Network Working Group                                          T. Narten
Internet-Draft                                                       IBM
Intended status: Informational                         February 17, 2010
Expires: August 21, 2010


                 On the Scalability of Internet Routing
              draft-narten-radir-problem-statement-05.txt

Abstract

   There has been much discussion over the last years about the overall
   scalability of the Internet routing system.  Some have argued that
   the resources required to maintain routing tables in the core of the
   Internet are growing faster than available technology will be able to
   keep up.  Others disagree with that assessment.  This document
   attempts to describe the factors that are placing pressure on the
   routing system and the growth trends behind those factors.

Status of this Memo

   This Internet-Draft is submitted to IETF in full conformance with the
   provisions of BCP 78 and BCP 79.

   Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
   Task Force (IETF), its areas, and its working groups.  Note that
   other groups may also distribute working documents as Internet-
   Drafts.

   Internet-Drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum of six months
   and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted by other documents at any
   time.  It is inappropriate to use Internet-Drafts as reference
   material or to cite them other than as "work in progress."

   The list of current Internet-Drafts can be accessed at
   http://www.ietf.org/ietf/1id-abstracts.txt.

   The list of Internet-Draft Shadow Directories can be accessed at
   http://www.ietf.org/shadow.html.

   This Internet-Draft will expire on August 21, 2010.

Copyright Notice

   Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
   document authors.  All rights reserved.

   This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal



Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010                [Page 1]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents
   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of
   publication of this document.  Please review these documents
   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect
   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must
   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of
   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as
   described in the BSD License.

   This document may contain material from IETF Documents or IETF
   Contributions published or made publicly available before November
   10, 2008.  The person(s) controlling the copyright in some of this
   material may not have granted the IETF Trust the right to allow
   modifications of such material outside the IETF Standards Process.
   Without obtaining an adequate license from the person(s) controlling
   the copyright in such materials, this document may not be modified
   outside the IETF Standards Process, and derivative works of it may
   not be created outside the IETF Standards Process, except to format
   it for publication as an RFC or to translate it into languages other
   than English.































Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010                [Page 2]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


Table of Contents

   1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  3
   2.  Terms and Definitions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  4
   3.  Background . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  6
     3.1.  Technical Aspects  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
     3.2.  Business Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  7
     3.3.  Alignment of Incentives  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  8
     3.4.  Table Growth Targets . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  9
   4.  Pressures on Routing Table Size  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
     4.1.  Traffic Engineering  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
     4.2.  Multihoming  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
     4.3.  End Site Renumbering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
     4.4.  Acquisitions and Mergers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
     4.5.  RIR Address Allocation Policies  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
     4.6.  Dual Stack Pressure on the Routing Table . . . . . . . . . 13
     4.7.  Internal Customer Routes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
     4.8.  IPv4 Address Exhaustion  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
   5.  Pressures on Control Plane Load  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
     5.1.  Interconnection Richness . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
     5.2.  Multihoming  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
     5.3.  Traffic Engineering  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
     5.4.  Questionable Operational Practices?  . . . . . . . . . . . 16
       5.4.1.  Rapid shuffling of prefixes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
       5.4.2.  Anti-Route Hijacking . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
       5.4.3.  Operational Ignorance  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
     5.5.  RIR Policy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
   6.  Summary  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
   7.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
   8.  IANA Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
   9.  Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22
   10. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23
   Author's Address . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24


















Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010                [Page 3]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


1.  Introduction

   Prompted in part by the October, 2006 IAB workshop on Routing &
   Addressing [RFC4984], there has been a renewed focus on the topic of
   routing scalability within the Internet.  The issue itself is not
   new, with discussions dating back at least 10-15 years [GSE, ROAD].

   This document attempts to describe the "pain points" being placed on
   the routing system, with the aim of describing the essential aspects
   so that the community has a way of evaluating whether proposed
   changes to the routing system actually address or impact existing
   pain points in a significant manner.







































Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010                [Page 4]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


2.  Terms and Definitions

   Control Plane:  The routing setup protocols, their associated state
      and the activity needed to create and maintain the data structures
      used to forward packets from one network to another.  The term is
      defined broadly to include all protocols and activities needed to
      construct and maintain the forwarding tables used to forward
      packets.

   Control Plane Load:  The actual load associated with operating the
      Control Plane.  The higher the control plane load, the higher the
      cost of operating the control plane (in terms of hardware,
      bandwidth, power, etc.).  The terms "routing load" and "control
      plane load" are used interchangeably throughout this document.

   Control Plane Cost:  The overall cost associated with operating the
      Control Plane.  The cost consists of capital costs (for hardware),
      bandwidth costs (for the control plane signalling) and any other
      ongoing operational cost associated with operating and maintaining
      the control plane.

   Default Free Zone (DFZ):  That part of the Internet where routers
      maintain full routing tables.  Many routers maintain only partial
      tables, having explicit routes for "local" destinations (i.e.,
      prefixes) plus a "default" for everything else.  For such routers,
      building and maintaining routing tables is relatively simple
      because the amount of information learned and maintained can be
      small.  In contrast, routers in the DFZ maintain complete
      information about all reachable destinations, which at the time of
      this writing number in the hundreds of thousands of entries.

   Routing Information Base (RIB):  The data structures a router
      maintains that hold the information about destinations and paths
      to those destinations.  The amount of state information maintained
      is dependent on a number of factors, including the number of
      individual prefixes learned from peers, the number of BGP peers,
      the number of distinct paths interconnecting destinations, etc.
      In addition to maintaining information about active paths used for
      forwarding, the RIB may also include information about unused
      ("backup") paths.

   Forwarding Information Base (FIB):  The actual table consulted while
      making forwarding decisions for individual packets.  The FIB is a
      compact, optimized subset of the RIB, containing only the
      information needed to actually forward individual packets, i.e.,
      mapping a packet's destination address to an outgoing interface
      and next-hop.  The FIB only stores information about paths
      actually used for forwarding; it typically does not store



Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010                [Page 5]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


      information about backup paths.  The FIB is typically constructed
      from specialized hardware components, which have different (and
      higher) cost properties than the hardware typically used to
      maintain the RIB.

   Traffic Engineering (TE):  In this document, "traffic engineering"
      refers to the current practice of inbound, inter-AS traffic
      engineering.  TE is accomplished by injecting additional, more-
      specific routes into the routing system and/or increasing the
      frequency of routing updates in order to arrange for inbound
      traffic at the boundary of an Autonomous system (AS) to travel
      over a different path than it otherwise would.

   Provider Aggregatable (PA) address space:  Address space that an end
      site obtains from an upstream ISP's address block.  The main
      benefit of PA address space is that reachability to all of a
      provider's customers can be achieved by advertising a single
      "provider aggregate" address prefix into the DFZ, rather than
      needing to announce individual prefixes for each customer.  An
      important disadvantage is that when a customer changes providers,
      the customer must renumber their site into addresses belonging to
      the new provider and return the previously used addresses to the
      former provider.

   Provider Independent (PI) address space:  Address space that an end
      site obtains directly from a Regional Internet Registry (RIR) for
      addressing its devices.  The main advantage (for the end site) is
      that it does not need to renumber its site when changing
      providers, since it continues to use its PI block.  However, PI
      address blocks are not aggregatable and thus each individual PI
      assignment results in an individual prefix being injected into the
      DFZ.

   Site:  Any topologically and administratively distinct entity that
      connects to the Internet.  A site can range from a large
      enterprise or ISP to a small home site.















Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010                [Page 6]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


3.  Background

   Within the DFZ, both the size of the RIB and FIB and the overall
   update rate have historically increased at a greater than linear
   rate.  Specifically:

   o  The number of individual prefixes that are being propagated into
      the DFZ over time has been and continues to increase at a faster-
      than-linear rate.  The term "super-linear" has been used to
      characterize the growth.  The exact nature of the growth is much
      debated (e.g., quadratic, polynomial, etc.), but growth is clearly
      faster than linear.  The reasons behind the rate increase are
      varied and discussed below.  Because each individual prefix
      requires resources to process, any increase in the number of
      prefixes produces a corresponding increase in control plane load
      of the routing system.  Each individual prefix that appears in
      routing updates requires state in the RIB (and possibly the FIB)
      and consumes processing and other resources when updates related
      to the prefix are received.

   o  The overall rate of routing updates is increasing [1], requiring
      routers to process updates at an increased rate or converge more
      slowly if they cannot.  The rate increase of the control plane
      load is driven by a number of factors (discussed below).  Further
      study is needed to better understand the factors behind the
      increasing update rate.  For example, it appears that a
      disproportionate increase in observed updates originates from a
      small percentage of the total number of advertised prefixes.

   The super-linear growth in the routing load presents a scalability
   challenge for current and/or future routers.  While there appears to
   be general agreement that we will be able to build routers (i.e.,
   hardware & software) actually capable of handling the control plane
   load, both today and going forward, there is considerable debate
   about the cost.  In particular, will it be possible for ISPs that
   currently (or would like to) maintain routes as part of the DFZ be
   able to afford to do so, or will only the largest (and a shrinking
   number) of top tier ISPs be able to afford the investment and cost of
   operating the control plane while being a part of the DFZ?

   Finally, the scalability challenge is aggravated by the lack of any
   firm limiting architectural upper-bound on the growth rate of the
   routing load and a weakening of social constraints that historically
   have helped restrain the growth rate so far.  Going forward, there is
   considerable uncertainty (some would say doubt) whether future growth
   rates will continue to be sufficiently constrained so that router
   development can keep up at an acceptable price point.




Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010                [Page 7]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


3.1.  Technical Aspects

   The technical challenge of building routers relates to the resources
   needed to process a larger and increasingly dynamic amount of routing
   information.  More specifically, routers must maintain an increasing
   amount of associated state information in the RIB, they must be
   capable of populating a growing FIB, they must perform forwarding
   lookups at line rates (while accessing the FIB) and they must be able
   to initialize the RIB and FIB after system restart.  All of these
   activities must take place within acceptable time frames (i.e., paths
   for individual destinations must converge and stabilize within an
   acceptable time period).  Finally, the hardware needed to achieve
   this cannot have unreasonable power consumption or cooling demands.

3.2.  Business Considerations

   While the IETF does not (and cannot) concern itself with business
   models or the profitability of the ISP community, the cost of running
   the routing subsystem as a whole is directly influenced by the
   routing architecture of the Internet, which clearly is the IETF's
   business.  Thus, it is useful to consider the overall business
   environment that underlies operation of the DFZ routing
   infrastructure.  The DFZ is run entirely by the private sector with
   no overall governmental oversight or regulatory framework to oversee
   or even influence what routes are propagated where, who must carry
   them, etc.  ISPs decide (on their own) which routing updates to
   accept and how (if at all) to process them.  Thus, there is no
   overall authority that can limit the number of prefixes that are
   injected into the DFZ or that insure that any particular prefixes are
   accepted at all.  Today, the system functions because the set of
   entities that comprise the DFZ are (generally) able to accept the
   prefixes that are being advertised and some loose best practices have
   emerged that are generally followed (e.g., minimum prefix sizes that
   are routed coupled with RIR policies that place limitations on who
   may obtain PI prefixes).

   In general the Internet would benefit if the cost of the (routing)
   infrastructure did not grow too rapidly as the Internet grows, since
   a lower infrastructure cost makes it possible to provide Internet
   service at a lower cost to a larger number of users.  That said, some
   types of Internet growth tie directly to revenue opportunities or
   cost savings for an ISP (e.g., adding more users/customers,
   increasing bandwidth, technological advances, providing new or
   additional services, etc.).  Upgrading or changing infrastructure is
   most feasible (and expected) when supported by a workable cost
   recovery model.  Hence limiting the cost of self-induced scaling is a
   nice-to-have benefit, but not a requirement.




Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010                [Page 8]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


   On the other hand, it is problematic when the infrastructure cost for
   an ISP grows (rapidly) due to factors outside of its own control,
   e.g., resulting from overall Internet growth external to the ISP.  If
   an ISP that does not add new customers, upgrade the bandwidth for
   their customers, or provide new services needs to upgrade or replace
   their infrastructure in unexpected ways, then they have no natural
   cost recovery mechanisms.  This is in essence what is happening with
   the scaling of the global routing table.  An ISP that is part of the
   DFZ may need to upgrade its routers to handle an increased routing
   load just to maintain the same level of service with respect to their
   current customers and services.

   Even if it is technically possible to build routers capable of
   meeting the technical and operational requirements, it is also
   necessary that the overall cost to build, maintain and deploy such
   equipment meet reasonable business expectations.  ISPs, after all,
   are run as businesses.  As such, they must be able to plan, develop
   and construct viable business plans that provide an acceptable return
   on investment (i.e., one acceptable to investors).

3.3.  Alignment of Incentives

   Today's growth pattern is influenced by the scaling properties of the
   current routing system.  If the routing system had better scaling
   properties, we would be able support and enable more widespread usage
   of such services as multihoming and traffic engineering.  The current
   system simply would not be able to handle to the routing load if
   everyone were to choose to multihome.  There are millions of
   potential end sites that would benefit from being able to multihome.
   This compares with a low few hundred thousand prefixes being carried
   today.  Broader availability of multihoming is limited by barriers
   imposed by operational practices that try to strike a balance between
   the amount of multihoming and preservation of routing slots.  It is
   desirable that the routing and addressing system exert the least
   possible back pressure on end user applications and deployment
   scenarios, to enable the broadest possible use of the Internet.

   One aspect of the current architecture is a misalignment of cost and
   benefit.  Injecting individual prefixes into the DFZ creates a small
   amount of "pain" for those routers that are part of the DFZ.  Each
   individual prefix adds only a small cost to the routing load, but the
   aggregate sum of all prefixes is significant, and leads to the key
   issue at hand.  Those that inject prefixes into the DFZ do not
   generally pay the cost associated with the individual prefix -- it is
   carried by the routers in the DFZ.  But the originator of the prefix
   receives the benefit.  Hence, there is misalignment of incentives
   between those receiving the benefit and those bearing the cost of
   providing the benefit.  Consequently, incentives are not aligned



Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010                [Page 9]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


   properly to produce a natural feedback loop to balance the cost and
   benefit of maintaining routing tables.

3.4.  Table Growth Targets

   A precise target for the rate of table size or routing update
   increase that should reasonably be supported going forward is
   difficult to state in quantitative terms.  One target might simply be
   to keep the growth at a stable, but manageable growth rate so that
   the increased router functionality can roughly be covered by
   improvements in technology (e.g., increased processor speeds,
   reductions in component costs, etc.).

   However, it is highly desirable to significantly bring down (or even
   reverse) the growth rate in order to meet user expectations for
   specific services.  As discussed below, there are numerous pressures
   to deaggregate routes.  These pressures come from users seeking
   specific, tangible service improvements that provide "business-
   critical" value.  Today, some of those services simply cannot be
   supported to the degree that future demand can reasonably be expected
   because of the negative implications on DFZ table growth.  Hence,
   valuable services are available to some, but not all potential
   customers.  As the need for such services becomes increasingly
   important, it will be difficult to deny such services to large
   numbers of users, especially when some "lucky" sites are able to use
   the service and others are not.

























Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 10]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


4.  Pressures on Routing Table Size

   There are a number of factors behind the increase in the quantity of
   prefixes appearing in the DFZ.  From a theoretical perspective, the
   number of prefixes in the DFZ can be minimized through aggressive
   aggregation [RFC4632].  In practice, strict adherence to the CIDR
   principles is difficult.

4.1.  Traffic Engineering

   Traffic engineering (TE) is the act of arranging for certain Internet
   traffic to use or avoid certain network paths (that is, TE attempts
   to place traffic where capacity exists, or where some set of
   parameters of the path is more favorable to the traffic being placed
   there).

   Outbound TE is typically accomplished by using internal interial
   gateway protocol (IGP) metrics to choose the shortest exit for two
   equally good BGP paths.  Adjustment of IGP metrics controls how much
   traffic flows over different internal paths to specific exit points
   for two equally good BGP paths.  Additional traffic can be moved by
   applying some policy to depreference or filter certain routes from
   specific BGP peers.  Because outbound TE is achieved via a site's own
   IGP, outbound TE does not impact routing outside of a site.

   Inbound TE is performed by announcing a more-specific route along the
   preferred path that "catches" the desired traffic and channels it
   away from the path it would take otherwise (i.e., via a larger
   aggregate).  At the BGP level, if the address range requiring TE is a
   portion of a larger address aggregate, network operators implementing
   TE are forced to de-aggregate otherwise aggregatable prefixes in
   order to steer the traffic of the particular address range to
   specific paths.

   TE is performed by both ISPs and customer networks, for three primary
   reasons:

   o  to match traffic with network capacity, or to spread the traffic
      load across multiple links (frequently referred to as "load
      balancing")

   o  to reduce costs by shifting traffic to lower cost paths or by
      balancing the incoming and outgoing traffic volume to maintain
      appropriate peering relations

   o  to enforce certain forms of policy (e.g., to prevent government
      traffic from transiting through other countries)




Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 11]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


   TE impacts route scaling in two ways.  First, inbound TE can result
   in additional prefixes being advertised into the DFZ.  Second,
   Network operators usually achieve traffic engineering by "tweaking"
   the processing of routing protocols to achieve desired results, e.g.,
   by sending updates at an increased rate.  In addition, some devices
   attempt to automatically find better paths and then advertise those
   preferences through BGP, though the extent to which such tools are in
   use and contributing to the control plane load is unknown.

   In today's highly competitive environment, providers require TE to
   maintain good performance and low cost in their networks.

4.2.  Multihoming

   Multihoming refers generically to the case in which a site is served
   by more than one ISP [RFC4116].  Multihoming is used to provide
   backup paths (i.e., to remove single points of failure), to achieve
   load-sharing, and to achieve policy or performance objectives (e.g.,
   to use lower latency or higher bandwidth paths).  Multihoming may
   also be a requirement due to contract or law.

   Multihoming can be accomplished using either PI or PA address space.
   A multihomed site advertises its site prefix into the routing system
   of each of its providers.  For PI space, the site's PI space is used,
   and the prefix is propagated throughout the DFZ.  For PA space, the
   PA site prefix may (or may not) be propagated throughout the DFZ,
   with the details depending on what type of multihoming is sought.

   If the site uses PA space, the PA site prefix allocated from one of
   its providers (whom we'll call the Primary Provider) is used.  The PA
   site prefix will be aggregatable by the Primary Provider but not the
   others.  To achieve multihoming with comparable properties to that
   when PI addresses are used as described above, the PA site prefix
   will need to be injected into the routing system of all of its ISPs,
   and throughout the DFZ.  In addition, because of the longest-match
   forwarding rule, the Primary Provider must advertise both its
   aggregate and the individual PA site prefix; otherwise, the path via
   the primary provider (as advertised via the aggregate) will never be
   selected due to the longest match rule.  For the type of multihoming
   described here, where the PA site prefix is propagated throughout the
   DFZ, the use of PI vs. PA space has no impact on the control plane
   load.  The increased load is due entirely to the need to propagate
   the site's individual prefix throughout the DFZ.

   The demand for multihoming is increasing [2].  The increase in
   multihoming demand is due to the increased reliance on the Internet
   for mission and business-critical applications (where businesses
   require 7x24 availability for their services) and the general



Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 12]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


   decrease in cost of Internet connectivity.

4.3.  End Site Renumbering

   It is generally considered painful and costly to renumber a site,
   with the cost proportional to the size and complexity of the network
   and most importantly, to the degree that addresses are stored in
   places that are difficult in practice to update.  When using PA
   space, a site must renumber when changing providers.  Larger sites
   object to this cost and view the requirement to renumber akin to
   being held "hostage" to the provider from which PA space was
   obtained.  Consequently, many sites desire PI space.  Having PI space
   provides independence from any one provider and makes it easier to
   switch providers (for whatever reason).  However, each individual PI
   prefix must be propagated throughout the DFZ and adds to the control
   plane load.

   It should be noted that while larger sites may also want to
   multihome, the cost of renumbering drives some sites to seek PI
   space, even though they do not multihome.

4.4.  Acquisitions and Mergers

   Acquisitions and mergers take place for business reasons, which
   usually have little to do with the network topologies of the impacted
   organizations.  When a business sells off part of itself, the assets
   may include networks, attached devices, etc.  A company that
   purchases or merges with other organizations may quickly find that
   its network assets are numbered out of many different and
   unaggragatable address blocks.  Consequently, an individual
   organization may find itself unable to announce a single prefix for
   all of their networks without renumbering a significant portion of
   its network.

   Likewise, selling off part of a business may involve selling part of
   a network as well, resulting in the fragmentation of one address
   block into two (or more) smaller blocks.  Because the resultant
   blocks belong to different organizations, they can no longer be
   advertised by a single aggregate and the resultant fragments may need
   to be advertised individually into the DFZ.

4.5.  RIR Address Allocation Policies

   ISPs and multihoming end sites obtain address space from RIRs.  As an
   entity grows, it needs additional address space and requests more
   from its RIR.  In order to be able to obtain additional address space
   that can be aggregated with the previously-allocated address space,
   the RIR must keep a reserve of space that the requester can grow into



Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 13]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


   in the future.  But any reserved address space cannot be used for any
   other purpose (i.e., assigned to another organization).  Hence, there
   is an inherent conflict between holding address space in reserve to
   allow for the future growth of an existing allocation holder and
   using address space efficiently.  In IPv4, there has been a heavy
   emphasis on conserving address space and obtaining efficient
   utilization.  Consequently, insufficient space has been held in
   reserve to allow for the growth of all sites and some allocations
   have had to be made from discontiguous address blocks.  That is, some
   sites have received discontiguous address blocks because their growth
   needs exceeded the amount of space held in reserve for them.

   In IPv6, its vast address space allows for a much a greater emphasis
   to be placed placed on preserving future aggregation than was
   possible in IPv4.

4.6.  Dual Stack Pressure on the Routing Table

   The recommended IPv6 deployment model is dual-stack, where IPv4 and
   IPv6 are run in parallel across the same links.  This has two
   implications for routing.  First, although alternative scenarios are
   possible, it seems likely that many routers will be supporting both
   IPv4 and IPv6 simultaneously and will thus be managing both IPv4 and
   IPv6 routing tables within a single router.  Second, for sites
   connected via both IPv4 and IPv6, both IPv4 and IPv6 prefixes will
   need to be propagated into the routing system.  Consequently, dual-
   stack routers will maintain both an IPv4 and IPv6 route to reach the
   same destination.

   It is possible to make some simple estimates on the approximate size
   of the IPv6 tables that would be needed if all sites reachable via
   IPv4 today were also reachable via IPv6.  In theory, each autonomous
   system (AS) needs only a single aggregate route.  This provides a
   lower bound on the size of the fully-realized IPv6 routing table.
   (As of Feb 2010, [3] states there are 33,548 active ASes in the
   routing system.)

   A single IPv6 aggregate will not allow for inbound traffic
   engineering.  End sites will need to advertise a number of smaller
   prefixes into the DFZ if they desire to gain finer grained control
   over their IPv6 inbound traffic.  This will increase the size of the
   IPv6 routing table beyond the lower bound discussed above.  There is
   reason to expect the IPv6 routing table will be smaller than the
   current IPv4 table, however, because the larger initial assignments
   to end sites will minimize the de-aggregation that occurs when a site
   must go back to its upstream address provider or RIR and receive a
   second, non-contiguous assignment.




Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 14]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


   It is possible to extrapolate what the size of the IPv6 Internet
   routing table would be if widespread IPv6 adoption occurred, from the
   current IPv4 Internet routing table.  Each active AS (33,548) would
   require at least one aggregate.  In addition, the IPv6 Internet table
   would also carry more-specific prefixes for traffic engineering.
   Assume that the IPv6 Internet table will carry the same number of
   more specifics as the IPv4 Internet table.  In this case one can take
   the number of IPv4 Internet routes and subtract the number of CIDR
   aggregates that they could easily be aggregated down to.  As of Feb
   2010, the 313,626 routes can be easily aggregated down to 193,844
   CIDR aggregates [3].  That difference yields 119,782 extra more-
   specific prefixes.  Thus if each active AS (33,548) required one
   aggregate, and an additional 119,782 more specifics were required,
   then the IPv6 Internet table would be 153,330 prefixes.

4.7.  Internal Customer Routes

   In addition to the Internet routing table, networks must also support
   their internal routing table.  Internal routes are defined as more-
   specific routes that are not advertised to the DFZ.  This primarily
   consists of prefixes that are a more-specific of a provider aggregate
   (PA) and are assigned to a single-homed customer.  The DFZ need only
   carry the PA aggregate in order to deliver traffic to the provider.
   However, the provider's routers require the more-specific route to
   deliver traffic to the end site.

   Internal routes could also come from more-specific prefixes
   advertised by multihomed customers with the "no-export" BGP
   community.  This is useful when the fine grained control of traffic
   to be influenced can be contained to the neighboring network.

   For a large ISP, the internal IPv4 table can be between 50,000 and
   150,000 routes.  During the dot com boom some ISPs had more internal
   prefixes than there were in the Internet table.  Thus the size of the
   internal routing table can have significant impact on the scalability
   and should not be discounted.

4.8.  IPv4 Address Exhaustion

   The IANA and RIR free pool of IPv4 addresses will be exhausted within
   a few years.  As the free pool shrinks, the size of the remaining
   unused blocks will also shrink and unused blocks previously held in
   reserve for expansion of existing allocations or otherwise not used
   due to their smaller size will be allocated for use.  Consequently,
   as the community looks to use every piece of available address space
   (no matter how small) there will be an increasing pressure to
   advertise additional prefixes in the DFZ.




Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 15]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


5.  Pressures on Control Plane Load

   This section describes a number of trends and pressures that are
   contributing to the overall routing load.  The previous section
   described pressures that are increasing the size of the routing
   table.  Even if the size could be bounded, the amount of work needed
   to maintain paths for a given set of prefixes appears to be
   increasing.

5.1.  Interconnection Richness

   The degree of interconnectedness between ASes has increased in recent
   years.  That is, the Internet as a whole is becoming "flatter" with
   an increasing number of possible paths interconnecting sites [4].  As
   the number of possible paths increase, the amount of computation
   needed to find a best path also increases.  This computation comes
   into effect whenever a change in path characteristics occurs, whether
   from a new path becoming available, an existing path failing, or a
   change in the attributes associated with a potential path.  Thus,
   even if the total number of prefixes were to stay constant, an
   increase in the interconnection richness implies an increase in the
   resources needed to maintain routing tables.

5.2.  Multihoming

   Multihoming places pressure on the routing system in two ways.
   First, an individual prefix for a multihomed site (whether PI or PA)
   must be propagated into the routing system, so that other sites can
   find a good path to the site.  Even if the site's prefix comes out of
   a PA block, an individual prefix for the site needs to be advertised
   so that the most desirable path to the site can be chosen when the
   path through the aggregate is sub-optimal.  Second, a multihomed site
   will be connected to the Internet in more than one place, increasing
   the overall level of interconnection richness.  If an outage occurs
   on any of the circuits connecting the site to the Internet, those
   changes will be propagated into the routing system.  In contrast, a
   singly-homed site numbered out of a Provider Aggregate places no
   additional control plane load in the DFZ as the details of the
   connectivity status to the site are kept internal to the provider to
   which it connects.

5.3.  Traffic Engineering

   The mechanisms used to achieve multihoming and inbound Traffic
   Engineering are the same.  In both cases, a specific prefix is
   advertised into the routing system to "catch" traffic and route it
   over a different path than it would otherwise be carried.  When
   multihoming, the specific prefix is one that differs from that of its



Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 16]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


   ISP or is a more-specific of the ISP's PA.  Traffic Engineering is
   achieved by taking one prefix and dividing it into a number of
   smaller and more-specific ones, and advertising them in order to gain
   finer-grained control over the paths used to carry traffic covered by
   those prefixes.

   Traffic Engineering increases the number of prefixes carried in the
   routing system.  In addition, when a circuit fails (or the routing
   attributes associated with the circuit change), additional load is
   placed on the routing system by having multiple prefixes potentially
   impacted by the change, as opposed to just one.

5.4.  Questionable Operational Practices?

   Some operators are believed to engage in operational practices that
   increase the load on the routing system.

5.4.1.  Rapid shuffling of prefixes

   Some networks try to assert fine-grained control of inbound traffic
   by modifying route announcements frequently in order to migrate
   traffic to less loaded links quickly.  The goal of this is to achieve
   higher utilization of multiple links.  In addition, some route
   selection devices actively measure link or path utilization and
   attempt to optimize inbound traffic by withholding or depreferencing
   certain prefixes in their advertisements.  In short, any system that
   actively measures load and modifies route advertisements in real time
   increases the load on the routing system, as any change in what is
   advertised must ripple through the entire routing system.

5.4.2.  Anti-Route Hijacking

   In order to reduce the threat of accidental (or intentional)
   hijacking of its address space by an unauthorized third party, some
   sites advertise their space as a set of smaller prefixes rather than
   as one aggregate.  That way, if someone else advertised a path for
   the larger aggregate (or a small piece of the aggregate), it will be
   ignored in favor of the more-specific announcements.  This increases
   both the number of prefixes advertised, and the number of updates.

5.4.3.  Operational Ignorance

   It is believed that some undesirable practices result from operator
   ignorance, where the operator is unaware of what they are doing and
   the impact that has on the DFZ.

   The default behavior of most BGP configurations is to automatically
   propagate all learned routes.  That is, one must take explicit



Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 17]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


   configuration steps to prevent the automatic propagation of learned
   routes.  In addition, it is often significant work to figure out how
   to (safely) aggregate routes (and which ones to aggregate) in order
   to reduce the number of advertisements propagated elsewhere.  While
   vendors could provide additional configuration "knobs" to reduce
   leakage, the implementation of additional features increases
   complexity and some operators may fear that the new configuration
   will break their existing routing setup.  Finally, leaking routes
   unnecessarily does not generally harm those responsible for the
   misconfiguration, hence, there may be little incentive to change such
   behavior.

5.5.  RIR Policy

   RIR address policy has direct impact on the control plane load
   because address policy determines who is eligible for a PI assignment
   (which impacts how many are given out in practice) and the size of
   the assignment (which impacts how much address space can be
   aggregated within a single assignment).  If PI assignments for end
   sites did not exist, then those end sites would not advertise their
   own prefix directly into the global routing system; instead their
   address block would be covered by their provider's aggregate.  That
   said, RIRs have adopted PI policies in response to community demand,
   for reasons described elsewhere (e.g., to support multihoming and to
   avoid the need to renumber).  In short, RIR policy can be seen as a
   symptom rather than a root cause.

























Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 18]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


6.  Summary

   As discussed in previous sections, in the current operating
   environment, an ISP may experience an overall increase in the routing
   load due entirely to external factors outside of its control.  These
   external pressures can make it increasingly difficult for ISPs to
   recover control plane related costs associated with the growth of the
   Internet.  Moreover, real business and user needs are creating
   increasing pressure to use techniques that increase the control plane
   load for ISPs operating within the DFZ.  While the system largely
   works today, there is a real risk that the current cost and incentive
   structures will be unable to keep control plane costs manageable
   (within the context of then-available routing hardware) over the next
   decades.  The Internet would strongly benefit from a routing and
   addressing model designed with this in mind.  Thus, in the absence of
   a business model that better supports such cost recovery, there is a
   need for an approach to routing and addressing that fulfils the
   following criteria:

   1.  Provides sufficient benefits to the party bearing the costs of
       deploying and maintaining the technology to recover the cost for
       doing so.

   2.  Reduces the growth rate of the DFZ control plane load.  In the
       current architecture, this is dominated by the routing, which is
       dependent on:

       A.  The number of individual prefixes in the DFZ

       B.  The update rate associated with those prefixes.

       Any change to the control plane architecture must result in a
       reduction in the overall control plane load, and shouldn't simply
       shift the load from one place in the system to another, without
       reducing the overall load as a whole.

   3.  Allows any end site wishing to multihome to do so

   4.  Supports ISP and enterprise TE needs

   5.  Allows end sites to switch providers while minimizing
       configuration changes to internal end site devices.

   6.  Provides end-to-end convergence/restoration of service at least
       comparable to that provided by the current architecture

   This document has purposefully been scoped to focus on the growth of
   the routing control plane load of operating the DFZ.  Other problems



Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 19]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


   that may seem related, but do not directly impact on route scaling
   are not considered to be "in scope" at this time.  For example,
   Mobile IP [RFC3344] [RFC3775] and NEMO [RFC3963] place no pressures
   on the routing system.  They are layered on top of existing IP, using
   tunneling to forward packets via a care-of addresses.  Hence,
   "improving" these technologies (e.g., by having them leverage a
   solution to the multihoming problem), while a laudable goal, is not
   considered a necessary goal.











































Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 20]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


7.  Security Considerations

   This document does not introduce any security considerations.
















































Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 21]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


8.  IANA Considerations

   This document contains no IANA actions.
















































Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 22]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


9.  Acknowledgments

   The initial version of this document was produced by the Routing and
   Addressing Directorate (http://www.ietf.org/IESG/content/radir.html).
   The membership of the directorate at that time included Marla
   Azinger, Vince Fuller, Vijay Gill, Thomas Narten, Erik Nordmark,
   Jason Schiller, Peter Schoenmaker, and John Scudder.

   Comments should be sent to rrg@iab.org or to radir@ietf.org.










































Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 23]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


10.  Informative References

   [RFC3344]  Perkins, C., "IP Mobility Support for IPv4", RFC 3344,
              August 2002.

   [RFC3775]  Johnson, D., Perkins, C., and J. Arkko, "Mobility Support
              in IPv6", RFC 3775, June 2004.

   [RFC3963]  Devarapalli, V., Wakikawa, R., Petrescu, A., and P.
              Thubert, "Network Mobility (NEMO) Basic Support Protocol",
              RFC 3963, January 2005.

   [RFC4116]  Abley, J., Lindqvist, K., Davies, E., Black, B., and V.
              Gill, "IPv4 Multihoming Practices and Limitations",
              RFC 4116, July 2005.

   [RFC4632]  Fuller, V. and T. Li, "Classless Inter-domain Routing
              (CIDR): The Internet Address Assignment and Aggregation
              Plan", BCP 122, RFC 4632, August 2006.

   [RFC4984]  Meyer, D., Zhang, L., and K. Fall, "Report from the IAB
              Workshop on Routing and Addressing", RFC 4984,
              September 2007.

   [1]  <http://www3.ietf.org/proceedings/06mar/slides/grow-3.pdf>

   [2]  <http://www.cidr-report.org/as2.0/, http://www.cidr-report.org/
        cgi-bin/
        plota?file=%2fvar%2fdata%2fbgp%2fas2.0%2fbgp%2das%2dcount%2etxt&
        descr=Unique%20ASes&ylabel=Unique%20ASes&with=step,http://
        www.potaroo.net/tools/asn32/>

   [3]  <http://www.cidr-report.org/as2.0/>

   [4]  <http://www.potaroo.net/bgprpts/bgp-average-aspath-length.png>
















Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 24]


Internet-Draft   On the Scalability of Internet Routing    February 2010


Author's Address

   Thomas Narten
   IBM

   Email: narten@us.ibm.com













































Narten                   Expires August 21, 2010               [Page 25]