Internet-Draft | VRRP Version 3 | March 2022 |
Lindem, et al. | Expires 8 September 2022 | [Page] |
This document defines the Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) for IPv4 and IPv6. It is version three (3) of the protocol, and it is based on VRRP (version 2) for IPv4 that is defined in RFC 3768 and in "Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol for IPv6". VRRP specifies an election protocol that dynamically assigns responsibility for a virtual router to one of the VRRP routers on a LAN. The VRRP router controlling the IPv4 or IPv6 address(es) associated with a virtual router is called the Active router, and it forwards packets sent to these IPv4 or IPv6 addresses. VRRP Active routers are configured with virtual IPv4 or IPv6 addresses, and VRRP Backup routers infer the address family of the virtual addresses being carried based on the transport protocol. Within a VRRP router, the virtual routers in each of the IPv4 and IPv6 address families are a domain unto themselves and do not overlap. The election process provides dynamic failover in the forwarding responsibility should the Active become unavailable. For IPv4, the advantage gained from using VRRP is a higher-availability default path without requiring configuration of dynamic routing or router discovery protocols on every end-host. For IPv6, the advantage gained from using VRRP for IPv6 is a quicker switchover to Backup routers than can be obtained with standard IPv6 Neighbor Discovery mechanisms.¶
The VRRP terminology has been updated be in line with inclusive language used in the industry. This document obseletes VRRP Version 3 [RFC5798].¶
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This document defines the Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) for IPv4 and IPv6. It is version three (3) of the protocol. It is based on VRRP (version 2) for IPv4 that is defined in [RFC3768] and in [VRRP-IPv6]. VRRP specifies an election protocol that dynamically assigns responsibility for a virtual router to one of the VRRP routers on a LAN. The VRRP router controlling the IPv4 or IPv6 address(es) associated with a virtual router is called the Active router, and it forwards packets sent to these IPv4 or IPv6 addresses. VRRP Active routers are configured with virtual IPv4 or IPv6 addresses, and VRRP Backup routers infer the address family of the virtual addresses being carried based on the transport protocol. Within a VRRP router, the virtual routers in each of the IPv4 and IPv6 address families are a domain unto themselves and do not overlap. The election process provides dynamic failover in the forwarding responsibility should the Active become unavailable.¶
VRRP provides a function similar to the proprietary protocols "Hot Standby Router Protocol (HSRP)" [RFC2281] and "IP Standby Protocol" [IPSTB].¶
This document discusses both IPv4 and IPv6 operation, and with respect to the VRRP protocol, many of the descriptions and procedures are common. In this document, it would be less verbose to be able to refer to "IP" to mean either "IPv4 or IPv6". However, historically, the term "IP" usually refers to IPv4. For this reason, in this specification, the term "IPvX" (where X is 4 or 6) is introduced to mean either "IPv4" or "IPv6". In this text, where the IP version matters, the appropriate term is used and the use of the term "IP" is avoided.¶
There are a number of methods that an IPv4 end-host can use to determine its first-hop router towards a particular IPv4 destination. These include running (or snooping) a dynamic routing protocol such as Routing Information Protocol [RFC2453] or OSPF version 2 [RFC2328], running an ICMP router discovery client [RFC1256], or using a statically configured default route.¶
Running a dynamic routing protocol on every end-host may be infeasible for a number of reasons, including administrative overhead, processing overhead, security issues, or lack of a protocol implementation for some platforms. Neighbor or router discovery protocols may require active participation by all hosts on a network, leading to large timer values to reduce protocol overhead in the face of large numbers of hosts. This can result in a significant delay in the detection of a lost (i.e., dead) neighbor; such a delay may introduce unacceptably long "black hole" periods.¶
The use of a statically configured default route is quite popular; it minimizes configuration and processing overhead on the end-host and is supported by virtually every IPv4 implementation. This mode of operation is likely to persist as dynamic host configuration protocols [RFC2131] are deployed, which typically provide configuration for an end-host IPv4 address and default gateway. However, this creates a single point of failure. Loss of the default router results in a catastrophic event, isolating all end-hosts that are unable to detect any alternate path that may be available.¶
The Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol (VRRP) is designed to eliminate the single point of failure inherent in the static default- routed environment. VRRP specifies an election protocol that dynamically assigns responsibility for a virtual router to one of the VRRP routers on a LAN. The VRRP router controlling the IPv4 address(es) associated with a virtual router is called the Active and forwards packets sent to these IPv4 addresses. The election process provides dynamic failover in the forwarding responsibility should the Active become unavailable. Any of the virtual router's IPv4 addresses on a LAN can then be used as the default first hop¶
router by end-hosts. The advantage gained from using VRRP is a higher availability default path without requiring configuration of dynamic routing or router discovery protocols on every end-host.¶
IPv6 hosts on a LAN will usually learn about one or more default routers by receiving Router Advertisements sent using the IPv6 Neighbor Discovery (ND) protocol [RFC4861]. The Router Advertisements are multicast periodically at a rate that the hosts will learn about the default routers in a few minutes. They are not sent frequently enough to rely on the absence of the Router Advertisement to detect router failures.¶
Neighbor Discovery (ND) includes a mechanism called Neighbor Unreachability Detection to detect the failure of a neighbor node (router or host) or the forwarding path to a neighbor. This is done by sending unicast ND Neighbor Solicitation messages to the neighbor node. To reduce the overhead of sending Neighbor Solicitations, they are only sent to neighbors to which the node is actively sending traffic and only after there has been no positive indication that the router is up for a period of time. Using the default parameters in ND, it will take a host about 38 seconds to learn that a router is unreachable before it will switch to another default router. This delay would be very noticeable to users and cause some transport protocol implementations to time out.¶
While the ND unreachability detection could be made quicker by changing the parameters to be more aggressive (note that the current lower limit for this is 5 seconds), this would have the downside of significantly increasing the overhead of ND traffic, especially when there are many hosts all trying to determine the reachability of one of more routers.¶
The Virtual Router Redundancy Protocol for IPv6 provides a much faster switchover to an alternate default router than can be obtained using standard ND procedures. Using VRRP, a Backup router can take over for a failed default router in around three seconds (using VRRP default parameters). This is done without any interaction with the hosts and a minimum amount of VRRP traffic.¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in [RFC2119].¶
The remainder of this document describes the features, design goals, and theory of operation of VRRP. The message formats, protocol processing rules, and state machine that guarantee convergence to a single Virtual Router Active are presented. Finally, operational issues related to MAC address mapping, handling of ARP requests, generation of ICMP redirect messages, and security issues are addressed.¶
A router running the Virtual Router¶
Redundancy Protocol. It may participate as one or more virtual routers.¶
An abstract object managed by VRRP that acts¶
as a default router for hosts on a shared LAN. It consists of a Virtual Router Identifier and either a set of associated IPv4 addresses or a set of associated IPv6 addresses across a common LAN. A VRRP Router may back up one or more virtual routers.¶
The VRRP router that has the virtual router's¶
IPvX address(es) as real interface address(es). This is the router that, when up, will respond to packets addressed to one of these IPvX addresses for ICMP pings, TCP connections, etc.¶
In IPv4, an IPv4 address selected from the¶
set of real interface addresses. One possible selection algorithm is to always select the first address. In IPv4 mode, VRRP advertisements are always sent using the active IPv4 address as the source of the IPv4 packet. In IPv6, the link-local address of the interface over which the packet is transmitted is used.¶
The VRRP router that is assuming the¶
responsibility of forwarding packets sent to the IPvX address(es) associated with the virtual router, answering ARP requests¶
for the IPv4 address(es), and answering ND requests for the IPv6 address(es). Note that if the IPvX address owner is available, then it will always become the Active.¶
The set of VRRP routers available to assume¶
forwarding responsibility for a virtual router should the current Active fail.¶
This section outlines the set of features that were considered mandatory and that guided the design of VRRP.¶
Backup of an IPvX address or addresses is the active function of VRRP. While providing election of a Virtual Router Active and the additional functionality described below, the protocol should strive to:¶
A simple model of Active election among a set of redundant routers is to treat each router with equal preference and claim victory after converging to any router as Active. However, there are likely to be many environments where there is a distinct preference (or range of preferences) among the set of redundant routers. For example, this preference may be based upon access link cost or speed, router performance or reliability, or other policy considerations. The protocol should allow the expression of this relative path preference in an intuitive manner and guarantee Active convergence to the most preferential router currently available.¶
Once Active election has been performed, any unnecessary transitions between Active and Backup routers can result in a disruption in service. The protocol should ensure after Active election that no state transition is triggered by any Backup router of equal or lower preference as long as the Active continues to function properly.¶
Some environments may find it beneficial to avoid the state transition triggered when a router that is preferred over the current Active becomes available. It may be useful to support an override of the immediate convergence to the preferred path.¶
Sending IPvX packets (that is, sending either IPv4 or IPv6) on a multiaccess LAN requires mapping from an IPvX address to a MAC address. The use of the virtual router MAC address in an extended LAN employing learning bridges can have a significant effect on the bandwidth overhead of packets sent to the virtual router. If the virtual router MAC address is never used as the source address in a link-level frame, then the station location is never learned, resulting in flooding of all packets sent to the virtual router. To improve the efficiency in this environment, the protocol should: 1) use the virtual router MAC address as the source in a packet sent by the Active to trigger station learning; 2) trigger a message immediately after transitioning to the Active to update the station learning; and 3) trigger periodic messages from the Active to maintain the station learning cache.¶
Sub-second detection of Active VRRP router failure is needed in both IPv4 and IPv6 environments. Earlier work proposed that sub-second operation was for IPv6; this specification leverages that earlier approach for IPv4 and IPv6.¶
One possible problematic scenario when using small VRRP_Advertisement_Intervals may occur when a router is delivering more packets onto the LAN than can be accommodated, and so a queue builds up in the router. It is possible that packets being transmitted onto the VRRP-protected LAN could see larger queueing delay than the smallest VRRP Advertisement_Interval. In this case, the Active_Down_Interval will be small enough so that normal queuing delays might cause a VRRP Backup to conclude that the Active is down, and therefore promote itself to Active. Very shortly afterwards, the delayed VRRP packets from the Active cause a switch back to Backup status. Furthermore, this process can repeat many times per second, causing significant disruption to traffic. To mitigate this problem, priority forwarding of VRRP packets should be considered. It should be possible for a VRRP Active to observe that this situation is occurring frequently and at least log the problem.¶
VRRP specifies an election protocol to provide the virtual router function described earlier. All protocol messaging is performed using either IPv4 or IPv6 multicast datagrams; thus, the protocol can operate over a variety of multiaccess LAN technologies supporting IPvX multicast. Each link of a VRRP virtual router has a single well-known MAC address allocated to it. This document currently only details the mapping to networks using the IEEE 802 48-bit MAC address. The virtual router MAC address is used as the source in all periodic VRRP messages sent by the Active router to enable bridge learning in an extended LAN.¶
A virtual router is defined by its virtual router identifier (VRID) and a set of either IPv4 or IPv6 address(es). A VRRP router may associate a virtual router with its real address on an interface. The scope of each virtual router is restricted to a single LAN. A VRRP router may be configured with additional virtual router mappings and priority for virtual routers it is willing to back up. The mapping between the VRID and its IPvX address(es) must be coordinated among all VRRP routers on a LAN.¶
There is no restriction against reusing a VRID with a different address mapping on different LANs, nor is there a restriction against using the same VRID number for a set of IPv4 addresses and a set of IPv6 addresses; however, these are two different virtual routers.¶
To minimize network traffic, only the Active for each virtual router sends periodic VRRP Advertisement messages. A Backup router will not attempt to preempt the Active unless it has higher priority. This eliminates service disruption unless a more preferred path becomes available. It's also possible to administratively prohibit all preemption attempts. The only exception is that a VRRP router will always become Active of any virtual router associated with addresses it owns. If the Active becomes unavailable, then the highest- priority Backup will transition to Active after a short delay, providing a controlled transition of the virtual router responsibility with minimal service interruption.¶
The VRRP protocol design provides rapid transition from Backup to Active to minimize service interruption and incorporates optimizations that reduce protocol complexity while guaranteeing controlled Active transition for typical operational scenarios. The optimizations result in an election protocol with minimal runtime state requirements, minimal active protocol states, and a single message type and sender. The typical operational scenarios are defined to be two redundant routers and/or distinct path preferences among each router. A side effect when these assumptions are violated (i.e., more than two redundant paths, all with equal preference) is that duplicate packets may be forwarded for a brief period during Active election. However, the typical scenario assumptions are likely to cover the vast majority of deployments, loss of the Active router is infrequent, and the expected duration in Active election convergence is quite small ( << 1 second ). Thus, the VRRP optimizations represent significant simplifications in the protocol design while incurring an insignificant probability of brief network degradation.¶
The following figure shows a simple network with two VRRP routers implementing one virtual router.¶
+-----------+ +-----------+ | Rtr1 | | Rtr2 | |(MR VRID=1)| |(BR VRID=1)| | | | | VRID=1 +-----------+ +-----------+ IPvX A--------->* *<---------IPvX B | | | | ----------------+------------+-----+----------+----------+----------+-- ^ ^ ^ ^ | | | | default rtr IPvX addrs-------> (IPvX A) (IPvX A) (IPvX A) (IPvX A) | | | | IPvX H1->* IpvX H2->* IPvX H3->* IpvX H4->* +--+--+ +--+--+ +--+--+ +--+--+ | H1 | | H2 | | H3 | | H4 | +-----+ +-----+ +--+--+ +--+--+ Legend: --+---+---+-- = Ethernet, Token Ring, or FDDI H = Host computer MR = Active Router BR = Backup Router * = IPvX Address; X is 4 everywhere in IPv4 case X is 6 everywhere in IPv6 case (IPvX) = default router for hosts Eliminating all mention of VRRP (VRID=1) from the figure above leaves it as a typical deployment.¶
In the IPv4 case (that is, IPvX is IPv4 everywhere in the figure), each router is permanently assigned an IPv4 address on the LAN interface (Rtr1 is assigned IPv4 A and Rtr2 is assigned IPv4 B), and each host installs a static default route through one of the routers (in this example they all use Rtr1's IPv4 A).¶
In the IPv6 case (that is, IPvX is IPv6 everywhere in the figure), each router has a link-local IPv6 address on the LAN interface (Rtr1 is assigned IPv6 Link-Local A and Rtr2 is assigned IPv6 Link- Local B), and each host learns a default route from Router Advertisements through one of the routers (in this example, they all use Rtr1's IPv6 Link-Local A).¶
Moving to an IPv4 VRRP environment, each router has the exact same permanently assigned IPv4 address. Rtr1 is said to be the IPv4 address owner of IPv4 A, and Rtr2 is the IPv4 address owner of IPv4 B. A virtual router is then defined by associating a unique identifier (the virtual router ID) with the address owned by a router.¶
Moving to an IPv6 VRRP environment, each router has the exact same Link-Local IPv6 address. Rtr1 is said to be the IPv6 address owner of IPv6 A, and Rtr2 is the IPv6 address owner of IPv6 B. A virtual router is then defined by associating a unique identifier (the virtual router ID) with the address owned by a router.¶
Finally, in both the IPv4 and IPv6 cases, the VRRP protocol manages virtual router failover to a Backup router.¶
The IPv4 example above shows a virtual router configured to cover the IPv4 address owned by Rtr1 (VRID=1, IPv4_Address=A). When VRRP is enabled on Rtr1 for VRID=1, it will assert itself as Active, with priority = 255, since it is the IP address owner for the virtual router IP address. When VRRP is enabled on Rtr2 for VRID=1, it will transition to Backup, with priority = 100 (the default priority is 100), since it is not the IPv4 address owner. If Rtr1 should fail, then the VRRP protocol will transition Rtr2 to Active, temporarily taking over forwarding responsibility for IPv4 A to provide uninterrupted service to the hosts. When Rtr1 returns to service, it will re-assert itself as Active.¶
The IPv6 example above shows a virtual router configured to cover the IPv6 address owned by Rtr1 (VRID=1, IPv6_Address=A). When VRRP is enabled on Rtr1 for VRID=1, it will assert itself as Active, with priority = 255, since it is the IPv6 address owner for the virtual router IPv6 address. When VRRP is enabled on Rtr2 for VRID=1, it will transition to Backup, with priority = 100 (the default priority is 100), since it is not the IPv6 address owner. If Rtr1 should fail, then the VRRP protocol will transition Rtr2 to Active, temporarily taking over forwarding responsibility for IPv6 A to provide uninterrupted service to the hosts.¶
Note that in both cases, in this example IPvX B is not backed up; it is only used by Rtr2 as its interface address. In order to back up IPvX B, a second virtual router must be configured. This is shown in the next section.¶
The following figure shows a configuration with two virtual routers with the hosts splitting their traffic between them.¶
+-----------+ +-----------+ | Rtr1 | | Rtr2 | |(MR VRID=1)| |(BR VRID=1)| |(BR VRID=2)| |(MR VRID=2)| VRID=1 +-----------+ +-----------+ VRID=2 IPvX A -------->* *<---------- IPvX B | | | | ----------------+------------+-----+----------+----------+----------+-- ^ ^ ^ ^ | | | | default rtr IPvX addrs -----> (IPvX A) (IPvX A) (IPvX B) (IPvX B) | | | | IPvX H1->* IpvX H2->* IPvX H3->* IpvX H4->* +--+--+ +--+--+ +--+--+ +--+--+ | H1 | | H2 | | H3 | | H4 | +-----+ +-----+ +--+--+ +--+--+ Legend: ---+---+---+-- = Ethernet, Token Ring, or FDDI H = Host computer MR = Active Router BR = Backup Router * = IPvX Address; X is 4 everywhere in IPv4 case X is 6 everywhere in IPv6 case (IPvX) = default router for hosts¶
In the IPv4 example above (that is, IPvX is IPv4 everywhere in the figure), half of the hosts have configured a static route through Rtr1's IPv4 A, and half are using Rtr2's IPv4 B. The configuration of virtual router VRID=1 is exactly the same as in the first example (see Section 10.1), and a second virtual router has been added to cover the IPv4 address owned by Rtr2 (VRID=2, IPv4_Address=B). In this case, Rtr2 will assert itself as Active for VRID=2 while Rtr1 will act as a Backup. This scenario demonstrates a deployment providing load splitting when both routers are available, while providing full redundancy for robustness.¶
In the IPv6 example above (that is, IPvX is IPv6 everywhere in the figure), half of the hosts have learned a default route through Rtr1's IPv6 A, and half are using Rtr2's IPv6 B. The configuration of virtual router VRID=1 is exactly the same as in the first example (see Section 10.1), and a second virtual router has been added to cover the IPv6 address owned by Rtr2 (VRID=2, IPv6_Address=B). In this case, Rtr2 will assert itself as Active for VRID=2 while Rtr1 will act as a Backup. This scenario demonstrates a deployment providing load splitting when both routers are available, while providing full redundancy for robustness.¶
Note that the details of load balancing are out of scope of this document. However, in a case where the servers need different weights, it may not make sense to rely on router advertisements alone to balance the host load between the routers.¶
The purpose of the VRRP packet is to communicate to all VRRP routers the priority and the state of the Active router associated with the VRID.¶
When VRRP is protecting an IPv4 address, VRRP packets are sent encapsulated in IPv4 packets. They are sent to the IPv4 multicast address assigned to VRRP.¶
When VRRP is protecting an IPv6 address, VRRP packets are sent encapsulated in IPv6 packets. They are sent to the IPv6 multicast address assigned to VRRP.¶
This section defines the format of the VRRP packet and the relevant fields in the IP header.¶
0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | IPv4 Fields or IPv6 Fields | ... ... | | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |Version| Type | Virtual Rtr ID| Priority |Count IPvX Addr| +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ |(rsvd) | Max Adver Int | Checksum | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ | | + + | IPvX Address(es) | + + + + + + + + | | + + | | +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+¶
This is the active IPv4 address of the interface the packet is being sent from.¶
The IPv4 multicast address as assigned by the IANA for VRRP is:¶
224.0.0.18¶
This is a link-local scope multicast address. Routers MUST NOT forward a datagram with this destination address, regardless of its TTL.¶
This is the IPv6 link-local address of the interface the packet is being sent from.¶
This is a link-local scope multicast address. Routers MUST NOT forward a datagram with this destination address, regardless of its Hop Limit.¶
The Hop Limit MUST be set to 255. A VRRP router receiving a packet with the Hop Limit not equal to 255 MUST discard the packet.¶
The IPv6 Next Header protocol assigned by the IANA for VRRP is 112 (decimal).¶
The version field specifies the VRRP protocol version of this packet. This document defines version 3.¶
The type field specifies the type of this VRRP packet. The only packet type defined in this version of the protocol is:¶
1 ADVERTISEMENT¶
A packet with unknown type MUST be discarded.¶
The Virtual Rtr ID field identifies the virtual router this packet is reporting status for.¶
The priority field specifies the sending VRRP router's priority for the virtual router. Higher values equal higher priority. This field is an 8-bit unsigned integer field.¶
The priority value for the VRRP router that owns the IPvX address associated with the virtual router MUST be 255 (decimal).¶
VRRP routers backing up a virtual router MUST use priority values between 1-254 (decimal). The default priority value for VRRP routers backing up a virtual router is 100 (decimal).¶
The priority value zero (0) has special meaning, indicating that the current Active has stopped participating in VRRP. This is used to trigger Backup routers to quickly transition to Active without having to wait for the current Active to time out.¶
This is the number of either IPv4 addresses or IPv6 addresses contained in this VRRP advertisement. The minimum value is 1.¶
The Maximum Advertisement Interval is a 12-bit field that indicates the time interval (in centiseconds) between ADVERTISEMENTS. The default is 100 centiseconds (1 second).¶
Note that higher-priority Active routers with slower transmission rates than their Backup routers are unstable. This is because low- priority nodes configured to faster rates could come online and decide they should be Actives before they have heard anything from the higher-priority Active with a slower rate. When this happens, it is temporary: once the lower-priority node does hear from the higher- priority Active, it will relinquish Activeship.¶
The checksum field is used to detect data corruption in the VRRP message.¶
The checksum is the 16-bit one's complement of the one's complement sum of the entire VRRP message starting with the version field and a "pseudo-header" as defined in Section 8.1 of [RFC2460]. The next header field in the "pseudo-header" should be set to 112 (decimal) for VRRP. For computing the checksum, the checksum field is set to zero. See RFC1071 for more detail [RFC1071].¶
This refers to one or more IPvX addresses associated with the virtual router. The number of addresses included is specified in the "Count IP Addr" field. These fields are used for troubleshooting misconfigured routers. If more than one address is sent, it is recommended that all routers be configured to send these addresses in the same order to make it easier to do this comparison.¶
For IPv4 addresses, this refers to one or more IPv4 addresses that are backed up by the virtual router.¶
For IPv6, the first address must be the IPv6 link-local address associated with the virtual router.¶
This field contains either one or more IPv4 addresses, or one or more IPv6 addresses, that is, IPv4 and IPv6 MUST NOT both be carried in one IPvX Address field.¶
Virtual Router Identifier. Configurable¶
item in the range 1-255 (decimal). There is no default.¶
Priority value to be used by this VRRP¶
router in Active election for this virtual router. The value of 255 (decimal) is reserved for the router that owns the IPvX address associated with the virtual router. The value of 0 (zero) is reserved for the Active router to indicate it is releasing responsibility for the virtual router. The range 1-254 (decimal) is available for VRRP routers backing up the virtual router. Higher values indicate higher priorities. The default value is 100 (decimal).¶
One or more IPv4 addresses associated¶
with this virtual router. Configured item with no default.¶
One or more IPv6 addresses associated¶
with this virtual router. Configured item with no default. The first address must be the Link-Local address associated with the virtual router.¶
Time interval between ADVERTISEMENTS¶
(centiseconds). Default is 100 centiseconds (1 second).¶
Advertisement interval contained in¶
ADVERTISEMENTS received from the Active (centiseconds). This value is saved by virtual routers in the Backup state and used to compute Skew_Time and Active_Down_Interval. The initial value is the same as Advertisement_Interval.¶
Time to skew Active_Down_Interval in¶
centiseconds. Calculated as¶
(((256 - priority) * Active_Adver_Interval) / 256)¶
Time interval for Backup to declare¶
Active down (centiseconds). Calculated as¶
(3 * Active_Adver_Interval) + Skew_time¶
Controls whether a (starting or¶
restarting) higher-priority Backup router preempts a lower-priority Active router. Values are True to allow preemption and False to prohibit preemption. Default is True.¶
Note: The exception is that the router that owns the IPvX address associated with the virtual router always preempts, independent of the setting of this flag.¶
Controls whether a virtual router in¶
Active state will accept packets addressed to the address owner's IPvX address as its own if it is not the IPvX address owner. The default is False. Deployments that rely on, for example, pinging the address owner's IPvX address may wish to configure Accept_Mode to True.¶
Note: IPv6 Neighbor Solicitations and Neighbor Advertisements MUST NOT be dropped when Accept_Mode is False.¶
The MAC address used for the source MAC¶
address in VRRP advertisements and advertised in ARP responses as the MAC address to use for IP_Addresses.¶
+---------------+ +--------->| |<-------------+ | | Initialize | | | +------| |----------+ | | | +---------------+ | | | | | | | V V | +---------------+ +---------------+ | |---------------------->| | | Active | | Backup | | |<----------------------| | +---------------+ +---------------+¶
In the state descriptions below, the state names are identified by {state-name}, and the packets are identified by all-uppercase characters.¶
A VRRP router implements an instance of the state machine for each virtual router election it is participating in.¶
The purpose of this state is to wait for a Startup event, that is, an implementation-defined mechanism that initiates the protocol once it has been configured. The configuration mechanism is out of scope of this specification.¶
(105) - If the Priority = 255 (i.e., the router owns the IPvX address associated with the virtual router), then:¶
(110) + Send an ADVERTISEMENT¶
(125) + else // IPv6¶
(135) +endif // was protected addr IPv4? (140) + Set the Adver_Timer to Advertisement_Interval (145) + Transition to the {Active} state (150) - else // rtr does not own virt addr (155) + Set Active_Adver_Interval to Advertisement_Interval (160) + Set the Active_Down_Timer to Active_Down_Interval (165) + Transition to the {Backup} state (170) -endif // priority was not 255 (175) endif // startup event was recv¶
The purpose of the {Backup} state is to monitor the availability and state of the Active router.¶
(305) - If the protected IPvX address is an IPv4 address, then:¶
(310) + MUST NOT respond to ARP requests for the IPv4 address(es) associated with the virtual router.¶
(315) - else // protected addr is IPv6¶
(330) -endif // was protected addr IPv4?¶
(360) -endif // shutdown recv (365) - If the Active_Down_Timer fires, then: (370) + Send an ADVERTISEMENT (375) + If the protected IPvX address is an IPv4 address, then:¶
(385) + else // ipv6¶
(400) +endif // was protected addr ipv4? (405) + Set the Adver_Timer to Advertisement_Interval (410) + Transition to the {Active} state (415) -endif // Active_Down_Timer fired (420) - If an ADVERTISEMENT is received, then: (425) + If the Priority in the ADVERTISEMENT is zero, then:¶
(430) * Set the Active_Down_Timer to Skew_Time (440) + else // priority non-zero¶
(460) @ Reset the Active_Down_Timer to Active_Down_Interval (465) * else // preempt was true or priority was less (470) @ Discard the ADVERTISEMENT (475) *endif // preempt test (480) +endif // was priority zero? (485) -endif // was advertisement recv? (490) endwhile // Backup state¶
While in the {Active} state, the router functions as the forwarding router for the IPvX address(es) associated with the virtual router.¶
Note that in the Active state, the Preempt_Mode Flag is not considered.¶
(605) - If the protected IPvX address is an IPv4 address, then:¶
(610) + MUST respond to ARP requests for the IPv4 address(es) associated with the virtual router.¶
(615) - else // ipv6¶
(640) +-endif // ipv4?¶
(675) -endif // shutdown recv (680) - If the Adver_Timer fires, then: (685) + Send an ADVERTISEMENT (690) + Reset the Adver_Timer to Advertisement_Interval (695) -endif // advertisement timer fired (700) - If an ADVERTISEMENT is received, then: (705) -+ If the Priority in the ADVERTISEMENT is zero, then: (710) -* Send an ADVERTISEMENT (715) -* Reset the Adver_Timer to Advertisement_Interval (720) -+ else // priority was non-zero¶
(730) -* or¶
(770) * else // new Active logic (775) @ Discard ADVERTISEMENT (780) *endif // new Active detected (785) +endif // was priority zero? (790) -endif // advert recv (795) endwhile // in Active¶
- else // ipv6 recv + MUST verify that the IPv6 Hop Limit is 255. -endif - MUST verify that the VRRP version is 3.¶
If any one of the above checks fails, the receiver MUST discard the packet, SHOULD log the event, and MAY indicate via network management that an error occurred.¶
If the above check fails, the receiver SHOULD log the event and MAY indicate via network management that a misconfiguration was detected.¶
The following operations MUST be performed when transmitting a VRRP packet:¶
- else // ipv6 + Set the source MAC address to virtual router MAC Address¶
Note: VRRP packets are transmitted with the virtual router MAC address as the source MAC address to ensure that learning bridges correctly determine the LAN segment the virtual router is attached to.¶
The virtual router MAC address associated with a virtual router is an IEEE 802 MAC Address in the following format:¶
IPv4 case: 00-00-5E-00-01-{VRID} (in hex, in Internet-standard bit- order)¶
The first three octets are derived from the IANA's Organizational Unique Identifier (OUI). The next two octets (00-01) indicate the address block assigned to the VRRP for IPv4 protocol. {VRID} is the VRRP Virtual Router Identifier. This mapping provides for up to 255 IPv4 VRRP routers on a network.¶
IPv6 case: 00-00-5E-00-02-{VRID} (in hex, in Internet-standard bit- order)¶
The first three octets are derived from the IANA's OUI. The next two octets (00-02) indicate the address block assigned to the VRRP for IPv6 protocol. {VRID} is the VRRP Virtual Router Identifier. This mapping provides for up to 255 IPv6 VRRP routers on a network.¶
IPv6 routers running VRRP MUST create their Interface Identifiers in the normal manner (e.g., "Transmission of IPv6 Packets over Ethernet Networks" [RFC2464]). They MUST NOT use the virtual router MAC address to create the Modified Extended Unique Identifier (EUI)-64 identifiers.¶
This VRRP specification describes how to advertise and resolve the VRRP router's IPv6 link-local address and other associated IPv6 addresses into the virtual router MAC address.¶
ICMP redirects may be used normally when VRRP is running between a group of routers. This allows VRRP to be used in environments where the topology is not symmetric.¶
The IPv4 source address of an ICMP redirect should be the address that the end-host used when making its next-hop routing decision. If a VRRP router is acting as Active for virtual router(s) containing addresses it does not own, then it must determine which virtual router the packet was sent to when selecting the redirect source address. One method to deduce the virtual router used is to examine the destination MAC address in the packet that triggered the redirect.¶
It may be useful to disable redirects for specific cases where VRRP is being used to load-share traffic between a number of routers in a symmetric topology.¶
When a host sends an ARP request for one of the virtual router IPv4 addresses, the Virtual Router Active MUST respond to the ARP request with an ARP response that indicates the virtual MAC address for the virtual router. Note that the source address of the Ethernet frame of this ARP response is the physical MAC address of the physical router. The Virtual Router Active MUST NOT respond with its physical MAC address in the ARP response. This allows the client to always use the same MAC address regardless of the current Active router.¶
When a VRRP router restarts or boots, it SHOULD NOT send any ARP messages using its physical MAC address for the IPv4 address it owns; it should only send ARP messages that include virtual MAC addresses.¶
This may entail the following:¶
ICMPv6 redirects may be used normally when VRRP is running between a group of routers [RFC4443]. This allows VRRP to be used in environments where the topology is not symmetric (e.g., the VRRP routers do not connect to the same destinations).¶
The IPv6 source address of an ICMPv6 redirect should be the address that the end-host used when making its next-hop routing decision. If a VRRP router is acting as Active for virtual router(s) containing addresses it does not own, then it must determine which virtual router the packet was sent to when selecting the redirect source address. A method to deduce the virtual router used is to examine the destination MAC address in the packet that triggered the redirect.¶
When a host sends an ND Neighbor Solicitation message for the virtual router IPv6 address, the Virtual Router Active MUST respond to the ND Neighbor Solicitation message with the virtual MAC address for the virtual router. The Virtual Router Active MUST NOT respond with its physical MAC address. This allows the client to always use the same MAC address regardless of the current Active router.¶
When a Virtual Router Active sends an ND Neighbor Solicitation message for a host's IPv6 address, the Virtual Router Active MUST include the virtual MAC address for the virtual router if it sends a source link-layer address option in the neighbor solicitation message. It MUST NOT use its physical MAC address in the source link-layer address option.¶
When a VRRP router restarts or boots, it SHOULD NOT send any ND messages with its physical MAC address for the IPv6 address it owns; it should only send ND messages that include virtual MAC addresses.¶
This may entail the following:¶
Note that on a restarting Active router where the VRRP protected address is the interface address, (that is, priority 255) duplicate address detection (DAD) may fail, as the Backup router may answer that it owns the address. One solution is to not run DAD in this case.¶
When a Backup VRRP router has become Active for a virtual router, it is responsible for sending Router Advertisements for the virtual router as specified in Section 12.4.3. The Backup routers must be configured to send the same Router Advertisement options as the address owner.¶
Router Advertisement options that advertise special services (e.g., Home Agent Information Option) that are present in the address owner should not be sent by the address owner unless the Backup routers are prepared to assume these services in full and have a complete and synchronized database for this service.¶
If it is not the address owner, a VRRP router SHOULD NOT forward packets addressed to the IPvX address for which it becomes Active. Forwarding these packets would result in unnecessary traffic. Also, in the case of LANs that receive packets they transmit (e.g., Token Ring), this can result in a forwarding loop that is only terminated when the IPvX TTL expires.¶
One such mechanism for VRRP routers is to add/delete a reject host route for each adopted IPvX address when transitioning to/from Active state.¶
A priority value of 255 designates a particular router as the "IPvX address owner". Care must be taken not to configure more than one router on the link in this way for a single VRID.¶
Routers with priority 255 will, as soon as they start up, preempt all lower-priority routers. No more than one router on the link is to be configured with priority 255, especially if preemption is set. If no router has this priority, and preemption is disabled, then no preemption will occur.¶
When there are multiple Backup routers, their priority values should be uniformly distributed. For example, if one Backup router has the default priority of 100 and another Backup Router is added, a priority of 50 would be a better choice for it than 99 or 100, in order to facilitate faster convergence.¶
As mentioned above, this support is intended for upgrade scenarios and is NOT recommended for permanent deployments.¶
An implementation MAY implement a configuration flag that tells it to listen for and send both VRRPv2 and VRRPv3 advertisements.¶
When a virtual router is configured this way and is the Active, it MUST send both types at the configured rate, even if sub-second.¶
When a virtual router is configured this way and is the Backup, it should time out based on the rate advertised by the Active; in the case of a VRRPv2 Active, this means it must translate the timeout value it receives (in seconds) into centiseconds. Also, a Backup should ignore VRRPv2 advertisements from the current Active if it is also receiving VRRPv3 packets from it. It MAY report when a VRRPv3 Active is *not* sending VRRPv2 packets: that suggests they don't agree on whether they're supporting VRRPv2 routers.¶
See also Section 11.2.7, "Maximum Advertisement Interval (Max Adver Int)".¶
The VRRPv2 Active router interacting with a sub-second VRRPv3 Backup router is the most important example of this.¶
A VRRPv2 implementation should not be given a higher priority than a VRRPv2/VRRPv3 implementation it is interacting with if the VRRPv2/ VRRPv3 rate is sub-second.¶
It seems possible that a VRRPv3 Active router sending at centisecond rates could potentially overwhelm a VRRPv2 Backup router with potentially unclear results.¶
In this upgrade case, a deployment should initially run the VRRPv3 Active routers with lower frequencies (e.g., 100 centiseconds) until the VRRPv2 routers are upgraded. Then, once the deployment has convinced itself that VRRPv3 is working properly, the VRRPv2 support may be unconfigured and then the desired sub-second rates configured.¶
The IPv6 text in this specification is based on [RFC2338]. The authors of RFC2338 are S. Knight, D. Weaver, D. Whipple, R. Hinden, D. Mitzel, P. Hunt, P. Higginson, M. Shand, and A. Lindem.¶
The author of [VRRP-IPv6] would also like to thank Erik Nordmark, Thomas Narten, Steve Deering, Radia Perlman, Danny Mitzel, Mukesh Gupta, Don Provan, Mark Hollinger, John Cruz, and Melissa Johnson for their helpful suggestions.¶
The IPv4 text in this specification is based on [RFC3768]. The authors of that specification would like to thank Glen Zorn, Michael Lane, Clark Bremer, Hal Peterson, Tony Li, Barbara Denny, Joel Halpern, Steve Bellovin, Thomas Narten, Rob Montgomery, Rob Coltun, Radia Perlman, Russ Housley, Harald Alvestrand, Steve Bellovin, Ned Freed, Ted Hardie, Russ Housley, Bert Wijnen, Bill Fenner, and Alex Zinin for their comments and suggestions.¶
IANA has assigned an IPv6 link-local scope multicast address for VRRP for IPv6. The IPv6 multicast address is FF02:0:0:0:0:0:0:12.¶
IANA has reserved a block of IANA Ethernet unicast addresses for VRRP for IPv6 in the range 00-00-5E-00-02-00 to 00-00-5E-00-02-FF (in hex).¶
VRRP for IPvX does not currently include any type of authentication. Earlier versions of the VRRP (for IPv4) specification included¶
Some L2 switches provide the capability to filter out, for example, ARP and/or ND messages from end-hosts on a switch-port basis. This mechanism could also filter VRRP messages from switch ports associated with end-hosts and can be considered for deployments with untrusted hosts.¶
It should be noted that these attacks are not worse and are a subset of the attacks that any node attached to a LAN can do independently of VRRP. The kind of attacks a malicious node on a LAN can do include promiscuously receiving packets for any router's MAC address; sending packets with the router's MAC address as the source MAC address in the L2 header to tell the L2 switches to send packets addressed to the router to the malicious node instead of the router; send redirects to tell the hosts to send their traffic somewhere else; send unsolicited ND replies; answer ND requests; etc. All of this can be done independently of implementing VRRP. VRRP does not add to these vulnerabilities.¶
Independent of any authentication type, VRRP includes a mechanism (setting TTL = 255, checking on receipt) that protects against VRRP packets being injected from another remote network. This limits most vulnerabilities to local attacks.¶
VRRP does not provide any confidentiality. Confidentiality is not necessary for the correct operation of VRRP, and there is no information in the VRRP messages that must be kept secret from other nodes on the LAN.¶
In the context of IPv6 operation, if SEcure Neighbor Discovery (SEND) is deployed, VRRP is compatible with the "trust anchor" and "trust anchor or cga" modes of SEND [RFC3971]. The SEND configuration needs to give the Active and Backup routers the same prefix delegation in the certificates so that Master and Backup routers advertise the same set of subnet prefixes. However, the Active and Backup routers should have their own key pairs to avoid private key sharing.¶
FDDI interfaces remove from the FDDI ring frames that have a source MAC address matching the device's hardware address. Under some conditions, such as router isolations, ring failures, protocol transitions, etc., VRRP may cause there to be more than one Active router. If a Active router installs the virtual router MAC address as the hardware address on a FDDI device, then other Actives' ADVERTISEMENTS will be removed from the ring during the Active convergence, and convergence will fail.¶
To avoid this, an implementation SHOULD configure the virtual router MAC address by adding a unicast MAC filter in the FDDI device, rather than changing its hardware MAC address. This will prevent a Active router from removing any ADVERTISEMENTS it did not originate.¶
Token Ring has several characteristics that make running VRRP difficult. These include the following:¶
Due to these difficulties, the preferred mode of operation over Token Ring will be to use a Token-Ring functional address for the VRID virtual MAC address. Token-Ring functional addresses have the two high-order bits in the first MAC address octet set to B'1'. They range from 03-00-00-00-00-80 to 03-00-02-00-00-00 (canonical format). However, unlike multicast addresses, there is only one unique functional address per bit position. The functional addresses 03-00-00-10-00-00 through 03-00-02-00-00-00 are reserved by the Token-Ring Architecture [TKARCH] for user-defined applications. However, since there are only 12 user-defined Token-Ring functional addresses, there may be other non-IPvX protocols using the same functional address. Since the Novell IPX [IPX] protocol uses the 03-00-00-10-00-00 functional address, operation of VRRP over Token Ring will avoid use of this functional address. In general, Token- Ring VRRP users will be responsible for resolution of other user- defined Token-Ring functional address conflicts.¶
VRIDs are mapped directly to Token-Ring functional addresses. In order to decrease the likelihood of functional-address conflicts, allocation will begin with the largest functional address. Most non- IPvX protocols use the first or first couple user-defined functional addresses, and it is expected that VRRP users will choose VRIDs sequentially, starting with 1.¶
VRID Token-Ring Functional Address ---- ----------------------------- 1 03-00-02-00-00-00 2 03-00-04-00-00-00 3 03-00-08-00-00-00 4 03-00-10-00-00-00 5 03-00-20-00-00-00 6 03-00-40-00-00-00 7 03-00-80-00-00-00 8 03-00-00-01-00-00 9 03-00-00-02-00-00 10 03-00-00-04-00-00 11 03-00-00-08-00-00¶
Or, more succinctly, octets 3 and 4 of the functional address are equal to (0x4000 >> (VRID - 1)) in non-canonical format.¶
Since a functional address cannot be used as a MAC-level source address, the real MAC address is used as the MAC source address in VRRP advertisements. This is not a problem for bridges, since packets addressed to functional addresses will be sent on the spanning-tree explorer path [ISO.10038.1993].¶
The functional-address mode of operation MUST be implemented by routers supporting VRRP on Token Ring.¶
Additionally, routers MAY support the unicast mode of operation to take advantage of newer Token-Ring adapter implementations that support non-promiscuous reception for multiple unicast MAC addresses and to avoid both the multicast traffic and usage conflicts associated with the use of Token-Ring functional addresses. Unicast mode uses the same mapping of VRIDs to virtual MAC addresses as Ethernet. However, one important difference exists. ND request/reply packets contain the virtual MAC address as the source MAC address. The reason for this is that some Token-Ring driver implementations keep a cache of MAC address/source-routing information independent of the ND cache.¶
Hence, these implementations have to receive a packet with the virtual MAC address as the source address in order to transmit to that MAC address in a source-route-bridged network.¶
Unicast mode on Token Ring has one limitation that should be considered. If there are VRID routers on different source-route- bridge segments, and there are host implementations that keep their source-route information in the ND cache and do not listen to gratuitous NDs, these hosts will not update their ND source-route information correctly when a switchover occurs. The only possible solution is to put all routers with the same VRID on the same source- route-bridge segment and use techniques to prevent that bridge segment from being a single point of failure. These techniques are beyond the scope of this document.¶
For both the multicast and unicast mode of operation, VRRP advertisements sent to 224.0.0.18 should be encapsulated as described in [RFC1469].¶
Operation of VRRP over ATM LANE on routers with ATM LANE interfaces and/or routers behind proxy LAN Emulation Clients (LECs) are beyond the scope of this document.¶