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EXPERIMENTAL
Internet Research Task Force (IRTF)                          P. FrejborgRequest for Comments: 6306                                     July 2011Category: ExperimentalISSN: 2070-1721Hierarchical IPv4 FrameworkAbstract   This document describes a framework for how the current IPv4 address   space can be divided into two new address categories: a core address   space (Area Locators, ALOCs) that is globally unique, and an edge   address space (Endpoint Locators, ELOCs) that is regionally unique.   In the future, the ELOC space will only be significant in a private   network or in a service provider domain.  Therefore, a 32x32 bit   addressing scheme and a hierarchical routing architecture are   achieved.  The hierarchical IPv4 framework is backwards compatible   with the current IPv4 Internet.   This document also discusses a method for decoupling the location and   identifier functions -- future applications can make use of the   separation.  The framework requires extensions to the existing Domain   Name System (DNS), the existing IPv4 stack of the endpoints,   middleboxes, and routers in the Internet.  The framework can be   implemented incrementally for endpoints, DNS, middleboxes, and   routers.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for examination, experimental implementation, and   evaluation.   This document defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet   community.  This document is a product of the Internet Research Task   Force (IRTF).  The IRTF publishes the results of Internet-related   research and development activities.  These results might not be   suitable for deployment.  This RFC represents the individual   opinion(s) of one or more members of the Routing Research Group of   the Internet Research Task Force (IRTF).  Documents approved for   publication by the IRSG are not a candidate for any level of Internet   Standard; seeSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6306.Frejborg                      Experimental                      [Page 1]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2011 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.Frejborg                      Experimental                      [Page 2]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................42. Requirements Notation ...........................................73. Definitions of Terms ............................................74. Hierarchical Addressing .........................................95. Intermediate Routing Architecture ..............................115.1. Overview ..................................................115.2. Life of a hIPv4 Session ...................................156. Long-Term Routing Architecture .................................186.1. Overview ..................................................196.2. Exit, DFZ, and Approach Routing ...........................217. Decoupling Location and Identification .........................238. ALOC Use Cases .................................................249. Mandatory Extensions ...........................................289.1. Overview ..................................................289.2. DNS Extensions ............................................299.3. Extensions to the IPv4 Header .............................3010. Consequences ..................................................3410.1. Overlapping Local and Remote ELOC Prefixes/Ports .........3410.2. Large Encapsulated Packets ...............................3510.3. Affected Applications ....................................3510.4. ICMP .....................................................3710.5. Multicast ................................................3711. Traffic Engineering Considerations ............................3811.1. Valiant Load-Balancing ...................................3912. Mobility Considerations .......................................4013. Transition Considerations .....................................4214. Security Considerations .......................................4315. Conclusions ...................................................4516. References ....................................................4716.1. Normative References .....................................4716.2. Informative References ...................................4717. Acknowlegments ................................................50Appendix A. Short Term and Future IPv4 Address Allocation Policy ..51Appendix B. Multi-Homing becomes Multi-Pathing ....................53Appendix C. Incentives and Transition Arguments ...................57Appendix D. Integration with CES Architectures ....................58Frejborg                      Experimental                      [Page 3]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 20111.  Introduction   A Locator/Identifier Separation Protocol [LISP] presentation from a   breakout session at an expo held in January, 2008, triggered a   research study; findings from the study are described in this   document.  Further studies revealed that the routing community at   IETF is concerned about the scalability of the routing and addressing   system of the future Internet.  The Internet Architecture Board (IAB)   held a Routing and Addressing workshop on October 18-19, 2006, in   Amsterdam.  The outcome from the workshop is documented in [RFC4984].   Also, the IRTF had established a Routing Research Group [RRG] in 2007   and created some design guidelines; see [RFC6227].   The author of this document found the LISP approach very interesting   because the IP address space is proposed to be separated into two   groups: Routing Locators (RLOCs), which are present in the global   routing table of the Internet called the Default-Free Zone (DFZ), and   Endpoint Identifiers (EIDs), which are only present in edge networks   attached to the Internet.   The proposed LISP architecture reduces the routing information in the   DFZ, but it also introduces a new mapping system that would require a   caching solution at the border routers installed between the edge   networks and DFZ.  EID prefixes are not needed in the DFZ since a   tunneling (overlay) scheme is applied between the border routers.  To   the author, this seems to be a complex architecture that could be   improved by applying lessons learned from similar past architectures   -- in the '90s, overlay architectures were common, deployed on top of   Frame Relay and ATM technologies.  Cache-based routing architectures   have also been tried, for example, Ipsilon's IP Switching.  These   architectures have largely been replaced by MPLS [RFC3031] for   several reasons -- one being that overlay and caching solutions have   historically suffered from scalability issues.  Technology has   certainly evolved since the '90s.  The scalability issues of overlay   and caching solutions may prove to be less relevant for modern   hardware and new methods; see [Revisiting_Route_Caching]   Nevertheless, the author has some doubt whether overlay and caching   will scale well, based upon lessons learned from past overlay and   caching architectures.  The hierarchical IPv4 framework proposal   arose from the question of whether the edge and core IP addressing   groupings from LISP could be used without creating an overlay   solution by borrowing ideas from MPLS to develop a peer-to-peer   architecture.  That is, instead of tunneling, why not swap IP   addresses (hereafter called locators) on a node in the DFZ?  By   introducing a shim header to the IPv4 header and Realm Border Router   (RBR) functionality on the network, the edge locators are no longer   needed in the routing table of DFZ.Frejborg                      Experimental                      [Page 4]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   Two architectural options existed regarding how to assemble the   packet so that RBR functionality can be applied in the DFZ: the   packet was assembled by either an ingress network node (similar to   LISP or MPLS) or at the endpoint itself.  The major drawback in   assembling the packet with a shim header at the endpoint is that the   endpoint's stack must be upgraded; however, a significant advantage   is that the Path MTU Discovery issue, as discussed in, e.g., LISP,   would not exist.  In addition, the caching scalability issue is   mitigated to the greatest extent possible by pushing caching to the   endpoint.   This approach also opened up the possibility of extending the current   IP address scheme with a new dimension.  In an MPLS network,   overlapping IP addresses are allowed since the forwarding plane is   leveraging label information from the MPLS shim header.  By applying   RBR functionality, extending the current IPv4 header with a shim   header and assembling the new header at endpoints, an IP network can   also carry packets with overlapping edge locators, although the core   locators must still be globally unique.  The location of an endpoint   is also no longer described by a single address space; it is   described by a combination of an edge locator and a core locator, or   a set of core locators.   Later on, it was determined that the current 32-bit address scheme   can be extended to 64 bits -- 32 bits reserved for globally unique   core locators and 32 bits reserved for locally unique edge locators.   The new 64-bit addressing scheme is backwards compatible with the   currently deployed Internet addressing scheme.   By making the architectural decisions described above, the foundation   for the hierarchical IPv4 framework was laid out.   Note that the hierarchical IPv4 framework is abbreviated as hIPv4,   which is close to the abbreviation of Host Identity Protocol (HIP)   [RFC4423].  Thus, the reader needs to pay attention to the use of the   two abbreviations -- hIPv4 and HIP, which represent two different   architectures.   Use of the hIPv4 abbreviation has caused much confusion, but it was   chosen for two reasons:   o Hierarchical - to emphasize that a hierarchical addressing scheme     is developed.  A formalized hierarchy is achieved in the routing     architecture.  Some literature describes today's Internet as     already using hierarchical addressing.  The author believes that     this claim is not valid -- today's Internet uses one flat address     space.Frejborg                      Experimental                      [Page 5]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011     It is true that we have hierarchical routing in place.  A routing     architecture can consist of at least three types of areas: stub     area, backbone area, and autonomous system (AS).  The current flat     address space is summarized or aggregated at border routers between     the areas to suppress the size of a routing table.  In order to     carry out summaries or aggregates of prefixes, the address space     must be continuous over the areas.     Thus, the author concludes that the current method is best     described as an aggregating addressing scheme since there are     address block dependencies between the areas.  Dividing addresses     into edge and core locator spaces (a formalized hierarchy) opens up     a new dimension -- the edge locator space can still be deployed as     an aggregating address scheme on the three types of areas mentioned     earlier.  In hIPv4, the core locators are combined with edge     locators, independent from each other -- the two locator space     allocation policies are separated and no dependencies exist between     the two addressing schemes in the long-term architecture.     A new hierarchical addressing scheme is achieved: a two-level     addressing scheme describing how the endpoint is attached to the     local network and also how the endpoint is attached to the     Internet.  This change in the addressing scheme will enable a     fourth level, called the Area Locator (ALOC) realm, at the routing     architecture.   o IPv4 - to emphasize that the framework is still based upon the IPv4     addressing scheme, and is only an evolution from the currently     deployed addressing scheme of the Internet.   While performing this research study, the author reviewed a previous   hierarchical addressing and routing architecture that had been   proposed in the past, the Extended Internet Protocol (EIP) [RFC1385].   Should the hIPv4 framework ever be developed from a research study to   a standard RFC, it is recommended that the hierarchical IPv4   framework name be replaced with Extended Internet Protocol, EIP,   since both architectures share similarities, e.g., backwards   compatibility with existing deployed architecture, hierarchical   addressing, etc., and the hIPv4 abbreviation can be mixed up with   HIP.   This document is an individual contribution to the IRTF Routing   Research Group (RRG); discussions between those on the mailing list   of the group have influenced the framework.  The views in this   document are considered controversial by the IRTF Routing Research   Group (RRG), but the group reached a consensus that the document   should still be published.  Since consensus was not achieved at RGG   regarding which proposal should be preferred -- as stated inFrejborg                      Experimental                      [Page 6]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   [RFC6115]: "The group explored a number of proposed solutions but did   not reach consensus on a single best approach" -- thus, all proposals   produced within RRG can be considered controversial.2.  Requirements Notation   The key words MUST, MUST NOT, REQUIRED, SHALL, SHALL NOT, SHOULD,   SHOULD NOT, RECOMMENDED, MAY, and OPTIONAL in this document are to be   interpreted as described in [RFC2119].3.  Definitions of Terms   This document makes use of the following terms:   Regional Internet Registry (RIR):      This is an organization overseeing the allocation and registration      of Internet number resources within a particular region of the      world.  Resources include IP addresses (both IPv4 and IPv6) and      autonomous system numbers.   Locator:      A name for a point of attachment within the topology at a given      layer.  Objects that change their point(s) of attachment will need      to change their associated locator(s).   Global Locator Block (GLB):      An IPv4 address block that is globally unique.   Area Locator (ALOC):      An IPv4 address (/32) assigned to locate an ALOC realm in the      Internet.  The ALOC is assigned by an RIR to a service provider.      The ALOC is globally unique because it is allocated from the GLB.   Endpoint Locator (ELOC):      An IPv4 address assigned to locate an endpoint in a local network.      The ELOC block is assigned by an RIR to a service provider or to      an enterprise.  In the intermediate routing architecture, the ELOC      block is only unique in a geographical region.  The final policy      of uniqueness shall be defined by the RIRs.  In the long-term      routing architecture, the ELOC block is no longer assigned by an      RIR; it is only unique in the local ALOC realm.Frejborg                      Experimental                      [Page 7]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   ALOC realm:      An area in the Internet with at least one attached Realm Border      Router (RBR).  Also, an ALOC must be assigned to the ALOC realm.      The Routing Information Base (RIB) of an ALOC realm holds both      local ELOC prefixes and global ALOC prefixes.  An ALOC realm      exchanges only ALOC prefixes with other ALOC realms.   Realm Border Router (RBR):      A router or node that is able to identify and process the hIPv4      header.  In the intermediate routing architecture, the RBR shall      be able to produce a service, that is, to swap the prefixes in the      IP header and locator header, and then forward the packet      according to the value in the destination address field of the IP      header.  In the long-term routing architecture, the RBR is not      required to produce the swap service.  Instead, the RBR can make      use of the Forwarding Indicator field in the locator header.  Once      the FI-bits are processed, the RBR forwards the packet according      to the value in the destination address of the IP header or      according to the value in the ELOC field of the locator header.      The RBR must have the ALOC assigned as its locator.   Locator Header:      A 4-byte or 12-byte field, inserted between the IP header and      transport protocol header.  If an identifier/locator split scheme      is used, the size of the locator header is further expanded.   Identifier:      The name of an object at a given layer.  Identifiers have no      topological sensitivity and do not have to change, even if the      object changes its point(s) of attachment within the network      topology.   Identifier/locator split scheme:      Separate identifiers used by applications from locators that are      used for routing.  The exchange of identifiers can occur      discreetly between endpoints that have established a session, or      the identifier/locator split can be mapped at a public database.Frejborg                      Experimental                      [Page 8]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   Session:      An interactive information exchange between endpoints that is      established at a certain time and torn down at a later time.   Provider Independent Address Space (PI addresses/prefixes):      An IPv4 address block that is assigned by a Regional Internet      Registry directly to a user organization.   Provider Aggregatable Address Space (PA addresses/prefixes):      An IPv4 address block assigned by a Regional Internet Registry to      an Internet Service Provider that can be aggregated into a single      route advertisement.   Site mobility:      A site wishing to change its attachment point to the Internet      without changing its IP address block.   Endpoint mobility:      An endpoint moves relatively rapidly between different networks,      changing its IP layer network attachment point.   Subflow:      A flow of packets operating over an individual path, the flow      forming part of a larger transport protocol connection.4.  Hierarchical Addressing   The current IP addressing (IPv4) and the future addressing (IPv6)   schemes of the Internet are unidimensional by their nature.  This   limitation -- the unidimensional addressing scheme -- has created   some roadblocks, for example, breaking end-to-end connectivity due to   NAT, limited deployment of Stream Control Transmission Protocol   (SCTP) [RFC4960], etc., for further growth of the Internet.   If we compare the Internet's current addressing schemes to other   global addressing or location schemes, we notice that the other   schemes use several levels in their structures.  For example, the   postal system uses street address, city, and country to locate a   destination.  To locate a geographical site, we use longitude and   latitude in the cartography system.  The other global network, the   Public Switched Telephone Network (PSTN), has been built upon a   three-level numbering scheme that has enabled a hierarchicalFrejborg                      Experimental                      [Page 9]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   signaling architecture.  By expanding the current IPv4 addressing   scheme from a single level to a two-level addressing structure, most   of the issues discussed in [RFC4984] can be solved.  Also, a   hierarchical addressing scheme would better describe the Internet we   have in place today.   Looking back, it seems that the architecture of the Internet changed   quite radically from the intended architecture with the introduction   of [RFC1918], which divides the hosts into three categories and the   address space into two categories: globally unique and private   address spaces.  This idea allowed for further growth of the Internet   and extended the life of the IPv4 address space, and it ended up   becoming much more successful than expected.RFC 1918 didn't solve   the multi-homing requirements for endpoints providing services for   Internet users, that is, multi-homed sites with globally unique IP   addresses at endpoints to be accessed from the Internet.   Multi-homing has imposed some challenges for the routing architecture   that [RRG] is addressing in [RFC6115].  Almost all proposals in the   report suggest a core and edge locator separation or elimination to   create a scalable routing architecture.  The core locator space can   be viewed to be similar to the globally unique address space, and the   edge locator space similar to the private address space inRFC 1918.RFC 1918 has already demonstrated that Internet scales better with   the help of categorized address spaces, that is, globally unique and   private address spaces.  The RRG proposals suggest that the Internet   will be able to scale even further by introducing core and edge   locators.  Why not then change the addressing scheme (both IPv4 and   IPv6 addressing schemes, though this document is only focusing on   IPv4) to better reflect the current and forthcoming Internet routing   architecture?  If we continue to use a flat addressing scheme, and   combine it with core (global) and edge (private) locator (address)   categories, the routing architecture will have to support additional   mechanisms, such as NAT, tunneling, or locator rewriting with the   help of an identifier to overcome the mismatch.  The result will be   that information is lost or hidden for the endpoints.  With a two-   level addressing scheme, these additional mechanisms can be removed   and core/edge locators can be used to create new routing and   forwarding directives.   A convenient way to understand the two-level addressing scheme of the   hIPv4 framework is to compare it to the PSTN numbering scheme   (E.164), which uses country codes, national destination codes, and   subscriber numbers.  The Area Locator (ALOC) prefix in the hIPv4   addressing scheme can be considered similar to the country code in   PSTN; i.e., the ALOC prefix locates an area in the Internet called an   ALOC realm.  The Endpoint Locator (ELOC) prefixes in hIPv4 can beFrejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 10]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   compared to the subscriber numbers in PSTN -- the ELOC is regionally   unique (in the future, locally unique) at the attached ALOC realm.   The ELOC can also be attached simultaneously to several ALOC realms.   By inserting the ALOC and ELOC elements as a shim header (similar to   the MPLS and [RBridge] architectures) between the IPv4 header and the   transport protocol header, a hIPv4 header is created.  From the   network point of view, the hIPv4 header "looks and feels like" an   IPv4 header, thus fulfilling some of the goals as outlined in EIP and   in the early definition of [Nimrod].  The outcome is that the current   forwarding plane does not need to be upgraded, though some minor   changes are needed in the control plane (e.g., ICMP extensions).5.  Intermediate Routing Architecture   The intermediate routing architecture is backwards compatible with   the currently deployed Internet; that is, the forwarding plane   remains intact except that the control plane needs to be upgraded to   support ICMP extensions.  The endpoint's stack needs to be upgraded,   and middleboxes need to be upgraded or replaced.  In order to speed   up the transition phase, middleboxes might be installed in front of   endpoints so that their stack upgrade can be postponed; for further   details, seeAppendix D.5.1.  Overview   As mentioned in previous sections, the role of an Area Locator (ALOC)   prefix is similar to a country code in PSTN; the ALOC prefix provides   a location functionality of an area within an autonomous system (AS),   or an area spanning over a group of ASes, in the Internet.  An area   can have several ALOC prefixes assigned, e.g., for traffic   engineering purposes such as load balancing among several   ingress/egress points at the area.  The ALOC prefix is used for   routing and forwarding purposes on the Internet, and so the ALOC   prefix must be globally unique and is allocated from an IPv4 address   block.  This globally unique IPv4 address block is called the Global   Locator Block (GLB).   When an area within an AS (or a group of ASes) is assigned an ALOC   prefix, the area has the potential to become an ALOC realm.  In order   to establish an ALOC realm, more elements, more than just the ALOC   prefix, are needed.  One or multiple Realm Border Routers (RBRs) must   be attached to the ALOC realm.  An RBR element is a node capable of   swapping the prefixes of the IP header and the new shim header,   called the locator header.  The swap service is described in detail   inSection 5.2, step 3.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 11]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   Today's routers do not support this RBR functionality.  Therefore,   the new functionality will most likely be developed on an external   device attached to a router belonging to the ALOC realm.  The   external RBR might be a server with two interfaces attached to a   router, the first interface configured with the prefix of the ALOC   and the second with any IPv4 prefix.  The RBRs do not make use of   dynamic routing protocols, so neither a Forwarding Information Base   (FIB) nor a cache is needed -- the RBR performs a service, swapping   headers.   The swap service is applied on a per-packet basis, and the   information needed to carry out the swap is included in the locator   header of the hIPv4 packet.  Thus, a standalone device with   sufficient computing and I/O resources to handle the incoming traffic   can take the role as an RBR.  Later on, the RBR functionality might   be integrated into the forwarding plane of a router.  It is expected   that one RBR will not be able to handle all the incoming traffic   designated for an ALOC realm and that having a single RBR would also   create a potential single point of failure in the network.   Therefore, several RBRs might be installed in the ALOC realm and the   RBRs shall use the ALOC prefix as their locator, and the routers   announce the ALOC prefix as an anycast locator within the local ALOC   realm.  The ALOC prefix is advertised throughout the DFZ by BGP   mechanisms.  The placement of the RBRs in the network will influence   the ingress traffic to the ALOC realm.   Since the forwarding paradigm of multicast packets is quite different   from forwarding unicast packets, the multicast functionality will   have an impact on the RBR.  Because the multicast RBR (mRBR)   functionality is not available on today's routers, an external device   is needed -- later on the functionality might be integrated into the   routers.  The mRBR shall take the role of an anycast Rendezvous Point   with the Multicast Source Discovery Protocol (MSDP) [RFC3618] and   Protocol Independent Multicast (PIM) [RFC4601] capabilities, but to   swap headers neither a FIB nor a cache is required.  As with the RBR,   the multicast hIPv4 packets are carrying all needed information in   their headers in order to apply the swap service; for details, seeSection 10.5.   The ALOC realm is not yet fully constructed.  We can now locate the   ALOC realm on the Internet, but to locate the endpoints attached to   the ALOC realm, a new element is needed: the Endpoint Locator (ELOC).   As mentioned in the previous section, the ELOC prefixes can be   considered similar to the subscriber numbers in PSTN.  The ELOC is   not a new element but a redefinition of the current IPv4 address   configured at an endpoint.  The term redefinition is applied because   when the hIPv4 framework is fully implemented, the global uniqueness   of the IPv4 addresses is no longer valid.  A more regional addressFrejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 12]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   allocation policy of IPv4 addresses can be deployed, as discussed inAppendix A.  The ELOC prefix will only be used for routing and   forwarding purposes inside the local and remote ALOC realms, and it   is not used in the intermediate ALOC realms.   When an initiator is establishing a session to a responder residing   outside the local ALOC realm, the value in the destination address   field of the IP header of an outgoing packet is no longer the remote   destination address (ELOC prefix); instead, the remote ALOC prefix is   installed in the destination address field of the IP header.  Because   the value in the destination address field of the IP header is   carrying an ALOC prefix, the intermediate ALOC realms do not need to   install the ELOC prefixes of other ALOC realms in their routing   tables.  It is sufficient for the intermediate ALOC realms to carry   only the ALOC prefixes.   The outcome is that the routing tables at each ALOC realm will be   reduced when the hIPV4 framework is fully implemented.  The ALOC   prefixes are still globally unique and must be installed in the DFZ.   Thus, the service provider cannot control the growth of the ALOC   prefixes, but she/he can control the amount of local ELOC prefixes in   her/his local ALOC realm.   When the hIPv4 packet arrives at the remote ALOC realm, it is   forwarded to the nearest RBR, since the value in the destination   address field of the IP header is the remote ALOC prefix.  When the   RBR has swapped the hIPv4 header, the value in the destination   address field of the IP header is the remote ELOC; thus, the hIPv4   packet will be forwarded to the final destination at the remote ALOC   realm.  An endpoint using an ELOC prefix can be attached   simultaneously to two different ALOC realms without the requirement   to deploy a classical multi-homing solution; for details, seeSection12 andAppendix B.   Understanding that the addressing structure is no longer   unidimensional and that a second level of hierarchy has been added,   it is important to solve the problems of locating the remote ELOC   (endpoint) and remote ALOC realm on the Internet, as well as   determining where to assemble the header of the hIPv4 packet.  The   hierarchical IPv4 framework relies upon the Domain Name System needs   to support a new record type so that the ALOC information can be   distributed to the endpoints.  To construct the header of the hIPv4   packet, either the endpoint or an intermediate node (e.g., a proxy)   should be used.  A proxy solution is likely to prove suboptimal due   to a complication induced by the proxy's need to listen to DNS   messages, and a cache solution has scalability issues.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 13]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   A better solution is to extend the current IPv4 stack at the   endpoints so that the ALOC and ELOC elements are incorporated at the   endpoint's stack; however, backwards compatibility must be preserved.   Most applications will not be aware of the extensions while other IP-   aware applications, such as Mobile IP, SIP, IPsec AH and so on (seeSection 10.3) will suffer and cannot be used outside their ALOC realm   when the hIPv4 framework is fully implemented, unless they are   upgraded.  The reason is that the IP-aware applications depend upon   the underlying network addressing structure, e.g., to identify an   endpoint.   Note that the applications used inside the local ALOC realm (e.g.,   enterprise's private network) do not need to be upgraded -- neither   in the intermediate nor in the long-term routing architecture.  The   classical IPv4 framework is preserved in that only IP-aware   applications used between ALOC realms need to be upgraded to support   the hIPv4 header.   Figure 1 shows a conceptual overview of the intermediate routing   architecture.  When this architecture is in place, the ELOC space is   no longer globally unique.  Instead, a regional allocation policy can   be implemented.  For further details, seeAppendix A.  The transition   from the current routing architecture to the intermediate routing   architecture is discussed inAppendix D.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 14]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011      Legend: *attachment point in the ALOC realm              UER=Unique ELOC region              EP=Endpoint      |-------------------------------------------------------------|      |            UER1          |       |           UER2           |      |-------------------------------------------------------------|      | Enterprise1 |    ISP1    |  ISP  |    ISP2    | Enterprise2 |      |  ALOC Realm | ALOC Realm | Tier1 | ALOC Realm |  ALOC Realm |      |             |            |       |            |             |      |   *EP       |  *RBR      |       |  *RBR      |   *EP       |      |    ELOC1    |   ALOC1    |       |   ALOC2    |    ELOC4    |      |             |            |       |            |             |      |             |   *EP      |       |   *EP      |             |      |             |    ELOC2   |       |    ELOC3   |             |      |             |            |       |            |             |      |-------------|xxxxxxxxxxxxxx DFZ xxxxxxxxxxxxxx| ------------|      |     RIB     |    RIB     |  RIB  |    RIB     |    RIB      |      |             |            |       |            |             |      |    ALOC1    |   ALOC1    | ALOC1 |   ALOC2    |    ALOC2    |      |    ELOC1    |   ALOC2    | ALOC2 |   ALOC1    |    ELOC4    |      |             |   ELOC2    |       |   ELOC3    |             |      |             |   ELOC1    |       |   ELOC4    |             |      |             |            |       |            |             |      |-------------------------------------------------------------|             Figure 1: Intermediate routing architecture of hIPv45.2.  Life of a hIPv4 Session   This section provides an example of a hIPv4 session between two hIPv4   endpoints: an initiator and a responder residing in different ALOC   realms.   When the hIPv4 stack is assembling the packet for transport, the   hIPv4 stack shall decide if a classical IPv4 or a hIPv4 header is   used based on the ALOC information received by a DNS reply.  If the   initiator's local ALOC prefix equals the responder's ALOC prefix,   there is no need to use the hIPv4 header for routing purposes,   because both the initiator and responder reside in the local ALOC   realm.  The packet is routed according to the prefixes in the IP   header since the packet will not exit the local ALOC realm.  When the   local ALOC prefix does not match the remote ALOC prefix, a hIPv4   header must be assembled because the packet needs to be routed to a   remote ALOC realm.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 15]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   A session between two endpoints inside an ALOC realm might use the   locator header -- not for routing purposes, but to make use of   Valiant Load-Balancing [VLB] for multipath-enabled transport   protocols (seeSection 11.1) or to make use of an identifier/locator   split scheme (seeSection 7).  When making use of VLB, the initiator   adds the locator header to the packet and by setting the VLB-bits to   01 or 11, indicating to the responder and intermediate routers that   VLB is requested for the subflow.  Because this is an intra-ALOC   realm session, there is no need to add ALOC and ELOC fields to the   locator header, and thus the size of the locator header will be 4   bytes.   If an identifier/locator split scheme is applied for the session   (intra-ALOC or inter-ALOC), the initiator must set the I-bit to 1 and   make use of the Locator Header Length field.  Identifier/locator   split scheme information is inserted into the locator header after   the Locator Header Length field.   How a hIPv4 session is established follows:   1. The initiator queries the DNS server.  The hIPv4 stack notices      that the local and remote ALOCs do not match and therefore must      use the hIPv4 header for the session.  The hIPv4 stack of the      initiator must assemble the packet by the following method:      a. Set the local IP address from the API in the source address         field of the IP header.      b. Set the remote IP address from the API in the ELOC field of the         locator header.      c. Set the local ALOC prefix in the ALOC field of the locator         header.      d. Set the remote ALOC prefix in the destination address field of         the IP header.      e. Set the transport protocol value in the protocol field of the         locator header and set the hIPv4 protocol value in the protocol         field of the IP header.      f. Set the desired parameters in the A-, I-, S-, VLB-, and L-         fields of the locator header.      g. Set the FI-bits of the locator header to 00.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 16]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011      h. Calculate IP, locator, and transport protocol header checksums.         The transport protocol header calculation does not include the         locator header fields.  When completed, the packet is         transmitted.   2. The hIPv4 packet is routed throughout the Internet based on the      value in the destination address field of the IP header.   3. The hIPv4 packet will reach the closest RBR of the remote ALOC      realm.  When the RBR notices that the value in the destination      address of the IP header matches the local ALOC prefix, the RBR      must:      a. Verify that the received packet uses the hIPv4 protocol value         in the protocol field of the IP header.      b. Verify IP, locator, and transport protocol header checksums.         The transport protocol header verification does not include the         locator header fields.      c. Replace the source address in the IP header with the ALOC         prefix of the locator header.      d. Replace the destination address in the IP header with the ELOC         prefix of the locator header.      e. Replace the ALOC prefix in the locator header with the         destination address of the IP header.      f. Replace the ELOC prefix in the locator header with the source         address of the IP header.      g. Set the S-field to 1.      h. Decrease the Time to Live (TTL) value by one.      i. Calculate IP, locator, and transport protocol header checksums.         The transport header calculation does not include the locator         header fields.      j. Forward the packet according to the value in the destination         address field of the IP header.   4. The swapped hIPv4 packet is now routed inside the remote ALOC      realm based on the new value in the destination address field of      the IP header to the final destination.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 17]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   5. The responder receives the hIPv4 packet.      a. The hIPv4 stack must verify that the received packet uses the         hIPv4 protocol value in the protocol field of the IP header.      b. Verify IP, locator, and transport protocol header checksums.         The transport protocol header verification does not include the         locator header fields.   6. The hIPv4 stack of the responder must present the following to the      extended IPv4 socket API:      a. The source address of the IP header as the remote ALOC prefix.      b. The destination address of the IP header as the local IP         address.      c. Verify that the received ALOC prefix of the locator header         equals the local ALOC prefix.      d. The ELOC prefix of the locator header as the remote IP address.   The responder's application will respond to the initiator and the   returning packet will take almost the same steps, which are steps 1   to 6, as when the initiator started the session.  In step 1, the   responder does not need to do a DNS lookup since all information is   provided by the packet.6.  Long-Term Routing Architecture   The long-term routing architecture is established once the forwarding   planes of private ALOC realms or service providers ALOC realms   containing subscribers are upgraded.  The forwarding planes of   transit DFZ routers do not need to be upgraded.  Why then would   private network or service provider administrators upgrade their   infrastructure?  There are two incentives:   o  The overlay local ALOC exit routing topology (as discussed inSection 11) can be replaced by a peer-to-peer local ALOC exit      routing topology, which is simpler to operate, thus decreasing      operational expenditures.   o  Locator freedom: Once the local ALOC realm is upgraded, the      enterprise or service provider can use the full 32-bit ELOC      address space to remove address space constraints and to design a      well-aggregated routing topology with an overdimensioned ELOC      allocation policy.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 18]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   When an enterprise or service provider upgrades the forwarding plane   in their ALOC realm, the previous PI or PA address space allocation   is released back to the RIR to be used for ALOC allocations in the   GLB.6.1.  Overview   The swap service at the RBR was added to the framework in order to   provide a smooth transition from the current IPv4 framework to the   hIPv4 framework; a major upgrade of the current forwarding plane is   avoided by the introduction of the swap service.  In the future, the   swap service can be left "as is" in the ALOC realm, if preferred, or   the swap service can be pushed towards the edge of the ALOC realm   when routers are upgraded in their natural lifecycle process.   Once an upgrade of a router is required because of, for example,   increased demand for bandwidth, the modified forwarding plane might   concurrently support IPv4 and hIPv4 forwarding -- and the swap   service can be pushed towards the edge and in the future removed at   the ALOC realm.  This is accomplished by adding an extension to the   current routing protocols, both IGP and BGP.  When an RBR receives a   hIPv4 packet where the value of the destination address field in the   IP header matches the local ALOC prefix, the RBR will -- contrary to   the tasks defined inSection 5.2, step 3 -- look up the ELOC field in   the locator header and compare this prefix against the FIB.  If the   next-hop entry is RBR-capable, the packet will be forwarded according   to the ELOC prefix.  If the next-hop is a classical IPv4 router, the   RBR must apply the tasks defined inSection 5.2, step 3 and, once   completed, forward the packet according to the new value in the   destination address field of the IP header.   When all endpoints (that need to establish sessions outside the local   ALOC realm) and infrastructure nodes in an ALOC realm are hIPv4-   capable, there is no need to apply swap service for unicast sessions.   Forwarding decisions can be based on information in the IP and   locator headers.  In the local ALOC realm, packets are routed to   their upstream anycast or unicast ALOC RBR according to the ALOC   prefix in the locator header; local ALOC exit routing is applied   against the local ALOC FIB.  Remote ELOC approach routing is applied   against the ELOC FIB in the remote ALOC realm.   Note that IP and transport protocol headers will remain intact   (except for TTL values, since the RBR is a router); only FI and LH   checksum values in the locator header will alternate in local ALOC   exit routing mode and remote ELOC approach routing mode.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 19]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   Figure 2 shows a conceptual overview of the long-term hIPv4 routing   architecture.   Legend: *attachment point in the ALOC realm           UER=Unique ELOC region           EP=Endpoint           aRBR=anycast RBR           uRBR=unicast RBR     |-------------------------------------------------------------|     |    UER1     |    UER2    |       |    UER3    |    UER4     |     |-------------------------------------------------------------|     | Enterprise1 |    ISP1    |  ISP  |    ISP2    | Enterprise2 |     |  ALOC Realm | ALOC Realm | Tier1 | ALOC Realm |  ALOC Realm |     |             |            |       |            |             |     |   *EP       |  *aRBR     |       |  *aRBR     |   *EP       |     |    ELOC1    |   ALOC1.1  |       |   ALOC2.1  |    ELOC4    |     |             |            |       |            |             |     |             *uRBR        |       |        uRBR*             |     |             |ALOC1.2     |       |     ALOC2.2|             |     |             |            |       |            |             |     |             |   *EP      |       |   *EP      |             |     |             |    ELOC2   |       |    ELOC3   |             |     |             |            |       |            |             |     |-------------|xxxxxxxxxxxxxx DFZ xxxxxxxxxxxxxx|-------------|     |     RIB     |    RIB     |  RIB  |    RIB     |    RIB      |     |             |            |       |            |             |     |   ALOC1.2   |   ALOC1.1  | ALOC1 |   ALOC2.1  |   ALOC2.2   |     |   ELOC1     |   ALOC1.2  | ALOC2 |   ALOC2.2  |   ELOC4     |     |             |   ALOC2    |       |   ALOC1    |             |     |             |   ELOC2    |       |   ELOC3    |             |     |             |            |       |            |             |     |-------------------------------------------------------------|              Figure 2: Long-term routing architecture of hIPv4   Also, the swap service for multicast can be removed when the   forwarding planes are upgraded in all consequent ALOC realms.  The   source's ALOC RBR sets the FI-bits to 11, and a Reverse Path   Forwarding (RPF) check is hereafter applied against the ALOC prefix   in the locator header.  Here, IP and transport protocol headers will   not alternate.   A long-term evolution will provide a 32x32 bit locator space.  The   ALOC prefixes are allocated only to service providers; ELOC prefixes   are only significant at a local ALOC realm.  An enterprise can use a   32-bit locator space for its private network (the ALOC prefix isFrejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 20]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   rented from the attached ISP), and an ISP can use a 32-bit ELOC space   to provide Internet connectivity services for its directly attached   customers (residential and enterprise).6.2.  Exit, DFZ, and Approach Routing   This section provides an example of a hIPv4 session between two hIPv4   endpoints: an initiator in an ALOC realm where the forwarding plane   has been upgraded to support the hIPv4 framework, and a responder   residing in a remote ALOC realm with the classical IPv4 forwarding   plane.   When the forwarding plane at the local ALOC realm has been upgraded,   the endpoints must be informed about it; that is, extensions to DHCP   are needed or the endpoints are manually configured to be notified   that the local ALOC realm is fully hIPv4 compliant.   How a hIPV4 session is established follows:   1. The initiator queries the DNS server.  The hIPv4 stack notices      that the local and remote ALOCs do not match and therefore must      use the hIPv4 header for the session.  The hIPv4 stack of the      initiator must assemble the packet as described inSection 5.2,      step 1, except for the following:      g. Set the FI-bits of the locator header to 01.   2. The hIPv4 packet is routed throughout the local ALOC realm      according to the ALOC prefix of the locator header; local ALOC      exit routing is applied.   3. The hIPv4 packet will reach the closest RBR of the local ALOC      realm.  When the RBR notices that the packet's ALOC prefix of the      locator header matches the local ALOC prefix and the FI-bits are      set to 01, the RBR must:      a. Verify that the received packet uses the hIPv4 protocol value         in the protocol field of the IP header.      b. Verify the IP and locator header checksums.      c. Set the FI-bits of the locator header to 00.      d. Decrease the TTL value by one.      e. Calculate IP and locator header checksums.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 21]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011      f. Forward the packet according to the value in the destination         address field of the IP header.   4. The hIPv4 packet is routed to the responder as described inSection 5.2, steps 2 to 6.  DFZ routing is applied.   5. The responder's application responds to the initiator and the      returning packet takes almost the same steps as described inSection 5.2 except for:   6. The hIPv4 packet will reach the closest RBR of the initiator's      ALOC realm.  When the RBR notices that the value in the      destination address field of the IP header matches the local ALOC      prefix and the FI-bits are set to 00, the RBR must:      a. Verify that the received packet uses the hIPv4 protocol value         in the protocol field of the IP header.      b. Verify the IP and locator header checksums.      c. Set the FI-bits of the locator header to 10.      d. Decrease the TTL value by one.      e. Calculate IP and locator header checksums.      f. Forward the packet according to the ELOC prefix of the locator         header.   7. The hIPv4 packet is routed throughout the initiator's ALOC realm      according to the ELOC prefix of the locator header.  Remote ELOC      approach routing is applied.   8. The hIPv4 stack of the responder must present the following to the      extended IPv4 socket API:      a. The source address of the IP header as the remote IP address.      b. The destination address of the IP header as the local ALOC         prefix.      c. The ALOC prefix of the locator header as the remote ALOC         prefix.      d. The ELOC prefix of the locator header as the local IP address.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 22]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 20117.  Decoupling Location and Identification   The design guidelines and rationale behind decoupling the location   from identification are stated in [RFC6227].  Another important   influence source is the report and presentations from the [Dagstuhl]   workshop that declared "a future Internet architecture must hence   decouple the functions of IP addresses as names, locators, and   forwarding directives in order to facilitate the growth and new   network-topological dynamisms of the Internet".   Therefore, identifier elements need to be added to the hIPv4   framework to provide a path for future applications to be able to   remove the current dependency on the underlying network layer   addressing scheme (local and remote IP address tuple).   However, there are various ways to apply an identifier/locator split,   as discussed in an [ID/loc_Split] presentation from the MobiArch   workshop at Sigcomm 2008.  Thus, the hIPv4 framework will not propose   or define a single identifier/locator split solution; a split can be   achieved by, for example, a multipath transport protocol or by an   identifier/locator database scheme such as HIP.  A placeholder has   been added to the locator header so identifier/locator split schemes   can be integrated into the hIPv4 framework.  But identifier/locator   split schemes may cause privacy inconveniences, as discussed in   [Mobility_&_Privacy].   Multipath transport protocols, such as SCTP and the currently under   development Multipath TCP (MPTCP) [RFC6182], are the most interesting   candidates to enable an identifier/locator split for the hIPv4   framework.  MPTCP is especially interesting from hIPv4's point of   view; one of the main goals of MPTCP is to provide backwards   compatibility with current implementations: hIPv4 shares the same   goal.   MPTCP itself does not provide an identifier/locator database scheme   as HIP does.  Instead, MPTCP is proposing a token -- with local   meaning -- to manage and bundle subflows under one session between   two endpoints.  The token can be considered to have the   characteristics of a session identifier, providing a generic cookie   mechanism for the application layer and creating a session layer   between the application and transport layers.  Thus, the use of a   session identifier will provide a mechanism to improve mobility, both   in site and endpoint mobility scenarios.   Since the session identifier improves site and endpoint mobility,   routing scalability is improved by introducing a hierarchical   addressing scheme, why then add an identifier/locator database scheme   to the hIPv4 framework?  Introducing an identifier/locator databaseFrejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 23]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   scheme, as described in HIP, Identifier/Locator Network Protocol   [ILNP] and Name-Based Sockets [NBS], might ease or remove the locator   renumbering dependencies at firewalls that are used to scope security   zones, but this approach would fundamentally change the currently   deployed security architecture.   However, combining an identifier/locator database scheme with DNS   Security (DNSSEC) [RFC4033] is interesting.  Today, security zones   are scoped by using locator prefixes in the security rule sets.   Instead, a Fully Qualified Domain Name (FQDN) could be used in the   rule sets and the renumbering of locator prefixes would no longer   depend upon the security rule sets in firewalls.  Another interesting   aspect is that an FQDN is and needs to be globally unique.  The ALOC   prefix must be globally unique, but ELOC prefixes are only regionally   unique and in the long-term only locally unique.  Nevertheless,   combining identifier/locator database schemes with security   architectures and DNSSEC needs further study.   In order to provide multi-homing and mobility capabilities for single   path transport protocols such as TCP and UDP, an identifier/locator   database scheme is needed.  This scheme can also be used to create a   bidirectional NAT traversal solution with a locator translation map   consisting of private locator prefixes and public identifiers at the   border router.   The hIPv4 routing architecture provides only location information for   the endpoints; that is, the ELOC describes how the endpoint is   attached to the local network, and the ALOC prefixes describe how the   endpoint is attached to the Internet.  Identifier/locator split   schemes are decoupled from the routing architecture -- the   application layer may or may not make use of an identifier/locator   split scheme.8.  ALOC Use Cases   Several ALOC use cases are explored in this section.  As mentioned inSection 5.1, ALOC describes an area in the Internet that can span   several autonomous systems (ASes), or if the area is equal to an AS   you can say that the ALOC describes an AS.  When the ALOC describes   an area, it is hereafter called an anycast ALOC.   The ALOC can also be used to describe a specific node between two   ALOC realms, e.g., a node installed between a private and an ISP ALOC   realm, or between two private ALOC realms.  In this use case the ALOC   describes an attachment point, e.g., where a private network is   attached to the Internet.  This ALOC type is hereafter called a   unicast ALOC.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 24]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   The main difference between anycast and unicast ALOC types is:   o  In an anycast ALOC scenario, ELOC routing information is shared      between the attached ALOC realms.   o  In a unicast ALOC scenario, no ELOC routing information is shared      between the attached ALOC realms.   Unicast ALOC functionalities should not be deployed between private   and ISP ALOC realms in the intermediate routing architecture -- it   would require too many locators from the GLB space.  Instead, unicast   ALOC functionality will be used to separate private ALOC realms.   ALOC space is divided into two types, a globally unique ALOC space   (a.k.a. GLB) that is installed in DFZ, and a private ALOC space that   is used inside private networks.  Private ALOCs use the same locator   space as defined in [RFC1918]; a private ALOC must be unique inside   the private network and not overlap private ELOC prefixes.  Only ISPs   should be allowed to apply for global ALOC prefixes.  For further   discussion, seeAppendix A.  The ISP should aggregate global ALOC   prefixes as much as possible in order to reduce the size of the   routing table in DFZ.   When a user logs on to the enterprise's network, the endpoint will   receive the following locator prefixes via provisioning means (e.g.,   DHCP or manually configured):   o  One ELOC prefix for each network interface.   o  One private ALOC prefix due to      -  The enterprise has recently been merged with another enterprise         and overlapping ELOC spaces exist.   o  Several private ALOC prefixes due to      -  The enterprise network spans high-speed long-distance         connections.  It is well-known that TCP cannot sustain high         throughput for extended periods of time.  Higher throughput         might be achieved by using multiple paths concurrently.   o  One or several global ALOC prefixes.  These ALOCs describe how the      enterprise network is attached to the Internet.   As the user establishes a session to a remote endpoint, DNS is   usually used to resolve remote locator prefixes.  DNS will return   ELOC and ALOC prefixes of the remote endpoint.  If no ALOC prefixes   are returned, a classical IPv4 session is initiated to the remoteFrejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 25]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   endpoint.  When ALOC prefixes are returned, the initiator compares   the ALOC prefixes with its own local ALOC prefixes (that are provided   via DHCP or manually configured).   o  If the remote ALOC prefix is from the private ALOC space, the      initiator will use the given private ALOC prefix for the session.   Two use cases exist to design a network to use private ALOC   functionality.  The remote endpoint is far away, leveraging high-   speed long-distance connections, and in order to improve performance   for the session a multipath transport protocol should be used.   The other use case is when the remote endpoint resides in a network   that recently has been merged and private ELOC [RFC1918] spaces   overlap if no renumbering is applied.  One or several unicast ALOC   solutions are needed in the network between the initiator and   responder.  For long-distance sessions with no overlapping ELOC   prefixes, anycast or unicast ALOC solutions can be deployed.   A third use case follows; again the initiator compares returned ALOC   prefixes from DNS with its own local ALOC prefixes:   o  If the remote ALOC prefix is from the global ALOC space and the      remote ALOC doesn't match the given global ALOC prefix, the      initiator will use the given global ALOC prefix for the session.   In this use case the remote endpoint resides outside the enterprise's   private network, and the global remote ALOC prefixes indicate how the   remote network is attached to the Internet.  When a multipath   transport protocol is used, the subflows can be routed via separate   border routers to the remote endpoint -- both at the local and remote   sites, if both are multi-homed.  The initiator's egress packets in   the local ALOC realm can be identified by the protocol value in the   IP header, routed to an explicit path (e.g., MPLS LSP, L2TPv3 tunnel,   etc.) based on the ALOC prefix in the locator header.  A local ALOC   overlay exit routing scheme can be designed.  In the long-term   routing architecture the overlay, the tunnel mechanism, can be   removed; seeSection 6.2.   Figure 3 shows a conceptual diagram with two endpoints having a   multipath session over a VPN connection and over the Internet (in the   intermediate routing architecture).Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 26]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   Legend: *attachment point in the ALOC realm           UER=Unique ELOC region           EP=Endpoint           aRBR=anycast RBR           uRBR=unicast RBR           BR=Border Router     |-------------------------------------------------------------|     |            UER1          |       |           UER2           |     |-----------------------------------------------|-------------|     | Enterprise1 |                                 | Enterprise2 |     |  ALOC Realm |                                 |  ALOC Realm |     |             |---------------------------------|             |     |             |              VPN                |             |     |             |           ALOC Realm            |             |     |             *uRBR3                       uRBR4*             |     |             |ALOC3                       ALOC4|             |     |             |xxxxxxxxxxxX VPN RIB xxxxxxxxxxxx|             |     |             |                                 |             |     |             |           ALOC3 & ALOC4         |             |     |             |---------------------------------|             |     |   *EP1      |                                 |   *EP2      |     |    ELOC1    |---------------------------------|    ELOC2    |     |             |    ISP1    |  ISP  |    ISP2    |             |     |             | ALOC Realm | Tier1 | ALOC Realm |             |     |             |            |       |            |             |     |          BR1*  *aRBR     |       |  *aRBR     *BR2          |     |             |   ALOC1    |       |   ALOC2    |             |     |             |            |       |            |             |     |-------------|xxxxxxxxxxxxxx DFZ xxxxxxxxxxxxxx|-------------|     |     RIB     |    RIB     |  RIB  |    RIB     |    RIB      |     |             |            |       |            |             |     |   ALOC1     |   ALOC1    | ALOC1 |   ALOC2    |   ALOC2     |     |   ALOC3     |   ALOC2    | ALOC2 |   ALOC1    |   ALOC4     |     |   ALOC4     |   ELOC1    |       |   ELOC2    |   ALOC3     |     |   ELOC1     |            |       |            |   ELOC2     |     |             |            |       |            |             |     |-------------------------------------------------------------|             Figure 3: Multi-pathing via VPN and the Internet   The first subflow is established from the initiator (EP1) via uRBR3   and uRBR4 (both use a private unicast ALOC prefix) to the responder   (EP2).  Normal unicast forwarding is applied; ALOC prefixes of uRBR3   and uRBR4 are installed in the routing tables of both the local and   remote ALOC realms.  A second subflow is established via the   Internet, that is, via BR1->BR2 to EP2. 0/0 exit routing is used to   enter the Internet at both ALOC realms.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 27]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   Note that ELOC prefixes can overlap since the local and remote ALOC   realms reside in different ELOC regions and are separated by private   unicast ALOC prefixes.   The fourth use case is to leverage the private and global ALOC   functionalities to be aligned with the design and implementation of   [Split-DNS] solutions.   The fifth use case is for residential users.  A residential user may   use one or several ALOC prefixes, depending upon the service offer   and network design of the ISP.  If the ISP prefers to offer advanced   support for multipath transport protocols and local ALOC exit   routing, the residential user is provided with several ALOC prefixes.   The ALOC provided for residential users is taken from the GLB space   and anycast ALOC functionality is applied.9.  Mandatory Extensions9.1.  Overview   To implement the hierarchical IPv4 framework, some basic rules are   needed:   1. The DNS architecture must support a new extension; an A type      Resource Record should be able to associate ALOC prefixes.   2. An endpoint upgraded to support hIPv4 shall have information about      the local ALOC prefixes; the local ALOC prefixes can be configured      manually or provided via provisioning means such as DHCP.   3. A globally unique IPv4 address block shall be reserved; this block      is called the Global Locator Block (GLB).  A service provider can      have one or several ALOC prefixes allocated from the GLB.   4. ALOC prefixes are announced via current BGP to adjacent peers.      They are installed in the RIB of the DFZ.  When the hIPV4      framework is fully implemented, only ALOC prefixes are announced      between the BGP peers in the DFZ.   5. An ALOC realm must have one or several RBRs attached to it.  The      ALOC prefix is configured as an anycast IP address on the RBR.      The anycast IP address is installed to appropriate routing      protocols in order to be distributed to the DFZ.   6. The IPv4 socket API at endpoints must be extended to support local      and remote ALOC prefixes.  The modified IPv4 socket API must be      backwards compatible with the current IPv4 socket API.  The      outgoing hIPv4 packet must be assembled by the hIPv4 stack withFrejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 28]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011      the local IP address from the socket as the source address and the      remote ALOC prefix as the destination address in the IP header.      The local ALOC prefix is inserted in the ALOC field of the locator      header.  The remote IP address from the socket API is inserted in      the ELOC field of the locator header.9.2.  DNS Extensions   Since the hierarchical IPv4 framework introduces an extended   addressing scheme and because DNS serves as the "phone book" for the   Internet, it is obvious that DNS needs a new Resource Record (RR)   type to serve endpoints that are upgraded to support hIPv4.  Future   RR types must follow the guidelines described in [RFC3597] and   [RFC5395] with the following characteristics:   o  Associated with the appropriate Fully Qualified Domain Name      (FQDN), inserted in the NAME field.   o  Assigned a new integer (QTYPE) in the TYPE field, to be assigned      by IANA.   o  The CLASS field is set to IN.   o  The RDATA field is of an unknown type as defined in [RFC3597] and      shall have the following format:      o  Preference subfield: A 16-bit integer that specifies the         preference given to this RR among others associated with a         FQDN.  Lower values are preferred over higher values.      o  ALOC subfield: A 32-bit integer that specifies the Area Locator         of the associated FQDN.                  +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+                  |                 Preference                    |                  +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+                  |                                               |                  |                    ALOC                       |                  +--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+--+                         Figure 4: RDATA format of the ALOC RR   Only endpoints that have been upgraded to support hIPv4 shall make   use of the new ALOC RR. Also, there is no need to define a new ELOC   RR because the A RR is used for that purpose when the ALOC RR is   returned.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 29]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 20119.3.  Extensions to the IPv4 Header   Figure 5 shows how the locator header is added to the current IPv4   header, creating a hIPv4 header.   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   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |Version|  IHL  |Type of Service|          Total Length         |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |         Identification        |Flags|      Fragment Offset    |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |  Time to Live |    Protocol   |         Header Checksum       |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                       Source Address                          |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                     Destination Address                       |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                    Options                    |    Padding    |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |A|I|S| FI|VLB|L|    Protocol   |         LH Checksum           |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                    Area Locator (optional)                    |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                 Endpoint Locator (optional)                   |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |     LH Length (optional)    |        Padding (optional)       |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                          Figure 5: hIPv4 header   Version: 4 bits      The Version field is identical to that ofRFC 791.   IHL: 4 bits      The Internet Header Length field is identical to that ofRFC 791.   Type of Service: 8 bits      The Type of Service is identical to that ofRFC 791.   Total Length:  16 bits      The Total Length field is identical to that ofRFC 791.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 30]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   Identification:  16 bits      The Identification field is identical to that ofRFC 791.   Flags:  3 bits      The Flags field is identical to that ofRFC 791.   Fragment Offset:  13 bits      The Fragment Offset field is identical to that ofRFC 791.   Time to Live:  8 bits      The Time to Live field is identical to that ofRFC 791.   Protocol:  8 bits      A new protocol number must be assigned for hIPv4.   Header Checksum:  16 bits      The Header Checksum field is identical to that ofRFC 791.   Source Address: 32 bits      The Source Address field is identical to that ofRFC 791.   Destination Address: 32 bits      The Destination Address field is identical to that ofRFC 791.   Options and Padding: Variable length      The Options and Padding fields are identical to that ofRFC 791.   ALOC Realm Bit, A-bit: 1 bit      When the initiator and responder reside in different ALOC realms,      the A-bit is set to 1 and the Area and Endpoint Locator fields      must be used in the locator header.  The size of the locator      header is 12 bytes.  When the A-bit is set to 0, the initiator and      responder reside within the same ALOC realm.  The Area and      Endpoint Locator shall not be used in the locator header.  The      size of the locator header is 4 bytes.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 31]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   Identifier Bit, I-bit: 1 bit      The identifier bit is set to 1 if the endpoint is using an      identifier/locator split scheme within the locator header.  The      identifier/locator split scheme must indicate by how much the size      of the locator header is increased.  The Locator Header Length      field is also added to the locator header.   Swap Bit, S-bit: 1 bit      The initiator sets the swap bit to 0 in the hIPv4 packet.  An RBR      will set this bit to 1 when it is swapping the source and      destination addresses of the IP header with the ALOC and ELOC      prefixes of the locator header.   Forwarding Indicator, FI-bits: 2 bits      The purpose of the Forwarding Indicator (FI) field is to provide a      mechanism for a future forwarding plane to identify which      Forwarding Information Base (FIB) should be used for inter-ALOC      realm sessions.  The new forwarding plane will remove the swap      functionality of IP and locator header values for both unicast and      multicast sessions.  The outcome is that the IP and transport      protocol headers will remain intact and only FI and LH checksum      values in the locator header will alternate.  The following values      are defined:         01: Local ALOC exit routing mode.  The initiator shall set the         FI-bits to 01 and the ALOC prefix in the locator header is used         to forward the packets to the RBR that is the owner of the         local ALOC prefix.  The RBR shall change the FI-bits to 00.         00: DFZ routing mode.  The local ALOC RBR shall forward the         packets according to the value in the destination address field         of the IP header.  The DFZ routers shall forward the packets         based on the value in the destination address field of the IP         header unless the destination address matches the local ALOC         prefix.  When this situation occurs, the packet enters the         remote ALOC realm and the remote RBR shall change the FI-bits         to 10.         10: Remote ELOC approach routing mode.  The remote ALOC RBR and         following routers shall forward the packets based on the ELOC         prefix in the locator header.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 32]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011         11: Inter-ALOC RPF check mode.  The local ALOC RBR changes the         FI-bits to 11 and the following inter-ALOC routers on the         shared tree shall apply the RPF check against the ALOC prefix         in the locator header.   Valiant Load-Balancing, VLB-bits: 2 bits (optional, subject for   further research)      The purpose of the Valiant Load-Balancing field is to provide a      mechanism for multipath-enabled transport protocols to request      explicit paths in the network for subflows, which are component      parts of a session between two endpoints.  The subflow path      request can be set as follows:         00: Latency-sensitive application.  Only one single subflow         (multipath not applied), the shortest path through the network         is requested.         01: First subflow.  The shortest path or Valiant Load-Balancing         might be applied.         11: Next subflow(s).  Valiant Load-Balancing should be applied   Load-Balanced, L-bit: 1 bit (optional, subject for further research)      The initiator must set the L-bit to zero.  A Valiant Load-      Balancing-capable node can apply VLB switching for the session if      the value is set to zero; if the value is set to 1, VLB switching      is not allowed.  When VLB switching is applied for the session,      the node applying the VLB algorithm must set the value to 1.   Protocol: 8 bits      The Protocol field is identical to that ofRFC 791.   Locator Header Checksum: 16 bits      A checksum is calculated for the locator header only.  The      checksum is computed at the initiator, recomputed at the RBR, and      verified at the responder.  The checksum algorithm is identical to      that ofRFC 791.   Area Locator (optional): 32 bits      The Area Locator is an IPv4 address assigned to locate an ALOC      realm in the Internet.  The ALOC is assigned by an RIR to a      service provider.  The ALOC is globally unique because it is      allocated from the GLB.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 33]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   Endpoint Locator (optional): 32 bits      The Endpoint Locator is an IPv4 address assigned to locate an      endpoint in a local network.  The ELOC block is assigned by an RIR      to a service provider or to an enterprise.  In the intermediate      routing architecture the ELOC block is only unique in a      geographical region.  The final policy of uniqueness shall be      defined by the RIRs.  In the long-term routing architecture the      ELOC block is no longer assigned by an RIR; it is only unique in      the local ALOC realm.   Locator Header Length (optional): 16 bits      The Locator Header Length is the total length of the locator      header.  Locator Header Length is applied when the identifier bit      is set to 1.  Identifier/locator split scheme parameters are      inserted into the locator header after this field.   Padding (optional): variable      The locator header padding is used to ensure that the locator      header ends on a 32-bit boundary.  The padding is zero.10.  Consequences10.1.  Overlapping Local and Remote ELOC Prefixes/Ports   Because an ELOC prefix is only significant within the local ALOC   realm, there is a slight possibility that a session between two   endpoints residing in separate ALOC realms might use the same local   and remote ELOC prefixes.  But the session is still unique because   the two processes communicating over the transport protocol form a   logical session that is uniquely identifiable by the 5-tuple   involved, by the combination of <protocol, local IP address, local   port, remote IP address, remote port>.   The session might no longer be unique when two initiators with the   same local ELOC prefix residing in two separate ALOC realms are   accessing a responder located in a third ALOC realm.  In this   scenario, the possibility exists that the initiators will use the   same local port value.  This situation will cause an "identical   session situation" for the application layer.   To overcome this scenario, the hIPv4 stack must accept only one   unique session with the help of the ALOC information.  If there is an   "identical session situation", i.e., both initiators use the same   values in the 5-tuple <protocol, local IP address, local port, remote   IP address, remote port>, the hIPv4 stack shall allow only the firstFrejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 34]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   established session to continue.  The following sessions must be   prohibited and the initiator is informed by ICMP notification about   the "identical session situation".   MPTCP introduces a token that is locally significant and currently   defined as 32 bits long.  The token will provide a sixth tuple for   future applications to identify and verify the uniqueness of a   session.  Thus, the probability to have an "identical session   situation" is further reduced.  By adding an identifier/locator   database scheme to the hIPv4 framework, the "identical session   situation" is completely removed.10.2.  Large Encapsulated Packets   Adding the locator header to an IPv4 packet in order to create a   hIPv4 packet will increase the size of it, but since the packet is   assembled at the endpoint it will not add complications of the   current Path MTU Discovery (PMTUD) mechanism in the network.  The   intermediate network between two endpoints will not see any   difference in the size of packets; IPv4 and hIPv4 packet sizes are   the same from the network point of view.10.3.  Affected Applications   There are several applications that insert IP address information to   the payload of a packet.  Some applications use the IP address   information to create new sessions or for identification purposes.   Some applications collect IP address information to be used as   referrals.  This section tries to list the applications that need to   be enhanced; however, this is by no means a comprehensive list.  The   applications can be divided into five main categories:   o  Applications based on raw sockets - a raw socket receives packets      containing the complete header, in contrast to the other sockets      that only receive the payload.   o  Applications needed to enable the hIPv4 framework, such as DNS and      DHCP databases, which must be extended to support ALOC prefixes.   o  Applications that insert IP addresses into the payload or use the      IP address for setting up new sessions or for some kind of      identification or as referrals.  An application belonging to this      category cannot set up sessions to other ALOC realms until      extensions have been incorporated.  Within the local ALOC realm      there are no restrictions since the current IPv4 scheme is still      valid.  The following applications have been identified:Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 35]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011      -  SIP: IP addresses are inserted in the SDP offers/answers, XML         body, Contact, Via, maddr, Route, Record-Route SIP headers.      -  Mobile IP: the mobile node uses several IP addresses during the         registration process.      -  IPsec AH: designed to detect alterations at the IP packet         header.      -  RSVP: Resource Reservation Protocol (RSVP) messages are sent         hop-by-hop between RSVP-capable routers to construct an         explicit path.      -  ICMP: notifications need to be able to incorporate ALOC         information and assemble the hIPv4 header in order to be routed         back to the source.      -  Source Specific Multicast: the receiver must specify the source         address.      -  IGMPv3: a source-list is included in the IGMP reports.   o  Applications related to security, such as firewalls, must be      enhanced to support ALOC prefixes.   o  Applications that will function with FQDN, but many use IP      addresses instead, such as ping, traceroute, telnet, and so on.      The CLI syntax needs to be upgraded to support ALOC and ELOC      information via the extended socket API.   At first glance, it seems that a lot of applications need to be re-   engineered and ported, but the situation is not all that bad.  The   applications used inside the local ALOC realm (e.g., an enterprise's   private network) do not need to be upgraded, neither in the   intermediate nor in the long-term architecture.  The classical IPv4   framework is preserved.  Only IP-aware applications used between ALOC   realms need to be upgraded to support the hIPv4 header.  IPv6 has the   definitions in place of the applications mentioned above, but the   migration of applications from IPv4 to IPv6 can impose some capital   expenditures for enterprises, especially if the applications are   customized or homegrown; see [Porting_IPv4].   As stated earlier, hIPv4 does not require to port applications used   inside a private network.  The conclusion is that, whatever next   generation architecture is deployed, some applications will suffer,   either during the transition period or when being re-engineered in   order to be compatible with the new architecture.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 36]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 201110.4.  ICMP   As long as the ICMP request is executed inside the local ALOC realm,   the normal IPv4 ICMP mechanism can be used.  As soon as the ICMP   request exits the local ALOC realm, the locator header shall be used   in the notifications.  Therefore, extensions to the ICMP shall be   implemented.  These shall be compatible with [RFC4884] and support   ALOC and ELOC information.10.5.  Multicast   Since local ELOC prefixes are only installed in the routing table of   the local ALOC realm, there is a constraint with Reverse Path   Forwarding (RPF) that is used to ensure loop-free forwarding of   multicast packets.  The source address of a multicast group (S,G) is   used against the RPF check.  The address of the source can no longer   be used as a RPF checkpoint outside the local ALOC realm.   To enable RPF globally for an (S,G), the multicast-enabled RBR (mRBR)   must at the source's ALOC realm replace the value of the source   address field in the IP header with the local ALOC prefix for inter-   ALOC multicast streams.  This can be achieved if the local RBR acts   also as an anycast Rendezvous Point with MSDP and PIM capabilities.   With these functionalities the RBR becomes a multicast-enabled RBR   (mRBR).  The source registers at the mRBR and a source tree is   established between the source and the mRBR.  When an inter-ALOC   realm receiver subscribes to the multicast group, the mRBR has to   swap the hIPv4 header in the following way:   a. Verify that the received packet uses the hIPv4 protocol value in      the protocol field of the IP header.   b. Verify IP, locator, and transport protocol header checksums.   c. Replace the source address in the IP header with the local ALOC      prefix.   d. Set the S-field to 1.   e. Decrease the TTL value by one.   f. Calculate IP, locator, and transport protocol header checksums.      Transport protocol header calculations do not include the locator      header fields.   g. Forward the packet to the shared multicast tree.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 37]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   In order for the mRBR to function as described above, the source must   assemble the multicast hIPv4 packet in the following way:   a. Set the local IP address (S) from the API in the source address      field of the IP header and in the ELOC field of the locator      header.   b. Set the multicast address (G) from the API in the destination      address field of the IP header.   c. Set the local ALOC prefix in the ALOC field of the locator header.   d. Set the transport protocol value in the protocol field of the      locator header and the hIPv4 protocol value in the protocol field      of the IP header.   e. Set the desired parameters in the A-, I-, S-, VLB-, and L-fields      of the locator header.   f. Set the FI-bits of the locator header to 00.   g. Calculate IP, locator, and transport protocol header checksums.      Transport protocol header calculations do not include the locator      header fields.  When completed, the packet is transmitted.   The downstream routers from the mRBR towards the receiver will use   the source address (which is the source's ALOC prefix after the mRBR)   in the IP header for RPF verification.  In order for the receiver to   create Real-time Transport Control Protocol (RTCP) receiver reports,   all information is provided in the hIPv4 header of the packet.   Because Source Specific Multicast (SSM) and IGMPv3 use IP addresses   in the payload, both protocols need to be modified to support the   hIPv4 framework.11.  Traffic Engineering Considerations   When the intermediate phase of the hIPv4 framework is fully   implemented, ingress load balancing to an ALOC realm can be   influenced by the placement of RBRs at the realm; an RBR provides a   shortest path scheme.  Also, if RIR policies allow, a service   provider can have several ALOCs assigned.  Hence, traffic engineering   and filtering can be done with the help of ALOC prefixes.  For   example, sensitive traffic can be aggregated under one ALOC prefix   that is not fully distributed into the DFZ.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 38]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   If needed, an ALOC traffic engineering solution between ALOC realms   might be developed, to create explicit paths that can be engineered   via specific ALOC prefixes.  For example, develop a mechanism similar   to the one described in [Pathlet_Routing].  Further studies are   needed; first it should be evaluated whether there is demand for such   a solution.   Ingress load balancing to a private remote ALOC realm (remote site)   is influenced by how many attachment points to the Internet the site   uses and where the attachment points are placed at the site.  In   order to apply local ALOC exit routing, e.g., from a multi-homed   site, some new network nodes are needed between the initiator and the   border routers of the site.   In the intermediate routing architecture this is achieved by using   overlay architectures such as MPLS LSP, L2TPv3 tunnels, etc.  The new   network node(s) shall be able to identify hIPv4 packets, based on the   protocol field in the IP header, and switch the packets to explicit   paths based on the ALOC prefix in the locator header.  In the long-   term routing architecture the overlay solution is replaced with a new   forwarding plane; seeSection 6.2.   Together with a multipath transport protocol, the subflows can be   routed via specific attachment points, that is, border routers   sitting between the private local/remote ALOC realms (multi-homed   sites) and the Internet.  Multi-homing becomes multi-pathing.  For   details, seeAppendix B.11.1.  Valiant Load-Balancing   The use of multipath-enabled transport protocols opens up the   possibility to develop a new design methodology of backbone networks,   based on Valiant Load-Balancing [VLB].  If two sites that are   connected with a single uplink to the Internet, and the endpoints are   using multipath-enabled transport protocols and are attached to the   network with only one interface/ELOC-prefix, both subflows will most   likely take the shortest path throughout the Internet.  That is, both   subflows are established over the same links and when there is   congestion on a link or a failure of a link, both subflows might   simultaneously drop packets.  Thus, the benefit of multi-pathing is   lost.   The "subflows-over-same-links" scenario can be avoided if the   subflows are traffic engineered to traverse the Internet on different   paths, but this is difficult to achieve by using classical traffic   engineering, such as IGP tuning or MPLS-based traffic engineering.   By adding a mechanism to the locator header, the "subflows-over-same-   links" scenario might be avoided.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 39]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   If the RBR functionality is deployed on a Valiant Load-Balancing   enabled backbone node -- hereafter called vRBR -- and the backbone   nodes are interconnected via logical full meshed connections, Valiant   Load-Balancing can be applied for the subflows.  When a subflow has   the appropriate bits set in the VLB-field of the locator header, the   first ingress vRBR shall do VLB switching of the subflow.  That is,   the ingress vRBR is allowed to do VLB switching of the subflow's   packets if the VLB-bits are set to 01 or 11, the L-bit is set to 0,   and the local ALOC prefix of the vRBR matches the ALOC-field's   prefix.  If there are no ALOC and ELOC fields in the locator header,   but the other fields' values are set as described above, the vRBR   should apply VLB switching as well for the subflow -- because it is   an intra-ALOC realm subflow belonging to a multipath-enabled session.   With this combination of parameters in the locator header, the   subflow is VLB switched only at the first ALOC realm and the subflows   might be routed throughout the Internet on different paths.  If VLB   switching is applied at every ALOC realm, this would most likely add   too much latency for the subflows.  The VLB switching at the first   ALOC realm will not separate the subflows on the first and last mile   links (site with a single uplink).  If the subflows on the first and   last mile link need to be routed on separate links, the endpoints   should be deployed in a multi-homed environment.  Studies on how   Valiant Load-Balancing is influencing traffic patterns between   interconnected VLB [iVLB] backbone networks have been done.   Nevertheless, more studies are needed regarding Valiant Load-   Balancing scenarios.12.  Mobility Considerations   This section considers two types of mobility solutions: site mobility   and endpoint mobility.   Site mobility:   Today, classical multi-homing is the most common solution for   enterprises that wish to achieve site mobility.  Multi-homing is one   of the key findings behind the growth of the DFZ RIB; see [RFC4984],   Sections2.1 and3.1.2.  The hIPv4 framework can provide a solution   for enterprises to have site mobility without the requirement of   implementing a classical multi-homed solution.   One of the reasons to deploy multi-homing is to avoid renumbering of   the local infrastructure when an upstream ISP is replaced.  Thus,   today, PI-address blocks are deployed at enterprises.  In the   intermediate routing architecture, an enterprise is allocated a   regional PI ELOC block (for details, seeAppendix A) that is used for   internal routing.  The upstream ISP provides an ALOC prefix thatFrejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 40]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   describes how the enterprise's network is connected to the Internet.   If the enterprise wishes to switch to another ISP, it only changes   the ALOC prefix at endpoints, from the previous ISP's ALOC prefix to   the new ISP's ALOC prefix, without connectivity interruptions in the   local network since the ALOC prefix is only used for Internet   connectivity -- several ALOCs can be used simultaneously at the   endpoints; thus, a smooth migration from one ISP to another is   possible.  In the long-term routing architecture, when the forwarding   plane is upgraded, the regional PI ELOC block is returned to the RIR   and the enterprise can use a full 32-bit ELOC space to design the   internal routing topology.   An enterprise can easily become multi-homed or switch ISPs.  The   local ELOC block is used for internal routing and upstream ISPs   provide their ALOC prefixes for Internet connectivity.  Multi-homing   is discussed in detail inAppendix B.   Endpoint mobility:   As said earlier, MPTCP is the most interesting identifier/locator   split scheme to solve endpoint mobility scenarios.  MPTCP introduces   a token, which is locally significant and currently defined as 32   bits long.  The token will provide a sixth tuple to identify and   verify the uniqueness of a session.  This sixth tuple -- the token --   does not depend upon the underlying layer, the IP layer.  The session   is identified with the help of the token and thus the application is   not aware when the locator parameters are changed, e.g., during a   roaming situation, but it is required that the application is not   making use of ELOC/ALOC information.  In multi-homed scenarios, the   application can make use of ELOC information, which will not change   if the endpoint is fixed to the location.   Security issues arise: the token can be captured during the session   by, for example, a man-in-the-middle attack.  These attacks can be   mitigated by applying [tcpcrypt], for example.  If the application   requires full protection against man-in-the-middle attacks, the user   should apply the Transport Layer Security Protocol (TLS) [RFC5246]   for the session.   The most common endpoint mobility use case today is that the   responder resides in the fixed network and the initiator is mobile.   Thus, MPTCP will provide roaming capabilities for the mobile   endpoint, if both endpoints are making use of the MPTCP extension.   However, in some use cases, the fixed endpoint needs to initialize a   session to a mobile responder.  Therefore, Mobile IP (MIP) [RFC5944]   should incorporate the hIPv4 extension -- MIP provides a rendezvous   service for the mobile endpoints.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 41]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   Also, many applications provide rendezvous services for their users,   e.g., SIP, peer-to-peer, Instant Messaging services.  A generic   rendezvous service solution can be provided by an identifier/locator   database scheme, e.g., HIP, ILNP, or NBS.  If desired, the user   (actually the application) can make use of one of these rendezvous   service schemes, such as extended MIP, some application-specific   rendezvous services, or a generic rendezvous service -- or some   combination of them.   The hIPv4 framework will not define which identifier/locator split   solution should be used for endpoint mobility.  The hIPv4 framework   is focusing on routing scalability and supports several   identifier/locator split solutions that can be exploited to develop   new services, with the focus on endpoint mobility.13.  Transition Considerations   The hIPv4 framework is not introducing any new protocols that would   be mandatory for the transition from IPv4 to hIPv4; instead,   extensions are added to existing protocols.  The hIPv4 framework   requires extensions to the current IPv4 stack, to infrastructure   systems, and to some applications that use IP address information,   but the current forwarding plane in the Internet remains intact,   except that a new forwarding element (the RBR) is required to create   an ALOC realm.   Extensions to the IPv4 stack, to infrastructure systems, and to   applications that make use of IP address information can be deployed   in parallel with the current IPv4 framework.  Genuine hIPv4 sessions   can be established between endpoints even though the current   unidimensional addressing structure is still present.   When will the unidimensional addressing structure be replaced by a   hierarchical addressing scheme and a fourth hierarchy added to the   routing architecture?  The author thinks there are two possible   tipping points:   o  When the RIB of DFZ is getting close to the capabilities of      current forwarding planes.  Who will pay for the upgrade?  Or will      the service provider only accept ALOC prefixes from other service      providers and avoid capital expenditures?   o  When the depletion of IPv4 addresses is causing enough problems      for service providers and enterprises.   The biggest risk and reason why the hIPv4 framework will not succeed   is the very short time frame until the expected depletion of the IPv4   address space occurs -- actually the first RIR has run out of IPv4Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 42]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   addresses during the IESG review process of this document (April   2011).  Also, will enterprises give up their global allocation of the   current IPv4 address block they have gained, as an IPv4 address block   has become an asset with an economical value.   The transition requires the upgrade of endpoint's stack, and this is   a drawback compared to the [CES] architectures proposed in [RFC6115].   A transition to an architecture that requires the upgrade of   endpoint's stack is considerably slower than an architecture that   requires only upgrade of some network nodes.  But the transition   might not be as slow or challenging at it first seems since hIPv4 is   an evolution of the current deployed Internet.   o  Not all endpoints need to be upgraded; the endpoints that do not      establish sessions to other ALOC realms can continue to make use      of the classical IPv4 framework.  Also, legacy applications that      are used only inside a local ALOC realm do not need to be ported      to another framework.  For further details, seeAppendix C.   o  Upgrading endpoint's stack, e.g., at critical or complicated      systems, will definitely take time; thus, it would be more      convenient to install a middlebox in front of such systems.  It is      obvious that the hIPv4 framework needs a middlebox solution to      speed up the transition; combining CES architectures with the      hIPv4 framework might produce such a middlebox.  For further      details, seeAppendix D.   o  The framework is incrementally deployable.  Not all endpoints in      the Internet need to be upgraded before the first IPv4 block can      be released from a globally unique allocation status to a      regionally unique allocation status.  That is, to achieve ELOC      status for the prefixes used in a local network in the      intermediate routing architecture, seeAppendix D.  An ALOC realm      that wishes to achieve local unique status for its ELOC block in      the long-term routing architecture does not need to wait for other      ALOC realms to proceed to the same level simultaneously.  It is      sufficient that the other ALOC realms have achieved the      intermediate routing architecture status.  For further details,      seeSection 6.14.  Security Considerations   Because the hIPv4 framework does not introduce other network   mechanisms than a new type of border router to the currently deployed   routing architecture, the best current practices for securing ISP   networks are still valid.  Since the DFZ will no longer contain ELOC   prefixes, there are some benefits and complications regarding   security that need to be taken into account.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 43]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   The hijacking of a single ELOC prefix by longest match from another   ALOC realm is no longer possible because the prefixes are separated   by a locator, the ALOC.  To carry out a hijack of a certain ELOC   prefix, the whole ALOC realm must be routed via a bogus ALOC realm.   Studies should be done with the Secure Inter-Domain Routing (SIDR)   working group to determine whether the ALOC prefixes can be protected   from hijacking.   By not being able to hijack a certain ELOC prefix, there are some   implications when mitigating distributed denial-of-service (DDoS)   attacks.  This implication occurs especially in the long-term routing   architecture, e.g., when a multi-homed enterprise is connected with   unicast ALOC RBRs to the ISPs.   One method used today to mitigate DDoS attacks is to inject a more   specific prefix (typically host prefix) to the routing table so that   the victim of the attack is "relocated", i.e., a sinkhole is created   in front of the victim.  The sinkhole may separate bogus traffic from   valid traffic or analyze the attack.  The challenge in the long-term   routing architecture is how to reroute a specific ELOC prefix of the   multi-homed enterprise when the ELOC prefix cannot be installed in   the ISP's routing table.   Creating a sinkhole for all traffic designated to an ALOC realm might   be challenging and expensive, depending on the size of the multi-   homed enterprise.  To have the sinkhole at the enterprise's ALOC   realm may saturate the connections between the enterprise and ISPs,   thus this approach is not a real option.   By borrowing ideas from a service-centric networking architecture   [SCAFFOLD], a sinkhole service can be created.  An example of how a   distributed sinkhole service can be designed follows:      a. A firewall (or similar node) at the victim's ALOC realm         discovers an attack.  The security staff at the enterprise         realizes that the amount of the incoming traffic caused by the         attack is soon saturating the connections or other resources.         Thus, the staff informs the upstream ISPs of the attack, also         about the victim's ALOC prefix X and ELOC prefix Y.      b. The ISP reserves the resources for the sinkhole service.  These         resources make use of ALOC prefix Z; the resources are         programmed with a service ID and the victim's X and Y prefixes.         The ISP informs the victim's security staff of the service ID.         The ISP applies a NAT rule on their RBRs and/or hIPv4-enabled         routers.  The NAT rule replaces the destination address in the         IP header of packets with Z when the destination address of the         IP header matches X and the ELOC prefix of the locator headerFrejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 44]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011         matches Y.  Also, the service ID is inserted to the locator         header; the service ID acts as a referral for the sinkhole.  It         is possible that the sinkhole serves several victims; thus, a         referral is needed.  PMTUD issues must be taken into account.      c. The victim's inbound traffic is now routed at the RBRs and/or         hIPv4-enabled routers to the sinkhole(s); the traffic is         identified by the service ID.  Bogus traffic is discarded at         the sinkhole, for valid traffic the value of the destination         address in the IP header Z is replaced with X.  By using a         service ID in the analyzed packets, the enterprise is informed         that the packets containing service ID are valid traffic and         allowed to be forwarded to the victim.  It might be possible         that not all upstream ISPs are redirecting traffic to the         distributed sinkholes.  Thus, traffic that does not contain the         agreed service ID might be bogus.  Also, by inserting a service         ID to the valid packets, overlay solutions between the routers,         sinkholes, and victim can be avoided.  In case the valid packet         with a service ID traverses another RBR or hIPv4-enabled router         containing the same NAT rule, that packet is not rerouted to         the sinkhole.  The enterprise shall ensure that the victim does         not use the service ID in its replies -- if the attacker         becomes aware of the service ID, the sinkhole is disarmed.   Today, traffic is sent to sinkholes by injecting host routes into the   routing table.  This method can still be used inside an ALOC realm   for intra-ALOC attacks.  For attacks spanning over several ALOC   realms new methods are needed; one example is described above.  It is   desirable that the RBR and hIPv4-enabled routers are capable of   applying NAT rules and inserting service ID to selected packets in   the forwarding plane.15.  Conclusions   This document offers a high-level overview of the hierarchical IPv4   framework that could be built in parallel with the current Internet   by implementing extensions at several architectures.  Implementation   of the hIPv4 framework will not require a major service window break   in the Internet or at the private networks of enterprises.   Basically, the hIPv4 framework is an evolution of the current IPv4   framework.   The transition to hIPv4 might be attractive for enterprises since the   hIPv4 framework does not create a catch-22 situation, e.g., when   should an application used only inside the private network be ported   from IPv4 to IPv6?  Also, what is the business justification for   porting the application to IPv6?  Another matter is that when anFrejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 45]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   IPv4/v6 dual-stack solution is used it could impose operational   expenditures, especially with rule sets at firewalls -- both in front   of servers and at clients.   If an enterprise chooses to deploy hIPv4, however, the legacy   applications do not need to be ported because hIPv4 is backwards   compatible with the classical IPv4 framework.  This means lower costs   for the enterprise, and an additional bonus is the new stack's   capabilities to better serve mobility use cases.   But the enterprise must take the decision soon and act promptly,   because the IPv4 address depletion is a reality in the very near   future.  If the decision is delayed, IPv6 will arrive, and then,   sooner or later, the legacy applications will need to be ported.   However, though this document has focused only on IPv4, a similar   scheme can be deployed for IPv6 in the future, that is, creating a   64x64 bit locator space.  But some benefits would have been lost at   the time this document was written, such as:      o  Backwards compatibility with the current Internet and therefore         no smooth migration plan is gained.      o  The locator header, including ALOC and ELOC prefixes, would         have been larger, 160 bits versus 96 bits.  And the identifier         (EUI-64) would always have been present, which can be         considered as pros or cons, depending upon one's view of the         privacy issue, as discussed in [RFC4941] and in         [Mobility_& _Privacy].   If an enterprise prefers hIPv4 (e.g., due to gaining additional IPv4   addresses and smooth migration capabilities), there is an   unintentional side effect (from the enterprise's point of view) on   the routing architecture of the Internet; multi-homing becomes multi-   pathing, and an opportunity opens up for the service providers to   create an Internet routing architecture that holds less prefixes and   generates less BGP updates in DFZ than the current Internet.   The hIPv4 framework is providing a new hierarchy in the routing   subsystem and is complementary work to multipath-enabled transport   protocols (such as MPTCP and SCTP) and service-centric networking   architectures (such as SCAFFOLD).  End users and enterprises are not   interested in routing issues in the Internet; instead, a holistic   view should be applied on the three disciplines with a focus on new   service opportunities and communicated to the end users and   enterprises.  Then perhaps the transition request to a new routing   architecture will be accepted and carried out.  However, more work is   needed to accomplish a holistic framework of the three disciplines.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 46]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 201116.  References16.1.  Normative References   [RFC1385]   Wang, Z., "EIP: The Extended Internet Protocol",RFC1385, November 1992.   [RFC1812]   Baker, F., Ed., "Requirements for IP Version 4 Routers",RFC 1812, June 1995.   [RFC1918]   Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, B., Karrenberg, D., de Groot, G.,               and E. Lear, "Address Allocation for Private Internets",BCP 5,RFC 1918, February 1996.   [RFC2119]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate               Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC3031]   Rosen, E., Viswanathan, A., and R. Callon, "Multiprotocol               Label Switching Architecture",RFC 3031, January 2001.   [RFC4033]   Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S.               Rose, "DNS Security Introduction and Requirements",RFC4033, March 2005.   [RFC4601]   Fenner, B., Handley, M., Holbrook, H., and I. Kouvelas,               "Protocol Independent Multicast - Sparse Mode (PIM-SM):               Protocol Specification (Revised)",RFC 4601, August 2006.   [RFC4884]   Bonica, R., Gan, D., Tappan, D., and C. Pignataro,               "Extended ICMP to Support Multi-Part Messages",RFC 4884,               April 2007.   [RFC5246]   Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security               (TLS) Protocol Version 1.2",RFC 5246, August 2008.   [RFC5944]   Perkins, C., Ed., "IP Mobility Support for IPv4,               Revised",RFC 5944, November 2010.16.2.  Informative References   [CES]       Jen, D., Meisel, M., Yan, H. Massey, D., Wang, L., Zhang,               B., Zhang, L., "Towards A New Internet Routing               Architecture: Arguments for Separating Edges from Transit               Core", 2008,http://conferences.sigcomm.org/hotnets/2008/papers/18.pdf.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 47]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   [Dagstuhl]  Arkko, J., Braun, M.B., Brim, S., Eggert, L., Vogt, C.,               Zhang, L., "Perspectives Workshop: Naming and Addressing               in a Future Internet", 2009,http://www.dagstuhl.de/de/programm/kalender/semhp/?semnr=09102.   [ID/loc_Split]               Thaler, D., "Why do we really want an ID/locator split               anyway?", 2008,http://conferences.sigcomm.org/sigcomm/2008/workshops/mobiarch/slides/thaler.pdf.   [ILNP]      Atkinson, R.,"ILNP Concept of Operations", Work in               Progress, February 2011.   [iVLB]      Babaioff, M., Chuang, J., "On the Optimality and               Interconnection of Valiant Load-Balancing Networks",               2007,http://people.ischool.berkeley.edu/~chuang/pubs/VLB-infocom07.pdf.   [LISP]      Farinacci, D., Fuller, V., Meyer, D., and D. Lewis,               "Locator/ID Separation Protocol", Work in Progress, June               2011.   [Mobility_&_Privacy]               Brim, S., Linsner. M., McLaughlin, B., and K. Wierenga,               "Mobility and Privacy", Work in Progress, March 2011.   [NBS]       Ubillos, J., Xu, M., Ming, Z., and C. Vogt, "Name-Based               Sockets Architecture", Work in Progress, September 2010.   [Nimrod]    Chiappa, N., "A New IP Routing and Addressing               Architecture", 1991,http://ana-3.lcs.mit.edu/~jnc/nimrod/overview.txt.   [Pathlet_Routing]               Godfrey, P.G., Shenker, S., Stoica, I., "Pathlet               Routing", 2008,http://conferences.sigcomm.org/hotnets/2008/papers/17.pdf.   [Porting_IPv4]               DeLong, O., "Porting IPv4 applications to dual stack,               with examples", 2010,http://www.apricot.net/apricot2010/program/tutorials/porting-ipv4-apps.html.   [RBridge]   Perlman, R., "RBridges, Transparent Routing", 2004,http://www.ieee-infocom.org/2004/Papers/26_1.PDF.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 48]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   [Revisiting_Route_Caching]               Kim, C., Caesar, M., Gerber, A., Rexford, J., "Revisiting               Route Caching: The World Should Be Flat", 2009,http://www.springerlink.com/content/80w13260665v2013/.   [RFC3597]   Gustafsson, A., "Handling of Unknown DNS Resource Record               (RR) Types",RFC 3597, September 2003.   [RFC3618]   Fenner, B., Ed., and D. Meyer, Ed., "Multicast Source               Discovery Protocol (MSDP)",RFC 3618, October 2003.   [RFC4423]   Moskowitz, R. and P. Nikander, "Host Identity Protocol               (HIP) Architecture",RFC 4423, May 2006.   [RFC4941]   Narten, T., Draves, R., and S. Krishnan, "Privacy               Extensions for Stateless Address Autoconfiguration in               IPv6",RFC 4941, September 2007.   [RFC4960]   Stewart, R., Ed., "Stream Control Transmission Protocol",RFC 4960, September 2007.   [RFC4984]   Meyer, D., Ed., Zhang, L., Ed., and K. Fall, Ed., "Report               from the IAB Workshop on Routing and Addressing",RFC4984, September 2007.   [RFC5395]   Eastlake 3rd, D., "Domain Name System (DNS) IANA               Considerations",RFC 5395, November 2008.   [RFC5880]   Katz, D. and D. Ward, "Bidirectional Forwarding Detection               (BFD)",RFC 5880, June 2010.   [RFC6115]   Li, T., Ed., "Recommendation for a Routing Architecture",RFC 6115, February 2011.   [RFC6182]   Ford, A., Raiciu, C., Handley, M., Barre, S., and J.               Iyengar, "Architectural Guidelines for Multipath TCP               Development",RFC 6182, March 2011.   [RFC6227]   Li, T., Ed., "Design Goals for Scalable Internet               Routing",RFC 6227, May 2011.   [RRG]       RRG, "IRTF Routing Research Group Home Page",http://tools.ietf.org/group/irtf/trac/wiki/RoutingResearchGroup.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 49]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   [SCAFFOLD]  Freedman, M.J., Arye, M., Gopalan, P., Steven Y. Ko,               S.Y., Nordstrom, E., Rexford, J., Shue, D. "Service-               Centric Networking with SCAFFOLD", September 2010http://www.cs.princeton.edu/research/techreps/TR-885-10.   [Split-DNS] BIND 9 Administrator Reference Manual,http://www.bind9.net/manual/bind/9.3.1/Bv9ARM.ch04.html#AEN767.   [tcpcrypt]  Bittau, A., Hamburg, M., Handley, M., Mazi`eres, D.,               Boneh, D., "The case for ubiquitous transport-level               encryption", 2010,http://tcpcrypt.org/tcpcrypt.pdf.   [VLB]       Zhang-Shen, R., McKeown, N., "Designing a Predictable               Internet Backbone with Valiant Load-Balancing", 2004,http://conferences.sigcomm.org/hotnets/2004/HotNets-III%20Proceedings/zhang-shen.pdf.17.  Acknowledgments   The active participants at the Routing Research Group [RRG] mailing   list are acknowledged.  They have provided ideas, proposals, and   discussions that have influenced the architecture of the hIPv4   framework.  The following persons, in alphabetical order, have   provided valuable review input: Aki Anttila, Mohamed Boucadair, Antti   Jarvenpaa, Dae Young Kim, Mark Lewis, Wes Toman, and Robin Whittle.   Also, during the IRSG and IESG review process, Rajeev Koodli, Wesley   Eddy, Jari Arkko, and Adrian Farrel provided valuable review input.   Lastly, a special thanks to Alfred Schwab from the Poughkeepsie ITSO   for his editorial assistance.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 50]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011Appendix A.  Short-Term and Future IPv4 Address Allocation Policy   In this section, we study how the hIPv4 framework could influence the   IPv4 address allocation policies to ensure that the new framework   will enable some reusage of IPv4 address blocks.  It is the Regional   Internet Registries (RIRs) that shall define the final policies.   When the intermediate routing architecture (see Figure 1) is fully   implemented, every ALOC realm could have a full IPv4 address space,   except the GLB, from which to allocate ELOC blocks.  There are some   implications, however.  In order for an enterprise to achieve site   mobility, that is, to change service provider without changing its   ELOC scheme, the enterprise should implement an autonomous system   (AS) solution with an ALOC prefix at the attachment point to the   service provider.   Larger enterprises have the resources to implement AS border routing.   Most large enterprises have already implemented multi-homing   solutions.  Small and midsize enterprises (SMEs) may not have the   resources to implement AS border routing, or the implementation   introduces unnecessary costs for the SME.  Also, if every enterprise   needs to have an allocated ALOC prefix, this will have an impact on   the RIB at the DFZ -- the RIB will be populated with a huge number of   non-aggregatable ALOC prefixes.   It is clear that a compromise is needed.  An SME site usually deploys   a single uplink to the Internet and should be able to reserve a PI   ELOC block from the RIR without being forced to create an ALOC realm,   that is, implement an RBR solution and AS border routing.  Since the   PI ELOC block is no longer globally unique, an SME can only reserve   the PI ELOC block for the region where it is active or has its   attachment point to the Internet.  The attachment point rarely   changes to another country; therefore, it is sufficient that the PI   ELOC block is regionally unique.   When the enterprise replaces its Internet service provider, it does   not have to change its ELOC scheme -- only the local ALOC prefix at   the endpoints is changed.  The internal traffic at an enterprise does   not make use of the ALOC prefix.  The internal routing uses only the   ELOC prefixes, and thus the internal routing and addressing   architectures are preserved.   Mergers and acquisitions of enterprises can cause ELOC conflicts,   because the PI ELOC block is hereafter only regionally unique.  If an   enterprise in region A acquires an enterprise in region B, there is a   slight chance that both enterprises have overlapping ELOC prefixes.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 51]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   If overlapping of ELOC prefixes occurs, the private unicast ALOC   solution can be implemented to separate them -- if all affected   endpoints support the hIPv4 framework.   Finally, residential users will receive only PA locators.  When a   residential user changes a service provider, she/he has to replace   the locators.  Since a PA ELOC block is no longer globally unique,   every Internet service provider can use the PA ELOC blocks at their   ALOC realms; the PA locators become kind of private locators for the   service providers.   If the forwarding planes and all hosts that establish inter-ALOC   realm sessions are upgraded to support the hIPv4 framework, that is,   the long-term routing architecture (see Figure 2) is implemented,   several interesting possibilities occur:   o  The regional allocation policy for PI ELOC spaces can be removed,      and the enterprise can make use of the whole IPv4 address space      that is globally unique today.  The ELOC space is hereafter only      significant at a local ALOC realm.   o  In case of mergers or acquisitions of enterprises, the private      unicast ALOC solution can be used to separate overlapping ELOC      spaces.   o  The GLB space can be expanded to make use of all 32 bits (except      for the blocks defined inRFC 1918) for anycast and unicast ALOC      allocations; only ISPs are allowed to apply for GLB prefixes.   o  The global anycast ALOC solution can be replaced with the global      unicast ALOC solution since the ISP and enterprise no longer need      to share ELOC routing information.  Also, there is enough space in      the GLB to reserve global unicast ALOC prefix(es) for every      enterprise.   o  Residential users will still use global anycast ALOC solutions,      and if they change service providers, their locators need to be      replaced.   The result is that a 32x32 bit locator space is achieved.  When an   enterprise replaces an ISP with another ISP, only the ALOC prefix(es)   is replaced at endpoints and infrastructure nodes.  Renumbering of   ALOC prefixes can be automated by, for example, DHCP and extensions   to IGP.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 52]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011Appendix B.  Multi-Homing becomes Multi-Pathing   When the transition to the intermediate routing architecture (see   Figure 1) is fully completed, the RIB of an ISP that has created an   ALOC realm will have the following entries:   o  The PA ELOC blocks of directly attached customers (residential and      enterprises)   o  The PI ELOC blocks of directly attached customers (e.g.,      enterprises)   o  The globally unique ALOC prefixes, received from other service      providers   The ISP will not carry any PA or PI ELOC blocks from other service   providers in its routing table.  In order to do routing and   forwarding of packets between ISPs, only ALOC information of other   ISPs is needed.   Then, the question is how to keep the growth of ALOC reasonable?  If   the enterprise is using PI addresses, has an AS number, and is   implementing BGP, why not apply for an ALOC prefix?   Classical multi-homing is causing the biggest impact on the growth of   the size of the RIB in the DFZ -- so replacing a /20 IPv4 prefix with   a /32 ALOC prefix will not reduce the size of the RIB in the DFZ.   Most likely, the only way to prevent this from happening is to impose   a yearly cost for the allocation of an ALOC prefix, except if you are   a service provider that is providing access and/or transit traffic   for your customers.  And it is reasonable to impose a cost for   allocating an ALOC prefix for the non-service providers, because when   an enterprise uses an ALOC prefix, it is reserving a FIB entry   throughout the DFZ; the ALOC FIB entry needs to have power, space,   hardware, and cooling on all the routers in the DFZ.   Implementing this kind of ALOC allocating policy will reduce the RIB   size in the DFZ quite well, because multi-homing will no longer   increase the RIB size of the DFZ.  But this policy will have some   impact on the resilience behavior because by compressing routing   information we will lose visibility in the network.  In today's   multi-homing solutions the network always knows where the remote   endpoint resides.  In case of a link or network failure, a backup   path is calculated and an alternative path is found, and all routers   in the DFZ are aware of the change in the topology.  This   functionality has off-loaded the workload of the endpoints; they only   need to find the closest ingress router and the network will deliverFrejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 53]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   the packets to the egress router, regardless (almost) of what   failures happen in the network.  And with the growth of multi-homed   prefixes, the routers in the DFZ have been forced to carry greater   workloads, perhaps close to their limits -- the workload between the   network and endpoints is not in balance.  The conclusion is that the   endpoints should take more responsibility for their sessions by   offloading the workload in the network.  How?  Let us walk through an   example.   A remote enterprise has been given an ELOC block 192.168.1.0/24,   either via static routing or BGP announced to the upstream service   providers.  The upstream service providers provide the ALOC   information for the enterprise, 10.1.1.1 and 10.2.2.2.  A remote   endpoint has been installed and given ELOC 192.168.1.1 -- the ELOC is   a locator defining where the remote endpoint is attached to the   remote network.  The remote endpoint has been assigned ALOCs 10.1.1.1   and 10.2.2.2 -- an ALOC is a locator defining the attachment point of   the remote network to the Internet.   The initiator (local endpoint) that has ELOC 172.16.1.1 and ALOC   prefixes 10.3.3.3 and 10.4.4.4 has established a session by using   ALOC 10.3.3.3 to the responder (remote endpoint) at ELOC 192.168.1.1   and ALOC 10.1.1.1.  That is, both networks 192.168.10/24 and   172.16.1.0/24 are multi-homed.  ALOCs are not available in the   current IP stack's API, but both ELOCs are seen as the local and   remote IP addresses in the API, so the application will communicate   between IP addresses 172.16.1.1 and 192.168.1.1.  If ALOC prefixes   are included, the session is established between 10.3.3.3:172.16.1.1   and 10.1.1.1:192.168.1.1.   Next, a network failure occurs and the link between the responder   border router (BR-R1) and service provider that owns ALOC 10.1.1.1   goes down.  The border router of the initiator (BR-I3) will not be   aware of the situation, because only ALOC information is exchanged   between service providers and ELOC information is compressed to stay   within ALOC realms.  But BR-R1 will notice the link failure; BR-R1   could rewrite the ALOC field in the locator header for this session   from 10.1.1.1 to 10.2.2.2 and send the packets to the second service   provider via BR-R2.  The session between the initiator   10.3.3.3:172.16.1.1 and the responder 10.2.2.2:192.168.1.1 remains   intact because the legacy 5-tuple at the IP stack API does not   change.  Only the ALOC prefix of the responder has changed and this   information is not shown to the application.  An assumption here is   that the hIPv4 stack does accept changes of ALOC prefixes on the fly   (more about this later).Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 54]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   If the network link between the BR-I3 and ISP providing ALOC 10.3.3.3   fails, BR-I3 could rewrite the ALOC prefix in the locator header and   route the packets via BR-I4 and the session would stay up.  If there   is a failure somewhere in the network, the border routers might   receive an ICMP destination unreachable message (if not blocked by   some security functionality) and thus try to switch the session over   to the other ISP by replacing the ALOC prefixes in the hIPv4 header.   Or the endpoints might try themselves to switch to the other ALOCs   after a certain time-out in the session.  In all session transition   cases the legacy 5-tuple remains intact.   If border routers or one of the endpoints changes the ALOC prefix   without a negotiation with the remote endpoint, security issues   arise.  Can the endpoints trust the remote endpoint when ALOC   prefixes are changed on the fly -- is it still the same remote   endpoint or has the session been hijacked by a bogus endpoint?  The   obvious answer is that an identification mechanism is needed to   ensure that after a change in the path or a change of the attachment   point of the endpoint, the endpoints are still the same.  An   identifier needs to be exchanged during the transition of the   session.   Identifier/locator split schemes have been discussed on the [RRG]   mailing list, for example, multipath-enabled transport protocols and   identifier database schemes.  Both types of identifiers can be used   to protect the session from being hijacked.  A session identifier   will provide a low-level security mechanism, offering some protection   against hijacking of the session and also provide mobility.  SCTP   uses the verification tag to identify the association; MPTCP   incorporates a token functionality for the same purpose -- both can   be considered to fulfill the characteristics of a session identifier.   [tcpcrypt] can be used to further mitigate session hijacking.  If the   application requires full protection against man-in-the-middle   attacks, TLS should be applied for the session.  Both transport   protocols are also multipath-capable.  Implementing multipath-capable   transport protocols in a multi-homed environment will provide new   capabilities, such as:   o  Concurrent and separate exit/entry paths via different attachment      points at multi-homed sites.   o  True dynamic load-balancing, in which the endpoints do not      participate in any routing protocols or do not update rendezvous      solutions due to network link or node failures.   o  Only a single Network Interface Card (NIC) on the endpoints is      required.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 55]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   o  In case of a border router or ISP failure, the multipath transport      protocol will provide resilience.   By adding more intelligence at the endpoints, such as multipath-   enabled transport protocols, the workload of the network is offloaded   and can take less responsibility for providing visibility of   destination prefixes on the Internet; for example, prefix compression   in the DFZ can be applied and only the attachment points of a local   network need to be announced in the DFZ.  And the IP address space no   longer needs to be globally unique; it is sufficient that only a part   is globally unique, with the rest being only regionally unique (in   the long-term routing architecture, locally unique) as discussed inAppendix A.   The outcome is that the current multi-homing solution can migrate   towards a multi-pathing environment that will have the following   characteristics:   o  An AS number is not mandatory for enterprises.   o  BGP is not mandatory at the enterprise's border routers; static      routing with Bidirectional Forwarding Detection (BFD) [RFC5880] is      an option.   o  Allocation of global ALOC prefixes for the enterprise should not      be allowed; instead, upstream ISPs provide the global ALOC      prefixes for the enterprise.   o  MPTCP provides dynamic load-balancing without using routing      protocols; several paths can be used simultaneously and thus      resilience is achieved.   o  Provides low growth of RIB entries at the DFZ.   o  When static routing is used between the enterprise and the ISP:      -  The RIB size at the enterprise's border routers does not depend         upon the size of the RIB in the DFZ or in adjacent ISPs.      -  The enterprise's border router cannot cause BGP churn in the         DFZ or in the adjacent ISPs' RIB.   o  When dynamic routing is used between the enterprise and the ISP:      -  The RIB size at the enterprise's border routers depends upon         the size of the RIB in the DFZ and adjacent ISPs.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 56]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011      -  The enterprise's border router can cause BGP churn for the         adjacent ISPs, but not in the DFZ.   o  The cost of the border router should be less than in today's      multi-homing solution.Appendix C.  Incentives and Transition Arguments   The media has announced the meltdown of the Internet and the   depletion of IPv4 addresses several times, but the potential chaos   has been postponed and the general public has lost interest in these   announcements.  Perhaps it could be worthwhile to find other valuable   arguments that the general public could be interested in, such as:   o  Not all endpoints need to be upgraded, only those that are      directly attached to the Internet, such as portable laptops, smart      mobile phones, proxies, and DMZ/frontend endpoints.  But the most      critical endpoints, the backend endpoints where enterprises keep      their most critical business applications, do not need to be      upgraded.  These endpoints should not be reached at all from the      Internet, only from the private network.  And this functionality      can be achieved with the hIPv4 framework, since it is backwards      compatible with the current IPv4 stack.  Therefore, investments in      legacy applications used inside an ALOC realm are preserved.   o  Mobility - it is estimated that the demand for applications that      perform well over the wireless access network will increase.      Introduction of MPTCP and identifier/locator split schemes opens      up new possibilities to create new solutions and applications that      are optimized for mobility.  The hIPv4 framework requires an      upgrade of the endpoint's stack; if possible, the hIPv4 stack      should also contain MPTCP and identifier/locator split scheme      features.  Applications designed for mobility could bring      competitive benefits.   o  The intermediate routers in the network do not need to be upgraded      immediately; the current forwarding plane can still be used.  The      benefit is that the current network equipment can be preserved at      the service providers, enterprises, and residences (except      middleboxes).  This means that the carbon footprint is a lot lower      compared to other solutions.  Many enterprises do have green      programs and many residential users are concerned with the global      warming issue.   o  The migration from IPv4 to IPv6 (currently defined architecture)      will increase the RIB and FIB throughout DFZ.  Whether it will      require a new upgrade of the forwarding plane as discussed in      [RFC4984] is unclear.  Most likely an upgrade is needed.  TheFrejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 57]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011      outcome of deploying IPv4 and IPv6 concurrently is that the      routers need to have larger memories for the RIB and FIB -- every      globally unique prefix is installed in the routers that are      participating in the DFZ.  Since the enterprise reserves one or      several RIB/FIB entries on every router in the DFZ, it is      increasing the power consumption of the Internet, thus increasing      the carbon footprint.  And many enterprises are committed to green      programs.  If hIPv4 is deployed, the power consumption of the      Internet will not grow as much as in an IPv4 to IPv6 transition      scenario.   o  Another issue: if the migration from IPv4 to IPv6 (currently      defined architecture) occurs, the routers in the DFZ most likely      need to be upgraded to more expensive routers, as discussed in      [RFC4984].  In the wealthy part of the world, where a large      penetration of Internet users is already present, the service      providers can pass the costs of the upgrade along to their      subscribers more easily.  With a "wealthy/high penetration" ratio      the cost will not grow so much that the subscribers would abandon      the Internet.  But in the less wealthy part of the world, where      there is usually a lower penetration of subscribers, the cost of      the upgrade cannot be accepted so easily -- a "less wealthy/low      penetration" ratio could impose a dramatic increase of the cost      that needs to be passed along to the subscribers.  And thus fewer      subscribers could afford to get connected to the Internet.  For      the global enterprises and the enterprises in the less wealthy      part of the world, this scenario could mean less potential      customers and there could be situations when the nomads of the      enterprises can't get connected to the Internet.  This is also not      fair; every human being should have a fair chance to be able to      enjoy the Internet experience -- and the wealthy part of the world      should take this right into consideration.  Many enterprises are      committed to Corporate Social Responsibility programs.   Not only technical and economical arguments can be found.  Other   arguments that the general public is interested in and concerned   about can be found, for example, that the Internet becomes greener   and more affordable for everyone, in contrast with the current   forecast of the evolution of the Internet.Appendix D.  Integration with CES Architectures   Because the hIPv4 framework requires changes to the endpoint's stack,   it will take some time before the migration of the current IPv4   architecture to the intermediate hIPv4 routing architecture is fully   completed.  If a hIPv4 proxy solution could be used in front ofFrejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 58]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   classical IPv4 endpoints, the threshold for early adopters to start   to migrate towards the hIPv4 framework would be less questionable and   the migration phase would also most likely be much shorter.   Therefore, it should be investigated whether the hIPv4 framework can   be integrated with Core-Edge Separation [CES] architectures.  In CES   architectures the endpoints do not need to be modified.  The design   goal of a CES solution is to minimize the PI-address entries in the   DFZ and to preserve the current stack at the endpoints.  But a CES   solution requires a new mapping system and also introduces a caching   mechanism in the map-and-encapsulate network nodes.  Much debate   about scalability of a mapping system and the caching mechanism has   been going on at the [RRG] list.  At the present time it is unclear   how well both solutions will scale; research work on both topics is   still in progress.   Since the CES architectures divide the address spaces into two new   categories, one that is installed in the RIB of the DFZ and one that   is installed in the local networks, there are to some degree   similarities between CES architectures and the hIPv4 framework.   Actually, the invention of the IP and locator header swap   functionality was inspired by [LISP].   In order to describe how these two architectures might be integrated,   some terminology definitions are needed:   CES-node:      A network node installed in front of a local network that must      have the following characteristics:         o  Map-and-encapsulate ingress functionality         o  Map-and-encapsulate egress functionality         o  Incorporate the hIPv4 stack         o  Routing functionality, [RFC1812]         o  Being able to apply policy-based routing on the ALOC field            in the locator header      The CES-node does not include the MPTCP extension because it would      most likely put too much of a burden on the CES-node to signal and      maintain MPTCP subflows for the cached hIPv4 entries.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 59]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   Consumer site:      A site that is not publishing any services towards the Internet,      that is, there are no entries in DNS for this site.  It is used by      local endpoints to establish outbound connectivity -- endpoints      are initiating sessions from the site towards content sites.      Usually such sites are found at small enterprises and residences.      PA-addresses are usually assigned to them.   Content site:      A site that is publishing services towards the Internet, and which      usually does have DNS entries.  Such a site is used by local      endpoints to establish both inbound and outbound connectivity.      Large enterprises use PI-addresses, while midsize/small      enterprises use either PI- or PA-address space.   The CES architectures aim to reduce the PI-address entries in the   DFZ.  Therefore, map-and-encapsulate egress functionality will be   installed in front of the content sites.  It is likely that the node   containing map-and-encapsulate egress functionality will also contain   map-and-encapsulate ingress functionality; it is also a router, so   the node just needs to support the hIPv4 stack and be able to apply   policy-based routing using the ALOC field of the locator header to   become a CES-node.   It is possible that the large content providers (LCPs) are not   willing to install map-and-encapsulate functionality in front of   their sites.  If the caching mechanism is not fully reliable or if   the mapping lookup delay does have an impact on their clients' user   experience, then most likely the LCPs will not adopt the CES   architecture.   In order to convince a LCP to adopt the CES architecture, it should   provide a mechanism to mitigate the caching and mapping lookup delay   risks.  One method is to push the CES architectures to the edge --   the closer to the edge you add new functionality, the better it will   scale.  That is, if the endpoint stack is upgraded, the caching   mechanism is maintained by the endpoint itself.  The mapping   mechanism can be removed if the CES architecture's addressing scheme   is replaced with the addressing scheme of hIPv4 when the CES solution   is integrated at the endpoints.  With this approach, the LCPs might   install a CES-node in front of their sites.  Also, some endpoints at   the content site might be upgraded with the hIPv4 stack.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 60]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   If the LCP faces issues with the caching or mapping mechanisms, the   provider can ask its clients to upgrade their endpoint's stack to   ensure a proper service level.  At the same time, the LCP promotes   the migration from the current routing architecture to a new routing   architecture, not for the sake of the routing architecture but   instead to ensure a proper service level -- you can say that a   business model will promote the migration of a new routing   architecture.   The hIPv4 framework proposes that the IPv4 addresses (ELOC) should no   longer be globally unique; once the transition is completed, a more   regional allocation can be deployed.  But this is only possible once   all endpoints (that are establishing sessions to other ALOC realms)   have migrated to support the hIPv4 framework.  Here the CES   architecture can speed up the re-usage of IPv4 addresses; that is,   once an IPv4 address block has become an ELOC block it can be re-used   in the other RIR regions, without the requirement that all endpoints   in the Internet must first be upgraded.   As stated earlier, the CES architecture aims to remove PI-addresses   from the DFZ, making the content sites more or less the primary   target for the roll-out of a CES solution.  At large content sites a   CES-node most likely will be installed.  To upgrade all endpoints   (that are providing services towards the Internet) at a large content   site will take time, and it might be that the endpoints at the   content site are upgraded only within their normal lifecycle process.   But if the size of the content site is small, the administrator   either installs a CES-node or upgrades the endpoint's stack -- a   decision influenced by availability, reliability, and economic   feasibility.   Once the content sites have been upgraded, the PI-address entries   have been removed from the DFZ.  Most likely also some endpoints at   the consumer sites have been upgraded to support the hIPv4 stack --   especially if there have been issues with the caches or mapping   delays that have influenced the service levels at the LCPs.  Then,   the issue is how to keep track of the upgrade of the content sites --   have they been migrated or not?  If the content sites or content   endpoints have been migrated, the DNS records should have either a   CES-node entry or ALOC entry for each A-record.  When the penetration   of CES solutions at content sites (followed up by CES-node/ALOC   records in DNS) is high enough, the ISP can start to promote the   hIPv4 stack upgrade at the consumer sites.   Once a PA-address block has been migrated it can be released from   global allocation to a regional allocation.  Why would an ISP then   push its customers to deploy hIPv4 stacks?  Because of the business   model -- it will be more expensive to stay in the currentFrejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 61]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011   architecture.  The depletion of IPv4 addresses will either cause more   NAT at the service provider's network (operational expenditures will   increase because the network will become more complex) or the ISP   should force its customers to migrate to IPv6.  But the ISP could   lose customers to other ISPs that are offering IPv4 services.   When PA-addresses have been migrated to the hIPv4 framework, the ISP   will have a more independent routing domain (ALOC realm) with only   ALOC prefixes from other ISPs and ELOC prefixes from directly   attached customers.  BGP churn from other ISPs is no longer received,   the amount of alternative paths is reduced, and the ISP can better   control the growth of the RIB at their ALOC realm.  The operational   and capital expenditures should be lower than in the current routing   architecture.   To summarize, the content providers might find the CES+hIPv4 solution   attractive.  It will remove the forthcoming IPv4 address depletion   constraints without forcing the consumers to switch to IPv6, and thus   the content providers can continue to grow (reach more consumers).   The ISP might also find this solution attractive because it should   reduce the capital and operational expenditures in the long term.   Both the content providers and the ISPs are providing the foundation   of the Internet.  If both adopt this architecture, the consumers have   to adopt.  Both providers might find business models to "guide" the   consumers towards the new routing architecture.   Then, how will this affect the consumer and content sites?   Residential users will need to upgrade their endpoints.  But it   doesn't really matter which IP version they use.  It is the   availability and affordability of the Internet that matters most.   Enterprises will be affected a little bit more.  The edge devices at   the enterprises' local networks need to be upgraded -- edge nodes   such as AS border routers, middleboxes, DNS, DHCP, and public nodes   -- but by installing a CES-node in front of them, the upgrade process   is postponed and the legacy nodes can be upgraded during their normal   lifecycle process.  The internal infrastructure is preserved,   internal applications can still use IPv4, and all investment in IPv4   skills is preserved.   Walkthrough of use cases:   1. A legacy endpoint at a content site establishes a session to a      content site with a hIPv4 upgraded endpoint.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 62]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011      When the legacy endpoint resolves the DNS entry for the remote      endpoint (a hIPv4 upgraded endpoint), it receives an ALOC record      in the DNS response.  The legacy endpoint ignores the ALOC record.      Only the A-record is used to establish the session.  Next, the      legacy endpoint initializes the session and a packet is sent      towards the map-and-encapsulate ingress node, which needs to do a      lookup at the CES mapping system (the assumption here is that no      cache entry exists for the remote endpoint).  The mapping system      returns either a CES-node prefix or an ALOC prefix for the lookup      -- since the requested remote endpoint has been upgraded, the      mapping system returns an ALOC prefix.      The CES-node will not use the CES encapsulation scheme for this      session.  Instead, the hIPv4 header scheme will be used and a /32      entry will be created in the cache.  A /32 entry must be created;      it is possible that not all endpoints at the remote site are      upgraded to support the hIPv4 framework.  The /32 cache entry can      be replaced with a shorter prefix in the cache if all endpoints      are upgraded at the remote site.  To indicate this situation, a      subfield should be added for the ALOC record in the mapping      system.      The CES-node must execute the following steps for the egress      packets:      a. Verify IP and transport header checksums.      b. Create the locator header and copy the value in the destination         address field of the IP header to the ELOC field of the locator         header.      c. Replace the destination address in the IP header with the ALOC         prefix given in the cache.      d. Insert the local CES-node prefix in the ALOC field of the         locator header.      e. Copy the transport protocol value of the IP header to the         protocol field of the locator header and set the hIPv4 protocol         value in the protocol field of the IP header.      f. Set the desired parameters in the A-, I-, S-, VLB-, and L-         fields of the locator header.      g. Set the FI-bits of the locator header to 00.      h. Decrease the TTL value by one.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 63]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011      i. Calculate IP, locator, and transport protocol header checksums.         Transport protocol header calculations do not include the         locator header fields.  When completed, the packet is         transmitted.      j. Because the size of the packet might exceed MTU due to the         insertion of the locator header, and if MTU is exceeded, the         CES-node should inform the source endpoint of the situation         with an ICMP message, and the CES-node should apply         fragmentation of the hIPv4 packet.   2. A hIPv4-upgraded endpoint at a consumer/content site establishes a      session to a content site with a CES-node in front of a legacy      endpoint.      The hIPv4 upgraded endpoint receives, in the DNS response, either      an ALOC record or a CES-node record for the resolved destination.      From the requesting hIPv4 endpoint's point of view, it really      doesn't matter if the new record prefix is used to locate RBR-      nodes or CES-nodes in the Internet -- the CES-node will act as a      hIPv4 proxy in front of the remote legacy endpoint.  Thus the      hIPv4 endpoint assembles a hIPv4 packet to initialize the session,      and when the packet arrives at the CES-node it must execute the      following:      a. Verify that the received packet uses the hIPv4 protocol value         in the protocol field of the IP header.      b. Verify IP, locator, and transport protocol header checksums.         Transport protocol header verification does not include the         locator header fields.      c. Replace the protocol field value of the IP header with the         protocol field value of the locator header.      d. Replace the destination address in the IP header with the ELOC         prefix of the locator header.      e. Remove the locator header.      f. Create a cache entry (unless an entry already exists) for         returning packets.  A /32 entry is required.  To optimize the         usage of cache entries, the CES-node might ask the CES mapping         node whether all endpoints at the remote site are upgraded or         not.  If upgraded, a shorter prefix can be used in the cache.      g. Decrease the TTL value by one.Frejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 64]

RFC 6306               Hierarchical IPv4 Framework             July 2011      h. Calculate IP and transport protocol header checksums.      i. Forward the packet according to the destination address of the         IP header.   3. A hIPv4-enabled endpoint with a regionally unique ELOC at a      consumer site establishes a session to a consumer site with a      legacy endpoint.      In this use case, the sessions will fail unless some mechanism is      invented and implemented at the ISPs' map-and-encapsulate nodes.      The sessions will work inside an ALOC realm since the classical      IPv4 framework is still valid.  Sessions between ALOC realms will      fail.  Some applications establish sessions between consumer      sites.  The most common are gaming and peer-to-peer applications.      These communities have historically been in the forefront of      adopting new technologies.  It is expected that they either      develop workarounds to solve this issue or simply ask their      members to upgrade their stacks.   4. A legacy endpoint at a consumer/content site establishes a session      to a content site with a CES-node in front of a legacy endpoint.      Assumed to be described in CES architecture documents.   5. A hIPv4-enabled endpoint at a consumer/content site establishes a      session to a content site with a hIPv4-enabled endpoint.      SeeSection 5.2.Author's Address   Patrick Frejborg   EMail: pfrejborg@gmail.comFrejborg                      Experimental                     [Page 65]

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