Internet DRAFT - draft-ietf-bess-mvpn-extranet

draft-ietf-bess-mvpn-extranet







BESS Working Group                                       Y. Rekhter, Ed.
Internet-Draft                                             E. Rosen, Ed.
Updates: 6513,6514,6625 (if approved)             Juniper Networks, Inc.
Intended status: Standards Track                             R. Aggarwal
Expires: October 14, 2016                                         Arktan
                                                                  Y. Cai
                                                               Microsoft
                                                                T. Morin
                                                                  Orange
                                                          April 12, 2016


                 Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs
                    draft-ietf-bess-mvpn-extranet-07

Abstract

   Previous RFCs specify the procedures necessary to allow IP multicast
   traffic to travel from one site to another within a BGP/MPLS IP VPN
   (Virtual Private Network).  However, it is sometimes desirable to
   allow multicast traffic whose source is in one VPN to be received by
   systems that are in another VPN.  This is known as a "Multicast VPN
   (MVPN) extranet".  This document updates RFCs 6513, 6514, and 6625 by
   specifying the procedures that are necessary in order to provide MVPN
   extranet service.

Status of This Memo

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

   Internet-Drafts are working documents of the Internet Engineering
   Task Force (IETF).  Note that other groups may also distribute
   working documents as Internet-Drafts.  The list of current Internet-
   Drafts is at http://datatracker.ietf.org/drafts/current/.

   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."

   This Internet-Draft will expire on October 14, 2016.

Copyright Notice

   Copyright (c) 2016 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the
   document authors.  All rights reserved.




Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016                [Page 1]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   This document is subject to BCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal
   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 Simplified BSD License.

Table of Contents

   1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
     1.1.  Terminology . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
     1.2.  Scope . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
       1.2.1.  Customer Multicast Control
               Protocols . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
       1.2.2.  Provider Multicast Control
               Protocols . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
     1.3.  Clarification on Use of Route
           Distinguishers  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
     1.4.  Overview  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   9
   2.  Extranets and Overlapping Address
       Spaces  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  11
     2.1.  Ambiguity: P-tunnel with
           Extranet/Non-Extranet Flows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  13
     2.2.  Ambiguity: P-tunnel with Multiple
           Extranet Flows  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15
     2.3.  Preventing Misdelivery in These
           Scenarios . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17
       2.3.1.  Do Not Deliver Packets from the 'Wrong' P-tunnel  . .  17
       2.3.2.  Policies to Prevent Ambiguity on a P-tunnel . . . . .  19
   3.  Extranet Transmission Models  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  20
     3.1.  Transmitting an Extranet C-flow on a Single PMSI  . . . .  21
       3.1.1.  Without Extranet Separation . . . . . . . . . . . . .  21
       3.1.2.  With Extranet Separation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  21
     3.2.  Transmitting an Extranet C-flow over Multiple PMSIs . . .  22
   4.  Distribution of Routes that Match
       C-S/C-RP Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  22
     4.1.  UMH-Eligible Routes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  22
       4.1.1.  Extranet Separation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  23
     4.2.  Distribution of Unicast Routes
           Matching C-RPs and DRs  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  24
     4.3.  Route Targets and Ambiguous
           UMH-Eligible Routes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  25
     4.4.  Dynamically Marking Extranet
           Routes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  26
       4.4.1.  The Extranet Source Extended



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016                [Page 2]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


               Community . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  26
       4.4.2.  Distribution of Extranet Source Extended
               Community . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  28
     4.5.  The 'Extranet Separation' Extended Community  . . . . . .  29
   5.  Origination and Distribution of BGP A-D Routes  . . . . . . .  29
     5.1.  Route Targets of UMH-eligible Routes and A-D
           Routes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  29
     5.2.  Considerations for Particular Inclusive Tunnel
           Types . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  32
       5.2.1.  RSVP-TE P2MP or Ingress
               Replication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  32
       5.2.2.  Ingress Replication . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  32
   6.  When PIM is the PE-PE C-multicast Control Plane . . . . . . .  34
     6.1.  Provisioning VRFs with RTs  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  35
       6.1.1.  Incoming and Outgoing Extranet RTs  . . . . . . . . .  35
       6.1.2.  UMH-eligible Routes and RTs . . . . . . . . . . . . .  36
       6.1.3.  PIM C-Instance Reverse Path Forwarding
               Determination . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  36
     6.2.  Single PMSI per C-flow Model  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  36
       6.2.1.  Forming the MI-PMSIs  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  36
       6.2.2.  S-PMSIs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  39
       6.2.3.  Sending PIM Control Packets . . . . . . . . . . . . .  41
       6.2.4.  Receiving PIM Control Packets . . . . . . . . . . . .  41
       6.2.5.  Sending and Receiving Data Packets  . . . . . . . . .  41
     6.3.  Multiple PMSIs per C-flow Model . . . . . . . . . . . . .  42
       6.3.1.  Forming the MI-PMSIs  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  42
   7.  When BGP is the PE-PE C-multicast Control Plane . . . . . . .  44
     7.1.  Originating C-multicast Routes  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  44
     7.2.  Originating A-D Routes Without Extranet
           Separation  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  45
       7.2.1.  Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D Routes  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  45
       7.2.2.  S-PMSI A-D Routes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  46
       7.2.3.  Source Active A-D Routes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  46
         7.2.3.1.  When Inter-Site Shared Trees Are Used . . . . . .  46
         7.2.3.2.  When Inter-Site Shared Trees Are Not Used . . . .  47
     7.3.  Originating A-D Routes With Extranet Separation . . . . .  47
       7.3.1.  Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D Routes  . . . . . . . . . . . . .  47
       7.3.2.  S-PMSI A-D Routes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  48
       7.3.3.  Source Active A-D Routes  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  50
     7.4.  Determining the Expected P-tunnel for a C-flow  . . . . .  50
       7.4.1.  (C-S,C-G) S-PMSI A-D Routes . . . . . . . . . . . . .  52
       7.4.2.  (C-S,C-*) S-PMSI A-D Routes . . . . . . . . . . . . .  52
       7.4.3.  (C-*,C-G) S-PMSI A-D Routes . . . . . . . . . . . . .  52
       7.4.4.  (C-*,C-*) S-PMSI A-D Routes . . . . . . . . . . . . .  54
       7.4.5.  I-PMSI A-D Routes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  54
     7.5.  Packets Arriving from the Wrong P-tunnel  . . . . . . . .  55
   8.  Multiple Extranet VRFs on the same
       PE  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  55



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016                [Page 3]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   9.  IANA Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  56
   10. Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  56
   11. Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  58
   12. Contributor Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  58
   13. References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  59
     13.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  59
     13.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  60
   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  61

1.  Introduction

   Previous RFCs ([RFC6513], [RFC6514]) specify the procedures necessary
   to allow IP multicast traffic to travel from one site to another
   within a BGP/MPLS IP VPN (Virtual Private Network).  However, it is
   sometimes desirable to allow multicast traffic whose source is in one
   VPN to be received by systems that are in another VPN.  This is known
   as an "extranet MVPN".  This document specifies the procedures that
   are necessary in order to provide Extranet MVPN functionality.

1.1.  Terminology

   This document uses terminology from [RFC6513], and in particular uses
   the prefixes "C-" and "P-" as specified in Section 3.1 of [RFC6513],
   and "A-D routes" for "auto-discovery routes".

   The term "Upstream Multicast Hop" (UMH) is used as defined in
   [RFC6513].

   The term "UMH-eligible route" is used to mean "route eligible for UMH
   determination", as defined in Section 5.1.1 of [RFC6513].  We will
   say that a given UMH-eligible route or unicast route "matches" a
   given IP address, in the context of a given Virtual Routing and
   Forwarding Table (VRF), if the address prefix of the given route is
   the longest match in that VRF for the given IP address.  We will
   sometimes say that a route "matches" a particular host if the route
   matches an IP address of the host.

   We follow the terminology of Section 3.2 of [RFC6625] when talking of
   a "Selective Provider Multicast Service Interface" (S-PMSI) A-D route
   being "installed".  That is, we say that an S-PMSI A-D route is
   "installed" (in a given VRF) if it has been selected by the BGP
   decision process as the preferred route for its NLRI.  We also follow
   the terminology of Section 3.2 of [RFC6625] when saying that an
   S-PMSI A-D route has been "originated by a given PE"; this means that
   the given PE's IP address is contained in the "Originating Router's
   IP Address" field in the NLRI of the route.

   We use the following additional terminology and notation:



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016                [Page 4]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   o  Extranet C-source: a multicast source, in a given VPN, that is
      allowed by policy to send multicast traffic to receivers that are
      in other VPNs.

   o  Extranet C-receiver: a multicast receiver, in a given VPN, that is
      allowed by policy to receive multicast traffic from extranet
      C-sources that are in other VPNs.

   o  Extranet C-flow: a multicast flow (with a specified C-source
      address and C-group address) whose source is an extranet C-source,
      and which is allowed by policy to have extranet C-receivers.

   o  Extranet C-group: a multicast group address that is in the "Any
      Source Multicast" (ASM) group address range, and that is allowed
      by policy to have Extranet C-sources and Extranet C-receivers that
      are not all in the same VPN.  Note that we will sometimes refer to
      "Source-Specific Multicast" (SSM) C-group addresses" (i.e., to
      C-group addresses in the SSM group address range), but will never
      call them "extranet C-groups".

      N.B.: Any source of traffic for an extranet C-group is considered
      to be an extranet C-source, and any receiver of traffic addressed
      to an extranet C-group is considered to be an extranet C-receiver.

   o  Extranet C-RP: a multicast Rendezvous Point (RP) for an extranet
      C-group; it is allowed by policy to receive PIM register messages
      [RFC7761] from outside its VPN, and to send multicast data packets
      to extranet C-receivers outside its VPN.

   o  Host(C-S,A): the host (or if C-S is an "anycast address", the set
      of hosts) denoted by the address C-S in the context of VPN-A.  For
      example, if a particular C-source in VPN A has address C-S, then
      Host(C-S,A) refers to that C-source.

   o  SAFI-n route: a BGP route whose Address Family Identifier (AFI) is
      either 1 (IPv4) or 2 (IPv6), and whose Subsequent Address Family
      Identifier (SAFI) is "n".

   o  PTA: PMSI Tunnel attribute [RFC6514].

   Note that a given extranet C-source is not necessarily allowed to
   transmit to every extranet C-receiver; policy determines which
   extranet C-sources are allowed to transmit to which extranet
   C-receivers.  However, in the case of an extranet (ASM) C-group, all
   transmitters to the group are allowed to transmit to all the
   receivers of the group, and all the receivers of the group are
   allowed to receive from all transmitters to the group.




Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016                [Page 5]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   We say that a given VRF "contains" or "has" a multicast C-source (or
   that the C-source is "in" the VRF), if that C-source is in a site
   connected to that VRF, and the VRF originates a UMH-eligible route
   (see Section 4) that matches the address of the C-source.

   We say that a given VRF "contains" or "has" a multicast C-receiver
   (or that the C-receiver is "in" the VRF), if that C-receiver is in a
   site connected to that VRF.

   We say that a given VRF "contains" or "has" the C-RP for a given ASM
   group (or that the C-RP is "in" the VRF) if that C-RP is in a site
   connected to that VRF, and the VRF originates a unicast route and a
   (possibly different, possibly the same) UMH-eligible route (see
   Section 4) whose respective address prefixes match the C-RP address.

   [RFC6513] allows a set of "Provider tunnels" (P-tunnels) to be
   aggregated together and transported via an outer P-tunnel, i.e., it
   allows for the use of hierarchical Label Switched Paths (LSPs) as
   P-tunnels.  A two-level hierarchical LSP, for example, can be thought
   of as a set of "inner tunnels" aggregated into an outer tunnel.  In
   this document, when we speak of a P-tunnel, we are always speaking of
   the innermost P-tunnel, i.e., of a P-tunnel at the lowest level of
   hierarchy.  P-tunnels are identified in the Provider Multicast
   Service Interface (PMSI) Tunnel Attributes (PTAs) [RFC6514] of BGP
   Auto-Discovery (A-D) routes.  Two PTAs that have the same Tunnel Type
   and Tunnel Identifier fields, but different MPLS label fields, are
   thus considered to identify two different P-tunnels.  (I.e., for the
   purposes of this document, the MPLS label included in the PTA, if
   any, is considered to be part of the tunnel identifier.)

   We say that the NLRI of a BGP S-PMSI A-D route or Source Active A-D
   route contains (C-S,C-G) if its "Multicast Source" field contains C-S
   and its "Multicast Group" field contains C-G.  If either or both of
   these fields is encoded as a wildcard, we will say that the NLRI
   contains (C-*,C-*) (both fields encoded as wildcard), or (C-*,C-G)
   (multicast source field encoded as wildcard) or (C-S,C-*) (multicast
   group field encoded as wildcard).

   We use the term "VPN security violation" to refer to any situation in
   which a packet is delivered to a particular VPN, even though, by
   policy, it should not be delivered to that VPN.

   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",
   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and
   "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in
   [RFC2119].





Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016                [Page 6]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


1.2.  Scope

1.2.1.  Customer Multicast Control Protocols

   This document presumes that the VPN customer is using "PIM Sparse
   Mode", operating in either "Source-Specific Mode" (SSM) or "Any
   Source Mode" (ASM), as the multicast control protocol at the customer
   sites.  Support for other customer IP multicast control protocols
   (e.g., [RFC5015], PIM "Dense Mode") is outside the scope of this
   document.  Support for the customer use of MPLS multicast control
   protocols (e.g., [RFC6388], [RFC4875]) is also outside the scope of
   this document.

   When a VPN customer uses ASM, the customer routers need to be able to
   map from a C-group address to a C-RP address.  These mappings can be
   provisioned in each router, or can be discovered dynamically through
   protocols such as BSR [RFC5059].  However, it cannot be assumed that
   such protocols will automatically work in the context of an extranet.
   Discussion of the use of such protocols in an extranet is outside the
   scope of this document.

1.2.2.  Provider Multicast Control Protocols

   [RFC6513] allows either PIM or BGP to be used as the protocol for
   distributing customer multicast routing information.  Except where
   otherwise specified, such as in Sections 6 and 7, the procedures of
   this document cover both cases.

1.3.  Clarification on Use of Route Distinguishers

   [RFC4364] requires that every VRF be associated with one or more
   Route Distinguishers (RD).  Each VPN-IPv4 or VPN-IPv6 route that is
   exported from a particular VRF contains, in its NLRI, an RD that is
   associated with that VRF.

   [RFC4364] allows a given RD to be associated with more than one VRF,
   as long as all the VRFs associated with that RD belong to the same
   VPN.  However, in the most common deployment model, each RD is
   associated with one and only one VRF.  [RFC6513] and [RFC6514]
   presuppose this deployment model.  That is, [RFC6513] and [RFC6514]
   presuppose that every RD is associated with one and only one VRF.  We
   will call this the "unique VRF per RD" condition.

   [RFC6514] defines the MCAST-VPN address family, which has a number of
   route types.  Each Intra-AS "Inclusive Provider Multicast Service
   Interface" (I-PMSI) A-D route, S-PMSI A-D route, and Source Active
   A-D route, when exported from a given VRF, contains, in its NLRI, an
   RD that is associated with the VRF.  [RFC6513] and [RFC6514] also



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016                [Page 7]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   discuss a class of routes known as "UMH-eligible" routes; when a UMH-
   eligible route is exported from a given VRF, its NLRI contains an RD
   of the VRF.

   [RFC6514] also defines MCAST-VPN routes whose NLRIs do not contain an
   RD of the VRF from which they are exported: the C-multicast Join
   routes and the Leaf A-D routes.

   Those route types that, when exported from a given VRF, contain (in
   their NLRIs) an RD of the VRF, will be known in this document as
   "local-RD routes".

   Given the "unique VRF per RD condition", if one sees that two local-
   RD routes have the same RD, one can infer that the two routes
   originated from the same VRF.  This inference can be drawn even if
   the two routes do not have the same SAFI, as long as the two routes
   are both local-RD routes.

   This document builds upon [RFC6513] and [RFC6514]; therefore the
   "unique VRF per RD" condition is REQUIRED.

   [RFC6514] presupposes a further requirement on the use of RDs in the
   local-RD routes exported from a given VRF.  Suppose a given VRF
   exports a Source Active A-D route containing (C-S,C-G).  That VRF
   will also export a UMH-eligible route matching C-S.  [RFC6514]
   presupposes that the UMH-eligible route and the Source Active A-D
   route have the same RD.

   In most cases, not only is a given RD associated with only a single
   VRF, but a given VRF is associated with only a single RD.  We will
   call this the "unique RD per VRF" condition.  When this condition
   holds, all the local-RD routes exported from a given VRF will have
   the same RD.  This ensures that the presupposition of the previous
   paragraph will hold, i.e., that the RD in a Source Active A-D route
   exported from a given VRF will have the same RD as the corresponding
   UMH-eligible route exported from the same VRF.

   Section 7.3 of this document describes a procedure known as "Extranet
   Separation".  When Extranet Separation is NOT being used, it is
   REQUIRED by this document that the "unique RD per VRF" condition
   hold.  This ensures that all the local-RD routes exported from a
   given VRF will have the same RD.

   When Extranet Separation is used, a VRF that contains both extranet
   sources and non-extranet sources MUST be configured with two RDs.
   One of these RDs is known as the "default RD", and the other is known
   as the "extranet RD".  It MUST be known by configuration which RD is
   the default RD and which is the extranet RD.



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016                [Page 8]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   When a VRF is configured with only one RD, we will refer to that RD
   as the "default RD".

   In general, local-RD routes exported from a given VRF will contain
   the default RD.  However, when Extranet Separation is used, some of
   the local-RD routes exported from the VRF will contain the extranet
   RD.  Details concerning the exported routes that contain the extranet
   RD can be found in Sections 4.1 and 7.3.

   Note that the "unique VRF per RD" condition applies to the extranet
   RD as well as to the default RD.  That is, a given extranet RD is
   associated with a unique VRF.

1.4.  Overview

   Consider two VPNs, VPN-S and VPN-R, each of which supports MVPN
   functionality as specified in [RFC6513] and/or [RFC6514].  In the
   simplest configuration, VPN-S is a collection of VRFs, each of which
   is configured with a particular Route Target (RT) value (call it "RT-
   S") as its import RT and as its export RT.  Similarly, VPN-R is a
   collection of VRFs, each of which is configured with a particular RT
   value (call it "RT-R") as its import RT and as its export RT.

   In this configuration, multicast C-receivers contained in a VPN-R VRF
   cannot receive multicast data traffic from multicast C-sources
   contained in a VPN-S VRF.  If it is desired to allow this, one needs
   to create an MVPN "extranet".  Creating an extranet requires
   procedures in addition to those specified in [RFC6513], [RFC6514],
   and [RFC6625]; this document specifies these additional procedures.

   In the example above, the additional procedures will allow a selected
   set of routes exported from the VPN-S VRFs (i.e., from the VRFs
   containing extranet C-sources) to be imported into the VPN-R VRFs
   (i.e., into the VRFs containing extranet C-receivers).  These routes
   include the routes that are to be eligible for use as UMH routes (see
   Section 5.1 of [RFC6513]) in the extranet, as well as a selected set
   of BGP A-D routes (Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes, S-PMSI A-D routes,
   Source Active A-D routes).  Importing these routes into the VPN-R
   VRFs makes it possible to determine, in the context of a VPN-R VRF,
   that a particular C-multicast Join needs to be delivered to a
   particular VPN-S VRF.  It also makes it possible to determine, in the
   context of a VPN-R VRF, the P-tunnel through which the aforementioned
   VPN-S VRF sends a particular C-flow.

   Depending on the type of P-tunnel used, it may also be necessary for
   Leaf A-D routes to be exported by one or more VPN-R VRFs and imported
   into a VPN-S VRF.




Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016                [Page 9]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   There are no extranet-specific procedures governing the use and
   distribution of BGP C-Multicast routes.

   If PIM is used as the PE-PE protocol for distributing C-multicast
   routing information, additional BGP A-D routes must be exported from
   the VPN-R VRFs and imported into the VPN-S VRFs, so that the VPN-S
   VRFs can join the P-tunnels that the VPN-R VRFs use for sending PIM
   control messages.  Details can be found in Section 6.

   The simple example above describes an extranet created from two
   MVPNs, one of which contains extranet C-sources and one of which
   contains extranet C-receivers.  However, the procedures described in
   this document allow for much more complicated scenarios.

   For instance, an extranet may contain extranet C-sources and/or
   extranet C-receivers from an arbitrary number of VPNs, not just from
   two VPNs.  An extranet C-receiver in VPN-R may be allowed to receive
   multicast traffic from extranet C-sources in VPN-A, VPN-B, and VPN-C.
   Similarly, extranet C-sources in VPN-S may be allowed to send
   multicast traffic to multicast C-receivers that are in VPN-A, VPN-B,
   VPN-C, etc.

   A given VPN customer may desire that only some of its multicast
   C-sources be treated as extranet C-sources.  This can be accomplished
   by appropriate provisioning of the import and export RTs of that
   customer's VRFs (as well as the VRFs of other VPNs that contain
   extranet C-receivers for extranet C-flows of the given customer.)

   A given VPN customer may desire that some of its extranet C-sources
   can transmit only to a certain set of VPNs, while other of its
   extranet C-sources can transmit only to a different set of VPNs.
   This can be accomplished by provisioning the VRFs to export different
   routes with different RTs.

   In all these cases, the VPN customers set the policies, and the
   Service Provider (SP) implements the policies by the way it
   provisions the import and export RTs of the VRFs.  It is assumed that
   the customer communicates to the SP the set of extranet C-source
   addresses, and the set of VPNs to which each C-source can transmit.
   (Recall that every C-source that can transmit to an extranet C-group
   is an extranet C-source, and must be able transmit to any VPN that
   has receivers for that group.  This must be taken into account when
   the provisioning is done.)  This customer/SP communication is part of
   the service provisioning process, and outside the scope of this
   document.

   It is possible that an extranet C-source will transmit both extranet
   C-flows and non-extranet C-flows.  However, if extranet C-receiver



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 10]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   C-R can receive extranet C-flows from extranet C-source C-S, the
   procedures of this document do not prevent C-R from requesting and
   receiving the non-extranet flows that are transmitted by C-S.
   Therefore it is NOT RECOMMENDED to allow an extranet C-source to
   transmit non-extranet C-flows.  However, the Service Provider (SP)
   has no control over the set of C-flows transmitted by a given
   C-source, and can do no more than communicate this recommendation to
   its customers.  (Alternatively, the customer and SP may coordinate on
   setting up filters to prevent unauthorized flows from being sent to a
   customer site; such a procedure is outside the scope of this
   document.)  See the "Security Considerations" section (Section 10)
   for additional discussion of this issue.

   Whenever a VPN is provisioned, there is a risk that errors in
   provisioning may result in an unintended cross-connection of VPNs.
   This would create a security problem for the customers.  When
   provisioning an extranet, attention to detail is particularly
   important, as extranet intentionally cross-connects VPNs.  Care must
   always be taken to ensure that the cross-connections are according to
   the policy agreed upon by the SP and its customers.

   Additionally, if one is connecting two VPNs that have overlapping
   address spaces, one has to be sure that the inter-VPN traffic neither
   originates from nor is destined to the part of the address space that
   is in the overlap.  Other problems that can arise due to overlapping
   address spaces are discussed in Section 2.

2.  Extranets and Overlapping Address Spaces

   As specified in [RFC4364], the address space of one VPN may overlap
   with the address space of another.  A given address may be
   "ambiguous", in that it denotes one system within VPN-A and a
   different system within VPN-B.  In the notation of Section 1.1, if an
   address C-S is ambiguous between VPNs A and B, then Host(C-S,A) !=
   Host(C-S,B).  However, any given address C-S MUST be unambiguous
   (i.e., MUST denote a single system) in the context of a given VPN.

   When a set of VRFs belonging to different VPNs are combined into an
   extranet, it is no longer sufficient for an address to be unambiguous
   only within the context of a single VPN:

   1.  Suppose C-S is the address of a given extranet C-source contained
       in VPN-A.  Now consider the set of VPNs {VPN-B, VPN-C, ...}
       containing extranet C-receivers that are allowed by policy to
       receive extranet C-flows from VPN-A's C-S.  The address C-S MUST
       be unambiguous among this entire set of VPNs (VPN-A, VPN-B, VPN-
       C, etc.); i.e., Host(C-S,A) == Host(C-S,B) == Host(C-S,C).




Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 11]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


       The implication is that C-S in VPN-A is not necessarily an
       extranet C-source for all VPNs that contain extranet C-receivers;
       policy MUST be used to ensure that C-S is an extranet C-source
       for a given VPN, say VPN-B, only if C-S is unambiguous between
       VPN-A and VPN-B.

   2.  If a given VRF contains extranet C-receivers for a given extranet
       C-source, then the address of this C-source MUST be unambiguous
       among all the extranet C-sources for which there are C-receivers
       in the VRF.  This is true whether or not C-sources are in VRFs
       that belong to the same or to different VPNs.

       The implication is that if C-S in VRF-X is ambiguous with C-S in
       VRF-Y, then there MUST NOT be any VRF, say VRF-Z, containing
       C-receivers that are allowed by policy to receive extranet
       C-flows from both C-S in VRF-X and C-S in VRF-Y.

   Note: A VPN customer may be using "anycast" addresses.  An anycast
   address is intentionally ambiguous, as it denotes a set of systems
   rather than a single system.  In this document, we will consider an
   anycast address to be unambiguous in a given context as long as it
   denotes the same set of systems whenever it occurs in that context.

   A multicast C-group address, say C-G, may also be ambiguous, in that
   it may be used for one multicast group in VPN-A and for an entirely
   different multicast group in VPN-B.  If a set of MVPNs are combined
   into an extranet, and C-G is an extranet C-group, it is necessary to
   ensure that C-G is unambiguous among the entire set of VPNs whose
   VRFs contain extranet C-sources, C-RPs, and/or extranet C-receivers
   for that C-group.  This may require, as part of the provisioning
   process, customer/SP communication that is outside the scope of this
   document.

   Subject to these restrictions, the SP has complete control over the
   distribution of routes in an MVPN.  This control is exerted either by
   provisioning the export RTs on the VRFs that originate the routes
   (i.e., on the VRFs that contain the extranet C-sources), or by
   provisioning the import RTs on the VRFs that receive the routes
   (i.e., on the VRFs that contain the extranet C-receivers), or both.

   Some of the rules and restrictions on provisioning the RTs are
   applicable to all extranets; these are specified in Section 4.
   Sections 6 and 7 add additional rules and restrictions that are
   applicable only to particular extranet scenarios.

   Even if all the RTs are provisioned according to the above rules and
   restrictions, it is still possible for a single P-tunnel to contain
   multicast data packets whose source and/or group addresses are



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 12]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   ambiguous in the context of the set of PEs that receive data from the
   P-tunnel.  That is, the above rules and restrictions are necessary,
   but not sufficient, to prevent address ambiguity from causing
   misdelivery of traffic.  To prevent such misdelivery, additional
   procedures or policies must be used.

   Sections 2.1 and 2.2 describe scenarios in which a given P-tunnel may
   carry data packets with ambiguous addresses.  The additional
   procedures and policies needed to prevent misdelivery of data in
   those scenarios are outlined in Section 2.3.  (The detailed
   procedures described in Sections 6 and 7 incorporate the
   considerations of Section 2.3.)

2.1.  Ambiguity: P-tunnel with Extranet/Non-Extranet Flows

   In the following, we will use the notation "VRF A-n" to mean "VRF n
   of VPN-A".

   If VPN-A and VPN-B have overlapping address spaces, and are part of
   the same extranet, then the following problem may exist, as
   illustrated in Figure 1.

   C-S2(A)  C-S1                                      Join(C-S2(A),G)
     \      /                                              /
      \    /                                              /
    +-------+---+   P1: (C-S1,G), (C-S2(A),G)     +---+--------+
    |VRF A-1|   |---------------------------------|   |VRF A-2 |
    +-------+PE1|                                 |PE2+--------+
    |VRF B-1|   |---------------------------------|   |VRF B-2 |
    +-------+---+   P2: (C-S2(B),G)               +---+--------+
        /                                               /    \
       /                                               /      \
     C-S2(B)                             Join(C-S2(B),G)   Join(C-S1,G)


      Figure 1: Ambiguity of Extranet and Non-Extranet Source Address

   Suppose:

   o  C-G is an SSM C-group used in VPNs A and B.

   o  VRF A-1, on PE1, contains an extranet C-source, whose IP address
      is C-S1, that is allowed to have receivers in VPN B.  VRF A-1 thus
      exports to VPN B a UMH-eligible route matching C-S1.

   o  VRF A-1 also contains a non-extranet C-source, whose IP address is
      C-S2.  VRF A-1 exports a UMH-eligible route matching C-S2 to other
      VPN A VRFs, but NOT to VPN B.



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 13]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   o  VRF B-1, also on PE1, contains a non-extranet C-source whose IP
      address is C-S2.  A UMH-eligible route matching C-S2 is thus
      exported from VRF B-1 to other VRFs in VPN B.

   o  Host(C-S2,A) != Host(C-S2,B).  That is, C-S2 is an ambiguous
      address in any extranet that contains both VPN-A VRFs and VPN-B
      VRFs.

   o  VRF B-2, on some other PE, say PE2, requests to receive the
      multicast flow (C-S1,C-G).  In the context of VRF B-2, C-S1
      matches the route exported from VRF A-1.  Thus B-2's request to
      receive the (C-S1,C-G) flow is transmitted to VRF A-1.

   o  VRF A-1 responds to VRF B-2's request for (C-S1,C-G) traffic by
      transmitting that traffic on P-tunnel P1.

   o  VRF B-2 joins P-tunnel P1, in order to receive the (C-S1,C-G)
      traffic.

   o  VRF A-2, on PE2, requests to receive the (non-extranet) multicast
      flow (C-S2,C-G).  In the context of VRF A-2, C-S2 matches the
      route exported from VRF A-1.  Thus A-2's request to receive the
      (C-S2,C-G) traffic is transmitted to VRF A-1.

   o  VRF A-1 responds to VRF A-2's request for (C-S2,C-G) traffic by
      transmitting that traffic on P-tunnel P1.

   o  VRF A-2 joins P-tunnel P1, in order to receive the (C-S2,C-G)
      traffic.

   o  VRF B-2 requests to receive the (non-extranet) multicast flow
      (C-S2,C-G).  In the context of VRF B-2, C-S2 matches the route
      exported from VRF B-1.  Thus B-2's request to receive the
      (C-S2,C-G) flow is transmitted to VRF B-1.

   o  VRF B-1 responds to VRF B-2's request for (C-S2,C-G) traffic by
      transmitting that traffic on P-tunnel P2.

   o  VRF B-2 joins P-tunnel P2.

   Since VRF B-2 has joined P-tunnel P1 and P-tunnel P2, it will receive
   (C-S2,C-G) traffic on both P-tunnels.  The (C-S2,C-G) traffic that
   VRF B-2 needs to receive is traveling on P-tunnel P2; this (C-S2,C-G)
   traffic must be forwarded by B-2 to any attached customer sites that
   have C-receivers for it.  But B-2 MUST discard the (C-S2,C-G) traffic
   that it receives on P1, as this is not the traffic that it has
   requested.  If the (C-S2,C-G) traffic arriving on P1 were forwarded
   to B-2's customer sites, the C-receivers would not be able to



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 14]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   distinguish the two flows, and the result would be a corrupted data
   stream.

   Note that the procedures of [RFC6513] Section 9.1.1 ("Discarding
   Packets from the Wrong PE") will not cause VRF B-2 to discard the
   (C-S2,C-G) that arrives on tunnel P1, because P1 and P2 have the same
   upstream PE.

   Therefore, it is necessary EITHER to prevent the above scenario from
   occurring, OR ELSE to ensure that multicast data packets will be
   discarded if they arrive on the "wrong" P-tunnel (even if they arrive
   from the expected PE).  See Section 2.3 for further discussion of
   this issue.

2.2.  Ambiguity: P-tunnel with Multiple Extranet Flows

   Here is another example in which overlapping address spaces may cause
   a problem.  This example is illustrated in Figure 2.

 C-S2(A2D) C-S1(A2C)                               Join(C-S2(A2D),G)
     \      /                                              /
      \    /                                              /
    +-------+---+ P1: (C-S1(A2C),G), (C-S2(A2D),G)+---+--------+
    |VRF A-1|   |---------------------------------|   |VRF D-1 |
    +-------+PE1|                                 |PE2+--------+
    |VRF B-1|   |---------------------------------|   |VRF C-1 |
    +-------+---+ P2: (C-S2(B2C),G)               +---+--------+
        /                                              /  \
       /                                              /    \
     C-S2(B2C)                                       /      \
                                                   Join     Join
                                            (C-S2(B2C),G)  (C-S1(A2C),G)


             Figure 2: Ambiguity of Extranet Source Addresses

   Suppose:

   o  C-G is an SSM C-group address that is used in VPNs A, B, C, and D.

   o  VRF A-1, on PE1, contains an extranet C-source whose IP address is
      C-S1, and that is allowed by policy to have C-receivers in VPN C
      (but not in VPN D).  VRF A-1 thus exports a UMH-eligible route
      matching C-S1 to VPN C.

   o  VRF A-1 also contains an extranet C-source whose IP address is
      C-S2, and that is allowed by policy to have C-receivers in VPN D




Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 15]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


      (but not in VPN C).  VRF A-1 thus exports a UMH-eligible route
      matching C-S2 to VPN D.

   o  VRF B-1, also on PE1, contains an extranet C-source whose IP
      address is C-S2, and that is allowed by policy to have C-receivers
      in VPN C (but not in VPN D).  VRF B-1 thus exports a UMH-eligible
      route matching C-S2 to VPN C.

   o  Host(C-S2,A) != Host (C-S2,B).  That is, C-S2 is an ambiguous
      address in any extranet that contains both VPN-A VRFs and VPN-B
      VRFs.

   o  VRF C-1, on some other PE, say PE2, requests to receive the
      extranet multicast flow (C-S1,C-G).  In the context of VRF C-1,
      C-S1 matches the route exported from VRF A-1.  Thus C-1's request
      to receive the (C-S1,C-G) flow is transmitted to VRF A-1.

   o  VRF A-1 responds to VRF C-1's request for (C-S1,C-G) traffic by
      transmitting that traffic on P-tunnel P1,

   o  VRF C-1 joins P-tunnel P1, in order to receive the (C-S1,C-G)
      traffic.

   o  VRF C-1 requests to receive the extranet multicast flow
      (C-S2,C-G).  In the context of VRF C-1, C-S2 matches the route
      exported from VRF B-1.  Thus C-1's request to receive the
      (C-S2,C-G) flow is transmitted to VRF B-1.

   o  VRF B-1 responds by transmitting its (C-S2,C-G) traffic on
      P-tunnel P2.

   o  VRF C-1 joins P-tunnel P2 in order to receive the (C-S2,C-G)
      traffic.

   o  VRF D-1, on PE2, requests to receive the extranet multicast flow
      (C-S2,C-G).  In the context of VRF D-1, C-S2 matches the route
      exported from VRF A-1.  Thus D-1's request to receive the
      (C-S2,C-G) flow is transmitted to VRF A-1.

   o  VRF A-1 responds by transmitting its (C-S2,C-G) traffic on
      P-tunnel P1.

   o  VRF D-1 joins P-tunnel P1 in order to receive the (C-S2,C-G)
      traffic.

   In this example, VRF A-1 has chosen to use the same P-tunnel, P1, to
   carry both its (C-S2,C-G) traffic and the (C-S1,C-G) traffic.  VRF
   C-1 has joined tunnel P1 in order to receive the (C-S1,C-G) traffic



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 16]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   from VRF A-1, which means that VRF C-1 will also receive the unwanted
   (C-S2,C-G) traffic from P1.  VRF C-1 is also expecting (C-S2,C-G)
   traffic from VRF B-1; this traffic will be received from P2.  Thus
   VRF C-1 is receiving (C-S2,C-G) traffic on both tunnels, and both
   C-flows arrive from the expected PE, PE1.

   Therefore, it is necessary EITHER to prevent the above scenario from
   occurring, OR ELSE to ensure that VRF C-1 discards any (C-S,C-G)
   traffic that arrives from the "wrong" P-tunnel.  See Section 2.3 for
   further discussion of this issue.

   Note that the ambiguity described in this section (Section 2.2) would
   not occur if C-G were an (ASM) extranet C-group.  In that case, the
   scenario would violate the rule, given previously in Section 2,
   requiring that all sources sending to a particular ASM extranet
   C-group must have addresses that are unambiguous over all the MVPNs
   receiving traffic for that C-group.

2.3.  Preventing Misdelivery in These Scenarios

   There are two ways to prevent the scenarios of Section 2.1 and
   Section 2.2 from resulting in misdelivery of data.  These two ways
   are discussed respectively in Section 2.3.1 and Section 2.3.2.

2.3.1.  Do Not Deliver Packets from the 'Wrong' P-tunnel

   Consider a particular C-flow that has receivers in a particular VRF.
   Sections 6 and 7 describe a set of procedures that enable an egress
   PE to determine the "expected P-tunnel" for that C-flow in the
   context of that VRF.  If a PE receives packets of the C-flow (as
   determined by the IP source and/or destination address of the
   packet), it checks to see if the packet was received on the expected
   P-tunnel for that VRF.  If so, the packet is delivered to the VRF
   (and thus to the C-flow's receivers in that VRF).  If not, the packet
   is not delivered to the VRF.

   Note that at a given egress PE, the "wrong" P-tunnel for one VRF may
   be the right P-tunnel for another.

   These procedures, if applied at every PE that joins a given P-tunnel,
   are sufficient to prevent misdelivery of traffic in the scenarios of
   Sections 2.1 and 2.2.

   IF these procedures cannot be applied by every PE that is attached to
   a given extranet, then the policies of Section 2.3.2 MUST be applied
   at every VRF containing C-sources for that extranet.





Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 17]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   In some cases, however, it may be safe to deliver packets that arrive
   from other than the expected P-tunnel.  Suppose it is known that
   every packet gets transmitted on only a single P-tunnel.  (This will
   be the case if the "single PMSI per C-flow" transmission model,
   discussed in Section 3.1, is being used.)  Suppose further that it is
   known that T1 and T2 carry only packets that arrived at the same
   ingress PE, over one or more VRF interfaces that are associated with
   the same VRF.  (I.e., that there is a particular VRF that is the
   ingress VRF for ALL the packets carried by T1 or T2.)  In this case,
   if T1 is the expected P-tunnel for a given (C-S,C-G) , it is NOT
   necessary to discard (S,G) packets that arrive over T2.

   It is not always possible to determine whether two P-tunnels are
   carrying packets from the same ingress VRF.  However, in some cases,
   this can be determined by examination of the A-D routes in which the
   tunnels have been advertised.

   Consider the following example:

   o  Tunnel T1 is a P2MP mLDP or RSVP-TE P-tunnel advertised in an
      Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route, call it R1.

   o  Tunnel T2 is a P2MP mLDP or RSVP-TE P-tunnel advertised in an
      S-PMSI A-D route, call it R2.

   o  The respective NLRIs of R1 and R2 contain the same RD value.

   o  The MPLS Label field of R1's PMSI Tunnel attribute is zero, and
      the MPLS label value of R2's PMSI Tunnel attribute is zero.

   In this example, it can be concluded that T1 and T2 are carrying
   packets from the same ingress VRF.  Thus if T1 is the expected
   P-tunnel for a (C-S,C-G) flow, (S,G) packets from T2 can be safely
   delivered to the egress VRF; they do not need to be discarded.
   Similarly, if T2 is the expected P-tunnel for a (C-S,C-G) flow, (S,G)
   packets from T1 can be safely delivered to the egress VRF.

   Another example is the following:

   o  Tunnel T3 is a P2MP mLDP or RSVP-TE P-tunnel advertised in a
      (C-*,C-*) S-PMSI A-D route, call it R3.

   o  Tunnel T4 is a P2MP mLDP or RSVP-TE P-tunnel advertised in a
      (C-S,C-G) S-PMSI A-D route, call it R4.

   o  The respective NLRIs of R3 and R4 contain the same RD value.





Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 18]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   o  The MPLS Label field of R3's PMSI Tunnel attribute is zero, and
      the MPLS label value of R4's PMSI Tunnel attribute is zero.

   In this example, it can be concluded that T3 and T4 are carrying
   packets from the same ingress VRF.  Thus if T3 is the expected
   P-tunnel for a (C-S,C-G) flow, (S,G) packets from T4 can be safely
   delivered to the egress VRF; they do not need to be discarded.
   Similarly, if T4 is the expected P-tunnel for a (C-S,C-G) flow, (S,G)
   packets from T3 can be safely delivered to the egress VRF.

   When Ingress Replication (IR) P-tunnels are being used, please see
   [MVPN-IR], especially Section 6 ("The PTA's MPLS Label Field") for a
   discussion of how to determine when packets from other than the
   expected P-tunnel must be discarded.

2.3.2.  Policies to Prevent Ambiguity on a P-tunnel

   For P-tunnels that are advertised in S-PMSI A-D routes whose NLRI
   contains (C-S,C-G) or (C-S,C-*), the ambiguities described in
   Sections 2.1 and 2.2 can be prevented by provisioning a policy that
   assigns, to such P-tunnels, only flows from the same C-source.

   However, it is not always possible to determine, through inspection
   of the control messages, whether this policy has been deployed.  For
   instance, suppose a given VRF has imported a set of S-PMSI A-D
   routes, that each route in the set has bound only a single
   (C-S1,C-G1) to a single P-tunnel, and that each route in the set
   identifies a different P-tunnel in its PTA than is identified by the
   PTA of any other route in the set.  One cannot infer from this that
   there is no ambiguity, as the same P-tunnel may also have been
   advertised in an S-PMSI A-D route that is not imported by the given
   VRF, and that S-PMSI A-D route may have bound (C-S2,C-G2) to the
   P-tunnel, where C-S1 != C-S2.

   Therefore, in order to determine that a given P-tunnel (advertised in
   a (C-S,C-G) or (C-S,C-*) S-PMSI A-D route) carries only C-flows from
   a single C-source, a PE must have a priori knowledge (through
   provisioning) that this policy has been deployed.  In the remainder
   of this document, we will refer to this policy as the "Single
   C-source per (C-S,C-G) or (C-S,C-*) P-tunnel" policy.  Note that this
   policy is only applicable to P-tunnels that are advertised only in
   (C-S,C-G) or (C-S,C-*) S-PMSI A-D routes.

   Of course, if a P-tunnel is advertised in (a) an I-PMSI A-D route, or
   (b) an S-PMSI A-D route whose NLRI contains (C-*,C-*), or (c) an
   S-PMSI A-D route whose NLRI contains (C-*,C-G), then it is always
   possible for the P-tunnel to contain traffic from multiple C-sources;
   there is no policy that can prevent that.



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 19]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   However, if a P-tunnel advertised in a (C-*,C-G) S-PMSI A-D route
   contains only traffic addressed to a single C-G, the address
   uniqueness rules of Section 2 prevent the C-source addresses from
   being ambiguous; the set of C-sources transmitting to a particular
   extranet C-group address must be unambiguous over the set of MVPNs
   that have receivers for that C-group.  So for P-tunnels that are
   advertised in (C-*,C-G) S-PMSI A-D routes, the ambiguities described
   Section 2.1 and Section 2.2 can be prevented by provisioning a policy
   that assigns, to such P-tunnels, only flows to the same extranet
   C-group.  We will refer to this policy as the "Single C-group per
   (C-*,C-G) P-tunnel" policy.

   These considerations can be summarized as follows.  IF the procedures
   referenced in Section 2.3.1 cannot be applied, then the PEs MUST be
   provisioned so that the all of the following conditions hold true of
   the VRFs that contain extranet C-sources:

   o  the "Single C-source per (C-S,C-G) or (C-S,C-*) P-tunnel" policy
      is provisioned, and

   o  either no (C-*,C-G) S-PMSI A-D routes are advertised, or else the
      "Single C-group per (C-*,C-G) P-tunnel" policy is provisioned, and

   o  no P-tunnels are advertised in I-PMSI A-D routes, and

   o  no (C-*,C-*) S-PMSI A-D routes are advertised.

   Section 3 of this document describes a procedure known as "extranet
   separation".  When extranet separation is used, the ambiguity of
   Section 2.1 is prevented.  However, the ambiguity of Section 2.2 is
   not prevented by extranet separation.  Therefore, the use of extranet
   separation is not a sufficient condition for avoiding the procedures
   referenced in Section 2.3.1.  Extranet separation is, however,
   implied by the policies discussed in this section (Section 2.3.2).

3.  Extranet Transmission Models

   This document specifies several "extranet transmission models".  A
   given VRF, containing extranet C-sources or C-receivers, MUST use
   only one of these models.  Further if VRF S contains extranet
   C-sources, VRF R contains extranet C-receivers, and it is allowed by
   policy for an extranet C-receiver in VRF R to receive a C-flow from
   an extranet C-source in VRF S, then VRFs S and R MUST use the same
   extranet transmission model.  The model used by a given VRF is
   determined by provisioning.






Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 20]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


3.1.  Transmitting an Extranet C-flow on a Single PMSI

   In one extranet transmission model, which we call the "transmitting
   an extranet C-flow on a single PMSI" model, or more simply, the
   "single PMSI per C-flow model", a PE transmitting a packet of an
   extranet C-flow transmits it on only a single PMSI.  If the PMSI is
   instantiated by a multicast P-tunnel, this means that the PE
   transmits the packet on a single P-tunnel.  Of course, if the PE is a
   replication point for that multicast P-tunnel, the packet is
   transmitted more than once by the PE.  Similarly, if the PMSI is
   instantiated by a set of unicast tunnels (i.e., via Ingress
   Replication), each packet may be transmitted multiple times.  It is
   still the case though that the packet is transmitted only on one
   PMSI.

   This document provides procedures for supporting this transmission
   model using either BGP or PIM as the PE-PE C-multicast control
   protocol.

   There are two variants of this transmission model: "without extranet
   separation" and "with extranet separation".

3.1.1.  Without Extranet Separation

   In this variant, multicast data traffic from extranet C-sources and
   from non-extranet C-sources may be carried in the same P-tunnel.

   This document provides procedures for supporting this variant using
   either BGP or PIM as the PE-PE C-multicast control protocol.

3.1.2.  With Extranet Separation

   In this variant, multicast data traffic from extranet C-sources and
   from non-extranet C-sources are never carried in the same P-tunnel.
   Under certain circumstances, this can reduce the amount of multicast
   data traffic that is delivered unnecessarily to certain PE routers.
   It also eliminates the ambiguity discussed in Section 2.1.

   By definition, when extranet separation is used, the following rule
   MUST be applied:

      Traffic from extranet C-sources MUST NOT be carried in the same
      P-tunnel as traffic from non-extranet C-sources.

   This rule does not impact those VRFs that contain only non-extranet
   C-sources, nor does it impact those VRFs that contain only extranet
   C-sources.  However, if a particular VRF contains both kinds of
   C-source, it will need to advertise some P-tunnels that are used for



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 21]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   carrying only extranet C-flows, and some that are used only for
   carrying non-extranet C-flows.

   This document provides procedures for supporting extranet separation
   when BGP is used as the PE-PE C-multicast control protocol.  Support
   for extranet separation using PIM as the PE-PE C-multicast control
   protocol is outside the scope of this document.

3.2.  Transmitting an Extranet C-flow over Multiple PMSIs

   The second extranet transmission model is called the "transmitting an
   extranet C-flow over multiple PMSIs" model, or more simply, the
   "multiple PMSIs per C-flow model".  In this model, a PE may transmit
   the packets of an extranet C-flow on several different PMSIs.

   Support for extranet separation with this model is outside the scope
   of this document.

   This document provides procedures for supporting this transmission
   model when PIM as the PE-PE C-multicast control protocol.  Support
   for this transmission model when BGP is used as the PE-PE C-multicast
   control protocol is outside the scope of this document.

4.  Distribution of Routes that Match C-S/C-RP Addresses

4.1.  UMH-Eligible Routes

   As described in Section 5.1 of [RFC6513], in order for a C-flow
   (C-S,C-G) to be carried across the SP backbone, a VRF that has
   multicast receivers for that C-flow must import a route that matches
   C-S, and this route must be "eligible for UMH selection".  In this
   document, we will refer to these routes as "UMH-eligible extranet
   C-source routes".

   The UMH-eligible extranet C-source routes do not necessarily have to
   be unicast routes; they MAY be SAFI-129 routes (see Section 5.1.1 of
   [RFC6513]).  For example, suppose one wants a VPN-R C-receiver to be
   able to receive extranet C-flows from C-sources in VPN-S, but one
   does not want any VPN-R system to be able to send unicast traffic to
   those C-sources.  One can achieve this by using SAFI-129 routes as
   the UMH-eligible routes exported from VPN-S and imported by VPN-R.
   Since SAFI-129 routes are used only for UMH determination, but not
   for unicast routing, this allows the multicast traffic to be
   forwarded properly, but does not create unicast routes to the
   C-sources.

   If a customer is using PIM-SM in ASM mode, and one or more customer
   sites have C-receivers that are allowed by policy to join a (C-*,C-G)



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 22]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   tree, where C-G is an extranet C-group, then any VRF with C-receivers
   for that group MUST import a UMH-eligible route that matches C-RP,
   where C-RP is the Rendezvous Point (RP) address for C-G.

   The UMH-eligible extranet C-source and C-RP routes do not have to be
   "host routes."  That is, they can be routes whose IPv4 address
   prefixes are not 32 bits in length, or whose IPv6 address prefixes
   are not 128 bits in length.  So it is possible for a UMH-eligible
   extranet C-source route to match the address of an extranet C-source
   and to also match the address of a non-extranet C-source.  However,
   if such a route is exported from a VPN-S VRF and imported by a VPN-R
   VRF, VPN-R receivers will be able to receive C-flows from any non-
   extranet C-sources whose addresses match that route.  To prevent
   this, the VPN-S VRF SHOULD be provisioned such that it will NOT
   export a UMH-eligible route that matches (in the context of the VPN-R
   VRF) both extranet C-sources and non-extranet C-sources.  Failure to
   follow this rule may result in a VPN security violation.  (See
   Section 10.)

   In general, one does not want ALL the routes from the VPN-S VRFs to
   be exported to all the VPN-R VRFs, as only a subset of the routes in
   the VPN-S VRFs will be UMH-eligible extranet C-source routes.  Route
   distribution is, as always in a BGP/MPLS IP VPN [RFC4364], controlled
   by Route Targets (RTs).  A variety of route distribution policies can
   be created by appropriately provisioning the import and export RTs of
   the various VRFs.

   For example, the VPN-S VRFs that contain extranet C-sources could be
   configured to apply an export RT whose value is "RT-A-extranet" to
   the routes that match the extranet C-sources.  The VPN-R VRFs that
   contain extranet C-receivers allowed to receive extranet C-flows from
   VPN-S extranet C-sources could then be configured with "RT-
   A-extranet" as an import RT.

   Arbitrarily complex policies can be created by suitable manipulation
   of the import and export RTs.

4.1.1.  Extranet Separation

   If Extranet Separation is being used, and if a given VRF is exporting
   UMH-eligible routes both for extranet C-sources for non-extranet
   C-sources, then the VRF MUST be configured not only with its "default
   RD", but also with an "extranet RD".  The exported UMH-eligible
   routes MUST contain the extranet RD in their NLRIs.







Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 23]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


4.2.  Distribution of Unicast Routes Matching C-RPs and DRs

   Consider a C-source, C-S, that may transmit to a particular extranet
   C-group, C-G.

   In order to follow the procedures of [RFC7761],

   o  the "first hop designated router" (DR) of C-S needs to be able to
      unicast "PIM Register Messages" to a C-RP that services C-G;

   o  the C-RPs servicing C-G need to be able to unicast "PIM Register-
      Stop Messages" to the DR of C-S.

   It follows that if a VRF contains C-S, but does not contain a C-RP
   for C-G, then the VRF MUST import a unicast route matching a C-RP for
   C-G.  Note that the unicast route matching the C-RP is needed whether
   or not the VRF has also imported a SAFI-129 route matching the C-RP.
   (If the VRF also contains receivers for C-G, and if UMH determination
   is being done using SAFI-129 routes, both a unicast route and a
   SAFI-129 matching C-RP route are needed.)

   Similarly, if a VRF contains a C-RP for C-G, but does not contain
   C-S, the VRF MUST import a unicast route matching the DR for C-S.
   Note that the unicast route matching the DR for C-S is needed even if
   UMH determination is being done using SAFI-129 routes; in that case,
   if the VRF also contains receivers for C-G, it needs to import a
   SAFI-129 route matching C-S and a unicast route matching the DR for
   C-S.

   If, for a particular extranet C-group, C-G, the customer is using
   "anycast-RP"([RFC3446], [RFC4610]) or MSDP [RFC3618], then all the
   C-RPs serving C-G need to send unicast messages to each other.  Thus
   any VRF that contains a C-RP for C-G needs to import unicast routes
   matching ALL the other C-RPs that serve C-G.

   The need to distribute these unicast routes is usually not a problem
   as long as all the C-sources and C-RPs for C-G are in the same MVPN.
   If, however, the C-sources are not all in the same MVPN, great care
   must be taken to ensure that the unicast routes mentioned above are
   properly distributed.

   There may be scenarios in which all the C-sources for C-G are in the
   same MVPN, but there are receivers in different VPNs, and some or all
   of the VPNs with receivers have their own C-RPs for C-G.  In this
   case, care must be taken to ensure that the C-RPs can all unicast to
   each other.





Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 24]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


4.3.  Route Targets and Ambiguous UMH-Eligible Routes

   This section imposes constraints on the way RTs are assigned to (a)
   UMH-eligible routes and to (b) the BGP A-D routes that advertise
   P-tunnels (i.e., to BGP A-D routes that contain a PTA).  The
   constraints specified here apply to any extranet for which the
   ambiguity of Section 2.2 is possible.  (The conditions under which
   such ambiguity is possible are described in Section 2.2.)

   We want to ensure that, in any given VRF, the UMH-eligible route
   matching a given extranet C-source has an RT in common with every BGP
   A-D route that advertises a P-tunnel that may be used to carry
   extranet multicast traffic from that C-source.  We also want to
   ensure that the UMH-eligible route matching a given extranet C-source
   does not have any RT in common with any BGP A-D route that advertises
   a P-tunnel that may be used to carry any multicast traffic from a
   different C-source that has the same IP address.  This enables us to
   determine whether traffic that appears to be from the given C-source
   is really arriving on the "wrong tunnel", and hence is really from a
   different C-source with the same IP address.

   Suppose an IP address C-S is used in VPN-A as the address of one
   system, and is used in VPN-B as the address of a different system.
   In this case, one or more VPN-A VRFs may export a VPN-IP route whose
   NLRI is <RD1,S>, and one or more VPN-B VRFs may export a VPN-IP route
   whose NLRI is <RD2,S>, where RD1 != RD2.  Consider two routes, R1 and
   R2, for which the following conditions all hold:

   o  R1 and R2 are UMH-eligible extranet C-source or C-RP routes, or
      are unicast routes matching a C-RP

   o  R1 is exported from a VRF of VPN-A, while R2 is exported from a
      VRF of a different VPN, say VPN-B

   o  R1's NLRI specifies IP address prefix S/n

   o  R2's NLRI specifies IP address prefix S/m

   o  m >= n, (S/m is either the same as or more specific than S/n)

   o  There is some host address H such that:

      *  H denotes a different system in VPN-A than in VPN-B,

      *  H/m == S/m (so either S/m or S/n might be a longest match for H
         in some VRF).





Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 25]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   We impose the following constraint: RTs MUST be assigned in such a
   way that R1 and R2 do not have any RT in common.

   (This constraint is not as onerous at it may seem.  Typically R1 and
   R2 would not have an RT in common, as that might result in their
   being imported into the same VRF, making the address H ambiguous in
   that VRF.)

   Sections 6 and 7 specify procedures for determining if a received
   C-flow has been received over the expected P-tunnel.  Those
   procedures will not work if this constraint is violated.  (The
   constraint described in this section is necessary but not sufficient
   for the procedures of those sections to work; additional constraints,
   covering the assignment of RTs to BGP A-D routes, are given in
   subsequent sections.)

4.4.  Dynamically Marking Extranet Routes

4.4.1.  The Extranet Source Extended Community

   Sections 4.1, 4.2, and 4.3 place specific requirements on the way in
   which certain VPN-IP routes are distributed.  In order to ensure that
   these requirements are met, a VPN customer must tell its SP which
   routes are the matching routes for extranet C-sources and C-RPs.
   This may be done as part of the provisioning process.  Note that this
   does not necessarily require customer/provider interaction every time
   the customer adds a new extranet C-source or C-RP, but only when the
   IP address of the new C-source or C-RP does not match an existing
   route that is already being distributed as a VPN-IP extranet route.
   Nevertheless, it seems worthwhile to support an OPTIONAL mechanism
   that allows a customer to dynamically mark certain routes as being
   extranet routes.

   To facilitate this, we define a new Transitive Opaque Extended
   Community (see [RFC4360], [RFC7153], and Section 9 of this document)
   the "Extranet Source" Extended Community.  When a CE router
   advertises (via BGP) a route to a PE router, and the AFI/SAFI of the
   route is 1/1, 1/2, 1/4, 2/1, 2/2, or 2/4, the Extranet Source
   Extended Community MAY be attached to the route.  The value field of
   the Extended Community MUST be set to zero.  By placing this Extended
   Community on a particular route, a CE router indicates to a PE router
   that the procedures of Sections 4.1, 4.2, and 4.3 are to be applied
   to that route.  That is, the CE router may use this Extended
   Community to indicate to the PE router that a particular route is to
   be treated as a route that matches the address of an extranet source,
   and exported accordingly to other VPNs.  A PE router that interprets
   this Extended Community MUST ignore the contents of the value field.




Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 26]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   Whether a CE router uses the Extranet Source Extended Community is
   determined by the configuration of the CE router.  If used, the set
   of routes to which the Extended Community is attached is also
   determined by configuration of the CE.  Note that a particular PE
   router may or may not support the use of the Extranet Source Extended
   Community by a particular CE router; this is determined by the
   service agreement between the SP and its customer.

   If a CE is advertising SAFI-2 routes to the PE as the UMH-eligible
   extranet C-source and C-RP routes, and if the CE is using the
   Extranet Source Extended Community, it is important that the CE
   attach that Extended Community to the SAFI-2 routes, rather than just
   to the corresponding SAFI-1 routes.  Otherwise extranet receivers may
   not be able to join the (C-S,C-G) or (C-*,C-G) multicast trees.

   However, if the C-sources and the C-RPs for a given extranet C-group
   are not all in the same VPN, the Extended Community would also have
   to be attached to the SAFI-1 routes that match the C-RP addresses and
   to the SAFI-1 routes that match the addresses of the first hop
   designated routers for all the C-sources.  Otherwise, the first hop
   routers might not be able to send PIM Register messages to the C-RPs,
   and the C-RPs might not be able to send PIM Register-Stop messages to
   the first hop routers.

   While this Extended Community allows a customer to inform the SP
   dynamically that certain routes are "extranet routes", it does not
   allow a customer to control the set of RTs that the route will carry
   when it is redistributed as a VPN-IP route.  Thus it is only useful
   when all the extranet routes from a given VRF are exported with
   exactly the same set of RTs.  (Cf.  Section 4.3.1 of [RFC4364], which
   does provide a mechanism that, if properly supported by the SP,
   allows the customer to determine the set of RTs carried by a VPN-IP
   route.)  A CE SHOULD NOT attach the Extranet Source Extended
   Community to any route for which it uses another method of specifying
   the RTs to be carried by that route.  A CE SHOULD NOT attach the
   Extranet Source Extended Community to a route unless all the extranet
   routes from the CE's VPN are intended to carry the same set of RTs.

   A PE SHOULD ignore the Extranet Source Extended Community if it
   appears on a route that the CE should not have put it on.  A PE that
   ignores the Extranet Source Extended Community SHOULD NOT follow the
   procedures of Section 4.4.2.

   Note that misconfiguration on the CE router can result in the
   Extranet Source Extended Community being mistakenly attached to a
   route that is not intended to be exported as an extranet route.  This
   could result in a VPN security violation.




Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 27]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


4.4.2.  Distribution of Extranet Source Extended Community

   Suppose a PE receives from a CE a route, call it R, with the Extranet
   Source Extended Community.  The PE must determine (via the
   considerations of Section 4.4.1) whether it should ignore that
   Extended Community on route R.  If so, the procedures of the current
   Section are not followed.

   Otherwise, when the PE originates a VPN-IP route corresponding to
   route R, the PE MUST attach this Extended Community to that route.

   A Route Reflector MUST NOT add or remove the Extranet Source Extended
   Community from the VPN-IP routes reflected by the Route Reflector,
   including the case where VPN-IP routes received via IBGP are
   reflected to EBGP peers (inter-AS option (c), see [RFC6513]
   Section 10).  The value of the Extended Community MUST NOT be changed
   by the route reflector.

   When re-advertising VPN-IP routes, ASBRs MUST NOT add/remove the
   Extranet Source Extended Community from these routes.  This includes
   inter-AS options (b) and (c) (see [RFC6513] Section 10).  The value
   of the Extended Community MUST NOT be changed by the ASBRs.

   When a PE advertises (via BGP) IP routes to a CE, these routes MUST
   NOT carry the Extranet Source Extended Community, unless the PE-CE
   connection is actually an inter-AS Option (a) connection (see
   [RFC6513] Section 10).  When the PE-CE connection is not an inter-AS
   Option (a) connection, a CE that receives an IP route with the
   Extranet Source Extended Community MUST remove it from the route
   before readvertising the route.

   The rules for attaching the Extranet Source Extended Community to a
   VPN-IP route, and the rules for propagating that Extended Community,
   are needed in order to support the scenario in which a VPN contains
   an Option (a) interconnect (see Section 10 of [RFC4364]).  At the
   Option (a) interconnect, the VPN-IP route gets translated back to an
   IP route, and the RTs are stripped off before the IP route is
   propagated.  If the Extranet Source EC has also been stripped off,
   there is no way for the router at the other end of the Option (a)
   interconnect to know that the route represents an extranet source.
   Thus the technique of using the Extranet Source EC to dynamically
   signal that a particular route represents an extranet source will not
   work correctly across an Option (a) interconnect unless the rules
   this section are followed.







Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 28]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


4.5.  The 'Extranet Separation' Extended Community

   We define a new Transitive Opaque Extended Community, the "Extranet
   Separation" Extended Community (see [RFC4360], [RFC7153], and
   Section 9 of this document).  This Extended Community is used only
   when extranet separation is being used.  Its value field MUST be set
   to zero upon origination, MUST be ignored upon reception, and MUST be
   passed unchanged by intermediate routers.  A Route Reflector MUST NOT
   add or remove the Extranet Separation Extended Community from the
   routes it reflects, including the case where routes received via IBGP
   are reflected to EBGP peers (inter-AS option (c), see [RFC6513]
   Section 10).

   If a VRF has been provisioned to use extranet separation, and if that
   VRF has been provisioned to transmit any extranet C-flows on a
   P-tunnel that it advertises in an I-PMSI A-D route or a (C-*,C-*)
   S-PMSI A-D route, then any UMH-eligible routes that are exported from
   that VRF following the procedures of Sections 4.1, 4.2, and 4.3 MUST
   carry the Extranet Separation Extended Community.  In addition, if an
   I-PMSI A-D route and/or (C-*,C-*) S-PMSI A-D route, exported from
   that VRF, is used to carry extranet traffic, that A-D route MUST also
   carry the Extranet Separation Extended Community.  Further details
   may be found in Sections 7.3, 7.4.4, and 7.4.5.

5.  Origination and Distribution of BGP A-D Routes

   Except where otherwise specified, this section describes procedures
   and restrictions that are independent of the PE-PE C-multicast
   control protocol.

5.1.  Route Targets of UMH-eligible Routes and A-D Routes

   Suppose there is an extranet C-flow such that:

   o  The extranet C-source of that C-flow is in VRF A-1.

   o  One or more extranet C-receivers of that C-flow are in VRF B-1.

   In this case VRF A-1 MUST export a UMH-eligible route that matches
   the extranet C-source address, and VRF B-1 MUST import that route.
   In addition, VRF A-1 MUST export an Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route or an
   S-PMSI A-D route specifying the P-tunnel through which it will send
   the data traffic of the given extranet C-flow, and VRF B-1 MUST
   import that route.  If BGP is the PE-PE C-multicast control protocol,
   then under certain conditions (as specified in [RFC6514]), VRF A-1
   may also need to export a Source Active A-D route specifying that it
   contains a source of the given C-flow, and VRF B-1 must import that
   Source Active A-D route.  That is, in order for VRF B-1 to receive a



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 29]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   C-flow from, a given extranet C-source contained in VRF A-1, VRF A-1
   MUST export a set of A-D routes that are "about" that source, and VRF
   B-1 MUST import them.

   One way to ensure this is to provision an RT that is carried by all
   the routes exported from VRF A-1 that are "about" a given extranet
   C-source, and to provision this RT as an import RT at any VRF (such
   as VRF B-1) that is allowed to receive extranet flows from source.

   If the "single PMSI per C-flow" transmission model is being used
   (with or without extranet separation), there is a an additional
   requirement, stated below, on the way RTs are provisioned, as the RTs
   carried by a UMH-eligible route that matches a given extranet
   C-source may need to be used to identify the A-D routes that are
   "about" that source.

   Consider the following scenario:

   o  IP address S is the address of one system in VPN-A, and of a
      different system in VPN-B.

   o  VRF A-1 on PE1 exports UMH-eligible route R1, which is a matching
      route for S.

   o  VRF A-1 on PE1 exports an A-D route P1 whose PTA identifies a
      P-tunnel through which VRF A-1 may send traffic whose C-source is
      S, where one of the following conditions holds:

      *  P1 is an I-PMSI A-D route, OR

      *  P1 is an S-PMSI A-D route whose NLRI contains (C-*,C-*) or
         (C-*,C-G), OR

      *  P1 is an S-PMSI A-D route whose NLRI contains (C-S,C-G) or
         (C-S,C-*), BUT the "single C-source per (C-S,C-G) or (C-S,C-*)
         P-tunnel" policy is not provisioned.

      *  P1 is a Source Active A-D route whose NLRI contains (C-S,C-G).

   o  VRF B-1 on PE1 exports a UMH-eligible route R2, which is a
      matching route for S.

   o  VRF B-1 on PE1 exports an A-D route P2 whose PTA identifies a
      P-tunnel on which VRF B-1 may send traffic whose C-source is S,
      where one of the following conditions holds:

      *  P2 is an I-PMSI A-D route, OR




Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 30]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


      *  P2 is an S-PMSI A-D route whose NLRI specifies (C-*,C-*) or
         (C-*,C-G), OR

      *  P2 is an S-PMSI A-D whose NLRI specifies (C-S,C-G) or
         (C-S,C-*), BUT the "single C-source per (C-S,C-G) or (C-S,C-*)
         P-tunnel" policy is not provisioned.

      *  P2 is a Source Active A-D route whose NLRI contains (C-S,C-G)

   As already specified in Section 4.1, there MUST NOT be any RT that is
   common to both R1 and R2.  In addition, the following set of rules
   for RT assignment MUST be followed when extranets are supported.
   This set of rules supports all the extranet transmission models
   described in this specification:

   o  There MUST NOT be any RT that is carried by both P1 and P2.

   o  The intersection of the set of RTs carried by P1 and the set of
      RTs carried by R1 MUST be non-null, and any VRF that imports both
      P1 and R1 MUST be configured with an import RT from this
      intersection.

   o  The intersection of the set of RTs carried by P2 and the set of
      RTs carried by R2 MUST be non-null, and any VRF that imports both
      P2 and R2 MUST be configured with an import RT from this
      intersection.

   Suppose VRF C-1 on PE2 imports P1 and R1 from VRF A-1, while also
   importing P2 from VRF B-1.  Since:

   o  R1 is VRF C-1's route to S, and

   o  R1 has an RT in common with P1, and

   o  R1 has no RT in common with P2

   it can be concluded that VRF C-1 should expect that multicast traffic
   from S will arrive on the P-tunnel specified in P1.  See Section 6
   and Section 7 for more details on determining the expected P-tunnel
   for a given extranet C-flow.

   While the assignment of import and export RTs to routes is a
   deployment and provisioning issue rather than a protocol issue, it
   should be understood that failure to follow these rules is likely to
   result in VPN security violations.






Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 31]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


5.2.  Considerations for Particular Inclusive Tunnel Types

   An Inclusive Tunnel (sometimes referred to as an "Inclusive Tree",
   see Section 2.1.1 of [RFC6513]) is a tunnel that, by default, carries
   all the multicast traffic of a given MVPN that enters the backbone
   network via a particular PE.  An Inclusive Tunnel is advertised in
   the PTA of an I-PMSI A-D route.

5.2.1.  RSVP-TE P2MP or Ingress Replication

   This section applies when Inclusive Tunnels are created using either
   RSVP-TE P2MP or Ingress Replication.

   Suppose a VRF, VRF-S, contains a given extranet C-source C-S, and
   that VRF-S advertises in its Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route either a P2MP
   RSVP-TE P-tunnel or an Ingress Replication P-tunnel to carry extranet
   traffic.

   In order for VRF-S to set up the P2MP RSVP-TE or Ingress Replication
   P-tunnel, it must know all the PEs that are leaf nodes of the
   P-tunnel, and to learn this it must import an Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D
   route from every VRF that needs to receive data through that tunnel.

   Therefore if VRF-R contains an extranet C-receiver that is allowed by
   policy to receive extranet flows from C-S, the RT(s) carried by the
   Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes originated by VRF-R MUST be such that
   those Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes will be imported into VRF-S.

   In the case of Ingress Replication, this has the following
   consequence.  If an egress PE has n VRFs with receivers for a flow
   that VRF-S transmits on its I-PMSI, that egress PE will receive n
   copies of the same packet, one for each of the n VRFs.

   Note that Section 9.1.1 of [RFC6514] prohibits the Leaf Information
   Required flag from being set in the PTA of an Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D
   route.  If this prohibition is ever removed, the requirement of this
   section will apply only if VRF-S does not set that flag.

5.2.2.  Ingress Replication

   This section applies only when Inclusive Tunnels are created via
   Ingress Replication.

   [RFC6513] and [RFC6514] specify procedures that allow I-PMSIs to be
   instantiated by Ingress Replication.  The concept of an IR P-tunnel,
   and the procedures for supporting IR P-tunnels, are explained more
   fully in [MVPN-IR].  An IR P-tunnel can be thought of as a P2MP tree




Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 32]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   in which a packet is transmitted from one node on the tree to another
   by being encapsulated and sent through a unicast tunnel.

   As discussed in Section 2, when I-PMSIs are used to support
   extranets, egress PEs MUST have the ability to discard customer
   multicast data packets that arrive on the wrong P-tunnel.  When
   I-PMSIs are instantiated by IR, this implies that the following two
   procedures MUST be followed:

   1.  One of the following three procedures MUST be followed:

       a.  the "Single Forwarder Selection" procedures of [RFC6513]
           Section 9.1.2,

       b.  the "Native PIM Methods" procedures of [RFC6513]
           Section 9.1.3

       c.  the unicast encapsulation used to transmit packets along the
           IR P-tunnel is such as to enable the receiving node to
           identify the transmitting node (note that this would not be
           the case if, e.g., the unicast tunnels were MP2P LSPs);

       and

   2.  If a PE assigns an MPLS label value in the PMSI Tunnel attribute
       of an Intra-AS or Inter-AS I-PMSI A-D route that it originates,
       that label value MUST NOT appear in the PMSI Tunnel attribute of
       any other I-PMSI or S-PMSI A-D route originated by the same PE.

   Failure to follow these procedures would make it impossible to
   discard packets that arrive on the wrong P-tunnel, and thus could
   lead to duplication of data.

   If it is desired to support extranet while also using IR to
   instantiate the PMSIs, an alternative is to use (C-*,C-*) S-PMSIs
   instead of I-PMSIs.  (See [RFC6625], as well as Sections 7.2.2,
   7.3.2, and 7.4.4 of this document.)  This has much the same effect in
   the data plane, and there are no restrictions on the type of unicast
   tunnel that can be used for instantiating S-PMSIs.

   Section 6.4.5 of [RFC6513] describes a way to support VPNs using
   I-PMSIs that are instantiated by IR, using no S-PMSIs, but using
   "explicit tracking" to ensure that a C-flow goes only to egress PEs
   that have receivers for it.  This document does not provide
   procedures to support extranet using that model.






Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 33]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


6.  When PIM is the PE-PE C-multicast Control Plane

   As specified in [RFC6513], when PIM is used as the PE-PE C-multicast
   control plane for a particular MVPN, there is a "Multidirectional
   Inclusive Provider Multicast Serivce Interface" (MI-PMSI) for that
   MVPN, and all the PEs of that MVPN must be able to send and receive
   on that MI-PMSI.  Associated with each VRF of the MVPN is a PIM
   C-instance, and the PIM C-instance treats the MI-PMSI as if it were a
   LAN interface.  That is, the "ordinary" PIM procedures run over the
   MI-PMSI just as they would over a real LAN interface, except that the
   data plane and control plane "RPF checks" need to be modified.
   Section 5.2 of [RFC6513] specifies the RPF check modifications for
   non-extranet MVPN service.

   For example, suppose that there are two VPNs, VPN-S and VPN-R.  In
   the absence of extranet support, all the VRFs of VPN-S are connected
   via one MI-PMSI (call it "the VPN-S MI-PMSI"), and all the VRFs of
   VPN-R are connected via another ("the VPN-R MI-PMSI").  If we want to
   provide extranet service in which the extranet C-sources are attached
   to some set of VPN-S VRFs, while the extranet C-receivers are
   attached to some set of VPN-R VRFs, then we have two choices:

   1.  either the VPN-R VRFs need to join the VPN-S MI-PMSI, or

   2.  the VPN-S VRFs need to join the VPN-R MI-PMSI.

   The first choice is used to support the "single PMSI per C-flow"
   transmission model.  The second choice is used to support the
   "multiple PMSIs per C-flow" transmission model.

   Procedures for both models are described below.

   To support these models, it must be possible to determine which
   I-PMSI A-D routes are associated with the VPN-S I-PMSI, and which are
   associated with the VPN-R I-PMSI.  Procedures are given for assigning
   RTs to these routes in a way that makes this determination possible.

   Both models allow the use of S-PMSIs to carry multicast data traffic.
   If a VRF containing receivers can receive from multiple MI-PMSIs,
   each S-PMSI must be uniquely associated with a particular MI-PMSI.
   Procedures are given for assigning RTs to these routes in a way that
   makes this determination possible.

   All the procedures specified in Sections 3, 4, and 5 still apply.

   Note that there are no special extranet procedures for Inter-AS
   I-PMSI A-D routes or for Leaf A-D routes.  Source Active A-D routes
   are not used when PIM is the PE-PE C-multicast protocol.



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 34]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


6.1.  Provisioning VRFs with RTs

6.1.1.  Incoming and Outgoing Extranet RTs

   In the absence of extranet service, suppose that each VRF of a given
   VPN, call it VPN-S, is configured with RT-S as its import and export
   RT, and that each VRF of a second VPN, call it VPN-R, is configured
   with RT-R as its import and export RT.  We will refer to RT-S and
   RT-R as "non-extranet RTs".

   Now suppose that VPN-S contains some extranet C-sources, and VPN-R
   contains some extranet C-receivers that are allowed by policy to
   receive extranet C-flows from the VPN-S extranet C-sources.

   To set up this S-to-R extranet, it is REQUIRED to provision an
   additional RT, call it RT-S-to-R, whose value is, in general,
   distinct from RT-S and RT-R.

   A VPN-S VRF that contains extranet C-sources allowed to transmit to
   VPN-R MUST be configured with RT-S-to-R as an "Outgoing Extranet RT".

   A VPN-R VRF that contains extranet C-receivers allowed to received
   from VPN-S MUST be configured with RT-S-to-R as an "Incoming Extranet
   RT".

   Note that the terms "Incoming" and "Outgoing" in this context refer
   to the direction of multicast data packets relative to the VRF.

   The Incoming Extranet RTs and Outgoing Extranet RTs that are
   configured for a given VRF serve as import RTs for that VRF.  They
   also serve as export RTs, but only for specific routes as specified
   in Section 6.1.2 below.

   Note that any VRF that contains both extranet C-sources and extranet
   C-receivers MUST be configured with both Outgoing and Incoming
   Extranet RTs.

   A VRF MAY be configured with more than one Incoming and/or Outgoing
   Extranet RT.

   If it happens to be the case that all C-sources in VPN-S are extranet
   C-sources allowed to transmit to VPN-R, then VPN-S VRFs MAY be
   configured such that RT-S is both a non-extranet RT and an Outgoing
   Extranet RT, and VPN-R VRFs MAY be configured such that RT-S is an
   Incoming Extranet RT.






Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 35]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


6.1.2.  UMH-eligible Routes and RTs

   Suppose R1 is a route, exported from a VPN-S VRF, matching an
   extranet C-source that is allowed by policy to transmit to VPN-R.
   Then R1 MUST carry the Outgoing Extranet RT used for the S-to-R
   extranet.  This will cause the route to be imported into the VPN-R
   VRFs that have extranet C-receivers that are allowed by policy to
   receive from VPN-S.

   The rules of Section 4 regarding route targets and ambiguous
   addresses still apply.

6.1.3.  PIM C-Instance Reverse Path Forwarding Determination

   Suppose a PIM control message, call it M, is received by a given VRF
   V, from a particular P-tunnel T.  In order to process control message
   M, the PIM C-instance associated with VRF V may need to do an "RPF
   determination" (see Section 5.2.2 of RFC 6513) for a particular IP
   prefix S.  RPF determination is based upon the rules for UMH
   selection as specified in Section 5.1 of RFC 6513.

   This document adds an additional constraint on the UMH selection
   procedure.  When doing RPF determination for a PIM control message
   received over a P-tunnel, a route matching prefix S is not considered
   to be eligible for UMH selection unless there is an RT, call it RT1,
   configured as one of V's Outgoing Extranet RTs, such that the
   following two conditions both hold:

   1.  The route matching S is exported from VRF V carrying RT1, and

   2.  An I-PMSI A-D route advertising P-tunnel T (in its PTA) has been
       imported into VRF V, and that I-PMSI A-D route carries RT1.

6.2.  Single PMSI per C-flow Model

   In this model, if a VPN-S VRF has extranet multicast C-sources, and a
   VPN-R VRF has extranet multicast C-receivers allowed by policy to
   receive from the C-sources in the VPN-S VRF, then the VPN-R VRF joins
   the MI-PMSI that VPN-S uses for its non-extranet traffic.

6.2.1.  Forming the MI-PMSIs

   Consider a VPN-S VRF that has extranet C-sources.  Per [RFC6513],
   each VPN-S VRF must originate an Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route containing
   a PMSI Tunnel Attribute (PTA) specifying the P-tunnel to be used as
   part of the VPN-S MI-PMSI.  In the absence of extranet service, this
   route carries the VRF's non-extranet RT, RT-S.  When extranet service




Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 36]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   is provided (using the "single PMSI per C-flow" model), this route
   MUST also carry each of the VRF's Outgoing Extranet RTs.

   Consider a VPN-R VRF that has extranet C-receivers.  Per [RFC6513],
   each VPN-R VRF must originate an Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route containing
   a PTA specifying the P-tunnel to be used as part of the VPN-R MI-
   PMSI.  This route carries the VRF's non-extranet RT RT-R.  When
   extranet service is provided (using the "single PMSI per C-flow"
   model), the VPN-R VRF MUST also originate one or more additional
   Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes.  It MUST originate one additional Intra-
   AS I-PMSI A-D route for each Incoming Extranet RT with which it has
   been configured; each such route will carry exactly one of the
   configured Incoming Extranet RTs.

   Note that when a VRF originates more than one Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D
   route, each of them MUST contain a different RD in its NLRI.  In
   addition, we add the requirement that any pair of such routes MUST
   NOT contain an RT in common.

   A VRF with extranet C-sources MUST join the P-tunnels advertised in
   the imported I-PMSI A-D routes that carry its non-extranet RT or any
   of its Outgoing Extranet RTs.  This set of P-tunnels will be treated
   as instantiating a single MI-PMSI, and the associated PIM C-instance
   will treat that MI-PMSI as a single LAN, and will run PIM procedures
   on that LAN, as specified in [RFC6513].  The fact that the MI-PMSI
   attaches to VRFs of different VPNs is not known to the PIM C-instance
   of the VRF containing the sources.

   A VRF with extranet C-receivers MUST join the P-tunnels advertised in
   all the imported I-PMSI A-D routes.  The set of P-tunnels advertised
   in the I-PMSI A-D routes that carry a particular Incoming Extranet RT
   are treated as instantiating a particular MI-PMSI.  So a VRF with
   C-receivers will "see" several MI-PMSIs, one corresponding to the
   non-extranet, and as many as one for each configured Incoming
   Extranet RT.  The PIM C-instance associated with the VRF will treat
   each of these MI-PMSIs as a separate LAN interface.

   As an example, suppose:

   o  All VPN-R VRFs are configured with RT-R as a non-extranet import
      and export RT,

   o  VPN-R VRFs with extranet receivers are configured with RT-S-to-R
      as an Incoming Extranet RT,

   o  VPN-S VRFs with extranet transmitters are configured:

      *  with RT-S as a non-extranet import and export RT



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 37]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


      *  with a list of IP addresses that are the addresses of the
         extranet sources

      *  with RT-S-to-R as an Outgoing Extranet RT

   Then VPN-S VRFs will export UMH-eligible routes matching extranet
   C-sources, and these routes will carry both RT-S and RT-S-to-R.  Each
   VPN-S VRF will also export an Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route that carries
   both RT-S and RT-S-to-R.

   VPN-R VRFs will originate and export two Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes:
   one carrying RT-R, and one carrying RT-S-to-R.  The Intra-AS I-PMSI
   A-D route with RT-S-to-R will be imported into the VPN-S VRFs.

   VPN-R will regard all the I-PMSI A-D routes it has exported or
   imported with RT-S-to-R as part of a single MI-PMSI.  VPN-R will
   regard all the I-PMSI A-D routes it has exported or imported with
   RT-R as part of a second MI-PMSI.  The PIM C-instance associated with
   a VPN-R VRF will treat the two MI-PMSIs as two separate LAN
   interfaces.  However, the VPN-S VRFs will regard all the I-PMSI A-D
   routes imported with RT-S or RT-S-to-R as establishing only a single
   MI-PMSI.  One can think of this as follows: the VPN-R VRFs have
   joined the VPN-S MI-PMSI, as well as the VPN-R MI-PMSI.

   Extranets consisting of more than two VPNs are easily supported as
   follows.  Suppose there are three VPNs, VPN-A, VPN-B, and VPN-C.
   VPN-A and VPN-B have extranet C-sources, and VPN-C contains receivers
   for both VPN-A extranet C-sources and VPN-B extranet C-sources.  In
   this case, the VPN-C VRFs that have receivers for both VPN-A and
   VPN-B sources may be provisioned as follows.  These VPN-C VRFs may be
   provisioned with RT-C as a non-extranet RT, and with RT-A-to-C and
   RT-B-to-C as Incoming Extranet RTs.  In this case, the VPN-C VRFs
   that are so provisioned will originate three Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D
   routes (each with a different RD in its NLRI), each of which carries
   exactly one of the three RTs just mentioned.  The VPN-B VRFs with
   extranet C-sources will be provisioned with RT-B-to-C as an Outgoing
   Extranet RT, and the VPN-A VRFs are provisioned with RT-A-to-C as an
   Outgoing Extranet RT.  The result will be that the PIM C-instance
   associated with a VPN-C VRF will see three LAN interfaces: one for
   the non-extranet, one for each of the two extranets.  This
   generalizes easily to the case where there are VPN-C receivers in n
   different extranets (i.e., receiving extranet flows whose sources are
   in n different VPNs).

   Suppose again that there are there are three VPNs, VPN-A, VPN-B, and
   VPN-C.  But in this example, VPN-A is the only one with extranet
   sources, while VPN-B and VPN-C both have receivers for the VPN-A




Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 38]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   extranet sources.  This can be provisioned as either one extranet or
   as two.

   To provision it as one extranet, the VPN-A VRFs are configured with
   one Outgoing Extranet RT, call it "RT-A-extranet".  The VPN-B and
   VPN-C VRFs with extranet receivers will be provisioned with RT-
   A-extranet as Incoming Extranet RT.  Thus the VPN-B and VPN-C VRFs
   will each originate two Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes, one for non-
   extranet, and one for the extranet.  The Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route,
   from a given VRF, for the extranet will carry RT-A-extranet, but will
   not share any RT with the non-extranet A-D routes exported from the
   same VRF.

   The result is that the VPN-B and VPN-C VRFs each belong to two MI-
   PMSIs, one for the extranet and one for the intranet.  The MI-PMSI
   for the extranet attaches VPN-A VRFs, VPN-B VRFs, and VPN-C VRFs.

   Alternatively, one could provision the VPN-A VRFs so that some UMH-
   eligible extranet source routes carry an RT which we will call "RT-A-
   to-B", and some carry an RT which we will call "RT-A-to-C".  The
   VPN-A VRFs would be configured with both of these as Outgoing
   Extranet RTs.  To allow an extranet flow from a VPN-A source to have
   both VPN-B and VPN-C receivers, the UMH-eligible route for that
   source would carry both RTs.  VPN-B VRFs (but not VPN-C VRFs) would
   be provisioned with RT-A-to-B as an Incoming Extranet RT.  VPN-C VRFs
   (but not VPN-B VRFs) would be provisioned with RT-A-to-C as an an
   Incoming Extranet RT.

   Following the rules above, if any VPN-A extranet source is to have
   both VPN-B and VPN-C receivers, the VPN-B and VPN-C VRFs will each
   originate two I-PMSI A-D routes, one for extranet and one for non-
   extranet.  The single Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route originated by the
   VPN-A VRFs will have both RT-A-to-B and RT-A-to-C among its RTs (as
   well as VPN-A's non-extranet RT).  The extranet I-PMSI A-D route
   originated from a VPN-B VRF would have RT-A-to-B, and the extranet
   I-PMSI A-D route originated from a VPN-C VRF would have RT-A-to-C.

   If a given VRF contains both extranet C-receivers and extranet
   C-sources, the procedures described above still work, as the VRF will
   be configured with both Incoming Extranet RTs and Outgoing Extranet
   RTs; the VRF functions both as a VPN-S VRF and as a VPN-R VRF.

6.2.2.  S-PMSIs

   When PIM is used as the PE-PE C-multicast control plane, every S-PMSI
   is considered to be part of the "emulated LAN" that "corresponds" to
   a particular MI-PMSI.




Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 39]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   When the bindings of C-flows to particular S-PMSIs are announced via
   S-PMSI Join Messages ([RFC6513], Section 7) sent on the MI-PMSI, the
   S-PMSI is considered to be part of the same LAN interface as the
   corresponding MI-PMSI.

   When the bindings of C-flows to particular S-PMSIs are announced via
   S-PMSI A-D routes, then any S-PMSI A-D route exported from that VRF
   MUST have an RT in common with exactly one of the Intra-AS A-D routes
   exported from that VRF, and this MUST be one of the VRF's Outgoing
   Extranet RTs.  Further, the S-PMSI A-D route MUST NOT have an RT in
   common with any other Intra-AS A-D route exported from a VRF on the
   same PE.  A given S-PMSI A-D route will be considered to "correspond"
   to the MI-PMSI of the Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route (originated from the
   same PE) with which it shares an RT.

   The MI-PMSI that corresponds to a given S-PMSI is determined as
   follows:

   o  If there is an Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route originated by the same PE
      that originated the S-PMSI A-D route, and if the those two routes
      have an RT in common, and if that RT is one of the VRF's Incoming
      Extranet RTs, then the S-PMSI corresponds to the I-PMSI associated
      with that Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route.

   o  Otherwise, if there is an Inter-AS I-PMSI A-D route originated in
      the same AS as the S-PMSI A-D route, and if the those two routes
      have an RT in common, and if that RT is one of the VRF's Incoming
      Extranet RTs, then the S-PMSI corresponds to the I-PMSI associated
      with that Inter-AS I-PMSI A-D route.

   o  Otherwise, there must be a configuration error (a violation of the
      requirements of Sections 3, 4, and 5 of this document).

   When wildcard S-PMSIs are used, the rules given in [RFC6625] for
   determining whether a given S-PMSI A-D route is a "match for
   reception" to a given (C-S,C-G) or (C-*,C-G) are modified as follows:

      A given S-PMSI A-D route MUST NOT be considered to be a "match for
      reception" for a given (C-S,C-G) or (C-*,C-G) state UNLESS that
      S-PMSI A-D route "corresponds" (as defined above) to the MI-PMSI
      that is the incoming interface for the given state.

   The rules given in [RFC6625] for determining whether a given S-PMSI
   A-D route is a "match for transmission" are unchanged.







Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 40]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


6.2.3.  Sending PIM Control Packets

   Suppose a PE, say PE1, receives a PIM Join(S,G) from a CE, over a VRF
   interface that is associated with a VPN-R VRF.  The PE does the RPF
   check for S by looking up S in the VPN-R VRF.  The PIM C-instance
   associated with that VRF must determine the correct P-tunnel over
   which to send a PIM Join(S,G) to other PEs.

   To do this, PE1 finds, in the VRF associated with the interface over
   which the Join was received, the selected UMH route for S, following
   the procedures of Section 5.1 of [RFC6513].  PE1 determines the set
   of RTs carried by that route.  PE1 then checks to see if there is an
   Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route, currently originated by PE1, that has an
   RT in common with the selected UMH route for S.

   If the rules of Sections 3, 4, and 5 have been followed, each of
   PE1's selected UMH routes will share an RT with a single one of PE1's
   currently originated Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes.  If this is so, the
   Join is sent on the P-tunnel advertised in the PTA of that route.
   Otherwise, the Join MUST NOT be sent.

   In essence, this procedure makes the RPF check for C-S resolve to the
   MI-PMSI that is serving as the next hop "interface" to C-S.

   If a PE receives a PIM Join(*,G) from a CE, the procedure for doing
   the RPF check is the same, except that the selected UMH route will be
   a route to the C-RP associated with the C-G group.

6.2.4.  Receiving PIM Control Packets

   When a PIM C-instance receives a PIM control message from a P-tunnel,
   it needs to identify the message's "incoming interface".  This
   incoming interface is the MI-PMSI of which the P-tunnel is a part.

6.2.5.  Sending and Receiving Data Packets

   The rules for choosing the PMSI on which to send a multicast data
   packet are as specified in [RFC6513] and [RFC6625], with one new
   restriction: a VPN-S VRF always transmits a multicast data packet
   either on the VPN-S MI-PMSI or on an S-PMSI that corresponds to the
   VPN-S MI-PMSI.  From the perspective of the PIM C-instance, there is
   only one outgoing interface.

   When a PIM C-instance receives a multicast data packet from a given
   P-tunnel, and that P-tunnel is being used to instantiate an MI-PMSI,
   the MI-PMSI of which the P-tunnel is a part (see Sections 6.2.1 and
   6.2.2) is considered to be the packet's "incoming interface".  If the
   packet is received on a P-tunnel that was advertised in an S-PMSI A-D



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 41]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   route, the packet's "incoming interface" is the MI-PMSI to which that
   S-PMSI route corresponds, as defined in Section 6.2.2.  Ordinary PIM
   rules for data plane RPF check apply.

   Following ordinary PIM procedures, packets arriving from an
   unexpected incoming interface are discarded.  This eliminates any
   problems due to the ambiguities described in Sections 2.1 and 2.2.

6.3.  Multiple PMSIs per C-flow Model

   In this model, if a VPN-S VRF has extranet multicast C-sources, and a
   VPN-R VRF has extranet multicast C-receivers allowed by policy to
   receive from the C-sources in the VPN-S VRF, then the VPN-S VRF joins
   the MI-PMSI that VPN-R uses for its non-extranet traffic.

   In the "single PMSI per C-flow" transmission model (as described in
   Section 6.2), a PE that needs to transmit a multicast data packet to
   a set of other PEs transmits the packet on a single PMSI.  This means
   that if a packet needs to be transmitted from a VPN-A VRF and
   received at a VPN-B VRF and a VPN-C VRF, there must be some P-tunnel
   from which the VPN-B and VPN-C VRFs can both receive packets.

   In the "multiple PMSIs per C-flow" transmission model, a PE that
   needs to transmit a multicast data packet to a set of other PEs may
   transmit the packet on several different PMSIs.  (Of course, any
   given packet is transmitted only once on a given P-tunnel.)  For
   example, if a C-flow (C-S,C-G) has a VPN-A C-source, a VPN-B
   receiver, and a VPN-C receiver, there could be one PMSI that the
   VPN-A VRF uses to transmit the packet to the VPN-B VRFs, and another
   PMSI that the VPN-A VRF uses to transmit the packet to the VPN-C
   VRFs.

6.3.1.  Forming the MI-PMSIs

   Consider a VPN-R VRF that has extranet C-receivers.  Per [RFC6513],
   each VPN-R VRF must originate an Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route containing
   a PMSI Tunnel Attribute (PTA) specifying the P-tunnel to be used as
   part of the VPN-R MI-PMSI.  In the absence of extranet service, this
   route carries the VRF's non-extranet RT, RT-R.  When extranet service
   is provided (using the "single PMSI per C-flow" model), this route
   MUST also carry each of the VRF's Incoming Extranet RTs.

   Consider a VPN-S VRF that has extranet C-sources.  Per [RFC6513],
   each VPN-S VRF must originate an Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route containing
   a PTA specifying the P-tunnel to be used as part of the VPN-S MI-
   PMSI.  This route carries the VRF's non-extranet RT RT-S.  When
   extranet service is provided using the "multiple PMSI per C-flow"
   model, the VPN-S VRF MUST also originate one or more additional



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 42]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes.  It MUST originate one additional Intra-
   AS I-PMSI A-D route for each outgoing extranet RT with which it has
   been configured; each such route will have a distinct RD, and will
   carry exactly one of the configured Outgoing Extranet RTs.

   As with the "single PMSI per C-flow" transmission model, VRFs
   containing extranet C-receivers need to import UMH-eligible extranet
   C-source routes from VRFs containing C-sources.  This is ensured by
   the rules of 3, 4, and 5.

   However, in the "multiple PMSIs per C-flow model", a VRF containing
   only C-receivers originates only a single Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route,
   carrying the non-extranet RT and all the Incoming Extranet RTs.

   When a VRF containing C-receivers imports Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes
   that carry the non-extranet RT or one of the Incoming Extranet RTs,
   the P-tunnels specified in the PTA of all such routes are considered
   to be part of the same MI-PMSI.  I.e., the associated PIM C-instance
   will treat them as part of a single interface.

   In this model, it is the VRF containing extranet C-sources that MUST
   originate multiple Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes.  Each such route MUST
   have a distinct RD, and the set of RTs carried by any one of these
   routes MUST be disjoint from the set carried by any other.  There
   MUST be one such route for each of the VRF's Outgoing Extranet RTs,
   and each such route MUST carry exactly one of the VRF's Outgoing
   Extranet RTs.  The VRFs containing extranet C-sources MUST also
   import all the A-D routes originated by the VRFs containing extranet
   C-receivers.  If a set of originated and/or imported Intra-AS I-PMSI
   A-D routes have an RT in common, and that RT is one of the VRF's
   Outgoing Export RTs, then those routes are considered to be "about"
   the same MI-PMSI.  The PIM C-instance of the VRF treats each MI-PMSI
   as a LAN Interface.

   In effect, if VPN-S has only extranet C-sources and VPN-R has only
   extranet C-receivers, this model has the VPN-S VRFs join the VPN-R
   MI-PMSI.  The VPN-S VRFs will thus be attached to multiple MI-PMSIs,
   while the VPN-R VRFs are attached to only one.  The fact that the
   VPN-R MI-PMSI is attached to VPN-S VRFs is not known to the PIM
   C-instance at the VPN-R VRFs.

   If a VPN-A VRF has extranet C-sources allowed to send to C-receivers
   in a VPN-B VRF, and the VPN-B VRF has C-sources allowed to send to
   C-receivers in the VPN-A VRF, the above procedures still work as
   specified.

   Following normal PIM procedures, when the PIM C-instance at a VRF
   with extranet C-sources receives a Join(C-S,C-G) or a Join(C-*,C-G)



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 43]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   over an MI-PMSI, it may create (C-S,C-G) or (C-*,C-G) state, and the
   MI-PMSI over which the Join was received may be added to the set of
   outgoing interfaces for that multicast state.  If n MI-PMSIs are
   added to the outgoing interface list for a particular multicast
   state, a multicast data packet may need to be replicated n times, and
   transmitted once on each of the n MI-PMSIs.

   Since the all multicast data packets received from another PE are
   received over a single emulated LAN, it is not necessary to have any
   special procedures to determine a packet's "incoming interface".  The
   ambiguities described in Section 2.1 and Section 2.2 do not occur,
   because a VPN-R VRF can only receive multicast data traffic that has
   been requested by a VPN-R VRF.

7.  When BGP is the PE-PE C-multicast Control Plane

   This document assumes that if BGP is used as the PE-PE C-multicast
   control plane, the "Single PMSI per C-flow" model is used.
   Procedures for providing the "Multiple PMSIs per C-flow" model with
   BGP C-multicast are outside the scope of this document.

   When BGP is used as the C-multicast control plane, the Single PMSI
   per C-flow model may be used either with or without "extranet
   separation".  (Recall that "extranet separation" means that no
   P-tunnel can carry both traffic from extranet sources and traffic
   from non-extranet sources.)  In either case, the data traffic may be
   carried on inclusive tunnels only, or on selective tunnels only
   (known as the "S-PMSI only" model), or on a combination of inclusive
   and selective tunnels.  This is determined by provisioning.  The
   procedures specified below support all three choices.

   Note that there are no special extranet procedures for Inter-AS
   I-PMSI A-D routes or for Leaf A-D routes.

7.1.  Originating C-multicast Routes

   This section applies whether extranet separation is used or not.

   When it is necessary to originate a C-multicast Source Tree Join for
   (C-S,C-G), a PE must follow the procedures of Section 11.1.3
   ("Constructing the rest of the C-multicast route") of [RFC6514] to
   find the selected UMH route for C-S.  When it is necessary to
   originate a C-multicast Shared Tree Join for (C-*,C-G),where C-G is
   an ASM group, a PE must follow the procedures of that section to find
   the selected UMH route for C-G's C-RP.

   Section 11.1.3 of [RFC6514] specifies how information from the
   selected UMH route is used to find an Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route or an



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 44]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   Inter-AS I-PMSI A-D route.  Information from that I-PMSI A-D route is
   then used to construct part of the C-multicast route.

   For extranet, this specification modifies the procedures of
   Section 11.1.3 of [RFC6514] as follows.  The rules given in
   Section 7.4.5 ("I-PMSI A-D Routes") of this document are used to find
   the Inter-AS I-PMSI A-D route or an Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route that
   "corresponds to" the selected UMH route.  (That is, the rules of
   Section 7.4.5 of this document replace the rules given in
   Section 11.1.3 of [RFC6514] for finding the Inter-AS or Intra-AS
   I-PMSI A-D route.)

   Information from this I-PMSI A-D route is then used, as specified in
   Section 11.1.3 of [RFC6514], to construct the C-multicast route.

7.2.  Originating A-D Routes Without Extranet Separation

7.2.1.  Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D Routes

   Consider a VRF, call it VRF-S, that contains extranet C-sources, and
   that exports UMH-eligible routes matching those C-sources.  The VRF
   may also originate and export an Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route.

   As specified in [RFC6514], if exactly one Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route
   is originated by and exported from VRF-S, the RTs carried by that
   route MUST be chosen such that every VRF that imports a UMH-eligible
   route from VRF-S also imports this Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route.

   If inclusive P-tunnels are being used to carry extranet C-flows,
   there are additional requirements on the way the RTs carried by the
   Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes must be chosen, as specified in the
   following paragraph.

   If VRF-S is using inclusive P-tunnels, but is not using extranet
   separation, there is one inclusive P-tunnel rooted at VRF-S, and this
   tunnel carries both extranet and non-extranet C-flows.  This
   inclusive tunnel is identified in the PMSI Tunnel Attribute (PTA) of
   the Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route originated from VRF-S.  The set of RTs
   carried by this Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route MUST be chosen so as to
   ensure that every VRF that imports a UMH-eligible route from this
   VRF-S also imports this Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route.  Further, the set
   of RTs carried by this Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route MUST be chosen such
   that it has at least one RT in common with every UMH-eligible route
   that is exported from the VRF.







Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 45]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


7.2.2.  S-PMSI A-D Routes

   Let R-SP be an S-PMSI A-D route that is exported from VRF-S.  Suppose
   that R-SP is used to bind some or all of the extranet C-flows from a
   given extranet C-source to a given selective P-tunnel.  Let R-UMH be
   a UMH-eligible route that is exported from VRF-S and that matches the
   given extranet C-source.  Then R-SP and R-UMH MUST have at least one
   RT in common.  Further, the RTs carried by these two routes MUST be
   such that every VRF that imports R-UMH also imports R-SP.  These
   rules apply whether or not R-SP uses wildcards [RFC6625].

   An implementation MUST allow the set of RTs carried by the S-PMSI A-D
   routes to be specified by configuration.  In the absence of such
   configuration, an S-PMSI A-D route originated by a given VRF X MUST
   carry a default set of RTs, as specified by the following rules:

   1.  By default an S-PMSI A-D route originated by VRF X for a given
       (C-S,C-G) or (C-S,C-*) carries the same RT(s) as the UMH-eligible
       route originated by VRF X that matches C-S.

   2.  By default an S-PMSI A-D route originated by VRF X for a given
       (C-*,C-G) carries as its RTs a set union of all RT(s) of the UMH-
       eligible route(s) matching the multicast C-sources contained in
       VRF X that could originate traffic for that C-G.  Moreover, if
       the VRF contains (as defined in Section 1.1) the C-RP of C-G,
       then this set union also includes the RT(s) of the UMH-eligible
       route matching C-RP, and of the unicast VPN-IP route matching
       C-RP.

   3.  By default, if a (C-*,C-*) S-PMSI A-D route originated by VRF X
       is to be used for both extranet and non-extranet traffic, it
       carries the same RTs that would be carried (as specified in
       Section 7.2.1) by an I-PMSI A-D route originated by VRF X if that
       I-PMSI A-D route were advertising an inclusive P-tunnel for
       carrying both extranet and non-extranet traffic.  In general, a
       given VRF would not originate both (a) an S-PMSI A-D route
       advertising a (C-*,C-*) selective P-tunnel for both extranet and
       non-extranet traffic and (b) an I-PMSI A-D route advertising an
       inclusive P-tunnel for both extranet and non-extranet traffic, as
       the inclusive P-tunnel would not get used in that case.

7.2.3.  Source Active A-D Routes

7.2.3.1.  When Inter-Site Shared Trees Are Used

   This section applies when Inter-Site Shared Trees are used, as
   specified in [RFC6514] Section 13.




Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 46]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   If VRF-S exports a Source Active A-D route that contains C-S in the
   Multicast Source field of its NLRI, and if that VRF also exports a
   UMH-eligible route matching C-S, the Source Active A-D route MUST
   carry at least one RT in common with the UMH-eligible route.  The RT
   MUST be chosen such that the following condition holds: if VRF-R
   contains an extranet C-receiver allowed by policy to receive extranet
   traffic from C-S, then VRF-R imports both the UMH-eligible route and
   the Source Active A-D route.

   By default, a Source Active A-D route for a given (C-S,C-G), exported
   by a given VRF, carries the same set of RTs as the UMH-eligible route
   matching C-S that is exported from that VRF.

7.2.3.2.  When Inter-Site Shared Trees Are Not Used

   This section applies when Inter-Site Shared Trees are not used, as
   specified in [RFC6514] Section 14.

   Suppose a VRF, say VRF-X, contains the C-RP for a given extranet
   C-group, say C-G.  If C-S is an active source for C-G, then following
   the procedures of Section 14.1 of [RFC6514], VRF-X may export a
   Source Active A-D route that contains C-S in the Multicast Source
   field of its NLRI.  This document replaces the rule for constructing
   the RT(s) carried by such a route, specified in Section 14.1 of
   [RFC6514], with the following.  VRF-X MUST be configured such that
   the Source Active A-D route for (C-S,C-G) carries the same set of RTs
   as the UMH-eligible route matching C-S that is exported from the
   VRF(s) containing C-S.  This way, if a VRF, say VRF-R, contains an
   extranet C-receiver allowed by policy to receive extranet traffic
   from C-S, then VRF-R imports both the UMH-eligible route and the
   Source Active A-D route.

7.3.  Originating A-D Routes With Extranet Separation

   If a VRF contains both extranet C-sources and non-extranet C-sources,
   it MUST be configured with both a "default RD" and an "extranet RD"
   (see Section 1.3).  The use of these RDs is explained in the
   following sub-sections.

7.3.1.  Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D Routes

   This section applies when VRF-S is using extranet separation, AND
   when VRF-S is using an inclusive P-tunnel to carry some or all of the
   extranet C-flows that it needs to transmit to other VRFs.

   If VRF-S contains both extranet C-sources and non-extranet C-sources,
   and if inclusive P-tunnels are used to carry both extranet C-flows
   and non-extranet C-flows, then there MUST be two inclusive tunnels



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 47]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   from VRF-S, one of which is to be used only to carry extranet C-flows
   (the "extranet inclusive P-tunnel"), and one of which is to be used
   only to carry non-extranet C-flows (the "non-extranet inclusive
   P-tunnel").

   In this case, the VRF MUST originate two Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes.
   Their respective NLRIs MUST of course have different RDs.  One of the
   Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D routes identifies the extranet inclusive P-tunnel
   in its PTA.  This route MUST have the VRF's "extranet RD" in its
   NLRI.  The other route identifies the non-extranet inclusive P-tunnel
   in its PTA.  This route MUST have the VRF's "default RD" in its PTA.

   If VRF-S uses an inclusive P-tunnel for carrying extranet traffic,
   but does not use an inclusive P-tunnel for carrying non-extranet
   traffic, then of course only a single Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route need
   be originated.  The PTA of this route identifies the "extranet
   inclusive P-tunnel".  The NLRI of that route MUST contain the VRF's
   extranet RD.

   An Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route whose PTA identifies an extranet
   inclusive P-tunnel MUST carry the Extranet Separation Extended
   Community defined in Section 4.5.

   The RTs carried by an Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route whose PTA identifies
   the "extranet inclusive P-tunnel" MUST be chosen such that the
   following condition holds: if a VRF (call it VRF-R) imports a UMH-
   eligible route from VRF-S, and if that route matches an extranet
   C-source, then VRF-R also imports that Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route.

   Note that when extranet separation is used, it is possible to use an
   inclusive P-tunnel for non-extranet traffic while using only
   selective P-tunnels for extranet traffic.  It is also possible to use
   an inclusive P-tunnel for extranet traffic while using only selective
   P-tunnels for non-extranet traffic.

7.3.2.  S-PMSI A-D Routes

   Let R-SP be an S-PMSI A-D route that is exported from VRF-S.  Suppose
   that R-SP is used to bind some or all of the extranet C-flows from a
   given extranet C-source to a given selective P-tunnel.  Let R-UMH be
   a UMH-eligible route that is exported from VRF-S and that matches the
   given extranet C-source.  Then R-SP and R-UMH MUST have at least one
   RT in common.  Further, the RTs carried by these two routes MUST be
   such that every VRF that imports R-UMH also imports R-SP.  These
   rules apply whether or not R-SP uses wildcards [RFC6625].

   The following rules, specific to the use of extranet separation,
   apply:



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 48]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   o  A selective P-tunnel MUST NOT carry C-flows from both extranet and
      non-extranet C-sources,

   o  If it is desired to use a (C-*,C-*) S-PMSI to carry extranet
      traffic and also to use a (C-*,C-*) S-PMSI to carry non-extranet
      traffic, then two (C-*,C-*) S-PMSI A-D routes MUST be originated.
      These two routes MUST have different RDs in their respective NLRI
      fields, and their respective PTAs MUST identify different
      P-tunnels.  If the route advertises a P-tunnel that carries only
      non-extranet traffic, the route's NLRI MUST contain the VRF's
      default RD.  If the route advertises a P-tunnel that carries only
      extranet traffic, the route's NLRI MUST contain the VRF's extranet
      RD.

   o  In the following cases, an S-PMSI A-D route exported from the VRF
      MUST have the VRF's extranet RD in its NLRI:

      *  The S-PMSI A-D route is a (C-S,C-G) or a (C-S,C-*) S-PMSI A-D
         route, and C-S is an extranet C-source.

      *  The S-PMSI A-D route is a (C-*,C-G) S-PMSI A-D route, and C-G
         is an extranet C-group.

      In all other cases, a (C-S,C-G), (C-S,C-*), or (C-*,C-G) S-PMSI
      A-D route MUST have the VRF's default RD in its NLRI.

   o  A (C-*,C-*) S-PMSI A-D route advertising a P-tunnel that is used
      to carry extranet traffic MUST carry the Extranet Separation
      Extended Community defined in Section 4.5.

   An implementation MUST allow the set of RTs carried by the S-PMSI A-D
   routes to be specified by configuration.  In the absence of such
   configuration, an S-PMSI A-D route originated by a given VRF X MUST
   carry a default set of RTs, as specified by the following rules:

   1.  Rule 1 of Section 7.2.2 applies.

   2.  By default, if C-G is an extranet C-group, rule 2 of
       Section 7.2.2 applies.

   3.  By default, if a (C-*,C-*) S-PMSI A-D route originated by VRF X
       is to be used for extranet traffic, it carries the same RTs that
       would be carried (as specified in Section 7.3.1) by an I-PMSI A-D
       route originated by VRF X if that I-PMSI A-D route were
       advertising an inclusive P-tunnel for carrying extranet traffic.
       In general, a given VRF would not originate both an S-PMSI A-D
       route advertising a (C-*,C-*) selective P-tunnel for extranet
       traffic and an I-PMSI A-D route advertising an inclusive P-tunnel



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 49]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


       for extranet traffic, as the inclusive P-tunnel would not get
       used in that case.

7.3.3.  Source Active A-D Routes

   The procedures of Section 7.2.3 apply.

   However, if a Source Active A-D route is exported from a given VRF,
   and the route contains C-S, where C-S is an extranet C-source, then
   the RD of the route's NLRI MUST be the extranet RD of the VRF.
   Otherwise the RD is the default RD of the VRF.

7.4.  Determining the Expected P-tunnel for a C-flow

   This section applies whether extranet separation is used or not.

   In the context of a VRF with receivers for a particular C-flow, a PE
   must determine the P-tunnel over which packets of that C-flow are
   expected to arrive.  This is done by finding an I-PMSI or S-PMSI A-D
   route that "matches" the flow.  The matching A-D route will contain a
   PTA that specifies the P-tunnel being used to carry the traffic of
   that C-flow.  We will refer to this P-tunnel as the "expected
   P-tunnel" for the C-flow.  (Note that, per [MVPN-IR], if the PTA
   specifies an tunnel of type "Ingress Replication" (IR), the
   identifier of the P-tunnel is actually the NLRI of the I-PMSI or
   S-PMSI A-D route.  If the PTA specifies a tunnel type other than IR,
   the identifier of the P-tunnel is found in the "tunnel identifier"
   field of the PTA.)

   A PE that needs to receive a given (C-S,C-G) or (C-*,C-G) C-flow MUST
   join the expected P-tunnel for that C-flow, and the PE MUST remain
   joined to the P-tunnel as long as the PE continues to need to receive
   the given C-flow, and the P-tunnel continues to remain the expected
   P-tunnel for that C-flow.  Procedures for joining and leaving a
   tunnel depend, of course, on the tunnel type.

   If a PTA specifies a non-zero MPLS label for a tunnel that is not an
   IR tunnel, then the PE originating the A-D route containing that PTA
   is advertising an aggregate P-tunnel.  The aggregate P-tunnel can be
   thought of as an outer P-tunnel multiplexing some number of inner
   P-tunnels.  The inner P-tunnels are demultiplexed by means of the
   MPLS label in the PTA.  In this document, when we talk of the
   "expected P-tunnel" in the context of an aggregate P-tunnel, we refer
   to a particular inner P-tunnel, not to the outer P-tunnel.  It is
   this "inner P-tunnel" that is the expected P-tunnel for a given
   C-flow.





Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 50]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   In order to find the expected P-tunnel for a given C-flow, the
   upstream PE of the C-flow is first determined.  Then the S-PMSI A-D
   routes originated by that PE are examined, and their NLRIs compared
   to the (C-S/C-RP,C-G) of the flow, to see if there is a "match for
   reception".  (If there is no S-PMSI A-D route that matches a given
   C-flow, the expected P-tunnel for that C-flow may have been
   advertised in an I-PMSI A-D route; see Section 7.4.5.)

   The rules for determining, in non-extranet cases, whether a given
   C-flow is a "match for reception" for a given S-PMSI A-D route are
   given in [RFC6625] Section 3.2.  Note that we use the terms
   "installed" and "originated" as they are defined in [RFC6625]
   Section 3.2.  (See also Section 1.1 of this document.)

   This specification adds additional rules for determining whether a
   given S-PMSI A-D route is a "match for reception" for a given (C-S/
   C-RP,C-G).  Note that these rules all assume the context of a
   particular VRF into which the A-D route has been imported.

   The rules given in [RFC6625] for determining whether a given S-PMSI
   A-D route is a "match for transmission" remain unchanged.

   Suppose a PE has originated a C-multicast Shared Tree Join for
   (C-*,C-G), has not originated a C-multicast Source Tree Join for
   (C-S,C-G), but has received and installed a Source Active A-D route
   for (C-S,C-G).  As described in Section 13.2 of [RFC6514], the PE
   must receive the (C-S,C-G) traffic from the tunnel the originator of
   the installed Source Active A-D route uses for sending (C-S,C-G).

   The originator of the installed Source Active A-D route is determined
   as follows:

   1.  Look at the "UMH Route Candidate Set" for C-S, as defined in
       [RFC6513] Section 5.1.3.

   2.  From that set select a subset of UMH routes to C-S, such that
       each route in the subset has at least one RT in common with the
       Source Active A-D route, and at least one of the RTs in common is
       an import RT of the VRF.

   3.  From that subset, find the route whose RD is the same as the RD
       from the NLRI of the Source Active A-D route.

   4.  The Upstream PE is the PE identified in the VRF Route Import
       Extended Community of that route.

   5.  The Upstream AS is the AS identified in the Source AS Extended
       Community of that route.



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 51]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   If the result of step 2 is an empty set, or if step 3 fails to find a
   route, then the Upstream PE of the Source Active A-D route cannot be
   determined, and it is necessary to act as if the Source Active A-D
   route had not been installed.  (A subsequent change to the UMH Route
   Candidate Set for C-S may require that a new attempt be made to
   determine the Upstream PE.)

   Once the upstream PE is determined, the P-tunnel over which the flow
   is expected is determined according to the procedures already
   described in this section.

7.4.1.  (C-S,C-G) S-PMSI A-D Routes

   When extranet functionality is being provided, an S-PMSI A-D route
   whose NLRI contains (C-S,C-G) is NOT considered to be a "match for
   reception" for a given C-flow (C-S,C-G) unless one of the following
   conditions holds (in addition to the conditions specified in
   [RFC6625]):

   o  the "single C-source per (C-S,C-G) or (C-S,C-*) P-tunnel" is
      provisioned, or

   o  the selected UMH route for C-S has at least one RT in common with
      the S-PMSI A-D route, and at least one of the common RTs is an
      import RT of the VRF.

7.4.2.  (C-S,C-*) S-PMSI A-D Routes

   When extranet functionality is being provided, an S-PMSI A-D route
   whose NLRI contains (C-S,C-*) is NOT considered to be a "match for
   reception" for a given C-flow (C-S,C-G) unless one of the following
   conditions holds, in addition to the conditions specified in
   [RFC6625]:

   o  the "single C-source per (C-S,C-G) or (C-S,C-*) P-tunnel" is
      provisioned, or

   o  the selected UMH route for C-S has at least one RT in common with
      the S-PMSI A-D route, and at least one of the common RTs is an
      import RT of the VRF.

7.4.3.  (C-*,C-G) S-PMSI A-D Routes

   When extranet functionality is being provided, an S-PMSI A-D route
   whose NLRI contains (C-*,C-G) is NOT considered to be a "match for
   reception" for a given C-flow (C-S,C-G) in a given VRF unless either
   condition 1 or condition 2 below holds, in addition to the conditions
   specified in [RFC6625]:



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 52]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   1.  The given VRF has currently originated a C-multicast Shared Tree
       Join route for (C-*,C-G), and

       a.  (C-*,C-G) matches an installed (C-*,C-G) S-PMSI A-D route
           (according to [RFC6625]) in the given VRF, and

       b.  either

           i.     the "Single C-group per (C-*,C-G) P-tunnel" policy has
                  been provisioned, or

           ii.    the RTs of that S-PMSI A-D route form a non-empty
                  intersection with the RTs carried in the VRF's
                  selected UMH route for C-RP of that C-G, or

           iii.   installed in the VRF is at least one (C-S,C-G) Source
                  Active A-D route that was originated by the same PE as
                  the (C-*,C-G) S-PMSI A-D route.

   2.  The given VRF does not have a currently originated C-multicast
       Shared Tree Join for (C-*,C-G), but

       a.  there are one or more values for C-S for which the VRF has a
           currently originated Source Tree Join C-multicast route for
           (C-S,C-G), and

       b.  the (C-* C-G) S-PMSI A-D route matches (according to
           [RFC6625]) each such (C-S,C-G), and

       c.  either

           i.    the "Single C-group per (C-*,C-G) P-tunnel" policy has
                 been provisioned, or

           ii.   the RTs of that S-PMSI A-D route form a non-empty
                 intersection with the RTs carried in the VRF's selected
                 UMH routes for each such C-S

       If a VRF has an installed (C-*,C-G) S-PMSI A-D route, but does
       not have a (C-S,C-G) or (C-*,C-G) multicast state that matches
       that route for reception, the procedures of Section 12.3
       ("Receiving S-PMSI A-D Routes by PEs") of [RFC6514] are not
       invoked for that route.  If those multicast states are created at
       some later time when the route is still installed, the procedures
       of Section 12.3 of [RFC6514] are invoked at that time.






Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 53]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


7.4.4.  (C-*,C-*) S-PMSI A-D Routes

   A (C-*,C-*) S-PMSI A-D Route (call it "R-AD") is NOT considered to be
   a match for reception for a given C-flow (C-S,C-G) or (C-*,C-G)
   unless the following conditions hold (in addition to the conditions
   specified in [RFC6625]:

   o  the selected UMH route (call it "R-UMH") for C-S or for C-G's C-RP
      respectively has at least one RT in common with R-AD, and at least
      one of the common RTs is an import RT of the VRF.

   o  either R-AD and R-UMH both carry the Extranet Separation Extended
      Community, or neither carries the Extranet Separation Extended
      Community.

7.4.5.  I-PMSI A-D Routes

   If a particular egress VRF in a particular egress PE contains no
   matching S-PMSI A-D routes for a particulalr C-flow, then the C-flow
   is expected to arrive (at that egress VRF) on an inclusive P-tunnel.

   Suppose that an egress PE has originated a (C-S,C-G) C-Multicast
   Source Tree Join.  Let R-UMH be the selected UMH route (in the given
   egress VRF) or C-S.  As specified in [RFC6514], the selected upstream
   PE for (C-S,C-G) is determined from the VRF Route Import Extended
   Community of R-UMH, and the "selected upstream AS" for the flow is
   determined from the Source AS Extended Community of R-UMH.

   Suppose that an egress PE has originated a (C-*,C-G) C-Multicast
   Shared Tree Join, but has not originated a (C-S,C-G) C-Multicast
   Source Tree Join.  If the egress VRF does not have a (C-S,C-G) Source
   Active A-D route installed, the selected upstream PE is determined
   from the VRF Route Import Extended Community of the installed UMH-
   eligible route matching C-RP, where C-RP is the RP for the group C-G.
   The selected upstream AS for the flow is determined from the Source
   AS Extended Community of that route.  If the egress VRF does have a
   (C-S,C-G) Source Active A-D route installed, the selected upstream PE
   and upstream AS are determined as specified in Section 7.4.  In
   either case, let R-UMH be the installed UMH-eligible route matching
   C-S.

   The inclusive P-tunnel that is expected to be carrying a particular
   C-flow is found as follows:

   o  If the selected upstream AS is the local AS, or if segmented
      Inter-AS P-tunnels are not being used to instantiate I-PMSIs, then
      look in the VRF for an installed Intra-AS I-PMSI A-D route, R-AD,
      such that (a) R-AD originated by the selected upstream PE, (b)



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 54]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


      R-AD has at least one an RT in common with R-UMH, (c) at least one
      of the common RTs is an import RT of the local VRF, and (d) either
      R-AD and R-UMH both carry the Extranet Separation Extended
      Community, or neither carries the Extranet Separation Extended
      Community.

      The PTA of R-AD specifies the P-tunnel over which traffic of the
      given C-flow is expected.

   o  If the selected upstream AS is not the local AS, and if segmented
      Inter-AS P-tunnels are being used to instantiate I-PMSIs, then
      look in the VRF for an installed Inter-AS I-PMSI A-D route, R-AD,
      such that (a) the Source AS field of R-AD's NLRI contains the AS
      number of the selected upstream AS, (b) R-AD has at least one RT
      in common with R-UMH, (c) at least one of the common RTs is an
      import RT of the local VRF, and (d) either R-AD and R-UMH both
      carry the Extranet Separation Extended Community, or neither
      carries the Extranet Separation Extended Community.

      The PTA of R-AD specifies the P-tunnel over which traffic of the
      given C-flow is expected.

7.5.  Packets Arriving from the Wrong P-tunnel

   Any packets that arrive on a P-tunnel other than the expected
   P-tunnel (as defined in Section 7.4) MUST be discarded, unless it is
   know that all the packets carried by both P-tunnels are from the same
   ingress VRF.  (See Section 2.3.1 for a more detailed discussion of
   when to discard packets from other than the expected P-tunnel.)  Note
   that packets arriving on the wrong P-tunnel are to be discarded even
   if they are arriving from the expected PE.

8.  Multiple Extranet VRFs on the same PE

   When multiple VRFs that contain extranet receivers for a given
   extranet source are present on the same PE, this PE becomes a single
   leaf of the P-tunnel used for sending (multicast) traffic from that
   source to these extranet receivers.  The PE MUST be able to replicate
   this traffic to the multiple VRFs.  Specific procedures for doing so
   are local to the PE, and outside the scope of this document.

   Two or more VRFs on the same PE may import the same S-PMSI A-D route.
   If this S-PMSI A-D route contains a PTA that has its "Leaf Info
   Required" bit set, it may be necessary for the PE to originate a Leaf
   A-D route whose NLRI is computed from the NLRI of the S-PMSI A-D
   route.  (Details are in [RFC6514].)  Note that for a given S-PMSI A-D
   route, the PE can originate only one corresponding Leaf A-D route,
   even if the S-PMSI A-D route is imported into multiple VRFs.  This



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 55]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   Leaf A-D route can thus be thought of as originating from several
   VRFs.  It MUST NOT be withdrawn by the PE until there are no longer
   any VRFs originating it.

   [RFC6514] specifies conditions under which a PE originates a
   C-Multicast Source Tree Join or a C-Multicast Shared Tree Join, based
   on the (*,G) and (S,G) states associated with a given VRF.  It also
   specifies the procedure for computing the NLRI of each such route.
   While a given PE may contain two or more VRFs that have (extranet)
   receivers for the same extranet C-flow, the PE cannot originate more
   than one BGP route with a given NLRI.  If there are multiple VRFs,
   each of which has state that is sufficient to cause a given
   C-multicast route to be originated, the route can be thought of as
   originating from several VRFs.  It MUST NOT be withdrawn by the PE
   until there is no longer any VRF with multicast state sufficient to
   cause the route to be originated.

   For a given extranet the site(s) that contain the extranet source(s)
   and the site(s) that contain the extranet receiver(s) may be
   connected to the same PE.  In this scenario, the procedures by which
   (multicast) traffic from these sources is delivered to these
   receivers is a local matter to the PE, and outside the scope of this
   document.

   An implementation MUST support multiple extranet VRFs on a PE.

9.  IANA Considerations

   IANA is requested to allocate two new codepoints from the "First
   Come, First Served" range of the "Transitive Opaque Extended
   Community Sub-Types" Registry (under the top-level registry: "Border
   Gateway Protocol (BGP) Extended Communities").  [TO BE REMOVED: This
   registration should take place at the following location:
   http://www.iana.org/assignments/bgp-extended-communities/bgp-
   extended-communities.xhtml#trans-opaque]

   o  A codepoint for "Extranet Source Extended Community"

   o  A codepoint for "Extranet Separation Extended Community"

10.  Security Considerations

   The security considerations of [RFC6513] and [RFC6514] are
   applicable.

   As is the case with any application of technology based upon
   [RFC4364], misconfiguration of the RTs may result in VPN security




Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 56]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   violations (i.e., may result in a packet being delivered to a VPN
   where, according to policy, it is not supposed to go).

   In those cases where the set of extranet sources of a particular VRF
   is manually configured, improper configuration of the VRF can result
   in VPN security violations -- traffic from a host that is not an
   extranet source may be treated as if it were traffic from an extranet
   source.

   Section 4.4 specifies the optional use of a new Extended Community,
   the Extranet Source Extended Community.  Security considerations
   regarding the use and distribution of that Extended Community are
   discussed in that section.

   The procedures of this document do not provide encryption of the data
   flows that are sent across the SP backbone network.  Hence these
   procedures do not by themselves ensure the privacy or integrity of
   the data against attacks on the backbone network.

   In general, different VPNs are allowed to have overlapping IP address
   spaces, i.e., a host in one VPN may have the same IP address as a
   host in another.  This is safe because the customer routes from a
   given VPN do not pass into other VPNs.  Even if there is overlapping
   address space among VPNs, the routes that are known at any given VPN
   site are unambiguous, as long as the address space of that VPN is
   unambiguous.  However, this is not necessarily true when extranet
   service is provided.  If an extranet C-receiver in VPN-R is to be
   able to receive multicast traffic from an extranet C-source in VPN-S,
   then the address of the VPN-S extranet C-source must be imported into
   one or more VPN-R VRFs.  If that address is also the address of a
   VPN-R non-extranet C-source, then a system attempting to receive an
   extranet C-flow from the VPN-R extranet C-source may instead receive
   a non-extranet C-flow from the VPN-S C-source.  Otherwise a a VPN
   security violation may result.

   That is, when provisioning an extranet between two VPNs that have
   overlapping address spaces, one must ensure that the IP addresses of
   the extranet sources and the extranet receivers are not from the
   overlapping part of the address space.  This document specifies that
   if a route is imported into a given VRF, all addresses that match
   that route must be unambiguous in the context of that VRF.  Improper
   provisioning of the extranet source addresses, or improper
   provisioning of the RTs, may cause this rule to be violated, and may
   result in a VPN security violation.

   It is possible that a given multicast C-source is the source of
   multiple flows, some of which are intended to be extranet C-flows,
   and some of which are intended to be non-extranet flows.  However,



Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 57]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   the procedures of this document will allow any C-receiver that is
   able to receive the extranet C-flows from a given C-source to also
   receive the non-extranet C-flows from that source.  As a result, VPN
   security violations may result if any system is a C-source for both
   extranet and non-extranet C-flows.  However, the set of C-flows
   transmitted by a given C-source is not under the control of the SP.
   SPs who offer the extranet MVPN service must make sure that this
   potential for VPN security violations is clearly understood by the
   customers who administer the C-sources.

   This specification does not require that UMH-eligible routes be "host
   routes"; they may be less specific routes.  So it is possible for the
   NLRI of a UMH-eligible route to contain an address prefix that
   matches the address of both an extranet C-source and a non-extranet
   C-source.  If such a route is exported from a VPN-S VRF and imported
   by a VPN-R VRF, C-receivers contained in VPN-R will be able to
   receive C-flows from the non-extranet C-sources whose addresses match
   that route.  This may result in VPN security violations.  Service
   providers who offer the extranet MVPN service must make sure that
   this is clearly understood by the customers who administer the
   distribution of routes from CE to PE routers.

   If the address ambiguities described in Sections 2.1 and 2.2 are not
   prohibited by deployment of the policies described in Section 2.3.2,
   VRFs must be able to discard traffic that arrives on the wrong
   P-tunnel (as specified in Section 2.3.1 and Section 7.5).  Otherwise
   VPN security violations may occur.

11.  Acknowledgments

   The authors wish to thank DP Ayyadevara, Robert Kebler, Padmini
   Misra, Rayen Mohanty, Maria Napierala, Karthik Subramanian, and Kurt
   Windisch for their contributions to this work.

   We also wish to thank Lizhong Jin and Rishabh Parekh for their
   reviews and comments.

   Special thanks to Jeffrey (Zhaohui) Zhang for his careful review and
   for providing the ascii art appearing in Section 2.

12.  Contributor Addresses

   Below is a list of other contributing authors in alphabetical order:








Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 58]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   Wim Henderickx
   Nokia
   Copernicuslaan 50
   Antwerp  2018
   Belgium

   Email: wim.henderickx@nokia.com

   Praveen Muley
   Nokia

   Email: Praveen.Muley@nokia.com

   Ray Qiu
   Juniper Networks, Inc.
   1194 North Mathilda Avenue
   Sunnyvale, CA  94089
   United States

   Email: rqiu@juniper.net

   IJsbrand Wijnands
   Cisco Systems, Inc.
   De Kleetlaan 6a
   Diegem  1831
   Belgium

   Email: ice@cisco.com


13.  References

13.1.  Normative References

   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate
              Requirement Levels", BCP 14, RFC 2119,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC2119, March 1997,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2119>.

   [RFC4360]  Sangli, S., Tappan, D., and Y. Rekhter, "BGP Extended
              Communities Attribute", RFC 4360, DOI 10.17487/RFC4360,
              February 2006, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4360>.

   [RFC4364]  Rosen, E. and Y. Rekhter, "BGP/MPLS IP Virtual Private
              Networks (VPNs)", RFC 4364, DOI 10.17487/RFC4364, February
              2006, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4364>.





Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 59]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   [RFC6513]  Rosen, E., Ed. and R. Aggarwal, Ed., "Multicast in MPLS/
              BGP IP VPNs", RFC 6513, DOI 10.17487/RFC6513, February
              2012, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6513>.

   [RFC6514]  Aggarwal, R., Rosen, E., Morin, T., and Y. Rekhter, "BGP
              Encodings and Procedures for Multicast in MPLS/BGP IP
              VPNs", RFC 6514, DOI 10.17487/RFC6514, February 2012,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6514>.

   [RFC6625]  Rosen, E., Ed., Rekhter, Y., Ed., Hendrickx, W., and R.
              Qiu, "Wildcards in Multicast VPN Auto-Discovery Routes",
              RFC 6625, DOI 10.17487/RFC6625, May 2012,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6625>.

   [RFC7153]  Rosen, E. and Y. Rekhter, "IANA Registries for BGP
              Extended Communities", RFC 7153, DOI 10.17487/RFC7153,
              March 2014, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7153>.

   [RFC7761]  Fenner, B., Handley, M., Holbrook, H., Kouvelas, I.,
              Parekh, R., Zhang, Z., and L. Zheng, "Protocol Independent
              Multicast - Sparse Mode (PIM-SM): Protocol Specification
              (Revised)", STD 83, RFC 7761, DOI 10.17487/RFC7761, March
              2016, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7761>.

13.2.  Informative References

   [MVPN-IR]  Rosen, E., Subramanian, K., and Z. Zhang, "Ingress
              Replication Tunnels in Multicast VPN", internet-draft
              draft-ietf-bess-ir-03, April 2016.

   [RFC3446]  Kim, D., Meyer, D., Kilmer, H., and D. Farinacci, "Anycast
              Rendevous Point (RP) mechanism using Protocol Independent
              Multicast (PIM) and Multicast Source Discovery Protocol
              (MSDP)", RFC 3446, DOI 10.17487/RFC3446, January 2003,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3446>.

   [RFC3618]  Fenner, B., Ed. and D. Meyer, Ed., "Multicast Source
              Discovery Protocol (MSDP)", RFC 3618,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC3618, October 2003,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3618>.

   [RFC4610]  Farinacci, D. and Y. Cai, "Anycast-RP Using Protocol
              Independent Multicast (PIM)", RFC 4610,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC4610, August 2006,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4610>.






Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 60]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   [RFC4875]  Aggarwal, R., Ed., Papadimitriou, D., Ed., and S.
              Yasukawa, Ed., "Extensions to Resource Reservation
              Protocol - Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE) for Point-to-
              Multipoint TE Label Switched Paths (LSPs)", RFC 4875,
              DOI 10.17487/RFC4875, May 2007,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4875>.

   [RFC5015]  Handley, M., Kouvelas, I., Speakman, T., and L. Vicisano,
              "Bidirectional Protocol Independent Multicast (BIDIR-
              PIM)", RFC 5015, DOI 10.17487/RFC5015, October 2007,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5015>.

   [RFC5059]  Bhaskar, N., Gall, A., Lingard, J., and S. Venaas,
              "Bootstrap Router (BSR) Mechanism for Protocol Independent
              Multicast (PIM)", RFC 5059, DOI 10.17487/RFC5059, January
              2008, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5059>.

   [RFC6388]  Wijnands, IJ., Ed., Minei, I., Ed., Kompella, K., and B.
              Thomas, "Label Distribution Protocol Extensions for Point-
              to-Multipoint and Multipoint-to-Multipoint Label Switched
              Paths", RFC 6388, DOI 10.17487/RFC6388, November 2011,
              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6388>.

Authors' Addresses

   Yakov Rekhter (editor)
   Juniper Networks, Inc.
   1194 North Mathilda Avenue
   Sunnyvale, CA  94089
   United States


   Eric C. Rosen (editor)
   Juniper Networks, Inc.
   10 Technology Park Drive
   Westford, Massachusetts  01886
   United States

   Email: erosen@juniper.net


   Rahul Aggarwal
   Arktan

   Email: raggarwa_1@yahoo.com






Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 61]

Internet-Draft   Extranet Multicast in BGP/IP MPLS VPNs       April 2016


   Yiqun Cai
   Microsoft
   1065 La Avenida
   Mountain View, CA  94043
   United States

   Email: yiqunc@microsoft.com


   Thomas Morin
   Orange
   2 Avenue Pierre-Marzin
   22307 Lannion Cedex
   France

   Email: thomas.morin@orange.com



































Rekhter, et al.         Expires October 14, 2016               [Page 62]