RFC 9999 | NETCONF-notif | July 2019 |
Voit, et al. | Standards Track | [Page] |
This document provides a Network Configuration Protocol (NETCONF) binding to the dynamic subscription capability of both subscribed notifications and YANG-Push.¶
This is an Internet Standards Track document.¶
This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). It represents the consensus of the IETF community. It has received public review and has been approved for publication by the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG). Further information on Internet Standards is available in Section 2 of RFC 7841.¶
Information about the current status of this document, any errata, and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained at https://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc9999.¶
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This document specifies the binding of a stream of events which form part of a dynamic subscription to the NETCONF protocol [RFC6241]. Dynamic subscriptions are defined in [RFCYYYY]. In addition, as [RFCZZZZ] is itself built upon [RFCYYYY], this document enables a NETCONF client to request via a dynamic subscription and receive updates from a YANG datastore located on a NETCONF server.¶
This document assumes that the reader is familiar with the terminology and concepts defined in [RFCYYYY].¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
The following terms are defined in [RFCYYYY]: dynamic subscription, event stream, notification message, publisher, receiver, subscriber, subscription. No additional terms are defined.¶
A publisher is allowed to concurrently support dynamic subscription RPCs of [RFCYYYY] at the same time as [RFC5277]'s "create-subscription" RPC. However a single NETCONF transport session MUST NOT support both this specification and a subscription established by [RFC5277]'s "create-subscription" RPC. To protect against any attempts to use a single NETCONF transport session in this way:¶
If a publisher supports this specification but not subscriptions via [RFC5277], the publisher MUST NOT advertise "urn:ietf:params:netconf:capability:notification:1.0".¶
The "encode-xml" feature of [RFCYYYY] MUST be supported. This indicates that XML is a valid encoding for RPCs, state change notifications, and subscribed content.¶
A NETCONF publisher supporting event stream subscription via [RFCYYYY] MUST support the "NETCONF" event stream identified in that document.¶
Management of dynamic subscriptions occurs via RPCs as defined in [RFCZZZZ] and [RFCYYYY]. For a dynamic subscription, if the NETCONF session involved with the "establish-subscription" terminates, the subscription MUST be terminated.¶
For a dynamic subscription, any "modify-subscription", "delete-subscription", or "resync-subscription" RPCs MUST be sent using the same NETCONF session upon which the referenced subscription was established.¶
Notification messages transported over the NETCONF protocol MUST be encoded in a <notification> message as defined within [RFC5277], Section 4[RFC5277]'s "eventTime" object definition, the "eventTime" is populated with the event occurrence time.¶
For dynamic subscriptions, all notification messages MUST use the NETCONF transport session used by the "establish-subscription" RPC.¶
When an RPC error occurs as defined in [RFCYYYY] Section 2.4.6 and [RFCZZZZ] Appendix A, the NETCONF RPC reply MUST include an "rpc-error" element per [RFC6241] with the error information populated as follows:¶
error identity uses error-tag ---------------------- -------------- dscp-unavailable invalid-value encoding-unsupported invalid-value filter-unsupported invalid-value insufficient-resources resource-denied no-such-subscription invalid-value replay-unsupported operation-not-supported¶
error identity uses error-tag ---------------------- -------------- cant-exclude operation-not-supported datastore-not-subscribable invalid-value no-such-subscription-resync invalid-value on-change-unsupported operation-not-supported on-change-sync-unsupported operation-not-supported period-unsupported invalid-value update-too-big too-big sync-too-big too-big unchanging-selection operation-failed¶
RPC have base identity ---------------------- ---------------------------- establish-subscription establish-subscription-error modify-subscription modify-subscription-error delete-subscription delete-subscription-error kill-subscription delete-subscription-error resync-subscription resync-subscription-error¶
establish-subscription returns hints in yang-data structure ---------------------- ------------------------------------ target: event stream establish-subscription-stream-error-info target: datastore establish-subscription-datastore-error-info modify-subscription returns hints in yang-data structure ---------------------- ------------------------------------ target: event stream modify-subscription-stream-error-info target: datastore modify-subscription-datastore-error-info¶
The yang-data included within "error-info" SHOULD NOT include the optional leaf "reason", as such a leaf would be redundant with information that is already placed within the "error-app-tag".¶
In case of an rpc error resulting from a "delete-subscription", "kill-subscription", or "resync-subscription" request, no "error-info" needs to be included, as the "subscription-id" is the only RPC input parameter and no hints regarding this RPC input parameters need to be provided.¶
This document does not introduce additional Security Considerations for dynamic subscriptions beyond those discussed in [RFCYYYY]. But there is one consideration worthy of more refinement based on the connection oriented nature of the NETCONF protocol. Specifically, if a buggy or compromised NETCONF subscriber sends a number of "establish-subscription" requests, then these subscriptions accumulate and may use up system resources. In such a situation, subscriptions MAY be terminated by terminating the underlying NETCONF session. The publisher MAY also suspend or terminate a subset of the active subscriptions on that NETCONF session in order to reclaim resources and preserve normal operation for the other subscriptions.¶
This document has no IANA actions.¶
This section is non-normative. Additionally the subscription "id" values of 22, 23, and 39 used below are just examples. In production, the actual values of "id" may not be small integers.¶
As defined in [RFCYYYY] an event stream exposes a continuous set of events available for subscription. A NETCONF client can retrieve the list of available event streams from a NETCONF publisher using the "get" operation against the top-level container "/streams" defined in [RFCYYYY] Section 3.1.¶
The following example illustrates the retrieval of the list of available event streams:¶
After such a request, the NETCONF publisher returns a list of event streams available, as well as additional information which might exist in the container.¶
The following figure shows two successful "establish-subscription" RPC requests as per [RFCYYYY]. The first request is given a subscription "id" of 22, the second, an "id" of 23.¶
To provide examples of the information being transported, example messages for interactions (a) and (b) in Figure 2 are detailed below:¶
As NETCONF publisher was able to fully satisfy the request (a), the publisher sends the subscription "id" of the accepted subscription within message (b):¶
If the NETCONF publisher had not been able to fully satisfy the request, or subscriber has no authorization to establish the subscription, the publisher would have sent an RPC error response. For instance, if the "dscp" value of 10 asserted by the subscriber in Figure 3 proved unacceptable, the publisher may have returned:¶
The subscriber can use this information in future attempts to establish a subscription.¶
An existing subscription may be modified. The following exchange shows a negotiation of such a modification via several exchanges between a subscriber and a publisher. This negotiation consists of a failed RPC modification request/response, followed by a successful one.¶
If the subscription being modified in Figure 6 is a datastore subscription as per [RFCZZZZ], the modification request made in (c) may look like that shown in Figure 7. As can be seen, the modifications being attempted are the application of a new XPath filter as well as the setting of a new periodic time interval.¶
If the NETCONF publisher can satisfy both changes, the publisher sends a positive result for the RPC. If the NETCONF publisher cannot satisfy either of the proposed changes, the publisher sends an RPC error response (d). The following is an example RPC error response for (d) which includes a hint. This hint is an alternative time period value which might have resulted in a successful modification:¶
The following demonstrates deleting a subscription. This subscription may have been to either a stream or a datastore.¶
If the NETCONF publisher can satisfy the request, the publisher replies with success to the RPC request.¶
If the NETCONF publisher cannot satisfy the request, the publisher sends an error-rpc element indicating the modification didn't work. Figure 10 shows a valid response for existing valid subscription "id", but that subscription "id" was created on a different NETCONF transport session:¶
A publisher will send subscription state notifications for dynamic subscriptions according to the definitions within [RFCYYYY].¶
As per Section 2.7.2 of [RFCYYYY], a "subscription-modified" might be sent over NETCONF if the definition of a configured filter changes. A subscription state notification encoded in XML would look like:¶
A "subscription-resumed" would look like:¶
The "replay-complete" is virtually identical, with "subscription-resumed" simply being replaced by "replay-complete".¶
A "subscription-terminated" would look like:¶
The "subscription-suspended" is virtually identical, with "subscription-terminated" simply being replaced by "subscription-suspended".¶
This section provides examples which illustrate both XPath and subtree methods of filtering event record contents. The examples are based on the YANG notification "vrrp-protocol-error-event" as defined per the ietf-vrrp.yang model within [RFC8347]. Event records based on this specification which are generated by the publisher might appear as:¶
Suppose a subscriber wanted to establish a subscription which only passes instances of event records where there is a "checksum-error" as part of a VRRP protocol event. Also assume the publisher places such event records into the NETCONF stream. To get a continuous series of matching event records, the subscriber might request the application of an XPath filter against the NETCONF stream. An "establish-subscription" RPC to meet this objective might be:¶
For more examples of XPath filters, see [XPATH].¶
Suppose the "establish-subscription" in Figure 15 was accepted. And suppose later a subscriber decided they wanted to broaden this subscription cover to all VRRP protocol events (i.e., not just those with a "checksum error"). The subscriber might attempt to modify the subscription in a way which replaces the XPath filter with a subtree filter which sends all VRRP protocol events to a subscriber. Such a "modify-subscription" RPC might look like:¶
For more examples of subtree filters, see [RFC6241], section 6.4.¶
We wish to acknowledge the helpful contributions, comments, and suggestions that were received from: Andy Bierman, Yan Gang, Sharon Chisholm, Hector Trevino, Peipei Guo, Susan Hares, Tim Jenkins, Balazs Lengyel, Martin Bjorklund, Mahesh Jethanandani, Kent Watsen, Qin Wu, and Guangying Zheng.¶