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rfc:rfc1668

Network Working Group D. Estrin Request for Comments: 1668 USC Category: Informational T. Li

                                                         Cisco Systems
                                                            Y. Rekhter
                                T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM Corp.
                                                           August 1994
               Unified Routing Requirements for IPng

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 was submitted to the IETF IPng area in response to RFC
 1550.  Publication of this document does not imply acceptance by the
 IPng area of any ideas expressed within.  Comments should be
 submitted to the big-internet@munnari.oz.au mailing list.

1. IPng Requirements

 The following list provides requirements on the IPng from the
 perspective of the Unified Routing Architecture, as describe in RFC
 1322.
 1. To provide scalable routing, IPng addressing must provide support
    for topologically significant address assignment.
 2. Since it is hard to predict how routing information will be
    aggregated, the IPng addressing structure should impose as few
    preconditions as possible on the number of levels in the hierarchy.
    Specifically, the number of levels must be allowed to be different
    at different parts in the hierarchy. Further, the levels must not
    be statically tied to particular parts (fields) in the addressing
    information.
 3. Hop-by-hop forwarding algorithm requires IPng to carry enough
    information in the Network Layer header to unambiguously determine
    a particular next hop. Unless mechanisms to compute
    context-sensitive forwarding tables and provide consistent
    forwarding are defined, the requirement assumes the presence of
    full hierarchical addresses.  Therefore, IPng packet format must
    provide efficient determination of the full hierarchical

Estrin, Li & Rekhter [Page 1] RFC 1668 Unified Routing Requirements for IPng August 1994

    destination address.
 4. Hierarchical address assignment should not imply strictly
    hierarchical routing. Therefore, IPng should carry enough
    information to provide forwarding along both hierarchical and
    non-hierarchical routes.
 5. The IPng packet header should accommodate a "routing label" or
    "route ID". This label will be used to identify a particular FIB
    to be used for packet forwarding by each router.
    Two types of routing labels should be supported: "strong" and
    "weak".
    When a packet carries a "strong" routing label and a router does
    not have a FIB with this label, the packet is discarded (and an
    error message is sent back to the source).
    When a packet carries a "weak" routing label and a router does not
    have a FIB with this label, the packet should be forwarded via a
    "default" FIB, i.e., according to the destination address. In
    addition, the packet should carry an indication that somewhere
    along the path the desired routing label was unavailable.
 6. IPng should provide a source routing mechanism with the following
    capabilities (i.e., flexibility):
  1. Specification of either individual routers or collections of

routers as the entities in the source route.

  1. The option to indicate that two consecutive entities in a

source route must share a common subnet in order for the

       source route to be valid.
  1. Specification of the default behavior when the route to

the next entry in the source route is unavailable:

  1. The packet is discarded, or
  1. The source route is ignored and the packet is forwarded based

only on the destination address (and the packet header will

       indicate this action).
  1. A mechanism to verify the feasibility of a source route.

Security Considerations

 Security issues are not discussed in this memo.

Estrin, Li & Rekhter [Page 2] RFC 1668 Unified Routing Requirements for IPng August 1994

Authors' Addresses

 Deborah Estrin
 University of Southern California
 Computer Science Department, MC 0782
 Los Angeles, California 90089-0782
 Phone: (310) 740-4524
 EMail: estrin@usc.edu
 Tony Li
 cisco Systems, Inc.
 1525 O'Brien Drive
 Menlo Park, CA 94025
 EMail: tli@cisco.com
 Yakov Rekhter
 T.J. Watson Research Center IBM Corporation
 P.O. Box 218
 Yorktown Heights, NY 10598
 Phone:  (914) 945-3896
 EMail:  yakov@watson.ibm.com

Estrin, Li & Rekhter [Page 3]

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