IETF
1;2c.
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                 J. Kaippallimalil
Internet-Draft
Request for Comments: 7561                                        Huawei
Intended status:
Category: Informational                                    R. Pazhyannur
Expires: October 12, 2015
ISSN: 2070-1721                                                    Cisco
                                                               P. Yegani
                                                                 Juniper
                                                          April 10,
                                                               June 2015

              Mapping PMIPv6 QoS Quality of Service (QoS) Procedures with
                 of Proxy Mobile IPv6 (PMIPv6) and WLAN QoS Procedures
                   draft-ietf-netext-pmip-qos-wifi-08

Abstract

   This document provides guidelines for achieving end to end Quality-
   of-Service end-to-end Quality of
   Service (QoS) in a Proxy Mobile IPv6 (PMIPv6) domain where the access
   network is based on IEEE 802.11.  RFC 7222 describes QoS negotiation
   between a Mobility Mobile Access Gateway (MAG) and Local Mobility Anchor (LMA)
   in a PMIPv6 mobility domain.  The negotiated QoS parameters can be
   used for QoS policing and marking of packets to enforce QoS
   differentiation on the path between the MAG and LMA.  IEEE 802.11-2012, 802.11 and
   Wi-Fi Multimedia - Admission Control (WMM-AC)
   describes describe methods for
   QoS negotiation between a Wi-Fi Station (MN in PMIPv6 terminology)
   and an Access Point.  This document provides a mapping between the
   above two sets of QoS procedures and the associated QoS parameters.
   This document is intended to be used as a companion document to RFC
   7222 to enable implementation of end to end end-to-end QoS.

Status of This Memo

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   This Internet-Draft will expire on October 12, 2015.
   http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7561.

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Table of Contents

   1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   2   3
     1.1.  Abbreviations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   4
     1.2.  Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   5
   2.  Overview of IEEE 802.11 QoS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .   7
   3.  Mapping QoS Procedures between IEEE 802.11 and PMIPv6 . . . .   7
     3.1.  MN Initiated  MN-Initiated QoS Service Request  . . . . . . . . . . . .   8
       3.1.1.  MN Initiated  MN-Initiated QoS Reservation Request  . . . . . . . .   8
       3.1.2.  MN Initiated  MN-Initiated QoS De-allocation Request  . . . . . . .  10  11
     3.2.  LMA Initiated  LMA-Initiated QoS Service Request . . . . . . . . . . . .  12
       3.2.1.  LMA Initiated  LMA-Initiated QoS Reservation Request . . . . . . . .  12
       3.2.2.  Discussion on QoS Request Handling with IEEE 802.11aa  13
       3.2.3.  LMA Initiated  LMA-Initiated QoS De-allocation Request . . . . . . .  13  14
   4.  Mapping between IEEE 802.11 QoS and PMIPv6 QoS Parameters . .  15
     4.1.  Connection Parameters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  15
     4.2.  QoS Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  16
     4.3.  Bandwidth . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  17
   5.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
   6.  IANA Considerations  References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  18
   7.  Acknowledgements . . . .  19
     6.1.  Normative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
   8.
     6.2.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
     8.1.  Normative References  . . . . . . . . .
   Appendix A.  LMA-Initiated QoS Service Flow with IEEE 802.11aa  .  21
   Acknowledgements  . . . . . . . .  19
     8.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  19
   Appendix A.  LMA Initiated QoS Service Flow with IEEE 802.11aa  .  20  23
   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  22  23

1.  Introduction

   PMIPv6 QoS [1] describes an access network independent access-network-independent way to
   negotiate Quality-of-Service Quality of Service (QoS) for Proxy Mobile IPv6 (PMIPv6)
   mobility sessions.  IEEE 802.11, Wi-Fi Multimedia (WMM), and Wi-Fi
   Multimedia - Admission Control (WMM-AC) describe ways to provide QoS
   for Wi-Fi traffic between the Wi-Fi Station (STA) and Access Point
   (AP).  This document describes how QoS can be implemented in a
   network where the access network is based on IEEE 802.11 (Wi-Fi).  It
   requires a mapping between QoS procedures and information elements in
   two segments segments: 1) the Wi-Fi segment and 2) the PMIPv6 segment (see segment.  (See
   Figure 1). 1.)  The recommendations here allow for dynamic QoS policy
   information per Mobile Node (MN) and session to be configured by the
   IEEE 802.11 access network.  PMIPv6 QoS signaling between Mobility the Mobile
   Access Gateway (MAG) and Local Mobility Anchor (LMA) provisions the per MN
   per-MN QoS policies in the MAG.  Further details on policy
   configuration and PCF
   (Policy the Policy Control Function) Function (PCF) can be found in
   [1], Section 6.1.  In the IEEE 802.11 access network modeled here,
   the MAG is located at the
   Access Point (AP)/ AP / Wireless LAN Controller (WLC).
   Figure 1 below provides an overview of the entities and protocols.

                                   +-----+                +-------+
                                   | AAA |                |  PCF  |
                                   +--+--+                +---+---+
                                      |                       |
                                      |                       |
       +----+                      +--+--------+          +---+---+
       |    | IEEE 802.11, WMM-AC  |+-++  +---+|  PMIPv6  |       |
       | MN <---------------------->|AP+--+MAG|<==========>  LMA  |
       |    |   (ADDTS, DELTS)     |+--+  +---+|   QoS    |       |
       +----+                      +-----------+          +-------+

       Figure 1: End-to-End QoS in Networks with IEEE 802.11 Access

   The MN and Access Point AP (AP) use IEEE 802.11 QoS mechanisms to setup set up
   QoS flows in the Wi-Fi segment.  The MAG and LMA setup set up QoS flows
   using PMIPv6 QoS procedures.  The protocols and mechanisms between
   the AP and MAG are out of outside the scope of this document.  Some
   implementations may have the AP and MAG in the same network node.
   However, this document does not exclude various deployments including
   those where in which the AP and WLC are separate nodes, nodes or in which the MAG
   control and data planes are separate.

   The recommendations in this document use IEEE 802.11 QoS and PMIPv6
   QoS [1] mechanisms. mechanisms [1].  State machines for QoS policy setup in IEEE
   802.11 and PMIPv6 operate differently.  Guidelines for installing QoS
   in the MN using IEEE 802.11 and PMIPv6 segments, segments and for mapping
   parameters between them are outlined below.

   - Procedure Mapping:

       PMIPv6 [RFC 7222] defined

       PMIPv6-defined procedures for QoS setup maybe setup, as specified in [1], may
       be triggered by the LMA or MAG.  IEEE 802.11 QoS setup setup, on the
       other
       hand hand, is always triggered by the MN (IEEE 802.11 QSTA). QoS
       Station (QSTA)).  The end-
       to-end end-to-end QoS setup across these network
       segments should accommodate
       both network triggered and end-user QoS that is triggered QoS. by the network
       or by the end user.

   - Parameter Mapping:

       There is no systematic method of mapping of specific parameters
       between PMIPv6 QoS parameters and IEEE 802.11 QoS.  For example,
       parameters like Allocation and Retention Priority (ARP) (AARP) in
       PMIPv6 QoS have no equivalent in IEEE 802.11.

   The primary emphasis of this specification is to handle the
   interworking between WMM-AC signaling/procedures and PMIPv6 QoS
   signaling/procedures.  When the client does not support WMM-AC, then
   the AP/MAG uses the connection mapping in Table 2 and DSCP to AC DSCP-to-AC
   mapping as shown in Table 3.

   The rest of the document is organized as follows.  Section 2 provides
   an overview of IEEE 802.11 QoS.  Section 3 describes a mapping of QoS
   signaling procedures between IEEE 802.11 and PMIPv6.  The mapping of
   parameters between IEEE 802.11 and PMIPv6 QoS is described in
   Section 4.

1.1.  Abbreviations

   AAA    Authentication Authorization     Authentication, Authorization, and Accounting
   AARP    Allocation and Retention Priority
   AC      Access Category
   ADDTS   ADD Traffic Stream
   AIFS    Arbitration Inter-Frame Space
   ALG     Application Layer Gateway
   AMBR    Aggregate Maximum Bit Rate
              ARP    Allocation and Retention Priority
   AP      Access Point
   CW      Contention Window
   DELTS   DELete Traffic Stream
   DL      DownLink
   DSCP    Differentiated Services Code Point
   DPI     Deep Packet Inspection
   EDCA    Enhanced Distributed Channel Access
   EPC     Evolved Packet Core
   GBR     Guaranteed Bit Rate
   MAC     Media Access Control
   MAG    Mobility     Mobile Access Gateway
   MBR     Maximum Bit Rate
   MN      Mobile Node
   MSDU    Media Access Control Service Data Unit
   PBA     Proxy Binding Acknowledgement
   PBU     Proxy Binding Update
   PCF     Policy Control Function
   PHY     Physical Layer
   QCI     QoS Class Identifier
   QoS     Quality of Service
   QSTA    QoS Station
   SIP     Session Initiation Protocol
   STA     Station
   TC      Traffic Class
   TCLAS   Type Classification
   TCP     Transmission Control Protocol
   TS      Traffic Stream
   TSPEC   Traffic Conditioning Specification
   UDP     User Datagram Protocol
   UL      UpLink
   UP      User Priority
   WLAN    Wireless Local Area Network
   WLC     Wireless Controller
   WMM     Wi-Fi MultiMedia
   WMM-AC  Wi-Fi MultiMedia Admission Control

1.2.  Definitions

   Peak Data Rate

      In WMM, WMM-AC, Peak Data Rate specifies the maximum data rate in bits
      per second.  The Maximum Data Rate does not include the MAC and
      PHY overheads [4].  Data rate includes the transport of the IP
      packet including header is included in the
       data rate. and header.

      TSPECs for both uplink and downlink may contain Peak Data Rate.

   Mean Data Rate

      This is the average data rate in bits per second.  The Mean Data
      Rate does not include the MAC and PHY overheads [4].  Data rate
      includes the transport of the IP packet
       including header is included in the data rate. and header.

      TSPECs for both uplink and downlink must contain the Mean Data
      Rate.

   Mimimum

   Minimum Data Rate

      In WMM, WMM-AC, Minimum Data Rate specifies the minimum data rate in
      bits per second.  The Minimum Data Rate does not include the MAC
      and PHY overheads [4].  Data rate includes the transport of the IP
      packet including header is included in the
       data rate. and header.

      Minimum Data Rate is not used in QoS provisioning as it is
      described here.

   QCI

       Quality of Service

      The QoS Class Identifier (QCI) is a scalar parameter that points
      to standardized characteristics of QoS as opposed to signaling
      separate parameters for resource type, priority, delay delay, and loss
      [8].

   STA

      A station (STA) is a device that has the capability to use the
      IEEE 802.11 protocol.  For example, a station maybe a laptop, a
      desktop PC, an access point point, or WiFi a Wi-Fi phone [3].

      An STA that implements the QoS facility is a QoS Station (QSTA)
      [3].

   TSPEC

      The TSPEC element in IEEE 802.11 contains the set of parameters
      that define the characteristics and QoS expectations of a traffic
      flow [3].

   TCLAS

      The TCLAS element specifies an element that contains a set of
      parameters necessary to identify incoming MSDU MSDUs (MAC Service Data
       Unit)
      Units) that belong to a particular TS (Traffic Stream) [3].

2.  Overview of IEEE 802.11 QoS

   IEEE 802.11-2012 802.11 defines a way of providing prioritized access for
   different traffic classes (video, voice, etc) etc.) by a mechanism called
   EDCA (Enhanced Distributed Channel Access).  The levels of priority
   in EDCA are called access categories (ACs) and there are four levels
   (in decreasing order of priority): Voice, Video, Best-Effort, and
   Background.  The prioritized  Prioritized access is achieved by using access
   category specific AC-specific
   values for contention window Contention Window (CW) and arbitration
   inter frame space Arbitration Inter-Frame Space
   (AIFS).  (Higher priority  (Higher-priority categories have smaller values for minimum
   and maximum CW and AIFS). AIFS.)

   A subset of the QoS mechanisms is defined in WMM - -- a Wi-Fi Alliance
   certification of support for a set of features from an IEEE 802.11e
   draft (now part of IEEE 802.11).  This certification is for both
   clients and APs, APs and certifies the operation of WMM.  WMM is primarily
   the implementation of the EDCA component of IEEE 802.11e.  WMM uses
   the IEEE 802.1P classification scheme developed by the IEEE (which is
   now a part of the 802.1D specification).  The IEEE 802.1P
   classification scheme has eight priorities, which WMM maps to four
   access categories: AC_BK, AC_BE, AC_VI, and AC_VO.  The lack of
   support in WMM for the TCLAS (used in identifying an IP flow) has an
   impact on the QoS provisioning.  The impact on WMM-based QoS
   provisioning is described in Chapters Sections 3 and 4 for WMM
   based QoS provisioning. 4.

   IEEE 802.11 defines the way a (non-AP) STA can request QoS to be
   reserved for an access category.  Correspondingly, the AP can
   determine whether to admit or deny the request depending on the
   available resources.  Further, the AP may require that Admission
   Control is mandatory for an access category.  In such a case, the STA
   is expected to use the AC access category only after being successfully
   admitted.  WMM-AC is a Wi-Fi Alliance certification of support for admission
   control
   Admission Control based on a set of features in IEEE 802.11.

   The QoS signaling in IEEE 802.11-2012 802.11 is initiated by the (non-AP) STA (by
   sending an ADDTS request).  This specification references procedures
   in IEEE 802.11-2012, WMM 802.11, WMM, and WMM-AC.

3.  Mapping QoS Procedures between IEEE 802.11 and PMIPv6

   There are two main types of interaction possible to provision QoS for
   flows that require admission control - Admission Control -- one where the MN initiates
   the QoS request and the network provisions the resources.  The second
   is where the network provisions resources as a result of a PMIPv6 QoS
   request.  In the second scenario, the LMA can push the QoS
   configuration to the MAG.  However, there are is no standards defined standard way for the
   AP to initiate a QoS service request to the MN.  Recommendations to setup
   set up QoS in both these cases are described in this section.

3.1.  MN Initiated  MN-Initiated QoS Service Request

3.1.1.  MN Initiated  MN-Initiated QoS Reservation Request

   This procedure outlines the case where the MN is configured to start
   the QoS signaling.  In this case, the MN sends an ADDTS request
   indicating the QoS required for the flow.  The AP/MAG obtains the
   corresponding level of QoS to be granted to the flow by using the
   PMIPv6 PBU/
   PBA PBU/PBA sequence with that contains the QoS options exchanged with
   the LMA.  Details of the QoS provisioning for the flow are described provided
   below.

                                 +-----------+
    +----+                       |+--+  +---+|            +-------+
    | MN |                       ||AP|  |MAG||            |  LMA  |
    +-+--+                       ++-++--+-+-++            +---+---+
      |                             |     |                   |
    +-------------------------------------------------------------+
    |          (0) establish connection session to with mobile network          |
    +-------------------------------------------------------------+
      |                             |     |                   |
    +-------------+                 |     |                   |
    |upper layer
    |upper-layer  |                 |     |                   |
    |notification |                 |     |                   |
    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                 |     |                   |
      |                             |     |                   |
      | ADDTS Request(TCLAS(opt),TSPEC),AC|                   |
      |---------------------------->|     |                   |
      |             (1)             |---->|PBU(QoS options)(2)|
      |                             |     |------------------>|
      |                             |     |                   | Policy
      |                             |     |PBA(QoS option)(3) |<----->
      |                             |     |<------------------|
      |                             |<----|                   |
      |ADDTS Response(TCLAS(opt),TSPEC),AC|                   |
      |<----------------------------|     |                   |
      |             (4)             |     |

                Figure 2: MN initiated MS-Initiated QoS service request Service Request

   In this the use case shown in Figure 2, the MN initiates the QoS service
   request.

   (0) The MN establishes a connectivity session as described in [1],
       Section 3.1, MAG-initiated QoS service request, steps 1-4. 1-4 of Use
       Case 2 (MAG-Initiated QoS Service Request) in Section 3.1 of [1].
       At this point, a connection with a PMIPv6 tunnel is established
       to the LMA.  This allows the MN to start application level application-level
       signaling.

   (1) The trigger for the MN to request QoS is an upper layer upper-layer
       notification.  This may be the result of end-to-end application
       signaling and setup procedures (e.g. (e.g., SIP [10]).

       Since the MN is configured to start QoS signaling, it sends an
       ADDTS request with TSPEC and TCLAS identifying the flow for which
       QoS is requested.

       It should be noted that WMM-AC specifications do not contain
       TCLAS.  When TCLAS is not present, there is no direct way to
       derive flow specific flow-specific attributes like Traffic Selector in PMIPv6.
       In this case case, functionality to derive IP flow details from
       information in upper layer upper-layer protocols (e.g., SIP [10]) and
       associate to them with a subsequent QoS request may be used.  This
       is not described further here, but it maybe may be functionality in an
       Application Layer Gateway (ALG) or Deep Packet Inspection (DPI).
       It should be noted that an ALG or DPI can increase the complexity
       of the AP/MAG implementation and affect its scalability.  If no
       TCLAS is derived, the reservation applies to all flows of the MN
       (not desired). MN.
       Parameter mapping in this case is shown in Table 2.

   (2) If there are sufficient resources at the AP/WLC to satisfy the
       request, the MAG sends a PBU with QoS options, operational code
       ALLOCATE Operational Code
       ALLOCATE, and the Traffic Selector identifying the flow.  The
       Traffic
       selector Selector is derived from the TCLAS to identify the flow
       requesting QoS.  IEEE 802.11 QoS parameters in TSPEC are mapped
       to PMIPv6 parameters.  The mapping of TCLAS to PMIPv6 is shown in
       Table 1.  TSPEC parameter mapping is shown in Table 4.

       If TCLAS is not present (when WMM-AC is used), TCLAS maybe may be
       derived from information in upper layer upper-layer protocols (as described
       in step 1) and populated in the Traffic Selector.  If TCLAS
       cannot be derived, the Traffic Selector field is not included in
       the QoS options.

   (3) The LMA obtains the authorized QoS for the flow and responds to
       the MAG with operational code Operational Code set to RESPONSE.  Mapping of PMIPv6
       to IEEE 802.11 TCLAS is shown in Table 1, and mapping of TSPEC
       parameters is shown in Table 4.

       Reserved bandwidth for flows are accounted is calculated separately from the
       non-reserved session bandwidth.  The Traffic Selector identifies
       the flow for which the QoS reservations are made.

       If the LMA offers downgraded QoS values to the MAG, it should
       send a PBU to the LMA with operational code Operational Code set to DE-ALLOCATE (the DE-ALLOCATE.
       (The LMA would respond with PBA to confirm completion of the request).
       request.)
   (4) The AP/MAG provisions the corresponding QoS and replies with
       ADDTS Response containing authorized QoS in TSPEC and TSPEC, the flow
       identification in TSPEC TSPEC, and ResultCode set to SUCCESS.

       The AP polices these flows according to the QoS provisioning.

       If in

       In step (3), 3, if the LMA sends a downgraded QoS or a PBA message
       with status code CANNOT_MEET_QOS_SERVICE_REQUEST (179), then the
       AP should respond to the MN with ADDTS Response and ResultCode
       set as follows:

       -  for downgraded QoS from LMA, ResultCode is set to
          REJECTED_WITH_SUGGESTED_CHANGES.  Downgraded QoS values from
          LMA are mapped to TSPEC as per Table 4.  This is still a
          rejection, but the MN may revise the QoS to a lower level and
          repeat this sequence if the application can adapt.

       -  if LMA cannot meet the QoS service request, ResultCode is set
          to TCLAS_RESOURCES_EXHAUSTED.

       Either REJECTED_WITH_SUGGESTED_CHANGES and or
       TCLAS_RESOURCES_EXHAUSTED results in the rejection of the QoS
       reservation, but it does not cause the removal of the session
       itself.

3.1.2.  MN Initiated  MN-Initiated QoS De-allocation Request

   QoS resources reserved for a session are released on completion of
   the session.  When the application session completes, the LMA, LMA or the
   MN may signal for the release of resources.  In this the use case shown in
   Figure 3, the MN initiates the release of QoS resources.

                                 +-----------+
    +----+                       |+--+  +---+|             +-------+
    | MN |                       ||AP|  |MAG||             |  LMA  |
    +-+--+                       ++-++--+-+-++             +---+---+
      |                             |     |                    |
    +-------------------------------------------------------------+
    |         (0) Establishment of application session            |
    |              and reservation of QoS resources               |
    |                                                             |
    |                  ( Session                   (Session in progress)                     |
    |                                                             |
    |               Release of application session                |
    +-------------------------------------------------------------+
      |                             |     |                    |
      | DELTS Request (TS INFO)(1)  |     |                    |
      |---------------------------->|     |                    |
      |                             |---->|                    |
      |                             |<----|                    |
      | DELTS Response (TS INFO)(2) |     |                    |
      |<----------------------------|     |                    |
      |                             |     |PBU(QoS,DE-ALLOC)(3)|
      |                             |     |------------------->|Policy
      |                             |     |                    |<---->
      |                             |     |                    |Update
      |                             |     |PBA(QoS,RESPONSE)(4)|
      |                             |     |<-------------------|
      |                             |     |                    |

                Figure 3: MN Initiated MN-Initiated QoS resource release Resource Release

   (0) The MN establishes and reserves QoS resources.  When the
       application session terminates, the MN prepares to release QoS
       resources.

   (1) The MN releases its own internal resources and sends a DELTS
       Request to the AP with TS (Traffic Stream) INFO.

   (2) The AP receives the DELTS request, releases local resources resources, and
       responds to the MN with a DELTS response.

   (3) The MAG initiates a PBU, operational code with the Operational Code set to DE-ALLOCATE
       DE-ALLOCATE, and with the Traffic Selector constructed from TCLAS
       and PMIPv6 QoS parameters from TSPEC.

       When TLCAS TCLAS is not present, the MAG should de-allocate all flows
       with the same access category (AC) as indicated in the DELTS Request.
       In the typical case, if the client does not support TCLAS and
       only MN initiated MN-initiated QoS Service requests are supported, then the
       MAG will have at most one QoS Service request per access
       category (AC).
       category.

   (4) LMA receives the PBU and releases local resources.  The LMA then
       responds with a PBA.

   It should be noted that steps 3 and 4 can proceed independently of
   the DELTS Response (step 2).

3.2.  LMA Initiated  LMA-Initiated QoS Service Request

3.2.1.  LMA Initiated  LMA-Initiated QoS Reservation Request

   This section describes the case when the QoS service request is
   initiated by the LMA.  For example example, an application such as voice may
   request the network to initiate configuration of additional QoS
   policy as in [8], Section 7.4.2.  In the current WLAN specifications,
   there are is no standards defined standard-defined way for the AP to initiate a QoS service
   request to the MN.  As a result, when the MAG receives a QoS request
   from the LMA, it does not have any standard mechanisms to initiate
   any QoS requests to the MN over the access network.  Given this, the
   PMIPv6 QoS service requests and any potential WLAN service requests
   (such as described in Section 3.1) are handled asynchronously.

   The PMIPv6 QoS service requests and WLAN QoS service request could
   still be coordinated to provide an end to end end-to-end QoS.  If the MAG
   receives a UPN an Update Notification (UPN) request from the LMA to reserve
   QoS resources for which it has no corresponding QoS request from the
   MN, the MAG may may, in consultation with the AP AP, provision a policy that
   can grant a subsequent QoS request from the MN.  If the MN initiates
   QoS procedures after the completion of PMIPv6 QoS procedures procedures, the AP/MAG AP/
   MAG can ensure consistency between the QoS resources in the access
   network and QoS resources between the MAG and LMA.

   For example, if the MN is requesting a mean data rate of x Mbps, the
   AP and MAG can ensure that the rate can be supported on the network
   between MAG-LMA MAG and LMA based on previous PMIPv6 QoS procedures.  If the
   MN subsequently requests for data rates of x Mbps or less, the AP can
   accept it a request based on the earlier PMIPv6 QoS provisioning.  For
   the case where there is a mismatch, i.e., the network does not
   support the x Mbps, then either the MAG should re-negotiate renegotiate the QoS
   resource and ask for increased QoS resources or the AP should reject
   the QoS request.

3.2.2.  Discussion on QoS Request Handling with IEEE 802.11aa

   The network initiated network-initiated QoS service request scenario poses some
   challenges outlined here.  IEEE 802.11-2012 802.11 does not provide any
   mechanisms for the AP to initiate a QoS request.  As a result, the
   AP/MAG cannot explicitly make any reservations in response to a QoS
   reservation request made using UPN.  IEEE 802.11aa [5](which [5] (which is an
   amendment to IEEE 802.11-2012) 802.11) has a mechanism that enables the AP to ask
   the client to reserve QoS for a traffic stream.  It does this via the
   ADDTS Reserve Request.  The ADDTS Reserve Request contains a TSPEC,
   an optional TCLAS, and a mandatory Stream Identifier. stream identifier.  The
   specification does not describe how the AP would obtain such a stream
   identifier.  As a result, there needs to be a new higher layer higher-layer
   protocol defined that is understood by the MN and AP and that
   provides a common stream identifier to both ends.  Alternately, the
   IEEE 802.11aa specification could be modified to make the usage
   optional.  When (or if) the Stream Identifier stream identifier is made optional, the
   TCLAS can provide information about the traffic stream.

   Appendix A outlines a protocol sequence with PMIPv6 UPN/UPA UPN / Update
   Notification Acknowledgement (UPA) if the above IEEE 802.11aa issues
   can be resolved.

3.2.3.  LMA Initiated  LMA-Initiated QoS De-allocation Request

   QoS resources reserved for a session are released on completion of
   the session.  When the application session completes, the LMA, LMA or the
   MN may signal for the release of resources.  In this use case, the
   network initiates the release of QoS resources.

                                  +-----------+
    +----+                       |+--+  +---+|            +-------+
    | MN |                       ||AP|  |MAG||            |  LMA  |
    +-+--+                       ++-++--+-+-++            +---+---+
      |                             |     |                   |
    +-------------------------------------------------------------+
    |             Establishment of application session            |
    |              and reservation of QoS resources               |
    |                                                             |
    |                  ( Session                   (Session in progress)                     |
    |                                                             |
    |               Release of application session                |
    +-------------------------------------------------------------+
      |                             |     |                   | Policy
      |                             |     |                   |<------
      |                             |     |UPN(QoS,DE-ALLOC)  |
      |                             |     |<------------------|
      |                             |<----|        (1)        |
      |                             |---->|UPA(QoS,RESPONSE)  |
      |                             |     |------------------>|
      |                             |     |        (2)        |
      |                             |     |                   |
      | DELTS Request (TS INFO)(3)  |     |                   |
      |<----------------------------|     |                   |
      | DELTS Response (TS INFO)(4) |     |                   |
      |---------------------------->|     |                   |
      |                             |     |                   |

               Figure 4: LMA initiated LMA-Initiated QoS resource release Resource Release

   In this the use case shown in Figure 4, the network initiates the release
   of QoS resources.  When the application session terminates, the LMA
   receives notification of that the session has terminated. event.  The LMA releases local QoS
   resources associated with the flow and initiates signaling to release
   QoS resources in the network.

   (1) The LMA sends a UPN with QoS options identifying the flow for
       which QoS resources are to be released, released and operation code Operational Code set
       to DE-
       ALLOCATE. DE-ALLOCATE.  No additional LMA QoS parameters are sent.

   (2) The MAG replies with a UPA confirming the acceptance and operation code
       Operational Code set to RESPONSE.

   (3) The AP/WLC (MAG) releases local QoS resources associated with the
       flow.  The AP derives the corresponding Access Category access category from the
       Traffic Class (TC) field provided in the QoS option.  In
       addition, if the AP supports TCLAS and the QoS option contains a
       Traffic Selector field, then the AP SHALL shall map the Traffic
       Selector into a TCLAS element.  In the case where the AP does not
       support TCLAS (for example a WMM-AC example, an AP compliant AP) with WMM-AC), then
       the AP
       SHALL shall only use the Access Category. access category.  The AP sends a DELTS
       Request with TS INFO identifying the reservation.

   (4) The MN sends DELTS Response confirming release.

   It should be noted that steps 3 and 4 can proceed independently of
   the UPA (step 2).

4.  Mapping between IEEE 802.11 QoS and PMIPv6 QoS Parameters

4.1.  Connection Parameters

   TSPEC in IEEE 802.11 is used to reserve QoS for a traffic stream (MN
   MAC, TS(Traffic Stream) id). TS ID).  The IEEE 802.11 QoS reservation is for IEEE 802.11
   frames associated with an MN's MAC address.

   The TCLAS element with Classifier 1 (TCP/UDP Parameters) is used to
   identify a PMIPv6 QoS flow.  We should note that WMM-AC procedures do
   not support TCLAS.  When TCLAS is present, a one-to-one mapping
   between the TCLAS defined TCLAS-defined flow and the Traffic Selector is given
   below.

   QoS reservations in IEEE 802.11 are made for a traffic stream
   (identified in TCLAS) and correspond to PMIPv6 QoS session parameters
   (identified by the Traffic Selector).  PMIPv6 QoS [1] specifies that
   when QoS-
   Traffic-Selector QoS-Traffic-Selector is included along with the per-session
   bandwidth attributes described in Section 4.3 below, the attributes
   apply at a per-session level.

      +--------------------------------+----------------------------+
      |    MN <--> AP(IEEE AP (IEEE 802.11)    |   MAG <--> LMA (PMIPv6)    |
      +--------------------------------+----------------------------+
      | (TCLAS Classifier 1)TCP/UDP IP | Traffic Selector (IP flow) |
      |   (TCLAS Classifier 1) DSCP    |     Traffic Class (TC)     |
      +--------------------------------+----------------------------+

           Table 1: IEEE 802.11 - PMIPv6 QoS Connection mapping Mapping
   If the MN or AP is not able to convey flow parameters in TCLAS, the
   QoS reservation request in IEEE 802.11 are is derived as shown in
   Table 2.

        +------------------------------+--------------------------+
        |       MN <--> AP(WMM) AP (WMM)       | MAG <--> LMA (PMIPv6)    |
        +------------------------------+--------------------------+
        | (no IP flow parameter/TCLAS) | (a) applies to all flows |
        |                              | (b) derived out-of-band  |
        |                              |                          |
        |    User Priority (802.1D)    | Traffic Class (TC)       |
        |                              | (derived using Table 3)  |
        +------------------------------+--------------------------+

               Table 2: WMM - PMIPv6 QoS Connection mapping Mapping

   When WMM [4] is used, and TCLAS is not present to specify IP flow,
   one of two options apply for the MAG - LMA (PMIPv6) segment:

   (a) Bandwidth parameters described in Section 4.3 apply to all flows
       of the MN.  This is not a preferred mode of operation if the LMA
       performs reservation for a single flow, e.g. e.g., a voice flow
       identified by an IP 5-tuple.

   (b) The IP flow for which the MN requests reservation is derived out-
       of-band.  For example, the AP/MAG observes application level application-level
       signaling (e.g. (e.g., SIP [10]) or session level session-level signaling (e.g. (e.g., 3GPP
       WLCP (WLAN Control Protocol) [7])and [7]), associates subsequent ADDTS
       request
       requests using heuristics heuristics, and then derives the IP flow/Traffic flow / Traffic
       Selector field.

4.2.  QoS Class

   Table 3 contains a mapping between Access Class (WMM AC) access category (AC) and IEEE
   802.1D User Priority (UP) tag in IEEE 802.11 frames, and DSCP in IP
   data packets.  The table also provides the mapping between Access Class
   (WMM AC) AC and
   DSCP for use in IEEE 802.11 TSPEC and PMIPv6 QoS (Traffic Class).
   Mapping of QCI to DSCP uses the tables in [6].

        +-----+------+-----------+---------+----------------------+
        | QCI | DSCP | 802.1D UP |  WMM    AC   | Example Services     |
        +-----+------+-----------+---------+----------------------+
        |  1  |  EF  |   6(VO)   | 3 AC_VO | conversational voice |
        |  2  |  EF  |   6(VO)   | 3 AC_VO | conversational video |
        |  3  |  EF  |   6(VO)   | 3 AC_VO | real-time gaming     |
        |  4  | AF41 |   5(VI)   | 2 AC_VI | buffered streaming   |
        |  5  | AF31 |   4(CL)   | 2 AC_VI | signaling            |
        |  6  | AF32 |   4(CL)   | 2 AC_VI | buffered streaming   |
        |  7  | AF21 |   3(EE)   | 0 AC_BE | interactive gaming   |
        |  8  | AF11 |   1(BE)   | 0 AC_BE | web access           |
        |  9  |  BE  |   0(BK)   | 1 AC_BK | e-mail email                |
        +-----+------+-----------+---------+----------------------+

           Table 3: QoS Mapping between QCI/DSCP, 802.1D UP, WMM AC

   The MN tags all data packets with DSCP and IEEE 802.1D UP
   corresponding to the application and the subscribed policy or
   authorization.  The AP polices sessions and flows based on the
   configured QoS policy values for the MN.

   For QoS reservations, TSPEC uses WMM AC WMM-AC values and PMIPv6 QoS uses
   corresponding DSCP values in Traffic Class (TC).  IEEE 802.11 QoS
   Access Class AC_VO, Category AC_VO and AC_VI are used for QoS reservations.  AC_BE,  AC_BE
   and AC_BK should not be used in reservations.

   When WMM-AC specifications that do not contain TCLAS are used, it is
   only possible to have one reservation per Traffic Class / access
   category (AC).
   category.  PMIPv6 QoS will not contain any flow specific flow-specific attributes
   like Traffic Selector.

4.3.  Bandwidth

   Bandwidth parameters that need to be mapped between IEEE 802.11 and
   PMIPv6 QoS are shown in Table 4.

          +-------------------------+---------------------------+
          | MN <--> AP(IEEE 802.11) | MAG <--> LMA (PMIPv6)     |
          +-------------------------+---------------------------+
          |    Mean Data Rate, DL   | Guaranteed-DL-Bit-Rate    |
          |    Mean Data Rate, UL   | Guaranteed-UL-Bit-Rate    |
          |    Peak Data Rate, DL   | Aggregate-Max-DL-Bit-Rate |
          |    Peak Data Rate, UL   | Aggregate-Max-UL-Bit-Rate |
          +-------------------------+---------------------------+

       Table 4: Bandwidth Parameters for Admission Controlled Admission-Controlled Flows
   In PMIPv6 QoS [1], services using a sending rate smaller than or
   equal to the Guaranteed Bit Rate (GBR) can assume, in general assume general, that
   congestion related
   congestion-related packet drops will not occur [8].  If the rate
   offered by the service exceeds this threshold, there are no
   guarantees provided.  IEEE 802.11 radio networks do not offer such a
   guarantee, but [4] notes that the application (service) requirements
   are captured in TSPEC by the MSDU (MAC Service Data Unit) and Mean
   Data Rate.  The TSPEC should contain Mean Data Rate Rate, and it is
   recommended that it be mapped to the GBR parameters, Guaranteed-DL-
   Bit-Rate and Guaranteed-UL-Bit-Rate in PMIPv6 QoS [1].

   IEEE 802.11 TSPEC requests do not require all fields to be completed.
   [4] specifies a list of TSPEC parameters that are required in the
   specification.  Peak Data Rate is not required in WMM, however WMM; however, for
   MNs and APs that are capable of specifying the Peak Data Rate, it
   should be mapped to MBR (Maximum Bit Rate) in PMIPv6 QoS.  The AP
   should use the MBR parameters, parameters Aggregate-Max-DL-Bit-Rate and
   Aggregate-Max-UL-Bit-Rate to police these flows on the backhaul
   segment between MAG and LMA.

   During the QoS reservation procedure, if the MN requests Mean Data
   Rate, or Peak Data Rate in excess of values authorized in PMIPv6 QoS,
   the AP should deny the request in an ADDTS Response. response.  The AP may set
   the reject cause code to REJECTED_WITH_SUGGESTED_CHANGES and send a
   revised TSPEC with Mean Data Rate and Peak Data Rate set to
   acceptable GBR and MBR respectively MBR, respectively, in PMIPv6 QoS.

5.  Security Considerations

   This document describes mapping of PMIPv6 QoS parameters to IEEE
   802.11 QoS parameters.  Thus, the security in the WLAN and PMIPv6
   signaling segments and the functional entities that map the two
   protocols need to be considered.  802.11-2012  IEEE 802.11 [3] provides the means
   to secure management frames that are used for ADDTS and DELTS.  The
   PMIPv6 [9] specification [9] recommends using IPSec IPsec and IKEv2 to secure
   protocol messages.  The security of the node(s) that implement the
   QoS mapping functionality should be considered in actual deployments.

   The QoS mappings themselves do not introduce additional security
   concerns.

6.  IANA Considerations

   No IANA assignment of parameters are required.

7.  Acknowledgements

   The authors thank the NetExt Working Group for the valuable feedback
   to different versions of this specification.  In particular, the
   authors wish to thank Sri Gundavelli, Rajeev, Koodli, Georgios
   Karagianis, Kent Leung, Marco Liebsch, Basavaraj Patil, Pierrick
   Seite, Hidetoshi Yokota for their suggestions and valuable input.
   The authors also thank George Calcev, Mirko Schramm, Mazin Shalash
   and Marco Spini for detailed input on parameters and scheduling in
   IEEE 802.11 and 3GPP radio networks.

8.  References

8.1.

6.1.  Normative References

   [1]  Liebsch, M., Seite, P., Yokota, H., Korhonen, J., and S.
        Gundavelli, "Quality-of-Service Option for Proxy Mobile IPv6",
        RFC 7222, DOI 10.17487/RFC7222, May 2014. 2014,
        <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7222>.

   [2]  Krishnan, S., Gundavelli, S., Liebsch, M., Yokota, H., and J.
        Korhonen, "Update Notifications for Proxy Mobile IPv6",
        RFC 7077, DOI 10.17487/RFC7077, November 2013.

8.2. 2013,
        <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7077>.

6.2.  Informative References

   [3]  IEEE, "802.11-2012 - IEEE "IEEE Standard for Information Technology -
        Telecommunications and information exchange between systems -
        Local and metropolitan area networks- networks - Specific requirements
        Part 11: Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical
        Layer (PHY) Specifications.",
              March 2012. Specifications", IEEE Standard 802.11.

   [4]  Wi-Fi Alliance, "Wi-Fi Multimedia Technical Specification (with
        WMM-Power Save and WMM-Admission Control) Control)", Version
              1.2.0.", 1.2.0, May
        2012.

   [5]  IEEE, "Wireless LAN Medium Access Control (MAC) and Physical
        Layer (PHY) Specification, Amendment 2: MAC Enhancements for
        Robust Audio Video Streaming, Streaming", IEEE
              802.11aa-2012.", May 2012. 802.11aa.

   [6]  3GPP, "Guidelines for IPX Provider networks (Previously
        Inter-Service Provider IP Backbone Guidelines) Version
              11.0", Guidelines)", GSMA Official
        Document IR.34 v11.0, November 2014. 2014,
        <http://www.gsma.com/newsroom/wp-content/uploads/
        IR.34-v11.0.pdf>.

   [7]  3GPP, "3rd Generation Partnership Project; Technical "Technical Specification Group Core Network and Services;
        Wireless LAN control plane protocols for trusted WLAN access to
        EPC; Stage 3 (Release 12)", 3GPP TS 23.244 12.1.0, December 2014.
        2014, <http://www.3gpp.org/ftp/specs/archive/24_series/24.244/>.

   [8]  3GPP, "3rd Generation Partnership Project; Technical "Technical Specification Group Services and System
        Aspects; Policy and Charging Control Architecture (Release 13)",
        3GPP TS 23.203 13.2.0, December 2014. 2014,
        <http://www.3gpp.org/ftp/specs/archive/23_series/23.203/>.

   [9]  Gundavelli, S., Ed., Leung, K., Devarapalli, V., Chowdhury, K.,
        and B. Patil, "Proxy Mobile IPv6", RFC 5213,
        DOI 10.17487/RFC5213, August 2008. 2008,
        <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5213>.

   [10] Rosenberg, J., Schulzrinne, H., Camarillo, G., Johnston, A.,
        Peterson, J., Sparks, R., Handley, M., and E.  Schooler, "SIP:
        Session Initiation Protocol", RFC 3261, DOI 10.17487/RFC3261,
        June 2002. 2002, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3261>.

Appendix A.  LMA Initiated  LMA-Initiated QoS Service Flow with IEEE 802.11aa

                              +-----------+
    +----+                    |+--+  +---+|           +-------+
    | MN |                    ||AP|  |MAG||           |  LMA  |
    +-+--+                    ++-++--+-+-++           +---+---+
      |                          |     |                  |
    +----------------------------------------------------------------+
    |         (0) establish connection session to with mobile network              |
    +----------------------------------------------------------------+
      |                          |     |                  |
      |                          |     |                  | Policy
      |                          |     |                  |<----------
      |                          |     |UPN(QoS opt(2)    | Update(1)
      | ADDTS Reserve Request    |     |<-----------------|
      |      (TCLAS, TSPEC)(3)   |<----|                  |
      |<-------------------------|     |                  |
      | ADDTS Reserve Response   |     |                  |
      |      (TCLAS, TSPEC)(4)   |     |                  |
      |------------------------->|     |                  |
      |                          |---->|UPA(QoS opt)(5)   |
      |                          |     |----------------->|
      |                          |     |                  |

         Figure 5: LMA initiated LMA-Initiated QoS service request Service Request with 802.11aa

   In this the use case shown in Figure 5, the LMA initiates the QoS service
   request and IEEE 802.11aa is used to setup set up the QoS reservation in
   the Wi-
   Fi Wi-Fi segment.

   (0) The MN sets up best effort connectivity a best-effort session.  This allows the MN to
       perform application level application-level signaling and setup.

   (1) The policy server sends a QoS reservation request to the LMA.
       This is usually sent in response to an application that requests
       the policy server for higher QoS for some of its flows.

       The LMA reserves resources for the flow requested.

   (2) The LMA sends a PMIPv6 UPN (Update Notification) [2], as outlined
       in Section 3.2.1, to the MAG with notification reason Notification Reason set to
       QOS_SERVICE_REQUEST and acknowledgement requested Acknowledgement Requested flag set to
       value of 1.
       The operational code Operational Code in the QoS option SHOULD be is set to
       ALLOCATE ALLOCATE, and
       the Traffic Selector identifies the flow for QoS.

       The LMA QoS parameters include Guaranteed-DL-Bit-Rate/Guaranteed-
       UL-Bit-Rate and Aggregate-Max-DL-Bit-Rate/Aggregate-Max-UL-Bit-
       Rate for the flow.  The reserved bandwidth for flows are
       accounted is
       calculated separately from the non-reserved session bandwidth.

   (3) If there are sufficient resources to satisfy the request, the AP
       /MAG AP/
       MAG sends an ADDTS Reserve Request (IEEE 802.11aa) specifying the
       QoS reserved for the traffic stream stream, including the TSPEC and
       TCLAS
       element elements mapped from the PMIPv6 QoS Traffic Selector to
       identify the flow.

       PMIPv6 parameters are mapped to TCLAS (Table 1) and TSPEC
       (Table 4).  If there are insufficient resources at the AP/WLC,
       the MAG will not send and an ADDTS message and will continue the
       processing of step (5).

       Higher level StreamId 5.

       The higher-level stream identifier in IEEE 802.11aa should be
       encoded as discussed in Section 3.2.2.

   (4) MN accepts the QoS reserved in the network and replies with ADDTS
       Reserve Response.

   (4)

   (5) The MAG (AP/WLC) replies with a UPA confirming the acceptance of
       QoS options and operational code Operational Code set to RESPONSE.  The AP/WLC
       polices flows based on the new QoS.

       If there are insufficient resources at the AP in step (3), 3, the MAG
       sends a response with UPA status code set to
       CANNOT_MEET_QOS_SERVICE_REQUEST (130).

Acknowledgements

   The authors thank the NETEXT Working Group for the valuable feedback
   to different versions of this specification.  In particular, the
   authors wish to thank Sri Gundavelli, Georgios Karagianis, Rajeev
   Koodli, Kent Leung, Marco Liebsch, Basavaraj Patil, Pierrick Seite,
   and Hidetoshi Yokota for their suggestions and valuable input.  The
   authors also thank George Calcev, Mirko Schramm, Mazin Shalash, and
   Marco Spini for detailed input on parameters and scheduling in IEEE
   802.11 and 3GPP radio networks.

Authors' Addresses

   John Kaippallimalil
   Huawei
   5340 Legacy Dr., Suite 175
   Plano, TX  75024
   USA

   Email:
   United States

   EMail: john.kaippallimalil@huawei.com

   Rajesh Pazhyannur
   Cisco
   170 West Tasman Drive
   San Jose, CA  95134
   USA

   Email:
   United States

   EMail: rpazhyan@cisco.com

   Parviz Yegani
   Juniper
   1194 North Mathilda Ave.
   Sunnyvale, CA  94089-1206
   USA

   Email:
   United States

   EMail: pyegani@juniper.net