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Network Working Group                                                ISORequest for Comments: 926                                  December 1984Protocol for Providing the Connectionless-Mode Network Services                         (Informally - ISO IP)                              ISO DIS 8473Status of this Memo: This document is distributed as an RFC for information only.  It does not specify a standard for the ARPA-Internet.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Note: This document has been prepared by retyping the text of ISO DIS 8473 of May 1984, which is currently undergoing voting within ISO as a Draft International Standard (DIS).  Although this RFC has been reviewed after typing, and is believed to be substantially correct, it is possible that typographic errors not present in the ISO document have been overlooked. Alex McKenzie BBN

RFC 926                                                    December 1984

RFC 926                                                    December 1984                           TABLE OF CONTENTS1   SCOPE AND FIELD OF APPLICATION........................22   REFERENCES............................................33   DEFINITIONS...........................................43.1   Reference Model Definitions.........................43.2   Service Conventions Definitions.....................43.3   Network Layer Architecture Definitions..............43.4   Network Layer Addressing Definitions................53.5   Additional Definitions..............................54   SYMBOLS AND ABBREVIATIONS.............................74.1   Data Units..........................................74.2   Protocol Data Units.................................74.3   Protocol Data Unit Fields...........................74.4   Parameters..........................................84.5   Miscellaneous.......................................85   OVERVIEW OF THE PROTOCOL..............................95.1   Internal Organization of the Network Layer..........95.2   Subsets of the Protocol.............................95.3   Addressing.........................................105.4   Service Provided by the Network Layer..............10 5.5   Service Assumed from the Subnetwork Service    Provider..............................................115.5.1   Subnetwork Addresses.............................125.5.2   Subnetwork Quality of Service....................125.5.3   Subnetwork User Data.............................135.5.4   Subnetwork Dependent Convergence Functions.......135.6   Service Assumed from Local Evironment..............146   PROTOCOL FUNCTIONS...................................166.1   PDU Composition Function...........................166.2   PDU Decomposition Function.........................176.3   Header Format Analysis Function....................176.4   PDU Lifetime Control Function......................186.5   Route PDU Function.................................186.6   Forward PDU Function...............................196.7   Segmentation Function..............................196.8   Reassembly Function................................206.9   Discard PDU Function...............................21ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                         [Page i]

RFC 926                                                    December 19846.10   Error Reporting Function..........................226.10.1   Overview........................................226.10.2   Requirements....................................236.10.3   Processing of Error Reports.....................246.11   PDU Header Error Detection........................256.12   Padding Function..................................266.13   Security..........................................266.14   Source Routing Function...........................276.15   Record Route Function.............................286.16   Quality of Service Maintenance Function...........296.17   Classification of Functions.......................297   STRUCTURE AND ENCODING OF PDUS.......................327.1   Structure..........................................327.2   Fixed Part.........................................347.2.1   General..........................................347.2.2   Network Layer Protocol Identifier................347.2.3   Length Indicator.................................357.2.4   Version/Protocol Identifier Extension............357.2.5   PDU Lifetime.....................................357.2.6   Flags............................................36 7.2.6.1   Segmentation Permitted and More Segments Flags. 367.2.6.2   Error Report Flag..............................377.2.7   Type Code........................................377.2.8   PDU Segment Length...............................377.2.9   PDUChecksum......................................387.3   Address Part.......................................387.3.1   General..........................................387.3.1.1     Destination and Source Address Information...397.4   Segmentation Part..................................407.4.1   Data Unit Identifier.............................417.4.2   Segment Offset...................................417.4.3   PDU Total Length.................................417.5   Options Part.......................................417.5.1   General..........................................417.5.2   Padding..........................................437.5.3   Security.........................................437.5.4   Source Routing...................................447.5.5   Recording of Route...............................457.5.6   Quality of Service Maintenance...................467.6   Priority...........................................47ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page ii]

RFC 926                                                    December 19847.7   Data Part..........................................477.8   Data (DT) PDU......................................497.8.1   Structure........................................497.8.1.1   Fixed Part.....................................507.8.1.2   Addresses......................................507.8.1.3   Segmentation...................................507.8.1.4   Options........................................507.8.1.5   Data...........................................507.9   Inactive Network Layer Protocol....................517.9.1   Network Layer Protocol Id........................517.9.2   Data Field.......................................517.10   Error Report PDU (ER).............................527.10.1   Structure.......................................527.10.1.1   Fixed Part....................................537.10.1.2   Addresses.....................................537.10.1.3   Segmentation..................................537.10.1.4   Options.......................................547.10.1.5   Reason for Discard............................547.10.1.6   Error Report Data Field.......................558   FORMAL DESCRIPTION...................................568.1   Values of the State Variable.......................578.2   Atomic Events......................................578.2.1   N.UNITDATA_request and N.UNITDATA_indication.....578.2.2   SN.UNITDATA_request and SN.UNITDATA_indication...588.2.3   TIMER Atomic Events..............................598.3   Operation of the Finite State Automation...........598.3.1   Type and Constant Definitions....................618.3.2   Interface Definitions............................658.3.3   Formal Machine Definition........................679   CONFORMANCE..........................................849.1   Provision of Functions for Conformance.............84ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                       [Page iii]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page iv]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984INTRODUCTION This Protocol is one of a set of International Standards produced to facilitate the interconnection of open systems. The set of standards covers the services and protocols required to achieve such interconnection. This Protocol Standard is positioned with respect to other related standards by the layers defined in the Reference Model for Open Systems Interconnection (ISO 7498). In particular, it is a protocol of the Network Layer. The Protocol herein described is a Subnetwork Independent Convergence Protocol combined with relay and routing functions as described in the Internal Organization of the Network Layer (ISO iiii). This Protocol provides the connectionless-mode Network Service as defined in ISO 8348/DAD1, Addendum to the Network Service Definition Covering Connectionless-mode Transmission, between Network Service users and/or Network Layer relay systems. The interrelationship of these standards is illustrated in Figure 0-1 below:      ______________OSI Network Service Definition______________                    |                             ^                                                  |                    |                             |         Protocol     Reference to aims __________|                    |      Specification | Reference to assumptions ___                                                  |                    |                             |                                                  |                    |                             |                                                  |                    |                             v      ______________Subnetwork Service Definition(s) ___________              Figure 0-1.  Interrelationship of StandardsISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                         [Page 1]

RFC 926                                                    December 19841  SCOPE AND FIELD OF APPLICATION This International Standard specifies a protocol which is used to provide the Connectionless-mode Network Service as described in ISO 8348/DAD1, Addendum to the Network Service Definition Covering Connectionless-mode Transmission. The protocol herein described relies upon the provision of a connectionless-mode subnetwork service. This Standard specifies:  a)  procedures for the connectionless transmission of data and control      information from one network-entity to a peer network-entity;  b)  the encoding of the protocol data units used for the transmission      of data and control information, comprising a variable-length      protocol header format;  c)  procedures for the correct interpretation of protocol control      information; and  d)  the functional requirements for implementations claiming      conformance to the Standard. The procedures are defined in terms of:  a)  the interactions among peer network-entities through the exchange      of protocol data units;  b)  the interactions between a network-entity and a Network Service      user through the exchange of Network Service primitives; and  c)  the interactions between a network-entity and a subnetwork service      provider through the exchange of subnetwork service primitives.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                         [Page 2]

RFC 926                                                    December 19842  REFERENCES ISO 7498       Information Processing Systems - Open Systems                Interconnection - Basic Reference Model DP 8524        Information Processing Systems - Open Systems                Interconnection - Addendum to ISO 7498 Covering                Connectionless-Mode Transmission DIS 8348       Information Processing Systems - Data Communications -                Network Service Definition ISO 8348/DAD1  Information Processing Systems - Data Communications -                Addendum to the Network Service Definition Covering                Connectionless-Mode Transmission ISO 8348/DAD2  Information Processing Systems - Data Communications -                Addendum to the Network Service Definition Covering                Network Layer Addressing DP iiii        Information Processing Systems - Data Communications -                Internal Organization of the Network Layer DP 8509        Information Processing Systems - Open Systems                Interconnection - Service Conventions ISO TC97/SC16  A Formal Description Technique based on an N1825                Extended State Transition ModelISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                         [Page 3]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984SECTION ONE.  GENERAL3  DEFINITIONS 3.1  Reference Model Definitions  This document makes use of the following concepts defined in ISO 7498:   a) Network layer   b) Network service   c) Network service access point   d) network service access point address   e) Network entity   f) Routing   f) Service   h) Network protocol   i) Network relay   j) Network protocol data unit   k) End system 3.2  Service Conventions Definitions  This document makes use of the following concepts from the OSI Service  Conventions (ISO 8509):   l) Service user   m) Service provider 3.3  Network Layer Architecture Definitions  This document makes use of the following concepts from the Internal  Organization of the Network Layer (ISO iiii):   n) SubnetworkISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                         [Page 4]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   o) Relay system   p) Intermediate system   q) Subnetwork service 3.4  Network Layer Addressing Definitions  This document makes use of the following concepts from DIS 8348/DAD2,  Addendum to the Network Service Definition Covering Network layer  addressing:   r) Network entity title   s) Network protocol address information   t) Subnetwork address   u) Domain 3.5  Additional Definitions  For the purposes of this document, the following definitions apply:   a) automaton    -  a machine designed to follow automatically a                      predetermined sequence of operations or to respond                      to encoded instructions.   b) local matter -  a decision made by a system concerning its                      behavior in the Network Layer that is not subject                      to the requirements of this Protocol.   c) segment      -  part of the user data provided in the N_UNITDATA                      request and delivered in the N_UNITDATA                      indication.   d) initial PDU  -  a protocol data unit carrying the whole of the                      user data from an N_UNITDATA request.   e) derived PDU  -  a  protocol data unit whose fields are identical                      to those of an initial PDU, except that it carries                      only a segment of the user data from an N_UNITDATA                      request.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                         [Page 5]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   f) segmentation -  the act of generating two or more derived PDUS                      from an initial or derived PDU.  The derived PDUs                      together carry the entire user data of the initial                      or derived PDU from which they were generated.                      [Note: it is possible that such an initial PDU                      will never actually be generated for a particular                      N_UNITDATA request, owing to the immediate                      application of segmentation.]   g) reassembly   -  the act of regenerating an initial PDU (in order                      to issue an N_UNITDATA indication) from two or                      more derived PDUs produced by segmentation.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                         [Page 6]

RFC 926                                                    December 19844  SYMBOLS AND ABBREVIATIONS 4.1  Data Units  PDU          Protocol Data Unit  NSDU         Network Service Data Unit  SNSDU        Subnetwork Service Data Unit 4.2  Protocol Data Units  DT PDU       Data Protocol Data Unit  ER PDU       Error Report Protocol Data Unit 4.3  Protocol Data Unit Fields  NPID         Network Layer Protocol Identifier  LI           Length Indicator  V/P          Version/protocol Identifier Extension  LT           Lifetime  SP           Segmentation Permitted Flag  MS           More Segments Flag  E/R          Error Report Flag  TP           Type  SL           Segment Length  CS           Checksum  DAL          Destination Address Length  DA           Destination Address  SAL          Source Address Length  SA           Source Address  DUID         Data Unit Identifier  SO           Segment Offset  TL           Total LengthISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                         [Page 7]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984 4.4  Parameters  DA           Destination Address  SA           Source Address  QOS          Quality of Service 4.5  Miscellaneous  SNICP        Subnetwork Independent Convergence Protocol  SNDCP        Subnetwork Dependent Convergence Protocol  SNAcP        Subnetwork Access Protocol  SN           Subnetwork  P            Protocol  NSAP         Network Service Access Point  SNSAP        Subnetwork Service Access Point  NPAI         Network Protocol Address Information  NS           Network ServiceISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                         [Page 8]

RFC 926                                                    December 19845  OVERVIEW OF THE PROTOCOL 5.1  Internal Organization of the Network Layer  The architecture of the Network Layer is described in a separate  document, Internal Organization of the Network Layer (ISO iiii), in  which an OSI Network Layer structure is defined, and a structure to  classify protocols as an aid to the progression toward that structure  is presented. This protocol is designed to be used in the context of  the internetworking protocol approach defined in that document,  between Network Service users and/or Network Layer relay systems. As  described in the Internal Organization of the Network Layer, the  protocol herein described is a Subnetwork Independent Convergence  Protocol combined with relay and routing functions designed to allow  the incorporation of existing network standards within the OSI  framework.  A Subnetwork Independent Convergence Protocol is one which can be  defined on a subnetwork independent basis and which is necessary to  support the uniform appearance of the OSI Connectionless-mode Network  Service between Network Service users and/or Network Layer relay  systems over a set of interconnected homogeneous or heterogeneous  subnetworks. This protocol is defined in just such a subnetwork  independent way so as to minimize variability where subnetwork  dependent and/or subnetwork access protocols do not provide the OSI  Network Service.  The subnetwork service required from the lower sublayers by the  protocol described herein is identified inSection 5.5. 5.2  Subsets of the Protocol  Two proper subsets of the full protocol are also defined which permit  the use of known subnetwork characteristics, and are therefore not  subnetwork independent.  One protocol subset is for use where it is known that the source and  destination end-systems are connected by a single subnetwork. This is  known as the "Inactive Network Layer Protocol" subset. A second subset  permits simplification of the header where it is known that the source  and destination end-systems are connected by subnetworks whose  subnetwork service data unit (SNSDU) sizes are greater than or equal  to a known bound large enough for segmentation not to be required.  This subset, selected by setting the "segmentation permitted" flag to  zero, is known as the "non-segmenting" protocol subset.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                         [Page 9]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984 5.3  Addressing  The Source Address and Destination Address parameters referred to inSection 7.3 of this International Standard are OSI Network Service  Access Point Addresses. The syntax and semantics of an OSI Network  Service Access Point Address, the syntax and encoding of the Network  Protocol Address Information employed by this Protocol, and the  relationship between the NSAP and the NPAI is described in a separate  document, ISO 8348/DAD2, Addendum to the Network Service Definition  covering Network Layer Addressing.  The syntax and semantics of the titles and addresses used for relaying  and routing are also described in ISO 8348/DAD2. 5.4  Service Provided by the Network Layer  The service provided by the protocol herein described is a  connectionless-mode Network Service. The connectionless-mode Network  Service is described in document ISO 8348/DAD1, Addendum to the  Network Service Definition Covering Connectionless-mode Transmission.  The Network Service primitives provided are summarized below:ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 10]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984                 Primitives                Parameters      +--------------------------------------------------------+      |                           |                            |      | N_UNITDATA Request        | NS_Destination_Address,    |      |            Indication     | NS_Source_Address,         |      |                           | NS_Quality_of_Service,     |      |                           | NS_Userdata                |      +--------------------------------------------------------+                 Table 5-1.  Network Service Primitives  The Addendum to the Network Service Definition Covering  Connectionless-mode Transmission (ISO 8348/DAD1) states that the  maximum size of a connectionless-mode Network-service-data-unit is  limited to 64512 octets. 5.5  Service Assumed from the Subnetwork Service provider  The subnetwork service required to support this protocol is defined as  comprising the following primitives:                Primitives                  Parameters      +--------------------------------------------------------+      |                           |                            |      | SN_UNITDATA Request       | SN_Destination_Address,    |      |             Indication    | SN_Source_Address,         |      |                           | SN_Quality_of_Service,     |      |                           | SN_Userdata                |      +--------------------------------------------------------+               Table 5-2.  Subnetwork Service PrimitivesISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 11]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  5.5.1  Subnetwork Addresses   The source and destination addresses specify the points of attachment   to a public or private subnetwork(s) involved in the transmission.   Subnetwork addresses are defined in the Service Definition of each   individual subnetwork.   The syntax and semantics of subnetwork addresses are not defined in   this Protocol Standard.  5.5.2  Subnetwork Quality of Service   Subnetwork Quality of Service describes aspects of a subnetwork   connectionless-mode service which are attributable solely to the   subnetwork service provider.   Associated with each subnetwork connectionless-mode transmission,   certain measures of quality of service are requested when the   primitive action is initiated. These requested measures (or parameter   values and options) are based on a priori knowledge by the Network   Service provider of the service(s) made available to it by the   subnetwork. Knowledge of the nature and type of service available is   typically obtained prior to an invocation of the subnetwork   connectionless-mode service.    Note:     The quality of service parameters identified for the subnetwork     connectionless-mode service may in some circumstances be directly     derivable from or mappable onto those identified in the     connectionless-mode Network Service; e.g., the parameters      a)  transit delay;      b)  protection against unauthorized access;      c)  cost determinants;      d)  priority; and      e)  residual error probability     as defined in ISO 8348/DAD1, Addendum to the Network Service     Definition Covering Connectionless-mode Transmission, may be     employed.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 12]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984     For those subnetworks which do not inherently provide Quality of     Service as a parameter when the primitive action is initiated, it     is a local matter as to how the semantics of the service requested     might be preserved. In particular, there may be instances in which     the Quality of Service requested cannot be maintained. In such     circumstances, the subnetwork service provider shall attempt to     deliver the protocol data unit at whatever Quality of Service is     available.  5.5.3  Subnetwork User Data   The SN_Userdata is an ordered multiple of octets, and is transferred   transparently between the specified subnetwork service access points.   The subnetwork service is required to support a subnetwork service   data unit size of at least the maximum size of the Data PDU header   plus one octet of NS-Userdata. This requires a minimum subnetwork   service data unit size of 256 octets.   Where the subnetwork service can support a subnetwork service data   unit (SNSDU) size greater than the size of the Data PDU header plus   one octet of NS_Userdata, the protocol may take advantage of this. In   particular, if all SNSDU sizes of the subnetworks involved are known   to be large enough that segmentation is not required, then the   "non-segmenting" protocol subset may be used.  5.5.4  Subnetwork Dependent Convergence Functions   Subnetwork Dependent Convergence Functions may be performed to   provide a connectionless-mode subnetwork service in the case where   subnetworks also provide a connection-oriented subnetwork service. If   a subnetwork provides a connection-oriented service, some subnetwork   dependent function is assumed to provide a mapping into the required   subnetwork service described in the preceding text.   A Subnetwork Dependent Convergence Protocol may also be employed in   those cases where functions assumed from the subnetwork service   provider are not performed.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 13]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984 5.6  Service Assumed from Local Evironment  A timer service is provided to allow the protocol entity to schedule  events.  There are three primitives associated with the S_TIMER service:   1)  the S-TIMER request;   2)  the S_TIMER response; and   3)  the S_TIMER cancel.  The S_TIMER request primitive indicates to the local environment that  it should initiate a timer of the specified name and subscript and  maintain it for the duration specified by the time parameter.  The S_TIMER response primitive is initiated by the local environment  to indicate that the delay requested by the corresponding S_TIMER  request primitive has elapsed.  The S_TIMER cancel primitive is an indication to the local environment  that the specified timer(s) should be cancelled. If the subscript  parameter is not specified, then all timers with the specified name  are cancelled; otherwise, the timer of the given name and subscript is  cancelled. If no timers correspond to the parameters specified, the  local environment takes no action.  The parameters of the S_TIMER service primitives are:ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 14]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984            Primitives                  Parameters      +--------------------------------------------------------+      |                           |                            |      | S_TIMER Request           | S_Time                     |      |                           | S_Name                     |      |                           | S_Subscript                |      |                           |                            |      | S_TIMER Response          | S_Name                     |      |         Cancel            | S_Subscript                |      +--------------------------------------------------------+                      Table 5-3.  Timer Primitives  The time parameter indicates the time duration of the specified timer.  An identifying label is associated with a timer by means of the name  parameter. The subscript parameter specifies a value to distinguish  timers with the same name. The name and subscript taken together  constitute a unique reference to the timer.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 15]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984SECTION TWO.  SPECIFICATION OF THE PROTOCOL6  PROTOCOL FUNCTIONS This section describes the functions performed as part of the Protocol. Not all of the functions must be performed by every implementation.Section 6.17 specifies which functions may be omitted and the correct behavior where requested functions are not implemented. 6.1  PDU Composition Function  This function is responsible for the construction of a protocol data  unit according to the rules of protocol given inSection 7. Protocol  Control Information required for delivering the data unit to its  destination is determined from current state information and from the  parameters provided with the N_UNITDATA Request; e.g., source and  destination addresses, QOS, etc. User data passed from the Network  Service user in the N_UNITDATA Request forms the Data field of the  protocol data unit.  During the composition of the protocol data unit, a Data Unit  Identifier is assigned to identify uniquely all segments of the  corresponding NS_Userdata. The "Reassemble PDU" function considers  PDUs to correspond to the same Initial PDU, and hence N_UNITDATA  request, if they have the same Source and Destination Addresses and  Data Unit Identifier.  The Data Unit Identifier is available for ancillary functions such as  error reporting. The originator of the PDU must choose the Data Unit  Identifier so that it remains unique (for this Source and Destination  Address pair) for the maximum lifetime of the PDU (or any Derived  PDUs) in the network.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 16]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  During the composition of the PDU, a value of the total length of the  PDU is determined by the originator and placed in the Total Length  field of the PDU header. This field is not changed in any Derived PDU  for the lifetime of the protocol data unit.  Where the non-segmenting subset is employed, neither the Total Length  field nor the Data Unit Identifier field is present. During the  composition of the protocol data unit, a value of the total length of  the PDU is determined by the originator and placed in the Segment  Length field of the PDU header. This field is not changed for the  lifetime of the PDU. 6.2  PDU Decomposition Function  This function is responsible for removing the Protocol Control  Information from the protocol data unit. During this process,  information pertinent to the generation of the N_UNITDATA Indication  is retained. The data field of the PDU received is reserved until all  segments of the original service data unit have been received; this is  the NS_Userdata parameter of the N_UNITDATA Indication. 6.3  Header Format Analysis Function  This function determines whether the full Protocol described in this  Standard is employed, or one of the defined proper subsets thereof. If  the protocol data unit has a Network Layer Protocol Identifier  indicating that this is a standard version of the Protocol, this  function determines whether a PDU received has reached its destination  using the destination address provided in the PDU is the same as the  one which addresses an NSAP served by this network-entity, then the  PDU has reached its destination; if not, it must be forwarded.  If the protocol data unit has a Network Layer Protocol Identifier  indicating that the Inactive Network Layer Protocol subset is in use,  then no further analysis of the PDU header is required. TheISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 17]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  network-entity in this case determines that either the network address  encoded in the network protocol address information of a supporting  subnetwork protocol corresponds to a network Service Access Point  address served by this network-entity, or that an error has occurred.  If the subnetwork PDU has been delivered correctly, then the protocol  data unit may be decomposed according to the procedure described for  that particular subnetwork protocol. 6.4  PDU Lifetime Control Function  This function is used to enforce the maximum PDU lifetime. It is  closely associated with the "Header Format Analysis" function. This  function determines whether a PDU received may be forwarded or whether  its assigned lifetime has expired, in which case it must be discarded.  The operation of the Lifetime Control function depends upon the  Lifetime field in the PDU header. This field contains, at any time,  the remaining lifetime of the PDU (represented in units of 500  Milliseconds). The Lifetime of the Initial PDU is determined by the  originating network-entity, and placed in the Lifetime field of the  PDU. 6.5  Route PDU Function  This function determines the network-entity to which a protocol data  unit should be forwarded, using the destination NSAP address  parameters, Quality of Service parameter, and/or other parameters. It  determines the subnetwork which must be transited to reach that  network-entity. Where segmentation occurs, it further determines which  subnetwork(s) the segments may transit to reach that network-entity.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 18]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984 6.6  Forward PDU Function  This function issues a subnetwork service primitive (seeSection 5.5)  supplying the subnetwork identified by the "Route PDU" function with  the protocol data unit as an SNSDU, and the address information  required by that subnetwork to identify the "next" intermediate-system  within the subnetwork-specific address domain.  When an Error Report PDU is to be forwarded, and is longer than the  maximum user data acceptable by the subnetwork, it shall be truncated  to the maximum acceptable length ad forwarded with no other change.  When a Data PDU is to be forwarded ad is longer than the maximum user  data acceptable by the subnetwork, the Segmentation function is  applied (SeeSection 6.7, which follows). 6.7  Segmentation Function  Segmentation is performed when the size of the protocol data unit is  greater than the maximum size of the user data parameter field of the  subnetwork service primitive.  Segmentation consists of composing two or more new PDUs (Derived PDUs)  from the PDU received. The PDU received may be the Initial PDU, or it  may be a Derived PDU. The Protocol Control Information required to  identify, route, and forward a PDU is duplicated in each PDU derived  from the Initial PDU. The user data encapsulated within the PDU  received is divided such that the Derived PDUs satisfy the size  requirements of the user data parameter field of the subnetwork  service primitive.  Derived PDUs are identified as being from the same Initial PDU by  means of   a)  the source address,   b)  the destination address, and   c)  the data unit identifier.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 19]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  The following fields of the PDU header are used in conjunction with  the Segmentation function:   a)  Segment Offset - identifies at which octet in the data field of       the Initial PDU the segment begins;   b)  Segment Length - specifies the number of octets in the Derived       PDU, including both header and data;   c)  More Segments Flag - set to one if this Derived PDU does not       contain, as its final octet of user data, the final octet of the       Initial PDU; and   d)  Total Length - specifies the entire length of the Initial PDU,       including both header and data.  Derived PDUs may be further segmented without constraining the routing  of the individual Derived PDUs.  A Segmentation Permitted flag is set to one to indicate that  segmentation is permitted. If the Initial PDU is not to be segmented  at any point during its lifetime in the network, the flag is set to  zero.  When the "Segmentation Permitted" flag is set to zero, the non-  segmenting protocol subset is in use. 6.8  Reassembly Function  The Reassembly Function reconstructs the Initial PDU transmitted to  the destination network-entity from the Derived PDUs generated during  the lifetime of the Initial PDU.  A bound on the time during which segments (Derived PDUs) of an Initial  PDU will be held at a reassembly point is provided so that resources  may be released when it is no longer expected that any outstanding  segments of the Initial PDU will arrive at the reassembly point. When  such an event occurs, segments (Derived PDUs) of the Initial PDU held  at the reassembly point are discarded, the resources allocated for  those segments are freed,ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 20]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  and if selected, an Error Report is generated.   Note:    The design of the Segmentation and Reassembly functions is intended    principally to be used such that reassembly takes place at the    destination. However, other schemes which     a)  interact with the routing algorithm to favor paths on which         fewer segments are generated,     b)  generate more segments than absolutely required in order to         avoid additional segmentation at some subsequent point, or     c)  allow partial/full reassembly at some point along the route         where it is known that the subnetwork with the smallest PDU         size has been transited    are not precluded. The information necessary to enable the use of    one of these alternative strategies may be made available through    the operation of a Network Layer Management function.    While the exact relationship between reassembly lifetime and PDU    lifetime is a local matter, the reassembly algorithm must preserve    the intent of the PDU lifetime. Consequently, the reassembly    function must discard PDUs whose lifetime would otherwise have    expired had they not been under the control of the reassembly    function. 6.9  Discard PDU Function  This function performs all of the actions necessary to free the  resources reserved by the network-entity in any of the following  situations (Note: the list is not exhaustive):   a)  A violation of protocol procedure has occurred.   b)  A PDU is received whose checksum is inconsistent with its       contents.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 21]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   c)  A PDU is received, but due to congestion, it cannot be processed.   d)  A PDU is received whose header cannot be analyzed.   e)  A PDU is received which cannot be segmented and cannot be       forwarded because its length exceeds the maximum subnetwork       service data unit size.   f)  A PDU is received whose destination address is unreachable or       unknown.   g)  Incorrect or invalid source routing was specified. This may       include a syntax error in the source routing field, and unknown       or unreachable address in the source routing field, or a path       which is not acceptable for other reasons.   h)  A PDU is received whose PDU lifetime has expired or the lifetime       expires during reassembly.   i)  A PDU is received which contains an unsupported option. 6.10  Error Reporting Function  6.10.1  Overview   This function causes the return of an Error Report PDU to the source   network-entity when a protocol data unit is discarded. An "error   report flag" in the original PDU is set by the source network-entity   to indicate whether or not Error Report PDUs are to be returned.   The Error Report PDU identifies the discarded PDU, specifies the type   of error detected, and identifies the location at which the error was   detected. Part or all of the discarded PDU is included in the data   field of the Error Report PDU.   The address of the originator of the Data Protocol Data Unit isISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 22]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   conveyed as both the destination address of the Error Report PDU as   well as the source address of the original Data PDU; the latter is   contained in the Data field of the Error Report PDU. The address of   the originator of the Error Report PDU is contained in the source   address field of the header of the Error Report PDU.    Note:     Non-receipt of an Error Report PDU does not imply correct delivery     of a PDU issued by a source network-entity.  6.10.2  Requirements   An Error Report PDU shall not be generated to report the discarding   of a PDU that itself contains an Error Report.   An Error Report PDU shall not be generated upon discarding of a PDU   unless that PDU has the Error Report flag set to allow Error Reports.   If a Data PDU is discarded, and has the Error Report flag set to   allow Error Reports, an Error Report PDU shall be generated if the   reason for discard (SeeSection 6.9)  is    a)  destination address unreachable,    b)  source routing failure,    c)  unsupported options, or    d)  protocol violation.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 23]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984    Note:     It is intended that this list shall include all nontransient     reasons for discard; the list may therefore need to be amended or     extended in the light of any changes made in the definitions of     such reasons.   If a Data PDU with the Error Report flag set to allow Error Reports   is discarded for any other reason, an Error Report PDU may be   generated (as an implementation option).  6.10.3  Processing of Error Reports   Error Report PDUs are forwarded by intermediate network-entities in   the same way as Data PDUs. It is possible that an Error Report PDU   may be longer than the maximum user data size of a subnetwork that   must be traversed to reach the origin of the discarded PDU. In this   case, the Forward PDU function shall truncate the PDU to the maximum   size acceptable.   The entire header of the discarded data unit shall be included in the   data field of the Error Report PDU. Some or all of the data field of   the discarded data unit may also be included.    Note:     Since the suppression of Error Report PDUs is controlled by the     originating network-entity and not by the NS User, care should be     exercised by the originator with regard to suppressing ER PDUs so     that error reporting is not suppressed for every PDU generated.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 24]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984 6.11  PDU Header Error Detection  The PDU Header Error Detection function protects against failure of  intermediate or end-system network-entities due to the processing of  erroneous information in the PDU header. The function is realized by a  checksum computed on the PDU header. The checksum is verified at each  point at which the PDU header is processed. If PDU header fields are  modified (for example, due to lifetime function), then the checksum is  modified so that the checksum remains valid.  An intermediate system network-entity must not recompute the checksum  for the entire header, even if fields are modified.   Note:    This is to ensure that inadvertent modification of a header while a    PDU is being processed by an intermediate system (for example, due    to a memory fault) may still be detected by the PDU Header Error    function.  The use of this function is optional, and is selected by the  originating network-entity. If the function is not used, the checksum  field of the PDU header is set to zero.  If the function is selected by the originating network-entity, the  value of the checksum field causes the following formulae to be  satisfied:     L   (SUM)     a   = 0  (modulo 255)              i     i=1     L   (SUM)     (L-i+1) a   = 0 (modulo 255)                       i     i=1    Where L = the number of octets in the PDU header, and          a = value of octet at position i.           iISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 25]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  When the function is in use, neither octet of the checksum field may  be set to zero.  Annex C contains descriptions of algorithms which may be used to  calculate the correct value of the checksum field when the PDU is  created, and to update the checksum field when the header is modified. 6.12  Padding Function  The padding function is provided to allow space to be reserved in the  PDU header which is not used to support any other function. Octet  alignment must be maintained.   Note:    An example of the use of this function is to cause the data field of    a PDU to begin on a convenient boundary for the originating    network-entity, such as a computer word boundary. 6.13  Security  An issue related to the quality of the network service is the  protection of information flowing between transport-entities. A system  may wish to control the distribution of secure data by assigning  levels of security to PDUs. As a local consideration, the Network  Service user could be authenticated to ascertain whether the user has  permission to engage in communication at a particular security level  before sending the PDU. While no protocol exchange is required in the  authentication process, the optional security parameter in the options  part of the PDU header may be employed to convey the particular  security level between peer network-entities.  The syntax and semantics of the security parameter are not specified  by this Standard. The security parameter is related to the "protection  from unauthorized access" Quality of service parameter described in  ISO 8348/DAD1, Addendum to the Network Service Definition Covering  Connectionless-mode Transmission. However, to facilitate  interoperation between end-systems and relay-systems by avoiding  different interpretations of the same encoding, a mechanism is  provided to distinguish user-defined security encoding from  standardized security encoding.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 26]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984 6.14  Source Routing Function  The Source Routing function allows the originator to specify the path  a generated PDU must take. Source routing can only be selected by the  originator of a PDU. Source Routing is accomplished using a list of  intermediate system addresses (or titles, seeSection 5.3 and 5.5.1)  held in a parameter within the options part of the PDU Header. The  size of the option field is determined by the originating  network-entity. The length of this option does not change as the PDU  traverses the network. Associated with this list is an indicator which  identifies the next entry in the list to be used; this indicator is  advanced by the receiver of the PDU when the next address matches its  own address. The indicator is updated as the PDU is forwarded so as to  identify the appropriate entry at each stage of relaying.  Two forms of the source routing option are provided. The first form,  referred to as complete source routing, requires that the specified  path must be taken; if the specified path cannot be taken, the PDU  must be discarded. The source may be informed of the discard using the  Error Reporting function described inSection 6.10.  The second form is referred to as partial source routing. Again, each  address in the list must be visited in the order specified while on  route to the destination. However, with this form of source routing  the PDU may take any path necessary to arrive at the next address in  the list. The PDU will not be discarded (for source routing related  causes) unless one of the addresses specified cannot be reached by any  available route.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 27]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984 6.15  Record Route Function  The Record Route function permits the exact recording of the paths  taken by a PDU as it traverses a series of interconnected subnetworks.  A recorded route is composed of a list of intermediate system  addresses held in a parameter within the options part of the PDU  header. The size of the option field is determined by the originating  network-entity. The length of this option does not change as the PDU  traverses the network.  The list is constructed as the PDU traverses a set of interconnected  subnetworks. Only intermediate system addresses are included in the  recorded route. The address of the originator of the PDU is not  recorded in the list. When an intermediate system network-entity  processes a PDU containing the record route parameter, the system  inserts its own address (or titles, see Sections5.3 or5.5.1) into  the list of recorded addresses.  The record route option contains an indicator which identifies the  next available octet to be used for recording of route. This  identifier is updated as entries are added to the list. If the  addition of the current address to the list would exceed the size of  the option field, the indicator is set to show that recording of route  has terminated. The PDU may still be forwarded to its final  destination, without further addition of intermediate system  addresses.   Note:    The Record Route function is principally intended to be used in the    diagnosis of network problems. Its mechanism has been designed on    this basis, and may provide a return path.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 28]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984 6.16  Quality of Service Maintenance Function  In order to support the Quality of Service requested by Network  Service users, the Protocol may need to make QOS information available  at intermediate systems. This information may be used by network  entities in intermediate systems to make routing decisions where such  decisions affect the overall QOS provided to NS users.  In those instances where the QOS indicated cannot be maintained, the  NS provider will attempt to deliver the PDU at a QOS less than that  indicated. The NS provider will not necessarily provide a notification  of failure to meet the indicated quality of service. 6.17  Classification of Functions  Implementations do not have to support all of the functions described  inSection 6. Functions are divided into three categories:   Type 1:  These functions must be supported.   Type 2:  These functions may or may not be supported. If an            implementation does not support a Type 2 function, and the            function is selected by a PDU, then the PDU shall be            discarded, and an Error Report PDU shall be generated and            forwarded to the originating network-entity, providing that            the Error Report flag is set.   Type 3:  These functions may or may not be supported. If an            implementation does not support a Type 3 function, and the            function is selected by a PDU, then the function is not            performed and the PDU is processed exactly as though the            function was not selected. The protocol data unit shall not            be discarded.  Table 6-1 shows how the functions are divided into these three  categories:ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 29]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984         +---------------------------------------------------+         | Function                       |  Type            |         |--------------------------------|------------------|         |                                |                  |         | PDU Composition                |  1               |         | PDU Decomposition              |  1               |         | Header Format Analysis         |  1               |         | PDU Lifetime Control           |  1               |         | Route PDU                      |  1               |         | Forward PDU                    |  1               |         | Segment PDU                    |  1               |         | Reassemble PDU                 |  1               |         | Discard PDU                    |  1               |         | Error Reporting                |  1 (note 1)      |         | PDU Header Error Detection     |  1 (note 1)      |         | Padding                        |  1 (notes 1   2) |         | Security                       |  2               |         | Complete Source Routing        |  2               |         | Partial Source Routing         |  3               |         | Priority                       |  3               |         | Record Route                   |  3               |         | Quality of Service Maintenance |  3               |         +---------------------------------------------------+            Table 6-1.  Categorization of Protocol FunctionsISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 30]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  Notes:   1)  While the Padding, Error Reporting, and Header Error Detection       functions must be provided, they are provided only when selected       by the sending Network Service user.   2)  The correct treatment of the Padding function involves no       processing. Therefore, this could equally be described as a Type       3 function.   3)  The rationale for the inclusion of type 3 functions is that in       the case of some functions it is more important to forward the       PDUs between intermediate systems or deliver them to an       end-system than it is to support the functions. Type 3 functions       should be used in those cases where they are of an advisory       nature and should not be the cause of the discarding of a PDU       when not supported.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 31]

RFC 926                                                    December 19847  STRUCTURE AND ENCODING OF PDUS 7.1 Structure  All Protocol Data Units shall contain an integral number of octets.  The octets in a PDU are numbered starting from one (1) and increasing  in the order in which they are put into an SNSDU. The bits in an octet  are numbered from one (1) to eight (8), where bit one (1) is the  low-order bit.  When consecutive octets are used to represent a binary number, the  lower octet number has the most significant value.  Any subnetwork supporting this protocol is required to state in its  specification the way octets are transferred, using the terms "most  significant bit" and "least significant bit." The PDUs of this  protocol are defined using the terms "most significant bit" and "least  significant bit."   Note:    When the encoding of a PDU is represented using a diagram in this    section, the following representation is used:     a)  octets are shown with the lowest numbered octet to the left,         higher number octets being further to the right;     b)  within an octet, bits are shown with bit eight (8) to the left         and bit one (1) to the right.  PDUs shall contain, in the following order:   1)  the header, comprising:    a)  the fixed part;    b)  the address part;    c)  the segmentation part, if present;    d)  the options part, if present   andISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 32]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   2)  the data field, if present.  This structure is illustrated below:                       Part:                Described in:            +-------------------+            |    Fixed Part     |Section 7.2            +-------------------+            +-------------------+            |   Address Part    |Section 7.3            +-------------------+            +-------------------+            | Segmentation Part |Section 7.4            +-------------------+            +-------------------+            |   Options Part    |Section 7.5            +-------------------+            +-------------------+            |       Data        |Section 7.6            +-------------------+                       Figure 7-1.  PDU StructureISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 33]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984 7.2 Fixed Part  7.2.1 General   The fixed part contains frequently occuring parameters including the   type code (DT or ER) of the protocol data unit. The length and the   structure of the fixed part are defined by the PDU code.   The fixed part has the following format:                                                      Octet            +------------------------------------+            | Network Layer Protocol Identifier  |     1            |------------------------------------|            |         Length Indicator           |     2            |------------------------------------|            |   Version/Protocol Id Extension    |     3            |------------------------------------|            |            Lifetime                |     4            |------------------------------------|            |S |M |E/R|         Type             |     5            | P| S|   |                          |            |------------------------------------|            |          Segment Length            |    6,7            |------------------------------------|            |             Checksum               |    8,9            +------------------------------------+                  Figure 7-2.  PDU Header--Fixed Part  7.2.2 Network Layer Protocol Identifier   The value of this field shall be binary 1000 0001. This field   identifies this Network Layer Protocol as ISO 8473, Protocol for   Providing the Connectionless-mode Network Service.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 34]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  7.2.3 Length Indicator   The length is indicated by a binary number, with a maximum value of   254 (1111 1110). The length indicated is the length in octets of the   header, as described inSection 7.1, Structure. The value 255 (1111   1111) is reserved for possible future extensions.    Note:     The rules for forwarding and segmentation ensure that the header     length is the same for all segments (Derived PDUs) of the Initial     PDU, and is the same as the header length of the Initial PDU.  7.2.4 Version/Protocol Identifier Extension   The value of this field is binary 0000 0001. This Identifies a   standard version of ISO 8473, Protocol for Providing the   Connectionless-mode Network Service.  7.2.5 PDU Lifetime   The Lifetime field is encoded as a binary number representing the   remaining lifetime of the PDU, in units of 500 milliseconds.   The Lifetime field is set by the originating network-entity, and is   decremented by every network-entity which processes the PDU. The PDU   shall be discarded if the value of the field reaches zero.   When a network-entity processes a PDU, it decrements the Lifetime by   at least one. The Lifetime shall be decremented by more than one if   the sum of:    1)  the transit delay in the subnetwork from which the PDU was        received; andISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 35]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984    2)  the delay within the system processing the PDU   exceeds or is estimated to exceed 500 milliseconds. In this case, the   lifetime field should be decremented by one for each additional 500   milliseconds of delay. The determination of delay need not be   precise, but where error exists the value used shall be an   overestimate, not an underestimate.   If the Lifetime reaches a value of zero before the PDU is delivered   to the destination, the PDU shall be discarded. The Error Reporting   function shall be invoked, as described inSection 6.10, Error   Reporting Function, and may result in the generation of an ER PDU. It   is a local matter whether the destination network-entity performs the   Lifetime Control function.   When the Segmentation function is applied to a PDU, the Lifetime   field is copied into all of the Derived PDUs.  7.2.6 Flags   7.2.6.1 Segmentation Permitted and More Segments Flags    The Segmentation Permitted flag determines whether segmentation is    permitted. A value of one indicates that segmentation is permitted.    A value of zero indicates that the non-segmenting protocol subset is    employed. Where this is the case, the segmentation part of the PDU    header is not present, and the Segment Length field serves as the    Total Length field.    The More Segments flag indicates whether the data segment in this    PDU contains (as its last octet) the last octet of the User Data in    the NSDU. When the More Segments flag is set to one (1) then    segmentation has taken place and the last octet of the NSDU is not    contained in this PDU. The More Segments flag cannot be set to one    (1) if the Segmentation Permitted flag is not set to one (1).ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 36]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984    When the More Segments flag is set to zero (0) the last octet of the    Data Part of the PDU is the last octet of the NSDU.   7.2.6.2 Error Report Flag    When the Error Report flag is set to one, the rules inSection 6.10    are used to determine whether to generate an Error Report PDU upon    discard of the PDU.    When the Error Report flag is set to zero, discard of the PDU will    not cause the generation of an Error Report PDU.  7.2.7 Type Code   The Type code field identifies the type of the protocol data unit.   Allowed values are given in Table 7-1:                                Bits    5 4 3 2 1                    +-----------------------------+                    |  DT PDU  |        1 1 1 0 0 |                    |-----------------------------|                    |  ER PDU  |        0 0 0 0 1 |                    +-----------------------------+                      Table 7-1.  Valid PDU Types  7.2.8 PDU Segment Length   The Segment Length field specifies the entire length of the PDU   segment including both header and data, if present. When the full   protocol is employed and a PDU is not segmented, then the value of   this field is identical to the value of the Total Length field   located in the Segmentation Part of the header.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 37]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   When the Non-segmenting protocol subset is employed, no segmentation   part is present in the header. In this subset, the Segment Length   field serves as the Total Length field of the header (seeSection7.4.3).  7.2.9 PDU Checksum   The checksum is computed on the entire PDU header. This includes the   segmentation and options parts, if present. A checksum value of zero   is reserved to indicate that the checksum is to be ignored. The   operation of the PDU Header Error Detection function ensures that the   value zero does not represent a valid checksum. A non-zero value   indicates that the checksum must be processed or the PDU must be   discarded. 7.3 Address Part  7.3.1 General   Address parameters are distinguished by their location, immediately   following the fixed part of the PDU header. The address part is   illustrated below:ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 38]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984                                                      Octet          +--------------------------------------+          |                                      |          | Destination Address Length Indicator |      10          |                                      |          |--------------------------------------|          |                                      |      11          |         Destination Address          |          |                                      |      m-1          |--------------------------------------|          |                                      |          |   Source Address Length Indicator    |       m          |                                      |          |--------------------------------------|          |                                      |      m+1          |           Source Address             |          |                                      |      n-1          +--------------------------------------+                 Figure 7-3.  PDU header--Address Part   7.3.1.1 Destination and Source Address Information    The Destination and Source addresses are Network Service Access    Point addresses as defined in ISO 8348/DAD2, Addendum to the Network    Service Definition Covering Network Layer Addressing.    The Destination and Source Address information is of variable    length.    The Destination Address Length Indicator field specifies the length    of the Destination Address in number of octets. The Destination    Address field follows the Destination Address Length Indicator    field. The Source Address Length Indicator field specifies the    length of the Source Address in number of octets. The Source Address    Length Indicator field follows the Destination Address field. The    Source Address field follows the Source Address Length Indicator    field.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 39]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984    Each address parameter is encoded as follows:                      Bits   8   7   6   5   4   3   2   1            +---------------------------------------------+            | Octet  | Address parameter Length Indicator |            |   n    |           (e.g., 'm')              |            |---------------------------------------------|            | Octets |                                    |            |  n+1   |     Address Parameter Value        |            | thru   |                                    |            |  n+m   |                                    |            +---------------------------------------------+                     Table 7-2.  Address Parameters 7.4 Segmentation Part  If the Segmentation Permitted Flag in the Fixed Part of the PDU Header  (Octet 4, Bit 8) is set to one, the segmentation part of the header,  illustrated below, must be present:                                               Octet                +------------------------+                |  Data Unit Identifier  |     n,n+1                |------------------------|                |     Segment Offset     |    n+2,n+3                |------------------------|                |      Total Length      |    n+4,n+5                +------------------------+               Figure 7-4.  PDU Header--Segmentation Part  Where the "Segmentation Permitted" flag is set to zero, the  nonsegmenting protocol subset is in use.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 40]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  7.4.1 Data Unit Identifier   The Data Unit Identifier identifies an Initial PDU (and hence, its   Derived PDUs) so that a segmented data unit may be correctly   reassembled by the destination network-entity. The Data Unit   Identifier size is two octets.  7.4.2 Segment Offset   For each segment the Segment Offset field specifies the relative   position of the segment in the data part of the Initial PDU with   respect to the start of the data field. The offset is measured in   units of octets. The offset of the first segment is zero.  7.4.3 PDU Total Length   The Total Length field specifies the entire length of the Initial   PDU, including both the header and data. This field is not changed in   any segment (Derived PDU) for the lifetime of the PDU. 7.5 Options Part  7.5.1 General   The options part is used to convey optional parameters. If the   options part is present, it contains one or more parameters. The   number of parameters that may be contained in the options part is   indicated by the length of the options part which is:    PDU Header Length - (length of fixed part +                         length of address part +                         length of segmentation part).ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 41]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   The options part of the PDU header is illustrated below:                                               Octet                   +--------------------+                   |                    |       n+6                   |      Options       |                   |                    |       p                   +--------------------+                 Figure 7-5.  PDU Header--Options Part   Each parameter contained within the options part of the PDU header is   encoded as follows:                          BITS    8  7  6  5  4  3  2  1             +------------------------------------------+             |  Octets  |                               |             |    n     |  Parameter Code               |             |------------------------------------------|             |   n+1    |  Parameter Length (e.g., 'm') |             |------------------------------------------|             |   n+2    |  Parameter Value              |             |  n+m+1   |                               |             +------------------------------------------+                   Table 7-3.  Encoding of Parameters   The parameter code field is coded in binary and, without extensions,   provides a maximum number of 255 different parameters. However, as   noted below, bits 8 and 7 cannot take every possible value, so the   practical maximum number of different parameters is less. A parameter   code of 255 (binary 1111 1111) is reserved for possible extensions of   the parameter code.   The parameter length field indicates the length, in octets, of the   parameter value field. The length is indicated by a binary number,   'm', with a theoretical maximum value of 255. The practical maximum   value of 'm' is lower. For example, in the case of a single parameter   contained within the options part, two octets are required for the   parameter code and the parameter length indication itself. Thus, the   value of 'm' is limited to:ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 42]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984     253 - (length of fixed part +     length of address part +     length of segmentation part).   For each succeeding parameter the maximum value of 'm' decreases.   The parameter value field contains the value of the parameter   identified in the parameter code field.   No parameter codes use bits 8 and 7 with the value 00.   Implementations shall accept the parameters defined in the options   part in any order. Duplication of options (where detected) is not   permitted. Receipt of a PDU with an option duplicated should be   treated as a protocol error. The rules governing the treatment of   protocol errors are described inSection 6.10, Error Reporting   Function.   The following parameters are permitted in the options part.  7.5.2 Padding   The padding parameter is used to lengthen the PDU header to a   convenient size (SeeSection 6.12).    Parameter Code:       1100 1100    Parameter Length:     variable    Parameter Value:      any value is allowed  7.5.3 Security   This parameter is user defined.    Parameter Code:       1100 0101    Parameter Length:     variable    Parameter Value:     High order bit of first octet is Security Domain bit, S, to be     interpreted as follows:ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 43]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984      S=0       +---------------------------       | S | User Defined        ----       +------------------------      S=1       +---------------------------       | S | CODE | ORGANIZATION ----       +------------------------      where       CODE = This field contains a geographic or non-geographic code to              which the option applies.       ORGANIZATION = This is a further subdivision of the CODE field                      and is determined by an administrator of the                      geographic or non-geographic domain identified by                      the value of CODE.  7.5.4 Source Routing   The source routing parameter specifies, either completely or   partially, the route to be taken from Source Network Address to   Destination Network Address.    Parameter Code:      1100 1000    Parameter Length:    variable    Parameter Value:     2 octet control information                         succeeded by a concatenation                         of ordered address fields                         (ordered from source to destination)ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 44]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   The first octet of the parameter value is the type code. This has the   following significance.    0000 0001     complete source routing    0000 0000     partial source routing    <all other values reserved>   The second octet indicates the octet offset of the next address to be   processed in the list. A value of three (3) indicates that the next   address begins immediately after this control octet. Successive   octets are indicated by correspondingly larger values of this   indicator.   The third octet begins the intermediate-system address list. The   address list consists of variable length address fields. The first   octet of each address field identifies the length of the address   which comprises the remainder of the address field.  7.5.5 Recording of Route   The recording of route parameter identifies the route of intermediate   systems traversed by the PDU.    Parameter Code:       1100 1011    Parameter Length:     variable    Parameter Value:      two octets control information                          succeeded  by a concatenation of                          ordered addresses   The first octet is used to indicate that the recording of route has   been terminated owing to lack of space in the option. It has the   following significance:    0000 0000     Recording of Route still in progress    1111 1111     Recording of Route terminated    <all other values reserved>ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 45]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   The second octet identifies the next octet which may be used to   record an address. It is encoded relative to the start of the   parameter, such that a value of three (3) indicates that the octet   after this one is the next to be used.   The third octet begins the address list. The address list consists of   variable length address fields. The first octet of each address field   identifies the length of the address which comprises the remainder of   the field. Address fields are always added to the beginning of the   address list; i.e., the most recently added field will begin in the   third octet of the parameter value.  7.5.6 Quality of Service Maintenance   The Quality of Service parameter conveys information about the   quality of service requested by the originating Network Service user.   At intermediate systems, Network Layer relay entities may (but are   not required to) make use of this information as an aid in selecting   a route when more than one route satisfying other routing criteria is   available and the available routes are known to differ with respect   to Quality of Service (seeSection 6.16).    Parameter Code:       1100 0011    Parameter Length:     one octet    Parameter Value:      Bit 8:  transit delay vs. cost                          Bit 7:  residual error probability vs.                                  transit delay                          Bit 6:  residual error probability vs.                                  cost                          Bits 5 thru 0 are not specified.   Bit 8 is set to one indicates that where possible, routing decision   should favor low transit delay over low cost. A value of 0 indicates   that routing decisions should favor low cost over low transit delay.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 46]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   Bit 7 set to one indicates that where possible, routing decisions   should favor low residual error probability over low transit delay. A   value of zero indicates that routing decisions should favor low   transit delay over low residual error probability.   Bit 6 is set to one indicates that where possible, routing decisions   should favor low residual error probability over low cost. A value of   0 indicates that routing decisions should favor low cost over low   residual error probability. 7.6 Priority  The priority parameter carries the relative priority of the protocol  data unit. Intermediate systems that support this option should make  use of this information in routing and in ordering PDUs for  transmission.   Parameter Code:       1100 1100   Parameter Length:     one octet   Parameter Value:      0000 0000 - Normal (Default)                         thru                         0000 1111 - Highest  The values 0000 0001 through 0000 1111 are to be used for higher  priority protocol data units. If an intermediate system does not  support this option then all PDUs shall be treated as if the field had  the value 0000 0000. 7.7 Data Part  The Data part of the PDU is structured as an ordered multiple of  octets, which is identical to the same ordered multiple of octets  specified for the NS_Userdata parameter of the N_UNITDATA Request and  Indication primitives. The data field is illustrated below:ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 47]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984                                             Octet                  +------------------+                  |                  |      p+1                  |       Data       |                  |                  |       z                  +------------------+                  Figure 7-6.  PDU header--Data FieldISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 48]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984 7.8 Data (DT) PDU  7.8.1 Structure   The DT PDU has the following format:                                                  Octet     +--------------------------------------+     |  Network Layer Protocol Identifier   |      1     |--------------------------------------|     |           Length Indicator           |      2     |--------------------------------------|     |   Version/Protocol Id Extension      |      3     |--------------------------------------|     |              Lifetime                |      4     |--------------------------------------|     |SP|MS|E/R|      Type                  |      5     |--------------------------------------|     |           Segment Length             |     6,7     |--------------------------------------|     |              Checksum                |     8,9     |--------------------------------------|     | Destination Address Length Indicator |     10     |--------------------------------------|     |         Destination Address          |     11 through m-1     |--------------------------------------|     |    Source Address Length Indicator   |      m     |--------------------------------------|     |            Source Address            |     m+1 through n-1     |--------------------------------------|     |         Data Unit Identifier         |     n,n+1     |--------------------------------------|     |            Segment Offset            |     n+2,n+3     |--------------------------------------|     |             Total Length             |     n+4,n+5     |--------------------------------------|     |                Options               |     n+6 through p     |--------------------------------------|     |                 Data                 |     p+1 through z     +--------------------------------------+                     Figure 7-7.  PDU Header FormatISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 49]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   7.8.1.1 Fixed Part    1) Network Layer Protocol Identifier   SeeSection 7.2.2.    2) Length Indicator                    SeeSection 7.2.3.    3) Version/Protocol Id Extension       SeeSection 7.2.4.    4) Lifetime                            SeeSection 7.2.5.    5) SP, MS, E/R                         SeeSection 7.2.6.    6) Type Code                           SeeSection 7.2.7.    7) Segment Length                      SeeSection 7.2.8.    8) Checksum                            SeeSection 7.2.9.   7.8.1.2 Addresses    SeeSection 7.3.   7.8.1.3 Segmentation    SeeSection 7.4.   7.8.1.4 Options    SeeSection 7.5.   7.8.1.5 Data    SeeSection 7.7.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 50]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984 7.9 Inactive Network Layer Protocol                                              Octet            +-----------------------------+            |  Network Layer Protocol Id  |     1            |-----------------------------|            |           Data              |     2 through n            +-----------------------------+              Figure 7-9.  Inactive Network Layer Protocol  7.9.1 Network Layer Protocol Id   The value of the Network Layer Protocol Identifier field is binary   zero (0000 0000).  7.9.2 Data Field   SeeSection 7.7.   The length of the NS_Userdata parameter is constrained to be less   than or equal to the value of the length of the SN_Userdata parameter   minus one.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 51]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984 7.10 Error Report PDU (ER)  7.10.1 Structure                                                  Octet     +--------------------------------------+     |   Network Layer Protocol Identifier  |       1     |--------------------------------------|     |           Length Indicator           |       2     |--------------------------------------|     |     Version/Protocol Id Extension    |       3     |--------------------------------------|     |               Lifetime               |       4     |--------------------------------------|     |SP|MS|E/R|       Type                 |       5     |--------------------------------------|     |             Segment Length           |      6,7     |--------------------------------------|     |                Checksum              |      8,9     |--------------------------------------|     | Destination Address Length Indicator |      10     |--------------------------------------|     |         Destination Address          |     10 through m-1     |--------------------------------------|     |     Source Address Length Indicator  |       m     |--------------------------------------|     |             Source Address           |     m+1 through n-1     |--------------------------------------|     |          Data Unit Identifier        |     n,n+1     |--------------------------------------|     |             Segment Offset           |     n+2,n+3     |--------------------------------------|     |              Total Length            |     n+4,n+5     |--------------------------------------|     |                Options               |     n+6 through p-1     |--------------------------------------|     |           Reason for Discard         |     p through q-1     |--------------------------------------|     |       Error Report Data Field        |       z     +--------------------------------------+                     Figure 7-10.  Error Report PDUISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 52]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   7.10.1.1 Fixed Part    The fixed part of the Error Report Protocol Data Unit is set as    though this is a new (Initial) PDU. Thus, references are provided to    precious sections describing the composition of the fields    comprising the fixed part:    1) Network Layer Protocol Identifier   SeeSection 7.2.2.    2) Length Indicator                    SeeSection 7.2.3.    3) Version/Protocol Id Extension       SeeSection 7.2.4.    4) Lifetime                            SeeSection 7.2.5.    5) SP, MS, E/R                         SeeSection 7.2.6.    6) Type Code                           SeeSection 7.2.7.    7) Segment Length                      SeeSection 7.2.8.    8) Checksum                            SeeSection 7.2.9.   7.10.1.2 Addresses    SeeSection 7.3.    The Destination Address specifies the original source of the    discarded PDU. The Source Address specifies the intermediate system    or end system network-entity initiating the Error Report PDU.   7.10.1.3 Segmentation    SeeSection 7.4.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 53]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   7.10.1.4 Options    SeeSection 7.5.   7.10.1.5 Reason for Discard    This parameter is only valid for the Error Report PDU. It provides a    report on the discarded protocol data unit.    Parameter Code:     1100 0001    Parameter Length:     two octets     type of error encoded in binary:      0000 0000:  Reason not specified.      0000 0001:  Protocol Procedure Error.                  other than below:      0000 0010:  Incorrect checksum.      0000 0011:  PDU discarded due to congestion.      0000 0100:  Header syntax error (header cannot                  be parsed).      0000 0101:  Segmentation is needed but is not                  permitted.      1000 xxxx:  Addressing Error:                  0000 0000:  Destination Address                              Unreachable.                  1000 0001:  Destination Address                              Unknown.      1001 xxxx:  Source Routing Error:                  1001 0000:  Unspecified Source                              Routing error.                  1001 0001:  Syntax error in Source                              Routing field.                  1001 0010:  Unknown Address in                              Source Routing field.                  1001 0011:  Path not acceptable.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 54]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984      1010 xxxx:  Lifetime Expiration:                  1010 0000:  Lifetime expired while                              data unit in transit.                  1010 0001:  Lifetime expired                              during reassembly.      1011 xxxx:  PDU discarded due to unsupported                  option:                  1011 0000:  unsupported option not                              specified.                  1011 0001:  unsupported padding                              option.                  1011 0010:  unsupported security                              option.                  1011 0011:  unsupported source                              routing option.                  1011 0100:  unsupported recording                              of route option.                  1011 0101:  unsupported QoS                              Maintenance option.     The second octet contains a pointer to the field in the associated     discarded PDU which caused the error. If no one particular field     can be associated with the error, then this field contains the     value of zero.   7.10.1.6 Error Report Data Field    This field provides all or a portion of the discarded PDU. The    octets comprising this field contain the rejected or discarded PDU    up to and including the octet which caused the rejection/discard.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 55]

RFC 926                                                    December 19848  FORMAL DESCRIPTION The operation of the protocol is modelled as a finite state automaton governed by a state variable with three values. The behavior of the automaton is defined with respect to individual independent Protocol Data Units. A transition of the automaton is prompted by the occurrence of an atomic event at one of three interfaces:  1) an interface to the Transport Layer, defined by the service      primitives of the Addendum to the Network Service Definition      Covering Connectionless-mode Transmission;  2) an interface to the subnetwork service provider, defined by the      SN_UNITDATA primitive ofSection 5.5 of this Standard;  3) an interface to an implementation-dependent timer function defined      by the TIMER primitives described inSection 5.6 of this Standard. In addition, a transition of the automaton may be prompted by the occurrence of a condition of the automaton. The atomic events are defined inSection 8.2. The occurrence of an atomic event is not in itself sufficient to cause a transition to take place; other conditions, called "enabling conditions" may also have to be met before a particular transition can take place. Enabling conditions are boolean expressions that depend on the values of parameters associated with the corresponding atomic event (that is, the parameters of some primitive), and on the values of locally maintained variables. More than one enabling condition -- and therefore, more than one possible transition -- may be associated with a single atomic event. In every such case, the enabling conditions are mutually exclusive, so that for any given combination of atomic event and parameter values, only one state transition can take place. Associated with each transition is an action, or "output." Actions consist of changes to the values of local variables and the sequential performance of zero or more functions. The operation of the finite state automaton is completely specified inSection 8.3 by defining the action associated with every possible transition.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 56]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984 8.1  Values of the State Variable  The protocol state variable has three values:  1)  INITIAL       The automaton is created in the INITIAL state.  No                    transition may carry the automaton into the INITIAL                    state.  2)  REASSEMBLING  The automaton is in the REASSEMBLING state for the                    period in which it is assembling PDU segments into a                    complete PDU.  3)  CLOSED        The final state of the automaton is the  CLOSED                    state.  When the automaton enters the CLOSED state                    it ceases to exist. 8.2  Atomic Events  An atomic event is the transfer of a unit of information across an  interface.  The description of an atomic event specifies a primitive  (such as an N_UNITDATA.Request), and the service boundary at which it  is invoked (such as the Network Service boundary). The direction of  information flow across the boundary is implied by the definition of  each of the primitives.  8.2.1  N.UNITDATA_request and N.UNITDATA_indication   The N.UNITDATA_request and N.UNITDATA_indication atomic events occur   at the Network Service boundary. They are defined by the Addendum to   the Network Service Definition Covering Connectionless Data   Transmission (ISO 8348/DAD1).ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 57]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   N.UNITDATA_request    (NS Source_Address,                          NS_Destination_Address,                          NS_Quality_of_Service,                          NS_Userdata)   N.UNITDATA_indication (NS_Source_Address,                          NS_Destination_Address,                          NS_Quality_of_Service, NS_Userdata)   The     parameters     of     the     N.UNITDATA_request      and   N.UNITDATA_indication  are  collectively  referred  to as Network   Service Data Unit (NSDUs).  8.2.2  SN.UNITDATA_request and SN.UNITDATA_indication   The SN.UNITDATA_request and SN.UNITDATA_indication atomic events   occur at the interface between the Protocol described herein and a   subnetwork service provider. They are defined inSection 5.5 of this   Standard.   SN.UNITDATA_request    (SN_Source_Address,                           SN_Destination_Address,                           SN_Quality_of_Service,                           SN_Userdata)   SN.UNITDATA_indication (SN_Source_Address,                           SN_Destination_Address,                           SN_Quality_of_Service,                           SN_Userdata)   The parameters of the SN_UNITDATA request and SN_UNITDATA Indication   are collectively referred to as Subnetwork Service Data Units   (SNSDUs).   The value of the SN_Userdata parameter may represent an Initial PDU   or a Derived PDU.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 58]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  8.2.3  TIMER Atomic Events   The TIMER atomic events occur at the interface between the Protocol   described herein and its local environment. They are defined inSection 5.6 of this Standard.    S.TIMER_request  (Time,                      Name,                      Subscript)    S.TIMER_cancel   (Name                      Subscript)    S.TIMER_response (Name,                      Subscript) 8.3  Operation of the Finite State Automation  The operation of the automaton is defined by use of the formal  description technique and notation specified in ISO/TC97/SC16 N1347.  This technique is based on an extended finite state transition model  and the Pascal programming language. The technique makes use of strong  variable typing to reduce ambiguity in interpretation of the  specification.  This specification formally specifies an abstract machine which  provides a single instance of the Connectionless-Mode Network Service  by use of the Protocol For Providing the Connectionless-Mode Network  Service. It should be emphasized that this formal specification does  not in any way constrain the internal operation or design of any  actual implementation. For example, it is not required that the  program segments contained in the state transitions will actually  appear as part of an actual implementation. A formal protocol  specification is useful in that it goes as far as possible to  eliminate any degree of ambiguity or vagueness in the specification of  a protocol standard.  The formal specification contained here specifies the behavior of a  single finite-state machine, which provides the protocolISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 59]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  behavior corresponding to a single independent service request. It is  expected that any actual implementation will be able to handle  behavior corresponding to many simultaneous finite state machines.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 60]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  8.3.1  Type and Constant Definitions   const    ZERO  = 0;    max_user_data = 64512;   type    NSAP_addr_type  = ...;     { NSAP_addr_type defines the data type for NSAP addresses, as     passed across the Network Service Boundary. }    NPAI_addr_type  = ...;     { NPAI_addr_type defines the data type for the addresses carried in     PDUs. }    SN_addr_type    = ...;     { SN_addr_type defines the data type for addresses in the     underlying service used by this protocol. }    quality_of_service_type = ...;     { Quality_of_service_type defines the data type for the QOS     parameter passed across the Network Service boundary. }    SN_QOS_type     = ...;     { SN_QOS_type defines the data type for the QOS parameter, if any,     passed to the underlying service used by this protocol. }    data_type       = ...;     { Data_type defines the data type for user data. Conceptually this     is equivalent to a variable length binary string. }    buffer_type     = ...;     { Buffer_type defines the data type for the memory resources used     in sending and receiving of user data.  This provides capabilities     required for segmentation and reassembly. }ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 61]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984    timer_name_type = (lifetime_timer);    timer_data_type = ...;    network_layer_protocol_id_type = (ISO_8473_protocol_id);    version_id_type  = (version1);    pdu_tp_type      = (DT, ER);    options_type    = ...;     { Options_type defines the data type used to store the options part     of the PDU header. }    subnet_id_type  = ...;     { The subnet_id_type defines the data type used to locally identify     a particular underlying service used by this protocol.  In general     there may be multiple underlying subnetwork (or data link)     services. }    error_type      = (NO_ERROR,                       TOO_MUCH_USER_DATA,                       PROTOCOL_PROCEDURE_ERROR,                       INCORRECT_CHECKSUM, CONGESTION,                       SYNTAX_ERROR,                       SEG_NEEDED_AND_NOT_PERMITTED,                       DESTINATION_UNREACHABLE,                       DESTINATION_UNKNOWN,                       UNSPECIFIED_SRC_ROUTING_ERROR,                       SYNTAX_ERROR_IN_SRC_ROUTING,                       UNKNOWN_ADDRESS_IN_SRC_ROUTING,                       PATH_NOT_ACCEPTABLE_IN_SRC_ROUTING,                       LIFETIME_EXPIRED_IN_TRANSIT,                       LIFETIME_EXPIRED_IN_REASSEMBLY,                       UNSUPPORTED_OPTION_NOT_SPECIFIED,                       UNSUPPORTED_PADDING_OPTION,                       UNSUPPORTED_SECURITY_OPTION,                       UNSUPPORTED_SRC_ROUTING_OPTION,                       UNSUPPORTED_RECORDING_OF_ROUTE_OPTION,                       UNSUPPORTED_QOS_MAINTENANCE_OPTION);ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 62]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   nsdu_type = record                   da   : NSAP_addr_type;                   sa   : NSAP_addr_type;                   qos  : quality_of_service_type;                   data : data_type;                end;   pdu_type = record                   nlp_id   : network_layer_protocol_id_type;                   hli      : integer;                   vp_id    : version_id_type; lifetime : integer;                   sp       : boolean;                   ms       : boolean;                   er_flag  : boolean;                   pdu_tp   : pdu_tp_type;                   seg_len  : integer;                   checksum : integer;                   da_len   : integer;                   da       : NPAI_addr_type;                   sa_len   : integer;                   sa       : NPAI_addr_type;                   du_id    : optional integer;                   so       : optional integer;                   tot_len  : optional integer;                      { du_id, so, and tot_len are present                       only if sp has the value TRUE. }                   options  : options_type;                   data     : data_type;                end;ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 63]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   route_result_type =               record            subnet_id    : subnet_id_type;            sn_da        : SN_addr_type;            sn_sa        : SN_addr_type;            segment_size : integer;         end;ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 64]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  8.3.2  Interface Definitions   channel Network_access_point (User, Provider);    by User:        UNITDATA_request           (NS_Destination_address : NSAP_addr_type;            NS_Source_address      : NSAP_addr_type;            NS_Quality_of_Service  : quality_of_service_type;            NS_Userdata            : data_type);    by Provider:        UNITDATA_indication           (NS_Destination_address : NSAP_addr_type;            NS_Source_address      : NSAP_addr_type;            NS_Quality_of_Service  : quality_of_service_type;            NS_Userdata            : data_type);   channel Subnetwork_access_point (User, Provider);    by User:        UNITDATA_request           (SN_Destination_address : SN_addr_type;            SN_Source_address      : SN_addr_type;            SN_Quality_of_Service  : SN_QOS_type;            SN_Userdata            : pdu_type);    by Provider:        UNITDATA_indication           (SN_Destination_address : SN_addr_type;            SN_Source_address      : SN_addr_type;            SN_Quality_of_Service  : SN_QOS_type;            SN_Userdata            : pdu_type);   channel System_access_point (User, Provider);    by User:        TIMER_request           (Time      : integer;            Name      : timer_name_type;            Subscript : integer);ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 65]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984        TIMER_cancel             (Name      : timer_name_type;              Subscript : integer);    by Provider:        TIMER_indication           (Name      : timer_name_type;            Subscript : integer);ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 66]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  8.3.3  Formal Machine Definition   module Connectionless_Network_Protocol_Machine        (N:  Network_access_point (Provider) common queue;         SN: array [subnet_id_type] of Subnetwork_access_point                                          (User) common queue;         S:  System_access_point (User) individual queue );   var       nsdu    : nsdu_type;       pdu     : pdu_type;       rcv_buf : buffer_type;   state : (INITIAL, REASSEMBLING, CLOSED);ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 67]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   procedure send_error_report (error : error_type;                                pdu   : pdu_type);    var        er_pdu : pdu_type;    begin     if (pdu.er_flag) then      begin       er_pdu.nlp_id   := ISO_8473_protocol_id;       er_pdu.vp_id    := version1;       er_pdu.lifetime := get_er_lifetime(pdu.sa);       er_pdu.sp       := get_er_seg_per(pdu);       er_pdu.ms       := FALSE;       er_pdu.er_flag  := FALSE;       er_pdu.pdu_tp   := ER;       er_pdu.da_len   := pdu.sa_len;       er_pdu.da       := pdu.sa;       er_pdu.sa_len   := get_local_NPAI_addr_len;       er_pdu.sa       := get_local_NPAI_addr;       er_pdu.options  := get_er_options                          (error,                          er_pdu.da,                          pdu.options);       er_pdu.hli      := get_header_length                          (er_pdu.da_len, er_pdu.sa_len,                           er_pdu.sp,                           er_pdu.options);       er_pdu.data     := get_er_data_field(error, pdu);       if (er_pdu.sp) then                        begin                           er_pdu.du_id   :=                           get_data_unit_id(er_pdu.da);                           er_pdu.so      := ZERO;                           er_pdu.tot_len := er_pdu.hli +                           size(er_pdu.data);                        end;ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 68]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984       if (NPAI_addr_local(er_pdu.da))                        then                           post_error_report(er_pdu)                        else                           send_pdu(er_pdu);      end;    end;ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 69]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   procedure send_pdu (pdu : pdu_type);    var     rte_result   : route_result_type;     error_code   : error_type;     send_buf     : buffer_type;     data_maxsize : integer;     more_seg     : boolean;     sn_qos       : SN_QOS_type;    begin     send_buf := make_buffer(pdu.data);     more_seg := pdu.ms;     repeat      begin       error_code := check_parameters                     (pdu.hli,                      pdu.sp,                      pdu.da,                      pdu.options,                      size(pdu.data));       if (error_code = NO_ERROR) then                        begin                           rte_result := route(pdu.hli,                                               pdu.sp,                                               pdu.da,                                               pdu.options,                                               size(pdu.data));                           data_maxsize := rte_result.segment_size -                           pdu.hli;                           pdu.data     := extract(send_buf,                           data_maxsize);                           pdu.seg_len  := pdu.hli + size(pdu.data);                           if (size(send_buf) = ZERO) then                               pdu.ms   := more_seg                           else                               pdu.ms   := TRUE;ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 70]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984                           pdu.checksum := get_checksum(pdu);                           sn_qos       := get_sn_qos                           (rte_result.subnet_id,                                                       pdu.options);                           out SN[rte_result.subnet_id].UNITDATA_request                                      (rte_result.sn_da,                                       rte_result.sn_sa,                                       sn_qos,                                       pdu);                           pdu.so := pdu.so + data_maxsize;                        end       else if (error_code = CONGESTION) then                        begin                           if (send_er_on_congestion (pdu)) then                               send_error_report(CONGESTION, pdu);                        end       else                        send_error_report(error_code, pdu);      end;     until (size_buf(data_buf) = ZERO) or           (error_code <> NO_ERROR);    end;ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 71]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   procedure allocate_reassembly_resources            (pdu_tot_len : integer);   primitive;    { This procedure allocates resources required for reassembly of a    PDU of the specified total length.  If this requires discarding of a    PDU in which the ER flag is set, then an error report is returned to    the source of the discarded data unit. }   function check_parameters        (hli     : integer;         sp      : boolean;         da      : NPAI_addr_type;         options : options_type;         datalen : integer) : error_type;   primitive;    { This function examines various parameters associated with a PDU,    to determine whether forwarding of the PDU can continue.  If a    result of NO_ERROR is returned, then the primitive route can be    called to specify the route and segment size.  Otherwise this    function specifies the reason that an error has occurred. }   function data_unit_complete        (buf : buffer_type) : boolean;   primitive;    { This function returns a boolean value specifying whether the PDU    stored in the specified buffer has been completely received. }ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 72]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   function elapsed_time : integer;   primitive;    { This function returns an estimate of the time elapsed, in 500    microsecond increments, since the PDU was transmitted by the    previous peer network entity.  This estimate includes both time    spent in transit, and any time to be spent in buffers within the    local system.  Although this estimate need not be precise,    overestimates are preferable to underestimates, as underestimating    the time elapsed may defeat the intent of the lifetime function. }   procedure empty_buffer        (buf : buffer_type);   primitive;    { This procedure empties the specified buffer. }   function extract        (buf    : buffer_type;         amount : integer) : data_type;   primitive;    { This function removes the specified amount of data from    the specified buffer, and returns this data as the function    value. }   procedure free_reassembly_resources;   primitive;    { This procedure releases the resources that had been previously    allocated by the procedure allocate_reassembly_resources. }   function get_checksum        (pdu : pdu_type) : integer;   primitive;    { This function returns the 16 bit integer value to be placed in the    checksum field of the PDU.  If the checksum facility is not being    used, then this function returns the value zero.  The algorithm for    producing a correct checksum value is specified in Annex A. }   function get_data_unit_id        (da : NPAI_addr_type) : integer;   primitive;    { This function returns a data unit identifier which is unique for    the specified destination address. }ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 73]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   function get_er_data_field        (error : error_type;         pdu   : pdu_type) : data_type;   primitive;    { This function returns the correct data field for an error report,    based on the information that the specified PDU is being discarded    due to the specified error.  The data field of an error report must    include the header of the discarded PDU, and may optionally contain    additional user data. }   function get_er_flag        (nsdu : nsdu_type) : boolean;   primitive;    { This function returns a boolean value to be used as the error    report flag in a PDU which transmits the specified nsdu.  If the PDU    must be discarded at some future time, an error report can be    returned only if this value is set to TRUE. }   function get_er_lifetime        (da : NPAI_addr_type) : integer;   primitive;    { This function returns the lifetime value to be used for an error    report being sent to the specified destination address. }   function get_er_options        (error   : error_type;         da      : NPAI_addr_type;         options : options_type) : options_type;   primitive;    { This function returns the options field of an error report, based    on the reason for discard, and the destination address and options    field of the discarded PDU.  The options field contains the reason    for discard option, and may contain other optional fields. }ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 74]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   function get_er_seg_per        (pdu     : pdu_type) : boolean;   primitive;    { This function returns the boolean value which will be used for the    segmentation permitted flag of an error report. }   function get_header_len        (da_len  : integer;         sa_len  : integer;         sp      : boolean;         options : options_type) : integer;   primitive;    { This function returns the header length, in octets.  This depends    upon the lengths of the source and destination addresses, whether    the segmentation part of the header is present, and the length of    the options part. }   function get_lifetime        (da  : NSAP_addr_type;         qos : quality_of_service_type) : lifetime_type;   primitive;    { This function returns the lifetime value to be used for a PDU,    based upon the destination address and requested quality of service.    }   function get_local_NPAI_addr : NPAI_addr_type;   primitive;    { This functions returns the local address as used in the protocol    header. }   function get_local_NPAI_addr_len : integer;   primitive;    { This functions returns the length of the local address as used in    the protocol header. }ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 75]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   function get_NPAI        (addr : NSAP_addr_type) : NPAI_addr_type;   primitive;    { This function returns the network address as used in the protocol    header, or "Network Protocol Addressing Information", corresponding    to the specified NSAP address. }   function get_NPAI_len        (addr : NSAP_addr_type) : integer;   primitive;    { This function returns the length of the network address    corresponding to a specified NSAP address. }   function get_NSAP_addr        (addr : NPAI_addr_type;         len  : integer) : NSAP_addr_type;   primitive;    { This function returns the NSAP address corresponding to the    network protocol addressing information (as it appears in the    protocol header) of the specified length. }   function get_options        (da  : NSAP_addr_type;         qos : quality_of_service_type) : options_type;   primitive;    { This function returns the options field for a PDU, based on the    requested destination address and quality of service. }   function get_seg_permitted        (da : NSAP_addr_type;         qos : quality_of_service_type) : boolean;   primitive;    { This function returns the boolean value to be used in the    segmentation permitted field of a PDU.  This value may depend upon    the destination address, requested quality of service, and the    length of the user data. }ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 76]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   function get_sn_qos        (subnet_id : subnet_id_type;          options   : options_type) : SN_QOS_type;   primitive;    { This function returns the quality of service to be used on the    specified subnetwork, in order to obtain the quality of service (if    any) and other parameters requested in the options part of the PDU.    }   function get_qos        (options : options_type) : quality_of_service_type;   primitive;    { This function determines, to the extent possible, the quality of    service that was obtained for a particular PDU, based upon the    quality of service and other information contained in the options    part of the PDU header. }   function make_buffer        (data : data_type) : buffer_type;   primitive;    { This function places the specified data in a newly created buffer.    The precise manner of handling buffers is implementation specific.    This newly created buffer is returned as the function value. }   procedure merge_seg        (buf   : buffer_type;         so    : integer;         data  : data_type);   primitive;    { This procedure merges the specified data into the specified    buffer, based on the specified segment offset of the data. }   function NPAI_addr_local        (addr : NPAI_addr_type) : boolean;   primitive;    { This function returns the boolean value TRUE only if the specified    network protocol addressing information specifies a local address. }ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 77]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   function NSAP_addr_local        (addr : NSAP_addr_type) : boolean;   primitive;    { This function returns the boolean value TRUE only if the specified    NSAP address specifies a local address. }   procedure post_error_report        (er_pdu : pdu_type);   primitive;    { This procedure posts the specified error report (ER) type PDU to    the appropriate local entity that handles error reports. }   function route        (hli     : integer;         sp      : boolean;         da      : NPAI_addr_type;         options : options_type;         datalen : integer) : route_result_type;   primitive;    { This function determines the route to be followed by a PDU    segment, as well as the segment size.  Note that in general, the    segment size and route may be mutually dependent.  This    determination is made on the basis of the header length, the    segmentation permitted flag, the destination address, several    parameters (such as source routing) contained in the options part of    the PDU header, and the length of data.  This function returns a    structure that specifies the subnetwork on which the segment should    be transmitted, the source and destination addresses to be used on    the subnetwork, and the segment size.  This routine may only be    called if the primitive function check_parameters has already    determined that an error will not occur. }ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 78]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   function send_er_on_congestion       (pdu : pdu_type) : boolean;   primitive;    { This function returns the boolean value true if an error report    should be sent when the indicated data unit is discarded due to    congestion.  Note that if the value true is returned, then the    er_flag field of the discarded data unit must still be checked    before an error report can be sent. }   function size       (data : data_type) : integer;   primitive;    { This function returns the length, in octets, of the specified    data. }   function size_buf       (buf : buffer_type) : integer;   primitive;    { This function returns the length, in octets, of the data contained    in the specified buffer. }   initialize    begin        state to INITIAL;    end;ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 79]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   trans  (* begin transitions *)   from INITIAL  to  CLOSED   when      N.UNITDATA_request   provided  not NSAP_addr_local(NS_Destination_Address)   begin     nsdu.da   := NS_Destination_Address;     nsdu.sa   := NS_Source_Address;     nsdu.qos  := NS_Quality_o  _Service;     nsdu.data := NS_Userdata;     pdu.nlp_id   := ISO_8473_protocol_id;     pdu.vp_id    := version1;     pdu.lifetime := get_lifetime(nsdu.da, nsdu.qos);     pdu.sp       := get_seg_permitted(nsdu.da, nsdu.qos);     pdu.ms       := FALSE;     pdu.er_flag  := get_er_flag(nsdu);     pdu.pdu_tp   := DT;     pdu.da_len   := get_NPAI_len(nsdu.da);     pdu.da       := get_NPAI(nsdu.da);     pdu.sa_len   := get_NPAI_len(nsdu.sa);     pdu.sa       := get_NPAI(nsdu.sa);     pdu.options  := get_options(nsdu.da, nsdu.qos);     pdu.data     := nsdu.data;     pdu.hli      := get_header_len(pdu.da_len,                                    pdu.sa_len,                                    pdu.sp,                                    pdu.options);     if (pdu.sp) then           begin             pdu.du_id    := get_data_unit_id(pdu.da);             pdu.so       := ZERO;             pdu.tot_len  := pdu.hli  +  size(pdu.data);           end;     if (size(pdu.data) > max_user_data) then           send_error_report(TOO_MUCH_USER_DATA, pdu)     else           send_pdu(pdu);   end;ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 80]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   from INITIAL  to  CLOSED   when      N.UNITDATA_request   provided  NSAP_addr_local(NS_Destination_Address)   begin     nsdu.da   := NS_Destination_Address;     nsdu.sa   := NS_Source_Address;     nsdu.qos  := NS_Quality_of_Service;     nsdu.data := NS_Userdata;     out N.UNITDATA_indication         (nsdu.da, nsdu.sa, nsdu.qos, nsdu.data);   end;   from INITIAL  to  CLOSED   when      SN[subnet_id].UNITDATA_indication   provided  NPAI_addr_local(SN_Userdata.da)  and             SN_Userdata.so       =  ZERO     and             not  SN_Userdata.ms   begin     pdu := SN_Userdata;     if (pdu.pdu_tp = DT) then         out N.UNITDATA_indication            (get_NSAP_addr(pdu.da_len, pdu.da),             get_NSAP_addr(pdu.sa_len, pdu.sa),             get_qos(pdu.options),             pdu.data)     else         post_error_report(pdu);   end;ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 81]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   from INITIAL  to  REASSEMBLING   when      SN[subnet_id].UNITDATA_indication   provided  NPAI_addr_local(SN_Userdata.da)    and             ((SN_Userdata.so > ZERO) or (SN_Userdata.ms))   begin     pdu := SN_Userdata;     allocate_reassembly_resources(pdu.tot_len);     empty_buffer(rcv_buf);     merge_seg        (rcv_buf,         pdu.so,         pdu.data);     out S.TIMER_request        (pdu.lifetime,         lifetime_timer,         ZERO);   end;   from INITIAL  to  CLOSED   when      SN[subnet_id].UNITDATA_indication   provided  not NPAI_addr_local(SN_Userdata.da)   begin     pdu := SN_Userdata;     if (pdu.lifetime > elapsed_time) then       begin         pdu.lifetime := pdu.lifetime - elapsed_time;         send_pdu(pdu);       end   else       send_error_report(LIFETIME_EXPIRED, pdu);   end;ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 82]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   from REASSEMBLING  to  REASSEMBLING   when      SN[subnet_id].UNITDATA_indication   provided  (SN_Userdata.du_id   = pdu.du_id)   and             (SN_Userdata.da_len  = pdu.da_len)  and             (SN_Userdata.da      = pdu.da)      and             (SN_Userdata.sa_len  = pdu.sa_len)  and             (SN_Userdata.sa      = pdu.sa)   begin     merge_seg        (rcv_buf,         SN_Userdata.so,         SN_Userdata.data);   end;   from REASSEMBLING  to  CLOSED   provided  data_unit_complete(rcv_buf)   no delay   begin     if (pdu.pdu_tp = DT) then         out N.UNITDATA_indication            (get_NSAP_addr(pdu.da_len, pdu.da),             get_NSAP_addr(pdu.sa_len, pdu.sa),             get_qos(pdu.options),             extract (rcv_buf, size_buf(rcv_buf)))    else        post_error_report(pdu);    out S.TIMER_cancel(lifetime_timer,ZERO);    free_reassembly_resources;   end;   from REASSEMBLING  to  CLOSED   when      S.TIMER_indication   begin     send_error_report(LIFETIME_EXPIRED, pdu);   end;ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 83]

RFC 926                                                    December 19849  CONFORMANCE For conformance to this International Standard, the ability to originate, manipulate, and receive PDUs in accordance with the full protocol (as opposed to the "non-segmenting" or "Inactive Network Layer Protocol" subsets) is required. Additionally, the provision of the optional functions described inSection 6.17 and enumerated in Table 9-1 must meet the requirements described therein. Additionally, conformance to the Standard requires adherence to the formal description ofSection 8 and to the structure and encoding of PDUs ofSection 7. If and only if the above requirements are met is there conformance to this International Standard. 9.1  Provision of Functions for Conformance  The following table categorizes the functions inSection 6 with  respect to the type of system providing the function:ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 84]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  +---------------------------------------------------------+  | Function                   |  Send  | Forward | Receive |  |---------------------------------------------------------|  | PDU Composition            |   M    |    -    |    -    |  | PDU Decomposition          |   M    |    -    |    M    |  | Header Format Analysis     |   -    |    M    |    M    |  | PDU Lifetime Control       |   -    |    M    |    I    |  | Route PDU                  |   -    |    M    |    -    |  | Forward PDU                |   M    |    M    |    -    |  | Segment PDU                |   M    | (note 1)|    -    |  | Reassemble PDU             |   -    |    I    |    M    |  | Discard PDU                |   -    |    M    |    M    |  | Error Reporting            |   -    |    M    |    M    |  | PDU Header Error Detection |   M    |    M    |    M    |  | Padding                    |(note 2)| (note 2)| (note 2)|  | Security                   |   -    | (note 3)| (note 3)|  | Complete Source Routing    |   -    | (note 3)|    -    |  | Partial Source Routing     |   -    | (note 4)|    -    |  | Record Route               |   -    | (note 4)|    -    |  | QoS Maintenance            |   -    | (note 4)|    -    |  +---------------------------------------------------------+                Table 9-1.  Categorization of Functions  +---------------------------------------------------------+  | KEY:                                                    |  |       M : Mandatory Function; must be implemented       |  |       - : Not applicable                                |  |       I : Implementation option, as described in text   |  +---------------------------------------------------------+  Notes:   1)  The Segment PDU function is in general mandatory for an       intermediate system. However, a system which is to be connected       only to subnetworks all offering the same maximum SNSDU size       (such as identical Local Area Networks) will not need to perform       this function and therefore does not need to implement it.       If this function is not implemented, this shall be stated as part       of the specification of the implementation.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 85]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   2)  The correct treatment of the padding function requires no       processing. A conforming implementation shall support the       function, to the extent of ignoring this parameter wherever it       may appear.   3)  This function may or may not be supported. If an implementation       does not support this function, and the function is selected by a       PDU, then the PDU shall be discarded, and an ER PDU shall be       generated and forwarded to the originating network-entity if the       Error Report flag is set.   4)  This function may or may not be supported. If an implementation       does not support this function, and the function is selected by a       PDU, then the function is not provided and the PDU is processed       exactly as though the function was not selected. The PDU shall       not be discarded.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 86]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984                                ANNEXES (These annexes are provided for information for implementors and are not an integral part of the body of the Standard.)                ANNEX A.  SUPPORTING TECHNICAL MATERIAL A.1  Data Unit Lifetime  There are two primary purposes of providing a PDU lifetime capability  in the ISO 8473 Protocol. One purpose is to ensure against unlimited  looping of protocol data units. Although the routing algorithm should  ensure that it will be very rare for data to loop, the PDU lifetime  field provides additional assurance that loops will be limited in  extent.  The other important purpose of the lifetime capability is to provide  for a means by which the originating network entity can limit the  Maximum NSDU lifetime. ISO Transport Protocol Class 4 assumes that  there is a particular Maximum NSDU Lifetime in order to protect  against certain error states in the connection establishment and  termination phases. If a TPDU does not arrive within this time, then  there is no chance that it will ever arrive. It is necessary to make  this assumption, even if the Network Layer does not guarantee any  particular upper bound on NSDU lifetime. It is much easier for  Transport Protocol Class 4 to deal with occasional lost TPDUs than to  deal with occasional very late TPDUs. For this reason, it is  preferable to discard very late TPDUs than to deliver them. Note that  NSDU lifetime is not directly associated with the retransmission of  lost TPDUs, but relates to the problem of distinguishing old  (duplicate) TPDUs from new TPDUs.  Maximum NSDU Lifetime must be provided to transport protocol entity in  units of time; a transport entity cannot count "hops". Thus NSDU  lifetime must be calculated in units of time in order to be useful in  determining Transport timer values.  In the absence of any guaranteed bound, it is common to simply guess  some value which seems like a reasonable compromise. In essence one is  simply assuming that "surely no TPDU would ever take more than 'x'  seconds to traverse the network." This value is probably chosen by  observation of past performance, and mayISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 87]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  vary with source and destination.  Three possible ways to deal with the requirement for a limit on the  maximum NSDU lifetime are: (1) specify lifetime in units of time,  thereby requiring intermediate systems to decrement the lifetime field  by a value which is an upper bound on the time spent since the  previous intermediate system, and have the Network Layer discard  protocol data units whose lifetime has expired; (2) provide a  mechanism in the Transport Layer to recognize and discard old TPDUs;  or (3) ignore the problem, anticipating that the resulting  difficulties will be rare. Which solution should be followed depends  in part upon how difficult it is to implement solutions (1) and (2),  and how strong the transport requirement for a bounded time to live  really is.  There is a problem with solution (2) above, in that transport entities  are inherently transient. In case of a computer system outage or other  error, or in the case where one of the two endpoints of a connection  closes without waiting for a sufficient period of time (approximately  twice Maximum NSDU Lifetime), it is possible for the Transport Layer  to have no way to know whether a particular TPDU is old unless  globally synchronized clocks are used (which is unlikely). On the  other hand, it is expected that intermediate systems will be  comparatively stable. In addition, even if intermediate systems do  fail and resume processing without memory of the recent past, it will  still be possible (in most instances) for the intermediate system to  easily comply with lifetime in units of time, as discussed below.  It is not necessary for each intermediate system to subtract a precise  measure of the time that has passed since an NPDU (containing the TPDU  or a segment thereof) has left the previous intermediate system. It is  sufficient to subtract an upper bound on the time taken. In most  cases, an intermediate system may simply subtract a constant value  which depends upon the typical near-maximum delays that are  encountered in a specific subnetwork. It is only necessary to make an  accurate estimate on a per NPDU basis for those subnetworks which have  both a relatively large maximum delay, and a relatively large  variation in delay.  As an example, assume that a particular local area network has short  average delays, with overall delays generally in the 1 to 5ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 88]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  millisecond range and with occasional delays up to 20 milliseconds. In  this case, although the relative range in delays might be large (a  factor of 20), it would still not be necessary to measure the delay  for actual NPDUs. A constant value of 20 milliseconds (or more) can be  subtracted for all delays ranging from .5 seconds to .6 seconds (.5  seconds for the propagation delay, 0 to .1 seconds for queueing delay)  then the constant value .6 seconds could be used.  If a third subnetwork had normal delays ranging from .1 to 1 second,  but occasionally delivered an NPDU after a delay of 15 seconds, the  intermediate system attached to this subnetwork might be required to  determine how long it has actually take the PDU to transit the  subnetwork. In this last example, it is likely to be more useful to  have the intermediate systems determine when the delays are extreme ad  discard very old NPDUs, as occasional large delays are precisely what  causes the Transport Protocol the most trouble.  In addition to the time delay within each subnetwork, it is important  to consider the time delay within intermediate systems. It should be  relatively simple for those gateways which expect to hold on to some  data-units for significant periods of time to decrement the lifetime  appropriately.  Having observed that (i) the Transport Protocol requires Maximum NSDU  to be calculated in units of time; (ii) in the great majority of  cases, it is not difficult for intermediate systems to determine a  valid upper bound on subnetwork transit time; and (iii) those few  cases where the gateways must actually measure the time take by a NPDU  are precisely the cases where such measurement truly needs to be made,  it can be concluded that NSDU lifetime should in fact be measured in  units of time, and that intermediate systems should required to  decrement the lifetime field of the ISO 8473 Protocol by a value which  represents an upper bound on the time actually taken since the  lifetime field was last decremented. A.2  Reassembly Lifetime Control  In order to ensure a bound on the lifetime of NSDUs, and to  effectively manage reassembly buffers in the Network Layer, the  Reassembly Function described inSection 6 must control theISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 89]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  lifetime of segments representing partially assembled PDUs. This annex  discusses methods of bounding reassembly lifetime and suggests some  implementation guidelines for the reassembly function.  When segments of a PDU arrive at a destination network-entity, they  are buffered until an entire PDU is received, assembled, and passed to  the PDU Decomposition Function. The connectionless Internetwork  Protocol does not guarantee the delivery of PDUs; hence, it is  possible for some segments of a PDU to be lost or delayed such that  the entire PDU cannot be assembled in a reasonable length of time. In  the case of loss of a PDU "segment", for example, this could be  forever. There are a number of possible schemes to prevent this:   a)  Per-PDU reassembly timers,   b)  Extension of the PDU Lifetime control function, and   c)  Coupling of the Transport Retransmission timers.  Each of these methods is discussed in the subsections which follow.  A.2.1  Method (a)   assigns a "reassembly lifetime" to each PDU received and identified   by its Data-unit Identifier. This is a local, real time which is   assigned by the reassembly function and decremented while some, but   not all segments of the PDU are being buffered by the destination   network-entity. If the timer expires, all segments of the PDU are   discarded, thus freeing the reassembly buffers and preventing a "very   old" PDU from being confused with a newer one bearing the same   Data-unit Identifier. For this scheme to function properly, the   timers must be assigned in such a fashion as to prevent the   phenomenon of Reassembly Interference (discussed below). In   particular, the following guidelines should be followed:    1)  The Reassembly Lifetime must be much less than the maximum PDU        lifetime of the network (to prevent the confusion of old and new        data-units).ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 90]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984    2)  The lifetime should be less than the Transport protocol's        retransmission timers minus the average transit time of the        network. If this is not done, extra buffers are tied up holding        data which has already been retransmitted by the Transport        Protocol. (Note that an assumption has been made that such        timers are integral to the Transport Protocol, which in some        sense, dictates that retransmission functions must exist in the        Transport Protocol employed).  A.2.2  Method (b)   is feasible if the PDU lifetime control function operates based on   real or virtual time rather than hop-count. In this scheme, the   lifetime field of all PDU segments of a Data-unit continues to be   decremented by the reassembly function of the destination   network-entity as if the PdU were still in transit (in a sense, it   still is). When the lifetime of any segment of a partially   reassembled PDU expires, all segments of that PDU are discarded. This   scheme is attractive since the delivery behavior of the ISO 8473   Protocol would be identical for segmented and unsegmented PDUs.  A.2.3  Method (c)   couples the reassembly lifetime directly to the Transport Protocol's   retransmission timers, and requires that Transport Layer management   make known to Network Layer Management (and hence, the Reassembly   Function) the values of its retransmission timers for each source   from which it expects to be receiving traffic. When a PDU segment is   received from a source, the retransmission time minus the anticipated   transit time becomes the reassembly lifetime of that PDU. If this   timer expires before the entire PDU has been reassembled, all   segments of the PDU are discarded. This scheme is attractive since it   has a low probability of holding PDU segments that have already been   retransmitted by the source Transport-entity; it has, however, the   disadvantage of depending on reliable operation of the Transport   Protocol to work effectively. If the retransmission timers are not   set correctly, it is possible that all PDUs would be discarded too   soon, and the Transport Protocol would make no progress. A.3  The Power of the Header Error Detection FunctionISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 91]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  A.3.1  General   The form of the checksum used for PDU header error detection is such   that it is easily calculated in software or firmware using only two   additions per octet of header, yet it has an error detection power   approaching (but not quite equalling) that of techniques (such as   cyclic polynomial checks) which involve calculations that are much   more time- or space-consuming. This annex discusses the power of this   error detection function.   The checksum consists of two octets, either of which can assume any   value except zero. That is, 255 distinct values for each octet are   possible. The calculation of the two octets is such that the value of   either is independent of the value of the other, so the checksum has   a total of 255 x 255 = 65025 values. If one considers all ways in   which the PDU header might be corrupted as equally likely, then there   is only one chance in 65025 that the checksum will have the correct   value for any particular corruption. This corresponds to 0.0015  of   all possible errors.   The remainder of this annex considers particular classes of errors   that are likely to be encountered. The hope is that the error   detection function will be found to be more powerful, or at least no   less powerful, against these classes as compared to errors in   general.  A.3.2  Bit Alteration Errors   First considered are classes of errors in which bits are altered, but   no bits are inserted nor deleted. This section does not consider the   case where the checksum itself is erroneously set to be all zero;   this case is discussed in section A.3.4.   A burst error of length b is a corruption of the header in which all   of the altered bits (no more than b in number) are within a single   span of consecutively transmitted bits that is b bits long. Checksums   are usually expected to do well against burst errors of a length not   exceeding the number of bits in the header error detection parameter   (16 for the PDU header). The PDU header error detection parameter in   fact fails to detect only 0.000019  of all such errors, each distinct   burst error of length 16 or less being considered to be equally   likely. In particular,ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 92]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   it cannot detect an 8-bit burst in which an octet of zero is altered   to an octet of 255 (all bits = 1) or vice versa. Similarly, it fails   to detect the swapping of two adjacent octets only if one is zero and   the other is 255.   The PDU header error detection, as should be expected, detects all   errors involving only a single altered bit.   Undetected errors involving only two altered bits should occur only   if the two bits are widely separated (and even then only rarely). The   PDU header error detection detects all double bit errors for which   the spacing between the two altered bits is less than 2040 bits = 255   octets. Since this separation exceeds the maximum header length, all   double bit errors are detected.   The power to detect double bit errors is an advantage of the checksum   algorithm used for the protocol, versus a simple modulo 65536   summation of the header split into 16 bit fields. This simple   summation would not catch all such double bit errors. In fact, double   bit errors with a spacing as little as 16 bits apart could go   undetected.  A.3.3  Bit Insertion/Deletion Errors   Although errors involving the insertion or deletion of bits are in   general neither more nor less likely to go undetected than are all   other kinds of general errors, at least one class of such errors is   of special concern. If octets, all equal to either zero or 255, are   inserted at a point such that the simple sum CO in the running   calculation (described in Annex C) happens to equal zero, then the   error will go undetected. This is of concern primarily because there   are two points in the calculation for which this value for the sum is   not a rare happenstance, but is expected; namely, at the beginning   and the end. That is, if the header is preceded or followed by   inserted octets all equal to zero or 255 then no error is detected.   Both cases are examined separately.   Insertion of erroneous octets at the beginning of the header   completely misaligns the header fields, causing them to be   misinterpreted. In particular, the first inserted octet is   interpreted as the network layer protocol identifier, probably   eliminating any knowledge that the data unit is related to theISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 93]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   ISO 8473 Protocol, and thereby eliminating any attempt to perform the   checksum calculation or invoking a different form of checksum   calculation. An initial octet of zero is reserved for the Inactive   Network Layer Protocol. This is indeed a problem but not one which   can be ascribed to the form of checksum being used. Therefore, it is   not discussed further here.   Insertion of erroneous octets at the end of the header, in the   absence of other errors, is impossible because the length field   unequivocally defines where the header ends. Insertion or deletion of   octets at the end of the header requires an alteration in the value   of the octet defining the header length. Such an alteration implies   that the value of the calculated sum at the end of the header would   not be expected to have the dangerous value of zero and consequently   that the error is just as likely to be detected as is any error in   general.   Insertion of an erroneous octet in the middle of the header is   primarily of concern if the inserted octet has either the value zero   or 255, and if the variable CO happens to have the value zero at this   point. In most cases, this error will completely destroy the parsing   of the header, which will cause the data unit to e discarded. In   addition, in the absence of any other error, the last octet of the   header will be thought to be data. This in turn will cause the header   to end in the wrong place. In the case where the header otherwise can   parse correctly, the last field will be found to be missing. Even in   the case where necessary, the length field is the padding option, and   therefore not necessary, the length field for the padding function   will be inconsistent with the header length field, and therefore the   error can be detected.  A.3.4  Checksum Non-calculation Errors   Use of the header error detection function is optional. The choice of   not using it is indicated by a checksum parameter value of zero. This   creates the possibility that the two octets of the checksum parameter   (neither of which is generated as being zero) could both be altered   to zero. This would in effect be an error not detected by the   checksum since the check would not be made. One of three   possibilities exists:    1)  A burst error of length sixteen (16) which sets the entireISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 94]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984    checksum to zero. Such an error could not be detected; however, it        requires a particular positioning of the burst within the        header. [A calculation of its effect on overall detectability of        burst errors depends upon the length of the header.]    2)  All single bit errors are detected. Since both octets of the        checksum field must be non-zero when the checksum is being used,        no single bit error can set the checksum to zero.    3)  Where each of the two octets of the checksum parameter has a        value that is a power of two, such that only one bit in each        equals one (1), then a zeroing of the checksum parameter could        result in an undetected double bit error. Furthermore, the two        altered bits have a separation of less than sixteen (16), and        could be consecutive. This is clearly a decline from the        complete detectability previously described.   Where a particular administration is highly concerned about the   possibility of accidental zeroing of the checksum among data units   within its domain, then the administration may impose the restriction   that all data units whose source or destination lie within its domain   must make use of the header error detection function. Any data units   which do not could be discarded, nor would they be allowed outside   the domain. This protects against errors that occur within the   domain, and would protect all data units whose source or destination   lies within the domain, even where the data path between all such   pairs crosses other domains (errors outside the protected domain   notwithstanding).ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 95]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984                      ANNEX B.  NETWORK MANAGEMENT The following topics are considered to be major components of Network Layer management:  A.  Routing   Considered by many to be the most crucial element of Network Layer   management, since management of the Routing algorithms for networking   seem to be an absolutely necessary prerequisite to a practical   networking scheme.   Routing management consists of three parts; forwarding, decision, and   update. Management of forwarding is the process of interpreting the   Network Layer address to properly forward NSDUs on its next network   hop on a route through the network. Management of decision is the   process of choosing routes for either connections or NSDUs, depending   on whether the network is operating a connection-oriented or   connectionless protocol. The decision component will be driven by a   number of considerations, not the least of which are those associated   with Quality of Service. Management of update is the management   protocol(s) used to exchange information among   intermediate-systems/network- entities which is used in the decision   component to determine routes.   To what extent is it desirable and/or practical to pursue a single   OSI network routing algorithm and associated Management protocol(s)?   It is generally understood that it is impractical to expect ISO to   adopt a single global routing algorithm. On the other hand, it is   recognized that having no standard at all upon which to make routing   decisions effectively prevents an internetwork protocol from working   at all. One possible compromise would be to define the principles for   the behavior of an internetwork routing algorithm. A possible next   step would be to specify the types of information that must be   propagated among the intermediate-systems/network-entities via their   update procedures. The details of the updating protocol might then be   left to bilateral agreements among the cooperating administrations.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 96]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  B.  Statistical Analysis   These management functions relate to the gathering and reporting of   information about the real-time behavior of the global network. They   consist of Data counts such as number of PDUs forwarded, entering   traffic, etc., and Event Counts such as topology changes, quality of   service changes, etc.  C.  Network Control   These management functions are those related to the control of the   global network, and possibly could be performed by a Network Control   Center(s). The control functions needed are not al all clear. Neither   are the issues relating to what organization(s) is/are responsible   for the management of the environment. Should there be a Network   Control Center distinct from those provided by the subnetwork   administrations? What subnetwork management information is needed by   the network management components to perform their functions?  D.  Directory Mapping Functions   Does the Network layer contain a Directory function as defined in the   Reference Model? Current opinion is that the Network Layer restricts   itself to the function of mapping NSAP addresses to routes.  E.  Congestion Control   Does this come under the umbrella of Network Layer management? How?  F.  Configuration Control   This is tightly associated with the concepts of Resource Management,   and is generally considered to be somehow concerned with the control   of the resources used in the management of the global network. The   resources which have to be managed are Bandwidth (use of subnetwork   resources), Processor (CPU), and Memory (buffers). Where is the   responsibility for resources assigned, and are they appropriate for   standardization? It appears that theseISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 97]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   functions are tightly related to how one signals changes in Quality   of Service.  G.  Accounting   What entities, administrations, etc., are responsible for network   accounting? How does this happen? What accounting information, if   any, is required from the subnetworks in order to charge for network   resources? Who is charged? To what degree is this to be standardized?ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 98]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984      ANNEX C.  ALGORITHMS FOR PDU HEADER ERROR DETECTION FUNCTION This Annex describes algorithm which may be used to computer, check and update the checksum field of the PDU Header in order to provide the PDU Header Error Detection function described inSection 6.11. C.1  Symbols used in algorithms  CO,C1  variables used in the algorithms  i      number (i.e., position) of an octet within the header  n      number (i.e., position) of the first octet of the checksum         parameter (n=8)  L      length of the PDU header in octets  X      value of octet one of the checksum parameter  Y      value of octet two of the checksum parameter  a      octet occupying position i of the PDU header C.2  Arithmetic Conventions  Addition is performed in one of the two following modes:   a)  modulo 255 arithmetic;   b)  eight-bit one's complement arithmetic in which, if any of the       variables has the value minus zero (i.e., 255) it shall be       regarded as though it was plus zero (i.e., 0). C.3  Algorithm for Generating Checksum Parameters  A:  Construct the complete PDU header with the value of the checksum      parameter field set to zero;  B:  Initialize C0 and C1 to zero;  C:  Process each octet of the PDU header sequentially from i = 1 to L      by   a)  adding the value of the octet to C0; then   b)  adding the value of C0 to C1;  D:  Calculate X = (L-8)C0 - C1 (modulo 255) and Y = (L-7) (-C0) + C1      (modulo 255)ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                        [Page 99]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984  E:  If X = 0, set X = 255;  F:  If Y = 0, set Y = 255;  G:  Place the values X and Y in octets 8 and 9 respectively. C.4  Algorithm for Checking Checksum Parameters  A:  If octets 8 and 9 of PDU header both contain 0 (all bits off),      then the checksum calculation has succeeded; otherwise initialize      C1 = 0, C0 - 0 and proceed;  B:  process each octet of the PDU header sequentially from i = 1 to L      by   a)  adding the value of the octet to C0; then   b)  adding the value of C0 to C1;  C:  If, when all the octets have been processed, C0 = C1 = 0 (modulo      255) then the checksum calculation has succeeded; otherwise, the      checksum calculation has failed. C.5  Algorithm to adjust checksum parameter when an octet is altered  This algorithm adjusts the checksum when an octet (such as the  lifetime field) is altered. Suppose the value in octet k is changed by  Z = new_value - old_value.  If X and Y denote the checksum values held in octets n and n+1,  respectively, then adjust X and Y as follows:   If X = 0 and Y = 0 do nothing, else;        X := (k-n-1)Z + X (modulo 255) and        Y := (n-k)Z + Y   (modulo 255).   If X is equal to zero, then set it to 255; and   similarly for Y.  For this Protocol, n = 8. If the octet being altered is the lifetime  field, k = 4. For the case where the lifetime is decreased by 1 unit  (Z = -1), the results simplify toISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                       [Page 100]

RFC 926                                                    December 1984   X := X + 5 (modulo 255) and   Y := Y - 4 (modulo 255).   Note:    To derive this result, assume that when octet k has the value Z    added to it then X and Y have values ZX and ZY added to them. For    the checksum parameters to satisfy the conditions ofSection 6.11    both before and after the values are added, the following is    required:     Z + ZX + ZY = 0 (modulo 255) and     (L-k+1)Z + (L-n+1)ZX + (L-n)ZY = 0 (modulo 255).  Solving these equations simultaneously yields ZX = (k-n-1)Z and ZY +  (m-k)Z.ISO DIS 8473 (May 1984)                                       [Page 101]

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