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rfc:rfc1526

Network Working Group D. Piscitello Request for Comments: 1526 Bellcore Category: Informational September 1993

        Assignment of System Identifiers for TUBA/CLNP Hosts

Status of this Memo

 This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does
 not specify an Internet standard.  Distribution of this memo is
 unlimited.

Abstract

 This document describes conventions whereby the system identifier
 portion of an RFC 1237 style NSAP address may be guaranteed
 uniqueness within a routing domain for the purpose of
 autoconfiguration in TUBA/CLNP internets. The mechanism is extensible
 and can provide a basis for assigning system identifiers in a
 globally unique fashion.

Introduction

 This memo specifies methods for assigning a 6 octet system identifier
 portion of the OSI NSAP address formats described in "Guidelines for
 OSI NSAP Allocation in the Internet" [1], in a fashion that ensures
 that the ID is unique within a routing domain. It also recommends
 methods for assigning system identifiers having lengths other than 6
 octets. The 6 octet system identifiers recommended in this RFC are
 assigned from 2 globally administered spaces (IEEE 802 or "Ethernet",
 and IP numbers, administered by the Internet Assigned Numbers
 Authority, IANA).
 At this time, the primary purpose for assuring uniqueness of system
 identifiers is to aid in autoconfiguration of NSAP addresses in
 TUBA/CLNP internets [2]. The guidelines in this paper also establish
 an initial framework within which globally unique system identifiers,
 also called endpoint identifiers, may be assigned.

Acknowledgments

 Many thanks to Radia Perlman, Allison Mankin, and Ross Callon of for
 their insights and assistance. Thanks also to the Ethernet connector
 to my MAC, which conveniently and quite inobtrusively fell out,
 enabling me to get an entire day's worth of work done without email
 interruptions.

Piscitello [Page 1] RFC 1526 System Identifiers for TUBA September 1993

1. Background

 The general format of OSI network service access point (NSAP)
 addresses is illustrated in Figure 1.
        _______________________________________________
        |____IDP_____|_______________DSP______________|
        |__AFI_|_IDI_|_____HO-DSP______|___ID___|_SEL_|
              IDP     Initial Domain Part
              AFI     Authority and Format Identifier
              IDI     Initial Domain Identifier
              DSP     Domain Specific Part
              HO-DSP  High-order DSP
              ID      System Identifier
              SEL     NSAP Selector
              Figure 1: OSI NSAP Address Structure.
 The recommended encoding and allocation of NSAP addresses in the
 Internet is specified in RFC 1237. RFC 1237 makes the following
 statements regarding the system identifier (ID) field of the NSAPA:
1.  the ID field may be from one to eight octets in length
2.  the ID must have a single known length in any particular
    routing domain
3.  the ID field must be unique within an area for ESs and
    level 1 ISs, and unique within the routing domain for level
    2 ISs.
4.  the ID field is assumed to be flat
 RFC 1237 further indicates that, within a routing domain that
 conforms to the OSI intradomain routing protocol [3] the lower-order
 octets of the NSAP should be structured as the ID and SEL fields
 shown in Figure 1 to take full advantage of intradomain IS-IS
 routing. (End systems with addresses which do not conform may require
 additional manual configuration and be subject to inferior routing
 performance.)
 Both GOSIP Version 2 (under DFI-80h, see Figure 2a) and ANSI DCC NSAP
 addressing (Figure 2b) define a common DSP structure in which the
 system identifier is assumed to be a fixed length of 6 octets.

Piscitello [Page 2] RFC 1526 System Identifiers for TUBA September 1993

             _______________
             |<--__IDP_-->_|___________________________________
             |AFI_|__IDI___|___________<--_DSP_-->____________|
             |_47_|__0005__|DFI_|AA_|Rsvd_|_RD_|Area_|ID_|Sel_|
      octets |_1__|___2____|_1__|_3_|__2__|_2__|_2___|_6_|_1__|
                  Figure 2 (a): GOSIP Version 2 NSAP structure.
             ______________
             |<--_IDP_-->_|_____________________________________
             |AFI_|__IDI__|____________<--_DSP_-->_____________|
             |_39_|__840__|DFI_|_ORG_|Rsvd_|RD_|Area_|_ID_|Sel_|
      octets |_1__|___2___|_1__|__3__|_2___|_2_|__2__|_6__|_1__|
                   IDP   Initial Domain Part
                   AFI   Authority and Format Identifier
                   IDI   Initial Domain Identifier
                   DSP   Domain Specific Part
                   DFI   DSP Format Identifier
                   ORG   Organization Name (numeric form)
                   Rsvd  Reserved
                   RD    Routing Domain Identifier
                   Area  Area Identifier
                   ID    System Identifier
                   SEL   NSAP Selector
               Figure 2(b): ANSI NSAP address format for DCC=840

2. Autoconfiguration

 There are provisions in OSI for the autoconfiguration of area
 addresses. OSI end systems may learn their area addresses
 automatically by observing area address identified in the IS-Hello
 packets transmitted by routers using the ISO 9542 End System to
 Intermediate System Routing Protocol, and may then insert their own
 system identifier. (In particular, RFC 1237 explains that when the ID
 portion of the address is assigned using IEEE style 48-bit
 identifiers, an end system can reconfigure its entire NSAP address
 automatically without the need for manual intervention.) End systems
 that have not been pre-configured with an NSAPA may also request an
 address from an intermediate system their area using [5].

2.1 Autoconfiguration and 48-bit addresses

 There is a general misassumption that the 6-octet system identifier
 must be a 48-bit IEEE assigned (ethernet) address.  Generally
 speaking, autoconfiguration does not rely on the use of a 48-bit
 ethernet style address; any system identifier that is globally

Piscitello [Page 3] RFC 1526 System Identifiers for TUBA September 1993

 administered and is unique will do. The use of 48-bit/6 octet system
 identifiers is "convenient...because it is the same length as an 802
 address", but more importantly, choice of a single, uniform ID length
 allows for "efficient packet forwarding", since routers won't have to
 make on the fly decisions about ID length (see [6], pages 156-157).
 Still, it is not a requirement that system identifiers be 6 octets to
 operate the the IS-IS protocol, and IS-IS allows for the use of IDs
 with lengths from 1 to 8 octets.

3. System Identifiers for TUBA/CLNP

 Autoconfiguration is a desirable feature for TUBA/CLNP, and is viewed
 by some as "essential if a network is to scale to a truly large size"
 [6].
 For this purpose, and to accommodate communities who do not wish to
 use ethernet style addresses, a generalized format that satisfies the
 following criteria is desired:
 o the format is compatible with installed end systems
   complying to RFC 1237
 o the format accommodates 6 octet, globally unique system
   identifiers that do not come from the ethernet address space
 o the format accommodates globally unique system identifiers
   having lengths other than 6 octets
 The format and encoding of a globally unique system identifier that
 meets these requirements is illustrated in Figure 3:
    Octet 1     Octet 2     Octet 3 ...     Octet LLL-1  Octet LLLL
 +-----------+-----------+-----------+- ...-+-----------+-----------+
 | xxxx TTGM | xxxx xxxx | xxxx xxxx |      | xxxx xxxx | xxxx xxxx |
 +-----------+-----------+-----------+- ...-+-----------+-----------+
                 Figure 3. General format of the system identifier

3.1 IEEE 802 Form of System Identifier

 The format is compatible with globally assigned IEEE 802 addresses,
 since it carefully preserves the semantics of the global/local and
 group/individual bits.  Octet 1 identifies 2 qualifier bits, G and M,
 and a subtype (TT) field whose semantics are associated with the
 qualifier bits.  When a globally assigned IEEE 802 address is used as
 a system identifier, the qualifier bit M, representing the
 multicast/unicast bit, must always be set to zero to denote a unicast
 address. The qualifier bit G may be either 0 or 1, depending on

Piscitello [Page 4] RFC 1526 System Identifiers for TUBA September 1993

 whether the individual address is globally or locally assigned.  In
 these circumstances, the subtype bits are "don't care", and the
 system identifier shall be interpreted as a 48-bit, globally unique
 identifier assigned from the IEEE 802 committee (an ethernet
 address).  The remaining bits in octet 1, together with octets 2 and
 3 are the vendor code or OUI (organizationally unique identifier), as
 illustrated in Figure 4.  The ID is encoded in IEEE 802 canonical
 form (low order bit of low order hex digit of leftmost octet is the
 first bit transmitted).
 Octet 1     Octet 2     Octet 3     Octet 4     Octet 5   Octet 6

+———–+———–+———–+———–+———–+———–+

VVVV VV00 VVVV VVVV VVVV VVVV SSSS SSSS SSSS SSSS SSSS SSSS

+———–+———–+———–+———–+———–+———–+

————vendor code ———–——–station code—————
              Figure 4. IEEE 802 form of system identifier

4. Embedded IP Address as System Identifier

 To distinguish 48-bit IEEE 802 addresses used as system identifiers
 from other forms of globally admininistered system identifiers, the
 qualifer bit M shall be set to 1. The correct interpretation of the M
 bit set to 1 should be, "this can't be an IEEE 802 multicast address,
 since use of multicast addresses is by convention illegal, so it must
 be some other form of system identifier". The subtype (TT) bits
 illustrated in Figure 3 thus become relevant.
 When the subtype bits (TT) are set to a value of 0, the system
 identifier contains an embedded IP address. The remainder of the 48-
 bit system identifier is encoded as follows. The remaining nibble in
 octet 1 shall be set to zero.  Octet 2 is reserved and shall be set
 to a pre-assigned value (see Figure 5).  Octets 3 through 6 shall
 contain a valid IP address, assigned by IANA.  Each octet of the IP
 address is encoded in binary, in internet canonical form, i.e., the
 leftmost bit of the network number first.
 Octet 1     Octet 2     Octet 3     Octet 4     Octet 5   Octet 6

+———–+———–+———–+———–+———–+———–+

0000 0001 1010 1010 aaaa aaaa bbbb bbbb cccc cccc dddd dddd

+———–+———–+———–+———–+———–+———–+

-len&Type––reserved-———IP address—————————-
              Figure 5. Embedded IP address as system identifier

Piscitello [Page 5] RFC 1526 System Identifiers for TUBA September 1993

 As an example, the host "eve.bellcore.com = 128.96.90.55" could retain
 its IP address as a system identifier in a TUBA/CLNP network. The
 encoded ID is illustrated in Figure 6.
 Octet 1     Octet 2     Octet 3     Octet 4     Octet 5   Octet 6

+———–+———–+———–+———–+———–+———–+

0000 0001 1010 1010 1000 0000 0110 0000 0101 1010 0011 0111

+———–+———–+———–+———–+———–+———–+

-len&Type––reserved-———IP address—————————-
              Figure 6. Example of IP address encoded as ID

H 2 "Other forms of System Identifiers"

 To allow for the future definition of additional 6-octet system
 identifiers, the remaining subtype values are reserved.
 It is also possible to identify system identifiers with lengths other
 than 6 octets. Communities who wish to use 8 octet identifiers (for
 example, embedded E.164 international numbers for the ISDN ERA) must
 use a GOSIP/ANSI DSP format that allows for the specification of 2
 additional octets in the ID field, perhaps at the expense of the
 "Rsvd" fields; this document recommends that a separate Domain Format
 Indicator value be assigned for such purposes; i.e., a DFI value that
 is interpreted as saying, among other things, "the system identifier
 encoded in this DSP is 64-bits/8 octets. The resulting ANSI/GOSIP DSP
 formats under such circumstances are illustrated in Figure 7:

Piscitello [Page 6] RFC 1526 System Identifiers for TUBA September 1993

             ______________
             |<--_IDP_-->_|______________________________
             |AFI_|__IDI__|____________<--_DSP_-->_______|
             |_39_|__840__|DFI_|_ORG_|RD_|Area_|_ID_|Sel_|
      octets |_1__|___2___|_1__|__3__|_2_|__2__|_8__|_1__|
      Figure 7a: ANSI NSAP address format for DCC=840, DFI=foo
             _______________
             |<--__IDP_-->_|___________________________________
             |AFI_|__IDI___|___________<--_DSP_-->____________|
             |_47_|__0005__|DFI_|AA_|_RD_|Area_|ID_|Sel_|
      octets |_1__|___2____|_1__|_3_|_2__|_2___|_8_|_1__|
                    IDP   Initial Domain Part
                    AFI   Authority and Format Identifier
                    IDI   Initial Domain Identifier
                    DSP   Domain Specific Part
                    DFI   DSP Format Identifier
                    AA    Administrative Authority
                    RD    Routing Domain Identifier
                    Area  Area Identifier
                    ID    System Identifier
                    SEL   NSAP Selector
     Figure 7b: GOSIP Version 2 NSAP structure, DFI=bar
 Similar address engineering can be applied for those communities who
 wish to have shorter system identifiers; have another DFI assigned,
 and expand the reserved field.

5. Conclusions

 This proposal should debunk the "if it's 48-bits, it's gotta be an
 ethernet address" myth. It demonstrates how IP addresses may be
 encoded within the 48-bit system identifier field in a compatible
 fashion with IEEE 802 addresses, and offers guidelines for those who
 wish to use system identifiers other than those enumerated here.

Piscitello [Page 7] RFC 1526 System Identifiers for TUBA September 1993

6. References

 [1] Callon, R., Gardner, E., and R. Colella, "Guidelines for OSI NSAP
     Allocation in the Internet", RFC 1237, NIST, Mitre, DEC, June
     1991.
 [2] Callon, R., "TCP and UDP with Bigger Addresses (TUBA), A Simple
     Proposal for Internet Addressing and Routing", RFC 1347, DEC,
     June 1992.
 [3] ISO, "Intradomain routing protocol for use in conjunction with
     ISO 8473, Protocol for providing the OSI connectionless network
     service", ISO 10589.
 [4] ISO, End-system and intermediate-system routing protocol for use
     in conjunction with ISO 8473, Protocol for providing the OSI
     connectionless network service, ISO 9542.
 [5] ISO, "End-system and intermediate-system routing protocol for use
     in conjunction with ISO 8473, Protocol for providing the OSI
     connectionless network service.  Amendment 1: Dynamic Discovery
     of OSI NSAP Addresses End Systems", ISO 9542/DAM1.
 [6] Perlman, R., "Interconnections: Bridges and Routers", Addison-
     Wesley Publishers, Reading, MA. 1992.

7. Security Considerations

 Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

8. Author's Address

 David M. Piscitello
 Bell Communications Research
 NVC 1C322
 331 Newman Springs Road
 Red Bank, NJ 07701
 EMail: dave@mail.bellcore.com

Piscitello [Page 8]

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