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rfc:rfc2004

Network Working Group C. Perkins Request for Comments: 2004 IBM Category: Standards Track October 1996

                  Minimal Encapsulation within IP

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 specifies a method by which an IP datagram may be
 encapsulated (carried as payload) within an IP datagram, with less
 overhead than "conventional" IP encapsulation that adds a second IP
 header to each encapsulated datagram.  Encapsulation is suggested as
 a means to alter the normal IP routing for datagrams, by delivering
 them to an intermediate destination that would otherwise not be
 selected by the (network part of the) IP Destination Address field in
 the original IP header.  Encapsulation may be serve a variety of
 purposes, such as delivery of a datagram to a mobile node using
 Mobile IP.

1. Introduction

 This document specifies a method by which an IP datagram may be
 encapsulated (carried as payload) within an IP datagram, with less
 overhead than "conventional" IP encapsulation [4] that adds a second
 IP header to each encapsulated datagram.  Encapsulation is suggested
 as a means to alter the normal IP routing for datagrams, by
 delivering them to an intermediate destination that would otherwise
 not be selected by the (network part of the) IP Destination Address
 field in the original IP header.  The process of encapsulation and
 decapsulation of a datagram is frequently referred to as "tunneling"
 the datagram, and the encapsulator and decapsulator are then
 considered to be the the "endpoints" of the tunnel; the encapsulator
 node is refered to as the "entry point" of the tunnel, and the
 decapsulator node is refered to as the "exit point" of the tunnel.

Perkins Standards Track [Page 1] RFC 2004 Minimal Encapsulation for IP October 1996

2. Motivation

 The Mobile IP working group has specified the use of encapsulation as
 a way to deliver packets from a mobile node's "home network" to an
 agent that can deliver datagrams locally by conventional means to the
 mobile node at its current location away from home [5].  The use of
 encapsulation may also be indicated whenever the source (or an
 intermediate router) of an IP datagram must influence the route by
 which a datagram is to be delivered to its ultimate destination.
 Other possible applications of encapsulation include multicasting,
 preferential billing, choice of routes with selected security
 attributes, and general policy routing.
 See [4] for a discussion concerning the advantages of encapsulation
 versus use of the IP loose source routing option.  Using IP headers
 to encapsulate IP datagrams requires the unnecessary duplication of
 several fields within the inner IP header; it is possible to save
 some additional space by specifying a new encapsulation mechanism
 that eliminates the duplication.  The scheme outlined here comes from
 the Mobile IP Working Group (in earlier Internet Drafts), and is
 similar to that which had been defined in [2].

3. Minimal Encapsulation

 A minimal forwarding header is defined for datagrams which are not
 fragmented prior to encapsulation.  Use of this encapsulating method
 is optional.  Minimal encapsulation MUST NOT be used when an original
 datagram is already fragmented, since there is no room in the minimal
 forwarding header to store fragmentation information.  To encapsulate
 an IP datagram using minimal encapsulation, the minimal forwarding
 header is inserted into the datagram, as follows:
   +---------------------------+       +---------------------------+
   |                           |       |                           |
   |         IP Header         |       |     Modified IP Header    |
   |                           |       |                           |
   +---------------------------+ ====> +---------------------------+
   |                           |       | Minimal Forwarding Header |
   |                           |       +---------------------------+
   |         IP Payload        |       |                           |
   |                           |       |                           |
   |                           |       |         IP Payload        |
   +---------------------------+       |                           |
                                       |                           |
                                       +---------------------------+

Perkins Standards Track [Page 2] RFC 2004 Minimal Encapsulation for IP October 1996

 The IP header of the original datagram is modified, and the minimal
 forwarding header is inserted into the datagram after the IP header,
 followed by the unmodified IP payload of the original datagram (e.g.,
 transport header and transport data).  No additional IP header is
 added to the datagram.
 In encapsulating the datagram, the original IP header [6] is modified
 as follows:
  1. The Protocol field in the IP header is replaced by protocol

number 55 for the minimal encapsulation protocol.

  1. The Destination Address field in the IP header is replaced by the

IP address of the exit point of the tunnel.

  1. If the encapsulator is not the original source of the datagram,

the Source Address field in the IP header is replaced by the IP

     address of the encapsulator.
  1. The Total Length field in the IP header is incremented by the

size of the minimal forwarding header added to the datagram.

     This incremental size is either 12 or 8 octets, depending on
     whether or not the Original Source Address Present (S) bit is set
     in the forwarding header.
  1. The Header Checksum field in the IP header is recomputed [6] or

updated to account for the changes in the IP header described

     here for encapsulation.
  Note that unlike IP-in-IP encapsulation [4], the Time to Live
  (TTL) field in the IP header is not modified during encapsulation;
  if the encapsulator is forwarding the datagram, it will decrement
  the TTL as a result of doing normal IP forwarding.  Also, since
  the original TTL remains in the IP header after encapsulation,
  hops taken by the datagram within the tunnel are visible, for
  example, to "traceroute".

Perkins Standards Track [Page 3] RFC 2004 Minimal Encapsulation for IP October 1996

 The format of the minimal forwarding header is as follows:
  0                   1                   2                   3
  0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 |   Protocol    |S|  reserved   |        Header Checksum        |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 |                 Original Destination Address                  |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 :            (if present) Original Source Address               :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
    Protocol
       Copied from the Protocol field in the original IP header.
    Original Source Address Present (S)
          0  The Original Source Address field is not present.  The
             length of the minimal tunneling header in this case is
             8 octets.
          1  The Original Source Address field is present.  The
             length of the minimal tunneling header in this case is
             12 octets.
    reserved
       Sent as zero; ignored on reception.
    Header Checksum
       The 16-bit one's complement of the one's complement sum of all
       16-bit words in the minimal forwarding header.  For purposes of
       computing the checksum, the value of the checksum field is 0.
       The IP header and IP payload (after the minimal forwarding
       header) are not included in this checksum computation.
    Original Destination Address
       Copied from the Destination Address field in the original IP
       header.
    Original Source Address
       Copied from the Source Address field in the original IP header.
       This field is present only if the Original Source Address
       Present (S) bit is set.

Perkins Standards Track [Page 4] RFC 2004 Minimal Encapsulation for IP October 1996

 When decapsulating a datagram, the fields in the minimal forwarding
 header are restored to the IP header, and the forwarding header is
 removed from the datagram.  In addition, the Total Length field in
 the IP header is decremented by the size of the minimal forwarding
 header removed from the datagram, and the Header Checksum field in
 the IP header is recomputed [6] or updated to account for the changes
 to the IP header described here for decapsulation.
 The encapsulator may use existing IP mechanisms appropriate for
 delivery of the encapsulated payload to the tunnel exit point.  In
 particular, use of IP options are allowed, and use of fragmentation
 is allowed unless the "Don't Fragment" bit is set in the IP header.
 This restriction on fragmentation is required so that nodes employing
 Path MTU Discovery [3] can obtain the information they seek.

4. Routing Failures

 The use of any encapsulation method for routing purposes brings with
 it increased susceptibility to routing loops.  To cut down the
 danger, a router should follow the same procedures outlined in [4].

5. ICMP Messages from within the Tunnel

 ICMP messages are to be handled as specified in [4], including the
 maintenance of tunnel "soft state".

6. Security Considerations

 Security considerations are not addressed in this document, but are
 generally similar to those outlined in [4].

7. Acknowledgements

 The original text for much of Section 3 was taken from the Mobile IP
 draft [1].  Thanks to David Johnson for improving consistency and
 making many other improvements to the draft.

Perkins Standards Track [Page 5] RFC 2004 Minimal Encapsulation for IP October 1996

References

 [1] Perkins, C., Editor, "IPv4 Mobility Support", Work in Progress,
     May 1995.
 [2] David B. Johnson.  Scalable and Robust Internetwork Routing
     for Mobile Hosts.  In Proceedings of the 14th International
     Conference on Distributed Computing Systems, pages 2--11, June
     1994.
 [3] Mogul, J.,  and S. Deering, "Path MTU Discovery", RFC 1191,
     November 1990.
 [4] Perkins, C., "IP Encapsulation within IP", RFC 2003,
     October 1996.
 [5] Perkins, C., Editor, "IP Mobility Support", RFC 2002,
     October 1996.
 [6] Postel, J., Editor, "Internet Protocol", STD 5, RFC 791,
     September 1981.

Author's Address

 Questions about this memo can be directed to:
 Charles Perkins
 Room H3-D34
 T. J. Watson Research Center
 IBM Corporation
 30 Saw Mill River Rd.
 Hawthorne, NY  10532
 Work:   +1-914-784-7350
 Fax:    +1-914-784-6205
 EMail: perk@watson.ibm.com
 The working group can be contacted via the current chair:
 Jim Solomon
 Motorola, Inc.
 1301 E. Algonquin Rd.
 Schaumburg, IL  60196
 Work:   +1-847-576-2753
 EMail: solomon@comm.mot.com

Perkins Standards Track [Page 6]

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