{
  "draft": "draft-kumaki-murai-l3vpn-rsvp-te-09",
  "doc_id": "RFC6882",
  "title": "Support for Resource Reservation Protocol Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE) in Layer 3 Virtual Private Networks (L3VPNs)",
  "authors": [
    "K. Kumaki, Ed.",
    "T. Murai",
    "D. Cheng",
    "S. Matsushima",
    "P. Jiang"
  ],
  "format": [
    "TEXT",
    "HTML"
  ],
  "page_count": "15",
  "pub_status": "EXPERIMENTAL",
  "status": "EXPERIMENTAL",
  "source": "IETF - NON WORKING GROUP",
  "abstract": "IP Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) provide connectivity between sites across an IP/MPLS backbone. These VPNs can be operated using BGP/MPLS, and a single Provider Edge (PE) node may provide access to multiple customer sites belonging to different VPNs.\n\n The VPNs may support a number of customer services, including RSVP and Resource Reservation Protocol Traffic Engineering (RSVP-TE) traffic. This document describes how to support RSVP-TE between customer sites when a single PE supports multiple VPNs and labels are not used to identify VPNs between PEs.",
  "pub_date": "March 2013",
  "keywords": [],
  "obsoletes": [],
  "obsoleted_by": [],
  "updates": [],
  "updated_by": [],
  "see_also": [],
  "doi": "10.17487/RFC6882",
  "errata_url": null
}