Internet-Draft | CA OF and PS DAG MC Extension | October 2020 |
Koutsiamanis, et al. | Expires 2 May 2021 | [Page] |
Packet Replication and Elimination is a method in which several copies of a data packet are sent in the network in order to achieve high reliability and low jitter. This document details how to apply Packet Replication and Elimination in RPL, especially how to exchange information within RPL control packets to let a node better select the different parents that will be used to forward the multiple copies of a packet. This document also describes the Objective Function which takes advantage of this information to implement multi-path routing.¶
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Networks in the industrial context must provide stringent guarantees in terms of reliability and predictability, with this domain being one of main ones addressed by Deterministic Networking [RFC8557]. Packet Replication and Elimination (PRE) (Section 4.5.3 of [I-D.ietf-6tisch-architecture]) is a technique which allows redundant paths in the network to be utilized for traffic requiring higher reliability. Allowing industrial applications to function over wireless networks requires the application of the principles and architecture of Deterministic Networking [RFC8655]. This results in designs which aim at optimizing packet delivery rate and bounding latency. Additionally, nodes operating on battery need to minimize their energy consumption.¶
As an example, to meet this goal, IEEE Std. 802.15.4 [IEEE802154] provides Time-Slotted Channel Hopping (TSCH), a mode of operation which uses a common communication schedule based on timeslots to allow deterministic medium access as well as channel hopping to work around radio interference. However, since TSCH uses retransmissions in the event of a failed transmission, end-to-end latency and jitter performance can deteriorate.¶
Furthermore, the 6TiSCH working group, focusing on IPv6 over IEEE Std. 802.15.4-TSCH, has worked on these issues and produced the "6TiSCH Architecture" [I-D.ietf-6tisch-architecture] to address that case.¶
PRE is a general method of maximizing packet delivery rate and potentially minimizing latency and jitter, not limited to 6TiSCH. More specifically, PRE achieves controlled redundancy by laying multiple forwarding paths through the network and using them in parallel for different copies of a same packet. PRE can follow the Destination-Oriented Directed Acyclic Graph (DODAG) formed by [RPL] from a node to the root. Building a multi-path DODAG can be achieved based on the RPL capability of having multiple parents for each node in a network, a subset of which is used to forward packets. In order to select parents to be part of this subset, the RPL Objective Function (OF) needs additional information regarding the multi-path nature of PRE. This document describes an OF which implements multi-path routing for PRE and specifies the transmission of this specific path information.¶
This document describes a new Objective Function (OF) called the Common Ancestor (CA) OF (see Section 4). A detailed description is given of how the path information is used within the CA OF and how the subset of parents for forwarding packets is selected. This specification defines a new Objective Code Point (OCP) for the CA OF.¶
For the path information, this specification focuses on the extensions to the DAG Metric Container [RFC6551] required for providing the PRE mechanism a part of the information it needs to operate. This information is the [RPL] parent address set of a node and it must be sent to potential children of the node. The RPL DIO Control Message is the canonical way of broadcasting this kind of information and therefore its DAG Metric Container [RFC6551] field is used to append a Node State and Attribute (NSA) object. The node's parent address set is stored as an optional TLV within the NSA object. This specification defines the type value and structure for the parent address set TLV (see Section 5).¶
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].¶
The draft uses the following Terminology:¶
In the RPL protocol, each node maintains a list of potential parents. For PRE, the Preferred Parent (PP) node is defined to be the same as the RPL DODAG Preferred Parent node. Furthermore, to construct an alternative path toward the root, in addition to the PP node, each node in the network selects additional parent(s), called alternative parent(s), from its Parent Set (PS).¶
There are multiple possible policies of selecting the AP node. This section details three such possible policies.¶
All three policies defined perform AP selection based on common ancestors, named Common Ancestor Strict, Common Ancestor Medium, and Common Ancestor Relaxed, depending on how restrictive the selection process is. A more restrictive policy will limit flooding but might fail to select an appropriate AP, while a less restrictive one will more often find an appropriate AP but might increase flooding.¶
All three policies apply their corresponding common ancestor criterion to filter the list of candidate neighbours in the alternative parent set.¶
In the CA Strict OF the node will check if its Preferred Grand Parent (PGP), the PP of its PP, is the same as the PP of the potential AP.¶
For example, in Figure 1, the source node S must know its grandparent sets through nodes A, B, C, and D. The Parent Sets (PS) and the Preferred Parents (PS) of nodes A, B, C, and D are shown on the side of the figure. The CA Strict parent selection policy will select an AP for node S for which PP(PP(S)) = PP(AP). Given that PP(PP(S)) = Y:¶
node S can decide to use node B as its AP node, since PP(PP(S)) = Y = PP(B).¶
In the CA Medium OF the node will check if its Preferred Grand Parent (PGP), the PP of its PP, is contained in the PS of the potential AP.¶
Using the same example, in Figure 1, the CA Medium parent selection policy will select an AP for node S for which PP(PP(S)) is in PS(AP). Given that PP(PP(S)) = Y:¶
node S can decide to use node B or D as its AP node.¶
In the CA Relaxed OF the node will check if the Parent Set (PS) of its Preferred Parent (PP) has a node in common with the PS of the potential AP.¶
Using the same example, in Figure 1, the CA Relaxed parent selection policy will select an AP for node S for which PS(PP(S)) has at least one node in common with PS(AP). Given that PS(PP(S)) = {X, Y, Z}:¶
node S can decide to use node A, B or D as its AP node.¶
An OF which allows the multiple paths to remain correlated is detailed here. More specifically, when using this OF a node will select an AP node close to its PP node to allow the operation of overhearing between parents. For more details about overhearing and its use in this context see the "Complex Track with Replication and Elimination" in Section 4.5.3 of [I-D.ietf-6tisch-architecture]. If multiple potential APs match this condition, the AP with the lowest rank will be registered.¶
The OF described here is an extension of The Minimum Rank with Hysteresis Objective Function [MRHOF]. In general, this OF extends MRHOF by specifying how an AP is selected. Importantly, the calculation of the rank of the node through each candidate neighbor and the selection of the PP is kept the same as in MRHOF.¶
The ways in which the CA OF modifies MRHOF in a section-by-section manner follows in detail:¶
Same as MRHOF extended to AP selection. The CA OF operates like MRHOF for AP selection by maintaining separate:¶
All OF policies apply their corresponding criterion to filter the list of candidate neighbours in the alternative parent set. The AP is then selected from the alternative parent set based on Rank and using hysteresis as is done for the PP in MRHOF. It is noteworthy that the OF uses the same Objective Code Point (OCP): TBD1 for all policies used.¶
The PS information can be used by any of the described AP selection policies or other ones not described here, depending on requirements. It is optional for all nodes to use the same AP selection policies. Different nodes may use different AP selection policies, since the selection policy is local to each node. For example, using different policies can be used to vary the transmission reliability in each hop.¶
In order to select their AP node, nodes need to be aware of their grandparent node sets. Within [RPL], the nodes use the DODAG Information Object (DIO) Control Message to broadcast information about themselves to potential children. However, [RPL], does not define how to propagate parent set related information, which is what this document addresses.¶
DIO messages can carry multiple options, out of which the DAG Metric Container option [RFC6551] is the most suitable structurally and semantically for the purpose of carrying the parent set. The DAG Metric Container option itself can carry different nested objects, out of which the Node State and Attribute (NSA) [RFC6551] is appropriate for transferring generic node state data. Within the Node State and Attribute it is possible to store optional TLVs representing various node characteristics. As per the Node State and Attribute (NSA) [RFC6551] description, no TLV has been defined for use. This document defines one TLV for the purpose of transmitting a node's parent set.¶
Figure 2 shows the structure of the DIO Control Message when a DAG Metric Container option is included. The DAG Metric Container option type (DAGMC Type in Figure 2) has the value 0x02 as per the IANA registry for the RPL Control Message Options, and is defined in [RPL]. The DAG Metric Container option length (DAGMC Length in Figure 2) expresses the DAG Metric Container length in bytes. DAG Metric Container data holds the actual data and is shown expanded in Figure 3.¶
The structure of the DAG Metric Container data in the form of a Node State and Attribute (NSA) object with a TLV in the NSA Optional TLVs field is shown in Figure 3. The first 32 bits comprise the DAG Metric Container header and all the following bits are part of the Node State and Attribute object body, as defined in [RFC6551]. This document defines a new TLV, which MAY be carried in the Node State and Attribute (NSA) object Optional TLVs field. The TLV is named Parent Set and is abbreviated as PS in Figure 3.¶
The PS SHOULD be used in the process of parent selection, and especially in AP selection, since it can help the alternative path to not significantly deviate from the preferred path. The Parent Set is information local to the node that broadcasts it.¶
The PS is used only within NSA objects configured as a metric, therefore the DAG Metric Container field "C" MUST be 0. Additionally, since the information in the PS needs to be propagated downstream but it cannot be aggregated, the DAG Metric Container field "R" MUST be 1. Finally, since the information contained is by definition partial, more specifically just the parent set of the DIO-sending node, the DAG Metric Container field "P" MUST be 1.¶
It is important that the PS does not affect the calculation of the rank through candidate neighbors. It is only used with the CA OF to remove nodes which do not fulfill the CA OF criteria from the candidate neighbor list.¶
PRE is very helpful when the aim is to increase reliability for a certain path, however its use creates additional traffic as part of the replication process. It is conceivable that not all paths have stringent reliability requirements. Therefore, a way to control whether PRE is applied to a path's packets SHOULD be implemented. For example, a traffic class label can be used to determine this behavior per flow type as described in Deterministic Networking Architecture [RFC8655].¶
The structure of the DIO control message is extended, within the pre-defined DIO options. The additional information are the IPv6 addresses of the parent set of the node transmitting the DIO. This use of this additional information can have the following potential consequences:¶
This proposal requests the allocation of a new value TBD1 from the "Objective Code Point (OCP)" sub-registry of the "Routing Protocol for Low Power and Lossy Networks (RPL)" registry.¶
This proposal also requests the allocation of a new value TBD2 for the "Parent Set" TLV from the "Routing Metric/Constraint TLVs" sub-registry of the "Routing Protocol for Low Power and Lossy Networks (RPL) Routing Metric/Constraint" registry.¶
We are very grateful to Dominique Barthel, Rahul Jadhav, Fabrice Theoleyre, Diego Dujovne, Derek Jianqiang Hou, and Michael Richardson for their comments, feedback, and support which lead to many improvements to this document. We would also like to thank Tomas Lagos Jenschke very much for helping in the implementation and evaluation of the proposals of this document.¶
A research-stage implementation of the PRE mechanism using the proposed extension as part of a 6TiSCH IOT use case was developed at IMT Atlantique, France by Tomas Lagos Jenschke and Remous-Aris Koutsiamanis. It was implemented on the open-source Contiki OS and tested with the Cooja simulator. The DIO DAGMC NSA extension is implemented with a configurable number of parents from the parent set of a node to be reported.¶
The simulation setup is:¶
Simulation results:¶
Routing Method | Average Packet Delivery Rate (%) | Average Traversed Nodes/packet (#) | Average Duplications/packet (#) |
---|---|---|---|
RPL | 82.70 | 5.56 | 7.02 |
2nd ETX | 99.38 | 14.43 | 31.29 |
CA Strict | 97.32 | 9.86 | 18.23 |
CA Medium | 99.66 | 13.75 | 28.86 |
Links:¶
The manner of choosing an AP selection policy is left to the implementation, for maximum flexibility.¶
For example, a different policy can be used per traffic type. The network configurator can choose the CA Relaxed policy to increase reliability (thus producing some flooding) for specific, extremely important, alert packets. On the other hand, all normal data traffic uses the CA Strict policy. Therefore, an exception is made just for the alert packets.¶
Another option would be to devise a new disjoint policy, where the paths are on purpose non-correlated, to increase path diversity and resilience against whole groups of nodes failing. The disadvantage may be increased jitter.¶
Finally, a network configurator may provide the CA policies with a preference order of Strict > Medium > Relaxed as a means of falling back to more flood-prone policies to maintain reliability.¶