RE: RFC6550 (RPL) and RFC6775 (IPv6 Neighbor Discovery for 6LoWPANs)

2020-06-01 Thread Templin (US), Fred L
NBMA is not necessarily a one-size-fits-all category, and it looks like 
multiple proposals
are considering models for NBMA links. AERO and OMNI define an NBMA link model
for virtual links and do define the operation of IPv6 ND over those links in 
ways that
go beyond RFC5942. This is encouraged in RFC4861 where it says:

   “Unless specified otherwise (in a document that covers operating IP
   over a particular link type) this document applies to all link types.
   However, because ND uses link-layer multicast for some of its
   services, it is possible that on some link types (e.g., Non-Broadcast
   Multi-Access (NBMA) links), alternative protocols or mechanisms to
   implement those services will be specified (in the appropriate
   document covering the operation of IP over a particular link type).”

Fred

From: ipv6 [mailto:ipv6-boun...@ietf.org] On Behalf Of Pascal Thubert (pthubert)
Sent: Monday, June 01, 2020 7:27 AM
To: Wes Beebee (wbeebee) ; Etienne-Victor 
Depasquale 
Cc: NANOG ; i...@ietf.org
Subject: RE: RFC6550 (RPL) and RFC6775 (IPv6 Neighbor Discovery for 6LoWPANs)

I take the “there was no NBMA” off, then, Wes, you’re correct. I’ll add a ref 
to RFC 5942 in section 4.4 that discusses the use of on-link flag.

Note that Hub and spoke is a very limited conception of NBMA. Think of an IOT 
network such as a RPL domain, or a frame relay network with OSPFv2 NBMA / P2MP 
models. It takes quite a bit more than resetting the on-link flag to enable 
IPv6 ND on those NBMA networks, though it is indeed necessary. This is what I 
tried to express too concisely.

Keep safe,
Pascal

PS For NBMA, RFC 4861 clearly says

 non-broadcast multiple access (NBMA)
- Redirect, Neighbor Unreachability Detection and
  next-hop determination should be implemented as
  described in this document.  Address resolution,
  and the mechanism for delivering Router
  Solicitations and Advertisements on NBMA links are
  not specified in this document.  Note that if
  hosts support manual configuration of a list of
  default routers, hosts can dynamically acquire the
  link-layer addresses for their neighbors from
  Redirect messages.


From: Wes Beebee (wbeebee) 
mailto:wbeebee=40cisco@dmarc.ietf.org>>
Sent: lundi 1 juin 2020 16:00
To: Pascal Thubert (pthubert) mailto:pthub...@cisco.com>>; 
Etienne-Victor Depasquale mailto:ed...@ieee.org>>
Cc: NANOG mailto:nanog@nanog.org>>; 
i...@ietf.org<mailto:i...@ietf.org>
Subject: Re: RFC6550 (RPL) and RFC6775 (IPv6 Neighbor Discovery for 6LoWPANs)

RFC 5942 outlines how NBMA works with Neighbor Discovery.

Using this RFC, IPv6 has been deployed in NBMA networks (DOCSIS) with 10 
million+ subscribers without any problems.

-  Wes

From: ipv6 mailto:ipv6-boun...@ietf.org>> on behalf of 
"Pascal Thubert (pthubert)" 
mailto:pthubert=40cisco@dmarc.ietf.org>>
Date: Sunday, May 31, 2020 at 8:29 AM
To: Etienne-Victor Depasquale mailto:ed...@ieee.org>>
Cc: NANOG mailto:nanog@nanog.org>>, 
"i...@ietf.org<mailto:i...@ietf.org>" mailto:i...@ietf.org>>
Subject: Re: RFC6550 (RPL) and RFC6775 (IPv6 Neighbor Discovery for 6LoWPANs)

Cool, that’s the whole point.

With IPv6 ND as defined 20+ years ago there couldn’t be NBMA and there couldn’t 
be MLSN.

We have changed that in IoT and we are now trying  to generalize to all types 
of links.
There’s a tentative to get the aforementioned draft adopted at 6MAN. If you 
found it useful please voice support !

Take care,

Pascal

Le 31 mai 2020 à 13:11, Etienne-Victor Depasquale 
mailto:ed...@ieee.org>> a écrit :
Pascal, thank you, the draft at  
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-thubert-6man-ipv6-over-wireless/  is 
very informative.

You hit the nail on the head with your suggestion of confusion between the 
congruence of link and subnet.

However, I followed one of the references (RFC4903) in your draft and
it does not help that it (RFC4903) points to RFC4291's assertion that:
"Currently IPv6 continues the IPv4 model that a subnet prefix is associated 
with one link"

RFC4903 further states that:
 "clearly, the notion of a multi-link subnet would be a change to the existing 
IP model.".

I confess: your assertion in the draft that:
"In Route-Over Multi-link subnets (MLSN) [RFC4903],
routers federate the links between nodes
that belong to the subnet, the subnet is not on-link and it extends
beyond any of the federated links"

is news to me.

Best regards,

Etienne





On Sat, May 30, 2020 at 1:39 PM Pascal Thubert (pthubert) 
mailto:pthub...@cisco.com>> wrote:
Hello Etienne Victor

Maybe you’re confusing link and a subnet?

This is discussed at length here:
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-th

FW: RFC6550 (RPL) and RFC6775 (IPv6 Neighbor Discovery for 6LoWPANs)

2020-06-01 Thread Pascal Thubert (pthubert) via NANOG

I take the “there was no NBMA” off, then, Wes, you’re correct. I’ll add a ref 
to RFC 5942 in section 4.4 that discusses the use of on-link flag.

Note that Hub and spoke is a very limited conception of NBMA. Think of an IOT 
network such as a RPL domain, or a frame relay network with OSPFv2 NBMA / P2MP 
models. It takes quite a bit more than resetting the on-link flag to enable 
IPv6 ND on those NBMA networks, though it is indeed necessary. This is what I 
tried to express too concisely.

Keep safe,
Pascal

PS For NBMA, RFC 4861 clearly says

 non-broadcast multiple access (NBMA)
- Redirect, Neighbor Unreachability Detection and
  next-hop determination should be implemented as
  described in this document.  Address resolution,
  and the mechanism for delivering Router
  Solicitations and Advertisements on NBMA links are
  not specified in this document.  Note that if
  hosts support manual configuration of a list of
  default routers, hosts can dynamically acquire the
  link-layer addresses for their neighbors from
  Redirect messages.


From: Wes Beebee (wbeebee) 
mailto:wbeebee=40cisco@dmarc.ietf.org>>
Sent: lundi 1 juin 2020 16:00
To: Pascal Thubert (pthubert) mailto:pthub...@cisco.com>>; 
Etienne-Victor Depasquale mailto:ed...@ieee.org>>
Cc: NANOG mailto:nanog@nanog.org>>; 
i...@ietf.org<mailto:i...@ietf.org>
Subject: Re: RFC6550 (RPL) and RFC6775 (IPv6 Neighbor Discovery for 6LoWPANs)

RFC 5942 outlines how NBMA works with Neighbor Discovery.

Using this RFC, IPv6 has been deployed in NBMA networks (DOCSIS) with 10 
million+ subscribers without any problems.


  *   Wes

From: ipv6 mailto:ipv6-boun...@ietf.org>> on behalf of 
"Pascal Thubert (pthubert)" 
mailto:pthubert=40cisco@dmarc.ietf.org>>
Date: Sunday, May 31, 2020 at 8:29 AM
To: Etienne-Victor Depasquale mailto:ed...@ieee.org>>
Cc: NANOG mailto:nanog@nanog.org>>, 
"i...@ietf.org<mailto:i...@ietf.org>" mailto:i...@ietf.org>>
Subject: Re: RFC6550 (RPL) and RFC6775 (IPv6 Neighbor Discovery for 6LoWPANs)

Cool, that’s the whole point.

With IPv6 ND as defined 20+ years ago there couldn’t be NBMA and there couldn’t 
be MLSN.

We have changed that in IoT and we are now trying  to generalize to all types 
of links.
There’s a tentative to get the aforementioned draft adopted at 6MAN. If you 
found it useful please voice support !

Take care,

Pascal

Le 31 mai 2020 à 13:11, Etienne-Victor Depasquale 
mailto:ed...@ieee.org>> a écrit :
Pascal, thank you, the draft at  
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-thubert-6man-ipv6-over-wireless/  is 
very informative.

You hit the nail on the head with your suggestion of confusion between the 
congruence of link and subnet.

However, I followed one of the references (RFC4903) in your draft and
it does not help that it (RFC4903) points to RFC4291's assertion that:
"Currently IPv6 continues the IPv4 model that a subnet prefix is associated 
with one link"

RFC4903 further states that:
 "clearly, the notion of a multi-link subnet would be a change to the existing 
IP model.".

I confess: your assertion in the draft that:
"In Route-Over Multi-link subnets (MLSN) [RFC4903],
routers federate the links between nodes
that belong to the subnet, the subnet is not on-link and it extends
beyond any of the federated links"

is news to me.

Best regards,

Etienne





On Sat, May 30, 2020 at 1:39 PM Pascal Thubert (pthubert) 
mailto:pthub...@cisco.com>> wrote:
Hello Etienne Victor

Maybe you’re confusing link and a subnet?

This is discussed at length here:
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-thubert-6man-ipv6-over-wireless/

RPL can route inside a subnet using host routes. This is how a multi link 
subnet can be made to work...

Please let me know if the draft above helped and whether it is clear enough. 
The best way for that discussion would be to cc 6MAN.

Keep safe,

Pascal

Le 30 mai 2020 à 10:03, Etienne-Victor Depasquale 
mailto:ed...@ieee.org>> a écrit :
Thank you Carsten, and thank you Pacal. Your replies are valuable and packed 
with insight.

I'll wrap up with how I interpret RPL's behaviour in terms of IP hops.

On one hand, RFC6775 defines a route-over topology as follows:
"A topology where hosts are connected to the 6LBR through the use of 
intermediate layer-3 (IP) routing.
Here, hosts are typically multiple IP hops away from a 6LBR.
The route-over topology typically consists of a 6LBR, a set of 6LRs, and hosts."
If RPL is route-over by definition, then RFC6775 would imply that there are 
typically multiple IP hops between a leaf and the border router.

On the other hand, there at least two contradictions (which I justify after 

Re: RFC6550 (RPL) and RFC6775 (IPv6 Neighbor Discovery for 6LoWPANs)

2020-05-31 Thread Etienne-Victor Depasquale
Pascal, thank you, the draft at
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-thubert-6man-ipv6-over-wireless/
is very informative.

You hit the nail on the head with your suggestion of confusion between the
congruence of link and subnet.

However, I followed one of the references (RFC4903) in your draft and
it does not help that it (RFC4903) points to RFC4291's assertion that:
"Currently IPv6 continues the IPv4 model that a subnet prefix is associated
with one link"

RFC4903 further states that:
 "clearly, the notion of a multi-link subnet would be a change to the
existing IP model.".

I confess: your assertion in the draft that:
"In Route-Over Multi-link subnets (MLSN) [RFC4903],
routers federate the links between nodes
that belong to the subnet, the subnet is not on-link and it extends
beyond any of the federated links"

is news to me.

Best regards,

Etienne





On Sat, May 30, 2020 at 1:39 PM Pascal Thubert (pthubert) <
pthub...@cisco.com> wrote:

> Hello Etienne Victor
>
> Maybe you’re confusing link and a subnet?
>
> This is discussed at length here:
>
> https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-thubert-6man-ipv6-over-wireless/
>
> RPL can route inside a subnet using host routes. This is how a multi link
> subnet can be made to work...
>
> Please let me know if the draft above helped and whether it is clear
> enough. The best way for that discussion would be to cc 6MAN.
>
> Keep safe,
>
> Pascal
>
> Le 30 mai 2020 à 10:03, Etienne-Victor Depasquale  a
> écrit :
>
> 
> Thank you Carsten, and thank you Pacal. Your replies are valuable and
> packed with insight.
>
> I'll wrap up with how I interpret RPL's behaviour in terms of IP hops.
>
> On one hand, RFC6775 defines a route-over topology as follows:
> "A topology where hosts are connected to the 6LBR through the use of
> intermediate layer-3 (IP) routing.
> Here, hosts are typically multiple IP hops away from a 6LBR.
> The route-over topology typically consists of a 6LBR, a set of 6LRs, and
> hosts."
> If RPL is route-over by definition, then RFC6775 would imply that there
> are typically multiple IP hops between a leaf and the border router.
>
> On the other hand, there at least two contradictions (which I justify
> after stating them):
> (a) RFC6550 states that "RPL also introduces the capability to bind a
> subnet together with a common prefix and to route within that subnet."
> (b) Reduction of a DODAG to a single subnet prefix, albeit only only one
> parent-child relationship deep, is clearly shown at Contiki-NG's Github
> page (deep dive section).
>
> The hinge on which my understanding revolves is that an IP hop traverses a
> router and ***results in a change of prefix of the link on which the packet
> travels*** :
>
> -->
> -->
>
> With RPL, the "hop" would look like as shown below:
>
>   --
> --
>
> There seems to be a change in the meaning associated with "IP hop".
> I guess that I can reconcile both cases through the observation that RPL
> actually does apply to a single, NBMA link and therefore the IP prefix
> ***is*** the same.
> Then again, calling the RPL device involved in the packet forwarding by
> the name "router" feels like an uncomfortable stretch.
> Don't routers sit at the meeting point of different layer 2 links?
>
>
> Cheers,
>
> Etienne
>
> On Fri, May 29, 2020 at 10:39 PM Pascal Thubert (pthubert) <
> pthub...@cisco.com> wrote:
>
>> Hello Etienne
>>
>> You may see ND as the host to * interface for any network and RPL as the
>> router to router interface when the network is NBMA.
>>
>> Some of us cared about the interworking.
>>
>> Look at the RPL Unaware leaf I-draft and you’ll see that I’m sure.
>>
>> Keep safe,
>>
>> Pascal
>>
>> > Le 29 mai 2020 à 20:28, Carsten Bormann  a écrit :
>> >
>> > Hi Etienne,
>> >
>> > I’m also not sure many of the classical network operators assembled in
>> NANOG work with 6LoWPANs today, but I still can answer your question.
>> >
>> >> While trying to build a holistic view of LoWPANs, I'm consulting the
>> IETF's informational and standards documents.
>> >>
>> >> I'm struck by the impression that, despite the significance of
>> RFC6775's extension of Neighbor Discovery(ND) to low-power and lossy
>> networks (LLNs),
>> >> it is largely ignored by RFC6550 (RPL), with little to no reference to
>> the ontological plane created in RFC6775's terminology section.
>> >
>> > Yes, you could say that.
>> >
>> > ND (Neighbor discovery) describes interfaces between hosts and between
>> hosts and routers.
>> > 6LoWPAN-ND does not use host-to-host interfaces (different from
>> Ethernet, all traffic goes over routers, which RFC 4861 already forsaw in
>> the L — on-link — bit, which isn’t set in 6LoWPAN-ND).
>> >
>> > RFC 6550 was completed at a time when many people who came in from the
>> WSN (wireless sensor network) world thought they could get away with a
>> network that is wholly composed of routers.
>> > Even the “leaf” nodes in the RPL world were participating 

Re: RFC6550 (RPL) and RFC6775 (IPv6 Neighbor Discovery for 6LoWPANs)

2020-05-30 Thread Etienne-Victor Depasquale
Thank you Carsten, and thank you Pacal. Your replies are valuable and
packed with insight.

I'll wrap up with how I interpret RPL's behaviour in terms of IP hops.

On one hand, RFC6775 defines a route-over topology as follows:
"A topology where hosts are connected to the 6LBR through the use of
intermediate layer-3 (IP) routing.
Here, hosts are typically multiple IP hops away from a 6LBR.
The route-over topology typically consists of a 6LBR, a set of 6LRs, and
hosts."
If RPL is route-over by definition, then RFC6775 would imply that there are
typically multiple IP hops between a leaf and the border router.

On the other hand, there at least two contradictions (which I justify after
stating them):
(a) RFC6550 states that "RPL also introduces the capability to bind a
subnet together with a common prefix and to route within that subnet."
(b) Reduction of a DODAG to a single subnet prefix, albeit only only one
parent-child relationship deep, is clearly shown at Contiki-NG's Github
page (deep dive section).

The hinge on which my understanding revolves is that an IP hop traverses a
router and ***results in a change of prefix of the link on which the packet
travels*** :

-->
-->

With RPL, the "hop" would look like as shown below:

  --
--

There seems to be a change in the meaning associated with "IP hop".
I guess that I can reconcile both cases through the observation that RPL
actually does apply to a single, NBMA link and therefore the IP prefix
***is*** the same.
Then again, calling the RPL device involved in the packet forwarding by the
name "router" feels like an uncomfortable stretch.
Don't routers sit at the meeting point of different layer 2 links?


Cheers,

Etienne

On Fri, May 29, 2020 at 10:39 PM Pascal Thubert (pthubert) <
pthub...@cisco.com> wrote:

> Hello Etienne
>
> You may see ND as the host to * interface for any network and RPL as the
> router to router interface when the network is NBMA.
>
> Some of us cared about the interworking.
>
> Look at the RPL Unaware leaf I-draft and you’ll see that I’m sure.
>
> Keep safe,
>
> Pascal
>
> > Le 29 mai 2020 à 20:28, Carsten Bormann  a écrit :
> >
> > Hi Etienne,
> >
> > I’m also not sure many of the classical network operators assembled in
> NANOG work with 6LoWPANs today, but I still can answer your question.
> >
> >> While trying to build a holistic view of LoWPANs, I'm consulting the
> IETF's informational and standards documents.
> >>
> >> I'm struck by the impression that, despite the significance of
> RFC6775's extension of Neighbor Discovery(ND) to low-power and lossy
> networks (LLNs),
> >> it is largely ignored by RFC6550 (RPL), with little to no reference to
> the ontological plane created in RFC6775's terminology section.
> >
> > Yes, you could say that.
> >
> > ND (Neighbor discovery) describes interfaces between hosts and between
> hosts and routers.
> > 6LoWPAN-ND does not use host-to-host interfaces (different from
> Ethernet, all traffic goes over routers, which RFC 4861 already forsaw in
> the L — on-link — bit, which isn’t set in 6LoWPAN-ND).
> >
> > RFC 6550 was completed at a time when many people who came in from the
> WSN (wireless sensor network) world thought they could get away with a
> network that is wholly composed of routers.
> > Even the “leaf” nodes in the RPL world were participating in the routing
> protocol and therefore didn’t really need a host-router interface.  There
> was no separate host-router interface in that world, because there were no
> non-router hosts.
> >
> >> (a) router advertisements and router solicitations are substituted by
> DAG information objects (DIO) and DAG information solicitations (DIS)
> >
> > Right, DIO and DAO are router-to-router messages.  If there are no hosts
> (and routers don’t bootstrap themselves as hosts), you don’t need ND.
> >
> >> (b) the terms "mesh-under" and "route-over" (widely cited), defined in
> RFC6775, are absent from RFC6550
> >
> > RFC6550 is route over by definition.  Actually, the term was coined by
> the people working closely with the RPL development; RFC 6775 does
> appropriate it as 6LoWPAN-ND is applicable in either case.
> >
> >> (c) jarringly: RFC6775 describes the route-over topologies as
> multi-IP-hop, while RFC6550 gathers DODAG nodes within the confines of the
> same IPv6 prefix as their border router - no multiple IP hops.
> >
> > I’m not sure where you get this interpretation: RFC 6550 (RPL) is very
> much about IP hops.
> > Maybe you mean the address architecture that was defined explicitly in
> RFC 6775; RFC 6550 does not really say much about addresses.
> >
> > Note that the RPL people have since proceeded to (at least partially)
> embrace the host-router concept from the IP architecture; RFC 8505 is an
> update to RFC 6775 that makes 6LoWPAN-ND more palatable to RPL people.
> >
> > I have CCed Pascal Thubert who, as a co-author to all three RFCs,
> certainly will have another perspective on this.

Re: RFC6550 (RPL) and RFC6775 (IPv6 Neighbor Discovery for 6LoWPANs)

2020-05-29 Thread Carsten Bormann
Hi Etienne,

I’m also not sure many of the classical network operators assembled in NANOG 
work with 6LoWPANs today, but I still can answer your question.

> While trying to build a holistic view of LoWPANs, I'm consulting the IETF's 
> informational and standards documents.
> 
> I'm struck by the impression that, despite the significance of RFC6775's 
> extension of Neighbor Discovery(ND) to low-power and lossy networks (LLNs),
> it is largely ignored by RFC6550 (RPL), with little to no reference to the 
> ontological plane created in RFC6775's terminology section.

Yes, you could say that.

ND (Neighbor discovery) describes interfaces between hosts and between hosts 
and routers.
6LoWPAN-ND does not use host-to-host interfaces (different from Ethernet, all 
traffic goes over routers, which RFC 4861 already forsaw in the L — on-link — 
bit, which isn’t set in 6LoWPAN-ND).

RFC 6550 was completed at a time when many people who came in from the WSN 
(wireless sensor network) world thought they could get away with a network that 
is wholly composed of routers.
Even the “leaf” nodes in the RPL world were participating in the routing 
protocol and therefore didn’t really need a host-router interface.  There was 
no separate host-router interface in that world, because there were no 
non-router hosts.

> (a) router advertisements and router solicitations are substituted by DAG 
> information objects (DIO) and DAG information solicitations (DIS)

Right, DIO and DAO are router-to-router messages.  If there are no hosts (and 
routers don’t bootstrap themselves as hosts), you don’t need ND.

> (b) the terms "mesh-under" and "route-over" (widely cited), defined in 
> RFC6775, are absent from RFC6550

RFC6550 is route over by definition.  Actually, the term was coined by the 
people working closely with the RPL development; RFC 6775 does appropriate it 
as 6LoWPAN-ND is applicable in either case.

> (c) jarringly: RFC6775 describes the route-over topologies as multi-IP-hop, 
> while RFC6550 gathers DODAG nodes within the confines of the same IPv6 prefix 
> as their border router - no multiple IP hops.

I’m not sure where you get this interpretation: RFC 6550 (RPL) is very much 
about IP hops.
Maybe you mean the address architecture that was defined explicitly in RFC 
6775; RFC 6550 does not really say much about addresses.

Note that the RPL people have since proceeded to (at least partially) embrace 
the host-router concept from the IP architecture; RFC 8505 is an update to RFC 
6775 that makes 6LoWPAN-ND more palatable to RPL people.

I have CCed Pascal Thubert who, as a co-author to all three RFCs, certainly 
will have another perspective on this.

Grüße, Carsten



RFC6550 (RPL) and RFC6775 (IPv6 Neighbor Discovery for 6LoWPANs)

2020-05-29 Thread Etienne-Victor Depasquale
Hello folks,


I'm not sure whether this is within scope as it regards LoWPANs ... please
chastise freely and ignore if LoWPANs are out of scope.

While trying to build a holistic view of LoWPANs, I'm consulting the IETF's
informational and standards documents.

I'm struck by the impression that, despite the significance of RFC6775's
extension of Neighbor Discovery(ND) to low-power and lossy networks (LLNs),
it is largely ignored by RFC6550 (RPL), with little to no reference to the
ontological plane created in RFC6775's terminology section.

For example:

(a) router advertisements and router solicitations are substituted by DAG
information objects (DIO) and DAG information solicitations (DIS)
(b) the terms "mesh-under" and "route-over" (widely cited), defined in
RFC6775, are absent from RFC6550
(c) jarringly: RFC6775 describes the route-over topologies as multi-IP-hop,
while RFC6550 gathers DODAG nodes within the confines of the same IPv6
prefix as their border router - no multiple IP hops.

Can anyone confirm or contradict this impression?


Cheers,

Etienne

-- 
Ing. Etienne-Victor Depasquale
Assistant Lecturer
Department of Communications & Computer Engineering
Faculty of Information & Communication Technology
University of Malta
Web. https://www.um.edu.mt/profile/etiennedepasquale