Internet-Draft Preference-based EVPN DF Election October 2023
Rabadan, et al. Expires 11 April 2024 [Page]
Workgroup:
BESS Workgroup
Internet-Draft:
draft-ietf-bess-evpn-pref-df-13
Updates:
8584 (if approved)
Published:
Intended Status:
Standards Track
Expires:
Authors:
J. Rabadan, Ed.
Nokia
S. Sathappan
Nokia
W. Lin
Juniper Networks
J. Drake
Independent
A. Sajassi
Cisco Systems

Preference-based EVPN DF Election

Abstract

The Designated Forwarder (DF) in Ethernet Virtual Private Networks (EVPN) is defined as the Provider Edge (PE) router responsible for sending Broadcast, Unknown unicast and Multicast traffic (BUM) to a multi-homed device/network in the case of an all-active multi-homing Ethernet Segment (ES), or BUM and unicast in the case of single-active multi-homing. The Designated Forwarder is selected out of a candidate list of PEs that advertise the same Ethernet Segment Identifier (ESI) to the EVPN network, according to the Default Designated Forwarder Election algorithm. While the Default Algorithm provides an efficient and automated way of selecting the Designated Forwarder across different Ethernet Tags in the Ethernet Segment, there are some use cases where a more 'deterministic' and user-controlled method is required. At the same time, Network Operators require an easy way to force an on-demand Designated Forwarder switchover in order to carry out some maintenance tasks on the existing Designated Forwarder or control whether a new active PE can preempt the existing Designated Forwarder PE.

This document proposes a Designated Forwarder Election algorithm that meets the requirements of determinism and operation control. This document updates RFC8584 by modifying the definition of the DF Election Extended Community.

Status of This Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.

Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."

This Internet-Draft will expire on 11 April 2024.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction

1.1. Problem Statement

[RFC7432] defines the Designated Forwarder (DF) in EVPN networks as the PE responsible for sending Broadcast, Unknown unicast and Multicast traffic (BUM) to a multi-homed device/network in the case of an all-active multi-homing Ethernet Segment or BUM and unicast traffic to a multi-homed device or network in the case of single-active multi-homing. The Designated Forwarder is selected out of a candidate list of PEs that advertise the Ethernet Segment Identifier (ESI) to the EVPN network and according to the Designated Forwarder Election Algorithm, or DF Alg as per [RFC8584].

While the Default Designated Forwarder Algorithm [RFC7432] or the Highest Random Weight algorithm (HRW) [RFC8584] provide an efficient and automated way of selecting the Designated Forwarder across different Ethernet Tags in the Ethernet Segment, there are some use-cases where a more user-controlled method is required. At the same time, Network Operators require an easy way to force an on-demand Designated Forwarder switchover in order to carry out some maintenance tasks on the existing Designated Forwarder or control whether a new active PE can preempt the existing Designated Forwarder PE.

1.2. Solution Requirements

The procedures described in this document meet the following requirements:

  1. The solution provides an administrative preference option so that the user can control in what order the candidate PEs may become Designated Forwarder, assuming they are all operationally ready to take over as Designated Forwarder. The operator can determine whether the Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference PE among the PEs in the Ethernet Segment will be elected as Designated Forwarder, based on the DF Algorithms described in this document.
  2. The extensions in this document work for [RFC7432] Ethernet Segments and virtual Ethernet Segments, as defined in [I-D.ietf-bess-evpn-virtual-eth-segment].
  3. The user may force a PE to preempt the existing Designated Forwarder for a given Ethernet Tag without re-configuring all the PEs in the Ethernet Segment, by simply modifying the existing administrative preference in that PE.
  4. The solution allows an option to NOT preempt the current Designated Forwarder ("Don't Preempt" capability), even if the former Designated Forwarder PE comes back up after a failure. This is also known as "non-revertive" behavior, as opposed to the [RFC7432] Designated Forwarder election procedures that are always revertive (because the winner PE of the default Designated Forwarder election algorithm always takes over as the operational Designated Forwarder).
  5. The procedures described in this document support single-active and all-active multi-homing Ethernet Segments.

1.3. Solution Overview

To provide a solution that satisfies the above requirements, we introduce two new DF Algorithms that can be advertised in the DF Election Extended Community Section 3. Carried with the new DF Election Extended Community variants are a DF election preference advertised for each PE, that influences which PE will become DF Section 4.1. The advertised DF election preference can dynamically vary from the administratively configured preference to provide non-revertive behavior Section 4.3. An optional solution is discussed in Section 4.2, for use in Ethernet segments that support large numbers of Ethernet Tags and therefore need to balance load among multiple DFs.

2. Requirements Language and Terminology

The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.

3. EVPN BGP Attributes Extensions

This solution reuses and extends the Designated Forwarder Election Extended Community defined in [RFC8584] that is advertised along with the Ethernet Segment route. It does so by replacing the last two reserved octets of the DF Election Extended Community when the DF Algorithm is set to Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference. This document also defines a new capability referred to as the "Don't Preempt" capability, that MAY be used with Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference DF Algorithms. The format of the DF Election Extended Community that is used in this document follows:

 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=0x06     | Sub-Type(0x06)| RSV |  DF Alg |    Bitmap     ~
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
~     Bitmap    |   Reserved    |   DF Preference (2 octets)    |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 1: DF Election Extended Community

Where the above fields are defined as follows:

                       1 1 1 1 1 1
   0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
  |D|A|                           |
  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Figure 2: Bitmap field in the DF Election Extended Community

4. Solution description

Figure 3 illustrates an example that will be used in the description of the solution.

              EVPN network
         +-------------------+
         |                +-------+  ENNI    Aggregation
         |   <---ESI1,500 |  PE1  |   /\  +----Network---+
         | <-----ESI2,100 |       |===||===              |
         |                |       |===||== \      vES1   |  +----+
     +-----+              |       |   \/  |\----------------+CE1 |
CE3--+ PE4 |              +-------+       | \   ------------+    |
     +-----+                 |            |  \ /         |  +----+
         |                   |            |   X          |
         |   <---ESI1,255  +-----+============ \         |
         | <-----ESI2,200  | PE2 |==========    \ vES2   | +----+
         |                 +-----+        | \    ----------+CE2 |
         |                   |            |  --------------+    |
         |                 +-----+   ----------------------+    |
         | <-----ESI2,300  | PE3 +--/     |              | +----+
         |                 +-----+        +--------------+
         --------------------+
Figure 3: Preference-based DF Election

Figure 3 shows three PEs that are connecting EVCs coming from the Aggregation Network to their EVIs in the EVPN network. CE1 is connected to vES1 - that spans PE1 and PE2 - and CE2 is connected to vES2, that is attached to PE1, PE2 and PE3.

If the algorithm chosen for vES1 and vES2 is DF Algorithm Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference, the PEs may become Designated Forwarder irrespective of their IP address and based on the administrative Preference value. The following sections provide some examples of the procedures and how they are applied in the use-case of Figure 3.

4.1. Use of the Highest-Preference and Lowest Preference Algorithm

Assuming the operator wants to control - in a flexible way - what PE becomes the Designated Forwarder for a given virtual Ethernet Segment and the order in which the PEs become Designated Forwarder in case of multiple failures, the Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference algorithms can be used. Using the example in Figure 3, these algorithms are used as follows:

  1. vES1 and vES2 are now configurable with three optional parameters that are signaled in the Designated Forwarder Election extended community. These parameters are the Preference, Preemption option (or "Don't Preempt" option) and DF Algorithm. We will represent these parameters as (Pref,DP,Alg). For instance, vES1 (Pref,DP,Alg) is configured as (500,0,Highest-Preference) in PE1, and (255,0,Highest-Preference) in PE2. vES2 is configured as (100,0,Highest-Preference), (200,0,Highest-Preference) and (300,0,Highest-Preference) in PE1, PE2 and PE3 respectively.
  2. The PEs advertise an Ethernet Segment route for each virtual Ethernet Segment, including the three parameters indicated in 'a' above, in the Designated Forwarder Election Extended Community (encoded as described in Section 3).
  3. According to [RFC8584], each PE will run the Designated Forwarder election algorithm upon expiration of the DF Wait timer. Each PE runs the Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference DF Algorithm for each Ethernet Segment as follows:

    • The PE will check the DF Algorithm value in each Ethernet Segment route, and assuming all the Ethernet Segment routes (including the local route) are consistent in this DF Algorithm (that is, all are configured for Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference, but not a mix), the PE runs the procedure in this section. Otherwise, the procedure falls back to [RFC7432] Default Algorithm. The Highest-Preference and Lowest-Preference Algorithms are different Algorithms, therefore if two PEs configured for Highest-Preference and Lowest-Preference respectively, are attached to the same Ethernet Segment, the operational Designated Forwarder Election Algorithm will fall back to the Default Algorithm.
    • If all the PEs attached to the Ethernet Segment advertise Highest-Preference Algorithm, each PE builds a list of candidate PEs, ordered by Preference value from the numerically highest value to lowest value. E.g., PE1 builds a list of candidate PEs for vES1 ordered by the Preference, from high to low: <PE1, PE2> (since PE1's preference is more preferred than PE2's). Hence, PE1 becomes the Designated Forwarder for vES1. In the same way, PE3 becomes the Designated Forwarder for vES2.
    • If all the PEs attached to the Ethernet Segment advertise Lowest-Preference Algorithm, then the candidate list is ordered from the numerically lowest Preference value to the highest Preference value. E.g., PE1's ordered list for vES1 is <PE2, PE1>. Hence, PE2 becomes the Designated Forwarder for vES1. In the same way, PE1 becomes the Designated Forwarder for vES2.
  4. Assuming some maintenance tasks had to be executed on a PE the operator may want to make sure the PE is not the Designated Forwarder for the Ethernet Segment so that the impact on the service is minimized. E.g., if PE3 is going on maintenance and the DF Algorithm is Highest-Preference, the operator could change vES2's Preference on PE3 from 300 to e.g., 50 (hence, the Ethernet Segment route from PE3 is updated with the new preference value) so that PE2 is forced to take over as Designated Forwarder for vES2 (irrespective of the DP capability). Once the maintenance task on PE3 is over, the operator could decide to leave the latest configured preference value or configure the initial preference value back. A similar procedure can be used for DF Algorithm Lowest-Preference too, that is, suppose the algorithm for vES2 is Lowest-Preference, and PE1 (the DF) goes on maintenance mode. The operator could change vES2's Preference on PE1 from 100 to e.g., 250, so that PE2 is forced to take over as Designated Forwarder for vES2.
  5. In case of equal Preference in two or more PEs in the Ethernet Segment, the DP bit and the numerically lowest IP address of the candidate PE(s) are used as tiebreakers. The procedures for the use of the DP bit are specified in Section 4.3.If more than one PE is advertising itself as the preferred Designated Forwarder, an implementation MUST first select the PE advertising the DP bit set, and then select the PE with the lowest IP address (if the DP bit selection does not yield a unique candidate). The PE's IP address is the address used in the candidate list and it is derived from the Originating Router's IP address of the Ethernet Segment route. In case PEs use the Originating Router's IP address of different families, an IPv4 address is always considered numerically lower than an IPv6 address. Some examples of the use of the DP bit and IP address tiebreakers follow:

    • If vES1 parameters were (500,0,Highest-Preference) in PE1 and (500,1,Highest-Preference) in PE2, PE2 would be elected due to the DP bit. The same example applies if PE1 and PE2 advertise Lowest-Preference DF Algorithm instead.
    • If vES1 parameters were (500,0,Highest-Preference) in PE1 and (500,0,Highest-Preference) in PE2, PE1 would be elected, if PE1's IP address is lower than PE2's. Or PE2 would be elected if PE2's IP address is lower than PE1's. The same example applies if PE1 and PE2 advertise Lowest-Preference DF Algorithm instead.
  6. The Preference is an administrative option that MUST be configured on a per-Ethernet Segment basis, and it is normally configured from the management plane. The Preference value MAY also be dynamically changed based on the use of local policies that react to events on the PE. The following examples illustrate the use of local policy to change the Preference value in a dynamic way.

    • E.g., on PE1, if the DF Algorithm is Highest-Preference, ES1's Preference value can be lowered from 500 to 100 in case the bandwidth on the ENNI port is decreased by 50% (that could happen if e.g., the 2-port Link Aggregation Group between PE1 and the Aggregation Network loses one port).
    • Local policy MAY also trigger dynamic Preference changes based on the PE's bandwidth availability in the core, specific ports going operationally down, etc.
    • The definition of the actual local policies is out of scope of this document.

The Highest-Preference and Lowest-Preference Algorithms MAY be used along with the AC-DF capability. Assuming all the PEs in the Ethernet Segment are configured consistently with Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference Algorithm and AC-DF capability, a given PE in the Ethernet Segment is not considered as a candidate for Designated Forwarder Election until its corresponding Ethernet A-D per ES and Ethernet A-D per EVI routes are received, as described in [RFC8584].

The Highest-Preference and Lowest-Preference DF Algorithms can be used in different virtual Ethernet Segments on the same PE. For instance, PE1 and PE2 can use Highest-Preference for vES1 and PE1, PE2 and PE3 Lowest-Preference for vES2. The use of one DF Algorithm over the other is the operator's choice. The existence of both provides flexibility and full control to the operator.

The procedures in this document can be used in [RFC7432]-based Ethernet Segment or virtual Ethernet Segment as in [I-D.ietf-bess-evpn-virtual-eth-segment], and also EVPN networks as in [RFC8214], [RFC7623] or [RFC8365].

4.2. Use of the Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference algorithm in [RFC7432] Ethernet Segments

While the Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference DF Algorithm described in Section 4.1 is typically used in virtual Ethernet Segment scenarios where there is normally an individual Ethernet Tag per virtual Ethernet Segment, the existing [RFC7432] definition of an Ethernet Segment allows potentially up to thousands of Ethernet Tags on the same Ethernet Segment. If this is the case, if Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference Algorithm is configured in all the PEs of the Ethernet Segment, the same PE will be the elected Designated Forwarder for all the Ethernet Tags of the Ethernet Segment. A potential way to achieve a more granular load balancing is described below.

The Ethernet Segment is configured with an administrative Preference value and an administrative DF Algorithm, i.e., Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference Algorithm. However, the administrative DF Algorithm (which is used to signal the DF Algorithm for the Ethernet Segment) MAY be overridden to a different operational DF Algorithm for a range of Ethernet Tags. With this option, the PE builds a list of candidate PEs ordered by Preference, however the Designated Forwarder for a given Ethernet Tag will be determined by the locally overridden DF Algorithm.

For instance:

  • Assuming ES3 is defined in PE1 and PE2, PE1 may be configured as (500,0,Highest-Preference) for ES3 and PE2 as (100,0,Highest-Preference). Both PEs will advertise the Ethernet Segment routes for ES3 with the indicated parameters in the DF Election Extended Community.
  • In addition, assuming VLAN-based service interfaces and that the PEs are attached to all Ethernet Tags in the range 1-4000, both PE1 and PE2 may be configured with (Ethernet Tag-range,Lowest-Preference), e.g., (2001-4000, Lowest-Preference).
  • This will result in PE1 being Designated Forwarder for Ethernet Tags 1-2000 (since they use the default Highest-Preference Algorithm) and PE2 being Designated Forwarder for Ethernet Tags 2001-4000, due to the local policy overriding the Highest-Preference Algorithm.

While the above logic provides a perfect load balancing distribution of Ethernet Tags per Designated Forwarder when there are only two PEs, for Ethernet Segments attached to three or more PEs, there would be only two Designated Forwarder PEs for all the Ethernet Tags. Any other logic that provides a fair distribution of the Designated Forwarder function among the three or more PEs is valid, as long as that logic is consistent in all the PEs in the Ethernet Segment. It is important to note that, when a local policy overrides the Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference signaled by all the PEs in the Ethernet Segment, this local policy MUST be consistent in all the PEs of the Ethernet Segment. If the local policy is inconsistent for a given Ethernet Tag in the Ethernet Segment, packet drops or packet duplication may occur on that Ethernet Tag. For all these reasons the use of virtual Ethernet Segments is RECOMMENDED for cases where more than two PEs per Ethernet Segment exist and a good load balancing distribution per Ethernet Tag of the Designated Forwarder function is desired.

4.3. The Non-Revertive Capability

As discussed in Section 1.2 (d), a capability to NOT preempt the existing Designated Forwarder (for all the Ethernet Tags in the Ethernet Segment) is required and therefore added to the Designated Forwarder Election extended community. This option allows a non-revertive behavior in the Designated Forwarder election.

Note that when a given PE in an Ethernet Segment is taken down for maintenance operations, before bringing it back, the Preference may be changed in order to provide a non-revertive behavior. The DP bit and the mechanism explained in this section will be used for those cases when a former Designated Forwarder comes back up without any controlled maintenance operation, and the non-revertive option is desired in order to avoid service impact.

In Figure 3, we assume that based on the Highest-Preference Algorithm, PE3 is the Designated Forwarder for ESI2.

If PE3 has a link, EVC or node failure, PE2 would take over as Designated Forwarder. If/when PE3 comes back up again, PE3 will take over, causing some unnecessary packet loss in the Ethernet Segment.

The following procedure avoids preemption upon failure recovery (please refer to Figure 3). The procedure supports a non-revertive mode that can be used along with:

  • Highest-Preference Algorithm
  • Lowest-Preference Algorithm
  • Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference Algorithm, where a local policy overrides the Highest/Lowest-Preference tiebreaker for a range of Ethernet Tags Section 4.2

The procedure is described assuming Highest-Preference Algorithm in the Ethernet Segment, where local policy overrides the tiebreaker for a given Ethernet Tag. The other cases above are a sub-set of this one and the differences are explained.

  1. A "Don't Preempt" capability is defined on a per-PE/per-Ethernet Segment basis, as described in Section 3. If "Don't Preempt" is disabled (default behavior), the PE sets DP to zero and advertises it in an Ethernet Segment route. If "Don't Preempt" is enabled, the Ethernet Segment route from the PE indicates the desire of not being preempted by the other PEs in the Ethernet Segment. All the PEs in an Ethernet Segment should be consistent in their configuration of the DP capability, however, this document does not enforce the consistency across all the PEs. In case of inconsistency in the support of the DP capability in the PEs of the same Ethernet Segment, non-revertive behavior is not guaranteed. However, PEs supporting this capability still attempt this procedure.
  2. We assume we want to avoid 'preemption' in all the PEs in the Ethernet Segment, the three PEs are configured with the "Don't Preempt" capability. In this example, we assume ESI2 is configured as 'DP=enabled' in the three PEs.
  3. We also assume vES2 is attached to Ethernet Tag-1 and Ethernet Tag-2. vES2 uses Highest-Preference as DF Algorithm and a local policy is configured in the three PEs to use Lowest-Preference for Ethernet Tag-2. When vES2 is enabled in the three PEs, the PEs will exchange the Ethernet Segment routes and select PE3 as Designated Forwarder for Ethernet Tag-1 (due to the Highest-Preference), and PE1 as Designated Forwarder for Ethernet Tag-2 (due to the Lowest-Preference).
  4. If PE3's vES2 goes down (due to EVC failure - detected by OAM, or port failure or node failure), PE2 will become the Designated Forwarder for Ethernet Tag-1. No changes will occur for Ethernet Tag-2.
  5. When PE3's vES2 comes back up, PE3 will start a boot-timer (if booting up) or hold-timer (if the port or EVC recovers). That timer will allow some time for PE3 to receive the Ethernet Segment routes from PE1 and PE2. This timer is applied between the INIT and the DF_WAIT states in the Designated Forwarder Election Finite State Machine described in [RFC8584]. PE3 will then:

    • Select a "reference-PE" among the Ethernet Segment routes in the virtual Ethernet Segment. If the Ethernet Segment uses the Highest-Preference algorithm, select a "Highest-PE". If it uses the Lowest-Preference algorithm, select a "Lowest-PE". If a local policy is in use, to override the Highest/Lowest-Preference for a range of Ethernet Tags (as discussed in Section 4.2), it is necessary to select both a Highest-PE and a Lowest-PE. They are selected as follows:

      • The Highest-PE is the PE with higher Preference, using the DP bit first (with DP=1 being better) and, after that, the lower PE-IP address as tiebreakers.
      • The Lowest-PE is the PE with lower Preference, using the DP bit first (with DP=1 being better) and, after that, the lower PE-IP address as tiebreakers.
      • In our example, the Highest-Preference algorithm is used, with a local policy to override it to use Lowest-Preference for a range of Ethernet Tags. Therefore PE3 selects a Highest-PE and a Lowest-PE. PE3 will select PE2 as Highest-PE over PE1, since, when comparing (Pref,DP,PE-IP), (200,1,PE2-IP) wins over (100,1,PE1-IP). PE3 will select PE1 as Lowest-PE over PE2, since (100,1,PE1-IP) wins over (200,1,PE2-IP). Note that if there were only one remote PE in the Ethernet Segment, Lowest and Highest PE would be the same PE.
    • Check its own administrative Pref and compare it with the one of the Highest-PE and Lowest-PE that have the DP capability set in their Ethernet Segment routes. Depending on this comparison PE3 sends the Ethernet Segment route with a (Pref,DP) that may be different from its administrative (Pref,DP):

      • If PE3's Pref value is higher or equal than the Highest-PE's, PE3 will send the Ethernet Segment route with an 'in-use' operational Pref equal to the Highest-PE's and DP=0.
      • If PE3's Pref value is lower or equal than the Lowest-PE's, PE3 will send the Ethernet Segment route with an 'in-use' operational Preference equal to the Lowest-PE's and DP=0.
      • If PE3's Pref value is not higher or equal than the Highest-PE's and is not lower or equal than the Lowest-PE's, PE3 will send the Ethernet Segment route with its administrative (Pref,DP)=(300,1).
      • In this example, PE3's administrative Pref=300 is higher than the Highest-PE with DP=1, that is, PE2 (Pref=200). Hence, PE3 will inherit PE2's preference and send the Ethernet Segment route with an operational 'in-use' (Pref,DP)=(200,0).
    • Note that, a PE will always send its DP capability set to zero as long as the advertised Pref is the 'in-use' operational Pref (as opposed to the 'administrative' Pref).
    • This Ethernet Segment route update sent by PE3, with (200,0,PE3-IP), will not cause any Designated Forwarder switchover for any Ethernet Tag. PE2 will continue being Designated Forwarder for Ethernet Tag-1. This is because the DP bit will be used as a tiebreaker in the Designated Forwarder election. That is, if a PE has two candidate PEs with the same Pref, it will pick the one with DP=1. There are no Designated Forwarder changes for Ethernet Tag-2 either.
  6. For any subsequent received update/withdraw in the Ethernet Segment, the PEs will go through the process described in (5) to select Highest and Lowest-PEs, now considering themselves as candidates. For instance, if PE2 fails, upon receiving PE2's Ethernet Segment route withdrawal, PE3 and PE1 will go through the selection of new Highest and Lowest-PEs (considering their own active Ethernet Segment route) and then they will run the Designated Forwarder Election.

    • If a PE selects itself as new Highest or Lowest-PE and it was not before, the PE will then compare its operational 'in-use' Pref with its administrative Pref. If different, the PE will send an Ethernet Segment route update with its administrative Pref and DP values. In the example, PE3 will be the new Highest-PE, therefore it will send an Ethernet Segment route update with (Pref,DP)=(300,1).
    • After running the Designated Forwarder Election, PE3 will become the new Designated Forwarder for Ethernet Tag-1. No changes will occur for Ethernet Tag-2.

Note that, irrespective of the DP bit, when a PE or Ethernet Segment comes back and the PE advertises a Designated Forwarder Election Algorithm different from the one configured in the rest of the PEs in the Ethernet Segment, all the PEs in the Ethernet Segment MUST fall back to the Default [RFC7432] Algorithm.

This document does not modify the use of the P and B bits in the Ethernet A-D per EVI routes [RFC8214] advertised by the PEs in the Ethernet Segment after running the Designated Forwarder Election, irrespective of the revertive or non-revertive behavior in the PE.

5. Security Considerations

This document describes a Designated Forwarder Election Algorithm that provides absolute control (by configuration) over what PE is the Designated Forwarder for a given Ethernet Tag. While this control is desired in many situations, a malicious user that gets access to the configuration of a PE in the Ethernet Segment may change the behavior of the network. In other DF Algorithms such as HRW, the Designated Forwarder Election is more automated and cannot be determined by configuration. With Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference as DF Algorithm, an attacker may change the configuration of the Preference value on a PE and Ethernet Segment, and impact the traffic going through that PE and Ethernet Segment.

The non-revertive capability described in this document may be seen as a security improvement over the regular EVPN revertive Designated Forwarder Election: an intentional link (or node) "flapping" on a PE will only cause service disruption once, when the PE goes to Non-Designated Forwarder state. However, an attacker who gets access to the configuration of a PE in the Ethernet Segment will be able to disable the non-revertive behavior, by advertising a conflicting DF election algorithm and thereby forcing fallback to the Default algorithm.

The document also describes how a local policy can override the Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference algorithms for a range of Ethernet Tags in the Ethernet Segment. If the local policy is not consistent across all PEs in the Ethernet Segment and there is an Ethernet Tag that ends up with an inconsistent use of Highest-Preference or Lowest-Preference in different PEs, packet drop or packet duplication may occur for that Ethernet Tag.

Finally, the two Designated Forwarder Election Algorithms specified in this document (Highest-Preference and Lowest-Preference) do not change the way the PEs share their Ethernet Segment information, compared to the algorithms in [RFC7432] and [RFC8584]. Therefore the security considerations in [RFC7432] and [RFC8584] apply to this document too.

6. IANA Considerations

This document solicits:

7. Acknowledgments

The authors would like to thank Kishore Tiruveedhula and Sasha Vainshtein for their review and comments. Also thank you to Luc Andre Burdet and Stephane Litkowski for their thorough review and suggestions for a new DF Algorithm for lowest-preference.

8. Contributors

In addition to the authors listed, the following individuals also contributed to this document:

Tony Przygienda, Juniper

Satya Mohanty, Cisco

Kiran Nagaraj, Nokia

Vinod Prabhu, Nokia

Selvakumar Sivaraj, Juniper

Sami Boutros, VMWare

9. References

9.1. Normative References

[RFC7432]
Sajassi, A., Ed., Aggarwal, R., Bitar, N., Isaac, A., Uttaro, J., Drake, J., and W. Henderickx, "BGP MPLS-Based Ethernet VPN", RFC 7432, DOI 10.17487/RFC7432, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7432>.
[RFC8584]
Rabadan, J., Ed., Mohanty, S., Ed., Sajassi, A., Drake, J., Nagaraj, K., and S. Sathappan, "Framework for Ethernet VPN Designated Forwarder Election Extensibility", RFC 8584, DOI 10.17487/RFC8584, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8584>.
[RFC2119]
Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
[RFC8174]
Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
[I-D.ietf-bess-evpn-virtual-eth-segment]
Sajassi, A., Brissette, P., Schell, R., Drake, J., and J. Rabadan, "EVPN Virtual Ethernet Segment", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-bess-evpn-virtual-eth-segment-14, , <https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/draft-ietf-bess-evpn-virtual-eth-segment-14>.

9.2. Informative References

[RFC8214]
Boutros, S., Sajassi, A., Salam, S., Drake, J., and J. Rabadan, "Virtual Private Wire Service Support in Ethernet VPN", RFC 8214, DOI 10.17487/RFC8214, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8214>.
[RFC8365]
Sajassi, A., Ed., Drake, J., Ed., Bitar, N., Shekhar, R., Uttaro, J., and W. Henderickx, "A Network Virtualization Overlay Solution Using Ethernet VPN (EVPN)", RFC 8365, DOI 10.17487/RFC8365, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8365>.
[RFC7623]
Sajassi, A., Ed., Salam, S., Bitar, N., Isaac, A., and W. Henderickx, "Provider Backbone Bridging Combined with Ethernet VPN (PBB-EVPN)", RFC 7623, DOI 10.17487/RFC7623, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7623>.

Authors' Addresses

J. Rabadan (editor)
Nokia
520 Almanor Avenue
Sunnyvale, CA 94085
United States of America
S. Sathappan
Nokia
W. Lin
Juniper Networks
J. Drake
Independent
A. Sajassi
Cisco Systems