RFC 0000 | Flow Specification | June 2020 |
Loibl, et al. | Standards Track | [Page] |
This document defines a Border Gateway Protocol Network Layer Reachability Information (BGP NLRI) encoding format that can be used to distribute traffic Flow Specifications. This allows the routing system to propagate information regarding more specific components of the traffic aggregate defined by an IP destination prefix.¶
It also specifies BGP Extended Community encoding formats, that can be used to propagate Traffic Filtering Actions along with the Flow Specification NLRI. Those Traffic Filtering Actions encode actions a routing system can take if the packet matches the Flow Specification.¶
Additionally, it defines two applications of that encoding format: one that can be used to automate inter-domain coordination of traffic filtering, such as what is required in order to mitigate (distributed) denial-of-service attacks, and a second application to provide traffic filtering in the context of a BGP/MPLS VPN service. Other applications (e.g., centralized control of traffic in a Software-Defined Networking (SDN) or Network Function Virtualization (NFV) context) are also possible. Other documents may specify Flow Specification extensions.¶
The information is carried via BGP, thereby reusing protocol algorithms, operational experience, and administrative processes, such as inter-provider peering agreements.¶
This document obsoletes both RFC 5575 and RFC 7674.¶
This is an Internet Standards Track document.¶
This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has received public review and has been approved for publication by the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Further information on Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.¶
Information about the current status of this document, any errata, and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc0000.¶
Copyright (c) 2020 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the document authors. All rights reserved.¶
This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of publication of this document. Please review these documents carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect to this document. Code Components extracted from this document must include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Simplified BSD License.¶
This document obsoletes "Dissemination of Flow Specification Rules" [RFC5575] (see Appendix B for the differences). This document also obsoletes "Clarification of the Flowspec Redirect Extended Community" [RFC7674], since it incorporates the encoding of the BGP Flow Specification Redirect Extended Community in Section 7.4.¶
Modern IP routers have the capability to forward traffic and to classify, shape, rate limit, filter, or redirect packets based on administratively defined policies. These traffic policy mechanisms allow the operator to define match rules that operate on multiple fields of the packet header. Actions, such as the ones described above, can be associated with each rule.¶
The n-tuple consisting of the matching criteria defines an aggregate traffic Flow Specification. The matching criteria can include elements such as source and destination address prefixes, IP protocol, and transport protocol port numbers.¶
Section 4 of this document defines a general procedure to encode Flow Specifications for aggregated traffic flows so that they can be distributed as a BGP [RFC4271] NLRI. Additionally, Section 7 of this document defines the required Traffic Filtering Actions BGP Extended Communities and mechanisms to use BGP for intra- and inter-provider distribution of traffic filtering rules to filter (distributed) denial-of-service (DoS) attacks.¶
By expanding routing information with Flow Specifications, the routing system can take advantage of the ACL (Access Control List) or firewall capabilities in the router's forwarding path. Flow Specifications can be seen as more specific routing entries to a unicast prefix and are expected to depend upon the existing unicast data information.¶
A Flow Specification received from an external autonomous system will need to be validated against unicast routing before being accepted (Section 6). The Flow Specification received from an internal BGP peer within the same autonomous system [RFC4271] is assumed to have been validated prior to transmission within the internal BGP (iBGP) mesh of an autonomous system. If the aggregate traffic flow defined by the unicast destination prefix is forwarded to a given BGP peer, then the local system can install more specific Flow Specifications that may result in different forwarding behavior, as requested by this system.¶
From an operational perspective, the utilization of BGP as the carrier for this information allows a network service provider to reuse both internal route distribution infrastructure (e.g., route reflector or confederation design) and existing external relationships (e.g., inter-domain BGP sessions to a customer network).¶
While it is certainly possible to address this problem using other mechanisms, this solution has been utilized in deployments because of the substantial advantage of being an incremental addition to already deployed mechanisms.¶
In current deployments, the information distributed by this extension is originated both manually as well as automatically, the latter by systems that are able to detect malicious traffic flows. When automated systems are used, care should be taken to ensure the correctness of the automated system. The limitations of the receiving systems that need to process these automated Flow Specifications need to be taken in consideration as well (see also Section 12).¶
This specification defines required protocol extensions to address most common applications of IPv4 unicast and VPNv4 unicast filtering. The same mechanism can be reused and new match criteria added to address similar filtering needs for other BGP address families, such as IPv6 families [IDR-FLOW-SPEC].¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
A Flow Specification is an n-tuple consisting of several matching criteria that can be applied to IP traffic. A given IP packet is said to match the defined Flow Specification if it matches all the specified criteria. This n-tuple is encoded into a BGP NLRI defined below.¶
A given Flow Specification may be associated with a set of attributes, depending on the particular application; such attributes may or may not include reachability information (i.e., NEXT_HOP). Well-known or AS-specific community attributes can be used to encode a set of predetermined actions.¶
A particular application is identified by a specific (Address Family Identifier, Subsequent Address Family Identifier (AFI, SAFI)) pair [RFC4760] and corresponds to a distinct set of RIBs. Those RIBs should be treated independently from each other in order to assure noninterference between distinct applications.¶
BGP itself treats the NLRI as a key to an entry in its databases. Entries that are placed in the Loc-RIB are then associated with a given set of semantics, which is application dependent. This is consistent with existing BGP applications. For instance, IP unicast routing (AFI=1, SAFI=1) and IP multicast reverse-path information (AFI=1, SAFI=2) are handled by BGP without any particular semantics being associated with them until installed in the Loc-RIB.¶
Standard BGP policy mechanisms, such as UPDATE filtering by NLRI prefix as well as community matching, must apply to the Flow specification defined NLRI-type. Network operators can also control propagation of such routing updates by enabling or disabling the exchange of a particular (AFI, SAFI) pair on a given BGP peering session.¶
This document defines a Flow Specification NLRI type (Figure 1) that may include several components, such as destination prefix, source prefix, protocol, ports, and others (see Section 4.2 below).¶
This NLRI information is encoded using MP_REACH_NLRI and MP_UNREACH_NLRI attributes, as defined in [RFC4760]. When advertising Flow Specifications, the Length of the Next-Hop Network Address MUST be set to 0. The Network Address of the Next-Hop field MUST be ignored.¶
The NLRI field of the MP_REACH_NLRI and MP_UNREACH_NLRI is encoded as one or more 2-tuples of the form <length, NLRI value>. It consists of a 1- or 2-octet length field followed by a variable-length NLRI value. The length is expressed in octets.¶
Implementations wishing to exchange Flow Specification MUST use BGP's Capability Advertisement facility to exchange the Multiprotocol Extension Capability Code (Code 1), as defined in [RFC4760]. The (AFI, SAFI) pair carried in the Multiprotocol Extension Capability MUST be (AFI=1, SAFI=133) for IPv4 Flow Specification and (AFI=1, SAFI=134) for VPNv4 Flow Specification.¶
In Figure 1 above, values less than 240 are encoded using two hex digits (0xnn). Values above 239 are encoded using 3 hex digits (0xfnnn). The highest value that can be represented with this encoding is 4095. For example, the length value of 239 is encoded as 0xef (single octet), while 240 is encoded as 0xf0f0 (2-octet).¶
The Flow Specification NLRI value consists of a list of optional components and is encoded as follows:¶
Encoding: <[component]+>¶
A specific packet is considered to match the Flow Specification when it matches the intersection (AND) of all the components present in the Flow Specification.¶
Components MUST follow strict type ordering by increasing numerical order. A given component type MAY (exactly once) be present in the Flow Specification. If present, it MUST precede any component of higher numeric type value.¶
All combinations of components within a single Flow Specification are allowed. However, some combinations cannot match any packets (e.g., "ICMP Type AND Port" will never match any packets) and thus SHOULD NOT be propagated by BGP.¶
An NLRI value not encoded as specified here, including an NLRI that contains an unknown component type, is considered malformed and error handling according to Section 10 is performed.¶
Most of the components described below make use of comparison operators. Which of the two operators is used is defined by the components in Section 4.2.2. The operators are encoded as a single octet.¶
This operator is encoded as shown in Figure 2.¶
The bits lt, gt, and eq can be combined to produce common relational operators, such as "less or equal", "greater or equal", and "not equal to", as shown in Table 1.¶
lt | gt | eq | Resulting operation |
---|---|---|---|
0 | 0 | 0 | false (independent of the value) |
0 | 0 | 1 | == (equal) |
0 | 1 | 0 | > (greater than) |
0 | 1 | 1 | >= (greater than or equal) |
1 | 0 | 0 | < (less than) |
1 | 0 | 1 | <= (less than or equal) |
1 | 1 | 0 | != (not equal value) |
1 | 1 | 1 | true (independent of the value) |
This operator is encoded as shown in Figure 3.¶
The encoding of each of the components begins with a type field (1 octet) followed by a variable length parameter. The following sections define component types and parameter encodings for the IPv4 IP layer and transport layer headers. IPv6 NLRI component types are described in [IDR-FLOW-SPEC].¶
Encoding: <type (1 octet), length (1 octet), prefix (variable)>¶
Defines the destination prefix to match. The length and prefix fields are encoded as in BGP UPDATE messages [RFC4271].¶
Encoding: <type (1 octet), length (1 octet), prefix (variable)>¶
Defines the source prefix to match. The length and prefix fields are encoded as in BGP UPDATE messages [RFC4271].¶
Encoding: <type (1 octet), [numeric_op, value]+>¶
Contains a list of {numeric_op, value} pairs that are used to match the IP protocol value octet in IP packet header (see Section 3.1 of [RFC0791]).¶
This component uses the Numeric Operator (numeric_op) described in Section 4.2.1.1. Type 3 component values SHOULD be encoded as single octet (numeric_op len=00).¶
Encoding: <type (1 octet), [numeric_op, value]+>¶
Defines a list of {numeric_op, value} pairs that match source OR destination TCP/UDP ports (see Section 3.1 of [RFC0793] and the "Format" section of [RFC0768]). This component matches if either the destination port OR the source port of an IP packet matches the value.¶
This component uses the Numeric Operator (numeric_op) described in Section 4.2.1.1. Type 4 component values SHOULD be encoded as 1- or 2-octet quantities (numeric_op len=00 or len=01).¶
In case of the presence of the port (destination-port (Section 4.2.2.5), source-port (Section 4.2.2.6)) component, only TCP or UDP packets can match the entire Flow Specification. The port component, if present, never matches when the packet's IP protocol value is not 6 (TCP) or 17 (UDP), if the packet is fragmented and this is not the first fragment, or if the system is unable to locate the transport header. Different implementations may or may not be able to decode the transport header in the presence of IP options or Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) NULL [RFC4303] encryption.¶
Encoding: <type (1 octet), [numeric_op, value]+>¶
Defines a list of {numeric_op, value} pairs used to match the destination port of a TCP or UDP packet (see also Section 3.1 of [RFC0793] and the "Format" section of [RFC0768].¶
This component uses the Numeric Operator (numeric_op) described in Section 4.2.1.1. Type 5 component values SHOULD be encoded as 1- or 2-octet quantities (numeric_op len=00 or len=01).¶
The last paragraph of Section 4.2.2.4 also applies to this component.¶
Encoding: <type (1 octet), [numeric_op, value]+>¶
Defines a list of {numeric_op, value} pairs used to match the source port of a TCP or UDP packet (see also Section 3.1 of [RFC0793] and the "Format" section of [RFC0768].¶
This component uses the Numeric Operator (numeric_op) described in Section 4.2.1.1. Type 6 component values SHOULD be encoded as 1- or 2-octet quantities (numeric_op len=00 or len=01).¶
The last paragraph of Section 4.2.2.4 also applies to this component.¶
Encoding: <type (1 octet), [numeric_op, value]+>¶
Defines a list of {numeric_op, value} pairs used to match the type field of an ICMP packet (see also the "Message Formats" section of [RFC0792]).¶
This component uses the Numeric Operator (numeric_op) described in Section 4.2.1.1. Type 7 component values SHOULD be encoded as single octet (numeric_op len=00).¶
In case of the presence of the ICMP type component, only ICMP packets can match the entire Flow Specification. The ICMP type component, if present, never matches when the packet's IP protocol value is not 1 (ICMP), if the packet is fragmented and this is not the first fragment, or if the system is unable to locate the transport header. Different implementations may or may not be able to decode the transport header in the presence of IP options or Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) NULL [RFC4303] encryption.¶
Encoding: <type (1 octet), [numeric_op, value]+>¶
Defines a list of {numeric_op, value} pairs used to match the code field of an ICMP packet (see also the "Message Formats" section of [RFC0792]).¶
This component uses the Numeric Operator (numeric_op) described in Section 4.2.1.1. Type 8 component values SHOULD be encoded as single octet (numeric_op len=00).¶
In case of the presence of the ICMP code component, only ICMP packets can match the entire Flow Specification. The ICMP code component, if present, never matches when the packet's IP protocol value is not 1 (ICMP), if the packet is fragmented and this is not the first fragment, or if the system is unable to locate the transport header. Different implementations may or may not be able to decode the transport header in the presence of IP options or Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) NULL [RFC4303] encryption.¶
Encoding: <type (1 octet), [bitmask_op, bitmask]+>¶
Defines a list of {bitmask_op, bitmask} pairs used to match TCP control bits (see also Section 3.1 of [RFC0793]).¶
This component uses the Bitmask Operator (bitmask_op) described in Section 4.2.1.2. Type 9 component bitmasks MUST be encoded as 1- or 2-octet bitmask (bitmask_op len=00 or len=01).¶
When a single octet (bitmask_op len=00) is specified, it matches octet 14 of the TCP header (see also Section 3.1 of [RFC0793]), which contains the TCP control bits. When a 2-octet (bitmask_op len=01) encoding is used, it matches octets 13 and 14 of the TCP header with the data offset (leftmost 4 bits) always treated as 0.¶
In case of the presence of the TCP flags component, only TCP packets can match the entire Flow Specification. The TCP flags component, if present, never matches when the packet's IP protocol value is not 6 (TCP), if the packet is fragmented and this is not the first fragment, or if the system is unable to locate the transport header. Different implementations may or may not be able to decode the transport header in the presence of IP options or Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) NULL [RFC4303] encryption.¶
Encoding: <type (1 octet), [numeric_op, value]+>¶
Defines a list of {numeric_op, value} pairs used to match on the total IP packet length (excluding Layer 2 but including IP header).¶
This component uses the Numeric Operator (numeric_op) described in Section 4.2.1.1. Type 10 component values SHOULD be encoded as 1- or 2-octet quantities (numeric_op len=00 or len=01).¶
Encoding: <type (1 octet), [numeric_op, value]+>¶
Defines a list of {numeric_op, value} pairs used to match the 6-bit DSCP field (see also [RFC2474]).¶
This component uses the Numeric Operator (numeric_op) described in Section 4.2.1.1. Type 11 component values MUST be encoded as single octet (numeric_op len=00).¶
The six least significant bits contain the DSCP value. All other bits SHOULD be treated as 0.¶
Encoding: <type (1 octet), [bitmask_op, bitmask]+>¶
Defines a list of {bitmask_op, bitmask} pairs used to match specific IP fragments.¶
This component uses the Bitmask Operator (bitmask_op) described in Section 4.2.1.2. The Type 12 component bitmask MUST be encoded as single octet bitmask (bitmask_op len=00).¶
Bitmask values:¶
An example of a Flow Specification NLRI encoding for: "all packets to 192.0.2.0/24 and TCP port 25".¶
length | destination | protocol | port |
---|---|---|---|
0x0b | 01 18 c0 00 02 | 03 81 06 | 04 81 19 |
Decoded:¶
Value | ||
---|---|---|
0x0b | length | 11 octets (len<240 1-octet) |
0x01 | type | Type 1 - Destination Prefix |
0x18 | length | 24 bit |
0xc0 | prefix | 192 |
0x00 | prefix | 0 |
0x02 | prefix | 2 |
0x03 | type | Type 3 - IP Protocol |
0x81 | numeric_op | end-of-list, value size=1, == |
0x06 | value | 6 (TCP) |
0x04 | type | Type 4 - Port |
0x81 | numeric_op | end-of-list, value size=1, == |
0x19 | value | 25 |
This constitutes an NLRI with an NLRI length of 11 octets.¶
An example of a Flow Specification NLRI encoding for: "all packets to 192.0.2.0/24 from 203.0.113.0/24 and port {range [137, 139] or 8080}".¶
length | destination | source | port |
---|---|---|---|
0x12 | 01 18 c0 00 02 | 02 18 cb 00 71 | 04 03 89 45 8b 91 1f 90 |
Decoded:¶
Value | ||
---|---|---|
0x12 | length | 18 octets (len<240 1-octet) |
0x01 | type | Type 1 - Destination Prefix |
0x18 | length | 24 bit |
0xc0 | prefix | 192 |
0x00 | prefix | 0 |
0x02 | prefix | 2 |
0x02 | type | Type 2 - Source Prefix |
0x18 | length | 24 bit |
0xcb | prefix | 203 |
0x00 | prefix | 0 |
0x71 | prefix | 113 |
0x04 | type | Type 4 - Port |
0x03 | numeric_op | value size=1, >= |
0x89 | value | 137 |
0x45 | numeric_op | "AND", value size=1, <= |
0x8b | value | 139 |
0x91 | numeric_op | end-of-list, value size=2, == |
0x1f90 | value | 8080 |
This constitutes an NLRI with an NLRI length of 18 octets.¶
An example of a Flow Specification NLRI encoding for: "all packets to 192.0.2.1/32 and fragment { DF or FF } (matching packet with DF bit set or First Fragments)¶
length | destination | fragment |
---|---|---|
0x09 | 01 20 c0 00 02 01 | 0c 80 05 |
Decoded:¶
Value | ||
---|---|---|
0x09 | length | 9 octets (len<240 1-octet) |
0x01 | type | Type 1 - Destination Prefix |
0x20 | length | 32 bit |
0xc0 | prefix | 192 |
0x00 | prefix | 0 |
0x02 | prefix | 2 |
0x01 | prefix | 1 |
0x0c | type | Type 12 - Fragment |
0x80 | bitmask_op | end-of-list, value size=1 |
0x05 | bitmask | DF=1, FF=1 |
This constitutes an NLRI with an NLRI length of 9 octets.¶
Traffic filtering policies have been traditionally considered to be relatively static. Limitations of these static mechanisms caused this new dynamic mechanism to be designed for the three new applications of traffic filtering:¶
These applications require coordination among service providers and/or coordination among the AS within a service provider.¶
The Flow Specification NLRI defined in Section 4 conveys information about traffic filtering rules for traffic that should be discarded or handled in a manner specified by a set of predefined actions (which are defined in BGP Extended Communities). This mechanism is primarily designed to allow an upstream autonomous system to perform inbound filtering in their ingress routers of traffic that a given downstream AS wishes to drop.¶
In order to achieve this goal, this document specifies two application-specific NLRI identifiers that provide traffic filters and a set of actions encoding in BGP Extended Communities. The two application-specific NLRI identifiers are:¶
Encoding of the NLRI is described in Section 4 for IPv4 Flow Specification and in Section 8 for VPNv4 Flow Specification. The filtering actions are described in Section 7.¶
More than one Flow Specification may match a particular traffic flow. Thus, it is necessary to define the order in which Flow Specifications get matched and actions being applied to a particular traffic flow. This ordering function is such that it does not depend on the arrival order of the Flow Specification via BGP and thus is consistent in the network.¶
The relative order of two Flow Specifications is determined by comparing their respective components. The algorithm starts by comparing the left-most components (lowest component type value) of the Flow Specifications. If the types differ, the Flow Specification with lowest numeric type value has higher precedence (and thus will match before) than the Flow Specification that doesn't contain that component type. If the component types are the same, then a type-specific comparison is performed (see below). If the types are equal, the algorithm continues with the next component.¶
For IP prefix values (IP destination or source prefix), if one of the two prefixes to compare is a more specific prefix of the other, the more specific prefix has higher precedence. Otherwise, the one with the lowest IP value has higher precedence.¶
For all other component types, unless otherwise specified, the comparison is performed by comparing the component data as a binary string using the memcmp() function as defined by [ISO_IEC_9899]. For strings with equal lengths, the lowest string (memcmp) has higher precedence. For strings of different lengths, the common prefix is compared. If the common prefix is not equal, the string with the lowest prefix has higher precedence. If the common prefix is equal, the longest string is considered to have higher precedence than the shorter one.¶
The code in Appendix A shows a Python3 implementation of the comparison algorithm. The full code was tested with Python 3.6.3 and can be obtained at https://github.com/stoffi92/rfc5575bis/tree/master/flowspec-cmp.¶
Flow Specifications received from a BGP peer that are accepted in the respective Adj-RIB-In are used as input to the route selection process. Although the forwarding attributes of two routes for the same Flow Specification prefix may be the same, BGP is still required to perform its path selection algorithm in order to select the correct set of attributes to advertise.¶
The first step of the BGP Route Selection procedure (Section 9.1.2 of [RFC4271]) is to exclude from the selection procedure routes that are considered non-feasible. In the context of IP routing information, this step is used to validate that the NEXT_HOP attribute of a given route is resolvable.¶
The concept can be extended, in the case of the Flow Specification NLRI, to allow other validation procedures.¶
The validation process described below validates Flow Specifications against unicast routes received over the same AFI but the associated unicast routing information SAFI:¶
In the absence of explicit configuration, a Flow Specification NLRI MUST be validated such that it is considered feasible if and only if all of the conditions below are true:¶
However, rule a MAY be relaxed by explicit configuration, permitting Flow Specifications that include no destination prefix component. If such is the case, rules b and c are moot and MUST be disregarded.¶
By "originator" of a BGP route, we mean either the address of the originator in the ORIGINATOR_ID Attribute [RFC4456] or the source IP address of the BGP peer, if this path attribute is not present.¶
BGP implementations MUST also enforce that the AS_PATH attribute of a route received via the External Border Gateway Protocol (eBGP) contains the neighboring AS in the left-most position of the AS_PATH attribute. While this rule is optional in the BGP specification, it becomes necessary to enforce it here for security reasons.¶
The best-match unicast route may change over the time independently of the Flow Specification NLRI. Therefore, a revalidation of the Flow Specification NLRI MUST be performed whenever unicast routes change. Revalidation is defined as retesting rules a to c as described above.¶
Explanation:¶
The underlying concept is that the neighboring AS that advertises the best unicast route for a destination is allowed to advertise Flow Specification information that conveys a destination prefix that is more or equally specific. Thus, as long as there are no "more-specific" unicast routes received from a different neighboring AS, which would be affected by that Flow Specification, the Flow Specification is validated successfully.¶
The neighboring AS is the immediate destination of the traffic described by the Flow Specification. If it requests these flows to be dropped, that request can be honored without concern that it represents a denial of service in itself. The reasoning is that this is as if the traffic is being dropped by the downstream autonomous system, and there is no added value in carrying the traffic to it.¶
This document defines a minimum set of Traffic Filtering Actions that it standardizes as BGP extended communities [RFC4360]. This is not meant to be an inclusive list of all the possible actions but only a subset that can be interpreted consistently across the network. Additional actions can be defined as either requiring standards or as vendor specific.¶
The default action for a matching Flow Specification is to accept the packet (treat the packet according to the normal forwarding behavior of the system).¶
This document defines the following extended communities values shown in Table 8 in the form 0xttss, where tt indicates the type and ss indicates the sub-type of the extended community. Encodings for these extended communities are described below.¶
community 0xttss | action | encoding |
---|---|---|
0x8006 | traffic-rate-bytes (Section 7.1) | 2-octet AS, 4-octet float |
TBD | traffic-rate-packets (Section 7.2) | 2-octet AS, 4-octet float |
0x8007 | traffic-action (Section 7.3) | bitmask |
0x8008 | rt-redirect AS-2octet (Section 7.4) | 2-octet AS, 4-octet value |
0x8108 | rt-redirect IPv4 (Section 7.4) | 4-octet IPv4 address, 2-octet value |
0x8208 | rt-redirect AS-4octet (Section 7.4) | 4-octet AS, 2-octet value |
0x8009 | traffic-marking (Section 7.5) | DSCP value |
Multiple Traffic Filtering Actions defined in this document may be present for a single Flow Specification and SHOULD be applied to the traffic flow (for example, traffic-rate-bytes and rt-redirect can be applied to packets at the same time). If not all of the Traffic Filtering Actions can be applied to a traffic flow, they should be treated as interfering Traffic Filtering Actions (see below).¶
Some Traffic Filtering Actions may interfere with each other or even contradict. Section 7.7 of this document provides general considerations on such Traffic Filtering Action interference. Any additional definition of Traffic Filtering Actions SHOULD specify the action to take if those Traffic Filtering Actions interfere (also with existing Traffic Filtering Actions).¶
All Traffic Filtering Actions are specified as transitive BGP Extended Communities.¶
The traffic-rate-bytes extended community uses the following extended community encoding:¶
The first two octets carry the 2-octet id, which can be assigned from a 2-octet AS number. When a 4-octet AS number is locally present, the 2 least significant octets of such an AS number can be used. This value is purely informational and SHOULD NOT be interpreted by the implementation.¶
The remaining 4 octets carry the maximum rate information in IEEE floating point [IEEE.754.1985] format, units being bytes per second. A traffic-rate of 0 should result on all traffic for the particular flow to be discarded. On encoding, the traffic-rate MUST NOT be negative. On decoding, negative values MUST be treated as zero (discard all traffic).¶
Interferes with: May interfere with the traffic-rate-packets (see Section 7.2). A policy may allow both filtering by traffic-rate-packets and traffic-rate-bytes. If the policy does not allow this, these two actions will conflict.¶
The traffic-rate-packets extended community uses the same encoding as the traffic-rate-bytes extended community. The floating point value carries the maximum packet rate in packets per second. A traffic-rate-packets of 0 should result in all traffic for the particular flow to be discarded. On encoding, the traffic-rate-packets MUST NOT be negative. On decoding, negative values MUST be treated as zero (discard all traffic).¶
Interferes with: May interfere with the traffic-rate-bytes (see Section 7.1). A policy may allow both filtering by traffic-rate-packets and traffic-rate-bytes. If the policy does not allow this, these two actions will conflict.¶
The traffic-action extended community consists of 6 octets of which only the 2 least significant bits of the 6th octet (from left to right) are defined by this document, as shown in Figure 5.¶
S and T are defined as:¶
The use of the Terminal Action (bit 47) may result in more than one Flow Specification matching a particular traffic flow. All the Traffic Filtering Actions from these Flow Specifications shall be collected and applied. In case of interfering Traffic Filtering Actions, it is an implementation decision which Traffic Filtering Actions are selected. See also Section 7.7.¶
Interferes with: No other BGP Flow Specification Traffic Filtering Action in this document.¶
The redirect extended community allows the traffic to be redirected to a VRF routing instance that lists the specified route-target in its import policy. If several local instances match this criteria, the choice between them is a local matter (for example, the instance with the lowest Route Distinguisher value can be elected).¶
This Extended Community allows 3 different encodings formats for the route-target (type 0x80, 0x81, 0x82). It uses the same encoding as the Route Target Extended Community in Sections 3.1 (type 0x80: 2-octet AS, 4-octet value), 3.2 (type 0x81: 4-octet IPv4 address, 2-octet value), and 4 of [RFC4360] and Section 2 of [RFC5668] (type 0x82: 4-octet AS, 2-octet value) with the high-order octet of the Type field 0x80, 0x81, 0x82 respectively and the low-order octet of the Type field (Sub-Type) always 0x08.¶
Interferes with: No other BGP Flow Specification Traffic Filtering Action in this document.¶
The traffic marking extended community instructs a system to modify the DSCP bits in the IP header (Section 3 of [RFC2474]) of a transiting IP packet to the corresponding value encoded in the 6 least significant bits of the extended community value, as shown in Figure 6.¶
The extended is encoded as follows:¶
Interferes with: No other BGP Flow Specification Traffic Filtering Action in this document.¶
Implementations should provide mechanisms that map an arbitrary BGP community value (normal or extended) to Traffic Filtering Actions that require different mappings on different systems in the network. For instance, providing packets with a worse-than-best-effort per-hop behavior is a functionality that is likely to be implemented differently in different systems and for which no standard behavior is currently known. Rather than attempting to define it here, this can be accomplished by mapping a user-defined community value to platform-/network-specific behavior via user configuration.¶
Since Traffic Filtering Actions are represented as BGP extended community values, Traffic Filtering Actions may interfere with each other (e.g., there may be more than one conflicting traffic-rate-bytes Traffic Filtering Action associated with a single Flow Specification). Traffic Filtering Action interference has no impact on BGP propagation of Flow Specifications (all communities are propagated according to policies).¶
If a Flow Specification associated with interfering Traffic Filtering Actions is selected for packet forwarding, it is an implementation decision which of the interfering Traffic Filtering Actions are selected. Implementors of this specification SHOULD document the behavior of their implementation in such cases.¶
Operators are encouraged to make use of the BGP policy framework supported by their implementation in order to achieve a predictable behavior. See also Section 12.¶
Provider-based Layer 3 VPN networks, such as the ones using a BGP/ MPLS IP VPN [RFC4364] control plane, may have different traffic filtering requirements than Internet service providers. But also Internet service providers may use those VPNs for scenarios like having the Internet routing table in a VRF, resulting in the same traffic filtering requirements as defined for the global routing table environment within this document. This document defines an additional BGP NLRI type (AFI=1, SAFI=134) value, which can be used to propagate Flow Specification in a BGP/MPLS VPN environment.¶
The NLRI format for this address family consists of a fixed-length Route Distinguisher field (8 octets) followed by the Flow Specification NLRI value (Section 4.2). The NLRI length field shall include both the 8 octets of the Route Distinguisher as well as the subsequent Flow Specification NLRI value. The resulting encoding is shown in Figure 7.¶
Propagation of this NLRI is controlled by matching Route Target extended communities associated with the BGP path advertisement with the VRF import policy, using the same mechanism as described in BGP/ MPLS IP VPNs [RFC4364].¶
Flow Specifications received via this NLRI apply only to traffic that belongs to the VRF(s) in which it is imported. By default, traffic received from a remote PE is switched via an MPLS forwarding decision and is not subject to filtering.¶
Contrary to the behavior specified for the non-VPN NLRI, Flow Specifications are accepted by default, when received from remote PE routers.¶
The validation procedure (Section 6) and Traffic Filtering Actions (Section 7) are the same as for IPv4.¶
Traffic filtering applications require monitoring and traffic statistics facilities. While this is an implementation specific choice, implementations SHOULD provide:¶
TEST 1: See Error Handling.¶
TEST 2: See Section 10, "Error Handling".¶
Error handling according to [RFC7606] and [RFC4760] applies to this specification.¶
This document introduces Traffic Filtering Action Extended Communities. Malformed Traffic Filtering Action Extended Communities in the sense of Section 7.14 of [RFC7606] are Extended Community values that cannot be decoded according to Section 7 of this document.¶
This section complies with [RFC7153].¶
IANA maintains a registry entitled "SAFI Values". For the purpose of this work, IANA is requested to update the following SAFIs to read according to the table below (Note: This document obsoletes both [RFC7674] and [RFC5575] and all references to those documents should be deleted from the registry below):¶
Value | Name | Reference |
---|---|---|
133 | Dissemination of Flow Specification rules | RFCXXXX |
134 | L3VPN Dissemination of Flow Specification rules | RFCXXXX |
The above textual changes generalize the definition of the SAFIs rather than change its underlying meaning. Therefore, based on "The YANG 1.1 Data Modeling Language" [RFC7950], the above text implies that the following YANG enums from "Common YANG Data Types for the Routing Area" [RFC8294] need to have their names and descriptions at https://www.iana.org/assignments/iana-routing-types changed to:¶
<CODE BEGINS> enum flow-spec-safi { value 133; description "Dissemination of Flow Specification rules SAFI."; } enum l3vpn-flow-spec-safi { value 134; description "L3VPN Dissemination of Flow Specification rules SAFI."; } <CODE ENDS>¶
A new revision statement should be added to the module as follows:¶
<CODE BEGINS> revision [revision date] { description "Non-backwards-compatible change of SAFI names (SAFI values 133, 134)."; reference "RFCXXXX: Dissemination of Flow Specification Rules."; } <CODE ENDS>¶
A Flow Specification consists of a sequence of flow components, which are identified by an 8-bit component type. IANA has created and maintains a registry entitled "Flow Spec Component Types". IANA is requested to update the reference for this registry to RFCXXXX. Furthermore, the references to the values should be updated according to the table below (Note: This document obsoletes both [RFC7674] and [RFC5575] and all references to those documents should be deleted from the registry below).¶
Value | Name | Reference |
---|---|---|
1 | Destination Prefix | RFCXXXX |
2 | Source Prefix | RFCXXXX |
3 | IP Protocol | RFCXXXX |
4 | Port | RFCXXXX |
5 | Destination port | RFCXXXX |
6 | Source port | RFCXXXX |
7 | ICMP type | RFCXXXX |
8 | ICMP code | RFCXXXX |
9 | TCP flags | RFCXXXX |
10 | Packet length | RFCXXXX |
11 | DSCP | RFCXXXX |
12 | Fragment | RFCXXXX |
In order to manage the limited number space and accommodate several usages, the following policies defined by [RFC8126] are used:¶
Type Values | Policy |
---|---|
0 | Reserved |
[1 .. 127] | Specification required |
[128 .. 254] | First Come First Served |
255 | Reserved |
Guidance for Experts:¶
The registration policy for the range 128-254 is Expert Review. The Experts are expected to check the clarity of purpose and use of the requested code points. The Experts must also verify that any specification produced in the IETF that requests one of these code points has been made available for review by the IDR Working Group and that any specification produced outside of the IETF does not conflict with work that is active or already published within the IETF. It must be pointed out that introducing new component types may break interoperability with existing implementations of this protocol.¶
The Extended Community Flow Specification Action types defined in this document consist of two parts:¶
For the type part, IANA maintains a registry entitled "BGP Transitive Extended Community Types". For the purpose of this work (Section 7), IANA is requested to update the references to the following entries according to the table below (Note: This document obsoletes both [RFC7674] and [RFC5575] and all references to those documents should be deleted in the registry below):¶
Type Value | Name | Reference |
---|---|---|
0x81 | Generic Transitive Experimental Use Extended Community Part 2 (Sub-Types are defined in the "Generic Transitive Experimental Use Extended Community Part 2 Sub-Types" Registry) | RFCXXXX |
0x82 | Generic Transitive Experimental Use Extended Community Part 3 (Sub-Types are defined in the "Generic Transitive Experimental Use Extended Community Part 3 Sub-Types" Registry) | RFCXXXX |
For the sub-type part of the extended community Traffic Filtering Actions, IANA maintains the following registries. IANA is requested to update all names and references according to the tables below and assign a new value for the "Flow spec traffic-rate-packets" Sub-Type (Note: This document obsoletes both [RFC7674] and [RFC5575] and all references to those documents should be deleted from the registries below).¶
Sub-Type Value | Name | Reference |
---|---|---|
0x06 | Flow spec traffic-rate-bytes | RFCXXXX |
TBD | Flow spec traffic-rate-packets | RFCXXXX |
0x07 | Flow spec traffic-action (Use of the "Value" field is defined in the "Traffic Action Fields" registry) | RFCXXXX |
0x08 | Flow spec rt-redirect AS-2octet format | RFCXXXX |
0x09 | Flow spec traffic-remarking | RFCXXXX |
Sub-Type Value | Name | Reference |
---|---|---|
0x08 | Flow spec rt-redirect IPv4 format | RFCXXXX |
Sub-Type Value | Name | Reference |
---|---|---|
0x08 | Flow spec rt-redirect AS-4octet format | RFCXXXX |
Furthermore, IANA is requested to update the reference for the registries "Generic Transitive Experimental Use Extended Community Part 2 Sub-Types" and "Generic Transitive Experimental Use Extended Community Part 3 Sub-Types" to RFCXXXX.¶
The "traffic-action" extended community (Section 7.3) defined in this document has 46 unused bits, which can be used to convey additional meaning. IANA created and maintains a registry entitled "Traffic Action Fields". IANA is requested to update the reference for this registry to RFCXXXX. Furthermore, IANA is requested to update the references according to the table below. These values should be assigned via IETF Review rules only (Note: This document obsoletes both [RFC7674] and [RFC5575] and all references to those documents should be deleted from the registry below).¶
Bit | Name | Reference |
---|---|---|
47 | Terminal Action | RFCXXXX |
46 | Sample | RFCXXXX |
As long as Flow Specifications are restricted to match the corresponding unicast routing paths for the relevant prefixes (Section 6), the security characteristics of this proposal are equivalent to the existing security properties of BGP unicast routing. Any relaxation of the validation procedure described in Section 6 may allow unwanted Flow Specifications to be propagated, and thus unwanted Traffic Filtering Actions may be applied to flows.¶
Where the above mechanisms are not in place, this could open the door to further denial-of-service attacks, such as unwanted traffic filtering, remarking, or redirection.¶
Deployment of specific relaxations of the validation within an administrative boundary of a network are useful in some networks for quickly distributing filters to prevent denial-of-service attacks. For a network to utilize this relaxation, the BGP policies must support additional filtering, since the origin AS field is empty. Specifications relaxing the validation restrictions MUST contain security considerations that provide details on the required additional filtering. For example, the use of origin validation can provide enhanced filtering within an AS confederation.¶
Inter-provider routing is based on a web of trust. Neighboring autonomous systems are trusted to advertise valid reachability information. If this trust model is violated, a neighboring autonomous system may cause a denial-of-service attack by advertising reachability information for a given prefix for which it does not provide service (unfiltered address space hijack). Since validation of the Flow Specification is tied to the announcement of the best unicast route, the failure in the validation of best path route may prevent the Flow Specification from being used by a local router. Possible mitigations are [RFC6811] and [RFC8205].¶
On Internet Exchange Points (IXPs), routes are often exchanged via route servers that do not extend the AS_PATH. In such cases, it is not possible to enforce the left-most AS in the AS_PATH to be the neighbor AS (the AS of the route server). Since the validation of Flow Specification (Section 6) depends on this, additional care must be taken. It is advised to use a strict inbound route policy in such scenarios.¶
Enabling firewall-like capabilities in routers without centralized management could make certain failures harder to diagnose. For example, it is possible to allow TCP packets to pass between a pair of addresses but not ICMP packets. It is also possible to permit packets smaller than 900 or greater than 1000 octets to pass between a pair of addresses but not packets whose length is in the range 900-1000. Such behavior may be confusing, and these capabilities should be used with care whether manually configured or coordinated through the protocol extensions described in this document.¶
Flow Specification BGP speakers (e.g., automated DDoS controllers) not properly programmed, algorithms that are not performing as expected, or simply rogue systems may announce unintended Flow Specifications, send updates at a high rate, or generate a high number of Flow Specifications. This may stress the receiving systems, exceed their capacity, or lead to unwanted Traffic Filtering Actions being applied to flows.¶
While the general verification of the Flow Specification NLRI is specified in this document (Section 6), the Traffic Filtering Actions received by a third party may need custom verification or filtering. In particular, all non-traffic-rate actions may allow a third party to modify packet forwarding properties and potentially gain access to other routing-tables/VPNs or undesired queues. This can be avoided by proper filtering/screening of the Traffic Filtering Action communities at network borders and only exposing a predefined subset of Traffic Filtering Actions (see Section 7) to third parties. One way to achieve this is by mapping user-defined communities, which can be set by the third party, to Traffic Filtering Actions and not accepting Traffic Filtering Action extended communities from third parties.¶
This extension adds additional information to Internet routers. These are limited in terms of the maximum number of data elements they can hold as well as the number of events they are able to process in a given unit of time. Service providers need to consider the maximum capacity of their devices and may need to limit the number of Flow Specifications accepted and processed.¶
<CODE BEGINS> """ Copyright (c) 2020 IETF Trust and the persons identified as authors of the code. All rights reserved. Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, is permitted pursuant to, and subject to the license terms contained in, the Simplified BSD License set forth in Section 4.c of the IETF Trust's Legal Provisions Relating to IETF Documents (https://trustee.ietf.org/license-info). """ import itertools import collections import ipaddress EQUAL = 0 A_HAS_PRECEDENCE = 1 B_HAS_PRECEDENCE = 2 IP_DESTINATION = 1 IP_SOURCE = 2 FS_component = collections.namedtuple('FS_component', 'component_type op_value') class FS_nlri(object): """ FS_nlri class implementation that allows sorting. By calling .sort() on an array of FS_nlri objects these will be sorted according to the flow_rule_cmp algorithm. Example: nlri = [ FS_nlri(components=[ FS_component(component_type=IP_DESTINATION, op_value=ipaddress.ip_network('10.1.0.0/16') ), FS_component(component_type=4, op_value=bytearray([0,1,2,3,4,5,6])), ]), FS_nlri(components=[ FS_component(component_type=5, op_value=bytearray([0,1,2,3,4,5,6])), FS_component(component_type=6, op_value=bytearray([0,1,2,3,4,5,6])), ]), ] nlri.sort() # sorts the array according to the algorithm """ def __init__(self, components = None): """ components: list of type FS_component """ self.components = components def __lt__(self, other): # use the below algorithm for sorting result = flow_rule_cmp(self, other) if result == B_HAS_PRECEDENCE: return True else: return False def flow_rule_cmp(a, b): """ Example of the flowspec comparison algorithm. """ for comp_a, comp_b in itertools.zip_longest(a.components, b.components): # If a component type does not exist in one rule # this rule has lower precedence if not comp_a: return B_HAS_PRECEDENCE if not comp_b: return A_HAS_PRECEDENCE # Higher precedence for lower component type if comp_a.component_type < comp_b.component_type: return A_HAS_PRECEDENCE if comp_a.component_type > comp_b.component_type: return B_HAS_PRECEDENCE # component types are equal -> type specific comparison if comp_a.component_type in (IP_DESTINATION, IP_SOURCE): # assuming comp_a.op_value, comp_b.op_value of # type ipaddress.IPv4Network if comp_a.op_value.overlaps(comp_b.op_value): # longest prefixlen has precedence if comp_a.op_value.prefixlen > \ comp_b.op_value.prefixlen: return A_HAS_PRECEDENCE if comp_a.op_value.prefixlen < \ comp_b.op_value.prefixlen: return B_HAS_PRECEDENCE # components equal -> continue with next component elif comp_a.op_value > comp_b.op_value: return B_HAS_PRECEDENCE elif comp_a.op_value < comp_b.op_value: return A_HAS_PRECEDENCE else: # assuming comp_a.op_value, comp_b.op_value of type # bytearray if len(comp_a.op_value) == len(comp_b.op_value): if comp_a.op_value > comp_b.op_value: return B_HAS_PRECEDENCE if comp_a.op_value < comp_b.op_value: return A_HAS_PRECEDENCE # components equal -> continue with next component else: common = min(len(comp_a.op_value), len(comp_b.op_value)) if comp_a.op_value[:common] > comp_b.op_value[:common]: return B_HAS_PRECEDENCE elif comp_a.op_value[:common] < \ comp_b.op_value[:common]: return A_HAS_PRECEDENCE # the first common bytes match elif len(comp_a.op_value) > len(comp_b.op_value): return A_HAS_PRECEDENCE else: return B_HAS_PRECEDENCE return EQUAL <CODE ENDS>¶
This document includes numerous editorial changes to [RFC5575]. It also completely incorporates the redirect action clarification document [RFC7674]. It is recommended to read the entire document. The authors, however, want to point out the following technical changes to [RFC5575]:¶
The authors would like to thank Yakov Rekhter, Dennis Ferguson, Chris Morrow, Charlie Kaufman, and David Smith for their comments on the original [RFC5575]. Chaitanya Kodeboyina helped design the flow validation procedure, and Steven Lin and Jim Washburn ironed out all the details necessary to produce a working implementation in the original [RFC5575].¶
A packet rate Traffic Filtering Action was also described in a Flow Specification extension draft and the authors would like to thank Wesley Eddy, Justin Dailey, and Gilbert Clark for their work.¶
Additionally, the authors would like to thank Alexander Mayrhofer, Nicolas Fevrier, Job Snijders, Jeffrey Haas, and Adam Chappell for their comments and review.¶
Barry Greene, Pedro Marques, Jared Mauch, and Nischal Sheth were authors on [RFC5575] and, therefore, are contributing authors on this document.¶