The subject matter described herein relates to routing of Diameter messages. More specifically, the subject matter relates to methods, systems, and computer readable media for answer-based routing of Diameter request messages.
Diameter is an authentication, authorization, and accounting (AAA) protocol for computer networks, and is a successor to RADIUS. The Diameter base protocol is defined in IETF RFC 3588, the disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety. Diameter communications may use a request-answer message exchange. Diameter routing involves routing of request messages in one direction and answer messages in the reverse direction. However, Diameter routing does not use information learned from received Diameter answer messages or from non-receipt of expected Diameter answer messages to route request messages.
Accordingly, there exists a need for methods, systems, and computer readable media for answer-based routing of Diameter request messages.
Methods, systems, and computer readable media for answer-based routing of Diameter request messages are disclosed. According to one method, a Diameter request message is received from a first Diameter node at a. A copy of at least a portion of the Diameter request message is cached at the DSR and the Diameter request message is routed to a second Diameter node. The DSR determines whether a predetermined condition associated with an answer to the first Diameter request message exists. In response to determining that the predetermined condition exists, the cached portion of the Diameter request message is retrieved, a Diameter request that includes the cached portion of the Diameter request message is generated, and the generated Diameter request message is routed. Determining whether the predetermined condition exists may include determining whether a received Diameter answer message that correlates with the request message sent to the second Diameter node includes non-protocol 3xxx error indicator information. Determining whether a predetermined condition associated with an answer message exists may also include determining whether the answer message or the request message is lost. Determining whether the answer or request message is lost may include initiating a timer when the request message is sent to the second Diameter node. If an answer to the request message is not received before the timer reaches a predetermined value, then the answer or the request (or both) is determined to be lost. Determining whether a predetermined condition associated with an answer to the request message exists may also include receiving an answer message, and determining whether additional service information is required before responding to the request originator.
According to another aspect of the subject matter described herein, a system for answer-based routing of Diameter request messages is provided. The system includes a DSR. The DSR includes a Diameter message processor for receiving a Diameter request message from a first Diameter node. The DSR further includes a caching module that caches a copy of at least a portion of the Diameter answer message. The DSR further includes an answer message-based request routing module that is configured to route the Diameter request message to a second Diameter node, to determine whether an error condition associated with an answer to the first Diameter request message exists, and, response to determining that the error condition exists, the answer message-based routing module retrieves the cached portion of the Diameter request message, generates a Diameter request message that includes the cached portion of the Diameter request message, and routes the generated Diameter request message.
The subject matter described herein can be implemented in software in combination with hardware and/or firmware. For example, the subject matter described herein can be implemented in software executed by a processor. In one exemplary implementation, the subject matter described herein can be implemented using a non-transitory computer readable medium having stored thereon executable instructions that when executed by the processor of a computer control the processor to perform steps. Exemplary non-transitory computer readable media suitable for implementing the subject matter described herein include chip memory devices or disk memory devices accessible by a processor, programmable logic devices, and application specific integrated circuits. In addition, a computer readable medium that implements the subject matter described herein may be located on a single computing platform or may be distributed across plural computing platforms.
The subject matter described herein will now be explained with reference to the accompanying drawings of which:
Diameter application layer (DAL) 102 may include applications 104. Exemplary applications 104 may include, but are not limited to, a Diameter client, Diameter server, translation agent, proxy agent, redirect agent, integrated monitoring application, Diameter message screening and filtering application, Diameter firewall application, and a load generator. Diameter application layer 102 may also include timer 106 and application data 108. DAL 102 may interface with Diameter message encode/decode library 110 for encoding and decoding Diameter messages.
Common platform services 112 may include buffer services 114, database services 116, measurements events alarms and logs (MEAL) services 118, and high availability (HA) services 120.
Diameter message processor (MP) 122 may further include Diameter routing layer (DRL) 124. DRL 124 may be responsible for the following functions. DRL 124 may perform ingress and egress message looping detection and prevention. DRL 124 may route ingress messages to one or more local DSR applications based upon user-define rules. DRL 124 may reroute messages upon failures. DRL 124 may perform message routing based upon route priorities and weights. DRL 124 may perform message routing based upon user-defined message content. DRL 124 may perform message routing to peers with multiple transport connections. DRL 124 may manage peer transport connections (TPS). DRL 124 may throttle ingress messages based upon local DSR congestion. DRL 124 may detect and avoid peer congestion. DRL 124 may load balance peer connection load to meet transaction per second (TPS) constraints of Diameter message processor 122.
DRL 124 may include answer-based request routing module 126, event processing module 128, DRL rerouting module 130, answer routing module 132, routing data 134, and DRL timer task 136. Answer-based request routing module 126 may perform the operations described herein for answer-based routing of Diameter request messages.
DRL 124 may communicate with DAL 102 via message-based APIs. For example, DRL 124 may use application indication and application request APIs to communicate with DAL 102.
Diameter connection layer (DCL) 138 may perform the following functions. DCL 138 may implement Diameter connection state machine 140 for each Diameter peer. DCL 138 may establish transport connections with Diameter peers and process Diameter peer-to-peer messages and related functionality. This may include capabilities exchange request/answer (CER/CEA), Diameter Watchdog request/answer (DWR/DWA), and Disconnect Peer request/answer (DPR/DPA). DCL 138 may interface with the DRL 124 by sending Diameter messages received from peers to DRL 124 using one or more message-based APIs. DCL 138 may send Diameter messages received from DRL 124 to the appropriate peer. DCL 138 may notify DRL of peer transport connection and congestion status changes. DCL 138 may process configuration and maintenance requests from DSR OAM for transport configuration objects. DCL 138 may update MEAL data for transport configuration objects. DCL 138 may perform transport layer capacity control.
DCL 138 may include Diameter message dispatch module 140, DCL listener/initiator module 142, DCL timer task 144, and connection data 145.
DCL 138 may also include one or more IP transport tasks. For example, DCL 138 may include IP transport task 146 and 148, where each IP transport task includes a receiving thread and a transmitting thread. For example, IP transport task 146 includes Rx thread 150 and Tx thread 152 and IP transport task 148 includes Rx thread 154 and Tx thread 156. IP transport tasks 146 and 148 may each communicate with SCTP/TCP sockets for interfacing with an operating system. For example, IP transport task 146 may communicate with SCTP/TCP socket 158 and IP transport task 148 may communicate with SCTP/TCP socket 160. SCTP/TCP sockets 158 and 160 may be associated with OS 162.
For simplicity, DSR 100 illustrated in
In operation, when a Diameter message arrives at one of message processors 122A-D, the message is routed based on Diameter signaling information in the message from the ingress message processor to the egress message processor, and from the egress message processor to the Diameter network. As will be described in detail below, each Diameter message processor 122A-D may perform the steps described herein for answer-based routing of Diameter request messages, which may in some instances over-ride or supplement the routing of Diameter messages based on Diameter signaling information.
In step 202, a copy of at least a portion of the Diameter request message is cached at the DSR. For example, a portion of (or the entirety of) a Diameter request message may be stored in message cache 105 on DSR 100.
In step 204, Diameter request message is routed to a second Diameter node. For example, the request message may be forwarded, by DSR 100, to Diameter node 1 for performing service A.
In step 206, a Diameter answer message associated with the Diameter request message from the second node is received at the DSR. For example, DSR 100 may receive a Diameter answer message corresponding to the Diameter request message for service A.
In addition, one embodiment of DSR 100 may include DCL 138 and DRL 124 being hosted on different computers and/or multiple interacting instances of DCL 138 and DRL 124 (i.e., scalable DSR). As such, an additional step (not shown) may be performed between steps 206 and 208 during which DCL 138 may determine the location of the DRL 124 having the cached copy of the corresponding request message and forward the answer message to that instance of DRL 124. However, for simplicity of illustration and description, unless otherwise noted, embodiments described herein assumed a single instance of DRL 124 co-located with DCL 138.
In step 208, it is determined by answer-based request routing module 126 whether the received Diameter answer message contains non-protocol 3 xxx error information. A non-protocol error is one that occurs at the base protocol level and may require per hop attention. Exemplary 3 xxx error codes and their corresponding descriptions are listed below.
DIAMETER_COMMAND_UNSUPPORTED 3001
The request contained a Command-Code that the receiver did not recognize or support. This is used when a Diameter node receives an experimental command that it does not understand.
DIAMETER_UNABLE_TO_DELIVER 3002
This error is given when Diameter cannot deliver the message to the destination, either because no host within the realm supporting the required application was available to process the request, or because Destination-Host AVP was given without the associated Destination-Realm AVP.
DIAMETER_REALM_NOT_SERVED 3003
The intended realm of the request is not recognized.
DIAMETER_TOO_BUSY 3004
This error must is used when a specific server is requested and it cannot provide the requested service.
DIAMETER_LOOP_DETECTED 3005
An agent detected a loop while trying to get the message to the intended recipient.
DIAMETER_REDIRECT_INDICATION 3006
A redirect agent has determined that the request could not be satisfied locally.
DIAMETER_APPLICATION_UNSUPPORTED 3007
A request was sent for an application that is not supported.
DIAMETER_INVALID_HDR_BITS 3008
A request was received whose bits in the Diameter header were either set to an invalid combination, or to a value that is inconsistent with the command code's definition.
DIAMETER_INVALID_AVP_BITS 3009
A request was received that included an AVP whose flag bits are set to an unrecognized value, or that is inconsistent with the AVP's definition.
DIAMETER_UNKNOWN_PEER 3010
A CER was received from an unknown peer.
Returning to
If the received Diameter answer message contains non-protocol 3 xxx error information, then control proceeds to step 212 where the Diameter request message's copy associated with the Diameter answer message is retrieved from message cache 105 by answer-based request routing module 126.
In step 214, the Diameter message copy is routed by answer-based request routing module 126. The Diameter message may be routed to the second Diameter node and after a configurable number of failed delivery attempts, to a third Diameter node. Alternatively, the Diameter message copy may be sent to a third Diameter node after detecting the error condition associated with the answer message. For example, the request message for service A may be forwarded to Diameter node 2 for performing service A. DSR 100 may allow the user to define a set of cause values which, when received, may result in alternate routing being attempted. The set of cause values may be found, for example, in the result-code attribute value pair (AVP) of the message.
In one embodiment, upon receiving an answer message responsive to a message sent by DSR 100, DSR 100 may add the original Hop-by-Hop ID from the request message to an answer message, forward the answer message to the original peer from which DSR 100 received the corresponding request message, and purge the corresponding request message. It may be appreciated that the user/operator may specify whether to make a copy of an answer message and route it to a specified Diameter destination.
In another embodiment, upon receiving an answer message for which DSR 100 has no pending transaction, DSR 100 may discard the message and, according to one possible embodiment, generate a UIM.
In step 402, the first Diameter request message is routed to a second Diameter node. For example, the Diameter request message for service A may be forwarded, by DSR 100, to Diameter node 1, which may be a server.
In step 404, a first Diameter answer message associated with the first Diameter request message from the second Diameter node is received at the DSR. For example, DSR 100 may receive a Diameter answer message from the Diameter server corresponding to the request message for service A.
In step 406, information contained in the first Diameter answer message is analyzed to determine whether additional service information is needed before answering the request originator. For example, the first Diameter request message may be a request for subscriber information from an HSS, and the first answer message may be an indication that the subscriber is not provisioned in the HSS. Accordingly, step 406 may include analyzing the first answer message to determine that a second Diameter request message to a second HSS is needed.
If no additional service information is determined to be needed, control proceeds to step 407 where the DSR sends an answer message to the request originator. If, in step 406, it is determined that additional service information is needed, control proceeds to step 408 where a copy of at least a portion of the first Diameter answer message is cached at the DSR. For example, DSR 100 may cache the answer message in message cache 105. In an embodiment in which the DCL and DRL layers are implemented on different computers, the DCL may determine the location of the DRL having the cached copy of the corresponding request message and may forward the answer message to that instance of the DRL. The DRL may then cache the answer message along with the corresponding request in its message cache 105.
In step 410, a second Diameter request message is generated, and, in step 412, the second Diameter request message is routed to a third Diameter node. For example, Diameter message B may be generated and forwarded to Diameter node 2, which in this example may be a new HSS.
In step 414, a second Diameter answer message associated with the second Diameter request message is received from the third Diameter node. For example, DSR 100 may receive Diameter answer message B. Continuing with the example, answer message B may be an update location answer message from the new HSS and may include the requested subscriber information.
In step 416, information from the first Diameter answer message copy and the second Diameter answer message are combined. For example, information from the first Diameter answer message that indicates that the subscriber is not provisioned in the first queried HSS and information from the second answer message indicating that the subscriber is provisioned in the second queried HSS along with the requested subscription information may be combined.
In step 418, a Diameter answer message containing the combined information is sent to the first Diameter node. For example, a Diameter answer message containing the non-serving HSS, serving HSS, and subscription information may be forwarded to the source Diameter peer node that sent the original Diameter request message.
At step 506, DSR 100 may analyze the information contained in
Diameter answer message 504 and trigger a new request B message. For example, DSR 100 may determine that additional service is required before answering client Diameter node 300. Examples of additional processing include the above-described HSS example or an example where multiple different service nodes providing the same or different services are required to be queried before responding to a Diameter request originator.
In the scenario shown, DSR 100 may generate Diameter request message 508 for service B, which may be the same or a different service from service A. In response, server Diameter node 304B may return Diameter answer message (e.g., answer message (non-error)) 510 for service B. At step 512, DSR 100 may analyze Diameter answer message 510 and combine information from Diameter answer messages 504 and 510. DSR 100 may then send Diameter answer message 514 containing the combined information from Diameter answer messages 504 and 510 to client Diameter node 300.
At step 602, DSR 100 may store a copy of Diameter request message 600. At step 604, request A message may be routed and a response timer may be started. DSR 100 may then send Diameter request message 606 for service A to server Diameter node 302A.
At step 608, it may be determined whether the timer has expired without receiving a Diameter answer message for Diameter request message 606. If the timer has expired, at step 610, DSR 100 may retrieve a copy of Diameter request message 606 and select an alternate route to server Diameter node 302A to which Diameter request message 606 should be sent and record an indication that delivery to server Diameter node 302A was attempted and failed to limit redelivery attempts to server node 302A. DSR 100 may then send Diameter request message 612 to server Diameter node 304A. In response, server Diameter node 304A may return Diameter answer (e.g., answer A message (non-error)) message 614 to DSR 100. At step 616, DSR 100 may analyze answer B message and, at step 618, DSR 100 may forward Diameter answer A+B message (non-error) to client Diameter node 300.
In addition to the scenario described above, it may be appreciated that the loss of a request message sent by DSR 100 may be indistinguishable (e.g., treated the same) from the loss of an answer message sent to DSR 100 by a peer node. In the event of a lost request message, it may be appreciated that the peer node would never send an answer message.
When answer messages are lost prior to their receipt by DSR 100, the “pending transactions” associated with the lost answer messages may either be aborted (answer message sent to peer) or re-routed. Since DSR 100 cannot “detect” a lost answer message, nor can it query the remote status of a forwarded request message, it may predict with high probability that one has been lost.
One method may be time-based. If an answer has not been received in “X” seconds, then the answer message may be assumed to most likely be lost. The larger the value of “X”, the higher the probability of loss. In one embodiment, a DRL “Lost answer Timer” may be supported and operator-configurable. An exemplary default value for X may be 30 seconds. It may be appreciated that the value of X may also be application dependent. For example, if the “Lost answer Timer” is application specific and DSR 100 supports multiple applications, the value may be per-application specific. It may also be appreciated that when the “Lost answer Timer” expires, DRL 124 may abort the transaction (default) and send an answer message to an originator of the request indicating an error condition. In another embodiment, DRL 124 may re-route the transaction. Additionally, it may be appreciated that if a connection fails at DSR 100, and it is the only connection between DSR 100 and a peer node, then all pending answer messages for that connection may be deemed, by DSR 100, to be lost.
Processing Answer Messages From Redirect Agents
As discussed previously, a forwarded request message may be routed to a Redirect Agent which sends an answer message containing an ordered list of hosts for routing the message. The base Diameter specification states that the recipient of a redirect response may re-route a pending request message using Redirect-Host AVPs, but does not require the recipient to do so. Therefore, in one embodiment, rather than re-routing the original request message using the redirect routing information received, DSR 100 may be configured to backwards-route the redirect response. However, because backwards routing may not be supported by a downstream peer in all customer networks, in another possible embodiment, the answer message may be re-routed using Redirect-Host AVPs. It may be appreciated that the process for redirecting an answer message may be a DRL-configurable option. As such, an operator may configure DRL 124 to use backward propagation as the default option.
Routing Answer Messages to Unavailable/Congested Peers
When DRL 124 receives an answer message and the message cannot be immediately delivered because the transport layer queue for the peer is full or the peer is congested, then DRL 124 has two options: delay delivery of the message within DRL 124 or immediately discard the answer message.
Delaying delivery of the message within DRL 124 may include buffering answer messages for a configurable time-period X1. If the peer's status changes before the timer expires, then the buffered answer messages may be forwarded. If the timer expires and the peer is available, then an attempt may be made to forward the buffered answer message until the buffer is flushed or another blocking condition occurs (e.g., transport queue full). In order to prevent an answer message from being queued indefinitely, a “maximum answer message queue delay” may be supported (i.e., message aging) where the answer message may be discarded when the above mentioned maximum delay is exceeded. It may be appreciated that if the transport connection is blocked for an inordinate period of time, preventing any answer messages from being sent, the transport layer may be disconnected in order to clear the condition and trigger the peer to re-forward the messages in the pending transaction queue(s).
It will be appreciated that in some or all of the embodiments described above, the DSR may be adapted to record or log each occurrence of a Diameter answer message error-driven routing event. The DSR may include in such log entries information associated with the related routing action taken by the DSR. The DSR may provide this information Diameter answer-based routing event log information to a network operations center or other network administration system.
It will be understood that various details of the subject matter described herein may be changed without departing from the scope of the subject matter described herein. Furthermore, the foregoing description is for the purpose of illustration only, and not for the purpose of limitation, as the subject matter described herein is defined by the claims as set forth hereinafter.
This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 13/026,112, filed Feb. 11, 2011, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application Ser. No. 61/304,310, filed Feb. 12, 2010; the disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties. The disclosures of each of the following commonly-owned, co-pending U.S. Patent Applications filed on Feb. 11, 2011 are hereby incorporated herein by reference in their entireties: “Methods, Systems, and Computer Readable Media for Inter-Diameter-Message Processor Routing,” (Ser. No. 13/025,968, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,478,828); “Methods, Systems, and Computer Readable Media for Inter-Diameter-Message Processor Routing,” (Ser. No. 13/932,608); “Methods, Systems, and Computer Readable Media for Source Peer Capacity-Based Diameter Load Sharing,” (Ser. No. 13/026,031, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,601,073); “Methods, Systems, and Computer Readable Media for Inter-Message Processor Status Sharing,” (Ser. No. 13/026,105); “Methods, Systems, and Computer Readable Media for Providing Priority Routing at a Diameter Node,” (Ser. No. 13/026,060, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,644,324); “Methods, Systems, and Computer Readable Media for Providing Peer Routing at a Diameter Node,” (Ser. No. 13/026,076, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,578,050); “Methods, Systems, and Computer Readable Media for Providing Origin Routing at a Diameter Node,” (Ser. No. 13/026,081, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,554,928); “Methods, Systems, and Computer Readable Media for Providing Local Application Routing at a Diameter Node,” (Ser. No. 13/026,098, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,483,233); “Methods, Systems, and Computer Readable Media for Answer-Based Routing of Diameter Request Messages,” (Ser. No. 13/026,112, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,527,598); “Methods, Systems, and Computer Readable Media for Performing Diameter Answer Message-Based Network Management at a Diameter Signaling Router (DSR),” (Ser. No. 13/026,125); “Methods, Systems, and Computer Readable Media for Multi-Interface Monitoring and Correlation of Diameter Signaling Information,” (Ser. No. 13/026,133); “Methods, Systems, and Computer Readable Media for Diameter Protocol Harmonization,” (Ser. No. 13/026,144, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,532,110); “Methods, Systems, and Computer Readable Media for Diameter Network Management,” (Ser. No. 13/026,153, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,498,202); and “Methods, Systems, and Computer Readable Media for Diameter Application Loop Prevention,” (Ser. No. 13/026,162, now U.S. Pat. No. 8,504,630).
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20140074975 A1 | Mar 2014 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13026112 | Feb 2011 | US |
Child | 14016000 | US |