Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


[RFC Home] [TEXT|PDF|HTML] [Tracker] [IPR] [Info page]

PROPOSED STANDARD
Updated by:7146
Network Working Group                                           R. RecioRequest for Comments: 5040                                    B. MetzlerCategory: Standards Track                                IBM Corporation                                                               P. Culley                                                              J. Hilland                                                 Hewlett-Packard Company                                                               D. Garcia                                                            October 2007A Remote Direct Memory Access Protocol SpecificationStatus of This Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Abstract   This document defines a Remote Direct Memory Access Protocol (RDMAP)   that operates over the Direct Data Placement Protocol (DDP protocol).   RDMAP provides read and write services directly to applications and   enables data to be transferred directly into Upper Layer Protocol   (ULP) Buffers without intermediate data copies.  It also enables a   kernel bypass implementation.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................41.1. Architectural Goals ........................................41.2. Protocol Overview ..........................................51.3. RDMAP Layering .............................................72. Glossary ........................................................82.1. General ....................................................82.2. LLP .......................................................102.3. Direct Data Placement (DDP) ...............................112.4. Remote Direct Memory Access (RDMA) ........................133. ULP and Transport Attributes ...................................153.1. Transport Requirements and Assumptions ....................153.2. RDMAP Interactions with the ULP ...........................164. Header Format ..................................................194.1. RDMAP Control and Invalidate STag Field ...................204.2. RDMA Message Definitions ..................................234.3. RDMA Write Header .........................................244.4. RDMA Read Request Header ..................................244.5. RDMA Read Response Header .................................264.6. Send Header and Send with Solicited Event Header ..........26      4.7. Send with Invalidate Header and Send with SE and           Invalidate Header .........................................264.8. Terminate Header ..........................................265. Data Transfer ..................................................325.1. RDMA Write Message ........................................325.2. RDMA Read Operation .......................................335.2.1. RDMA Read Request Message ..........................335.2.2. RDMA Read Response Message .........................355.3. Send Message Type .........................................365.4. Terminate Message .........................................375.5. Ordering and Completions ..................................386. RDMAP Stream Management ........................................416.1. Stream Initialization .....................................416.2. Stream Teardown ...........................................426.2.1. RDMAP Abortive Termination .........................437. RDMAP Error Management .........................................437.1. RDMAP Error Surfacing .....................................44      7.2. Errors Detected at the Remote Peer on Incoming           RDMA Messages .............................................458. Security Considerations ........................................468.1. Summary of RDMAP-Specific Security Requirements ...........468.1.1. RDMAP (RNIC) Requirements ..........................478.1.2. Privileged Resource Manager Requirements ...........488.2. Security Services for RDMAP ...............................498.2.1. Available Security Services ........................498.2.2. Requirements for IPsec Services for RDMAP ..........509. IANA Considerations ............................................51Recio, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 200710. References ....................................................5210.1. Normative References .....................................5210.2. Informative References ...................................53Appendix A. DDP Segment Formats for RDMA Messages .................54A.1. DDP Segment for RDMA Write ................................54A.2. DDP Segment for RDMA Read Request .........................55A.3. DDP Segment for RDMA Read Response ........................56A.4. DDP Segment for Send and Send with Solicited Event ........56      A.5. DDP Segment for Send with Invalidate and Send with SE and           Invalidate ................................................57A.6. DDP Segment for Terminate .................................58Appendix B. Ordering and Completion Table .........................59Appendix C. Contributors ..........................................61Table of Figures   Figure 1: RDMAP Layering ...........................................7   Figure 2: Example of MPA, DDP, and RDMAP Header Alignment over TCP .8   Figure 3: DDP Control, RDMAP Control, and Invalidate STag Fields ..20   Figure 4: RDMA Usage of DDP Fields ................................22   Figure 5: RDMA Message Definitions ................................23   Figure 6: RDMA Read Request Header Format .........................24   Figure 7: Terminate Header Format .................................27   Figure 8: Terminate Control Field .................................27   Figure 9: Terminate Control Field Values ..........................29   Figure 10: Error Type to RDMA Message Mapping .....................32   Figure 11: RDMA Write, DDP Segment Format .........................54   Figure 12: RDMA Read Request, DDP Segment Format ..................55   Figure 13: RDMA Read Response, DDP Segment Format .................56   Figure 14: Send and Send with Solicited Event, DDP Segment Format .56   Figure 15: Send with Invalidate and Send with SE and Invalidate,              DDP Segment Format .....................................57   Figure 16: Terminate, DDP Segment Format ..........................58   Figure 17: Operation Ordering .....................................59Recio, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 20071.  Introduction   Today, communications over TCP/IP typically require copy operations,   which add latency and consume significant CPU and memory resources.   The Remote Direct Memory Access Protocol (RDMAP) enables removal of   data copy operations and enables reduction in latencies by allowing a   local application to read or write data on a remote computer's memory   with minimal demands on memory bus bandwidth and CPU processing   overhead, while preserving memory protection semantics.   RDMAP is layered on top of Direct Data Placement (DDP) and uses the   two buffer models available from DDP.  DDP-related terminology is   discussed inSection 2.3.  As RDMAP builds on DDP, the reader is   advised to become familiar with [DDP].   The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT",   "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this   document are to be interpreted as described inRFC 2119 [RFC2119].1.1.  Architectural Goals   RDMAP has been designed with the following high-level architectural   goals:   *  Provide a data transfer operation that allows a Local Peer to      transfer up to 2^32 - 1 octets directly into a previously      Advertised Buffer (i.e., Tagged Buffer) located at a Remote Peer      without requiring a copy operation.  This is referred to as the      RDMA Write data transfer operation.   *  Provide a data transfer operation that allows a Local Peer to      retrieve up to 2^32 - 1 octets directly from a previously      Advertised Buffer (i.e., Tagged Buffer) located at a Remote Peer      without requiring a copy operation.  This is referred to as the      RDMA Read data transfer operation.   *  Provide a data transfer operation that allows a Local Peer to send      up to 2^32 - 1 octets directly into a buffer located at a Remote      Peer that has not been explicitly Advertised.  This is referred to      as the Send (Send with Invalidate, Send with Solicited Event, and      Send with Solicited Event and Invalidate) data transfer operation.   *  Enable the local ULP to use the Send Operation Type (includes      Send, Send with Invalidate, Send with Solicited Event, and Send      with Solicited Event and Invalidate) to signal to the remote ULP      the Completion of all previous Messages initiated by the local      ULP.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   *  Provide for all operations on a single RDMAP Stream to be reliably      transmitted in the order that they were submitted.   *  Provide RDMAP capabilities independently for each Stream when the      LLP supports multiple data Streams within an LLP connection.1.2.  Protocol Overview   RDMAP provides seven data transfer operations.  Except for the RDMA   Read operation, each operation generates exactly one RDMA Message.   Following is a brief overview of the RDMA Operations and RDMA   Messages:   1.  Send - A Send operation uses a Send Message to transfer data from       the Data Source into a buffer that has not been explicitly       Advertised by the Data Sink.  The Send Message uses the DDP       Untagged Buffer Model to transfer the ULP Message into the Data       Sink's Untagged Buffer.   2.  Send with Invalidate - A Send with Invalidate operation uses a       Send with Invalidate Message to transfer data from the Data       Source into a buffer that has not been explicitly Advertised by       the Data Sink.  The Send with Invalidate Message includes all       functionality of the Send Message, with one addition: an STag       field is included in the Send with Invalidate Message.  After the       message has been Placed and Delivered at the Data Sink, the       Remote Peer's buffer identified by the STag can no longer be       accessed remotely until the Remote Peer's ULP re-enables access       and Advertises the buffer.   3.  Send with Solicited Event (Send with SE) - A Send with Solicited       Event operation uses a Send with Solicited Event Message to       transfer data from the Data Source into an Untagged Buffer at the       Data Sink.  The Send with Solicited Event Message is similar to       the Send Message, with one addition: when the Send with Solicited       Event Message has been Placed and Delivered, an Event may be       generated at the recipient, if the recipient is configured to       generate such an Event.   4.  Send with Solicited Event and Invalidate (Send with SE and       Invalidate) - A Send with Solicited Event and Invalidate       operation uses a Send with Solicited Event and Invalidate Message       to transfer data from the Data Source into a buffer that has not       been explicitly Advertised by the Data Sink.  The Send with       Solicited Event and Invalidate Message is similar to the Send       with Invalidate Message, with one addition: when the Send withRecio, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007       Solicited Event and Invalidate Message has been Placed and       Delivered, an Event may be generated at the recipient, if the       recipient is configured to generate such an Event.   5.  Remote Direct Memory Access Write - An RDMA Write operation uses       an RDMA Write Message to transfer data from the Data Source to a       previously Advertised Buffer at the Data Sink.       The ULP at the Remote Peer, which in this case is the Data Sink,       enables the Data Sink Tagged Buffer for access and Advertises the       buffer's size (length), location (Tagged Offset), and Steering       Tag (STag) to the Data Source through a ULP-specific mechanism.       The ULP at the Local Peer, which in this case is the Data Source,       initiates the RDMA Write operation.  The RDMA Write Message uses       the DDP Tagged Buffer Model to transfer the ULP Message into the       Data Sink's Tagged Buffer.  Note: the STag associated with the       Tagged Buffer remains valid until the ULP at the Remote Peer       invalidates it or the ULP at the Local Peer invalidates it       through a Send with Invalidate or Send with Solicited Event and       Invalidate.   6.  Remote Direct Memory Access Read - The RDMA Read operation       transfers data to a Tagged Buffer at the Local Peer, which in       this case is the Data Sink, from a Tagged Buffer at the Remote       Peer, which in this case is the Data Source.  The ULP at the Data       Source enables the Data Source Tagged Buffer for access and       Advertises the buffer's size (length), location (Tagged Offset),       and Steering Tag (STag) to the Data Sink through a ULP-specific       mechanism.  The ULP at the Data Sink enables the Data Sink Tagged       Buffer for access and initiates the RDMA Read operation.  The       RDMA Read operation consists of a single RDMA Read Request       Message and a single RDMA Read Response Message, and the latter       may be segmented into multiple DDP Segments.       The RDMA Read Request Message uses the DDP Untagged Buffer Model       to Deliver the STag, starting Tagged Offset, and length for both       the Data Source and Data Sink Tagged Buffers to the Remote Peer's       RDMA Read Request Queue.       The RDMA Read Response Message uses the DDP Tagged Buffer Model       to Deliver the Data Source's Tagged Buffer to the Data Sink,       without any involvement from the ULP at the Data Source.       Note: the Data Source STag associated with the Tagged Buffer       remains valid until the ULP at the Data Source invalidates it or       the ULP at the Data Sink invalidates it through a Send withRecio, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007       Invalidate or Send with Solicited Event and Invalidate.  The Data       Sink STag associated with the Tagged Buffer remains valid until       the ULP at the Data Sink invalidates it.   7.  Terminate - A Terminate operation uses a Terminate Message to       transfer to the Remote Peer information associated with an error       that occurred at the Local Peer.  The Terminate Message uses the       DDP Untagged Buffer Model to transfer the Message into the Data       Sink's Untagged Buffer.1.3.  RDMAP Layering   RDMAP is dependent on DDP, subject to the requirements defined inSection 3.1, "Transport Requirements and Assumptions".  Figure 1,   "RDMAP Layering", depicts the relationship between Upper Layer   Protocols (ULPs), RDMAP, DDP protocol, the framing layer, and the   transport.  For LLP protocol definitions of each LLP, see [MPA],   [TCP], and [SCTP].                 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                 |                                     |                 |     Upper Layer Protocol (ULP)      |                 |                                     |                 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                 |                                     |                 |              RDMAP                  |                 |                                     |                 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                 |                                     |                 |           DDP protocol              |                 |                                     |                 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                 |                 |                   |                 |       MPA       |                   |                 |                 |                   |                 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       SCTP        |                 |                 |                   |                 |       TCP       |                   |                 |                 |                   |                 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                       Figure 1: RDMAP Layering   If RDMAP is layered over DDP/MPA/TCP, then the respective headers and   ULP Payload are arranged as follows (Note: For clarity, MPA header   and CRC fields are included but MPA markers are not shown):Recio, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007     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    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    |                                                               |    //                           TCP Header                        //    |                                                               |    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    |         MPA Header            |                               |    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               +    |                                                               |    //                        DDP Header                           //    |                                                               |    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    |                                                               |    //                        RDMA Header                          //    |                                                               |    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    |                                                               |    //                        ULP Payload                          //    //                 (shown with no pad bytes)                   //    //                                                             //    |                                                               |    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    |                           MPA CRC                             |    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Figure 2: Example of MPA, DDP, and RDMAP Header Alignment over TCP2.  Glossary2.1.  General   Advertisement (Advertised, Advertise, Advertisements, Advertises) -       the act of informing a Remote Peer that a local RDMA Buffer is       available to it.  A Node makes available an RDMA Buffer for       incoming RDMA Read or RDMA Write access by informing its RDMA/DDP       peer of the Tagged Buffer identifiers (STag, base address, and       buffer length).  This Advertisement of Tagged Buffer information       is not defined by RDMA/DDP and is left to the ULP.  A typical       method would be for the Local Peer to embed the Tagged Buffer's       Steering Tag, base address, and length in a Send Message destined       for the Remote Peer.   Completion - Refer to "RDMA Completion" inSection 2.4.   Completed - See "RDMA Completion" inSection 2.4.   Complete - See "RDMA Completion" inSection 2.4.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   Completes - See "RDMA Completion" inSection 2.4.   Data Sink - The peer receiving a data payload.  Note that the Data       Sink can be required to both send and receive RDMA/DDP Messages       to transfer a data payload.   Data Source - The peer sending a data payload.  Note that the Data       Source can be required to both send and receive RDMA/DDP Messages       to transfer a data payload.   Data Delivery (Delivery, Delivered, Delivers) - Delivery is defined       as the process of informing the ULP or consumer that a particular       Message is available for use.  This is specifically different       from "Placement", which may generally occur in any order, while       the order of "Delivery" is strictly defined.  See "Data       Placement" inSection 2.3.   Delivery - See Data Delivery inSection 2.1.   Delivered - See Data Delivery inSection 2.1.   Delivers - See Data Delivery inSection 2.1.   Fabric - The collection of links, switches, and routers that connect       a set of Nodes with RDMA/DDP protocol implementations.   Fence (Fenced, Fences) - To block the current RDMA Operation from       executing until prior RDMA Operations have Completed.   iWARP - A suite of wire protocols comprised of RDMAP, DDP, and MPA.       The iWARP protocol suite may be layered above TCP, SCTP, or other       transport protocols.   Local Peer - The RDMA/DDP protocol implementation on the local end of       the connection.  Used to refer to the local entity when       describing a protocol exchange or other interaction between two       Nodes.   Node - A computing device attached to one or more links of a Fabric       (network).  A Node in this context does not refer to a specific       application or protocol instantiation running on the computer.  A       Node may consist of one or more RNICs installed in a host       computer.   Placement - See "Data Placement" inSection 2.3.   Placed - See "Data Placement" inSection 2.3.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   Places - See "Data Placement" inSection 2.3.   Remote Peer - The RDMA/DDP protocol implementation on the opposite       end of the connection.  Used to refer to the remote entity when       describing protocol exchanges or other interactions between two       Nodes.   RNIC - RDMA Network Interface Controller.  In this context, this       would be a network I/O adapter or embedded controller with iWARP       and Verbs functionality.   RNIC Interface (RI) - The presentation of the RNIC to the Verbs       Consumer as implemented through the combination of the RNIC and       the RNIC driver.   Termination - See "RDMAP Abortive Termination" inSection 2.4.   Terminated - See "RDMAP Abortive Termination" inSection 2.4.   Terminate - See "RDMAP Abortive Termination" inSection 2.4.   Terminates - See "RDMAP Abortive Termination" inSection 2.4.   ULP - Upper Layer Protocol.  The protocol layer above the one       currently being referenced.  The ULP for RDMA/DDP is expected to       be an OS, Application, adaptation layer, or proprietary device.       The RDMA/DDP documents do not specify a ULP -- they provide a set       of semantics that allow a ULP to be designed to utilize RDMA/DDP.   ULP Payload - The ULP data that is contained within a single protocol       segment or packet (e.g., a DDP Segment).   Verbs - An abstract description of the functionality of an RNIC       Interface.  The OS may expose some or all of this functionality       via one or more APIs to applications.  The OS will also use some       of the functionality to manage the RNIC Interface.2.2.  LLP   LLP - Lower Layer Protocol.  The protocol layer beneath the protocol       layer currently being referenced.  For example, for DDP, the LLP       is SCTP, MPA, or other transport protocols.  For RDMA, the LLP is       DDP.   LLP Connection - Corresponds to an LLP transport-level connection       between the peer LLP layers on two Nodes.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   LLP Stream - Corresponds to a single LLP transport-level Stream       between the peer LLP layers on two Nodes.  One or more LLP       Streams may map to a single transport-level LLP connection.  For       transport protocols that support multiple Streams per connection       (e.g., SCTP), an LLP Stream corresponds to one transport-level       Stream.   MULPDU - Maximum ULPDU.  The current maximum size of the record that       is acceptable for DDP to pass to the LLP for transmission.   ULPDU - Upper Layer Protocol Data Unit.  The data record defined by       the layer above MPA.2.3.  Direct Data Placement (DDP)   Data Placement (Placement, Placed, Places) - For DDP, this term is       specifically used to indicate the process of writing to a data       buffer by a DDP implementation.  DDP Segments carry Placement       information, which may be used by the receiving DDP       implementation to perform Data Placement of the DDP Segment ULP       Payload.  See "Data Delivery".   DDP Abortive Teardown - The act of closing a DDP Stream without       attempting to Complete in-progress and pending DDP Messages.   DDP Graceful Teardown - The act of closing a DDP Stream such that all       in-progress and pending DDP Messages are allowed to Complete       successfully.   DDP Control Field - A fixed 16-bit field in the DDP Header.  The DDP       Control Field contains an 8-bit field whose contents are reserved       for use by the ULP.   DDP Header - The header present in all DDP segments.  The DDP Header       contains control and Placement fields that are used to define the       final Placement location for the ULP Payload carried in a DDP       Segment.   DDP Message - A ULP-defined unit of data interchange, which is       subdivided into one or more DDP segments.  This segmentation may       occur for a variety of reasons, including segmentation to respect       the maximum segment size of the underlying transport protocol.   DDP Segment - The smallest unit of data transfer for the DDP       protocol.  It includes a DDP Header and ULP Payload (if present).       A DDP Segment should be sized to fit within the underlying       transport protocol MULPDU.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   DDP Stream - A sequence of DDP Messages whose ordering is defined by       the LLP.  For SCTP, a DDP Stream maps directly to an SCTP Stream.       For MPA, a DDP Stream maps directly to a TCP connection, and a       single DDP Stream is supported.  Note that DDP has no ordering       guarantees between DDP Streams.   Direct Data Placement - A mechanism whereby ULP data contained within       DDP Segments may be Placed directly into its final destination in       memory without processing of the ULP.  This may occur even when       the DDP Segments arrive out of order.  Out-of-order Placement       support may require the Data Sink to implement the LLP and DDP as       one functional block.   Direct Data Placement Protocol (DDP) - Also, a wire protocol that       supports Direct Data Placement by associating explicit memory       buffer placement information with the LLP payload units.   Message Offset (MO) - For the DDP Untagged Buffer Model, specifies       the offset, in bytes, from the start of a DDP Message.   Message Sequence Number (MSN) - For the DDP Untagged Buffer Model,       specifies a sequence number that is increasing with each DDP       Message.   Queue Number (QN) - For the DDP Untagged Buffer Model, identifies a       destination Data Sink queue for a DDP Segment.   Steering Tag - An identifier of a Tagged Buffer on a Node, valid as       defined within a protocol specification.   STag - Steering Tag   Tagged Buffer - A buffer that is explicitly Advertised to the Remote       Peer through exchange of an STag, Tagged Offset, and length.   Tagged Buffer Model - A DDP data transfer model used to transfer       Tagged Buffers from the Local Peer to the Remote Peer.   Tagged DDP Message - A DDP Message that targets a Tagged Buffer.   Tagged Offset (TO) - The offset within a Tagged Buffer on a Node.   Untagged Buffer - A buffer that is not explicitly Advertised to the       Remote Peer.  Untagged Buffers support one of the two available       data transfer mechanisms called the Untagged Buffer Model.  An       Untagged Buffer is used to send asynchronous control messages to       the Remote Peer for RDMA Read, Send, and Terminate requests.       Untagged Buffers handle Untagged DDP Messages.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   Untagged Buffer Model - A DDP data transfer model used to transfer       Untagged Buffers from the Local Peer to the Remote Peer.   Untagged DDP Message - A DDP Message that targets an Untagged Buffer.2.4.  Remote Direct Memory Access (RDMA)   Completion Queues (CQs) - Logical components of the RNIC Interface       that conceptually represent how an RNIC notifies the ULP about       the completion of the transmission of data, or the completion of       the reception of data; see [RDMASEC].   Event - An indication provided by the RDMAP layer to the ULP to       indicate a Completion or other condition requiring immediate       attention.   Invalidate STag - A mechanism used to prevent the Remote Peer from       reusing a previous explicitly Advertised STag, until the Local       Peer makes it available through a subsequent explicit       Advertisement.  The STag cannot be accessed remotely until it is       explicitly Advertised again.   RDMA Completion (Completion, Completed, Complete, Completes) - For       RDMA, Completion is defined as the process of informing the ULP       that a particular RDMA Operation has performed all functions       specified for the RDMA Operations, including Placement and       Delivery.  The Completion semantic of each RDMA Operation is       distinctly defined.   RDMA Message - A data transfer mechanism used to fulfill an RDMA       Operation.   RDMA Operation - A sequence of RDMA Messages, including control       Messages, to transfer data from a Data Source to a Data Sink.       The following RDMA Operations are defined: RDMA Writes, RDMA       Read, Send, Send with Invalidate, Send with Solicited Event, Send       with Solicited Event and Invalidate, and Terminate.   RDMA Protocol (RDMAP) - A wire protocol that supports RDMA Operations       to transfer ULP data between a Local Peer and the Remote Peer.   RDMAP Abortive Termination (Termination, Terminated, Terminate,       Terminates) - The act of closing an RDMAP Stream without       attempting to Complete in-progress and pending RDMA Operations.   RDMAP Graceful Termination - The act of closing an RDMAP Stream such       that all in-progress and pending RDMA Operations are allowed to       Complete successfully.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   RDMA Read - An RDMA Operation used by the Data Sink to transfer the       contents of a source RDMA buffer from the Remote Peer to the       Local Peer.  An RDMA Read operation consists of a single RDMA       Read Request Message and a single RDMA Read Response Message.   RDMA Read Request - An RDMA Message used by the Data Sink to request       the Data Source to transfer the contents of an RDMA buffer.  The       RDMA Read Request Message describes both the Data Source and Data       Sink RDMA buffers.   RDMA Read Request Queue - The queue used for processing RDMA Read       Requests.  The RDMA Read Request Queue has a DDP Queue Number of       1.   RDMA Read Response - An RDMA Message used by the Data Source to       transfer the contents of an RDMA buffer to the Data Sink, in       response to an RDMA Read Request.  The RDMA Read Response Message       only describes the data sink RDMA buffer.   RDMAP Stream - An association between a pair of RDMAP       implementations, possibly on different Nodes, which transfer ULP       data using RDMA Operations.  There may be multiple RDMAP Streams       on a single Node.  An RDMAP Stream maps directly to a single DDP       Stream.   RDMA Write - An RDMA Operation that transfers the contents of a       source RDMA Buffer from the Local Peer to a destination RDMA       Buffer at the Remote Peer using RDMA.  The RDMA Write Message       only describes the Data Sink RDMA buffer.   Remote Direct Memory Access (RDMA) - A method of accessing memory on       a remote system in which the local system specifies the remote       location of the data to be transferred.  Employing an RNIC in the       remote system allows the access to take place without       interrupting the processing of the CPU(s) on the system.   Send - An RDMA Operation that transfers the contents of a ULP Buffer       from the Local Peer to an Untagged Buffer at the Remote Peer.   Send Message Type - A Send Message, Send with Invalidate Message,       Send with Solicited Event Message, or Send with Solicited Event       and Invalidate Message.   Send Operation Type - A Send Operation, Send with Invalidate       Operation, Send with Solicited Event Operation, or Send with       Solicited Event and Invalidate Operation.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   Solicited Event (SE) - A facility by which an RDMA Operation sender       may cause an Event to be generated at the recipient, if the       recipient is configured to generate such an Event, when a Send       with Solicited Event Message or Send with Solicited Event and       Invalidate Message is received.  Note: The Local Peer's ULP can       use the Solicited Event mechanism to ensure that Messages       designated as important to the ULP are handled in an expeditious       manner by the Remote Peer's ULP.  The ULP at the Local Peer can       indicate a given Send Message Type is important by using the Send       with Solicited Event Message or Send with Solicited Event and       Invalidate Message.  The ULP at the Remote Peer can choose to       only be notified when valid Send with Solicited Event Messages       and/or Send with Solicited Event and Invalidate Messages arrive       and handle other valid incoming Send Messages or Send with       Invalidate Messages at its leisure.   Terminate - An RDMA Message used by a Node to pass an error       indication to the peer Node on an RDMAP Stream.  This operation       is for RDMAP use only.   ULP Buffer - A buffer owned above the RDMAP layer and Advertised to       the RDMAP layer either as a Tagged Buffer or an Untagged ULP       Buffer.   ULP Message - The ULP data that is handed to a specific protocol       layer for transmission.  Data boundaries are preserved as they       are transmitted through iWARP.3.  ULP and Transport Attributes3.1.  Transport Requirements and Assumptions   RDMAP MUST be layered on top of the Direct Data Placement Protocol   [DDP].   RDMAP requires the following DDP support:   *  RDMAP uses three queues for Untagged Buffers:      *  Queue Number 0 (used by RDMAP for Send, Send with Invalidate,         Send with Solicited Event, and Send with Solicited Event and         Invalidate operations).      *  Queue Number 1 (used by RDMAP for RDMA Read operations).      *  Queue Number 2 (used by RDMAP for Terminate operations).   *  DDP maps a single RDMA Message to a single DDP Message.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   *  DDP uses the STag and Tagged Offset provided by the RDMAP for      Tagged Buffer Messages (i.e., RDMA Write and RDMA Read Response).   *  When the DDP layer Delivers an Untagged DDP Message to the RDMAP      layer, DDP provides the length of the DDP Message.  This ensures      that RDMAP does not have to carry a length field in its header.   *  When the RDMAP layer provides an RDMA Message to the DDP layer,      DDP must insert the RsvdULP field value provided by the RDMAP      layer into the associated DDP Message.   *  When the DDP layer Delivers a DDP Message to the RDMAP layer, DDP      provides the RsvdULP field.   *  The RsvdULP field must be 1 octet for DDP Tagged Messages and 5      octets for DDP Untagged Messages.   *  DDP propagates to RDMAP all operation or protection errors (used      by RDMAP Terminate) and, when appropriate, the DDP Header fields      of the DDP Segment that encountered the error.   *  If an RDMA Operation is aborted by DDP or a lower layer, the      contents of the Data Sink buffers associated with the operation      are considered indeterminate.   *  DDP, in conjunction with the lower layers, provides reliable, in-      order Delivery.3.2.  RDMAP Interactions with the ULP   RDMAP provides the ULP with access to the following RDMA Operations   as defined in this specification:   *  Send   *  Send with Solicited Event   *  Send with Invalidate   *  Send with Solicited Event and Invalidate   *  RDMA Write   *  RDMA ReadRecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   For Send Operation Types, the following are the interactions between   the RDMAP layer and the ULP:   *  At the Data Source:      *  The ULP passes to the RDMAP layer the following:         *  ULP Message Length         *  ULP Message         *  An indication of the Send Operation Type, where the valid            types are: Send, Send with Solicited Event, Send with            Invalidate, or Send with Solicited Event and Invalidate.         *  An Invalidate STag, if the Send Operation Type was Send with            Invalidate or Send with Solicited Event and Invalidate.      *  When the Send Operation Type Completes, an indication of the         Completion results.   *  At the Data Sink:      *  If the Send Operation Type Completed successfully, the RDMAP         layer passes the following information to the ULP Layer:         *  ULP Message Length         *  ULP Message         *  An Event, if the Data Sink is configured to generate an            Event.         *  An Invalidated STag, if the Send Operation Type was Send            with Invalidate or Send with Solicited Event and Invalidate.      *  If the Send Operation Type Completed in error, the Data Sink         RDMAP layer will pass up the corresponding error information to         the Data Sink ULP and send a Terminate Message to the Data         Source RDMAP layer.  The Data Source RDMAP layer will then pass         up the Terminate Message to the ULP.   For RDMA Write operations, the following are the interactions between   the RDMAP layer and the ULP:   *  At the Data Source:      *  The ULP passes to the RDMAP layer the following:Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007         *  ULP Message Length         *  ULP Message         *  Data Sink STag         *  Data Sink Tagged Offset         *  When the RDMA Write operation Completes, an indication of            the Completion results.   *  At the Data Sink:      *  If the RDMA Write completed successfully, the RDMAP layer does         not Deliver the RDMA Write to the ULP.  It does Place the ULP         Message transferred through the RDMA Write Message into the ULP         Buffer.      *  If the RDMA Write completed in error, the Data Sink RDMAP layer         will pass up the corresponding error information to the Data         Sink ULP and send a Terminate Message to the Data Source RDMAP         layer.  The Data Source RDMAP layer will then pass up the         Terminate Message to the ULP.   For RDMA Read operations, the following are the interactions between   the RDMAP layer and the ULP:   *  At the Data Sink:      *  The ULP passes to the RDMAP layer the following:         *  ULP Message Length         *  Data Source STag         *  Data Sink STag         *  Data Source Tagged Offset         *  Data Sink Tagged Offset      *  When the RDMA Read operation Completes, an indication of the         Completion results.   *  At the Data Source:      *  If no error occurred while processing the RDMA Read Request,         the Data Source will not pass up any information to the ULP.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007      *  If an error occurred while processing the RDMA Read Request,         the Data Source RDMAP layer will pass up the corresponding         error information to the Data Source ULP and send a Terminate         Message to the Data Sink RDMAP layer.  The Data Sink RDMAP         layer will then pass up the Terminate Message to the ULP.   For STags made available to the RDMAP layer, following are the   interactions between the RDMAP layer and the ULP:   *  If the ULP enables an STag, the ULP passes the following to the      RDMAP layer:      *  STag;      *  range of Tagged Offsets that are associated with a given STag;      *  remote access rights (read, write, or read and write)         associated with a given, valid STag; and      *  association between a given STag and a given RDMAP Stream.   *  If the ULP disables an STag, the ULP passes to the RDMAP layer the      STag.   If an error occurs at the RDMAP layer, the RDMAP layer may pass back   error information (e.g., the content of a Terminate Message) to the   ULP.4.  Header Format   The control information of RDMA Messages is included in DDP   protocol-defined header fields, with the following exceptions:   *  The first octet reserved for ULP usage on all DDP Messages in the      DDP Protocol (i.e., the RsvdULP Field) is used by RDMAP to carry      the RDMA Message Opcode and the RDMAP version.  This octet is      known as the RDMAP Control Field in this specification.  For Send      with Invalidate and Send with Solicited Event and Invalidate,      RDMAP uses the second through fifth octets, provided by DDP on      Untagged DDP Messages, to carry the STag that will be Invalidated.   *  The RDMA Message length is passed by the RDMAP layer to the DDP      layer on all outbound transfers.   *  For RDMA Read Request Messages, the RDMA Read Message Size is      included in the RDMA Read Request Header.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   *  The RDMA Message length is passed to the RDMAP layer by the DDP      layer on inbound Untagged Buffer transfers.   *  Two RDMA Messages carry additional RDMAP headers.  The RDMA Read      Request carries the Data Sink and Data Source buffer descriptions,      including buffer length.  The Terminate carries additional      information associated with the error that caused the Terminate.4.1.  RDMAP Control and Invalidate STag Field   The version of RDMAP defined by this specification uses all 8 bits of   the RDMAP Control Field.  The first octet reserved for ULP use in the   DDP Protocol MUST be used by the RDMAP to carry the RDMAP Control   Field.  The ordering of the bits in the first octet MUST be as   defined in Figure 3, "DDP Control, RDMAP Control, and Invalidate STag   Fields".  For Send with Invalidate and Send with Solicited Event and   Invalidate, the second through fifth octets of the DDP RsvdULP field   MUST be used by RDMAP to carry the Invalidate STag.  Figure 3 depicts   the format of the DDP Control and RDMAP Control fields.  (Note: In   Figure 3, the DDP Header is offset by 16 bits to accommodate the MPA   header defined in [MPA].  The MPA header is only present if DDP is   layered on top of MPA.)    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                                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                                   |T|L| Resrv | DV| RV|Rsv| Opcode|   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                     Invalidate STag                           |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Figure 3: DDP Control, RDMAP Control, and Invalidate STag Fields   All RDMA Messages handed by the RDMAP layer to the DDP layer MUST   define the value of the Tagged flag in the DDP Header.  Figure 4,   "RDMA Usage of DDP Fields", MUST be used to define the value of the   Tagged flag that is handed to the DDP layer for each RDMA Message.   Figure 4 defines the value of the RDMA Opcode field that MUST be used   for each RDMA Message.   Figure 4 defines when the STag, Queue Number, and Tagged Offset   fields MUST be provided for each RDMA Message.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   For this version of the RDMAP, all RDMA Messages MUST have:   *  Bits 24-25; RDMA Version field: 01b for an RNIC that complies with      this RDMA protocol specification.  00b for an RNIC that complies      with the RDMA Consortium's RDMA protocol specification.  Both      version numbers are valid.  Interoperability is dependent on MPA      protocol version negotiation (e.g., MPA marker and MPA CRC).   *  Bits 26-27; Reserved.  MUST be set to zero by sender, ignored by      the receiver.   *  Bits 28-31; OpCode field: see Figure 4.   *  Bits 32-63; Invalidate STag.  However, this field is only valid      for Send with Invalidate and Send with Solicited Event and      Invalidate Messages (see Figure 4).      For Send, Send with Solicited Event, RDMA Read Request, and      Terminate, the Invalidate STag field MUST be set to zero on      transmit and ignored by the receiver.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   -------+-----------+-------+------+-------+-----------+--------------   RDMA   | Message   | Tagged| STag | Queue | Invalidate| Message   Message| Type      | Flag  | and  | Number| STag      | Length   OpCode |           |       | TO   |       |           | Communicated          |           |       |      |       |           | between DDP          |           |       |      |       |           | and RDMAP   -------+-----------+-------+------+-------+-----------+--------------   0000b  | RDMA Write| 1     | Valid| N/A   | N/A       | Yes          |           |       |      |       |           |   -------+-----------+-------+------+-------+-----------+--------------   0001b  | RDMA Read | 0     | N/A  | 1     | N/A       | Yes          | Request   |       |      |       |           |   -------+-----------+-------+------+-------+-----------+--------------   0010b  | RDMA Read | 1     | Valid| N/A   | N/A       | Yes          | Response  |       |      |       |           |   -------+-----------+-------+------+-------+-----------+--------------   0011b  | Send      | 0     | N/A  | 0     | N/A       | Yes          |           |       |      |       |           |   -------+-----------+-------+------+-------+-----------+--------------   0100b  | Send with | 0     | N/A  | 0     | Valid     | Yes          | Invalidate|       |      |       |           |   -------+-----------+-------+------+-------+-----------+--------------   0101b  | Send with | 0     | N/A  | 0     | N/A       | Yes          | SE        |       |      |       |           |   -------+-----------+-------+------+-------+-----------+--------------   0110b  | Send with | 0     | N/A  | 0     | Valid     | Yes          | SE and    |       |      |       |           |          | Invalidate|       |      |       |           |   -------+-----------+-------+------+-------+-----------+--------------   0111b  | Terminate | 0     | N/A  | 2     | N/A       | Yes          |           |       |      |       |           |   -------+-----------+-------+------+-------+-----------+--------------   1000b  |           |   to     | Reserved  |               Not Specified   1111b  |           |   -------+-----------+-------------------------------------------------                    Figure 4: RDMA Usage of DDP Fields   Note:  N/A means Not Applicable.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 20074.2.  RDMA Message Definitions   The following figure defines which RDMA Headers MUST be used on each   RDMA Message and which RDMA Messages are allowed to carry ULP   Payload:   -------+-----------+-------------------+-------------------------   RDMA   | Message   | RDMA Header Used  | ULP Message allowed in   Message| Type      |                   | the RDMA Message   OpCode |           |                   |          |           |                   |   -------+-----------+-------------------+-------------------------   0000b  | RDMA Write| None              | Yes          |           |                   |   -------+-----------+-------------------+-------------------------   0001b  | RDMA Read | RDMA Read Request | No          | Request   | Header            |   -------+-----------+-------------------+-------------------------   0010b  | RDMA Read | None              | Yes          | Response  |                   |   -------+-----------+-------------------+-------------------------   0011b  | Send      | None              | Yes          |           |                   |   -------+-----------+-------------------+-------------------------   0100b  | Send with | None              | Yes          | Invalidate|                   |   -------+-----------+-------------------+-------------------------   0101b  | Send with | None              | Yes          | SE        |                   |   -------+-----------+-------------------+-------------------------   0110b  | Send with | None              | Yes          | SE and    |                   |          | Invalidate|                   |   -------+-----------+-------------------+-------------------------   0111b  | Terminate | Terminate Header  | No          |           |                   |   -------+-----------+-------------------+-------------------------   1000b  |           |   to     | Reserved  |            Not Specified   1111b  |           |   -------+-----------+-------------------+-------------------------                  Figure 5: RDMA Message DefinitionsRecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 20074.3.  RDMA Write Header   The RDMA Write Message does not include an RDMAP header.  The RDMAP   layer passes to the DDP layer an RDMAP Control Field.  The RDMA Write   Message is fully described by the DDP Headers of the DDP Segments   associated with the Message.   SeeAppendix A for a description of the DDP Segment format associated   with RDMA Write Messages.4.4.  RDMA Read Request Header   The RDMA Read Request Message carries an RDMA Read Request Header   that describes the Data Sink and Data Source Buffers used by the RDMA   Read operation.  The RDMA Read Request Header immediately follows the   DDP header.  The RDMAP layer passes to the DDP layer an RDMAP Control   Field.  The following figure depicts the RDMA Read Request Header   that MUST be used for all RDMA Read Request Messages:     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    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    |                     Data Sink STag (SinkSTag)                 |    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    |                                                               |    +                  Data Sink Tagged Offset (SinkTO)             +    |                                                               |    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    |                  RDMA Read Message Size (RDMARDSZ)            |    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    |                     Data Source STag (SrcSTag)                |    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    |                                                               |    +                 Data Source Tagged Offset (SrcTO)             +    |                                                               |    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+               Figure 6: RDMA Read Request Header Format      Data Sink Steering Tag: 32 bits.           The Data Sink Steering Tag identifies the Data Sink's Tagged           Buffer.  This field MUST be copied, without interpretation,           from the RDMA Read Request into the corresponding RDMA Read           Response; this field allows the Data Sink to place the           returning data.  The STag is associated with the RDMAP Stream           through a mechanism that is outside the scope of the RDMAP           specification.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007      Data Sink Tagged Offset: 64 bits.           The Data Sink Tagged Offset specifies the starting offset, in           octets, from the base of the Data Sink's Tagged Buffer, where           the data is to be written by the Data Source.  This field is           copied from the RDMA Read Request into the corresponding RDMA           Read Response and allows the Data Sink to place the returning           data.  The Data Sink Tagged Offset MAY start at an arbitrary           offset.           The Data Sink STag and Data Sink Tagged Offset fields           describe the buffer to which the RDMA Read data is written.           Note: the DDP layer protects against a wrap of the Data Sink           Tagged Offset.      RDMA Read Message Size: 32 bits.           The RDMA Read Message Size is the amount of data, in octets,           read from the Data Source.  A single RDMA Read Request           Message can retrieve from 0 to 2^32-1 data octets from the           Data Source.      Data Source Steering Tag: 32 bits.           The Data Source Steering Tag identifies the Data Source's           Tagged Buffer.  The STag is associated with the RDMAP Stream           through a mechanism that is outside the scope of the RDMAP           specification.      Data Source Tagged Offset: 64 bits.           The Tagged Offset specifies the starting offset, in octets,           that is to be read from the Data Source's Tagged Buffer.  The           Data Source Tagged Offset MAY start at an arbitrary offset.           The Data Source STag and Data Source Tagged Offset fields           describe the buffer from which the RDMA Read data is read.   SeeSection 7.2, "Errors Detected at the Remote Peer on Incoming RDMA   Messages", for a description of error checking required upon   processing of an RDMA Read Request at the Data Source.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 20074.5.  RDMA Read Response Header   The RDMA Read Response Message does not include an RDMAP header.  The   RDMAP layer passes to the DDP layer an RDMAP Control Field.  The RDMA   Read Response Message is fully described by the DDP Headers of the   DDP Segments associated with the Message.   SeeAppendix A for a description of the DDP Segment format associated   with RDMA Read Response Messages.4.6.  Send Header and Send with Solicited Event Header   The Send and Send with Solicited Event Messages do not include an   RDMAP header.  The RDMAP layer passes to the DDP layer an RDMAP   Control Field.  The Send and Send with Solicited Event Messages are   fully described by the DDP Headers of the DDP Segments associated   with the Messages.   SeeAppendix A for a description of the DDP Segment format associated   with Send and Send with Solicited Event Messages.4.7.  Send with Invalidate Header and Send with SE and Invalidate Header   The Send with Invalidate and Send with Solicited Event and Invalidate   Messages do not include an RDMAP header.  The RDMAP layer passes to   the DDP layer an RDMAP Control Field and the Invalidate STag field   (seesection 4.1 RDMAP Control and Invalidate STag Field).  The Send   with Invalidate and Send with Solicited Event and Invalidate Messages   are fully described by the DDP Headers of the DDP Segments associated   with the Messages.   SeeAppendix A for a description of the DDP Segment format associated   with Send and Send with Solicited Event Messages.4.8.  Terminate Header   The Terminate Message carries a Terminate Header that contains   additional information associated with the cause of the Terminate.   The Terminate Header immediately follows the DDP header.  The RDMAP   layer passes to the DDP layer an RDMAP Control Field.  The following   figure depicts a Terminate Header that MUST be used for the Terminate   Message:Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007     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    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    |       Terminate Control             |      Reserved           |    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    |  DDP Segment Length  (if any) |                               |    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               +    |                                                               |    //                                                             //    |                  Terminated DDP Header (if any)               |    +                                                               +    |                                                               |    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    |                                                               |    //                                                             //    |                 Terminated RDMA Header (if any)               |    +                                                               +    |                                                               |    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                 Figure 7: Terminate Header Format      Terminate Control: 19 bits.          The Terminate Control field MUST have the format defined in          Figure 8 below.     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    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+    | Layer | EType |   Error Code  |HdrCt|    +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                    Figure 8: Terminate Control Field   *  Figure 9, "Terminate Control Field Values", defines the valid      values that MUST be used for this field.      *  Layer: 4 bits.         Identifies the layer that encountered the error.      *  EType (RDMA Error Type): 4 bits.         Identifies the type of error that caused the Terminate.  When         the error is detected at the RDMAP layer, the RDMAP layer         inserts the Error Type into this field.  When the error is         detected at an LLP layer, an LLP layer creates the Error TypeRecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007         and the DDP layer passes it up to the RDMAP layer, and the         RDMAP layer inserts it into this field.      *  Error Code: 8 bits.         This field identifies the specific error that caused the         Terminate.  When the error is detected at the RDMAP layer, the         RDMAP layer creates the Error Code.  When the error is detected         at an LLP layer, the LLP layer creates the Error Code, the DDP         layer passes it up to the RDMAP layer, and the RDMAP layer         inserts it into this field.      *  HdrCt: 3 bits.         Header control bits:         *  M: bit 16.  DDP Segment Length valid.  See Figure 10 for            when this bit SHOULD be set.         *  D: bit 17.  DDP Header Included.  See Figure 10 for when            this bit SHOULD be set.         *  R: bit 18.  RDMAP Header Included.  See Figure 10 for when            this bit SHOULD be set.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   -------+-----------+-------+-------------+------+--------------------   Layer  | Layer     | Error | Error Type  | Error| Error Code Name          | Name      | Type  | Name        | Code |   -------+-----------+-------+-------------+------+--------------------          |           | 0000b | Local       | None | None - This error          |           |       | Catastrophic|      | type does not have          |           |       | Error       |      | an error code. Any          |           |       |             |      | value in this field          |           |       |             |      | is acceptable.          |           +-------+-------------+------+--------------------          |           |       |             | 00X  | Invalid STag          |           |       |             +------+--------------------          |           |       |             | 01X  | Base or bounds          |           |       |             |      | violation          |           |       | Remote      +------+--------------------          |           | 0001b | Protection  | 02X  | Access rights          |           |       | Error       |      | violation          |           |       |             +------+--------------------   0000b  | RDMA      |       |             | 03X  | STag not associated          |           |       |             |      | with RDMAP Stream          |           |       |             +------+--------------------          |           |       |             | 04X  | TO wrap          |           |       |             +------+--------------------          |           |       |             | 09X  | STag cannot be          |           |       |             |      | Invalidated          |           |       |             +------+--------------------          |           |       |             | FFX  | Unspecified Error          |           +-------+-------------+------+--------------------          |           |       |             | 05X  | Invalid RDMAP          |           |       |             |      | version          |           |       |             +------+--------------------          |           |       |             | 06X  | Unexpected OpCode          |           |       | Remote      +------+--------------------          |           | 0010b | Operation   | 07X  | Catastrophic error,          |           |       | Error       |      | localized to RDMAP          |           |       |             |      | Stream          |           |       |             +------+--------------------          |           |       |             | 08X  | Catastrophic error,          |           |       |             |      | global          |           |       |             +------+--------------------          |           |       |             | 09X  | STag cannot be          |           |       |             |      | Invalidated          |           |       |             +------+--------------------          |           |       |             | FFX  | Unspecified ErrorRecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   -------+-----------+-------+-------------+------+--------------------   0001b  | DDP       | See DDP Specification [DDP] for a description of          |           | the values and names.   -------+-----------+-------+-----------------------------------------   0010b  | LLP       | For MPA, see MPA Specification [MPA] for a          |(e.g., MPA)| description of the values and names.   -------+-----------+-------+-----------------------------------------              Figure 9: Terminate Control Field Values      Reserved: 13 bits.  This field MUST be set to zero on transmit,      ignored on receive.      DDP Segment Length: 16 bits           The length handed up by the DDP layer when the error was           detected.  It MUST be valid if the M bit is set.  It MUST be           present when the D bit is set.      Terminated DDP Header: 112 bits for Tagged Messages and 144 bits      for Untagged Messages.           The DDP Header of the incoming Message that is associated           with the Terminate.  The DDP Header is not present if the           Terminate Error Type is a Local Catastrophic Error.  It MUST           be present if the D bit is set.      Terminated RDMA Header: 224 bits.           The Terminated RDMA Header is only sent back if the terminate           is associated with an RDMA Read Request Message.  It MUST be           present if the R bit is set.           If the terminate occurs before the first RDMA Read Request           byte is processed, the original RDMA Read Request Header is           sent back.           If the terminate occurs after the first RDMA Read Request           byte is processed, the RDMA Read Request Header is updated to           reflect the current location of the RDMA Read operation that           is in process:               *  Data Sink STag = Data Sink STag originally sent in the                  RDMA Read Request.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007               *  Data Sink Tagged Offset = Current offset into the Data                  Sink Tagged Buffer.  For example, if the RDMA Read                  Request was terminated after 2048 octets were sent,                  then the Data Sink Tagged Offset = the original Data                  Sink Tagged Offset + 2048.               *  Data Message size = Number of bytes left to transfer.               *  Data Source STag = Data Source STag in the RDMA Read                  Request.               *  Data Source Tagged Offset = Current offset into the                  Data Source Tagged Buffer.  For example, if the RDMA                  Read Request was terminated after 2048 octets were                  sent, then the Data Source Tagged Offset = the                  original Data Source Tagged Offset + 2048.   Note: if a given LLP does not define any termination codes for the   RDMAP Termination message to use, then none would be used for that   LLP.   Figure 10, "Error Type to RDMA Message Mapping", maps layer name and   error types to each RDMA Message type:Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   ---------+-------------+------------+------------+-----------------   Layer    | Error Type  | Terminate  | Terminate  | What type of   Name     | Name        | Includes   | Includes   | RDMA Message can            |             | DDP Header | RDMA Header| cause the error            |             | and DDP    |            |            |             | Segment    |            |            |             | Length     |            |   ---------+-------------+------------+------------+-----------------            | Local       | No         | No         | Any            | Catastrophic|            |            |            | Error       |            |            |            +-------------+------------+------------+-----------------            | Remote      | Yes, if    | Yes        | Only RDMA Read   RDMA     | Protection  | possible   |            | Request, Send            | Error       |            |            | with Invalidate,            |             |            |            | and Send with SE            |             |            |            | and Invalidate            +-------------+------------+------------+-----------------            | Remote      | Yes, if    | No         | Any            | Operation   | possible   |            |            | Error       |            |            |   ---------+-------------+------------+------------+-----------------   DDP      | See DDP Spec| Yes        | No         | Any            | [DDP]       |            |            |   ---------+-------------+------------+------------+-----------------   LLP      | See LLP Spec| No         | No         | Any            | (e.g., MPA) |            |            |            Figure 10: Error Type to RDMA Message Mapping5.  Data Transfer5.1.  RDMA Write Message   An RDMA Write is used by the Data Source to transfer data to a   previously Advertised Tagged Buffer at the Data Sink.  The RDMA Write   Message has the following semantics:   *  An RDMA Write Message MUST reference a Tagged Buffer.  That is,      the Data Source RDMAP layer MUST request that the DDP layer mark      the Message as Tagged.   *  A valid RDMA Write Message MUST NOT be delivered to the Data      Sink's ULP (i.e., it is placed by the DDP layer).   *  At the Remote Peer, when an invalid RDMA Write Message is      delivered to the Remote Peer's RDMAP layer, an error is surfaced      (seeSection 7.1, "RDMAP Error Surfacing").Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   *  The Tagged Offset of a Tagged Buffer MAY start at a non-zero      value.   *  An RDMA Write Message MAY target all or part of a previously      Advertised Buffer.   *  The RDMAP does not define how the buffer(s) are used by an      outbound RDMA Write or how they are addressed.  For example, an      implementation of RDMA may choose to allow a gather-list of non-      contiguous data blocks to be the source of an RDMA Write.  In this      case, the data blocks would be combined by the Data Source and      sent as a single RDMA Write Message to the Data Sink.   *  The Data Source RDMAP layer MUST issue RDMA Write Messages to the      DDP layer in the order they were submitted by the ULP.   *  At the Data Source, a subsequent Send (Send with Invalidate, Send      with Solicited Event, or Send with Solicited Event and Invalidate)      Message MAY be used to signal Delivery of previous RDMA Write      Messages to the Data Sink, if the ULP chooses to signal Delivery      in this fashion.   *  If the Local Peer wishes to write to multiple Tagged Buffers on      the Remote Peer, the Local Peer MUST use multiple RDMA Write      Messages.  That is, a single RDMA Write Message can only write to      one remote Tagged Buffer.   *  The Data Source MAY issue a zero-length RDMA Write Message.5.2.  RDMA Read Operation   The RDMA Read operation MUST consist of a single RDMA Read Request   Message and a single RDMA Read Response Message.5.2.1.  RDMA Read Request Message   An RDMA Read Request is used by the Data Sink to transfer data from a   previously Advertised Tagged Buffer at the Data Source to a Tagged   Buffer at the Data Sink.  The RDMA Read Request Message has the   following semantics:   *  An RDMA Read Request Message MUST reference an Untagged Buffer.      That is, the Local Peer's RDMAP layer MUST request that the DDP      mark the Message as Untagged.   *  One RDMA Read Request Message MUST consume one Untagged Buffer.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   *  The Remote Peer's RDMAP layer MUST process an RDMA Read Request      Message.  A valid RDMA Read Request Message MUST NOT be delivered      to the Data Sink's ULP (i.e., it is processed by the RDMAP layer).   *  At the Remote Peer, when an invalid RDMA Read Request Message is      delivered to the Remote Peer's RDMAP layer, an error is surfaced      (seeSection 7.1, "RDMAP Error Surfacing").   *  An RDMA Read Request Message MUST reference the RDMA Read Request      Queue.  That is, the Local Peer's RDMAP layer MUST request that      the DDP layer set the Queue Number field to one.   *  The Local Peer MUST pass to the DDP layer RDMA Read Request      Messages in the order they were submitted by the ULP.   *  The Remote Peer MUST process the RDMA Read Request Messages in the      order they were sent.   *  If the Local Peer wishes to read from multiple Tagged Buffers on      the Remote Peer, the Local Peer MUST use multiple RDMA Read      Request Messages.  That is, a single RDMA Read Request Message      MUST only read from one remote Tagged Buffer.   *  AN RDMA Read Request Message MAY target all or part of a      previously Advertised Buffer.   *  If the Data Source receives a valid RDMA Read Request Message, it      MUST respond with a valid RDMA Read Response Message.   *  The Data Sink MAY issue a zero-length RDMA Read Request Message by      setting the RDMA Read Message Size field to zero in the RDMA Read      Request Header.   *  If the Data Source receives a non-zero-length RDMA Read Message      Size, the Data Source RDMAP MUST validate the Data Source STag and      Data Source Tagged Offset contained in the RDMA Read Request      Header.   *  If the Data Source receives an RDMA Read Request Header with the      RDMA Read Message Size set to zero, the Data Source RDMAP:      *  MUST NOT validate the Data Source STag and Data Source Tagged         Offset contained in the RDMA Read Request Header, and      *  MUST respond with a zero-length RDMA Read Response Message.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 20075.2.2.  RDMA Read Response Message   The RDMA Read Response Message uses the DDP Tagged Buffer Model to   Deliver the contents of a previously requested Data Source Tagged   Buffer to the Data Sink, without any involvement from the ULP at the   Remote Peer.  The RDMA Read Response Message has the following   semantics:   *  The RDMA Read Response Message for the associated RDMA Read      Request Message travels in the opposite direction.   *  An RDMA Read Response Message MUST reference a Tagged Buffer.      That is, the Data Source RDMAP layer MUST request that the DDP      mark the Message as Tagged.   *  The Data Source MUST ensure that a sufficient number of Untagged      Buffers are available on the RDMA Read Request Queue (Queue with      DDP Queue Number 1) to support the maximum number of RDMA Read      Requests negotiated by the ULP.   *  The RDMAP layer MUST Deliver the RDMA Read Response Message to the      ULP.   *  At the Remote Peer, when an invalid RDMA Read Response Message is      delivered to the Remote Peer's RDMAP layer, an error is surfaced      (seeSection 7.1, "RDMAP Error Surfacing").   *  The Tagged Offset of a Tagged Buffer MAY start at a non-zero      value.   *  The Data Source RDMAP layer MUST pass RDMA Read Response Messages      to the DDP layer, in the order that the RDMA Read Request Messages      were received by the RDMAP layer, at the Data Source.   *  The Data Sink MAY validate that the STag, Tagged Offset, and      length of the RDMA Read Response Message are the same as the STag,      Tagged Offset, and length included in the corresponding RDMA Read      Request Message.   *  A single RDMA Read Response Message MUST write to one remote      Tagged Buffer.  If the Data Sink wishes to read multiple Tagged      Buffers, the Data Sink can use multiple RDMA Read Request      Messages.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 20075.3.  Send Message Type   The Send Message Type uses the DDP Untagged Buffer Model to transfer   data from the Data Source into an Untagged Buffer at the Data Sink.   *  A Send Message Type MUST reference an Untagged Buffer.  That is,      the Local Peer's RDMAP layer MUST request that the DDP layer mark      the Message as Untagged.   *  One Send Message Type MUST consume one Untagged Buffer.      *  The ULP Message sent using a Send Message Type MAY be less than         or equal to the size of the consumed Untagged Buffer.  The         RDMAP layer communicates to the ULP the size of the data         written into the Untagged Buffer.      *  If the ULP Message sent via Send Message Type is larger than         the Data Sink's Untagged Buffer, it is an error (seeSection9.1, "RDMAP Error Surfacing").   *  At the Remote Peer, the Send Message Type MUST be Delivered to the      Remote Peer's ULP in the order they were sent.   *  After the Send with Solicited Event or Send with Solicited Event      and Invalidate Message is Delivered to the ULP, the RDMAP MAY      generate an Event, if the Data Sink is configured to generate such      an Event.   *  At the Remote Peer, when an invalid Send Message Type is Delivered      to the Remote Peer's RDMAP layer, an error is surfaced (seeSection 7.1, "RDMAP Error Surfacing").   *  The RDMAP does not specify the structure of the buffer(s) used by      an outbound RDMA Write nor does it specify how the buffer(s) are      addressed.  For example, an implementation of RDMA may choose to      allow a gather-list of non-contiguous data blocks to be the source      of a Send Message Type.  In this case, the data blocks would be      combined by the Data Source and sent as a single Send Message Type      to the Data Sink.   *  For a Send Message Type, the Local Peer's RDMAP layer MUST request      that the DDP layer set the Queue Number field to zero.   *  The Local Peer MUST issue Send Message Type Messages in the order      they were submitted by the ULP.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   *  The Data Source MAY pass a zero-length Send Message Type.  A      zero-length Send Message Type MUST consume an Untagged Buffer at      the Data Sink.  A Send with Invalidate or Send with Solicited      Event and Invalidate Message MUST reference an STag.  That is, the      Local Peer's RDMAP layer MUST pass the RDMA control field and the      STag that will be Invalidated to the DDP layer.   *  When the Send with Invalidate and Send with Solicited Event and      Invalidate Message are Delivered to the Remote Peer's RDMAP layer,      the RDMAP layer MUST:      *  Verify the STag that is associated with the RDMAP Stream; and      *  Invalidate the STag if it is associated with the RDMAP Stream;         or issue a Terminate Message with the STag Cannot be         Invalidated Terminate Error Code, if the STag is not associated         with the RDMAP Stream.5.4.  Terminate Message   The Terminate Message uses the DDP Untagged Buffer Model to   transfer-error-related information from the Data Source into an   Untagged Buffer at the Data Sink and then ceases all further   communications on the underlying DDP Stream.  The Terminate Message   has the following semantics:   *  A Terminate Message MUST reference an Untagged Buffer.  That is,      the Local Peer's RDMAP layer MUST request that the DDP layer mark      the Message as Untagged.   *  A Terminate Message references the Terminate Queue.  That is, the      Local Peer's RDMAP layer MUST request that the DDP layer set the      Queue Number field to two.   *  One Terminate Message MUST consume one Untagged Buffer.   *  On a single RDMAP Stream, the RDMAP layer MUST guarantee placement      of a single Terminate Message.   *  A Terminate Message MUST be Delivered to the Remote Peer's RDMAP      layer.  The RDMAP layer MUST Deliver the Terminate Message to the      ULP.   *  At the Remote Peer, when an invalid Terminate Message is delivered      to the Remote Peer's RDMAP layer, an error is surfaced (seeSection 7.1 "RDMAP Error Surfacing").Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   *  The RDMAP layer Completes in error all ULP operations that have      not been provided to the DDP layer.   *  After sending a Terminate Message on an RDMAP Stream, the Local      Peer MUST NOT send any more Messages on that specific RDMAP      Stream.   *  After receiving a Terminate Message on an RDMAP Stream, the Remote      Peer MAY stop sending Messages on that specific RDMAP Stream.5.5.  Ordering and Completions   It is important to understand the difference between Placement and   Delivery ordering since RDMAP provides quite different semantics for   the two.   Note that many current protocols, both as used in the Internet and   elsewhere, assume that data is both Placed and Delivered in order.   Taking advantage of this fact allowed applications to take a variety   of shortcuts.  For RDMAP, many of these shortcuts are no longer safe   to use, and could cause application failure.   The following rules apply to implementations of the RDMAP protocol.   Note that in these rules, Send includes Send, Send with Invalidate,   Send with Solicited Event, and Send with Solicited Event and   Invalidate:   1.  RDMAP does not provide ordering among Messages on different RDMAP       Streams.   2.  RDMAP does not provide ordering between operations that are       generated from the two ends of an RDMAP Stream.   3.  RDMA Messages that use Tagged and Untagged Buffers MAY be Placed       in any order.  If an application uses overlapping buffers (points       different Messages or portions of a single Message at the same       buffer), then it is possible that the last incoming write to the       Data Sink buffer will not be the last outgoing data sent from the       Data Source.   4.  For a Send operation, the contents of an Untagged Buffer at the       Data Sink MAY be indeterminate until the Send is Delivered to the       ULP at the Data Sink.   5.  For an RDMA Write operation, the contents of the Tagged Buffer at       the Data Sink MAY be indeterminate until a subsequent Send is       Delivered to the ULP at the Data Sink.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   6.  For an RDMA Read operation, the contents of the Tagged Buffer at       the Data Sink MAY be indeterminate until the RDMA Read Response       Message has been Delivered at the Local Peer.   Statements 4, 5, and 6 imply "no peeking" at the data to see if it is   done.  It is possible for some data to arrive before logically   earlier data does, and peeking may cause unpredictable application   failure.   7.  If the ULP or Application modifies the contents of Tagged or       Untagged Buffers, which are being modified by an RDMA Operation       while the RDMAP is processing the RDMA Operation, the state of       the Buffers is indeterminate.   8.  If the ULP or Application modifies the contents of Tagged or       Untagged Buffers, which are read by an RDMA Operation while the       RDMAP is processing the RDMA Operation, the results of the read       are indeterminate.   9.  The Completion of an RDMA Write or Send Operation at the Local       Peer does not guarantee that the ULP Message has yet reached the       Remote Peer ULP Buffer or been examined by the Remote ULP.   10. Send Messages MUST be Delivered to the ULP at the Remote Peer       after they are Delivered to RDMAP by DDP and in the order that       they were Delivered to RDMAP.       Note that DDP ordering rules ensure that this will be the same       order that they were submitted at the Local Peer and that any       prior RDMA Writes have been submitted for ordered Placement at       the Remote Peer.  This means that when the ULP sees the Delivery       of the Send, the memory buffers targeted by any preceding RDMA       Writes and Sends are available to be accessed locally or remotely       as authorized.  If the ULP overlaps its buffers for different       operations, the data from the RDMA Write or Send may be       overwritten by subsequent RDMA Operations before the ULP receives       and processes the Delivery.   11. RDMA Read Response Messages MUST be Delivered to the ULP at the       Remote Peer after they are Delivered to RDMAP by DDP and in the       order that the they were Delivered to RDMAP.       DDP ordering rules ensure that this will be the same order that       they were submitted at the Local Peer.  This means that when the       ULP sees the Delivery of the RDMA Read Response, the memory       buffers targeted by the RDMA Read Response are available to be       accessed locally or remotely as authorized.  If the ULP overlapsRecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007       its buffers for different operations, the data from the RDMA Read       Response may be overwritten by subsequent RDMA Operations before       the ULP receives and processes the Delivery.   12. RDMA Read Request Messages, including zero-length RDMA Read       Requests, MUST NOT start processing at the Remote Peer until they       have been Delivered to RDMAP by DDP.       Note: the ULP is assured that data written can be read back.  For       example, if          a) an RDMA Read Request is issued by the local peer,          b) the Request targets the same ULP Buffer as a preceding Send             or RDMA Write (in the same direction as the RDMA Read             Request), and          c) there are no other sources of update for the ULP Buffer,       then the Remote Peer will send back the data written by the Send       or RDMA Write.  That is, for this example, the ULP Buffer is       Advertised for use on a series of RDMA Messages, is only valid on       the RDMAP Stream for which it is Advertised, and is not locally       updated while the series of RDMAP Messages are performed.  For       this example, order rule (12) assures that subsequent local or       remote accesses to the ULP Buffer contain the data written by the       Send or RDMA Write.       RDMA Read Response Messages MAY be generated at the Remote Peer       after subsequent RDMA Write Messages or Send Messages have been       Placed or Delivered.  Therefore, when an application does an RDMA       Read Request followed by an RDMA Write (or Send) to the same       buffer, it may get the data from the later RDMA Write (or Send)       in the RDMA Read Response Message, even though the operations       completed in order at the Local Peer.  If this behavior is not       desired, the Local Peer ULP must Fence the later RDMA write (or       Send) by withholding the RDMA Write Message until all outstanding       RDMA Read Responses have been Delivered.   13. The RDMAP layer MUST submit RDMA Messages to the DDP layer in the       order the RDMA Operations are submitted to the RDMAP layer by the       ULP.   14. A Send or RDMA Write Message MUST NOT be considered Complete at       the Local Peer (Data Source) until it has been successfully       completed at the DDP layer.   15. RDMA Operations MUST be Completed at the Local Peer in the order       that they were submitted by the ULP.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   16. At the Data Sink, an incoming Send Message MUST be Delivered to       the ULP only after the DDP Message has been Delivered to the       RDMAP layer by the DDP layer.   17. RDMA Read Response Message processing at the Remote Peer (reading       the specified Tagged Buffer) MUST be started only after the RDMA       Read Request Message has been Delivered by the DDP layer (thus,       all previous RDMA Messages have been properly submitted for       ordered Placement).   18. Send Messages MAY be Completed at the Remote Peer (Data Sink)       before prior incoming RDMA Read Request Messages have completed       their response processing.   19. An RDMA Read operation MUST NOT be Completed at the Local Peer       until the DDP layer Delivers the associated incoming RDMA Read       Response Message.   20. If more than one outstanding RDMA Read Request Messages are       supported by both peers, the RDMA Read Response Messages MUST be       submitted to the DDP layer on the Remote Peer in the order the       RDMA Read Request Messages were Delivered by DDP, but the actual       read of the buffer contents MAY take place in any order at the       Remote Peer.       This simplifies Local Peer Completion processing for RDMA Reads       in that a Delivered RDMA Read Response MUST be sufficient to       Complete the RDMA Read operation.6.  RDMAP Stream Management   RDMAP Stream management consists of RDMAP Stream Initialization and   RDMAP Stream Termination.6.1.  Stream Initialization   RDMAP Stream initialization occurs after the LLP Stream has been   created (e.g., for DDP/MPA over TCP, the first TCP Segment after the   SYN, SYN/ACK exchange).  The ULP is responsible for transitioning the   LLP Stream into RDMA-enabled mode.  The switch to RDMA mode typically   occurs sometime after LLP Stream setup.  Once in RDMA enabled mode,   an implementation MUST send only RDMA Messages across the transport   Stream until the RDMAP Stream is torn down.   For each direction of an RDMAP Stream:   *  For a given RDMAP Stream, the number of outstanding RDMA Read      Requests is limited per RDMAP Stream direction.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   *  It is the ULP's responsibility to set the maximum number of      outstanding, inbound RDMA Read Requests per RDMAP Stream      direction.   *  The RDMAP layer MUST provide the maximum number of outstanding,      inbound RDMA Read Requests per RDMAP Stream direction that were      negotiated between the ULP and the Local Peer's RDMAP layer.  The      negotiation mechanism is outside the scope of this specification.   *  It is the ULP's responsibility to set the maximum number of      outstanding, outbound RDMA Read Requests per RDMAP Stream      direction.   *  The RDMAP layer MUST provide the maximum number of outstanding,      outbound RDMA Read Requests for the RDMAP Stream direction that      were negotiated between the ULP and the Local Peer's RDMAP layer.      The negotiation mechanism is outside the scope of this      specification.   *  The Local Peer's ULP is responsible for negotiating with the      Remote Peer's ULP the maximum number of outstanding RDMA Read      Requests for the RDMAP Stream direction.  It is recommended that      the ULP set the maximum number of outstanding, inbound RDMA Read      Requests equal to the maximum number of outstanding, outbound RDMA      Read Requests for a given RDMAP Stream direction.   *  For outbound RDMA Read Requests, the RDMAP layer MUST NOT exceed      the maximum number of outstanding, outbound RDMA Read Requests      that were negotiated between the ULP and the Local Peer's RDMAP      layer.   *  For inbound RDMA Read Requests, the RDMAP layer MUST NOT exceed      the maximum number of outstanding, inbound RDMA Read Requests that      were negotiated between the ULP and the Local Peer's RDMAP layer.6.2.  Stream Teardown   There are three methods for terminating an RDMAP Stream: ULP Graceful   Termination, RDMAP Abortive Termination, and LLP Abortive   Termination.   The ULP is responsible for performing ULP Graceful Termination.   After a ULP Graceful Termination, either side of the Stream can   initiate LLP Graceful Termination, using the graceful termination   mechanism provided by the LLP.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 42]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   RDMAP Abortive Termination allows the RDMAP to issue a Terminate   Message describing the reason the RDMAP Stream was terminated.  The   next section (6.2.1, "RDMAP Abortive Termination") describes the   RDMAP Abortive Termination in detail.   LLP Abortive Termination results due to an LLP error and causes the   RDMAP Stream to be torn down midstream, without an RDMAP Terminate   Message.  While this last method is highly undesirable, it is   possible, and the ULP should take this into consideration.6.2.1.  RDMAP Abortive Termination   RDMAP defines a Terminate operation that SHOULD be invoked when   either an RDMAP error is encountered or an LLP error is surfaced to   the RDMAP layer by the LLP.   It is not always possible to send the Terminate Message.  For   example, certain LLP errors may occur that cause the LLP Stream to be   torn down a) before RDMAP is aware of the error, b) before RDMAP is   able to send the Terminate Message, or c) after RDMAP has posted the   Terminate Message to the LLP, but it has not yet been transmitted by   the LLP.   Note that an RDMAP Abortive Termination may entail loss of data.  In   general, when a Terminate Message is received, it is impossible to   tell for sure what unacknowledged RDMA Messages were Completed   successfully at the Remote Peer.  Thus, the state of all outstanding   RDMA Messages is indeterminate, and the Messages SHOULD be considered   Completed in error.   When a peer sends or receives a Terminate Message, it MAY immediately   tear down the LLP Stream.  The peer SHOULD perform a graceful LLP   teardown to ensure the Terminate Message is successfully Delivered.   SeeSection 4.8, "Terminate Header", for a description of the   Terminate Message and its contents.  SeeSection 5.4, "Terminate   Message", for a description of the Terminate Message semantics.7.  RDMAP Error Management   The RDMAP protocol does not have RDMAP- or DDP-layer error recovery   operations built in.  If everything is working, the LLP guarantees   will ensure that the Messages are arriving at the destination.   If errors are detected at the RDMAP or DDP layer, then the RDMAP,   DDP, and LLP Streams are Abortively Terminated (seeSection 4.8,   "Terminate Header").Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 43]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   In general, poor implementations or improper ULP programming cause   the errors detected at the RDMAP and DDP layers.  In these cases,   returning a diagnostic termination error Message and closing the   RDMAP Stream is far simpler than attempting to maintain the RDMAP   Stream, particularly when the cause of the error is not known.   If an LLP does not support teardown of a Stream independent of other   Streams, and an RDMAP error results in the Termination of a specific   Stream, then the LLP MUST label the Stream as an erroneous Stream and   MUST NOT allow any further data transfer on that Stream after RDMAP   requests the Stream to be torn down.   For a specific LLP connection, when all Streams are either gracefully   torn down or are labeled as erroneous Streams, the LLP connection   MUST be torn down.   Since errors are detected at the Remote Peer (possibly long) after   RDMA Messages are passed to the DDP and the LLP at the Local Peer and   after the RDMA Operations conveyed by the Messages are Completed, the   sender cannot easily determine which of its Messages have been   received.  (RDMA Reads are an exception to this rule.)   For a list of errors returned to the Remote Peer as a result of an   Abortive Termination, seeSection 4.8, "Terminate Header".7.1.  RDMAP Error Surfacing   If an error occurs at the Local Peer, the RDMAP layer MUST attempt to   inform the local ULP that the error has occurred.   The Local Peer MUST send a Terminate Message for each of the   following cases:   1.  For errors detected while creating RDMA Write, Send, Send with       Invalidate, Send with Solicited Event, Send with Solicited Event       and Invalidate, or RDMA Read Requests, or other reasons not       directly associated with an incoming Message, the Terminate       Message and Error code are sent instead of the request.  In this       case, the Error Type and Error Code fields are included in the       Terminate Message, but the Terminated DDP Header and Terminated       RDMA Header fields are set to zero.   2.  For errors detected on an incoming RDMA Write, Send, Send with       Invalidate, Send with Solicited Event, Send with Solicited Event       and Invalidate, or Read Response Message (after the Message has       been Delivered by DDP), the Terminate Message is sent at the       earliest possible opportunity, preferably in the next outgoing       RDMA Message.  In this case, the Error Type, Error Code, ULP PDURecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 44]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007       Length, and Terminated DDP Header fields are included in the       Terminate Message, but the Terminated RDMA Header field is set to       zero.   3.  For errors detected on an incoming RDMA Read Request Message       (after the Message has been Delivered by DDP), the Terminate       Message is sent at the earliest possible opportunity, preferably       in the next outgoing RDMA Message.  In this case, the Error Type,       Error Code, ULP PDU Length, Terminated DDP Header, and Terminated       RDMA Header fields are included in the Terminate Message.   4.  If more than one error is detected on incoming RDMA Messages,       before the Terminate Message can be sent, then the first RDMA       Message (and its associated DDP Segment) that experienced an       error MUST be captured by the Terminate Message, in accordance       with rules 2 and 3 above.7.2.  Errors Detected at the Remote Peer on Incoming RDMA Messages   On incoming RDMA Writes, RDMA Read Response, Sends, Send with   Invalidate, Send with Solicited Event, Send with Solicited Event and   Invalidate, and Terminate Messages, the following must be validated:   1.  The DDP layer MUST validate all DDP Segment fields.   2.  The RDMA OpCode MUST be valid.   3.  The RDMA Version MUST be valid.       Additionally, on incoming Send with Invalidate and Send with       Solicited Event and Invalidate Messages, the following must also       be validated:   4.  The Invalidate STag MUST be valid.   5.  The STag MUST be associated to this RDMAP Stream.   On incoming RDMA Request Messages, the following must be validated:   1.  The DDP layer MUST validate all Untagged DDP Segment fields.   2.  The RDMA OpCode MUST be valid.   3.  The RDMA Version MUST be valid.   4.  For non-zero length RDMA Read Request Messages:       a.  The Data Source STag MUST be valid.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 45]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007       b.  The Data Source STag MUST be associated to this RDMAP Stream.       c.  The Data Source Tagged Offset MUST fall in the range of legal           offsets associated with the Data Source STag.       d.  The sum of the Data Source Tagged Offset and the RDMA Read           Message Size MUST fall in the range of legal offsets           associated with the Data Source STag.       e.  The sum of the Data Source Tagged Offset and the RDMA Read           Message Size MUST NOT cause the Data Source Tagged Offset to           wrap.8.  Security Considerations   This section references the resources that discuss protocol- specific   security considerations and implications of using RDMAP with existing   security services.  A detailed analysis of the security issues around   implementation and use of the RDMAP can be found in [RDMASEC].   [RDMASEC] introduces the RDMA reference model and discusses how the   resources of this model are vulnerable to attacks and the types of   attack these vulnerabilities are subject to.  It also details the   levels of Trust available in this peer-to-peer model and how this   defines the nature of resource sharing.   The IPsec requirements for RDDP are based on the version of IPsec   specified inRFC 2401 [RFC2401] and related RFCs, as profiled byRFC3723 [RFC3723], despite the existence of a newer version of IPsec   specified inRFC 4301 [RFC4301] and related RFCs [RFC4303],   [RFC4306], [RFC4835].  One of the important early applications of the   RDDP protocols is their use with iSCSI [iSER]; RDDP's IPsec   requirements follow those of IPsec in order to facilitate that usage   by allowing a common profile of IPsec to be used with iSCSI and the   RDDP protocols.  In the future,RFC 3723 may be updated to the newer   version of IPsec, and the IPsec security requirements of any such   update should apply uniformly to iSCSI and the RDDP protocols.8.1.  Summary of RDMAP-Specific Security Requirements   [RDMASEC] defines the security requirements for the implementation of   the components of the RDMA reference model, namely the RDMA enabled   NIC (RNIC) and the Privileged Resource Manager.  An RDMAP   implementation conforming to this specification MUST conform to these   requirements.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 46]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 20078.1.1.  RDMAP (RNIC) Requirements   RDMAP provides several countermeasures for all types of attacks as   introduced in [RDMASEC].  In the following, this specification lists   all security requirements that MUST be implemented by the RNIC.  A   more detailed discussion of RNIC security requirements can be found   in Section 5 of [RDMASEC].   1.  An RNIC MUST ensure that a specific Stream in a specific       Protection Domain cannot access an STag in a different Protection       Domain.   2.  An RNIC MUST ensure that if an STag is limited in scope to a       single Stream, no other Stream can use the STag.   3.  An RNIC MUST ensure that a Remote Peer is not able to access       memory outside of the buffer specified when the STag was enabled       for remote access.   4.  An RNIC MUST provide a mechanism for the ULP to establish and       revoke the association of a ULP Buffer to an STag and TO range.   5.  An RNIC MUST provide a mechanism for the ULP to establish and       revoke read, write, or read and write access to the ULP Buffer       referenced by an STag.   6.  An RNIC MUST ensure that the network interface can no longer       modify an Advertised Buffer after the ULP revokes remote access       rights for an STag.   7.  An RNIC MUST ensure that a Remote Peer is not able to invalidate       an STag enabled for remote access, if the STag is shared on       multiple streams.   8.  An RNIC MUST choose the value of STags in a way difficult to       predict.  It is RECOMMENDED to sparsely populate them over the       full available range.   9.  An RNIC MUST NOT enable sharing a Completion Queue (CQ) across       ULPs that do not share partial mutual trust.   10. An RNIC MUST ensure that if a CQ overflows, any Streams that do       not use the CQ MUST remain unaffected.   11. An RNIC implementation SHOULD provide a mechanism to cap the       number of outstanding RDMA Read Requests.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 47]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   12. An RNIC MUST NOT enable firmware to be loaded on the RNIC       directly from an untrusted Local Peer or Remote Peer, unless the       Peer is properly authenticated*, and the update is done via a       secure protocol, such as IPsec.       * by a mechanism outside the scope of this specification.  The         mechanism presumably entails authenticating that the remote ULP         has the right to perform the update.8.1.2.  Privileged Resource Manager Requirements   With RDMAP, all reservations of local resources are initiated from   local ULPs.  To protect from local attacks including unfair resource   distribution and gaining unauthorized access to RNIC resources, a   Privileged Resource Manager (PRM) must be implemented, which manages   all local resource allocation.  Note that the PRM must not be   provided as an independent component, and its functionality can also   be implemented as part of the privileged ULP or as part of the RNIC   itself.   A PRM implementation must meet the following security requirements (a   more detailed discussion of PRM security requirements can be found in   Section 5 of [RDMASEC]):   1.  All Non-Privileged ULP interactions with the RNIC Engine that       could affect other ULPs MUST be done using the Resource Manager       as a proxy.   2.  All ULP resource allocation requests for scarce resources MUST       also be done using a Privileged Resource Manager.   3.  The Privileged Resource Manager MUST NOT assume that different       ULPs share Partial Mutual Trust unless there is a mechanism to       ensure that the ULPs do indeed share partial mutual trust.   4.  If Non-Privileged ULPs are supported, the Privileged Resource       Manager MUST verify that the Non-Privileged ULP has the right to       access a specific Data Buffer before allowing an STag for which       the ULP has access rights to be associated with a specific Data       Buffer.   5.  The Privileged Resource Manager MUST control the allocation of CQ       entries.   6.  The Privileged Resource Manager SHOULD prevent a Local Peer from       allocating more than its fair share of resources.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 48]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   7.  RDMA Read Request Queue resource consumption MUST be controlled       by the Privileged Resource Manager such that RDMAP/DDP Streams       that do not share Partial Mutual Trust do not share RDMA Read       Request Queue resources.   8.  If an RNIC provides the ability to share receive buffers across       multiple Streams, the combination of the RNIC and the Privileged       Resource Manager MUST be able to detect if the Remote Peer is       attempting to consume more than its fair share of resources so       that the Local Peer can apply countermeasures to detect and       prevent the attack.8.2.  Security Services for RDMAP   RDMAP is using IP-based network services to control, read, and write   data buffers over the network.  Therefore, all exchanged control and   data packets are vulnerable to spoofing, tampering, and information   disclosure attacks.   RDMAP Streams that are subject to impersonation attacks or Stream   hijacking attacks can be authenticated, have their integrity   protected, and be protected from replay attacks.  Furthermore,   confidentiality protection can be used to protect from eavesdropping.8.2.1.  Available Security Services   The IPsec protocol suite [RFC2401] defines strong countermeasures to   protect an IP stream from those attacks.  Several levels of   protection can guarantee session confidentiality, per-packet source   authentication, per-packet integrity, and correct packet sequencing.   RDMAP security may also profit from SSL or TLS security services   provided for TCP-based ULPs [RFC4346].  Used underneath RDMAP, these   security services also provide for stream authentication, data   integrity, and confidentiality.  As discussed in [RDMASEC],   limitations on the maximum packet length to be carried over the   network and potentially inefficient out-of-order packet processing at   the data sink make SSL and TLS less appropriate for RDMAP than IPsec.   If SSL is layered on top of RDMAP, SSL does not protect the RDMAP   headers.  Thus, a man-in-the-middle attack can still occur by   modifying the RDMAP header to incorrectly place the data into the   wrong buffer, thus effectively corrupting the data stream.   By remaining independent of ULP and LLP security protocols, RDMAP   will benefit from continuing improvements at those layers.  Users are   provided flexibility to adapt to their specific security requirements   and the ability to adapt to future security challenges.  Given this,Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 49]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   the vulnerabilities of RDMAP to active third-party interference are   no greater than any other protocol running over an LLP such as TCP or   SCTP.8.2.2.  Requirements for IPsec Services for RDMAP   Because IPsec is designed to secure arbitrary IP packet streams,   including streams where packets are lost, RDMAP can run on top of   IPsec without any change.  IPsec packets are processed (e.g.,   integrity checked and possibly decrypted) in the order they are   received, and an RDMAP Data Sink will process the decrypted RDMA   Messages contained in these packets in the same manner as RDMA   Messages contained in unsecured IP packets.   The IP Storage working group has defined the normative IPsec   requirements for IP Storage [RFC3723].  Portions of this   specification are applicable to the RDMAP.  In particular, a   compliant implementation of IPsec services for RDMAP MUST meet the   requirements as outlined inSection 2.3 of [RFC3723].  Without   replicating the detailed discussion in [RFC3723], this includes the   following requirements:   1.  The implementation MUST support IPsec ESP [RFC2406], as well as       the replay protection mechanisms of IPsec.  When ESP is utilized,       per-packet data origin authentication, integrity, and replay       protection MUST be used.   2.  It MUST support ESP in tunnel mode and MAY implement ESP in       transport mode.   3.  It MUST support IKE [RFC2409] for peer authentication,       negotiation of security associations, and key management, using       the IPsec DOI [RFC2407].   4.  It MUST NOT interpret the receipt of a IKE Phase 2 delete message       as a reason for tearing down the RDMAP stream.  Since IPsec       acceleration hardware may only be able to handle a limited number       of active IKE Phase 2 SAs, idle SAs may be dynamically brought       down, and a new SA be brought up again, if activity resumes.   5.  It MUST support peer authentication using a pre-shared key, and       MAY support certificate-based peer authentication using digital       signatures.  Peer authentication using the public key encryption       methods [RFC2409] SHOULD NOT be used.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 50]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   6.  It MUST support IKE Main Mode and SHOULD support Aggressive Mode.       IKE Main Mode with pre-shared key authentication SHOULD NOT be       used when either of the peers uses a dynamically assigned IP       address.   7.  When digital signatures are used to achieve authentication,       either IKE Main Mode or IKE Aggressive Mode MAY be used.  In       these cases, an IKE negotiator SHOULD use IKE Certificate Request       Payload(s) to specify the certificate authority (or authorities)       that are trusted in accordance with its local policy.  IKE       negotiators SHOULD check the pertinent Certificate Revocation       List (CRL) before accepting a PKI certificate for use in IKE's       authentication procedures.   8.  Access to locally stored secret information (pre-shared or       private key for digital signing) must be suitably restricted,       since compromise of the secret information nullifies the security       properties of the IKE/IPsec protocols.   9.  It MUST follow the guidelines ofSection 2.3.4 of [RFC3723] on       the setting of IKE parameters to achieve a high level of       interoperability without requiring extensive configuration.   Furthermore, implementation and deployment of the IPsec services for   RDDP should follow the Security Considerations outlined inSection 5   of [RFC3723].9.  IANA Considerations   This document requests no direct action from IANA.  The following   consideration is listed here as commentary.   If RDMAP was enabled a priori for a ULP by connecting to a well-known   port, this well-known port would be registered for the RDMAP with   IANA.  The registration of the well-known port will be the   responsibility of the ULP specification.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 51]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 200710.  References10.1.  Normative References   [DDP]     Shah, H., Pinkerton, J., Recio, R., and P. Culley, "Direct             Data Placement over Reliable Transports",RFC 5041, October             2007.   [iSER]    Ko, M., Chadalapaka, M., Hufferd, J., Elzur, U., Shah, H.,             and P. Thaler, "Internet Small Computer System Interface             (iSCSI) Extensions for Remote Direct Memory Access (RDMA)"RFC 5046, October 2007.   [MPA]     Culley, P., Elzur, U., Recio, R., Bailey, S., and J.             Carrier, "Marker PDU Aligned Framing for TCP             Specification",RFC 5044, October 2007.   [RDMASEC] Pinkerton, J. and E. Deleganes, "Direct Data Placement             Protocol (DDP) / Remote Direct Memory Access Protocol             (RDMAP) Security",RFC 5042, October 2007.   [RFC2119] Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate             Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC2406] Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "IP Encapsulating Security             Payload (ESP)",RFC 2406, November 1998.   [RFC2407] Piper, D., "The Internet IP Security Domain of             Interpretation of ISAKMP",RFC 2407, November 1998.   [RFC2409] Harkins, D. and D. Carrel, "The Internet Key Exchange             (IKE)",RFC 2409, November 1998.   [RFC3723] Aboba, B., Tseng, J., Walker, J., Rangan, V., and F.             Travostino, "Securing Block Storage Protocols over IP",RFC3723, April 2004.   [RFC2401] Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for the             Internet Protocol",RFC 2401, November 1998.   [SCTP]    Stewart, R., Ed., "Stream Control Transmission Protocol",RFC 4960, September 2007.   [TCP]     Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", STD 7,RFC793, September 1981.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 52]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 200710.2.  Informative References   [RFC4301] Kent, S. and K. Seo, "Security Architecture for the             Internet Protocol",RFC 4301, December 2005.   [RFC4303] Kent, S., "IP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)",RFC4303, December 2005.   [RFC4306] Kaufman, C., "Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2) Protocol",RFC4306, December 2005.   [RFC4346] Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The TLS Protocol Version 1.1",RFC 4346, April 2006.   [RFC4835] Manral, V., "Cryptographic Algorithm Implementation             Requirements for Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) and             Authentication Header (AH)",RFC 4835, April 2007.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 53]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007Appendix A.  DDP Segment Formats for RDMA Messages   This appendix is for information only and is NOT part of the   standard. It simply depicts the DDP Segment format for the various   RDMA Messages.A.1.  DDP Segment for RDMA Write   The following figure depicts an RDMA Write, DDP Segment:    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                                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                                   |   DDP Control | RDMA Control  |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                       Data Sink STag                          |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                   Data Sink Tagged Offset                     |   +                                                               +   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                   RDMA Write ULP Payload                      |   //                                                             //   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+            Figure 11:  RDMA Write, DDP Segment FormatRecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 54]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007A.2.  DDP Segment for RDMA Read Request   The following figure depicts an RDMA Read Request, DDP Segment:    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                                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                                   |  DDP Control  | RDMA Control  |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                      Reserved (Not Used)                      |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |              DDP (RDMA Read Request) Queue Number             |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |        DDP (RDMA Read Request) Message Sequence Number        |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |             DDP (RDMA Read Request) Message Offset            |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                     Data Sink STag (SinkSTag)                 |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                                                               |   +                  Data Sink Tagged Offset (SinkTO)             +   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                  RDMA Read Message Size (RDMARDSZ)            |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                     Data Source STag (SrcSTag)                |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                                                               |   +                 Data Source Tagged Offset (SrcTO)             +   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+            Figure 12: RDMA Read Request, DDP Segment formatRecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 55]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007A.3.  DDP Segment for RDMA Read Response   The following figure depicts an RDMA Read Response, DDP Segment:    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                                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                                   |  DDP Control  | RDMA Control  |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                       Data Sink STag                          |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                   Data Sink Tagged Offset                     |   +                                                               +   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                RDMA Read Response ULP Payload                 |   //                                                             //   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+           Figure 13: RDMA Read Response, DDP Segment FormatA.4.  DDP Segment for Send and Send with Solicited Event   The following figure depicts a Send and Send with Solicited   Request, DDP Segment:    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                                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                                   |  DDP Control  | RDMA Control  |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                      Reserved (Not Used)                      |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                       (Send) Queue Number                     |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                 (Send) Message Sequence Number                |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                      (Send) Message Offset                    |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                       Send ULP Payload                        |   //                                                             //   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Figure 14: Send and Send with Solicited Event, DDP Segment FormatRecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 56]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007A.5.  DDP Segment for Send with Invalidate and Send with SE and      Invalidate   The following figure depicts a Send with Invalidate and Send with   Solicited and Invalidate Request, DDP Segment:    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                                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                                   |   DDP Control | RDMA Control  |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                         Invalidate STag                       |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                       (Send) Queue Number                     |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                 (Send) Message Sequence Number                |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                      (Send) Message Offset                    |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                       Send ULP Payload                        |   //                                                             //   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Figure 15: Send with Invalidate and Send with SE and Invalidate,                            DDP Segment FormatRecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 57]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007A.6.  DDP Segment for Terminate   The following figure depicts a Terminate, DDP Segment:    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                                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                                   |   DDP Control | RDMA Control  |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                      Reserved (Not Used)                      |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                   DDP (Terminate) Queue Number                |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |             DDP (Terminate) Message Sequence Number           |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                  DDP (Terminate) Message Offset               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |       Terminate Control             |      Reserved           |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |  DDP Segment Length (if any)  |                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               +   |                                                               |   +                                                               +   |                 Terminated DDP Header (if any)                |   +                                                               +   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   |                                                               |   //                                                             //   |                 Terminated RDMA Header (if any)               |   +                                                               +   |                                                               |   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+               Figure 16: Terminate, DDP Segment FormatRecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 58]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007Appendix B.  Ordering and Completion Table   The following table summarizes the ordering relationships that are   defined inSection 5.5, "Ordering and Completions", from the   standpoint of the local peer issuing the two Operations.  Note that   in the table that follows, Send includes Send, Send with Invalidate,   Send with Solicited Event, and Send with Solicited Event and   Invalidate.   ------+-------+----------------+----------------+----------------   First | Later | Placement      | Placement      | Ordering    Op   | Op    | guarantee at   | guarantee at   | guarantee at         |       | Remote Peer    | Local Peer     | Remote Peer         |       |                |                |   ------+-------+----------------+----------------+----------------   Send  | Send  | No placement   | Not applicable | Completed in         |       | guarantee. If  |                | order.         |       | guarantee is   |                |         |       | necessary, see |                |         |       | footnote 1.    |                |   ------+-------+----------------+----------------+----------------   Send  | RDMA  | No placement   | Not applicable | Not applicable         | Write | guarantee. If  |                |         |       | guarantee is   |                |         |       | necessary, see |                |         |       | footnote 1.    |                |   ------+-------+----------------+----------------+----------------   Send  | RDMA  | No placement   | RDMA Read      | RDMA Read         | Read  | guarantee      | Response       | Response         |       | between Send   | Payload will   | Message will         |       | Payload and    | not be placed  | not be         |       | RDMA Read      | at the local   | generated until         |       | Request Header | peer until the | Send has been         |       |                | Send Payload is| Completed         |       |                | placed at the  |         |       |                | Remote Peer    |   ------+-------+----------------+----------------+----------------   RDMA  | Send  | No placement   | Not applicable | Not applicable   Write |       | guarantee. If  |                |         |       | guarantee is   |                |         |       | necessary, see |                |         |       | footnote 1.    |                |Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 59]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   ------+-------+----------------+----------------+----------------   RDMA  | RDMA  | No placement   | Not applicable | Not applicable   Write | Write | guarantee. If  |                |         |       | guarantee is   |                |         |       | necessary, see |                |         |       | footnote 1.    |                |   ------+-------+----------------+----------------+----------------   RDMA  | RDMA  | No placement   | RDMA Read      | Not applicable   Write | Read  | guarantee      | Response       |         |       | between RDMA   | Payload will   |         |       | Write Payload  | not be placed  |         |       | and RDMA Read  | at the local   |         |       | Request Header | peer until the |         |       |                | RDMA Write     |         |       |                | Payload is     |         |       |                | placed at the  |         |       |                | Remote Peer    |   ------+-------+----------------+----------------+----------------   RDMA  | Send  | No placement   | Send Payload   | Not applicable   Read  |       | guarantee      | may be placed  |         |       | between RDMA   | at the remote  |         |       | Read Request   | peer before the|         |       | Header and Send| RDMA Read      |         |       | payload        | Response is    |         |       |                | generated.     |         |       |                | If guarantee is|         |       |                | necessary, see |         |       |                | footnote 2.    |   ------+-------+----------------+----------------+----------------   RDMA  | RDMA  | No placement   | RDMA Write     | Not applicable   Read  | Write | guarantee      | Payload may be |         |       | between RDMA   | placed at the  |         |       | Read Request   | Remote Peer    |         |       | Header and RDMA| before the RDMA|         |       | Write payload  | Read Response  |         |       |                | is generated.  |         |       |                | If guarantee is|         |       |                | necessary, see |         |       |                | footnote 2.    |Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 60]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   ------+-------+----------------+----------------+----------------   RDMA  | RDMA  | No placement   | No placement   | Second RDMA   Read  | Read  | guarantee of   | guarantee of   | Read Response         |       | the two RDMA   | the two RDMA   | will not be         |       | Read Request   | Read Response  | generated until         |       | Headers        | Payloads.      | first RDMA Read         |       | Additionally,  |                | Response is         |       | there is no    |                | generated.         |       | guarantee that |                |         |       | the Tagged     |                |         |       | Buffers        |                |         |       | referenced in  |                |         |       | the RDMA Read  |                |         |       | will be read in|                |         |       | order          |                |                    Figure 17: Operation Ordering   Footnote 1:  If the guarantee is necessary, a ULP may insert an RDMA   Read operation and wait for it to complete to act as a Fence.   Footnote 2:  If the guarantee is necessary, a ULP may wait for the   RDMA Read operation to complete before performing the Send.Appendix C.  Contributors   Dwight Barron   Hewlett-Packard Company   20555 SH 249   Houston, TX  77070-2698 USA   Phone:  281-514-2769   EMail:  dwight.barron@hp.com   Caitlin Bestler   Broadcom Corporation   16215 Alton Parkway   Irvine, CA  92619-7013 USA   Phone:  949-926-6383   EMail:  caitlinb@broadcom.com   John Carrier   Cray, Inc.   411 First Avenue S, Suite 600   Seattle, WA  98104-2860 USA   Phone: 206-701-2090   EMail: carrier@cray.comRecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 61]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   Ted Compton   EMC Corporation   Research Triangle Park, NC  27709 USA   Phone: 919-248-6075   EMail: compton_ted@emc.com   Uri Elzur   Broadcom Corporation   16215 Alton Parkway   Irvine, California  92619-7013 USA   Phone: +1 (949) 585-6432   EMail: Uri@Broadcom.com   Hari Ghadia   Gen10 Technology, Inc.   1501 W Shady Grove Road   Grand Prairie, TX 75050   Phone: (972) 301 3630   EMail: hghadia@gen10technology.com   Howard C. Herbert   Intel Corporation   MS CH7-404   5000 West Chandler Blvd.   Chandler, Arizona  85226   Phone: 480-554-3116   EMail: howard.c.herbert@intel.com   Mike Ko   IBM   650 Harry Rd.   San Jose, CA  95120   Phone: (408) 927-2085   EMail: mako@us.ibm.com   Mike Krause   Hewlett-Packard Company   43LN   19410 Homestead Road   Cupertino, CA  95014 USA   Phone: 408-447-3191   EMail: krause@cup.hp.comRecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 62]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   Dave Minturn   Intel Corporation   MS JF1-210   5200 North East Elam Young Parkway   Hillsboro, Oregon  97124   Phone: 503-712-4106   EMail: dave.b.minturn@intel.com   Mike Penna   Broadcom Corporation   16215 Alton Parkway   Irvine, California  92619-7013 USA   Phone: +1 (949) 926-7149   EMail: MPenna@Broadcom.com   Jim Pinkerton   Microsoft, Inc.   One Microsoft Way   Redmond, WA  98052 USA   EMail:  jpink@microsoft.com   Hemal Shah   Broadcom Corporation   5300 California Avenue   Irvine, CA 92617 USA   Phone: +1 (949) 926-6941   EMail: hemal@broadcom.com   Allyn Romanow   Cisco Systems   170 W Tasman Drive   San Jose, CA  95134 USA   Phone: +1 408 525 8836   EMail: allyn@cisco.com   Tom Talpey   Network Appliance   1601 Trapelo Road #16   Waltham, MA  02451 USA   Phone: +1 (781) 768-5329   EMail: thomas.talpey@netapp.comRecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 63]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007   Patricia Thaler   Broadcom Corporation   16215 Alton Parkway   Irvine, CA  92619-7013 USA   Phone: +1-916-570-2707   EMail: pthaler@broadcom.com   Jim Wendt   Hewlett-Packard Company   8000 Foothills Boulevard MS 5668   Roseville, CA  95747-5668 USA   Phone: +1 916 785 5198   EMail: jim_wendt@hp.com   Madeline Vega   IBM   11400 Burnet Rd. Bld.45-2L-007   Austin, TX  78758 USA   Phone: 512-838-7739   EMail: mvega1@us.ibm.com   Claudia Salzberg   IBM   11501 Burnet Rd. Bld.902-5B-014   Austin, TX  78758 USA   Phone: 512-838-5156   EMail: salzberg@us.ibm.comRecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 64]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007Authors' Addresses   Renato J. Recio   IBM Corp.   11501 Burnett Road   Austin, TX  78758 USA   Phone: 512-838-3685   EMail: recio@us.ibm.com   Bernard Metzler   IBM Research GmbH   Zurich Research Laboratory   Saeumerstrasse 4   CH-8803 Rueschlikon, Switzerland   Phone: +41 44 724 8605   EMail: bmt@zurich.ibm.com   Paul R. Culley   Hewlett-Packard Company   20555 SH 249   Houston, TX  77070-2698 USA   Phone: 281-514-5543   EMail: paul.culley@hp.com   Jeff Hilland   Hewlett-Packard Company   20555 SH 249   Houston, TX  77070-2698 USA   Phone: 281-514-9489   EMail: jeff.hilland@hp.com   Dave Garcia   24100 Hutchinson Rd.   Los Gatos, CA 95033 USA   Phone: +1 (831) 247-4464   Email: Dave.Garcia@StanfordAlumni.orgRecio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 65]

RFC 5040              RDMA Protocol Specification           October 2007Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY, THE IETF TRUST AND   THE INTERNET ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS   OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF   THE INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at   ietf-ipr@ietf.org.Recio, et al.               Standards Track                    [Page 66]

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp