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- Network Working Group J. McCann
- Request for Comments: 1981 Digital Equipment Corporation
- Category: Standards Track S. Deering
- Xerox PARC
- J. Mogul
- Digital Equipment Corporation
- August 1996
-
-
- Path MTU Discovery for IP version 6
-
- 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
-
- This document describes Path MTU Discovery for IP version 6. It is
- largely derived from RFC 1191, which describes Path MTU Discovery for
- IP version 4.
-
- Table of Contents
-
- 1. Introduction.................................................2
- 2. Terminology..................................................2
- 3. Protocol overview............................................3
- 4. Protocol Requirements........................................4
- 5. Implementation Issues........................................5
- 5.1. Layering...................................................5
- 5.2. Storing PMTU information...................................6
- 5.3. Purging stale PMTU information.............................8
- 5.4. TCP layer actions..........................................9
- 5.5. Issues for other transport protocols......................11
- 5.6. Management interface......................................12
- 6. Security Considerations.....................................12
- Acknowledgements...............................................13
- Appendix A - Comparison to RFC 1191............................14
- References.....................................................14
- Authors' Addresses.............................................15
-
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- McCann, Deering & Mogul Standards Track [Page 1]
-
- RFC 1981 Path MTU Discovery for IPv6 August 1996
-
-
- 1. Introduction
-
- When one IPv6 node has a large amount of data to send to another
- node, the data is transmitted in a series of IPv6 packets. It is
- usually preferable that these packets be of the largest size that can
- successfully traverse the path from the source node to the
- destination node. This packet size is referred to as the Path MTU
- (PMTU), and it is equal to the minimum link MTU of all the links in a
- path. IPv6 defines a standard mechanism for a node to discover the
- PMTU of an arbitrary path.
-
- IPv6 nodes SHOULD implement Path MTU Discovery in order to discover
- and take advantage of paths with PMTU greater than the IPv6 minimum
- link MTU [IPv6-SPEC]. A minimal IPv6 implementation (e.g., in a boot
- ROM) may choose to omit implementation of Path MTU Discovery.
-
- Nodes not implementing Path MTU Discovery use the IPv6 minimum link
- MTU defined in [IPv6-SPEC] as the maximum packet size. In most
- cases, this will result in the use of smaller packets than necessary,
- because most paths have a PMTU greater than the IPv6 minimum link
- MTU. A node sending packets much smaller than the Path MTU allows is
- wasting network resources and probably getting suboptimal throughput.
-
- 2. Terminology
-
- node - a device that implements IPv6.
-
- router - a node that forwards IPv6 packets not explicitly
- addressed to itself.
-
- host - any node that is not a router.
-
- upper layer - a protocol layer immediately above IPv6. Examples are
- transport protocols such as TCP and UDP, control
- protocols such as ICMP, routing protocols such as OSPF,
- and internet or lower-layer protocols being "tunneled"
- over (i.e., encapsulated in) IPv6 such as IPX,
- AppleTalk, or IPv6 itself.
-
- link - a communication facility or medium over which nodes can
- communicate at the link layer, i.e., the layer
- immediately below IPv6. Examples are Ethernets (simple
- or bridged); PPP links; X.25, Frame Relay, or ATM
- networks; and internet (or higher) layer "tunnels",
- such as tunnels over IPv4 or IPv6 itself.
-
- interface - a node's attachment to a link.
-
-
-
-
- McCann, Deering & Mogul Standards Track [Page 2]
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- RFC 1981 Path MTU Discovery for IPv6 August 1996
-
-
- address - an IPv6-layer identifier for an interface or a set of
- interfaces.
-
- packet - an IPv6 header plus payload.
-
- link MTU - the maximum transmission unit, i.e., maximum packet
- size in octets, that can be conveyed in one piece over
- a link.
-
- path - the set of links traversed by a packet between a source
- node and a destination node
-
- path MTU - the minimum link MTU of all the links in a path between
- a source node and a destination node.
-
- PMTU - path MTU
-
- Path MTU
- Discovery - process by which a node learns the PMTU of a path
-
- flow - 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.
-
- flow id - a combination of a source address and a non-zero
- flow label.
-
- 3. Protocol overview
-
- This memo describes a technique to dynamically discover the PMTU of a
- path. The basic idea is that a source node initially assumes that
- the PMTU of a path is the (known) MTU of the first hop in the path.
- If any of the packets sent on that path are too large to be forwarded
- by some node along the path, that node will discard them and return
- ICMPv6 Packet Too Big messages [ICMPv6]. Upon receipt of such a
- message, the source node reduces its assumed PMTU for the path based
- on the MTU of the constricting hop as reported in the Packet Too Big
- message.
-
- The Path MTU Discovery process ends when the node's estimate of the
- PMTU is less than or equal to the actual PMTU. Note that several
- iterations of the packet-sent/Packet-Too-Big-message-received cycle
- may occur before the Path MTU Discovery process ends, as there may be
- links with smaller MTUs further along the path.
-
- Alternatively, the node may elect to end the discovery process by
- ceasing to send packets larger than the IPv6 minimum link MTU.
-
-
-
- McCann, Deering & Mogul Standards Track [Page 3]
-
- RFC 1981 Path MTU Discovery for IPv6 August 1996
-
-
- The PMTU of a path may change over time, due to changes in the
- routing topology. Reductions of the PMTU are detected by Packet Too
- Big messages. To detect increases in a path's PMTU, a node
- periodically increases its assumed PMTU. This will almost always
- result in packets being discarded and Packet Too Big messages being
- generated, because in most cases the PMTU of the path will not have
- changed. Therefore, attempts to detect increases in a path's PMTU
- should be done infrequently.
-
- Path MTU Discovery supports multicast as well as unicast
- destinations. In the case of a multicast destination, copies of a
- packet may traverse many different paths to many different nodes.
- Each path may have a different PMTU, and a single multicast packet
- may result in multiple Packet Too Big messages, each reporting a
- different next-hop MTU. The minimum PMTU value across the set of
- paths in use determines the size of subsequent packets sent to the
- multicast destination.
-
- Note that Path MTU Discovery must be performed even in cases where a
- node "thinks" a destination is attached to the same link as itself.
- In a situation such as when a neighboring router acts as proxy [ND]
- for some destination, the destination can to appear to be directly
- connected but is in fact more than one hop away.
-
- 4. Protocol Requirements
-
- As discussed in section 1, IPv6 nodes are not required to implement
- Path MTU Discovery. The requirements in this section apply only to
- those implementations that include Path MTU Discovery.
-
- When a node receives a Packet Too Big message, it MUST reduce its
- estimate of the PMTU for the relevant path, based on the value of the
- MTU field in the message. The precise behavior of a node in this
- circumstance is not specified, since different applications may have
- different requirements, and since different implementation
- architectures may favor different strategies.
-
- After receiving a Packet Too Big message, a node MUST attempt to
- avoid eliciting more such messages in the near future. The node MUST
- reduce the size of the packets it is sending along the path. Using a
- PMTU estimate larger than the IPv6 minimum link MTU may continue to
- elicit Packet Too Big messages. Since each of these messages (and
- the dropped packets they respond to) consume network resources, the
- node MUST force the Path MTU Discovery process to end.
-
- Nodes using Path MTU Discovery MUST detect decreases in PMTU as fast
- as possible. Nodes MAY detect increases in PMTU, but because doing
- so requires sending packets larger than the current estimated PMTU,
-
-
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- McCann, Deering & Mogul Standards Track [Page 4]
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- RFC 1981 Path MTU Discovery for IPv6 August 1996
-
-
- and because the likelihood is that the PMTU will not have increased,
- this MUST be done at infrequent intervals. An attempt to detect an
- increase (by sending a packet larger than the current estimate) MUST
- NOT be done less than 5 minutes after a Packet Too Big message has
- been received for the given path. The recommended setting for this
- timer is twice its minimum value (10 minutes).
-
- A node MUST NOT reduce its estimate of the Path MTU below the IPv6
- minimum link MTU.
-
- Note: A node may receive a Packet Too Big message reporting a
- next-hop MTU that is less than the IPv6 minimum link MTU. In that
- case, the node is not required to reduce the size of subsequent
- packets sent on the path to less than the IPv6 minimun link MTU,
- but rather must include a Fragment header in those packets [IPv6-
- SPEC].
-
- A node MUST NOT increase its estimate of the Path MTU in response to
- the contents of a Packet Too Big message. A message purporting to
- announce an increase in the Path MTU might be a stale packet that has
- been floating around in the network, a false packet injected as part
- of a denial-of-service attack, or the result of having multiple paths
- to the destination, each with a different PMTU.
-
- 5. Implementation Issues
-
- This section discusses a number of issues related to the
- implementation of Path MTU Discovery. This is not a specification,
- but rather a set of notes provided as an aid for implementors.
-
- The issues include:
-
- - What layer or layers implement Path MTU Discovery?
-
- - How is the PMTU information cached?
-
- - How is stale PMTU information removed?
-
- - What must transport and higher layers do?
-
- 5.1. Layering
-
- In the IP architecture, the choice of what size packet to send is
- made by a protocol at a layer above IP. This memo refers to such a
- protocol as a "packetization protocol". Packetization protocols are
- usually transport protocols (for example, TCP) but can also be
- higher-layer protocols (for example, protocols built on top of UDP).
-
-
-
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- McCann, Deering & Mogul Standards Track [Page 5]
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- RFC 1981 Path MTU Discovery for IPv6 August 1996
-
-
- Implementing Path MTU Discovery in the packetization layers
- simplifies some of the inter-layer issues, but has several drawbacks:
- the implementation may have to be redone for each packetization
- protocol, it becomes hard to share PMTU information between different
- packetization layers, and the connection-oriented state maintained by
- some packetization layers may not easily extend to save PMTU
- information for long periods.
-
- It is therefore suggested that the IP layer store PMTU information
- and that the ICMP layer process received Packet Too Big messages.
- The packetization layers may respond to changes in the PMTU, by
- changing the size of the messages they send. To support this
- layering, packetization layers require a way to learn of changes in
- the value of MMS_S, the "maximum send transport-message size". The
- MMS_S is derived from the Path MTU by subtracting the size of the
- IPv6 header plus space reserved by the IP layer for additional
- headers (if any).
-
- It is possible that a packetization layer, perhaps a UDP application
- outside the kernel, is unable to change the size of messages it
- sends. This may result in a packet size that exceeds the Path MTU.
- To accommodate such situations, IPv6 defines a mechanism that allows
- large payloads to be divided into fragments, with each fragment sent
- in a separate packet (see [IPv6-SPEC] section "Fragment Header").
- However, packetization layers are encouraged to avoid sending
- messages that will require fragmentation (for the case against
- fragmentation, see [FRAG]).
-
- 5.2. Storing PMTU information
-
- Ideally, a PMTU value should be associated with a specific path
- traversed by packets exchanged between the source and destination
- nodes. However, in most cases a node will not have enough
- information to completely and accurately identify such a path.
- Rather, a node must associate a PMTU value with some local
- representation of a path. It is left to the implementation to select
- the local representation of a path.
-
- In the case of a multicast destination address, copies of a packet
- may traverse many different paths to reach many different nodes. The
- local representation of the "path" to a multicast destination must in
- fact represent a potentially large set of paths.
-
- Minimally, an implementation could maintain a single PMTU value to be
- used for all packets originated from the node. This PMTU value would
- be the minimum PMTU learned across the set of all paths in use by the
- node. This approach is likely to result in the use of smaller
- packets than is necessary for many paths.
-
-
-
- McCann, Deering & Mogul Standards Track [Page 6]
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- RFC 1981 Path MTU Discovery for IPv6 August 1996
-
-
- An implementation could use the destination address as the local
- representation of a path. The PMTU value associated with a
- destination would be the minimum PMTU learned across the set of all
- paths in use to that destination. The set of paths in use to a
- particular destination is expected to be small, in many cases
- consisting of a single path. This approach will result in the use of
- optimally sized packets on a per-destination basis. This approach
- integrates nicely with the conceptual model of a host as described in
- [ND]: a PMTU value could be stored with the corresponding entry in
- the destination cache.
-
- If flows [IPv6-SPEC] are in use, an implementation could use the flow
- id as the local representation of a path. Packets sent to a
- particular destination but belonging to different flows may use
- different paths, with the choice of path depending on the flow id.
- This approach will result in the use of optimally sized packets on a
- per-flow basis, providing finer granularity than PMTU values
- maintained on a per-destination basis.
-
- For source routed packets (i.e. packets containing an IPv6 Routing
- header [IPv6-SPEC]), the source route may further qualify the local
- representation of a path. In particular, a packet containing a type
- 0 Routing header in which all bits in the Strict/Loose Bit Map are
- equal to 1 contains a complete path specification. An implementation
- could use source route information in the local representation of a
- path.
-
- Note: Some paths may be further distinguished by different
- security classifications. The details of such classifications are
- beyond the scope of this memo.
-
- Initially, the PMTU value for a path is assumed to be the (known) MTU
- of the first-hop link.
-
- When a Packet Too Big message is received, the node determines which
- path the message applies to based on the contents of the Packet Too
- Big message. For example, if the destination address is used as the
- local representation of a path, the destination address from the
- original packet would be used to determine which path the message
- applies to.
-
- Note: if the original packet contained a Routing header, the
- Routing header should be used to determine the location of the
- destination address within the original packet. If Segments Left
- is equal to zero, the destination address is in the Destination
- Address field in the IPv6 header. If Segments Left is greater
- than zero, the destination address is the last address
- (Address[n]) in the Routing header.
-
-
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- McCann, Deering & Mogul Standards Track [Page 7]
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- RFC 1981 Path MTU Discovery for IPv6 August 1996
-
-
- The node then uses the value in the MTU field in the Packet Too Big
- message as a tentative PMTU value, and compares the tentative PMTU to
- the existing PMTU. If the tentative PMTU is less than the existing
- PMTU estimate, the tentative PMTU replaces the existing PMTU as the
- PMTU value for the path.
-
- The packetization layers must be notified about decreases in the
- PMTU. Any packetization layer instance (for example, a TCP
- connection) that is actively using the path must be notified if the
- PMTU estimate is decreased.
-
- Note: even if the Packet Too Big message contains an Original
- Packet Header that refers to a UDP packet, the TCP layer must be
- notified if any of its connections use the given path.
-
- Also, the instance that sent the packet that elicited the Packet Too
- Big message should be notified that its packet has been dropped, even
- if the PMTU estimate has not changed, so that it may retransmit the
- dropped data.
-
- Note: An implementation can avoid the use of an asynchronous
- notification mechanism for PMTU decreases by postponing
- notification until the next attempt to send a packet larger than
- the PMTU estimate. In this approach, when an attempt is made to
- SEND a packet that is larger than the PMTU estimate, the SEND
- function should fail and return a suitable error indication. This
- approach may be more suitable to a connectionless packetization
- layer (such as one using UDP), which (in some implementations) may
- be hard to "notify" from the ICMP layer. In this case, the normal
- timeout-based retransmission mechanisms would be used to recover
- from the dropped packets.
-
- It is important to understand that the notification of the
- packetization layer instances using the path about the change in the
- PMTU is distinct from the notification of a specific instance that a
- packet has been dropped. The latter should be done as soon as
- practical (i.e., asynchronously from the point of view of the
- packetization layer instance), while the former may be delayed until
- a packetization layer instance wants to create a packet.
- Retransmission should be done for only for those packets that are
- known to be dropped, as indicated by a Packet Too Big message.
-
- 5.3. Purging stale PMTU information
-
- Internetwork topology is dynamic; routes change over time. While the
- local representation of a path may remain constant, the actual
- path(s) in use may change. Thus, PMTU information cached by a node
- can become stale.
-
-
-
- McCann, Deering & Mogul Standards Track [Page 8]
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- RFC 1981 Path MTU Discovery for IPv6 August 1996
-
-
- If the stale PMTU value is too large, this will be discovered almost
- immediately once a large enough packet is sent on the path. No such
- mechanism exists for realizing that a stale PMTU value is too small,
- so an implementation should "age" cached values. When a PMTU value
- has not been decreased for a while (on the order of 10 minutes), the
- PMTU estimate should be set to the MTU of the first-hop link, and the
- packetization layers should be notified of the change. This will
- cause the complete Path MTU Discovery process to take place again.
-
- Note: an implementation should provide a means for changing the
- timeout duration, including setting it to "infinity". For
- example, nodes attached to an FDDI link which is then attached to
- the rest of the Internet via a small MTU serial line are never
- going to discover a new non-local PMTU, so they should not have to
- put up with dropped packets every 10 minutes.
-
- An upper layer must not retransmit data in response to an increase in
- the PMTU estimate, since this increase never comes in response to an
- indication of a dropped packet.
-
- One approach to implementing PMTU aging is to associate a timestamp
- field with a PMTU value. This field is initialized to a "reserved"
- value, indicating that the PMTU is equal to the MTU of the first hop
- link. Whenever the PMTU is decreased in response to a Packet Too Big
- message, the timestamp is set to the current time.
-
- Once a minute, a timer-driven procedure runs through all cached PMTU
- values, and for each PMTU whose timestamp is not "reserved" and is
- older than the timeout interval:
-
- - The PMTU estimate is set to the MTU of the first hop link.
-
- - The timestamp is set to the "reserved" value.
-
- - Packetization layers using this path are notified of the increase.
-
- 5.4. TCP layer actions
-
- The TCP layer must track the PMTU for the path(s) in use by a
- connection; it should not send segments that would result in packets
- larger than the PMTU. A simple implementation could ask the IP layer
- for this value each time it created a new segment, but this could be
- inefficient. Moreover, TCP implementations that follow the "slow-
- start" congestion-avoidance algorithm [CONG] typically calculate and
- cache several other values derived from the PMTU. It may be simpler
- to receive asynchronous notification when the PMTU changes, so that
- these variables may be updated.
-
-
-
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- McCann, Deering & Mogul Standards Track [Page 9]
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- RFC 1981 Path MTU Discovery for IPv6 August 1996
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-
- A TCP implementation must also store the MSS value received from its
- peer, and must not send any segment larger than this MSS, regardless
- of the PMTU. In 4.xBSD-derived implementations, this may require
- adding an additional field to the TCP state record.
-
- The value sent in the TCP MSS option is independent of the PMTU.
- This MSS option value is used by the other end of the connection,
- which may be using an unrelated PMTU value. See [IPv6-SPEC] sections
- "Packet Size Issues" and "Maximum Upper-Layer Payload Size" for
- information on selecting a value for the TCP MSS option.
-
- When a Packet Too Big message is received, it implies that a packet
- was dropped by the node that sent the ICMP message. It is sufficient
- to treat this as any other dropped segment, and wait until the
- retransmission timer expires to cause retransmission of the segment.
- If the Path MTU Discovery process requires several steps to find the
- PMTU of the full path, this could delay the connection by many
- round-trip times.
-
- Alternatively, the retransmission could be done in immediate response
- to a notification that the Path MTU has changed, but only for the
- specific connection specified by the Packet Too Big message. The
- packet size used in the retransmission should be no larger than the
- new PMTU.
-
- Note: A packetization layer must not retransmit in response to
- every Packet Too Big message, since a burst of several oversized
- segments will give rise to several such messages and hence several
- retransmissions of the same data. If the new estimated PMTU is
- still wrong, the process repeats, and there is an exponential
- growth in the number of superfluous segments sent.
-
- This means that the TCP layer must be able to recognize when a
- Packet Too Big notification actually decreases the PMTU that it
- has already used to send a packet on the given connection, and
- should ignore any other notifications.
-
- Many TCP implementations incorporate "congestion avoidance" and
- "slow-start" algorithms to improve performance [CONG]. Unlike a
- retransmission caused by a TCP retransmission timeout, a
- retransmission caused by a Packet Too Big message should not change
- the congestion window. It should, however, trigger the slow-start
- mechanism (i.e., only one segment should be retransmitted until
- acknowledgements begin to arrive again).
-
- TCP performance can be reduced if the sender's maximum window size is
- not an exact multiple of the segment size in use (this is not the
- congestion window size, which is always a multiple of the segment
-
-
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- McCann, Deering & Mogul Standards Track [Page 10]
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- RFC 1981 Path MTU Discovery for IPv6 August 1996
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-
- size). In many systems (such as those derived from 4.2BSD), the
- segment size is often set to 1024 octets, and the maximum window size
- (the "send space") is usually a multiple of 1024 octets, so the
- proper relationship holds by default. If Path MTU Discovery is used,
- however, the segment size may not be a submultiple of the send space,
- and it may change during a connection; this means that the TCP layer
- may need to change the transmission window size when Path MTU
- Discovery changes the PMTU value. The maximum window size should be
- set to the greatest multiple of the segment size that is less than or
- equal to the sender's buffer space size.
-
- 5.5. Issues for other transport protocols
-
- Some transport protocols (such as ISO TP4 [ISOTP]) are not allowed to
- repacketize when doing a retransmission. That is, once an attempt is
- made to transmit a segment of a certain size, the transport cannot
- split the contents of the segment into smaller segments for
- retransmission. In such a case, the original segment can be
- fragmented by the IP layer during retransmission. Subsequent
- segments, when transmitted for the first time, should be no larger
- than allowed by the Path MTU.
-
- The Sun Network File System (NFS) uses a Remote Procedure Call (RPC)
- protocol [RPC] that, when used over UDP, in many cases will generate
- payloads that must be fragmented even for the first-hop link. This
- might improve performance in certain cases, but it is known to cause
- reliability and performance problems, especially when the client and
- server are separated by routers.
-
- It is recommended that NFS implementations use Path MTU Discovery
- whenever routers are involved. Most NFS implementations allow the
- RPC datagram size to be changed at mount-time (indirectly, by
- changing the effective file system block size), but might require
- some modification to support changes later on.
-
- Also, since a single NFS operation cannot be split across several UDP
- datagrams, certain operations (primarily, those operating on file
- names and directories) require a minimum payload size that if sent in
- a single packet would exceed the PMTU. NFS implementations should
- not reduce the payload size below this threshold, even if Path MTU
- Discovery suggests a lower value. In this case the payload will be
- fragmented by the IP layer.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
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- McCann, Deering & Mogul Standards Track [Page 11]
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- RFC 1981 Path MTU Discovery for IPv6 August 1996
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-
- 5.6. Management interface
-
- It is suggested that an implementation provide a way for a system
- utility program to:
-
- - Specify that Path MTU Discovery not be done on a given path.
-
- - Change the PMTU value associated with a given path.
-
- The former can be accomplished by associating a flag with the path;
- when a packet is sent on a path with this flag set, the IP layer does
- not send packets larger than the IPv6 minimum link MTU.
-
- These features might be used to work around an anomalous situation,
- or by a routing protocol implementation that is able to obtain Path
- MTU values.
-
- The implementation should also provide a way to change the timeout
- period for aging stale PMTU information.
-
- 6. Security Considerations
-
- This Path MTU Discovery mechanism makes possible two denial-of-
- service attacks, both based on a malicious party sending false Packet
- Too Big messages to a node.
-
- In the first attack, the false message indicates a PMTU much smaller
- than reality. This should not entirely stop data flow, since the
- victim node should never set its PMTU estimate below the IPv6 minimum
- link MTU. It will, however, result in suboptimal performance.
-
- In the second attack, the false message indicates a PMTU larger than
- reality. If believed, this could cause temporary blockage as the
- victim sends packets that will be dropped by some router. Within one
- round-trip time, the node would discover its mistake (receiving
- Packet Too Big messages from that router), but frequent repetition of
- this attack could cause lots of packets to be dropped. A node,
- however, should never raise its estimate of the PMTU based on a
- Packet Too Big message, so should not be vulnerable to this attack.
-
- A malicious party could also cause problems if it could stop a victim
- from receiving legitimate Packet Too Big messages, but in this case
- there are simpler denial-of-service attacks available.
-
-
-
-
-
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- RFC 1981 Path MTU Discovery for IPv6 August 1996
-
-
- Acknowledgements
-
- We would like to acknowledge the authors of and contributors to
- [RFC-1191], from which the majority of this document was derived. We
- would also like to acknowledge the members of the IPng working group
- for their careful review and constructive criticisms.
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- RFC 1981 Path MTU Discovery for IPv6 August 1996
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- Appendix A - Comparison to RFC 1191
-
- This document is based in large part on RFC 1191, which describes
- Path MTU Discovery for IPv4. Certain portions of RFC 1191 were not
- needed in this document:
-
- router specification - Packet Too Big messages and corresponding
- router behavior are defined in [ICMPv6]
-
- Don't Fragment bit - there is no DF bit in IPv6 packets
-
- TCP MSS discussion - selecting a value to send in the TCP MSS
- option is discussed in [IPv6-SPEC]
-
- old-style messages - all Packet Too Big messages report the
- MTU of the constricting link
-
- MTU plateau tables - not needed because there are no old-style
- messages
-
- References
-
- [CONG] Van Jacobson. Congestion Avoidance and Control. Proc.
- SIGCOMM '88 Symposium on Communications Architectures and
- Protocols, pages 314-329. Stanford, CA, August, 1988.
-
- [FRAG] C. Kent and J. Mogul. Fragmentation Considered Harmful.
- In Proc. SIGCOMM '87 Workshop on Frontiers in Computer
- Communications Technology. August, 1987.
-
- [ICMPv6] Conta, A., and S. Deering, "Internet Control Message
- Protocol (ICMPv6) for the Internet Protocol Version 6
- (IPv6) Specification", RFC 1885, December 1995.
-
- [IPv6-SPEC] Deering, S., and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version
- 6 (IPv6) Specification", RFC 1883, December 1995.
-
- [ISOTP] ISO. ISO Transport Protocol Specification: ISO DP 8073.
- RFC 905, SRI Network Information Center, April, 1984.
-
- [ND] Narten, T., Nordmark, E., and W. Simpson, "Neighbor
- Discovery for IP Version 6 (IPv6)", Work in Progress.
-
- [RFC-1191] Mogul, J., and S. Deering, "Path MTU Discovery",
- RFC 1191, November 1990.
-
-
-
-
-
-
- McCann, Deering & Mogul Standards Track [Page 14]
-
- RFC 1981 Path MTU Discovery for IPv6 August 1996
-
-
- [RPC] Sun Microsystems, Inc., "RPC: Remote Procedure Call
- Protocol", RFC 1057, SRI Network Information Center,
- June, 1988.
-
- Authors' Addresses
-
- Jack McCann
- Digital Equipment Corporation
- 110 Spitbrook Road, ZKO3-3/U14
- Nashua, NH 03062
- Phone: +1 603 881 2608
-
- Fax: +1 603 881 0120
- Email: mccann@zk3.dec.com
-
-
- Stephen E. Deering
- Xerox Palo Alto Research Center
- 3333 Coyote Hill Road
- Palo Alto, CA 94304
- Phone: +1 415 812 4839
-
- Fax: +1 415 812 4471
- EMail: deering@parc.xerox.com
-
-
- Jeffrey Mogul
- Digital Equipment Corporation Western Research Laboratory
- 250 University Avenue
- Palo Alto, CA 94301
- Phone: +1 415 617 3304
-
- EMail: mogul@pa.dec.com
-
-
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- McCann, Deering & Mogul Standards Track [Page 15]
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