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RFC2622 - Routing Policy Specification Language (RPSL)

王朝other·作者佚名  2008-05-31
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Network Working Group C. Alaettinoglu

Request for Comments: 2622 USC/Information Sciences Institute

Obsoletes: 2280 C. Villamizar

Category: Standards Track Avici Systems

E. Gerich

At Home Network

D. Kessens

Qwest Communications

D. Meyer

University of Oregon

T. Bates

Cisco Systems

D. Karrenberg

RIPE NCC

M. Terpstra

Bay Networks

June 1999

Routing Policy Specification Language (RPSL)

Status of this Memo

This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the

Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for

improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet

Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state

and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Copyright Notice

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999). All Rights Reserved.

Abstract

RPSL allows a network operator to be able to specify routing policies

at various levels in the Internet hierarchy; for example at the

Autonomous System (AS) level. At the same time, policies can be

specified with sufficient detail in RPSL so that low level router

configurations can be generated from them. RPSL is extensible; new

routing protocols and new protocol features can be introdUCed at any

time.

Table of Contents

1 Introduction 3

2 RPSL Names, Reserved Words, and Representation 4

3 Contact Information 7

3.1 mntner Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

3.2 person Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10

3.3 role Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11

4 route Class 12

5 Set Classes 13

5.1 as-set Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14

5.2 route-set Class. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15

5.3 Predefined Set Objects . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17

5.4 Filters and filter-set Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17

5.5 rtr-set Class. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

5.6 Peerings and peering-set Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24

6 aut-num Class 27

6.1 import Attribute: Import Policy Specification . . . . . . . 27

6.1.1 Action Specification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28

6.2 eXPort Attribute: Export Policy Specification . . . . . . . 29

6.3 Other Routing Protocols, Multi-Protocol Routing Protocols,

and Injecting Routes Between Protocols . . . . . . . . . . . . 29

6.4 Ambiguity Resolution . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31

6.5 default Attribute: Default Policy Specification . . . . . . 33

6.6 Structured Policy Specification. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33

7 dictionary Class 37

7.1 Initial RPSL Dictionary and Example Policy Actions and

Filters. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41

8 Advanced route Class 45

8.1 Specifying Aggregate Routes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45

8.1.1Interaction with policies in aut-num class. . . . . . . . 49

8.1.2Ambiguity resolution with overlapping aggregates. . . . . 50

8.2 Specifying Static Routes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52

9 inet-rtr Class 52

10 Extending RPSL 54

10.1 Extensions by changing the dictionary class . . . . . . . . 54

10.2 Extensions by adding new attributes to existing classes . . 55

10.3 Extensions by adding new classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55

10.4 Extensions by changing the syntax of existing RPSL

attributes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55

11 Security Considerations 56

12 Acknowledgements 56

References 56

A Routing Registry Sites 59

B Grammar Rules 59

C Changes from RFC2280 67

D Authors' Addresses 68

Full Copyright Statement 69

1 Introduction

This memo is the reference document for the Routing Policy

Specification Language (RPSL). RPSL allows a network operator to be

able to specify routing policies at various levels in the Internet

hierarchy; for example at the Autonomous System (AS) level. At the

same time, policies can be specified with sufficient detail in RPSL

so that low level router configurations can be generated from them.

RPSL is extensible; new routing protocols and new protocol features

can be introduced at any time.

RPSL is a replacement for the current Internet policy specification

language known as RIPE-181 [6] or RFC-1786 [7]. RIPE-81 [8] was the

first language deployed in the Internet for specifying routing

policies. It was later replaced by RIPE-181 [6]. Through

operational use of RIPE-181 it has become apparent that certain

policies cannot be specified and a need for an enhanced and more

generalized language is needed. RPSL addresses RIPE-181's

limitations.

RPSL was designed so that a view of the global routing policy can be

contained in a single cooperatively maintained distributed database

to improve the integrity of Internet's routing. RPSL is not designed

to be a router configuration language. RPSL is designed so that

router configurations can be generated from the description of the

policy for one autonomous system (aut-num class) combined with the

description of a router (inet-rtr class), mainly providing router ID,

autonomous system number of the router, interfaces and peers of the

router, and combined with a global database mappings from AS sets to

ASes (as-set class), and from origin ASes and route sets to route

prefixes (route and route-set classes). The accurate population of

the RPSL database can help contribute toward such goals as router

configurations that protect against accidental (or malicious)

distribution of inaccurate routing information, verification of

Internet's routing, and aggregation boundaries beyond a single AS.

RPSL is object oriented; that is, objects contain pieces of policy

and administrative information. These objects are registered in the

Internet Routing Registry (IRR) by the authorized organizations. The

registration process is beyond the scope of this document. Please

refer to [1, 17, 4] for more details on the IRR.

In the following sections, we present the classes that are used to

define various policy and administrative objects. The "mntner" class

defines entities authorized to add, delete and modify a set of

objects. The "person" and "role" classes describes technical and

administrative contact personnel. Autonomous systems (ASes) are

specified using the "aut-num" class. Routes are specified using the

"route" class. Sets of objects can be defined using the "as-set",

"route-set", "filter-set", "peering-set", and "rtr-set" classes. The

"dictionary" class provides the extensibility to the language. The

"inet-rtr" class is used to specify routers. Many of these classes

were originally defined in earlier documents [6, 13, 16, 12, 5] and

have all been enhanced.

This document is self-contained. However, the reader is encouraged

to read RIPE-181 [7] and the associated documents [13, 16, 12, 5] as

they provide significant background as to the motivation and

underlying principles behind RIPE-181 and consequently, RPSL. For a

tutorial on RPSL, the reader should read the RPSL applications

document [4].

2 RPSL Names, Reserved Words, and Representation

Each class has a set of attributes which store a piece of information

about the objects of the class. Attributes can be mandatory or

optional: A mandatory attribute has to be defined for all objects of

the class; optional attributes can be skipped. Attributes can also

be single or multiple valued. Each object is uniquely identified by

a set of attributes, referred to as the class "key".

The value of an attribute has a type. The following types are most

widely used. Note that RPSL is case insensitive and only the

characters from the ASCII character set can be used.

<object-name>

Many objects in RPSL have a name. An <object-name> is made up of

letters, digits, the character underscore "_", and the character

hyphen "-"; the first character of a name must be a letter, and

the last character of a name must be a letter or a digit. The

following words are reserved by RPSL, and they can not be used as

names:

any as-any rs-any peeras

and or not

atomic from to at action accept announce except refine

networks into inbound outbound

Names starting with certain prefixes are reserved for certain

object types. Names starting with "as-" are reserved for as set

names. Names starting with "rs-" are reserved for route set

names. Names starting with "rtrs-" are reserved for router set

names. Names starting with "fltr-" are reserved for filter set

names. Names starting with "prng-" are reserved for peering set

names.

<as-number> An AS number x is represented as the string "ASx". That

is, the AS 226 is represented as AS226.

<ipv4-address> An IPv4 address is represented as a sequence of four

integers in the range from 0 to 255 separated by the character dot

".". For example, 128.9.128.5 represents a valid IPv4 address.

In the rest of this document, we may refer to IPv4 addresses as IP

addresses.

<address-prefix> An address prefix is represented as an IPv4 address

followed by the character slash "/" followed by an integer in the

range from 0 to 32. The following are valid address prefixes:

128.9.128.5/32, 128.9.0.0/16, 0.0.0.0/0; and the following address

prefixes are invalid: 0/0, 128.9/16 since 0 or 128.9 are not

strings containing four integers.

<address-prefix-range> An address prefix range is an address prefix

followed by an optional range operator. The range operators are:

^- is the exclusive more specifics operator; it stands for the more

specifics of the address prefix excluding the address prefix

itself. For example, 128.9.0.0/16^- contains all the more

specifics of 128.9.0.0/16 excluding 128.9.0.0/16.

^+ is the inclusive more specifics operator; it stands for the more

specifics of the address prefix including the address prefix

itself. For example, 5.0.0.0/8^+ contains all the more specifics

of 5.0.0.0/8 including 5.0.0.0/8.

^n where n is an integer, stands for all the length n specifics of

the address prefix. For example, 30.0.0.0/8^16 contains all the

more specifics of 30.0.0.0/8 which are of length 16 such as

30.9.0.0/16.

^n-m where n and m are integers, stands for all the length n to

length m specifics of the address prefix. For example,

30.0.0.0/8^24-32 contains all the more specifics of 30.0.0.0/8

which are of length 24 to 32 such as 30.9.9.96/28.

Range operators can also be applied to address prefix sets. In this

case, they distribute over the members of the set. For example, for

a route-set (defined later) rs-foo, rs-foo^+ contains all the

inclusive more specifics of all the prefixes in rs-foo.

It is an error to follow a range operator with another one (e.g.

30.0.0.0/8^24-28^+ is an error). However, a range operator can be

applied to an address prefix set that has address prefix ranges in it

(e.g. {30.0.0.0/8^24-28}^27-30 is not an error). In this case, the

outer operator ^n-m distributes over the inner operator ^k-l and

becomes the operator ^max(n,k)-m if m is greater than or equal to

max(n,k), or otherwise, the prefix is deleted from the set. Note

that the operator ^n is equivalent to ^n-n; prefix/l^+ is equivalent

to prefix/l^l-32; prefix/l^- is equivalent to prefix/l^(l+1)-32;

{prefix/l^n-m}^+ is equivalent to {prefix/l^n-32}; and {prefix/l^n-

m}^- is equivalent to {prefix/l^(n+1)-32}. For example,

{128.9.0.0/16^+}^- == {128.9.0.0/16^-}

{128.9.0.0/16^-}^+ == {128.9.0.0/16^-}

{128.9.0.0/16^17}^24 == {128.9.0.0/16^24}

{128.9.0.0/16^20-24}^26-28 == {128.9.0.0/16^26-28}

{128.9.0.0/16^20-24}^22-28 == {128.9.0.0/16^22-28}

{128.9.0.0/16^20-24}^18-28 == {128.9.0.0/16^20-28}

{128.9.0.0/16^20-24}^18-22 == {128.9.0.0/16^20-22}

{128.9.0.0/16^20-24}^18-19 == {}

<date>

A date is represented as an eight digit integer of the form

YYYYMMDD where YYYY represents the year, MM represents the month

of the year (01 through 12), and DD represents the day of the

month (01 through 31). All dates are in UTC unless otherwise

specified. For example, June 24, 1996 is represented as 19960624.

<email-address>is as described in RFC-822 [10].

<dns-name>is as described in RFC-1034 [17].

<nic-handle> is a uniquely assigned identifier word used by routing,

address allocation, and other registries to unambiguously refer to

contact information. Person and role classes map NIC handles to

actual person names, and contact information.

<free-form>is a sequence of ASCII characters.

<X-name> is a name of an object of type X. That is <mntner-name> is a

name of a mntner object.

<registry-name> is a name of an IRR registry. The routing registries

are listed in Appendix A.

A value of an attribute may also be a list of one of these types. A

list is represented by separating the list members by commas ",".

For example, "AS1, AS2, AS3, AS4" is a list of AS numbers. Note that

being list valued and being multiple valued are orthogonal. A

multiple valued attribute has more than one value, each of which may

or may not be a list. On the other hand a single valued attribute

may have a list value.

An RPSL object is textually represented as a list of attribute-value

pairs. Each attribute-value pair is written on a separate line. The

attribute name starts at column 0, followed by character ":" and

followed by the value of the attribute. The attribute which has the

same name as the object's class should be specified first. The

object's representation ends when a blank line is encountered. An

attribute's value can be split over multiple lines, by having a

space, a tab or a plus ('+') character as the first character of the

continuation lines. The character "+" for line continuation allows

attribute values to contain blank lines. More spaces may optionally

be used after the continuation character to increase readability.

The order of attribute-value pairs is significant.

An object's description may contain comments. A comment can be

anywhere in an object's definition, it starts at the first "#"

character on a line and ends at the first end-of-line character.

White space characters can be used to improve readability.

An integer can be specified using (1) the C programming language

notation (e.g. 1, 12345); (2) sequence of four 1-octet integers (in

the range from 0 to 255) separated by the character dot "." (e.g.

1.1.1.1, 255.255.0.0), in this case a 4-octet integer is formed by

concatenating these 1-octet integers in the most significant to least

significant order; (3) sequence of two 2-octet integers (in the range

from 0 to 65535) separated by the character colon ":" (e.g. 3561:70,

3582:10), in this case a 4-octet integer is formed by concatenating

these 2-octet integers in the most significant to least significant

order.

3 Contact Information

The mntner, person and role classes, admin-c, tech-c, mnt-by,

changed, and source attributes of all classes describe contact

information. The mntner class also specifies authenticaiton

information required to create, delete and update other objects.

These classes do not specify routing policies and each registry may

have different or additional requirements on them. Here we present

the common denominator for completeness which is the RIPE database

implementation [16]. Please consult your routing registry for the

latest specification of these classes and attributes. The "Routing

Policy System Security" document [20] describes the authenticaiton

and authorization model in more detail.

3.1 mntner Class

The mntner class specifies authenticaiton information required to

create, delete and update RPSL objects. A provider, before he/she

can create RPSL objects, first needs to create a mntner object. The

attributes of the mntner class are shown in Figure 1. The mntner

class was first described in [13].

The mntner attribute is mandatory and is the class key. Its value is

an RPSL name. The auth attribute specifies the scheme that will be

used to identify and authenticate update requests from this

maintainer. It has the following syntax:

auth: <scheme-id> <auth-info>

E.g.

auth: NONE

Attribute Value Type

mntner <object-name> mandatory, single-valued, class key

descr <free-form> mandatory, single-valued

auth see description in text mandatory, multi-valued

upd-to <email-address> mandatory, multi-valued

mnt-nfy <email-address> optional, multi-valued

tech-c <nic-handle> mandatory, multi-valued

admin-c <nic-handle> optional, multi-valued

remarks <free-form> optional, multi-valued

notify <email-address> optional, multi-valued

mnt-by list of <mntner-name> mandatory, multi-valued

changed <email-address> <date> mandatory, multi-valued

source <registry-name> mandatory, single-valued

Figure 1: mntner Class Attributes

auth: CRYPT-PW dhjsdfhruewf

auth: MAIL-FROM .*@ripe\.net

The <scheme-id>'s currently defined are: NONE, MAIL-FROM, PGP-KEY and

CRYPT-PW. The <auth-info> is additional information required by a

particular scheme: in the case of MAIL-FROM, it is a regular

expression matching valid email addresses; in the case of CRYPT-PW,

it is a password in UNIX crypt format; and in the case of PGP-KEY, it

is a pointer to key-certif object [22] containing the PGP public key

of the user. If multiple auth attributes are specified, an update

request satisfying any one of them is authenticated to be from the

maintainer.

The upd-to attribute is an email address. On an unauthorized update

attempt of an object maintained by this maintainer, an email message

will be sent to this address. The mnt-nfy attribute is an email

address. A notification message will be forwarded to this email

address whenever an object maintained by this maintainer is added,

changed or deleted.

The descr attribute is a short, free-form textual description of the

object. The tech-c attribute is a technical contact NIC handle.

This is someone to be contacted for technical problems such as

misconfiguration. The admin-c attribute is an administrative contact

NIC handle. The remarks attribute is a free text explanation or

clarification. The notify attribute is an email address to which

notifications of changes to this object should be sent. The mnt-by

attribute is a list of mntner object names. The authorization for

changes to this object is governed by any of the maintainer objects

referenced. The changed attribute documents who last changed this

object, and when this change was made. Its syntax has the following

form:

changed: <email-address> <YYYYMMDD>

E.g.

changed: johndoe@terabit-labs.nn 19900401

The <email-address> identifies the person who made the last change.

<YYYYMMDD> is the date of the change. The source attribute specifies

the registry where the object is registered. Figure 2 shows an

example mntner object. In the example, UNIX crypt format password

authentication is used.

mntner: RIPE-NCC-MNT

descr: RIPE-NCC Maintainer

admin-c: DK58

tech-c: OPS4-RIPE

upd-to: ops@ripe.net

mnt-nfy: ops-fyi@ripe.net

auth: CRYPT-PW lz1A7/JnfkTtI

mnt-by: RIPE-NCC-MNT

changed: ripe-dbm@ripe.net 19970820

source: RIPE

Figure 2: An example mntner object.

The descr, tech-c, admin-c, remarks, notify, mnt-by, changed and

source attributes are attributes of all RPSL classes. Their syntax,

semantics, and mandatory, optional, multi-valued, or single-valued

status are the same for for all RPSL classes. Only exception to this

is the admin-c attribute which is mandatory for the aut-num class.

We do not further discuss them in other sections.

3.2 person Class

A person class is used to describe information about people. Even

though it does not describe routing policy, we still describe it here

briefly since many policy objects make reference to person objects.

The person class was first described in [15].

The attributes of the person class are shown in Figure 3. The person

attribute is the full name of the person. The phone and the fax-no

attributes have the following syntax:

phone: +<country-code> <city> <subscriber> [ext. <extension>]

E.g.:

phone: +31 20 12334676

Attribute Value Type

person <free-form> mandatory, single-valued

nic-hdl <nic-handle> mandatory, single-valued, class key

address <free-form> mandatory, multi-valued

phone see description in text mandatory, multi-valued

fax-no same as phone optional, multi-valued

e-mail <email-address> mandatory, multi-valued

Figure 3: person Class Attributes

phone: +44 123 987654 ext. 4711

Figure 4 shows an example person object.

person: Daniel Karrenberg

address: RIPE Network Coordination Centre (NCC)

address: Singel 258

address: NL-1016 AB Amsterdam

address: Netherlands

phone: +31 20 535 4444

fax-no: +31 20 535 4445

e-mail: Daniel.Karrenberg@ripe.net

nic-hdl: DK58

changed: Daniel.Karrenberg@ripe.net 19970616

source: RIPE

Figure 4: An example person object.

3.3 role Class

The role class is similar to the person object. However, instead of

describing a human being, it describes a role performed by one or

more human beings. Examples include help desks, network monitoring

centers, system administrators, etc. Role object is particularly

useful since often a person performing a role may change, however the

role itself remains.

The attributes of the role class are shown in Figure 5. The nic-hdl

attributes of the person and role classes share the same name space.

The trouble attribute of role object may contain additional contact

information to be used when a problem arises in any object that

references this role object. Figure 6 shows an example role object.

Attribute Value Type

role <free-form> mandatory, single-valued

nic-hdl <nic-handle> mandatory, single-valued,

class key

trouble <free-form> optional, multi-valued

address <free-form> mandatory, multi-valued

phone see description in text mandatory, multi-valued

fax-no same as phone optional, multi-valued

e-mail <email-address> mandatory, multi-valued

Figure 5: role Class Attributes

role: RIPE NCC Operations

trouble:

address: Singel 258

address: 1016 AB Amsterdam

address: The Netherlands

phone: +31 20 535 4444

fax-no: +31 20 545 4445

e-mail: ops@ripe.net

admin-c: CO19-RIPE

tech-c: RW488-RIPE

tech-c: JLSD1-RIPE

nic-hdl: OPS4-RIPE

notify: ops@ripe.net

changed: roderik@ripe.net 19970926

source: RIPE

Figure 6: An example role object.

4 route Class

Each interAS route (also referred to as an interdomain route)

originated by an AS is specified using a route object. The

attributes of the route class are shown in Figure 7. The route

attribute is the address prefix of the route and the origin attribute

is the AS number of the AS that originates the route into the interAS

routing system. The route and origin attribute pair is the class

key.

Figure 8 shows examples of four route objects (we do not include

contact attributes such as admin-c, tech-c for brevity). Note that

the last two route objects have the same address prefix, namely

128.8.0.0/16. However, they are different route objects since they

are originated by different ASes (i.e. they have different keys).

Attribute Value Type

route <address-prefix> mandatory, single-valued,

class key

origin <as-number> mandatory, single-valued,

class key

member-of list of <route-set-names> optional, multi-valued

see Section 5

inject see Section 8 optional, multi-valued

components see Section 8 optional, single-valued

aggr-bndry see Section 8 optional, single-valued

aggr-mtd see Section 8 optional, single-valued

export-comps see Section 8 optional, single-valued

holes see Section 8 optional, multi-valued

Figure 7: route Class Attributes

route: 128.9.0.0/16

origin: AS226

route: 128.99.0.0/16

origin: AS226

route: 128.8.0.0/16

origin: AS1

route: 128.8.0.0/16

origin: AS2

Figure 8: Route Objects

5 Set Classes

To specify policies, it is often useful to define sets of objects.

For this purpose we define as-set, route-set, rtr-set, filter-set,

and peering-set classes. These classes define a named set. The

members of these sets can be specified either directly by listing

them in the sets' definition, or indirectly by having member objects

refer to the sets' names, or a combination of both methods.

A set's name is an rpsl word with the following restrictions: All

as-set names start with prefix "as-". All route-set names start with

prefix "rs-". All rtr-set names start with prefix "rtrs-". All

filter-set names start with prefix "fltr-". All peering-set names

start with prefix "prng-". For example, as-foo is a valid as-set

name.

Set names can also be hierarchical. A hierarchical set name is a

sequence of set names and AS numbers separated by colons ":". At

least one component of such a name must be an actual set name (i.e.

start with one of the prefixes above). All the set name components

of an hierarchical name has to be of the same type. For example, the

following names are valid: AS1:AS-CUSTOMERS, AS1:RS-EXPORT:AS2, RS-

EXCEPTIONS:RS-BOGUS.

The purpose of an hierarchical set name is to partition the set name

space so that the maintainers of the set X1 controls the whole set

name space underneath, i.e. X1:...:Xn-1. Thus, a set object with

name X1:...:Xn-1:Xn can only be created by the maintainer of the

object with name X1:...:Xn-1. That is, only the maintainer of AS1

can create a set with name AS1:AS-FOO; and only the maintainer of

AS1:AS-FOO can create a set with name AS1:AS-FOO:AS-BAR. Please see

RPS Security Document [20] for details.

5.1 as-set Class

The attributes of the as-set class are shown in Figure 9. The as-set

attribute defines the name of the set. It is an RPSL name that

starts with "as-". The members attribute lists the members of the

set. The members attribute is a list of AS numbers, or other as-set

names.

Attribute Value Type

as-set <object-name> mandatory, single-valued,

class key

members list of <as-numbers> or optional, multi-valued

<as-set-names>

mbrs-by-ref list of <mntner-names> optional, multi-valued

Figure 9: as-set Class Attributes

Figure 10 presents two as-set objects. The set as-foo contains two

ASes, namely AS1 and AS2. The set as-bar contains the members of the

set as-foo and AS3, that is it contains AS1, AS2, AS3. The set as-

empty contains no members.

as-set: as-foo as-set: as-bar as-set: as-empty

members: AS1, AS2 members: AS3, as-foo

Figure 10: as-set objects.

The mbrs-by-ref attribute is a list of maintainer names or the

keyword ANY. If this attribute is used, the AS set also includes

ASes whose aut-num objects are registered by one of these maintainers

and whose member-of attribute refers to the name of this AS set. If

the value of a mbrs-by-ref attribute is ANY, any AS object referring

to the AS set is a member of the set. If the mbrs-by-ref attribute

is missing, only the ASes listed in the members attribute are members

of the set.

as-set: as-foo

members: AS1, AS2

mbrs-by-ref: MNTR-ME

aut-num: AS3 aut-num: AS4

member-of: as-foo member-of: as-foo

mnt-by: MNTR-ME mnt-by: MNTR-OTHER

Figure 11: as-set objects.

Figure 11 presents an example as-set object that uses the mbrs-by-ref

attribute. The set as-foo contains AS1, AS2 and AS3. AS4 is not a

member of the set as-foo even though the aut-num object references

as-foo. This is because MNTR-OTHER is not listed in the as-foo's

mbrs-by-ref attribute.

5.2 route-set Class

The attributes of the route-set class are shown in Figure 12. The

route-set attribute defines the name of the set. It is an RPSL name

that starts with "rs-". The members attribute lists the members of

the set. The members attribute is a list of address prefixes or

other route-set names. Note that, the route-set class is a set of

route prefixes, not of RPSL route objects.

Attribute Value Type

route-set <object-name> mandatory,

single-valued,

class key

members list of <address-prefix-range> or optional, multi-valued

<route-set-name> or

<route-set-name><range-operator>

mbrs-by-ref list of <mntner-names> optional, multi-valued

Figure 12: route-set Class Attributes

Figure 13 presents some example route-set objects. The set rs-foo

contains two address prefixes, namely 128.9.0.0/16 and 128.9.0.0/24.

The set rs-bar contains the members of the set rs-foo and the address

prefix 128.7.0.0/16.

An address prefix or a route-set name in a members attribute can be

optionally followed by a range operator. For example, the following

set:

route-set: rs-foo

members: 128.9.0.0/16, 128.9.0.0/24

route-set: rs-bar

members: 128.7.0.0/16, rs-foo

Figure 13: route-set Objects

route-set: rs-bar

members: 5.0.0.0/8^+, 30.0.0.0/8^24-32, rs-foo^+

contains all the more specifics of 5.0.0.0/8 including 5.0.0.0/8, all

the more specifics of 30.0.0.0/8 which are of length 24 to 32 such as

30.9.9.96/28, and all the more specifics of address prefixes in route

set rs-foo.

The mbrs-by-ref attribute is a list of maintainer names or the

keyword ANY. If this attribute is used, the route set also includes

address prefixes whose route objects are registered by one of these

maintainers and whose member-of attribute refers to the name of this

route set. If the value of a mbrs-by-ref attribute is ANY, any route

object referring to the route set name is a member. If the mbrs-by-

ref attribute is missing, only the address prefixes listed in the

members attribute are members of the set.

route-set: rs-foo

mbrs-by-ref: MNTR-ME, MNTR-YOU

route-set: rs-bar

members: 128.7.0.0/16

mbrs-by-ref: MNTR-YOU

route: 128.9.0.0/16

origin: AS1

member-of: rs-foo

mnt-by: MNTR-ME

route: 128.8.0.0/16

origin: AS2

member-of: rs-foo, rs-bar

mnt-by: MNTR-YOU

Figure 14: route-set objects.

Figure 14 presents example route-set objects that use the mbrs-by-ref

attribute. The set rs-foo contains two address prefixes, namely

128.8.0.0/16 and 128.9.0.0/16 since the route objects for

128.8.0.0/16 and 128.9.0.0/16 refer to the set name rs-foo in their

member-of attribute. The set rs-bar contains the address prefixes

128.7.0.0/16 and 128.8.0.0/16. The route 128.7.0.0/16 is explicitly

listed in the members attribute of rs-bar, and the route object for

128.8.0.0/16 refer to the set name rs-bar in its member-of attribute.

Note that, if an address prefix is listed in a members attribute of a

route set, it is a member of that route set. The route object

corresponding to this address prefix does not need to contain a

member-of attribute referring to this set name. The member-of

attribute of the route class is an additional mechanism for

specifying the members indirectly.

5.3 Predefined Set Objects

In a context that expects a route set (e.g. members attribute of the

route-set class), an AS number ASx defines the set of routes that are

originated by ASx; and an as-set AS-X defines the set of routes that

are originated by the ASes in AS-X. A route p is said to be

originated by ASx if there is a route object for p with ASx as the

value of the origin attribute. For example, in Figure 15, the route

set rs-special contains 128.9.0.0/16, routes of AS1 and AS2, and

routes of the ASes in AS set AS-FOO.

route-set: rs-special

members: 128.9.0.0/16, AS1, AS2, AS-FOO

Figure 15: Use of AS numbers and AS sets in route sets.

The set rs-any contains all routes registered in IRR. The set as-any

contains all ASes registered in IRR.

5.4 Filters and filter-set Class

The attributes of the filter-set class are shown in Figure 16. A

filter-set object defines a set of routes that are matched by its

filter. The filter-set attribute defines the name of the filter. It

is an RPSL name that starts with "fltr-".

Attribute Value Type

filter-set <object-name> mandatory, single-valued, class key

filter <filter> mandatory, single-valued

Figure 16: filter Class Attributes

filter-set: fltr-foo

filter: { 5.0.0.0/8, 6.0.0.0/8 }

filter-set: fltr-bar

filter: (AS1 or fltr-foo) and <AS2>

Figure 17: filter-set objects.

The filter attribute defines the set's policy filter. A policy

filter is a logical expression which when applied to a set of routes

returns a subset of these routes. We say that the policy filter

matches the subset returned. The policy filter can match routes

using any BGP path attribute, such as the destination address prefix

(or NLRI), AS-path, or community attributes.

The policy filters can be composite by using the operators AND, OR,

and NOT. The following policy filters can be used to select a subset

of routes:

ANY

The keyword ANY matches all routes.

Address-Prefix Set This is an explicit list of address prefixes

enclosed in braces '{' and '}'. The policy filter matches the set

of routes whose destination address-prefix is in the set. For

example:

{ 0.0.0.0/0 }

{ 128.9.0.0/16, 128.8.0.0/16, 128.7.128.0/17, 5.0.0.0/8 }

{ }

An address prefix can be optionally followed by a range operator

(i.e.

{ 5.0.0.0/8^+, 128.9.0.0/16^-, 30.0.0.0/8^16, 30.0.0.0/8^24-32 }

contains all the more specifics of 5.0.0.0/8 including 5.0.0.0/8, all

the more specifics of 128.9.0.0/16 excluding 128.9.0.0/16, all the

more specifics of 30.0.0.0/8 which are of length 16 such as

30.9.0.0/16, and all the more specifics of 30.0.0.0/8 which are of

length 24 to 32 such as 30.9.9.96/28.

Route Set Name A route set name matches the set of routes that are

members of the set. A route set name may be a name of a route-set

object, an AS number, or a name of an as-set object (AS numbers and

as-set names implicitly define route sets; please see Section 5.3).

For example:

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 accept AS2

import: from AS2 accept AS-FOO

import: from AS2 accept RS-FOO

The keyword PeerAS can be used instead of the AS number of the peer

AS. PeerAS is particularly useful when the peering is specified

using an AS expression. For example:

as-set: AS-FOO

members: AS2, AS3

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS-FOO accept PeerAS

is same as:

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 accept AS2

import: from AS3 accept AS3

A route set name can also be followed by one of the operators '^-',

'^+', example, { 5.0.0.0/8, 6.0.0.0/8 }^+ equals { 5.0.0.0/8^+,

6.0.0.0/8^+ }, and AS1^- equals all the exclusive more specifics of

routes originated by AS1.

AS Path Regular Expressions

An AS-path regular expression can be used as a policy filter by

enclosing the expression in `<' and `>'. An AS-path policy filter

matches the set of routes which traverses a sequence of ASes

matched by the AS-path regular expression. A router can check

this using the AS_PATH attribute in the Border Gateway Protocol

[19], or the RD_PATH attribute in the Inter-Domain Routing

Protocol [18].

AS-path Regular Expressions are POSIX compliant regular

expressions over the alphabet of AS numbers. The regular

expression constructs are as follows:

ASN

where ASN is an AS number. ASN matches the AS-path that is of

length 1 and contains the corresponding AS number (e.g. AS-path

regular expression AS1 matches the AS-path "1").

The keyword PeerAS can be used instead of the AS number of the

peer AS.

AS-set

where AS-set is an AS set name. AS-set matches the AS-paths that

is matched by one of the ASes in the AS-set.

.

matches the AS-paths matched by any AS number.

[...]

is an AS number set. It matches the AS-paths matched by the AS

numbers listed between the brackets. The AS numbers in the set

are separated by white space characters. If a `-' is used between

two AS numbers in this set, all AS numbers between the two AS

numbers are included in the set. If an as-set name is listed, all

AS numbers in the as-set are included.

[^...]

is a complemented AS number set. It matches any AS-path which is

not matched by the AS numbers in the set.

^

Matches the empty string at the beginning of an AS-path.

$

Matches the empty string at the end of an AS-path.

We next list the regular expression operators in the decreasing order

of evaluation. These operators are left associative, i.e. performed

left to right.

Unary postfix operators * + ? {m} {m,n} {m,}

For a regular expression A, A* matches zero or more occurrences of

A; A+ matches one or more occurrences of A; A? matches zero or

one occurrence of A; A{m} matches m occurrence of A; A{m,n}

matches m to n occurrence of A; A{m,} matches m or more occurrence

of A. For example, [AS1 AS2]{2} matches AS1 AS1, AS1 AS2, AS2 AS1,

and AS2 AS2.

Unary postfix operators ~* ~+ ~{m} ~{m,n} ~{m,}

These operators have similar functionality as the corresponding

operators listed above, but all occurrences of the regular

expression has to match the same pattern. For example, [AS1

AS2]~{2} matches AS1 AS1 and AS2 AS2, but it does not match AS1

AS2 and AS2 AS1.

Binary catenation operator

This is an implicit operator and exists between two regular

expressions A and B when no other explicit operator is specified.

The resulting expression A B matches an AS-path if A matches some

prefix of the AS-path and B matches the rest of the AS-path.

Binary alternative (or) operator

For a regular expressions A and B, A B matches any AS-path that

is matched by A or B.

Parenthesis can be used to override the default order of evaluation.

White spaces can be used to increase readability.

The following are examples of AS-path filters:

<AS3>

<^AS1>

<AS2$>

<^AS1 AS2 AS3$>

<^AS1 .* AS2$>.

The first example matches any route whose AS-path contains AS3, the

second matches routes whose AS-path starts with AS1, the third

matches routes whose AS-path ends with AS2, the fourth matches routes

whose AS-path is exactly "1 2 3", and the fifth matches routes whose

AS-path starts with AS1 and ends in AS2 with any number of AS numbers

in between.

Composite Policy Filters The following operators (in decreasing order

of evaluation) can be used to form composite policy filters:

NOT Given a policy filter x, NOT x matches the set of routes that

are not matched by x. That is it is the negation of policy

filter x.

AND Given two policy filters x and y, x AND y matches the intersection

of the routes that are matched by x and that are matched by y.

OR Given two policy filters x and y, x OR y matches the union of the

routes that are matched by x and that are matched by y.

Note that an OR operator can be implicit, that is `x y' is equivalent

to `x OR y'.

E.g.

NOT {128.9.0.0/16, 128.8.0.0/16}

AS226 AS227 OR AS228

AS226 AND NOT {128.9.0.0/16}

AS226 AND {0.0.0.0/0^0-18}

The first example matches any route except 128.9.0.0/16 and

128.8.0.0/16. The second example matches the routes of AS226, AS227

and AS228. The third example matches the routes of AS226 except

128.9.0.0/16. The fourth example matches the routes of AS226 whose

length are not longer than 18.

Routing Policy Attributes Policy filters can also use the values of

other attributes for comparison. The attributes whose values can be

used in policy filters are specified in the RPSL dictionary. Please

refer to Section 7 for details. An example using the the BGP

community attribute is shown below:

aut-num: AS1

export: to AS2 announce AS1 AND NOT community(NO_EXPORT)

Filters using the routing policy attributes defined in the dictionary

are evaluated before evaluating the operators AND, OR and NOT.

Filter Set Name

A filter set name matches the set of routes that are matched by

its filter attribute. Note that the filter attribute of a filter

set, can recursively refer to other filter set names. For example

in Figure 17, fltr-foo matches { 5.0.0.0/8, 6.0.0.0/8 }, and

fltr-bar matches AS1'S routes or { 5.0.0.0/8, 6.0.0.0/8 } if their

as path contained AS2.

5.5 rtr-set Class

The attributes of the rtr-set class are shown in Figure 18. The

rtr-set attribute defines the name of the set. It is an RPSL name

that starts with "rtrs-". The members attribute lists the members of

the set. The members attribute is a list of inet-rtr names,

ipv4_addresses or other rtr-set names.

Attribute Value Type

rtr-set <object-name> mandatory, single-valued,

class key

members list of <inet-rtr-names> or optional, multi-valued

<rtr-set-names>

or <ipv4_addresses>

mbrs-by-ref list of <mntner-names> optional, multi-valued

Figure 18: rtr-set Class Attributes

Figure 19 presents two rtr-set objects. The set rtrs-foo contains

two routers, namely rtr1.isp.net and rtr2.isp.net. The set rtrs-bar

contains the members of the set rtrs-foo and rtr3.isp.net, that is it

contains rtr1.isp.net, rtr2.isp.net, rtr3.isp.net.

rtr-set: rtrs-foo rtr-set: rtrs-bar

members: rtr1.isp.net, rtr2.isp.net members: rtr3.isp.net, rtrs-foo

Figure 19: rtr-set objects.

The mbrs-by-ref attribute is a list of maintainer names or the

keyword ANY. If this attribute is used, the router set also includes

routers whose inet-rtr objects are registered by one of these

maintainers and whose member-of attribute refers to the name of this

router set. If the value of a mbrs-by-ref attribute is ANY, any

inet-rtr object referring to the router set is a member of the set.

If the mbrs-by-ref attribute is missing, only the routers listed in

the members attribute are members of the set.

rtr-set: rtrs-foo

members: rtr1.isp.net, rtr2.isp.net

mbrs-by-ref: MNTR-ME

inet-rtr: rtr3.isp.net

local-as: as1

ifaddr: 1.1.1.1 masklen 30

member-of: rtrs-foo

mnt-by: MNTR-ME

Figure 20: rtr-set objects.

Figure 20 presents an example rtr-set object that uses the mbrs-by-

ref attribute. The set rtrs-foo contains rtr1.isp.net, rtr2.isp.net

and rtr3.isp.net.

5.6 Peerings and peering-set Class

The attributes of the peering-set class are shown in Figure 21. A

peering-set object defines a set of peerings that are listed in its

peering attributes. The peering-set attribute defines the name of

the set. It is an RPSL name that starts with "prng-".

Attribute Value Type

peering-set <object-name> mandatory, single-valued, class key

peering <peering> mandatory, multi-valued

Figure 21: filter Class Attributes

The peering attribute defines a peering that can be used for

importing or

---------------------- ----------------------

7.7.7.1 ------- ------- 7.7.7.2

========

AS1 EX1 ------- 7.7.7.3 AS2

9.9.9.1 ------ ------ 9.9.9.2

---------------------- ----------------------

===========

EX2

----------------------

9.9.9.3 ---------

AS3

----------------------

Figure 22: Example topology consisting of three ASes, AS1, AS2, and

AS3; two exchange points, EX1 and EX2; and six routers.

exporting routes.

In describing peerings, we are going to use the topology of Figure

22. In this topology, there are three ASes, AS1, AS2, and AS3;

two exchange points, EX1 and EX2; and six routers. Routers

connected to the same exchange point peer with each other and

exchange routing information. That is, 7.7.7.1, 7.7.7.2 and

7.7.7.3 peer with each other; 9.9.9.1, 9.9.9.2 and 9.9.9.3 peer

with each other.

The syntax of a peering specification is:

<as-expression> [<router-expression-1>] [at <router-expression-2>]

<peering-set-name>

where <as-expression> is an expression over AS numbers and AS sets

using operators AND, OR, and EXCEPT, and <router-expression-1> and

<router-expression-2> are expressions over router IP addresses,

inet-rtr names, and rtr-set names using operators AND, OR, and

EXCEPT. The binary "EXCEPT" operator is the set suBTraction

operator and has the same precedence as the operator AND (it is

semantically equivalent to "AND NOT" combination). That is "(AS1

OR AS2) EXCEPT AS2" equals "AS1".

This form identifies all the peerings between any local router in

<router-expression-2> to any of their peer routers in <router-

expression-1> in the ASes in <as-expression>. If <router-

expression-2> is not specified, it defaults to all routers of the

local AS that peer with ASes in <as-expression>. If <router-

expression-1> is not specified, it defaults to all routers of the

peer ASes in <as-expression> that peer with the local AS.

If a <peering-set-name> is used, the peerings are listed in the

corresponding peering-set object. Note that the peering-set

objects can be recursive.

Many special forms of this general peering specification is

possible. The following examples illustrate the most common

cases, using the import attribute of the aut-num class. In the

following example 7.7.7.1 imports 128.9.0.0/16 from 7.7.7.2.

(1) aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 7.7.7.2 at 7.7.7.1 accept { 128.9.0.0/16 }

In the following example 7.7.7.1 imports 128.9.0.0/16 from 7.7.7.2

and 7.7.7.3.

(2) aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 at 7.7.7.1 accept { 128.9.0.0/16 }

In the following example 7.7.7.1 imports 128.9.0.0/16 from 7.7.7.2

and 7.7.7.3, and 9.9.9.1 imports 128.9.0.0/16 from 9.9.9.2.

(3) aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 accept { 128.9.0.0/16 }

In the following example 9.9.9.1 imports 128.9.0.0/16 from 9.9.9.2

and 9.9.9.3.

(4) as-set: AS-FOO

members: AS2, AS3

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS-FOO at 9.9.9.1 accept { 128.9.0.0/16 }

In the following example 9.9.9.1 imports 128.9.0.0/16 from 9.9.9.2

and 9.9.9.3, and 7.7.7.1 imports 128.9.0.0/16 from 7.7.7.2 and

7.7.7.3.

(5) aut-num: AS1

import: from AS-FOO accept { 128.9.0.0/16 }

In the following example AS1 imports 128.9.0.0/16 from AS3 at router

9.9.9.1

(6) aut-num: AS1

import: from AS-FOO and not AS2 at not 7.7.7.1

accept { 128.9.0.0/16 }

This is because "AS-FOO and not AS2" equals AS3 and "not 7.7.7.1"

equals 9.9.9.1.

In the following example 9.9.9.1 imports 128.9.0.0/16 from 9.9.9.2

and 9.9.9.3.

(7) peering-set: prng-bar

peering: AS1 at 9.9.9.1

peering-set: prng-foo

peering: prng-bar

peering: AS2 at 9.9.9.1

aut-num: AS1

import: from prng-foo accept { 128.9.0.0/16 }

6 aut-num Class

Routing policies are specified using the aut-num class. The

attributes of the aut-num class are shown in Figure 23. The value of

the aut-num attribute is the AS number of the AS described by this

object. The as-name attribute is a symbolic name (in RPSL name

syntax) of the AS. The import, export and default routing policies of

the AS are specified using import, export and default attributes

respectively.

Attribute Value Type

aut-num <as-number> mandatory, single-valued, class key

as-name <object-name> mandatory, single-valued

member-of list of <as-set-names> optional, multi-valued

import see Section 6.1 optional, multi valued

export see Section 6.2 optional, multi valued

default see Section 6.5 optional, multi valued

Figure 23: aut-num Class Attributes

6.1 import Attribute: Import Policy Specification

In RPSL, an import policy is divided into import policy expressions.

Each import policy expression is specified using an import attribute.

The import attribute has the following syntax (we will extend this

syntax later in Sections 6.3 and 6.6):

import: from <peering-1> [action <action-1>]

. . .

from <peering-N> [action <action-N>]

accept <filter>

The action specification is optional. The semantics of an import

attribute is as follows: the set of routes that are matched by

<filter> are imported from all the peers in <peerings>; while

importing routes at <peering-M>, <action-M> is executed.

E.g.

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 action pref = 1; accept { 128.9.0.0/16 }

This example states that the route 128.9.0.0/16 is accepted from AS2

with preference 1. We already presented how peerings (see Section

5.6) and filters (see Section 5.4) are specified. We next present

how to specify actions.

6.1.1 Action Specification

Policy actions in RPSL either set or modify route attributes, such as

assigning a preference to a route, adding a BGP community to the BGP

community path attribute, or setting the MULTI-EXIT-DISCRIMINATOR

attribute. Policy actions can also instruct routers to perform

special operations, such as route flap damping.

The routing policy attributes whose values can be modified in policy

actions are specified in the RPSL dictionary. Please refer to

Section 7 for a list of these attributes. Each action in RPSL is

terminated by the semicolon character (';'). It is possible to form

composite policy actions by listing them one after the other. In a

composite policy action, the actions are executed left to right. For

example,

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2

action pref = 10; med = 0; community.append(10250, 3561:10);

accept { 128.9.0.0/16 }

sets pref to 10, med to 0, and then appends 10250 and 3561:10 to the

BGP community path attribute. The pref attribute is the inverse of

the local-pref attribute (i.e. local-pref == 65535 - pref). A route

with a local-pref attribute is always preferred over a route without

one.

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 action pref = 1;

from AS3 action pref = 2;

accept AS4

The above example states that AS4's routes are accepted from AS2 with

preference 1, and from AS3 with preference 2 (routes with lower

integer preference values are preferred over routes with higher

integer preference values).

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 7.7.7.2 at 7.7.7.1 action pref = 1;

from AS2 action pref = 2;

accept AS4

The above example states that AS4's routes are accepted from AS2 on

peering 7.7.7.1-7.7.7.2 with preference 1, and on any other peering

with AS2 with preference 2.

6.2 export Attribute: Export Policy Specification

Similarly, an export policy expression is specified using an export

attribute. The export attribute has the following syntax:

export: to <peering-1> [action <action-1>]

. . .

to <peering-N> [action <action-N>]

announce <filter>

The action specification is optional. The semantics of an export

attribute is as follows: the set of routes that are matched by

<filter> are exported to all the peers specified in <peerings>; while

exporting routes at <peering-M>, <action-M> is executed.

E.g.

aut-num: AS1

export: to AS2 action med = 5; community .= { 70 };

announce AS4

In this example, AS4's routes are announced to AS2 with the med

attribute's value set to 5 and community 70 added to the community

list.

Example:

aut-num: AS1

export: to AS-FOO announce ANY

In this example, AS1 announces all of its routes to the ASes in the

set AS-FOO.

6.3 Other Routing Protocols, Multi-Protocol Routing Protocols, and

Injecting Routes Between Protocols

The more complete syntax of the import and export attributes are as

follows:

import: [protocol <protocol-1>] [into <protocol-2>]

from <peering-1> [action <action-1>]

. . .

from <peering-N> [action <action-N>]

accept <filter>

export: [protocol <protocol-1>] [into <protocol-2>]

to <peering-1> [action <action-1>]

. . .

to <peering-N> [action <action-N>]

announce <filter>

Where the optional protocol specifications can be used for specifying

policies for other routing protocols, or for injecting routes of one

protocol into another protocol, or for multi-protocol routing

policies. The valid protocol names are defined in the dictionary.

The <protocol-1> is the name of the protocol whose routes are being

exchanged. The <protocol-2> is the name of the protocol which is

receiving these routes. Both <protocol-1> and <protocol-2> default

to the Internet Exterior Gateway Protocol, currently BGP.

In the following example, all interAS routes are injected into RIP.

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 accept AS2

export: protocol BGP4 into RIP

to AS1 announce ANY

In the following example, AS1 accepts AS2's routes including any more

specifics of AS2's routes, but does not inject these extra more

specific routes into OSPF.

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 accept AS2^+

export: protocol BGP4 into OSPF

to AS1 announce AS2

In the following example, AS1 injects its static routes (routes which

are members of the set AS1:RS-STATIC-ROUTES) to the interAS routing

protocol and appends AS1 twice to their AS paths.

aut-num: AS1

import: protocol STATIC into BGP4

from AS1 action ASPath.prepend(AS1, AS1);

accept AS1:RS-STATIC-ROUTES

In the following example, AS1 imports different set of unicast routes

for multicast reverse path forwarding from AS2:

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 accept AS2

import: protocol IDMR

from AS2 accept AS2:RS-RPF-ROUTES

6.4 Ambiguity Resolution

It is possible that the same peering can be covered by more that one

peering specification in a policy expression. For example:

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 7.7.7.2 at 7.7.7.1 action pref = 2;

from AS2 7.7.7.2 at 7.7.7.1 action pref = 1;

accept AS4

This is not an error, though definitely not desirable. To break the

ambiguity, the action corresponding to the first peering

specification is used. That is the routes are accepted with

preference 2. We call this rule as the specification-order rule.

Consider the example:

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 action pref = 2;

from AS2 7.7.7.2 at 7.7.7.1 action pref = 1; dpa = 5;

accept AS4

where both peering specifications cover the peering 7.7.7.1-7.7.7.2,

though the second one covers it more specifically. The specification

order rule still applies, and only the action "pref = 2" is executed.

In fact, the second peering-action pair has no use since the first

peering-action pair always covers it. If the intended policy was to

accept these routes with preference 1 on this particular peering and

with preference 2 in all other peerings, the user should have

specified:

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 7.7.7.2 at 7.7.7.1 action pref = 1; dpa = 5;

from AS2 action pref = 2;

accept AS4

It is also possible that more than one policy expression can cover

the same set of routes for the same peering. For example:

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 action pref = 2; accept AS4

import: from AS2 action pref = 1; accept AS4

In this case, the specification-order rule is still used. That is,

AS4's routes are accepted from AS2 with preference 2. If the filters

were overlapping but not exactly the same:

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 action pref = 2; accept AS4

import: from AS2 action pref = 1; accept AS4 OR AS5

the AS4's routes are accepted from AS2 with preference 2 and however

AS5's routes are also accepted, but with preference 1.

We next give the general specification order rule for the benefit of

the RPSL implementors. Consider two policy expressions:

aut-num: AS1

import: from peerings-1 action action-1 accept filter-1

import: from peerings-2 action action-2 accept filter-2

The above policy expressions are equivalent to the following three

expressions where there is no ambiguity:

aut-num: AS1

import: from peerings-1 action action-1 accept filter-1

import: from peerings-3 action action-2 accept filter-2 AND NOT filter-1

import: from peerings-4 action action-2 accept filter-2

where peerings-3 are those that are covered by both peerings-1 and

peerings-2, and peerings-4 are those that are covered by peerings-2

but not by peerings-1 ("filter-2 AND NOT filter-1" matches the routes

that are matched by filter-2 but not by filter-1).

Example:

aut-num: AS1

import: from AS2 7.7.7.2 at 7.7.7.1

action pref = 2;

accept {128.9.0.0/16}

import: from AS2

action pref = 1;

accept {128.9.0.0/16, 75.0.0.0/8}

Lets consider two peerings with AS2, 7.7.7.1-7.7.7.2 and 9.9.9.1-

9.9.9.2. Both policy expressions cover 7.7.7.1-7.7.7.2. On this

peering, the route 128.9.0.0/16 is accepted with preference 2, and

the route 75.0.0.0/8 is accepted with preference 1. The peering

9.9.9.1-9.9.9.2 is only covered by the second policy expressions.

Hence, both the route 128.9.0.0/16 and the route 75.0.0.0/8 are

accepted with preference 1 on peering 9.9.9.1-9.9.9.2.

Note that the same ambiguity resolution rules also apply to export

and default policy expressions.

6.5 default Attribute: Default Policy Specification

Default routing policies are specified using the default attribute.

The default attribute has the following syntax:

default: to <peering> [action <action>] [networks <filter>]

The <action> and <filter> specifications are optional. The semantics

are as follows: The <peering> specification indicates the AS (and

the router if present) is being defaulted to; the <action>

specification, if present, indicates various attributes of

defaulting, for example a relative preference if multiple defaults

are specified; and the <filter> specifications, if present, is a

policy filter. A router only uses the default policy if it received

the routes matched by <filter> from this peer.

In the following example, AS1 defaults to AS2 for routing.

aut-num: AS1

default: to AS2

In the following example, router 7.7.7.1 in AS1 defaults to router

7.7.7.2 in AS2.

aut-num: AS1

default: to AS2 7.7.7.2 at 7.7.7.1

In the following example, AS1 defaults to AS2 and AS3, but prefers

AS2 over AS3.

aut-num: AS1

default: to AS2 action pref = 1;

default: to AS3 action pref = 2;

In the following example, AS1 defaults to AS2 and uses 128.9.0.0/16

as the default network.

aut-num: AS1

default: to AS2 networks { 128.9.0.0/16 }

6.6 Structured Policy Specification

The import and export policies can be structured. We only reccomend

structured policies to advanced RPSL users. Please feel free to skip

this section.

The syntax for a structured policy specification is the following:

<import-factor> ::= from <peering-1> [action <action-1>]

. . .

from <peering-N> [action <action-N>]

accept <filter>;

<import-term> ::= <import-factor>

LEFT-BRACE

<import-factor>

. . .

<import-factor>

RIGHT-BRACE

<import-expression> ::= <import-term>

<import-term> EXCEPT <import-expression>

<import-term> REFINE <import-expression>

import: [protocol <protocol1>] [into <protocol2>]

<import-expression>

Please note the semicolon at the end of an <import-factor>. If the

policy specification is not structured (as in all the examples in

other sections), this semicolon is optional. The syntax and

semantics for an <import-factor> is already defined in Section 6.1.

An <import-term> is either a sequence of <import-factor>'s enclosed

within matching braces (i.e. `{' and `}') or just a single <import-

factor>. The semantics of an <import-term> is the union of <import-

factor>'s using the specification order rule. An <import-expression>

is either a single <import-term> or an <import-term> followed by one

of the keywords "except" and "refine", followed by another <import-

expression>. Note that our definition allows nested expressions.

Hence there can be exceptions to exceptions, refinements to

refinements, or even refinements to exceptions, and so on.

The semantics for the except operator is as follows: The result of an

except operation is another <import-term>. The resulting policy set

contains the policies of the right hand side but their filters are

modified to only include the routes also matched by the left hand

side. The policies of the left hand side are included afterwards and

their filters are modified to exclude the routes matched by the right

hand side. Please note that the filters are modified during this

process but the actions are copied verbatim. When there are multiple

levels of nesting, the operations (both except and refine) are

performed right to left.

Consider the following example:

import: from AS1 action pref = 1; accept as-foo;

except {

from AS2 action pref = 2; accept AS226;

except {

from AS3 action pref = 3; accept {128.9.0.0/16};

}

}

where the route 128.9.0.0/16 is originated by AS226, and AS226 is a

member of the as set as-foo. In this example, the route 128.9.0.0/16

is accepted from AS3, any other route (not 128.9.0.0/16) originated

by AS226 is accepted from AS2, and any other ASes' routes in as-foo

is accepted from AS1.

We can come to the same conclusion using the algebra defined above.

Consider the inner exception specification:

from AS2 action pref = 2; accept AS226;

except {

from AS3 action pref = 3; accept {128.9.0.0/16};

}

is equivalent to

{

from AS3 action pref = 3; accept AS226 AND {128.9.0.0/16};

from AS2 action pref = 2; accept AS226 AND NOT {128.9.0.0/16};

}

Hence, the original expression is equivalent to:

import: from AS1 action pref = 1; accept as-foo;

except {

from AS3 action pref = 3; accept AS226 AND {128.9.0.0/16};

from AS2 action pref = 2; accept AS226 AND NOT {128.9.0.0/16};

}

which is equivalent to

import: {

from AS3 action pref = 3;

accept as-foo AND AS226 AND {128.9.0.0/16};

from AS2 action pref = 2;

accept as-foo AND AS226 AND NOT {128.9.0.0/16};

from AS1 action pref = 1;

accept as-foo AND NOT

(AS226 AND NOT {128.9.0.0/16} OR AS226 AND {128.9.0.0/16});

}

Since AS226 is in as-foo and 128.9.0.0/16 is in AS226, it simplifies

to:

import: {

from AS3 action pref = 3; accept {128.9.0.0/16};

from AS2 action pref = 2; accept AS226 AND NOT {128.9.0.0/16};

from AS1 action pref = 1; accept as-foo AND NOT AS226;

}

In the case of the refine operator, the resulting set is constructed

by taking the cartasian product of the two sides as follows: for

each policy l in the left hand side and for each policy r in the

right hand side, the peerings of the resulting policy are the

peerings common to both r and l; the filter of the resulting policy

is the intersection of l's filter and r's filter; and action of the

resulting policy is l's action followed by r's action. If there are

no common peerings, or if the intersection of filters is empty, a

resulting policy is not generated.

Consider the following example:

import: { from AS-ANY action pref = 1; accept community(3560:10);

from AS-ANY action pref = 2; accept community(3560:20);

} refine {

from AS1 accept AS1;

from AS2 accept AS2;

from AS3 accept AS3;

}

Here, any route with community 3560:10 is assigned a preference of 1

and any route with community 3560:20 is assigned a preference of 2

regardless of whom they are imported from. However, only AS1's

routes are imported from AS1, and only AS2's routes are imported from

AS2, and only AS3's routes are imported form AS3, and no routes are

imported from any other AS. We can reach the same conclusion using

the above algebra. That is, our example is equivalent to:

import: {

from AS1 action pref = 1; accept community(3560:10) AND AS1;

from AS1 action pref = 2; accept community(3560:20) AND AS1;

from AS2 action pref = 1; accept community(3560:10) AND AS2;

from AS2 action pref = 2; accept community(3560:20) AND AS2;

from AS3 action pref = 1; accept community(3560:10) AND AS3;

from AS3 action pref = 2; accept community(3560:20) AND AS3;

}

Note that the common peerings between "from AS1" and "from AS-ANY"

are those peerings in "from AS1". Even though we do not formally

define "common peerings", it is straight forward to deduce the

definition from the definitions of peerings (please see Section 5.6).

Consider the following example:

import: {

from AS-ANY action med = 0; accept {0.0.0.0/0^0-18};

} refine {

from AS1 at 7.7.7.1 action pref = 1; accept AS1;

from AS1 action pref = 2; accept AS1;

}

where only routes of length 0 to 18 are accepted and med's value is

set to 0 to disable med's effect for all peerings; In addition, from

AS1 only AS1's routes are imported, and AS1's routes imported at

7.7.7.1 are preferred over other peerings. This is equivalent to:

import: {

from AS1 at 7.7.7.1 action med=0; pref=1; accept {0.0.0.0/0^0-

18} AND AS1;

from AS1 action med=0; pref=2; accept {0.0.0.0/0^0-

18} AND AS1;

}

The above syntax and semantics also apply equally to structured

export policies with "from" replaced with "to" and "accept" is

replaced with "announce".

7 dictionary Class

The dictionary class provides extensibility to RPSL. Dictionary

objects define routing policy attributes, types, and routing

protocols. Routing policy attributes, henceforth called rp-

attributes, may correspond to actual protocol attributes, such as the

BGP path attributes (e.g. community, dpa, and AS-path), or they may

correspond to router features (e.g. BGP route flap damping). As new

protocols, new protocol attributes, or new router features are

introduced, the dictionary object is updated to include appropriate

rp-attribute and protocol definitions.

An rp-attribute is an abstract class; that is a data representation

is not available. Instead, they are Accessed through access methods.

For example, the rp-attribute for the BGP AS-path attribute is called

aspath; and it has an access method called prepend which stuffs extra

AS numbers to the AS-path attributes. Access methods can take

arguments. Arguments are strongly typed. For example, the method

prepend above takes AS numbers as arguments.

Once an rp-attribute is defined in the dictionary, it can be used to

describe policy filters and actions. Policy analysis tools are

required to fetch the dictionary object and recognize newly defined

rp-attributes, types, and protocols. The analysis tools may

approximate policy analyses on rp-attributes that they do not

understand: a filter method may always match, and an action method

may always perform no-operation. Analysis tools may even download

code to perform appropriate operations using mechanisms outside the

scope of RPSL.

We next describe the syntax and semantics of the dictionary class.

This description is not essential for understanding dictionary

objects (but it is essential for creating one). Please feel free to

skip to the RPSL Initial Dictionary subsection (Section 7.1).

The attributes of the dictionary class are shown in Figure 24. The

dictionary attribute is the name of the dictionary object, obeying

the RPSL naming rules. There can be many dictionary objects, however

there is always one well-known dictionary object "RPSL". All tools

use this dictionary by default.

Attribute Value Type

dictionary <object-name> mandatory, single-valued,

class key

rp-attribute see description in text optional, multi valued

typedef see description in text optional, multi valued

protocol see description in text optional, multi valued

Figure 24: dictionary Class Attributes

The rp-attribute attribute has the following syntax:

rp-attribute: <name>

<method-1>(<type-1-1>, ..., <type-1-N1> [, "..."])

...

<method-M>(<type-M-1>, ..., <type-M-NM> [, "..."])

where <name> is the name of the rp-attribute; and <method-i> is the

name of an access method for the rp-attribute, taking Ni arguments

where the j-th argument is of type <type-i-j>. A method name is

either an RPSL name or one of the operators defined in Figure 25.

The operator methods with the exception of operator() and operator[]

can take only one argument.

operator= operator==

operator<<= operator<

operator>>= operator>

operator+= operator>=

operator-= operator<=

operator*= operator!=

operator/= operator()

operator.= operator[]

Figure 25: Operators

An rp-attribute can have many methods defined for it. Some of the

methods may even have the same name, in which case their arguments

are of different types. If the argument list is followed by "...",

the method takes a variable number of arguments. In this case, the

actual arguments after the Nth argument are of type <type-N>.

Arguments are strongly typed. A <type> in RPSL is either a

predefined type, a union type, a list type, or a dictionary defined

type. The predefined types are listed in Figure 26.

integer[lower, upper] ipv4_address

real[lower, upper] address_prefix

enum[name, name, ...] address_prefix_range

string dns_name

boolean filter

rpsl_word as_set_name

free_text route_set_name

email rtr_set_name

as_number filter_set_name

peering_set_name

Figure 26: Predefined Types

The integer and the real predefined types can be followed by a lower

and an upper bound to specify the set of valid values of the

argument. The range specification is optional. We use the ANSI C

language conventions for representing integer, real and string

values. The enum type is followed by a list of RPSL names which are

the valid values of the type. The boolean type can take the values

true or false. as_number, ipv4_address, address_prefix and dns_name

types are as in Section 2. filter type is a policy filter as in

Section 6. The value of filter type is suggested to be enclosed in

parenthesis.

The syntax of a union type is as follows:

union <type-1>, ... , <type-N>

where <type-i> is an RPSL type. The union type is either of the

types <type-1> through <type-N> (analogous to unions in C[14]).

The syntax of a list type is as follows:

list [<min_elems>:<max_elems>] of <type>

In this case, the list elements are of <type> and the list contains

at least <min_elems> and at most <max_elems> elements. The size

specification is optional. If it is not specified, there is no

restriction in the number of list elements. A value of a list type

is represented as a sequence of elements separated by the character

"," and enclosed by the characters "{" and "}".

The typedef attribute in the dictionary defines named types as

follows:

typedef: <name> <type>

where <name> is a name for type <type>. typedef attribute is

paticularly useful when the type defined is not a predefined type

(e.g. list of unions, list of lists, etc.).

A protocol attribute of the dictionary class defines a protocol and a

set of peering parameters for that protocol (which are used in inet-

rtr class in Section 9). Its syntax is as follows:

protocol: <name>

MANDATORY OPTIONAL <parameter-1>(<type-1-1>,...,

<type-1-N1> [,"..."])

...

MANDATORY OPTIONAL <parameter-M>(<type-M-1>,...,

<type-M-NM> [,"..."])

where <name> is the name of the protocol; MANDATORY and OPTIONAL are

keywords; and <parameter-i> is a peering parameter for this protocol,

taking Ni many arguments. The syntax and semantics of the arguments

are as in the rp-attribute. If the keyword MANDATORY is used, the

parameter is mandatory and needs to be specified for each peering of

this protocol. If the keyword OPTIONAL is used, the parameter can be

skipped.

7.1 Initial RPSL Dictionary and Example Policy Actions and Filters

dictionary: RPSL

rp-attribute: # preference, smaller values represent higher preferences

pref

operator=(integer[0, 65535])

rp-attribute: # BGP multi_exit_discriminator attribute

med

# to set med to 10: med = 10;

# to set med to the IGP metric: med = igp_cost;

operator=(union integer[0, 65535], enum[igp_cost])

rp-attribute: # BGP destination preference attribute (dpa)

dpa

operator=(integer[0, 65535])

rp-attribute: # BGP aspath attribute

aspath

# prepends AS numbers from last to first order

prepend(as_number, ...)

typedef: # a community value in RPSL is either

# - a 4 byte integer (ok to use 3561:70 notation)

# - internet, no_export, no_advertise (see RFC-1997)

community_elm union

integer[1, 4294967295],

enum[internet, no_export, no_advertise],

typedef: # list of community values { 40, no_export, 3561:70 }

community_list list of community_elm

rp-attribute: # BGP community attribute

community

# set to a list of communities

operator=(community_list)

# append community values

operator.=(community_list)

append(community_elm, ...)

# delete community values

delete(community_elm, ...)

# a filter: true if one of community values is contained

contains(community_elm, ...)

# shortcut to contains: community(no_export, 3561:70)

operator()(community_elm, ...)

# order independent equality comparison

operator==(community_list)

rp-attribute: # next hop router in a static route

next-hop

# to set to 7.7.7.7: next-hop = 7.7.7.7;

# to set to router's own address: next-hop = self;

operator=(union ipv4_address, enum[self])

rp-attribute: # cost of a static route

cost

operator=(integer[0, 65535])

protocol: BGP4

# as number of the peer router

MANDATORY asno(as_number)

# enable flap damping

OPTIONAL flap_damp()

OPTIONAL flap_damp(integer[0,65535],

# penalty per flap

integer[0,65535],

# penalty value for supression

integer[0,65535],

# penalty value for reuse

integer[0,65535],

# halflife in secs when up

integer[0,65535],

# halflife in secs when down

integer[0,65535])

# maximum penalty

protocol: OSPF

protocol: RIP

protocol: IGRP

protocol: IS-IS

protocol: STATIC

protocol: RIPng

protocol: DVMRP

protocol: PIM-DM

protocol: PIM-SM

protocol: CBT

protocol: MOSPF

Figure 27: RPSL Dictionary

Figure 27 shows the initial RPSL dictionary. It has seven rp-

attributes: pref to assign local preference to the routes accepted;

med to assign a value to the MULTI_EXIT_DISCRIMINATOR BGP attribute;

dpa to assign a value to the DPA BGP attribute; aspath to prepend a

value to the AS_PATH BGP attribute; community to assign a value to or

to check the value of the community BGP attribute; next-hop to assign

next hop routers to static routes; and cost to assign a cost to

static routes. The dictionary defines two types: community_elm and

community_list. community_elm type is either a 4-byte unsigned

integer, or one of the keywords internet, no_export or no_advertise

(defined in [9]). An integer can be specified using two 2-byte

integers seperated by ":" to partition the community number space so

that a provider can use its AS number as the first two bytes, and

assigns a semantics of its choice to the last two bytes.

The initial dictionary (Figure 27) defines only options for the

Border Gateway Protocol: asno and flap_damp. The mandatory asno

option is the AS number of the peer router. The optional flap_damp

option instructs the router to damp route flaps [21] when importing

routes from the peer router.

It can be specified with or without parameters. If parameters are

missing, they default to:

flap_damp(1000, 2000, 750, 900, 900, 20000)

That is, a penalty of 1000 is assigned at each route flap, the route

is suppressed when penalty reaches 2000. The penalty is reduced in

half after 15 minutes (900 seconds) of stability regardless of

whether the route is up or down. A supressed route is reused when

the penalty falls below 750. The maximum penalty a route can be

assigned is 20,000 (i.e. the maximum suppress time after a route

becomes stable is about 75 minutes). These parameters are consistent

with the default flap damping parameters in several routers.

Policy Actions and Filters Using RP-Attributes

The syntax of a policy action or a filter using an rp-attribute x is

as follows:

x.method(arguments)

x "op" argument

where method is a method and "op" is an operator method of the rp-

attribute x. If an operator method is used in specifying a composite

policy filter, it evaluates earlier than the composite policy filter

operators (i.e. AND, OR, NOT, and implicit or operator).

The pref rp-attribute can be assigned a positive integer as follows:

pref = 10;

The med rp-attribute can be assigned either a positive integer or the

word "igp_cost" as follows:

med = 0;

med = igp_cost;

The dpa rp-attribute can be assigned a positive integer as follows:

dpa = 100;

The BGP community attribute is list-valued, that is it is a list of

4-byte integers each representing a "community". The following

examples demonstrate how to add communities to this rp-attribute:

community .= { 100 };

community .= { NO_EXPORT };

community .= { 3561:10 };

In the last case, a 4-byte integer is constructed where the more

significant two bytes equal 3561 and the less significant two bytes

equal 10. The following examples demonstrate how to delete

communities from the community rp-attribute:

community.delete(100, NO_EXPORT, 3561:10);

Filters that use the community rp-attribute can be defined as

demonstrated by the following examples:

community.contains(100, NO_EXPORT, 3561:10);

community(100, NO_EXPORT, 3561:10); # shortcut

The community rp-attribute can be set to a list of communities as

follows:

community = {100, NO_EXPORT, 3561:10, 200};

community = {};

In this first case, the community rp-attribute contains the

communities 100, NO_EXPORT, 3561:10, and 200. In the latter case,

the community rp-attribute is cleared. The community rp-attribute

can be compared against a list of communities as follows:

community == {100, NO_EXPORT, 3561:10, 200}; # exact match

To influence the route selection, the BGP as_path rp-attribute can be

made longer by prepending AS numbers to it as follows:

aspath.prepend(AS1);

aspath.prepend(AS1, AS1, AS1);

The following examples are invalid:

med = -50; # -50 is not in the range

med = igp; # igp is not one of the enum values

med.assign(10); # method assign is not defined

community.append(AS3561:20); # the first argument should be 3561

Figure 28 shows a more advanced example using the rp-attribute

community. In this example, AS3561 bases its route selection

preference on the community attribute. Other ASes may indirectly

affect AS3561's route selection by including the appropriate

communities in their route announcements.

aut-num: AS1

export: to AS2 action community.={3561:90};

to AS3 action community.={3561:80};

announce AS1

as-set: AS3561:AS-PEERS

members: AS2, AS3

aut-num: AS3561

import: from AS3561:AS-PEERS

action pref = 10;

accept community(3561:90)

import: from AS3561:AS-PEERS

action pref = 20;

accept community(3561:80)

import: from AS3561:AS-PEERS

action pref = 20;

accept community(3561:70)

import: from AS3561:AS-PEERS

action pref = 0;

accept ANY

Figure 28: Policy example using the community rp-attribute.

8 Advanced route Class

8.1 Specifying Aggregate Routes

The components, aggr-bndry, aggr-mtd, export-comps, inject, and holes

attributes are used for specifying aggregate routes [11]. A route

object specifies an aggregate route if any of these attributes, with

the exception of inject, is specified. The origin attribute for an

aggregate route is the AS performing the aggregation, i.e. the

aggregator AS. In this section, we used the term "aggregate" to refer

to the route generated, the term "component" to refer to the routes

used to generate the path attributes of the aggregate, and the term

"more specifics" to refer to any route which is a more specific of

the aggregate regardless of whether it was used to form the path

attributes.

The components attribute defines what component routes are used to

form the aggregate. Its syntax is as follows:

components: [ATOMIC] [[<filter>] [protocol <protocol> <filter> ...]]

where <protocol> is a routing protocol name such as BGP4, OSPF or RIP

(valid names are defined in the dictionary) and <filter> is a policy

expression. The routes that match one of these filters and are

learned from the corresponding protocol are used to form the

aggregate. If <protocol> is omitted, it defaults to any protocol.

<filter> implicitly contains an "AND" term with the more specifics of

the aggregate so that only the component routes are selected. If the

keyword ATOMIC is used, the aggregation is done atomically [11]. If

a <filter> is not specified it defaults to more specifics. If the

components attribute is missing, all more specifics without the

ATOMIC keyword is used.

route: 128.8.0.0/15

origin: AS1

components: <^AS2>

route: 128.8.0.0/15

origin: AS1

components: protocol BGP4 {128.8.0.0/16^+}

protocol OSPF {128.9.0.0/16^+}

Figure 29: Two aggregate route objects.

Figure 29 shows two route objects. In the first example, more

specifics of 128.8.0.0/15 with AS paths starting with AS2 are

aggregated. In the second example, some routes learned from BGP and

some routes learned form OSPF are aggregated.

The aggr-bndry attribute is an AS expression over AS numbers and sets

(see Section 5.6). The result defines the set of ASes which form the

aggregation boundary. If the aggr-bndry attribute is missing, the

origin AS is the sole aggregation boundary. Outside the aggregation

boundary, only the aggregate is exported and more specifics are

suppressed. However, within the boundary, the more specifics are

also exchanged.

The aggr-mtd attribute specifies how the aggregate is generated. Its

syntax is as follows:

aggr-mtd: inbound

outbound [<as-expression>]

where <as-expression> is an expression over AS numbers and sets (see

Section 5.6). If <as-expression> is missing, it defaults to AS-ANY.

If outbound aggregation is specified, the more specifics of the

aggregate will be present within the AS and the aggregate will be

formed at all inter-AS boundaries with ASes in <as-expression> before

export, except for ASes that are within the aggregating boundary

(i.e. aggr-bndry is enforced regardless of <as-expression>). If

inbound aggregation is specified, the aggregate is formed at all

inter-AS boundaries prior to importing routes into the aggregator AS.

Note that <as-expression> can not be specified with inbound

aggregation. If aggr-mtd attribute is missing, it defaults to

"outbound AS-ANY".

route: 128.8.0.0/15 route: 128.8.0.0/15

origin: AS1 origin: AS2

components: {128.8.0.0/15^-} components: {128.8.0.0/15^-}

aggr-bndry: AS1 OR AS2 aggr-bndry: AS1 OR AS2

aggr-mtd: outbound AS-ANY aggr-mtd: outbound AS-ANY

Figure 30: Outbound multi-AS aggregation example.

Figure 30 shows an example of an outbound aggregation. In this

example, AS1 and AS2 are coordinating aggregation and announcing only

the less specific 128.8.0.0/15 to outside world, but exchanging more

specifics between each other. This form of aggregation is useful

when some of the components are within AS1 and some are within AS2.

When a set of routes are aggregated, the intent is to export only the

aggregate route and suppress exporting of the more specifics outside

the aggregation boundary. However, to satisfy certain policy and

topology constraints (e.g. a multi-homed component), it is often

required to export some of the components. The export-comps

attribute equals an RPSL filter that matches the more specifics that

need to be exported outside the aggregation boundary. If this

attribute is missing, more specifics are not exported outside the

aggregation boundary. Note that, the export-comps filter contains an

implicit "AND" term with the more specifics of the aggregate.

Figure 31 shows an example of an outbound aggregation. In this

example, the more specific 128.8.8.0/24 is exported outside AS1 in

addition to the aggregate. This is useful, when 128.8.8.0/24 is

multi-homed site to AS1 with some other AS.

route: 128.8.0.0/15

origin: AS1

components: {128.8.0.0/15^-}

aggr-mtd: outbound AS-ANY

export-comps: {128.8.8.0/24}

Figure 31: Outbound aggregation with export exception.

The inject attribute specifies which routers perform the aggregation

and when they perform it. Its syntax is as follow:

inject: [at <router-expression>] ...

[action <action>]

[upon <condition>]

where <action> is an action specification (see Section 6.1.1),

<condition> is a boolean expression described below, and <router-

expression> is as described in Section 5.6.

All routers in <router-expression> and in the aggregator AS perform

the aggregation. If a <router-expression> is not specified, all

routers inside the aggregator AS perform the aggregation. The

<action> specification may set path attributes of the aggregate, such

as assign a preferences to the aggregate.

The upon clause is a boolean condition. The aggregate is generated

if and only if this condition is true. <condition> is a boolean

expression using the logical operators AND and OR (i.e. operator NOT

is not allowed) over:

HAVE-COMPONENTS { list of prefixes }

EXCLUDE { list of prefixes }

STATIC

The list of prefixes in HAVE-COMPONENTS can only be more specifics of

the aggregate. It evaluates to true when all the prefixes listed are

present in the routing table of the aggregating router. The list can

also include prefix ranges (i.e. using operators ^-, ^+, ^n, and ^n-

m). In this case, at least one prefix from each prefix range needs

to be present in the routing table for the condition to be true. The

list of prefixes in EXCLUDE can be arbitrary. It evaluates to true

when none of the prefixes listed is present in the routing table.

The list can also include prefix ranges, and no prefix in that range

should be present in the routing table. The keyword static always

evaluates to true. If no upon clause is specified the aggregate is

generated if an only if there is a component in the routing table

(i.e. a more specific that matches the filter in the components

attribute).

route: 128.8.0.0/15

origin: AS1

components: {128.8.0.0/15^-}

aggr-mtd: outbound AS-ANY

inject: at 1.1.1.1 action dpa = 100;

inject: at 1.1.1.2 action dpa = 110;

route: 128.8.0.0/15

origin: AS1

components: {128.8.0.0/15^-}

aggr-mtd: outbound AS-ANY

inject: upon HAVE-COMPONENTS {128.8.0.0/16, 128.9.0.0/16}

holes: 128.8.8.0/24

Figure 32: Examples of inject.

Figure 32 shows two examples. In the first case, the aggregate is

injected at two routers each one setting the dpa path attribute

differently. In the second case, the aggregate is generated only if

both 128.8.0.0/16 and 128.9.0.0/16 are present in the routing table,

as opposed to the first case where the presence of just one of them

is sufficient for injection.

The holes attribute lists the component address prefixes which are

not reachable through the aggregate route (perhaps that part of the

address space is unallocated). The holes attribute is useful for

diagnosis purposes. In Figure 32, the second example has a hole,

namely 128.8.8.0/24. This may be due to a customer changing

providers and taking this part of the address space with it.

8.1.1 Interaction with policies in aut-num class

An aggregate formed is announced to other ASes only if the export

policies of the AS allows exporting the aggregate. When the

aggregate is formed, the more specifics are suppressed from being

exported except to the ASes in aggr-bndry and except the components

in export-comps. For such exceptions to happen, the export policies

of the AS should explicitly allow exporting of these exceptions.

If an aggregate is not formed (due to the upon clause), then the more

specifics of the aggregate can be exported to other ASes, but only if

the export policies of the AS allows it. In other words, before a

route (aggregate or more specific) is exported it is filtered twice,

once based on the route objects, and once based on the export

policies of the AS.

route: 128.8.0.0/16

origin: AS1

route: 128.9.0.0/16

origin: AS1

route: 128.8.0.0/15

origin: AS1

aggr-bndry: AS1 or AS2 or AS3

aggr-mtd: outbound AS3 or AS4 or AS5

components: {128.8.0.0/16, 128.9.0.0/16}

inject: upon HAVE-COMPONENTS {128.9.0.0/16, 128.8.0.0/16}

aut-num: AS1

export: to AS2 announce AS1

export: to AS3 announce AS1 and not {128.9.0.0/16}

export: to AS4 announce AS1

export: to AS5 announce AS1

export: to AS6 announce AS1

Figure 33: Interaction with policies in aut-num class.

In Figure 33 shows an interaction example. By examining the route

objects, the more specifics 128.8.0.0/16 and 128.9.0.0/16 should be

exchanged between AS1, AS2 and AS3 (i.e. the aggregation boundary).

Outbound aggregation is done to AS4 and AS5 and not to AS3, since AS3

is in the aggregation boundary. The aut-num object allows exporting

both components to AS2, but only the component 128.8.0.0/16 to AS3.

The aggregate can only be formed if both components are available.

In this case, only the aggregate is announced to AS4 and AS5.

However, if one of the components is not available the aggregate will

not be formed, and any available component or more specific will be

exported to AS4 and AS5. Regardless of aggregation is performed or

not, only the more specifics will be exported to AS6 (it is not

listed in the aggr-mtd attribute).

When doing an inbound aggregation, configuration generators may

eliminating the aggregation statements on routers where import policy

of the AS prohibits importing of any more specifics.

8.1.2 Ambiguity resolution with overlapping aggregates

When several aggregate routes are specified and they overlap, i.e.

one is less specific of the other, they must be evaluated more

specific to less specific order. When an outbound aggregation is

performed for a peer, the aggregate and the components listed in the

export-comps attribute for that peer are available for generating the

next less specific aggregate. The components that are not specified

in the export-comps attribute are not available. A route is

exportable to an AS if it is the least specific aggregate exportable

to that AS or it is listed in the export-comps attribute of an

exportable route. Note that this is a recursive definition.

route: 128.8.0.0/15

origin: AS1

aggr-bndry: AS1 or AS2

aggr-mtd: outbound

inject: upon HAVE-COMPONENTS {128.8.0.0/16, 128.9.0.0/16}

route: 128.10.0.0/15

origin: AS1

aggr-bndry: AS1 or AS3

aggr-mtd: outbound

inject: upon HAVE-COMPONENTS {128.10.0.0/16, 128.11.0.0/16}

export-comps: {128.11.0.0/16}

route: 128.8.0.0/14

origin: AS1

aggr-bndry: AS1 or AS2 or AS3

aggr-mtd: outbound

inject: upon HAVE-COMPONENTS {128.8.0.0/15, 128.10.0.0/15}

export-comps: {128.10.0.0/15}

Figure 34: Overlapping aggregations.

In Figure 34, AS1 together with AS2 aggregates 128.8.0.0/16 and

128.9.0.0/16 into 128.8.0.0/15. Together with AS3, AS1 aggregates

128.10.0.0/16 and 128.11.0.0/16 into 128.10.0.0/15. But altogether

they aggregate these four routes into 128.8.0.0/14. Assuming all

four components are available, a router in AS1 for an outside AS, say

AS4, will first generate 128.8.0.0/15 and 128.10.0.0/15. This will

make 128.8.0.0/15, 128.10.0.0/15 and its exception 128.11.0.0/16

available for generating 128.8.0.0/14. The router will then generate

128.8.0.0/14 from these three routes. Hence for AS4, 128.8.0.0/14

and its exception 128.10.0.0/15 and its exception 128.11.0.0/16 will

be exportable.

For AS2, a router in AS1 will only generate 128.10.0.0/15. Hence,

128.10.0.0/15 and its exception 128.11.0.0/16 will be exportable.

Note that 128.8.0.0/16 and 128.9.0.0/16 are also exportable since

they did not participate in an aggregate exportable to AS2.

Similarly, for AS3, a router in AS1 will only generate 128.8.0.0/15.

In this case 128.8.0.0/15, 128.10.0.0/16, 128.11.0.0/16 are

exportable.

8.2 Specifying Static Routes

The inject attribute can be used to specify static routes by using

"upon static" as the condition:

inject: [at <router-expression>] ...

[action <action>]

upon static

In this case, the routers in <router-expression> executes the

<action> and injects the route to the interAS routing system

statically. <action> may set certain route attributes such as a

next-hop router or a cost.

In the following example, the router 7.7.7.1 injects the route

128.7.0.0/16. The next-hop routers (in this example, there are two

next-hop routers) for this route are 7.7.7.2 and 7.7.7.3 and the

route has a cost of 10 over 7.7.7.2 and 20 over 7.7.7.3.

route: 128.7.0.0/16

origin: AS1

inject: at 7.7.7.1 action next-hop = 7.7.7.2; cost = 10; upon static

inject: at 7.7.7.1 action next-hop = 7.7.7.3; cost = 20; upon static

9 inet-rtr Class

Routers are specified using the inet-rtr class. The attributes of the

inet-rtr class are shown in Figure 35. The inet-rtr attribute is a valid

DNS name of the router described. Each alias attribute, if present, is a

canonical DNS name for the router. The local-as attribute specifies the AS

number of the AS which owns/operates this router.

Attribute Value Type

inet-rtr <dns-name> mandatory, single-valued, class key

alias <dns-name> optional, multi-valued

local-as <as-number> mandatory, single-valued

ifaddr see description in text mandatory, multi-valued

peer see description in text optional, multi-valued

member-of list of <rtr-set-names> optional, multi-valued

Figure 35: inet-rtr Class Attributes

The value of an ifaddr attribute has the following syntax:

<ipv4-address> masklen <integer> [action <action>]

The IP address and the mask length are mandatory for each interface.

Optionally an action can be specified to set other parameters of this

interface.

Figure 36 presents an example inet-rtr object. The name of the

router is "amsterdam.ripe.net". "amsterdam1.ripe.net" is a canonical

name for the router. The router is connected to 4 networks. Its IP

addresses and mask lengths in those networks are specified in the

ifaddr attributes.

inet-rtr: Amsterdam.ripe.net

alias: amsterdam1.ripe.net

local-as: AS3333

ifaddr: 192.87.45.190 masklen 24

ifaddr: 192.87.4.28 masklen 24

ifaddr: 193.0.0.222 masklen 27

ifaddr: 193.0.0.158 masklen 27

peer: BGP4 192.87.45.195 asno(AS3334), flap_damp()

Figure 36: inet-rtr Objects

Each peer attribute, if present, specifies a protocol peering with

another router. The value of a peer attribute has the following

syntax:

<protocol> <ipv4-address> <options>

<protocol> <inet-rtr-name> <options>

<protocol> <rtr-set-name> <options>

<protocol> <peering-set-name> <options>

where <protocol> is a protocol name, <ipv4-address> is the IP address

of the peer router, and <options> is a comma separated list of

peering options for <protocol>. Instead of the peer's IP address,

its inet-rtr-name can be used. Possible protocol names and

attributes are defined in the dictionary (please see Section 7). In

the above example, the router has a BGP peering with the router

192.87.45.195 in AS3334 and turns the flap damping on when importing

routes from this router.

Instead of a single peer, a group of peers can be specified by using

the <rtr-set-name> and <peering-set-name> forms. If <peering-set-

name> form is being used only the peerings in the corresponding

peering set that are with this router are included. Figure 37 shows

an example inet-rtr object with peering groups.

rtr-set: rtrs-ibgp-peers

members: 1.1.1.1, 2.2.2.2, 3.3.3.3

peering-set: prng-ebgp-peers

peering: AS3334 192.87.45.195

peering: AS3335 192.87.45.196

inet-rtr: Amsterdam.ripe.net

alias: amsterdam1.ripe.net

local-as: AS3333

ifaddr: 192.87.45.190 masklen 24

ifaddr: 192.87.4.28 masklen 24

ifaddr: 193.0.0.222 masklen 27

ifaddr: 193.0.0.158 masklen 27

peer: BGP4 rtrs-ibgp-peers asno(AS3333), flap_damp()

peer: BGP4 prng-ebgp-peers asno(PeerAS), flap_damp()

Figure 37: inet-rtr Object with peering groups

10 Extending RPSL

Our experience with earlier routing policy languages and data formats

(PRDB [2], RIPE-81 [8], and RIPE-181 [7]) taught us that RPSL had to

be extensible. As a result, extensibility was a primary design goal

for RPSL. New routing protocols or new features to existing routing

protocols can be easily handled using RPSL's dictionary class. New

classes or new attributes to the existing classes can also be added.

This section provides guidelines for extending RPSL. These guidelines

are designed with an eye toward maintaining backward compatibility

with existing tools and databases. We next list the available

options for extending RPSL from the most preferred to the least

preferred order.

10.1 Extensions by changing the dictionary class

The dictionary class is the primary mechanism provided to extend

RPSL. Dictionary objects define routing policy attributes, types,

and routing protocols.

We recommend updating the RPSL dictionary to include appropriate rp-

attribute and protocol definitions as new path attributes or router

features are introduced. For example, in an earlier version of the

RPSL document, it was only possible to specify that a router performs

route flap damping on a peer, but it was not possible to specify the

parameters of route flap damping. Later the parameters were added by

changing the dictionary.

When changing the dictionary, full compatibility should be

maintained. For example, in our flap damping case, we made the

parameter specification optional in case this level of detail was not

desired by some ISPs. This also achieved compatibility. Any object

registered without the parameters will continue to be valid. Any

tool based on RPSL is expected to do a default action on routing

policy attributes that they do not understand (e.g. issue a warning

and otherwise ignore). Hence, old tools upon encountering a flap

damping specification with parameters will ignore the parameters.

10.2 Extensions by adding new attributes to existing classes

New attributes can be added to any class. To ensure full

compatibility, new attributes should not contradict the semantics of

the objects they are attached to. Any tool that uses the IRR should

be designed so that it ignores attributes that it doesn't understand.

Most existing tools adhere to this design principle.

We recommend adding new attributes to existing classes when a new

aspect of a class is discovered. For example, RPSL route class

extends its RIPE-181 predecessor by including several new attributes

that enable aggregate and static route specification.

10.3 Extensions by adding new classes

New classes can be added to RPSL to store new types of policy data.

Providing full compatibility is straight forward as long as existing

classes are still understood. Since a tool should only query the IRR

for the classes that it understand, full compatibility should not be

a problem in this case.

Before adding a new class, one should question if the information

contained in the objects of the new class could have better belonged

to some other class. For example, if the geographic location of a

router needs to be stored in IRR, it may be tempting to add a new

class called, say router-location class. However, the information

better belongs to the inet-rtr class, perhaps in a new attribute

called location.

10.4 Extensions by changing the syntax of existing RPSL attributes

If all of the methods described above fail to provide the desired

extension, it may be necessary to change the syntax of RPSL. Any

change in RPSL syntax must provide backwards compatibility, and

should be considered only as a last resort since full compatibility

may not be achievable. However, we require that the old syntax to be

still valid.

11 Security Considerations

This document describes RPSL, a language for expressing routing

policies. The language defines a maintainer (mntner class) object

which is the entity which controls or "maintains" the objects stored

in a database expressed by RPSL. Requests from maintainers can be

authenticated with various techniques as defined by the "auth"

attribute of the maintainer object.

The exact protocols used by IRR's to communicate RPSL objects is

beyond the scope of this document, but it is envisioned that several

techniques may be used, ranging from interactive query/update

protocols to store and forward protocols similar to or based on

electronic mail (or even voice telephone calls). Regardless of which

protocols are used in a given situation, it is expected that

appropriate security techniques such as IPSEC, TLS or PGP/MIME will

be utilized.

12 Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Jessica Yu, Randy Bush, Alan Barrett, Bill

Manning, Sue Hares, Ramesh Govindan, Kannan Varadhan, Satish Kumar,

Craig Labovitz, Rusty Eddy, David J. LeRoy, David Whipple, Jon

Postel, Deborah Estrin, Elliot Schwartz, Joachim Schmitz, Mark Prior,

Tony Przygienda, David Woodgate, Rob Coltun, Sanjay Wadhwa, Ardas

Cilingiroglu, and the participants of the IETF RPS Working Group for

various comments and suggestions.

References

[1] Internet routing registry. procedures.

http://www.ra.net/RADB.tools.docs/,

http://www.ripe.net/db/doc.Html.

[2] Nsfnet policy routing database (prdb). Maintained by MERIT

Network Inc., Ann Arbor, Michigan. Contents available from

nic.merit.edu.:/nsfnet/announced.networks/nets.tag.now by

anonymous FTP.

[3] Alaettinouglu, C., Bates, T., Gerich, E., Karrenberg, D., Meyer,

D., Terpstra, M. and C. Villamizer, "Routing Policy Specification

Language (RPSL)", RFC2280, January 1998.

[4] C. Alaettinouglu, D. Meyer, and J. Schmitz. Application of

routing policy specification language (rpsl) on the internet.

Work in Progress.

[5] T. Bates. Specifying an `internet router' in the routing

registry. Technical Report RIPE-122, RIPE, RIPE NCC, Amsterdam,

Netherlands, October 1994.

[6] T. Bates, E. Gerich, L. Joncheray, J-M. Jouanigot, D. Karrenberg,

M. Terpstra, and J. Yu. Representation of ip routing policies in

a routing registry. Technical Report ripe-181, RIPE, RIPE NCC,

Amsterdam, Netherlands, October 1994.

[7] Bates, T., Gerich, E., Joncheray, L., Jouanigot, J-M.,

Karrenberg, D., Terpstra, M. and J. Yu, " Representation of IP

Routing Policies in a Routing Registry", RFC1786, March 1995.

[8] T. Bates, J-M. Jouanigot, D. Karrenberg, P. Lothberg, and M.

Terpstra. Representation of ip routing policies in the ripe

database. Technical Report ripe-81, RIPE, RIPE NCC, Amsterdam,

Netherlands, February 1993.

[9] Chandra, R., Traina, P. and T. Li, "BGP Communities Attribute",

RFC1997, August 1996.

[10] Crocker, D., "Standard for ARPA Internet Text Messages", STD 11,

RFC822, August 1982.

[11] Fuller, V., Li, T., Yu, J. and K. Varadhan, "Classless Inter-

Domain Routing (CIDR): an Address Assignment and Aggregation

Strategy", RFC1519, September 1993.

[12] D. Karrenberg and T. Bates. Description of inter-as networks in

the ripe routing registry. Technical Report RIPE-104, RIPE, RIPE

NCC, Amsterdam, Netherlands, December 1993.

[13] D. Karrenberg and M. Terpstra. Authorisation and notification of

changes in the ripe database. Technical Report ripe-120, RIPE,

RIPE NCC, Amsterdam, Netherlands, October 1994.

[14] B. W. Kernighan and D. M. Ritchie. The C Programming Language.

Prentice-Hall, 1978.

[15] A. Lord and M. Terpstra. Ripe database template for networks and

persons. Technical Report ripe-119, RIPE, RIPE NCC, Amsterdam,

Netherlands, October 1994.

[16] A. M. R. Magee. Ripe ncc database documentation. Technical Report

RIPE-157, RIPE, RIPE NCC, Amsterdam, Netherlands, May 1997.

[17] Mockapetris, P., "Domain names - concepts and facilities", STD

13, RFC1034, November 1987.

[18] Y. Rekhter. Inter-domain routing protocol (idrp). Journal of

Internetworking Research and Experience, 4:61--80, 1993.

[19] Rekhter Y. and T. Li, "A Border Gateway Protocol 4 (BGP-4)", RFC

1771, March 1995.

[20] C. Villamizar, C. Alaettinouglu, D. Meyer, S. Murphy, and C.

Orange. Routing policy system security", Work in Progress.

[21] Villamizar, C., Chandra, R. and R. Govindan, "BGP Route Flap

Damping", RFC2439, November 1998.

[22] J. Zsako, "PGP authentication for ripe database updates", Work in

Progress.

A Routing Registry Sites

The set of routing registries as of November 1996 are RIPE, RADB,

CANet, MCI and ANS. You may contact one of these registries to find

out the current list of registries.

B Grammar Rules

In this section we provide formal grammar rules for RPSL. Basic data

types are defined in Section 2. We do not provide formal grammar

rules for attributes whose values are of basic types or list of basic

types. The rules are written using the input language of GNU Bison

parser. Hence, they can be cut and pasted to that program.

//**** Generic Attributes **********************************************

changed_attribute: ATTR_CHANGED TKN_EMAIL TKN_INT

//**** aut-num class ***************************************************

//// as_expression /////////////////////////////////////////////////////

opt_as_expression:

as_expression

as_expression: as_expression OP_OR as_expression_term

as_expression_term

as_expression_term: as_expression_term OP_AND as_expression_factor

as_expression_term KEYW_EXCEPT as_expression_factor

as_expression_factor

as_expression_factor: '(' as_expression ')'

as_expression_operand

as_expression_operand: TKN_ASNO

TKN_ASNAME

//// router_expression /////////////////////////////////////////////////

opt_router_expression:

router_expression

opt_router_expression_with_at:

KEYW_AT router_expression

router_expression: router_expression OP_OR router_expression_term

router_expression_term

router_expression_term: router_expression_term OP_AND

router_expression_factor

router_expression_term KEYW_EXCEPT router_expression_factor

router_expression_factor

router_expression_factor: '(' router_expression ')'

router_expression_operand

router_expression_operand: TKN_IPV4

TKN_DNS

TKN_RTRSNAME

//// peering ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

peering: as_expression opt_router_expression opt_router_expression_with_at

TKN_PRNGNAME

//// action ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

opt_action:

KEYW_ACTION action

action: single_action

action single_action

single_action: TKN_RP_ATTR '.' TKN_WORD '(' generic_list ')' ';'

TKN_RP_ATTR TKN_OPERATOR list_item ';'

TKN_RP_ATTR '(' generic_list ')' ';'

TKN_RP_ATTR '[' generic_list ']' ';'

';'

//// filter ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

filter: filter OP_OR filter_term

filter filter_term %prec OP_OR

filter_term

filter_term : filter_term OP_AND filter_factor

filter_factor

filter_factor : OP_NOT filter_factor

'(' filter ')'

filter_operand

filter_operand: KEYW_ANY

'<' filter_aspath '>'

filter_rp_attribute

TKN_FLTRNAME

filter_prefix

filter_prefix: filter_prefix_operand OP_MS

filter_prefix_operand

filter_prefix_operand: TKN_ASNO

KEYW_PEERAS

TKN_ASNAME

TKN_RSNAME

'{' opt_filter_prefix_list '}'

opt_filter_prefix_list:

filter_prefix_list

filter_prefix_list: filter_prefix_list_prefix

filter_prefix_list ',' filter_prefix_list_prefix

filter_prefix_list_prefix: TKN_PRFXV4

TKN_PRFXV4RNG

filter_aspath: filter_aspath '' filter_aspath_term

filter_aspath_term

filter_aspath_term: filter_aspath_term filter_aspath_closure

filter_aspath_closure

filter_aspath_closure: filter_aspath_closure '*'

filter_aspath_closure '?'

filter_aspath_closure '+'

filter_aspath_factor

filter_aspath_factor: '^'

'$'

'(' filter_aspath ')'

filter_aspath_no

filter_aspath_no: TKN_ASNO

KEYW_PEERAS

TKN_ASNAME

'.'

'[' filter_aspath_range ']'

'[' '^' filter_aspath_range ']'

filter_aspath_range:

filter_aspath_range TKN_ASNO

filter_aspath_range KEYW_PEERAS

filter_aspath_range '.'

filter_aspath_range TKN_ASNO '-' TKN_ASNO

filter_aspath_range TKN_ASNAME

filter_rp_attribute: TKN_RP_ATTR '.' TKN_WORD '(' generic_list ')'

TKN_RP_ATTR TKN_OPERATOR list_item

TKN_RP_ATTR '(' generic_list ')'

TKN_RP_ATTR '[' generic_list ']'

//// peering action pair ///////////////////////////////////////////////

import_peering_action_list: KEYW_FROM peering opt_action

import_peering_action_list KEYW_FROM peering opt_action

export_peering_action_list: KEYW_TO peering opt_action

export_peering_action_list KEYW_TO peering opt_action

//// import/export factor //////////////////////////////////////////////

import_factor: import_peering_action_list KEYW_ACCEPT filter

import_factor_list: import_factor ';'

import_factor_list import_factor ';'

export_factor: export_peering_action_list KEYW_ANNOUNCE filter

export_factor_list: export_factor ';'

export_factor_list export_factor ';'

//// import/export term ////////////////////////////////////////////////

import_term: import_factor ';'

'{' import_factor_list '}'

export_term: export_factor ';'

'{' export_factor_list '}'

//// import/export expression //////////////////////////////////////////

import_expression: import_term

import_term KEYW_REFINE import_expression

import_term KEYW_EXCEPT import_expression

export_expression: export_term

export_term KEYW_REFINE export_expression

export_term KEYW_EXCEPT export_expression

//// protocol ///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////

opt_protocol_from:

KEYW_PROTOCOL tkn_word

opt_protocol_into:

KEYW_INTO tkn_word

//**** import/export attributes ****************************************

import_attribute: ATTR_IMPORT

ATTR_IMPORT opt_protocol_from opt_protocol_into import_factor

export_attribute: ATTR_EXPORT

ATTR_EXPORT opt_protocol_from opt_protocol_into export_factor

opt_default_filter:

KEYW_NETWORKS filter

default_attribute: ATTR_DEFAULT KEYW_TO peering

filter_attribute: ATTR_FILTER filter

peering_attribute: ATTR_PEERING peering

//**** inet-rtr class **************************************************

ifaddr_attribute: ATTR_IFADDR TKN_IPV4 KEYW_MASKLEN TKN_INT opt_action

//// peer attribute ////////////////////////////////////////////////////

opt_peer_options:

peer_options

peer_options: peer_option

peer_options ',' peer_option

peer_option: tkn_word '(' generic_list ')'

peer_id: TKN_IPV4

TKN_DNS

TKN_RTRSNAME

TKN_PRNGNAME

peer_attribute: ATTR_PEER tkn_word peer_id opt_peer_options

//**** route class *****************************************************

aggr_bndry_attribute: ATTR_AGGR_BNDRY as_expression

aggr_mtd_attribute: ATTR_AGGR_MTD KEYW_INBOUND

ATTR_AGGR_MTD KEYW_OUTBOUND opt_as_expression

//// inject attribute //////////////////////////////////////////////////

opt_inject_expression:

KEYW_UPON inject_expression

inject_expression: inject_expression OP_OR inject_expression_term

inject_expression_term

inject_expression_term: inject_expression_term OP_AND

inject_expression_factor

inject_expression_factor

inject_expression_factor: '(' inject_expression ')'

inject_expression_operand

inject_expression_operand: KEYW_STATIC

KEYW_HAVE_COMPONENTS '{' opt_filter_prefix_list '}'

KEYW_EXCLUDE '{' opt_filter_prefix_list '}'

inject_attribute: ATTR_INJECT opt_router_expression_with_at opt_action

opt_inject_expression

//// components attribute //////////////////////////////////////////////

opt_atomic:

KEYW_ATOMIC

components_list:

filter

components_list KEYW_PROTOCOL tkn_word filter

components_attribute: ATTR_COMPONENTS opt_atomic components_list

//**** route-set *******************************************************

opt_rs_members_list: /* empty list */

rs_members_list

rs_members_list: rs_member

rs_members_list ',' rs_member

rs_member: TKN_ASNO

TKN_ASNO OP_MS

TKN_ASNAME

TKN_ASNAME OP_MS

TKN_RSNAME

TKN_RSNAME OP_MS

TKN_PRFXV4

TKN_PRFXV4RNG

rs_members_attribute: ATTR_RS_MEMBERS opt_rs_members_list

//**** dictionary ******************************************************

rpattr_attribute: ATTR_RP_ATTR TKN_WORD methods

ATTR_RP_ATTR TKN_RP_ATTR methods

methods: method

methods method

method: TKN_WORD '(' ')'

TKN_WORD '(' typedef_type_list ')'

TKN_WORD '(' typedef_type_list ',' TKN_3DOTS ')'

KEYW_OPERATOR TKN_OPERATOR '(' typedef_type_list ')'

KEYW_OPERATOR TKN_OPERATOR '(' typedef_type_list ',' TKN_3DOTS ')'

//// typedef attribute ////////////////////////////////////////////////

typedef_attribute: ATTR_TYPEDEF TKN_WORD typedef_type

typedef_type_list: typedef_type

typedef_type_list ',' typedef_type

typedef_type: KEYW_UNION typedef_type_list

KEYW_RANGE KEYW_OF typedef_type

TKN_WORD

TKN_WORD '[' TKN_INT ',' TKN_INT ']'

TKN_WORD '[' TKN_REAL ',' TKN_REAL ']'

TKN_WORD '[' enum_list ']'

KEYW_LIST '[' TKN_INT ':' TKN_INT ']' KEYW_OF typedef_type

KEYW_LIST KEYW_OF typedef_type

enum_list: tkn_word

enum_list ',' tkn_word

//// protocol attribute ////////////////////////////////////////////////

protocol_attribute: ATTR_PROTOCOL tkn_word protocol_options

protocol_options:

protocol_options protocol_option

protocol_option: KEYW_MANDATORY method

KEYW_OPTIONAL method

//**** Token Definitions ***********************************************

//// flex macros used in token definitions /////////////////////////////

INT [[:digit:]]+

SINT [+-]?{INT}

REAL [+-]?{INT}?\.{INT}({WS}*E{WS}*[+-]?{INT})?

NAME [[:alpha:]]([[:alnum:]_-]*[[:alnum:]])?

ASNO AS{INT}

ASNAME AS-[[:alnum:]_-]*[[:alnum:]]

RSNAME RS-[[:alnum:]_-]*[[:alnum:]]

RTRSNAME RTRS-[[:alnum:]_-]*[[:alnum:]]

PRNGNAME PRNG-[[:alnum:]_-]*[[:alnum:]]

FLTRNAME FLTR-[[:alnum:]_-]*[[:alnum:]]

IPV4 [0-9]+(\.[0-9]+){3,3}

PRFXV4 {IPV4}\/[0-9]+

PRFXV4RNG {PRFXV4}("^+""^-""^"{INT}"^"{INT}-{INT})

ENAMECHAR [^()<>,;:\\\"\.[\] \t\r]

ENAME ({ENAMECHAR}+(\.{ENAMECHAR}+)*\.?)(\"[^\"@\\\r\n]+\")

DNAME [[:alnum:]_-]+

//// Token Definitions ////////////////////////////////////////////////

TKN_INT {SINT}

TKN_INT {INT}:{INT} if each {INT} is two octets

TKN_INT {INT}.{INT}.{INT}.{INT} if each {INT} is one octet

TKN_REAL {REAL}

TKN_STRING Same as in programming language C

TKN_IPV4 {IPV4}

TKN_PRFXV4 {PRFXV4}

TKN_PRFXV4RNG {PRFXV4RNG}

TKN_ASNO {ASNO}

TKN_ASNAME (({ASNO}peeras{ASNAME}):)*{ASNAME} (:({ASNO}peeras{ASNAME}))*

TKN_RSNAME (({ASNO}peeras{RSNAME}):)*{RSNAME} (:({ASNO}peeras{RSNAME}))*

TKN_RTRSNAME (({ASNO}peeras{RTRSNAME}):)*{RTRSNAME} (:({ASNO}peeras{RTRSNAME}))*

TKN_PRNGNAME (({ASNO}peeras{PRNGNAME}):)*{PRNGNAME} (:({ASNO}peeras{PRNGNAME}))*

TKN_FLTRNAME (({ASNO}peeras{FLTRNAME}):)*{FLTRNAME} (:({ASNO}peeras{FLTRNAME}))*

TKN_BOOLEAN truefalse

TKN_RP_ATTR {NAME} if defined in dictionary

TKN_WORD {NAME}

TKN_DNS {DNAME}("."{DNAME})+

TKN_EMAIL {ENAME}@({DNAME}("."{DNAME})+{IPV4})

C Changes from RFC2280

RFC2280 [3] contains an earlier version of RPSL. This section

summarizes the changes since then. They are as follows:

o It is now possible to write integers as sequence of four 1-octet

integers (e.g. 1.1.1.1) or as sequence of two 2-octet integers

(e.g. 3561:70). Please see Section 2.

o The definition of address prefix range is extended so that an

address prefix is also an address prefix range. Please see Section

2.

o The semantics for a range operator applied to a set containing

address prefix ranges is defined (e.g. {30.0.0.0/8^24-28}^27-30).

Please see Section 2.

o All dates are now in UTC. Please see Section 2.

o Plus ('+') character is added to space and tab characters to split

an attribute's value to multiple lines (i.e. by starting the

following lines with a space, a tab or a plus ('+') character).

Please see Section 2.

o The withdrawn attribute of route class is removed from the

language.

o filter-set class is introduced. Please see Section 5.4.

o rtr-set class is introduced. Please see Section 5.5.

o peering-set class is introduced. Please see Section 5.6.

o Filters can now refer to filter-set names. Please see Section 5.4.

o Peerings can now refer to peering-set, rtr-set names. Both local

and peer routers can be specified using router expressions. Please

see Section 5.6.

o The peer attribute of the inet-rtr class can refer to peering-set,

rtr-set names. Please see Section 9.

o The syntax and semantics of union, and list types and typedef

attribute have changed. Please see Section 7.

o In the initial dictionary, the typedef attribute defining the

community_elm, rp-attribute defining the community attribute has

changed. Please see Section 7.

o Guideliness for extending RPSL is added. Please see Section 10.

o Formal grammar rules are added. Please see Appendix B.

D Authors' Addresses

Cengiz Alaettinoglu

USC/Information Sciences Institute

EMail: cengiz@isi.edu

Curtis Villamizar

Avici Systems

EMail: curtis@avici.com

Elise Gerich

At Home Network

EMail: epg@home.net

David Kessens

Qwest Communications

EMail: David.Kessens@qwest.net

David Meyer

University of Oregon

EMail: meyer@antc.uoregon.edu

Tony Bates

Cisco Systems, Inc.

EMail: tbates@cisco.com

Daniel Karrenberg

RIPE NCC

EMail: dfk@ripe.net

Marten Terpstra

c/o Bay Networks, Inc.

EMail: marten@BayNetworks.com

Full Copyright Statement

Copyright (C) The Internet Society (1999). All Rights Reserved.

This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to

others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it

or assist in its implmentation may be prepared, copied, published and

distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any kind,

provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are

included on all such copies and derivative works. However, this

document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing

the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other

Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of developing

Internet standards in which case the procedures for copyrights defined

in the Internet Standards process must be followed, or as required to

translate it into languages other than English.

The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be

revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.

This document and the information contained herein is provided on an

"AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING

TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT

NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION HEREIN

WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF

MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.

Acknowledgement

Funding for the RFCEditor function is currently provided by the

Internet Society.

 
 
 
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