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INFORMATIONAL
Errata Exist
Network Working Group                                       A. MatsumotoRequest for Comments: 5220                                   T. FujisakiCategory: Informational                                              NTT                                                               R. Hiromi                                                           Intec Netcore                                                             K. Kanayama                                                           INTEC Systems                                                               July 2008Problem Statement for Default Address Selection in Multi-PrefixEnvironments: Operational Issues ofRFC 3484 Default RulesStatus of This Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Abstract   A single physical link can have multiple prefixes assigned to it.  In   that environment, end hosts might have multiple IP addresses and be   required to use them selectively.RFC 3484 defines default source   and destination address selection rules and is implemented in a   variety of OSs.  But, it has been too difficult to use operationally   for several reasons.  In some environments where multiple prefixes   are assigned on a single physical link, the host using the default   address selection rules will experience some trouble in   communication.  This document describes the possible problems that   end hosts could encounter in an environment with multiple prefixes.Matsumoto, et al.            Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 2008Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................21.1. Scope of This Document .....................................32. Problem Statement ...............................................42.1. Source Address Selection ...................................42.1.1. Multiple Routers on a Single Interface ..............42.1.2. Ingress Filtering Problem ...........................52.1.3. Half-Closed Network Problem .........................62.1.4. Combined Use of Global and ULA ......................72.1.5. Site Renumbering ....................................82.1.6. Multicast Source Address Selection ..................92.1.7. Temporary Address Selection .........................92.2. Destination Address Selection .............................102.2.1. IPv4 or IPv6 Prioritization ........................102.2.2. ULA and IPv4 Dual-Stack Environment ................112.2.3. ULA or Global Prioritization .......................123. Conclusion .....................................................134. Security Considerations ........................................145. Normative References ...........................................141.  Introduction   In IPv6, a single physical link can have multiple prefixes assigned   to it.  In such cases, an end host may have multiple IP addresses   assigned to an interface on that link.  In the IPv4-IPv6 dual-stack   environment or in a site connected to both a Unique Local Address   (ULA) [RFC4193] and globally routable networks, an end host typically   has multiple IP addresses.  These are examples of the networks that   we focus on in this document.  In such an environment, an end host   may encounter some communication troubles.   Inappropriate source address selection at the end host causes   unexpected asymmetric routing, filtering by a router, or discarding   of packets because there is no route to the host.   Considering a multi-prefix environment, destination address selection   is also important for correct or better communication establishment.RFC 3484 [RFC3484] defines default source and destination address   selection algorithms and is implemented in a variety of OSs.  But, it   has been too difficult to use operationally for several reasons, such   as lack of an autoconfiguration method.  There are some problematic   cases where the hosts using the default address selection rules   encounter communication troubles.   This document describes the possibilities of incorrect address   selection that lead to dropping packets and communication failure.Matsumoto, et al.            Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 20081.1.  Scope of This Document   As other mechanisms already exist, the multi-homing techniques for   achieving redundancy are basically out of our scope.   We focus on an end-site network environment and unmanaged hosts in   such an environment.  This is because address selection behavior at   these kinds of hosts is difficult to manipulate, owing to the users'   lack of knowledge, hosts' location, or massiveness of the hosts.   The scope of this document is to sort out problematic cases related   to address selection.  It includes problems that can be solved in the   framework ofRFC 3484 and problems that cannot.  For the latter,RFC3484 might be modified to meet their needs, or another address   selection solution might be necessary.  For the former, an additional   mechanism that mitigates the operational difficulty might be   necessary.   This document also includes simple solution analysis for each   problematic case.  This analysis basically just focuses on whether or   not the case can be solved in the framework ofRFC 3484.  If not,   some possible solutions are described.  Even if a case can be solved   in the framework ofRFC 3484, as mentioned above, it does not   necessarily mean that there is no operational difficulty.  For   example, in the environment stated above, it is not a feasible   solution to configure each host's policy table by hand.  So, for such   a solution, the difficulty of configuration is yet another common   problem.Matsumoto, et al.            Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 20082.  Problem Statement2.1.  Source Address Selection2.1.1.  Multiple Routers on a Single Interface                          ==================                          |    Internet    |                          ==================                             |          |          2001:db8:1000::/36 |          | 2001:db8:8000::/36                        +----+-+      +-+----+                        | ISP1 |      | ISP2 |                        +----+-+      +-+----+                             |          |         2001:db8:1000:::/48 |          | 2001:db8:8000::/48                       +-----+---+ +----+----+                       | Router1 | | Router2 |                       +-------+-+ +-+-------+                               |     |          2001:db8:1000:1::/64 |     | 2001:db8:8000:1::/64                               |     |                        -----+-+-----+------                             |                           +-+----+ 2001:db8:1000:1::100                           | Host | 2001:db8:8000:1::100                           +------+                                    Figure 1   Generally speaking, there is no interaction between next-hop   determination and address selection.  In this example, when a host   starts a new connection and sends a packet via Router1, the host does   not necessarily choose address 2001:db8:1000:1::100 given by Router1   as the source address.  This causes the same problem as described in   the next section, "Ingress Filtering Problem".   Solution analysis:      As this case depends on next-hop selection, controlling the      address selection behavior at the Host alone doesn't solve the      entire problem.  One possible solution for this case is adopting      source-address-based routing at Router1 and Router2.  Another      solution may be using static routing at Router1, Router2, and the      Host, and using the corresponding static address selection policy      at the Host.Matsumoto, et al.            Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 20082.1.2.  Ingress Filtering Problem                        ==================                        |    Internet    |                        ==================                             |       |          2001:db8:1000::/36 |       | 2001:db8:8000::/36                        +----+-+   +-+----+                        | ISP1 |   | ISP2 |                        +----+-+   +-+----+                             |       |         2001:db8:1000:::/48 |       | 2001:db8:8000::/48                            ++-------++                            | Router  |                            +----+----+                                 |  2001:db8:1000:1::/64                                 |  2001:db8:8000:1::/64                       ------+---+----------                             |                           +-+----+ 2001:db8:1000:1::100                           | Host | 2001:db8:8000:1::100                           +------+                                    Figure 2   When a relatively small site, which we call a "customer network", is   attached to two upstream ISPs, each ISP delegates a network address   block, which is usually /48, and a host has multiple IPv6 addresses.   When the source address of an outgoing packet is not the one that is   delegated by an upstream ISP, there is a possibility that the packet   will be dropped at the ISP by its ingress filter.  Ingress filtering   is becoming more popular among ISPs to mitigate the damage of   denial-of-service (DoS) attacks.   In this example, when the router chooses the default route to ISP2   and the host chooses 2001:db8:1000:1::100 as the source address for   packets sent to a host (2001:db8:2000::1) somewhere on the Internet,   the packets may be dropped at ISP2 because of ingress filtering.   Solution analysis:      One possible solution for this case is adopting source-address-      based routing at the Router.  Another solution may be using static      routing at the Router, and using the corresponding static address      selection policy at the Host.Matsumoto, et al.            Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 20082.1.3.  Half-Closed Network Problem   You can see a second typical source address selection problem in a   multi-homed site with global half-closed connectivity, as shown in   the figure below.  In this case, Host-A is in a multi-homed network   and has two IPv6 addresses, one delegated from each of the upstream   ISPs.  Note that ISP2 is a closed network and does not have   connectivity to the Internet.                           +--------+                           | Host-C | 2001:db8:a000::1                           +-----+--+                                 |                        ==============  +--------+                        |  Internet  |  | Host-B | 2001:db8:8000::1                        ==============  +--------+                             |           |           2001:db8:1000:/36 |           | 2001:db8:8000::/36                        +----+-+   +-+---++                        | ISP1 |   | ISP2 | (Closed Network/VPN tunnel)                        +----+-+   +-+----+                             |       |           2001:db8:1000:/48 |       | 2001:db8:8000::/48                            ++-------++                            | Router  |                            +----+----+                                 |  2001:db8:1000:1::/64                                 |  2001:db8:8000:1::/64                       ------+---+----------                             |                          +--+-----+ 2001:db8:1000:1::100                          | Host-A | 2001:db8:8000:1::100                          +--------+                                     Figure 3   You do not need two physical network connections here.  The   connection from the Router to ISP2 can be a logical link over ISP1   and the Internet.   When Host-A starts the connection to Host-B in ISP2, the source   address of a packet that has been sent will be the one delegated from   ISP2 (that is, 2001:db8:8000:1::100) because of rule 8 (longest   matching prefix) inRFC 3484.   Host-C is located somewhere on the Internet and has IPv6 address   2001:db8:a000::1.  When Host-A sends a packet to Host-C, the longest   matching algorithm chooses 2001:db8:8000:1::100 for the sourceMatsumoto, et al.            Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 2008   address.  In this case, the packet goes through ISP1 and may be   filtered by ISP1's ingress filter.  Even if the packet is not   filtered by ISP1, a return packet from Host-C cannot possibly be   delivered to Host-A because the return packet is destined for 2001:   db8:8000:1::100, which is closed from the Internet.   The important point is that each host chooses a correct source   address for a given destination address.  To solve this kind of   network-policy-based address selection problem, it is likely that   delivering additional information to a node provides a better   solution than using algorithms that are local to the node.   Solution analysis:      This problem can be solved in theRFC 3484 framework.  For      example, configuring some address selection policies into Host-A'sRFC 3484 policy table can solve this problem.2.1.4.  Combined Use of Global and ULA                        ============                        | Internet |                        ============                              |                              |                         +----+----+                         |   ISP   |                         +----+----+                              |              2001:db8:a::/48 |                         +----+----+                         | Router  |                         +-+-----+-+                           |     | 2001:db8:a:100::/64          fd01:2:3:200:/64 |     | fd01:2:3:100:/64                   -----+--+-   -+--+----                        |           |      fd01:2:3:200::101 |           |      2001:db8:a:100::100                   +----+----+    +-+----+ fd01:2:3:100::100                   | Printer |    | Host |                   +---------+    +------+                                Figure 4   AsRFC 4864 [RFC4864] describes, using a ULA may be beneficial in   some scenarios.  If the ULA is used for internal communication,   packets with the ULA need to be filtered at the Router.Matsumoto, et al.            Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 2008   This case does not presently create an address selection problem   because of the dissimilarity between the ULA and the global unicast   address.  The longest matching rule ofRFC 3484 chooses the correct   address for both intra-site and extra-site communication.   In the future, however, there is a possibility that the longest   matching rule will not be able to choose the correct address anymore.   That is the moment when the assignment of those global unicast   addresses starts, where the first bit is 1.  InRFC 4291 [RFC4291],   almost all address spaces of IPv6, including those whose first bit is   1, are assigned as global unicast addresses.   Namely, when we start to assign a part of the address block 8000::/1   as the global unicast address and that part is used somewhere in the   Internet, the longest matching rule ceases to function properly for   the people trying to connect to the servers with those addresses.   For example, when the destination host has an IPv6 address 8000::1,   and the originating host has 2001:db8:a:100::100 and   fd01:2:3:100::100, the source address will be fd01:2:3:100::100,   because the longest matching bit length is 0 for 2001:db8:a:100::100   and 1 for fd01:2:3:100::100, respectively.   Solution analysis:      This problem can be solved in theRFC 3484 framework.  For      example, configuring some address selection policies into the      Host'sRFC 3484 policy table can solve this problem.  Another      solution is to modifyRFC 3484 and define ULA's scope smaller than      the global scope.2.1.5.  Site RenumberingRFC 4192 [RFC4192] describes a recommended procedure for renumbering   a network from one prefix to another.  An autoconfigured address has   a lifetime, so by stopping advertisement of the old prefix, the   autoconfigured address is eventually invalidated.   However, invalidating the old prefix takes a long time.  You cannot   stop routing to the old prefix as long as the old prefix is not   removed from the host.  This can be a tough issue for ISP network   administrators.   There is a technique of advertising the prefix with the preferred   lifetime zero; however,RFC 4862[RFC4862], Section 5.5.4, does not   absolutely prohibit the use of a deprecated address for a new   outgoing connection due to limitations on the capabilities of   applications.Matsumoto, et al.            Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 2008                              +-----+---+                              | Router  |                              +----+----+                                   |  2001:db8:b::/64  (new)                                   |  2001:db8:a::/64 (old)                         ------+---+----------                               |                            +--+---+ 2001:db8:b::100  (new)                            | Host | 2001:db8:a::100 (old)                            +------+                                Figure 5   Solution analysis:      This problem can be mitigated in theRFC 3484 framework.  For      example, configuring some address selection policies into the      Host'sRFC 3484 policy table can solve this problem.2.1.6.  Multicast Source Address Selection   This case is an example of site-local or global unicast   prioritization.  When you send a multicast packet across site   borders, the source address of the multicast packet should be a   globally routable address.  The longest matching algorithm, however,   selects a ULA if the sending host has both a ULA and a Global Unicast   Address.   Solution analysis:      This problem can be solved in theRFC 3484 framework.  For      example, configuring some address selection policies into the      sending host'sRFC 3484 policy table can solve this problem.2.1.7.  Temporary Address SelectionRFC 3041 [RFC3041] defines a Temporary Address.  The usage of a   Temporary Address has both pros and cons.  It is good for viewing web   pages or communicating with the general public, but it is bad for a   service that uses address-based authentication and for logging   purposes.   If you could turn the temporary address on and off, that would be   better.  If you could switch its usage per service (destination   address), that would also be better.  The same situation can be found   when using an HA (home address) and a CoA (care-of address) in a   Mobile IPv6 [RFC3775] network.Matsumoto, et al.            Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 2008Section 6 ("Future Work") ofRFC 3041 discusses that an API extension   might be necessary to achieve a better address selection mechanism   with finer granularity.   Solution analysis:      This problem cannot be solved in theRFC 3484 framework.  A      possible solution is to make applications to select desirable      addresses by using the IPv6 Socket API for Source Address      Selection defined inRFC 5014 [RFC5014].2.2.  Destination Address Selection2.2.1.  IPv4 or IPv6 Prioritization   The default policy table gives IPv6 addresses higher precedence than   IPv4 addresses.  There seem to be many cases, however, where network   administrators want to control the address selection policy of end   hosts so that it is the other way around.Matsumoto, et al.            Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 2008                            +---------+                            | Tunnel  |                            | Service |                            +--+---++-+                               |   ||                               |   ||                        ===========||==                        | Internet || |                        ===========||==                             |     ||                192.0.2.0/24 |     ||                        +----+-+   ||                        | ISP  |   ||                        +----+-+   ||                             |     ||               IPv4 (Native) |     || IPv6 (Tunnel)                192.0.2.0/26 |     ||                            ++-----++-+                            | Router  |                            +----+----+                                 |  2001:db8:a:1::/64                                 |  192.0.2.0/28                                 |                       ------+---+----------                             |                           +-+----+ 2001:db8:a:1::100                           | Host | 192.0.2.2                           +------+                                Figure 6   In the figure above, a site has native IPv4 and tunneled IPv6   connectivity.  Therefore, the administrator may want to set a higher   priority for using IPv4 than for using IPv6 because the quality of   the tunnel network seems to be worse than that of the native   transport.   Solution analysis:      This problem can be solved in theRFC 3484 framework.  For      example, configuring some address selection policies into the      Host'sRFC 3484 policy table can solve this problem.2.2.2.  ULA and IPv4 Dual-Stack Environment   This is a special form of IPv4 and IPv6 prioritization.  When an   enterprise has IPv4 Internet connectivity but does not yet have IPv6   Internet connectivity, and the enterprise wants to provide site-local   IPv6 connectivity, a ULA is the best choice for site-local IPv6Matsumoto, et al.            Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 2008   connectivity.  Each employee host will have both an IPv4 global or   private address and a ULA.  Here, when this host tries to connect to   Host-B that has registered both A and AAAA records in the DNS, the   host will choose AAAA as the destination address and the ULA for the   source address.  This will clearly result in a connection failure.                           +--------+                           | Host-B | AAAA = 2001:db8::80                           +-----+--+ A    = 192.0.2.1                                 |                        ============                        | Internet |                        ============                             |  no IPv6 connectivity                        +----+----+                        | Router  |                        +----+----+                             |                             | fd01:2:3::/48 (ULA)                             | 192.0.2.128/25                            ++--------+                            | Router  |                            +----+----+                                 |  fd01:2:3:4::/64 (ULA)                                 |  192.0.2.240/28                       ------+---+----------                             |                           +-+------+ fd01:2:3:4::100 (ULA)                           | Host-A | 192.0.2.245                           +--------+                                Figure 7   Solution analysis:      This problem can be solved in theRFC 3484 framework.  For      example, configuring some address selection policies into Host-A'sRFC 3484 policy table can solve this problem.2.2.3.  ULA or Global Prioritization   Differentiating services by the client's source address is very   common.  IP-address-based authentication is a typical example of   this.  Another typical example is a web service that has pages for   the public and internal pages for employees or involved parties.  Yet   another example is DNS zone splitting.Matsumoto, et al.            Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 2008   However, a ULA and an IPv6 global address both have global scope, andRFC 3484 default rules do not specify which address should be given   priority.  This point makes IPv6 implementation of address-based   service differentiation a bit harder.                            +--------+                            | Host-B |                            +-+--|---+                              |  |                      ===========|==                      | Internet | |                      ===========|==                            |    |                            |    |                       +----+-+  +-->+------+                       | ISP  +------+  DNS | 2001:db8:a::80                       +----+-+  +-->+------+ fc12:3456:789a::80                            |    |            2001:db8:a::/48 |    |        fc12:3456:789a::/48 |    |                       +----+----|+                       | Router  ||                       +---+-----|+                           |     |    2001:db8:a:100::/64                           |     |    fc12:3456:789a:100::/64                         --+-+---|-----                             |   |                           +-+---|--+ 2001:db8:a:100::100                           | Host-A | fc12:3456:789a:100::100                           +--------+                                Figure 8   Solution analysis:      This problem can be solved in theRFC 3484 framework.  For      example, configuring some address selection policies into Host-A'sRFC 3484 policy table can solve this problem.3.  Conclusion   We have covered problems related to destination or source address   selection.  These problems have their roots in the situation where   end hosts have multiple IP addresses.  In this situation, every end   host must choose an appropriate destination and source address; this   choice cannot be achieved only by routers.Matsumoto, et al.            Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 2008   It should be noted that end hosts must be informed about routing   policies of their upstream networks for appropriate address   selection.  A site administrator must consider every possible address   false-selection problem and take countermeasures beforehand.4.  Security Considerations   When an intermediate router performs policy routing (e.g., source-   address-based routing), inappropriate address selection causes   unexpected routing.  For example, in the network described inSection2.1.3, when Host-A uses a default address selection policy and   chooses an inappropriate address, a packet sent to a VPN can be   delivered to a location via the Internet.  This issue can lead to   packet eavesdropping or session hijack.  However, sending the packet   back to the correct path from the attacker to the node is not easy,   so these two risks are not serious.   As documented in the Security Considerations section ofRFC 3484,   address selection algorithms expose a potential privacy concern.   When a malicious host can make a target host perform address   selection (for example, by sending an anycast or multicast packet),   the malicious host can get knowledge of multiple addresses attached   to the target host.  In a case likeSection 2.1.4, if an attacker can   make the Host to send a multicast packet and the Host performs the   default address selection algorithm, the attacker may be able to   determine the ULAs attached to the host.   These security risks have roots in inappropriate address selection.   Therefore, if a countermeasure is taken, and hosts always select an   appropriate address that is suitable to a site's network structure   and routing, these risks can be avoided.5.  Normative References   [RFC3041]  Narten, T. and R. Draves, "Privacy Extensions for              Stateless Address Autoconfiguration in IPv6",RFC 3041,              January 2001.   [RFC3484]  Draves, R., "Default Address Selection for Internet              Protocol version 6 (IPv6)",RFC 3484, February 2003.   [RFC3775]  Johnson, D., Perkins, C., and J. Arkko, "Mobility Support              in IPv6",RFC 3775, June 2004.   [RFC4192]  Baker, F., Lear, E., and R. Droms, "Procedures for              Renumbering an IPv6 Network without a Flag Day",RFC 4192,              September 2005.Matsumoto, et al.            Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 2008   [RFC4193]  Hinden, R. and B. Haberman, "Unique Local IPv6 Unicast              Addresses",RFC 4193, October 2005.   [RFC4291]  Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing              Architecture",RFC 4291, February 2006.   [RFC4862]  Thomson, S., Narten, T., and T. Jinmei, "IPv6 Stateless              Address Autoconfiguration",RFC 4862, September 2007.   [RFC4864]  Van de Velde, G., Hain, T., Droms, R., Carpenter, B., and              E. Klein, "Local Network Protection for IPv6",RFC 4864,              May 2007.   [RFC5014]  Nordmark, E., Chakrabarti, S., and J. Laganier, "IPv6              Socket API for Source Address Selection",RFC 5014,              September 2007.Matsumoto, et al.            Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 2008Authors' Addresses   Arifumi Matsumoto   NTT PF Lab   Midori-Cho 3-9-11   Musashino-shi, Tokyo  180-8585   Japan   Phone: +81 422 59 3334   EMail: arifumi@nttv6.net   Tomohiro Fujisaki   NTT PF Lab   Midori-Cho 3-9-11   Musashino-shi, Tokyo  180-8585   Japan   Phone: +81 422 59 7351   EMail: fujisaki@nttv6.net   Ruri Hiromi   Intec Netcore, Inc.   Shinsuna 1-3-3   Koto-ku, Tokyo  136-0075   Japan   Phone: +81 3 5665 5069   EMail: hiromi@inetcore.com   Ken-ichi Kanayama   INTEC Systems Institute, Inc.   Shimoshin-machi 5-33   Toyama-shi, Toyama  930-0804   Japan   Phone: +81 76 444 8088   EMail: kanayama_kenichi@intec-si.co.jpMatsumoto, et al.            Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 5220                  Address Selection PS                 July 2008Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2008).   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.Matsumoto, et al.            Informational                     [Page 17]

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