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MPLS Working Group A. Conta (Lucent)
INTERNET-DRAFT P. Doolan (Ennovate)
A. Malis (Ascend)
November 1997
Use of Label Switching on Frame Relay Networks
Specification
draft-conta-mpls-fr-01.txt
Status of this Memo
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Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
Abstract
This document defines the model and generic mechanisms for
Multiprotocol Label Switching on Frame Relay networks. A
Multiprotocol Label Switching Architecture is described in [ARCH].
MPLS enables the use of Frame Relay Switches as Label Switching
Routers (LSRs).
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Table of Contents
Status of this Memo.........................................1
Table of Contents...........................................2
1. Introduction................................................3
2. Terminology.................................................3
3. Special Characteristics of Frame Relay Switches.............4
4 Label Switching Control Component for Frame Relay...........5
4.1 Hybrid Switches (Ships in the Night) ....................6
5 Label Encapsulation.........................................6
6 Frame Relay Label Swithcing Processing......................8
6.1 Use of DLCIs..............................................8
6.2 Hybrid LSPs...............................................8
6.3 Frame Relay Label Switching Loop Prevention and Control...9
6.3.1 FR-LSRs Loop Control - MPLS TTL Processing.............9
6.4 Label Processing by Ingress FR-LSRs......................10
6.5 Label Processing by Core FR-LSRs.........................10
6.6 Label Processing by Egress FR-LSRs.......................11
7 Label Allocation and Maintenance Procedures ...............11
7.1 Edge LSR Behavior........................................11
7.2 Efficient use of label space-Merging FR-LSRs.............14
8 Security Considerations ..................................14
9 Acknowledgments ..........................................15
10 References ...............................................15
11 Authors' Addresses .......................................16
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1. Introduction
A Multiprotocol Label Switching Architecture is described in [ARCH].
The framework for Multiprotocol Label Switching protocols is
described in [FRAMEW]. It is possible to use Frame Relay switches as
Label Switching Routers. Such Frame Relay switches run network layer
routing algorithms (such as OSPF, IS-IS, etc.), and their forwarding
is based on the results of these routing algorithms. No specific
Frame Relay routing is needed.
When a Frame Relay switch is used for label switching, the current
label, on which forwarding decisions are based, is carried in the
DLCI field of the Frame Relay data link layer header of a frame.
Additional information carried along with the current label, but not
processed by Frame Relay switching, along with other labels, if the
packet is multiply labeled, are carried in the generic MPLS
encapsulation defined in [STACK].
Frame Relay permanent virtual circuits (PVCs) could be configured to
carry label switching based traffic. The DLCIs would be used as MPLS
Labels and the Frame Relay switches would become MPLS switches while
the MPLS traffic would be encapsulated according to this
specification, and would be forwarded based on network layer routing
information.
The keywords MUST, MUST NOT, MAY, OPTIONAL, REQUIRED, RECOMMENDED,
SHALL, SHALL NOT, SHOULD, SHOULD NOT are to be interpreted as
defined in RFC 2119.
2. Terminology
LSR
A Label Switching Router (LSR) is a device which implements the
label switching control and forwarding components described in
[ARCH].
LC-FR
A label switching controlled Frame Relay (LC-FR) interface is a
Frame Relay interface controlled by the label switching control
component. Packets traversing such an interface carry labels in
the DLCI field.
FR-LSR
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A FR-LSR is an LSR with one or more LC-FR interfaces which
forwards frames onto these interfaces using labels carried in
the DLCI field.
FR-LSR cloud
A FR-LSR cloud is a set of FR-LSRs which are mutually
interconnected by LC-FR interfaces.
Edge Set
The Edge Set of an FR-LSR cloud is the set of LSRs which are
connected to the cloud by LC-FR interfaces.
3. Special characteristics of Frame Relay Switches
While the label switching architecture permits considerable
flexibility in LSR implementation, a FR-LSR is constrained by the
capabilities of the (possibly pre-existing) hardware and the
restrictions on such matters as frame format imposed by the
Multiprotocol Interconnect over Frame Relay [MIFR], or Frame Relay
standards (Q.922, etc). Because of these constraints, some special
procedures are required for FR-LSRs.
Some of the key features of Frame Relay switches that affects their
behavior as LSRs are:
- the label swapping function is performed on fields (DLCI) in the
frame's Frame Relay data link header; this dictates the size and
placement of the label(s) in a packet. The size of the DLCI
field can be 10 (default), 17, or 23 bits, and it can span two,
or four bytes in the header.
- congestion control is performed by each node based on parameters
that are passed at circuit creation. Flags in the frame headers
may be set as a consequence of congestion, or exceeding the
contractual parameters of the circuit.
- although in a standard switch it may be possible to configure
multiple input DLCIs to one output DLCI resulting in a
multipoint-to-point circuit, multipoint-to-multipoint VCs are
generally not fully supported.
- there is generally no capability to perform a `TTL-decrement'
function as is performed on IP headers in routers.
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This document describes ways of applying label switching to Frame
Relay switches which work within these constraints.
4. Label Switching Control Component for Frame Relay
To support label switching a Frame Relay Switch MUST implement the
control component of label switching. This consists primarily of
label allocation and maintenance procedures. Label binding
information MAY be communicated by several mechanisms, one of which
is the Label Distribution Protocol (LDP) [LDP].
Since the label switching control component uses information learned
directly from network layer routing protocols, this implies that the
switch MUST participate as a peer in these protocols (e.g., OSPF,
IS-IS).
In some cases, LSRs may use other protocols (e.g. RSVP, PIM, BGP) to
distribute label bindings. In these cases, a Frame Relay LSR should
participate in these protocols.
In the case where Frame Relay circuits are established via LDP, or
RSVP, or others, with no involvement from traditional Frame Relay
mechanisms, it is assumed that circuit establishing contractual
information such as input/output maximum frame size,
incoming/outgoing requested/agreed throughput, incoming/outgoing
acceptable throughput, incoming/outgoing burst size,
incoming/outgoing frame rate, used in transmitting, and congestion
control MAY be passed to the FR-LSRs through RSVP, or can be
statically configured. It is also assumed that congestion control and
frame header flagging as a consequence of congestion, would be done
by the FR-LSRs in a similar fashion as for traditional Frame Relay
circuits. With the goal of emulating a best-effort router as default,
the default VC parameters, in the absence of LDP, RSVP, or other
mechanisms participation to setting such parameters, should be zero
CIR, so that input policing will set the DE bit in incoming frames,
but no frames are dropped..
Control and state information for the circuits based on MPLS MAY be
communicated through LDP.
Support of label switching on a Frame Relay switch requires
conformance only to FRF 1.1 (framing, bit-stuffing, headers, FCS)
except for section 2.3 (PVC control signaling procedures, aka LMI).
Q.933 signaling for PVCs and/or SVCs is not required. PVC and/or SVC
signaling may be used for non-MPLS (standard Frame Relay) PVCs and/or
SVCs when both are running on the same interface as MPLS, as
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discussed in the next section.
4.1 Hybrid Switches (Ships in the Night)
The existence of the label switching control component on a Frame
Relay switch does not preclude the ability to support the Frame Relay
control component defined by the ITU and Frame Relay Forum on the
same switch and the same interfaces (NICs). The two control
components, label switching and those defined by ITU/Frame Relay
Forum, would operate independently.
Definition of how such a device operates is beyond the scope of this
document. However, only a small amount of information needs to be
consistent between the two control components, such as the portions
of the DLCI space which are available to each component.
5. Label Encapsulation
By default, all labeled packets should be transmitted with the
generic label encapsulation as defined in [STACK], using the frame
relay null encapsulation mechanism. The labels implicitly encode the
network protocol type, consequently those particular labels cannot be
used with other network protocols. Rules regarding the construction
of the label stack, and error messages returned to the frame source
are also described in [STACK].
0 1 (Octets)
+-----------------------+-----------------------+
(Octets)0 | |
/ Q.922 Address /
/ (length 'n' equals 2 or 4) /
| |
+-----------------------+-----------------------+
n | . |
/ . /
/ MPLS packet /
| . |
+-----------------------+-----------------------+
"n" is the length of the Q.922 Address which can be 2 or 4
octets.
The Q.922 representation of a DLCI (in canonical order - the
first bit is stored in the least significant, i.e., the right-
most bit of a byte in memory) [CANON]is the following:
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7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 (bit order)
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
(octet) 0 | DLCI(high order) | 0 | 0 |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
1 | DLCI(low order) | 0 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
10 bits DLCI
7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 (bit order)
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
(octet) 0 | DLCI(high order) | 0 | 0 |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
1 | DLCI | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
2 | DLCI(low order) | 0 |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
3 | unused (set to 0) | 1 | 1 |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
17 bits DLCI
7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 (bit order)
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----00
(octet) 0 | DLCI(high order) | 0 | 0 |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----
1 | DLCI | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
2 | DLCI | 0 |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
3 | DLCI (low order) | 0 | 1 |
+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+-----+
23 bits DLCI
The generic encapsulation contains n labels for a label stack of depth
n, where the top stack entry carries significant values with the
exception of the label which is carried in the DLCI field of the Frame
Relay data link header encoded in Q.922 address format.
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6. Frame Relay Label Switching Processing
6.1 Use of DLCIs
Label switching is accomplished by associating labels with routes and
using the label value to forward packets, including determining the
value of any replacement label. See [ARCH] for further details. In a
FR-LSR, the current (top) MPLS label is carried in the DLCI field of
the Frame Relay data link layer header of the frame. The top label
carries implicitly information about the network protocol type.
For two connected FR-LSRs, a full-duplex connection must be available
for LDP. The DLCI for the LDP VC is assigned a value by way of
configuration, similar to configuring the DLCI used to run IP routing
protocols between the switches.
With the exception of this configured value, the DLCI values used for
MPLS in the two directions of the link may be treated as belonging to
two independent spaces, i.e. VCs may be half-duplex, each direction
with its own DLCI. In case of DLCI aggregation (DLCI space
conservation), half-duplex (unidirectional) VCs are desired, since a
"many to few" aggregation is possible in one direction but not in
reverse.
The allowable ranges of DLCIs are always communicated through LDP.
Note that the range of DLCIs used for labels depends on the size of
the DLCI field.
6.2 Hybrid LSPs
If <LSR1, LSR2, LSR3> is an LSP, it is possible that LSR1 will use
one encoding of the label stack when transmitting packet P to LSR2,
but LSR2 will use a different encoding when transmitting a packet P
to LSR3. In general, the MPLS architecture supports LSPs with
different label stack encodings used on different hops. When a
labeled packet is received, the LSR must decode it to determine the
current value of the label stack, then must operate on the label
stack to determine the new label value of the stack, and then encode
the new value appropriately before transmitting the labeled packet to
its next hop.
Naturally there will be MPLS networks which contain a combination of
Frame Relay switches operating as LSRs, and other LSRs which operate
using an other MPLS encapsulations, such as MPLS shim header, or ATM
encapsulation. In such networks there may be some LSRs which have
Frame Relay interfaces as well as "MPLS Shim" interfaces. This is one
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example of an LSR with different label stack encodings on different
hops of the same LSP. Such an LSR may swap off a Frame Relay encoded
label on an incoming interface and replace it with a label encoded
into an MPLS shim header on the outgoing interface.
6.3 Frame Relay Label Switching Loop Prevention and Control
FR-LSRs MUST use diffusion computation for loop prevention [ARCH].
6.3.1 FR-LSRs Loop Control - MPLS TTL processing
The MPLS TTL encoded in the MPLS label stack is a mechanism used to:
(a) suppress loops;
(b) limit the scope of a packet.
When a packet travels along an LSP, it should emerge with the same
TTL value that it would have had if it had traversed the same
sequence of routers without having been label switched. If the
packet travels along a hierarchy of LSPs, the total number of LSR-
hops traversed should be reflected in its TTL value when it emerges
from the hierarchy of LSPs [ARCH].
The initial value of the MPLS TTL is loaded into a newly pushed label
stack entry from the previous TTL value, whether that is from the
network layer header when no previous label stack existed, or from a
pre-existent lower level label stack entry.
A FR-LSR switching same level labeled packets does not decrement the
MPLS TTL. A sequence of such FR-LSR is a "non-TTL segment".
When a packet emerges from a "non-TTL LSP segment", it should however
reflect in the TTL the number of LSR-hops it traversed. In the
unicast case, this can be achieved by propagating a meaningful LSP
length or LSP segment length to the FR-LSR ingress nodes, enabling
the ingress to decrement the TTL value before forwarding packets into
a non-TTL LSP segment [ARCH].
When an ingress FR-LSR determines upon decrementing the MPLS TTL that
a particular packet's TTL will expire before the packet reaches the
egress of the "non-TTL LSP segment", the FR-LSR MUST not label switch
the packet, but rather follow the specifications in [STACK] in an
attempt to return an error message to the packet's source.
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6.4 Label Processing by Ingress FR-LSRs
When a packet first enters an MPLS domain, the packet is forwarded by
normal network layer forwarding operations with the exception that
the outgoing encapsulation will include an MPLS label stack [STACK]
with at least one entry. The frame relay null encapsulation will
carry information about the network layer protocol implicitly in the
label, which MUST be associated only with that network protocol. The
TTL field in the top label stack entry is filled with the network
layer TTL (or hop limit) resulted after network layer forwarding
[STACK]. The further FR-LSR processing is similar in both possible
cases:
(a) the LSP is Frame Relay only, and the FR-LSR is the ingress.
(b) the LSP is hybrid -- Frame Relay, PPP, Ethernet, ATM, etc...
segments form the LSP -- and the FR-LSR is the ingress into a Frame
Relay segment.
The MPLS TTL SHOULD be decremented with the number of hops of the
Frame Relay LSP, or Frame Relay segment of the LSP, minus one. An LDP
constructing the LSP SHOULD pass meaningful information to the
ingress FR-LSR regarding the number of hops of the "non-TTL segment".
Next, the MPLS encapsulated packet is passed down to the Frame Relay
data link driver with the top label as output DLCI. The Frame Relay
frame carrying the MPLS encapsulated packet is forwarded onto the
Frame Relay VC to the next LSR.
6.5 Label Processing by Core FR-LSRs
In a FR-LSR, the current (top) MPLS label is carried in the DLCI
field of the Frame Relay data link layer header of the frame. Just as
in conventional Frame Relay, for a frame arriving at an interface,
the DLCI carried by the Frame Relay data link header is looked up in
the DLCI Information Base, replaced with the correspondent output
DLCI, and transmitted on the outgoing interface (forwarded to the
next hop node).
The current label information is also carried in the top of the label
stack. In the top level entry, all fields except the label
information, which is carried and switched in the Frame Relay frame
data link-layer header, are of current significance.
6.6 Label Processing by Egress FR-LSRs
When reaching the end of a Frame Relay LSP, the FR-LSR pops the label
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stack [FRAMEW],[ARCH]. If the label popped is the last label, it is
necessary to determine the particular network layer protocol which is
being carried. The label stack carries no explicit information to
identify the network layer protocol. This must be inferred from the
value of the label which is popped from the stack.
If the label popped is not the last label, the previous current MPLS
TTL is propagated to the new current label stack entry.
If the FR-LSR is the egress switch of a Frame Relay segment of a
hybrid LSP, and the end of the Frame Relay segment is not the end of
the LSP, the MPLS packet will be processed for forwarding onto the
next segment of the LSP based on the information held in the Next Hop
Label Forwarding Entry (NHLFE) [ARCH]. The output label is set to the
value from the NHLFE, and the MPLS TTL is decremented by 1 [STACK].
Further, the MPLS packet is forwarded according to the MPLS
specifications for the particular link of the next segment of the
LSP.
7. Label Allocation and Maintenance Procedures
A possible scenario for the label allocation and maintenance for FR-
LSRs is the following:
7.1 Edge LSR Behavior
Consider a member of the Edge Set of a FR-LSR cloud. Assume that, as
a result of its routing calculations, it selects a FR-LSR as the next
hop of a certain route, and that the next hop is reachable via a LC-
Frame Relay interface. The Edge LSR uses a specific LDP request for a
label binding from the next hop. The hop count field in the request
is set to 1. Once the Edge LSR receives the label binding
information, the label is used as an outgoing label. The binding
received by the edge LSR may contain a hop count, which represents
the number of hops a packet will take to cross the FR-LSR cloud when
using this label.
When a member of the Edge Set of the FR-LSR cloud receives a label
binding request from a FR-LSR, it allocates a label, creates a new
entry in its Label Information Base (LIB), places that label in the
incoming label component of the entry, and returns (via LDP) a
binding containing the allocated label back to the peer that
originated the request. It sets the hop count in the binding to 1.
When a routing calculation causes an Edge LSR to change the next hop
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for a route, and the former next hop was in the FR-LSR cloud, the
Edge LSR should notify the former next hop (via LDP) that the label
binding associated with the route is no longer needed.
When a Frame Relay-LSR receives (via LDP) a label binding request for
a certain route from a peer connected to the FR-LSR over a LC-FR
interface, the FR-LSR takes the following actions:
- it allocates a label, creates a new entry in its Label
Information Base (LIB), and places that label in the incoming
label component of the entry;
- it requests (via LDP) a label binding from the next hop for
that route;
- it returns (via LDP) a binding containing the allocated
incoming label back to the peer that originated the request.
The hop count field in the request that the FR-LSR sends (to the next
hop LSR) is set to the hop count field in the request that it
received from the upstream LSR plus one. Once the FR-LSR receives
the binding from the next hop, it places the label from the binding
into the outgoing label component of the LIB entry.
The FR-LSR may choose to wait for the request to be satisfied from
downstream before returning the binding upstream (a "conservative"
approach). In this case, the FR-LSR increments the hop count it
received from downstream and uses this value in the binding it
returns upstream.
Alternatively, the FR-LSR may return the binding upstream without
waiting for a binding from downstream (an "optimistic" approach). In
this case, it uses a reserved value for hop count in the binding,
indicating that it is unknown. The correct value for hop count will
be returned later, as described below.
Since both the conservative and the optimistic approach has
advantages and disadvantages, this is left as an implementation
choice.
Note that a FR-LSR, or a member of the edge set of a FR-LSR cloud,
may receive multiple binding requests for the same route from the
same FR-LSR. It must generate a new binding for each request
(assuming adequate resources to do so), and retain any existing
binding(s). For each request received, a FR-LSR should also generate
a new binding request toward the next hop for the route.
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When a routing calculation causes a FR-LSR to change the next hop for
a route, the FR-LSR should notify the former next hop (via LDP) that
the label binding associated with the route is no longer needed.
When a LSR receives a notification that a particular label binding is
no longer needed, the LSR may deallocate the label associated with
the binding, and destroy the binding. In the case where a FR-LSR
receives such notification and destroys the binding, it should notify
the next hop for the route that the label binding is no longer
needed. If a LSR does not destroy the binding, it may re-use the
binding only if it receives a request for the same route with the
same hop count as the request that originally caused the binding to
be created.
When a route changes, the label bindings are re-established from the
point where the route diverges from the previous route. LSRs
upstream of that point are (with one exception, noted below)
oblivious to the change. Whenever a LSR changes its next hop for a
particular route, if the new next hop is a FR-LSR or a member of the
edge set reachable via a LC-FR interface, then for each entry in its
LIB associated with the route the LSR should request (via LDP) a
binding from the new next hop.
When a FR-LSR receives a label binding from a downstream neighbor, it
may already have provided a corresponding label binding for this
route to an upstream neighbor, either because it is operating
optimistically or because the new binding from downstream is the
result of a routing change. In this case, it should extract the hop
count from the new binding and increment it by one. If the new hop
count is different from that which was previously conveyed to the
upstream neighbor (including the case where the upstream neighbor was
given the value `unknown') the FR-LSR must notify the upstream
neighbor of the change. Each FR-LSR in turn increments the hop count
and passes it upstream until it reaches the ingress Edge LSR.
Whenever a FR-LSR originates a label binding request to its next hop
LSR as a result of receiving a label binding request from another
(upstream) LSR, and the request to the next hop LSR is not satisfied,
the FR-LSR should destroy the binding created in response to the
received request, and notify the requester (via LDP).
When a LSR determines that it has lost its LDP session with another
LSR, the following actions are taken. Any binding information
learned via this connection must be discarded. For any label
bindings that were created as a result of receiving label binding
requests from the peer, the LSR may destroy these bindings (and
deallocate labels associated with these binding).
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7.2 Efficient use of label space - Merging FR-LSRs
The above discussion assumes that an edge LSR will request one label
for each prefix in its routing table that has a next hop in the FR-
LSR cloud. In fact, it is possible to significantly reduce the number
of labels needed by having the edge LSR request instead one label for
several routes. Use of many-to-one mappings between routes (address
prefixes) and labels using the notion of Forwarding Equivalence
Classes (as described in [ARCH]) provides a mechanism to conserve the
number of labels.
Note that conserving label space may be restricted in case the frame
traffic requires Frame Relay fragmentation. The issue is that Frame
Relay fragments must be transmitted in sequence, i.e. fragments of
distinct frames must not be interleaved. If the fragmenting FR-LSR
ensures the transmission in sequence of all fragments of a frame,
without interleaving with fragments of other frames, then label
conservation (aggregation) can be performed.
In the case where the label space is to be conserved, it is desirable
to use half-duplex (unidirectional) VCs, since a "many to few"
aggregation is possible in one direction but not in reverse.
8. Security Considerations
This section looks at the security aspects of:
(a) frame traffic
(b) label distribution.
MPLS encapsulation has no effect on authenticated or encrypted
network layer packets, that is IP packets that are authenticated or
encrypted will incur no change.
The MPLS protocol has no mechanisms of its own to protect against
misdirection of packets or the impersonation of an LSR by accident or
malicious intent.
Altering by accident or forgery an existent label in the DLCI field
of the Frame Relay data link layer header of a frame or one or more
fields in a potentially following label stack affects the forwarding
of that frame.
The label distribution mechanism can be secured by applying the
appropriate level of security to the underlying protocol carrying
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label information - authentication or encryption - see [LDP].
9. Acknowledgments
This document is derived from the Label Switching over ATM document
[ATM].
Thanks for the extensive reviewing and constructive comments from (in
alphabetical order) Dan Harrington, Milan Merhar, Martin Mueller.
Also thanks to E. Gray for his reviewing. More [TBD]
10. References
[MIFR] T. Bradley, C. Brown, A. Malis "Multiprotocol Interconnect
over Frame Relay" <draft-ietf-ion-fr-update-03.txt>
[FRAMEW]"A Framework for Multiprotocol Label Switching" R.Callon et
al. <draft-ietf-mpls-framework-01.txt>
[ARCH] "Proposed Architecture for MPLS" in "draft-rosen-mpls-00.txt"
by E. Rosen, R. Callon, R. Vishwanathan.
[LDP] Label Distribution Protocol - work in progress.
[STACK] "Label Switching: Label Stack Encodings" "draft-mpls-label-
encaps-00.txt" by Rosen et al.
[ATM] "draft-davie-tag-switching-atm-01.txt" by Davie et al.
10.Authors' Addresses
Alex Conta
Lucent Technologies Inc.
300 Baker Ave, Suite 100
Concord, MA 01742
+1-508-287-2842
E-mail: aconta@lucent.com
Paul Doolan
Conta & Doolan & Malis Expires in six months [Page 15]
INTERNET-DRAFT Use of Label Switching With Frame RelayNovember 21, 1997
Ennovate Networks
330 Codman Hill Rd
Boxborough MA 01719
+1-978-263-2002
E-mail: pdoolan@ennovatenetworks.com
Andrew Malis
Ascend Communications, Inc
1 Robbins Rd
Westford, MA 01886
+1-978-952-7414
E-mail: malis@ascend.com
Conta & Doolan & Malis Expires in six months [Page 16]