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rfc:rfc2207

Network Working Group L. Berger Request for Comments: 2207 FORE Systems Category: Standards Track T. O'Malley

                                                              BBN
                                                   September 1997
                RSVP Extensions for IPSEC Data Flows

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 presents extensions to Version 1 of RSVP.  These
 extensions permit support of individual data flows using RFC 1826, IP
 Authentication Header (AH) or RFC 1827, IP Encapsulating Security
 Payload (ESP).  RSVP Version 1 as currently specified can support the
 IPSEC protocols, but only on a per address, per protocol basis not on
 a per flow basis.  The presented extensions can be used with both
 IPv4 and IPv6.

Berger & O'Malley Standards Track [Page 1] RFC 2207 RSVP Extensions for IPSEC September 1997

Table of Contents

 1   Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
 2   Overview of Extensions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
 3   Object Definition. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
     3.1  SESSION Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
     3.2  FILTER_SPEC Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
     3.3  SENDER_TEMPLATE Class . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
 4   Processing Rules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
     4.1  Required Changes. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
     4.2  Merging Flowspecs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
     4.2.1  FF and SE Styles. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
     4.2.2  WF Styles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
 5   IANA Considerations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
 6   Security Considerations. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
 7   References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10
 8   Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . .  . . . . . . . . .10
 9   Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10
 A   Options Considered . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11
     A.1  UDP Encapsulation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11
     A.2  FlowID Header Encapsulation . . . . . . . . . . . . .12
     A.3  IPSEC Protocol Modification . . . . . . . . . . . . .12
     A.4  AH Transparency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13

1 Introduction

 Recently published Standards Track RFCs specify protocol mechanisms
 to provide IP level security.  These IP Security, or IPSEC, protocols
 support packet level authentication, [RFC 1826], and integrity and
 confidentiality [RFC 1827].  A number of interoperable
 implementations already exist and several vendors have announced
 commercial products that will use these mechanisms.
 The IPSEC protocols provide service by adding a new header between a
 packet's IP header and the transport (e.g. UDP) protocol header.  The
 two security headers are the Authentication Header (AH), for
 authentication, and the Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP), for
 integrity and confidentiality.
 RSVP is being developed as a resource reservation (dynamic QoS setup)
 protocol.  RSVP as currently specified [RFC 2205] is tailored towards
 IP packets carrying protocols that have TCP or UDP-like ports.
 Protocols that do not have such UDP/TCP-like ports, such as the IPSEC
 protocols, can be supported, but only with limitations.
 Specifically, for flows of IPSEC data packets, flow definition can
 only be done on per IP address, per protocol basis.

Berger & O'Malley Standards Track [Page 2] RFC 2207 RSVP Extensions for IPSEC September 1997

 This memo proposes extensions to RSVP so that data flows containing
 IPSEC protocols can be controlled at a granularity similar to what is
 already specified for UDP and TCP.  The proposed extensions can be
 used with both IPv4 and IPv6.  Section 2 of this memo will provide an
 overview of extensions.  Section 3 contains a description of extended
 protocol mechanisms.  Section 4 presents extended protocol processing
 rules.  Section 5 defines the additional RSVP data objects.

2 Overview of Extensions

 The basic notion is to extend RSVP to use the IPSEC Security
 Parameter Index, or SPI, in place of the UDP/TCP-like ports.  This
 will require a new FILTER_SPEC object, which will contain the IPSEC
 SPI, and a new SESSION object.
 While SPIs are allocated based on destination address, they will
 typically be associated with a particular sender.  As a result, two
 senders to the same unicast destination will usually have different
 SPIs.  In order to support the control of multiple independent flows
 between source and destination IP addresses, the SPI will be included
 as part of the FILTER_SPEC.  When using WF, however, all flows to the
 same IP destination address using the same IP protocol ID will share
 the same reservation.  (This limitation exists because the IPSEC
 transport headers do not contain a destination demultiplexing value
 like the UDP/TCP destination port.)
 Although the RESV message format will not change, RESV processing
 will require modification.  Processing of the new IPSEC FILTER_SPEC
 will depend on the use of the new SESSION object and on the protocol
 ID contained in the session definition.  When the new FILTER_SPEC
 object is used, the complete four bytes of the SPI will need to be
 extracted from the FILTER_SPEC for use by the packet classifier.  The
 location of the SPI in the transport header of the IPSEC packets is
 dependent on the protocol ID field.
 The extension will also require a change to PATH processing,
 specifically in the usage of the port field in a session definition.
 An RSVP session is defined by the triple: (DestAddress, protocol ID,
 DstPort).  [RFC 2205] includes the definition of one type of SESSION
 object, it contains UDP/TCP destination ports, specifically "a 16-bit
 quantity carried at the octet offset +2 in the transport header" or
 zero for protocols that lack such a field.  The IPSEC protocols do

Berger & O'Malley Standards Track [Page 3] RFC 2207 RSVP Extensions for IPSEC September 1997

 not contain such a field, but there remains a requirement for
 demultiplexing sessions beyond the IP destination address.  In order
 to satisfy this requirement, a virtual destination port, or vDstPort,
 is introduced.  The vDstPort value will be carried in the new SESSION
 object but not in the IPSEC transport header.  The vDstPort allows
 for the differentiation of multiple IPSEC sessions destined to the
 same IP address.  See Section 5 for a discussion of vDstPort ranges.
 In PATH messages, the SENDER_TEMPLATE for IPSEC flows will have the
 same format as the modified FILTER_SPEC.  But, a new SESSION object
 will be used to unambiguously distinguish the use of a virtual
 destination port.
 Traffic will be mapped (classified) to reservations based on SPIs in
 FILTER_SPECs.  This, of course, means that when WF is used all flows
 to the same IP destination address and with the same IP protocol ID
 will share the same reservation.
 The advantages to the described approach are that no changes to
 RFC1826 and 1827 are required and that there is no additional per
 data packet overhead.  Appendix A contains a discussion of the
 advantages of this approach compared to several other alternatives.
 This approach does not take advantage of the IPv6 Flow Label field,
 so greater efficiency may be possible for IPv6 flows.  The details of
 IPv6 Flow Label usage is left for the future.

3 Object Definition

 The FILTER_SPEC and SENDER_TEMPLATE used with IPSEC protocols will
 contain a four byte field that will be used to carry the SPI.  Rather
 than label the modified field with an IPSEC specific label, SPI, the
 label "Generalized Port Identifier", or GPI, will be so that these
 object may be reused for non-IPSEC uses in the future.  The name for
 these objects are the IPv4/GPI FILTER_SPEC, IPv6/GPI FILTER_SPEC,
 IPv4/GPI SENDER_TEMPLATE, and IPv6/GPI SENDER_TEMPLATE.  Similarly,
 the new SESSION objects will be the IPv4/GPI SESSION and the IPv6/GPI
 SESSION.  When referring to the new objects, IP version will not be
 included unless a specific distinction between IPv4 and IPv6 is being
 made.

Berger & O'Malley Standards Track [Page 4] RFC 2207 RSVP Extensions for IPSEC September 1997

3.1 SESSION Class

      SESSION Class = 1.
      o    IPv4/GPI SESSION object: Class = 1, C-Type = 3
      +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
      |               IPv4 DestAddress (4 bytes)              |
      +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
      | Protocol ID |     Flags   |         vDstPort          |
      +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
      o    IPv6/GPI SESSION object:  Class = 1, C-Type = 4
      +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
      |                                                       |
      +                                                       +
      |                                                       |
      +               IPv6 DestAddress (16 bytes)             +
      |                                                       |
      +                                                       +
      |                                                       |
      +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
      | Protocol ID |     Flags   |         vDstPort          |
      +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+

3.2 FILTER_SPEC Class

      FILTER_SPEC class = 10.
      o    IPv4/GPI FILTER_SPEC object: Class = 10, C-Type = 4
      +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
      |               IPv4 SrcAddress (4 bytes)               |
      +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
      |            Generalized Port Identifier (GPI)          |
      +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+

Berger & O'Malley Standards Track [Page 5] RFC 2207 RSVP Extensions for IPSEC September 1997

      o    IPv6/GPI FILTER_SPEC object: Class = 10, C-Type = 5
      +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
      |                                                       |
      +                                                       +
      |                                                       |
      +               IPv6 SrcAddress (16 bytes)              +
      |                                                       |
      +                                                       +
      |                                                       |
      +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+
      |            Generalized Port Identifier (GPI)          |
      +-------------+-------------+-------------+-------------+

3.3 SENDER_TEMPLATE Class

      SENDER_TEMPLATE class = 11.
      o    IPv4/GPI SENDER_TEMPLATE object: Class = 11, C-Type = 4
               Definition same as IPv4/GPI FILTER_SPEC object.
      o    IPv6/GPI SENDER_TEMPLATE object: Class = 11, C-Type = 5
               Definition same as IPv6/GPI FILTER_SPEC object.

4 Processing Rules

 This section presents additions to the Processing Rules presented in
 [RFC 2209].  These additions are required in order to properly
 process the GPI SESSION and FILTER_SPEC objects.  Values for
 referenced error codes can be found in [RFC 2205].  As in with the
 other RSVP documents, values for internally reported (API) errors are
 not defined.

4.1 Required Changes

 Both RESV and PATH processing will need to be changed to support the
 new objects.  The changes ensure consistency and extend port
 processing.
 The following PATH message processing changes are required:
   o  When a session is defined using the GPI SESSION object, only
      the GPI SENDER_TEMPLATE may be used.  When this condition is
      violated, end-stations should report a "Conflicting C-Type" API
      error to the application.

Berger & O'Malley Standards Track [Page 6] RFC 2207 RSVP Extensions for IPSEC September 1997

   o  For PATH messages that contain the GPI SESSION object,
      end-stations must verify that the protocol ID corresponds to a
      protocol known to use the GPI SESSION object.  Values 51 (AH)
      or 50 (ESP) must be supported by implementations supporting
      the described IPSEC extensions.  If an unknown protocol ID is
      used, then the API should report an "API Error" to the
      application.
   o  For such messages, the vDstPort value should be recorded.
      The vDstPort value forms part of the recorded state and is used
      to match Resv messages, but it is not passed to traffic control.
      Non-zero values of vDstPort are required.  This requirement
      ensures that a non-GPI SESSION object will never merge with a
      GPI SESSION object.  Violation of this condition causes an
      "Invalid Destination Port" API error.
   The changes to RESV message processing are:
   o  When a RESV message contains a GPI FILTER_SPEC, the session
      must be defined using the GPI SESSION object. Otherwise, this is
      a message formatting error.
   o  The GPI contained in the FILTER_SPEC must match the GPI
      contained in the SENDER_TEMPLATE.  Otherwise, a "No sender
      information for this Resv message" error  is generated.
   o  When the GPI FILTER_SPEC is used, each node must create
      a data classifier for the flow described by the quadruple:
      (DestAddress, protocol ID, SrcAddress, GPI). The data classifier
      will need to look for the four byte GPI at transport header
      offset +4 for AH, and at transport header offset +0 for ESP.

4.2 Merging Flowspecs

 When using this extension for IPSEC data flows, RSVP sessions are
 defined by the triple: (DestAddress, protocol Id, vDstPort).
 Similarly, a sender is defined by the tuple: (SrcAddress, GPI), where
 the GPI field will be a four byte representation of a generalized
 source port.  These extensions have some ramifications depending upon
 the reservation style.

4.2.1 FF and SE Styles

 In the FF and SE Styles, the FILTER_SPEC object contains the
 (SrcAddress, GPI) pair.  This allows the receiver to uniquely
 identify senders based on both elements of the pair.  When merging
 explicit sender descriptors, the senders may only be considered
 identical when both elements are identical.

Berger & O'Malley Standards Track [Page 7] RFC 2207 RSVP Extensions for IPSEC September 1997

4.2.2 WF Styles

 These extensions provide very limited service when used with WF style
 reservations.  As described, the SENDER_TEMPLATE and FILTER_SPEC each
 contain the GPI.  In a WF style reservation, the RESV message does
 NOT contain a FILTER_SPEC (after all, it is a wildcard filter), and
 the SENDER_TEMPLATE is ignored (again, because any sender is
 allowed).  As a result, classifiers may match all packets which
 contain both the session's destination IP address and protocol ID to
 such WF reservations.
 Although a solution for this limitation is not proposed, this issue
 is not seen as significant since IPSEC applications are less likely
 to use WF style reservations.

5 IANA Considerations

 The range of possible vDstPort values is broken down into sections,
 in a fashion similar to the UDP/TCP port ranges.
           0              Illegal Value
           1 - 10         Reserved. Contact authors.
           11 - 8191      Assigned by IANA
           8192 - 65535   Dynamic
 IANA is directed to assign the well-known vDstPorts using the
 following criteria:  Anyone who asks for an assigned vDstPort must
 provide a) a Point of Contact, b) a brief description of intended
 use, and c) a short name to be associated with the assignment (e.g.
 "ftp").

6 Security Considerations

 The same considerations stated in [RFC 2205], [RFC 1826], and [RFC
 1827] apply to the extensions described in this note.  There are two
 additional issue related to these extensions.
 First, the vDstPort mechanism represents another data element about
 the IP Flow that might be available to an adversary.  Such data might
 be useful to an adversary engaging in traffic analysis by monitoring
 not only the data packets of the IP Flow but also the RSVP control
 messages associated with that Flow.  Protection against traffic
 analysis attacks is outside the scope of this mechanism.  One
 possible approach to precluding such attacks would be deployment and
 use of appropriate link-layer confidentiality mechansisms, such as
 encryption.

Berger & O'Malley Standards Track [Page 8] RFC 2207 RSVP Extensions for IPSEC September 1997

 Secondly, Changes in SPI values for a given flow will affect RSVP
 flows and reservations.  Changes will happen whenever that flow
 changes its Security Association.  Such changes will occur when a
 flow is rekeyed (i.e. to use a new key). Rekeying intervals are
 typically set based on traffic levels, key size, threat environment,
 and crypto algorithm in use.  When an SPI change occurs it will, in
 most cases, be necessary to update (send) the corresponding
 SENDER_TEMPLATEs and FILTER_SPECs.  IPSEC implementations, RSVP
 applications, and RSVP end-station implementations will need to take
 the possibility of changes of SPI into account to ensure proper
 reservation behavior.  This issue is likely to be a tolerable, since
 rekeying intervals are under the control of local administrators.
 Many, if not most, RSVP sessions will not need to deal with this
 rekeying issue.  For those applications that do need to deal with
 changes of SPIs during a session, the impact of sending new PATH and
 RESV messages will vary based on the reservation style being used.
 Builders of such applications may want to select reservation style
 based on interaction with SPI changes.
 The least impact of an SPI change will be to WF style reservations.
 For such reservations, a new SENDER_TEMPLATE will need to be sent,
 but no new RESV is required.  For SE style reservations, both a new
 SENDER_TEMPLATE and a new RESV will need to be sent.  This will
 result in changes to state, but should not affect data packet
 delivery or actual resource allocation in any way.  The FF style will
 be impacted the most.  Like with SE, both PATH and RESV messages will
 need to be sent.  But, since FF style reservations result in sender
 receiving its own resource allocation, resources will be allocated
 twice for a period of time.  Or, even worse, there won't be enough
 resources to support the new flow without first freeing the old flow.
 A way around this FF/SPI-change problem does exist.  Applications
 that want FF style reservations can use multiple SE reservations.
 Each real sender would have a separate SESSION (vDstPort) definition.
 When it came time to switch SPIs, a shared reservation could be made
 for the new SPI while the old SPI was still active.  Once the new SPI
 was in use, the old reservation could be torn down.  This is less
 than optimal, but will provide uninterrupted service for a set of
 applications.

Berger & O'Malley Standards Track [Page 9] RFC 2207 RSVP Extensions for IPSEC September 1997

7 References

   [RFC 2205] Braden, R., Ed., Zhang, L., Estrin, D., Herzog, S.,
              and S. Jamin, "Resource ReSerVation Protocol (RSVP)
              -- Version 1 Functional Specification", RFC 2205,
              September 1997.
   [RFC 2209] Braden, R., Ed., Zhang, "Resource ReSerVation
              Protocol (RSVP) -- Version 1 Message Processing
              Rules", RFC 2209, September 1997.
   [RFC 1825] Atkinson, R., "Security Architecture for the Internet
              Protocol", RFC 1825, NRL, August 1995.
   [RFC 1826] Atkinson, R., "IP Authentication Header", RFC 1826, NRL,
              August 1995.
   [RFC 1827] Atkinson, R., "IP Encapsulating Security Payload", RFC
              1827, NRL, August 1995.

8 Acknowledgments

 This note includes ideas originated and reviewed by a number of
 individuals who did not participate in this note's writing.  The
 authors would like to acknowledge their contribution.  We thank Ran
 Atkinson <rja@cisco.com>, Fred Baker <fred@cisco.com>, Greg Troxel
 <gdt@bbn.com>, John Krawczyk <jkrawczyk@BayNetworks.com> for much
 appreciated input and feedback. Special appreciation goes to Bob
 Braden <braden@isi.edu> for his detailed editorial and technical
 comments.  We also thank Buz Owen, Claudio Topolcic, Andy Veitch, and
 Luis Sanchez for their help in coming up with the proposed approach.
 If any brain-damage exists in this note, it originated solely from
 the authors.

9 Authors' Addresses

 Lou Berger                           Tim O'Malley
 FORE Systems                         BBN Corporation
 6905 Rockledge Drive                 10 Moulton Street
 Suite 800                            Cambridge, MA 02138
 Bethesda, MD 20817
 Phone: 301-571-2534                  Phone: 617-873-3076
 EMail: lberger@fore.com              EMail: timo@bbn.com

Berger & O'Malley Standards Track [Page 10] RFC 2207 RSVP Extensions for IPSEC September 1997

A Options Considered

 This sections reviews other approaches that were explored in
 developing the described extensions.  They are included here to
 provide additional context into the general problem.  All listed
 options were rejected by the working group.
 Four other options were considered:
 1.  UDP Encapsulation
     Add a UDP header between the IP and the IPSEC AH or ESP
     headers.
 2.  FlowID Header Encapsulation
     Add a new type of header between the IP and the IPSEC AH or
     ESP headers.
 3.  IPSEC modification
     Modify IPSEC headers so that there are appropriate fields in
     same location as UDP and TCP ports.
 4.  AH Transparency
     Skip over the Authentication Header packet classifier
     processing.

A.1 UDP Encapsulation

 Since current SESSION and FILTER object expect UDP or TCP ports, this
 proposal says let's just give it to them.  The basic concept is to
 add a UDP port between the IP and AH/ESP headers.  The UDP ports
 would provide the granularity of control that is need to associate
 specific flows with reservations.
 Source and destination ports would be used, as normal, in RSVP
 session definition and control.  The port fields would also need to
 be used to identify the real transport level protocol (e.g. ESP)
 being used. Also since many UDP ports are assigned as well known
 ports, use of port numbers would be limited.  So, the port fields
 would need to be used to unambiguously identify 1) the next level
 protocol, 2) the RSVP session, and 3) the RSVP reservation.
 The advantages of this option is that no RSVP changes are required.
 The disadvantages is that, since the headers aren't in the expected
 location, RFC 1826 and RFC 1827 are violated.

Berger & O'Malley Standards Track [Page 11] RFC 2207 RSVP Extensions for IPSEC September 1997

A.2 FlowID Header Encapsulation

 [This option was originally proposed by Greg Troxel <gdt@bbn.com>.]
 This option is very similar to option 1, but is more generic and
 could be adopted as a standard solution.  The notion is to use UDP
 like ports for the sole purpose of flow identification.  RSVP would
 treat this new protocol exactly the same as UDP.
 The difference between this and UDP encapsulation is in destination
 host processing.  The destination host would essentially ignore port
 information and use a new field, protocol ID, to identify which
 protocol should process the packet next.  Some examples of protocol
 IDs correspond to TCP, UDP, ESP, or AH.
    The format of the FlowID Header would be:
+---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
|          Source Port          |            Dest Port          |
+---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
|  Ver  |  Len  |  Protocol ID  |            Checksum           |
+---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
     2 bytes source port                 4 bits length-32 (2)
     2 bytes dest port                   8 bits protocol ID
     4 bits version (1)                  16 bits checksum
 The advantage of this protocol is that flow identification is
 separated from all other protocol processing.  The disadvantage is
 that the addition of a header violates RFC 1826 and 1827, and also
 that applications using RSVP will need to add this extra header on
 all data packets whose transport headers do not have UDP/TCP like
 ports.

A.3 IPSEC Protocol Modification

 The basic notion of this option is to leave RSVP as currently
 specified and use the Security Association Identifier (SPI) found in
 the IPSEC headers for flow identification.  There are two issues with
 using the SPI. The first is that the SPI is located in the wrong
 location when using Authentication (AH).  The second issue is how to
 make use of the SPI.
 The first issue is easy to fix, but violates RFC 1826.  UDP and TCP
 have port assignments in the first 4 bytes of their headers, each is
 two bytes long, source comes first, then destination.  The ESP header
 has the SPI in the same location as UDP/TCP ports, the AH doesn't.

Berger & O'Malley Standards Track [Page 12] RFC 2207 RSVP Extensions for IPSEC September 1997

 The IP Authentication Header has the following syntax:
+---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
| Next Header   | Length        |           RESERVED            |
+---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
|                    Security Parameters Index                  |
+---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
|                                                               |
+     Authentication Data (variable number of 32-bit words)     |
|                                                               |
+---------------+---------------+---------------+---------------+
 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
 Simply reversing the first 4 bytes with the SPI we will have the SPI
 in the location that RSVP expects.  This would be non-standard, or
 require a major (i.e. not backward compatible) change to RSVP 1826.
 The second issue is how to make use of the SPI.  Per the current RSVP
 specification, the first two bytes of a flow's SPI will need to be
 carried in the PATH message and the second two bytes in the RESV
 message.  The biggest problem is that the SPI is normally selected by
 the receiver and is likely to be different for EACH sender.  (There
 is a special case where the same SPI is used by all senders in a
 multicast group.  But this is a special case.)  It is possible to
 have the SPI selected prior to starting the RSVPsession.  This will
 work for unicast and the special multicast case.  But using this
 approach means that setup time will usually be extended by at least 1
 round trip time.  Its not clear how to support SE and WF style
 reservations.
 The advantage of this approach is no change to RSVP.  The
 disadvantages are modification to RFC1827 and limited support of RSVP
 reservation styles.

A.4 AH Transparency

 The source of the RSVP support of IPSEC protocols problem is that the
 real transport header is not in the expected location.  With ESP
 packets, the real source and destination ports are encrypted and
 therefore useless to RSVP.  This is not the case for authentication.
 For AH, the real header just follows the Authentication Header.  So,
 it would be possible to use the real transport header for RSVP
 session definition and reservation.
 To use the transport header, all that would need to be done is for
 the flow classifier to skip over AHs before classifying packets.  No
 modification to RSVP formats or setup processing would be required.
 Applications would make reservations based on transport (i.e., UDP or

Berger & O'Malley Standards Track [Page 13] RFC 2207 RSVP Extensions for IPSEC September 1997

 TCP) ports as usual.
 The advantages of this approach are no changes to either IPSEC
 protocols or RSVP formats.  The major disadvantage is that routers
 and hosts must skip all AHs before classifying packets.  The working
 group decided that it was best to have a consistent solution for both
 AH and ESP.

Berger & O'Malley Standards Track [Page 14]

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