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author | Dimitri Staessens <dimitri@ouroboros.rocks> | 2021-04-02 10:21:22 +0200 |
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committer | Dimitri Staessens <dimitri@ouroboros.rocks> | 2021-04-02 10:21:22 +0200 |
commit | 483b8cca480f8d249bb822351397a04fee07df50 (patch) | |
tree | 96e17ffd04f11b34c72092fec2d73f03d58a330c /content/en/blog | |
parent | d62a973817e2c75024f91f538126e12f5777a946 (diff) | |
download | website-483b8cca480f8d249bb822351397a04fee07df50.tar.gz website-483b8cca480f8d249bb822351397a04fee07df50.zip |
blog: Add post on uni/any/multicast
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-rw-r--r-- | content/en/blog/20210402-multicast.md | 479 |
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diff --git a/content/en/blog/20210402-multicast.md b/content/en/blog/20210402-multicast.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..38a71ee --- /dev/null +++ b/content/en/blog/20210402-multicast.md @@ -0,0 +1,479 @@ +--- +date: 2021-04-02 +title: "How does Ouroboros do anycast and multicast?" +linkTitle: "Does Ouroboros do (any,multi)-cast?" +description: > + Searching for the answer to the question: why do packet networks work? +author: Dimitri Staessens +--- + +``` +Nothing is as practical as a good theory + -- Kurt Lewin +``` + +How does Ouroboros handle routing and how is it different from the +Internet? How does it do multicast? That's a good subject for a blog +post! I assume the reader to be a bit knowledgeable about the Internet +Protocol (IP) suite. I limit this discussion to IPv4, but generally +speaking it's also applicable to IPv6. Hope you enjoy the read. + +Network communications is commonly split up into four classes based on +the delivery model of the message. If it is a single source sending to +a single receiver, it is called _unicast_. This is the way most of the +traffic on the Internet works: a packet is forwarded to a specific +destination IP address. This process is then called _unicast routing_. +If a sender is transmitting a message to _all_ nodes in a network, +it's called _broadcast_. To do this efficiently, the network will run +a bunch of protocols to construct some form of _spanning tree_ between +the nodes in the network a process referred to as _broadcast +routing_. If the destination is a specific set of receivers, it's +called _multicast_. Broadcast routing is augmented with a protocol to +create groups of nodes, the so-called multicast group, to again create +some form of a spanning tree between the group members, called +_multicast routing_. The last class is _anycast_, when the destination +of the communication is _any_ single member of a group, usually the +closest. + +Usually these concepts are explained in an Internet/IP setting where +the destinations are (groups of) IP addresses, but the concepts can +also be generalized towards the naming system: resolving a (domain) +name to a set of addresses, for instance, which can then be used in a +multicast implementation called _multidestination +routing_. Multidestination routing (i.e. specifying a bunch of +destination addresses in a packet) doesn't scale well. + +Can we contemplate other classes? Randomcast (sending to a random +destination)? Or stupidcast (sending to all destinations that don't +need to receive the message)? All kidding aside, the 4 classes above +are likely to be all the _sensible_ delivery models. + +### Conundrum, part I + +During the development of Ouroboros, it became clearer and clearer to +us that the distinction based on the delivery model is not a +_fundamental_ one. If I have to make a -- definitely imperfect -- +analogy, it's a bit like classifying animals by the number of eyes +they have. Where two eyes is unicast, more is multicast and composite +eyes broadcast. Now, it will tell you _something useful_ about the +animals if they are in the 2, multi or composite-eye class, but it's +not how biologists classify animals. Some animal orders -- spiders -- +have members with 2, 4, 6 and 8 eyes. There are deeper, more +meaningful distinctions that can be made on more fundamental grounds, +such as whether the species has a backbone or not, that traces back +their evolution. What are those fundamental differences for networks? + +Take a minute to contemplate the following little conundrum. Take a +network that is linear, e.g. + +``` +source - node - node - node - node - destination +``` + +and imagine observing a packet traveling over every _link_ on this +linear network, from source to destination. Was that communication +anycast, unicast, multicast or broadcast? Now this may seem like a +silly question, but it should become clearer why it's relevant, and -- +in fact -- fundamental. I will come back to this at the end of this +post. + +But first, let's have a look at how it's done, shall we? + +### Unicast + +This is the basics. IP routers will forward packets based on the +destination IP address (not in any special range) in their header to +the host (in effect: an interface) that has been assigned that IP +address. The forwarding is based on a forwarding table that is +constructed using some routing protocol (OSPF/IS-IS/BGP/...). I'll +assume you know how this works, and if not, there are plenty of online +resources on these protocols. + +On unicast in Ouroboros, I will be pretty brief: it operates in a +similar way as unicast IP: packets are forwarded to a destination +address, and the layer uses some algorithm to build a forwarding table +(or more general, a _forwarding function_). In the current +implementation, unicast is based on IS-IS link-state routing with +support for ECMP (equal-cost multipath). The core difference with IP +is that there are _no_ special case addresses: an address is _always_ +uniquely assigned to a single network node. To scale the layer, there +can be different _levels_ of (link-state) routing in a layer. It's +very interesting in its own right, but I'll focus on the _modus +operandi_ in this post, which is: packets get forwarded based on an +address. I'll take a more in-depth look into Ouroboros addressing in +(maybe the next) post (or you can find it in the +[paper](https://arxiv.org/abs/2001.09707). + +### Anycast + +IP anycast is a funny thing. It's pretty simple: it's just unicast, +but multiple nodes (interfaces) in the network have the same address, +and the shortest path algorithm used in the routing protocol will +forward the packet to the nearest node (interface) with that +address. The network is otherwise completely oblivious; there is no +such thing as an _anycast address_, it's a concept in the mind of +network engineers. + +Now, if your reaction is _that can't possibly work_, you're absolutely +right! Equal length paths can lead to _route flapping_, where some +packets would be delivered _over here_ and other packets _over +there_. That's why IP anycast is not something that _anyone_ can do. I +can't run this server somewhere in Germany and a clone of it in +Denver, and yet another clone in Singapore, and give them the same IP +address. IP anycast is therefore highly restricted to some select +cases, most notably DNS, NTP and some big Content Delivery Networks +(CDNs). There is a certain level of trust needed between BGP peers, +and BGP routers are monitored to remove routes that exhibit +flapping. In addition, NTP and DNS use protocols that are UDP-based +with a simple request-response mechanism, so sending subsequent +packets to a different server isn't a big problem. CDN providers go to +great _traffic engineering_ lengths to configure their peering +relations in such a way that the anycast routes are stable. IP anycast +"works" because there are a lot of assumptions and it's engineered -- +mostly through human interactions -- into a safe zone of +operations[^1]. In the case of DNS in particular, IP anycast is an +essential part of the Internet. Being close to a root DNS server +impacts response times! The alternative would be to specify a bunch of +alternate servers to try. But it's easier to remember +[9.9.9.9](https://www.quad9.net/) than a whole list of random IP +addresses where you have to figure out where they are! IP anycast also +offers some protection against network failures in case the closest +server becomes unreachable, but this benefit is relatively small as +the convergence times of the routing protocols (OSPF/BGP) are on the +order of minutes (and should be). That's why most hosts usually have 2 +DNS servers configured, because relying on anycast could mean a couple +of minutes without DNS. + +Now, about anycast in Ouroboros, I can again be brief: I won't allow +multiple nodes with the same address in a layer in the prototype, as +this doesn't _scale_. Anycast is supported by name resolution. A +service can be registered at different locations (addresses) and +resolving such a name will return a (subset of) address(es) from the +locations. If a flow allocation fails to the closest address, it can +be repeated to the next one. Name resolution is an inherent function +of a _unicast layer_, and currently implemented as a Distributed Hash +Table (DHT). When joining a network (we call this operation +_enrolment_, Kademlia calls it _join_), a list of known DHT node +addresses is passed. The DHT stores its <name, address> entries +in multiple locations (in the prototype this number is 8) and the +randomness of the DHT hash assignment in combination with caching +ensures the _proximity_ of the most popular lookups with reasonable +probability. + +### Broadcast + +IP broadcast is also a funny thing, as it's not really IP that's doing +the broadcasting. It's a coating of varnish on top of _layer 2_ +broadcast. So let's first look at Ethernet broadcast. + +Ethernet broadcast does what you would expect from a broadcasting +solution. Note that switched Ethernets are confined to a loop-free +topology by grace of the (Rapid) Spanning-Tree Protocol. A message to +the reserved MAC address FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF will be _broadcasted_ by +every intermediate Layer 2 node to all nodes (interfaces) that are +connected on that Ethernet segment. If VLANs are defined, the +broadcast is confined to all nodes (interfaces) on that +VLAN. Quite nice, no objections _your honor_! + +The semantics of IP broadcast are related to the scope of the +underlying _layer 2_ network. An IP broadcast address is the last "IP +address" in a _subnet_. So, for instance, in the 192.168.0.0/255 +subnet, the IP broadcast address is 192.168.0.255. When sending a +datagram to that IP broadcast destination, the Ethernet layer will be +sending it to FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF, and every node _on that Ethernet_ +which has an IP address in the 192.168.0.0/24 network will receive it. +You'd be forgiven to think that an IP broadcast to 255.255.255.255 +should be spread to every host on the Internet, but for obvious +reasons that's not the case. The semantic of 0.0.0.0/0 is to mean your +own local IP subnet on that specific interface. The DHCP protocol, for +instance, makes use of this. A last thing to mention is that, in +theory, you could send IP broadcast messages to a _different_ subnet, +but few routers allows this, because it invites some very obvious +[smurf attacks](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smurf_attack). +Excuse me for finding it more than mildly amusing that standards +originally +[_required_](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2644) +routers to forward directed broadcast packets! + +So, in practice,IP broadcast is a _passthrough_ interface towards +layer 2 (Ethernet, Wi-Fi, ...) broadcast. + +In Ouroboros -- like in Ethernet -- broadcast is a rather simple +affair. It is facilitated by the _broadcast layer_, for which each +node implements a _broadcast function_: what comes in on one flow, +goes out on all others. The implementation is a stateless layer that +-- also like Ethernet -- requires the graph to be a tree. But it has +no addresses -- in fact, it doesn't even have a _header_ at all! +Access control is part of _enrolment_, where participants in the +broadcast layer get read and/or write access to the broadcast layer +based on credentials. Every message on a broadcast layer is actually +broadcast. This is the only way -- at least that I know of -- to make +a broadcast layer _scaleable_ to billions of receivers![^2] + +So here is the first clue to the answer to the little conundrum at the +beginning of this post. The Ouroboros model makes a distinction +between _unicast layers_ and _broadcast layers_, based on the _nature +of the algorithm_ applied to the message. If it's based on a +_destination address_ in the message, we call the algorithm +_FORWARDING_, and if it's sending on all interfaces except the +incoming one, we call the algorithm _FLOODING_. + +An application like 'ping', where one broadcasts a message to a bunch +of remotes, and each one responds back requires _both_ a broadcast +layer and a unicast layer of (at least) the same size, with the 'ping' +application using both[^3]. Tools like _ping_ and _traceroute_ and +_nmap_ are administrative tools which reveal network information. They +should only be available to _administrators_. + +It's not prohibited to implement an IPCP that does both broadcast (to +the complete layer) and unicast. In fact, the unicast IPCP in the +prototype in some sense does it, as we only figured out broadcast +layers _after_ we implemented the link-state protocol, which is +effectively broadcasting link-state messages within the unicast +layer. All it would take is to implement the _flow\_join()_ API in the +unicast IPCP and send those packets like we send Link-State +Messages. But I won't do it, for a number of reasons: the first is +that it is rare to have broadcast layers and unicast layers to be +exactly the same size. Usually broadcast layers will be much +smaller. The second is that, in the current implementation, the +link-state messages are stateful: they have the source address and a +sequence number to be able to deal with loops in the meshed +topology. This doesn't scale to the _full_ unicast layer. To create a +scaleable _do-both-unicast-and-broadcast_ layer, it would require to +create a "virtual tree-topology-network" within the unicast layer, +which is adjacency management. This would require an adjacency +management module (running something like a hypothetical RSTP that is +able to scale to billions of nodes) as part of the unicast +IPCP. Adjacency management is functionality that was removed -- we +called it the _graph adjaceny manager_ and the logic put _outside_ of +the IPCP and replaced with a _connect_ API so it could be scripted as +part of network management. And the third, and most important, is +that we like the prototype to reflect the _model_, as it is more +educational. Unicast layers and broadcast layers _are_ different +layers. Always have been, and always will be. Combining them in an +implementation only obfuscates this fact. To make a long (and probably +confusing) story short, combining unicast and broadcast in a single +IPCP _can_ be done, but at present I don't see any real benefit in +doing it, and I'm pretty sure it will be hard to avoid +[_making a mess_](https://www.cs.utexas.edu/users/EWD/transcriptions/EWD13xx/EWD1304.html) +out of it. + +This transitions us nicely into multicast. Because combining unicast +and multicast in the same layer is exactly what IP tries to do. + +### Multicast + +Before looking at IP, let's first have a look at how one would do +multicast in Ethernet, because it's simpler. + +The simplest way to achieve multicast within Ethernet 802.1Q is using +a VLAN: Configure VLANs on the end hosts and switch, and then just +broadcast packets on that VLAN. The Ethernet II (MAC) frame will look +like this: + +``` ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +| FF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF | SRC | 0x8100 | TCI | Ethertype | .. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +``` + +The 0x8100 _en lieu_ of the Ethertype specifies that it's a VLAN, the +Tag Control Information (TCI) has 12 bits that specify a VLAN ID, so +one can have 4096 parallel VLANs. There are two fields needed to +achieve the multicast nature of the communications: The destination +set to the broadcast address, and a VLAN ID that will only be assigned +to members of the group. + +Now, it won't come as a surprise to you, but IP multicast _is_ a funny +thing. The gist of it is that there are protocols that do group +management and protocols that assist in building a (spanning) tree. +There is a range of IP addresses, 224.0.0.0 -- 239.255.255.255 (or in +binary: starting with the 1110), called _class D_, which are only +allowed as destination addresses. This _class D_ is further subdivided +in different ranges for different functionalities, such as +source-specific multicast. An IPv4 multicast packet can be +distinguished by a single field: a destination address in the _class +D_ range. + +If we compare this with Ethernet above, the _class D_ IP address is +behaving more like the VLAN ID than the destination MAC _address_. The +reason IP doesn't need an extra destination address is that the +_broadcast_ functionality is _implied_ by the _class D_ address range, +whereas a VLAN also supports unicast via MAC learning. + +Ethernet actually also has a special address range for multicast, +01:00:5E:00:00:00 to 01:00:5E:7F:FF:FF, that copies the last 23 bits +of the IP multicast address when that host joins the multicast +tree. The reasoning behind it is this: if there are multiple endpoints +for an IP multicast tree on the _same_ Ethernet segment, instead of +the IP router sending individual unicast messages to each of them, +that last "hop" can use a single Ethernet broadcast message. + +Next Ouroboros. From the discussion of the Ouroboros broadcast layer, +you probably already figured out how Ouroboros does multicast. The +same as broadcast! There is literally _zero_ difference. The only +difference between multicast and broadcast is in the eye of the +beholder when comparing a unicast layer and a broadcast layer. + +There is something else to remember about (Ouroboros) broadcast +layers: the broadcast function is _stateless_, and _all_ broadcast +IPCPs are _identical_ in function. The reason I mention this, is in +relation the problem that I just mentioned above. What if I have a +broadcast layer, for which a number of endpoints are also connected +over a _lower_ broadcast layer? Can we, like IP/Ethernet, leverage +this? And the answer is: no, there is no sharing of information +between layers, and broadcast layers have no state. But we don't +really need to! If there is a device with a broadcast IPCP in a lower +broadcast layer, just add a broadcast IPCP to the higher level +broadcast layer! It's not a matter of functionality, since the +functionality for the higher level broadcast layer is _exactly_ the +same as the lower one. + +While I am not eager to mix broadcast and unicast in a single IPCP +program, I have few objections for creating a single program that +behaves like multiple IPCPs of the same type. Especially for the +stateless broadcast IPCP it would be rather trivial to make a single +program that implements parallel broadcast IPCPs. And allowing +something like _sublayers_ (like VLANs, with a single tag) is also +something that can be considered for optimization purposes. + +### Conundrum, part II + +Now, let's look back at our little riddle, with a packet observed to +move from source to destination over a linear network. + +``` +source - node - node - node - node - destination +``` + +Now, if we pedantically apply the definition of one-to-one +communication given in most textbooks, it is unicast, since it has +only a single source and a single destination. But to know what's +going on at the routing level, can not be known. But I hope you gave +it some thought about what information you'd need to be _able to +tell_. + +Let's start with Ethernet. The Ethernet standard says that all MAC +addresses are unique, so it's not anycast, and there is no _real_ +difference between multicast and broadcast. So, if the address is not +the broadcast address or in some special range, it's _unicast_, else +it's multi/broadcast. But really? What if the nodes were hubs instead +of switches? + +What about IP? Bit harder. If it was anycast, it wouldn't have reached +the destination if there was another node with the same address in +this particular setup. But in a general IP network, it's not really +possible to tell the difference between unicast and anycast without +looking at all reachable node addresses. To know if it was broadcast +or multicast, it would suffice to know the destination address in the +packet. + +For Ouroboros, all you'd need to know what was going on is the type of +layer. To detect anycast, one would need to query the directory to +check if it returns a single or multiple destination addresses (since +we don't allow _anycast routing_), and, like Ethernet in a way, it +makes the distinction between multicast and broadcast rather moot. + +### The Ouroboros model + +In a nutshell, what does the Ouroboros model say? + +First, all communications is composed of either unicast or broadcast, +and these two types of communications are fundamentally different and +give rise to distinct types of layers. In a _unicast_ layer, nodes +implement _FORWARDING_, which moves packets based on a destination +address. In a _broadcast_ layer, nodes implement _FLOODING_, which +sends incoming packets out on all links except for the incoming link. + +If we leave out the physical layer (wiring, spectrum tuning etc), +constructing a layer goes through 2 phases: adding a node to a network +layer (enrolment) and adding links (by which I mean allowed +adjacencies) between that node and other members of the layer +(adjacency management). After this the node becomes active in the +network. During enrolment, nodes can be authenticated and permissions +are acquired such as read/write access. Both types of layers go +through this phase. A unicast layer, may, in addition, periodically +disseminate information that enables _FORWARDING_. We call this +dissemination function _ROUTING_, but if you know a better word that +avoids confusion, we'll take it. _ROUTING_ is distinct from adjancy +management, in the sense that adjancy management is administrative, +and tells the networks which links it is allowed to use, which links +_exist_. _ROUTING- will make use of these links and make decisions +when they are unavailable, for instance due to failures. + +Let's apply the Ouroboros model to Ethernet. Ethernet implements both +types of layers. Enrolment and topology management are taken care of +by the _spanning tree protocol_. It might be tempting to think that +STP does _only_ topology management, but that's not really the +case. Just add a new _root bridge_ to an Ethernet network: at some +point, that network will go down completely. The default operation of +Ethernet is as a _broadcast layer_: the default function applied to a +packet is _FLOODING_. To allow unicast, Ethernet implements _ROUTING_ +via _MAC learning_. MAC learning is thus a highly specific routing +protocol, that piggybacks its dissemination information on user +frames, and calculates the forwarding tables based on the knowledge +that the underlying topology is a _tree_. This brings a caveat: it +only detects sending interfaces. If there are receivers on an Ethernet +that never send a frame (but for which the senders know the MAC +address), that traffic will always be broadcast. And in any case, the +_first_ packet will always be broadcast. + +Next, VLAN. In Ouroboros speak, a VLAN is an implementation detail +(important, of course) to logically combine parallel Ethernets. VLANs +are independent layers, and indeed, must be enrolled (VLAN IDs set on +bridge interfaces) and will keep their own states of (R)STP and MAC +learning. Without VLAN, Ethernet is thus a single broadcast layer and +a single multicast layer. With VLAN, Ethernet is potentially 4096 +broadcast layers and 4096 unicast layers. + +If we apply the Ouroboros model to IP, we again see that IP tries to +implement both unicast and broadcast. A lot is configured +manually. Enrolment and adjacency management are basically assigning +IP addresses and, in addition, adding BGP routes and rules. IP has two +levels of _ROUTING_, one is inside an autonomous system using +link-state protocols such as OSPF, and on top there is BGP, which is +disseminating routes as path vectors. Multicast in IP is building a +broadcast layer, which is identified using a "multicast address", +which is really the name of that broadcast layer. Enrolment into this +virtual broadcast layer is handled via protocols such as IGMP, with +adjacencies managed in many possible ways that involve calculating +spanning trees based on internal topology information from OSPF or +other means. The tree is then grafted into the routing table by +labeling outgoing interfaces with the name of the broadcast +layer. Yes, _that_ is what adding a multicast destination address to +an IP forwarding table is _really_ doing! It's just hidden in plain +sight! + +Now, my claim is that the Ouroboros model can be applied to _any_ +packet network technology. To conclude this post, let's take a real +tricky one: Multi-Protocol Label Switching (MPLS). + +MPLS looks very different from Ethernet and IP. It doesn't have +addresses at all, but uses _labels_, and it can swap and stack labels. + +Now, surely, MPLS doesn't fit the unicast layer, which says that every +node gets an address, and forwards based on the destination address. +Here's the solution to MPLS: it is a set of broadcast layers! The +labels are a distributed way of identifying the layer _by its links_, +instead of a single identifier for the whole layer, like a VLAN or a +multicast IP address. RSVP / LDP (and their traffic engineering -TE +cousins) are protocols that do enrolment and adjancy management. + +I hope this gave you a bit of an insight into the Ouroboros view of +the world. Course materials on computer networks consist of a +compendium of technologies and _how_ they work. The Ouroboros model is +an attempt to figure out _why_ they work. + +Stay curious. + +Dimitri + + +[^1]: I'm sure someone has or will propose some AI to solve it. + +[^2]: Individual links on a broadcast layer can be protected with + retransmission and using multi-path routing in the underlying + unicast layer. + +[^3]: Now that I'm writing this, I put it on my todo list to + implement this into the oping application. |