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Transcript
Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols And Multicasting 1 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Problems with Distance-Vector and Link-State Routing Neither distance-vector (RIP) nor link state (OSPF) protocols effective for exterior routing Distance vector and link state protocols assume all routers share common metric Priorities and restrictions may differ between ASs Flooding of link state information may become unmanageable 2 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Path Vector Routing Dispense with routing metrics Provide information about: – Which networks can be reached by given router – Which ASs must be crossed to get there No distance or cost element Routing information includes all Ass visited to reach destination – Allows policy routing 3 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Boarder Gateway Protocol (BGP) Allows routers (gateways) in different ASs to exchange routing information Messages sent over TCP – See next slide Three functional procedures – Neighbor acquisition – Neighbor reachability – Network reachability 4 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting BGP v4 Messages Open – Start neighbor relationship with another router Update – Transmit information about single route – List multiple routes to be withdrawn Keepalive – Acknowledge open message – Periodically confirm neighbor relationship Notification – Send when error condition detected 5 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Neighbor Acquisition Neighbors attach to same subnetwork If in different ASs routers may wish to exchange information Neighbor acquisitionis when two neighboring routers agree to exchange routing information regularly – Needed because one router may not wish to take part One router sends request, the other acknowledges – Knowledge of existence of other routers and need to exchange information established at configuration time or by active intervention 6 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Neighbor Reachability Periodic issue of keepalive messages Between all routers that are neighbors 7 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Network Reachability Each router keeps database of subnetworks it can reach and preferred route When change made, router issues update message All BGP routers build up and maintain routing information 8 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting BGP Message Formats Marker: – Reserved for authentication Length: – In octets Type: – Open, Update, Keepalive, Notification 9 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Neighbor Acquisition Detail Router opens TCP connection with neighbor Sends open message – Identifies sender’s AS and gives IP address – Includes Hold Time As proposed by sender If recipient prepared to open neighbor relationship – Calculate hold time min [own hold time, received hold time] Max time between keepalive/update messages – Reply with keepalive 10 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Keepalive Detail Header only Often enough to prevent hold time expiring 11 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Update Detail Information about single route through internet – Information to be added to database of any recipient router – Network layer reachability information (NLRI) List of network portions of IP addresses of subnets reached by this route – Total path attributes length field – Path attributes field (next slide) List of previously advertised routes being withdrawn May contain both 12 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Path Attributes Field Origin – Interior (e.g. OSPF) or exterior (BGP) protocol AS_Path – ASs traversed for this route Next_Hop – IP address of boarder router for next hop Multi_Exit_disc – Information about routers internal to AS Local_Pref – Tell other routers within AS degree of preference Atomic_Aggregate, Aggregator – Uses subnet addresses in tree view of network to reduce information needed in NLRI Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting 13 Withdrawal of Route(s) Route identified by IP address of destination subnetwork(s) 14 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Notification Message Error notification Message header error – Includes authentication and syntax errors Open message error – Syntax errors and option not recognised – Proposed hold time unacceptable Update message error – Syntax and validity errors Hold time expired Finite state machine error Cease – Close connection in absence of any other error 15 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Diagram for BGP Routing Information Exchange 16 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting BGP Routing Information Exchange R1 constructs routing table for AS1 using OSPF R1 issues update message to R5 (in AS2) – AS_Path: identity of AS1 – Next_Hop: IP address of R1 – NLRI: List of all subnets in AS1 Suppose R5 has neighbor relationship with R9 in AS3 R9 forwards information from R1 to R9 in update message – AS_Path: list of ids {AS2,AS1} – Next_Hop: IP address of R5 – NLRI: All subnets in AS1 R9 decides if this is prefered route and forwards to neighbors Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting 17 Inter-Domain Routing Protocol (IDRP) Exterior routing protocol for IPv6 ISO-OSI standard Path-vector routing Superset of BGP Operates over any internet protocol (not just TCP) – Own handshaking for guaranteed delivery Variable length AS identifiers Handles multiple internet protocols and address schemes Aggregates path information using routing domain confederations 18 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Routing Domain Confederations Set of connected AS Appear to outside world as single AS – Recursive Effective scaling 19 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Multicasting Sending message to multicast address – Multicast address refers to a group of hosts Multimedia Teleconferencing Databases Distributed computation Real-time workgroup 20 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Multicasting within LAN MAC level multicast addresses – IEEE 802 uses highest order bit 1 All stations that recognise the multicast address accept the packet Works because of broadcast nature of LAN Packet only sent once Much harder on internet 21 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Example Configuration for Multicast Internet 22 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Broadcast Assume location of recipients not know Send packet to every network Packet addressed to N3 traverses N1, link L3, N3 Router B translates IP multicast address to MAC multicast address Repeat for each network Generates lots of packets – In example, 13 23 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Multiple Unicast Location of each member of multicast group known to source Table maps multicast address to list of networks Only need to send to networks containing members of multicast group Reduced traffic (a bit) – In example, 11 24 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting True Multicast Least cost path from source to each network containing member of group is determined – Gives spanning tree configuration For networks containing group members only Source transmits packet along spanning tree Packet replicated by routers at branch points of spanning tree Reduced traffic – In example, 8 25 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Multicast Transmission Example 26 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Requirements for Multicasting (1) Router must forward two or more copies of incoming packet Addressing – IPv4 uses class D Start 1110 plus 28 bit group id – IPv6 uses 8 bit prefix of all 1s, 4 bit flags field, 4 bit scope field 112 bit group id Node must translate between multicast address and list of networks containing members of group Router must translate between IP multicast address and subnet multicast address to deliver to destination network 27 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Requirements for Multicasting (2) Multicast addresses may be permanent or dynamic Individual hosts may join or leave dynamically – Need mechanism to inform routers Routers exchange information on which subnets contain members of groups Routers exchange information to calculate shortest path to each network – Need routing protocol and algorithm Routes determined based on source and destination addresses – Avoids unnecessary duplication of packets 28 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) Type:Membership query (general or group specific), membership report, leave group, max. response time Checksum: uses IPv4 algorithm Group address: zero for request, valid IP multicast for report or leave 29 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting IGMP Operation Host uses IGMP to make itself know as member of group to other hosts and routers To join, send IGMP membership report message – Send to multicast destination of group being joined Routers periodically issue IGMP query – To all-hosts multicast address – Hosts respond with report message for each group to which it belongs Only one host in group needs to respond to keep group alive Host keeps timer and reponds if no other reply heard in time Host sends leave group message – Group specific query from router determins if any members remain 30 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Group Membership with IPv6 Function incorporated in ICMPv6 Includes all ICMPv4 plus IGMP – Includes group membership query and report – Addition of new group membership termination message 31 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Multicast Extension to OSPF (MOSPF) Enables routing of IP multicast datagrams within single AS Each router uses MOSPF to maintain local group membership information Each router periodically floods this to all routers in area Routers build shortest path spanning tree from a source network to all networks containing members of group (Dijkstra) – Takes time, so on demand only 32 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Forwarding Multicast Packets If multicast address not recognised, discard If router attaches to a network containing a member of group, transmit copy to that network Consult spanning tree for this sourcedestination pair and forward to other routers if required 33 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Equal Cost Multipath Ambiguities Dijkstra’ algorithm will include one of multiple equal cost paths – Which depends on order of processing nodes For multicast, all routers must have same spanning tree for given source node MOSPF has tiebreaker rule 34 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Interarea Multicasting Multicast groups amy contain members from more than one area Routers only know about multicast groups with members in its area Subset of area’s border routers forward group membership information and multicast datagrams between areas – Interarea multicast forwarders 35 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Inter-AS Multicasting Certain boundary routers act as inter-AS multicast forwarders – Run and inter-AS multicast routing protocol as well as MOSPF and OSPF – MOSPF makes sure they receive all multicast datagrams from within AS – Each such router forwards if required – Use reverse path routing to determine source Assume datagram from X enters AS at point advertising shortest route back to X Use this to determine path of datagram through MOSPF AS 36 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting MOSPF Routing Illustration 37 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Multicast Routing Protocol Characteristics Extension to existing protocol – MOSPF v OSPF Designed to be efficient for high concentration of group members Appropriate with single AS Not for large internet 38 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) Independent of unicast routing protocols Extract required routing information from any unicast routing protocol Work across multiple AS with different unicast routing protocols 39 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting PIM Strategy Flooding is inefficient over large sparse internet Little opportunity for shared spanning trees Focus on providing multiple shortest path unicast routes Two operation modes – Dense mode For intra-AS Alternative to MOSPF – Sparse mode Inter-AS multicast routing 40 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Spares Mode PIM A spare group: – Number of networks/domains with group members present significantly small than number of networks/domains in internet – Internet spanned by group not sufficiently resource rich to ignore overhead of current multicast schemes 41 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting Group Destination Router Group Source Router Group Destination Router – Has local group members – Router becomes destination router for given group when at least one host joins group Using IGMP or similar Group source router – Attaches to network with at least one host transmitting on multicast address via that router 42 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting PIM Approach For a group, one router designated rendezvous point (RP) Group destination router sends join message towards RP requesting its members be added to group – Use unicast shortest path route to send – Reverse path becomes part of distribution tree for this RP to listeners in this group Node sending to group sends towards RP using shortest path unicast route Destination router may replace group-shared tree with shortest path tree to any source – By sending a join back to source router along unicast shortest path Selection of RP dynamic – Not critical Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting 43 Example of PIM Operation 44 Chapter 16 Exterior Routing Protocols and Multicasting