RFC 975 - Autonomous confederations

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Network Working Group D. L. Mills
Request for Comments: 975 M/A-COM Linkabit
 February 1986
 Autonomous Confederations
Status of This Memo
 This RFC proposes certain enhancements of the Exterior Gateway
 Protocol (EGP) to support a simple, multiple-level routing capability
 while preserving the robustness features of the current EGP model.
 It requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.
 Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
Overview
 The enhancements, which do not require retrofits in existing
 implementations in order to interoperate with enhanced
 implementations, in effect generalize the concept of core system to
 include multiple communities of autonomous systems, called autonomous
 confederations. Autonomous confederations maintain a higher degree of
 mutual trust than that assumed between autonomous systems in general,
 including reasonable protection against routing loops between the
 member systems, but allow the routing restrictions of the current EGP
 model to be relaxed.
 The enhancements involve the "hop count" or distance field of the EGP
 Update message, the interpretation of which is not covered by the
 current EGP model. This field is given a special interpretation
 within each autonomous confederation to support up to three levels of
 routing, one within the autonomous system, a second within the
 autonomous confederation and an optional third within the universe of
 confederations.
1. Introduction and Background
 The historical development of Internet exterior-gateway routing
 algorithms began with a rather rigid and restricted topological model
 which emphasized robustness and stability at the expense of routing
 dynamics and flexibility. Evolution of robust and dynamic routing
 algorithms has since proved extraordinarily difficult, probably due
 more to varying perceptions of service requirements than to
 engineering problems.
 The original exterior-gateway model suggested in RFC-827 [1] and
 subsequently refined in RFC-888 [2] severely restricted the Internet
 topology essentially to a tree structure with root represented by the
 BBN-developed "core" gateway system. The most important
 characteristic of the model was that debilitating resource-consuming
 routing loops between clusters of gateways (called autonomous
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 systems) could not occur in a tree-structured topology. However, the
 administrative and enforcement difficulties involved, not to mention
 the performance liabilities, made widespread implementation
 impractical.
 1.1. The Exterior Gateway Protocol
 Requirements for near-term interoperability between the BBN core
 gateways and the remainder of the gateway population implemented
 by other organizations required that an interim protocol be
 developed with the capability of exchanging reachability
 information, but not necessarily the capability to function as a
 true routing algorithm. This protocol is called the Exterior
 Gateway Protocol (EGP) and is documented in RFC-904 [3].
 EGP was not designed as a routing algorithm, since no agreement
 could be reached on a trusted, common metric. However, EGP was
 designed to provide high-quality reachability information, both
 about neighbor gateways and about routes to non-neighbor gateways.
 At the present state of development, dynamic routes are computed
 only by the core system and provided to non-core gateways using
 EGP only as an interface mechanism. Non-core gateways can provide
 routes to the core system and even to other non-core gateways, but
 cannot pass on "third-party" routes computed using data received
 from other gateways.
 As operational experience with EGP has accumulated, it has become
 clear that a more decentralized dynamic routing capability is
 needed in order to avoid resource-consuming suboptimal routes. In
 addition, there has long been resistance to the a-priori
 assumption of a single core system, with implications of
 suboptimal performance, administrative problems, impossible
 enforcement and possible subversion. Whether or not this
 resistance is real or justified, the important technical question
 remains whether a more dynamic, distributed approach is possible
 without significantly diluting stability and robustness.
 This document proposes certain enhancements of EGP which
 generalize the concept of core system to include multiple
 communities of autonomous systems, called autonomous
 confederations. Autonomous confederations maintain a higher
 degree of mutual trust than that assumed between autonomous
 systems in general, including reasonable protection against
 routing loops between the member systems. The enhancements
 involve the "hop count" or distance field of the EGP Update
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Autonomous Confederations
 message, which is given a special interpretation as described
 later. Note that the interpretation of this field is not
 specified in RFC-904, but is left as a matter for further study.
 The interpretation of the distance field involves three levels of
 metrics, in which the lowest level is available to the interior
 gateway protocol (IGP) of the autonomous system itself to extend
 the interior routes to the autonomous system boundary. The next
 higher level selects preferred routes within the autonomous system
 to those outside, while the third and highest selects preferred
 routes within the autonomous confederation to those outside.
 The proposed model is believed compatible with the current
 specifications and practices used in the Internet. In fact, the
 entire present conglomeration of autonomous systems, including the
 core system, can be represented as a single autonomous
 confederation, with new confederations being formed from existing
 and new systems as necessary.
 1.2. Routing Restrictions
 It was the intent in RFC-904 that the stipulated routing
 restrictions superceded all previous documents, including RFC-827
 and RFC-888. The notion that a non-core gateway must not pass on
 third-party information was suggested in planning meetings that
 occured after the previous documents had been published and before
 RFC-904 was finalized. This effectively obsoletes prior notions
 of "stub" or any other asymmetry other than the third-party rule.
 Thus, the only restrictions placed on a non-core gateway is that
 in its EGP messages (a) a gateway can be listed only if it belongs
 to the same autonomous system (internal neighbor) and (b) a net
 can be listed only if it is reachable via gateways belonging to
 that system. There are no other restrictions, overt or implied.
 The specification does not address the design of the core system
 or its gateways.
 The restrictions imply that, to insure full connectivity, every
 non-core gateway must run EGP with a core gateway. Since the
 present core-gateway implementation disallows other gateways on
 EGP-neighbor paths, this further implies that every non-core
 gateway must share a net in common with at least one core gateway.
 Note that there is no a-priori prohibition on using EGP as an IGP,
 or even on using EGP with a gateway of another non-core system,
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Autonomous Confederations
 providing that the third-party rule is observed. If a gateway in
 each system ran EGP with a gateway in every other system, the
 notion of core system would be unneccessary and superflous.
 At one time during the evolution of the EGP model a strict
 hierarchical topology (tree structure) of autonomous systems was
 required, but this is not the case now. At one time it was
 forbidden for two nets to be connected by gateways of two or more
 systems, but this is not the case now. Autonomous systems are
 sets of gateways, not nets or hosts, so that a given net or host
 can be reachable via more than one system; however, every gateway
 belongs to exactly one system.
 1.3. Examples and Problems
 Consider the common case of two local-area nets A and B connected
 to the ARPANET by gateways of different systems. Now assume A and
 B are connected to each other by a gateway A-B belonging to the
 same system as the A-ARPANET gateway, which could then list itself
 and both the A and B nets in EGP messages sent to any other
 gateway, since both are now reachable in its system. However, the
 B-ARPANET gateway could list itself and only the B net, since the
 A-B gateway is not in its system.
 In principle, we could assume the existence of a second gateway
 B-A belonging to the same system as the B-ARPANET gateway, which
 would entitle it to list the A net as well; however, it may be
 easier for both systems to sign a treaty and consider the A-B
 gateway under joint administration. The implementation of the
 treaty may not be trivial, however, since the joint gateway must
 appear to other gateways as two distinct gateways, each with its
 own autonomous-system number.
 Another case occurs when for some reason or other a system has no
 path to a core gateway other than via another non-core system.
 Consider a third local-are net C, together with gateway C-A
 belonging to a system other than the A-ARPANET and B-ARPANET
 gateways. According to the restrictions above, gateway C-A could
 list net C in EGP messages sent to A-ARPANET, while A-ARPANET
 could list ARPANET in messages sent to C-A, but not other nets
 which it may learn about from the core. Thus, gateway C-A cannot
 acquire full routing information unless it runs EGP directly with
 a core gateway.
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2. Autonomous Systems and Confederations
 The second example above illustrates the need for a mechanism in
 which arbitrary routing information can be exchanged between non-core
 gateways without degrading the degree of robustness relative to a
 mutually agreed security model. One way of doing this is is to
 extend the existing single-core autonomous-system model to include
 multiple core systems. This requires both a topological model which
 can be used to define the scope of these systems together with a
 global, trusted metric that can be used to drive the routing
 computations. An appropriate topological model is described in the
 next section, while an appropriate metric is suggested in the
 following section.
 2.1. Topological Models
 An "autonomous system" consists of a set of gateways, each of
 which can reach any other gateway in the same system using paths
 via gateways only in that system. The gateways of a system
 cooperatively maintain a routing data base using an interior
 gateway protocol (IGP) and a intra-system trusted routing
 mechanism of no further concern here. The IGP is expected to
 include security mechanisms to insure that only gateways of the
 same system can acquire each other as neighbors.
 One or more gateways in an autonomous system can run EGP with one
 or more gateways in a neighboring system. There is no restriction
 on the number or configuration of EGP neighbor paths, other than
 the requirement that each path involve only gateways of one system
 or the other and not intrude on a third system. It is
 specifically not required that EGP neighbors share a common
 network, although most probably will.
 An "autonomous confederation" consists of a set of autonomous
 systems sharing a common security model; that is, they trust each
 other to compute routes to other systems in the same
 confederation. Each gateway in a confederation can reach any
 other gateway in the same confederation using paths only in that
 confederation. Although there is no restriction on the number or
 configuration of EGP paths other than the above, it is expected
 that some mechanism be available so that potential EGP neighbors
 can discover whether they are in the same confederation. This
 could be done by access-control lists, for example, or by
 partitioning the set of system numbers.
 A network is "directly reachable" from an autonomous system if a
 gateway in that system has an interface to it. Every gateway in
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 that system is entitled to list all directly reachable networks in
 EGP messages sent to any other system. In general, it may happen
 that a particular network is directly reachable from more than one
 system.
 A network is "reachable" from an autonomous system if it is
 directly reachable from an autonomous system belonging to the same
 confederation. A directly reachable net is always reachable from
 the same system. Every gateway in that confederation is entitled
 to list all reachable nets in EGP messages sent to any other
 system. It may happen that a particular net is either directly
 reachable or reachable from different confederations.
 In order to preserve global routing stability in the Internet, it
 is explicitly assumed that routes within an autonomous system to a
 directly reachable net are always preferred over routes outside
 that system and that routes within an autonomous confederation are
 always preferred over routes outside that confederation. The
 mechanism by which this is assured is described in the next
 section.
 In general, EGP Update messages can include two lists of gateways,
 one for those gateways belonging to the same system (internal
 neighbors) and the other for gateways belonging to different
 systems (external neighbors). Directly reachable nets must always
 be associated with gateways of the same system, that is, with
 internal neighbors, while non-directly reachable nets can be
 associated with either internal or external neighbors. Nets that
 are reachable, but not directly reachable, must always be
 associated with gateways of the same confederation.
 2.2. Trusted Routing Metrics
 There seems to be a general principle which characterizes
 distributed systems: The "nearer" a thing is the more dynamic and
 trustable it is, while the "farther" a thing is the more static
 and suspicious it is. For instance, the concept of network is
 intrinsic to the Internet model, as is the concept of gateways
 which bind them together. A cluster of gateways "near" each other
 (e.g. within an autonomous system) typically exchange routing
 information using a high-performance routing algorithm capable of
 sensitive monitoring of, and rapid adaptation to, changing
 performance indicators such as queueing delays and link loading.
 However, clusters of gateways "far" from each other (e.g. widely
 separated autonomous systems) usually need only coarse routing
 information, possibly only "hints" on the best likely next hop to
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 the general destination area. On the other hand, mutual suspicion
 increases with distance, so these clusters may need elaborate
 security considerations, including peer authentication,
 confidentiality, secrecy and signature verification. In addition,
 considerations of efficiency usually dictate that the allowable
 network bandidth consumed by the routing protocol itself decreases
 with distance. The price paid for both of these things typically
 is in responsiveness, with the effect that the more distant
 clusters are from each other, the less dynamic is the routing
 algorithm.
 The above observations suggest a starting point for the evolution
 of a globally acceptable routing metric. Assume the metric is
 represented by an integer, with low values representing finer
 distinctions "nearer" the gateway and high values coarser
 distinctions "farther" from it. Values less than a globally
 agreed constant X are associated with paths confined to the same
 autonomous system as the sender, values greater than X but less
 than another constant Y with paths confined to the autonomous
 confederation of the sender and values greater than Y associated
 with the remaining paths.
 At each of these three levels - autonomous system, autonomous
 confederation and universe of confederations - multiple routing
 algorithms could be operated simultaneously, with each producing
 for each destination net a possibly different subtree and metric
 in the ranges specified above. However, within each system the
 metric must have the same interpretation, so that other systems
 can mitigate routes between multiple gateways in that system.
 Likewise, within each confederation the metric must have the same
 interpretation, so that other confederations can mitigate routes
 to gateways in that confederation. Although all confederations
 must agree on a common universe-of-confederations algorithm, not
 all confederations need to use the same confederation-level
 algorithm and not all systems in the same confederation need to
 use the same system-level algorithm.
3. Implementation Issues
 The manner in which the eight-bit "hop count" or distance field in
 the EGP Update to be used is not specified in RFC-904, but left as a
 matter for further study. The above model provides both an
 interpretation of this field, as well as hints on how to design
 appropriate routing algorithms.
 For the sake of illustration, assume the values of X and Y above are
 128 and 192 respectively. This means that the gateways in a
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 particular system will assign distance values less than 128 for
 directly-reachable nets and that exterior gateways can compare these
 values freely in order to select among these gateways. It also means
 that the gateways in all systems of a particular confederation will
 assign distance values between 128 and 192 for those nets not
 directly reachable in the system but reachable in the confederation.
 In the following it will be assumed that the various confederations
 can be distinguished by some feature of the 16-bit system-number
 field, perhaps by reserving a subfield.
 3.1. Data-Base Management Functions
 The following implementation model may clarify the above issues,
 as well as present at least one way to organize the gateway data
 base. The data base is organized as a routing table, the entries
 of which include a net number together with a list of items, where
 each item consists of (a) the gateway address, system number and
 distance provided by an EGP neighbor, (b) a time-to-live counter,
 local routing information and other information as necessary to
 manage the data base.
 The routing table is updated each time an EGP Update message is
 received from a neighbor and possibly by other means, such as the
 system IGP. The message is first decoded into a list of quads
 consisting of a network number, gateway address, system number and
 distance. If the gateway address is internal to the neighbor
 system, as determined from the EGP message, the system number of
 the quad is set to that system; while, if not, the system number
 is set to zero, indicating "external."
 Next, a new value of distance is computed from the old value
 provided in the message and subject to the following constraints:
 If the system number matches the local system number, the new
 value is determined by the rules for the system IGP but must be
 less than 128. If not and either the system number belongs to the
 same confederation or the system number is zero and the old
 distance is less than 192, the value is determined by the rules
 for the confederation EGP, but must be at least 128 and less than
 192. Otherwise, the value is determined by the rules for the
 (global) universe-of-federations EGP, but must be at least 192.
 For each quad in the list the routing table is first searched for
 matching net number and a new entry made if not already there.
 Next, the list of items for that net number is searched for
 matching gateway address and system number and a new entry made if
 not already there. Finally, the distance field is recomputed, the
 time-to-live field reset and local routing information inserted.
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 The time-to-live fields of all items in each list are incremented
 on a regular basis. If a field exceeds a preset maximum, the item
 is discarded; while, if all items on a list are discarded, the
 entire entry including net number is discarded.
 When a gateway sends an EGP Update message to a neighbor, it must
 invert the data base in order by gateway address, rather than net
 number. As part of this process the routing table is scanned and
 the gateway with minimum distance selected for each net number.
 The resulting list is sorted by gateway address and partitioned on
 the basis of internal/external system number.
 3.2. Routing Functions
 A gateway encountering a datagram (service unit) searches the
 routing table for matching destination net number and then selects
 the gateway on that list with minimum distance. As the result of
 the value assignments above, it should be clear that routes at a
 higher level will never be chosen if routes at a lower level
 exist. It should also be clear that route selection within a
 system cannot affect route selection outside that system, except
 through the intervention of the intra-confederation routing
 algorithm. If a simple min-system-hop algorithm is used for the
 confederation EGP, the IGP of each system can influence it only to
 the extent of reachability.
 3.3. Compatibility Issues
 The proposed interpretation is backwards-compatibile with known
 EGP implementations which do not interpret the distance field and
 with several known EGP implementations that take private liberties
 with this field. Perhaps the simplest way to evolve the present
 system is to collect the existing implementations that do not
 interpet the distance field at all as a single confederation with
 the present core system and routing restrictions. All distances
 provided by this confederation would be assumed equal to 192,
 which would provide at least a rudimentary capability for routing
 within the universe of confederations.
 One or more existing or proposed systems in which the distance
 field has a uniform interpretation throughout the system can be
 organized as autonomous confederations. This might include the
 Butterfly gateways now now being deployed, as well as clones
 elsewhere. These systems provide the capability to select routes
 into the system based on the distance fields for the different
 gateways. It is anticipated that the distance fields for the
 Butterfly system can be set to at least 128 if the routing
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 information comes from another Butterfly system and to at least
 192 if from a non-Butterfly system presumed outside the
 confederation.
 New systems using an implmentation model such as suggested above
 can select routes into a confederation based on the distance
 field. For this to work properly, however, it is necessary that
 all systems and confederations adopt a consistent interpretation
 of distance values exceeding 192.
4. Summary and Conclusions
 Taken at face value, this document represents a proposal for an
 interpretation of the distance field of the EGP Update message, which
 has previously been assigned no architected interpretation, but has
 been often used informally. The proposal amounts to ordering the
 autonomous systems in a hierarchy of systems and confederations,
 together with an interpretation of the distance field as a
 three-level metric. The result is to create a corresponding
 three-level routing community, one prefering routes inside a system,
 a second preferring routes inside a confederation and the third with
 no preference.
 While the proposed three-level hierarchy can readily be extended to
 any number of levels, this would create strain on the distance field,
 which is limited to eight bits in the current EGP model.
 The concept of distance can easily be generalized to "administrative
 distance" as suggested by John Nagle and others.
5. References
 [1] Rosen, E., Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP), DARPA Network
 Working Group Report RFC-827, Bolt Beranek and Newman, September
 1982.
 [2] Seamonson, L.J., and E.C., Rosen. "STUB" Exterior Gateway
 Protocol, DARPA Network Working Group Report RFC-888, BBN
 Communications, January 1984.
 [3] Mills, D.L., Exterior Gateway Protocol Formal Specification,
 DARPA Network Working Group Report RFC-904, M/A-COM Linkabit,
 April 1984.
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