This application is a national stage of PCT/EP2002/007860, published in the German language on Jan. 22, 2004, which was filed in the english language on Jul. 15, 2002.
The invention relates to a method and an optimized home agent for transfer of IP datagrams over a path from a sender over a radio access network to a mobile host.
The Mobile IP protocol is a concept to deal with user mobility issues for transport of IP related services. As a prerequisite the access network as well as the core network use IP as the network layer protocol and are capable to run, the mobile IP protocol in addition. The network architecture for mobile IPv4 includes home agents and foreign agents to build forwarding IP tunnels, when a mobile host moves out of the home network to attach to a different access point for requesting services from a network. The foreign agent represents the default router for a mobile host, if it is attached to an access point outside the home network. When a correspondent node sends packets to a mobile host currently registered at a different location, the home agent intercepts all packets for that host and reroutes them to the new location. The home agent's binding cache contains rerouting information for all mobile hosts currently attached to different access points. The care-of-address specifies the mobile node's temporarily acquired host address after registering at a different location.
Using IP tunnels between home agent and foreign agent becomes inefficient, if the transport network already provides alternative tunneling mechanisms to interconnect various access points. The MPLS called label switching approach offers support for IP traffic engineering by introduction of virtual circuit switched services in connectionless IP based networks. Other benefits of MPLS include the establishment of virtual private networks and provision of traffic trunks with dedicated reserved bandwidth between two endpoints of a path (tunnel). When label switching is active, packet forwarding is based on a fixed label instead of an IP network address or prefix in the routing table. A label is attached by a label ingress router, which is the ingress router of the MPLS path. The label egress router represents the endpoint of a MPLS tunnel. Path setup requires a signaling protocol to agree on path attributes like labels to be used and requested bandwidth for the path etc. Examples are CR-LDP, RSVP-TE or BGP enhancements.
A network operator has to deal with convergence issues, if there is a strategy to offer mobile IP based services in a network, which has been engineered for MPLS. Functional components for mobile IP and MPLS may reside on the same network node in the situation described above. For example one network node may include home agent and label edge router functionality at the same time. The same applies to the mobile foreign agent. It is the challenge of equipment manufacturers to provide integrated solutions for network components, in a way that mobile home/foreign agent are optimized for interworking with MPLS. It means that existing MPLS tunnels may be used for rerouting purposes in mobile IP instead of establishing a separate IP tunnel in parallel. This would allow the network operator to easily adapt mobility services to a MPLS infrastructure without the need for complex network resource management. There is no need to manage MPLS and IP tunnels in parallel.
Mobile IP and MPLS are emerging technologies. Though definition of concepts is quite stable there is no widespread usage so far. A simple approach is to deploy both technologies independently of each other and neglecting the possibilities of convergence. Thus MPLS paths would not be used to transport redirected packets to a mobile foreign agent. Instead MPLS tunnels for traffic engineering purposes and IP tunnels for mobile IP support would exist in parallel. However such a heterogeneous network would enlarge the effort for management of tunnels and represent a burden for consistent network engineering due to different technologies to be deployed in parallel.
A different approach is a loose coupling between MPLS and mobile IP. Home agent and label edge router would reside on the same network node without direct interaction between these components. The same applies to the foreign agent, which includes the label edge router functional components as well. Packets, which are destined for a mobile host, which is attached to a foreign access point would have to be transported by means of an IP tunnel and a MPLS tunnel as well for the loose coupling. Home agent in this example first would have to encapsulate the native IP packet with an additional IP header, afterwards a label is attached to this packet by the label switching ingress router. As a benefit a pure MPLS network might be sufficient to forward packets to the foreign agent for the loose coupling approach. Nevertheless advantage of label switched paths is not used completely, since an additional IP tunnel is required.
The invention is an efficient transport of mobile IP traffic. The invention described herein provides optimal usage of an existing static MPLS infrastructure while introducing IP mobility services. Static here means that label switched paths have been configured in advance based on mechanisms like traffic engineering. Primarily the focus is on a single administrative domain, where a network operator controls network nodes, which are involved in mobility issues. Though the mechanism is not restricted to a single network domain. With the invention, full advantage of an existing MPLS network can be gained for mobile IP forwarding. It is assumed that by means of traffic engineering a mesh of label switched paths has been established, which can be used for redirecting packets between any pair of mobile home agents and foreign agents in the current administrative domain. For the purpose of mobile IP no additional label switched paths have to be created or modified. As well no IP tunnels are required between a home agent and a foreign agent. The solution for convergence proposes an optimisation of mobile home/foreign agents by efficiently incorporating label edge router functionality. A tight coupling between MPLS and mobile IP is achieved. No changes for existing protocols like mobile IP or label distribution protocol are required. Efficient usage of preestablished label switched paths for the transport of redirected packets between mobility agents requires traffic engineering for mobility. In that context it is necessary to gain knowledge about behaviour of mobile users, i.e frequency of leaving home networks, services to be requested at foreign access points etc.
The mechanism described for convergence between MPLS and mobile IP may be extended to different administrative domains. Macro mobility describes the situation, where a mobile user might attach to an access point, which is controlled by a different administrative authority in a geographically distinct area. Mobile IP forwarding and MPLS paths between separate domains may be enabled if service level agreements are established between adjacent network domains.
Advantageous features of the invention are:
Further advantages of the invention are apparent from the following description of an example of the invention illustrated in
Three mobile stations MS 1, 2, 3 use some wireless link layer technology to connect to an IP based radio access network 4. Correspondent base stations BS 5, 6, 7 terminate the radio interface. The radio access network provides mobility support and uses label switched paths LSP 37, 62 for internal transport as already described for this invention.
Connectivity to transport networks 14 is achieved via border routers BR 8, 9, which separate the administrative domains. In this example all three mobile stations 1, 2, 3 are located in the same home network 4—they get access by the same edge router, which includes the home agent (15) functional component at the same time. MS 2 and MS 3 currently moved to different access points (BS 6,7) and attach to the network through foreign agents FA 11 and FA 12 respectively. Two. LSP's 37, 62 are illustrated for label switching between home agent HA 15 and foreign agents FA 11, 12. A correspondent node CN 13 typically located at any access point beyond the local network 4 should send data to three mobile stations 1, 2, 3. For packets destined for MS 1 no entry in the binding cache (in 15) is available, thus packets are directly forwarded to MS 1. Now CN 13 sends data to MS 2. Home agent HA 15 includes a binding for MS 2 with care-of-address 137.21.16.5. From a configured subsystem list, the home agent is aware that MS 2 is currently reachable through subnetwork 137.21.16.0. Finally correspondent entry in FTN table for that subnetwork indicates that home agent needs to code “label 37” on its interface eth0 to forward the packet to the proper label switched path 37. Since LSPs are unidirectional they have to be originated at the HA and terminated at the FA. The illustration includes a further example for MS 3, which is attached to a different access point BS 7, where yet another label switched path (LSP 62) is used to forward packets to the correct destination (via FA12, BS7 to MS 3).
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP02/07860 | 7/15/2002 | WO | 1/18/2005 |