Internet-Draft EVPN VPWS Flexible Cross-Connect June 2022
Sajassi, et al. Expires 18 December 2022 [Page]
Workgroup:
BESS Working Group
Internet-Draft:
draft-ietf-bess-evpn-vpws-fxc-07
Published:
Intended Status:
Standards Track
Expires:
Authors:
A. Sajassi, Ed.
Cisco Systems
P. Brissette
Cisco Systems
J. Uttaro
AT&T
J. Drake
Juniper Networks
S. Boutros
Ciena
J. Rabadan
Nokia

EVPN VPWS Flexible Cross-Connect Service

Abstract

This document describes a new EVPN VPWS service type specifically for multiplexing multiple attachment circuits across different Ethernet Segments and physical interfaces into a single EVPN VPWS service tunnel and still providing Single-Active and All-Active multi-homing. This new service is referred to as flexible cross-connect service. After a description of the rationale for this new service type, the solution to deliver such service is detailed.

Requirements Language

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.

Status of This Memo

This Internet-Draft is submitted in full conformance with the provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Note that other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-Drafts. The list of current Internet-Drafts is at https://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.

Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."

This Internet-Draft will expire on 18 December 2022.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction

[RFC8214] describes a solution to deliver P2P services using BGP constructs defined in [RFC7432]. It delivers this P2P service between a pair of Attachment Circuits (ACs), where an AC can designate on a PE, a port, a VLAN on a port, or a group of VLANs on a port. It also leverages multi-homing and fast convergence capabilities of [RFC7432] in delivering these VPWS services. Multi‑homing capabilities include the support of single-active and all‑active redundancy mode and fast convergence is provided using "mass withdraw" message in control- plane and fast protection switching using prefix independent convergence in data-plane upon node or link failure [I-D.ietf-rtgwg-bgp-pic]. Furthermore, the use of EVPN BGP constructs eliminates the need for multi-segment PW auto‑discovery and signaling if the VPWS service need to span across multiple ASes.

Some service providers have very large number of ACs (in millions) that need to be back hauled across their MPLS/IP network. These ACs may or may not require tag manipulation (e.g., VLAN translation). These service providers want to multiplex a large number of ACs across several physical interfaces spread across one or more PEs (e.g., several Ethernet Segments) onto a single VPWS service tunnel in order to a) reduce number of EVPN service labels associated with EVPN-VPWS service tunnels and thus the associated OAM monitoring, and b) reduce EVPN BGP signaling (e.g., not to signal each AC as it is the case in [RFC8214]).

These service provider want the above functionality without scarifying any of the capabilities of [RFC8214] including single- active and all-active multi-homing, and fast convergence.

This document presents a solution based on extensions to [RFC8214] to meet the above requirements.

1.1. Terminology

MAC:
Media Access Control
MPLS:
Multi Protocol Label Switching
OAM:
Operations, Administration and Maintenance
PE:
Provider Edge device
CE:
Customer Edge device e.g., host or router or switch
EVPL:
Ethernet Virtual Private Line
EPL:
Ethernet Private Line
ES:
Ethernet Segment
VPWS:
Virtual private wire service
EVI:
EVPN Instance
RT:
Route Target
VPWS Service Tunnel:
It is represented by a pair of EVPN service labels associated with a pair of endpoints. Each label is downstream assigned and advertised by the disposition PE through an Ethernet A-D per-EVI route. The downstream label identifies the endpoint on the disposition PE. A VPWS service tunnel can be associated with many VPWS service identifiers where each identifier is a normalized VID.
Single-Active Redundancy Mode:
When a device or a network is multi‑homed to two or more PEs and when only a single PE in such redundancy group can forward traffic to/from the multi-homed device or network for a given VLAN, then such multi-homing or redundancy is referred to as "Single-Active".
All-Active Redundancy Mode:
When a device is multi-homed to two or more PEs and when all PEs in such redundancy group can forward traffic to/from the multi-homed device for a given VLAN, then such multi-homing or redundancy is referred to as "All-Active".

2. Requirements

Two of the main motivations for service providers seeking a new solution are: 1) to reduce number of VPWS service tunnels by multiplexing large number of ACs across different physical interfaces instead of having one VPWS service tunnel per AC, and 2) to reduce the signaling of ACs as much as possible. Besides these two requirements, they also want multi-homing and fast convergence capabilities of [RFC8214].

In [RFC8214], a PE signals an AC indirectly by first associating that AC to a VPWS service tunnel (e.g., a VPWS service instance) and then signaling the VPWS service tunnel via a Ethernet A-D per EVI route with Ethernet Tag field set to a 24-bit VPWS service instance identifier (which is unique within the EVI) and ESI field set to a 10-octet identifier of the Ethernet Segment corresponding to that AC.

Therefore, a PE device that receives such EVPN routes, can associate the VPWS service tunnel to the remote Ethernet Segment, and when the remote ES fails and the PE receives the "mass withdraw" message associated with the failed ES per [RFC7432], it can update its BGP path list for that VPWS service tunnel quickly and achieve fast convergence for multi-homing scenarios. Even if fast convergence were not needed, there would still be a need for signaling each AC failure (via its corresponding VPWS service tunnel) associated with the failed ES, so that the BGP path list for each of them gets updated accordingly and the packets are sent to backup PE (in case of single- active multi-homing) or to other PEs in the redundancy group (in case of all-active multi-homing). In absence of updating the BGP path list, the traffic for that VPWS service tunnel will be black‑holed.

When a single VPWS service tunnel multiplexes many ACs across number of Ethernet Segments (number of physical interfaces) and the ACs are not signaled via EVPN BGP to remote PE devices, then the remote PE devices neither know the association of the received Ethernet Segment to these ACs (and in turn to their local ACs) nor they know the association of the VPWS service tunnel (e.g., EVPN service label) to the far-end ACs - i.e, the remote PEs only know the association of their local ACs to the VPWS service tunnel but not the far-end ACs. Thus upon a connectivity failure to the ES, they don't know how to redirect traffic via another multi-homing PE to that ES. In other words, even if an ES failure is signaled via EVPN to the remote PE devices, they don't know what to do with such message because they don't know the association among the remote ES, the remote ACs, and the VPWS service tunnel.

In order to address this issue when multiplexing large number of ACs onto a single VPWS service tunnel, two mechanisms are devised: one to support VPWS services between two single-homed endpoints and another one to support VPWS services where one of the endpoints is multi- homed. An endpoint can be an AC, MAC-VRF, IP-VRF, global table, or etc.

For single-homed endpoints, it is OK not to signal each AC in BGP because upon connection failure to the ES, there is no alternative path to that endpoint. However, the ramification for not signaling an AC failure is that the traffic destined to the failed AC, is sent over MPLS/IP core and then gets discarded at the destination PE - i.e., it can waste network resources.
This waste of network resources upon connection failure may be transient as it is detectable and preventable at the application layer in some cases. Section 3.2 describes a solution for such single-homing VPWS service.

For VPWS services where one of the endpoints is multi-homed, there are two options:

1) to signal each AC via BGP so that the path list can be updated upon a failure that impacts those ACs. This solution is described in Section 3.3 and it is called VLAN-signaled flexible cross-connect service.

2) to bundle several ACs on an ES together per destination end-point (e.g., ES, MAC-VRF, etc.) and associate such bundle to a single VPWS service tunnel. This is similar to VLAN-bundle service interface described in [RFC8214]. This solution is described in Section 3.2.1.

3. Solution

This section describes a solution for providing a new VPWS service between two PE devices where a large number of ACs (e.g., VLANs) that span across many Ethernet Segments (i.e., physical interfaces) on each PE are multiplex onto a single P2P EVPN service tunnel. Since multiplexing is done across several physical interfaces, there can be overlapping VLAN IDs across these interfaces; therefore, in such scenarios, the VLAN IDs (VIDs) MUST be translated into unique VIDs to avoid collision. Furthermore, if the number of VLANs that are getting multiplex onto a single VPWS service tunnel exceed 4095, then a single tag to double tag translation MUST be performed. This translation of VIDs into unique VIDs (either single or double) is referred to as "VID normalization".

When single normalized VID is used, the lower 12-bit of Ethernet tag field in EVPN routes is set to that VID and when double normalized VID is used, the lower 12-bit of Ethernet tag field is set to inner VID and the higher 12-bit is set to the outer VID. As in [RFC8214], 12-bit and 24-bit VPWS service instance identifiers representing normalised VIDs MUST be right-aligned.

Since there is only a single EVPN VPWS service tunnel associated with many normalized VIDs (either single or double) across multiple physical interfaces, MPLS lookup at the disposition PE is no longer sufficient to forward the packet to the right egress endpoint/⁠interface. Therefore, in addition to an EVPN label lookup corresponding to the VPWS service tunnel, a VID lookup (either single or double) is also required. On the disposition PE, one can think of the lookup of EVPN label results in identification of a VID-VRF, and the lookup of normalized VID(s) in that table, results in identification of egress endpoint/interface. The tag manipulation (translation from normalized VID(s) to local VID) can be performed either as part of the VID table lookup or at the egress interface itself.

Since VID lookup (single or double) needs to be performed at the disposition PE, then VID normalization MUST be performed prior to the MPLS encapsulation on the ingress PE. This requires that both imposition and disposition PE devices be capable of VLAN tag manipulation, such as re-write (single or double), addition, deletion (single or double) at their endpoints (e.g., their ES's, MAC-VRFs, IP-VRFs, etc.).

3.1. VPWS Service Identifiers

In [RFC8214], a unique value in the context of each PE's EVI is signaled. The 32-bit Ethernet Tag ID field MUST be set to this VPWS service instance identifier value.

For FXC, Ethernet Tag ID field value may represent:

  • VLAN-Bundle : a unique value for a group of VLANs ;
  • VLAN-Aware Bundle : a unique value for individual VLANs, and may be considered same as the normalised VID

Both the VPWS service instance identifier and normalised VID are carried in the Ethernet Tag ID field of the Ethernet A-D per EVI route. For FXC, in the case of a 12-bit ID the VPWS service instance identifier is the same as the single-tag normalised VID and will be the same on both PEs. Similarly in the case of a 24-bit ID, the VPWS service instance identifier is the same as the double-tag normalised VID.

3.2. Flexible Xconnect

In this mode of operation, many ACs across several Ethernet Segments are multiplex into a single EVPN VPWS service tunnel represented by a single VPWS service ID. This is the default mode of operation for FXC and the participating PEs do not need to signal the VLANs (normalized VIDs) in EVPN BGP.

With respect to the data-plane aspects of the solution, both imposition and disposition PEs are aware of the VLANs as the imposition PE performs VID normalization and the disposition PE does VID lookup and translation. In this solution, there is only a single P2P EVPN VPWS service tunnel between a pair of PEs for a set of ACs.

As discussed previously, since the EVPN VPWS service tunnel is used to multiplex ACs across different ES's (e.g., physical interfaces), the EVPN label alone is not sufficient for proper forwarding of the received packets (over MPLS/IP network) to egress interfaces. Therefore, normalized VID lookup is required in the disposition direction to forward packets to their proper egress end-points - i.e., the EVPN label lookup identifies a VID-VRF and subsequently, the normalized VID lookup in that table, identifies the egress interface.

This mode of operation is only suitable for single-homing because in multi-homing the association between EVPN VPWS service tunnel and remote AC changes during the failure and therefore the VLANs (normalized VIDs) need to be signaled.

In this solution, on each PE, the single-homing ACs represented by their normalized VIDs are associated with a single EVPN VPWS service tunnel (in a given EVI). The EVPN route that gets generated is an Ethernet A-D per EVI route with ESI=0, Ethernet Tag field set to VPWS service instance ID, MPLS label field set to dynamically generated EVPN service label representing the EVPN VPWS service tunnel. This route is sent with a Route Target (RT) representing the EVI. This RT can be auto‑generated from the EVI per Section 5.1.2.1 of [RFC8365]. Furthermore, this route is sent with the EVPN Layer-2 Extended Community defined in Section 3.1 of [RFC8214] with two new flags (defined in Section 4) that indicate: 1) this VPWS service tunnel is for default Flexible Cross-Connect, and 2) normalized VID type (single versus double). The receiving PE uses these new flags for consistency check and MAY generate an alarm if it detects inconsistency but doesn't bring down the VPWS service.

It should be noted that in this mode of operation, a single Ethernet A-D per EVI route is sent upon configuration of the first AC (ie, normalized VID). Later, when additional ACs are configured and associated with this EVPN VPWS service tunnel, the PE does not advertise any additional EVPN BGP routes. The PE only associates locally these ACs with the already created VPWS service tunnel.

3.2.1. Multi-homing

The default FXC mode can also be used for multi-homing. In this mode, a group of normalized VIDs (ACs) on a single Ethernet segment that are destined to a single endpoint are multiplexed into a single EVPN VPWS service tunnel represented by a single VPWS service ID. When the default FXC mode is used for multi-homing, instead of a single EVPN VPWS service tunnel, there can be many service tunnels per pair of PEs - i.e, there is one tunnel per group of VIDs per pair of PEs and there can be many groups between a pair of PEs, thus resulting in many EVPN service tunnels.

3.3. VLAN-Signaled Flexible Xconnect

In this mode of operation, just as the default FXC mode in Section 3.2, many normalized VIDs (ACs) across several different ES's/⁠interfaces are multiplexed into a single EVPN VPWS service tunnel; however, this single tunnel is represented by many VPWS service IDs (one per normalized VID) and these normalized VIDs are signaled using EVPN BGP.

In this solution, on each PE, the multi-homing ACs represented by their normalized VIDs are configured with a single EVI. There is no need to configure VPWS service instance ID in here as it is the same as the normalized VID. For each normalized VID on each ES, the PE generates an Ethernet A-D per EVI route where ESI field represents the ES ID, the Ethernet Tag field is set to the normalized VID, MPLS label field is set to dynamically generated EVPN label representing the P2P EVPN service tunnel and it is the same label for all the ACs that are multiplexed into a single EVPN VPWS service tunnel. This route is sent with a Route Target (RT) representing the EVI. As before, this RT can be auto-generated from the EVI per section Section 5.1.2.1 of [RFC8365]. Furthermore, this route is sent with the EVPN Layer-2 Extended Community defined in Section 3.1 of [RFC8214] with two new flags (defined in Section 4) that indicate: 1) this VPWS service tunnel is for VLAN-signaled Flexible Cross-Connect, and 2) normalized VID type (single versus double). The receiving PE uses these new flags for consistency check and MAY generate an alarm if it detects inconsistency but doesn't bring down the VPWS service.

It should be noted that in this mode of operation, the PE sends a single Ethernet A-D per EVI route for each AC that is configured - i.e., each normalized VID that is configured per ES results in generation of an EVPN Ethernet A-D per EVI.

This mode of operation provides automatic cross checking of normalized VIDs used for EVPL services because these VIDs are signaled in EVPN BGP. For example, if the same normalized VID is configured on three PE devices (instead of two) for the same EVI, then when a PE receives the second Ethernet A-D per EVI route, it generates an error message unless the two Ethernet A-D per EVI routes include the same ESI. Such cross-checking is not feasible in default FXC mode because the normalized VIDs are not signaled.

3.3.1. Local Switching

When cross-connection is between two ACs belonging to two multi-homed Ethernet Segments on the same set of multi-homing PEs, then forwarding between the two ACs MUST be performed locally during normal operation (e.g., in absence of a local link failure) - i.e., the traffic between the two ACs MUST be locally switched within the PE.

In terms of control plane processing, this means that when the receiving PE receives an Ethernet A-D per-EVI route whose ESI is a local ESI, the PE does not alter its forwarding state based on the received route. This ensures that the local switching takes precedence over forwarding via MPLS/IP network. This scheme of locally switched preference is consistent with baseline EVPN [RFC7432] where it describes the locally switched preference for MAC/⁠IP routes.

In such scenarios, the Ethernet A-D per EVI route should be advertised with the MPLS label either associated with the destination Attachment Circuit or with the destination Ethernet Segment in order to avoid any ambiguity in forwarding. In other words, the MPLS label cannot represent the same VID-VRF used in Section 3.3 because the same normalized VID can be reachable via two Ethernet Segments. In case of using MPLS label per destination AC, then this same solution can be used for VLAN-based VPWS or VLAN-bundle VPWS services per [RFC8214].

3.4. Service Instantiation

The V field defined in Section 4 is OPTIONAL. However, when transmitted, its value could be flagging an error condition which may result in an operational issue. Notification to operator of an error is not sufficient, the VPWS service tunnel must not be established.

If both PEs of a VPWS tunnel are signaling a matching Normalised VID in control plane, yet one is operating in single tag and the other in double tag mode, the signaling of V-bit allows for detecting and preventing this tunnel instantiation.

If single VID normalisation is signaled in the Ethernet Tag ID field (12-bits) yet dataplane is operating based double tags, the VID normalisation applies only to outer tag. If double VID normalisation is signaled in the Ethernet Tag ID field (24-bits), VID normalisation applies to both inner and outer tags.

4. BGP Extensions

This draft uses the EVPN Layer-2 attribute extended community defined in [RFC8214] with two additional flags added to this EC as described below. This EC is sent with Ethernet A-D per EVI route per Section 3, and SHOULD be sent for Single-Active and All-Active redundancy modes.

    +-------------------------------------------+
    | Type (0x06) / Sub-type (0x04) (2 octets)  |
    +-------------------------------------------+
    | Control Flags (2 octets)                  |
    +-------------------------------------------+
    | L2 MTU (2 octets)                         |
    +-------------------------------------------+
    | Reserved (2 octets)                       |
    +-------------------------------------------+

                         1 1 1 1 1 1
     0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    | MBZ           | V | M |-|C|P|B|    (MBZ = MUST Be Zero)
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

The following bits in the Control Flags are defined; the remaining bits MUST be set to zero when sending and MUST be ignored when receiving this community.

    Name     Meaning
    ---------------------------------------------------------------
    B,P,C    per definition in [RFC8214]

    -        reserved for Flow-label

    M        00 mode of operation as defined in [RFC8214]
             01 VLAN-Signaled FXC
             10 Default FXC


    V        00 operating per [RFC8214]
             01 single-VID normalization
             10 double-VID normalization

The M and V fields are OPTIONAL. The M field is ignored at reception for forwarding purposes and is used for error notifications. The reserved bit for flow label is defined as per [I-D.ietf-bess-rfc7432bis]

5. Failure Scenarios

Two examples will be used as an example to analyze the failure scenarios.

The first scenario is depicted in Figure 1 and shows the VLAN‑signaled FXC mode with Multi-Homing. In this example:

In this scenario, PE1 and PE2 advertise an Ethernet A-D per EVI route per normalized VID (values 1, 2 and 3), however only two VPWS Service Tunnels are needed: VPWS Service Tunnel 1 (sv.T1) between PE1's FXC service and PE3's FXC, and VPWS Service Tunnel 2 (sv.T2) between PE2's FXC and PE3's FXC.

                 N.VID 1,2,3 +---------------------+
                         PE1 |                     |
                     +---------+     IP/MPLS       |
    +-----+ VID1  p1 | +-----+ |                   +
    | CE1 |------------| FXC | |     sv.T1       PE3          +-----+
    |     |       /\ | |     |=======+     +----------+    +--| CE3 |
    +-----+\     +||---|     | |     \     |          |  1/   |     |
        VID3\   / ||---|     | |      \    | +-----+  |  /    +-----+
             \ / /\/ | +-----+ |       +=====| FXC |----+
              \ / p2 +---------+           | |     |  |   2   +-----+
              /\                           | |     |----------| CE4 |
             / /\    +---------+      +======|     |  |       |     |
            / /  \p3 | +-----+ |     /     | |     |  |       +-----+
     VIDs1,2 /    +----| FXC |      /      | |     |---+
    +-----+ /   /\   | |     |======+      | +-----+  |\3    +-----+
    | CE2 |-----||-----|     | |     sv.T2 |          | \    | CE5 |
    |     |-----||-----|     | |           +----------+  +---|     |
    +-----+     \/   | +-----+ |                 |           +-----+
       VIDs3,4  p4   +---------+                 |
                          PE2 |                  |
                  N.VID 1,2,3 +------------------+

Figure 1: VLAN-Signaled Flexible Xconnect

The second scenario is a default Flexible Xconnect with Multi- Homing solution and it is depicted in Figure 2. In this case, the same VID Normalization as in the previous example is performed, however there is not an individual Ethernet A-D per EVI route per normalized VID, but per bundle of ACs on an ES. That is, PE1 will advertise two Ethernet A-D per EVI routes: the first one will identify the ACs on p1's ES and the second one will identify the AC2 in p2's ES. Similarly, PE2 will advertise two Ethernet A-D per EVI routes.

                 N.VID 1,2,3 +---------------------+
                         PE1 |                     |
                     +---------+     IP/MPLS       |
   +-----+ VID1   p1 | +-----+ | sv.T1             +
   | CE1 |-------------| FXC |======+            PE3         +-----+
   |     |        /\ | |     | |    \     +----------+    +--| CE3 |
   +-----+\      +||---|     | sv.T2 \    |          |  1/   |     |
       VID3\    / ||---|     |=====+  \   | +-----+  |  /    +-----+
            \  // \/ | +-----+ |    \  +====| FXC |----+
             \ /  p2 +---------+     +======|     |  |   2   +-----+
             /\                           | |     |----------| CE4 |
            / /\    +---------+       +=====|     |  |       |     |
           / /  \p3 | +-----+ sv.T3  / +====|     |  |       +-----+
    VIDs1,2 /    +----| FXC |=======+ /   | |     |---+
   +-----+ /   /\   | |     | |      /    | +-----+  |\3    +-----+
   | CE2 |-----||---| |     | sv.T4 /     |          | \    | CE5 |
   |     |-----||---| |     |======+      +----------+  +---|     |
   +--VIDs3,4  \/   | +-----+ |                  |          +-----+
               p4   +---------+                  |
                         PE2 |                   |
                 N.VID 1,2,3 +-------------------+

Figure 2: Default Flexible Xconnect

5.1. EVPN VPWS Service Failure

The failure detection of an EVPN VPWS service can be performed via OAM mechanisms such as VCCV-BFD and upon such failure detection, the switch over procedure to the backup S-PE is the same as the one described above.

5.2. Attachment Circuit Failure

In case of AC Failure, the VLAN-Signaled and default FXC modes behave in a different way:

  • VLAN-signaled FXC (Figure 1): a VLAN or AC failure, e.g. VID1 on CE2, triggers the withdrawal of the Ethernet A-D per EVI route for the corresponding Normalized VID, that is, Ethernet-Tag 2. When PE3 receives the route withdrawal, it will remove PE1 from its path-list for traffic coming from CE4.
  • Default FXC (Figure 2): a VLAN or AC failure is not signaled in the default mode, therefore in case of an AC failure, e.g. VID1 on CE2, nothing prevents PE3 from sending CE4's traffic to PE1, creating a black-hole. Application layer OAM may be used if per-VLAN fault propagation is required in this case.

5.3. PE Port Failure

In case of PE port Failure, the failure will be signaled and the other PE will take over in both cases:

  • VLAN-signaled FXC (Figure 1): a port failure, e.g. p2, triggers the withdrawal of the Ethernet A-D per EVI routes for Normalized VIDs 2 and 3, as well as the withdrawal of the Ethernet A-D per ES route for p2's ES. Upon receiving the fault notification, PE3 will withdraw PE1 from its path-list for the traffic coming from CE4 and CE5.
  • Default FXC (Figure 2): a port failure, e.g. p2, is signaled by route for sv.T2 will also be withdrawn. Upon receiving the fault notification, PE3 will remove PE1 from its path-list for traffic coming from CE4 and CE5.

5.4. PE Node Failure

In the case of PE node failure, the operation is similar to the steps described above, albeit that EVPN route withdrawals are performed by the Route Reflector instead of the PE.

6. Security Considerations

Since this document describes a muxing capability which leverages EVPN-VPWS signaling, no additional functionality beyond the muxing service is added and thus no additional security considerations are needed beyond what is already specified in [RFC8214].

7. IANA Considerations

This document requests allocation of bits 4-7 in the "EVPN Layer 2 Attributes Control Flags" registry with names M and V:

   M     Signaling mode of operation (2 bits)
   V     VLAN-ID normalisation (2 bits)

8. References

8.1. Normative References

[RFC2119]
Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.
[RFC7432]
Sajassi, A., Ed., Aggarwal, R., Bitar, N., Isaac, A., Uttaro, J., Drake, J., and W. Henderickx, "BGP MPLS-Based Ethernet VPN", RFC 7432, DOI 10.17487/RFC7432, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7432>.
[RFC8174]
Leiba, B., "Ambiguity of Uppercase vs Lowercase in RFC 2119 Key Words", BCP 14, RFC 8174, DOI 10.17487/RFC8174, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8174>.
[RFC8214]
Boutros, S., Sajassi, A., Salam, S., Drake, J., and J. Rabadan, "Virtual Private Wire Service Support in Ethernet VPN", RFC 8214, DOI 10.17487/RFC8214, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8214>.

8.2. Informative References

[I-D.ietf-bess-rfc7432bis]
Sajassi, A., Burdet, L. A., Drake, J., and J. Rabadan, "BGP MPLS-Based Ethernet VPN", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-bess-rfc7432bis-04, , <https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-bess-rfc7432bis-04.txt>.
[I-D.ietf-rtgwg-bgp-pic]
Bashandy, A., Filsfils, C., and P. Mohapatra, "BGP Prefix Independent Convergence", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-rtgwg-bgp-pic-18, , <https://www.ietf.org/archive/id/draft-ietf-rtgwg-bgp-pic-18.txt>.
[RFC8365]
Sajassi, A., Ed., Drake, J., Ed., Bitar, N., Shekhar, R., Uttaro, J., and W. Henderickx, "A Network Virtualization Overlay Solution Using Ethernet VPN (EVPN)", RFC 8365, DOI 10.17487/RFC8365, , <https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc8365>.

Appendix A. Contributors

In addition to the authors listed on the front page, the following co-authors have also contributed substantially to this document:

Wen Lin
Juniper Networks

EMail: wlin@juniper.net

Luc Andre Burdet
Cisco

EMail: lburdet@cisco.com

Authors' Addresses

Ali Sajassi (editor)
Cisco Systems
Patrice Brissette
Cisco Systems
James Uttaro
AT&T
John Drake
Juniper Networks
Sami Boutros
Ciena
Jorge Rabadan
Nokia