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- Network Working Group: R. Hinden
- Request for Comments: 1710 Sun Microsystems
- Category: Informational October 1994
-
-
- Simple Internet Protocol Plus White Paper
-
- Status of this Memo
-
- This memo provides information for the Internet community. This memo
- does not specify an Internet standard of any kind. Distribution of
- this memo is unlimited.
-
- Abstract
-
- This document was submitted to the IETF IPng area in response to RFC
- 1550. Publication of this document does not imply acceptance by the
- IPng area of any ideas expressed within. Comments should be
- submitted to the author and/or the sipp@sunroof.eng.sun.com mailing
- list.
-
- 1. Introduction
-
- This white paper presents an overview of the Simple Internet Protocol
- plus (SIPP) which is one of the candidates being considered in the
- Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) for the next version of the
- Internet Protocol (the current version is usually referred to as
- IPv4). This white paper is not intended to be a detailed
- presentation of all of the features and motivation for SIPP, but is
- intended to give the reader an overview of the proposal. It is also
- not intended that this be an implementation specification, but given
- the simplicity of the central core of SIPP, an implementor familiar
- with IPv4 could probably construct a basic working SIPP
- implementation from reading this overview.
-
- SIPP is a new version of IP which is designed to be an evolutionary
- step from IPv4. It is a natural increment to IPv4. It can be
- installed as a normal software upgrade in internet devices and is
- interoperable with the current IPv4. Its deployment strategy was
- designed to not have any "flag" days. SIPP is designed to run well
- on high performance networks (e.g., ATM) and at the same time is
- still efficient for low bandwidth networks (e.g., wireless). In
- addition, it provides a platform for new internet functionality that
- will be required in the near future.
-
- This white paper describes the work of IETF SIPP working group.
- Several individuals deserve specific recognition. These include
- Steve Deering, Paul Francis, Dave Crocker, Bob Gilligan, Bill
-
-
-
- Hinden [Page 1]
-
- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
-
-
- Simpson, Ran Atkinson, Bill Fink, Erik Nordmark, Christian Huitema,
- Sue Thompson, and Ramesh Govindan.
-
- 2. Key Issues for the Next Generation of IP
-
- There are several key issues that should be used in the evaluation of
- any next generation internet protocol. Some are very
- straightforward. For example the new protocol must be able to
- support large global internetworks. Others are less obvious. There
- must be a clear way to transition the current installed base of IP
- systems. It doesn't matter how good a new protocol is if there isn't
- a practical way to transition the current operational systems running
- IPv4 to the new protocol.
-
- 2.1 Growth
-
- Growth is the basic issue which caused there to be a need for a next
- generation IP. If anything is to be learned from our experience with
- IPv4 it is that the addressing and routing must be capable of
- handling reasonable scenarios of future growth. It is important that
- we have an understanding of the past growth and where the future
- growth will come from.
-
- Currently IPv4 serves what could be called the computer market. The
- computer market has been the driver of the growth of the Internet.
- It comprises the current Internet and countless other smaller
- internets which are not connected to the Internet. Its focus is to
- connect computers together in the large business, government, and
- university education markets. This market has been growing at an
- exponential rate. One measure of this is that the number of networks
- in current Internet (23,494 as of 1/28/94) is doubling approximately
- every 12 months. The computers which are used at the endpoints of
- internet communications range from PC's to Supercomputers. Most are
- attached to Local Area Networks (LANs) and the vast majority are not
- mobile.
-
- The next phase of growth will probably not be driven by the computer
- market. While the computer market will continue to grow at
- significant rates due to expansion into other areas such as schools
- (elementary through high school) and small businesses, it is doubtful
- it will continue to grow at an exponential rate. What is likely to
- happen is that other kinds of markets will develop. These markets
- will fall into several areas. They all have the characteristic that
- they are extremely large. They also bring with them a new set of
- requirements which were not as evident in the early stages of IPv4
- deployment. The new markets are also likely to happen in parallel
- with other. It may turn out that we will look back on the last ten
- years of Internet growth as the time when the Internet was small and
-
-
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- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
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- only doubling every year. The challenge for an IPng is to provide a
- solution which solves todays problems and is attractive in these
- emerging markets.
-
- Nomadic personal computing devices seem certain to become ubiquitous
- as their prices drop and their capabilities increase. A key
- capability is that they will be networked. Unlike the majority of
- todays networked computers they will support a variety of types of
- network attachments. When disconnected they will use RF wireless
- networks, when used in networked facilities they will use infrared
- attachment, and when docked they will use physical wires. This makes
- them an ideal candidate for internetworking technology as they will
- need a common protocol which can work over a variety of physical
- networks. These types of devices will become consumer devices and
- will replace the current generation of cellular phones, pagers, and
- personal digital assistants. In addition to the obvious requirement
- of an internet protocol which can support large scale routing and
- addressing, they will require an internet protocol which imposes a
- low overhead and supports auto configuration and mobility as a basic
- element. The nature of nomadic computing requires an internet
- protocol to have built in authentication and confidentiality. It
- also goes without saying that these devices will need to communicate
- with the current generation of computers. The requirement for low
- overhead comes from the wireless media. Unlike LAN's which will be
- very high speed, the wireless media will be several orders of
- magnitude slower due to constraints on available frequencies,
- spectrum allocation, and power consumption.
-
- Another market is networked entertainment. The first signs of this
- emerging market are the proposals being discussed for 500 channels of
- television, video on demand, etc. This is clearly a consumer market.
- The possibility is that every television set will become an Internet
- host. As the world of digital high definition television approaches,
- the differences between a computer and a television will diminish.
- As in the previous market, this market will require an Internet
- protocol which supports large scale routing and addressing, and auto
- configuration. This market also requires a protocol suite which
- imposes the minimum overhead to get the job done. Cost will be the
- major factor in the selection of a technology to use.
-
- Another market which could use the next generation IP is device
- control. This consists of the control of everyday devices such as
- lighting equipment, heating and cooling equipment, motors, and other
- types of equipment which are currently controlled via analog switches
- and in aggregate consume considerable amounts of power. The size of
- this market is enormous and requires solutions which are simple,
- robust, easy to use, and very low cost.
-
-
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- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
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-
- The challenge for the IETF in the selection of an IPng is to pick a
- protocol which meets today's requirements and also matches the
- requirements of these emerging markets. These markets will happen
- with or without an IETF IPng. If the IETF IPng is a good match for
- these new markets it is likely to be used. If not, these markets
- will develop something else. They will not wait for an IETF
- solution. If this should happen it is probable that because of the
- size and scale of the new markets the IETF protocol would be
- supplanted. If the IETF IPng is not appropriate for use in these
- markets, it is also probable that they will each develop their own
- protocols, perhaps proprietary. These new protocols would not
- interoperate with each other. The opportunity for the IETF is to
- select an IPng which has a reasonable chance to be used in these
- emerging markets. This would have the very desirable outcome of
- creating an immense, interoperable, world-wide information
- infrastructure created with open protocols. The alternative is a
- world of disjoint networks with protocols controlled by individual
- vendors.
-
- 2.2. Transition
-
- At some point in the next three to seven years the Internet will
- require a deployed new version of the Internet protocol. Two factors
- are driving this: routing and addressing. Global internet routing
- based on the on 32-bit addresses of IPv4 is becoming increasingly
- strained. IPv4 address do not provide enough flexibility to
- construct efficient hierarchies which can be aggregated. The
- deployment of Classless Inter-Domain Routing [CIDR] is extending the
- life time of IPv4 routing routing by a number of years, the effort to
- manage the routing will continue to increase. Even if the IPv4
- routing can be scaled to support a full IPv4 Internet, the Internet
- will eventually run out of network numbers. There is no question
- that an IPng is needed, but only a question of when.
-
- The challenge for an IPng is for its transition to be complete before
- IPv4 routing and addressing break. The transition will be much
- easier if IPv4 address are still globally unique. The two transition
- requirements which are the most important are flexibility of
- deployment and the ability for IPv4 hosts to communicate with IPng
- hosts. There will be IPng-only hosts, just as there will be IPv4-
- only hosts. The capability must exist for IPng-only hosts to
- communicate with IPv4-only hosts globally while IPv4 addresses are
- globally unique.
-
- The deployment strategy for an IPng must be as flexible as possible.
- The Internet is too large for any kind of controlled rollout to be
- successful. The importance of flexibility in an IPng and the need
- for interoperability between IPv4 and IPng was well stated in a
-
-
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- Hinden [Page 4]
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- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
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- message to the sipp mailing list by Bill Fink, who is responsible for
- a portion of NASA's operational internet. In his message he said:
-
- "Being a network manager and thereby representing the interests of
- a significant number of users, from my perspective it's safe to
- say that the transition and interoperation aspects of any IPng is
- *the* key first element, without which any other significant
- advantages won't be able to be integrated into the user's network
- environment. I also don't think it wise to think of the
- transition as just a painful phase we'll have to endure en route
- to a pure IPng environment, since the transition/coexistence
- period undoubtedly will last at least a decade and may very well
- continue for the entire lifetime of IPng, until it's replaced with
- IPngng and a new transition. I might wish it was otherwise but I
- fear they are facts of life given the immense installed base.
-
- "Given this situation, and the reality that it won't be feasible
- to coordinate all the infrastructure changes even at the national
- and regional levels, it is imperative that the transition
- capabilities support the ability to deploy the IPng in the
- piecemeal fashion... with no requirement to need to coordinate
- local changes with other changes elsewhere in the Internet...
-
- "I realize that support for the transition and coexistence
- capabilities may be a major part of the IPng effort and may cause
- some headaches for the designers and developers, but I think it is
- a duty that can't be shirked and the necessary price that must be
- paid to provide as seamless an environment as possible to the end
- user and his basic network services such as e-mail, ftp, gopher,
- X-Window clients, etc...
-
- "The bottom line for me is that we must have interoperability
- during the extended transition period for the base IPv4
- functionality..."
-
- Another way to think about the requirement for compatibility with
- IPv4 is to look at other product areas. In the product world,
- backwards compatability is very important. Vendors who do not
- provide backward compatibility for their customers usually find they
- do not have many customers left. For example, chip makers put
- considerable effort into making sure that new versions of their
- processor always run all of the software that ran on the previous
- model. It is unlikely that Intel would develop a new processor in
- the X86 family that did not run DOS and the tens of thousands of
- applications which run on the current versions of X86's.
-
- Operating system vendors go to great lengths to make sure new
- versions of their operating systems are binary compatible with their
-
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- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
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- old version. For example the labels on most PC or MAC software
- usually indicate that they require OS version XX or greater. It
- would be foolish for Microsoft come out with a new version of Windows
- which did not run the applications which ran on the previous version.
- Microsoft even provides the ability for windows applications to run
- on their new OS NT. This is an important feature. They understand
- that it was very important to make sure that the applications which
- run on Windows also run on NT.
-
- The same requirement is also true for IPng. The Internet has a large
- installed base. Features need to be designed into an IPng to make
- the transition as easy as possible. As with processors and operating
- systems, it must be backwards compatible with IPv4. Other protocols
- have tried to replace TCP/IP, for example XTP and OSI. One element
- in their failure to reach widespread acceptance was that neither had
- any transition strategy other than running in parallel (sometimes
- called dual stack). New features alone are not adequate to motivate
- users to deploy new protocols. IPng must have a great transition
- strategy and new features.
-
- 3. History of the SIPP Effort
-
- The SIPP working group represents the evolution of three different
- IETF working groups focused on developing an IPng. The first was
- called IP Address Encapsulation (IPAE) and was chaired by Dave
- Crocker and Robert Hinden. It proposed extensions to IPv4 which
- would carry larger addresses. Much of its work was focused on
- developing transition mechanisms.
-
- Somewhat later Steve Deering proposed a new protocol evolved from
- IPv4 called the Simple Internet Protocol (SIP). A working group was
- formed to work on this proposal which was chaired by Steve Deering
- and Christian Huitema. SIP had 64-bit addresses, a simplified
- header, and options in separate extension headers. After lengthly
- interaction between the two working groups and the realization that
- IPAE and SIP had a number of common elements and the transition
- mechanisms developed for IPAE would apply to SIP, the groups decided
- to merge and concentrate their efforts. The chairs of the new SIP
- working group were Steve Deering and Robert Hinden.
-
- In parallel to SIP, Paul Francis (formerly Paul Tsuchiya) had founded
- a working group to develop the "P" Internet Protocol (Pip). Pip was
- a new internet protocol based on a new architecture. The motivation
- behind Pip was that the opportunity for introducing a new internet
- protocol does not come very often and given that opportunity
- important new features should be introduced. Pip supported variable
- length addressing in 16-bit units, separation of addresses from
- identifiers, support for provider selection, mobility, and efficient
-
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- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
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- forwarding. It included a transition scheme similar to IPAE.
-
- After considerable discussion among the leaders of the Pip and SIP
- working groups, they came to realize that the advanced features in
- Pip could be accomplished in SIP without changing the base SIP
- protocol as well as keeping the IPAE transition mechanisms. In
- essence it was possible to keep the best features of each protocol.
- Based on this the groups decided to merge their efforts. The new
- protocol was called Simple Internet Protocol Plus (SIPP). The chairs
- of the merged working group are Steve Deering, Paul Francis, and
- Robert Hinden.
-
- 4. SIPP Overview
-
- SIPP is a new version of the Internet Protocol, designed as a
- successor to IP version 4 [IPV4]. SIPP is assigned IP version number
- 6.
-
- SIPP was designed to take an evolutionary step from IPv4. It was not
- a design goal to take a radical step away from IPv4. Functions which
- work in IPv4 were kept in SIPP. Functions which didn't work were
- removed. The changes from IPv4 to SIPP fall primarily into the
- following categories:
-
- o Expanded Routing and Addressing Capabilities
-
- SIPP increases the IP address size from 32 bits to 64 bits, to
- support more levels of addressing hierarchy and a much greater
- number of addressable nodes. SIPP addressing can be further
- extended, in units of 64 bits, by a facility equivalent to
- IPv4's Loose Source and Record Route option, in combination
- with a new address type called "cluster addresses" which
- identify topological regions rather than individual nodes.
- The scaleability of multicast routing is improved by adding
- a "scope" field to multicast addresses.
-
- o Header Format Simplification
-
- Some IPv4 header fields have been dropped or made optional, to
- reduce the common-case processing cost of packet handling and to
- keep the bandwidth cost of the SIPP header almost as low as that
- of IPv4, despite the increased size of the addresses. The basic
- SIPP header is only four bytes longer than IPv4.
-
-
-
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- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
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- o Improved Support for Options
-
- Changes in the way IP header options are encoded allows for more
- efficient forwarding, less stringent limits on the length of
- options, and greater flexibility for introducing new options in
- the future.
-
- o Quality-of-Service Capabilities
-
- A new capability is added to enable the labeling of packets
- belonging to particular traffic "flows" for which the sender
- requests special handling, such as non-default quality of
- service or "real-time" service.
-
- o Authentication and Privacy Capabilities
-
- SIPP includes the definition of extensions which provide support
- for authentication, data integrity, and confidentiality. This
- is included as a basic element of SIPP.
-
- The SIPP protocol consists of two parts, the basic SIPP header and
- SIPP Options.
-
- 4.1 SIPP Header Format
-
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- |Version| Flow Label |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | Payload Length | Payload Type | Hop Limit |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | |
- + Source Address +
- | |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- | |
- + Destination Address +
- | |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
-
- Version 4-bit Internet Protocol version number = 6.
-
- Flow Label 28-bit field. See SIPP Quality of Service
- section.
-
- Payload Length 16-bit unsigned integer. Length of payload,
- i.e., the rest of the packet following the
- SIPP header, in octets.
-
-
-
- Hinden [Page 8]
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- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
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-
- Payload Type 8-bit selector. Identifies the type of
- header immediately following the SIPP
- header. Uses the same values as the IPv4
- Protocol field [STD 2, RFC 1700].
-
- Hop Limit 8-bit unsigned integer. Decremented by 1
- by each node that forwards the packet.
- The packet is discarded if Hop Limit is
- decremented to zero.
-
- Source Address 64 bits. An address of the initial sender of
- the packet. See [ROUT] for details.
-
- Destination Address 64 bits. An address of the intended
- recipient of the packet (possibly not the
- ultimate recipient, if an optional Routing
- Header is present).
-
- 4.2 SIPP Options
-
- SIPP includes an improved option mechanism over IPv4. SIPP options
- are placed in separate headers that are located between the SIPP
- header and the transport-layer header in a packet. Most SIPP option
- headers are not examined or processed by any router along a packet's
- delivery path until it arrives at its final destination. This
- facilitates a major improvement in router performance for packets
- containing options. In IPv4 the presence of any options requires the
- router to examine all options. The other improvement is that unlike
- IPv4, SIPP options can be of arbitrary length and the total amount of
- options carried in a packet is not limited to 40 bytes. This feature
- plus the manner in which they are processed, permits SIPP options to
- be used for functions which were not practical in IPv4. A good
- example of this is the SIPP Authentication and Security Encapsulation
- options.
-
- In order to improve the performance when handling subsequent option
- headers and the transport protocol which follows, SIPP options are
- always an integer multiple of 8 octets long, in order to retain this
- alignment for subsequent headers.
-
-
-
-
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- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
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- The SIPP option headers which are currently defined are:
-
- Option Function
- --------------- ---------------------------------------
- Routing Extended Routing (like IPv4 loose source
- route)
- Fragmentation Fragmentation and Reassembly
- Authentication Integrity and Authentication
- Security Encapsulation Confidentiality
- Hop-by-Hop Option Special options which require hop by hop
- processing
-
- 4.3 SIPP Addressing
-
- SIPP addresses are 64-bits long and are identifiers for individual
- nodes and sets of nodes. There are three types of SIPP addresses.
- These are unicast, cluster, and multicast. Unicast addresses
- identify a single node. Cluster addresses identify a group of nodes,
- that share a common address prefix, such that a packet sent to a
- cluster address will be delivered to one member of the group.
- Multicast addresses identify a group of nodes, such that a packet
- sent to a multicast address is delivered to all of the nodes in the
- group.
-
- SIPP supports addresses which are twice the number of bits as IPv4
- addresses. These addresses support an address space which is four
- billion (2^^32) times the size of IPv4 addresses (2^^32). Another
- way to say this is that SIPP supports four billion internets each the
- size of the maximum IPv4 internet. That is enough to allow each
- person on the planet to have their own internet. Even with several
- layers of hierarchy (with assignment utilization similar to IPv4)
- this would allow for each person on the planet to have their own
- internet each holding several thousand hosts.
-
- In addition, SIPP supports extended addresses using the routing
- option. This capability allows the address space to grow to 128-
- bits, 192-bits (or even larger) while still keeping the address units
- in manageable 64-bit units. This permits the addresses to grow while
- keeping the routing algorithms efficient because they continue to
- operate using 64- bit units.
-
- 4.3.1 Unicast Addresses
-
- There are several forms of unicast address assignment in SIPP. These
- are global hierarchical unicast addresses, local-use addresses, and
- IPv4- only host addresses. The assignment plan for unicast addresses
- is described in [ADDR].
-
-
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- 4.3.1.1 Global Unicast Addresses
-
- Global unicast addresses are used for global communication. They are
- the most common SIPP address and are similar in function to IPv4
- addresses. Their format is:
-
- |1| n bits | m bits | p bits | 63-n-m-p|
- +-+-------------------+---------------------+-----------+---------+
- |C| PROVIDER ID | SUBSCRIBER ID | SUBNET ID | NODE ID |
- +-+-------------------+---------------------+-----------+---------+
-
- The first bit is the IPv4 compatibility bit, or C-bit. It indicates
- whether the node represented by the address is IPv4 or SIPP. SIPP
- addresses are provider-oriented. That is, the high-order part of the
- address is assigned to internet service providers, which then assign
- portions of the address space to subscribers, etc. This usage is
- similar to assignment of IP addresses under CIDR. The SUBSCRIBER ID
- distinguishes among multiple subscribers attached to the provider
- identified by the PROVIDER ID. The SUBNET ID identifies a
- topologically connected group of nodes within the subscriber network
- identified by the subscriber prefix. The NODE ID identifies a single
- node among the group of nodes identified by the subnet prefix.
-
- 4.3.1.2 Local-Use Address
-
- A local-use address is a unicast address that has only local
- routability scope (within the subnet or within a subscriber network),
- and may have local or global uniqueness scope. They are intended for
- use inside of a site for "plug and play" local communication, for
- bootstrapping up to a single global addresses, and as part of an
- address sequence for global communication. Their format is:
-
- | 4 |
- |bits| 12 bits | 48 bits |
- +----+---------------+--------------------------------------------+
- |0110| SUBNET ID | NODE ID |
- +----+---------------+--------------------------------------------+
-
- The NODE ID is an identifier which much be unique in the domain in
- which it is being used. In most cases these will use a node's IEEE-
- 802 48bit address. The SUBNET ID identifies a specific subnet in a
- site. The combination of the SUBNET ID and the NODE ID to form a
- local use address allows a large private internet to be constructed
- without any other address allocation.
-
- Local-use addresses have two primary benefits. First, for sites or
- organizations that are not (yet) connected to the global Internet,
- there is no need to request an address prefix from the global
-
-
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- Internet address space. Local-use addresses can be used instead. If
- the organization connects to the global Internet, it can use it's
- local use addresses to communicate with a server (e.g., using the
- Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol [DHCP]) to have a global address
- automatically assigned.
-
- The second benefit of local-use addresses is that they can hold much
- larger NODE IDs, which makes possible a very simple form of auto-
- configuration of addresses. In particular, a node may discover a
- SUBNET ID by listening to a Router Advertisement messages on its
- attached link(s), and then fabricating a SIPP address for itself by
- using its link-level address as the NODE ID on that subnet.
-
- An auto-configured local-use address may be used by a node as its own
- identification for communication within the local domain, possibly
- including communication with a local address server to obtain a
- global SIPP address. The details of host auto-configuration are
- described in [DHCP].
-
- 4.3.1.3 IPv4-Only Addresses
-
- SIPP unicast addresses are assigned to IPv4-only hosts as part of the
- IPAE scheme for transition from IPv4 to SIPP. Such addresses have
- the following form:
-
- |1| 31 bits | 32 bits |
- +-+------------------------------+--------------------------------+
- |1| HIGHER-ORDER SIPP PREFIX | IPv4 ADDRESS |
- +-+------------------------------+--------------------------------+
-
- The highest-order bit of a SIPP address is called the IPv4
- compatibility bit or the C bit. A C bit value of 1 identifies an
- address as belonging to an IPv4-only node.
-
- The IPv4 node's 32-bit IPv4 address is carried in the low-order 32
- bits of the SIPP address. The remaining 31 bits are used to carry
- HIGHER- ORDER SIPP PREFIX, such as a service-provider ID.
-
- 4.3.2 Cluster Addresses
-
- Cluster addresses are unicast addresses that are used to reach the
- "nearest" one (according to unicast routing's notion of nearest) of
- the set of boundary routers of a cluster of nodes identified by a
- common prefix in the SIPP unicast routing hierarchy. These are used
- to identify a set of nodes. The cluster address, when used as part
- of an address sequence, permits a node to select which of several
- providers it wants to carry its traffic. A cluster address can only
- be used as a destination address. In this example there would be a
-
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- cluster address for each provider. This capability is sometimes
- called "source selected policies". Cluster addresses have the
- general form:
-
- | n bits | 64-n bits |
- +---------------------------------+-------------------------------+
- | CLUSTER PREFIX |0000000000000000000000000000000|
- +---------------------------------+-------------------------------+
-
- 4.3.3 Multicast Addresses
-
- A SIPP multicast address is an identifier for a group of nodes. A
- node may belong to any number of multicast groups. Multicast
- addresses have the following format:
-
-
- |1| 7 | 4 | 4 | 48 bits |
- +-+-------+----+----+---------------------------------------------+
- |C|1111111|FLGS|SCOP| GROUP ID |
- +-+-------+----+----+---------------------------------------------+
-
- Where:
-
- C = IPv4 compatibility bit.
-
- 1111111 in the rest of the first octet identifies the address as
- being a multicast address.
-
- +-+-+-+-+
- FLGS is a set of 4 flags: |0|0|0|T|
- +-+-+-+-+
-
- The high-order 3 flags are reserved, and must be initialized to 0.
-
- T = 0 indicates a permanently-assigned ("well-known") multicast
- address, assigned by the global internet numbering authority.
-
- T = 1 indicates a non-permanently-assigned ("transient") multicast
- address.
-
- SCOP is a 4-bit multicast scope value used to limit the scope of
- the multicast group. The values are:
-
- 0 reserved 8 intra-organization scope
- 1 intra-node scope 9 (unassigned)
- 2 intra-link scope 10 (unassigned)
- 3 (unassigned) 11 intra-community scope
- 4 (unassigned) 12 (unassigned)
-
-
-
- Hinden [Page 13]
-
- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
-
-
- 5 intra-site scope 13 (unassigned)
- 6 (unassigned) 14 global scope
- 7 (unassigned) 15 reserved
-
- GROUP ID identifies the multicast group, either permanent or
- transient, within the given scope.
-
- 4.4 SIPP Routing
-
- Routing in SIPP is almost identical to IPv4 routing under CIDR except
- that the addresses are 64-bit SIPP addresses instead of 32-bit IPv4
- addresses. This is true even when extended addresses are being used.
- With very straightforward extensions, all of IPv4's routing
- algorithms (OSPF, BGP, RIP, IDRP, etc.) can used to route SIPP [OSPF]
- [RIP2] [IDRP].
-
- SIPP also includes simple routing extensions which support powerful
- new routing functionality. These capabilities include:
-
- Provider Selection (based on policy, performance, cost, etc.)
- Host Mobility (route to current location)
- Auto-Readdressing (route to new address)
- Extended Addressing (route to "sub-cloud")
-
- The new routing functionality is obtained by creating sequences of
- SIPP addresses using the SIPP Routing option. The routing option is
- used by a SIPP source to list one or more intermediate nodes (or
- topological clusters) to be "visited" on the way to a packet's
- destination. This function is very similar in function to IPv4's
- Loose Source and Record Route option. A node would publish its
- address sequence in the Domain Name System [DNS].
-
- The identification of a specific transport connection is done by only
- using the first (source) and last (destination) address in the
- sequence. These identifying addresses (i.e., first and last
- addresses of a route sequence) are required to be unique within the
- scope over which they are used. This permits the middle addresses in
- the address sequence to change (in the cases of mobility, provider
- changes, site readdressing, etc.) without disrupting the transport
- connection.
-
- In order to make address sequences a general function, SIPP hosts are
- required to reverse routes in a packet it receives containing address
- sequences in order to return the packet to its originator. This
- approach is taken to make SIPP host implementations from the start
- support the handling and reversal of source routes. This is the key
- for allowing them to work with hosts which implement the new features
- such as provider selection or extended addresses.
-
-
-
- Hinden [Page 14]
-
- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
-
-
- Three examples show how the extended addressing can be used. In
- these examples, address sequences are shown by a list of individual
- addresses separated by commas. For example:
-
- SRC, I1, I2, I3, DST
-
- Where the first address is the source address, the last address is
- the destination address, and the middle addresses are intermediate
- addresses.
-
- For these examples assume that two hosts, H1 and H2 wish to
- communicate. Assume that H1 and H2's sites are both connected to
- providers P1 and P2. A third wireless provider, PR, is connected to
- both providers P1 and P2.
-
- ----- P1 ------
- / | \
- / | \
- H1 PR H2
- \ | /
- \ | /
- ----- P2 ------
-
- The simplest case (no use of address sequences) is when H1 wants to
- send a packet to H2 containing the addresses:
-
- H1, H2
-
- When H2 replied it would reverse the addresses and construct a packet
- containing the addresses:
-
- H2, H1
-
- In this example either provider could be used, and H1 and H2 would
- not be able to select which provider traffic would be sent to and
- received from.
-
- If H1 decides that it wants to enforce a policy that all
- communication to/from H2 can only use provider P1, it would construct
- a packet containing the address sequence:
-
- H1, P1, H2
-
- This ensures that when H2 replies to H1, it will reverse the route
- and the reply it would also travel over P1. The addresses in H2's
- reply would look like:
-
- H2, P1, H1
-
-
-
- Hinden [Page 15]
-
- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
-
-
- If H1 became mobile and moved to provider PR, it could maintain (not
- breaking any transport connections) communication with H2, by sending
- packets that contain the address sequence:
-
- H1, PR, P1, H2
-
- This would ensure that when H2 replied it would enforce H1's policy
- of exclusive use of provider P1 and send the packet to H1 new
- location on provider PR. The reversed address sequence would be:
-
- H2, P1, PR, H1
-
- The address extension facility of SIPP can be used for provider
- selection, mobility, readdressing, and extended addressing. It is a
- simple but powerful capability.
-
- 4.5 SIPP Quality-of-Service Capabilities
-
- The Flow Label field in the SIPP header may be used by a host to
- label those packets for which it requests special handling by SIPP
- routers, such as non-default quality of service or "real-time"
- service. This labeling is important in order to support applications
- which require some degree of consistent throughput, delay, and/or
- jitter. The Flow Label is a 28-bit field, internally structured into
- three subfields as follows:
-
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
- |R| DP | Flow ID |
- +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
-
- R (Reserved) 1-bit subfield. Initialized to zero for
- transmission; Ignored on reception.
-
- DP (Drop Priority) 3-bit unsigned integer. Specifies the
- priority of the packet, relative to other
- packets from the same source, for being
- discarded by a router under conditions of
- congestion. Larger values indicates a
- greater willingness by the sender to allow
- the packet to be discarded.
-
- Flow ID 24-bit subfield used to identify a
- specific flow.
-
- A flow is a sequence of packets sent from a particular source to a
- particular (unicast or multicast) destination for which the source
- desires special handling by the intervening routers. There may be
- multiple active flows from a source to a destination, as well as
-
-
-
- Hinden [Page 16]
-
- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
-
-
- traffic that is not associated with any flow. A flow is identified
- by the combination of a Source Address and a non-zero Flow ID.
- Packets that do not belong to a flow carry a Flow ID of zero.
-
- A Flow ID is assigned to a flow by the flow's source node. New Flow
- IDs must be chosen (pseudo-)randomly and uniformly from the range 1
- to FFFFFF hex. The purpose of the random allocation is to make any
- set of bits within the Flow ID suitable for use as a hash key by the
- routers, for looking up the special-handling state associated with
- the flow. A Flow ID must not be re-used by a source for a new flow
- while any state associated with the previous usage still exists in
- any router.
-
- The Drop Priority subfield provides a means separate from the Flow ID
- for distinguishing among packets from the same source, to allow a
- source to specify which of its packets are to be discarded in
- preference to others when a router cannot forward them all. This is
- useful for applications like video where it is preferable to drop
- packets carrying screen updates rather than the packets carrying the
- video synchronization information.
-
- 4.6 SIPP Security
-
- The current Internet has a number of security problems and lacks
- effective privacy and authentication mechanisms below the application
- layer. SIPP remedies these shortcomings by having two integrated
- options that provide security services. These two options may be
- used singly or together to provide differing levels of security to
- different users. This is very important because different user
- communities have different security needs.
-
- The first mechanism, called the "SIPP Authentication Header", is an
- option which provides authentication and integrity (without
- confidentiality) to SIPP datagrams. While the option is algorithm-
- independent and will support many different authentication
- techniques, the use of keyed MD5 is proposed to help ensure
- interoperability within the worldwide Internet. This can be used to
- eliminate a significant class of network attacks, including host
- masquerading attacks. The use of the SIPP Authentication Header is
- particularly important when source routing is used with SIPP because
- of the known risks in IP source routing. Its placement at the
- internet layer can help provide host origin authentication to those
- upper layer protocols and services that currently lack meaningful
- protections. This mechanism should be exportable by vendors in the
- United States and other countries with similar export restrictions
- because it only provides authentication and integrity, and
- specifically does not provide confidentiality. The exportability of
- the SIPP Authentication Header encourages its widespread
-
-
-
- Hinden [Page 17]
-
- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
-
-
- implementation and use.
-
- The second security option provided with SIPP is the "SIPP
- Encapsulating Security Header". This mechanism provides integrity
- and confidentiality to SIPP datagrams. It is simpler than some
- similar security protocols (e.g., SP3D, ISO NLSP) but remains
- flexible and algorithm-independent. To achieve interoperability
- within the global Internet, the use of DES CBC is proposed as the
- standard algorithm for use with the SIPP Encapsulating Security
- Header.
-
- 5. SIPP Transition Mechanisms
-
- The two key motivations in the SIPP transition mechanisms are to
- provide direct interoperability between IPv4 and SIPP hosts and to
- allow the user population to adopt SIPP in an a highly diffuse
- fashion. The transition must be incremental, with few or no critical
- interdependencies, if it is to succeed. The SIPP transition allows
- the users to upgrade their hosts to SIPP, and the network operators
- to deploy SIPP in routers, with very little coordination between the
- two.
-
- The mechanisms and policies of the SIPP transition are called "IPAE".
- Having a separate term serves to highlight those features designed
- specifically for transition. Once an acronym for an encapsulation
- technique to facilitate transition, the term "IPAE" now is mostly
- historical.
-
- The IPAE transition is based on five key elements:
-
- 1) A 64-bit SIPP addressing plan that encompasses the existing
- 32-bit IPv4 addressing plan. The 64-bit plan will be used to
- assign addresses for both SIPP and IPv4 nodes at the beginning
- of the transition. Existing IPv4 nodes will not need to change
- their addresses, and IPv4 hosts being upgraded to SIPP keep their
- existing IPv4 addresses as the low-order 32 bits of their SIPP
- addresses. Since the SIPP addressing plan is a superset of the
- existing IPv4 plan, SIPP hosts are assigned only a single 64-bit
- address, which can be used to communicate with both SIPP and IPv4
- hosts.
-
- 2) A mechanism for encapsulating SIPP traffic within IPv4 packets so
- that the IPv4 infrastructure can be leveraged early in the
- transition. Most of the "SIPP within IPv4 tunnels" can be
- automatically configured.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Hinden [Page 18]
-
- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
-
-
- 3) Algorithms in SIPP hosts that allow them to directly interoperate
- with IPv4 hosts located on the same subnet and elsewhere in the
- Internet.
-
- 4) A mechanism for translating between IPv4 and SIPP headers to
- allow SIPP-only hosts to communicate with IPv4-only hosts and to
- facilitate IPv4 hosts communicating over over a SIPP-only
- backbone.
-
- 5) An optional mechanism for mapping IPv4 addresses to SIPP address
- to allow improved scaling of IPv4 routing. At the present time
- given the success of CIDR, this does not look like it will be
- needed in a transition to SIPP. If Internet growth should
- continue beyond what CIDR can handle, it is available as an
- optional mechanism.
-
- IPAE ensures that SIPP hosts can interoperate with IPv4 hosts
- anywhere in the Internet up until the time when IPv4 addresses run
- out, and afterward allows SIPP and IPv4 hosts within a limited scope
- to interoperate indefinitely. This feature protects for a very long
- time the huge investment users have made in IPv4. Hosts that need
- only a limited connectivity range (e.g., printers) need never be
- upgraded to SIPP. This feature also allows SIPP-only hosts to
- interoperate with IPv4-only hosts.
-
- The incremental upgrade features of IPAE allow the host and router
- vendors to integrate SIPP into their product lines at their own pace,
- and allows the end users and network operators to deploy SIPP on
- their own schedules.
-
- The interoperability between SIPP and IPv4 provided by IPAE also has
- the benefit of extending the lifetime of IPv4 hosts. Given the large
- installed base of IPv4, changes to IPv4 in hosts are nearly
- impossible. Once an IPng is chosen, most of the new feature
- development will be done on IPng. New features in IPng will increase
- the incentives to adopt and deploy it.
-
- 6. Why SIPP?
-
- There are a number of reasons why SIPP should be selected as the
- IETF's IPng. It solves the Internet scaling problem, provides a
- flexible transition mechanism for the current Internet, and was
- designed to meet the needs of new markets such as nomadic personal
- computing devices, networked entertainment, and device control. It
- does this in a evolutionary way which reduces the risk of
- architectural problems.
-
-
-
-
-
- Hinden [Page 19]
-
- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
-
-
- Ease of transition is a key point in the design of SIPP. It is not
- something was was added in at the end. SIPP is designed to
- interoperate with IPv4. Specific mechanisms (C-bit, embedded IPv4
- addresses, etc.) were built into SIPP to support transition and
- compatability with IPv4. It was designed to permit a gradual and
- piecemeal deployment without any dependencies.
-
- SIPP supports large hierarchical addresses which will allow the
- Internet to continue to grow and provide new routing capabilities not
- built into IPv4. It has cluster addresses which can be used for
- policy route selection and has scoped multicast addresses which
- provide improved scaleability over IPv4 multicast. It also has local
- use addresses which provide the ability for "plug and play"
- installation.
-
- SIPP is designed to have performance better than IPv4 and work well
- in low bandwidth applications like wireless. Its headers are less
- expensive to process than IPv4 and its 64-bit addresses are chosen to
- be well matched to the new generation of 64bit processors. Its
- compact header minimizes bandwidth overhead which makes it ideal for
- wireless use.
-
- SIPP provides a platform for new Internet functionality. This
- includes support for real-time flows, provider selection, host
- mobility, end-to- end security, auto-configuration, and auto-
- reconfiguration.
-
- In summary, SIPP is a new version of IP. It can be installed as a
- normal software upgrade in internet devices. It is interoperable
- with the current IPv4. Its deployment strategy was designed to not
- have any "flag" days. SIPP is designed to run well on high
- performance networks (e.g., ATM) and at the same time is still
- efficient for low bandwidth networks (e.g., wireless). In addition,
- it provides a platform for new internet functionality that will be
- required in the near future.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Hinden [Page 20]
-
- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
-
-
- 7. Status of SIPP Effort
-
- There are many active participants in the SIPP working group. Groups
- making active contributions include:
-
- Group Activity
- --------------------- ----------------------------------------
- Beame & Whiteside Implementation (PC)
- Bellcore Implementation (SunOS), DNS and ICMP specs.
- Digital Equipment Corp. Implementation (Alpha/OSF, Open VMS)
- INRIA Implementation (BSD, BIND), DNS & OSPF specs.
- INESC Implementation (BSD/Mach/x-kernel)
- Intercon Implementation (MAC)
- MCI Phone Conferences
- Merit IDRP for SIPP Specification
- Naval Research Lab. Implementation (BSD) Security Design
- Network General Implementation (Sniffer)
- SGI Implementation (IRIX, NetVisulizer)
- Sun Implementation (Solaris 2.x, Snoop)
- TGV Implementation (Open VMS)
- Xerox PARC Protocol Design
- Bill Simpson Implementation (KA9Q)
-
- As of the time this paper was written there were a number of SIPP and
- IPAE implementations. These include:
-
- Implementation Status
- -------------- ------------------------------------
- BSD/Mach Completed (telnet, NFS, AFS, UDP)
- BSD/Net/2 In Progress
- Bind Code done
- DOS &Windows Completed (telnet, ftp, tftp, ping)
- IRIX In progress (ping)
- KA9Q In progress (ping, TCP)
- Mac OS Completed (telnet, ftp, finger, ping)
- NetVisualizer Completed (SIP & IPAE)
- Open VMS Completed (telnet, ftp), In Progress
- OSF/1 In Progress (ping, ICMP)
- Sniffer Completed (SIP & IPAE)
- Snoop Completed (SIP & IPAE)
- Solaris Completed (telnet, ftp, tftp, ping)
- Sun OS In Progress
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Hinden [Page 21]
-
- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
-
-
- 8. Where to Get Additional Information
-
- The documentation listed in the reference sections can be found in
- one of the IETF internet draft directories or in the archive site for
- the SIPP working group. This is located at:
-
- ftp.parc.xerox.com in the /pub/sipp directory.
-
- In addition other material relating to SIPP (such as postscript
- versions of presentations on SIPP) can also be found in the SIPP
- working group archive.
-
- To join the SIPP working group, send electronic mail to
-
- sipp-request@sunroof.eng.sun.com
-
- An archive of mail sent to this mailing list can be found in the IETF
- directories at cnri.reston.va.us.
-
- 9. Security Considerations
-
- Security issues are discussed in section 4.6.
-
- 10. Author's Address
-
- Robert M. Hinden
- Manager, Internet Engineering
- Sun Microsystems, Inc.
- MS MTV5-44
- 2550 Garcia Ave.
- Mt. View, CA 94303
-
- Phone: (415) 336-2082
- Fax: (415) 336-6016
- EMail: hinden@eng.sun.com
-
- 11. References
-
- [ADDR] Francis, P., "Simple Internet Protocol Plus (SIPP): Unicast
- Hierarchical Address Assignment", Work in Progress, January
- 1994.
-
- [AUTH] Atkinson, R., "SIPP Authentication Payload",
- Work in Progress, January, 1994.
-
- [CIDR] Fuller, V., Li, T., Yu, J., and K. Varadhan, "Supernetting:
- an Address Assignment and Aggregation Strategy", RFC 1338,
- BARRNet, cisco, Merit, OARnet, June 1992.
-
-
-
- Hinden [Page 22]
-
- RFC 1710 SIPP IPng White Paper October 1994
-
-
- [DISC] Simpson, W., "SIPP Neighbor Discovery", Work in Progress,
- March 1994.
-
- [DIS2] Simpson, W., "SIPP Neighbor Discovery -- ICMP Message
- Formats", Work in Progress, March 1994.
-
- [DHCP] Thomson, S., "Simple Internet Protocol Plus (SIPP): Automatic
- Host Address Assignment", Work in Progress, March 1994.
-
- [DNS] Thomson, S., and C. Huitema, "DNS Extensions to Support
- Simple Internet Protocol Plus (SIPP)", Work in Progress,
- March 1994.
-
- [ICMP] Govindan, R., and S. Deering, "ICMP and IGMP for the Simple
- Internet Protocol Plus (SIPP)", Work in Progress, March 1994.
-
- [IDRP] Hares, S., "IDRP for SIP", Work in Progress, November 1993.
-
- [IPAE] Gilligan, R., et al, "IPAE: The SIPP Interoperability and
- Transition Mechanism", Work in Progress, March 1994.
-
- [IPV4] Postel, J., "Internet Protocol- DARPA Internet Program
- Protocol Specification", STD 5, RFC 791, DARPA,
- September 1981.
-
- [OSPF] Francis, P., "OSPF for SIPP", Work in Progress, February
- 1994.
-
- [RIP2] Malkin, G., and C. Huitema, "SIP-RIP", Work in Progress,
- March 1993.
-
- [ROUT] Deering, S., et al, "Simple Internet Protocol Plus (SIPP):
- Routing and Addressing", Work in Progress, February 1994.
-
- [SARC] Atkinson, R., "SIPP Security Architecture", Work in Progress,
- January 1994.
-
- [SECR] Atkinson, R., "SIPP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)",
- Work in Progress, January 1994.
-
- [SIPP] Deering, S., "Simple Internet Protocol Plus (SIPP)
- Specification", Work in Progress, February 1994.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Hinden [Page 23]
-
-