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- Network Working Group J. Moy, Editor
- Request for Comments: 1246 July 1991
-
-
- Experience with the OSPF protocol
-
-
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This memo provides information for the Internet community. It does not
- specify any Internet standard. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
-
-
- Abstract
-
- This is the second of two reports on the OSPF protocol. These reports
- are required by the IAB/IESG in order for an Internet routing protocol
- to advance to Draft Standard Status. OSPF is a TCP/IP routing protocol,
- designed to be used internal to an Autonomous System (in other words,
- OSPF is an Interior Gateway Protocol).
-
- OSPF is currently designated as a Proposed Standard. Version 1 of the
- OSPF protocol was published in RFC 1131. Since then OSPF version 2 has
- been developed. Version 2 has been documented in RFC 1247. The changes
- between version 1 and version 2 of the OSPF protocol are explained in
- Appendix F of RFC 1247. It is OSPF Version 2 that is the subject of this
- report.
-
- This report documents experience with OSPF V2. This includes reports on
- interoperability testing, field experience, simulations and the current
- state of OSPF implementations. It also presents a summary of the OSPF
- Management Information Base (MIB), and a summary of OSPF authentication
- mechanism.
-
- Please send comments to ospf@trantor.umd.edu.
-
-
- 1.0 Introduction
-
- This document addresses, for OSPF V2, the requirements set forth by the
- IAB/IESG for an Internet routing protocol to advance to Draft Standard
- state. This requirements are briefly summarized below. The remaining
- sections of this report document how OSPF V2 satisfies these
- requirements:
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 1]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- o The specification for the routing protocol must be well written such
- that independent, interoperable implementations can be developed
- solely based on the specification. For example, it should be possible
- to develop an interoperable implementation without consulting the
- original developers of the routing protocol.
-
- o A Management Information Base (MIB) must be written for the protocol.
- The MIB must be in the standardization process, but does not need to
- be at the same level of standardization as the routing protocol.
-
- o The security architecture of the protocol must be set forth
- explicitly. The security architecture must include mechanisms for
- authenticating routing messages and may include other forms of
- protection.
-
- o Two or more interoperable implementations must exist. At least two
- must be written independently.
-
- o There must be evidence that all features of the protocol have been
- tested, running between at least two implementations. This must
- include that all of the security features have been demonstrated to
- operate, and that the mechanisms defined in the protocol actually
- provide the intended protection.
-
- o There must be significant operational experience. This must include
- running in a moderate number routers configured in a moderately
- complex topology, and must be part of the operational Internet. All
- significant features of the protocol must be exercised. In the case
- of an Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP), both interior and exterior
- routes must be carried (unless another mechanism is provided for the
- exterior routes). In the case of a Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP),
- it must carry the full complement of exterior routes.
-
- This report is a compilation of information obtained from many people.
- The reader is referred to specific people when more information on a
- subject is available. People references are gathered into Section 10.0,
- in a format similar to that used in [4].
-
-
- 1.1 Acknowledgments
-
- The OSPF protocol has been developed by the OSPF Working Group of the
- Internet Engineering Task Force. Many people have contributed to this
- report. They are listed in Section 10.0 of this report.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 2]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- 2.0 Documentation
-
- Version 1 of the OSPF protocol is documented in RFC 1131 [1]. OSPF
- Version 2, which supersedes Version 1, has been documented in RFC 1247
- [2]. The differences between OSPF Version 1 and Version 2 are relatively
- minor, and are listed in Appendix F of RFC 1247 [2]. All information
- presented in this report concerns OSPF V2 unless explicitly mentioned
- otherwise.
-
- The OSPF protocol was developed by the OSPF Working Group of the
- Internet Engineering Task Force. This Working Group has a mailing list,
- ospf@trantor.umd.edu, where discussions of protocol features and
- operation are held. The OSPF Working Group also meets during the
- quarterly Internet Engineering Task Force conferences. Reports of these
- meeting are published in the IETF's Proceedings. In addition, two
- reports on the OSPF protocol have been presented to the IETF plenary
- (see "Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about OSPFIGP" in [5] and "OSPF
- Update" in [6]).
-
- The OSPF protocol began undergoing field trials in Spring of 1990. A
- mailing list, ospf-tests@seka.cso.uiuc.edu, was formed to discuss how
- the field trials were proceeding. This mailing list is maintained by
- Ross Veach of the University of Illinois [rrv]. Archives of this list
- are also available. There has been quite a bit of discussion on the list
- concerning OSPF/RIP/EGP interaction.
-
- A OSPF V2 Management Information Base has also been developed and
- published in [3]. For more information, see Section 3.0 of this report.
-
- There is a free implementation of OSPF available from the University of
- Maryland. This implementation was written by Rob Coltun [rcoltun].
- Contact Rob for details.
-
-
- 3.0 MIB
-
- An OSPF Management Information Base has been published in RFC 1248 [3].
- The MIB was written by Rob Coltun [rcoltun] and Fred Baker [fbaker]. The
- OSPF MIB appears on the mgmt subtree as SMI standard-mib 13.
-
- The OSPF MIB was originally developed by Rob Coltun of the University of
- Maryland, under contract to Advanced Computer Communications. A subset
- of his proposal was implemented to facilitate their development, and
- represents operational experience of a sort.
-
- The MIB consists of a general variables group and ten tables:
-
- TABLE 1. OSPF MIB Organization
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 3]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- Group Name Description
- ________________________________________________________________
- ospfGeneralGroup General Global Variables
- ospfAreaTable Area Descriptions
- ospfStubAreaTable Default Metrics, by Type of Service
- ospfLsdbTable Link State Database
- ospfAreaRangeTable Address Range Specifications
- ospfHostTable Directly connected Hosts
- ospfIfTable OSPF Interface Variables
- ospfIfMetricTable Interface Metrics, by Type of Service
- ospfVirtIfTable Virtual Links
- ospfNbrTable (Non-virtual) OSPF Neighbors
- ospfVirtNbrTable Virtual OSPF Neighbors
-
-
- As MIBs go, the OSPF MIB is quite large; 105 objects. The following are
- some statistics describing the distribution of the MIB's variables:
-
-
- o 11 define the above Group and Tables
-
- o 10 define the Entry in a Table
-
- o 7 are Counters
-
- o 6 are Gauges
-
- o 68 objects mandated by the OSPF Version 2 Specification
-
- Section D.2 of the OSPF V2 specification [2] lists a set of required
- statistics that an implementation must maintain. These statistics have
- been incorporated into the OSPF MIB. The MIB's thirteen Counters and
- Gauges enable evaluation of the OSPF protocol's performance in an
- operational environment. Most of the remainder of the MIB's variables
- parameterize the many features that OSPF provides the network
- administrator.
-
- For more information on the MIB contact Fred Baker [fbaker].
-
-
- 4.0 Security architecture
-
- In OSPF, all protocol packet exchanges are authenticated. The OSPF
- packet header (which is common to all OSPF packets) contains a 16-bit
- Authentication type field, and 64-bits of Authentication data. Each
- particular OSPF area must run a single authentication scheme, as
- indicated by the Authentication type field. However, authentication keys
- can be configured by the system administrator on a per-network basis.
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 4]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- When an OSPF packet is received from a network, the OSPF router first
- verifies that it indicates the correct Authentication type. The router
- then authenticates the packet, running a verification algorithm using
- the configured authentication key, the 64-bits of Authentication data
- and the rest of the OSPF packet data as input. The precise algorithm
- used is dictated by the Authentication type. Packets failing the
- authentication algorithm are dropped, and the authentication failure is
- noted in a MIB-accessible variable (see [3]).
-
- There are currently few Authentication types in use. The current
- assignments are:
-
- TABLE 2. Current OSPF Authentication types.
-
-
- Type code Algorithm
- ____________________________________________________________________
- 0 No authentication performed.
- 1 Simple (clear) password.
- 2-255 Reserved for assignment by the IANA (iana@isi.edu)
- > 255 Available for local (per-AS) definition.
-
-
- For more information on OSPF's authentication procedures, see Sections
- 8.1, 8.2, and Appendix E of [2].
-
-
- 5.0 Implementations
-
- The are multiple, interoperable implementations of OSPF currently
- available. This section gives a brief overview of the five
- implementations that have participated in at least one round of
- interoperability testing. (For a detailed discussion of OSPF
- interoperability testing, see Section 7.0 of this report.) Other
- implementations do exist, but because of commercial realities (e.g., the
- product is not yet announced) they unfortunately cannot be listed here.
-
- The five implementations that have participated in the OSPF
- interoperability testing are (listed in alphabetical order):
-
-
- o 3com. This implementation was wholly developed by 3com. It has
- participated in all three rounds of interoperability testing. It is
- also the only implementation of OSPF's TOS routing.. The 3com
- implementation consists of approximately 9000 lines of C code,
- including comments but excluding user interface and MIB code.
- Consult Dino Farinacci [dino] for more details.
-
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 5]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- o ACC. This implementation is based on the University of Maryland code.
- It participated in the last two rounds of interoperability testing.
- It also contains the only implementation of (a precursor to) the OSPF
- MIB (see Section 3.0 for details), which it uses for monitoring and
- configuration. The ACC implementation consists of approximately
- 24,000 lines of C code, including its OSPF MIB code. Consult Fred
- Baker [fbaker] for more details.
-
- o Proteon. This implementation was wholly developed by Proteon. It has
- participated in all three rounds of interoperability testing. It is
- also the only implementation that has a significant amount of field
- experience (see Section 6.0 for details). The Proteon implementation
- consists of approximately 9500 lines of C code, including comments
- but excluding user interface code. Consult John Moy [jmoy] for more
- details.
-
- o Wellfleet. This implementation has participated in all three rounds
- of interoperability testing. Consult Jonathan Hsu [jhsu] for more
- details.
-
- o University of Maryland. This implementation was developed wholly by
- Rob Coltun at the University of Maryland. It has formed the basis for
- a number of commercial OSPF implementations, and also participated in
- the latest round of interoperability testing. The University of
- Maryland implementation consists of approximately 10,000 lines of C
- code. Consult Rob Coltun [rcoltun] for more details.
-
- Note that, as required by the IAB/IESG for Draft Standard status, there
- are multiple interoperable independent implementations, namely those
- from 3com, Proteon and the University of Maryland.
-
-
- 6.0 Operational experience
-
- This section discusses operational experience with the OSPF protocol.
- Version 1 of the OSPF protocol began to be deployed in the Internet in
- Spring of 1990. The results of this original deployment were reported to
- the mailing list ospf-tests@seka.cso.uiuc.edu. (Archives of this mailing
- list are available from Ross Veach [rrv].) No protocol bugs were found
- in this first deployment, although several additional features were
- found to be desirable. These new features were added to the protocol in
- OSPF Version 2.
-
- The OSPF protocol is now deployed in a number of places in the Internet.
- In this section we focus on three highly visible systems, namely the
- NASA Sciences Internet, BARRNet and OARnet. The dimensions of these
- three OSPF systems is summarized in the following table:
-
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 6]
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- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- TABLE 3. Three operational OSPF deployments
-
-
- Name Version 1 date Version 2 date # routers
- _____________________________________________________
- NSI 4/13/90 1/1/91 15
- BARRNet 4/90 11/90 14
- OARnet 10/15/90 not yet 13
-
-
- All the above deployments are using the Proteon OSPF implementation.
- There is one other deployment worth mentioning in this context. 3com has
- started to deploy OSPF on their corporate network. They have 8 of their
- routers running OSPF (the 3com implementation), and are planning on
- cutting over the remaining routers (20 in all). Currently they have two
- operational routers running OSPF and RIP simultaneously. One converts
- OSPF data to RIP data, and the other RIP data to OSPF data. For more
- details, contact Dino Farinacci [dino].
-
-
- 6.1 NSI
-
- The NASA Science Internet (NSI) is a multiprotocol network, currently
- supporting both DECnet and TCP/IP protocols. NSI's mission is to provide
- reliable high-speed communications to the NASA science community. The
- NASA Science Internet connects with other national networks including
- the National Science Foundation's NSFNET, the Department of Energy's
- ESnet and the Department of Defense's MILNET. NSI also has
- international connections to Japan, Australia, New Zealand, Chile and
- several European countries.
-
- For more information on NSI, contact Jeffrey Burgan [jeff] or Milo Medin
- [medin].
-
-
- 6.1.1 NSI's OSPF system
-
- NSI was one of the initial deployment sites for OSPF Version 1, having
- deployed the protocol in April 1990. NSI has been running OSPF V2 since
- 1/1/91. They currently have 15 routers in their OSPF system. This
- system is pictured in Figure 1. It consists of a nationwide collection
- of serial lines, with ethernets at hub sites. The numbers associated to
- interfaces/links in Figure1 are the associated OSPF costs. Note that
- certain links have been weighted so that they are less preferable than
- others.
-
- Many of NSI's OSPF routers are speaking either RIP and/or EGP as well as
- OSPF. Routes from these other routing protocols are selectively imported
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 7]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- into their OSPF system as externals. The current number of imported
- externals is 496.
-
- All NSI externals are imported as OSPF type 2 metrics. In addition, NSI
- uses the OSPF external route tag to manage the readvertisement of
- external routes. For example, a route learned at one edge of the NSI
- system via EGP can be tagged with the number of the AS from which it was
- learned. Then, as the OSPF external LSA describing this route is flooded
- through the OSPF system, this tagging information is distributed to all
- the other AS boundary routers. A router on the other edge of the NSI can
- then say that it wants to readvertise (via EGP) routes learned from one
- particular AS but not routes learned from another AS. This allows NSI to
- implement transit policies at the granularity of Autonomous Systems,
- instead of network numbers, which greatly reduces the network's
- configuration burden.
-
- NSI has also experimented with OSPF stub areas, in order to support
- routers having a small amount of memory.
-
-
- 6.1.2 NSI - Deployment analysis
-
- NSI ran a couple of experiments after OSPF's deployment to test OSPF's
- convergence time in the face of network failures, and to compare the
- level of routing traffic in OSPF with the level of routing traffic in
- RIP. These experiments were included in NSI status reports to the OSPF
- plenary.
-
- The first experiment consisted of running a continuous ICMP ping, and
- then bringing down one of the links in the ping packet's path. They then
- timed how long it took OSPF to find an alternate path, by noticing when
- the pings resumed. The result of this experiment is contained in Milo
- Medin's "NASA Sciences Internet Report" in [8]. It shows that the
- interrupted ping resumed in three seconds.
-
- The second experiment consisted in analyzing the amount of routing
- protocol traffic that flow over an NSI link. One of the NSI links was
- installed, but did not have any active users yet. For this reason, all
- traffic that flowed over the link was routing protocol traffic. The link
- was instrumented to continuously measure the amount of bandwidth
- consumed, first in the case where RIP was running, and then in the case
- of where OSPF was running. The result is shown graphically in Jeffrey
- Burgan's "NASA Sciences Internet" report in [9]. It shows that OSPF
- consumes many times less network bandwidth than RIP.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 8]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- 6.2 BARRNet
-
- BARRNet is the NSFNet regional network in Northern California. At the
- present time, it serves approximately 80 member sites in an area
- stretching from Sacramento in the north-east to Monterey in the in the
- south-west. Sites are connected to the network at speeds from 9.6Kbps to
- full T1 using Proteon and cisco routers as well as a Xylogics terminal
- server. The membership is composed of a mix of university, government,
- and commercial organizations. BARRNet has interconnections to the NSFNet
- (peering with both T1 and T3 backbones at Stanford University), ESNet
- (peering at LLNL, with additional multi-homed sites at LBL, SLAC, and
- NASA Ames), and DDN national networks (peering at the FIX network at
- NASA Ames), and to the statewide networks of the University of
- California (peering at U.C. Berkeley) and the California State
- University system (peering at San Francisco State and Sacramento State).
-
- Topologically, the network consists of fourteen OSPF-speaking Proteon
- routers, which as a "core", with six of these redundantly connected into
- a ring. All "core" sites are interconnected via full T1 circuits. Other
- member sites attach as "stub" connections to the "core" sites. The bulk
- of these are connected in a "star" configuration at Stanford University,
- with lesser numbers at other "core" sites.
-
- Contact Vince Fuller [vaf] for more information on BARRNet.
-
-
- 6.2.1 BARRNet's OSPF system
-
- BARRNet was also one of the initial deployment sites for OSPF Version 1,
- having deployed the protocol in April 1990. BARRNet has been running
- OSPF V2 since November 1990. They currently have 14 routers in their
- OSPF system. The BARRNet OSPF system is pictured in Figure 2. It
- consists of a collection of T1 serial lines, with ethernets at hub
- sites.
-
- Most of BARRNet's OSPF routers are speaking either RIP and/or EGP as
- well as OSPF. Routes from these other routing protocols are selectively
- imported into their OSPF system as externals. A large number of external
- routes are imported; the current number is1816. The bulk of these are
- the T1 NSFNet routes, followed by several hundred NSN routes, around
- 60-80 BARRNet routes from the non-OSPF system, and several dozen from
- ESNet.
-
- All external routes are imported into the BARRNet system as external
- type 1 metrics. In addition, BARRnet, like NSI, uses the OSPF's external
- route tagging feature to help manage the readvertisement of external
- routes via EGP.
-
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 9]
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- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- BARRnet is also using four stub OSPF areas in order to collapse subnet
- information. These stub areas all consist of a single LAN. They do not
- contain any OSPF routers in their interiors.
-
-
- 6.2.2 BARRNet - Deployment analysis
-
- Initial deployment of OSPF Version 1 in BARRNet pointed to the need for
- two new protocol features that were added to OSPF V2, namely:
-
- o Addition of the forwarding address to OSPF external LSAs. This
- eliminated the extra hops that were being taken in BARRNet when only
- routers BR5 and BR6 were exchanging EGP information with the NSS (see
- Figure 2). Without the forwarding address feature, that meant that
- NSFNet traffic handled by routers BR10, BR16 and BR28 was taking an
- extra hop to get to the NSS.
-
- o Addition of stub areas. This was an attempt to get OSPF running on
- some of the BARRNet routers that had insufficient memory to deal with
- all of BARRNet's external routes.
-
-
-
- 6.3 OARnet
-
- OARnet, the Ohio Academic Resources Network, is the regional network for
- the state of Ohio. It serves the entire higher education community,
- providing Ohio schools access to colleagues worldwide. The Ohio
- Supercomputer Center and the NSF Supercomputer Centers are reached
- through OARnet. Libraries, databases, national and international
- laboratories and research centers are accessible to faculty, helping
- make Ohio schools competitive.
-
- OARnet was established in 1987 to provide state-wide access to the CRAY
- at the Ohio Supercomputer Center in Columbus, Ohio. Since then it has
- evolved into a network supporting all aspects of higher education within
- Ohio. A primary goal of OARnet is to facilitate collaborative projects
- and sharing of resources between institutions, including those outside
- the state. OARnet connections are available to Ohio academic
- institutions and corporations engaged in research, product development,
- or instruction. Colleges, universities, and industries currently use
- OARnet connections to communicate within the state and with colleagues
- around the country.
-
- OARnet uses the Internet (TCP/IP) and DECNET protocols. OARnet
- participants using TP/IP protocols are connected to the worldwide
- Internet, which includes all the major networks open to non-classified
- research. OARnet is also connected to NSFNet, the national research and
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 10]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- education network sponsored by the National Science Foundation. It has
- gateways to BITNET, CSNET, CICNet (a network connecting the Big Ten
- universities), and the NASA Science Internet.
-
- For more information on OARnet, contact Kannan Varadhan [kannan].
-
-
- 6.3.1 OARnet's OSPF system
-
- OARnet has been running OSPF Version 1 since October 15, 1990. They
- currently have 14 routers in their OSPF system. The OARnet OSPF system
- is pictured in Figure 3.
-
- There are 29 sites connected directly to the OARnet backbone. All 13 of
- OARnet's OSPF routers act as ASBRs. There are 40 OSPF internal routes on
- OARnet's network, and they import about 120 routes from RIP. OARnet
- runs EGP on the DMZnet at Columbus, which connects them to CICNet. The
- router connecting OARnet to DMZnet (OAR1 in Figure 3) runs EGP on the
- DMZnet side, and OSPF and RIP on the OARnet backbone. No EGP routes are
- imported into the OSPF system. The OAR1 router is configured to generate
- a default when EGP routes are available. The OAR1 router is the keystone
- for routing on OARnet's network, in that it acts as an intermediary for
- all of OARnet's RIP centric routers.
-
- OARnet uses the Event Logging System on its Proteon routers to generate
- traps for "interesting" events related to routing. They have these traps
- sent to an SNMP management station, where the logs are collected for
- later perusal.
-
-
- 6.3.2 OARnet - Deployment analysis
-
- OARnet is monitoring their OSPF system via collection of traps on their
- SNMP management station. The following is a report on their
- observations. It has been edited slightly to conform better with the
- other text and maps presented in this report. For more information,
- contact Kannan Varadhan [kannan]:
-
- 3 of our 10 DS1 circuits are on digital microwave, and these tend to
- flap occasionally. Our observations indicate that the routers bring up
- links, and adjacencies, on average, in about 2 seconds. Routes fallback
- to alternate backup paths instantly. Whole blocks of routes cut over the
- instant the adjacencies are formed.
-
- In contrast to this, our RIP routes would take about 3-6 minutes to
- cutover, and, on occasion, would not cut back to the preferred paths.
- This was our prime motivation in switching to OSPF.
-
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 11]
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- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- We attempted to duplicate Milo Medin's ping test to dramatically
- illustrate the performance of RIP over OSPF. To do this, we selected a
- host on the farthest point from our workstation, and ran a continuous
- ping to it. We would then bring down a primary DS1 circuit, and watch
- the time it took to switch to the fallback route. Following this, we
- would bring the circuit back up, and study the time it took to re-sync
- to the new path. With RIP, we were unable to fully complete the
- experiment, because the farthest point was exactly equal to the new (and
- preferred) primary path, and therefore, RIP would never choose it on
- it's own, until the path it was currently using failed. With OSPF, it
- took about 2 seconds to synchronize over a new, much slower 56kb path,
- and less than a second when the DS1 circuit came back up.
-
- Here are some more observations of the OARnet OSPF system's behavior:
-
-
- o 131.187.36.0 is the 56kb line to Kent State University. Kent also has
- a DS1 circuit leading into ASP, the Akron Pop. Likewise, UAkron.edu
- has a similar configuration. A roundabout backup path exists when
- traffic heads up to Cleveland over a couple of DS1 circuits, and then
- down a 56kb backup path used by another school in the Cleveland area.
-
- Some statistical information:
-
-
- 1. 09:55:17: SPF.37: new route to Net 131.187.36.5,
- type SPF cost 32
- 2. 09:55:18: SPF.37: new route to Net 131.187.36.6,
- type SPF cost 22
- 3. 09:55:20: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.27.6,
- new state <Full>, event 9
- 4. 09:55:21: SPF.37: new route to Net 131.187.36.5,
- type SPF cost 31
- 5. 09:55:22: SPF.37: new route to Net 131.187.36.6,
- type SPF cost 21
- 6. 09:55:28: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.21.5,
- new state <Full>, event 9
- 7. 09:55:29: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.51.6,
- new state <Full>, event 9
- 8. 09:55:31: SPF.37: new route to Net 131.187.36.5,
- type SPF cost 22
- 9. 09:55:33: SPF.37: new route to Net 131.187.36.5,
- type SPF cost 11
-
-
- The Akron router restarts, and has to re-sync with all the lines.
- This restart is confirmed when one looks at the traps from gwCSP1.
- Traps from gwASP1 still do not get through to us, because traps are
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 12]
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- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- sent via UDP, and gwASP1's routing tables are not fully configured
- yet.
-
- Events 1 and 2 are route changes routing traffic via Cleveland,
- across 2 DS1 circuits and a 56kb line.
-
- When the DS1 circuit to UAkron came up, routes instantly cut over to
- use this as a better least cost path. This is shown in events 3, 4
- and 5.
-
- In a few seconds, the line to Columbus is the next one up. This is
- event 6. Event 8 relates to this cutover, and is the best path yet.
- When the DS1 circuit to Kent is up, the link is used instantly.
-
- We are able to make such a definitive conclusion of these traps on
- the basis of the topological information that we have about the
- network and the means used to monitor them.
-
-
- o To illustrate the time required to fully synchronize a database, we
- piece together a few adjacency forming traces...
-
- Please bear in mind that these time stamps are the time stamps on the
- management station, and are not to be taken as the absolute truth.
- Things we haven't taken into account are transit times of
- messages, ordering of events (SNMP traps are sent using UDP),
- loss of event reports (recall that an entire synchronization sequence
- of gwASP1 on the ASP-CSP link is missing), etc.
-
- The trace below corresponds to the Akron router, gwASP1 bring up the
- link in the previous section. This is as observed on the other end of
- the line, gwCSP1.
-
- REPORT DATE: 02/26/91 ROUTER: gwcsp1
- 09:55:06: SPF.15: State Change, ifc 131.187.22.6,
- new state <Point-To-Point>, event 1
- 09:55:06: GW.xxx: Link Up Trap: 09:55:07: SPF.37:
- new route to Net 131.187.22.5, type SPF cost 1
- 09:55:07: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.22.5,
- new state <Init>, event 1
- 09:55:09: SPF.37: new route to Net 131.187.27.5,
- type SPF cost 22
- 09:55:11: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.22.5,
- new state <ExStart>, event 14
- 09:55:11: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.22.5,
- new state <2-Way>, event 3
- 09:55:12: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.22.5,
- new state <Exchange>, event 5
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 13]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- 09:55:12: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.22.5,
- new state <Full>, event 9
- 09:55:12: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.22.5,
- new state <Loading>, event 6
-
- Below, is another trace of the same router restart sequence, where
- the router is proceeding to bring up other DS1 circuits. Bringing up
- the first adjacency took about 5 seconds. Subsequent adjacencies take
- the router less than a second as seen below.
-
- REPORT DATE: 02/26/91 ROUTER: gwasp1
- 09:55:20: SPF.15: State Change, ifc 131.187.27.5,
- new state <Point-To-Point>, event 1
- 09:55:20: GW.xxx: Link Up Trap: 09:55:20: SPF.21:
- State Change, nbr 131.187.27.6, new state <Init>, event 1
- 09:55:20: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.27.6,
- new state <ExStart>, event 14
- 09:55:20: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.27.6,
- new state <Exchange>, event 5
- 09:55:20: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.27.6,
- new state <Full>, event 9
- 09:55:21: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.27.6,
- new state <Loading>, event 6
- 09:55:24: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.51.6,
- new state <Init>, event 1
- 09:55:24: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.21.5,
- new state <Init>, event 1
- 09:55:25: SPF.37: new route to Net 131.187.21.6, type SPF cost 13
- 09:55:25: SPF.37: new route to Net 131.187.51.5, type SPF cost 22
- 09:55:28: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.21.5,
- new state <ExStart>, event 14
- 09:55:28: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.21.5,
- new state <2-Way>, event 3
- 09:55:28: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.21.5,
- new state <Exchange>, event 5
- 09:55:28: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.21.5,
- new state <Full>, event 9
- 09:55:28: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.21.5,
- new state <Loading>, event 6
- 09:55:29: SPF.37: new route to Net 131.187.51.6, type SPF cost 1
- 09:55:29: SPF.37: new route to Net 131.187.21.5, type SPF cost 1
- 09:55:29: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.51.6,
- new state <Exchange>, event 5
- 09:55:29: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.51.6,
- new state <ExStart>, event 14
- 09:55:29: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.51.6,
- new state <2-Way>, event 3
- 09:55:29: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.51.6,
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 14]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- new state <Full>, event 9
- 09:55:29: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.51.6,
- new state <Loading>, event 6
-
- A transient fault on a DS1 circuit, causes the line to flap. All
- routers quickly reroute around the flap, and the router itself takes
- about 2 seconds to bring up the adjacency once more.
-
- REPORT DATE: 02/26/91 ROUTER: gwasp1
- 14:33:43: GW.xxx: Link Up Trap:
- 14:34:19: SPF.15: State Change, ifc 131.187.22.5,
- new state <Down>, event 7
- 14:34:19: GW.xxx: Link Failure Trap:
- 14:34:19: SPF.47: Net 131.187.22.6 now unreachable
- 14:34:36: SPF.15: State Change, ifc 131.187.22.5,
- new state <Point-To-Point>, event 1
- 14:34:36: GW.xxx: Link Up Trap:
- 14:34:37: SPF.37: new route to Net 131.187.22.6, type SPF cost 1
- 14:34:45: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.22.6,
- new state <2-Way>, event 3
- 14:34:45: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.22.6,
- new state <Init>, event 1
- 14:34:46: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.22.6,
- new state <ExStart>, event 14
- 14:34:46: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.22.6,
- new state <Exchange>, event 5
- 14:34:47: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.22.6,
- new state <Full>, event 9
- 14:34:47: SPF.21: State Change, nbr 131.187.22.6,
- new state <Loading>, event 6
-
- o On the amount of time it takes for a router to restart, and become
- fully synchronized. Taking the logs in the previous instance, we
- notice that the CSP-ASP link comes up at 9:55:06. The last link is
- observed to be up at 9:55:29, which is less than a minute.
-
-
- o On the RIP equivalent of the tests, it took us 3 minutes to cutover
- to the slower speed fallback route, and we lost countless many
- packets. The routes never cutover to the higher speed paths when
- available, and we waited well over 30 minutes watching this,
- wondering why. Unfortu- nately, at this point, we seem to have lost
- the RIP statistics.
-
- On the OSPF version, we have...
-
- {nisca danw 51}
- ping 131.187.25.6 PING 131.187.25.6 (131.187.25.6):
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 15]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- 56 data bytes 64 bytes from 131.187.25.6:
- icmp seq=0 ttl(255-ttl)=54(201). time=20 ms
- [...]
- icmp seq=10 ttl(255-ttl)=54(201). time=20 ms
- || T1 down
- icmp seq=14 ttl(255-ttl)=54(201). time=180 ms
- icmp seq=15 ttl(255-ttl)=54(201). time=60 ms
- [...]
- icmp seq=38 ttl(255-ttl)=8(247). time=1300 ms
- icmp seq=39 ttl(255-ttl)=54(201). time=820 ms
- || Tl Up
- icmp seq=40 ttl(255-ttl)=54(201). time=20 ms
- icmp seq=41 ttl(255-ttl)=54(201). time=20 ms
- 131.187.25.6 PING Statistics
- 51 packets transmitted, 48 packets received, 5% packet loss
- round-trip (ms) min/avg/max = 20/277/1300
-
-
- 6.4 Features exercised during operational deployment
-
- In operational environments, all basic mechanisms of the OSPF protocol
- have been exercised. These mechanisms include:
-
- o Designated Router election. There have been operational deployments
- have as many as 8 OSPF routers attached to a single broadcast
- network.
-
- o Database synchronization. This includes OSPF's adjacency bringup and
- reliable flooding procedures. Large operational OSPF link state
- databases (e.g., BARRNet) have provided a thorough test of these
- mechanisms.
-
- o Flushing advertisements. The procedure for flushing old or
- unreachable advertisements (the MaxAge procedure) has been tested
- operationally. It is interesting to note that flushing of
- advertisements does occur more during interoperability testing
- (because of the constant restart- ing of routers) that it does
- operationally. For example, in a week of BARRNet statistics, 9650
- advertisements were flushed, while 688,278 new advertisements were
- flooded.
-
- o Import of external routes. All options of external LSAs have been
- tested operationally: type 1 metrics, type 2 metrics, forwarding
- addresses and the external route tag.
-
- o Authentication. The OSPF authentication procedure has been tested
- operationally.
-
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 16]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- o Equal-cost multipath. Operational deployments have included
- topologies with equal-cost, redundant paths.
-
- o Stub areas. These have been deployed both in BARRNet and NSI.
-
-
- 6.5 Limitations of operational deployments
-
- The following things have not been tested in an operational environment:
-
- o Multi-vendor deployments. So far all deployments have used a single
- implementation. However, extensive interoperability testing of OSPF
- has been done (see Section 7.0 of this report).
-
- o Regular OSPF areas. These have however been tested in all three
- rounds of the OSPF interoperability testing.
-
- o Virtual links. These have however been tested in OSPF's
- interoperability testing.
-
- o Non-broadcast networks. However, OSPF interoperability testing has
- been performed over X.25 networks.
-
- o TOS routing. However, this has been tested in OSPF's interoperability
- testing.
-
-
- 6.6 Conclusions
-
- All basic features of the OSPF protocol have been exercised. Very large
- OSPF link state databases (e.g., BARRNet's OSPF system) have been
- deployed, providing a thorough test of OSPF's database synchronization
- mechanisms. No OSPF protocol problems have been found in operational
- deployments.
-
- Most of the hassles in operation deployments has to do with the OSPF/RIP
- interchange. Many of these issues have been ironed out on the ospf-tests
- mailing list (see Section 2.0). However, the interaction between OSPF,
- RIP, and EGP continues to be an active area of research.
-
-
- 7.0 Interoperability Testing
-
- There have been three separate OSPF V2 interoperability testing
- sessions. Five separate implementations have participated in at least
- one session: implementations from the companies 3com, ACC, Proteon and
- Wellfleet, and the publicly available implementation from the University
- of Maryland.
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 17]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- Each of the testing sessions is described in a succeeding section. For
- each session, the participants are identified, and the testing
- topologies are described along with the particular protocol features
- that were exercised. Any protocol problems that were encountered during
- the testing are also described. In addition, for the second and third
- rounds testing reports were sent to the ospf mailing lists. These
- reports are reproduced in this document.
-
- There is quite a bit of commonality in the features that have been
- tested from session to session. There are several reasons for this
- commonality. First, in each testing session an attempt has been made to
- increase the size of the OSPF system under test. For example, the number
- of external routes imported has doubled each session. Secondly, the
- interoperability sessions have been debugging sessions as well as
- protocol sessions. Many things tested in the third round were to ver-
- ify that implementations had successfully fixed problems found in
- earlier sessions. A brief overview of the testing session is presented
- in the following table:
-
- TABLE 4. OSPF interoperability testing at a glance.
-
-
- Site Week Routers Externals Implementations
- _____________________________________________________________________________
- Proteon 9/25/90 6 20-30 3com, Proteon, Wellfleet
- SURAnet 12/17/90 10 96 3com, ACC, Proteon, Wellfleet
- 3com 2/4/91 16 400 3com, ACC, Proteon, Wellfleet, UMD
-
-
- For more information on the interoperability testing, the following
- people can be contacted: Fred Baker [fbaker], Rob Coltun [rcoltun], Dino
- Farinacci [dino], Jonathan Hsu [jhsu], John Moy [jmoy], and William
- Streilein [bstreile].
-
-
- 7.1 Testing methodology
-
- In the interoperability tests, the routers have been interconnected
- using ethernet, serial lines (PPP and proprietary), X.25 and 802.5 token
- ring. Monitoring of the routers has been done through connecting
- terminals (either directly or via telnet) to the router consoles. Each
- implementation has a different user interface, which makes monitoring
- somewhat difficult. As explained earlier in this document, there is now
- an OSPF MIB, which in the future will enable a common monitoring
- interface to all implementations.
-
- In general, each implementation has an error logging capability, and
- this is often how problems are discovered. LAN protocol analyzers are
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 18]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- also used to capture OSPF protocol packet exchanges that are causing
- problems. These packet traces are available for analysis either during
- of after the testing sessions.
-
- Verification of routing was done through visual inspection of
- implementations' routing table and link state databases (via the console
- interface), and through network debugging tools such as "ping" and
- "traceroute".
-
-
- 7.2 First round (Proteon, 9/25/90 - 9/29/90)
-
- The first round of OSPF protocol testing took place at Proteon Inc.'s
- Westborough facility, the week of September 25, 1990. Three
- implementations participated, from the vendors 3com, Proteon and
- Wellfleet.
-
- There were two 3com routers, two Wellfleet routers and two Proteon
- routers available for testing. These routers were interconnected with
- ethernets and serial lines. External routes were imported from the
- Proteon company internet. In addition, during off hours we were able to
- connect the routers under test to the Proteon company internet, forming
- one fairly large OSPF system.
-
- The testing at Proteon proceeded as follows:
-
- o All routers were connected to a single ethernet. Then, as routers
- were taken up and down, the Designated Router election algorithm and
- the Database Description process were tested. Also OSPF's reliable
- flooding algorithm was tested in this configuration.
-
- o Twenty to thirty external routes were imported into the OSPF system
- by a Proteon router (which was simultaneously running RIP). It was
- then verified that these external routes were installed into the
- router's routing tables.
-
- o One of the 3com routers was configured to originate an OSPF default
- route. This tested OSPF default route processing, and also tested the
- behavior of the system when multiple routers were importing external
- routes.
-
- o The OSPF system was split into areas. Both regular OSPF areas (non-
- stub) and stub areas were tested.
-
- o The six routers under test were connected to the Proteon company
- internet (which was also running OSPF), forming an OSPF system of
- eighteen routers. This configuration was shortlived, due to a
- disagreement between the 3com and Proteon routers concerning how to
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 19]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- represent an OSPF default route.
-
- Unfortunately, incomplete records were kept of this testing, so that no
- maps of the testing configurations can be reproduced for this document.
-
-
-
- 7.2.1 Problems found in the First round testing
-
- A couple of OSPF protocol/specification problems were uncovered in the
- first round of testing. First, it was noticed that there was a window
- in the Database Description process where concurrently flooded MaxAge
- advertisements could prevent database synchronization from completing.
- This required a change in the specification's handling of MaxAge LSAs.
-
- Secondly, it was found that the OSPF specification did not specify how
- the Network Mask field should be set in external LSAs that were
- advertising the DefaultDestination. This was a minor problem, but caused
- difficulties because of assumptions made in one implementation on how
- the mask should be set.
-
-
- 7.3 Second round (SURAnet, 12/17/90 - 12/21/90)
-
- The second round of OSPF protocol testing took place at SURAnet's
- College Park facility, the week of December 12, 1990. Four
- implementations participated, from the vendors 3com, ACC, Proteon and
- Wellfleet.
-
- There were two 3com routers, two ACC routers, two Wellfleet routers and
- four Proteon routers available for testing. These routers were
- interconnected with ethernets, serial lines and token rings. External
- routes were imported from SURAnet by one of the Proteon routers.
-
- The testing at SURAnet proceeded as follows. Initially nine routers were
- configured as a single backbone area, with six of the routers connected
- to a single ethernet. This is pictured in Figure 4. In this
- configuration, the Designated Router transition and database
- synchronization process were tested. Ninety-six external routes were
- imported from SURAnet to stress the flooding algorithm. By restarting
- the router that was importing the routes, the flushing of advertisements
- from the routing domain was tested. Additionally, variable-length
- subnets and OSPF's optional TOS routing capability were tested in this
- configuration.
-
- Next the routers were configured into four separate OSPF areas, with
- each area directly connected to the OSPF backbone (which was a single
- ethernet). There were no virtual links in this configuration. Inter-
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 20]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- area routing was tested, including having AS boundary routers internal
- to a non-backbone area. Also tested was the case where a single router
- was both an area border router and an AS boundary router.
-
- For more details of the testing, see the "Official report of the Second
- Round Testing" listed below.
-
-
-
- 7.3.1 Official report of the Second round testing
-
- The following report was sent to the ospf, ospf-tests, and router-
- requirements mailing lists after the second round of interoperability
- tests:
-
- The second round of OSPF multi-vendor testing was done in College Park,
- Maryland the week of 12/17/90. The facilities were provided by SURAnet.
- Four major router vendors were present, Advanced Computer Communications
- (ACC), Proteon, 3Com, and Wellfleet. A press conference and presentation
- was provided for 3 different data communication magazine
- representatives.
-
- Each vendor provided at least 2 routers. Each vendor had a device
- connected to a common Ethernet. This Ethernet was configured as the OSPF
- backbone area. The rest of the routers were attached to the various
- backbone routers via Ethernet, Token Ring, proprietary serial line, PPP
- serial line, and X.25 type media. The following test scenarios were
- performed and completed in the following order:
-
- o Intra-area routing. All routers were configured to reside in the
- backbone area. Designated Router election was performed various
- number of times so each vendor could be designated router for a
- period of time. Packet data was captured on a Sniffer for later
- observation.
-
- o Variable Length Subnet Masks. Some of the serial lines in the
- configuration were configured to be on the same IP network but with
- different subnet masks. It was observed that all routers stored
- routes for the different length subnets.
-
- o Import SURAnet routes. The Proteon router was listening for RIP
- routes generated by the SURAnet routers. These routes were imported
- into our OSPF test system. 96 external link state advertisements were
- generated as a result. Many scaling type implementation problems
- surfaced for each vendor during this exercise.
-
- o Type of Service generation. While the test setup was still configured
- as a single area, the 3Com router generated Type of Service link
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 21]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- state advertisements. It was observed how the other vendor
- implementations reacted to it. Some problems were found.
-
- o Inter-area routing. Multiple areas were configured. Common non-
- backbone areas were shared by Proteon and Wellfleet and by ACC and
- 3Com. It was observed that the correct Intra-area and Inter-area
- routes appeared in each router's routing table. At this point in the
- test setup, the Proteon router regenerated the 96 SURAnet routes into
- the configuration. It was observed that the routes were learned and
- propagated over area boundaries. Some problems occur at this point.
- More emphasis on this scenario will occur at the next round of
- testing.
-
- o OSPF over X.25. A point-to-point link was connected between the
- Proteon router and the 3Com router. The X.25 packet level was
- configured to run over the link. OSPF was enabled over the link to
- verify that multi-vendor OSPF over X.25 was performed. Both of these
- routers were in the same area.
-
- o MaxAge advertisements. Link state advertisements were flushed from
- the routing domain using the MaxAge procedure. We verified that all
- routers removed the advertisements from their databases, after they
- were properly acknowledged by the flooding procedure. Some problems
- were found in this test, although not nearly as many as in the first
- round of testing.
-
- Each vendor agreed that this sort of testing was extremely valuable and
- that it should occur again. 3Com has offered for the third round of
- testing to occur in Santa Clara sometime in February. 3Com will
- encourage other OSPF implementations to join in the testing. Items that
- will be tested are:
-
- o Intra-area routing with loops (as well as equal-cost multipath).
-
- o Inter-area testing including Stub and Transit area support, with both
- Intra-area and Inter-area loops.
-
- o Virtual link testing in the looped Inter-area configuration.
-
- o RIP/OSPF route interchange including testing forwarding address
- capability in external link state advertisements.
-
- o EGP/OSPF router interchange including the use of the route tag field
- in external link state advertisements.
-
- o More than two routers connected to an X.25 network. We would like to
- test OSPF's non-broadcast multi-access capabilities by attaching more
- than two vendor's routers to an X.25 packet switch.
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 22]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- o Several vendors running OSPF and RIP simultaneously. This will
- further test the OSPF/RIP interactions.
-
- o Test processing of links with cost LSInfinity. These links should be
- treated as unreachable.
-
- Furthermore, we hope that in future rounds of testing an OSPF MIB would
- allow us to also use a network management station to gather test data.
-
- In summary, the stability of implementations were better this time more
- so than the first round of testing. No problems with the protocol design
- were encountered. The exchange of ideas and the cooperation among
- implementors that occurred during this test effort, continues the spirit
- that OSPF is truly an open protocol.
-
-
- 7.3.2 Problems found in the Second round testing
-
- No problems were found in the OSPF protocol during the second round of
- testing.
-
-
-
- 7.4 Third round (3com, 2/4/91 - 2/8/91)
-
- The third round of OSPF protocol testing took place at 3com's Santa
- Clara facility, the week of February 4, 1991. Five implementations
- participated, from the vendors 3com, ACC, Proteon and Wellfleet and the
- publicly available University of Maryland implementation (running on a
- SUN workstation).
-
- There were five 3com routers, four ACC routers, three Wellfleet routers,
- three Proteon routers and the UMD Sun workstation available for testing
- (giving a total of 16 routers available). These routers were
- interconnected with ethernets, serial lines and X.25. External routes
- were imported from BARRNet by one of the 3com routers.
-
- The initial testing configuration is shown in Figure 5. Three areas were
- configured, along with a non-contiguous backbone. The backbone was then
- joined by configuring two virtual links. In this configuration the
- following OSPF functionality was tested: inter-area routing and virtual
- links.
-
- The system was then reconfigured so that twelve of the routers were
- connected to a single ethernet. This configuration is pictured in Figure
- 6. By bringing routers up and down, this configuration tested Designated
- Router election, database synchronization and reliable flooding. To see
- how this functionality, and also the implementations, scale, 400
-
-
-
- [Moy] [Page 23]
-
- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
-
-
- external routes were imported from BARRNet.
-
-
-
- 7.4.1 Official report of the Third round testing
-
- The following report was sent to the ospf, ospf-tests, and router-
- requirements mailing lists after the third round of interoperability
- tests:
-
- The third round of OSPF interoperability testing was held at 3com
- Corporation in Santa Clara the week of February 4-8. Four router vendors
- came to the testing: 3com, ACC, Proteon and Wellfleet. In addition, Rob
- Coltun brought the University of Maryland implementation, which was run
- on a Sun Workstation.
-
- Testing was performed over ethernet, point-to-point networks (using PPP)
- and X.25. In all we had 16 routers available: five 3com routers, four
- ACC routers, three Proteon routers, three Wellfleet routers and Rob's
- SUN. We also were able to import external routes from BARRNet.
-
- Specific tests performed included the following:
-
- o Initially we configured the routers into three separate areas and a
- physically disconnected backbone. The backbone was then reconnected
- through configuration of several virtual links. These tests verified
- the generation and processing of summary link advertisements, as well
- as the operation of virtual links.
-
- o We connected multiple routers to an X.25 packet switch, testing
- OSPF's non-broadcast network capability. OSPF was successfully run
- over the X.25 network, using routers that were both DR eligible and
- DR ineligible. Some problems were encountered, but they all involved
- running IP over X.25 (i.e., they were not X.25 specific).
-
- o We also connected a 3com router, Proteon router, and Rob's SUN to an
- ethernet, and then treated the ethernet as a non-broadcast network.
- This allowed us to connect Rob's SUN into the rest of the routing
- domain without installing the IP multicast modifications to the SUN
- kernel. It also further tested the OSPF's non-broadcast network
- capability.
-
- o We then reconfigured the OSPF system so that all but three of the
- routers were connected to a single ethernet. This tested the
- Designated Router functionality (12 routers were synchronizing with
- the DR). We then also tested the DR election algorithm, by
- selectively restarting the DR, or sometimes both the DR and the
- Backup DR. This also tested OSPF's Database Description process.
-
-
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-
- o In this configuration, we then imported 400 external routes from
- BARRNet (one of the 3com routers ran both OSPF and EGP). Some
- problems were encountered in implementations' buffer allocation
- strategies, and problems were also found in the way implementations
- avoid IP fragmentation. But overall, this system was fairly stable.
-
- The following problems we found in the OSPF specification:
-
- o The specification should say that the "Network mask" field should not
- be verified in OSPF Hellos received over virtual links.
-
- o The specification should say that on multi-access networks neighbors
- are identified by their IP address, and on point-to-point networks
- and virtual links by their OSPF Router ID. This eliminates confusion
- when, for example, a router is restarted and comes up with the same
- IP address but a different Router ID.
-
- Thanks to 3com for providing the testing facility, cables. terminals,
- X.25 switch. etc. Also thanks to Vince Fuller of BARRNet for helping us
- import the BARRNet routes.
-
-
- 7.4.2 Problems found in the Third round testing
-
- A couple of specification/protocol problems were found in the third
- round of interoperability testing. First, it was noticed that the
- specification did not specify the setting of the Network Mask field in
- Hellos sent over virtual links. This caused some initial difficulty in
- bringing up virtual links between routers belonging to different
- vendors. Secondly, it was noticed that the specification was not strict
- enough in defining how OSPF neighbors are identified on multi-access
- networks. This caused difficulties in one implementation when another
- vendor's router was restarted with the same IP address but a different
- OSPF Router ID. This is discussed more fully in the above "Official
- Report of the Third Round Testing".
-
-
-
- 7.5 Overall: Features tested
-
-
- All significant protocol features and mechanisms have been tested in the
- three rounds of interoperability testing. In particular, the following
- basic pieces of the protocol have been tested:
-
- o Designated Router election. With as many as thirteen routers attached
- to a single LAN, the election of Backup Designated Router and
- Designated router was verified by bringing routers up and down,
-
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- singly and in pairs.
-
- o Adjacency bringup. The Database Description process was verified,
- with databases having over 400 LSAs. Adjacency bringup was also
- verified in times when flooding was taking place simultaneously.
-
- o Reliable flooding. It was verified that OSPF's flooding algorithm
- maintains database synchronization, both in the presence of loops in
- the topology, and with large databases (over 400 LSAs).
-
- o Flushing advertisements from routing domain. OSPF's procedure for
- flushing old or unreachable LSAs from the routing domain was
- verified, both in the presence of topology loops and with many LSAs
- being flushed at once. This is also referred to as OSPF's MaxAge
- procedure.
-
- o OSPF routing hierarchy. The OSPF four level routing hierarchy:
- intra-area, inter-area. type 1 externals and type 2 externals was
- tested.
-
- o Import of external routing information. The importing of external
- routes has been tested, with as many as 400 imported at once. Also,
- the varying options in external LSAs has been tested: type 1 or type
- 2 metrics and forwarding addresses.escribe all options. In addition,
- test setups were utilized having AS boundary routers both internal to
- non-backbone areas and also being simultaneously area border routers.
-
- o Running protocol over various network types. In the test setups, OSPF
- has been run over ethernet, point-to-point serial lines (both PPP and
- proprietary), 802.5 token ring and X.25.
-
- o Non-broadcast, multi-access networks. OSPF has been tested over X.25.
- Some testing was also done treating ethernet as a non-broadcast
- network. Two separate situations were tested: when all routers
- attached to the non-broadcast network were DR-eligible, and when only
- some of them were.
-
- o Authentication. OSPF's authentication procedure was tested for the
- two current authentication types.
-
- o Equal-cost multipath. Much of the testing was done in configurations
- with redundant paths, and equal-cost multipath was verified through
- examination of implementations' routing tables.
-
- o Variable-length subnet masks. It was verified that implementations
- paid attention to the network mask field present in OSPF LSAs.
-
-
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- RFC 1246 Experience with OSPF July 1991
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- Testing was also performed on the following pieces of OSPF's Area
- functionality:
-
- o Extent of advertisements. It was verified that all advertisements
- except external LSAs were flooded throughout a single area only.
-
- o Inter-area routing. The generation and processing of summary link
- LSAs was tested. Also tested were configurations having multiple area
- border routers attaching to a single area.
-
- o Virtual links.
-
- The following OSPF options were also tested:
-
- o TOS routing. The interplay between TOS-capable and non-TOS-capable
- routers was tested, by configuring TOS-specific metrics in the only
- implementation (3com) supporting TOS routing.
-
- o Stub areas. OSPF's stub area functionality was verified.
-
-
-
- 7.6 Testing conclusions
-
- The interoperability testing has proven to be very valuable. Many bugs
- were found (and fixed) in the implementations. Some protocol problems
- were found (and fixed), and gray areas of the specification were cleared
- up. Implementations have also been "bullet-proofed" in order to deal
- with the unexpected behavior of other implementations. All participants
- in the testing now understand the maxim "be conservative in what you
- generate, and liberal in what you accept" (if they didn't already).
-
-
- 7.7 Future work
-
- The one thing that has gone mostly untested at the interoperability
- sessions is the interaction between OSPF and other routing protocols
- (such as RIP and EGP). Each interoperability session generally had a
- router running multiple routing protocols in order to import external
- routing information into the OSPF system. However, simultaneously
- running multiple routing protocols between different vendors' routers
- has not been tested.
-
- Each vendor has developed a slightly different architecture for the
- exchange of routing information between differing routing protocols. As
- the OSPF field testing has also shown, this exchange of routing
- information is an area of ongoing work and a candidate for future
- standardization.
-
-
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- 8.0 Simulation
-
-
- The OSPF protocol has been simulated by the Distributed Systems Research
- Group at the University of Maryland Baltimore County (UMBC). The two
- principal investigators for the OSPF simulation project are Dr.
- Deepinder P. Sidhu of UMBC and Rob Coltun. They have been aided by three
- graduate students: S. Abdallah, T. Fu and R. Nair. This section
- attempts to summarize their simulation setup and results. For more
- information, contact the Distributed Systems Research Group at the
- following address:
-
- Dr. Deepinder P. Sidhu
- Department of Computer Science
- University of Maryland Baltimore County
- Baltimore, MD 21228
- email: sidhu@umbc3.umbc.edu
-
- A demo was given of their OSPF simulation at the March 4-8, 1991 IETF in
- St. Louis. Details of the demo should be available in the IETF
- proceedings.
-
-
- 8.1 Simulator setup
-
- The Distributed System Research Group uses a significantly enhanced
- version of the MIT network simulator. The simulator is event driven, and
- contains support for both point-to-point networks and ethernet links. It
- can simulate characteristics of both packet switches and hosts, and can
- simulate internet behavior under various types of data traffic load
- (e.g., Poisson, normal, exponential and uniform distributions). This
- latter ability could be used, for example, to simulate how a routing
- protocol works in a congested internet. Specific network topologies can
- be input into the simulator, or pseudo-random network topologies can be
- generated. Packet loss rates can also be simulated.
-
- To simulate OSPF, Rob Coltun's OSPF implementation was incorporated into
- the simulator, essentially unchanged.
-
- The output of the simulator can be displayed in a graphical manner (it
- uses X windows). Any variable in the implementation under test can be
- monitored. In addition, statistical reports can later be produced from
- logging files produced during the simulation runs.
-
-
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- 8.2 Simulation results
-
- The OSPF simulation has been run using the following topologies:
-
- o The two sample topologies in the OSPF specification (Figure 2 and
- Figure 6 in [2]). The first of these topologies shows an Autonomous
- System without areas, the second the same AS with three areas and a
- virtual link configured.
-
- o The 19-node hub topology from [7].
-
- o A large network of over 50 nodes, all attached to a single ethernet.
-
- o A large network of over 50 nodes, containing both ethernets and
- serial lines, pseudo randomly generated.
-
- In these topologies, the correctness of the OSPF database
- synchronization was verified. This was done through examination of the
- nodes' OSPF link state databases and the nodes' routing tables. The
- implementation of multiple OSPF areas was also tested. Also, database
- convergence time was analyzed as a function of the network components'
- link speeds.
-
- Also, some formal analysis of the OSPF protocol was undertaken. The
- neighbor and interface state machines were analyzed. In addition, the
- Designated Router election algorithm was verified for certain sets of
- initial conditions.
-
-
- 9.0 Reference Documents
-
- The following documents have been referenced by this report:
-
- [1] Moy, J., "The OSPF Specification", RFC 1131, October 1989.
-
- [2] Moy, J., "OSPF Version 2", RFC 1247, July 1991.
-
- [3] Coltun, R. and Baker, F., "OSPF Version 2 Management Information
- Base", RFC 1248, July 1991.
-
- [4] Reynolds, J. and Postel, J., "Assigned Numbers', RFC1060, March
- 1990.
-
- [5] Corporation for National Research Initiatives, "Proceedings of the
- Thirteenth Internet Engineering Task Force", Cocoa Beach, Florida,
- April 11-14, 1989.
-
-
-
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-
- [6] Corporation for National Research Initiatives, "Proceedings of the
- Sixteenth Internet Engineering Task Force", Florida State
- University, February 6-9, 1990.
-
- [7] Gardner, M., et al., "Type-of-service routing: modeling and
- simulation," Report 6364, BBN Communications Corporation, January
- 1987.
-
- [8] Corporation for National Research Initiatives, "Proceedings of the
- Seventeenth Internet Engineering Task Force", Pittsburgh
- Supercomputing Center, May 1-4, 1990.
-
- [9] Corporation for National Research Initiatives, "Proceedings of the
- Eighteenth Internet Engineering Task Force", University of British
- Columbia, July 30-August 3, 1990.
-
-
- 10.0 People
-
- The following people have contributed information to this report and can
- be contacted for further information:
-
- TABLE 5. People references in this report
-
-
- Tag Name Affiliation email
- __________________________________________________________________________________
- bstreile William Streilein Wellfleet bstreile@wellfleet.com
- dino Dino Farinacci 3com dino@buckeye.esd.3com.com
- fbaker Fred Baker ACC fbaker@acc.com
- jeff Jeffrey Burgan Sterling Software jeff@nsipo.nasa.gov
- jhsu Jonathan Hsu Wellfleet jhsu@wellfleet.com
- jmoy John Moy Proteon jmoy@proteon.com
- kannan Kannan Varadhan OARnet kannan@oar.net
- medin Milo Medin Sterling Software medin@nsipo.nasa.gov
- rcoltun Rob Coltun U. of Maryland rcoltun@umd5.umd.edu
- rrv Ross Veach U. of Illinois rrv@seka.cso.uiuc.edu
- vaf Vince Fuller BARRNet vaf@valinor.stanford.edu
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- Security Considerations
-
- The OSPF protocol's security architecture is described in Section 4.0.
-
-
- Author's Address
-
- John Moy
- Proteon Inc.
- 2 Technology Drive
- Westborough, MA 01581
-
- Phone: (508) 898-2800
- Email: jmoy@proteon.com
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