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EXPERIMENTAL
Network Working Group                                       Trudy MillerRequest for Comments: 938                                            ACC                                                           February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction ProtocolFunctional and Interface SpecificationSTATUS OF THIS MEMO   This RFC is being distributed to members of the DARPA research   community in order to solicit their reactions to the proposals   contained in it.  While the issues discussed may not be directly   relevant to the research problems of the DARPA community, they may be   interesting to a number of researchers and implementors.  This RFC   suggests a proposed protocol for the ARPA-Internet community, and   requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.  Distribution   of this memo is unlimited.ABSTRACT   The Internet Reliable Transaction Protocol (IRTP) is a transport   level host to host protocol designed for an internet environment.  It   provides reliable, sequenced delivery of packets of data between   hosts and multiplexes/demultiplexes streams of packets from/to user   processes representing ports.  It is simple to implement, with a   minimum of connection management, at the possible expense of   efficiency.Miller                                                          [Page i]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction ProtocolTABLE OF CONTENTS   INTRODUCTION1.1   Purpose .........................................11.2   Underlying Mechanisms ...........................11.3   Relationship to Other Protocols .................2   IRTP HEADERS2.1   Header Format ...................................32.2   Packet Type .....................................32.3   Port Number .....................................32.4   Sequence Number .................................42.5   Length ..........................................42.6   Checksum ........................................4   INTERFACES3.1   User Services Provided By IRTP ..................53.2   IP Services Expected by IRTP ....................5   MODEL OF OPERATION4.1   State Variables .................................64.2   IRTP Initialization .............................74.3   Host-to-Host Synchronization ....................74.3.1   Response to SYNCH Packets .....................74.3.2   Response to SYNCH ACK Packet ..................84.4   Transmitting Data ...............................84.4.1   Receiving Data From Using Processes ...........84.4.2   Packet Retransmission .........................104.5   Receiving Data ..................................104.5.1   Receive and Acknowledgment Windows ............114.5.2   Invalid Packets ...............................124.5.3   Sequence Numbers Within Acknowledge Window ....124.5.4   Sequence Numbers Within the Receive Window ....124.5.5   Forwarding Data to Using Processes ............13   IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES5.1   Retransmission Strategies .......................145.2   Pinging .........................................145.3   Deleting Connection Tables ......................16Miller                                                         [Page ii]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction Protocol   LIST OF FIGURES      Figure 1-1    Relationship of IRTP to Other Protocols .  2      Figure 2-1    IRTP Header Format ......................3      Figure 4-1    SYNCH Packet Format .....................8      Figure 4-2    SYNCH ACK Packet Format .................8      Figure 4-3    DATA Packet Format ......................9      Figure 4-4    DATA ACK Packet Format ..................11      Figure 4-5    PORT NAK Packet Format ..................11   ABBREVIATIONS      ICMP        Internet Control Message Protocol      IP          Internet Protocol      IRTP        Internet Reliable Transaction Protocol      RDP         Reliable Data Protocol      TCP         Transmission Control Protocol      UDP         User Datagram ProtocolMiller                                                        [Page iii]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction ProtocolCHAPTER 1 - INTRODUCTION   The Internet Reliable Transaction Protocol (IRTP) is a full duplex,   transaction oriented, host to host protocol which provides reliable   sequenced delivery of packets of data, called transaction packets.   Note: throughout this document the terms host and internet address   are used interchangeably.   1.1 Purpose      The IRTP was designed for an environment in which one host will      have to maintain reliable communication with many other hosts.  It      is assumed that there is a (relatively) sporadic flow of      information with each destination host, however information flow      may be initiated at any time at either end of the connection.  The      nature of the information is in the form of transactions, i.e.      small, self contained messages.  There may be times at which one      host will want to communicate essentially the same information to      all of its known destinations as rapidly as possible.      In effect, the IRTP defines a constant underlying connection      between two hosts. This connection is not established and broken      down, rather it can be resynchronized with minimal loss of data      whenever one of the hosts has been rebooted.      Due to the lack of connection management, it is desirable that all      IRTP processes keep static information about all possible remote      hosts. However, the IRTP has been designed such that minimal state      information needs to be associated with each host to host pair,      thereby allowing one host to communicate with many remote hosts.      The IRTP is more complex than UDP in that it provides reliable,      sequenced delivery of packets, but it is less complex than TCP in      that sequencing is done on a packet by packet (rather than      character stream) basis, and there is only one connection defined      between any two internet addresses (that is, it is not a process      to process protocol.)   1.2 Underlying Mechanisms      The IRTP uses retransmission and acknowledgments to guarantee      delivery. Checksums are used to guarantee data integrity and to      protect against misrouting.  There is a host to host      synchronization mechanism and packet sequencing to provide      duplicate detection and ordered delivery to the user process.  A      simple mechanism allows IRTP to multiplex and demultiplex streamsMiller                                                          [Page 1]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction Protocol      of transaction packets being exchanged between multiple IRTP users      on this host and statically paired IRTP users on the same remote      host.   1.3 Relationship to Other Protocols      The IRTP is designed for use in a potentially lossy internet      environment.  It requires that IP be under it.  The IP protocol      number of IRTP is 28.      Conversely, IRTP provides a reliable transport protocol for one or      more user processes.  User processes must have well-known IRTP      port numbers, and can communicate only with matching processes      with the same port number.  (Note that the term port refers to a      higher level protocol.  IRTP connections exists between two hosts,      not between a host/port and another host/port.)      These relationships are depicted below.         +--------+    +--------+   +-----------+         | port a |....| port x |   | TCP users |   Application Level         +--------+    +--------+   +-----------+               |          |            | ... |             +--------------+       +-----------+             |     IRTP     |       |    TCP    |   Host Level             +--------------+       +-----------+                    |                     |         +--------------------------------------+         |    Internet Protocol and ICMP        |   Internet Level         +--------------------------------------+                          |         +--------------------------------------+         |      Local Network Protocol          |   Network Level         +--------------------------------------+         Figure 1-1.  Relationship of IRTP to Other ProtocolsMiller                                                          [Page 2]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction ProtocolCHAPTER 2 - IRTP HEADERS   2.1 Header Format      Each IRTP packet is preceded by an eight byte header depicted      below. The individual fields are described in the following      sections.         0      7 8     15 16             31         +--------+--------+--------+--------+         | packet |  port  |     sequence    |         |  type  | number |      number     |         +--------+--------+--------+--------+         |      length     |    checksum     |         |                 |                 |         +-----------------+-----------------+         |                                   |         |       optional data octets        |         + . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . |         Figure 2-1.  IRTP Header Format   2.2 Packet Type      Five packet types are defined by the IRTP. These are:      packet type   numeric code      SYNCH              0      SYNCH ACK          1      DATA               2      DATA ACK           3      PORT NAK           4      The use of individual packet types is discussed in MODEL OF      OPERATION.   2.3 Port Number      This field is used for the multiplexing and demultiplexing of      packets from multiple user processes across a single IRTP      connection.  Processes which desire to use IRTP must claim port      numbers.  A port number represents a higher level protocol, and      data to/from this port may be exchanged only with a process which      has claimed the same port number at a remote host.  A process can      claim multiple port numbers, however, only one process may claim      an individual port number.  All port numbers are well-known.Miller                                                          [Page 3]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction Protocol   2.4 Sequence Number      For each communicating pair of hosts, there are two sequence      numbers defined, which are the send sequence numbers for the two      ends.  Sequence numbers are treated as unsigned 16 bit integers.      Each time a new transaction packet is sent, the sender increases      the sequence number by one.  Initial sequence numbers are      established when the connection is resynchronized (seeSection4.3.)   2.5 Length      The length is the number of octets in this transaction packet,      including the header and the data.  (This means that the minimum      value of the length is 8.)   2.6 Checksum      The checksum is the 16-bit one's complement of the one's      complement sum of the IRTP header and the transaction packet data      (padded with an octet of zero if necessary to make an even number      of octets.)Miller                                                          [Page 4]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction ProtocolCHAPTER 3 - INTERFACES   3.1 User Services Provided by IRTP      The exact interface to the TRTP from the using processes is      implementation dependent, however, IRTP should provide the      following services to the using processes.         o  user processes must be able to claim a port number         o  users must be able to request that data be sent to a            particular port at an internet address (the port must be one            which the user has claimed)         o  users must be able to request transaction data from a            particular port at any (unspecified) remote internet address            (the port must be one which the user has claimed)         o  if a port is determined to be unreachable at a particular            destination, the using process which has claimed that port            should be notified      In addition to these minimal data transfer services, a particular      implementation may want to have a mechanism by which a      "supervisory" (that is, port independent) module can define      dynamically the remote internet addresses which are legal targets      for host to host communication by this IRTP module.  This      mechanism might be internal or external to the IRTP module itself.   3.2 IP Services Expected by IRTP      IRTP expects a standard interface to IP through which it can send      and receive transaction packets as IP datagrams.  In addition, if      possible, it is desirable that IP or ICMP notify IRTP in the event      that a remote internet address is unreachable.      If the IP implementation (including ICMP) is able to notify IRTP      of source quench conditions, individual IRTP implementations may      be able to perform some dynamic adjustment of transmission      characteristics.Miller                                                          [Page 5]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction ProtocolCHAPTER 4 - MODEL OF OPERATION   The basic operation of IRTP is as follows.  The first time two hosts   communicate (or the first time after both have simultaneously   failed,) synchronization is established using constant initial   sequence numbers (there is a sequence number for each direction of   transmission).  The TCP "quiet time" is used following reboots to   insure that this will not cause inaccurate acknowledgment processing   by one side or the other.   Once synchronization has been achieved data may be passed in both   directions.  Each transaction packet has a 16 bit sequence number.   Sequence numbers increase monotonically as new packets are generated.   The receipt of each sequence number must be acknowledged, either   implicitly or explicitly.  At most 8 unacknowledged packets may be   outstanding in one direction.  This number (called MAXPACK) is fixed   for all IRTP modules. Unacknowledged packets must be periodically   retransmitted.  Sequence numbers are also used for duplicate   detection by receiving IRTP modules.   If synchronization is lost due to the failure of one of the   communicating hosts, after a reboot that host requests the remote   host to communicate sequence number information, and data transfer   continues.   4.1 State Variables      Each IRTP is associated with a single internet address.  The      synchronization mechanism of the IRTP depends on the requirement      that each IRTP module knows the internet addresses of all modules      with which it will communicate.  For each remote internet address,      an IRTP module must maintain the following information (called the      connection table):      rem_addr     (32 bit remote internet address)      conn_state   (8  bit connection state)      snd_nxt      (16 bit send sequence number)      rcv_nxt      (16 bit expected next receive sequence number)      snd_una      (16 bit first unacknowledged sequence number)      In addition to maintaining the connection tables defined above, it      is required that every IRTP module have some mechanism which      generates "retransmission events" such that SYNCH packets are      periodically retransmitted for any connection in synch_wait state      (seeSection 4.3), and the appropriate DATA packet is periodically      retransmitted for any connection in data_transfer state (seeSection 4.4.2).  It is implementation dependent whether thisMiller                                                          [Page 6]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction Protocol      mechanism is connection dependent, or a uniform mechanism for all      connections, so it has not been made part of the connection state      table.  See Chapter 5 for more discussion.   4.2 IRTP Initialization      Whenever a remote internet address becomes known by an IRTP      process, a 2 minute "quiet time" as described in the TCP      specification must be observed before accepting any incoming      packets or user requests.  This is to insure that no old IRTP      packets are still in the network.  In addition, a connection table      is initialized as follows:      rem_addr     =    known internet address      conn_state   =    0 = out-of-synch      snd_nxt      =    0      rcv_nxt      =    0      snd_una      =    0      Strictly speaking, the IRTP specification does not allow      connection tables to be dynamically deleted and recreated,      however, if this happens the above procedure must be repeated.      See Chapter 5 for more discussion.   4.3 Host-to-Host Synchronization      An IRTP module must initiate synchronization whenever it receives      a DATA packet or a user request referencing an internet address      whose connection state is out-of-synch.  Typically, this will      happen only the first time that internet address is active      following the reinitialization of the IRTP module. A SYNCH packet      as shown below is transmitted.  Having sent this packet, the host      enters connection state synch_wait (conn_state = 1).  In this      state, any incoming DATA, DATA ACK or PORT NAK packets are      ignored.  The SYNCH packet itself must be retransmitted      periodically until synchronization has been achieved.      4.3.1 Response to SYNCH Packets -         Whenever a SYNCH packet is received, the recipient, regardless         of current connection state, is required to to return a SYNCH         ACK packet as shown below.  At this point the recipient enters         data_transfer state (conn_state = 2).Miller                                                          [Page 7]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction Protocol      4.3.2 Response to SYNCH ACK Packet -         On receipt of a SYNCH ACK packet, the behavior of the recipient         depends on its state.  If the recipient is in synch_wait state         the recipient sets rcv_nxt to the sequence number value, sets         snd_nxt and snd_una to the value in the two-octet data field,         and enters data_transfer state (conn_state = 2).  Otherwise,         the packet is ignored.            0      7 8     15 16             31            +--------+--------+--------+--------+            |00000000|00000000|00000000 00000000|            +--------+--------+--------+--------+            |        8        |    checksum     |            +-----------------+-----------------+            Figure 4-1.  SYNCH Packet Format            0      7 8     15 16             31            +--------+--------+--------+--------+            |00000001| unused |     snd_una     |            +--------+--------+--------+--------+            |        10       |    checksum     |            +-----------------+-----------------+            |      rcv_nxt    |            +-----------------+            Figure 4-2.  SYNCH ACK Packet Format   4.4 Transmitting Data      Once in data_transfer state DATA, DATA ACK and PORT NAK packets      are used to achieve communication between IRTP processes, subject      to the constraint that no more than MAXPACK unacknowledged packets      may be transmitted on a connection at any time.  Note that all      arithmetic operations and comparisons on sequence numbers      described in this chapter are to be done modulo 2 to the 16.      4.4.1 Receiving Data From Using Processes -         User processes may request IRTP to send packets of at most 512         user data octets to a remote internet address and IRTP port.         When such a request is received, the behavior of the IRTP         depends on the state of the connection with the remote host and         on implementation dependent considerations.  If the connectionMiller                                                          [Page 8]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction Protocol         between this IRTP module and the remote host is not in         data_transfer state, that state must be achieved (seeSection4.3) before acting on the user request.         Once the connection is in data_transfer state, the behavior of         the IRTP module in reaction to a write request from a user is         implementation dependent.  The simplest IRTP implementations         will not accept write requests when MAXPACK unacknowledged         packets have been sent to the remote connection and will         provide interested users a mechanism by which they can be         notified when the connection is no longer in this state, which         is called flow controlled.  Such implementations are called         blocking IRTP implementations.  These implementations check, on         receipt of a write request, to see if the value of snd_nxt is         less than snd_una+MAXPACK.  If it is, IRTP prepends a DATA         packet header as shown below, and transmits the packet.  The         value of snd_nxt is then incremented by one.  In addition, the         packet must be retained in a retransmission queue until it is         acknowledged.            0       7 8     15 16             31            +--------+--------+--------+--------+            |00000010|port num|     snd_nxt     |            +--------+--------+--------+--------+            |     length      |    checksum     |            +-----------------+-----------------+            |           data octet(s)           |            + . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . +            Figure 4-3.  DATA Packet Format         Other implementations may allow (some number of) write requests         to be accepted even when the connection is flow controlled.         These implementations, called non-blocking IRTP         implementations, must maintain, in addition to the         retransmission queue for each connection, a queue of accepted         but not yet transmitted packets, in order of request.  This is         called the pretransmission queue for the connection.         When a non-blocking implementation receives a write request, if         the connection is not flow controlled, it behaves exactly as a         blocking IRTP.  Otherwise, it prepends a DATA packet header         without a sequence number to the data, and appends the packet         to the pretransmission queue.  Note that in this case, snd_nxt         is not incremented.  The value of snd_nxt is incremented only         when a packet is transmitted for the first time.Miller                                                          [Page 9]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction Protocol      4.4.2 Packet Retransmission -         The IRTP protocol requires that the transaction packet with         sequence number snd_una be periodically retransmitted as long         as there are any unacknowledged, but previously transmitted,         packets (that is, as long as the value of snd_una is not equal         to that of snd_nxt.)         The value of snd_una increases over time due to the receipt of         DATA ACK or PORT NAK packets from a remote host (see Sections         4.5.3 and 4.5.4 below).  When either of these packet types is         received, if the incoming sequence number in that packet is         greater than the current value of snd_una, the value of snd_una         is set to the incoming sequence number in that packet.  Any         DATA packets with sequence number less than the new snd_una         which were queued for retransmission are released.         (If this is a non-blocking IRTP implementation, for each DATA         packet which is thus released from the retransmission queue,         the earliest buffered packet may be transmitted from the         pretransmission queue, as long as the pretransmission queue is         non-empty.  Prior to transmitting the packet, the current value         of snd_nxt is put in the sequence number field of the header.         The value of snd_nxt is then incremented by one.)         Finally, if the acknowledgment is a PORT NAK, the user process         with the nacked port number should be notified that the remote         port is not there.         It is also to be desired, though it is not required, that IRTP         modules have some mechanism to decide that a remote host is not         responding in order to notify user processes that this host is         apparently unreachable.   4.5 Receiving Data      When an IRTP module in data_transfer state receives a DATA packet,      its behavior depends on the port number, sequence number and      implementation dependent space considerations.      DATA ACK and PORT NAK packets are used to acknowledge the receipt      of DATA packets.  Both of these acknowledgment packets acknowledge      the receipt of all sequence numbers up to, but not including, the      sequence number in their headers.  Note that this value is denoted      "rcv_nxt" in the figures below.  This number is the value of      rcv_nxt at the source of the acknowledgment packet when the      acknowledgment was generated.Miller                                                         [Page 10]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction Protocol         0      7 8     15 16             31         +--------+--------+--------+--------+         |00000011|port num|     rcv_nxt     |         +--------+--------+--------+--------+         |        8        |    checksum     |         +-----------------+-----------------+         Figure 4-4.  DATA ACK Packet Format         0      7 8     15 16             31         +--------+--------+--------+--------+         |00000100|port num|     rcv_nxt     |         +--------+--------+--------+--------+         |        8        |    checksum     |         +-----------------+-----------------+         Figure 4-5.  PORT NAK Packet Format      It is not required that a receiving IRTP implementation return an      acknowledgment packet for every incoming DATA packet, nor is it      required that the acknowledged sequence number be that in the most      recently received packet.  The exact circumstances under which      DATA ACK and PORT NAK packets are sent are detailed below.  The      net effect is that every sequence number is acknowledged, a sender      can force reacknowledgment if an ACK is lost, all acknowledgments      are cumulative, and no out of order acknowledgments are permitted.      4.5.1 Receive and Acknowledgment Windows -         Each IRTP module has two windows associated with the receive         side of a connection.  For convenience in the following         discussion these are given names.  The sequence number window         rcv_nxt-MAXPACK =< sequence number < rcv_nxt         is called the acknowledge window.  All sequence numbers within         this window represent packets which have previously been acked         or nacked, however, the ack or nack may have been lost in the         network.         The sequence number window         rcv_nxt =< sequence number < rcv_nxt+MYRCV =< rcv_nxt+MAXPACK         is called the receive window.  All sequence numbers within this         window represent legal packets which may be in transit,         assuming that the remote host has received acks for all packetsMiller                                                         [Page 11]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction Protocol         in the acknowledge window.  The value of MYRCV depends on the         implementation of the IRTP.  In the simplest case this number         will be one, effectively meaning that the IRTP will ignore any         incoming packets not in the acknowledge window or not equal to         rcv_nxt.  If the IRTP has enough memory to buffer some incoming         out-of-order packets, MYRCV can be set to some number =<         MAXPACK and a more complex algorithm can be used to compute         rcv_nxt, thereby achieving potentially greater efficiency.         Note that in the latter case, these packets are not         acknowledged until their sequence number is less than rcv_nxt,         thereby insuring that acknowledgments are always cumulative.         (See 4.5.4 below.)      4.5.2 Invalid Packets -         When an IRTP receives a DATA packet, it first checks the         sequence number in the received packet.  If the sequence number         is not within the acknowledge or receive window, the packet is         discarded.  Similarly, if the computed checksum does not match         that in the header, the packet is discarded.  No further action         is taken.      4.5.3 Sequence Numbers Within Acknowledge Window -         When an IRTP receives an incoming DATA packet whose sequence         number is within the acknowledge window, if the port specified         in the incoming DATA packet is known to this IRTP, a DATA ACK         packet is returned.  Otherwise, a PORT NAK is returned.         In both cases, the value put in the sequence number field of         the acknowlegement packet is the current value of rcv_nxt at         the IRTP module which is acknowledging the DATA packet.  The         DATA packet itself is discarded.         (Note that the PORT NAK acknowledges reception of all packet         numbers up to rcv_nxt.  It NAKs the port number, not the         sequence number.)      4.5.4 Sequence Numbers Within the Receive Window -         If the received sequence number is within the receive window,         rcv_nxt is recomputed.  How this is done is implementation         dependent.  If MYRCV is one, then rcv_nxt is simply         incremented.  Otherwise, rcv_nxt is set to the lowest sequence         number such that all data packets with sequence numbers lessMiller                                                         [Page 12]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction Protocol         than this number have been received and are buffered at the         receiving IRTP, or have been delivered to their destination         port.         Once rcv_nxt has been recomputed, a DATA ACK or PORT NAK is         returned, depending on whether the port number is known or not         known.  The value placed in the sequence number field is the         newly computed value for rcv_nxt.      4.5.5 Forwarding Data to Using Processes -         Whenever an incoming DATA packet has been acknowledged (either         implicitly or explicitly) its header can be stripped off and it         can be queued for delivery to the user process which has         claimed its port number.  If the IRTP implementation allows         MYRCV to be greater than one, care must be taken that data         which was originally received out of order is forwarded to its         intended recipient in order of original sequence number.Miller                                                         [Page 13]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction ProtocolCHAPTER 5 - IMPLEMENTATION ISSUES   The preceding chapter was left intentionally vague in certain ways.   In particular, no explicit description of the use of a timer or   timers within an IRTP module was given, nor was there a description   of how timer events should relate to "retransmission events".  This   was done to separate the syntactic and operational requirements of   the protocol from the performance characteristics of its   implementation.   It is believed that the protocol is robust.  That is, any   implementation which strictly conforms to Chapter 4 should provide   reliable synchronization of two hosts and reliable sequenced transfer   of transaction data between them.  However, different ways of   defining the notion of a retransmission event can have potentially   significant impact on the performance of the protocol in terms of   throughput and in terms of the load it places on the network.  It is   up to the implementor to take into account overall requirements of   the network environment and the intended use of the protocol, if   possible, to optimize overall characteristics of the implementation.   Several such issues will be discussed in this chapter.   5.1 Retransmission Strategies      The IRTP requires that a timer mechanism exists to somehow trigger      retransmissions and requires that the packet with sequence number      snd_una be the one retransmitted.  It is not required that      retransmission be performed on every timer event, though this is      one "retransmission strategy".  A possible alternative strategy is      to perform a retransmission on a timer event only if no ACKs have      been received since the last event.      Additionally, the interval of the timer can affect the performance      of the strategies, as can the value of MYRCV and the lossiness of      the network environment.      It is not within the scope of this document to recommend a      retransmission strategy, only to point out that different      strategies have different consequences.  It might be desirable to      allow using processes to "specify" a strategy when a port is      claimed in order to tailor the service of the protocol to the      needs of a particular application.   5.2 Pinging      It is important to make explicit that IRTP modules ping by      definition.  That is, as long as a remote internet address isMiller                                                         [Page 14]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction Protocol      known, and is in use (that is, either synchronization or data      transfer is being attempted), the protocol requires "periodic      retransmission" of packets.  Note that this is true even if the      IRTP module has determined that the remote address is currently      unreachable.      It is suggested that this situation can be made more sensible by      adding two fields to the connection table.  These are:      num_retries  (number of times current packet has been sent)      time_out     (current retransmission timeout)      These fields are to be used as follows.  It is assumed that there      is some default initial value for time_out called DEFTIME, some      (relatively long) value for time_out called PINGTIME and some      value MAX_TRIES.  The exact values of these constants are      implementation dependent.  The value of DEFTIME may also be      retransmission strategy dependent.      At the time that a connection table is initialized, num_retries is      set to zero, and time_out is set to DEFTIME.  Whenever a      retransmission event occurs (this will either be a retransmission      of a SYNCH packet or of the packet with sequence number snd_una),      num_retries is incremented by one unless it is equal to MAX_TRIES.      If a destination is determined to be unreachable, either via an      ICMP message or a Destination Host Dead message, num_retries is      set to MAX_TRIES.  Whenever num_retries transitions to MAX_TRIES,      either by being incremented or as above, the destination is is      presumed unreachable and user processes are notified. At this      point, time_out is set to PINGTIME, the state of the connection      does not change and retransmissions occur at PINGTIME intervals      until the destination becomes reachable.      Conversely, whenever a SYNCH_ACK is received (in synch_wait      state), or an (implicit or explicit) acknowledgment of sequence      number snd_una is received (in data transfer state), time_out is      set to DEFTIME and num_retries is reset to zero.  If time_out was      already set to PINGTIME, user processes are notified that the      destination is now reachable.      The effect of this system is obvious.  The implementation still      pings as required, but at presumably very infrequent intervals.      Alternative solutions, which might place the decision to ping on      using processes, are considered undesirable because         o  IRTP itself becomes more complicated in terms of states of            the connection tableMiller                                                         [Page 15]

RFC 938                                                    February 1985Internet Reliable Transaction Protocol         o  the user interface becomes both more complicated and more            rigid         o  such solutions might be deadlock prone in some instances         o  it seems appropriate that the host to host protocol should            be the place to determine destination reachability, if the            overall application requires that such information be known            (as it does in the environments intended for IRTP.)   5.3 Deleting Connection Tables      The protocol as defined does not allow connection tables to be      deleted (or for a connection state to transition to out_of_synch      from any other state).  It might be appropriate to delete a      connection table if it is known that the destination internet      address is no longer one which this host wants to communicate      with.  (The only danger there is that if the destination does not      know this, it could ping this host forever.)  It is dangerous to      delete a connection table or to go into out_of_synch state to      avoid pinging when a destination does not appear to be there.  Two      hosts with the same such strategy could potentially deadlock and      fail to resynchronize.AUTHOR'S ADDRESS   Trudy Miller   Advanced Computer Communications   720 Santa Barbara Street   Santa Barbara, CA  93101   (805) 963-9431Miller                                                         [Page 16]

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