<- RFC Index (4701..4800)
RFC 4724
Updates RFC 4271
Updated by RFC 8538
Network Working Group S. Sangli
Request for Comments: 4724 E. Chen
Category: Standards Track Cisco Systems
R. Fernando
J. Scudder
Y. Rekhter
Juniper Networks
January 2007
Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP
Status of This Memo
This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
Copyright Notice
Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).
Abstract
This document describes a mechanism for BGP that would help minimize
the negative effects on routing caused by BGP restart. An End-of-RIB
marker is specified and can be used to convey routing convergence
information. A new BGP capability, termed "Graceful Restart
Capability", is defined that would allow a BGP speaker to express its
ability to preserve forwarding state during BGP restart. Finally,
procedures are outlined for temporarily retaining routing information
across a TCP session termination/re-establishment.
The mechanisms described in this document are applicable to all
routers, both those with the ability to preserve forwarding state
during BGP restart and those without (although the latter need to
implement only a subset of the mechanisms described in this
document).
Sangli, et al. Standards Track [Page 1]
RFC 4724 Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP January 2007
Table of Contents
1. Introduction ....................................................2
1.1. Specification of Requirements ..............................2
2. Marker for End-of-RIB ...........................................3
3. Graceful Restart Capability .....................................3
4. Operation .......................................................6
4.1. Procedures for the Restarting Speaker ......................6
4.2. Procedures for the Receiving Speaker .......................7
5. Changes to BGP Finite State Machine .............................9
6. Deployment Considerations ......................................11
7. Security Considerations ........................................12
8. Acknowledgments ................................................13
9. IANA Considerations ............................................13
10. References ....................................................13
10.1. Normative References .....................................13
10.2. Informative References ...................................13
1. Introduction
Usually, when BGP on a router restarts, all the BGP peers detect that
the session went down and then came up. This "down/up" transition
results in a "routing flap" and causes BGP route re-computation,
generation of BGP routing updates, and unnecessary churn to the
forwarding tables. It could spread across multiple routing domains.
Such routing flaps may create transient forwarding blackholes and/or
transient forwarding loops. They also consume resources on the
control plane of the routers affected by the flap. As such, they are
detrimental to the overall network performance.
This document describes a mechanism for BGP that would help minimize
the negative effects on routing caused by BGP restart. An End-of-RIB
marker is specified and can be used to convey routing convergence
information. A new BGP capability, termed "Graceful Restart
Capability", is defined that would allow a BGP speaker to express its
ability to preserve forwarding state during BGP restart. Finally,
procedures are outlined for temporarily retaining routing information
across a TCP session termination/re-establishment.
1.1 Specification of Requirements
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
"SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this
document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119 [RFC2119].
Sangli, et al. Standards Track [Page 2]
RFC 4724 Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP January 2007
2. Marker for End-of-RIB
An UPDATE message with no reachable Network Layer Reachability
Information (NLRI) and empty withdrawn NLRI is specified as the End-
of-RIB marker that can be used by a BGP speaker to indicate to its
peer the completion of the initial routing update after the session
is established. For the IPv4 unicast address family, the End-of-RIB
marker is an UPDATE message with the minimum length [BGP-4]. For any
other address family, it is an UPDATE message that contains only the
MP_UNREACH_NLRI attribute [BGP-MP] with no withdrawn routes for that
<AFI, SAFI>.
Although the End-of-RIB marker is specified for the purpose of BGP
graceful restart, it is noted that the generation of such a marker
upon completion of the initial update would be useful for routing
convergence in general, and thus the practice is recommended.
In addition, it would be beneficial for routing convergence if a BGP
speaker can indicate to its peer up-front that it will generate the
End-of-RIB marker, regardless of its ability to preserve its
forwarding state during BGP restart. This can be accomplished using
the Graceful Restart Capability described in the next section.
3. Graceful Restart Capability
The Graceful Restart Capability is a new BGP capability [BGP-CAP]
that can be used by a BGP speaker to indicate its ability to preserve
its forwarding state during BGP restart. It can also be used to
convey to its peer its intention of generating the End-of-RIB marker
upon the completion of its initial routing updates.
This capability is defined as follows:
Capability code: 64
Capability length: variable
Capability value: Consists of the "Restart Flags" field, "Restart
Time" field, and 0 to 63 of the tuples <AFI, SAFI, Flags for
address family> as follows:
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RFC 4724 Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP January 2007
+--------------------------------------------------+
| Restart Flags (4 bits) |
+--------------------------------------------------+
| Restart Time in seconds (12 bits) |
+--------------------------------------------------+
| Address Family Identifier (16 bits) |
+--------------------------------------------------+
| Subsequent Address Family Identifier (8 bits) |
+--------------------------------------------------+
| Flags for Address Family (8 bits) |
+--------------------------------------------------+
| ... |
+--------------------------------------------------+
| Address Family Identifier (16 bits) |
+--------------------------------------------------+
| Subsequent Address Family Identifier (8 bits) |
+--------------------------------------------------+
| Flags for Address Family (8 bits) |
+--------------------------------------------------+
The use and meaning of the fields are as follows:
Restart Flags:
This field contains bit flags related to restart.
0 1 2 3
+-+-+-+-+
|R|Resv.|
+-+-+-+-+
The most significant bit is defined as the Restart State (R)
bit, which can be used to avoid possible deadlock caused by
waiting for the End-of-RIB marker when multiple BGP speakers
peering with each other restart. When set (value 1), this bit
indicates that the BGP speaker has restarted, and its peer MUST
NOT wait for the End-of-RIB marker from the speaker before
advertising routing information to the speaker.
The remaining bits are reserved and MUST be set to zero by the
sender and ignored by the receiver.
Restart Time:
This is the estimated time (in seconds) it will take for the
BGP session to be re-established after a restart. This can be
used to speed up routing convergence by its peer in case that
the BGP speaker does not come back after a restart.
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RFC 4724 Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP January 2007
Address Family Identifier (AFI), Subsequent Address Family
Identifier (SAFI):
The AFI and SAFI, taken in combination, indicate that Graceful
Restart is supported for routes that are advertised with the
same AFI and SAFI. Routes may be explicitly associated with a
particular AFI and SAFI using the encoding of [BGP-MP] or
implicitly associated with <AFI=IPv4, SAFI=Unicast> if using
the encoding of [BGP-4].
Flags for Address Family:
This field contains bit flags relating to routes that were
advertised with the given AFI and SAFI.
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
|F| Reserved |
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
The most significant bit is defined as the Forwarding State (F)
bit, which can be used to indicate whether the forwarding state
for routes that were advertised with the given AFI and SAFI has
indeed been preserved during the previous BGP restart. When
set (value 1), the bit indicates that the forwarding state has
been preserved.
The remaining bits are reserved and MUST be set to zero by the
sender and ignored by the receiver.
When a sender of this capability does not include any <AFI, SAFI> in
the capability, it means that the sender is not capable of preserving
its forwarding state during BGP restart, but supports procedures for
the Receiving Speaker (as defined in Section 4.2 of this document).
In that case, the value of the "Restart Time" field advertised by the
sender is irrelevant.
A BGP speaker MUST NOT include more than one instance of the Graceful
Restart Capability in the capability advertisement [BGP-CAP]. If
more than one instance of the Graceful Restart Capability is carried
in the capability advertisement, the receiver of the advertisement
MUST ignore all but the last instance of the Graceful Restart
Capability.
Including <AFI=IPv4, SAFI=unicast> in the Graceful Restart Capability
does not imply that the IPv4 unicast routing information should be
carried by using the BGP multiprotocol extensions [BGP-MP] -- it
could be carried in the NLRI field of the BGP UPDATE message.
Sangli, et al. Standards Track [Page 5]
RFC 4724 Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP January 2007
4. Operation
A BGP speaker MAY advertise the Graceful Restart Capability for an
address family to its peer if it has the ability to preserve its
forwarding state for the address family when BGP restarts. In
addition, even if the speaker does not have the ability to preserve
its forwarding state for any address family during BGP restart, it is
still recommended that the speaker advertise the Graceful Restart
Capability to its peer (as mentioned before this is done by not
including any <AFI, SAFI> in the advertised capability). There are
two reasons for doing this. The first is to indicate its intention
of generating the End-of-RIB marker upon the completion of its
initial routing updates, as doing this would be useful for routing
convergence in general. The second is to indicate its support for a
peer which wishes to perform a graceful restart.
The End-of-RIB marker MUST be sent by a BGP speaker to its peer once
it completes the initial routing update (including the case when
there is no update to send) for an address family after the BGP
session is established.
It is noted that the normal BGP procedures MUST be followed when the
TCP session terminates due to the sending or receiving of a BGP
NOTIFICATION message.
A suggested default for the Restart Time is a value less than or
equal to the HOLDTIME carried in the OPEN.
In the following sections, "Restarting Speaker" refers to a router
whose BGP has restarted, and "Receiving Speaker" refers to a router
that peers with the restarting speaker.
Consider that the Graceful Restart Capability for an address family
is advertised by the Restarting Speaker, and is understood by the
Receiving Speaker, and a BGP session between them is established.
The following sections detail the procedures that MUST be followed by
the Restarting Speaker as well as the Receiving Speaker once the
Restarting Speaker restarts.
4.1. Procedures for the Restarting Speaker
When the Restarting Speaker restarts, it MUST retain, if possible,
the forwarding state for the BGP routes in the Loc-RIB and MUST mark
them as stale. It MUST NOT differentiate between stale and other
information during forwarding.
To re-establish the session with its peer, the Restarting Speaker
MUST set the "Restart State" bit in the Graceful Restart Capability
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RFC 4724 Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP January 2007
of the OPEN message. Unless allowed via configuration, the
"Forwarding State" bit for an address family in the capability can be
set only if the forwarding state has indeed been preserved for that
address family during the restart.
Once the session between the Restarting Speaker and the Receiving
Speaker is re-established, the Restarting Speaker will receive and
process BGP messages from its peers. However, it MUST defer route
selection for an address family until it either (a) receives the
End-of-RIB marker from all its peers (excluding the ones with the
"Restart State" bit set in the received capability and excluding the
ones that do not advertise the graceful restart capability) or (b)
the Selection_Deferral_Timer referred to below has expired. It is
noted that prior to route selection, the speaker has no routes to
advertise to its peers and no routes to update the forwarding state.
In situations where both Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP) and BGP have
restarted, it might be advantageous to wait for IGP to converge
before the BGP speaker performs route selection.
After the BGP speaker performs route selection, the forwarding state
of the speaker MUST be updated and any previously marked stale
information MUST be removed. The Adj-RIB-Out can then be advertised
to its peers. Once the initial update is complete for an address
family (including the case that there is no routing update to send),
the End-of-RIB marker MUST be sent.
To put an upper bound on the amount of time a router defers its route
selection, an implementation MUST support a (configurable) timer that
imposes this upper bound. This timer is referred to as the
"Selection_Deferral_Timer". The value of this timer should be large
enough, so as to provide all the peers of the Restarting Speaker with
enough time to send all the routes to the Restarting Speaker.
If one wants to apply graceful restart only when the restart is
planned (as opposed to both planned and unplanned restart), then one
way to accomplish this would be to set the Forwarding State bit to 1
after a planned restart, and to 0 in all other cases. Other
approaches to accomplish this are outside the scope of this document.
4.2. Procedures for the Receiving Speaker
When the Restarting Speaker restarts, the Receiving Speaker may or
may not detect the termination of the TCP session with the Restarting
Speaker, depending on the underlying TCP implementation, whether or
not [BGP-AUTH] is in use, and the specific circumstances of the
restart. In case it does not detect the termination of the old TCP
session and still considers the BGP session as being established, it
Sangli, et al. Standards Track [Page 7]
RFC 4724 Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP January 2007
MUST treat the subsequent open connection from the peer as an
indication of the termination of the old TCP session and act
accordingly (when the Graceful Restart Capability has been received
from the peer). See Section 8 for a description of this behavior in
terms of the BGP finite state machine.
"Acting accordingly" in this context means that the previous TCP
session MUST be closed, and the new one retained. Note that this
behavior differs from the default behavior, as specified in [BGP-4],
Section 6.8. Since the previous connection is considered to be
terminated, no NOTIFICATION message should be sent -- the previous
TCP session is simply closed.
When the Receiving Speaker detects termination of the TCP session for
a BGP session with a peer that has advertised the Graceful Restart
Capability, it MUST retain the routes received from the peer for all
the address families that were previously received in the Graceful
Restart Capability and MUST mark them as stale routing information.
To deal with possible consecutive restarts, a route (from the peer)
previously marked as stale MUST be deleted. The router MUST NOT
differentiate between stale and other routing information during
forwarding.
In re-establishing the session, the "Restart State" bit in the
Graceful Restart Capability of the OPEN message sent by the Receiving
Speaker MUST NOT be set unless the Receiving Speaker has restarted.
The presence and the setting of the "Forwarding State" bit for an
address family depend upon the actual forwarding state and
configuration.
If the session does not get re-established within the "Restart Time"
that the peer advertised previously, the Receiving Speaker MUST
delete all the stale routes from the peer that it is retaining.
A BGP speaker could have some way of determining whether its peer's
forwarding state is still viable, for example through Bidirectional
Forwarding Detection [BFD] or through monitoring layer two
information. Specifics of such mechanisms are beyond the scope of
this document. In the event that it determines that its peer's
forwarding state is not viable prior to the re-establishment of the
session, the speaker MAY delete all the stale routes from the peer
that it is retaining.
Once the session is re-established, if the "Forwarding State" bit for
a specific address family is not set in the newly received Graceful
Restart Capability, or if a specific address family is not included
in the newly received Graceful Restart Capability, or if the Graceful
Restart Capability is not received in the re-established session at
Sangli, et al. Standards Track [Page 8]
RFC 4724 Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP January 2007
all, then the Receiving Speaker MUST immediately remove all the stale
routes from the peer that it is retaining for that address family.
The Receiving Speaker MUST send the End-of-RIB marker once it
completes the initial update for an address family (including the
case that it has no routes to send) to the peer.
The Receiving Speaker MUST replace the stale routes by the routing
updates received from the peer. Once the End-of-RIB marker for an
address family is received from the peer, it MUST immediately remove
any routes from the peer that are still marked as stale for that
address family.
To put an upper bound on the amount of time a router retains the
stale routes, an implementation MAY support a (configurable) timer
that imposes this upper bound.
5. Changes to BGP Finite State Machine
As mentioned under "Procedures for the Receiving Speaker" above, this
specification modifies the BGP finite state machine.
The specific state machine modifications to [BGP-4], Section 8.2.2,
are as follows.
In the Idle state, make the following changes.
Replace this text:
- initializes all BGP resources for the peer connection,
with
- initializes all BGP resources for the peer connection, other
than those resources required in order to retain routes
according to section "Procedures for the Receiving Speaker" of
this (Graceful Restart) specification,
In the Established state, make the following changes.
Replace this text:
In response to an indication that the TCP connection is
successfully established (Event 16 or Event 17), the second
connection SHALL be tracked until it sends an OPEN message.
with
Sangli, et al. Standards Track [Page 9]
RFC 4724 Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP January 2007
If the Graceful Restart Capability with one or more AFIs/SAFIs
has not been received for the session, then in response to an
indication that a TCP connection is successfully established
(Event 16 or Event 17), the second connection SHALL be tracked
until it sends an OPEN message.
However, if the Graceful Restart Capability with one or more
AFIs/SAFIs has been received for the session, then in response
to Event 16 or Event 17 the local system:
- retains all routes associated with this connection according
to section "Procedures for the Receiving Speaker" of this
(Graceful Restart) specification,
- releases all other BGP resources,
- drops the TCP connection associated with the ESTABLISHED
session,
- initializes all BGP resources for the peer connection, other
than those required in order to retain routes according to
section "Procedures for the Receiving Speaker" of this
specification,
- sets ConnectRetryCounter to zero,
- starts the ConnectRetryTimer with the initial value, and
- changes its state to Connect.
Replace this text:
If the local system receives a NOTIFICATION message (Event 24 or
Event 25), or a TcpConnectionFails (Event 18) from the underlying
TCP, the local system:
- sets the ConnectRetryTimer to zero,
- deletes all routes associated with this connection,
- releases all the BGP resources,
- drops the TCP connection,
- increments the ConnectRetryCounter by 1,
- changes its state to Idle.
Sangli, et al. Standards Track [Page 10]
RFC 4724 Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP January 2007
with
If the local system receives a NOTIFICATION message (Event 24 or
Event 25), or if the local system receives a TcpConnectionFails
(Event 18) from the underlying TCP and the Graceful Restart
capability with one or more AFIs/SAFIs has not been received for
the session, the local system:
- sets the ConnectRetryTimer to zero,
- deletes all routes associated with this connection,
- releases all the BGP resources,
- drops the TCP connection,
- increments the ConnectRetryCounter by 1, and
- changes its state to Idle.
However, if the local system receives a TcpConnectionFails (Event
18) from the underlying TCP, and the Graceful Restart Capability
with one or more AFIs/SAFIs has been received for the session, the
local system:
- sets the ConnectRetryTimer to zero,
- retains all routes associated with this connection according
to section "Procedures for the Receiving Speaker" of this
(Graceful Restart) specification,
- releases all other BGP resources,
- drops the TCP connection,
- increments the ConnectRetryCounter by 1, and
- changes its state to Idle.
6. Deployment Considerations
Although the procedures described in this document would help
minimize the effect of routing flaps, it is noted that when a BGP
Graceful Restart-capable router restarts, or if it restarts without
preserving its forwarding state (e.g., due to a power failure), there
is a potential for transient routing loops or blackholes in the
network if routing information changes before the involved routers
complete routing updates and convergence. Also, depending on the
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RFC 4724 Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP January 2007
network topology, if not all IBGP speakers are Graceful Restart
capable, there could be an increased exposure to transient routing
loops or blackholes when the Graceful Restart procedures are
exercised.
The Restart Time, the upper bound for retaining routes, and the upper
bound for deferring route selection may need to be tuned as more
deployment experience is gained.
Finally, it is noted that the benefits of deploying BGP Graceful
Restart in an Autonomous System (AS) whose IGPs and BGP are tightly
coupled (i.e., BGP and IGPs would both restart) and IGPs have no
similar Graceful Restart Capability are reduced relative to the
scenario where IGPs do have similar Graceful Restart Capability.
7. Security Considerations
Since with this proposal a new connection can cause an old one to be
terminated, it might seem to open the door to denial of service
attacks. However, it is noted that unauthenticated BGP is already
known to be vulnerable to denials of service through attacks on the
TCP transport. The TCP transport is commonly protected through use
of [BGP-AUTH]. Such authentication will equally protect against
denials of service through spurious new connections.
If an attacker is able to successfully open a TCP connection
impersonating a legitimate peer, the attacker's connection will
replace the legitimate one, potentially enabling the attacker to
advertise bogus routes. We note, however, that the window for such a
route insertion attack is small since through normal operation of the
protocol the legitimate peer would open a new connection, in turn
causing the attacker's connection to be terminated. Thus, this
attack devolves to a form of denial of service.
It is thus concluded that this proposal does not change the
underlying security model (and issues) of BGP-4.
We also note that implementations may allow use of graceful restart
to be controlled by configuration. If graceful restart is not
enabled, naturally the underlying security model of BGP-4 is
unchanged.
Sangli, et al. Standards Track [Page 12]
RFC 4724 Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP January 2007
8. Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank Bruce Cole, Lars Eggert, Bill Fenner,
Eric Gray, Jeffrey Haas, Sam Hartman, Alvaro Retana, Pekka Savola
Naiming Shen, Satinder Singh, Mark Townsley, David Ward, Shane
Wright, and Alex Zinin for their review and comments.
9. IANA Considerations
This document defines a new BGP capability - Graceful Restart
Capability. The Capability Code for Graceful Restart Capability is
64.
10. References
10.1. Normative References
[BGP-4] Rekhter, Y., Li, T., and S. Hares, "A Border Gateway
Protocol 4 (BGP-4)", RFC 4271, January 2006.
[BGP-MP] Bates, T., Rekhter, Y., Chandra, R., and D. Katz,
"Multiprotocol Extensions for BGP-4", RFC 2858, June
2000.
[BGP-CAP] Chandra, R. and J. Scudder, "Capabilities Advertisement
with BGP-4", RFC 3392, November 2002.
[BGP-AUTH] Heffernan, A., "Protection of BGP Sessions via the TCP
MD5 Signature Option", RFC 2385, August 1998.
[RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119, March 1997.
[IANA-AFI] http://www.iana.org/assignments/address-family-numbers
[IANA-SAFI] http://www.iana.org/assignments/safi-namespace
10.2. Informative References
[BFD] Katz, D. and D. Ward, "Bidirectional Forwarding
Detection", Work in Progress.
Sangli, et al. Standards Track [Page 13]
RFC 4724 Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP January 2007
Authors' Addresses
Srihari R. Sangli
Cisco Systems, Inc.
EMail: rsrihari@cisco.com
Yakov Rekhter
Juniper Networks, Inc.
EMail: yakov@juniper.net
Rex Fernando
Juniper Networks, Inc.
EMail: rex@juniper.net
John G. Scudder
Juniper Networks, Inc.
EMail: jgs@juniper.net
Enke Chen
Cisco Systems, Inc.
EMail: enkechen@cisco.com
Sangli, et al. Standards Track [Page 14]
RFC 4724 Graceful Restart Mechanism for BGP January 2007
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Sangli, et al. Standards Track [Page 15]