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- Network Working Group R. Callon
- Request for Comments: 2185 Cascade Communications Co.
- Category: Informational D. Haskin
- Bay Networks Inc.
- September 1997
-
-
- Routing Aspects Of IPv6 Transition
-
- 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 gives an overview of the routing aspects of the IPv6
- transition. It is based on the protocols defined in the document
- "Transition Mechanisms for IPv6 Hosts and Routers" [1]. Readers
- should be familiar with the transition mechanisms before reading this
- document.
-
- The proposals contained in this document are based on the work of the
- Ngtrans working group.
-
- 1. TERMINOLOGY
-
- This paper uses the following terminology:
-
- node - a protocol module that implements IPv4 or IPv6.
-
- router - a node that forwards packets not explicitly
- addressed to itself.
-
- host - any node that is not a router.
-
- border router - a router that forwards packets across
- routing domain boundaries.
-
- link - a communication facility or medium over which
- nodes can communicate at the link layer, i.e., the layer
- immediately below internet layer.
-
- interface - a node's attachment to a link.
-
- address - an network layer identifier for an interface or
- a group of interfaces.
-
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- neighbors - nodes attached to the same link.
-
- routing domain - a collection of routers which coordinate
- routing knowledge using a single routing protocol.
-
- routing region (or just "region") - a collection of routers
- interconnected by a single internet protocol (e.g. IPv6)
- and coordinating their routing knowledge using routing
- protocols from a single internet protocol stack. A
- routing region may be a superset of a routing domain.
-
- tunneling - encapsulation of protocol A within protocol B,
- such that A treats B as though it were a datalink layer.
-
- reachability information - information describing the set of
- reachable destinations that can be used for packet
- forwarding decisions.
-
- routing information - same as reachability information.
-
- address prefix - the high-order bits in an address.
-
- routing prefix - address prefix that expresses destinations
- which have addresses with the matching address prefixes.
- It is used by routers to advertise what systems they are
- capable of reaching.
-
- route leaking - advertisement of network layer reachability
- information across routing region boundaries.
-
- 2. ISSUES AND OUTLINE
-
- This document gives an overview of the routing aspects of IPv4 to
- IPv6 transition. The approach outlined here is designed to be
- compatible with the existing mechanisms for IPv6 transition [1].
-
- During an extended IPv4-to-IPv6 transition period, IPv6-based systems
- must coexist with the installed base of IPv4 systems. In such a dual
- internetworking protocol environment, both IPv4 and IPv6 routing
- infrastructure will be present. Initially, deployed IPv6-capable
- domains might not be globally interconnected via IPv6-capable
- internet infrastructure and therefore may need to communicate across
- IPv4-only routing regions. In order to achieve dynamic routing in
- such a mixed environment, there need to be mechanisms to globally
- distribute IPv6 network layer reachability information between
- dispersed IPv6 routing regions. The same techniques can be used in
- later stages of IPv4-to-IPv6 transition to route IPv4 packets between
- isolated IPv4-only routing region over IPv6 infrastructure.
-
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- The IPng transition provides a dual-IP-layer transition, augmented by
- use of encapsulation where necessary and appropriate. Routing issues
- related to this transition include:
-
- (1) Routing for IPv4 packets
-
- (2) Routing for IPv6 packets
- (2a) IPv6 packets with IPv6-native addresses
- (2b) IPv6 packets with IPv4-compatible addresses
-
- (3) Operation of manually configured static tunnels
-
- (4) Operation of automatic encapsulation
- (4a) Locating encapsulators
- (4b) Ensuring that routing is consist with
- encapsulation
-
- Basic mechanisms required to accomplish these goals include: (i)
- Dual-IP-layer Route Computation; (ii) Manual configuration of point-
- to-point tunnels; and (iii) Route leaking to support automatic
- encapsulation.
-
- The basic mechanism for routing of IPv4 and IPv6 involves dual-IP-
- layer routing. This implies that routes are separately calculated for
- IPv4 addresses and for IPv6 addressing. This is discussed in more
- detail in section 3.1.
-
- Tunnels (either IPv4 over IPv6, or IPv6 over IPv4) may be manually
- configured. For example, in the early stages of transition this may
- be used to allow two IPv6 domains to interact over an IPv4
- infrastructure. Manually configured static tunnels are treated as if
- they were a normal data link. This is discussed in more detail in
- section 3.2.
-
- Use of automatic encapsulation, where the IPv4 tunnel endpoint
- address is determined from the IPv4 address embedded in the IPv4-
- compatible destination address of IPv6 packet, requires consistency
- of routes between IPv4 and IPv6 routing domains for destinations
- using IPv4-compatible addresses. For example, consider a packet which
- starts off as an IPv6 packet, but then is encapsulated in an IPv4
- packet in the middle of its path from source to destination. This
- packet must locate an encapsulator at the correct part of its path.
- Also, this packet has to follow a consistent route for the entire
- path from source to destination. This is discussed in more detail in
- section 3.3.
-
- The mechanisms for tunneling IPv6 over IPv4 are defined in the
- transition mechanisms specification [1].
-
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- 3. MORE DETAIL OF BASIC APPROACHES
-
- 3.1 Basic Dual-IP-layer Operation
-
- In the basic dual-IP-layer transition scheme, routers may
- independently support IPv4 and IPv6 routing. Other parts of the
- transition, such as DNS support, and selection by the source host of
- which packet format to transmit (IPv4 or IPv6) are discussed in [1].
- Forwarding of IPv4 packets is based on routes learned through running
- IPv4-specific routing protocols. Similarly, forwarding of IPv6
- packets (including IPv6-packets with IPv4-compatible addresses) is
- based on routes learned through running IPv6-specific routing
- protocols. This implies that separate instances of routing protocols
- are used for IPv4 and for IPv6 (although note that this could consist
- of two instances of OSPF and/or two instances of RIP, since both OSPF
- and RIP are capable of supporting both IPv4 and IPv6 routing).
-
- A minor enhancement would be to use an single instance of an
- integrated routing protocol to support routing for both IPv4 and
- IPv6. At the time that this is written there is no protocol which
- has yet been enhanced to support this. This minor enhancement does
- not change the basic dual-IP-layer nature of the transition.
-
- For initial testing of IPv6 with IPv4-compatible addresses, it may be
- useful to allow forwarding of IPv6 packets without running any IPv6-
- compatible routing protocol. In this case, a dual (IPv4 and IPv6)
- router could run routing protocols for IPv4 only. It then forwards
- IPv4 packets based on routes learned from IPv4 routing protocols.
- Also, it forwards IPv6 packets with an IPv4-compatible destination
- address based on the route for the associated IPv4 address. There are
- a couple of drawbacks with this approach: (i) It does not
- specifically allow for routing of IPv6 packets via IPv6-capable
- routers while avoiding and routing around IPv4-only routers; (ii) It
- does not produce routes for "non-compatible" IPv6 addresses. With
- this method the routing protocol does not tell the router whether
- neighboring routers are IPv6-compatible. However, neighbor discovery
- may be used to determine this. Then if an IPv6 packet needs to be
- forwarded to an IPv4-only router it can be encapsulated to the
- destination host.
-
- 3.2 Manually Configured Static Tunnels
-
- Tunneling techniques are already widely deployed for bridging non-IP
- network layer protocols (e.g. AppleTalk, CLNP, IPX) over IPv4 routed
- infrastructure. IPv4 tunneling is an encapsulation of arbitrary
- packets inside IPv4 datagrams that are forwarded over IPv4
- infrastructure between tunnel endpoints. For a tunneled protocol, a
- tunnel appears as a single-hop link (i.e. routers that establish a
-
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- tunnel over a network layer infrastructure can inter-operate over the
- tunnel as if it were a one-hop, point-to-point link). Once a tunnel
- is established, routers at the tunnel endpoints can establish routing
- adjacencies and exchange routing information. Describing the
- protocols for performing encapsulation is outside the scope of this
- paper (see [1]). Static point-to-point tunnels may also be
- established between a host and a router, or between two hosts. Again,
- each manually configured point-to-point tunnel is treated as if it
- was a simple point-to-point link.
-
- 3.3 Automatic Tunnels
-
- Automatic tunneling may be used when both the sending and destination
- nodes are connected by IPv4 routing. In order for automatic
- tunneling to work, both nodes must be assigned IPv4-compatible IPv6
- addresses. Automatic tunneling can be especially useful where either
- source or destination hosts (or both) do not have any adjacent IPv6-
- capable router. Note that by "adjacent router", this includes
- routers which are logically adjacent by virtue of a manually
- configured point-to-point tunnel (which is treated as if it is a
- simple point-to-point link).
-
- With automatic tunneling, the resulting IPv4 packet is forwarded by
- IPv4 routers as a normal IPv4 packet, using IPv4 routes learned from
- routing protocols. There are therefore no special issues related to
- IPv4 routing in this case. There are however routing issues relating
- to how IPv6 routing works in a manner which is compatible with
- automatic tunneling, and how tunnel endpoint addresses are selected
- during the encapsulation process. Automatic tunneling is useful from
- a source host to the destination host, from a source host to a
- router, and from a router to the destination host. Mechanisms for
- automatic tunneling from a router to another router are not currently
- defined.
-
- 3.3.1 Host to Host Automatic Tunneling
-
- If both source and destination hosts make use of IPv4-compatible IPv6
- addresses, then it is possible for automatic tunneling to be used for
- the entire path from the source host to the destination host. In this
- case, the IPv6 packet is encapsulated in an IPv4 packet by the source
- host, and is forwarded by routers as an IPv4 packet all the way to
- the destination host. This allows initial deployment of IPv6-capable
- hosts to be done prior to the update of any routers.
-
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- A source host may make use of Host to Host automatic tunneling
- provided that the following are both true:
-
- - the source address is an IPv4-compatible IPv6 address.
- - the destination address is an IPv4-compatible IPv6 address.
- - the source host does know of one or more neighboring IPv4-
- capable routers, or the source and destination are on the
- same subnet.
-
- If all of these requirements are true, then the source host may
- encapsulate the IPv6 packet in an IPv4 packet, using a source IPv4
- address which is extracted from the associated source IPv6 address,
- and using a destination IPv4 address which is extracted from the
- associated destination IPv6 address.
-
- Where host to host automatic tunneling is used, the packet is
- forwarded as a normal IPv4 packet for its entire path, and is
- decapsulated (i.e., the IPv4 header is removed) only by the
- destination host.
-
- 3.3.2 Host to Router Configured Default Tunneling
-
- In some cases "configured default" tunneling may be used to
- encapsulate the IPv6 packet for transmission from the source host to
- an IPv6-backbone. However, this requires that the source host be
- configured with an IPv4 address to use for tunneling to the backbone.
-
- Configured default tunneling is particularly useful if the source
- host does not know of any local IPv6-capable router (implying that
- the packet cannot be forwarded as a normal IPv6 packet directly over
- the link layer), and when the destination host does not have an
- IPv4-compatible IPv6 address (implying that host to host tunneling
- cannot be used).
-
- Host to router configured default tunneling may optionally also be
- used even when the host does know of a local IPv6 router. In this
- case it is a policy decision whether the host prefers to send a
- native IPv6 packet to the IPv6-capable router or prefers to send an
- encapsulated packet to the configured tunnel endpoint.
-
- Similarly host to router default configured tunneling may be used
- even when the destination address is an IPv4-compatible IPv6 address.
- In this case for example a policy decision may be made to prefer
- tunneling for part of the path and native IPv6 for part of the path,
- or alternatively to use tunneling for the entire path from source
- host to destination host.
-
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- A source host may make use of host to router configured default
- tunneling provided that ALL of the following are true:
-
- - the source address is an IPv4-compatible IPv6 address.
- - the source host does know of one or more neighboring IPv4-
- capable routers
- - the source host has been configured with an IPv4 address of
- an dual router which can serve as the tunnel endpoint.
-
- If all of these requirements are true, then the source host may
- encapsulate the IPv6 packet in an IPv4 packet, using a source IPv4
- address which is extracted from the associated source IPv6 address,
- and using a destination IPv4 address which corresponds to the
- configured address of the dual router which is serving as the tunnel
- endpoint.
-
- When host to router configured default tunneling is used, the packet
- is forwarded as a normal IPv4 packet from the source host to the dual
- router serving as tunnel endpoint, is decapsulated by the dual
- router, and is then forwarded as a normal IPv6 packet by the tunnel
- endpoint.
-
- 3.3.2.1 Routing to the Endpoint for the Configured Default Tunnel
-
- The dual router which is serving as the end point of the host to
- router configured default tunnel must advertise reachability into
- IPv4 routing sufficient to cause the encapsulated packet to be
- forwarded to it.
-
- The simplest approach is for a single IPv4 address to be assigned for
- use as a tunnel endpoint. One or more dual routers, which have
- connectivity to the IPv6 backbone and which are capable of serving as
- tunnel endpoint, advertise a host route to this address into IPv4
- routing in the IPv4-only region. Each dual host in the associated
- IPv4-only region is configured with the address of this tunnel
- endpoint and selects a route to this address for forwarding
- encapsulated packet to a tunnel end point (for example, the nearest
- tunnel end point, based on whatever metric(s) the local routing
- protocol is using).
-
- Finally, in some cases there may be some reason for specific hosts to
- prefer one of several tunnel endpoints, while allowing all potential
- tunnel endpoints to serve as backups in case the preferred endpoint
- is not reachable. In this case, each dual router with IPv6 backbone
- connectivity which is serving as potential tunnel endpoint is given a
- unique IPv4 address taken from a single IPv4 address block (where the
- IPv4 address block is assigned either to the organization
- administering the IPv4-only region, or to the organization
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- administering the local part of the IPv6 backbone). In the likely
- case that there are much less than 250 such dual routers serving as
- tunnel endpoints, we suggest using multiple IPv4 addresses selected
- from a single 24-bit IPv4 address prefix for this purpose. Each dual
- router then advertises two routes into the IPv4 region: A host route
- corresponding to the tunnel endpoint address specifically assigned to
- it, and also a standard (prefix) route to the associated IPv4 address
- block. Each dual host in the IPv4-only region is configured with a
- tunnel endpoint address which corresponds to the preferred tunnel
- endpoint for it to use. If the associated dual router is operating,
- then the packet will be delivered to it based upon the host route
- that it is advertising into the IPv4-only region. However, if the
- associated dual router is down, but some other dual router serving as
- a potential tunnel endpoint is operating, then the packet will be
- delivered to the nearest operating tunnel endpoint.
-
- 3.3.3 Router to Host Automatic Tunneling
-
- In some cases the source host may have direct connectivity to one or
- more IPv6-capable routers, but the destination host might not have
- direct connectivity to any IPv6-capable router. In this case,
- provided that the destination host has an IPv4-compatible IPv6
- address, normal IPv6 forwarding may be used for part of the packet's
- path, and router to host tunneling may be used to get the packet from
- an encapsulating dual router to the destination host.
-
- In this case, the hard part is the IPv6 routing required to deliver
- the IPv6 packet from the source host to the encapsulating router. For
- this to happen, the encapsulating router has to advertise
- reachability for the appropriate IPv4-compatible IPv6 addresses into
- the IPv6 routing region. With this approach, all IPv6 packets
- (including those with IPv4-compatible addresses) are routed using
- routes calculated from native IPv6 routing. This implies that
- encapsulating routers need to advertise into IPv6 routing specific
- route entries corresponding to any IPv4-compatible IPv6 addresses
- that belong to dual hosts which can be reached in an neighboring
- IPv4-only region. This requires manual configuration of the
- encapsulating routers to control which routes are to be injected into
- IPv6 routing protocols. Nodes in the IPv6 routing region would use
- such a route to forward IPv6 packets along the routed path toward the
- router that injected (leaked) the route, at which point packets are
- encapsulated and forwarded to the destination host using normal IPv4
- routing.
-
- Depending upon the extent of the IPv4-only and dual routing regions,
- the leaking of routes may be relatively simple or may be more
- complex. For example, consider a dual Internet backbone, connected
- via one or two dual routers to an IPv4-only stub routing domain. In
-
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- this case, it is likely that there is already one summary address
- prefix which is being advertised into the Internet backbone in order
- to summarize IPv4 reachability to the stub domain. In such a case,
- the border routers would be configured to announce the IPv4 address
- prefix into the IPv4 routing within the backbone, and also announce
- the corresponding IPv4-compatible IPv6 address prefix into IPv6
- routing within the backbone.
-
- A more difficult case involves the border between a major Internet
- backbone which is IPv4-only, and a major Internet backbone which
- supports both IPv4 and IPv6. In this case, it requires that either
- (i) the entire IPv4 routing table be fed into IPv6 routing in the
- dual routing domain (implying a doubling of the size of the routing
- tables in the dual domain); or (ii) Manual configuration is required
- to determine which of the addresses contained in the Internet routing
- table include one or more IPv6-capable systems, and only these
- addresses be advertised into IPv6 routing in the dual domain.
-
- 3.3.4 Example of How Automatic Tunnels May be Combined
-
- Clearly tunneling is useful only if communication can be achieved in
- both directions. However, different forms of tunneling may be used in
- each direction, depending upon the local environment, the form of
- address of the two hosts which are exchanging IPv6 packets, and the
- policies in use.
-
- Table 1 summarizes the form of tunneling that will result given each
- possible combination of host capabilities, and given one possible set
- of policy decisions. This table is derived directly from the
- requirements for automatic tunneling discussed above.
-
- The example in table 1 uses a specific set of policy decisions: It is
- assumed in table 1 that the source host will transmit a native IPv6
- where possible in preference over encapsulation. It is also assumed
- that where tunneling is needed, host to host tunneling will be
- preferred over host to router tunneling. Other combinations are
- therefore possible if other policies are used.
-
- Due to a specific policy choice, the default sending rules in [1] may
- not be followed.
-
- Note that IPv6-capable hosts which do not have any local IPv6 router
- must be given an IPv4-compatible v6 address in order to make use of
- their IPv6 capabilities. Thus, there are no entries for IPv6-capable
- hosts which have an incompatible IPv6 address and which also do not
- have any connectivity to any local IPv6 router. In fact, such hosts
- could communicate with other IPv6 hosts on the same local network
- without the use of a router. However, since this document focuses on
-
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- routing and router implications of IPv6 transition, direct
- communication between two hosts on the same local network without any
- intervening router is outside the scope of this document.
-
- Also, table 1 does not consider manually configured point-to-point
- tunnels. Such tunnels are treated as if they were normal point-to-
- point links. Thus any two IPv6-capable devices which have a manually
- configured tunnel between them may be considered to be directly
- connected.
-
- -----------------+------------------+--------------------------
- Host A | Host B | Result
- -----------------+------------------+--------------------------
- v4-compat. addr. | v4-compat. addr. | host to host tunneling
- no local v6 rtr. | no local v6 rtr. | in both directions
- -----------------+------------------+--------------------------
- v4-compat. addr. | v4-compat. addr. | A->B: host to host tunnel
- no local v6 rtr. | local v6 rtr. | B->A: v6 forwarding plus
- | | rtr->host tunnel
- -----------------+------------------+--------------------------
- v4-compat. addr. | incompat. addr. | A->B: host to rtr tunnel
- no local v6 rtr. | local v6 rtr. | plus v6 forwarding
- | | B->A: v6 forwarding plus
- | | rtr to host tunnel
- -----------------+------------------+--------------------------
- v4-compat. addr. | v4-compat. addr. | end to end native v6
- local v6 rtr. | local v6 rtr. | in both directions
- -----------------+------------------+--------------------------
- v4-compat. addr. | incompat. addr. | end to end native v6
- local v6 rtr. | local v6 rtr. | in both directions
- -----------------+------------------+--------------------------
- incompat. addr. | incompat. addr. | end to end native v6
- local v6 rtr. | local v6 rtr. | in both directions
- -----------------+------------------+--------------------------
-
- Table 1: Summary of Automatic Tunneling Combinations
-
- 3.3.5 Example
-
- Figure 2 illustrates an example network with two regions A and B.
- Region A is dual, meaning that the routers within region A are
- capable of forwarding both IPv4 and IPv6. Region B is IPv4-only,
- implying that the routers within region B are capable of routing only
- IPv4. The illustrated routers R1 through R4 are dual. The illustrated
- routers r5 through r9 are IPv4-only. Also assume that hosts H3
- through H8 are dual. Thus H7 and H8 have been upgraded to be IPv6-
- capable, even though they exist in a region in which the routers are
- not IPv6-capable. However, host h1 and h2 are IPv4-only.
-
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- ......................... .......................
- . . . .
- . h1 . . |-h2 .
- . | . . | .
- . H3---R1--------R2---------------r5----r9----+ .
- . | | . . | |-H7 .
- . | | . . | .
- . | | . . | .
- . H4---R3--------R4---------------r6----r8-----H8 .
- . . . .
- ......................... .......................
- Region A (Dual Routers) Region B (IPv4-only Rtrs)
-
- Figure 2: Example of Automatic Tunneling
-
- Consider a packet from h1 to H8. In this case, since h1 is IPv4-only,
- it will send an IPv4 packet. This packet will traverse regions A and
- B as a normal IPv4 packet for the entire path. Routing will take
- place using normal IPv4 routing methods, with no change from the
- operation of the current IPv4 Internet (modulo normal advances in the
- operation of IPv4, of course). Similarly, consider a return packet
- from H8 to h1. Here again H8 will transmit an IPv4 packet, which will
- be forwarded as a normal IPv4 packet for the entire path.
-
- Consider a packet from H3 to H8. In this case, since H8 is in an
- IPv4-only routing domain, we can assume that H8 uses an IPv4-
- compatible IPv6 address. Since both source and destination are IPv6-
- capable, H3 may transmit an IPv6 packet destined to H8. The packet
- will be forwarded as far as R2 (or R4) as an IPv6 packet.
-
- Router R2 (or R4) will then encapsulate the full IPv6 packet in an
- IPv4 header for delivery to H8. In this case it is necessary for
- routing of IPv6 within region A to be capable of delivering this
- packet correctly to R2 (or R4). As explained in section 3.3, routers
- R2 and R4 may inject routes to IPv4-compatible IPv6 addresses into
- the IPv6 routing used within region A corresponding to the routes
- which are available via IPv4 routing within region B.
-
- Consider a return packet from H8 to H3. Again, since both source and
- destination are IPv6-capable, a IPv6 packet may be transmitted by H8.
- However, since H8 does not have any direct connectivity to an IPv6-
- capable router, H8 must make use of an automatic tunnel. Which form
- of automatic tunnel will be used depends upon the type of address
- assigned to H3.
-
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- If H3 is assigned an IPv4-compatible address, then the requirements
- specified in section 3.3.1 will all be satisfied. In this case host
- H8 may encapsulate the full IPv6 packet in an IPv4 header using a
- source IPv4 address extracted from the IPv6 address of H8, and using
- a destination IPv4 address extracted from the IPv6 address of H3.
-
- If H3 has an IPv6-only address, then it is not possible for H8 to
- extract an IPv4 address to use as the destination tunnel address from
- the IPv6 address of H3. In this case H8 must use host to router
- tunneling, as specified in section 3.3.2. In this case one or both of
- R2 and R4 must have been configured with a tunnel endpoint IPv4
- address (R2 and R4 may use either the same address or different
- addresses for this purpose). R2 and/or R4 therefore advertise
- reachability to the tunnel endpoint address to r5 and r6
- (respectively), which advertise this reachability information into
- region B. Also, H8 must have been configured to know which tunnel
- endpoint address to use for host to router tunneling. This will
- result in the IPv6 packet, encapsulated in an IPv4 header, to be
- transmitted as far as the border router R2 or R4. The border router
- will then strip off the IPv4 header, and forward the remaining IPv6
- packet as a normal IPv6 packet using the normal IPv6 routing used in
- region A.
-
- 4. SECURITY CONSIDERATIONS
-
- Use of tunneling may violate firewalls of underlying routing
- infrastructure.
-
- No other security issues are discussed in this paper.
-
- 5. REFERENCES
-
- [1] Gilligan, B. and E. Nordmark. Transition Mechanisms for IPv6
- Hosts and Routers, Sun Microsystems, RFC 1933, April 1996.
-
-
- 6. AUTHORS' ADDRESSES
-
- Ross Callon
- Cascade Communications Co.
- 5 Carlisle Road
- Westford, MA 01886
- email: rcallon@casc.com
-
-
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- Dimitry Haskin
- Bay Networks, Inc.
- 2 Federal Street
- Billerica, MA 01821
- email: dhaskin@baynetworks.com
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- Callon & Haskin Informational [Page 13]
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