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Versions: 00
Network Group S. Matsushima
Internet-Draft Softbank Telecom
Intended status: Informational R. Wakikawa
Expires: January 11, 2014 Softbank Mobile
July 10, 2013
Stateless user-plane architecture for virtualized EPC (vEPC)
draft-matsushima-stateless-uplane-vepc-00
Abstract
We envision a new mobile architecture for the future Evolved Packet
Core (EPC). The new architecture is designed to support the
virtualization scheme called NFV (Network Function Virtualization).
In our architecture, the user plane of EPC is decoupled from the
control-plane and uses routing information to forward packets of
mobile nodes. Although the EPC control plane will run on hypervisor,
our proposal does not modify the signaling of the EPC control plane.
The benefits of our architecture are 1) scalability, 2) flexibility
and 3) Manageability. How to run the EPC control plane on NFV is out
of our focus in this document.
Status of This Memo
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This Internet-Draft will expire on January 11, 2014.
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This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
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Table of Contents
1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
1.1. The Benefits of NFV . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
2. Motivations and Requirements, - Why IETF? - . . . . . . . . . 4
2.1. Motivations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
2.2. Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
3. Stateless user-plane architecture for virtualized EPC . . . 7
3.1. Architecture Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
3.2. Protocol Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
3.3. Control-plane awareness of stateless user-plane . . . . . 13
3.4. Routing mechanism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13
3.5. IPv4 Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
4. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
5. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
6. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
6.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
6.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
1. Introduction
3GPP introduces Evolved Packet Core (EPC) that is fully IP based
mobile system for LTE and -advanced in their Release-8 specification
and beyond. Operators are now deploying EPC for LTE services and
encounter rapid LTE traffic growth. There are various activities to
offload mobile traffic in 3GPP and IETF such as LIPA, SIPTO and DMM.
The concept is similar that traffic of OTT (Over The Top) application
is offloaded at entity that is closer to the mobile node (ex. eNodeB
or closer anchor).
Likewise, overload of signaling (control plane) is also increasing
day by day. Network operators expect recent innovation and trends of
NFV (Network Function Virtualization) to solve this overloaded
control plane. NFV is discussed at the ETSI NFV ISG and is
introduced in [NFV-WHITEPAPER]. Mobile operator's network is built
with variety of proprietary hardware appliances today. If we can get
rid of these physical appliances and could shift to a cloud-based
service, we will have a lot of benefits explained in the next
section. This document assumes that NFV will push networking
functions currently run on dedicated hardwares onto a cloud network.
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Expected network functions are Mobility Management Entity (MME),
Serving Gateway (SGW) PDN Gateway(PGW), etc. With NFV, EPC can be
operated onto servers/hyper-visors. We name it virtualized-EPC
(vEPC) in this document.
This document uses a lot of 3GPP specific terms. These terms can be
found mostly at [RFC6459].
1.1. The Benefits of NFV
This section briefly explains the benefits of NFV. The detailed
benefits can be found in [NFV-WHITEPAPER]. Although today's eco-
system of EPC appliances might be affected, we believe there are
various approaches to enhance current eco-system and migrate to new
NFV approaches. For example, operators could pay monthly recurring
charges for the NFV services and operations to vendors, instead of
one-time purchase and a little maintenance cost.
o [Flexible Network Operations]: The control functions of EPC are no
longer in appliances deployed widely in operator's network and can
be run at hypervisor (cloud). It is easier to add and/ or delete
functions from the services, because no physical construction is
needed. Network operations will be much simpler and easier
because complications of today's network are pushed to NFV (i.e.
hypervisor).
o [Flexible Resource Managements]: The EPC functions can be run on
hypervisor and are now less dependent on proprietary hardwares.
Adding additional resources is easier in hypervisor, while adding
or replacing physical appliances require installation,
construction, configuration, and even migration plan without
service cutoff. A hypervisor can be also shared across various
functions such as PGW, SGW and MME. NFV also brings multi-tenancy
and allows a single platform for different services and users.
The operator can optimize resources and costs to share a NFV
platform for multiple customers (ex. MVNO customers) and services
(ex. multiple APNs).
o [Faster Speed of Time to Market]: When an operator wants a new
function to its network and services, the operator needs to
negotiate appliance vendors to implement the new functions or to
find alternative equipment supporting the new function. It takes
a longer time to convince the vendors, or to replace existing
hardwares. However, if functions can be implemented as a
software, it is much faster to implement the functions on NFV.
Even the operator may implement them and try the new functions by
themselves. Field trial is also getting easier because of no
physical installation or replacement. You may turn on a new
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function in NFV and observe how the new function behaves in your
network. NFV can save preparation time and tuning time of the new
function.
o [Cost Optimization]: Last but not least, Cost is the most
important motivation for operators to realize NFV. Operators can
remove many of proprietary appliances from its network and replace
them with industry standard servers, switches and routers. In
addition, it is easy to scale up and down operator's services so
that resources can be always tuned to the size of services. In
addition, operational costs led by any physical hardware such as
power supply, maintenance, installation, construction and
replacement can be minimized or even removed. The network design
can be simpler, because complicated functions could be handled by
NFV. That simple operation may enable automatic configurations
and prevent unnecessary trouble-shooting. As a result, CAPEX and
OPEX can be always optimized and lowered.
2. Motivations and Requirements, - Why IETF? -
2.1. Motivations
What is a role of IETF to realize vEPC in the future? IETF is not
the right place to discuss, for instance, how to run MME on
hypervisor. An important IETF activity must be to decouple the
control- and user- planes of mobility protocols used in EPC. In
doing so, NFV-enabled solutions can be easily designed and
implemented with interoperability across multiple vendors and
platforms. Otherwise, NFV solutions can be easily fragmented due to
many proprietary solutions for the protocol separations. As stated
in [NFV-WHITEPAPER], interoperability is highly important.
In the past, IETF has developed tunnel based mechanisms for mobile
nodes such as Mobile IPv6 [RFC6275][RFC5555], Proxy Mobile IPv6
[RFC5213][RFC5844] and NEMO [RFC3963]. Similarly, 3GPP has developed
tunnel protocols called GPRS Tunneling Protocol (GTP). These tunnel-
based protocols establish a data path for a mobile node between the
mobile node and an anchor point (s). There is a case where an access
router terminates a tunnel instead of a mobile node (ex. Proxy
Mobile IP). In 3GPP, a tunnel is established between SGW and PGW per
a mobile node by either Proxy Mobile IPv6 or GTP. The control and
the user planes of these mobility protocols are tightly related and
cannot be decoupled. The signaling like Binding Update and user's
packets are routed along a same path in EPC. It might be necessary
to extend these mobility protocols for the user- and control- planes
separation. The protocol separation of Mobile IP is discussed in
[I-D.yokota-dmm-scenario].
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Alternatively, if vEPC was realized, we should have an opportunity to
re-visit the basic architecture of mobility system. Instead of
tunneling packets on today's EPC, why can't we just route packets to
a mobile node? Since a role of the user plane is "routing", BGP and
other routing protocols could be used to forward UE's traffic. This
document introduces a BGP-based solution. Software Defined
Networking (SDN) can be an alternative solution. Open Flow and other
relevant protocols can setup the forward path dynamically according
to UE's states available in the control plane.
We have to remember that there is a good reason of adapting tunneling
in Mobile IP based solutions, that is global mobility. A mobile node
should be able to move anywhere on the Internet and be reachable from
anyone on the Internet. There were routing based global mobility
solutions like Boeing global mobility [Boeing-BGP] and WINMO
[RFC6301]. In these proposals, BGP was used to propagate forwarding
information of mobile nodes to the Internet. Whenever a mobile node
changes its point of attachment, the route must be updated. Due to
scalability and stability issues of the Internet, this solution was
not recommended by IETF [Boeing-BGP]. However, as Boeing showed, it
is doable to support global mobility by using BGP routing update. If
scalability is not your concern, a routing based approach becomes a
candidate of the mobility solution.
While global mobility is important, the "reality" is that your cell
phones (i.e. UE/mobile node) are moving just within an operator's
network and fully controlled in your local EPC. If mobility is
limited within an operator, we believe a routing based approach is
feasible and practical for today's mobile system. Instead of
dedicated proprietary equipment like SGW and PGW to manage a tunnel
path for a mobile node, multiple industry standard routers and
switches are configured in the user plane. These switches and
routers receive mobile nodes' forwarding information from the control
plane of vEPC by routing update.
2.2. Requirements
Requirements of our stateless user plane for vEPC are followings.
NFV Support
The future EPC architecture must support NFV capability. The
control plane of EPC operated on NFV framework is named
"virtualized EPC (vEPC)" in this document. The control plane
of vEPC should keep backward compatibility with the today's
EPC's control plane. It means this document doesn't modify
the control plane at all. It only assumes software-based
MME, SGW, and PGW run on hypervisor.
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Separation of Control- and User- Planes
Due to tight relationship of the control- and user- planes in
today's EPC, resource increase is always provisioned to both
planes at once. It prevents flexible resource arrangement
and introduces high capital investment and over-provisioned
resources to one of planes. If NFV is deployed, it is
expected that computing resources can be independently
allocated to the control planes of the vEPC in a flexible
manner.
_+---+_ _ _+---+_ _ _
EPC / | S | | P | /
Control-plane / | G | | G | /
/_ _| W |_ _ _| W |__/
+---+ +---+ | | | |
| | | e | | | | |
| U | | N | _| |_ _ _| |_ _ _
EPC | E | | B | / | | | | /
User-plane +---+ +---+ / +---+ +---+ /
/_ _ _Existing EPC_ _/
_+---+_ _ _+---+_ _ _
vEPC / | S | | P | /
Control-plane / | G | | G | /
/_ _| W |_ _ _| W |__/
| | | |
+---+ +---+ +---+ +---+
| | | e | +----------+
| U | | N | _|IP Routing|_ _ _
Stateless | E | | B | / | Network | /
User-plane +---+ +---+ / +----------+ /
/_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ /
NFV enabled EPC architecture
Figure 1
Figure 1 shows a possibility that the entities of EPC
Control- plane are virtualized in generic cloud environment,
however user packets won't go through those virtualized EPC
nodes. Decoupling User-plane from the Control-plane entities
will be made virtualized Control-plane nodes relax hyper-
visor data- path capacity requirements. On the other hand,
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decoupled User-plane into IP routing network will be agnostic
from sessions and bearers states, of which are generated and
maintained in the Control-plane. In terms of IP routing,
forwarding packets through the networks is based on the
destination address of the packets evaluated with network
reachable information in the routing table that accommodated
in the routing nodes. To forward EPC User-plane packets
correctly, those states must be indicated by network
reachable information.
Flat Design for Distributed Operation
Today's 3GPP architecture introduces PDN gateway (PGW) as a
gateway to external networks like the Internet. PGW manages
all traffic from and to UEs and could be a bottleneck and
single point of failure of network connectivity. In
addition, due to recent rapid traffic increase, it is
important to perform traffic engineering and to offload
traffic to multiple locations (ex. SGW, PGW, eNodeB). For
enhancements of traffic engineering capability, more flat
design with multiple gateways is expected so that traffic can
be distributed to all these gateways. There were proposals
how to enable flat design to (Proxy) Mobile IP such as
[I-D.wakikawa-mext-haha-interop2008] in IETF. Distributed
Mobility Management (DMM) Working Group has also discussed
how to extend Mobile IP-based solutions to support traffic
distribution in an optimal way by removing centrally deployed
anchors that is like a Home Agent.
Stateless in User Plane
Ultimate goal of vEPC is to remove all mobility specific
states from the forwarding nodes in the user-plane of vEPC.
If we succeed in this, industry standard routers and switches
can be used to forward mobile nodes traffic in the user plane
of vEPC. A mobile node's specific states are kept in both an
IP header of the mobile node's packets and a routing entry of
the mobile node. The detail is described in Section 3.2
3. Stateless user-plane architecture for virtualized EPC
This section explains our solution that is the stateless user-plane
architecture for vEPC. This solution is basically a combination of
existing protocols defined in IETF. A minor extension might be
needed but it should be easily addressed in IETF. We first introduce
our architecture and then protocol overview.
3.1. Architecture Overview
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Figure 2 shows the user plane of the current EPC architecture. A
tunnel is established between SGW and PGW by either Proxy Mobile IP
or GTP. PGW is an anchor point of UE for incoming packets. All the
packet destined to UE is routed first to PGW. The UE's packets are
intercepted by PGW and tunneled to SGW. SGW then forwards the packet
to UE via access points (i.e. eNodeB) over Radio Area Network (RAN).
.--.
_( `)_
_( `)
+---+ +---+ ( EPC-NW ) +---+
[UE]~~~~|RAN|====|SGW|===================|PGW| -> the Internet
+---+ +---+ `--(______)---' +---+
<--------Tunneling------>
~~~ Wireless Link
=== GTP Tunnel (PMIP tunnel)
--- IP link
User plane of the current EPC
Figure 2
Figure 3 is our proposed user plane of vEPC. The control plane is
not shown in this figure.
[EPC-E anycast address]
| .--.
| _( `)_
| +---+ _( `)
+---+ \ |EPC| ( IPv6 Core ) +---+
[UE]~~~~|RAN|====| -E|-( ` NW )-|RTR| --> the Internet
+---+ +---+ ( ` ) ) +---+
(eNodeB) `--(_____)--'
<--------Routing-------->
User plane of vEPC
Figure 3
We introduce two new entities such as
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EPC Edge Router (EPC-E)
EPC-E is located at the same place of today's SGW and terminates
GTP tunnel established with eNodeB (RAN). EPC-E supports the user
plane functions of SGW and PGW. EPC-E is configured an anycast
address to the network interface facing to eNodeB. The eNodeB
establishes a GTP tunnel per UE with this anycast address. Thanks
for anycast address, UE's traffic forwarded by eNodeB is always
routed to the closest EPC-E of UE. EPC-E is a router and
maintains routing information of every UE that is notified by the
control plane. Detail of routing mechanism can be found in
Section 3.4.
Router (RTR)
It is a regular IP router. The control plane of vEPC distributes
routing information of every UE by a routing protocol like BGP.
Therefore any additional protocols other than routing protocols
are not needed for RTR. Multiple RTRs can be configured anywhere
in the user plane of vEPC. RTRs announce UE's routing information
to the external network (ex. The Internet).
As you see in Figure 3, we omit a tunneling mechanism originally
established between SGW and PGW for routing UE's packets. By
removing this tunnel, UE's packets are forwarded to and from the
Internet according to routing tables on routers in the core network.
Note that, although we remove the tunnel for UE's traffic, the
control-plane signaling stays same. If Proxy Mobile IP is used for
this tunnel, Proxy Binding Update and Acknowledgment are exchanged
between PGW and SGW that are managed by NFV on servers/hyper-visor.
Instead of a tunnel setup, states created by Proxy Mobile IP are
distributed to all routing entities (EPC-E and RTR) by a routing
protocol. From the user plane point of view, these states are just
seen as routing entries. EPC-E and RTR are not involved in any
signaling of the control plane. The control plane just injects
routing information to EPC-E and RTR to setup routing paths to and
from UEs.
Although this architecture just uses IPv6 core network, it supports
both IPv4 and IPv6 packets. The detailed operation of IPv4 support
will be discussed in Section 3.5.
A mobile node can still use a global mobility solution like Mobile IP
when it moves out an operator's network. We should keep backward
compatibility for the control plane of EPC and should be able to fall
back to the tunneling based packet forwarding for non-operator's
network and roaming scenarios.
3.2. Protocol Overview
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This section gives an example of protocols used for vEPC. Figure 5
is the procedure of the PDN connection setup in vEPC. This figure is
copied from the section 3 of [RFC6459]. All the steps from (1) to
(13) are same as the original except for NFV-based MME, SGW, PGW,
HSS, and AAA.
The vEPC introduces two new steps, (14) and (15), to setup paths in
the user-plane after finishing all the signaling on the control-
plane. (16) and (17) are the steps to assign IP address to the mobile
node.
In (14), vEPC advertises a routing information of UE whose next hop
is set to GTP tunnel between eNodeB and UE in RAN. To do this, we
will introduce two existing solutions as the key to build vEPC and
also show potential modification required for vEPC.
o "Stateless IPv6 Prefix Delegation for IPv6 enabled networks"
[I-D.savolainen-stateless-pd] can be used as the algorithm to
generate UE's prefix.
In the case of an UE's prefix length is equal, or shorter than /64,
the generated prefix is consisted as follow:
| n bits | o bits (=< 16)|64-n-o bits|
+---------------------------+---------------+-----------+
| PDN Prefix | TEID | subnet ID |
+---------------------------+---------------+-----------+
<---------------------------64bits---------------------->
Stateless-pd Prefix
Figure 4
Each PDN is assumed to have single or several prefixes (called PDN
prefix) used to generate UE's address. Followed by the PDN prefix in
Figure 4, there is 16-bit TEID assigned for a UE's session at SGW on
the control plane. TEID is 16 bits identifier in GTP header to
distinguish each bearer. The remaining bits are filled by subnet ID.
The prefix is allocated per UE and used for address assignment by
SLAAC or DHCPv6.
o [I-D.vandevelde-idr-remote-next-hop] can be used to carry end
points information of GTP tunnel over BGP.
In order to distribute a route entry of the UE's generated prefix of
UE from vEPC to all EPC-E, BGP is one of suitable routing protocol.
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[I-D.vandevelde-idr-remote-next-hop] enables BGP to carry tunnel
information as Network Layer Reachability Information (NLRI) within
BGP route. In our document, we use GTP tunnel endpoint information
as a next-hop of the route entry of UE's prefix. The GTP information
is a combination of SI-U address and TEID of UE's attaching eNodeB.
BGP has already been extended for BGP speakers to advertise tunneling
information to its peers [RFC5512], but [RFC5512] does not support
GTP as a tunnel type. Moreover, it assumes only a single tunnel
between a pair of BGP speakers although there are multiple tunnels
between RAN and vEPC in cellular system. To keep compatibility to
RAN architecture, it is not possible for eNodeB to act as a BGP
speaker. Some mechanism will thus be required to advertise and to
reflect tunnel endpoint routes to EPC-E instead of eNodeB.
[I-D.vandevelde-idr-remote-next-hop] will be dealt with these issues.
In step (15), EPC-E can aggregate multiple UE's prefixes into less
BGP routes as a part of normal routing operation within operator's
network.
When tunnel endpoint is updated by an UE hand-over between eNode,
vEPC must refresh the route of UE with updated tunnel endpoint as a
remote next-hop. The updated route should be immediately advertised
to EPC-Es. In the case of UE detachment, vEPC simply removes the
detached UE route.
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vEPC(MME/SGW
UE eNodeB PGW/HSS/AAA) EPC-E RTR
| | | | |
|---------->|(1) | | |
| |---------->|(1) MME | |
|/---------------------\| | |
| Authentication |(2) AAA | |
|\---------------------/| | |
| | |--+SGW/PGW | |
| | | |(3)(4) |(4)SGW's TEID is configured
| | |<-+ | and notified to MME
| |<----------|(5) MME | |
|/---------\| | | |
| RB setup |(6) | | |
|\---------/| | | |
| |---------->|(7) MME | |
|---------->|(8) | | |
| |---------->|(9) MME |(9)eNodeB TEID is configured
| | | | and sent to MME
|= = = = = = = Uplink Data = = = = =>= = = = ==>|(10)
| The uplink is not yet built here |
| | | | |
| | |--+SGW/MME | |
| | | |(11,12) | |
| | |<-+ | |
|<= = = = = = Downlink Data = = = = <= = = = = =|(13)
| The downlink is not yet built here |
| | | | |
| | |---------->|(14) Route Update
| | | [Dst: UE-prefix,
| | | NxtHop: S1-U addr and TEID of enodeB
| | | | |
| | | |---------->|(15)Route update
| | | |[Dst: UE-prefix,
| | | | NxtHop: EPC-E address]
| | | | |
|---------RS or DHCP Request------->|(16) |
|<--------RA or DHCP Reply----------|(17) |
Extended PDN Connection Setup Procedure (copied Figure 8 of RFC6459)
Figure 5
UE requests an IPv6 prefix for its address assignment in the step
(16). In our architecture, instead of PDN-GW, EPC-E is responsible
to allocate an IPv6 prefix to UE.
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When EPC-E receives a packet of either Router Solicitation or DHCPv6
request message, it looks up the remote next-hop field of its routing
information base (RIB) with the source IP address and the TEID of the
received packet. A route entry matched for this search is the route
entry created for the requesting UE. Therefore, EPC-E simply uses
the destination prefix of the route entry as an assigned UE's prefix.
In (17), EPC-E simply returns the prefix to UE by either Router
Advertisement or DHCPv6 reply message. UE now creates an configures
an address(es) from the received prefix. It is important to
highlight that UE can obtain the same prefix information from any
EPC-E all the time because the same UE's route information is
available on all the EPC-E.
3.3. Control-plane awareness of stateless user-plane
Control-plane nodes in vEPC must be aware that anycast address
assigned to EPC-E is the S1-U address of SGW. They must use the
anycast address for any control-plane signaling packets on vEPC. By
doing this, packets from RAN are correctly forwarded to an
appropriate EPC-E. Due to anycast nature, every SGW have the same
address as the S1-U address. It means there is no hand-off procedure
between SGWs because all eNodeB in the RAN send packets to the
anycast address are covered by all EPC-E of which sharing same routes
set.
3.4. Routing mechanism
Figure 6 shows a packet forwarding mechanism of our stateless user
plane. As an example, there are four eNodeB (illustrated as eNB-x) ,
three EPC-Edge routers(shown as EPC-Ex) and two routers (RTRx) in
Figure 6. UE is first connected to eNB-C and then moves to eNB-D.
The UE at the new location is illustrated as UE'. Routing entry for
UE is also illustrated at the right side in Figure 6.
EPC-E has two interfaces facing either RAN or CORE networks. An
anycast address (shown as X) is configured to the interface facing
RAN of all EPC-E. EPC-E assigns an individual IPv6 address to
another interface (illustrated "a" to "d" in the figure). It is
important to mention that the anycast address X can be treated as the
SGW's S1-U address.
Since RTRs are a gateway to the Internet, they advertise routes of an
operator's prefix to the Internet. After one of RTR receives a
packet of UE from the Internet, it needs to routing it to UE in the
user plane. RTR has a simple routing entry for PDN prefix whose next
hop points to the EPC-E. One of RTR (let's say RTR2 in this case)
looks up a routing table with UE's address and matched it with a
routing entry of PDN prefix. Since multiple EPC-Es advertise a route
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for the same PDN prefix, RTR2 should forward the packet to one of
EPC-E according to the routing entry. This routing is known as hot-
potato routing. In this example, the RTR2 uses EPC-E2-b as a nexthop
of PDN prefix.
When the UE's packet is arrived at EPC-E2, EPC-E2 needs to forwards
them to UE via eNodeB to which UE is connecting by using GTP tunnel.
For this operation, EPC-E2 has a routing entry that destination is
UE's prefix and that next hop points to GTP tunnel between eNB-C and
the EPC-Es. In order to identify the GTP tunnel for UE, EPC-E needs
S1-U address and Tunnel Endpoint ID (TEID) of eNB-C that is eNB-C-3
in Figure 6. The eNB-C TEID for UE is illustrated as TEID[eNB-C].
The SGW assigned TEID is utilized to generate the UE's prefix as we
explained in Section 3.2. These TEID are assigned per UE. The TEID
and S1-U address of eNodeB are retrieved from the next hop field of
the routing entry of the mobile node. By using the GTP information,
every EPC-E can now forward the UE's packets to right eNodeB.
Routing outgoing packets from UE is much simpler. The packets from
UE are always routed to the closest EPC-E to UE because of anycast
routing. In Figure 6, when UE sends a packet to a destination, the
packet is reached to eNB-C and tunneled to EPC-E's anycast address.
The GTP-tunneled packet is routed to the closest EPC-E that is EPC-E2
in this case. The packet is decapsulated by EPC-E2 and then
forwarded to one of RTR according to the routing table. Since the
decapsulated packet is regular IPv6 packet, no extra control other
than routing is necessary.
When UE moves to a new location (UE'), it updates its location on the
control plane. After signaling completion for location update, vEPC
needs to update the UE's routing entry of all EPC-E so that vEPC
advertises updated route with new location to all EPC-Es by a routing
protocol. The routing entry should be updated with the new eNodeB's
address that is eNB-D-4. During handover, there might be some
traffic arriving to the older eNodeB (eNB-C). These packets can be
re-routed to the new eNodeB (eNB-D) via X2-U interface in RAN.
The UE's address isn't changed when UE changes its attachment. In
our scenario, SGW run on hypervisor and is independent from network
topology. Therefore, logically we don't have handover across
different SGWs. UE can stay connected with the same SGW all the time
and can keep using the same TEID after handover. Thus, UE's address
is unchanged even after handover.
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Internet-Draft Draft Specification July 2013
+--------------------+
| Correspondent Node |
+--------------------+
|
.--. [Route on the Internet]
_(. `) Destination: Operator's Prefix
_( `)_ NextHop: RTR-1/2
( Internet `)
( ` . ) )
`--(_______)---'
/ \ [Route at RTR]
+----+ +----+ Destination: PDN Prefix
|RTR1| |RTR2| NextHop: EPC-E2-b
+----+ +----+
\ .--. /
_( IP `.
( CORE NW )
___( ` . ) )__
/ `--(___.--' \
/ | \
|a |b |c [Route at EPC-E]
+---+--+ +---+--+ +---+--+ Destination: UE's Prefix *1
|EPC-E1| |EPC-E2| |EPC-E3| NextHop: GTP tunnel (eNB-C) *2
+---+--+ +---+--+ +---+--+
|X |X |X
\ .--. /
\_____( RAN `.____/
( ACCESS )
____( ` NW ) )_______
/ `--(___.--' \
/ | | \
|1 |2 |3 |4
+--+--+ +--+--+ +--+--+ +--+--+
|eNB-A| |eNB-B| |eNB-C| |eNB-D|
+--+--+ +--+--+ +--+--+ +--+--+
: : : :
UE --> UE'
*1 TEID used at EPC-E for the UE is included in this UE's prefix.
see Figure 4.
*2 GTP tunnel state is stored in the next hop field. The state
information is the combination of eNB-C S1 address that is
eNB-C-3 and TEID(eNB-C) assigned for the UE.
Routing Mechanism Overview
Figure 6
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3.5. IPv4 Support
Recent IPv6 transition mechanisms enable IPv6-only network to forward
IPv4 packet with encapsulation or translation techniques. By using
one of mechanisms, we can use IPv6 for our stateless user-plane
network for transporting both IPv4 and IPv6 packets. Figure 7 shows
available solutions of IPv4 support for each bearer type to deal with
that requirement.
Bearer UE EPC-E Gateway
type function function function
--------------------------------------------
IPv4 - B4 AFTR
IPv4 - CLAT PLAT
IPv6 MAP-CE - MAP-BR
IPv6 B4 - AFTR
IPv6 CLAT - PLAT
Solutions and functions for IPv4 support
Figure 7
In the case of a UE only support IPv4 bearer, B4 function of DS-Lite
[RFC6333] or CLAT function of 464XLAT [RFC6877] may be implemented in
a EPC-E. Both functions are stateless therefore EPC-E isn't required
to maintain any tunneling or translation state.
Figure 8 shows how to support IPv4 on IPv6 core network in our vEPC.
Instead of using RqTR as a gateway to the Internet, DS-LITE AFTR or
464XLAT PLAT is installed as a gateway to the IPv4 Internet.
.--.
EPC-E _( `)_ Gateway
+----+ _( `) +------+
| B4 | ( IPv6 Core ) | AFTR |
[UE]==IPv4-only==| or |-( ` NW )-| or | --> Internet
bearer |CLAT| ( ` ) ) | PLAT | (IPv4)
+----+ `--(_____)--' +------+
<-----IPv4 over IPv6----->
or
v4v6 translation
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Internet-Draft Draft Specification July 2013
IPv4 User plane of vEPC
Figure 8
If UE supports IPv6 capable bearer, IPv6 transition function may be
implemented in the UE such as MAP-CE [I-D.ietf-softwire-map], B4 or
CLAT. That means an EPC-E receives IPv6 packets from UE in this case
so that the EPC-E does not need to be involved in the part of IPv4
support functions.
4. IANA Considerations
This memo includes no request to IANA.
5. Security Considerations
There are no security considerations specific to this document at
this moment.
6. References
6.1. Normative References
[I-D.savolainen-stateless-pd]
Savolainen, T. and J. Korhonen, "Stateless IPv6 Prefix
Delegation for IPv6 enabled networks", draft-savolainen-
stateless-pd-01 (work in progress), February 2010.
[I-D.vandevelde-idr-remote-next-hop]
Velde, G., Patel, K., Rao, D., Raszuk, R., and R. Bush,
"BGP Remote-Next-Hop", draft-vandevelde-idr-remote-next-
hop-03 (work in progress), October 2012.
[RFC5512] Mohapatra, P. and E. Rosen, "The BGP Encapsulation
Subsequent Address Family Identifier (SAFI) and the BGP
Tunnel Encapsulation Attribute", RFC 5512, April 2009.
6.2. Informative References
[Boeing-BGP]
Andrew, ., "Global IP Network Mobility using Border
Gateway Protocol (BGP)", IAB Plenary IAB Plenary of IETF
62nd, March 2005.
[I-D.ietf-softwire-map]
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Internet-Draft Draft Specification July 2013
Troan, O., Dec, W., Li, X., Bao, C., Matsushima, S.,
Murakami, T., and T. Taylor, "Mapping of Address and Port
with Encapsulation (MAP)", draft-ietf-softwire-map-07
(work in progress), May 2013.
[I-D.wakikawa-mext-haha-interop2008]
Wakikawa, R., Shima, K., and N. Shigechika, "The Global
HAHA Operation at the Interop Tokyo 2008", draft-wakikawa-
mext-haha-interop2008-00 (work in progress), July 2008.
[I-D.yokota-dmm-scenario]
Yokota, H., Seite, P., Demaria, E., and Z. Cao, "Use case
scenarios for Distributed Mobility Management", draft-
yokota-dmm-scenario-00 (work in progress), October 2010.
[NFV-WHITEPAPER]
Network Operators, ., "Network Functions Virtualization,
An Introduction, Benefits, Enablers, Challenges and Call
for Action", SDN and OpenFlow SDN and OpenFlow World
Congress, October 2012.
[RFC3963] Devarapalli, V., Wakikawa, R., Petrescu, A., and P.
Thubert, "Network Mobility (NEMO) Basic Support Protocol",
RFC 3963, January 2005.
[RFC5213] Gundavelli, S., Leung, K., Devarapalli, V., Chowdhury, K.,
and B. Patil, "Proxy Mobile IPv6", RFC 5213, August 2008.
[RFC5555] Soliman, H., "Mobile IPv6 Support for Dual Stack Hosts and
Routers", RFC 5555, June 2009.
[RFC5844] Wakikawa, R. and S. Gundavelli, "IPv4 Support for Proxy
Mobile IPv6", RFC 5844, May 2010.
[RFC6275] Perkins, C., Johnson, D., and J. Arkko, "Mobility Support
in IPv6", RFC 6275, July 2011.
[RFC6301] Zhu, Z., Wakikawa, R., and L. Zhang, "A Survey of Mobility
Support in the Internet", RFC 6301, July 2011.
[RFC6333] Durand, A., Droms, R., Woodyatt, J., and Y. Lee, "Dual-
Stack Lite Broadband Deployments Following IPv4
Exhaustion", RFC 6333, August 2011.
[RFC6459] Korhonen, J., Soininen, J., Patil, B., Savolainen, T.,
Bajko, G., and K. Iisakkila, "IPv6 in 3rd Generation
Partnership Project (3GPP) Evolved Packet System (EPS)",
RFC 6459, January 2012.
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Internet-Draft Draft Specification July 2013
[RFC6877] Mawatari, M., Kawashima, M., and C. Byrne, "464XLAT:
Combination of Stateful and Stateless Translation", RFC
6877, April 2013.
Authors' Addresses
Satoru Matsushima
Softbank Telecom
1-9-1,Higashi-Shimbashi,Minato-Ku
Tokyo 105-7322
Japan
Email: satoru.matsushima@g.softbank.co.jp
Ryuji Wakikawa
Softbank Mobile
1-9-1,Higashi-Shimbashi,Minato-Ku
Tokyo 105-7322
Japan
Email: ryuji.wakikawa@gmail.com
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