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Supported RSVP Standards
The JUNOS software substantially supports the following
RSVP standards:
- RFC 2205, Resource ReSerVation Protocol
(RSVP)—Version 1 Functional Specification
- RFC 2209, Resource ReSerVation Protocol
(RSVP)—Version 1 Message Processing Rules
- RFC 2210, The Use of RSVP with IETF Integrated Services
- RFC 2211, Specification of the Controlled-Load
Network Element Service
- RFC 2212, Specification of Guaranteed Quality of Service
- RFC 2215, General Characterization Parameters
for Integrated Service Network Elements
- RFC 2216, Network Element Service Specification Template
- RFC 2745, RSVP Diagnostic
Messages
- RFC 2747, RSVP Cryptographic Authentication (updated by RFC 3097)
- RFC 2961, RSVP Refresh Overhead Reduction Extensions
- RFC 3097, RSVP Cryptographic Authentication—Updated
Message Type Value (see also RFC 2747)
- RFC 3209, RSVP-TE: Extensions to RSVP for LSP Tunnels (the Null
Service Object for maximum transmission unit [MTU] signaling in RSVP
is not supported)
- RFC 3473, Generalized Multi-Protocol
Label Switching (GMPLS) Signaling Resource ReserVation [sic] Protocol-Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE) Extensions (only
Section 9, “Fault Handling,” is supported)
- RFC 3477, Signalling
Unnumbered Links in Resource ReSerVation Protocol - Traffic Engineering
(RSVP-TE)
- RFC 4090, Fast Reroute Extensions to RSVP-TE for LSP Tunnels (except
for node protection in facility backup)
- RFC 4125, Maximum
Allocation Bandwidth Constraints Model for Diffserv-aware MPLS Traffic
Engineering
- RFC 4127, Russian
Dolls Bandwidth Constraints Model for Diffserv-aware MPLS Traffic
Engineering
- Internet draft draft-ietf-mpls-rsvp-te-p2mp-01.txt, Extensions to RSVP-TE for Point to Multipoint TE LSPs (expires
June 2005)
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