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Resilient Packet Ring

This document describes the resilient packet ring (RPR) networking technology. RPR aims to combine the high availability and reliability of SONET/SDH rings with the high bandwidth and low cost of Ethernet. It provides fast recovery from single link or node failures like SONET/SDH, utilizes bandwidth efficiently like Ethernet, and also provides quality of service and fairness. The document outlines RPR's architecture, packet forwarding methods, traffic classes, bandwidth allocation, access control, fairness control algorithm, and other aspects.

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Supriya Mishra
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
63 views25 pages

Resilient Packet Ring

This document describes the resilient packet ring (RPR) networking technology. RPR aims to combine the high availability and reliability of SONET/SDH rings with the high bandwidth and low cost of Ethernet. It provides fast recovery from single link or node failures like SONET/SDH, utilizes bandwidth efficiently like Ethernet, and also provides quality of service and fairness. The document outlines RPR's architecture, packet forwarding methods, traffic classes, bandwidth allocation, access control, fairness control algorithm, and other aspects.

Uploaded by

Supriya Mishra
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Resilient packet ring

Resilient packet ring

• IEEE 802.17 resilient packet ring (RPR)


– RPR targets metro edge & metro core areas
– RPR aims at combining
• SONET/SDH’s carrier-class functionalities of high
availability, reliability, and profitable TDM service (voice)
support
• Ethernet’s high bandwidth utilization, low equipment cost,
and simplicity
– RPR vs. SONET/SDH & Ethernet
• Similar to SONET/SDH rings, RPR provides fast recovery
from single link or node failure within 50 ms & carries
legacy TDM traffic with high-level QoS
• Similar to Ethernet, RPR exhibits improved bandwidth
utilization due to statistical multiplexing
• Unlike SONET/SDH rings, RPR utilizes full ring bandwidth
under normal (failure-free) operation
• Unlike Ethernet, RPR provides fairness
Resilient packet ring

• Architecture
– Bidirectional packet-
switched ring with
counterrotating fiber
ringlets 0 and 1
– Up to 255 ring nodes
– RPR MAC over several
physical layers (e.g.,
Ethernet, SONET/SDH)
– Shortest path routing
unless preferred ringlet
specified by MAC client
– Destination stripping
enables spatial reuse
=> increased capacity
Resilient packet ring

• Packet forwarding
– Intermediate nodes forward packet if they don’t
recognize destination MAC address in packet header
– Forwarding methods
• Cut-through
– Packet forwarded before completely received
• Store-and-forward
– Packet forwarded after completely received
– Supplementary 1-byte time-to-live (TTL) field
• Added to each packet by RPR MAC control entity
• Value decremented by each intermediate node
• Prevents packets with unrecognized destination MAC
address from circulating forever
Resilient packet ring

• Multicasting
– Multicast group member-
ship identified by group
MAC destination address
– Realized by means of
broadcasting => no spatial
reuse
– Unidirectional flooding
• Packet removal based on
expired TTL or matching
source MAC address
– Bidirectional flooding
• Packets removal at
cleave point based on
expired TTL
• Cleave point can be put
on any span
Resilient packet ring

• Topology discovery
– RPR’s topology discovery protocol determines
connectivity, order of nodes, and status of each link
– At system initialization
• All nodes broadcast topology discovery control
packets on both ringlets with TTL value equal to 255
(maximum number of nodes)
• Each topology control packet contains information
about status of corresponding node & its attached
links
• By receiving all topology control packets, each node is
able to compute complete topology image (number &
ordering of nodes, status of each link)
• Topology image is stored in topology database of each
node
Resilient packet ring

• Topology discovery
– During normal operation
• Topology discovery packet is sent immediately by a
– New node inserted into ring
– Node after detecting link/node failure
– Node after receiving topology discovery packet
inconsistent with its current topology image
• Ripple effect
– First node noticing a topology change sends topology
discovery packet, followed by all other nodes
• Consistency check
– Once topology image is stable for specified time period,
each node performs consistency check
• Robustness
– After achieving stable & consistent topology image, each
node continues to periodically send topology discovery
packets
Resilient packet ring

• Topology discovery
– Use of topology database
• Determining number of hops between source &
destination nodes
• Setting TTL field to appropriate value
• Selecting shortest path to any destination node
Resilient packet ring

• Node architecture
Resilient packet ring

• Node architecture
– Salient features
• Virtual output queueing (VOQ) to avoid head-of-line
(HOL) blocking
• Ingress traffic throttled by means of token bucket
traffic shapers
• Lossless transit path
– Single-queue mode
» Single FIFO queue called primary transit queue (PTQ)
to store class A in-transit traffic
– Dual-queue mode
» Additional FIFO queue called secondary transit queue
(STQ) to store class B & C in-transit traffic
– RPR network may consist of both single-queue &
dual-queue nodes
• Checker, scheduler, and traffic monitor
Resilient packet ring

• Traffic classes
– Class-based priority scheme to achieve QoS support &
service differentiation
– Traffic classes & subclasses
• Class A: Low-latency & low-jitter service with guaranteed
bandwidth
• Class B: Predictable latency & jitter service
• Class C: Best-effort

Traffic class Subclass Bandwidth preallocation


A A0 Reserved
A1 Reclaimable
B B-CIR Reclaimable
B-EIR No preallocation
C - No preallocation
Resilient packet ring

• Bandwidth preallocation
– To fulfill service guarantees, bandwidth preallocated for
traffic subclasses A0, A1, and B-CIR
• Subclass A0
– Reserved bandwidth
– Reservation done by using topology discovery protocol
– Reserved bandwidth dedicated to node making reservation
• Subclasses A1 & B-CIR
– Part of unreserved bandwidth preallocated to subclasses
A1 & B-CIR => reclaimable bandwidth
– Reclaimable bandwidth not used by A1 & B-CIR (as well as
remaining unreserved bandwidth) can be used by
subclasses B-EIR & C
• Subclasses B-EIR & C
– No bandwidth preallocation
– Fairness eligible traffic
Resilient packet ring

• Access control
– Single-queue mode
• Highest priority given to local control traffic if PTQ not full
• Without local control traffic, in-transit traffic is given
priority over local ingress traffic
– Dual-queue mode
• Highest priority given to local control traffic if both PTQ &
STQ not full
• Without local control traffic, PTQ always served first
• If PTQ empty, local ingress traffic served until STQ reaches
certain threshold
• If STQ threshold crossed, STQ in-transit traffic is given
priority over local ingress traffic
– Benefits
• Lossless transit path for all traffic classes
• Class A traffic experiences only propagation delay &
occasional queueing delay due to nonpreemptive scheduling
Resilient packet ring

• Fairness control
– Lossless path property gives rise to starvation of down-
stream nodes => fairness problem
– Distributed fairness control protocol
• Dynamically throttling upstream traffic
• Maximizing spatial reuse
Resilient packet ring

• RIAS reference model


– Fairness control designed according to ring ingress
aggregated with spatial reuse (RIAS) reference model
– RIAS reference model
• Fairness on each link is determined at granularity of ingress
aggregated (IA) flow (only traffic subclasses B-EIR & C)
• IA flow: aggregate of all flows originating from a given
ingress node
• Goals
– Throttle IA flows at ring ingress nodes to their
network-wide fair rates => alleviated congestion
– Let unused bandwidth be reclaimed by IA flows
=> maximized spatial reuse
• Fairness control realized by backlogged nodes sending
fairness control packets based on local measurements to
upstream ring nodes
Resilient packet ring

• Fairness control algorithm


– Framework
• Each node measures forward_rate & add_rate as byte counts
at output of scheduler
– Forward_rate: serviced rate of all in-transit traffic
– Add_rate: serviced rate of all local traffic
• Both traffic measurements are
– taken over prespecified time period called aging_interval
– low-pass filtered by means of exponential averaging using
parameter 1/LPCOEFF for current measurement &
1 - 1/LPCOEFF for previous average
• Measurements are used by nodes to detect local congestion
• When node n is congested, it calculates its local_fair_rate[n]
• Congested node n sends fairness control packet containing
local_fair_rate[n] to upstream nodes
• Upstream nodes sending via n throttle their traffic to fair rate
• When congestion clears, all nodes periodically increase rate
Resilient packet ring

• Local_fair_rate
– Local_fair_rate[n] of congested node n denotes fair rate
at which source nodes are supposed to transmit via
intermediate node n
– Congested node n sends fairness control packet
containing local_fair_rate[n] to upstream node n-1
– If node n-1 is also congested, it forwards fairness
control packet to upstream node n-2 containing
min {local_fair_rate[n], local_fair_rate[n-1]}
– If node n-1 is not congested but its forward_rate >
local_fair_rate[n], it forwards fairness control packet to
upstream node n-2 containing local_fair_rate[n]
– Otherwise, node n-1 sends null-value fairness control
packet to indicate lack of congestion
Resilient packet ring

• Allowed_rate_congested
– When upstream node i receives fairness control packet with
local_fair_rate[n], it decreases rate controller value of all
flows traversing congested node n to allowed_rate_congested
– Allowed_rate_congested equals sum of serviced rates of all
flows (i,j) originating from node i & traversing node n on their
path toward destination node j => local traffic rates of
upstream node i does not exceed local_fair_rate[n]
– Otherwise, if upstream node i receives null-value fairness
control packet, it increases allowed_rate_congested by
prespecified value to reclaim bandwidth
Resilient packet ring

• Operation modes
– Fairness control algorithm operates in either of two
operation modes
• Aggressive mode (AM)
• Conservative mode (CM)
– Both AM & CM operate within the same aforementioned
framework
– AM & CM differ in how node detects congestion &
calculates its local fair rate
Resilient packet ring

• Aggressive mode (AM)


– AM is default operation mode of RPR deploying dual-
queue mode
– Operation
• Node n is considered congested whenever

STQ_depth[n] > low_threshold


or
forward_rate[n] + add_rate[n] > unreserved_rate

• A congested node n calculates its local_fair_rate[n]


as the serviced rate of local traffic add_rate
Resilient packet ring

• Conservative mode (CM)


– CM deploys single-queue mode by default
– Each node uses access timer
– Operation
• Node n is considered congested whenever access
timer expires or
forward_rate[n] + add_rate[n] > low_threshold
• If node n is congested only in current aging_interval:

local_fair_rate[n] = unreserved_rate/# of active nodes


• If node n is continuously congested:
– local_fair_rate[n] ramps up if
forward_rate[n] + add_rate[n] < low_threshold
– local_fair_rate[n] ramps down if
forward_rate[n] + add_rate[n] > high_threshold
Resilient packet ring

• Protection
– Due to bidirectional dual-fiber ring topology, RPR is able
to recover from single link or node failure
– Fault detection
• Alarm signal issued by underlying physical layer technology
(e.g., loss-of-signal (LOS) alert in SONET/SDH)
• No keep-alive messages from neighboring node for pre-
specified period of time
– Fault notification
• Upon fault detection, node broadcasts topology discovery
update packet to inform all ring nodes about failure
– Fault recovery
• RPR deploys two protection techniques
– Wrapping (optional)
– Steering (mandatory)
Resilient packet ring

• Wrapping
– Optional in RPR
– If deployed, all nodes
must support it
– Similar to automatic
protection switching
(APS) of SONET/SDH
self-healing rings (SHRs)
– Affects only packets
marked wrap eligible
(we bit in header is set)
– Benefits
• Fast recovery time
• Minimized packet loss
– Drawback
• Bandwidth inefficiency
Resilient packet ring

• Steering
– Mandatory in RPR
– After receiving a topo-
logy discovery update
packet sent by wrapping
node, a source node sends
local ingress traffic on
the ringlet in failure-free
direction
– Benefit
• Higher bandwidth
efficiency than wrapping
– Wrap-then-steer
protection strategy
• recommended if both
wrapping & steering used
together =>
packet reordering
Resilient packet ring

• In-order delivery
– RPR deploys two packet modes
• Strict packet mode (default)
– Packets guaranteed to arrive in same order as sent
– Strict order (so) bit in header is set to identify strict
order packets
– Strict order packets cannot be marked wrap eligible
=> discarded at wrap point
– After learning about failure, nodes stop sending strict
order packets & discard strict order in-transit packets
until topology stabilization timer expires
– With stable & consistent updated topology image, nodes
start to steer strict order packets onto respective ringlet
• Relaxed packet mode (optional)
– Relaxed packets may be steered immediately after learning
about failure & are not discarded from transit queues

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