Side_1_360

(Dana P.) #1

  • S – 1 bit indicates end of label stacking as sev-
    eral labels may be stacked;

  • TTL – 8 bit giving the Time To Live informa-
    tion.


When an MPLS packet enters a Label Switching
Router(LSR) a table containing information,
Label Information Base(LIB) on further treat-
ment of the packet is looked up. This is illus-
trated in Figure 23. This base may also be re-
ferred to as the Next Hop Label Forwarding
Entry(NHLFE), which typically contains
the following information (ref. [RFC3031]):


  • Next hop of the packet;

  • Operation to perform on the packet’s label
    stack (replace the label at the top with another
    label, pop the label stack, or replace the label
    at the top of the stack with a new label and at
    the same time push one or more new labels
    onto the stack);

  • Data link encapsulation to use when transmit-
    ting the packet;

  • Way of encoding the label stack when trans-
    mitting the packet;

  • Other information relevant to forwarding
    treatment.


In a given LSR, the “next hop LSR” may be
the same LSR, implying that the top level label
should be popped and the packet “forwarded” to
itself, allowing or more forwarding decisions.

At the ingress of an MPLS domain an FEC-to-
NHLFE mapping is needed, that is when packets
arrive without an MPLS label.

Within an MPLS domain an incoming label
mapping is executed, mapping the packet onto
a set of NHLFEs.

MPLS can operate on a label stack. Operations
on this stack are push, pop and swap. This can
be used to merge and split traffic streams. The
push operation adds a new label at the top of the
stack and the pop operation removes one label
from the stack. The MPLS stack functionality
can be used to aggregate traffic trunks. A com-
mon label is added to the stack of labels. The
result is an aggregated trunk. When this MPLS
path is terminated the result will be a splitting
(de-aggregation) of the aggregated trunk into
its individual components. Two trunks can be
aggregated in this way if they share a portion of
their path. Hence, MPLS can provide hier-
archical forwarding, which may become an
important feature. A consequence may be that
the transit provider need not carry global routing
information, thus making the MPLS network
more stable and scalable than a full-blown
routed network.

To limit the number of MPLS paths, merging
can be utilised. Then two paths in the same
direction and with common requirements are
placed together in a common LSP on the out-
going side resulting in a many-to-one mapping
of labels.

Figure 23 Illustration of
information attached to an
LSP in an LSR

Ingress LSR

packet


Transit LSR Egress LSR

IP packet header

MPLS header

Outgoing:


  • interface

  • label
    Label Information Base


Forwarding

Packet ForwardEquivalence Class Traffic trunk LabelSwitched Path Physicalnetwork


Forward
Equivalence
Class
Incoming:


  • interface

  • label

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