Internet Draft Kwok Ho Chan Expiration: September 2000 Nortel Networks File: draft-ietf-rap-pr-02.txt David Durham Intel Silvano Gai Cisco Shai Herzog IPHighway Keith McCloghrie Cisco Francis Reichmeyer IPHighway John Seligson Nortel Networks Andrew Smith Extreme Networks Raj Yavatkar Intel COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning March 10, 2000 Status of this Memo This document is an Internet-Draft and is in full conformance with all provisions of Section 10 of RFC2026. 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. Distribution of this memo is unlimited. Copyright Notice Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1998). All Rights Reserved. Internet Draft Expires June 2000 [Page 1] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 2] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 Abstract This draft describes the use of the COPS protocol [COPS] for support of policy provisioning. This specification is independent of type of policy being provisioned (QoS, Security, etc.) but focuses on the mechanisms and conventions used to communicate provisioned information between PDPs and PEPs. The protocol extensions described in this document do not make any assumptions about the policy data being communicated, but describe the message formats and objects that carry policy data. Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 3] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 Table of Contents Abstract..............................................................3 Table of Contents.....................................................4 Glossary..............................................................5 1. Introduction.....................................................5 1.1. Why not SNMP?..................................................6 1.2. Interaction between the PEP and PDP............................7 2. Policy Information Base (PIB)....................................8 2.1. Rules for Modifying and Extending PIBs.........................9 2.2. Adding PRCs to, or deprecating from, a PIB.....................9 2.2.1. Adding or Deprecating Attributes of a PRC......................9 2.2.2. Augmenting a PRC with another PRC.............................10 2.3. COPS Operations Supported for a Policy Rule Instance..........10 3. Message Content.................................................11 3.1. Request (REQ) PEP -> PDP.....................................11 3.2. Decision (DEC) PDP -> PEP....................................12 3.3. Report State (RPT) PEP -> PDP................................14 4. COPS-PR Protocol Objects........................................14 4.1. Complete Policy Rule Identifier (PRID)........................15 4.2. Prefix PRID (PPRID)...........................................16 4.3. Encoded Policy Instance Data (EPD)............................16 4.4. Provisioning Error Object (PERR)..............................18 4.5. Error PRID Object (ErrorPRID).................................19 5. COPS-PR Client-Specific Data Formats............................19 5.1. Named Decision Data...........................................20 5.2. ClientSI Request Data.........................................20 5.3. Policy Provisioning Report Data...............................20 5.3.1. Success and Failure Report-Type Data Format...................21 5.3.2. Accounting Report-Type Data Format............................21 6. Common Operations...............................................22 7. Fault Tolerance.................................................24 7.1. Security Considerations.......................................25 8. Acknowledgements................................................25 9. References......................................................26 10. Author Information..............................................27 11. Full Copyright Notice...........................................28 Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 4] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 Glossary PRC Policy Rule Class. A type of policy data. PRI Policy Rule Instance. An instance of a PRC. PIB Policy Information Base. The database of policy information. PDP Policy Decision Point. See [RAP-FRAMEWORK]. PEP Policy Enforcement Point. See [RAP-FRAMEWORK]. PRID Policy Rule Instance Identifier. Uniquely identifies an instance of a PRC. 1. Introduction The IETF Resource Allocation Protocol (RAP) WG has defined the COPS (Common Open Policy Service) protocol [COPS] as a scalable protocol that allows policy servers (PDPs) to communicate policy decisions to network devices (PEP). COPS was designed to support multiple types of policy clients. COPS is a query/response protocol that supports two common models for policy control: Outsourcing and Configuration. The Outsourcing model addresses the kind of events at the PEP that require instantaneous policy decision (authorization). The PEP, being aware that it must perform a policy decision. However, being unable to carry the task itself, the PEP delegates responsibility to an external policy server (PDP). For example, in [COPS-RSVP] when a reservation message arrives, the PEP is aware that it must decide whether to admit or reject the request. It sends a specific query to the PDP, and in most case, waits for a decision before admitting the outstanding reservation. The COPS Configuration model (herein described as the Provisioning model), on the other hand, makes no assumptions of such direct 1:1 correlation between PEP events and PDP decisions. The PDP may proactively provision the PEP reacting to external events (such as user input), PEP events, and any combination thereof (N:M correlation). Provisioning may be performed in bulk (e.g., entire router QoS configuration) or in portions (e.g., updating a DiffServ marking filter). Network resources are often provisioned based on relatively static SLAs (Service Level Agreements) at network boundaries. While the Outsourcing model is dynamically paced by the PEP in real-time, the Provisioning model is paced by the PDP in somewhat flexible timing over a wide range of configurable aspects of the PEP. Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 5] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 Edge Device Policy Server +--------------+ +-----------+ +-----------+ | | | | | External | | | COPS | | | Events | | +-----+ | REQ() | +-----+ | +---+-------+ | | |----|----------|->| | | | | | PEP | | | | PDP |<-|---------+ | | |<---|----------|--| | | | +-----+ | COPS | +-----+ | | | DEC() | | +--------------+ +-----------+ Figure 1: COPS Provisioning Model In COPS-PR, policy requests describe the PEP and its configurable parameters (rather than an operational event). If a change occurs in these basic parameters, an updated request is sent. Hence, requests are issued quite infrequently. Decisions are not necessarily mapped directly to requests, and are issued mostly when the PDP responds to external events or PDP events (policy/SLA updates). This draft describes the use of the COPS protocol [COPS] for support of policy provisioning. This specification is independent of the type of policy being provisioned (QoS, Security, etc.) but, rather, focuses on the mechanisms and conventions used to communicate provisioned information between PDPs and PEPs. The model described in this document is based on the concept of Policy Information Bases (PIBs) that define the policy data. There may be one or more PIBs for given area of policy and different areas of policy will have different sets of PIBs. In order to support a model that includes multiple PDPs controlling non-overlapping areas of policy on a single PEP, the client type specified by the PEP to the PDP is unique for the area of policy being managed. A single client type for a given area of policy (eg. QoS) will be used for all PIBs that exist in that area. The client should treat all the COPS-PR client-types it supports as non-overlapping and independent namespaces where instances MUST NOT be shared. The Examples used in this document are biased toward QoS Policy Provisioning in a Differentiated Services (DiffServ) environment. However, COPS-PR can be used for other types of provisioning policies under the same framework. 1.1. Why not SNMP? Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 6] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 SNMP is a very popular network management protocol. One may question using COPS-PR, rather than extending SNMP for policy provisioning. SNMP is designed for low-level access at very fine levels of granularity. When configuring large amounts of policy information, the low-level, granular access makes it inefficient and cumbersome. COPS-PR has been designed within a framework which is less general-purpose and more optimized for configuration to overcome these shortcomings, based on the requirements defined in [RAP]. It has a single connection between client and server, it guarantees only one server updates the policy configuration at any given time (and these are locked, even from console configuration, while COPS is connected to a server). COPS uses reliable TCP transport and thus uses a state sharing/synchronization mechanism and exchanges differential updates only. If either the server or client are rebooted (or restarted) the other would know about it quickly. Last, it is defined as a real-time mechanism for the PEP device. The COPS protocol is already used for policy control over RSVP. It is highly desirable to use a single policy control protocol for Quality of Service (QoS) mechanisms (if possible), rather than invent a new one for each type of policy problem. At the same time, useful mechanisms from SNMP were adopted. COPS- PR uses a named Policy Information Base (PIB), which can be described using the SMI [V2SMI] and encoded using BER [BER] data encoding. This allows reuse of experience, knowledge, tools and some code from the SNMP world. 1.2. Interaction between the PEP and PDP When a device boots, it opens a COPS connection to its Primary PDP. When the connection is established, the PEP sends information about itself to the PDP in the form of a configuration request. This information includes client specific information (e.g., hardware type, software release, configuration information). During this phase the client may also specify the maximum COPS-PR message size supported. In response, the PDP downloads all provisioned policies that are currently relevant to that device. On receiving the provisioned policies, the device maps them into its local QoS mechanisms, and installs them. If conditions change at the PDP such that the PDP detects that changes are required in the provisioned policies currently in effect, then the PDP sends the changes (installs and/or deletes) in policy to the PEP, and the PEP updates its local QoS mechanisms appropriately. Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 7] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 If, subsequently, the configuration of the device changes (board removed, board added, new software installed, etc.) in ways not covered by policies already known to the PEP, then the PEP sends this unsolicited new information to the PDP. On receiving this new information, the PDP sends to the PEP any additional provisioned policies now needed by the PEP. 2. Policy Information Base (PIB) The data carried by COPS-PR is a set of policy rules. The protocol uses a named data structure, known as a Policy Information Base (PIB), to identify the type and purpose of unsolicited policy information that is "pushed" from the PDP to the PEP for provisioning policy. The PIB name space is common to both the PEP and the PDP and data instances within this space are unique within the scope of a given PDP/PEP/Client-Type communication channel. Note that a given device might implement multiple PEPs or multiple Client-Types and the name space is then only relevant within each separate channel (there is no sharing of instance data across the PDP/PEP/Client-Types). The PIB can be described as a conceptual tree data structure where the branches of the tree represent types of rules or Policy Rule Classes (PRCs), while the leaves represent the contents of Policy Rule Instances (PRIs). There may be multiple instances of rules (PRIs) for any given rule type (PRC). For example, if one wanted to install multiple access control filters, the PRC might represent a generic access control filter type and each PRI might represent an individual access control filter to be applied. The tree might be represented as follows: -------+-------+----------+---PRC--+--PRI | | | +--PRI | | | | | +---PRC-----PRI | | | +---PRC--+--PRI | +--PRI | +--PRI | +--PRI | +--PRI | +---PRC---PRI Figure 2: The PIB Tree Instances of the policy rules (PRIs) are each identified by a Policy Rule Identifier (PRID). A PRID is a name, carried in a COPS Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 8] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 or object, which identifies a particular instance of a rule. 2.1. Rules for Modifying and Extending PIBs As experience is gained with policy management, and as new requirements arise, it will be necessary to make changes to PIBs. Changes to an existing PIB can be made in several ways. (1) Additional PRCs can be added to a PIB or an existing one deprecated. (2) Attributes can be added to, or deprecated from an existing PRC. (3) An existing PRC can be extended by "augmenting" it with a new PRC defined in another (perhaps enterprise specific) PIB. The rules for each of these extension mechanisms is described in this sub-section. All of these mechanisms for modifying a PIB allow for interoperability between PDPs and PEPs even when one party is using a new version of the PIB while the other is using an old version. 2.2. Adding PRCs to, or deprecating from, a PIB A published PIB can be extended with new PRCs by simply revising the document and adding additional PRCs. These additional PRCs are easily identified with new PRIDs under the module's PRID Prefix. In the event that a PEP implementing the new PIB is being configured by a PDP implementing the old PIB, the PEP will simply not receive any instances of the new PRC. In the event that the PEP is implementing the old PIB and the PDP the new one, the PEP may receive PRIs for the new PRC. The PEP SHOULD ignore these unsupported PRI. However, it MAY return and error to the PDP. In the latter case, the PDP must restructure its policy decisions to exclude the unsupported PRCs. Similarly, existing PRCs can be deprecated from a PIB. In this case, the PEP ignores any PRIs sent it by a PDP implementing the old (non- deprecated) version of the PIB. A PDP implementing the new version of the PIB simply does not send any instances of the deprecated class. 2.2.1. Adding or Deprecating Attributes of a BER Encoded PRC Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 9] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 A PIB can be modified to deprecate existing attributes of a PRC or add new ones. When deprecating the attributes of a PRC, it must be remembered that, with the COPS-PR protocol, the attributes of the PRC are identified by their order in the sequence rather than an explicit label (or attribute OID). Consequently, an ASN.1 value MUST be sent even for deprecated attributes so that a PDP and PEP implementing different versions of the PIB are inter-operable. For a deprecated attribute, if the PDP is using a BER encoded PIB, the PDP MUST send either an ASN.1 value of the correct type, or it may send an ASN.1 NULL value. A PEP that receives an ASN.1 NULL for an attribute that is not deprecated SHOULD substitute a default value. If it has no default value to substitute it MUST return an error to the PDP. When adding new attributes to a PIB, these new attributes must be added in sequence after the existing ones. A PEP that receives a PRI with more attributes than it is expecting MUST ignore the additional attributes. It MAY send a warning back to the PDP. A PEP that receives a PRI with fewer attributes than it is expecting SHOULD assume default values for the missing attributes. It MAY send a warning back to the PDP. If the missing attributes are required and there is no suitable default, the PEP MUST send and error back to the PDP. In all cases the missing attributes are assumed to correspond to the last attributes of the PRC. 2.3. COPS Operations Supported for a Policy Rule Instance A Policy Rule Instance (PRI) typically contains a value for each attribute defined for the PRC of which it an instance and is identified uniquely, within the scope of a given COPS Client-Type on a PEP, by a Policy Rule Identifier (PRID). The following COPS operations are supported on a PRI: o Install - This operation creates or updates a named instance of a PRC. It includes two parameters: a PRID object to name the PRI and an Encoded Policy Instance Data (EPD) object with the new/updated values. The PRID value MUST uniquely identify a single PRI (i.e. PRID/PRC prefix values are illegal). o Remove - This operation is used to delete an instance of a PRC. It includes one parameter, a PRID object, which names either the individual PRI to be deleted or a PRID prefix naming one or more complete classes of PRIs. Prefix-based deletion supports efficient bulk policy removal. Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 10] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 3. Message Content The COPS protocol provides for different COPS clients to define their own "named", i.e. client-specific, information for various messages. This section describes the messages exchanged between a COPS server (PDP) and COPS Policy Provisioning clients (PEP) that carry client-specific data objects. All the COPS messages used by COPS-PR conform to the message specifications defined in the COPS base protocol [COPS]. Note: The use of the '*' character represented throughout this document is consistent with the ABNF [RFC2234] and means 0 or more of the following entities. 3.1. Request (REQ) PEP -> PDP The REQ message is sent by policy provisioning clients to issue a 'configuration request' to the PDP as specified in the COPS Context Object. The Client Handle associated with the REQ message originated by a provisioning client must be unique for that client. The Client Handle is used to identify a specific request state. Thus, one client can potentially open several configuration request states, each uniquely identified by its handle. Different request states are used to isolate similarly named configuration information into non-overlapping contexts (or logically isolated namespaces). Thus, a piece of named information is unique relative to a particular client-type and is unique relative to a particular request state for that client-type, even if the information was similarly identified in other request states. Thus, the Client Handle is part of the instance identification of the communicated configuration information. The config request message serves as a request from the PEP to the PDP for provisioning policy data which the PDP may have for the PEP, such as access control lists, etc. This includes policy the PDP may have at the time the REQ is received as well as any future policy data or updates to this data. The config request message should include provisioning client information to provide the PDP with client-specific configuration or capability information about the PEP. The information provided by the PEP should include client resource (e.g. queuing capabilities) and default policy configuration (e.g. default role combinations) information as well as references to existing policy (i.e. PIB) incarnation data. This information typically does not include all the information previously installed by a PDP but rather should include checksums or shortened references to previously installed information for synchronization purposes. Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 11] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 This information from the client assists the server in deciding what types of policy the PEP can install and enforce. The format of the information encapsulated in the provisioning Named ClientSI data is described in section 5. Note that the config request message is regenerated and sent to the PDP in response to the receipt of a Synchronize State Request (SSQ) message. The policy information supplied by the PDP must be consistent with the named decision data defined for the policy provisioning client. The PDP responds to the config request with a DEC message containing any available provisioning policy data. The REQ message has the following format: ::= [] [] Note that the COPS objects IN-Int, OUT-Int and LDPDecisions are not included in a COPS-PR Request. 3.2. Decision (DEC) PDP -> PEP The DEC message is sent from the PDP to a policy provisioning client in response to the REQ message received from the PEP. The Client Handle must be the same Handle that was received in the corresponding REQ message. The DEC message is sent as an immediate response to a configuration request with the solicited message flag set in the COPS message header. Subsequent DEC messages may also be sent at any time after the original DEC message to supply the PEP with additional/updated policy information without the solicited message flag set in the COPS message header (as they are unsolicited decisions). Each DEC message may contain multiple decisions. This means a single message can install some policies and delete others. In general a COPS-PR decision message should contain at most one or more deletes followed by one or more install decisions. This is used to solve a precedence issue, not a timing issue: the delete decision deletes what it specifies, except those items that are installed in the same message. The DEC message can also be used by the PDP to command the PEP to open a new Request State or Delete an existing Request State as identified by the Client-Handle. To accomplish this, COPS-PR Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 12] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 defines a new flag for the COPS Decision Flags object. The flag 0x02 is to be used by COPS-PR client-types and is hereafter referred to as the "Request-State" flag. An Install decision (Decision Flags: Command-Code=Install) with the Request-State flag set in the COPS Decision Flags object will cause the PEP to issue a new Request with a new Client Handle or else specify the appropriate error in a COPS Report message. A Remove decision (Decision Flags: Command-Code=Remove) with the Request-State flag set in the COPS Decision Flags object will cause the PEP to send a COPS Delete Request State (DRQ) message for the request state identified by the Client Handle in the DEC message. Whenever the Request-State flag is set in the COPS Decision Flags object in the DEC message, no COPS Named Decision Data object can be included in the corresponding decision (as it serves no purpose for this decision flag). A COPS-PR DEC message must be treated as a single "transaction", i.e. either all the decisions in a DEC message succeed or they all fail. This allows the PDP to delete some policies only if other policies can be installed in their place. The DEC message has the following format: ::= *() | [] ::= [] Note that the Named Decision Data (Provisioning) object is included in a COPS-PR Decision when it is an Install or Remove decision with no Decision Flags set. Other types of COPS decision data objects (e.g. Stateless, Replacement) are not supported by COPS-PR client-types. The Named Decision Data object MUST NOT be included in the decision if the Decision Flags object Command-Code is NULL (meaning there is no configuration information to install at this time) or if the Request-State flag is set in the Decision Flags object. For each decision on the DEC message, the PEP performs the operation specified in the Command-Code and Flags field in the Decision Flags object on the Named Decision Data. For the policy provisioning clients, the format for this data is defined in the context of the Policy Information Base (see section 5). In response to a DEC message, the policy provisioning client sends a RPT message with the solicited message flag set back to the PDP to inform the PDP of the action taken. Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 13] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 3.3. Report State (RPT) PEP -> PDP The RPT message is sent from the policy provisioning clients to the PDP to report accounting information associated with the provisioned policy, or to notify the PDP of changes in the PEP (Report-Type = 'Accounting') related to the provisioning client. RPT is also used as a mechanism to inform the PDP about the action taken at the PEP, in response to a DEC message. For example, in response to an 'Install' decision, the PEP informs the PDP if the policy data is installed (Report-Type = 'Success') or not (Report- Type = 'Failure'). Reports that are in response to a DEC message MUST set the solicited message flag in their COPS message header. Reports can also be unsolicited and all unsolicited Reports MUST NOT set the solicited message flag in their COPS message header. Examples of unsolicited reports include 'Accounting' Report-Types, that were not triggered by a specific DEC messages, or 'Failure' Report-Types that indicate a change of state in a previously successfully installed configuration. The RPT message may contain provisioning client information such as accounting parameters or errors/warnings related to a decision. The data format for this information is defined in the context of the policy information base (see section 5). The RPT message has the following format: ::= [] [] 4. COPS-PR Protocol Objects The COPS Policy Provisioning clients encapsulate several new objects within the existing COPS Named Client-specific information object and Named Decision Data object. This section defines the format of these new objects. COPS-PR classifies policy data according to "bindings", where a binding consists of a Policy Rule Identifier and the Policy Rule Instance data, encoded within the context of the provisioning policy information base (see section 5). The format for these new objects is as follows: Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 14] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 0 1 2 3 +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ | Length | S-Num | S-Type | +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ | 32 bit unsigned integer | +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ S-Num and S-Type are similar to the C-Num and C-Type used in the base COPS objects. The difference is that S-Num and S-Type are used only for COPS-PR clients and are encapsulated within the existing COPS Named ClientSI or Named Decision Data objects. The S-Num identifies the general purpose of the object, and the S-Type describes the specific encoding used for the object. All the object descriptions and examples in this document use the Basic Encoding Rules as the encoding type (S-Type = 1). Additional encodings can be defined for the remaining S-Types in the future (for example, XML string based encodings). Length is a two-octet value that describes the number of octets (including the header) that compose the object. If the length in octets does not fall on a 32-bit word boundary, padding must be added to the end of the object so that it is aligned to the next 32-bit boundary before the object can be sent on the wire. On the receiving side, a subsequent object boundary can be found by simply rounding up the stated object length of the current object to the next 32-bit boundary. 4.1. Complete Policy Rule Identifier (PRID) S-Num = 1, S-Type = 1 (Complete BER PRID), Length = variable. This object is used to carry the identifier, or PRID, of a Policy Rule Instance. The identifier is encoded following the rules that have been defined for encoding SNMP Object Identifier (OID) values. Specifically, PRID values are encoded using the Type/Length/Value (TLV) format and initial sub-identifier packing that is specified by the binary encoding rules [BER] used for Object Identifiers in an SNMP PDU. 0 1 2 3 +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ | Length | S-Num = PRID | S-Type = BER | +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ ... ... | Policy Rule Identifier | ... ... +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 15] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 For example, a (fictitious) PRID equal to 1.3.6.1.2.2.8.1 would be encoded as follows (values in hex): 06 07 2B 06 01 02 02 08 01 The entire PRID object would be encoded as follows: 00 0D - Length 01 - S-Num 01 - S-Type (Complete PRID) 06 07 2B 06 01 02 02 08 01 - Encoded PRID 00 00 00 - Padding 4.2. PRID Prefix(PPRID) Certain operations, such as decision removal, can be optimized by specifying a PRID prefix with the intent that the requested operation be applied to all PRIs matching the prefix. PRID prefix objects MUST only be used in the COPS protocol operation where it may be more optimal to perform bulk decision removal using class prefixes instead of a sequence of individual operations. Other COPS operations, e.g. operations always require individual PRID specification. S-Num = 2, S-Type = 1 (BER PRID Prefix), Length = variable. 0 1 2 3 +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ | Length | S-Num = PPRID | S-Type = BER | +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ ... ... | PRID Prefix | ... ... +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ Continuing with the previous example, a PRID prefix that is equal to 1.3.6.1.2.2 would be encoded as follows (values in hex): 06 05 2B 06 01 02 02 The entire PRID object would be encoded as follows: 00 0B - Length 02 - S-Num = PRID Prefix 01 - S-Type = BER 06 05 2B 06 01 02 02 - Encoded PRID Prefix 00 - Padding 4.3. Encoded Policy Instance Data (EPD) Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 16] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 S-Num = 3, S-Type = 1, Length = variable. This object is used to carry the encoded value of a Policy Rule Instance. The PRI value, which contains all of the individual values of the attributes that comprise the class, is encoded as a series of TLV sub-components. Each sub-component represents the value of a single attribute and is encoded following the BER. 0 1 2 3 +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ | Length | S-Num = EPD | S-Type = BER | +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ ... ... | BER Encoded PRI Value | ... ... +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ As an example, an instance of the filter class, defined in the QoS Policy IP PIB [PIB], would be encoded as follows: 02 01 08 :filterIndex/INTEGER/Value = 8 40 04 C0 39 01 05 :filterDstAddr/IpAddress/Value = 192.57.1.5 40 04 FF FF FF FF :filterDstMask/IpAddress/Value = 255.255.255.255 40 04 00 00 00 00 :filterSrcAddr/IpAddress/Value = 0.0.0.0 40 04 00 00 00 00 :filterSrcMask/IpAddress/Value = 0.0.0.0 02 01 FF :filterDscp/Integer32/Value = -1 (not used) 02 01 06 :filterProtocol/INTEGER/Value = 6 (TCP) 05 00 :filterDstL4PortMin/NULL/not supported 05 00 :filterDstL4PortMax/NULL/not supported 05 00 :filterSrcL4PortMin/NULL/not supported 05 00 :filterSrcL4PortMax/NULL/not supported 02 01 01 :filterPermit/TruthValue/Value = 1 (true) The entire EPD object would be encoded as follows: 00 30 - Length 03 - S-Num = EPD 01 - S-Type = BER 02 01 08 - filterIndex 40 04 C0 39 01 05 - filterDstAddr 40 04 FF FF FF FF - filterDstMask 40 04 00 00 00 00 - filterSrcAddr 40 04 00 00 00 00 - filterSrcMask 02 01 FF - filterDscp 02 01 06 - filterProtocol 05 00 - filterDstL4PortMin 05 00 - filterDstL4PortMax Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 17] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 05 00 - filterSrcL4PortMin 05 00 - filterSrcL4PortMax 02 01 01 - filterPermit Note that attributes not supported within a class are still returned in the EPD for a PRI. By convention, a NULL value is returned for attributes that are not supported. In the previous example, source and destination port number attributes are not supported. 4.4. Global Provisioning Error Object (GPERR) S-Num = 4, S-Type = 1, Length = 8. 0 1 2 3 +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ | Length | S-Num = GPERR | S-Type = BER | +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ | Error-Code | Error Sub-code | +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ The global provisioning error object has the same format as the Error object in COPS [COPS], except with C-Num and C-Type replaced by the S-Num and S-Type values shown. The global provision error object is used to communicate general errors that do not map to a specific PRC. The following global error codes are defined: availMemLow(1), availMemExhausted(2), unknownASN.1Tag(3), maxMsgSizeExceeded(4), unknownError(5) Note: For the unknownASN.1Tag, the erroneous tag type MUST be specified in the Error Sub-Code field 4.5. PRC Class Provisioning Error Object (CPERR) S-Num = 5, S-Type = 1, Length = 8. 0 1 2 3 +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ | Length | S-Num = CPERR | S-Type = BER | +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ | Error-Code | Error Sub-code | +---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+ Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 18] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 The class-specific provisioning error object has the same format as the Error object in COPS [COPS], except with C-Num and C-Type replaced by the S-Num and S-Type values shown. The class-specific error object is used to communicate errors relating to specific PRCs and MUST have an associated Error PRID Object. The following Generic Class-Specific errors are defined: priSpaceExhausted(1), priInstanceInvalid(2), attrValueInvalid(3), attrValueSupLimited(4), attrEnumSupLimited(5), attrMaxLengthExceeded(6), attrReferenceUnknown(7), priNotifyOnly(8), unknownPrc(9), -- install a PRI of a class not supported by PEP noAccess(10), -- install a PRI of a class whose access is notify tooFewAttrs(11), -- recvd PRI has fewer attributes than required. invalidAttrType(12), -- recvd PRI has an attribute of the wrong type. deletedInRef(13), -- deleted PRI is still referenced by other (non) deleted PRIs priSpecificError(14) Note: For the priSpecificError code the Error Sub-code field contains the PRC specific error code 4.6. Error PRID Object (ErrorPRID) S-Num = 6, S-Type = 1 (BER ErrorPRID), Length = variable. This object is used to carry the identifier, or PRID, of a Policy Rule Instance that caused an installation error or could not be installed or removed. The identifier is encoded and formatted exactly as in the PRID object as described in section 4.1. 5. COPS-PR Client-Specific Data Formats This section describes the format of the named client specific information for the COPS policy provisioning client. ClientSI formats are defined for Decision message's Named Decision Data object, the Request message's Named ClientSI object and Report message's Named ClientSI object. The actual content of the data is defined by the policy information base for a specific provisioning client type (see below). Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 19] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 5.1. Named Decision Data The formats encapsulated by the Named Decision Data object for the policy provisioning client-types depends on the type of decision. Install and Remove are the two types of decisions that dictate the internal format of the COPS Named Decision Data object and require its presence. Install and Remove refer to the 'Install' and 'Remove' Command-Code, respectively, specified in the COPS Decision Flags Object when no Decision Flags are set. The data, in general, is composed of one or more bindings. Each binding associates a PRID object and a EPD object. The PRID object is always present in both install and remove decisions, the EPD object MUST be present in the case of an install decision and MUST NOT be present in the case of a remove decision. The format for this data is encapsulated within the COPS Named Decision Data object as follows: < Decision: Named Data> ::= < | > ::= *( ) ::= *(|) Note that PRID objects in a Remove Decision may specify PRID prefix values. Explicit and implicit deletion of installed policies is supported by a client. Install Decision data MUST be explicit (i.e., PRID prefix values are illegal and MUST be rejected by a client). 5.2. ClientSI Request Data The provisioning client request data will use same bindings as described above. The format for this data is encapsulated in the COPS Named ClientSI object as follows: ::= <*( )> 5.3. Policy Provisioning Report Data The COPS Named ClientSI object is used in the RPT message in conjunction with the accompanying COPS Report Type object to encapsulate COPS-PR report information from the PEP to the PDP. Report types can be 'Success' or 'Failure', indicating to the PDP that a particular set of provisioning policies has been either successfully or unsuccessfully installed/removed on the PEP, or 'Accounting'. Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 20] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 5.3.1. Success and Failure Report-Type Data Format Report-types can be 'Success' or 'Failure' indicating to the PDP that a particular set of provisioning policies has been either successfully or unsuccessfully installed/removed on the PEP. The provisioning report data consists of the bindings described above and global and specific error/warning information. Specific errors are associated with a particular policy rule. For a 'Success' Report-Type, a specific error is an indication of a warning related to a specific policy that has been installed, but that is not fully implemented (e.g., its parameters have been approximated) as identified by the ErrorPRID object. For a 'Failure' Report-Type, this is an error code specific to a binding, again, identified by the ErrorPRID object. Specific errors may also include regular bindings to carry additional information in a generic manner so that the specific errors/warnings may be more verbosely described and associated with the erroneous ErrorPRID object. Global errors are not tied to a specific ErrorPRID. In a 'Success' RPT message, a global error is an indication of a general warning at the PEP level (e.g., memory low). In a 'Failure' RPT message, this is an indication of a general error at the PEP level (e.g., memory exhausted). In the case of a 'Failure' Report-Type the PEP MUST report at least the first error and should report as many errors as possible. In this case the PEP MUST roll-back its configuration to the last good transaction before the erroneous Decision message was received. The format for this data is encapsulated in the COPS Named ClientSI object as follows: ::= <[] *()> ::= *() 5.3.2. Accounting Report-Type Data Format Additionally, reports can be used to carry accounting information when specifying the 'Accounting' Report-Type. This accounting report message will typically carry statistical or event information related to the installed configuration for use at the PDP. This information is encoded as one or more bindings that generally describe the accounting information being reported from the PEP to the PDP. Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 21] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 The format for this data is encapsulated in the COPS Named ClientSI object as follows: ::= <*()> 6. Common Operations This section describes, in general, typical exchanges between a PDP and Policy Provisioning COPS client. First, a TCP connection is established between the client and server and the PEP sends a Client-Open message specifying a COPS- PR client-type, Policy Provisioning client. If the PDP supports the specified provisioning client type, the PDP responds with a Client-Accept (CAT) message. If the client-type is not supported, a Client-Close (CC) message is returned by the PDP to the PEP, possibly identifying an alternate server that is known to support the policy for the provisioning client-type specified. After receiving the CAT message, the PEP can send requests to the server. The REQ from a policy provisioning client contains a COPS 'Configuration Request' context object and, optionally, any relevant named client specific information from the PEP. The information provided by the PEP should include available client resources (e.g., supported classes/attributes) and default policy configuration information as well as references to existing policy (i.e., PIB) incarnation data. The configuration request message from a provisioning client serves two purposes. First, it is a request to the PDP for any provisioning configuration data which the PDP may currently have that is suitable for the PEP, such as access control filters, etc., given the information the PEP specified in its REQ. Also, the configuration request effectively opens a channel that will allow the PDP to asynchronously send policy data to the PEP, as the PDP decides is necessary, as long as the PEP keeps its request state open (ie. As long as the PEP does not send a DRQ with the request state's Client Handle). This asynchronous data may be new policy data or an update to policy data sent previously. After the PEP sends a REQ, if the PDP has Policy Provisioning policy configuration information for the client, that information is returned to the client in a DEC message containing the Policy Provisioning client policy data within the COPS Named Decision Data object and specifying an "Install" Command-Code in the Decision Flags object. If no filters are defined, the DEC message will simply specify that there are no filters using the "NULL Decision" Command-Code in the Decision Flags object. As the PEP MUST specify a Client Handle in the request message, the PDP MUST process the Client Handle and copy it in the corresponding Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 22] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 decision message. A DEC message must be issued by the PDP with the Solicited Message Flag set in the COPS message header, regardless of whether or not the PDP has any configuration information for the PEP at the time of the request. This is to prevent the PEP from timing out the REQ and deleting the Client Handle. The PDP can then add new policy data or update/delete existing state by sending subsequent unsolicited DEC message(s) to the PEP, with the same Client Handle. The PEP is responsible for removing the Client handle when it is no longer needed, for example when the interface goes down, and informing the PDP that the Client Handle is to be deleted via the COPS DRQ message. For Policy Provisioning purposes, access state, and access requests to the policy server can be initiated by other sources besides the PEP. Examples of other sources include attached users requesting network services via a web interface into a central management application, or H.323 servers requesting resources on behalf of a user for a video conferencing application. When such a request is accepted, the edge device affected by the decision (the point where the flow is to enter the network) must be informed of the decision. Since the PEP in the edge device did not initiate the request, the specifics of the request, e.g. flowspec, packet filter, and PHB to apply, must be communicated to the PEP by the PDP. This information is sent to the PEP using the Decision message containing Policy Provisioning Named Decision Data objects in the COPS Decision object as specified. Any updates to the state information, for example in the case of a policy change or call tear down, is communicated to the PEP by subsequent DEC messages containing the same Client Handle and the updated Policy Provisioning request state. Updates can specify that policy data is to be deleted or installed. PDPs may also command the PEP to open a new Request State or delete an exiting one by issuing a decision with the Decision Flags object's Request-State flag set. If the command-code is "install", then the PDP is commanding the PEP to create a new Request State, and therefore issue a new REQ message specifying a new Client Handle or otherwise issue a "Failure" RPT specifying an error condition. Each request state represents an independent and logically non-overlapping namespace, identified by the Client Handle, on which transactions may be performed. Other existing Request States will be unaffected by the new request state as they are independent (thus, no instances of configuration data within one Request State can be affected by DECs for another Request State as identified by the Client Handle). If the command-code is "Remove", then the PDP is commanding the PEP to delete the existing Request-State specified by the DEC message's Client Handle, thereby causing the PEP to issue a DRQ message for this Handle. Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 23] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 The PEP acknowledges the DEC message and action taken by sending a RPT message with a "Success" or "Failure" Report-Type object with the Solicited Message Flag set in the COPS message header. This serves as an indication to the PDP that the requestor (e.g. H.323 server) can be notified that the request has been accepted by the network. If the PEP needs to reject the DEC operation for any reason, a RPT message is sent with a Report-Type of value "Failure" and optionally a Client Specific Information object specifying the policy data that was rejected. The PDP can then respond to the requestor accordingly. The PEP can report to the PDP the local status of any installed request state when appropriate. This information is sent in a Report-State (RPT) message with the "Accounting" flag set. The request state being reported is referenced by the Client Handle associated with the request state and the client specific data identifier. Finally, Client-Close (CC) messages are used to cancel the corresponding Client-Open message. The CC message informs the other side that the client type specified is no longer supported. 7. Fault Tolerance When communication is lost between PEP and PDP, the PEP attempts to re-establish the TCP connection with the PDP it was last connected to. If that server cannot be reached, then the PEP attempts to connect to a secondary PDP, assumed at this time to be manually configured at the PEP. When a connection is finally re-established with a PDP, the PEP sends a OPN message with a object providing the address of the most recent PDP for which it is still caching decisions. If no decisions are being cached on the PEP (due to reboot or TTL timeout of state) the PEP must not include the last PDP address information. Based on this information, the PDP may request the PEP to re-synch its current state information (by issuing a COPS SSQ message). If, after re-connecting, the PDP does not request the synchronization, the client can assume the server recognizes it and the current state at the PEP is correct. Any state changes which occurred at the PEP while the connection was lost must be reported to the PDP via the PEP sending an updated REQ message. On the other hand, if re-synchronization is requested, the PEP MUST reissue any REQ messages it generated during initial connection establishment and the PDP MUST issue DEC messages to delete either individual PRIDs or prefixes as appropriate to ensure a consistent known state at the PEP. Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 24] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 While the PEP is disconnected from the PDP, the request state at the PEP is to be used for policy decisions. If the PEP cannot re- connect in some pre-specified period of time, the request state is to be deleted and the associated Handles removed. The same holds true for the PDP; upon detecting a failed TCP connection, the time-out timer is started for the request state associated with the PEP and the state is removed after the specified period without a connection. 7.1. Security Considerations The use of COPS for Policy Provisioning introduces no new security issues over the base COPS protocol [COPS]. The security mechanism described in that document should be deployed in a COPS-PR environment. 8. Acknowledgements This document has been developed with active involvement from a number of sources. The authors would specifically like to acknowledge the valuable input given by Michael Fine and Scott Hahn. Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 25] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 9. References [COPS] Boyle, J., Cohen, R., Durham, D., Herzog, S., Raja, R., Sastry, A., "The COPS (Common Open Policy Service) Protocol", IETF RFC 2748, Proposed Standard, January 2000. [RAP] Yavatkar, R., et al., "A Framework for Policy Based Admission Control",IETF RFC 2753, January 2000. [RSVP] Braden, R., Zhang, L., Berson, S., Herzog, S., and Jamin, S., "Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) Version 1 Functional Specification", IETF RFC 2205, Proposed Standard, September 1997. [ASN1] Information processing systems - Open Systems Interconnection, "Specification of Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1)", International Organization for Standardization, International Standard 8824, December 1987. [BER] Information processing systems - Open Systems Interconnection - Specification of Basic Encoding Rules for Abstract Syntax Notation One (ASN.1), International Organization for Standardization. International Standard 8825, (December, 1987). [RFC2475] S. Blake, D. Black, M. Carlson, E. Davies, Z. Wang, W. Weiss, "An Architecture for Differentiated Service," RFC 2475, December 1998. [PIB] M. Fine, K. McCloghrie, S. Hahn, K. Chan, A. Smith, "An Initial Quality of Service Policy Information Base for COPS-PR Clients and Servers", draft-mfine-cops-pib-02.txt, October 1999. V2SMI] McCloghrie, K., Perkins, D., Schoenwaelder, J., Case, J., Rose, M. and S. Waldbusser, "Structure of Management Information Version 2(SMIv2)", STD 58, RFC 2578, April 1999. [RFC2234] D. Crocker, P. Overell, " Augmented BNF for Syntax Specifications: ABNF", RFC 2234, November 1997. Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 26] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 10. Author Information Francis Reichmeyer IPHighway Inc. Phone: (201) 585-0800 Parker Plaza, 16th Floor Email: FranR@iphighway.com 400 Kelby St. Fort-Lee, NJ 07024 Shai Herzog Phone: (201) 585-0800 Email: Herzog@iphighway.com Kwok Ho Chan Nortel Networks, Inc. Phone: (978) 916-8175 600 Technology Park Drive Email: kchan@nortelnetworks.com Billerica, MA 01821 David Durham Intel Phone: (503) 264-6232 2111 NE 25th Avenue Email: david.durham@intel.com Hillsboro, OR 97124 Raj Yavatkar Phone: (503) 264-9077 Email: raj.yavatkar@intel.com Silvano Gai Cisco Systems, Inc. Phone: (408) 527-2690 170 Tasman Dr. Email: sgai@cisco.com San Jose, CA 95134-1706 Keith McCloghrie Phone: (408) 526-5260 Email: kzm@cisco.com Andrew Smith Extreme Networks Phone: +1 408 579 2821 3585 Monroe St. Email: andrew@extremenetworks.com Santa Clara CA 95051 USA John Seligson Nortel Networks, Inc. Phone: (408) 495-2992 4401 Great America Parkway Email:jseligso@nortelnetworks.com Santa Clara, CA 95054 Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 27] Internet Draft COPS Usage for Policy Provisioning 10-Mar-00 11. Full Copyright Notice Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1997). All Rights Reserved. This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than English. The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns. This document and the information contained herein is provided on an "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Chan et al. Expires June 2000 [Page 28]