Penultimate hop popping
Penultimate hop popping is specified in and is a function performed by certain routers in an MPLS enabled network. It refers to the process whereby the outermost label of an MPLS tagged packet is removed by a label switch router before the packet is passed to an adjacent label edge router. The benefit is that the LSR has to do a label lookup anyway and it doesn't make a difference whether this results in a label swap or pop. However, for the LER this saves one cycle of label lookup.
The process is important in a Layer 3 MPLS VPN environment as it reduces the load on the LER. If this process didn't happen, the LER would have to perform at least 2 label lookups:
- The outer label, identifying that the packet was destined to have its label stripped on this router.
- The inner label, to identify which Virtual Routing and Forwarding instance to use for the subsequent IP routing lookup.
PHP functionality is achieved by the LER advertising a label with a value of 3 to its neighbours. This label is defined as "implicit-null" and informs the neighbouring LSR to perform PHP.