TEAS Working Group I. Busi, Ed. Internet-Draft Huawei Technologies Intended status: Standards Track S. Belotti, Ed. Expires: 22 September 2022 Nokia O. Gonzalez de Dios Telefonica A. Sharma Google D. Ceccarelli Ericsson 21 March 2022 A YANG Data Model for requesting path computation draft-ietf-teas-yang-path-computation-18 Abstract There are scenarios, typically in a hierarchical Software-Defined Networking (SDN) context, where the topology information provided by a Traffic Engineering (TE) network provider may be insufficient for its client to perform multi-domain path computation. In these cases the client would need to request the TE network provider to compute some intra-domain paths. This document defines a YANG data model which contains Remote Procedure Calls (RPCs) to request path computation. This model complements the solution, defined in RFC YYYY, to configure a TE tunnel path in "compute-only" mode. [RFC EDITOR NOTE: Please replace RFC YYYY with the RFC number of draft-ietf-teas-yang-te once it has been published. Moreover, this document describes some use cases where the path computation request, via YANG-based protocols (e.g., NETCONF or RESTCONF), can be needed. 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/. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 1] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 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 22 September 2022. Copyright Notice Copyright (c) 2022 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 Revised BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as described in the Revised BSD License. Table of Contents 1. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 1.1. Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 1.2. Tree Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 1.3. Prefixes in Data Node Names . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 2. Use Cases . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 2.1. Packet/Optical Integration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 2.2. Multi-domain TE networks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10 2.3. Data Center Interconnections . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 2.4. Backward Recursive Path Computation scenario . . . . . . 14 2.5. Hierarchical PCE scenario . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 3. Motivations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 3.1. Motivation for a YANG Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 3.1.1. Benefits of common data models . . . . . . . . . . . 17 3.1.2. Benefits of a single interface . . . . . . . . . . . 18 3.1.3. Extensibility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 3.2. Interactions with TE topology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 3.2.1. TE topology aggregation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 3.2.2. TE topology abstraction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 3.2.3. Complementary use of the TE topology . . . . . . . . 24 3.3. Path Computation RPC . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 3.3.1. Temporary reporting of the computed path state . . . 28 4. Path computation and optimization for multiple paths . . . . 30 5. YANG data model for requesting Path Computation . . . . . . . 31 5.1. Synchronization of multiple path computation requests . . 32 5.2. Returned metric values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 2] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 5.3. Multiple Paths Requests for the same TE tunnel . . . . . 35 5.3.1. Tunnel attributes specified by value . . . . . . . . 38 5.3.2. Tunnel attributes specified by reference . . . . . . 38 5.4. Multi-Layer Path Computation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 6. YANG data model for TE path computation . . . . . . . . . . . 42 6.1. Tree diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 6.2. YANG module . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 7. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 8. IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73 9. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 9.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 9.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 Appendix A. Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 A.1. Basic Path Computation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 A.2. Path Computation with transient state . . . . . . . . . . 77 A.3. Path Computation with Global Path Constraint . . . . . . 78 A.4. Path Computation with Per-tunnel Path Constraint . . . . 79 A.5. Path Computation result . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80 Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81 Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83 1. Introduction There are scenarios, typically in a hierarchical Software-Defined Networking (SDN) context, where the topology information provided by a Traffic Engineering (TE) network provider may be insufficient for its client to perform multi-domain path computation. In these cases the client would need to request the TE network provider to compute some intra-domain paths that could be used together with its topology information to compute the multi-domain path. These types of scenarios can be applied to different interfaces in different reference architectures: * Application-Based Network Operations (ABNO) control interface [RFC7491], in which an Application Service Coordinator can request the ABNO controller to take in charge path calculation (see Figure 1 in [RFC7491]). * Abstraction and Control of TE Networks (ACTN) [RFC8453], where a controller hierarchy is defined. In the ACTN context, path computation is needed on the interface between Customer Network Controller (CNC) and Multi-Domain Service Coordinator (MDSC), called CNC-MDSC Interface (CMI), and on the interface between MSDC and Provisioning Network Controller (PNC), called MDSC-PNC Interface (MPI). [RFC8454] describes an information model for the Path Computation request. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 3] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 Multiple protocol solutions can be used for communication between different controller hierarchical levels. This document assumes that the controllers are communicating using YANG-based protocols (e.g., NETCONF [RFC6241] or RESTCONF [RFC8040]). Path Computation Elements (PCEs), controllers and orchestrators perform their operations based on Traffic Engineering Databases (TED). Such TEDs can be described, in a technology agnostic way, with the YANG data model for TE Topologies [RFC8795]. Furthermore, the technology specific details of the TED are modelled in the technology specific topology models, e.g., the [I-D.ietf-ccamp-otn-topo-yang] for Optical Transport Network (OTN) Optical Data Unit (ODU) technologies, which augment the common TE topology model in [RFC8795]. The availability of such topology models allows the provisioning of the TED using YANG-based protocols (e.g., NETCONF or RESTCONF). Furthermore, it enables a PCE/controller performing the necessary abstractions or modifications and offering this customized topology to another PCE/controller or high level orchestrator. The tunnels that can be provided over the networks described with the topology models can be also set-up, deleted and modified via YANG- based protocols (e.g., NETCONF or RESTCONF) using the TE tunnel YANG data model [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te]. This document defines a YANG data model [RFC7950] for an RPC to request path computation, which complements the solution defined in [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te], to configure a TE tunnel path in "compute-only" mode. The YANG data model definition does not make any assumption about whether that the client or the server implement a "PCE" functionality, as defined in [RFC4655], and the Path Computation Element Communication Protocol (PCEP) protocol, as defined in [RFC5440]. Moreover, this document describes some use cases where a path computation request, via YANG-based protocols (e.g., NETCONF or RESTCONF), can be needed. The YANG data model defined in this document conforms to the Network Management Datastore Architecture [RFC8342]. 1.1. Terminology TED: Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 4] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 The traffic engineering database is a collection of all TE information about all TE nodes and TE links in a given network. PCE: A Path Computation Element (PCE) is an entity that is capable of computing a network path or route based on a network graph, and of applying computational constraints during the computation. The PCE entity is an application that can be located within a network node or component, on an out-of-network server, etc. For example, a PCE would be able to compute the path of a TE Label Switched Path (LSP) by operating on the TED and considering bandwidth and other constraints applicable to the TE LSP service request. [RFC4655]. Domain: TE information is the data relating to nodes and TE links that is used in the process of selecting a TE path. TE information is usually only available within a network. We call such a zone of visibility of TE information a domain. An example of a domain may be an IGP area or an Autonomous System. [RFC7926] The terminology for describing YANG data models is found in [RFC7950]. 1.2. Tree Diagram Tree diagrams used in this document follow the notation defined in [RFC8340]. 1.3. Prefixes in Data Node Names In this document, names of data nodes and other data model objects are prefixed using the standard prefix associated with the corresponding YANG imported modules, as shown in Table 1. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 5] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 +==========+==========================+===========+ | Prefix | YANG module | Reference | +==========+==========================+===========+ | inet | ietf-inet-types | [RFC6991] | +----------+--------------------------+-----------+ | te-types | ietf-te-types | [RFC8776] | +----------+--------------------------+-----------+ | te | ietf-te | [RFCYYYY] | +----------+--------------------------+-----------+ | te-pc | ietf-te-path-computation | RFCXXXX | +----------+--------------------------+-----------+ Table 1: Prefixes and corresponding YANG modules RFC Editor Note: Please replace XXXX with the RFC number assigned to this document. Please replace RFC YYYY with the RFC number of [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te] once it has been published. Please remove this note. 2. Use Cases This section presents some use cases, where a client needs to request underlying SDN controllers for path computation. The use of the YANG data model defined in this document is not restricted to these use cases but can be used in any other use case when deemed useful. The presented uses cases have been grouped, depending on the different underlying topologies: a) Packet/Optical Integration; b) multi-domain Traffic Engineered (TE) Networks; and c) Data Center Interconnections. Use cases d) and e) respectively present how to apply this YANG data model for standard multi-domain PCE i.e. Backward Recursive Path Computation [RFC5441] and Hierarchical PCE [RFC6805]. 2.1. Packet/Optical Integration In this use case, an optical domain is used to provide connectivity to some nodes of a packet domain (see Figure 1). Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 6] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 +----------------+ | | | Packet/Optical | | Coordinator | | | +---+------+-----+ | | +------------+ | | +-----------+ +------V-----+ | | | +------V-----+ | Packet | | | | Domain | | Optical | | Controller | | Domain | | | | Controller | +------+-----+ +-------+----+ | | .........V......................... | : packet domain : | +----+ +----+ | | R1 |= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =| R2 | | +-+--+ +--+-+ | | : : | | | :................................ : | | | | | | +-----+ | | | ...........| Opt |........... | | | : | C | : | | | : /+--+--+\ : | | | : / | \ : | | | : / | \ : | | | +-----+ / +--+--+ \ +-----+ | | | | Opt |/ | Opt | \| Opt | | | +---| A | | D | | B |---+ | +-----+\ +--+--+ /+-----+ | : \ | / : | : \ | / : | : \ +--+--+ / optical<---------+ : \| Opt |/ domain : :..........| E |..........: +-----+ Figure 1: Packet/Optical Integration use case Figure 1 as well as Figure 2 below only show a partial view of the packet network connectivity, before additional packet connectivity is provided by the optical network. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 7] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 It is assumed that the Optical Domain Controller provides to the Packet/Optical Coordinator an abstracted view of the optical network. A possible abstraction could be to represent the whole optical network as one "virtual node" with "virtual ports" connected to the access links, as shown in Figure 2. It is also assumed that Packet Domain Controller can provide the Packet/Optical Coordinator the information it needs to set up connectivity between packet nodes through the optical network (e.g., the access links). The path computation request helps the Packet/Optical Coordinator to know the real connections that can be provided by the optical network. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,. , Packet/Optical Coordinator view , , +----+ , . , | | , , | R2 | , . , +----+ +------------ + /+----+ , , | | | |/-----/ / / , . , | R1 |--O VP1 VP4 O / / , , | |\ | | /----/ / , . , +----+ \| |/ / , , / O VP2 VP5 O / , . , / | | +----+ , , / | | | | , . , / O VP3 VP6 O--| R4 | , , +----+ /-----/|_____________| +----+ , . , | |/ +------------ + , , | R3 | , . , +----+ ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,. . Packet Domain Controller view +----+ , only packet nodes and packet links | | , . . with access links to the optical network | R2 | , , +----+ /+----+ , . . , | | /-----/ / / , , | R1 |--- / / , . . , +----+\ /----/ / , , / \ / / , . . , / / , , / +----+ , . . , / | | , , / ---| R4 | , . . , +----+ /-----/ +----+ , , | |/ , . Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 8] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 . , | R3 | , , +----+ ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,. .,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , Optical Domain Controller view , . . only optical nodes, +--+ , optical links and /|OF| , . . access links from the +--++--+ / , packet network |OA| \ /-----/ / , . . , ---+--+--\ +--+/ / , , \ | \ \-|OE|-------/ , . . , \ | \ /-+--+ , , \+--+ X | , . . , |OB|-/ \ | , , +--+-\ \+--+ , . . , / \ \--|OD|--- , , /-----/ +--+ +--+ , . . , / |OC|/ , , +--+ , . ., ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, , . Actual Physical View +----+ , , +--+ | | , . , /|OF| | R2 | , , +----+ +--++--+ /+----+ , . , | | |OA| \ /-----/ / / , , | R1 |---+--+--\ +--+/ / / , . , +----+\ | \ \-|OE|-------/ / , , / \ | \ /-+--+ / , . , / \+--+ X | / , , / |OB|-/ \ | +----+ , . , / +--+-\ \+--+ | | , , / / \ \--|OD|---| R4 | , . , +----+ /-----/ +--+ +--+ +----+ , , | |/ |OC|/ , . , | R3 | +--+ , , +----+ , .,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, Figure 2: Packet and Optical Topology Abstractions In this use case, the Packet/Optical Coordinator needs to set up an optimal underlying path for an IP link between R1 and R2. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 9] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 As depicted in Figure 2, the Packet/Optical Coordinator has only an "abstracted view" of the physical network, and it does not know the feasibility or the cost of the possible optical paths (e.g., VP1-VP4 and VP2-VP5), which depend on the current status of the physical resources within the optical network and on vendor-specific optical attributes. The Packet/Optical Coordinator can request the underlying Optical Domain Controller to compute a set of potential optimal paths, taking into account optical constraints. Then, based on its own constraints, policy and knowledge (e.g. cost of the access links), it can choose which one of these potential paths to use to set up the optimal end- to-end path crossing optical network. ............................ : : O VP1 VP4 O cost=10 /:\ /:\ cost=10 / : \----------------------/ : \ +----+ / : cost=50 : \ +----+ | |/ : : \| | | R1 | : : | R2 | | |\ : : /| | +----+ \ : /--------------------\ : / +----+ \ : / cost=55 \ : / cost=5 \:/ \:/ cost=5 O VP2 VP5 O : : :..........................: Figure 3: Packet/Optical Integration path computation example For example, in Figure 3, the Packet/Optical Coordinator can request the Optical Domain Controller to compute the paths between VP1-VP4 and VP2-VP5 and then decide to set up the optimal end-to-end path using the VP2-VP5 optical path even if this is not the optimal path from the optical domain perspective. Considering the dynamicity of the connectivity constraints of an optical domain, it is possible that a path computed by the Optical Domain Controller when requested by the Packet/Optical Coordinator is no longer valid/available when the Packet/Optical Coordinator requests it to be set up. This is further discussed in Section 3.3. 2.2. Multi-domain TE networks In this use case there are two TE domains which are interconnected together by multiple inter-domains links. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 10] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 A possible example could be a multi-domain optical network. +--------------+ | Multi-Domain | | Controller | +---+------+---+ | | +------------+ | | +-----------+ +------V-----+ | | | | | TE Domain | +------V-----+ | Controller | | | | 1 | | TE Domain | +------+-----+ | Controller | | | 2 | | +------+-----+ .........V.......... | : : | +-----+ : | | | : .........V.......... | X | : : : | | +-----+ +-----+ : +-----+ | | | | : : | C |------| E | : +-----+ +-----+ /| | | |\ +-----+ +-----+ | | | |/ +-----+ +-----+ \| | | | | A |----| B | : : | G |----| H | | | | |\ : : /| | | | +-----+ +-----+ \+-----+ +-----+/ +-----+ +-----+ : | | | | : : | D |------| F | : : | | | | +-----+ : +-----+ +-----+ | | : : : | Y | : : : | | : TE domain 1 : : TE domain 2 +-----+ :..................: :.................: Figure 4: Multi-domain multi-link interconnection Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 11] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 In order to set up an end-to-end multi-domain TE path (e.g., between nodes A and H), the Multi-Domain Controller needs to know the feasibility or the cost of the possible TE paths within the two TE domains, which depend on the current status of the physical resources within each TE domain. This is more challenging in case of optical networks because the optimal paths depend also on vendor-specific optical attributes (which may be different in the two domains if they are provided by different vendors). In order to set up a multi-domain TE path (e.g., between nodes A and H), the Multi-Domain Controller can request the TE Domain Controllers to compute a set of intra-domain optimal paths and take decisions based on the information received. For example: * The Multi-Domain Controller asks TE Domain Controllers to provide set of paths between A-C, A-D, E-H and F-H * TE Domain Controllers return a set of feasible paths with the associated costs: the path A-C is not part of this set (in optical networks, it is typical to have some paths not being feasible due to optical constraints that are known only by the Optical Domain Controller) * The Multi-Domain Controller will select the path A-D-F-H since it is the only feasible multi-domain path and then request the TE Domain Controllers to set up the A-D and F-H intra-domain paths * If there are multiple feasible paths, the Multi-Domain Controller can select the optimal path knowing the cost of the intra-domain paths (provided by the TE domain controllers) and the cost of the inter-domain links (known by the Multi-Domain Controller) This approach may have some scalability issues when the number of TE domains is quite big (e.g. 20). In this case, it would be worthwhile using the abstract TE topology information provided by the TE Domain Controllers to limit the number of potential optimal end-to-end paths and then request path computation from fewer TE Domain Controllers in order to decide what the optimal path within this limited set is. For more details, see Section 3.2.3. 2.3. Data Center Interconnections In these use case, there is a TE domain which is used to provide connectivity between Data Centers which are connected with the TE domain using access links. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 12] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 +--------------+ | Cloud Network| | Orchestrator | +--------------+ | | | | +-------------+ | | +------------------------+ | | +------------------+ | | +--------V---+ | | | | | | | | | TE Network | | | +------V-----+ | Controller | +------V-----+ | | DC | +------------+ | DC | | | Controller | | | Controller | | +------------+ | +-----+ +------------+ | | ....V...| |........ | | | : | P | : | | .....V..... : /+-----+\ : .....V..... | : : +-----+ / | \ +-----+ : : | : DC1 || : | |/ | \| | : DC2 || : | : ||||----| PE1 | | | PE2 |---- |||| : | : _|||||| : | |\ | /| | : _|||||| : | : : +-----+ \ +-----+ / +-----+ : : | :.........: : \| |/ : :.........: | :.......| PE3 |.......: | | | | +-----+ +---------V--+ .....|..... | DC | : : | Controller | : DC3 || : +------------+ : |||| : | : _|||||| <------------------+ : : :.........: Figure 5: Data Center Interconnection use case In this use case, there is the need to transfer data from Data Center 1 (DC1) to either DC2 or DC3 (e.g. workload migration). The optimal decision depends both on the cost of the TE path (DC1-DC2 or DC1-DC3) and of the Data Center resources within DC2 or DC3. The Cloud Network Orchestrator needs to make a decision for optimal connection based on TE network constraints and Data Center resources. It may not be able to make this decision because it has only an abstract view of the TE network (as in Section 2.1). Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 13] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 The Cloud Network Orchestrator can request to the TE Network Controller to compute the cost of the possible TE paths (e.g., DC1- DC2 and DC1-DC3) and to the DC Controller to provide the information it needs about the required Data Center resources within DC2 and DC3 and then it can take the decision about the optimal solution based on this information and its policy. 2.4. Backward Recursive Path Computation scenario [RFC5441] has defined the Virtual Source Path Tree (VSPT) TLV within PCE Reply Object in order to compute inter-domain paths following a "Backward Recursive Path Computation" (BRPC) method. The main principle is to forward the PCE request message up to the destination domain. Then, each PCE involved in the computation will compute its part of the path and send it back to the requester through PCE Response message. The resulting computation is spread from destination PCE to source PCE. Each PCE is in charge of merging the path it received with the one it calculated. At the end, the source PCE merges its local part of the path with the received one to achieve the end-to-end path. Figure 6 below show a typical BRPC scenario where 3 PCEs cooperate to compute inter-domain paths. +----------------+ +----------------+ | Domain (B) | | Domain (C) | | | | | | /-------|---PCEP---|--------\ | | / | | \ | | (PCE) | | - (PCE) | | / <----------> |D| | | / | Inter | - | +---|----^-------+ Domain +----------------+ | | Link PCEP | | | Inter-domain Link | | +---|----v-------+ | | | | | Domain (A) | | \ | | (PCE) - | | |S| | | - | +----------------+ Figure 6: BRPC Scenario Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 14] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 In this use case, a client can use the YANG data model defined in this document to request path computation from the PCE that controls the source of the tunnel. For example, a client can request to the PCE of domain A to compute a path from a source S, within domain A, to a destination D, within domain C. Then PCE of domain A will use PCEP protocol, as per [RFC5441], to compute the path from S to D and in turn gives the final answer to the requester. 2.5. Hierarchical PCE scenario [RFC6805] has defined an architecture and extensions to the PCE standard to compute inter-domain path following a hierarchical method. Two new roles have been defined: parent PCE and child PCE. The parent PCE is in charge to coordinate the end-to-end path computation. For that purpose it sends to each child PCE involved in the multi-domain path computation a PCE Request message to obtain the local part of the path. Once received all answer through PCE Response message, the parent PCE will merge the different local parts of the path to achieve the end-to-end path. Figure 7 below shows a typical hierarchical scenario where a parent PCE request end-to-end path to the different child PCE. Note that a PCE could take independently the role of child or parent PCE depending of which PCE will request the path. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 15] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 ----------------------------------------------------------------- | Domain 5 | | ----- | | |PCE 5| | | ----- | | | | ---------------- ---------------- ---------------- | | | Domain 1 | | Domain 2 | | Domain 3 | | | | | | | | | | | | ----- | | ----- | | ----- | | | | |PCE 1| | | |PCE 2| | | |PCE 3| | | | | ----- | | ----- | | ----- | | | | | | | | | | | | ----| |---- ----| |---- | | | | |BN11+---+BN21| |BN23+---+BN31| | | | | - ----| |---- ----| |---- - | | | | |S| | | | | |D| | | | | - ----| |---- ----| |---- - | | | | |BN12+---+BN22| |BN24+---+BN32| | | | | ----| |---- ----| |---- | | | | | | | | | | | | ---- | | | | ---- | | | | |BN13| | | | | |BN33| | | | -----------+---- ---------------- ----+----------- | | \ / | | \ ---------------- / | | \ | | / | | \ |---- ----| / | | ----+BN41| |BN42+---- | | |---- ----| | | | | | | | ----- | | | | |PCE 4| | | | | ----- | | | | | | | | Domain 4 | | | ---------------- | | | ----------------------------------------------------------------- Figure 7: Hierarchical domain topology from RFC6805 In this use case, a client can use the YANG data model defined in this document to request to the parent PCE a path from a source S to a destination D. The parent PCE will in turn contact the child PCEs through PCEP protocol to compute the end-to-end path and then return the computed path to the client, using the YANG data model defined in this document. For example the YANG data model can be used to Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 16] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 request to PCE5 acting as parent PCE to compute a path from source S, within domain 1, to destination D, within domain 3. PCE5 will contact child PCEs of domain 1, 2 and 3 to obtain local part of the end-to-end path through the PCEP protocol. Once received the PCE Response message, it merges the answers to compute the end-to-end path and send it back to the client. 3. Motivations This section provides the motivation for the YANG data model defined in this document. Section 3.1 describes the motivation for a YANG data model to request path computation. Section 3.2 describes the motivation for a YANG data model which complements the TE topology YANG data model defined in [RFC8795]. Section 3.3 describes the motivation for a YANG RPC which complements the TE tunnel YANG data model defined in [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te]. 3.1. Motivation for a YANG Model 3.1.1. Benefits of common data models The YANG data model for requesting path computation is closely aligned with the YANG data models that provide (abstract) TE topology information, i.e., [RFC8795] as well as that are used to configure and manage TE tunnels, i.e., [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te]. There are many benefits in aligning the data model used for path computation requests with the YANG data models used for TE topology information and for TE tunnels configuration and management: * There is no need for an error-prone mapping or correlation of information. * It is possible to use the same endpoint identifiers in path computation requests and in the topology modeling. * The attributes used for path computation constraints are the same as those used when setting up a TE tunnel. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 17] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 3.1.2. Benefits of a single interface The system integration effort is typically lower if a single, consistent interface is used by controllers, i.e., one data modeling language (i.e., YANG) and a common protocol (e.g., NETCONF or RESTCONF). Practical benefits of using a single, consistent interface include: 1. Simple authentication and authorization: The interface between different components has to be secured. If different protocols have different security mechanisms, ensuring a common access control model may result in overhead. For instance, there may be a need to deal with different security mechanisms, e.g., different credentials or keys. This can result in increased integration effort. 2. Consistency: Keeping data consistent over multiple different interfaces or protocols is not trivial. For instance, the sequence of actions can matter in certain use cases, or transaction semantics could be desired. While ensuring consistency within one protocol can already be challenging, it is typically cumbersome to achieve that across different protocols. 3. Testing: System integration requires comprehensive testing, including corner cases. The more different technologies are involved, the more difficult it is to run comprehensive test cases and ensure proper integration. 4. Middle-box friendliness: Provider and consumer of path computation requests may be located in different networks, and middle-boxes such as firewalls, NATs, or load balancers may be deployed. In such environments it is simpler to deploy a single protocol. Also, it may be easier to debug connectivity problems. 5. Tooling reuse: Implementers may want to implement path computation requests with tools and libraries that already exist in controllers and/or orchestrators, e.g., leveraging the rapidly growing eco-system for YANG tooling. 3.1.3. Extensibility Path computation is only a subset of the typical functionality of a controller. In many use cases, issuing path computation requests comes along with the need to access other functionality on the same system. In addition to obtaining TE topology, for instance also configuration of services (set-up/modification/deletion) may be required, as well as: Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 18] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 1. Receiving notifications for topology changes as well as integration with fault management 2. Performance management such as retrieving monitoring and telemetry data 3. Service assurance, e.g., by triggering OAM functionality 4. Other fulfilment and provisioning actions beyond tunnels and services, such as changing QoS configurations YANG is a very extensible and flexible data modeling language that can be used for all these use cases. 3.2. Interactions with TE topology The use cases described in Section 2 have been described assuming that the topology view exported by each underlying controller to its client is aggregated using the "virtual node model", defined in [RFC7926]. TE topology information, e.g., as provided by [RFC8795], could in theory be used by an underlying controller to provide TE information to its client thus allowing a PCE available within its client to perform multi-domain path computation on its own, without requesting path computations to the underlying controllers. In case the client does not implement a PCE function, as discussed in Section 1, it could not perform path computation based on TE topology information and would instead need to request path computation from the underlying controllers to get the information it needs to find the optimal end-to-end path. In case the client implements a PCE function, as discussed in Section 1, the TE topology information needs to be complete and accurate, which would bring to scalability issues. Using TE topology to provide a "virtual link model" aggregation, as described in [RFC7926], may be insufficient, unless the aggregation provides complete and accurate information, which would still cause scalability issues, as described in Section 3.2.1 below. Using TE topology abstraction, as described in [RFC7926], may lead to compute an unfeasible path, as described in [RFC7926] in Section 3.2.2 below. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 19] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 Therefore when computing an optimal multi-domain path, there is a scalability trade-off between providing complete and accurate TE information and the number of path computation requests to the underlying controllers. The TE topology information used, in a complimentary way, to reduce the number for path computation requests to the underlying controllers, are described in Section 3.2.3 below. 3.2.1. TE topology aggregation Using the TE topology model, as defined in [RFC8795], the underlying controller can export the whole TE domain as a single TE node with a "detailed connectivity matrix" (which provides specific TE attributes, such as delay, Shared Risk Link Groups (SRLGs) and other TE metrics, between each ingress and egress links). The information provided by the "detailed connectivity matrix" would be equivalent to the information that should be provided by "virtual link model" as defined in [RFC7926]. For example, in the Packet/Optical Integration use case, described in Section 2.1, the Optical Domain Controller can make the information shown in Figure 3 available to the Packet/Optical Coordinator as part of the TE topology information and the Packet/Optical Coordinator could use this information to calculate on its own the optimal path between R1 and R2, without requesting any additional information to the Optical Domain Controller. However, when designing the amount of information to provide within the "detailed connectivity matrix", there is a tradeoff to be considered between accuracy (i.e., providing "all" the information that might be needed by the PCE available within the client) and scalability. Figure 8 below shows another example, similar to Figure 3, where there are two possible Optical paths between VP1 and VP4 with different properties (e.g., available bandwidth and cost). Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 20] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 ............................ : /--------------------\ : : / cost=65 \ : :/ available-bw=10G \: O VP1 VP4 O cost=10 /:\ /:\ cost=10 / : \----------------------/ : \ +----+ / : cost=50 : \ +----+ | |/ : available-bw=2G : \| | | R1 | : : | R2 | | |\ : : /| | +----+ \ : /--------------------\ : / +----+ \ : / cost=55 \ : / cost=5 \:/ available-bw=3G \:/ cost=5 O VP2 VP5 O : : :..........................: Figure 8: Packet/Optical Integration path computation Example with multiple choices If the information in the "detailed connectivity matrix" is not complete/accurate, we can have the following drawbacks: * If only the VP1-VP4 path with available bandwidth of 2 Gb/s and cost 50 is reported, the client's PCE will fail to compute a 5 Gb/ s path between routers R1 and R2, although this would be feasible; * If only the VP1-VP4 path with available bandwidth of 10 Gb/s and cost 60 is reported, the client's PCE will compute, as optimal, the 1 Gb/s path between R1 and R2 going through the VP2-VP5 path within the optical domain while the optimal path would actually be the one going thought the VP1-VP4 sub-path (with cost 50) within the optical domain. Reporting all the information, as in Figure 8, using the "detailed connectivity matrix", is quite challenging from a scalability perspective. The amount of this information is not just based on number of end points (which would scale as N-square), but also on many other parameters, including client rate, user constraints/ policies for the service, e.g. max latency < N ms, max cost, etc., exclusion policies to route around busy links, min Optical Signal to Noise Ratio (OSNR) margin, max pre-Forward Error Correction (FEC) Bit Error Rate (BER) etc. All these constraints could be different based on connectivity requirements. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 21] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 It is also worth noting that the "connectivity matrix" has been originally defined in Wavelength Switched Optical Networks (WSON), [RFC7446], to report the connectivity constrains of a physical node within the Wavelength Division Multiplexing (WDM) network: the information it contains is pretty "static" and therefore, once taken and stored in the TE data base, it can be always being considered valid and up-to-date in path computation request. The "connectivity matrix" is sometimes confused with "optical reach table" that contain multiple (e.g. k-shortest) regen-free reachable paths for every A-Z node combination in the network. Optical reach tables can be calculated offline, utilizing vendor optical design and planning tools, and periodically uploaded to the Controller: these optical path reach tables are fairly static. However, to get the connectivity matrix, between any two sites, either a regen free path can be used, if one is available, or multiple regen free paths are concatenated to get from the source to the destination, which can be a very large combination. Additionally, when the optical path within optical domain needs to be computed, it can result in different paths based on input objective, constraints, and network conditions. In summary, even though "optical reach table" is fairly static, which regen free paths to build the connectivity matrix between any source and destination is very dynamic, and is done using very sophisticated routing algorithms. Using the "basic connectivity matrix" with an abstract node to abstract the information regarding the connectivity constraints of an Optical domain, would make this information more "dynamic" since the connectivity constraints of an optical domain can change over time because some optical paths that are feasible at a given time may become unfeasible at a later time when e.g., another optical path is established. The information in the "detailed connectivity matrix" is even more dynamic since the establishment of another optical path may change some of the parameters (e.g., delay or available bandwidth) in the "detailed connectivity matrix" while not changing the feasibility of the path. There is therefore the need to keep the information in the "detailed connectivity matrix" updated which means that there another tradeoff between the accuracy (i.e., providing "all" the information that might be needed by the client's PCE) and having up-to-date information. The more the information is provided and the longer it takes to keep it up-to-date which increases the likelihood that the client's PCE computes paths using not updated information. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 22] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 It seems therefore quite challenging to have a "detailed connectivity matrix" that provides accurate, scalable and updated information to allow the client's PCE to take optimal decisions by its own. Considering the example in Figure 8 with the approach defined in this document, the client, when it needs to set up an end-to-end path, it can request the Optical Domain Controller to compute a set of optimal paths (e.g., for VP1-VP4 and VP2-VP5) and take decisions based on the information received: * When setting up a 5 Gb/s path between routers R1 and R2, the Optical Domain Controller may report only the VP1-VP4 path as the only feasible path: the Packet/Optical Coordinator can successfully set up the end-to-end path passing though this optical path; * When setting up a 1 Gb/s path between routers R1 and R2, the Optical Domain Controller (knowing that the path requires only 1 Gb/s) can report both the VP1-VP4 path, with cost 50, and the VP2- VP5 path, with cost 65. The Packet/Optical Coordinator can then compute the optimal path which is passing thought the VP1-VP4 sub- path (with cost 50) within the optical domain. 3.2.2. TE topology abstraction Using the TE topology model, as defined in [RFC8795], the underlying controller can export to its client an abstract TE topology, composed by a set of TE nodes and TE links, representing the abstract view of the topology under its control. For example, in the multi-domain TE network use case, described in Section 2.2, the TE Domain Controller 1 can export a TE topology encompassing the TE nodes A, B, C and D and the TE links interconnecting them. In a similar way, the TE Domain Controller 2 can export a TE topology encompassing the TE nodes E, F, G and H and the TE links interconnecting them. In this example, for simplicity reasons, each abstract TE node maps with each physical node, but this is not necessary. In order to set up a multi-domain TE path (e.g., between nodes A and H), the Multi-Domain Controller can compute by its own an optimal end-to-end path based on the abstract TE topology information provided by the domain controllers. For example: Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 23] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 * Multi-Domain Controller can compute, based on its own TED data, the optimal multi-domain path being A-B-C-E-G-H, and then request the TE Domain Controllers to set up the A-B-C and E-G-H intra- domain paths * But, during path set-up, the TE Domain Controller may find out that A-B-C intra-domain path is not feasible (as discussed in Section 2.2, in optical networks it is typical to have some paths not being feasible due to optical constraints that are known only by the Optical Domain Controller), while only the path A-B-D is feasible * So what the Multi-Domain Controller has computed is not good and it needs to re-start the path computation from scratch As discussed in Section 3.2.1, providing more extensive abstract information from the TE Domain Controllers to the Multi-Domain Controller may lead to scalability problems. In a sense this is similar to the problem of routing and wavelength assignment within an optical domain. It is possible to do first routing (step 1) and then wavelength assignment (step 2), but the chances of ending up with a good path is low. Alternatively, it is possible to do combined routing and wavelength assignment, which is known to be a more optimal and effective way for optical path set-up. Similarly, it is possible to first compute an abstract end-to-end path within the Multi- Domain Controller (step 1) and then compute an intra-domain path within each optical domain (step 2), but there are more chances not to find a path or to get a suboptimal path than by performing multiple per-domain path computations and then stitching them together. 3.2.3. Complementary use of the TE topology As discussed in Section 2.2, there are some scalability issues with path computation requests in a multi-domain TE network with many TE domains, in terms of the number of requests to send to the TE Domain Controllers. It would therefore be worthwhile using the abstract TE topology information provided by the TE Domain Controllers to limit the number of requests. An example can be described considering the multi-domain abstract TE topology shown in Figure 9. In this example, an end-to-end TE path between domains A and F needs to be set up. The transit TE domain should be selected between domains B, C, D and E. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 24] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 .........B......... : _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ : :/ \: +---O NOT FEASIBLE O---+ cost=5| : : | ......A...... | :.................: | ......F...... : : | | : : : O-----+ .........C......... +-----O : : : : /-------------\ : : : : : :/ \: : : : cost<=20 O---------O cost <= 30 O---------O cost<=20 : : /: cost=5 : : cost=5 :\ : : /------/ : :.................: : \------\ : : / : : \ : :/ cost<=25 : .........D......... : cost<=25 \: O-----------O-------+ : /-------------\ : +-------O-----------O :\ : cost=5| :/ \: |cost=5 : /: : \ : +-O cost <= 30 O-+ : / : : \------\ : : : : /------/ : : cost>=30 \: :.................: :/ cost>=30 : : O-----+ +-----O : :...........: | .........E......... | :...........: | : /-------------\ : | cost=5| :/ \: |cost=5 +---O cost >= 30 O---+ : : :.................: Figure 9: Multi-domain with many domains (Topology information) The actual cost of each intra-domain path is not known a priori from the abstract topology information. The Multi-Domain Controller only knows, from the TE topology provided by the underlying domain controllers, the feasibility of some intra-domain paths and some upper-bound and/or lower-bound cost information. With this information, together with the cost of inter-domain links, the Multi- Domain Controller can understand by its own that: * Domain B cannot be selected as the path connecting domains A and F is not feasible; * Domain E cannot be selected as a transit domain since it is known from the abstract topology information provided by domain controllers that the cost of the multi-domain path A-E-F (which is 100, in the best case) will be always be higher than the cost of the multi-domain paths A-D-F (which is 90, in the worst case) and A-C-F (which is 80, in the worst case). Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 25] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 Therefore, the Multi-Domain Controller can understand by its own that the optimal multi-domain path could be either A-D-F or A-C-F but it cannot know which one of the two possible option actually provides the optimal end-to-end path. The Multi-Domain Controller can therefore request path computation only to the TE Domain Controllers A, D, C and F (and not to all the possible TE Domain Controllers). .........B......... : : +---O O---+ ......A...... | :.................: | ......F...... : : | | : : : O-----+ .........C......... +-----O : : : : /-------------\ : : : : : :/ \: : : : cost=15 O---------O cost = 25 O---------O cost=10 : : /: cost=5 : : cost=5 :\ : : /------/ : :.................: : \------\ : : / : : \ : :/ cost=10 : .........D......... : cost=15 \: O-----------O-------+ : /-------------\ : +-------O-----------O : : cost=5| :/ \: |cost=5 : : : : +-O cost = 15 O-+ : : : : : : : : : : :.................: : : : O-----+ +-----O : :...........: | .........E......... | :...........: | : : | +---O O---+ :.................: Figure 10: Multi-domain with many domains (Path Computation information) Based on these requests, the Multi-Domain Controller can know the actual cost of each intra-domain paths which belongs to potential optimal end-to-end paths, as shown in Figure 10, and then compute the optimal end-to-end path (e.g., A-D-F, having total cost of 50, instead of A-C-F having a total cost of 70). 3.3. Path Computation RPC The TE tunnel YANG data model, defined in [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te], can support the need to request path computation, as described in section 5.1.2 of [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te]. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 26] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 This solution is stateful since the state of each created "compute- only" TE tunnel path needs to be maintained, in the YANG datastores (at least in the running datastore and operational datastore), and updated, when underlying network conditions change. The RPC mechanism allows requesting path computation using a simple atomic operation, without creating any state in the YANG datastores, and it is the natural option/choice, especially with stateless PCE. It is very useful to provide both the options of using an RPC as well as of setting up TE tunnel paths in "compute-only" mode. It is suggested to use the RPC as much as possible and to rely on "compute- only" TE tunnel paths, when really needed. Using the RPC solution would imply that the underlying controller (e.g., a PNC) computes a path twice during the process to set up an LSP: at time T1, when its client (e.g., an MDSC) sends a path computation RPC request to it, and later, at time T2, when the same client (MDSC) creates a TE tunnel requesting the set-up of the LSP. The underlying assumption is that, if network conditions have not changed, the same path that has been computed at time T1 is also computed at time T2 by the underlying controller (e.g. PNC) and therefore the path that is set up at time T2 is exactly the same path that has been computed at time T1. However, since the operation is stateless, there is no guarantee that the returned path would still be available when path set-up is requested: this does not cause major issues when the time between path computation and path set-up is short (especially if compared with the time that would be needed to update the information of a very detailed connectivity matrix). In most of the cases, there is even no need to guarantee that the path that has been set up is the exactly same as the path that has been returned by path computation, especially if it has the same or even better metrics. Depending on the abstraction level applied by the server, the client may also not know the actual computed path. The most important requirement is that the required global objectives (e.g., multi-domain path metrics and constraints) are met. For this reason a path verification phase is always necessary to verify that the actual path that has been set up meets the global objectives (for example in a multi-domain network, the resulting end-to-end path meets the required end-to-end metrics and constraints). In most of the cases, even if the path being set up is not exactly the same as the path returned by path computation, its metrics and constraints are "good enough" and the path verification passes Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 27] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 successfully. In the few corner cases where the path verification fails, it is possible repeat the whole process (path computation, path set-up and path verification). In case it is required to set up at T2 exactly the same path computed at T1, the RPC solution should not be used and, instead, a "compute- only" TE tunnel path should be set up, allowing also notifications in case the computed path has been changed. In this case, at time T1, the client (MDSC) creates a TE tunnel in a compute-only mode in the running datastore and later, at time T2, changes the configuration of that TE tunnel (not to be any more in a compute-only mode) to trigger the set-up of the LSP over the path which have been computed at time T1 and reported in the operational datastore. It is worth noting that also using the "compute-only" TE tunnel path, although increasing the likelihood that the computed path is available at path set-up, does not guarantee that because notifications may not be reliable or delivered on time. Path verification is needed also in this case. The solution based on "compute-only" TE tunnel path has also the following drawbacks: * Several messages required for any path computation * Requires persistent storage in the underlying controller * Need for garbage collection for stranded paths * Process burden to detect changes on the computed paths in order to provide notifications update 3.3.1. Temporary reporting of the computed path state This section describes an optional extension to the stateless behavior of the path computation RPC, where the underlying controller, after having received a path computation RPC request, maintains some "transient state" associated with the computed path, allowing the client to request the set-up of exactly that path, if still available. This is similar to the "compute-only" TE tunnel path solution but, to avoid the drawbacks of the stateful approach, is leveraging the path computation RPC and the separation between configuration and operational datastore, as defined in the NMDA architecture [RFC8342]. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 28] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 The underlying controller, after having computed a path, as requested by a path computation RPC, also creates a TE tunnel instance within the operational datastore, to store that computed path. This would be similar to a "compute-only" TE tunnel path, with the only difference that there is no associated TE tunnel instance within the running datastore. Since the underlying controller stores in the operational datastore the computed path based on an abstract topology it exposes, it also remembers, internally, which is the actual native path (physical path), within its native topology (physical topology), associated with that compute-only TE tunnel instance. Afterwards, the client (e.g., MDSC) can request the set-up of that specific path by creating a TE tunnel instance (not in compute-only mode) in the running datastore using the same tunnel-name of the existing TE tunnel in the operational datastore: this will trigger the underlying controller to set up that path, if still available. There are still cases where the path being set up is not exactly the same as the path that has been computed: * When the tunnel is configured with path constraints which are not compatible with the computed path; * When the tunnel set-up is requested after the resources of the computed path are no longer available; * When the tunnel set-up is requested after the computed path is no longer known (e.g. due to a server reboot) by the underlying controller. In all these cases, the underlying controller should compute and set up a new path. Therefore the "path verification" phase, as described in Section 3.3 above, is always needed to check that the path that has been set up is still "good enough". Since this new approach is not completely stateless, garbage collection is implemented using a timeout that, when it expires, triggers the removal of the computed path from the operational datastore. This operation is fully controlled by the underlying controller without the need for any action to be taken by the client that is not able to act on the operational datastore. The default value of this timeout is 10 minutes but a different value may be configured by the client. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 29] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 In addition, it is possible for the client to tag each path computation request with a transaction-id allowing for a faster removal of all the paths associated with a transaction-id, without waiting for their timers to expire. The underlying controller can remove from the operational datastore all the paths computed with a given transaction-id which have not been set up either when it receives a Path Delete RPC request for that transaction-id or, automatically, right after the set-up up of a path that has been previously computed with that transaction-id. This possibility is useful when multiple paths are computed but, at most, only one is set up (e.g., in multi-domain path computation scenario scenarios). After the selected path has been set up (e.g, in one domain during multi-domain path set-up), all the other alternative computed paths can be automatically deleted by the underlying controller (since no longer needed). The client can also request, using the Path Delete RPC request, the underlying controller to remove all the computed paths, if none of them is going to be set up (e.g., in a transit domain not being selected by multi-domain path computation and so not being automatically deleted). This approach is complimentary and not alternative to the timer which is always needed to avoid stranded computed paths being stored in the operational datastore when no path is set up and no explicit Path Delete RPC request is received. 4. Path computation and optimization for multiple paths There are use cases, where it is advantageous to request path computation for a set of paths, through a network or through a network domain, using a single request [RFC5440]. In this case, sending a single request for multiple path computations, instead of sending multiple requests for each path computation, would reduce the protocol overhead and it would consume less resources (e.g., threads in the client and server). In the context of a typical multi-domain TE network, there could multiple choices for the ingress/egress points of a domain and the Multi-Domain Controller needs to request path computation between all the ingress/egress pairs to select the best pair. For example, in the example of Section 2.2, the Multi-Domain Controller needs to request the TE Network Controller 1 to compute the A-C and the A-D paths and to the TE Network Controller 2 to compute the E-H and the F-H paths. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 30] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 It is also possible that the Multi-Domain Controller receives a request to set up a group of multiple end to end connections. The Multi-Domain Controller needs to request each TE domain Controller to compute multiple paths, one (or more) for each end to end connection. There are also scenarios where it can be needed to request path computation for a set of paths in a synchronized fashion. One example could be computing multiple diverse paths. Computing a set of diverse paths in an unsynchronized fashion, leads to the possibility of not being able to satisfy the diversity requirement. In this case, it is preferable to compute a sub-optimal primary path for which a diversely routed secondary path exists. There are also scenarios where it is needed to request optimizing a set of paths using objective functions that apply to the whole set of paths, see [RFC5541], e.g. to minimize the sum of the costs of all the computed paths in the set. 5. YANG data model for requesting Path Computation This document define a YANG RPC to request path computation as an "augmentation" of tunnel-rpc, defined in [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te]. This model provides the RPC input attributes that are needed to request path computation and the RPC output attributes that are needed to report the computed paths. augment /te:tunnels-path-compute/te:input/te:path-compute-info: +-- path-request* [request-id] | +-- request-id uint32 | ........... augment /te:tunnels-path-compute/te:output/te:path-compute-result: +--ro response* [response-id] +--ro response-id uint32 +--ro computed-paths-properties | +--ro computed-path-properties* [k-index] | +--ro k-index uint8 | +--ro path-properties | ........... This model extensively re-uses the grouping defined in [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te] and [RFC8776] to ensure maximal syntax and semantics commonality. This YANG data model allows one RPC to include multiple path requests, each path request being identified by a request-id. Therefore, one RPC can return multiple responses, one for each path Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 31] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 request, being identified by a response-id equal to the corresponding request-id. Each response reports one or more computed paths, as requested by the k-requested-paths attribute. By default, each response reports one computed path. 5.1. Synchronization of multiple path computation requests The YANG data model permits the synchronization of a set of multiple path requests (identified by specific request-id) all related to a "svec" container emulating the syntax of the Synchronization VECtor (SVEC) PCEP object, defined in [RFC5440]. +-- synchronization* [] +-- svec | +-- relaxable? boolean | +-- disjointness? te-path-disjointness | +-- request-id-number* uint32 +-- svec-constraints | +-- path-metric-bound* [metric-type] | +-- metric-type identityref | +-- upper-bound? uint64 +-- path-srlgs-lists | +-- path-srlgs-list* [usage] | +-- usage identityref | +-- values* srlg +-- path-srlgs-names | +-- path-srlgs-name* [usage] | +-- usage identityref | +-- names* string +-- exclude-objects | +-- excludes* [] | +-- (type)? | +--:(numbered-node-hop) | | +-- numbered-node-hop | | +-- node-id te-node-id | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | +--:(numbered-link-hop) | | +-- numbered-link-hop | | +-- link-tp-id te-tp-id | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | +-- direction? te-link-direction | +--:(unnumbered-link-hop) | | +-- unnumbered-link-hop | | +-- link-tp-id te-tp-id | | +-- node-id te-node-id | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | +-- direction? te-link-direction | +--:(as-number) Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 32] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 | | +-- as-number-hop | | +-- as-number inet:as-number | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | +--:(label) | +-- label-hop | +-- te-label | +-- (technology)? | | +--:(generic) | | +-- generic? | | rt-types:generalized-label | +-- direction? te-label-direction +-- optimizations +-- (algorithm)? +--:(metric) {te-types:path-optimization-metric}? | +-- optimization-metric* [metric-type] | +-- metric-type identityref | +-- weight? uint8 +--:(objective-function) {te-types:path-optimization-objective- function}? +-- objective-function +-- objective-function-type? identityref The model, in addition to the metric types, defined in [RFC8776], which can be applied to each individual path request, supports also additional metric types, which apply to a set of synchronized requests, as referenced in [RFC5541]. These additional metric types are defined by the following YANG identities: * svec-metric-type: base YANG identity from which cumulative metric types identities are derived. * svec-metric-cumul-te: cumulative TE cost metric type, as defined in [RFC5541]. * svec-metric-cumul-igp: cumulative IGP cost metric type, as defined in [RFC5541]. * svec-metric-cumul-hop: cumulative Hop metric type, representing the cumulative version of the Hop metric type defined in [RFC8776]. * svec-metric-aggregate-bandwidth-consumption: aggregate bandwidth consumption metric type, as defined in [RFC5541]. * svec-metric-load-of-the-most-loaded-link: load of the most loaded link metric type, as defined in [RFC5541]. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 33] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 5.2. Returned metric values This YANG data model provides a way to return the values of the metrics computed by the path computation in the output of RPC, together with other important information (e.g. srlg, affinities, explicit route), emulating the syntax of the "C" flag of the "METRIC" PCEP object [RFC5440]: | +--ro path-properties | +--ro path-metric* [metric-type] | | +--ro metric-type identityref | | +--ro accumulative-value? uint64 | +--ro path-affinities-values | | +--ro path-affinities-value* [usage] | | +--ro usage identityref | | +--ro value? admin-groups | +--ro path-affinity-names | | +--ro path-affinity-name* [usage] | | +--ro usage identityref | | +--ro affinity-name* [name] | | +--ro name string | +--ro path-srlgs-lists | | +--ro path-srlgs-list* [usage] | | +--ro usage identityref | | +--ro values* srlg | +--ro path-srlgs-names | | +--ro path-srlgs-name* [usage] | | +--ro usage identityref | | +--ro names* string | +--ro path-route-objects | ........... | +--ro te-bandwidth | | +--ro (technology)? | | +--:(generic) | | +--ro generic? te-bandwidth | +--ro disjointness-type? | te-types:te-path-disjointness It also allows the client to request which information (metrics, srlg and/or affinities) should be returned: | +-- request-id uint32 | ........... | +-- requested-metrics* [metric-type] | | +-- metric-type identityref | +-- return-srlgs? boolean | +-- return-affinities? boolean | ........... Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 34] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 This feature is essential for path computation in a multi-domain TE network as described in Section 2.2. In this case, the metrics returned by a path computation requested to a given underlying controller must be used by the client to compute the best end-to-end path. If they are missing, the client cannot compare different paths calculated by the underlying controllers and choose the best one for the optimal end-to-end (e2e) path. 5.3. Multiple Paths Requests for the same TE tunnel The YANG data model allows including multiple requests for different paths intended to be used within the same tunnel or within different tunnels. When multiple requested paths are intended to be used within the same tunnel (e.g., requesting path computation for the primary and secondary paths of a protected tunnel), the set of attributes that are intended to be configured on per-tunnel basis rather than on per- path basis are common to all these path requests. These attributes includes both attributes which can be configured only a per-tunnel basis (e.g., tunnel-name, source/destination TTP, encoding and switching-type) as well attributes which can be configured both on a per-tunnel and on a per-path basis (e.g., the te-bandwidth or the associations). Therefore, a tunnel-attributes list is defined, within the path computation request RPC: Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 35] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 +-- tunnel-attributes* [tunnel-name] | +-- tunnel-name string | +-- encoding? identityref | +-- switching-type? identityref | +-- source? te-types:te-node-id | +-- destination? te-types:te-node-id | +-- src-tunnel-tp-id? binary | +-- dst-tunnel-tp-id? binary | +-- bidirectional? boolean | +-- association-objects | ........... | +-- protection-type? identityref | +-- restoration-type? identityref | +-- restoration-scheme? identityref | +-- te-topology-identifier | | +-- provider-id? te-global-id | | +-- client-id? te-global-id | | +-- topology-id? te-topology-id | +-- te-bandwidth | | +-- (technology)? | | +--:(generic) | | +-- generic? te-bandwidth | +-- link-protection? identityref | +-- setup-priority? uint8 | +-- hold-priority? uint8 | +-- signaling-type? identityref | +-- hierarchy | +-- dependency-tunnels | ............ | +-- hierarchical-link | ............ The path requests that are intended to be used within the same tunnel should reference the same entry in the tunnel-attributes list. This allows: * avoiding repeating the same set of per-tunnel parameters on multiple requested paths; * the server to understand what attributes are intended to be configured on a per-tunnel basis (e.g., the te-bandwidth configured in the tunnel-attributes) and what attributes are intended to be configured on a per-path basis(e.g., the te- bandwidth configured in the path-request). This could be useful especially when the server also creates a TE tunnel instance within the operational datastore to report the computed paths, as described in Section 3.3.1: in this case, the tunnel-name is also used as the suggested name for that TE tunnel instance. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 36] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 The YANG data model allows also including requests for paths intended to modify existing tunnels (e.g., adding a protection path for an existing un-protected tunnel). In this case, the per- tunnel attributes are already provided in an existing TE tunnel instance and do not need to be re-configured in the path computation request RPC. Therefore, these requests should reference an existing TE tunnel instance. It is also possible to request computing paths without indicating in which tunnel they are intended to be used (e.g., in case of an unprotected tunnel). In this case, the per-tunnel attributes could be provided together with the per-path attributes in the path request, without using the tunnel-attributes list. The choices below are defined to distinguish the cases above: * whether the per-tunnel attributes are configured by reference (providing a leafref), to: - either a TE tunnel instance, if it exists; - or to an entry of the tunnel-attributes list, if the TE tunnel instance does not exist; * or by value, providing the set of tunnel attributes within the path request: | +-- (tunnel-attributes)? | | +--:(reference) | | | +-- tunnel-reference | | | +-- (tunnel-exist)? | | | | +--:(tunnel-ref) | | | | | +-- tunnel-ref te:tunnel-ref | | | | +--:(tunnel-attributes-ref) | | | | +-- tunnel-attributes-ref leafref | | | +-- path-name? string | | | +-- (path-role) | | | +--:(primary-path) | | | ........... | | +--:(value) | | +-- tunnel-name? string | | ........... | | +-- encoding? identityref | | +-- switching-type? identityref | | ........... Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 37] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 5.3.1. Tunnel attributes specified by value The (value) case provides the set of attributes that are configured only on per-tunnel basis (e.g., tunnel-name, source/destination TTP, encoding and switching-type). In this case, it is assumed that the requested path will be the only path within a tunnel. If the requested path is a transit segment of a multi-domain end-to- end path, it can be of any type (primary, secondary, reverse-primary or reverse-secondary), as specified by the (path-role) choice: | | +-- (path-role)? | | | +--:(primary-path) | | | +--:(secondary-path) | | | | +-- secondary-path! | | | | +-- primary-path-name? string | | | +--:(primary-reverse-path) | | | | +-- primary-reverse-path! | | | | +-- primary-path-name? string | | | +--:(secondary-reverse-path) | | | +-- secondary-reverse-path | | | +-- primary-path-name? string | | | +-- primary-reverse-path-name? string | | ........... In all the other cases, the requested path can only be a primary path. The secondary-path, the primary-reverse-path and the secondary- reverse-path are presence container used to indicate the role of the path: by default, the path is assumed to be a primary path. They optionally can contain the name of the primary-path under which the requested path could be associated within the YANG tree structure defined in [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te], which could be useful when the server also creates a TE tunnel instance within the operational datastore to report the computed paths, as described in Section 3.3.1: in this case, the tunnel-name and the path names are also used as the suggested name for that TE tunnel and path instances. 5.3.2. Tunnel attributes specified by reference The (reference) case provides the information needed to associate multiple path requests that are intended to be used within the same tunnel. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 38] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 In order to indicate the role of the path being requested within the intended tunnel (e.g., primary or secondary path), the (path-role) choice is defined: | | | +-- (path-role) | | | +--:(primary-path) | | | | +-- primary-path! | | | | ........... | | | +--:(secondary-path) | | | | +-- secondary-path | | | | ........... | | | +--:(primary-reverse-path) | | | | +-- primary-reverse-path | | | | ........... | | | +--:(secondary-reverse-path) | | | +-- secondary-reverse-path | | | +-- preference? uint8 | | | +-- protection-type? identityref | | | +-- restoration-type? identityref | | | +-- restoration-scheme? identityref | | | +-- primary-reverse-path-ref* [] | | | +-- (primary-reverse-path-exist)? | | | +--:(path-ref) | | | | +-- primary-path-ref leafref | | | +--:(path-request-ref) | | | +-- path-request-ref leafref The primary-path is a presence container used to indicate that the requested path is intended to be used as a primary path. It can also contain some attributes which are configured only on primary paths (e.g., the k-requested-paths). The secondary-path container indicates that the requested path is intended to be used as a secondary path and it contains at least references to one or more primary paths which can use it as a candidate secondary path: | | | | +-- secondary-path | | | | ........... | | | | +-- primary-path-ref* [] | | | | +-- (primary-path-exist)? | | | | +--:(path-ref) | | | | | +-- primary-path-ref leafref | | | | +--:(path-request-ref) | | | | +-- path-request-ref leafref Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 39] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 A requested secondary path can reference any requested primary paths, and, in case they are intended to be used within an existing TE tunnel, it could also reference any existing primary-paths. The secondary-path container can also contain some attributes which are configured only on secondary paths (e.g., the protection-type). The primary-reverse-path container indicates that the requested path is intended to be used as a primary reverse path and it contains only the reference to the primary path which is intended to use it as a reverse path: | | | | +-- primary-reverse-path | | | | +-- (primary-path-exist)? | | | | +--:(path-ref) | | | | | +-- primary-path-ref leafref | | | | +--:(path-request-ref) | | | | +-- path-request-ref leafref A requested primary reverse path can reference either a requested primary path, or, in case it is intended to be used within an existing TE tunnel, an existing primary-path. The secondary-reverse-path container indicates that the requested path is intended to be used as a secondary reverse path and it contains at least references to one or more primary paths, whose primary reverse path can use it as a candidate secondary reverse path: | | | +-- secondary-reverse-path | | | ........... | | | +-- primary-reverse-path-ref* [] | | | +-- (primary-reverse-path-exist)? | | | +--:(path-ref) | | | | +-- primary-path-ref leafref | | | +--:(path-request-ref) | | | +-- path-request-ref leafref A requested secondary reverse path can reference any requested primary paths, and, in case they are intended to be used within an existing TE tunnel, it could reference also existing primary-paths. The secondary-reverse-path container can also contain some attributes which are configured only on secondary reverse paths (e.g., the protection-type). Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 40] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 In case the requested path is a transit segment of a multi-domain end-to-end path, the primary-path may not be needed to be setup/ computed. However, the request for path computation of a secondary- path or a primary-reverse or of a secondary-reverse-path requires that the primary-path exists or it is requested within the same RPC request. In the latter case, the path request for the primary-path should have an empty ERO to indicate to the server that path computation is not requested and no path properties will therefore be returned in the RPC response. 5.4. Multi-Layer Path Computation The models supports requesting multi-layer path computation following the same approach based on dependency tunnels, as defined in [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te]. The tunnel-attributes of a given client-layer path request can reference server-layer TE tunnels which can already exist in the YANG datastore or be specified in the tunnel-attributes list, within the same RPC request: | +-- dependency-tunnels | | +-- dependency-tunnel* [name] | | | +-- name -> /te:te/tunnels/tunnel/name | | | +-- encoding? identityref | | | +-- switching-type? identityref | | +-- dependency-tunnel-attributes* [name] | | +-- name leafref | | +-- encoding? identityref | | +-- switching-type? identityref In a similar way as in [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te], the server-layer tunnel attributes should provide the information of what would be the dynamic link in the client layer topology supported by that tunnel, if instantiated: | +-- hierarchical-link | +-- local-te-node-id? te-types:te-node-id | +-- local-te-link-tp-id? te-types:te-tp-id | +-- remote-te-node-id? te-types:te-node-id | +-- te-topology-identifier | +-- provider-id? te-global-id | +-- client-id? te-global-id | +-- topology-id? te-topology-id Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 41] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 It is worth noting that since path computation RPC is stateless, the dynamic hierarchical links configured for the server-layer tunnel attributes cannot be used for path computation of any client-layer path unless explicitly referenced in the dependency-tunnel-attributes list within the same RPC request. 6. YANG data model for TE path computation 6.1. Tree diagram Figure 11 below shows the tree diagram of the YANG data model defined in module ietf-te-path-computation.yang, defined in Section 6.2. module: ietf-te-path-computation augment /te:tunnels-path-compute/te:input/te:path-compute-info: +-- path-request* [request-id] | +-- request-id uint32 | +-- (tunnel-attributes)? | | +--:(reference) | | | +-- tunnel-reference | | | +-- (tunnel-exist)? | | | | +--:(tunnel-ref) | | | | | +-- tunnel-ref te:tunnel-ref | | | | +--:(tunnel-attributes-ref) | | | | +-- tunnel-attributes-ref leafref | | | +-- path-name? string | | | +-- (path-role) | | | +--:(primary-path) | | | | +-- primary-path! | | | | +-- preference? uint8 | | | | +-- k-requested-paths? uint8 | | | +--:(secondary-path) | | | | +-- secondary-path | | | | +-- preference? uint8 | | | | +-- protection-type? identityref | | | | +-- restoration-type? identityref | | | | +-- restoration-scheme? identityref | | | | +-- primary-path-ref* [] | | | | +-- (primary-path-exist)? | | | | +--:(path-ref) | | | | | +-- primary-path-ref leafref | | | | +--:(path-request-ref) | | | | +-- path-request-ref leafref | | | +--:(primary-reverse-path) | | | | +-- primary-reverse-path | | | | +-- (primary-path-exist)? | | | | +--:(path-ref) Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 42] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 | | | | | +-- primary-path-ref leafref | | | | +--:(path-request-ref) | | | | +-- path-request-ref leafref | | | +--:(secondary-reverse-path) | | | +-- secondary-reverse-path | | | +-- preference? uint8 | | | +-- protection-type? identityref | | | +-- restoration-type? identityref | | | +-- restoration-scheme? identityref | | | +-- primary-reverse-path-ref* [] | | | +-- (primary-reverse-path-exist)? | | | +--:(path-ref) | | | | +-- primary-path-ref leafref | | | +--:(path-request-ref) | | | +-- path-request-ref leafref | | +--:(value) | | +-- tunnel-name? string | | +-- path-name? string | | +-- (path-role)? | | | +--:(primary-path) | | | +--:(secondary-path) | | | | +-- secondary-path! | | | | +-- primary-path-name? string | | | +--:(primary-reverse-path) | | | | +-- primary-reverse-path! | | | | +-- primary-path-name? string | | | +--:(secondary-reverse-path) | | | +-- secondary-reverse-path! | | | +-- primary-path-name? string | | | +-- primary-reverse-path-name? string | | +-- k-requested-paths? uint8 | | +-- encoding? identityref | | +-- switching-type? identityref | | +-- source? te-types:te-node-id | | +-- destination? te-types:te-node-id | | +-- src-tunnel-tp-id? binary | | +-- dst-tunnel-tp-id? binary | | +-- bidirectional? boolean | | +-- te-topology-identifier | | +-- provider-id? te-global-id | | +-- client-id? te-global-id | | +-- topology-id? te-topology-id | +-- association-objects | | +-- association-object* [association-key] | | | +-- association-key string | | | +-- type? identityref | | | +-- id? uint16 | | | +-- source Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 43] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 | | | +-- id? te-gen-node-id | | | +-- type? enumeration | | +-- association-object-extended* [association-key] | | +-- association-key string | | +-- type? identityref | | +-- id? uint16 | | +-- source | | | +-- id? te-gen-node-id | | | +-- type? enumeration | | +-- global-source? uint32 | | +-- extended-id? yang:hex-string | +-- optimizations | | +-- (algorithm)? | | +--:(metric) {path-optimization-metric}? | | | +-- optimization-metric* [metric-type] | | | | +-- metric-type identityref | | | | +-- weight? uint8 | | | | +-- explicit-route-exclude-objects | | | | | +-- route-object-exclude-object* [index] | | | | | +-- index uint32 | | | | | +-- (type)? | | | | | +--:(numbered-node-hop) | | | | | | +-- numbered-node-hop | | | | | | +-- node-id te-node-id | | | | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | | | | +--:(numbered-link-hop) | | | | | | +-- numbered-link-hop | | | | | | +-- link-tp-id te-tp-id | | | | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | | | | | +-- direction? te-link-direction | | | | | +--:(unnumbered-link-hop) | | | | | | +-- unnumbered-link-hop | | | | | | +-- link-tp-id te-tp-id | | | | | | +-- node-id te-node-id | | | | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | | | | | +-- direction? te-link-direction | | | | | +--:(as-number) | | | | | | +-- as-number-hop | | | | | | +-- as-number inet:as-number | | | | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | | | | +--:(label) | | | | | | +-- label-hop | | | | | | +-- te-label | | | | | | +-- (technology)? | | | | | | | +--:(generic) | | | | | | | +-- generic? | | | | | | | rt-types:generalized-label | | | | | | +-- direction? Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 44] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 | | | | | | te-label-direction | | | | | +--:(srlg) | | | | | +-- srlg | | | | | +-- srlg? uint32 | | | | +-- explicit-route-include-objects | | | | +-- route-object-include-object* [index] | | | | +-- index uint32 | | | | +-- (type)? | | | | +--:(numbered-node-hop) | | | | | +-- numbered-node-hop | | | | | +-- node-id te-node-id | | | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | | | +--:(numbered-link-hop) | | | | | +-- numbered-link-hop | | | | | +-- link-tp-id te-tp-id | | | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | | | | +-- direction? te-link-direction | | | | +--:(unnumbered-link-hop) | | | | | +-- unnumbered-link-hop | | | | | +-- link-tp-id te-tp-id | | | | | +-- node-id te-node-id | | | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | | | | +-- direction? te-link-direction | | | | +--:(as-number) | | | | | +-- as-number-hop | | | | | +-- as-number inet:as-number | | | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | | | +--:(label) | | | | +-- label-hop | | | | +-- te-label | | | | +-- (technology)? | | | | | +--:(generic) | | | | | +-- generic? | | | | | rt-types:generalized-label | | | | +-- direction? | | | | te-label-direction | | | +-- tiebreakers | | | +-- tiebreaker* [tiebreaker-type] | | | +-- tiebreaker-type identityref | | +--:(objective-function) | | {path-optimization-objective-function}? | | +-- objective-function | | +-- objective-function-type? identityref | +-- named-path-constraint? leafref | | {te-types:named-path-constraints}? | +-- te-bandwidth | | +-- (technology)? | | +--:(generic) Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 45] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 | | +-- generic? te-bandwidth | +-- link-protection? identityref | +-- setup-priority? uint8 | +-- hold-priority? uint8 | +-- signaling-type? identityref | +-- path-metric-bounds | | +-- path-metric-bound* [metric-type] | | +-- metric-type identityref | | +-- upper-bound? uint64 | +-- path-affinities-values | | +-- path-affinities-value* [usage] | | +-- usage identityref | | +-- value? admin-groups | +-- path-affinity-names | | +-- path-affinity-name* [usage] | | +-- usage identityref | | +-- affinity-name* [name] | | +-- name string | +-- path-srlgs-lists | | +-- path-srlgs-list* [usage] | | +-- usage identityref | | +-- values* srlg | +-- path-srlgs-names | | +-- path-srlgs-name* [usage] | | +-- usage identityref | | +-- names* string | +-- disjointness? te-path-disjointness | +-- explicit-route-objects-always | | +-- route-object-exclude-always* [index] | | | +-- index uint32 | | | +-- (type)? | | | +--:(numbered-node-hop) | | | | +-- numbered-node-hop | | | | +-- node-id te-node-id | | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | | +--:(numbered-link-hop) | | | | +-- numbered-link-hop | | | | +-- link-tp-id te-tp-id | | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | | | +-- direction? te-link-direction | | | +--:(unnumbered-link-hop) | | | | +-- unnumbered-link-hop | | | | +-- link-tp-id te-tp-id | | | | +-- node-id te-node-id | | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | | | +-- direction? te-link-direction | | | +--:(as-number) | | | | +-- as-number-hop Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 46] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 | | | | +-- as-number inet:as-number | | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | | +--:(label) | | | +-- label-hop | | | +-- te-label | | | +-- (technology)? | | | | +--:(generic) | | | | +-- generic? | | | | rt-types:generalized-label | | | +-- direction? te-label-direction | | +-- route-object-include-exclude* [index] | | +-- explicit-route-usage? identityref | | +-- index uint32 | | +-- (type)? | | +--:(numbered-node-hop) | | | +-- numbered-node-hop | | | +-- node-id te-node-id | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | +--:(numbered-link-hop) | | | +-- numbered-link-hop | | | +-- link-tp-id te-tp-id | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | | +-- direction? te-link-direction | | +--:(unnumbered-link-hop) | | | +-- unnumbered-link-hop | | | +-- link-tp-id te-tp-id | | | +-- node-id te-node-id | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | | +-- direction? te-link-direction | | +--:(as-number) | | | +-- as-number-hop | | | +-- as-number inet:as-number | | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | +--:(label) | | | +-- label-hop | | | +-- te-label | | | +-- (technology)? | | | | +--:(generic) | | | | +-- generic? | | | | rt-types:generalized-label | | | +-- direction? te-label-direction | | +--:(srlg) | | +-- srlg | | +-- srlg? uint32 | +-- path-in-segment! | | +-- label-restrictions | | +-- label-restriction* [index] | | +-- restriction? enumeration Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 47] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 | | +-- index uint32 | | +-- label-start | | | +-- te-label | | | +-- (technology)? | | | | +--:(generic) | | | | +-- generic? rt-types:generalized-label | | | +-- direction? te-label-direction | | +-- label-end | | | +-- te-label | | | +-- (technology)? | | | | +--:(generic) | | | | +-- generic? rt-types:generalized-label | | | +-- direction? te-label-direction | | +-- label-step | | | +-- (technology)? | | | +--:(generic) | | | +-- generic? int32 | | +-- range-bitmap? yang:hex-string | +-- path-out-segment! | | +-- label-restrictions | | +-- label-restriction* [index] | | +-- restriction? enumeration | | +-- index uint32 | | +-- label-start | | | +-- te-label | | | +-- (technology)? | | | | +--:(generic) | | | | +-- generic? rt-types:generalized-label | | | +-- direction? te-label-direction | | +-- label-end | | | +-- te-label | | | +-- (technology)? | | | | +--:(generic) | | | | +-- generic? rt-types:generalized-label | | | +-- direction? te-label-direction | | +-- label-step | | | +-- (technology)? | | | +--:(generic) | | | +-- generic? int32 | | +-- range-bitmap? yang:hex-string | +-- requested-metrics* [metric-type] | | +-- metric-type identityref | +-- return-srlgs? boolean | +-- return-affinities? boolean | +-- requested-state! | +-- timer? uint16 | +-- transaction-id? string +-- tunnel-attributes* [tunnel-name] Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 48] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 | +-- tunnel-name string | +-- encoding? identityref | +-- switching-type? identityref | +-- source? te-types:te-node-id | +-- destination? te-types:te-node-id | +-- src-tunnel-tp-id? binary | +-- dst-tunnel-tp-id? binary | +-- bidirectional? boolean | +-- association-objects | | +-- association-object* [association-key] | | | +-- association-key string | | | +-- type? identityref | | | +-- id? uint16 | | | +-- source | | | +-- id? te-gen-node-id | | | +-- type? enumeration | | +-- association-object-extended* [association-key] | | +-- association-key string | | +-- type? identityref | | +-- id? uint16 | | +-- source | | | +-- id? te-gen-node-id | | | +-- type? enumeration | | +-- global-source? uint32 | | +-- extended-id? yang:hex-string | +-- protection-type? identityref | +-- restoration-type? identityref | +-- restoration-scheme? identityref | +-- te-topology-identifier | | +-- provider-id? te-global-id | | +-- client-id? te-global-id | | +-- topology-id? te-topology-id | +-- te-bandwidth | | +-- (technology)? | | +--:(generic) | | +-- generic? te-bandwidth | +-- link-protection? identityref | +-- setup-priority? uint8 | +-- hold-priority? uint8 | +-- signaling-type? identityref | +-- hierarchy | +-- dependency-tunnels | | +-- dependency-tunnel* [name] | | | +-- name -> /te:te/tunnels/tunnel/name | | | +-- encoding? identityref | | | +-- switching-type? identityref | | +-- dependency-tunnel-attributes* [name] | | +-- name leafref Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 49] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 | | +-- encoding? identityref | | +-- switching-type? identityref | +-- hierarchical-link | +-- local-te-node-id? te-types:te-node-id | +-- local-te-link-tp-id? te-types:te-tp-id | +-- remote-te-node-id? te-types:te-node-id | +-- te-topology-identifier | +-- provider-id? te-global-id | +-- client-id? te-global-id | +-- topology-id? te-topology-id +-- synchronization* [] +-- svec | +-- relaxable? boolean | +-- disjointness? te-path-disjointness | +-- request-id-number* uint32 +-- svec-constraints | +-- path-metric-bound* [metric-type] | +-- metric-type identityref | +-- upper-bound? uint64 +-- path-srlgs-lists | +-- path-srlgs-list* [usage] | +-- usage identityref | +-- values* srlg +-- path-srlgs-names | +-- path-srlgs-name* [usage] | +-- usage identityref | +-- names* string +-- exclude-objects | +-- excludes* [] | +-- (type)? | +--:(numbered-node-hop) | | +-- numbered-node-hop | | +-- node-id te-node-id | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | +--:(numbered-link-hop) | | +-- numbered-link-hop | | +-- link-tp-id te-tp-id | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | +-- direction? te-link-direction | +--:(unnumbered-link-hop) | | +-- unnumbered-link-hop | | +-- link-tp-id te-tp-id | | +-- node-id te-node-id | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | | +-- direction? te-link-direction | +--:(as-number) | | +-- as-number-hop | | +-- as-number inet:as-number Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 50] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 | | +-- hop-type? te-hop-type | +--:(label) | +-- label-hop | +-- te-label | +-- (technology)? | | +--:(generic) | | +-- generic? | | rt-types:generalized-label | +-- direction? te-label-direction +-- optimizations +-- (algorithm)? +--:(metric) {te-types:path-optimization-metric}? | +-- optimization-metric* [metric-type] | +-- metric-type identityref | +-- weight? uint8 +--:(objective-function) {te-types:path-optimization-objective-function}? +-- objective-function +-- objective-function-type? identityref augment /te:tunnels-path-compute/te:output/te:path-compute-result: +--ro response* [response-id] +--ro response-id uint32 +--ro computed-paths-properties | +--ro computed-path-properties* [k-index] | +--ro k-index uint8 | +--ro path-properties | +--ro path-metric* [metric-type] | | +--ro metric-type identityref | | +--ro accumulative-value? uint64 | +--ro path-affinities-values | | +--ro path-affinities-value* [usage] | | +--ro usage identityref | | +--ro value? admin-groups | +--ro path-affinity-names | | +--ro path-affinity-name* [usage] | | +--ro usage identityref | | +--ro affinity-name* [name] | | +--ro name string | +--ro path-srlgs-lists | | +--ro path-srlgs-list* [usage] | | +--ro usage identityref | | +--ro values* srlg | +--ro path-srlgs-names | | +--ro path-srlgs-name* [usage] | | +--ro usage identityref | | +--ro names* string | +--ro path-route-objects | | +--ro path-route-object* [index] Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 51] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 | | +--ro index uint32 | | +--ro (type)? | | +--:(numbered-node-hop) | | | +--ro numbered-node-hop | | | +--ro node-id te-node-id | | | +--ro hop-type? te-hop-type | | +--:(numbered-link-hop) | | | +--ro numbered-link-hop | | | +--ro link-tp-id te-tp-id | | | +--ro hop-type? te-hop-type | | | +--ro direction? te-link-direction | | +--:(unnumbered-link-hop) | | | +--ro unnumbered-link-hop | | | +--ro link-tp-id te-tp-id | | | +--ro node-id te-node-id | | | +--ro hop-type? te-hop-type | | | +--ro direction? te-link-direction | | +--:(as-number) | | | +--ro as-number-hop | | | +--ro as-number inet:as-number | | | +--ro hop-type? te-hop-type | | +--:(label) | | +--ro label-hop | | +--ro te-label | | +--ro (technology)? | | | +--:(generic) | | | +--ro generic? | | | rt-types:generalized-label | | +--ro direction? | | te-label-direction | +--ro te-bandwidth | | +--ro (technology)? | | +--:(generic) | | +--ro generic? te-bandwidth | +--ro disjointness-type? | te-types:te-path-disjointness +--ro computed-path-error-infos | +--ro computed-path-error-info* [] | +--ro error-description? string | +--ro error-timestamp? yang:date-and-time | +--ro error-reason? identityref +--ro tunnel-ref? te:tunnel-ref +--ro (path-role)? +--:(primary) | +--ro primary-path-ref? leafref +--:(primary-reverse) | +--ro primary-reverse-path-ref? leafref +--:(secondary) Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 52] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 | +--ro secondary-path-ref? leafref +--:(secondary-reverse) +--ro secondary-reverse-path-ref? leafref augment /te:tunnels-actions/te:input/te:tunnel-info/te:filter-type: +--:(path-compute-transactions) +-- path-compute-transaction-id* string augment /te:tunnels-actions/te:output: +--ro path-computed-delete-result +--ro path-compute-transaction-id* string Figure 11: TE path computation tree diagram 6.2. YANG module file "ietf-te-path-computation@2022-01-24.yang" module ietf-te-path-computation { yang-version 1.1; namespace "urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-te-path-computation"; prefix te-pc; import ietf-te { prefix te; reference "RFCYYYY: A YANG Data Model for Traffic Engineering Tunnels and Interfaces"; } /* Note: The RFC Editor will replace YYYY with the number assigned to the RFC once draft-ietf-teas-yang-te becomes an RFC.*/ import ietf-te-types { prefix te-types; reference "RFC8776: Common YANG Data Types for Traffic Engineering."; } organization "Traffic Engineering Architecture and Signaling (TEAS) Working Group"; contact "WG Web: WG List: Editor: Italo Busi Editor: Sergio Belotti Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 53] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 Editor: Victor Lopez Editor: Oscar Gonzalez de Dios Editor: Anurag Sharma Editor: Yan Shi Editor: Ricard Vilalta Editor: Karthik Sethuraman Editor: Michael Scharf Editor: Daniele Ceccarelli "; description "This module defines a YANG data model for requesting Traffic Engineering (TE) path computation. The YANG model defined in this document is based on RPCs augmenting the RPCs defined in the generic TE module (ietf-te). The model fully conforms to the Network Management Datastore Architecture (NMDA). Copyright (c) 2022 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 (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info). This version of this YANG module is part of RFC XXXX; see the RFC itself for full legal notices."; // RFC Ed.: replace XXXX with actual RFC number and remove Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 54] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 // this note // replace the revision date with the module publication date // the format is (year-month-day) revision 2022-01-24 { description "Initial revision"; reference "RFC XXXX: A YANG Data Model for requesting path computation"; } // RFC Ed.: replace XXXX with actual RFC number and remove // this note /* * Identities */ identity svec-metric-type { description "Base identity for SVEC metric type."; reference "RFC5541: Encoding of Objective Functions in the Path Computation Element Communication Protocol (PCEP)."; } identity svec-metric-cumul-te { base svec-metric-type; description "Cumulative TE cost."; reference "RFC5541: Encoding of Objective Functions in the Path Computation Element Communication Protocol (PCEP)."; } identity svec-metric-cumul-igp { base svec-metric-type; description "Cumulative IGP cost."; reference "RFC5541: Encoding of Objective Functions in the Path Computation Element Communication Protocol (PCEP)."; } identity svec-metric-cumul-hop { base svec-metric-type; description "Cumulative Hop path metric."; Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 55] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 reference "RFC8776: Common YANG Data Types for Traffic Engineering."; } identity svec-metric-aggregate-bandwidth-consumption { base svec-metric-type; description "Aggregate bandwidth consumption."; reference "RFC5541: Encoding of Objective Functions in the Path Computation Element Communication Protocol (PCEP)."; } identity svec-metric-load-of-the-most-loaded-link { base svec-metric-type; description "Load of the most loaded link."; reference "RFC5541: Encoding of Objective Functions in the Path Computation Element Communication Protocol (PCEP)."; } identity tunnel-action-path-compute-delete { base te:tunnel-actions-type; description "Action type to delete the transient states of computed paths, as described in section 3.3.1 of RFC XXXX."; reference "RFC XXXX: A YANG Data Model for requesting path computation"; } /* * Groupings */ grouping protection-restoration-properties { description "This grouping defines the restoration and protection types for a path in the path computation request."; leaf protection-type { type identityref { base te-types:lsp-protection-type; } default "te-types:lsp-protection-unprotected"; description "LSP protection type."; } Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 56] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 leaf restoration-type { type identityref { base te-types:lsp-restoration-type; } default "te-types:lsp-restoration-restore-any"; description "LSP restoration type."; } leaf restoration-scheme { type identityref { base te-types:restoration-scheme-type; } default "te-types:restoration-scheme-preconfigured"; description "LSP restoration scheme."; } } // grouping protection-restoration-properties grouping requested-info { description "This grouping defines the information (e.g., metrics) which is requested, in the path computation request, to be returned in the path computation response."; list requested-metrics { key "metric-type"; description "The list of the requested metrics. The metrics listed here must be returned in the response. Returning other metrics in the response is optional."; leaf metric-type { type identityref { base te-types:path-metric-type; } description "The metric that must be returned in the response"; } } leaf return-srlgs { type boolean; default "false"; description "If true, path srlgs must be returned in the response. If false, returning path srlgs in the response optional."; } leaf return-affinities { type boolean; default "false"; description Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 57] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 "If true, path affinities must be returned in the response. If false, returning path affinities in the response is optional."; } } // grouping requested-info grouping requested-state { description "Configuration for the transient state used to report the computed path"; container requested-state { presence "Request temporary reporting of the computed path state"; description "Configures attributes for the temporary reporting of the computed path state (e.g., expiration timer)."; leaf timer { type uint16; units "minutes"; default "10"; description "The timeout after which the transient state reporting the computed path should be removed."; } leaf transaction-id { type string; description "The transaction-id associated with this path computation to be used for fast deletion of the transient states associated with multiple path computations. This transaction-id can be used to explicitly delete all the transient states of all the computed paths associated with the same transaction-id. When one path associated with a transaction-id is setup, the transient states of all the other computed paths with the same transaction-id are automatically removed. If not specified, the transient state is removed only when the timer expires (when the timer is specified) or not created at all (stateless path computation, when the timer is not specified)."; } } } // grouping requested-state grouping reported-state { Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 58] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 description "This grouping defines the information, returned in the path computation response, reporting the transient state related to the computed path"; leaf tunnel-ref { type te:tunnel-ref; description " Reference to the tunnel that reports the transient state of the computed path. If no transient state is created, this attribute is omitted. "; } choice path-role { description "The transient state of the computed path can be reported as a primary, primary-reverse, secondary or a secondary-reverse path of a te-tunnel"; case primary { leaf primary-path-ref { type leafref { path "/te:te/te:tunnels/" + "te:tunnel[te:name=current()/../tunnel-ref]/" + "te:primary-paths/te:primary-path/" + "te:name"; } must '../tunnel-ref' { description "The primary-path name can only be reported if also the tunnel name is reported."; } description " Reference to the primary-path that reports the transient state of the computed path. If no transient state is created, this attribute is omitted. "; } } // case primary case primary-reverse { leaf primary-reverse-path-ref { type leafref { path "/te:te/te:tunnels/" + "te:tunnel[te:name=current()/../tunnel-ref]/" Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 59] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 + "te:primary-paths/te:primary-path/" + "te:name"; } must '../tunnel-ref' { description "The primary-reverse-path name can only be reported if also the tunnel name is reported."; } description " Reference to the primary-reverse-path that reports the transient state of the computed path. If no transient state is created, this attribute is omitted. "; } } // case primary-reverse case secondary { leaf secondary-path-ref { type leafref { path "/te:te/te:tunnels/" + "te:tunnel[te:name=current()/../tunnel-ref]/" + "te:secondary-paths/te:secondary-path/" + "te:name"; } must '../tunnel-ref' { description "The secondary-path name can only be reported if also the tunnel name is reported."; } description " Reference to the secondary-path that reports the transient state of the computed path. If no transient state is created, this attribute is omitted. "; } } // case secondary case secondary-reverse { leaf secondary-reverse-path-ref { type leafref { path "/te:te/te:tunnels/" + "te:tunnel[te:name=current()/../tunnel-ref]/" + "te:secondary-reverse-paths/" + "te:secondary-reverse-path/te:name"; Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 60] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 } must '../tunnel-ref' { description "The secondary-reverse-path name can only be reported if also the tunnel name is reported."; } description " Reference to the secondary-reverse-path that reports the transient state of the computed path. If no transient state is created, this attribute is omitted. "; } } // case secondary } // choice path } // grouping reported-state grouping synchronization-constraints { description "Global constraints applicable to synchronized path computation requests."; container svec-constraints { description "global svec constraints"; list path-metric-bound { key "metric-type"; description "list of bound metrics"; leaf metric-type { type identityref { base svec-metric-type; } description "SVEC metric type."; reference "RFC5541: Encoding of Objective Functions in the Path Computation Element Communication Protocol (PCEP)."; } leaf upper-bound { type uint64; description "Upper bound on SVEC metric"; } } } uses te-types:generic-path-srlgs; Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 61] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 container exclude-objects { description "Resources to be excluded"; list excludes { description "List of Explicit Route Objects to always exclude from synchronized path computation"; uses te-types:explicit-route-hop; } } } // grouping synchronization-constraints grouping synchronization-optimization { description "Optimizations applicable to synchronized path computation requests."; container optimizations { description "The objective function container that includes attributes to impose when computing a synchronized set of paths"; choice algorithm { description "Optimizations algorithm."; case metric { if-feature "te-types:path-optimization-metric"; list optimization-metric { key "metric-type"; description "svec path metric type"; leaf metric-type { type identityref { base svec-metric-type; } description "TE path metric type usable for computing a set of synchronized requests"; } leaf weight { type uint8; description "Metric normalization weight"; } } } case objective-function { if-feature "te-types:path-optimization-objective-function"; container objective-function { Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 62] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 description "The objective function container that includes attributes to impose when computing a TE path"; leaf objective-function-type { type identityref { base te-types:objective-function-type; } default "te-types:of-minimize-cost-path"; description "Objective function entry"; } } } } } } // grouping synchronization-optimization grouping synchronization-info { description "Information for synchronized path computation requests."; list synchronization { description "List of Synchronization VECtors."; container svec { description "Synchronization VECtor"; leaf relaxable { type boolean; default "true"; description "If this leaf is true, path computation process is free to ignore svec content. Otherwise, it must take into account this svec."; } uses te-types:generic-path-disjointness; leaf-list request-id-number { type uint32; description "This list reports the set of path computation requests that must be synchronized."; } } uses synchronization-constraints; uses synchronization-optimization; } } // grouping synchronization-info /* Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 63] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 * Augment TE RPCs */ augment "/te:tunnels-path-compute/te:input/te:path-compute-info" { description "Path Computation RPC input"; list path-request { key "request-id"; description "The list of the requested paths to be computed"; leaf request-id { type uint32; mandatory true; description "Each path computation request is uniquely identified within the RPC request by the request-id-number."; } choice tunnel-attributes { default "value"; description "Whether the tunnel attributes are specified by value within this path computation request or by reference. The reference could be either to an existing te-tunnel or to an entry in the tunnel-attributes list"; case reference { container tunnel-reference { description "Attributes for a requested path that belongs to either an exiting te-tunnel or to an entry in the tunnel-attributes list."; choice tunnel-exist { description "Whether the tunnel reference is to an existing te-tunnel or to an entry in the tunnel-attributes list"; case tunnel-ref { leaf tunnel-ref { type te:tunnel-ref; mandatory true; description "The referenced te-tunnel instance"; } } // case tunnel-ref case tunnel-attributes-ref { leaf tunnel-attributes-ref { type leafref { path "/te:tunnels-path-compute/" + "te:path-compute-info/" Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 64] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 + "te-pc:tunnel-attributes/te-pc:tunnel-name"; } mandatory true; description "The referenced te-tunnel instance"; } } // case tunnel-attributes-ref } // choice tunnel-exist leaf path-name { type string; description "TE path name."; } choice path-role { mandatory true; description "Whether this path is a primary, or a reverse primary, or a secondary, or a reverse secondary path."; case primary-path { container primary-path { presence "Indicates that the requested path is a primary path"; description "TE primary path"; uses te:path-preference; uses te:k-requested-paths; } // container primary-path } // case primary-path case secondary-path { container secondary-path { description "TE secondary path"; uses te:path-preference; uses protection-restoration-properties; list primary-path-ref { min-elements 1; description "The list of primary paths that reference this path as a candidate secondary path"; choice primary-path-exist { description "Whether the path reference is to an existing te-tunnel path or to another path request"; case path-ref { leaf primary-path-ref { type leafref { path "/te:te/te:tunnels/te:tunnel" Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 65] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 + "[te:name=current()/../../../" + "tunnel-ref]/te:primary-paths/" + "te:primary-path/te:name"; } must '../../../tunnel-ref' { description "The primary-path can be referenced if also the tunnel is referenced."; } mandatory true; description "The referenced primary path"; } } // case path-ref case path-request-ref { leaf path-request-ref { type leafref { path "/te:tunnels-path-compute/" + "te:path-compute-info/" + "te-pc:path-request/" + "te-pc:request-id"; } mandatory true; description "The referenced primary path request"; } } // case path-request-ref } // choice primary-path-exist } // list primary-path-ref } // container secondary-path } // case secondary-path case primary-reverse-path { container primary-reverse-path { description "TE primary reverse path"; choice primary-path-exist { description "Whether the path reference to the primary paths for which this path is the reverse-path is to an existing te-tunnel path or to another path request."; case path-ref { leaf primary-path-ref { type leafref { path "/te:te/te:tunnels/te:tunnel[te:name" + "=current()/../../tunnel-ref]/" + "te:primary-paths/te:primary-path/" + "te:name"; Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 66] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 } must '../../tunnel-ref' { description "The primary-path can be referenced if also the tunnel is referenced."; } mandatory true; description "The referenced primary path"; } } // case path-ref case path-request-ref { leaf path-request-ref { type leafref { path "/te:tunnels-path-compute/" + "te:path-compute-info/" + "te-pc:path-request/" + "te-pc:request-id"; } mandatory true; description "The referenced primary path request"; } } // case path-request-ref } // choice primary-path-exist } // container primary-reverse-path } // case primary-reverse-path case secondary-reverse-path { container secondary-reverse-path { description "TE secondary reverse path"; uses te:path-preference; uses protection-restoration-properties; list primary-reverse-path-ref { min-elements 1; description "The list of primary reverse paths that reference this path as a candidate secondary reverse path"; choice primary-reverse-path-exist { description "Whether the path reference is to an existing te-tunnel path or to another path request"; case path-ref { leaf primary-path-ref { type leafref { path "/te:te/te:tunnels/te:tunnel" + "[te:name=current()/../../../" Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 67] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 + "tunnel-ref]/te:primary-paths/" + "te:primary-path/te:name"; } must '../../../tunnel-ref' { description "The primary-path can be referenced if also the tunnel is referenced."; } mandatory true; description "The referenced primary path"; } } // case path-ref case path-request-ref { leaf path-request-ref { type leafref { path "/te:tunnels-path-compute/" + "te:path-compute-info/" + "te-pc:path-request/" + "te-pc:request-id"; } mandatory true; description "The referenced primary reverse path request"; } } // case path-request-ref } // choice primary-reverse-path-exist } // list primary-reverse-path-ref } // container secondary-reverse-path } // case secondary-reverse-path } // choice tunnel-path-role } } // case reference case value { leaf tunnel-name { type string; description "TE tunnel name."; } leaf path-name { type string; description "TE path name."; } choice path-role { when 'not (./source) and not (./destination) and not (./src-tunnel-tp-id) and Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 68] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 not (./dst-tunnel-tp-id)' { description "When the tunnel attributes are specified by value within this path computation, it is assumed that the requested path will be the only path of a tunnel. If the requested path is a transit segment path, it could be of any type. Otherwise it could only be a primary path."; } default primary-path; description "Indicates whether the requested path is a primary path, a secondary path, a reverse primary path or a reverse secondary path."; case primary-path { description "The requested path is a primary path."; } container secondary-path { presence "Indicates that the requested path is a secondary path."; description "The name of the primary path which the requested primary reverse path belongs to."; leaf primary-path-name { type string; description "TE primary path name."; } } // container secondary-path container primary-reverse-path { presence "Indicates that the requested path is a primary reverse path."; description "The name of the primary path which the requested primary reverse path belongs to."; leaf primary-path-name { type string; description "TE primary path name."; } } // container primary-reverse-path container secondary-reverse-path { presence "Indicates that the requested path is a secondary Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 69] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 reverse path."; description "The names of the primary path and of the primary reverse path which the requested secondary reverse path belongs to."; leaf primary-path-name { type string; description "TE primary path name."; } leaf primary-reverse-path-name { type string; description "TE primary reverse path name."; } } // container primary-reverse-path } // choice path-role uses te:k-requested-paths; uses te:encoding-and-switching-type; uses te:tunnel-common-attributes; uses te-types:te-topology-identifier; } // case value } // choice tunnel-attributes uses te:path-compute-info; uses requested-info; uses requested-state; } list tunnel-attributes { key "tunnel-name"; description "Tunnel attributes common to multiple request paths"; leaf tunnel-name { type string; description "TE tunnel name."; } uses te:encoding-and-switching-type; uses te:tunnel-common-attributes; uses te:tunnel-associations-properties; uses protection-restoration-properties; uses te-types:tunnel-constraints; uses te:tunnel-hierarchy-properties { augment "hierarchy/dependency-tunnels" { description "Augment with the list of dependency tunnel requests."; list dependency-tunnel-attributes { key "name"; description Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 70] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 "A tunnel request entry that this tunnel request can potentially depend on."; leaf name { type leafref { path "/te:tunnels-path-compute/" + "te:path-compute-info/te-pc:tunnel-attributes/" + "te-pc:tunnel-name"; } description "Dependency tunnel request name."; } uses te:encoding-and-switching-type; } } } } uses synchronization-info; } // path-compute rpc input augment "/te:tunnels-path-compute/te:output/" + "te:path-compute-result" { description "Path Computation RPC output"; list response { key "response-id"; config false; description "response"; leaf response-id { type uint32; description "The response-id has the same value of the corresponding request-id."; } uses te:path-computation-response; uses reported-state; } } // path-compute rpc output augment "/te:tunnels-actions/te:input/te:tunnel-info/" + "te:filter-type" { description "Augment Tunnels Action RPC input filter types"; case path-compute-transactions { when "derived-from-or-self(../te:action-info/te:action, " + "'tunnel-action-path-compute-delete')"; description "Path Delete Action RPC"; Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 71] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 leaf-list path-compute-transaction-id { type string; description "The list of the transaction-id values of the transient states to be deleted"; } } } // path-delete rpc input augment "/te:tunnels-actions/te:output" { description "Augment Tunnels Action RPC output with path delete result"; container path-computed-delete-result { description "Path Delete RPC output"; leaf-list path-compute-transaction-id { type string; description "The list of the transaction-id values of the transient states that have been successfully deleted"; } } } // path-delete rpc output } Figure 12: TE path computation YANG module 7. Security Considerations This document describes use cases of requesting Path Computation using YANG data models, which could be used at the ABNO Control Interface [RFC7491] and/or between controllers in ACTN [RFC8453]. As such, it does not introduce any new security considerations compared to the ones related to YANG specification, ABNO specification and ACTN Framework defined in [RFC7950], [RFC7491] and [RFC8453]. The YANG module defined in this document is designed to be accessed via the NETCONF protocol [RFC6241] or RESTCONF protocol [RFC8040]. The lowest NETCONF layer is the secure transport layer, and the mandatory-to-implement secure transport is Secure Shell (SSH) [RFC6242]. The lowest RESTCONF layer is HTTPS, and the mandatory-to- implement secure transport is TLS [RFC8446]. The Network Configuration Access Control Model (NACM) [RFC8341] provides the means to restrict access for particular NETCONF or RESTCONF users to a preconfigured subset of all available NETCONF or RESTCONF protocol operations and content. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 72] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 The YANG module defined in this document augments the "tunnels-path- compute" and the "tunnel-actions" RPCs defined in [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te]. The security considerations provided in [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te] are also applicable to the YANG module defined in this document. Some of the RPC operations defined in this YANG module may be considered sensitive or vulnerable in some network environments. It is thus important to control access to these operations. These are the operations and their sensitivity/vulnerability: "te-pc:response/computed-paths-properties": provides the same information provided by the "te:computed-paths-properties" defined in [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te]. The security considerations provided in [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te] for the TE tunnel state apply also to this subtree. "te-pc:response/te-pc:tunnel-ref", "te-pc:response/te-pc:primary- path-ref", "te-pc:response/te-pc:primary-reverse-path-ref", "te- pc:response/te-pc:secondary-path-ref" and "te-pc:response/te- pc:secondary-reverse-path-ref" provides a reference where the same information provided in "te-pc:response/computed-paths-properties" is temporarly stored with the operational datastore (see Section 3.3.1). Therefore access to this information does not provide any additional security issue that the information provided with "te-pc:response/ computed-paths-properties". "/te:tunnels-actions": the YANG model defined in this document augments this action with a new action type that allows deleting the transient states of computed paths (see Section 3.3.1). A malicious use of this action would have no impact on the paths carrying live traffic but it would preclude the client from using the "transient states" to request the set-up of exactly that path, if still available. The security considerations spelled out in the YANG specification [RFC7950] apply for this document as well. 8. IANA Considerations This document registers the following URIs in the "ns" subregistry within the "IETF XML registry" [RFC3688]. URI: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-te-path-computation Registrant Contact: The IESG. XML: N/A, the requested URI is an XML namespace. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 73] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 This document registers a YANG module in the "YANG Module Names" registry [RFC7950]. name: ietf-te-path-computation namespace: urn:ietf:params:xml:ns:yang:ietf-te-path-computation prefix: te-pc reference: this document 9. References 9.1. Normative References [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te] Saad, T., Gandhi, R., Liu, X., Beeram, V. P., Bryskin, I., and O. G. D. Dios, "A YANG Data Model for Traffic Engineering Tunnels, Label Switched Paths and Interfaces", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf-teas-yang-te- 29, 7 February 2022, . [RFC3688] Mealling, M., "The IETF XML Registry", BCP 81, RFC 3688, DOI 10.17487/RFC3688, January 2004, . [RFC5440] Vasseur, JP., Ed. and JL. Le Roux, Ed., "Path Computation Element (PCE) Communication Protocol (PCEP)", RFC 5440, DOI 10.17487/RFC5440, March 2009, . [RFC5441] Vasseur, JP., Ed., Zhang, R., Bitar, N., and JL. Le Roux, "A Backward-Recursive PCE-Based Computation (BRPC) Procedure to Compute Shortest Constrained Inter-Domain Traffic Engineering Label Switched Paths", RFC 5441, DOI 10.17487/RFC5441, April 2009, . [RFC5541] Le Roux, JL., Vasseur, JP., and Y. Lee, "Encoding of Objective Functions in the Path Computation Element Communication Protocol (PCEP)", RFC 5541, DOI 10.17487/RFC5541, June 2009, . [RFC6241] Enns, R., Ed., Bjorklund, M., Ed., Schoenwaelder, J., Ed., and A. Bierman, Ed., "Network Configuration Protocol (NETCONF)", RFC 6241, DOI 10.17487/RFC6241, June 2011, . Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 74] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 [RFC6242] Wasserman, M., "Using the NETCONF Protocol over Secure Shell (SSH)", RFC 6242, DOI 10.17487/RFC6242, June 2011, . [RFC6991] Schoenwaelder, J., Ed., "Common YANG Data Types", RFC 6991, DOI 10.17487/RFC6991, July 2013, . [RFC7926] Farrel, A., Ed., Drake, J., Bitar, N., Swallow, G., Ceccarelli, D., and X. Zhang, "Problem Statement and Architecture for Information Exchange between Interconnected Traffic-Engineered Networks", BCP 206, RFC 7926, DOI 10.17487/RFC7926, July 2016, . [RFC7950] Bjorklund, M., Ed., "The YANG 1.1 Data Modeling Language", RFC 7950, DOI 10.17487/RFC7950, August 2016, . [RFC8040] Bierman, A., Bjorklund, M., and K. Watsen, "RESTCONF Protocol", RFC 8040, DOI 10.17487/RFC8040, January 2017, . [RFC8340] Bjorklund, M. and L. Berger, Ed., "YANG Tree Diagrams", BCP 215, RFC 8340, DOI 10.17487/RFC8340, March 2018, . [RFC8341] Bierman, A. and M. Bjorklund, "Network Configuration Access Control Model", STD 91, RFC 8341, DOI 10.17487/RFC8341, March 2018, . [RFC8446] Rescorla, E., "The Transport Layer Security (TLS) Protocol Version 1.3", RFC 8446, DOI 10.17487/RFC8446, August 2018, . [RFC8776] Saad, T., Gandhi, R., Liu, X., Beeram, V., and I. Bryskin, "Common YANG Data Types for Traffic Engineering", RFC 8776, DOI 10.17487/RFC8776, June 2020, . [RFC8795] Liu, X., Bryskin, I., Beeram, V., Saad, T., Shah, H., and O. Gonzalez de Dios, "YANG Data Model for Traffic Engineering (TE) Topologies", RFC 8795, DOI 10.17487/RFC8795, August 2020, . 9.2. Informative References Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 75] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 [I-D.ietf-ccamp-otn-topo-yang] Zheng, H., Busi, I., Liu, X., Belotti, S., and O. G. D. Dios, "A YANG Data Model for Optical Transport Network Topology", Work in Progress, Internet-Draft, draft-ietf- ccamp-otn-topo-yang-14, 7 March 2022, . [RFC4655] Farrel, A., Vasseur, J.-P., and J. Ash, "A Path Computation Element (PCE)-Based Architecture", RFC 4655, DOI 10.17487/RFC4655, August 2006, . [RFC6805] King, D., Ed. and A. Farrel, Ed., "The Application of the Path Computation Element Architecture to the Determination of a Sequence of Domains in MPLS and GMPLS", RFC 6805, DOI 10.17487/RFC6805, November 2012, . [RFC7446] Lee, Y., Ed., Bernstein, G., Ed., Li, D., and W. Imajuku, "Routing and Wavelength Assignment Information Model for Wavelength Switched Optical Networks", RFC 7446, DOI 10.17487/RFC7446, February 2015, . [RFC7491] King, D. and A. Farrel, "A PCE-Based Architecture for Application-Based Network Operations", RFC 7491, DOI 10.17487/RFC7491, March 2015, . [RFC8342] Bjorklund, M., Schoenwaelder, J., Shafer, P., Watsen, K., and R. Wilton, "Network Management Datastore Architecture (NMDA)", RFC 8342, DOI 10.17487/RFC8342, March 2018, . [RFC8453] Ceccarelli, D., Ed. and Y. Lee, Ed., "Framework for Abstraction and Control of TE Networks (ACTN)", RFC 8453, DOI 10.17487/RFC8453, August 2018, . [RFC8454] Lee, Y., Belotti, S., Dhody, D., Ceccarelli, D., and B. Yoon, "Information Model for Abstraction and Control of TE Networks (ACTN)", RFC 8454, DOI 10.17487/RFC8454, September 2018, . Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 76] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 Appendix A. Examples This section contains examples of use of the model with RESTCONF [RFC8040] and JSON encoding. These examples show how path computation can be requested for the tunnels configuration provided in Appendix A of [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te]. A.1. Basic Path Computation This example uses the path computation RPC defined in this document to request the computation of the path for the tunnel defined in section 13.1 of of [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te]. In this case, the TE Tunnel has only one primary path with no specific constraints. POST /restconf/operations/ietf-te:te:tunnels-path-compute HTTP/1.1 Host: example.com Content-Type: application/yang-data+json { "ietf-te:input": { "path-compute-info": { "ietf-te-path-computation:path-request": [ { "request-id": 1, "tunnel-name": "Example_LSP_Tunnel_A_2", "encoding": "te-types:lsp-encoding-packet", "source": "10.0.0.1", "destination": "10.0.0.4", "bidirectional": "false", "signaling-type": "te-types:path-setup-rsvp" } ] } } } A.2. Path Computation with transient state This example uses the path computation RPC defined in this document to request the computation of the path for the tunnel defined in section 13.1 of of [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te] requesting some transient state to be reported within the operational datastore, as described Section 3.3.1. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 77] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 In this case, the TE Tunnel has only one primary path with no specific constraints. POST /restconf/operations/ietf-te:te:tunnels-path-compute HTTP/1.1 Host: example.com Content-Type: application/yang-data+json { "ietf-te:input": { "path-compute-info": { "ietf-te-path-computation:path-request": [ { "request-id": 2, "tunnel-name": "Example_LSP_Tunnel_A_2", "encoding": "te-types:lsp-encoding-packet", "source": "10.0.0.1", "destination": "10.0.0.4", "bidirectional": "false", "signaling-type": "te-types:path-setup-rsvp", "requested-state": { "transaction-id": "example" } } ] } } } A.3. Path Computation with Global Path Constraint This example uses the path computation RPC defined in this document to request the computation of the path for the tunnel defined in section 13.3 of of [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te]. The 'named path constraint' is created in section 13.2 of [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te] applies to this path computation request. POST /restconf/operations/ietf-te:te:tunnels-path-compute HTTP/1.1 Host: example.com Content-Type: application/yang-data+json Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 78] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 { "ietf-te:input": { "path-compute-info": { "ietf-te-path-computation:path-request": [ { "request-id": 3, "tunnel-name": "Example_LSP_Tunnel_A_4_1", "path-name": "Simple_LSP_1", "encoding": "te-types:lsp-encoding-packet", "source": "10.0.0.1", "destination": "10.0.0.4", "bidirectional": "false", "signaling-type": "path-setup-rsvp", "named-path-constraint": "max-hop-3", "requested-state": {} } ] } } } A.4. Path Computation with Per-tunnel Path Constraint This example uses the path computation RPC defined in this document to request the computation of the path for the tunnel defined in section 13.4 of of [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te], using a per tunnel path constraint. POST /restconf/operations/ietf-te:te:tunnels-path-compute HTTP/1.1 Host: example.com Content-Type: application/yang-data+json Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 79] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 { "ietf-te:input": { "path-compute-info": { "ietf-te-path-computation:path-request": [ { "request-id": 4, "tunnel-name": "Example_LSP_Tunnel_A_4_2", "path-name": "path1", "encoding": "te-types:lsp-encoding-packet", "source": "10.0.0.1", "destination": "10.0.0.4", "bidirectional": "false", "signaling-type": "te-types:path-setup-rsvp", "path-metric-bounds": { "path-metric-bound": [ { "metric-type": "te-types:path-metric-hop", "upper-bound": "3" } ] } } ] } } } A.5. Path Computation result This example reports the output of the path computation RPC request described in Appendix A.4. HTTP/1.1 200 OK Host: example.com Content-Type: application/yang-data+json Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 80] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 { "ietf-te:output": { "path-compute-result": { "ietf-te-path-computation:response": [ { "response-id": 3, "computed-paths-properties": { "computed-path-properties": [ { "k-index": "1", "path-properties": { "path-route-objects": { "path-route-object": [ { "index": "1", "numbered-node-hop": { "node-id": "10.0.0.2" } }, { "index": "2", "numbered-node-hop": { "node-id": "10.0.0.4" } } ] } } } ] }, "tunnel-ref": "Example_LSP_Tunnel_A_4_1", "primary-path-ref": "path1" } ] } } } Acknowledgments The authors would like to thank Igor Bryskin and Xian Zhang for participating in the initial discussions that have triggered this work and providing valuable insights. Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 81] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 The authors would like to thank the authors of the TE tunnel YANG data model [I-D.ietf-teas-yang-te], in particular Igor Bryskin, Vishnu Pavan Beeram, Tarek Saad and Xufeng Liu, for their inputs to the discussions and support in having consistency between the Path Computation and TE tunnel YANG data models. The authors would like to thank Adrian Farrel, Dhruv Dhody, Igor Bryskin, Julien Meuric and Lou Berger for their valuable input to the discussions that has clarified that the path being set up is not necessarily the same as the path that has been previously computed and, in particular to Dhruv Dhody, for his suggestion to describe the need for a path verification phase to check that the actual path being set up meets the required end-to-end metrics and constraints. The authors would like to thank Aihua Guo, Lou Berger, Shaolong Gan, Martin Bjorklund and Tom Petch for their useful comments on how to define XPath statements in YANG RPCs. The authors would like to thank Haomian Zheng, Yanlei Zheng, Tom Petch, Aihua Guo and Martin Bjorklund for their review and valuable comments to this document. Previous versions of document were prepared using 2-Word- v2.0.template.dot. This document was prepared using kramdown. Contributors Victor Lopez Nokia Email: victor.lopez@nokia.com Ricard Vilalta CTTC Email: ricard.vilalta@cttc.es Karthik Sethuraman NEC Email: karthik.sethuraman@necam.com Michael Scharf Nokia Email: michael.scharf@gmail.com Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 82] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 Dieter Beller Nokia Email: dieter.beller@nokia.com Gianmarco Bruno Ericsson Email: gianmarco.bruno@ericsson.com Francesco Lazzeri Ericsson Email: francesco.lazzeri@ericsson.com Young Lee Samsung Electronics Email: younglee.tx@gmail.com Carlo Perocchio Ericsson Email: carlo.perocchio@ericsson.com Olivier Dugeon Orange Labs Email: olivier.dugeon@orange.com Julien Meuric Orange Labs Email: julien.meuric@orange.com Authors' Addresses Italo Busi (editor) Huawei Technologies Email: italo.busi@huawei.com Sergio Belotti (editor) Nokia Email: sergio.belotti@nokia.com Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 83] Internet-Draft Yang for Path Computation March 2022 Oscar Gonzalez de Dios Telefonica Email: oscar.gonzalezdedios@telefonica.com Anurag Sharma Google Email: ansha@google.com Daniele Ceccarelli Ericsson Email: daniele.ceccarelli@ericsson.com Busi, et al. Expires 22 September 2022 [Page 84]