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- Network Working Group W. Simpson, Editor
- Request for Comments: 1661 Daydreamer
- STD: 51 July 1994
- Obsoletes: 1548
- Category: Standards Track
-
-
- The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP)
-
-
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
- Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
- improvements. Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
- Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
- and status of this protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
-
-
- Abstract
-
- The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) provides a standard method for
- transporting multi-protocol datagrams over point-to-point links. PPP
- is comprised of three main components:
-
- 1. A method for encapsulating multi-protocol datagrams.
-
- 2. A Link Control Protocol (LCP) for establishing, configuring,
- and testing the data-link connection.
-
- 3. A family of Network Control Protocols (NCPs) for establishing
- and configuring different network-layer protocols.
-
- This document defines the PPP organization and methodology, and the
- PPP encapsulation, together with an extensible option negotiation
- mechanism which is able to negotiate a rich assortment of
- configuration parameters and provides additional management
- functions. The PPP Link Control Protocol (LCP) is described in terms
- of this mechanism.
-
-
- Table of Contents
-
-
- 1. Introduction .......................................... 1
- 1.1 Specification of Requirements ................... 2
- 1.2 Terminology ..................................... 3
-
- 2. PPP Encapsulation ..................................... 4
-
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- Simpson [Page i]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
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- 3. PPP Link Operation .................................... 6
- 3.1 Overview ........................................ 6
- 3.2 Phase Diagram ................................... 6
- 3.3 Link Dead (physical-layer not ready) ............ 7
- 3.4 Link Establishment Phase ........................ 7
- 3.5 Authentication Phase ............................ 8
- 3.6 Network-Layer Protocol Phase .................... 8
- 3.7 Link Termination Phase .......................... 9
-
- 4. The Option Negotiation Automaton ...................... 11
- 4.1 State Transition Table .......................... 12
- 4.2 States .......................................... 14
- 4.3 Events .......................................... 16
- 4.4 Actions ......................................... 21
- 4.5 Loop Avoidance .................................. 23
- 4.6 Counters and Timers ............................. 24
-
- 5. LCP Packet Formats .................................... 26
- 5.1 Configure-Request ............................... 28
- 5.2 Configure-Ack ................................... 29
- 5.3 Configure-Nak ................................... 30
- 5.4 Configure-Reject ................................ 31
- 5.5 Terminate-Request and Terminate-Ack ............. 33
- 5.6 Code-Reject ..................................... 34
- 5.7 Protocol-Reject ................................. 35
- 5.8 Echo-Request and Echo-Reply ..................... 36
- 5.9 Discard-Request ................................. 37
-
- 6. LCP Configuration Options ............................. 39
- 6.1 Maximum-Receive-Unit (MRU) ...................... 41
- 6.2 Authentication-Protocol ......................... 42
- 6.3 Quality-Protocol ................................ 43
- 6.4 Magic-Number .................................... 45
- 6.5 Protocol-Field-Compression (PFC) ................ 48
- 6.6 Address-and-Control-Field-Compression (ACFC)
-
- SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS ...................................... 51
- REFERENCES ................................................... 51
- ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS ............................................. 51
- CHAIR'S ADDRESS .............................................. 52
- EDITOR'S ADDRESS ............................................. 52
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- Simpson [Page ii]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
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-
- 1. Introduction
-
- The Point-to-Point Protocol is designed for simple links which
- transport packets between two peers. These links provide full-duplex
- simultaneous bi-directional operation, and are assumed to deliver
- packets in order. It is intended that PPP provide a common solution
- for easy connection of a wide variety of hosts, bridges and routers
- [1].
-
- Encapsulation
-
- The PPP encapsulation provides for multiplexing of different
- network-layer protocols simultaneously over the same link. The
- PPP encapsulation has been carefully designed to retain
- compatibility with most commonly used supporting hardware.
-
- Only 8 additional octets are necessary to form the encapsulation
- when used within the default HDLC-like framing. In environments
- where bandwidth is at a premium, the encapsulation and framing may
- be shortened to 2 or 4 octets.
-
- To support high speed implementations, the default encapsulation
- uses only simple fields, only one of which needs to be examined
- for demultiplexing. The default header and information fields
- fall on 32-bit boundaries, and the trailer may be padded to an
- arbitrary boundary.
-
- Link Control Protocol
-
- In order to be sufficiently versatile to be portable to a wide
- variety of environments, PPP provides a Link Control Protocol
- (LCP). The LCP is used to automatically agree upon the
- encapsulation format options, handle varying limits on sizes of
- packets, detect a looped-back link and other common
- misconfiguration errors, and terminate the link. Other optional
- facilities provided are authentication of the identity of its peer
- on the link, and determination when a link is functioning properly
- and when it is failing.
-
- Network Control Protocols
-
- Point-to-Point links tend to exacerbate many problems with the
- current family of network protocols. For instance, assignment and
- management of IP addresses, which is a problem even in LAN
- environments, is especially difficult over circuit-switched
- point-to-point links (such as dial-up modem servers). These
- problems are handled by a family of Network Control Protocols
- (NCPs), which each manage the specific needs required by their
-
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- Simpson [Page 1]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- respective network-layer protocols. These NCPs are defined in
- companion documents.
-
- Configuration
-
- It is intended that PPP links be easy to configure. By design,
- the standard defaults handle all common configurations. The
- implementor can specify improvements to the default configuration,
- which are automatically communicated to the peer without operator
- intervention. Finally, the operator may explicitly configure
- options for the link which enable the link to operate in
- environments where it would otherwise be impossible.
-
- This self-configuration is implemented through an extensible
- option negotiation mechanism, wherein each end of the link
- describes to the other its capabilities and requirements.
- Although the option negotiation mechanism described in this
- document is specified in terms of the Link Control Protocol (LCP),
- the same facilities are designed to be used by other control
- protocols, especially the family of NCPs.
-
-
-
- 1.1. Specification of Requirements
-
- In this document, several words are used to signify the requirements
- of the specification. These words are often capitalized.
-
- MUST This word, or the adjective "required", means that the
- definition is an absolute requirement of the specification.
-
- MUST NOT This phrase means that the definition is an absolute
- prohibition of the specification.
-
- SHOULD This word, or the adjective "recommended", means that there
- may exist valid reasons in particular circumstances to
- ignore this item, but the full implications must be
- understood and carefully weighed before choosing a
- different course.
-
- MAY This word, or the adjective "optional", means that this
- item is one of an allowed set of alternatives. An
- implementation which does not include this option MUST be
- prepared to interoperate with another implementation which
- does include the option.
-
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- Simpson [Page 2]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
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- 1.2. Terminology
-
- This document frequently uses the following terms:
-
- datagram The unit of transmission in the network layer (such as IP).
- A datagram may be encapsulated in one or more packets
- passed to the data link layer.
-
- frame The unit of transmission at the data link layer. A frame
- may include a header and/or a trailer, along with some
- number of units of data.
-
- packet The basic unit of encapsulation, which is passed across the
- interface between the network layer and the data link
- layer. A packet is usually mapped to a frame; the
- exceptions are when data link layer fragmentation is being
- performed, or when multiple packets are incorporated into a
- single frame.
-
- peer The other end of the point-to-point link.
-
- silently discard
- The implementation discards the packet without further
- processing. The implementation SHOULD provide the
- capability of logging the error, including the contents of
- the silently discarded packet, and SHOULD record the event
- in a statistics counter.
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- Simpson [Page 3]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
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- 2. PPP Encapsulation
-
- The PPP encapsulation is used to disambiguate multiprotocol
- datagrams. This encapsulation requires framing to indicate the
- beginning and end of the encapsulation. Methods of providing framing
- are specified in companion documents.
-
- A summary of the PPP encapsulation is shown below. The fields are
- transmitted from left to right.
-
- +----------+-------------+---------+
- | Protocol | Information | Padding |
- | 8/16 bits| * | * |
- +----------+-------------+---------+
-
-
- Protocol Field
-
- The Protocol field is one or two octets, and its value identifies
- the datagram encapsulated in the Information field of the packet.
- The field is transmitted and received most significant octet
- first.
-
- The structure of this field is consistent with the ISO 3309
- extension mechanism for address fields. All Protocols MUST be
- odd; the least significant bit of the least significant octet MUST
- equal "1". Also, all Protocols MUST be assigned such that the
- least significant bit of the most significant octet equals "0".
- Frames received which don't comply with these rules MUST be
- treated as having an unrecognized Protocol.
-
- Protocol field values in the "0***" to "3***" range identify the
- network-layer protocol of specific packets, and values in the
- "8***" to "b***" range identify packets belonging to the
- associated Network Control Protocols (NCPs), if any.
-
- Protocol field values in the "4***" to "7***" range are used for
- protocols with low volume traffic which have no associated NCP.
- Protocol field values in the "c***" to "f***" range identify
- packets as link-layer Control Protocols (such as LCP).
-
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- Simpson [Page 4]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
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- Up-to-date values of the Protocol field are specified in the most
- recent "Assigned Numbers" RFC [2]. This specification reserves
- the following values:
-
- Value (in hex) Protocol Name
-
- 0001 Padding Protocol
- 0003 to 001f reserved (transparency inefficient)
- 007d reserved (Control Escape)
- 00cf reserved (PPP NLPID)
- 00ff reserved (compression inefficient)
-
- 8001 to 801f unused
- 807d unused
- 80cf unused
- 80ff unused
-
- c021 Link Control Protocol
- c023 Password Authentication Protocol
- c025 Link Quality Report
- c223 Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol
-
- Developers of new protocols MUST obtain a number from the Internet
- Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA), at IANA@isi.edu.
-
-
- Information Field
-
- The Information field is zero or more octets. The Information
- field contains the datagram for the protocol specified in the
- Protocol field.
-
- The maximum length for the Information field, including Padding,
- but not including the Protocol field, is termed the Maximum
- Receive Unit (MRU), which defaults to 1500 octets. By
- negotiation, consenting PPP implementations may use other values
- for the MRU.
-
-
- Padding
-
- On transmission, the Information field MAY be padded with an
- arbitrary number of octets up to the MRU. It is the
- responsibility of each protocol to distinguish padding octets from
- real information.
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- Simpson [Page 5]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
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- 3. PPP Link Operation
-
- 3.1. Overview
-
- In order to establish communications over a point-to-point link, each
- end of the PPP link MUST first send LCP packets to configure and test
- the data link. After the link has been established, the peer MAY be
- authenticated.
-
- Then, PPP MUST send NCP packets to choose and configure one or more
- network-layer protocols. Once each of the chosen network-layer
- protocols has been configured, datagrams from each network-layer
- protocol can be sent over the link.
-
- The link will remain configured for communications until explicit LCP
- or NCP packets close the link down, or until some external event
- occurs (an inactivity timer expires or network administrator
- intervention).
-
-
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- 3.2. Phase Diagram
-
- In the process of configuring, maintaining and terminating the
- point-to-point link, the PPP link goes through several distinct
- phases which are specified in the following simplified state diagram:
-
- +------+ +-----------+ +--------------+
- | | UP | | OPENED | | SUCCESS/NONE
- | Dead |------->| Establish |---------->| Authenticate |--+
- | | | | | | |
- +------+ +-----------+ +--------------+ |
- ^ | | |
- | FAIL | FAIL | |
- +<--------------+ +----------+ |
- | | |
- | +-----------+ | +---------+ |
- | DOWN | | | CLOSING | | |
- +------------| Terminate |<---+<----------| Network |<-+
- | | | |
- +-----------+ +---------+
-
- Not all transitions are specified in this diagram. The following
- semantics MUST be followed.
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- Simpson [Page 6]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
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-
- 3.3. Link Dead (physical-layer not ready)
-
- The link necessarily begins and ends with this phase. When an
- external event (such as carrier detection or network administrator
- configuration) indicates that the physical-layer is ready to be used,
- PPP will proceed to the Link Establishment phase.
-
- During this phase, the LCP automaton (described later) will be in the
- Initial or Starting states. The transition to the Link Establishment
- phase will signal an Up event to the LCP automaton.
-
- Implementation Note:
-
- Typically, a link will return to this phase automatically after
- the disconnection of a modem. In the case of a hard-wired link,
- this phase may be extremely short -- merely long enough to detect
- the presence of the device.
-
-
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- 3.4. Link Establishment Phase
-
- The Link Control Protocol (LCP) is used to establish the connection
- through an exchange of Configure packets. This exchange is complete,
- and the LCP Opened state entered, once a Configure-Ack packet
- (described later) has been both sent and received.
-
- All Configuration Options are assumed to be at default values unless
- altered by the configuration exchange. See the chapter on LCP
- Configuration Options for further discussion.
-
- It is important to note that only Configuration Options which are
- independent of particular network-layer protocols are configured by
- LCP. Configuration of individual network-layer protocols is handled
- by separate Network Control Protocols (NCPs) during the Network-Layer
- Protocol phase.
-
- Any non-LCP packets received during this phase MUST be silently
- discarded.
-
- The receipt of the LCP Configure-Request causes a return to the Link
- Establishment phase from the Network-Layer Protocol phase or
- Authentication phase.
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- Simpson [Page 7]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
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- 3.5. Authentication Phase
-
- On some links it may be desirable to require a peer to authenticate
- itself before allowing network-layer protocol packets to be
- exchanged.
-
- By default, authentication is not mandatory. If an implementation
- desires that the peer authenticate with some specific authentication
- protocol, then it MUST request the use of that authentication
- protocol during Link Establishment phase.
-
- Authentication SHOULD take place as soon as possible after link
- establishment. However, link quality determination MAY occur
- concurrently. An implementation MUST NOT allow the exchange of link
- quality determination packets to delay authentication indefinitely.
-
- Advancement from the Authentication phase to the Network-Layer
- Protocol phase MUST NOT occur until authentication has completed. If
- authentication fails, the authenticator SHOULD proceed instead to the
- Link Termination phase.
-
- Only Link Control Protocol, authentication protocol, and link quality
- monitoring packets are allowed during this phase. All other packets
- received during this phase MUST be silently discarded.
-
- Implementation Notes:
-
- An implementation SHOULD NOT fail authentication simply due to
- timeout or lack of response. The authentication SHOULD allow some
- method of retransmission, and proceed to the Link Termination
- phase only after a number of authentication attempts has been
- exceeded.
-
- The implementation responsible for commencing Link Termination
- phase is the implementation which has refused authentication to
- its peer.
-
-
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- 3.6. Network-Layer Protocol Phase
-
- Once PPP has finished the previous phases, each network-layer
- protocol (such as IP, IPX, or AppleTalk) MUST be separately
- configured by the appropriate Network Control Protocol (NCP).
-
- Each NCP MAY be Opened and Closed at any time.
-
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- Simpson [Page 8]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- Implementation Note:
-
- Because an implementation may initially use a significant amount
- of time for link quality determination, implementations SHOULD
- avoid fixed timeouts when waiting for their peers to configure a
- NCP.
-
- After a NCP has reached the Opened state, PPP will carry the
- corresponding network-layer protocol packets. Any supported
- network-layer protocol packets received when the corresponding NCP is
- not in the Opened state MUST be silently discarded.
-
- Implementation Note:
-
- While LCP is in the Opened state, any protocol packet which is
- unsupported by the implementation MUST be returned in a Protocol-
- Reject (described later). Only protocols which are supported are
- silently discarded.
-
- During this phase, link traffic consists of any possible combination
- of LCP, NCP, and network-layer protocol packets.
-
-
-
- 3.7. Link Termination Phase
-
- PPP can terminate the link at any time. This might happen because of
- the loss of carrier, authentication failure, link quality failure,
- the expiration of an idle-period timer, or the administrative closing
- of the link.
-
- LCP is used to close the link through an exchange of Terminate
- packets. When the link is closing, PPP informs the network-layer
- protocols so that they may take appropriate action.
-
- After the exchange of Terminate packets, the implementation SHOULD
- signal the physical-layer to disconnect in order to enforce the
- termination of the link, particularly in the case of an
- authentication failure. The sender of the Terminate-Request SHOULD
- disconnect after receiving a Terminate-Ack, or after the Restart
- counter expires. The receiver of a Terminate-Request SHOULD wait for
- the peer to disconnect, and MUST NOT disconnect until at least one
- Restart time has passed after sending a Terminate-Ack. PPP SHOULD
- proceed to the Link Dead phase.
-
- Any non-LCP packets received during this phase MUST be silently
- discarded.
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- Simpson [Page 9]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
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- Implementation Note:
-
- The closing of the link by LCP is sufficient. There is no need
- for each NCP to send a flurry of Terminate packets. Conversely,
- the fact that one NCP has Closed is not sufficient reason to cause
- the termination of the PPP link, even if that NCP was the only NCP
- currently in the Opened state.
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- Simpson [Page 10]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
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- 4. The Option Negotiation Automaton
-
- The finite-state automaton is defined by events, actions and state
- transitions. Events include reception of external commands such as
- Open and Close, expiration of the Restart timer, and reception of
- packets from a peer. Actions include the starting of the Restart
- timer and transmission of packets to the peer.
-
- Some types of packets -- Configure-Naks and Configure-Rejects, or
- Code-Rejects and Protocol-Rejects, or Echo-Requests, Echo-Replies and
- Discard-Requests -- are not differentiated in the automaton
- descriptions. As will be described later, these packets do indeed
- serve different functions. However, they always cause the same
- transitions.
-
- Events Actions
-
- Up = lower layer is Up tlu = This-Layer-Up
- Down = lower layer is Down tld = This-Layer-Down
- Open = administrative Open tls = This-Layer-Started
- Close= administrative Close tlf = This-Layer-Finished
-
- TO+ = Timeout with counter > 0 irc = Initialize-Restart-Count
- TO- = Timeout with counter expired zrc = Zero-Restart-Count
-
- RCR+ = Receive-Configure-Request (Good) scr = Send-Configure-Request
- RCR- = Receive-Configure-Request (Bad)
- RCA = Receive-Configure-Ack sca = Send-Configure-Ack
- RCN = Receive-Configure-Nak/Rej scn = Send-Configure-Nak/Rej
-
- RTR = Receive-Terminate-Request str = Send-Terminate-Request
- RTA = Receive-Terminate-Ack sta = Send-Terminate-Ack
-
- RUC = Receive-Unknown-Code scj = Send-Code-Reject
- RXJ+ = Receive-Code-Reject (permitted)
- or Receive-Protocol-Reject
- RXJ- = Receive-Code-Reject (catastrophic)
- or Receive-Protocol-Reject
- RXR = Receive-Echo-Request ser = Send-Echo-Reply
- or Receive-Echo-Reply
- or Receive-Discard-Request
-
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- Simpson [Page 11]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- 4.1. State Transition Table
-
- The complete state transition table follows. States are indicated
- horizontally, and events are read vertically. State transitions and
- actions are represented in the form action/new-state. Multiple
- actions are separated by commas, and may continue on succeeding lines
- as space requires; multiple actions may be implemented in any
- convenient order. The state may be followed by a letter, which
- indicates an explanatory footnote. The dash ('-') indicates an
- illegal transition.
-
- | State
- | 0 1 2 3 4 5
- Events| Initial Starting Closed Stopped Closing Stopping
- ------+-----------------------------------------------------------
- Up | 2 irc,scr/6 - - - -
- Down | - - 0 tls/1 0 1
- Open | tls/1 1 irc,scr/6 3r 5r 5r
- Close| 0 tlf/0 2 2 4 4
- |
- TO+ | - - - - str/4 str/5
- TO- | - - - - tlf/2 tlf/3
- |
- RCR+ | - - sta/2 irc,scr,sca/8 4 5
- RCR- | - - sta/2 irc,scr,scn/6 4 5
- RCA | - - sta/2 sta/3 4 5
- RCN | - - sta/2 sta/3 4 5
- |
- RTR | - - sta/2 sta/3 sta/4 sta/5
- RTA | - - 2 3 tlf/2 tlf/3
- |
- RUC | - - scj/2 scj/3 scj/4 scj/5
- RXJ+ | - - 2 3 4 5
- RXJ- | - - tlf/2 tlf/3 tlf/2 tlf/3
- |
- RXR | - - 2 3 4 5
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- Simpson [Page 12]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
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- | State
- | 6 7 8 9
- Events| Req-Sent Ack-Rcvd Ack-Sent Opened
- ------+-----------------------------------------
- Up | - - - -
- Down | 1 1 1 tld/1
- Open | 6 7 8 9r
- Close|irc,str/4 irc,str/4 irc,str/4 tld,irc,str/4
- |
- TO+ | scr/6 scr/6 scr/8 -
- TO- | tlf/3p tlf/3p tlf/3p -
- |
- RCR+ | sca/8 sca,tlu/9 sca/8 tld,scr,sca/8
- RCR- | scn/6 scn/7 scn/6 tld,scr,scn/6
- RCA | irc/7 scr/6x irc,tlu/9 tld,scr/6x
- RCN |irc,scr/6 scr/6x irc,scr/8 tld,scr/6x
- |
- RTR | sta/6 sta/6 sta/6 tld,zrc,sta/5
- RTA | 6 6 8 tld,scr/6
- |
- RUC | scj/6 scj/7 scj/8 scj/9
- RXJ+ | 6 6 8 9
- RXJ- | tlf/3 tlf/3 tlf/3 tld,irc,str/5
- |
- RXR | 6 7 8 ser/9
-
-
- The states in which the Restart timer is running are identifiable by
- the presence of TO events. Only the Send-Configure-Request, Send-
- Terminate-Request and Zero-Restart-Count actions start or re-start
- the Restart timer. The Restart timer is stopped when transitioning
- from any state where the timer is running to a state where the timer
- is not running.
-
- The events and actions are defined according to a message passing
- architecture, rather than a signalling architecture. If an action is
- desired to control specific signals (such as DTR), additional actions
- are likely to be required.
-
- [p] Passive option; see Stopped state discussion.
-
- [r] Restart option; see Open event discussion.
-
- [x] Crossed connection; see RCA event discussion.
-
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- Simpson [Page 13]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- 4.2. States
-
- Following is a more detailed description of each automaton state.
-
- Initial
-
- In the Initial state, the lower layer is unavailable (Down), and
- no Open has occurred. The Restart timer is not running in the
- Initial state.
-
- Starting
-
- The Starting state is the Open counterpart to the Initial state.
- An administrative Open has been initiated, but the lower layer is
- still unavailable (Down). The Restart timer is not running in the
- Starting state.
-
- When the lower layer becomes available (Up), a Configure-Request
- is sent.
-
- Closed
-
- In the Closed state, the link is available (Up), but no Open has
- occurred. The Restart timer is not running in the Closed state.
-
- Upon reception of Configure-Request packets, a Terminate-Ack is
- sent. Terminate-Acks are silently discarded to avoid creating a
- loop.
-
- Stopped
-
- The Stopped state is the Open counterpart to the Closed state. It
- is entered when the automaton is waiting for a Down event after
- the This-Layer-Finished action, or after sending a Terminate-Ack.
- The Restart timer is not running in the Stopped state.
-
- Upon reception of Configure-Request packets, an appropriate
- response is sent. Upon reception of other packets, a Terminate-
- Ack is sent. Terminate-Acks are silently discarded to avoid
- creating a loop.
-
- Rationale:
-
- The Stopped state is a junction state for link termination,
- link configuration failure, and other automaton failure modes.
- These potentially separate states have been combined.
-
- There is a race condition between the Down event response (from
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 14]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- the This-Layer-Finished action) and the Receive-Configure-
- Request event. When a Configure-Request arrives before the
- Down event, the Down event will supercede by returning the
- automaton to the Starting state. This prevents attack by
- repetition.
-
- Implementation Option:
-
- After the peer fails to respond to Configure-Requests, an
- implementation MAY wait passively for the peer to send
- Configure-Requests. In this case, the This-Layer-Finished
- action is not used for the TO- event in states Req-Sent, Ack-
- Rcvd and Ack-Sent.
-
- This option is useful for dedicated circuits, or circuits which
- have no status signals available, but SHOULD NOT be used for
- switched circuits.
-
- Closing
-
- In the Closing state, an attempt is made to terminate the
- connection. A Terminate-Request has been sent and the Restart
- timer is running, but a Terminate-Ack has not yet been received.
-
- Upon reception of a Terminate-Ack, the Closed state is entered.
- Upon the expiration of the Restart timer, a new Terminate-Request
- is transmitted, and the Restart timer is restarted. After the
- Restart timer has expired Max-Terminate times, the Closed state is
- entered.
-
- Stopping
-
- The Stopping state is the Open counterpart to the Closing state.
- A Terminate-Request has been sent and the Restart timer is
- running, but a Terminate-Ack has not yet been received.
-
- Rationale:
-
- The Stopping state provides a well defined opportunity to
- terminate a link before allowing new traffic. After the link
- has terminated, a new configuration may occur via the Stopped
- or Starting states.
-
- Request-Sent
-
- In the Request-Sent state an attempt is made to configure the
- connection. A Configure-Request has been sent and the Restart
- timer is running, but a Configure-Ack has not yet been received
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 15]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- nor has one been sent.
-
- Ack-Received
-
- In the Ack-Received state, a Configure-Request has been sent and a
- Configure-Ack has been received. The Restart timer is still
- running, since a Configure-Ack has not yet been sent.
-
- Ack-Sent
-
- In the Ack-Sent state, a Configure-Request and a Configure-Ack
- have both been sent, but a Configure-Ack has not yet been
- received. The Restart timer is running, since a Configure-Ack has
- not yet been received.
-
- Opened
-
- In the Opened state, a Configure-Ack has been both sent and
- received. The Restart timer is not running.
-
- When entering the Opened state, the implementation SHOULD signal
- the upper layers that it is now Up. Conversely, when leaving the
- Opened state, the implementation SHOULD signal the upper layers
- that it is now Down.
-
-
-
- 4.3. Events
-
- Transitions and actions in the automaton are caused by events.
-
- Up
-
- This event occurs when a lower layer indicates that it is ready to
- carry packets.
-
- Typically, this event is used by a modem handling or calling
- process, or by some other coupling of the PPP link to the physical
- media, to signal LCP that the link is entering Link Establishment
- phase.
-
- It also can be used by LCP to signal each NCP that the link is
- entering Network-Layer Protocol phase. That is, the This-Layer-Up
- action from LCP triggers the Up event in the NCP.
-
- Down
-
- This event occurs when a lower layer indicates that it is no
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 16]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- longer ready to carry packets.
-
- Typically, this event is used by a modem handling or calling
- process, or by some other coupling of the PPP link to the physical
- media, to signal LCP that the link is entering Link Dead phase.
-
- It also can be used by LCP to signal each NCP that the link is
- leaving Network-Layer Protocol phase. That is, the This-Layer-
- Down action from LCP triggers the Down event in the NCP.
-
- Open
-
- This event indicates that the link is administratively available
- for traffic; that is, the network administrator (human or program)
- has indicated that the link is allowed to be Opened. When this
- event occurs, and the link is not in the Opened state, the
- automaton attempts to send configuration packets to the peer.
-
- If the automaton is not able to begin configuration (the lower
- layer is Down, or a previous Close event has not completed), the
- establishment of the link is automatically delayed.
-
- When a Terminate-Request is received, or other events occur which
- cause the link to become unavailable, the automaton will progress
- to a state where the link is ready to re-open. No additional
- administrative intervention is necessary.
-
- Implementation Option:
-
- Experience has shown that users will execute an additional Open
- command when they want to renegotiate the link. This might
- indicate that new values are to be negotiated.
-
- Since this is not the meaning of the Open event, it is
- suggested that when an Open user command is executed in the
- Opened, Closing, Stopping, or Stopped states, the
- implementation issue a Down event, immediately followed by an
- Up event. Care must be taken that an intervening Down event
- cannot occur from another source.
-
- The Down followed by an Up will cause an orderly renegotiation
- of the link, by progressing through the Starting to the
- Request-Sent state. This will cause the renegotiation of the
- link, without any harmful side effects.
-
- Close
-
- This event indicates that the link is not available for traffic;
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 17]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- that is, the network administrator (human or program) has
- indicated that the link is not allowed to be Opened. When this
- event occurs, and the link is not in the Closed state, the
- automaton attempts to terminate the connection. Futher attempts
- to re-configure the link are denied until a new Open event occurs.
-
- Implementation Note:
-
- When authentication fails, the link SHOULD be terminated, to
- prevent attack by repetition and denial of service to other
- users. Since the link is administratively available (by
- definition), this can be accomplished by simulating a Close
- event to the LCP, immediately followed by an Open event. Care
- must be taken that an intervening Close event cannot occur from
- another source.
-
- The Close followed by an Open will cause an orderly termination
- of the link, by progressing through the Closing to the Stopping
- state, and the This-Layer-Finished action can disconnect the
- link. The automaton waits in the Stopped or Starting states
- for the next connection attempt.
-
- Timeout (TO+,TO-)
-
- This event indicates the expiration of the Restart timer. The
- Restart timer is used to time responses to Configure-Request and
- Terminate-Request packets.
-
- The TO+ event indicates that the Restart counter continues to be
- greater than zero, which triggers the corresponding Configure-
- Request or Terminate-Request packet to be retransmitted.
-
- The TO- event indicates that the Restart counter is not greater
- than zero, and no more packets need to be retransmitted.
-
- Receive-Configure-Request (RCR+,RCR-)
-
- This event occurs when a Configure-Request packet is received from
- the peer. The Configure-Request packet indicates the desire to
- open a connection and may specify Configuration Options. The
- Configure-Request packet is more fully described in a later
- section.
-
- The RCR+ event indicates that the Configure-Request was
- acceptable, and triggers the transmission of a corresponding
- Configure-Ack.
-
- The RCR- event indicates that the Configure-Request was
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 18]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- unacceptable, and triggers the transmission of a corresponding
- Configure-Nak or Configure-Reject.
-
- Implementation Note:
-
- These events may occur on a connection which is already in the
- Opened state. The implementation MUST be prepared to
- immediately renegotiate the Configuration Options.
-
- Receive-Configure-Ack (RCA)
-
- This event occurs when a valid Configure-Ack packet is received
- from the peer. The Configure-Ack packet is a positive response to
- a Configure-Request packet. An out of sequence or otherwise
- invalid packet is silently discarded.
-
- Implementation Note:
-
- Since the correct packet has already been received before
- reaching the Ack-Rcvd or Opened states, it is extremely
- unlikely that another such packet will arrive. As specified,
- all invalid Ack/Nak/Rej packets are silently discarded, and do
- not affect the transitions of the automaton.
-
- However, it is not impossible that a correctly formed packet
- will arrive through a coincidentally-timed cross-connection.
- It is more likely to be the result of an implementation error.
- At the very least, this occurance SHOULD be logged.
-
- Receive-Configure-Nak/Rej (RCN)
-
- This event occurs when a valid Configure-Nak or Configure-Reject
- packet is received from the peer. The Configure-Nak and
- Configure-Reject packets are negative responses to a Configure-
- Request packet. An out of sequence or otherwise invalid packet is
- silently discarded.
-
- Implementation Note:
-
- Although the Configure-Nak and Configure-Reject cause the same
- state transition in the automaton, these packets have
- significantly different effects on the Configuration Options
- sent in the resulting Configure-Request packet.
-
- Receive-Terminate-Request (RTR)
-
- This event occurs when a Terminate-Request packet is received.
- The Terminate-Request packet indicates the desire of the peer to
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 19]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- close the connection.
-
- Implementation Note:
-
- This event is not identical to the Close event (see above), and
- does not override the Open commands of the local network
- administrator. The implementation MUST be prepared to receive
- a new Configure-Request without network administrator
- intervention.
-
- Receive-Terminate-Ack (RTA)
-
- This event occurs when a Terminate-Ack packet is received from the
- peer. The Terminate-Ack packet is usually a response to a
- Terminate-Request packet. The Terminate-Ack packet may also
- indicate that the peer is in Closed or Stopped states, and serves
- to re-synchronize the link configuration.
-
- Receive-Unknown-Code (RUC)
-
- This event occurs when an un-interpretable packet is received from
- the peer. A Code-Reject packet is sent in response.
-
- Receive-Code-Reject, Receive-Protocol-Reject (RXJ+,RXJ-)
-
- This event occurs when a Code-Reject or a Protocol-Reject packet
- is received from the peer.
-
- The RXJ+ event arises when the rejected value is acceptable, such
- as a Code-Reject of an extended code, or a Protocol-Reject of a
- NCP. These are within the scope of normal operation. The
- implementation MUST stop sending the offending packet type.
-
- The RXJ- event arises when the rejected value is catastrophic,
- such as a Code-Reject of Configure-Request, or a Protocol-Reject
- of LCP! This event communicates an unrecoverable error that
- terminates the connection.
-
- Receive-Echo-Request, Receive-Echo-Reply, Receive-Discard-Request
- (RXR)
-
- This event occurs when an Echo-Request, Echo-Reply or Discard-
- Request packet is received from the peer. The Echo-Reply packet
- is a response to an Echo-Request packet. There is no reply to an
- Echo-Reply or Discard-Request packet.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 20]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- 4.4. Actions
-
- Actions in the automaton are caused by events and typically indicate
- the transmission of packets and/or the starting or stopping of the
- Restart timer.
-
- Illegal-Event (-)
-
- This indicates an event that cannot occur in a properly
- implemented automaton. The implementation has an internal error,
- which should be reported and logged. No transition is taken, and
- the implementation SHOULD NOT reset or freeze.
-
- This-Layer-Up (tlu)
-
- This action indicates to the upper layers that the automaton is
- entering the Opened state.
-
- Typically, this action is used by the LCP to signal the Up event
- to a NCP, Authentication Protocol, or Link Quality Protocol, or
- MAY be used by a NCP to indicate that the link is available for
- its network layer traffic.
-
- This-Layer-Down (tld)
-
- This action indicates to the upper layers that the automaton is
- leaving the Opened state.
-
- Typically, this action is used by the LCP to signal the Down event
- to a NCP, Authentication Protocol, or Link Quality Protocol, or
- MAY be used by a NCP to indicate that the link is no longer
- available for its network layer traffic.
-
- This-Layer-Started (tls)
-
- This action indicates to the lower layers that the automaton is
- entering the Starting state, and the lower layer is needed for the
- link. The lower layer SHOULD respond with an Up event when the
- lower layer is available.
-
- This results of this action are highly implementation dependent.
-
- This-Layer-Finished (tlf)
-
- This action indicates to the lower layers that the automaton is
- entering the Initial, Closed or Stopped states, and the lower
- layer is no longer needed for the link. The lower layer SHOULD
- respond with a Down event when the lower layer has terminated.
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 21]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- Typically, this action MAY be used by the LCP to advance to the
- Link Dead phase, or MAY be used by a NCP to indicate to the LCP
- that the link may terminate when there are no other NCPs open.
-
- This results of this action are highly implementation dependent.
-
- Initialize-Restart-Count (irc)
-
- This action sets the Restart counter to the appropriate value
- (Max-Terminate or Max-Configure). The counter is decremented for
- each transmission, including the first.
-
- Implementation Note:
-
- In addition to setting the Restart counter, the implementation
- MUST set the timeout period to the initial value when Restart
- timer backoff is used.
-
- Zero-Restart-Count (zrc)
-
- This action sets the Restart counter to zero.
-
- Implementation Note:
-
- This action enables the FSA to pause before proceeding to the
- desired final state, allowing traffic to be processed by the
- peer. In addition to zeroing the Restart counter, the
- implementation MUST set the timeout period to an appropriate
- value.
-
- Send-Configure-Request (scr)
-
- A Configure-Request packet is transmitted. This indicates the
- desire to open a connection with a specified set of Configuration
- Options. The Restart timer is started when the Configure-Request
- packet is transmitted, to guard against packet loss. The Restart
- counter is decremented each time a Configure-Request is sent.
-
- Send-Configure-Ack (sca)
-
- A Configure-Ack packet is transmitted. This acknowledges the
- reception of a Configure-Request packet with an acceptable set of
- Configuration Options.
-
- Send-Configure-Nak (scn)
-
- A Configure-Nak or Configure-Reject packet is transmitted, as
- appropriate. This negative response reports the reception of a
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 22]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- Configure-Request packet with an unacceptable set of Configuration
- Options.
-
- Configure-Nak packets are used to refuse a Configuration Option
- value, and to suggest a new, acceptable value. Configure-Reject
- packets are used to refuse all negotiation about a Configuration
- Option, typically because it is not recognized or implemented.
- The use of Configure-Nak versus Configure-Reject is more fully
- described in the chapter on LCP Packet Formats.
-
- Send-Terminate-Request (str)
-
- A Terminate-Request packet is transmitted. This indicates the
- desire to close a connection. The Restart timer is started when
- the Terminate-Request packet is transmitted, to guard against
- packet loss. The Restart counter is decremented each time a
- Terminate-Request is sent.
-
- Send-Terminate-Ack (sta)
-
- A Terminate-Ack packet is transmitted. This acknowledges the
- reception of a Terminate-Request packet or otherwise serves to
- synchronize the automatons.
-
- Send-Code-Reject (scj)
-
- A Code-Reject packet is transmitted. This indicates the reception
- of an unknown type of packet.
-
- Send-Echo-Reply (ser)
-
- An Echo-Reply packet is transmitted. This acknowledges the
- reception of an Echo-Request packet.
-
-
-
- 4.5. Loop Avoidance
-
- The protocol makes a reasonable attempt at avoiding Configuration
- Option negotiation loops. However, the protocol does NOT guarantee
- that loops will not happen. As with any negotiation, it is possible
- to configure two PPP implementations with conflicting policies that
- will never converge. It is also possible to configure policies which
- do converge, but which take significant time to do so. Implementors
- should keep this in mind and SHOULD implement loop detection
- mechanisms or higher level timeouts.
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 23]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- 4.6. Counters and Timers
-
- Restart Timer
-
- There is one special timer used by the automaton. The Restart
- timer is used to time transmissions of Configure-Request and
- Terminate-Request packets. Expiration of the Restart timer causes
- a Timeout event, and retransmission of the corresponding
- Configure-Request or Terminate-Request packet. The Restart timer
- MUST be configurable, but SHOULD default to three (3) seconds.
-
- Implementation Note:
-
- The Restart timer SHOULD be based on the speed of the link.
- The default value is designed for low speed (2,400 to 9,600
- bps), high switching latency links (typical telephone lines).
- Higher speed links, or links with low switching latency, SHOULD
- have correspondingly faster retransmission times.
-
- Instead of a constant value, the Restart timer MAY begin at an
- initial small value and increase to the configured final value.
- Each successive value less than the final value SHOULD be at
- least twice the previous value. The initial value SHOULD be
- large enough to account for the size of the packets, twice the
- round trip time for transmission at the link speed, and at
- least an additional 100 milliseconds to allow the peer to
- process the packets before responding. Some circuits add
- another 200 milliseconds of satellite delay. Round trip times
- for modems operating at 14,400 bps have been measured in the
- range of 160 to more than 600 milliseconds.
-
- Max-Terminate
-
- There is one required restart counter for Terminate-Requests.
- Max-Terminate indicates the number of Terminate-Request packets
- sent without receiving a Terminate-Ack before assuming that the
- peer is unable to respond. Max-Terminate MUST be configurable,
- but SHOULD default to two (2) transmissions.
-
- Max-Configure
-
- A similar counter is recommended for Configure-Requests. Max-
- Configure indicates the number of Configure-Request packets sent
- without receiving a valid Configure-Ack, Configure-Nak or
- Configure-Reject before assuming that the peer is unable to
- respond. Max-Configure MUST be configurable, but SHOULD default
- to ten (10) transmissions.
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 24]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- Max-Failure
-
- A related counter is recommended for Configure-Nak. Max-Failure
- indicates the number of Configure-Nak packets sent without sending
- a Configure-Ack before assuming that configuration is not
- converging. Any further Configure-Nak packets for peer requested
- options are converted to Configure-Reject packets, and locally
- desired options are no longer appended. Max-Failure MUST be
- configurable, but SHOULD default to five (5) transmissions.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 25]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- 5. LCP Packet Formats
-
- There are three classes of LCP packets:
-
- 1. Link Configuration packets used to establish and configure a
- link (Configure-Request, Configure-Ack, Configure-Nak and
- Configure-Reject).
-
- 2. Link Termination packets used to terminate a link (Terminate-
- Request and Terminate-Ack).
-
- 3. Link Maintenance packets used to manage and debug a link
- (Code-Reject, Protocol-Reject, Echo-Request, Echo-Reply, and
- Discard-Request).
-
- In the interest of simplicity, there is no version field in the LCP
- packet. A correctly functioning LCP implementation will always
- respond to unknown Protocols and Codes with an easily recognizable
- LCP packet, thus providing a deterministic fallback mechanism for
- implementations of other versions.
-
- Regardless of which Configuration Options are enabled, all LCP Link
- Configuration, Link Termination, and Code-Reject packets (codes 1
- through 7) are always sent as if no Configuration Options were
- negotiated. In particular, each Configuration Option specifies a
- default value. This ensures that such LCP packets are always
- recognizable, even when one end of the link mistakenly believes the
- link to be open.
-
- Exactly one LCP packet is encapsulated in the PPP Information field,
- where the PPP Protocol field indicates type hex c021 (Link Control
- Protocol).
-
- A summary of the Link Control Protocol packet format is shown below.
- The fields are transmitted from left to right.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Code | Identifier | Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Data ...
- +-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Code
-
- The Code field is one octet, and identifies the kind of LCP
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 26]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- packet. When a packet is received with an unknown Code field, a
- Code-Reject packet is transmitted.
-
- Up-to-date values of the LCP Code field are specified in the most
- recent "Assigned Numbers" RFC [2]. This document concerns the
- following values:
-
- 1 Configure-Request
- 2 Configure-Ack
- 3 Configure-Nak
- 4 Configure-Reject
- 5 Terminate-Request
- 6 Terminate-Ack
- 7 Code-Reject
- 8 Protocol-Reject
- 9 Echo-Request
- 10 Echo-Reply
- 11 Discard-Request
-
-
- Identifier
-
- The Identifier field is one octet, and aids in matching requests
- and replies. When a packet is received with an invalid Identifier
- field, the packet is silently discarded without affecting the
- automaton.
-
- Length
-
- The Length field is two octets, and indicates the length of the
- LCP packet, including the Code, Identifier, Length and Data
- fields. The Length MUST NOT exceed the MRU of the link.
-
- Octets outside the range of the Length field are treated as
- padding and are ignored on reception. When a packet is received
- with an invalid Length field, the packet is silently discarded
- without affecting the automaton.
-
- Data
-
- The Data field is zero or more octets, as indicated by the Length
- field. The format of the Data field is determined by the Code
- field.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 27]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- 5.1. Configure-Request
-
- Description
-
- An implementation wishing to open a connection MUST transmit a
- Configure-Request. The Options field is filled with any desired
- changes to the link defaults. Configuration Options SHOULD NOT be
- included with default values.
-
- Upon reception of a Configure-Request, an appropriate reply MUST
- be transmitted.
-
- A summary of the Configure-Request packet format is shown below. The
- fields are transmitted from left to right.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Code | Identifier | Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Options ...
- +-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Code
-
- 1 for Configure-Request.
-
- Identifier
-
- The Identifier field MUST be changed whenever the contents of the
- Options field changes, and whenever a valid reply has been
- received for a previous request. For retransmissions, the
- Identifier MAY remain unchanged.
-
- Options
-
- The options field is variable in length, and contains the list of
- zero or more Configuration Options that the sender desires to
- negotiate. All Configuration Options are always negotiated
- simultaneously. The format of Configuration Options is further
- described in a later chapter.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 28]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- 5.2. Configure-Ack
-
- Description
-
- If every Configuration Option received in a Configure-Request is
- recognizable and all values are acceptable, then the
- implementation MUST transmit a Configure-Ack. The acknowledged
- Configuration Options MUST NOT be reordered or modified in any
- way.
-
- On reception of a Configure-Ack, the Identifier field MUST match
- that of the last transmitted Configure-Request. Additionally, the
- Configuration Options in a Configure-Ack MUST exactly match those
- of the last transmitted Configure-Request. Invalid packets are
- silently discarded.
-
- A summary of the Configure-Ack packet format is shown below. The
- fields are transmitted from left to right.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Code | Identifier | Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Options ...
- +-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Code
-
- 2 for Configure-Ack.
-
- Identifier
-
- The Identifier field is a copy of the Identifier field of the
- Configure-Request which caused this Configure-Ack.
-
- Options
-
- The Options field is variable in length, and contains the list of
- zero or more Configuration Options that the sender is
- acknowledging. All Configuration Options are always acknowledged
- simultaneously.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 29]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- 5.3. Configure-Nak
-
- Description
-
- If every instance of the received Configuration Options is
- recognizable, but some values are not acceptable, then the
- implementation MUST transmit a Configure-Nak. The Options field
- is filled with only the unacceptable Configuration Options from
- the Configure-Request. All acceptable Configuration Options are
- filtered out of the Configure-Nak, but otherwise the Configuration
- Options from the Configure-Request MUST NOT be reordered.
-
- Options which have no value fields (boolean options) MUST use the
- Configure-Reject reply instead.
-
- Each Configuration Option which is allowed only a single instance
- MUST be modified to a value acceptable to the Configure-Nak
- sender. The default value MAY be used, when this differs from the
- requested value.
-
- When a particular type of Configuration Option can be listed more
- than once with different values, the Configure-Nak MUST include a
- list of all values for that option which are acceptable to the
- Configure-Nak sender. This includes acceptable values that were
- present in the Configure-Request.
-
- Finally, an implementation may be configured to request the
- negotiation of a specific Configuration Option. If that option is
- not listed, then that option MAY be appended to the list of Nak'd
- Configuration Options, in order to prompt the peer to include that
- option in its next Configure-Request packet. Any value fields for
- the option MUST indicate values acceptable to the Configure-Nak
- sender.
-
- On reception of a Configure-Nak, the Identifier field MUST match
- that of the last transmitted Configure-Request. Invalid packets
- are silently discarded.
-
- Reception of a valid Configure-Nak indicates that when a new
- Configure-Request is sent, the Configuration Options MAY be
- modified as specified in the Configure-Nak. When multiple
- instances of a Configuration Option are present, the peer SHOULD
- select a single value to include in its next Configure-Request
- packet.
-
- Some Configuration Options have a variable length. Since the
- Nak'd Option has been modified by the peer, the implementation
- MUST be able to handle an Option length which is different from
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 30]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- the original Configure-Request.
-
- A summary of the Configure-Nak packet format is shown below. The
- fields are transmitted from left to right.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Code | Identifier | Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Options ...
- +-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Code
-
- 3 for Configure-Nak.
-
- Identifier
-
- The Identifier field is a copy of the Identifier field of the
- Configure-Request which caused this Configure-Nak.
-
- Options
-
- The Options field is variable in length, and contains the list of
- zero or more Configuration Options that the sender is Nak'ing.
- All Configuration Options are always Nak'd simultaneously.
-
-
-
- 5.4. Configure-Reject
-
- Description
-
- If some Configuration Options received in a Configure-Request are
- not recognizable or are not acceptable for negotiation (as
- configured by a network administrator), then the implementation
- MUST transmit a Configure-Reject. The Options field is filled
- with only the unacceptable Configuration Options from the
- Configure-Request. All recognizable and negotiable Configuration
- Options are filtered out of the Configure-Reject, but otherwise
- the Configuration Options MUST NOT be reordered or modified in any
- way.
-
- On reception of a Configure-Reject, the Identifier field MUST
- match that of the last transmitted Configure-Request.
- Additionally, the Configuration Options in a Configure-Reject MUST
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 31]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- be a proper subset of those in the last transmitted Configure-
- Request. Invalid packets are silently discarded.
-
- Reception of a valid Configure-Reject indicates that when a new
- Configure-Request is sent, it MUST NOT include any of the
- Configuration Options listed in the Configure-Reject.
-
- A summary of the Configure-Reject packet format is shown below. The
- fields are transmitted from left to right.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Code | Identifier | Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Options ...
- +-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Code
-
- 4 for Configure-Reject.
-
- Identifier
-
- The Identifier field is a copy of the Identifier field of the
- Configure-Request which caused this Configure-Reject.
-
- Options
-
- The Options field is variable in length, and contains the list of
- zero or more Configuration Options that the sender is rejecting.
- All Configuration Options are always rejected simultaneously.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 32]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- 5.5. Terminate-Request and Terminate-Ack
-
- Description
-
- LCP includes Terminate-Request and Terminate-Ack Codes in order to
- provide a mechanism for closing a connection.
-
- An implementation wishing to close a connection SHOULD transmit a
- Terminate-Request. Terminate-Request packets SHOULD continue to
- be sent until Terminate-Ack is received, the lower layer indicates
- that it has gone down, or a sufficiently large number have been
- transmitted such that the peer is down with reasonable certainty.
-
- Upon reception of a Terminate-Request, a Terminate-Ack MUST be
- transmitted.
-
- Reception of an unelicited Terminate-Ack indicates that the peer
- is in the Closed or Stopped states, or is otherwise in need of
- re-negotiation.
-
- A summary of the Terminate-Request and Terminate-Ack packet formats
- is shown below. The fields are transmitted from left to right.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Code | Identifier | Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Data ...
- +-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Code
-
- 5 for Terminate-Request;
-
- 6 for Terminate-Ack.
-
- Identifier
-
- On transmission, the Identifier field MUST be changed whenever the
- content of the Data field changes, and whenever a valid reply has
- been received for a previous request. For retransmissions, the
- Identifier MAY remain unchanged.
-
- On reception, the Identifier field of the Terminate-Request is
- copied into the Identifier field of the Terminate-Ack packet.
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 33]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- Data
-
- The Data field is zero or more octets, and contains uninterpreted
- data for use by the sender. The data may consist of any binary
- value. The end of the field is indicated by the Length.
-
-
-
- 5.6. Code-Reject
-
- Description
-
- Reception of a LCP packet with an unknown Code indicates that the
- peer is operating with a different version. This MUST be reported
- back to the sender of the unknown Code by transmitting a Code-
- Reject.
-
- Upon reception of the Code-Reject of a code which is fundamental
- to this version of the protocol, the implementation SHOULD report
- the problem and drop the connection, since it is unlikely that the
- situation can be rectified automatically.
-
- A summary of the Code-Reject packet format is shown below. The
- fields are transmitted from left to right.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Code | Identifier | Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Rejected-Packet ...
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Code
-
- 7 for Code-Reject.
-
- Identifier
-
- The Identifier field MUST be changed for each Code-Reject sent.
-
- Rejected-Packet
-
- The Rejected-Packet field contains a copy of the LCP packet which
- is being rejected. It begins with the Information field, and does
- not include any Data Link Layer headers nor an FCS. The
- Rejected-Packet MUST be truncated to comply with the peer's
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 34]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- established MRU.
-
-
-
- 5.7. Protocol-Reject
-
- Description
-
- Reception of a PPP packet with an unknown Protocol field indicates
- that the peer is attempting to use a protocol which is
- unsupported. This usually occurs when the peer attempts to
- configure a new protocol. If the LCP automaton is in the Opened
- state, then this MUST be reported back to the peer by transmitting
- a Protocol-Reject.
-
- Upon reception of a Protocol-Reject, the implementation MUST stop
- sending packets of the indicated protocol at the earliest
- opportunity.
-
- Protocol-Reject packets can only be sent in the LCP Opened state.
- Protocol-Reject packets received in any state other than the LCP
- Opened state SHOULD be silently discarded.
-
- A summary of the Protocol-Reject packet format is shown below. The
- fields are transmitted from left to right.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Code | Identifier | Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Rejected-Protocol | Rejected-Information ...
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Code
-
- 8 for Protocol-Reject.
-
- Identifier
-
- The Identifier field MUST be changed for each Protocol-Reject
- sent.
-
- Rejected-Protocol
-
- The Rejected-Protocol field is two octets, and contains the PPP
- Protocol field of the packet which is being rejected.
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 35]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- Rejected-Information
-
- The Rejected-Information field contains a copy of the packet which
- is being rejected. It begins with the Information field, and does
- not include any Data Link Layer headers nor an FCS. The
- Rejected-Information MUST be truncated to comply with the peer's
- established MRU.
-
-
-
- 5.8. Echo-Request and Echo-Reply
-
- Description
-
- LCP includes Echo-Request and Echo-Reply Codes in order to provide
- a Data Link Layer loopback mechanism for use in exercising both
- directions of the link. This is useful as an aid in debugging,
- link quality determination, performance testing, and for numerous
- other functions.
-
- Upon reception of an Echo-Request in the LCP Opened state, an
- Echo-Reply MUST be transmitted.
-
- Echo-Request and Echo-Reply packets MUST only be sent in the LCP
- Opened state. Echo-Request and Echo-Reply packets received in any
- state other than the LCP Opened state SHOULD be silently
- discarded.
-
-
- A summary of the Echo-Request and Echo-Reply packet formats is shown
- below. The fields are transmitted from left to right.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Code | Identifier | Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Magic-Number |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Data ...
- +-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Code
-
- 9 for Echo-Request;
-
- 10 for Echo-Reply.
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 36]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- Identifier
-
- On transmission, the Identifier field MUST be changed whenever the
- content of the Data field changes, and whenever a valid reply has
- been received for a previous request. For retransmissions, the
- Identifier MAY remain unchanged.
-
- On reception, the Identifier field of the Echo-Request is copied
- into the Identifier field of the Echo-Reply packet.
-
- Magic-Number
-
- The Magic-Number field is four octets, and aids in detecting links
- which are in the looped-back condition. Until the Magic-Number
- Configuration Option has been successfully negotiated, the Magic-
- Number MUST be transmitted as zero. See the Magic-Number
- Configuration Option for further explanation.
-
- Data
-
- The Data field is zero or more octets, and contains uninterpreted
- data for use by the sender. The data may consist of any binary
- value. The end of the field is indicated by the Length.
-
-
-
- 5.9. Discard-Request
-
- Description
-
- LCP includes a Discard-Request Code in order to provide a Data
- Link Layer sink mechanism for use in exercising the local to
- remote direction of the link. This is useful as an aid in
- debugging, performance testing, and for numerous other functions.
-
- Discard-Request packets MUST only be sent in the LCP Opened state.
- On reception, the receiver MUST silently discard any Discard-
- Request that it receives.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 37]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- A summary of the Discard-Request packet format is shown below. The
- fields are transmitted from left to right.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Code | Identifier | Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Magic-Number |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Data ...
- +-+-+-+-+
-
- Code
-
- 11 for Discard-Request.
-
- Identifier
-
- The Identifier field MUST be changed for each Discard-Request
- sent.
-
- Magic-Number
-
- The Magic-Number field is four octets, and aids in detecting links
- which are in the looped-back condition. Until the Magic-Number
- Configuration Option has been successfully negotiated, the Magic-
- Number MUST be transmitted as zero. See the Magic-Number
- Configuration Option for further explanation.
-
- Data
-
- The Data field is zero or more octets, and contains uninterpreted
- data for use by the sender. The data may consist of any binary
- value. The end of the field is indicated by the Length.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 38]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- 6. LCP Configuration Options
-
- LCP Configuration Options allow negotiation of modifications to the
- default characteristics of a point-to-point link. If a Configuration
- Option is not included in a Configure-Request packet, the default
- value for that Configuration Option is assumed.
-
- Some Configuration Options MAY be listed more than once. The effect
- of this is Configuration Option specific, and is specified by each
- such Configuration Option description. (None of the Configuration
- Options in this specification can be listed more than once.)
-
- The end of the list of Configuration Options is indicated by the
- Length field of the LCP packet.
-
- Unless otherwise specified, all Configuration Options apply in a
- half-duplex fashion; typically, in the receive direction of the link
- from the point of view of the Configure-Request sender.
-
- Design Philosophy
-
- The options indicate additional capabilities or requirements of
- the implementation that is requesting the option. An
- implementation which does not understand any option SHOULD
- interoperate with one which implements every option.
-
- A default is specified for each option which allows the link to
- correctly function without negotiation of the option, although
- perhaps with less than optimal performance.
-
- Except where explicitly specified, acknowledgement of an option
- does not require the peer to take any additional action other than
- the default.
-
- It is not necessary to send the default values for the options in
- a Configure-Request.
-
-
- A summary of the Configuration Option format is shown below. The
- fields are transmitted from left to right.
-
- 0 1
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Type | Length | Data ...
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 39]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- Type
-
- The Type field is one octet, and indicates the type of
- Configuration Option. Up-to-date values of the LCP Option Type
- field are specified in the most recent "Assigned Numbers" RFC [2].
- This document concerns the following values:
-
- 0 RESERVED
- 1 Maximum-Receive-Unit
- 3 Authentication-Protocol
- 4 Quality-Protocol
- 5 Magic-Number
- 7 Protocol-Field-Compression
- 8 Address-and-Control-Field-Compression
-
-
- Length
-
- The Length field is one octet, and indicates the length of this
- Configuration Option including the Type, Length and Data fields.
-
- If a negotiable Configuration Option is received in a Configure-
- Request, but with an invalid or unrecognized Length, a Configure-
- Nak SHOULD be transmitted which includes the desired Configuration
- Option with an appropriate Length and Data.
-
- Data
-
- The Data field is zero or more octets, and contains information
- specific to the Configuration Option. The format and length of
- the Data field is determined by the Type and Length fields.
-
- When the Data field is indicated by the Length to extend beyond
- the end of the Information field, the entire packet is silently
- discarded without affecting the automaton.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 40]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- 6.1. Maximum-Receive-Unit (MRU)
-
- Description
-
- This Configuration Option may be sent to inform the peer that the
- implementation can receive larger packets, or to request that the
- peer send smaller packets.
-
- The default value is 1500 octets. If smaller packets are
- requested, an implementation MUST still be able to receive the
- full 1500 octet information field in case link synchronization is
- lost.
-
- Implementation Note:
-
- This option is used to indicate an implementation capability.
- The peer is not required to maximize the use of the capacity.
- For example, when a MRU is indicated which is 2048 octets, the
- peer is not required to send any packet with 2048 octets. The
- peer need not Configure-Nak to indicate that it will only send
- smaller packets, since the implementation will always require
- support for at least 1500 octets.
-
- A summary of the Maximum-Receive-Unit Configuration Option format is
- shown below. The fields are transmitted from left to right.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Type | Length | Maximum-Receive-Unit |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Type
-
- 1
-
- Length
-
- 4
-
- Maximum-Receive-Unit
-
- The Maximum-Receive-Unit field is two octets, and specifies the
- maximum number of octets in the Information and Padding fields.
- It does not include the framing, Protocol field, FCS, nor any
- transparency bits or bytes.
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 41]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- 6.2. Authentication-Protocol
-
- Description
-
- On some links it may be desirable to require a peer to
- authenticate itself before allowing network-layer protocol packets
- to be exchanged.
-
- This Configuration Option provides a method to negotiate the use
- of a specific protocol for authentication. By default,
- authentication is not required.
-
- An implementation MUST NOT include multiple Authentication-
- Protocol Configuration Options in its Configure-Request packets.
- Instead, it SHOULD attempt to configure the most desirable
- protocol first. If that protocol is Configure-Nak'd, then the
- implementation SHOULD attempt the next most desirable protocol in
- the next Configure-Request.
-
- The implementation sending the Configure-Request is indicating
- that it expects authentication from its peer. If an
- implementation sends a Configure-Ack, then it is agreeing to
- authenticate with the specified protocol. An implementation
- receiving a Configure-Ack SHOULD expect the peer to authenticate
- with the acknowledged protocol.
-
- There is no requirement that authentication be full-duplex or that
- the same protocol be used in both directions. It is perfectly
- acceptable for different protocols to be used in each direction.
- This will, of course, depend on the specific protocols negotiated.
-
- A summary of the Authentication-Protocol Configuration Option format
- is shown below. The fields are transmitted from left to right.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Type | Length | Authentication-Protocol |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Data ...
- +-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Type
-
- 3
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 42]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- Length
-
- >= 4
-
- Authentication-Protocol
-
- The Authentication-Protocol field is two octets, and indicates the
- authentication protocol desired. Values for this field are always
- the same as the PPP Protocol field values for that same
- authentication protocol.
-
- Up-to-date values of the Authentication-Protocol field are
- specified in the most recent "Assigned Numbers" RFC [2]. Current
- values are assigned as follows:
-
- Value (in hex) Protocol
-
- c023 Password Authentication Protocol
- c223 Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol
-
-
- Data
-
- The Data field is zero or more octets, and contains additional
- data as determined by the particular protocol.
-
-
-
- 6.3. Quality-Protocol
-
- Description
-
- On some links it may be desirable to determine when, and how
- often, the link is dropping data. This process is called link
- quality monitoring.
-
- This Configuration Option provides a method to negotiate the use
- of a specific protocol for link quality monitoring. By default,
- link quality monitoring is disabled.
-
- The implementation sending the Configure-Request is indicating
- that it expects to receive monitoring information from its peer.
- If an implementation sends a Configure-Ack, then it is agreeing to
- send the specified protocol. An implementation receiving a
- Configure-Ack SHOULD expect the peer to send the acknowledged
- protocol.
-
- There is no requirement that quality monitoring be full-duplex or
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 43]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- that the same protocol be used in both directions. It is
- perfectly acceptable for different protocols to be used in each
- direction. This will, of course, depend on the specific protocols
- negotiated.
-
- A summary of the Quality-Protocol Configuration Option format is
- shown below. The fields are transmitted from left to right.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Type | Length | Quality-Protocol |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Data ...
- +-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Type
-
- 4
-
- Length
-
- >= 4
-
- Quality-Protocol
-
- The Quality-Protocol field is two octets, and indicates the link
- quality monitoring protocol desired. Values for this field are
- always the same as the PPP Protocol field values for that same
- monitoring protocol.
-
- Up-to-date values of the Quality-Protocol field are specified in
- the most recent "Assigned Numbers" RFC [2]. Current values are
- assigned as follows:
-
- Value (in hex) Protocol
-
- c025 Link Quality Report
-
-
- Data
-
- The Data field is zero or more octets, and contains additional
- data as determined by the particular protocol.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 44]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- 6.4. Magic-Number
-
- Description
-
- This Configuration Option provides a method to detect looped-back
- links and other Data Link Layer anomalies. This Configuration
- Option MAY be required by some other Configuration Options such as
- the Quality-Protocol Configuration Option. By default, the
- Magic-Number is not negotiated, and zero is inserted where a
- Magic-Number might otherwise be used.
-
- Before this Configuration Option is requested, an implementation
- MUST choose its Magic-Number. It is recommended that the Magic-
- Number be chosen in the most random manner possible in order to
- guarantee with very high probability that an implementation will
- arrive at a unique number. A good way to choose a unique random
- number is to start with a unique seed. Suggested sources of
- uniqueness include machine serial numbers, other network hardware
- addresses, time-of-day clocks, etc. Particularly good random
- number seeds are precise measurements of the inter-arrival time of
- physical events such as packet reception on other connected
- networks, server response time, or the typing rate of a human
- user. It is also suggested that as many sources as possible be
- used simultaneously.
-
- When a Configure-Request is received with a Magic-Number
- Configuration Option, the received Magic-Number is compared with
- the Magic-Number of the last Configure-Request sent to the peer.
- If the two Magic-Numbers are different, then the link is not
- looped-back, and the Magic-Number SHOULD be acknowledged. If the
- two Magic-Numbers are equal, then it is possible, but not certain,
- that the link is looped-back and that this Configure-Request is
- actually the one last sent. To determine this, a Configure-Nak
- MUST be sent specifying a different Magic-Number value. A new
- Configure-Request SHOULD NOT be sent to the peer until normal
- processing would cause it to be sent (that is, until a Configure-
- Nak is received or the Restart timer runs out).
-
- Reception of a Configure-Nak with a Magic-Number different from
- that of the last Configure-Nak sent to the peer proves that a link
- is not looped-back, and indicates a unique Magic-Number. If the
- Magic-Number is equal to the one sent in the last Configure-Nak,
- the possibility of a looped-back link is increased, and a new
- Magic-Number MUST be chosen. In either case, a new Configure-
- Request SHOULD be sent with the new Magic-Number.
-
- If the link is indeed looped-back, this sequence (transmit
- Configure-Request, receive Configure-Request, transmit Configure-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 45]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- Nak, receive Configure-Nak) will repeat over and over again. If
- the link is not looped-back, this sequence might occur a few
- times, but it is extremely unlikely to occur repeatedly. More
- likely, the Magic-Numbers chosen at either end will quickly
- diverge, terminating the sequence. The following table shows the
- probability of collisions assuming that both ends of the link
- select Magic-Numbers with a perfectly uniform distribution:
-
- Number of Collisions Probability
- -------------------- ---------------------
- 1 1/2**32 = 2.3 E-10
- 2 1/2**32**2 = 5.4 E-20
- 3 1/2**32**3 = 1.3 E-29
-
-
- Good sources of uniqueness or randomness are required for this
- divergence to occur. If a good source of uniqueness cannot be
- found, it is recommended that this Configuration Option not be
- enabled; Configure-Requests with the option SHOULD NOT be
- transmitted and any Magic-Number Configuration Options which the
- peer sends SHOULD be either acknowledged or rejected. In this
- case, looped-back links cannot be reliably detected by the
- implementation, although they may still be detectable by the peer.
-
- If an implementation does transmit a Configure-Request with a
- Magic-Number Configuration Option, then it MUST NOT respond with a
- Configure-Reject when it receives a Configure-Request with a
- Magic-Number Configuration Option. That is, if an implementation
- desires to use Magic Numbers, then it MUST also allow its peer to
- do so. If an implementation does receive a Configure-Reject in
- response to a Configure-Request, it can only mean that the link is
- not looped-back, and that its peer will not be using Magic-
- Numbers. In this case, an implementation SHOULD act as if the
- negotiation had been successful (as if it had instead received a
- Configure-Ack).
-
- The Magic-Number also may be used to detect looped-back links
- during normal operation, as well as during Configuration Option
- negotiation. All LCP Echo-Request, Echo-Reply, and Discard-
- Request packets have a Magic-Number field. If Magic-Number has
- been successfully negotiated, an implementation MUST transmit
- these packets with the Magic-Number field set to its negotiated
- Magic-Number.
-
- The Magic-Number field of these packets SHOULD be inspected on
- reception. All received Magic-Number fields MUST be equal to
- either zero or the peer's unique Magic-Number, depending on
- whether or not the peer negotiated a Magic-Number.
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 46]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- Reception of a Magic-Number field equal to the negotiated local
- Magic-Number indicates a looped-back link. Reception of a Magic-
- Number other than the negotiated local Magic-Number, the peer's
- negotiated Magic-Number, or zero if the peer didn't negotiate one,
- indicates a link which has been (mis)configured for communications
- with a different peer.
-
- Procedures for recovery from either case are unspecified, and may
- vary from implementation to implementation. A somewhat
- pessimistic procedure is to assume a LCP Down event. A further
- Open event will begin the process of re-establishing the link,
- which can't complete until the looped-back condition is
- terminated, and Magic-Numbers are successfully negotiated. A more
- optimistic procedure (in the case of a looped-back link) is to
- begin transmitting LCP Echo-Request packets until an appropriate
- Echo-Reply is received, indicating a termination of the looped-
- back condition.
-
- A summary of the Magic-Number Configuration Option format is shown
- below. The fields are transmitted from left to right.
-
- 0 1 2 3
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Type | Length | Magic-Number
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- Magic-Number (cont) |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Type
-
- 5
-
- Length
-
- 6
-
- Magic-Number
-
- The Magic-Number field is four octets, and indicates a number
- which is very likely to be unique to one end of the link. A
- Magic-Number of zero is illegal and MUST always be Nak'd, if it is
- not Rejected outright.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 47]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- 6.5. Protocol-Field-Compression (PFC)
-
- Description
-
- This Configuration Option provides a method to negotiate the
- compression of the PPP Protocol field. By default, all
- implementations MUST transmit packets with two octet PPP Protocol
- fields.
-
- PPP Protocol field numbers are chosen such that some values may be
- compressed into a single octet form which is clearly
- distinguishable from the two octet form. This Configuration
- Option is sent to inform the peer that the implementation can
- receive such single octet Protocol fields.
-
- As previously mentioned, the Protocol field uses an extension
- mechanism consistent with the ISO 3309 extension mechanism for the
- Address field; the Least Significant Bit (LSB) of each octet is
- used to indicate extension of the Protocol field. A binary "0" as
- the LSB indicates that the Protocol field continues with the
- following octet. The presence of a binary "1" as the LSB marks
- the last octet of the Protocol field. Notice that any number of
- "0" octets may be prepended to the field, and will still indicate
- the same value (consider the two binary representations for 3,
- 00000011 and 00000000 00000011).
-
- When using low speed links, it is desirable to conserve bandwidth
- by sending as little redundant data as possible. The Protocol-
- Field-Compression Configuration Option allows a trade-off between
- implementation simplicity and bandwidth efficiency. If
- successfully negotiated, the ISO 3309 extension mechanism may be
- used to compress the Protocol field to one octet instead of two.
- The large majority of packets are compressible since data
- protocols are typically assigned with Protocol field values less
- than 256.
-
- Compressed Protocol fields MUST NOT be transmitted unless this
- Configuration Option has been negotiated. When negotiated, PPP
- implementations MUST accept PPP packets with either double-octet
- or single-octet Protocol fields, and MUST NOT distinguish between
- them.
-
- The Protocol field is never compressed when sending any LCP
- packet. This rule guarantees unambiguous recognition of LCP
- packets.
-
- When a Protocol field is compressed, the Data Link Layer FCS field
- is calculated on the compressed frame, not the original
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 48]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- uncompressed frame.
-
- A summary of the Protocol-Field-Compression Configuration Option
- format is shown below. The fields are transmitted from left to
- right.
-
- 0 1
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Type | Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Type
-
- 7
-
- Length
-
- 2
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 49]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- 6.6. Address-and-Control-Field-Compression (ACFC)
-
- Description
-
- This Configuration Option provides a method to negotiate the
- compression of the Data Link Layer Address and Control fields. By
- default, all implementations MUST transmit frames with Address and
- Control fields appropriate to the link framing.
-
- Since these fields usually have constant values for point-to-point
- links, they are easily compressed. This Configuration Option is
- sent to inform the peer that the implementation can receive
- compressed Address and Control fields.
-
- If a compressed frame is received when Address-and-Control-Field-
- Compression has not been negotiated, the implementation MAY
- silently discard the frame.
-
- The Address and Control fields MUST NOT be compressed when sending
- any LCP packet. This rule guarantees unambiguous recognition of
- LCP packets.
-
- When the Address and Control fields are compressed, the Data Link
- Layer FCS field is calculated on the compressed frame, not the
- original uncompressed frame.
-
- A summary of the Address-and-Control-Field-Compression configuration
- option format is shown below. The fields are transmitted from left
- to right.
-
- 0 1
- 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Type | Length |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Type
-
- 8
-
- Length
-
- 2
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 50]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- Security Considerations
-
- Security issues are briefly discussed in sections concerning the
- Authentication Phase, the Close event, and the Authentication-
- Protocol Configuration Option.
-
-
-
- References
-
- [1] Perkins, D., "Requirements for an Internet Standard Point-to-
- Point Protocol", RFC 1547, Carnegie Mellon University,
- December 1993.
-
- [2] Reynolds, J., and Postel, J., "Assigned Numbers", STD 2, RFC
- 1340, USC/Information Sciences Institute, July 1992.
-
-
- Acknowledgements
-
- This document is the product of the Point-to-Point Protocol Working
- Group of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). Comments should
- be submitted to the ietf-ppp@merit.edu mailing list.
-
- Much of the text in this document is taken from the working group
- requirements [1]; and RFCs 1171 & 1172, by Drew Perkins while at
- Carnegie Mellon University, and by Russ Hobby of the University of
- California at Davis.
-
- William Simpson was principally responsible for introducing
- consistent terminology and philosophy, and the re-design of the phase
- and negotiation state machines.
-
- Many people spent significant time helping to develop the Point-to-
- Point Protocol. The complete list of people is too numerous to list,
- but the following people deserve special thanks: Rick Adams, Ken
- Adelman, Fred Baker, Mike Ballard, Craig Fox, Karl Fox, Phill Gross,
- Kory Hamzeh, former WG chair Russ Hobby, David Kaufman, former WG
- chair Steve Knowles, Mark Lewis, former WG chair Brian Lloyd, John
- LoVerso, Bill Melohn, Mike Patton, former WG chair Drew Perkins, Greg
- Satz, John Shriver, Vernon Schryver, and Asher Waldfogel.
-
- Special thanks to Morning Star Technologies for providing computing
- resources and network access support for writing this specification.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Simpson [Page 51]
- RFC 1661 Point-to-Point Protocol July 1994
-
-
- Chair's Address
-
- The working group can be contacted via the current chair:
-
- Fred Baker
- Advanced Computer Communications
- 315 Bollay Drive
- Santa Barbara, California 93117
-
- fbaker@acc.com
-
-
-
- Editor's Address
-
- Questions about this memo can also be directed to:
-
- William Allen Simpson
- Daydreamer
- Computer Systems Consulting Services
- 1384 Fontaine
- Madison Heights, Michigan 48071
-
- Bill.Simpson@um.cc.umich.edu
- bsimpson@MorningStar.com
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-
- Simpson [Page 52]
-
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-