MPLS ICMP Extensions

Mike Bernico mbernico at illinois.net
Thu Aug 14 18:21:28 UTC 2003


Maybe I'm wrong, but I thought that the extended MPLS info only showed
up when the trace was started on a PE or P router. Is that right?  

If customers or others outside the MPLS domain can see that info I'd
definitely agree with you.

Mike

-----Original Message-----
From: Leo Bicknell [mailto:bicknell at ufp.org] 
Sent: Thursday, August 14, 2003 12:40 PM
To: nanog at merit.edu
Subject: MPLS ICMP Extensions


I wanted to get some other opinions on some new features that have
appeared in recent code from the popular vendors.  It appears there
is a new draft, a copy of which can be found at
http://www.watersprings.org/links/mlr/id/draft-ietf-mpls-icmp-01.txt
that
allows MPLS enabled boxes to return some additonal information in
a traceroute packet.

That's all well and good, and I can see how that might be amazingly
useful to someone running an MPLS network, however, it seems to
expose data much further than the local network.  Here's a random
example from a traceroute I recently performed (on a Juniper):

traceroute wcg.net
[snip]
11  hrndva1wcx3-oc48.wcg.net (64.200.95.117)  91.935 ms  102.652 ms
92.960 ms
     MPLS Label=13198 CoS=0 TTL=1 S=1
12  hrndva1wcx2-oc48.wcg.net (64.200.95.77)  92.593 ms  92.785 ms 93.119
ms
     MPLS Label=12676 CoS=0 TTL=1 S=1
13  nycmny2wcx2-oc48.wcg.net (64.200.240.45)  93.273 ms  93.121 ms
93.067 ms
     MPLS Label=12632 CoS=0 TTL=1 S=1
14  nycmny2wcx3-oc48.wcg.net (64.200.87.78)  104.755 ms  91.949 ms
92.169 ms
     MPLS Label=12672 CoS=0 TTL=1 S=1
15  chcgil1wcx3-oc48.wcg.net (64.200.240.37)  92.021 ms  91.737 ms
91.684 ms
     MPLS Label=12592 CoS=0 TTL=1 S=1
16  chcgil1wcx3-pos5-0.wcg.net (64.200.210.114)  175.907 ms  278.144 ms
203.763 ms
     MPLS Label=12695 CoS=0 TTL=1 S=1
17  chcgil1wcx2-oc48.wcg.net (64.200.103.73)  93.286 ms  93.230 ms
93.593 ms
     MPLS Label=13506 CoS=0 TTL=1 S=1
18  stlsmo3wcf1-atm.wcg.net (64.200.210.158)  92.780 ms  92.344 ms
92.596 ms

It appears both Cisco and Juniper support this new feature.  The
question I quickly asked both vendors is how do you turn this
behavior off, so the traceroutes appear as they did before this
feature was introduced.  The answer, apparently, is you don't.  You
can either disable TTL processing on your MPLS tunnels (in effect
disabling traceroute), or you can have it output all this extra
information.

The response I'm getting so far from each vendor is they believe
this are the right two options to offer.  Thus, my post here.  I
think there are more people out there who would like to not expose
their MPLS labels, Class of Service info, or anything else this
feature can provide (because, I don't know all of what it can
display), but still allow traceroute to work normally.

If I'm off in the deep end, please tell me so, if not, please tell your
vendor rep you'd like the "icmp no mpls info" knob.

-- 
       Leo Bicknell - bicknell at ufp.org - CCIE 3440
        PGP keys at http://www.ufp.org/~bicknell/
Read TMBG List - tmbg-list-request at tmbg.org, www.tmbg.org



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