TRILL Charter Draft July 2013 ================================= The TRILL WG has specified a solution for transparent unicast shortest-path and multi-destination frame routing in multi-hop networks with arbitrary topology. End stations, including Layer 3 routers, are connected to TRILL switches through IEEE 802.1-compliant Ethernet. TRILL switches may be interconnected with multi-access or point-to-point links of arbitrary technology. The current work of the working group is around operational support and additional extensions and optimizations of TRILL for the properties of the networks on which it is deployed. The TRILL WG may also produce corrections, clarifications, and updates of existing TRILL RFCs. The WG will work on the following items: (1) Following on from the TRILL OAM requirements (RFC 6905), specify a framework and specific protocols for the handling of Operations, Administration, and Maintenance (OAM) in networks using TRILL, focusing on fault management and performance and taking into consideration existing OAM mechanisms that might apply to TRILL. (2) Specify protocols to support "active-active" service to end stations that are multiply connected to a TRILL campus to provide them with flow level traffic spreading and rapid adaptation to link failure similar to that provided by TRILL for TRILL switches. (3) Develop, within the TRILL protocol context, protocol specifications for broadcast/multicast (multi-destination) frame reduction. Examples: protocol extensions supporting replacement of broadcast/multicast by unicast where appropriate; ARP/ND (Neighbor Discovery) reduction through extensions to the TRILL ESADI protocol. (4) Specify protocols for TRILL over pseudowires and TRILL over IP tunnels, for example to connect branch office TRILL switches to a central TRILL campus over the Internet. (5) Specify extensions to the TRILL protocol to support multi-level routing to improve scaling and multi-topology routing to provide different topologies for different classes or types of traffic, based existing IS-IS multi-level and multi-topology routing facilities. (6) Specify a reduced TRILL control plane protocol for interconnection, with improved error isolation, between TRILL campuses under coordinated management. (7) Analyze the use of IS-IS security in TRILL and determine if any work is needed to accommodate any specific TRILL control or data plane security leveraging IS-IS security. (8) Produce an interoperability / implementation report for TRILL. The TRILL WG will continue to work with other IETF working groups such as the ISIS WG, and SDO groups such as IEEE 802.1 through established inter-WG relationships and SDO liaison processes, including early and WG last call review by the ISIS WG of documents extending IS-IS routing.