DMM Working Group U. Chunduri, Ed.
Internet-Draft R. Li
Intended status: Standards Track Huawei USA
Expires: August 18, 2019 S. Bhaskaran
Huawei Technologies India Pvt Ltd
J. Tantsura
Apstra, Inc.
L. Contreras
Telefonica
P. Muley
Nokia
February 14, 2019
Transport Network aware Mobility for 5G
draft-clt-dmm-tn-aware-mobility-03
Abstract
This document specifies a framework and a mapping function for 5G
mobile user plane with transport network slicing, integrated with
Mobile Radio Access and a Virtualized Core Network. The integrated
approach is specified in a way to fit into the 5G core network
architecture defined in [TS23.501].
It focuses on an optimized mobile user plane functionality with
various transport services needed for some of the 5G traffic needing
low and deterministic latency, real-time, mission-critical services.
This document describes, how this objective is achieved agnostic to
the transport underlay used (IPv4, IPv6, MPLS) in various deployments
and with a new transport network underlay routing, called Preferred
Path Routing (PPR).
Requirements Language
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 [RFC2119].
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/.
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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 August 18, 2019.
Copyright Notice
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document authors. All rights reserved.
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction and Problem Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
1.1. Acronyms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
1.2. Solution Approach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
2. Transport Network (TN) and Slice aware Mobility on N3/N9 . . 5
2.1. Discrete Approach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
2.2. Integrated Approach . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
2.3. Transport Network Function . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3. Using PPR as TN Underlay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
3.1. PPR with Transport Awareness for 5GS on N3/N9 Interfaces 11
3.2. Path Steering Support to native IP user planes . . . . . 13
3.3. Service Level Guarantee in Underlay . . . . . . . . . . . 13
3.4. PPR with various 5G Mobility procedures . . . . . . . . . 13
3.4.1. SSC Mode1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
3.4.2. SSC Mode2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
3.4.3. SSC Mode3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
4. Other TE Technologies Applicability . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
5. Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
6. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
7. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
8. Contributing Authors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
9. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
9.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
9.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Appendix A. Appendix: New Control Plane and User Planes . . . . 20
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A.1. LISP and PPR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
A.2. ILA and PPR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
1. Introduction and Problem Statement
3GPP Release 15 for 5GC is defined in [TS.23.501-3GPP],
[TS.23.502-3GPP] and [TS.23.503-3GPP]. User Plane Functions (UPF)
are the data forwarding entities in the 5GC architecture. The
architecture allows the placement of Branching Point (BP) and Uplink
Classifier (ULCL) UPFs closer to the access network (5G-AN). The 5G-
AN can be a radio access network or any non-3GPP access network, for
example, WLAN. The IP address is anchored by a PDU session anchor
UPF (PSA UPF). The interface between the BP/ULCL UPF and the PSA UPF
is called N9. While in REL15, 3GPP has adopted GTP-U for the N9
interface, new user plane protocols along with GTP-U are being
investigated for N9 interface in REL16, as part of [CT4SID].
Concerning to this document another relevant interface is N3, which
is between the 5G-AN and the UPF. N3 interface is similar to the
user plane interface S1U in LTE [TS.23.401-3GPP]. This document:
o does not propose any change to existing N3 user plane
encapsulations to realize the benefits with the approach specified
here
o and can work with any encapsulation (including GTP-U) for the N9
interface.
[TS.23.501-3GPP] defines network slicing as one of the core
capability of 5GC with slice awareness from Radio and 5G Core (5GC)
network. It also defines various Session and Service Continuity
(SSC) modes and mobility scenarios for 5G. The 5G System (5GS) as
defined, allows transport network between N3 and N9 interfaces work
independently with various IETF Traffic Engineering (TE)
technologies.
However, lack of underlying Transport Network (TN) awareness may lead
to selection of sub-optimal UPF(s) and/or 5G-AN during 5GS
procedures. This could lead to inability to meet SLAs for real-time,
mission-critical or latency sensitive services. These 5GS procedures
including but not limited to Service Request, PDU Session
Establishment, or User Equipment (UE) mobility need same service
level characteristics from the TN for the Protocols Data Unit (PDU)
session, similar to as provided in Radio and 5GC for the various
Slice Service Types (SST) and 5QI's defined in [TS.23.501-3GPP] .
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1.1. Acronyms
5QI - 5G QoS Indicator
5G-AN - 5G Access Network
AMF - Access and Mobility Management Function (5G)
BP - Branch Point (5G)
CSR - Cell Site Router
DN - Data Network (5G)
eMBB - enhanced Mobile Broadband (5G)
FRR - Fast ReRoute
gNB - 5G NodeB
GBR - Guaranteed Bit Rate (5G)
IGP - Interior Gateway Protocols (e.g. IS-IS, OSPFv2, OSPFv3)
LFA - Loop Free Alternatives (IP FRR)
mIOT - Massive IOT (5G)
MPLS - Multi Protocol Label Switching
QFI - QoS Flow ID (5G)
PPR - Preferred Path Routing
PDU - Protocol Data Unit (5G)
PW - Pseudo Wire
RQI - Reflective QoS Indicator (5G)
SBI - Service Based Interface (5G)
SID - Segment Identifier
SMF - Session Management Function (5G)
SSC - Session and Service Continuity (5G)
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SST - Slice and Service Types (5G)
SR - Segment Routing
TE - Traffic Engineering
ULCL - Uplink Classifier (5G)
UPF - User Plane Function (5G)
URLLC - Ultra reliable and low latency communications (5G)
1.2. Solution Approach
This document specifies a mechanism to fulfil the needs of 5GS to
transport user plane traffic from 5G-AN to UPF for all service
continuity modes [TS.23.501-3GPP] in an optimized fashion. This is
done by, keeping mobility procedures aware of underlying transport
network along with slicing requirements.
Section 2 describes two methods, with which Transport Network (TN)
aware mobility can be built irrespective of underlying TN technology
used. Using Preferred Path Routing (PPR) as TN Underlay is detailed
in Section 3. Section 3.4 further describes the applicability and
procedures of the same with 5G SSC modes on N3 and N9 interfaces.
2. Transport Network (TN) and Slice aware Mobility on N3/N9
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Service Based Interfaces (SBI)
----+-----+-----+----+----+-----+----+--------+-----+----+------
| | | | | | | | | |
+---+---+ | +--+--+ | +--+---+ | +--+--+ +--+--+ | +-+--+
| NSSF | | | NRF | | | AUSF | | | UDM | | NEF | | | AF |
+-------+ | +-----+ | +------+ | +-----+ +-----+ | +----+
+---+----+ +--+--+ +---=++ +--------------+-+
| AMF | | PCF | | TNF | | SMF |
+---+--+-+ +-----+ +-+-+-+ +-+-----------+--+
N1 | | | | To |
to-UE+----+ N2 +----Ns---+ +-Nn-+ N4 +--Nn-+ N4
| | | | | |
+---+---+ +--++ +-+--+---+ +-+-----+ +----+
|gNB+======+CSR+------N3-----+ UPF +-N9--+ UPF +--N6--+ DN |
+---+ +---+ +-+------+ +-------+ +----+
| +----+
+-| DN |
N6 +----+
Figure 1: 5G Service Based Architecture
The above diagrams depicts one of the scenarios of the 5G network
specified in [TS.23.501-3GPP] and with a new and virtualized control
component Transport Network Function (TNF). A Cell Site Router (CSR)
is shown connecting to gNB. gNB is an entity in 5G-AN. Though it is
shown as a separate block from gNB, in some cases both of these can
be co-located. This document concerns with backhaul TN, from CSR to
UPF on N3 interface or from Staging UPF to Anchor UPF on N9
interface.
Currently specified Control Plane (CP) functions - the Access and
Mobility Management Function (AMF), the Session Management Function
(SMF) and the User plane (UP) components gNodeB (gNB), User Plane
Function (UPF) with N2, N3, N4, N6 and N9 interfaces are relevant to
this document. Other Virtualized 5G control plane components NRF,
AUSF, PCF, AUSF, UDM, NEF, and AF are not directly relevant for the
discussion in this document and one can see the functionalities of
these in [TS.23.501-3GPP].
From encapsulation perspective, N3 interface is similar to S1U in 4G/
LTE [TS.23.401-3GPP] network and uses GTP-U [TS.29.281-3GPP] to
transport any UE PDUs (IPv4, IPv6, IPv4v6, Ethernet or Unstructured).
Unlike S1U, N3 has some additional aspects as there is no bearer
concept and no per bearer GTP-U tunnels. Instead, QoS information is
carried in the PDU Session Container GTP-U extension header. N9
interface is a new interface to connect UPFs and the right user plane
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protocols for N9, including GTP-U, are being studied through 3GPP CT4
WG approved study item [CT4SID] for REL-16.
TN Aware Mobility with optimized transport network functionality is
explained below. How PPR fits in this framework in detail along with
other various TE technologies briefly are in Section 3 and Section 4
respectively.
2.1. Discrete Approach
In this approach transport network functionality from the 5G-AN to
UPF is discrete and 5GS is not aware of the underlying transport
network and the resources available. Deployment specific mapping
function is used to map the GTP-U encapsulated traffic at the 5G-AN
(e.g. gNB) in UL and UPF in DL direction to the appropriate transport
slice or transport Traffic Engineered (TE) paths. These TE paths can
be established using RSVP-TE [RFC3209] for MPLS underlay, SR
[I-D.ietf-spring-segment-routing] for both MPLS and IPv6 underlay or
PPR [I-D.chunduri-lsr-isis-preferred-path-routing] with MPLS, IPv6
with SRH, native IPv6 and native IPv4 underlays.
As per [TS.23.501-3GPP] and [TS.23.502-3GPP] the SMF controls the
user plane traffic forwarding rules in the UPF. The UPFs have a
concept of a "Network Instance" which logically abstracts the
underlying transport path. When the SMF creates the packet detection
rules (PDR) and forwarding action rules (FAR) for a PDU session at
the UPF, the SMF identifies the network instance through which the
packet matching the PDR has to be forwarded. A network instance can
be mapped to a TE path at the UPF. In this approach, TNF as shown in
Figure 1 need not be part of the 5G Service Based Interface (SBI).
Only management plane functionality is needed to create, monitor,
manage and delete (life cycle management) the transport TE paths/
transport slices from the 5G-AN to the UPF (on N3/N9 interfaces).
The management plane functionality also provides the mapping of such
TE paths to a network instance identifier to the SMF. The SMF uses
this mapping to install appropriate FARs in the UPF. This approach
provide partial integration of the transport network into 5GS with
some benefits.
One of the limitations of this approach is the inability of the 5GS
procedures to know, if underlying transport resources are available
for the traffic type being carried in PDU session before making
certain decisions in the 5G CP. One example scenario/decision could
be, a target gNB selection during a N2 mobility event, without
knowing if the target gNB is having a underlay transport slice
resource for the S-NSSAI and 5QI of the PDU session. The Integrated
approach specified below can mitigate this.
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2.2. Integrated Approach
Network Slice Selection Function (NSSF) as defined in
[TS.23.501-3GPP] concerns with multiple aspects including selecting a
network slice instance when requested by AMF based on the requested
SNSSAI, current location of UE, roaming indication etc. It also
notifies NF service consumers (e.g AMF) whenever the status about the
slice availability changes. However, the scope is only in 5GC (both
control and user plane) and NG Radio Access network including the
N3IWF for the non-3GPP access. The network slice instance(s)
selected by the NSSF are applicable at a per PDU session granularity.
An SMF and UPF are allocated from the selected slice instance during
the PDU session establishment procedure. [TS.23.501-3GPP] and
[TS.23.502-3GPP] do not consider the resources and functionalities
needed from transport network for the selection of UPF. This is seen
as independent functionality and currently not part of 5GS. If
transport network is not factored in an integrated fashion w.r.t
available resources (with network characteristics from desired
bandwidth, latency, burst size handling and optionally jitter) some
of the gains made with optimizations through 5GNR and 5GC can be
degraded.
To assuage the above situation, TNF is described (Figure 1) as part
of control plane. This has the view of the underlying transport
network with all links and nodes as well as various possible underlay
paths with different characteristics. TNF can be seen as supporting
PCE functionality [RFC5440] and optionally BGP-LS [RFC7752] to get
the TE and topology information of the underlying IGP network.
A south bound interface Ns is shown which interacts with the 5G
Access Network (e.g. gNB/CSR). 'Ns' can use one or more mechanism
available today (PCEP [RFC5440], NETCONF [RFC6241], RESTCONF
[RFC8040] or gNMI) to provision the L2/L3 VPNs along with TE underlay
paths from gNB to UPF. Ns and Nn interfaces can be part of the
integrated 3GPP architecture, but the specification/ownership of
these interfaces SHOULD be left out of scope of 3GPP.
These VPNs and/or underlay TE paths MUST be similar on all 5G-AN/CSRs
and UPFs concerned to allow mobility of UEs while associated with one
of the Slice/Service Types (SSTs)as defined in [TS.23.501-3GPP]. A
north bound interface 'Nn' is shown from one or more of the transport
network nodes (or ULCL/BP UPF, Anchor Point UPF) to TNF as shown in
Figure 1. It would enable learning the TE characteristics of all
links and nodes of the network continuously (through BGP-LS [RFC7752]
or through a passive IGP adjacency and PCEP [RFC5440]).
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With the TNF in 5GS Service Based Interface, the following additional
functionalities are required for end-2-end slice management including
the transport network:
o The Specific Network Slice Selection Assistance Information
(SNSSAI) of PDU session's SHOULD be mapped to the assigned
transport VPN and the TE path information for that slice.
o For transport slice assignment for various SSTs (eMBB, URLLC,
MIoT) corresponding underlay paths need to be created and
monitored from each transport end point (gNB/CSR and UPF).
o During PDU session creation, apart from radio and 5GC resources,
transport network resources needed to be verified matching the
characteristics of the PDU session traffic type.
o The TNF MUST provide an API that takes as input the source and
destination 3GPP user plane element address, required bandwidth,
latency and jitter characteristics between those user plane
elements and returns as output a particular TE path's identifier,
that satisfies the requested requirements.
o Mapping of PDU session parameters to underlay SST paths need to be
done. One way to do this to let the SMF install a Forwarding
Action Rule (FAR) in the UPF via N4 with the FAR pointing to a
"Network Instance" in the UPF. A "Network Instance" is a logical
identifier for an underlying network. The "Network Instance"
pointed by the FAR can be mapped to a transport path (through L2/
L3 VPN). FARs are associated with Packet Detection Rule (PDR).
PDRs are used to classify packets in the uplink (UL) and the
downlink (DL) direction. For UL GTP-U TEID and/or the QFI marked
in the GTPU packet can be used for classifying a packet belonging
to a particular slice characteristics. For DL, at a PSA UPF, the
UE IP address is used to identify the PDU session, and hence the
slice a packet belongs to and the IP 5 tuple can be used for
identifying the flow and QoS characteristics to be applied on the
packet.
o If any other form of encapsulation (other than GTP-U) either on N3
or N9 corresponding QFI information MUST be there in the
encapsulation header.
o In some SSC modes Section 3.4, if segmented path (gNB to
staging/ULCL/BP-UPF to anchor-point-UPF) is needed, then
corresponding path characteristics MUST be used. This includes a
path from gNB/CSR to UL-CL/BP UPF [TS.23.501-3GPP] and UL-CL/BP
UPF to eventual UPF access to DN.
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o Continuous monitoring of transport path characteristics and
reassignment at the endpoints MUST be performed. For all the
affected PDU sessions, degraded transport paths need to be updated
dynamically with similar alternate paths.
o During UE mobility event similar to 4G/LTE i.e., gNB mobility (Xn
based or N2 based), for target gNB selection, apart from radio
resources, transport resources MUST be factored. This enables
handling of all PDU sessions from the UE to target gNB and this
require co-ordination of gNB, AMF, SMF with the TNF module.
Integrating the TNF as part of the 5GS Service Based Interfaces,
provides the flexibility to control the allcoation of required
characteristics from the TN during a 5GS signalling procedure (e.g.
PDU Session Establishment). If TNF is seen as part of management
plane, this real time flexibility is lost. Changes to detailed
signaling to integrate the above for various 5GS procedures as
defined in [TS.23.502-3GPP] is beyond the scope of this document.
2.3. Transport Network Function
Proposed TNF as part of the 5GC shown in Figure 1 can be realized
using Abstraction and Control of TE Networks (ACTN). ACTN
architecture, underlying topology abstraction methods and
manageability considerations of the same are detailed in [RFC8453].
3. Using PPR as TN Underlay
In a network implementing source routing, packets may be transported
through the use of Segment Identifiers (SIDs), where a SID uniquely
identifies a segment as defined in [I-D.ietf-spring-segment-routing].
Section 5.3 [I-D.bogineni-dmm-optimized-mobile-user-plane] lays out
all SRv6 features along with a few concerns in Section 5.3.7 of the
same document. Those concerns are addressed by a new backhaul
routing mechanism called Preferred Path Routing (PPR), of which this
section provides an overview.
The label/PPR-ID refer not to individual segments of which the path
is composed, but to the identifier of a path that is deployed on
network nodes. The fact that paths and path identifiers can be
computed and controlled by a controller, not a routing protocol,
allows the deployment of any path that network operators prefer, not
just shortest paths. As packets refer to a path towards a given
destination and nodes make their forwarding decision based on the
identifier of a path, not the identifier of a next segment node, it
is no longer necessary to carry a sequence of labels. This results
in multiple benefits including significant reduction in network layer
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overhead, increased performance and hardware compatibility for
carrying both path and services along the path.
Details of the IGP extensions for PPR are provided here:
o IS-IS - [I-D.chunduri-lsr-isis-preferred-path-routing]
o OSPF - [I-D.chunduri-lsr-ospf-preferred-path-routing]
3.1. PPR with Transport Awareness for 5GS on N3/N9 Interfaces
PPR does not remove GTP-U, unlike some other proposals laid out in
[I-D.bogineni-dmm-optimized-mobile-user-plane]. Instead, PPR works
with the existing cellular user plane (GTP-U) for both N3 and any
approach selected for N9 (encap or no-encap). In this scenario, PPR
will only help providing TE benefits needed for 5G slices from
transport domain perspective. It does so without adding any
additional overhead to the user plane, unlike SR-MPLS or SRv6. This
is achieved by:
o For 3 different SSTs, 3 PPR-IDs can be signaled from any node in
the transport network. For Uplink traffic, the 5G-AN will choose
the right PPR-ID of the UPF based on the S-NSSAI the PDU Session
belongs to and/or the QFI (e.g. 5QI) marking on the GTP-U
encapsulation header. Similarly in the Downlink direction
matching PPR-ID of the 5G-AN is chosen based on the S-NSSAI the
PDU Session belongs to. The table below shows a typical mapping:
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+----------------+------------+------------------+-----------------+
| QFI (Ranges) | SST | Transport Path | Transport Path |
| | in S-NSSAI | Info | Characteristics |
+----------------+------------+------------------+-----------------+
| Range Xx - Xy | | | |
| X1, X2(discrete| MIOT | PW ID/VPN info, | GBR (Guaranteed |
| values) | (massive | PPR-ID-A | Bit Rate) |
| | IOT) | | Bandwidth: Bx |
| | | | Delay: Dx |
| | | | Jitter: Jx |
+----------------+------------+------------------+-----------------+
| Range Yx - Yy | | | |
| Y1, Y2(discrete| URLLC | PW ID/VPN info, | GBR with Delay |
| values) | (ultra-low | PPR-ID-B | Req. |
| | latency) | | Bandwidth: By |
| | | | Delay: Dy |
| | | | Jitter: Jy |
+----------------+------------+------------------+-----------------+
| Range Zx - Zy | | | |
| Z1, Z2(discrete| EMBB | PW ID/VPN info, | Non-GBR |
| values) | (broadband)| PPR-ID-C | Bandwidth: Bx |
+----------------+------------+------------------+-----------------+
Figure 2: QFI Mapping with PPR-IDs on N3/N9
o It is possible to have a single PPR-ID for multiple input points
through a PPR tree structure separate in UL and DL direction.
o Same set of PPRs are created uniformly across all needed 5G-ANs
and UPFs to allow various mobility scenarios.
o Any modification of TE parameters of the path, replacement path
and deleted path needed to be updated from TNF to the relevant
ingress points. Same information can be pushed to the NSSF, and/
or SMF as needed.
o PPR can be supported with any native IPv4 and IPv6 data/user
planes (Section 3.2) with optional TE features (Section 3.3) . As
this is an underlay mechanism it can work with any overlay
encapsulation approach including GTP-U as defined currently for N3
interface.
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3.2. Path Steering Support to native IP user planes
PPR works in fully compatible way with SR defined user planes (SR-
MPLS and SRv6) by reducing the path overhead and other challenges as
listed in [I-D.chunduri-lsr-isis-preferred-path-routing] or
Section 5.3.7 of [I-D.bogineni-dmm-optimized-mobile-user-plane]. PPR
also expands the source routing to user planes beyond SR-MPLS and
SRv6 i.e., native IPv6 and IPv4 user planes.
This helps legacy transport networks to get the immediate path
steering benefits and helps in overall migration strategy of the
network to the desired user plane. It is important to note, these
benefits can be realized with no hardware upgrade except control
plane software for native IPv6 and IPv4 user planes.
3.3. Service Level Guarantee in Underlay
PPR also optionally allows to allocate resources that are to be
reserved along the preferred path. These resources are required in
some cases (for some 5G SSTs with stringent GBR and latency
requirements) not only for providing committed bandwidth or
deterministic latency, but also for assuring overall service level
guarantee in the network. This approach does not require per-hop
provisioning and reduces the OPEX by minimizing the number of
protocols needed and allows dynamism with Fast-ReRoute (FRR)
capabilities.
3.4. PPR with various 5G Mobility procedures
PPR fulfills the needs of 5GS to transport the user plane traffic
from 5G-AN to UPF in all 3 SSC modes defined [TS.23.501-3GPP]. This
is done in keeping the backhaul network at par with 5G slicing
requirements that are applicable to Radio and virtualized core
network to create a truly end-to-end slice path for 5G traffic. When
UE moves across the 5G-AN (e.g. from one gNB to another gNB), there
is no transport network reconfiguration required with the approach
above.
SSC mode would be specified/defaulted by SMF. No change in the mode
once connection is initiated and this property is not altered here.
3.4.1. SSC Mode1
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+---+----+ +-----+ +----------------+
| AMF | | TNF | | SMF |
+---+--+-+ +-+-+-+ +-+--------------+
N1 | | | |
+--------+ N2 +----Ns---+ +-Nn-+ N4
| | | | |
+ +---+---+ +--++ +-+--+---+ +----+
UE1 |gNB+======+CSR+------N3-----+ UPF +-N6--+ DN |
== +---+ +---+ +--------+ +----+
Figure 3: SSC Mode1 with integrated Transport Slice Function
After UE1 moved to another gNB in the same UPF serving area
+---+----+ +-----+ +----------------+
| AMF | | TNF | | SMF |
+---_--+-+ +-+-+-+ +-+--------------+
| | | |
N2 +----Ns---+ +-Nn-+ N4
| | | |
+----+--+ +-+-+ ++--+----+ +----+
|gNB1+======+CSR+------N3-----+ UPF +-N6--+ DN |
+----+ +---+ +---+----+ +----+
|
|
|
|
+----+ +--++ |
UE1 |gNB2+======+CSR+------N3--------+
== +----+ +---+
Figure 4: SSC Mode1 with integrated Transport Slice Function
In this mode, IP address at the UE is preserved during mobility
events. This is similar to 4G/LTE mechanism and for respective
slices, corresponding PPR-ID (TE Path) has to be assigned to the
packet at UL and DL direction. During Xn mobility as shown above,
source gNB has to additionally ensure transport path's resources from
TNF are available at the target gNB apart from radio resources check
(at decision and request phase of Xn/N2 mobility scenario).
3.4.2. SSC Mode2
In this case, if IP Address is changed during mobility (different UPF
area), then corresponding PDU session is released. No session
continuity from the network is provided and this is designed as an
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application offload and application manages the session continuity,
if needed. For PDU Session, Service Request and Mobility cases
mechanism to select the transport resource and the PPR-ID (TE Path)
is similar to SSC Mode1.
3.4.3. SSC Mode3
In this mode, new IP address may be assigned because of UE moved to
another UPF coverage area. Network ensures UE suffers no loss of
'connectivity'. A connection through new PDU session anchor point is
established before the connection is terminated for better service
continuity. There are two ways in which this happens.
o Change of SSC Mode 3 PDU Session Anchor with multiple PDU
Sessions.
o Change of SSC Mode 3 PDU Session Anchor with IPv6 multi-homed PDU
Session.
In the first mode, from user plane perspective, the two PDU sessions
are independent and the use of PPR-ID by gNB and UPFs is exactly
similar to SSC Mode 1 described above. The following paragraphs
describe the IPv6 multi-homed PDU session case for SSC Mode 3.
+---+----+ +-----+ +----------------+
| AMF | | TNF | | SMF |
+---+--+-+ +-+-+-+ +-+-----------+--+
N1 | | | | |
to-UE+----+ N2 +-------Ns---+ +-Nn-+ N4 N4|
| | | | |
+-------+--+ +--+-------+--+ +-----+-+
|gNB/CSR +---N3---+ BP UPF +-N9--+ UPF +-N6--
+----------+ +----------+--+ +-------+ to DN
| +----+
+-| DN |
N6 +----+
Figure 5: SSC Mode3 and Service Continuity
In the uplink direction for the traffic offloading from the Branching
Point UPF, packet has to reach to the right exit UPF. In this case
packet gets re-encapsulated by the BP UPF (with either GTP-U or the
chosen encapsulation) after bit rate enforcement and LI, towards the
anchor UPF. At this point packet has to be on the appropriate VPN/PW
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to the anchor UPF. This mapping is done based on the S-NSSAI the PDU
session belongs to and/or the QFI marking in the GTPU encapsulation
header (e.g. 5QI value) to the PPR-ID of the exit node by selecting
the respective TE PPR-ID (PPR path) of the UPF. If it's a non-MPLS
underlay, destination IP address of the encapsulation header would be
the mapped PPR-ID (TE path).
In the downlink direction for the incoming packet, UPF has to
encapsulate the packet (with either GTP-U or the chosen
encapsulation) to reach the BP UPF. Here mapping is done based on
the S-NSSAI the PDU session belongs, to the PPR-ID (TE Path) of the
BP UPF. If it's a non-MPLS underlay, destination IP address of the
encapsulation header would be the mapped PPR-ID (TE path). In
summary:
o Respective PPR-ID on N3 and N9 has to be selected with correct
transport characteristics from TNF.
o For N2 based mobility SMF has to ensure transport resources are
available for N3 Interface to new BP UPF and from there the
original anchor point UPF.
o For Service continuity with multi-homed PDU session same transport
network characteristics of the original PDU session (both on N3
and N9) need to be observed for the newly configured IPv6
prefixes.
4. Other TE Technologies Applicability
RSVP-TE [RFC3209] provides a lean transport overhead for the TE path
for MPLS user plane. However, it is perceived as less dynamic in
some cases and has some provisioning overhead across all the nodes in
N3 and N9 interface nodes. Also it has another drawback with
excessive state refresh overhead across adjacent nodes and this can
be mitigated with [RFC8370].
SR-TE [I-D.ietf-spring-segment-routing] does not explicitly signal
bandwidth reservation or mechanism to guarantee latency on the nodes/
links on SR path. But, SR allows path steering for any flow at the
ingress and particular path for a flow can be chosen. Some of the
issues around path overhead/tax, MTU issues are documented at
Section 5.3 of [I-D.bogineni-dmm-optimized-mobile-user-plane]. SR-
MPLS allows reduction of the control protocols to one IGP (with out
needing for LDP and RSVP-TE).
However, as specified above with PPR (Section 3), in the integrated
transport network function (TNF) a particular RSVP-TE path for MPLS
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or SR path for MPLS and IPv6 with SRH user plane, can be supplied to
SMF for mapping a particular PDU session to the transport path.
5. Acknowledgements
Thanks to Young Lee and John Kaippallimalil for discussions on this
document including ACTN applicability for the proposed TNF. Thanks
to Sri Gundavelli and 3GPP delegates who provided detailed feedback
on this document.
6. IANA Considerations
This document has no requests for any IANA code point allocations.
7. Security Considerations
This document does not introduce any new security issues.
8. Contributing Authors
The following people contributed substantially to the content of this
document and should be considered co-authors.
Xavier De Foy
InterDigital Communications, LLC
1000 Sherbrooke West
Montreal
Canada
Email: Xavier.Defoy@InterDigital.com
9. References
9.1. Normative References
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
9.2. Informative References
[I-D.bashandy-rtgwg-segment-routing-ti-lfa]
Bashandy, A., Filsfils, C., Decraene, B., Litkowski, S.,
Francois, P., daniel.voyer@bell.ca, d., Clad, F., and P.
Camarillo, "Topology Independent Fast Reroute using
Segment Routing", draft-bashandy-rtgwg-segment-routing-ti-
lfa-05 (work in progress), October 2018.
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[I-D.bogineni-dmm-optimized-mobile-user-plane]
Bogineni, K., Akhavain, A., Herbert, T., Farinacci, D.,
Rodriguez-Natal, A., Carofiglio, G., Auge, J.,
Muscariello, L., Camarillo, P., and S. Homma, "Optimized
Mobile User Plane Solutions for 5G", draft-bogineni-dmm-
optimized-mobile-user-plane-01 (work in progress), June
2018.
[I-D.chunduri-lsr-isis-preferred-path-routing]
Chunduri, U., Li, R., White, R., Tantsura, J., Contreras,
L., and Y. Qu, "Preferred Path Routing (PPR) in IS-IS",
draft-chunduri-lsr-isis-preferred-path-routing-02 (work in
progress), February 2019.
[I-D.chunduri-lsr-ospf-preferred-path-routing]
Chunduri, U., Qu, Y., White, R., Tantsura, J., and L.
Contreras, "Preferred Path Routing (PPR) in OSPF", draft-
chunduri-lsr-ospf-preferred-path-routing-02 (work in
progress), February 2019.
[I-D.farinacci-lisp-mobile-network]
Farinacci, D., Pillay-Esnault, P., and U. Chunduri, "LISP
for the Mobile Network", draft-farinacci-lisp-mobile-
network-04 (work in progress), September 2018.
[I-D.ietf-dmm-srv6-mobile-uplane]
Matsushima, S., Filsfils, C., Kohno, M., Camarillo, P.,
daniel.voyer@bell.ca, d., and C. Perkins, "Segment Routing
IPv6 for Mobile User Plane", draft-ietf-dmm-srv6-mobile-
uplane-03 (work in progress), October 2018.
[I-D.ietf-spring-segment-routing]
Filsfils, C., Previdi, S., Ginsberg, L., Decraene, B.,
Litkowski, S., and R. Shakir, "Segment Routing
Architecture", draft-ietf-spring-segment-routing-15 (work
in progress), January 2018.
[RFC3209] Awduche, D., Berger, L., Gan, D., Li, T., Srinivasan, V.,
and G. Swallow, "RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for LSP
Tunnels", RFC 3209, DOI 10.17487/RFC3209, December 2001,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3209>.
[RFC5440] Vasseur, JP., Ed. and JL. Le Roux, Ed., "Path Computation
Element (PCE) Communication Protocol (PCEP)", RFC 5440,
DOI 10.17487/RFC5440, March 2009,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5440>.
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[RFC6241] Enns, R., Ed., Bjorklund, M., Ed., Schoenwaelder, J., Ed.,
and A. Bierman, Ed., "Network Configuration Protocol
(NETCONF)", RFC 6241, DOI 10.17487/RFC6241, June 2011,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6241>.
[RFC6830] Farinacci, D., Fuller, V., Meyer, D., and D. Lewis, "The
Locator/ID Separation Protocol (LISP)", RFC 6830,
DOI 10.17487/RFC6830, January 2013,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6830>.
[RFC7490] Bryant, S., Filsfils, C., Previdi, S., Shand, M., and N.
So, "Remote Loop-Free Alternate (LFA) Fast Reroute (FRR)",
RFC 7490, DOI 10.17487/RFC7490, April 2015,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7490>.
[RFC7752] Gredler, H., Ed., Medved, J., Previdi, S., Farrel, A., and
S. Ray, "North-Bound Distribution of Link-State and
Traffic Engineering (TE) Information Using BGP", RFC 7752,
DOI 10.17487/RFC7752, March 2016,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7752>.
[RFC8040] Bierman, A., Bjorklund, M., and K. Watsen, "RESTCONF
Protocol", RFC 8040, DOI 10.17487/RFC8040, January 2017,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8040>.
[RFC8370] Beeram, V., Ed., Minei, I., Shakir, R., Pacella, D., and
T. Saad, "Techniques to Improve the Scalability of RSVP-TE
Deployments", RFC 8370, DOI 10.17487/RFC8370, May 2018,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8370>.
[RFC8453] Ceccarelli, D., Ed. and Y. Lee, Ed., "Framework for
Abstraction and Control of TE Networks (ACTN)", RFC 8453,
DOI 10.17487/RFC8453, August 2018,
<https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8453>.
[TS.23.401-3GPP]
3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP), "Procedures for
4G/LTE System; 3GPP TS 23.401, v15.4.0", June 2018.
[TS.23.501-3GPP]
3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP), "System
Architecture for 5G System; Stage 2, 3GPP TS 23.501
v2.0.1", December 2017.
[TS.23.502-3GPP]
3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP), "Procedures for
5G System; Stage 2, 3GPP TS 23.502, v2.0.0", December
2017.
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[TS.23.503-3GPP]
3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP), "Policy and
Charging Control System for 5G Framework; Stage 2, 3GPP TS
23.503 v1.0.0", December 2017.
[TS.29.281-3GPP]
3rd Generation Partnership Project (3GPP), "GPRS Tunneling
Protocol User Plane (GTPv1-U), 3GPP TS 29.281 v15.1.0",
December 2017.
Appendix A. Appendix: New Control Plane and User Planes
A.1. LISP and PPR
PPR can also be used with LISP control plane for 3GPP as described in
[I-D.farinacci-lisp-mobile-network]. This can be achieved by mapping
the UE IP address (EID) to PPR-ID, which acts as Routing Locator
(RLOC). Any encapsulation supported by LISP can work well with PPR.
If the RLOC refers to an IPv4 or IPv6 destination address in the LISP
encapsulated header, packets are transported on the preferred path in
the network as opposed to traditional shortest path routing with no
additional user plane overhead related to TE path in the network
layer.
Some of the distinct advantages of the LISP approach is, its
scalability, support for service continuity in SSC Mode3 as well as
native support for session continuity (session survivable mobility).
Various other advantages are documented at
[I-D.farinacci-lisp-mobile-network].
A.2. ILA and PPR
If an ILA-prefix is allowed to refer to a PPR-ID, ILA can be
leveraged with all the benefits (including mobility) that it
provides. This works fine in the DL direction as packet is destined
to UE IP address at UPF. However, in the UL direction, packet is
destined to an external internet address (SIR Prefix to ILA Prefix
transformation happens on the Source address of the original UE
packet). One way to route the packet with out bringing the complete
DFZ BGP routing table is by doing a default route to the UPF (ILA-R).
In this case, how TE can be achieved is TBD (to be expanded further
with details).
Authors' Addresses
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Uma Chunduri (editor)
Huawei USA
2330 Central Expressway
Santa Clara, CA 95050
USA
Email: uma.chunduri@huawei.com
Richard Li
Huawei USA
2330 Central Expressway
Santa Clara, CA 95050
USA
Email: renwei.li@huawei.com
Sridhar Bhaskaran
Huawei Technologies India Pvt Ltd
Survey No.37, Whitefield Road, Kundalahalli
Bengaluru, Karnataka
India
Email: sridhar.bhaskaran@huawei.com
Jeff Tantsura
Apstra, Inc.
Email: jefftant.ietf@gmail.com
Luis M. Contreras
Telefonica
Sur-3 building, 3rd floor
Madrid 28050
Spain
Email: luismiguel.contrerasmurillo@telefonica.com
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Praveen Muley
Nokia
440 North Bernardo Ave
Mountain View, CA 94043
USA
Email: praveen.muley@nokia.com
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