP attribute MUST support a
per-session configuration item, AIGP_SESSION, that indicates whether
the attribute is enabled or disabled for use on that session.
- For Internal BGP (IBGP) sessions, and for External BGP (EBGP)
sessions between members of the same BGP Confederation
[BGP-CONFED], the default value of AIGP_SESSION SHOULD be
"enabled".
- For all other External BGP (EBGP) sessions, the default value of
AIGP_SESSION MUST be "disabled".
Mohapatra, et al. Standards Track [Page 6]
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The AIGP attribute MUST NOT be sent on any BGP session for which
AIGP_SESSION is disabled.
If an AIGP attribute is received on a BGP session for which
AIGP_SESSION is disabled, the attribute MUST be treated exactly as if
it were an unrecognized non-transitive attribute. That is, it "MUST
be quietly ignored and not passed along to other BGP peers" (see
[BGP], Section 5). However, the fact that the attribute was received
SHOULD be logged (in a rate-limited manner).
3.4. Creating and Modifying the AIGP Attribute
3.4.1. Originating the AIGP Attribute
An implementation that supports the AIGP attribute MUST support a
configuration item, AIGP_ORIGINATE, that enables or disables its
creation and attachment to routes. The default value of
AIGP_ORIGINATE MUST be "disabled".
A BGP speaker MUST NOT add the AIGP attribute to any route whose path
leads outside the AIGP administrative domain to which the BGP speaker
belongs. When the AIGP attribute is used, changes in IGP routing
will directly impact BGP routing. Attaching the AIGP attribute to
customer routes, Internet routes, or other routes whose paths lead
outside the infrastructure of a particular AIGP administrative domain
could result in BGP scaling and/or thrashing problems.
The AIGP attribute may be added only to routes that satisfy one of
the following conditions:
- The route is a static route, not leading outside the AIGP
administrative domain, that is being redistributed into BGP;
- The route is an IGP route that is being redistributed into BGP;
- The route is an IBGP-learned route whose AS_PATH attribute is
empty; or
- The route is an EBGP-learned route whose AS_PATH contains only
ASes that are in the same AIGP administrative domain as the BGP
speaker.
A BGP speaker R MUST NOT add the AIGP attribute to any route for
which R does not set itself as the next hop.
Mohapatra, et al. Standards Track [Page 7]
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It SHOULD be possible to set AIGP_ORIGINATE to "enabled for the
routes of a particular IGP that are redistributed into BGP" (where "a
particular IGP" might be OSPF or IS-IS). Other policies determining
when and whether to originate an AIGP attribute are also possible,
depending on the needs of a particular deployment scenario.
When originating an AIGP attribute for a BGP route to address prefix
P, the value of the AIGP TLV is set according to policy. There are a
number of useful policies, some of which are in the following list:
- When a BGP speaker R is redistributing into BGP an IGP route to
address prefix P, the IGP will have computed a distance from R to
P. This distance MAY be assigned as the value of the AIGP TLV.
- A BGP speaker R may be redistributing into BGP a static route to
address prefix P, for which a distance from R to P has been
configured. This distance MAY be assigned as the value of the
AIGP TLV.
- A BGP speaker R may have received and installed a BGP-learned
route to prefix P, with next hop N. Or it may be redistributing a
static route to P, with next hop N. Then:
* If R has an IGP route to N, the IGP-computed distance from R to
N MAY be used as the value of the AIGP TLV of the route to P.
* If R has a BGP route to N, and an AIGP TLV attribute value has
been computed for that route (see Section 3.4.3), that value
MAY be used as the AIGP TLV value of the route to P.
3.4.2. Modifications by the Originator
If BGP speaker R is the originator of the AIGP attribute of prefix P,
and the distance from R to P changes at some point, R SHOULD issue a
new BGP update containing the new value of the AIGP TLV of the AIGP
attribute. (Here we use the term "distance" to refer to whatever
value the originator assigns to the AIGP TLV, however it is computed;
see Section 3.4.1.) However, if the difference between the new
distance and the distance advertised in the AIGP TLV is less than a
configurable threshold, the update MAY be suppressed.
3.4.3. Modifications by a Non-Originator
Suppose a BGP speaker R1 receives a route with an AIGP attribute
whose value is A and with a next hop whose value is R2. Suppose also
that R1 is about to redistribute that route on a BGP session that is
enabled for sending/receiving the attribute.
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If R1 does not change the next hop of the route, then R1 MUST NOT
change the AIGP attribute value of the route.
In all the computations discussed in this section, the AIGP value
MUST be capped at its maximum unsigned value 0xffffffffffffffff.
Increasing the AIGP value MUST NOT cause the value to wrap around.
Suppose R1 changes the next hop of the route from R2 to R1. If R1's
route to R2 is either (a) an IGP-learned route or (b) a static route
that does not require recursive next hop resolution, then R1 MUST
increase the value of the AIGP TLV by adding to A the distance from
R1 to R2. This distance is either the IGP-computed distance from R1
to R2 or some value determined by policy. However, A MUST be
increased by a non-zero amount.
It is possible that R1 and R2 above are EBGP neighbors and that there
is a direct link between them on which no IGP is running. Then, when
R1 changes the next hop of a route from R2 to R1, the AIGP TLV value
MUST be increased by a non-zero amount. The amount of the increase
SHOULD be such that it is properly comparable to the IGP metrics.
For example, if the IGP metric is a function of latency, then the
amount of the increase should be a function of the latency from R1 to
R2.
Suppose R1 changes the next hop of the route from R2 to R1 and R1's
route to R2 is either (a) a BGP-learned route or (b) a static route
that requires recursive next-hop resolution. Then, the AIGP TLV
value needs to be increased in several steps, according to the
following procedure. (Note that this procedure is ONLY used when
recursive next-hop resolution is needed.)
1. Let Xattr be the new AIGP TLV value.
2. Initialize Xattr to A.
3. Set XNH to R2.
4. Find the route to XNH.
5. If the route to XNH does not require recursive next-hop
resolution, get the distance D from R1 to XNH. (Note that this
condition cannot be satisfied the first time through this
procedure.) If D is above a configurable threshold, set the AIGP
TLV value to Xattr+D. If D is below a configurable threshold,
set the AIGP TLV value to Xattr. In either case, exit this
procedure.
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6. If the route to XNH is a BGP-learned route that does NOT have an
AIGP attribute, then exit this procedure and do not pass on any
AIGP attribute. If the route has an AIGP attribute without an
AIGP TLV, then the AIGP attribute MAY be passed along unchanged.
7. If the route to XNH is a BGP-learned route that has an AIGP TLV
value of Y, then set Xattr to Xattr+Y and set XNH to the next hop
of this route. (The intention here is that Y is the AIGP TLV
value of the route as it was received by R1, without having been
modified by R1.)
8. Go to step 4.
The AIGP TLV value of a given route depends on (a) the AIGP TLV
values of all the next hops that are recursively resolved during this
procedure, and (b) the IGP distance to any next hop that is not
recursively resolved. Any change due to (a) in any of these values
MUST trigger a new AIGP computation for that route. Whether a change
due to (b) triggers a new AIGP computation depends upon whether the
change in IGP distance exceeds a configurable threshold.
If the AIGP attribute is carried across several ASes, each with its
own IGP domain, it is clear that these procedures are unlikely to
give a sensible result if the IGPs are different (e.g., some OSPF and
some IS-IS) or if the meaning of the metrics is different in the
different IGPs (e.g., if the metric represents bandwidth in some IGP
domains but represents latency in others). These procedures also are
unlikely to give a sensible result if the metric assigned to inter-AS
BGP links (on which no IGP is running) or to static routes is not
comparable to the IGP metrics. All such cases are outside the scope
of the current document.
4. Decision Process
Support for the AIGP attribute involves several modifications to the
tie-breaking procedures of the BGP "phase 2" decision described in
[BGP], Section 9.1.2.2. These modifications are described in
Sections 4.1 and 4.2.
In some cases, the BGP decision process may install a route without
executing any tie-breaking procedures. This may happen, e.g., if
only one route to a given prefix has the highest degree of preference
(as defined in [BGP], Section 9.1.1). In this case, the AIGP
attribute is not considered.
Mohapatra, et al. Standards Track [Page 10]
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In other cases, some routes may be eliminated before the tie-breaking
procedures are invoked, e.g., routes with AS-PATH attributes
indicating a loop or routes with unresolvable next hops. In these
cases, the AIGP attributes of the eliminated routes are not
considered.
4.1. When a Route Has an AIGP Attribute
Assuming that the BGP decision process invokes the tie-breaking
procedures, the procedures in this section MUST be executed BEFORE
any of the tie-breaking procedures described in [BGP], Section
9.1.2.2 are executed.
If any routes have an AIGP attribute containing an AIGP TLV, remove
from consideration all routes that do not have an AIGP attribute
containing an AIGP TLV.
If router R is considering route T, where T has an AIGP attribute
with an AIGP TLV,
- then R must compute the value A, defined as follows: set A to the
sum of (a) T's AIGP TLV value and (b) the IGP distance from R to
T's next hop.
- remove from consideration all routes that are not tied for the
lowest value of A.
4.2. When the Route to the Next Hop Has an AIGP Attribute
Suppose that a given router R1 is comparing two BGP-learned routes,
such that either:
- the two routes have equal AIGP TLV values, or else
- neither of the two routes has an AIGP attribute containing an AIGP
TLV.
The BGP decision process as specified in [BGP] makes use, in its tie-
breaking procedures, of "interior cost", defined as follows:
interior cost of a route is determined by calculating the metric
to the NEXT_HOP for the route using the Routing Table.
This document replaces the "interior cost" tie breaker of [BGP] with
a tie breaker based on the "AIGP-enhanced interior cost". Suppose
route T has a next hop of N. The "AIGP-enhanced interior cost" from
node R1 to node N is defined as follows:
Mohapatra, et al. Standards Track [Page 11]
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- Let R2 be the BGP next hop of the route to N after all recursive
resolution of the next hop is done. Let m be the IGP distance (or
in the case of a static route, the configured distance) from R1 to
R2.
- If the installed route to N has an AIGP attribute with an AIGP
TLV, set A to its AIGP TLV value, computed according to the
procedure in Section 3.4.3.
- If the installed route to N does not have an AIGP attribute with
an AIGP TLV, set A to 0.
- The "AIGP-enhanced interior cost" of route T is the quantity A+m.
The "interior cost" tie breaker of [BGP] is then applied, using the
"AIGP-enhanced interior cost" instead of the "interior cost" as
defined in [BGP].
5. Deployment Considerations
- Using the AIGP attribute to achieve a desired routing policy will
be more effective if each BGP speaker can use it to choose from
among multiple routes. Thus, it is highly recommended that the
procedures of [BESTEXT] and [ADD-PATH] be used in conjunction with
the AIGP attribute.
- If a Route Reflector does not pass all paths to its clients, then
it will tend to pass the paths for which the IGP distance from the
Route Reflector itself to the next hop is smallest. This may
result in a non-optimal choice by the clients.
- When the procedures of this document are deployed, it must be
understood that frequent changes of the IGP distance towards a
certain prefix may result in equally frequent transmission of BGP
updates about that prefix.
- In an IGP deployment, there are certain situations in which a
network link may be temporarily assigned a metric whose value is
the maximum metric value (or close to the maximum) for that IGP.
This is known as "costing out" the link. A link may be "costed
out" to deflect traffic from the link before the link is actually
brought down or to discourage traffic from using a link until all
the necessary state for that link has been set up (e.g.,
[LDP-IGP-SYNC]). This assumes, of course, that a path containing
a "costed out" link will have a total distance that is larger than
any alternate path within the same IGP area; in that case, the
normal IGP decision process will choose the path that does not
contain the "costed out" link.
Mohapatra, et al. Standards Track [Page 12]
RFC 7311 AIGP Metric Attribute for BGP August 2014
Costing out a link will have the same effect on BGP routes that
carry the AIGP attribute. The value of the AIGP TLV will be
larger for a route (to a given prefix) that contains a "costed
out" link than for a route (to the same prefix) that does not. It
must be understood, though, that a route that carries an AIGP
attribute will be preferred to a route that does not, no matter
what the value of the AIGP TLV is. This is similar to the
behavior in, e.g., an OSPF area, where an intra-area route is
preferred to an inter-area or external route, even if the intra-
area route's distance is large.
6. IANA Considerations
IANA has assigned the codepoint 26 in the "BGP Path Attributes"
registry to the AIGP attribute.
IANA has created a registry for "BGP AIGP Attribute Types". The Type
field consists of a single octet, with possible values from 1 to 255.
(The value 0 is "Reserved".) The registration procedure for this
registry is "Standards Action". Type 1 is defined as "AIGP" and
refers to this document.
7. Security Considerations
The spurious introduction, through error or malfeasance, of an AIGP
attribute could result in the selection of paths other than those
desired.
Improper configuration on both ends of an EBGP connection could
result in an AIGP attribute being passed from one service provider to
another. This would likely result in an unsound selection of paths.
8. Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank Waqas Alam, Rajiv Asati, Alia Atlas,
Ron Bonica, Bruno Decraene, Brian Dickson, Clarence Filsfils, Sue
Hares, Anoop Kapoor, Pratima Kini, Thomas Mangin, Robert Raszuk,
Yakov Rekhter, Eric Rosenberg, Samir Saad, John Scudder, Shyam
Sethuram, and Ilya Varlashkin for their input.
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RFC 7311 AIGP Metric Attribute for BGP August 2014
9. References
9.1. Normative Reference
[BGP] Rekhter, Y., Ed., Li, T., Ed., and S. Hares, Ed., "A
Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4)", RFC 4271, January
2006.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
9.2. Informative References
[ADD-PATH] Walton, D., Retana, A., Chen, E., and J. Scudder,
"Advertisement of Multiple Paths in BGP", Work in
Progress, October 2013.
[BESTEXT] Marques, P., Fernando, R., Mohapatra, P., and H.
Gredler, "Advertisement of the best external route in
BGP", Work in Progress, January 2012.
[BGP-CONFED] Traina, P., McPherson, D., and J. Scudder, "Autonomous
System Confederations for BGP", RFC 5065, August 2007.
[BGP-ERROR] Chen, E., Scudder, J., Mohapatra, P., and K. Patel,
"Revised Error Handling for BGP UPDATE Messages", Work
in Progress, June 2014.
[LDP-IGP-SYNC] Jork, M., Atlas, A., and L. Fang, "LDP IGP
Synchronization", RFC 5443, March 2009.
Mohapatra, et al. Standards Track [Page 14]
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Authors' Addresses
Pradosh Mohapatra
Sproute Networks
EMail: mpradosh@yahoo.com
Rex Fernando
Cisco Systems, Inc.
170 Tasman Drive
San Jose, CA 95134
US
EMail: rex@cisco.com
Eric C. Rosen
Cisco Systems, Inc.
1414 Massachusetts Avenue
Boxborough, MA, 01719
US
EMail: erosen@cisco.com
James Uttaro
AT&T
200 S. Laurel Avenue
Middletown, NJ 07748
US
EMail: uttaro@att.com
Mohapatra, et al. Standards Track [Page 15]