Title: VROOM: Virtual ROuters On the Move
1VROOM Virtual ROuters On the Move
With Eric Keller (Princeton) Brian Biskeborn
(Princeton) Kobus van der Merwe (ATT Labs -
Research) Jennifer Rexford (Princeton)
2Virtual ROuters On the Move (VROOM)
- Key idea
- Routers should be free to roam around
- Useful for many different applications
- Simplify network maintenance
- Simplify service deployment and evolution
- Reduce power consumption
-
- Feasible in practice
- No performance impact on data traffic
- No visible impact on routing protocols
3VROOM The Basic Idea
- Virtual routers (VRs) form logical topology
1
4
3
2
physical router
5
virtual router
logical link
4VROOM The Basic Idea
- VR migration does not affect the logical topology
2
physical router
3
virtual router
1
logical link
4
5
5The Rest of the Talk is QA
- Why is VROOM a good idea?
- What are the challenges?
- Or it is just technically trivial?
- How does VROOM work?
- The migration process
- Is VROOM practical?
- Prototype system
- Performance evaluation
- Where to migrate?
- The scheduling problem
- Still have questions? Feel free to ask!
5
6The Coupling of Logical and Physical
- Today, the physical and logical configurations of
a router is tightly coupled - Physical changes break protocol adjacencies,
disrupt traffic - Logical configuration as a tool to reduce the
disruption - E.g., the cost-out/cost-in of IGP link weights
- Cannot eliminate the disruption
- Account for over 73 of network maintenance
events
7VROOM Separates the Logical and Physical
- Make a logical router instance migratable among
physical nodes - All logical configurations/states remain the same
before/after the migration - IP addresses remain the same
- Routing protocol configurations remain the same
- Routing-protocol adjacencies stay up
- No protocol (BGP/IGP) reconvergence
- Network topology stays intact
- No disruption to data traffic
8Case 1 Planned Maintenance
- Todays best practice cost-out/cost-in
- Router reconfiguration protocol reconvergence
- VROOM
- NO reconfiguration of VRs, NO reconvergence
PR-A
PR-B
9Case 1 Planned Maintenance
- Todays best practice cost-out/cost-in
- Router reconfiguration protocol reconvergence
- VROOM
- NO reconfiguration of VRs, NO reconvergence
PR-A
PR-B
10Case 1 Planned Maintenance
- Todays best practice cost-out/cost-in
- Router reconfiguration protocol reconvergence
- VROOM
- NO reconfiguration of VRs, NO reconvergence
PR-A
PR-B
11Case 2 Service Deployment Evolution
- Deploy a new service in a controlled test
network first
CE
CE
CE
Test network
Test network
Production network
Test network
12Case 2 Service Deployment Evolution
- Roll out the service to the production network
after it matures - VROOM guarantees seamless service to existing
customers during the roll-out and later evolution
Test network
Test network
Production network
Test network
13Case 3 Power Savings
- Big power consumption of routers
- Millions of Routers in the U.S.
- Electricity bill hundreds of millions/year
(Source National Technical Information Service,
Department of Commerce, 2000. Figures for 2005
2010 are projections.)
14Case 3 Power Savings
- Observation the diurnal traffic pattern
- Idea contract and expand the physical network
according to the traffic demand
15Case 3 Power Savings
Dynamically contract expand the physical
network in a day - 3PM
16Case 3 Power Savings
Dynamically contract expand the physical
network in a day - 9PM
17Case 3 Power Savings
Dynamically contract expand the physical
network in a day - 4AM
18Virtual Router Migration the Challenges
- Migrate an entire virtual router instance
- All control plane data plane processes / states
- Minimize disruption
- Data plane up to millions packets per second
- Control plane less stringent (w/ routing message
retrans.) - Migrate links
18
19Outline
- Why is VROOM a good idea?
- What are the challenges?
- How does VROOM work?
- The migration enablers
- The migration process
- What to be migrated?
- How? (in order to minimize disruption)
- Is VROOM practical?
- Where to migrate?
20VROOM Architecture
- Three enablers that make VR migration possible
- Router virtualization
- Control and data plane separation
- Dynamic interface binding
21A Naive Migration Process
- Freeze the virtual router
- Copy states
- Restart
- Migrate links
- Practically unacceptable
- Packet forwarding should not stop during migration
22VROOMs Migration Process
- Key idea separate the migration of control and
data plane - No data-plane interruption
- Low control-plane interruption
- Control-plane migration
- Data-plane cloning
- Link migration
22
23Control-Plane Migration
- Two things to be copied
- Router image
- Binaries, configuration files, etc.
- Memory
- 1st stage pre-copy
- 2nd stage stall-and-copy (when the control
plane is frozen)
2
1
time
t1
t2
t3
t4
pre-copy
stall-and-copy
1 router-image copy
2 memory copy
23
24Data-Plane Cloning
- Clone the data plane by repopulation
- Copying the data plane states is wasteful, and
could be hard - Instead, repopulate the new data plane using the
migrated control plane - The old data plane continues working during
migration
2
3
1
time
t1
t2
t3
t4
t5
1 router-image copy
2 memory copy
3 data-plane cloning
24
25Remote Control Plane
- The migrated control plane plays two roles
- Act as a remote control plane for the old data
plane - Populate the new data plane
2
3
1
time
t1
t2
t3
t4
t5
remote control plane
control plane
old node
new node
1 router-image copy
2 memory copy
3 data-plane cloning
25
26Keep the Control Plane Online
- Data-plane cloning takes time
- Around 110 us per FIB entry update (for high-end
router) - Installing 250k routes could take over 20 seconds
- The control plane needs connectivity during this
period - Redirect the routing messages through tunnels
P. Francios, et. al., Achieving sub-second IGP
convergence in large IP networks, ACM SIGCOMM
CCR, no. 3, 2005.
26
27Double Data Planes
- At the end of data-plane cloning, two data planes
are ready to forward traffic (i.e., double data
planes)
4
2
3
1
0
time
t1
t2
t3
t4
t5
t0
t6
remote control plane
control plane
old node
new node
old node
data plane
new node
0 tunnel setup
double data plane
1 router-image copy
2 memory copy
3 data-plane cloning
4 asynchronous link migration
27
28Asynchronous Link Migration
- With the double data planes, each link can be
migrated independently - Eliminate the need for a synchronization system
28
29Outline
- Why is VROOM a good idea?
- What are the challenges?
- How does VROOM work?
- Is VROOM practical?
- Prototype system
- Performance evaluation
- Where to migrate?
30Prototype Implementation
- PC OpenVZ
- OpenVZ OS-level virtualization
- Lighter-weight
- Supports live migration
- Two prototypes
- Software-based data plane (SD) Linux kernel
- Hardware-based data plane (HD) NetFPGA
- NetFPGA 4-port gigabit Ethernet PCI with an
FPGA - Why two prototypes?
- To validate the data-plane hypervisor design
(e.g., migration between SD and HD)
30
31The Out-of-box OpenVZ Approach
- Packets are forwarded inside each VE
- When a VE is being migrated, packets are dropped
31
32Control and Data Plane Separation
- Move the FIBs out of the VEs
- shadowd in each VE, pushing down route updates
- virtd in VE0, as the data-plane hypervisor
32
33Dynamic Interface Binding
- bindd provides two types of bindings
- Map substrate interfaces to the right FIB
- Map substrate interfaces to the right virtual
interfaces
33
34Putting It Altogether Realizing Migration
1. The migration program notifies shadowd about
the completion of the control plane migration
34
35Putting It Altogether Realizing Migration
2. shadowd requests zebra to resend all the
routes, and pushes them down to virtd
35
36Putting It Altogether Realizing Migration
3. virtd installs routes the new FIB, while
continuing to update the old FIB
36
37Putting It Altogether Realizing Migration
4. virtd notifies the migration program to start
link migration after finishing populating the new
FIB 5. After link migration is completed, the
migration program notifies virtd to stop updating
the old FIB
37
38Evaluation
- Answer three questions
- Performance of individual migration steps?
- Impact on data traffic?
- Impact on routing protocol?
- Experiments on Emulab
38
39Performance of Migration Steps
- Memory copy time
- With different numbers of routes (dump file
sizes)
39
40Performance of Migration Steps
- FIB population time
- Grows linearly w.r.t. the number of route entries
- Installing a FIB entry into NetFPGA 7.4
microseconds - Installing a FIB entry into Linux kernel 1.94
milliseconds
- FIB update time time for virtd to install
entries to FIB - Total time FIB update time time for shadowd
to send routes to virtd
40
41Data Plane Impact
- The diamond testbed
- 64-byte UDP packets, round-trip traffic
41
42Data Plane Impact
- HD router with separate migration bandwidth
- No delay increase or packet loss
- SD router with separate migration bandwidth
- Up to 3.7 delay increase at 5k packets/s
- Less than 0.4 delay increase at 25k packets/s
SD, 5k packets/s
42
43The Importance of Separate Migration Bandwidth
- The dumbbell testbed
- 250k routes in the RIB
43
44Separate Migration Bandwidth is Important
- Throughput of the migration traffic
44
45Separate Migration Bandwidth is Important
- Delay increase of the data traffic
45
46Separate Migration Bandwidth is Important
- Loss rate of the data traffic
46
47Control Plane Impact
- The Abilene testbed
- Assume a backbone running MPLS
- VR5 configured as
- Core router (running OSPF only)
- Edge router (running OSPF BGP)
47
48Core Router Migration
- No events during migration
- Average control plane downtime 0.972 seconds
(0.924 - 1.008 seconds in 10 runs) - Support 1-second OSPF hello-interval (with
4-second dead-interval) - Miss at most one hello message
48
49Core Router Migration
- Events happen during migration
- Introducing events (LSA) by flapping link VR2-VR3
- Miss at most one LSA
- Get retransmission 5 seconds later (the default
LSA retransmission-interval) - Can use smaller LSA retransmission-interval
(e.g., 1 second)
49
50Edge Router Migration
- 255k BGP routes OSPF
- Dump file size grows from 3.2MB to 76.0MB
- Average control plane downtime 3.560 seconds
(3.484 - 3.594 seconds in 10 runs) - Support 2-second OSPF hello-interval (with
8-second dead-interval) - BGP sessions stay up
- In practice, ISPs often use the default values
- 10-second hello-interval
- 40-second dead interval
50
51Outline
- Why is VROOM a good idea?
- What are the challenges?
- How does VROOM work?
- Is VROOM practical?
- Where to migrate?
52Deciding Where To Migrate
- Physical constraints
- Latency
- E.g, NYC to Washington D.C. 2 msec
- Link capacity
- Enough remaining capacity for extra traffic
- Platform compatibility
- Routers from different vendors
- Router capability
- E.g., number of access control lists (ACLs)
supported - Good news these constraints limit the search
space
53Two Optimization Problems
- For planned maintenance/service deployment
- Minimize path stretch
- With constraints on link capacity, platform
compatibility, router capability, etc. - For power savings
- Maximize power savings
- With different regional electricity prices
- With constraints on path stretch, link capacity,
etc.
53
54Conclusions
- VROOM offers a useful network-management
primitive - separates the tight coupling between physical and
logical - Simplify network management, enable new
applications - Live router migration with minimal disruption
- Data-plane hypervisor enables
- Data-plane cloning
- Remote control plane
- Double data plane and asynchronous link
migration - No data-plane disruption
- No visible control-plane disruption
55Thanks!
- Questions Comments Please!
56Backup Slides
57Packet-aware Access Network
58Packet-aware Access Network
- Pseudo-wires (virtual circuits) from CE to PE
PE
CE
P/G-MSS Packet-aware/Gateway Multi-Service
Switch MSE Multi-Service Edge
59Events During Migration
- Network failure during migration
- The old VR image is not deleted until the
migration is confirmed successful - Routing messages arrive during the migration of
the control plane - BGP TCP retransmission
- OSPF LSA retransmission
60Flexible Transport Networks
- Migrate links affixed to the virtual routers
- Enabled by programmable transport networks
- Long-haul links are reconfigurable
- Layer 3 point-to-point links are multi-hop at
layer 1/2
New York
Chicago
Programmable Transport Network
Washington D.C.
Multi-service optical switch (e.g., Ciena
CoreDirector)
60
61Requirements Enabling Technologies
- Migrate links affixed to the virtual routers
- Enabled by programmable transport networks
- Long-haul links are reconfigurable
- Layer 3 point-to-point links are multi-hop at
layer 1/2
New York
Chicago
Programmable Transport Network
Washington D.C.
Multi-service optical switch (e.g., Ciena
CoreDirector)
62Requirements Enabling Technologies
- Enable edge router migration
- Enabled by packet-aware access networks
- Access links are becoming inherently virtualized
- Customers connects to provider edge (PE) routers
via pseudo-wires (virtual circuits) - Physical interfaces on PE routers can be shared
by multiple customers
Dedicated physical interface per customer
Shared physical interface
63Link Migration in Transport Networks
- With programmable transport networks, long-haul
links are reconfigurable - IP-layer point-to-point links are multi-hop at
transport layer - VROOM leverages this capability in a new way to
enable link migration
63
64Link Migration in Flexible Transport Networks
- 2. With packet-aware transport networks
- Logical links share the same physical port
- Packet-aware access network (pseudo wires)
- Packet-aware IP transport network (tunnels)
64
65Power Consumption of Routers
- A Synthetic large tier-1 ISP backbone
- 50 POPs (Point-of-Presence)
- 20 major POPs, each has
- 6 backbone routers, 6 peering routers, 30 access
routers - 30 smaller POPs, each has
- 6 access routers
66Future Work
- Algorithms that solve the constrained
optimization problems - Control-plane hypervisor to enable cross-vendor
migration
66