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Network Working Group                                           J. BoundRequest for Comments: 1888                 Digital Equipment CorporationCategory: Experimental                                      B. Carpenter                                                                    CERN                                                           D. Harrington                                           Digital Equipment Corporation                                                          J. Houldsworth                                                     ICL Network Systems                                                                A. Lloyd                                                  Datacraft Technologies                                                             August 1996OSI NSAPs and IPv6Status of this Memo   This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet   community.  This memo does not specify an Internet standard of any   kind.  Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.   Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Abstract   This document recommends that network implementors who have planned   or deployed an OSI NSAP addressing plan, and who wish to deploy or   transition to IPv6, should redesign a native IPv6 addressing plan to   meet their needs.  However, it also defines a set of mechanisms for   the support of OSI NSAP addressing in an IPv6 network.  These   mechanisms are the ones that MUST be used if such support is   required.  This document also defines a mapping of IPv6 addresses   within the OSI address format, should this be required.Table of Contents1. General recommendation on NSAP addressing plans..............22. Summary of defined mechanisms................................43. Restricted NSAPA in a 16-byte IPv6 address for ICD and DCC...43.1 Routing restricted NSAPAs...................................54. Truncated NSAPA used as an IPv6 address......................64.1 Routing truncated NSAPAs....................................85. Carriage of full NSAPAs in IPv6 destination option...........96. IPv6 addresses inside an NSAPA..............................107. Security Considerations.....................................11      Acknowledgements...............................................11      References.....................................................12      Annex A: Summary of NSAP Allocations...........................13      Annex B: Additional Rationale..................................14      Authors' Addresses.............................................16Bound, et. al.                Experimental                      [Page 1]

RFC 1888                   OSI NSAPs and IPv6                August 19961. General recommendation on NSAP addressing plans   This recommendation is addressed to network implementors who have   already planned or deployed an OSI NSAP addressing plan for the usage   of OSI CLNP [IS8473] according to the OSI network layer addressing   plan [IS8348] using ES-IS and IS-IS routing [IS9542,IS10589].  It   recommends how they should adapt their addressing plan for use with   IPv6 [RFC1883].   The majority of known CLNP addressing plans use either the Digital   Country Code (DCC) or the International Code Designator (ICD) formats   defined in [IS8348]. A particular example of this is the US   Government OSI Profile Version 2 (GOSIP) addressing plan [RFC1629].   The basic NSAP addressing scheme and current implementations are   summarised in Annex A.   [IS8348] specifies a maximum NSAPA (NSAP address) size of 20 bytes   and some network implementors have designed address allocation   schemes which make use of this 20 byte address space.   Other NSAP addressing plans have been specified by the ITU-T for   public data services, such as X.25 and ISDN, and these can also have   addresses up to 20 bytes in length.   The general recommendation is that implementors SHOULD design native   IPv6 addressing plans according to [RFC1884], but doing so as a   natural re-mapping of their CLNP addressing plans. While it is   impossible to give a general recipe for this, CLNP addresses in DCC   or ICD format can normally be split into two parts: the high order   part relating to the network service provider and the low order part   relating to the user network topology and host computers.   For example, in some applications of US GOSIP the high order part is   the AFI, ICD, DFI, AA and RD fields, together occupying 9 bytes. The   low order part is the Area and ID fields, together occupying 8 bytes.   (The selector byte and the two reserved bytes are not part of the   addressing plan.) Thus, in such a case, the high-order part could be   replaced by the provider part of an IPv6 provider-based addressing   plan.  An 8-byte prefix is recommended for this case and [RFC1884]   MUST be followed in planning such a replacement. The low order part   would then be mapped directly in the low-order half of the IPv6   address space, and user site address plans are unchanged.  A 6-byte   ID field, exactly as used in US GOSIP and other CLNP addressing   plans, will be acceptable as the token for IPv6 autoconfiguration   [RFC1971].   Analogous rules would be applied for other CLNP addressing plans   similar to US GOSIP, which is used only as a well known example.Bound, et. al.                Experimental                      [Page 2]

RFC 1888                   OSI NSAPs and IPv6                August 1996   Three warnings must be carefully considered in every case:   1. The ES-IS/IS-IS model employs a routing hierarchy down to the Area   level, but not all end systems in an Area need to be in the same   physical subnet (on the same "wire" or "link"). IS routers on   different links within a given Area exchange information about the   end systems they can each reach directly.  In contrast, the IPv6   routing model extends down to the subnet level and all hosts in the   same subnet are assumed to be on the same link. In mapping a CLNP   addressing plan into IPv6 format, without changing the physical   topology, it may be necessary to add an extra level of hierarchy to   cope with this mismatch. In other words, the Area number cannot   blindly be mapped as a subnet number, unless the physical network   topology corresponds to this mapping.   2. It is highly desirable that subnet addresses can be aggregated for   wide area routing purposes, to minimise the size of routing tables.   Thus network implementors should ensure that the address prefix used   for all their subnets is the same, regardless of whether a particular   subnet is using a pure IPv6 addressing scheme or one derived from a   CLNP scheme as above.   3. Some hosts have more than one physical network interface.  In the   ES-IS model, an end system may have more than one NSAP address, each   of which identifies the host as a whole.  Such an end system with   more than one physical interface may be referenced by any one of the   NSAPs, and reached via any one of the physical connections.  In the   IPv6 model, a host may have multiple IPv6 addresses per interface,   but each of its physical interfaces must have its own unique   addresses. This restriction must be applied when mapping an NSAP   addressing plan into an IPv6 addressing plan for such hosts.   This document does not address the issues associated with migrating   the routing protocols used with CLNP (ES-IS or IS-IS) and transition   of their network infrastructure.Bound, et. al.                Experimental                      [Page 3]

RFC 1888                   OSI NSAPs and IPv6                August 19962. Summary of defined mechanisms   This document defines four distinct mechanisms.  All of these are   ELECTIVE mechanisms, i.e. they are not mandatory parts of an IPv6   implementation, but if such mechanisms are needed they MUST be   implemented as defined in this document.      1. Restricted NSAPA mapping into 16-byte IPv6 address      2. Truncated NSAPA for routing, full NSAPA in IPv6 option      3. Normal IPv6 address, full NSAPA in IPv6 option      4. IPv6 address carried as OSI address   To clarify the relationship between the first three mechanisms, note   that:      If the first byte of an IPv6 address is hexadecimal 0x02 (binary      00000010), then the remaining 15 bytes SHALL contain a restricted      NSAPA mapped as in Chapter 3 below. The term "restricted" is used      to indicate that this format is currently restricted to a subset      of the ICD and DCC formats.      If the first byte of an IPv6 address is hexadecimal 0x03 (binary      00000011), then the remaining 15 bytes SHALL contain a truncated      NSAPA as described in Chapter 4 below. EITHER a destination option      containing the complete NSAPA of any format, as described in      Chapter 5 below, OR an encapsulated CLNP packet, SHALL be present.      With any other format of IPv6 address, a destination option      containing a complete NSAPA, as defined in Chapter 5 below, MAY be      present.3. Restricted NSAPA in a 16-byte IPv6 address for ICD and DCC   Some organizations may decide for various reasons not to follow the   above general recommendation to redesign their addressing plan.  They   may wish to use their existing OSI NSAP addressing plan unchanged for   IPv6. It should be noted that such a decision has serious   implications for routing, since it means that routing between such   organizations and the rest of the Internet is unlikely to be   optimised. An organization using both native IPv6 addresses and NSAP   addresses for IPv6 would be likely to have inefficient internal   routing.  Nevertheless, to cover this eventuality, the present   document defines a way to map a subset of the NSAP address space into   the IPv6 address space. The mapping is algorithmic and reversible   within this subset of the NSAP address space.Bound, et. al.                Experimental                      [Page 4]

RFC 1888                   OSI NSAPs and IPv6                August 1996       0                   1                   2                   3       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 0-3  |0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0| AFcode| IDI (last 3 digits)   |Prefix(octet 0)|      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 4-7  |             Prefix (octets 1 through 4)                       |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 8-11 | Area (octets 0 and 1)         |  ID (octets 0 and 1)          |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 12-15|             ID (octets 2 through 5)                           |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   The AFcode nibble is overloaded, and encoded as follows       0000-1001      Implied AFI value is 47 (ICD)       (0-9 decimal)  AFcode is first BCD digit of the ICD                      IDI is last three BCD digits of the ICD       1010           Implied AFI value is 39 (DCC)       (hex. A)       IDI is the three BCD digits of the DCC       1011-1111      Reserved, not to be used.       (hex. B-F)   The NSEL octet is not included. It is of no use for TCP and UDP   traffic.  In any case where it is needed, the mechanism described in   the next chapter should be used.   The longest CLNP routing prefixes known to be in active use today are   5 octets (subdivided into AA and RD fields in US GOSIP version 2).   Thus the semantics of existing 20-octet NSAPAs can be fully mapped.   DECnet/OSI (Registered Trade Mark) address semantics are also fully   mapped.   It is expected that hosts using restricted NSAPAs could be configured   using IPv6 auto-configuration [RFC1971], and that they could use   normal IPv6 neighbour discovery mechanisms [RFC1970].   Restricted NSAPAs, assuming that they can be fully routed using IPv6   routing protocols, may be used in IPv6 routing headers.3.1 Routing restricted NSAPAs   As mentioned in Chapter 1, there is a mismatch between the OSI or   GOSIP routing model and the IPv6 routing model. Restricted NSAPAs can   be routed hierarchically down to the Area level but must be flat-   routed within an Area. Normal IPv6 addresses can be routedBound, et. al.                Experimental                      [Page 5]

RFC 1888                   OSI NSAPs and IPv6                August 1996   hierarchically down to physical subnet (link) level and only have to   be flat-routed on the physical subnet.   Thus, packets whose destination address is a restricted NSAPA can be   routed using any normal IPv6 routing protocol only as far as the   Area. If the Area contains more than one physical subnet reached by   more than one router, no IPv6 routing protocol can route the packet   to the correct final router.  There is no solution to this problem   within the existing IPv6 mechanisms.  Presumably a flooding   algorithm, or a suitably adapted implementation of ES-IS, could solve   this problem.   In the absence of such a routing protocol, either the Area number   must be hierarchically structured to correspond to physical subnets,   or each Area must be limited to one physical subnet.   It is necessary in an IPv6 network that routes may be aggregated to   minimise the size of routing tables. If a subscriber is using both   normal IPv6 addresses [RFC1884] and restricted NSAPAs, these two   types of address will certainly not aggregate with each other, since   they differ from the second most significant bit onwards. This means   that there may be a significant operational penalty for using both   types of address with currently known routing technology.4. Truncated NSAPA used as an IPv6 address   An NSAP address contains routing information (e.g. Routing Domain and   area/subnet identifiers) in the form of the Area Address (as defined   in [IS10589]). The format and length of this routing information are   typically compatible with a 16 byte IPv6 address, and may be   represented as such using the following format:       0                   1                   2                   3       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 0-3  |0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1|  High order octets of full NSAP address       |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 4-7  |                NSAP address continued                         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 8-11 |                NSAP address continued                         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 12-15| NSAP address truncated     ...    zero pads if necessary      |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   If appropriate, when used as a destination IPv6 address, the   truncated NSAPA may be interpreted as an IPv6 anycast address.  An   anycast address may be used to identify either an IPv6 node, or   potentially even an OSI End System or Intermediate System.  ForBound, et. al.                Experimental                      [Page 6]

RFC 1888                   OSI NSAPs and IPv6                August 1996   example, it might be configured to identify the endpoints of a CLNP   tunnel, or it might identify a particular OSI capable system in a   particular subnet.   If a truncated NSAPA is used as a source address, it must be   interpreted as a unicast address and must therefore be uniquely   assigned within the IPv6 address space.   If a truncated NSAPA is used as either the source or destination IPv6   address (or both), EITHER an NSAPA destination option OR an   encapsulated CLNP packet MUST be present. It is the responsibility of   the destination system to take the appropriate action for each IPv6   packet received (e.g. forward, decapsulate, discard) and, if   necessary, return to the originating host an appropriate ICMP error   message.   If the truncated NSAPA is used to identify a router, and an NSAPA   destination option is present, then it is the responsibility of that   router to forward the complete IPv6 packet to the appropriate host   based upon the Destination NSAP field in the NSAPA option.  This   forwarding process may be based upon static routing information (i.e.   a manual mapping of NSAPs to IPv6 unicast addresses), or it may be   gathered in an automated fashion analogous to the ES-IS mechanism,   perhaps using extensions to the Neighbor Discovery protocol   [RFC1970].  The details of such a mechanism are beyond the scope of   this document.   This document does not restrict the formats of NSAP address that may   be used in truncated NSAPAs, but it is apparent that binary ICD or   DCC formats will be much easier to accomodate in an IPv6 routing   infrastructure than the other formats defined in [IS8348].   It is not expected that IPv6 autoconfiguration [RFC1971] and   discovery [RFC1970] will work unchanged for truncated NSAPAs.   Truncated NSAPAs are not meaningful within IPv6 routing headers, and   there is no way to include full NSAPAs in routing headers.   If a packet whose source address is a truncated NSAPA causes an ICMP   message to be returned for whatever reason, this ICMP message may be   discarded rather than being returned to the true source of the   packet.Bound, et. al.                Experimental                      [Page 7]

RFC 1888                   OSI NSAPs and IPv6                August 19964.1 Routing truncated NSAPAs   This is a grey area. If the truncated NSAPA retains a hierarchical   structure, it can be routed like a restricted NSAPA, subject to the   same problem concerning the mismatch between Areas and subnets.  If   possible, in the case of a GOSIP-like NSAPA, it should be truncated   immediately after the Area number. In this case the routing   considerations will be similar to those for restricted NSAPAs, except   that final delivery of the packet will depend on the last IPv6 router   being able to interpret the NSAPA destination option (or an   encapsulated CLNP packet).   In the general case, nothing can be said since the NSAPA could have   almost any format and might have very little hierarchical content   after truncation. There may be many cases in which truncated NSAPAs   cannot be routed across large regions of the IPv6 network.   The situation for route aggregation is similar to that described inSection 3.1 as long as the truncated NSAPAs have ICD or DCC format.   However, if arbitrary NSAPAs are used nothing can be predicted about   route aggregation and we must assume that it will be poor.Bound, et. al.                Experimental                      [Page 8]

RFC 1888                   OSI NSAPs and IPv6                August 19965. Carriage of full NSAPAs in IPv6 destination option   In the case of a truncated NSAPA used as an IPv6 address other than   for a CLNP tunnel, the full NSAPA must be carried in a destination   option. Any format defined in [IS8348] is allowed.   The NSAPA destination option is illustrated below. It has no   alignment requirement.   The option type code is 11-0-00011 = 195 decimal.       0                   1                   2                   3       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |1 1 0 0 0 0 1 1|  Opt Data Len |Source NSAP Len| Dest. NSAP Len|       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                                                               |       +                                                               +       |                                                               |       +                         Source NSAP                           +       |                                                               |       +                                                               +       |                                                               |       +                                                               +       |                                                               |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                                                               |       +                                                               +       |                                                               |       +                       Destination NSAP                        +       |                                                               |       +                                                               +       |                                                               |       +                                                               +       |                                                               |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   The length fields are each one octet long and are expressed in   octets.  The destination node should check the consistency of the   length fields (Option Data Length = Source NSAP Length + Dest. NSAP   Length +2).  In case of inconsistency the destination node shall   discard the packet and send an ICMP Parameter Problem, Code 2,   message to the packet's source address, pointing to the Option Data   Length field.   The boundary between the source NSAP and the destination NSAP is   simply aligned on an octet boundary. With standard 20 octet NSAPs the   total option length is 44 bytes and the Option Data Length is 42.Bound, et. al.                Experimental                      [Page 9]

RFC 1888                   OSI NSAPs and IPv6                August 1996   The NSAP encodings follow [IS8348] exactly.   If this option is used, both end systems concerned SHOULD use NSAP   addresses. In the exceptional case that only one of the end systems   uses NSAP addresses, the NSAP Length field of the other SHALL be set   to zero in the NSAP destination option.   This destination option is used in two cases. Firstly, an IPv6 source   node using normal IPv6 addresses (unicast address or anycast address)   MAY supply an NSAP destination option header for interpretation by   the IPv6 destination node. Secondly, an IPv6 node MAY use a truncated   NSAP address in place of a normal IPv6 address.   IPv6 nodes are not required to implement this option, except for   nodes using truncated NSAPAs other than for CLNP tunnels.6. IPv6 addresses inside an NSAPA   If it is required, for whatever reason, to embed an IPv6 address   inside a 20-octet NSAP address, then the following format MUST be   used.   A specific possible use of this embedding is to express an IP address   within the ATM Forum address format.  Another  possible use would be   to allow CLNP packets that encapsulate IPv6 packets to be routed in a   CLNP network using the IPv6 address architecture. Several leading   bytes of the IPv6 address could be used as a CLNP routing prefix.   The first three octets are an IDP in binary format, using the AFI   code in the process of being allocated to the IANA. The AFI value   provisionally allocated is 35, but this requires a formal   modification to [IS8348].  The encoding format is as for AFI value 47   [IS8348]. The third octet of the IDP is known as the ICP (Internet   Code Point) and its value must be zero. All other values are reserved   for allocation by the IANA.   Thus an AFI value of 35 with an ICP value of zero means that "this   NSAPA embeds a 16 byte IPv6 address".   The last octet is a selector.  To maintain compatibility with both   NSAP format and IPv6 addressing, this octet must be present, but it   has no significance for IPv6. Its default value is zero.Bound, et. al.                Experimental                     [Page 10]

RFC 1888                   OSI NSAPs and IPv6                August 1996       0                   1                   2                   3       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 0-3  |  AFI = 35     |   ICP = 0000                  | IPv6  (byte 0)|      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 4-7  |             IPv6  (bytes 1-4)                                 |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 8-11 |             IPv6  (bytes 5-8)                                 |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 12-15|             IPv6  (bytes 9-12)                                |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+ 16-19|       IPv6  (bytes 13-15)                     |0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0|      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Theoretically this format would allow recursive address embedding.   However, this is considered dangerous since it might lead to routing   table anomalies or to loops (compare [RFC1326]).  Thus embedded IPv6   address MUST NOT have the prefixes 0x02 or 0x03, and an NSAPA with   the IANA AFI code MUST NOT be embedded in an IPv6 header.   An NSAPA with the IANA AFI code and ICP set to zero is converted to   an IPv6 address by stripping off the first three and the twentieth   octets. All other formats of NSAPA are handled according to the   previous Chapters of this document.7. Security Considerations   Security issues are not specifically addressed in this document, but   it is compatible with the IPv6 security mechanisms [RFC1825].Acknowledgements   The authors are pleased to acknowledge the suggestions and comments   of Ross Callon, Richard Collella, Steve Deering, Dirk Fieldhouse,   Joel Halpern, Denise Heagerty, Cyndi Jung, Yakov Rekhter, and members   of the former TUBA and current IPNG working groups of the IETF. The   support of Scott Bradner and Allison Mankin of the IESG was   essential.   Herb Bertine, Alan Chambers, Dave Marlow, and Jack Wheeler were all   active in arranging the AFI allocation by ISO/IEC JTC1/SC6.Bound, et. al.                Experimental                     [Page 11]

RFC 1888                   OSI NSAPs and IPv6                August 1996References   [IS8473] Data communications protocol for providing the   connectionless-mode network service, ISO/IEC 8473, 1988.   [IS8348] Annex A, Network Layer Addressing, and Annex B, Rationale   for the material in Annex A, of ISO/IEC 8348, 1993 (identical to   CCITT Recommendation X.213, 1992).   [IS10589] Intermediate system to intermediate system intra-domain-   routeing routine information exchange protocol for use in   conjunction with the protocol for providing the connectionless-mode   Network Service (ISO 8473), ISO 10589, 1992.   [IS9542] End system to Intermediate system routeing exchange   protocol for use in conjunction with the Protocol for providing the   connectionless-mode network service (ISO 8473), ISO 9542, 1988.   [RFC1629] Colella, R., Callon, R., Gardner, E., and Y. Rekhter,   "Guidelines for OSI NSAP Allocation in the Internet",RFC 1629, May   1994.   [RFC1326] Tsuchiya, P., "Mutual Encapsulation Considered   Dangerous",RFC 1326, May 1992.   [RFC1883] Deering, S., and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6   (IPv6) Specification",RFC 1883, December 1995.   [RFC1884] Hinden, R., and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing   Architecture",RFC 1884, December 1995.   [RFC1971] Thompson, S., and T. Narten, "IPv6 Stateless Address   Autoconfiguration",RFC1971, August 1996.   [RFC1970] Narten, T., Nordmark, E., and W. Simpson, "Neighbor   Discovery for IP Version 6 (IPv6)",RFC1970, August 1996.   [RFC1825] Atkinson, R., "Security Architecture for the Internet   Protocol",RFC 1825, August 1995.Bound, et. al.                Experimental                     [Page 12]

RFC 1888                   OSI NSAPs and IPv6                August 1996Annex A: Summary of NSAP Allocations            -----IDP------            -----------------------------------------------------            | AFI  | IDI  |     DOMAIN SPECIFIC PART            |            -----------------------------------------------------            --------------------20 bytes max---------------------   The Initial Domain Part (IDP) is split into Authority and Format   Identifier (AFI) followed by the Initial Domain Identifier (IDI).   This combination is followed by the Domain Specific Part and   allocation within that part is domain specific.   The following is a summary of current allocations:   ISO DCC Scheme   AFI = decimal 38 or binary 39 = ISO Data Country Code Scheme.  IDI =   3 decimal or binary digits specifying the country.  ISO allocate the   country codes.  The DSP is administered by the standards authority   for each country.  In the UK, the British Standards Institution have   delegated administration to the Federation of Electronics Industries   - FEI   The UK DSP is split into a single digit UK Format Indicator (UKFI)   which indicates large, medium or small organisation rather like IP   addressing and a UK Domain Identifier (UKDI).  Using binary coded   decimal examples only (there are binary equivalents):   UKFI = 0 is reserved UKFI = 1, UKDI = nnn, UK Domain Specific Part =   31 digits.  UKFI = 2, UKDI = nnnnn, UKDSP = 29 digits max.  UKFI = 3,   UKDI = nnnnnnnn, UKDSP = 26 digits max.   UKFI = 4 to 9 reserved   The UK Government have been allocated a UKDI in the UKFI = 1 (large   organisation) format and have specified the breakdown of the   Government Domain Specific Part with sub domain addresses followed by   a station ID (which could be a MAC address) and a selector (which   could be a TSAP selection).   ITU-T X.121   AFI = decimal 36 or 52, binary 37 or 53 indicates that the IDI is a   14 digit max X.121 International Numbering Plan address (prefix, 3   digit Data Country Code, dial up data network number).  The full   X.121 address indicates who controls the formatting of the DSP.Bound, et. al.                Experimental                     [Page 13]

RFC 1888                   OSI NSAPs and IPv6                August 1996   ITU-T F.69   AFI = 40,54 or binary 41,55 indicates that the IDI is a telex number   up to 8 digits long.   ITU-T E.163   AFI = 42,56 or binary 43,57 indicates that the IDI is a normal   telephone number up to 12 digits long.   ITU-T E.164   AFI = 44,58 or binary 45,59 indicates that the IDI is an ISDN number   up to 15 digits long.   ISO 6523-ICD   AFI = 46 or binary 47 indicates that the IDI is an International Code   Designator allocated according to ISO 6523.  You have to be a global   organisation to get one of these.  The Organisation to which the ISO   6523 designator is issued specifies the DSP allocation.Annex B: Additional Rationale   This annex is intended to give additional rationale, motivation and   justification for the support of NSAPAs in an IPv6 network.   There are several models for OSI-IPv6 convergence, of which address   mapping is only one. The other models can be identified as    1. Dual stack coexistence, in which a CLNP network and an IPv6       network exist side by side indefinitely using multiprotocol       routers.    2. CLNP tunnels over IPv6.    3. OSI transport over IPv6.    4. OSI transport over UDP.    5. OSI transport over TCP (compareRFC 1006)   The present model is more fundamental, as it attempts to unify and   reconcile the OSI and IPv6 addressing and routing schemes, and   replace CLNP by IPv6 at the network level. The rationale for this   choice is to preserve investment in NSAPA allocation schemes, and to   open the door for peer-to-peer routing models between IPv6 and bearer   services (such as ATM) using NSAPA addressing. It should be notedBound, et. al.                Experimental                     [Page 14]

RFC 1888                   OSI NSAPs and IPv6                August 1996   that such peer-to-peer models are contentious at the time of writing,   but in any case a consistent address mapping is preferable to   multiple mappings.   In addition to their use to retain an existing addressing plan,   certain other uses of restricted NSAPAs could be envisaged.  They   could be used as an intermediate addressing plan for a network making   a transition from CLNP to IPv6. They could be used in a header   translation scheme for dynamic translation between IPv6 and CLNP.   They could be used to allow CLNP and IPv6 traffic to share the same   routing architecture within an organization ("Ships in the Day").   It should be noted that the use of full NSAPA addresses in end   systems impacts many things. The most obvious are the API and DNS. If   applications are to work normally, everything that has to be modified   to cope with IPv6 addresses has to be further modified for full   NSAPAs.  The mechanisms defined in the present document are only a   small part of the whole.   A destination option was chosen to carry full NSAPAs, in preference   to a dedicated extension header.  In the case of an extension header,   all IPv6 nodes would have needed to understand its syntax merely in   order to ignore it. In contrast, intermediate nodes can ignore the   destination option without any knowledge of its syntax. Thus only   nodes interested in NSAPAs need to know anything about them.   Thus we end up with two classes of IPv6 nodes:   1. Nodes knowing only about 16 byte addresses (including restricted   NSAPAs, which behave largely like any other IPv6 addresses).   2. Nodes also knowing about 20 byte NSAPAs, either as an extension of   the IPv6 address space or as the CLNP address space. In either case,   regions of the network containing such nodes are connected to each   other by unicast or anycast tunnels through the 16 byte address   space. Routing, system configuration, and neighbour discovery in the   NSAPA regions are outside the scope of the normal IPv6 mechanisms.Bound, et. al.                Experimental                     [Page 15]

RFC 1888                   OSI NSAPs and IPv6                August 1996Authors' Addresses   Jim Bound   Member Technical Staff                    Phone: (603) 881-0400   Network Operating Systems                 Fax:   (603) 881-0120   Digital Equipment Corporation             Email: bound@zk3.dec.com   110 Spitbrook Road, ZKO3-3/U14   Nashua, NH 03062   Brian E. Carpenter   Group Leader, Communications Systems      Phone:  +41 22 767-4967   Computing and Networks Division           Fax:    +41 22 767-7155   CERN                                      Telex:  419000 cer ch   European Laboratory for Particle Physics  Email: brian@dxcoms.cern.ch   1211 Geneva 23, Switzerland   Dan Harrington                            Phone: (508) 486-7643   Digital Equipment Corp.   550 King Street (LKG2-2/Q9)               Email: dan@netrix.lkg.dec.com   Littleton, MA  01460   Jack Houldsworth            Phone- ICL: +44 438 786112   ICL Network Systems               Home: +44 438 352997   Cavendish Road              Fax:        +44 438 786150   Stevenage                   Email: j.houldsworth@ste0906.wins.icl.co.uk   Herts   UK SG1 4BQ   Alan Lloyd                  Phone:  +61 3 727 9222   Datacraft Technologies      Fax:    +61 3 727 1557   252 Maroondah Highway       Email:  alan.lloyd@datacraft.com.au   Mooroolbark 3138   Victoria       Australia   X.400- G=alan;S=lloyd;O=dcthq;P=datacraft;A=telememo;C=auBound, et. al.                Experimental                     [Page 16]

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