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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                       R. WakikawaRequest for Comments: 5844                                    Toyota ITCCategory: Standards Track                                  S. GundavelliISSN: 2070-1721                                                    Cisco                                                                May 2010IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6Abstract   This document specifies extensions to the Proxy Mobile IPv6 protocol   for adding IPv4 protocol support.  The scope of IPv4 protocol support   is two-fold: 1) enable IPv4 home address mobility support to the   mobile node, and 2) allow the mobility entities in the Proxy Mobile   IPv6 domain to exchange signaling messages over an IPv4 transport   network.Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5844.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2010 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010Table of Contents1.  Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31.1.  Stated Assumptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41.2.  Relevance to Dual-Stack Mobile IPv6  . . . . . . . . . . .52.  Conventions and Terminology  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62.1.  Conventions  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62.2.  Terminology  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .63.  IPv4 Home Address Mobility Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . .83.1.  Local Mobility Anchor Considerations . . . . . . . . . . .93.1.1.  Extensions to Binding Cache Entry  . . . . . . . . . .93.1.2.  Signaling Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10       3.1.3.  Routing Considerations for the Local Mobility               Anchor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .153.1.4.  ECN and Payload Fragmentation Considerations . . . . .163.2.  Mobile Access Gateway Considerations . . . . . . . . . . .173.2.1.  Extensions to Binding Update List Entry  . . . . . . .173.2.2.  Extensions to Mobile Node's Policy Profile . . . . . .173.2.3.  Signaling Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17       3.2.4.  Routing Considerations for the Mobile Access               Gateway  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .213.3.  Mobility Options and Status Codes  . . . . . . . . . . . .223.3.1.  IPv4 Home Address Request Option . . . . . . . . . . .223.3.2.  IPv4 Home Address Reply Option . . . . . . . . . . . .233.3.3.  IPv4 Default-Router Address Option . . . . . . . . . .253.3.4.  IPv4 DHCP Support Mode Option  . . . . . . . . . . . .253.3.5.  Status Codes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .263.4.  Supporting DHCP-Based Address Configuration  . . . . . . .27       3.4.1.  DHCP Server Co-Located with the Mobile Access               Gateway  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28       3.4.2.  DHCP Relay Agent Co-Located with the Mobile Access               Gateway  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .313.4.3.  Common DHCP Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . .334.  IPv4 Transport Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .354.1.  Local Mobility Anchor Considerations . . . . . . . . . . .374.1.1.  Extensions to Binding Cache Entry  . . . . . . . . . .374.1.2.  Extensions to Mobile Node's Policy Profile . . . . . .374.1.3.  Signaling Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .374.1.4.  Routing Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .394.2.  Mobile Access Gateway Considerations . . . . . . . . . . .404.2.1.  Extensions to Binding Update List Entry  . . . . . . .404.2.2.  Signaling Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .404.3.  IPsec Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .434.3.1.  PBU and PBA  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .434.3.2.  Payload Packet . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .435.  Protocol Configuration Variables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .445.1.  Local Mobility Anchor - Configuration Variables  . . . . .445.2.  Mobile Access Gateway - Configuration Variables  . . . . .44Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 20106.  IANA Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .457.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .468.  Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .469.  Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4710. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4710.1. Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4710.2. Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .481.  Overview   The transition from IPv4 to IPv6 is a long process, and during this   period of transition, both the protocols will be enabled over the   same network infrastructure.  Thus, it is reasonable to assume that a   mobile node in a Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain may operate in an IPv4-   only, IPv6-only, or dual-stack mode, and the network between the   mobile access gateway and a local mobility anchor may be an IPv4 or   an IPv6 network.  It is also reasonable to expect the same mobility   infrastructure in the Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain to provide mobility to   the mobile nodes operating in IPv4, IPv6, or in dual mode and whether   the transport network is IPv4 or IPv6 network.  The motivation and   scope of IPv4 support in Mobile IPv6 is summarized in [RFC4977], and   all those requirements apply to Proxy Mobile IPv6 protocol as well.   The Proxy Mobile IPv6 protocol [RFC5213] specifies a mechanism for   providing IPv6 home address mobility support to a mobile node in a   Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain.  The protocol requires IPv6 transport   network between the mobility entities.  The extensions defined in   this document specify IPv4 support to the Proxy Mobile IPv6 protocol   [RFC5213].   The scope of IPv4 support in Proxy Mobile IPv6 includes the support   for the following two features:   o  IPv4 Home Address Mobility Support: A mobile node that is dual-      stack or IPv4-only enabled will be able to obtain an IPv4 address      and be able to use that address from any of the access networks in      that Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain.  The mobile node is not required to      be allocated or assigned an IPv6 address to enable IPv4 home      address support.   o  IPv4 Transport Network Support: The mobility entities in the Proxy      Mobile IPv6 domain will be able to exchange Proxy Mobile IPv6      signaling messages over an IPv4 transport.   These two features, the IPv4 home address mobility support and the   IPv4 transport support features, are independent of each other, and   deployments may choose to enable either one or both of these features   as required.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   Figure 1 shows a typical Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain with an IPv4   transport network and with IPv4 enabled mobile nodes.  The terms used   in this illustration are explained in the Terminology section.               +----+                +----+               |LMA1|                |LMA2|               +----+                +----+   IPv4-LMAA  -> |          IPv4-LMAA-> | <-- LMAA                 |                      |                 \\                    //\\                  \\                  //  \\                   \\                //    \\                +---\\------------- //------\\----+               (     \\  IPv4/IPv6 //        \\    )               (      \\  Network //          \\   )                +------\\--------//------------\\-+                        \\      //              \\                         \\    //                \\                          \\  //                  \\         IPv4-Proxy-CoA --> |                      | <-- Proxy-CoA                         +----+                 +----+                         |MAG1|-----{MN2}       |MAG2|                         +----+    |            +----+        (MN-HoA)           |       |              | <-- (MN-HoA)        (IPv4-MN-HoA) -->  |   (IPv4-MN-HoA)      | <-- (IPv4-MN-HoA)                         {MN1}                   {MN3}               Figure 1: IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv61.1.  Stated Assumptions   The following are the system and configuration requirements from the   mobility entities in the Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain for supporting the   extensions defined in this document.   o  Both the mobility entities, the local mobility anchor and the      mobile access gateway are dual-stack (IPv4/IPv6) enabled.      Irrespective of the type of transport network (IPv4 or IPv6)      separating these two entities, the mobility signaling is always      based on Proxy Mobile IPv6 protocol [RFC5213].   o  A deployment where a mobile access gateway uses an IPv4 private      address with NAT [RFC3022] translation devices in the path to a      local mobility anchor is not supported by this specification.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   o  The mobile node can be operating in IPv4-only, IPv6-only or in      dual mode.  Based on the enabled configuration for a mobile node,      the mobile node should be able to obtain IPv4-only, IPv6-only, or      both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses for its interface and furthermore      achieve mobility support for those addresses.   o  For enabling IPv4 home address mobility support to a mobile node,      it is not required that the IPv6 home address mobility support      need be enabled.  However, the respective protocol(s) support,      such as IPv4 or IPv6 packet forwarding, must be enabled on the      access link between the mobile node and the mobile access gateway.   o  The mobile node can obtain an IPv4 address for its attached      interface.  Based on the type of link, it may be able to acquire      its IPv4 address configuration using standard IPv4 address      configuration mechanisms such as DHCP [RFC2131], IP Control      Protocol (IPCP) [RFC1332], Internet Key Exchange Protocol version      2 (IKEv2) [RFC4306], or static address configuration.  However,      the details on how IPCP or IKEv2 can be used for address delivery      are outside the scope of this document.   o  The mobile node's IPv4 home subnet is typically a shared address      space.  It is not for the exclusive use of any one mobile node.      There can be multiple mobile nodes that are assigned IPv4      addresses from the same subnet.   o  The mobile access gateway is the IPv4 default router for the      mobile node on its access link.  It will be in the forwarding path      for the mobile node's data traffic.  Additionally, as specified inSection 6.9.3 of [RFC5213], all the mobile access gateways in the      Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain MUST use the same link-layer address on      any of the access links wherever the mobile node attaches.1.2.  Relevance to Dual-Stack Mobile IPv6   IPv4 support for Mobile IPv6 is specified in the Dual-Stack Mobile   IPv6 specification [RFC5555].  This document leverages some of the   approaches, messaging options, and processing logic defined in that   document for extending IPv4 support to Proxy Mobile IPv6, except with   deviation in some aspects for obvious reasons of supporting a   network-based mobility model.  The following are some of the related   considerations.   o  The Binding Update message flag 'F' and the NAT Detection Option      defined in Sections3.1.3 and3.2.2 of [RFC5555] are used by this      specification in Proxy Binding Update and Proxy Binding      Acknowledgement messages.  Their sole purpose is to allow forcingWakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010      of UDP encapsulation between a mobile access gateway and a local      mobility anchor in situations similar to those discussed in      Sections4.1 and4.4.1 of [RFC5555].   o  The necessary extensions to the conceptual data structures,      Binding Cache entry and Binding Update List entry, for storing the      state related to the IPv4 support defined in [RFC5555], will all      be needed and relevant for this document.   o  In Mobile IPv6 [RFC3775] and in Dual-Stack Mobile IPv6 [RFC5555],      IPsec security associations (SAs) are specific to a single mobile      node; they use the identifier visible to upper-layer protocols      (HoA/IPv4-HoA) as traffic selector; and the IKE/IPsec SAs need to      be updated when the mobile node moves.      In Proxy Mobile IPv6 (both [RFC5213] and this document), the IPsec      SAs are specific to the mobile access gateway (and used for a      potentially large number of mobile nodes); they use the locators      used for routing (Proxy-CoA/IPv4-Proxy-CoA) as traffic selectors;      and they are not updated when the mobile node moves.      This means the IPsec processing for Mobile IPv6 and Proxy Mobile      IPv6 (whether IPv6-only or dual-stack) is very different.   o  The tunneling considerations specified in [RFC5555] for supporting      IPv4 transport are relevant for this document as well.2.  Conventions and Terminology2.1.  Conventions   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].2.2.  Terminology   All the mobility related terms used in this document are to be   interpreted as defined in the Mobile IPv6 specification [RFC3775] and   Proxy Mobile IPv6 specification [RFC5213].  In addition, this   document introduces the following terms.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   IPv4 Proxy Care-of Address (IPv4-Proxy-CoA)      The IPv4 address that is configured on the egress-interface of the      mobile access gateway.  When using IPv4 transport, this address      will be the registered care-of address in the mobile node's      Binding Cache entry and will also be the transport-endpoint of the      tunnel between the local mobility anchor and a mobile access      gateway.   IPv4 Local Mobility Anchor Address (IPv4-LMAA)      The IPv4 address that is configured on the egress-interface of the      local mobility anchor.  When using IPv4 transport, the mobile      access gateway sends the Proxy Binding Update messages to this      address and will be the transport-endpoint of the tunnel between      the local mobility anchor and the mobile access gateway.   Mobile Node's IPv4 Home Address (IPv4-MN-HoA)      The IPv4 home address assigned to the mobile node's attached      interface.  This address is topologically anchored at the mobile      node's local mobility anchor.  The mobile node configures this      address on its attached interface.  If the mobile node connects to      the Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain via multiple interfaces each of the      interfaces are assigned a unique IPv4 address.  All the IPv6 home      network prefixes and the IPv4 home address assigned to a given      interface of a mobile node will be managed under one mobility      session.   Selective De-registration      A procedure for partial de-registration of all the addresses that      belong to one address family, i.e., de-registration of either the      IPv4 home address or one or more of the assigned IPv6 home network      prefixes.   Encapsulation Modes      This document uses the following terms when referring to the      different encapsulation modes.      IPv4-or-IPv6-over-IPv6         IPv4 or IPv6 packet carried as a payload of an IPv6 packet      IPv4-or-IPv6-over-IPv4         IPv4 or IPv6 packet carried as a payload of an IPv4 packetWakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010      IPv4-or-IPv6-over-IPv4-UDP         IPv4 or IPv6 packet carried as a payload in an IPv4 packet with         a UDP header      IPv4-or-IPv6-over-IPv4-UDP-TLV         IPv4 or IPv6 packet carried as a payload in an IPv4 packet with         UDP and TLV headers      IPv4-or-IPv6-over-IPv4-GRE         IPv4 or IPv6 packet carried as a payload in an IPv4 packet with         a Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE) header (but no UDP or TLV         header)3.  IPv4 Home Address Mobility Support   The IPv4 home address mobility support essentially enables a mobile   node in a Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain to obtain IPv4 home address   configuration for its attached interfaces and be able to retain that   address configuration even after performing a handoff anywhere within   that Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain.  This section describes the protocol   operation and the required extensions to Proxy Mobile IPv6 protocol   for extending IPv4 home address mobility support.   When an IPv4-enabled or a dual-stack-enabled mobile node attaches to   the Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain, the mobile access gateway on the access   link where the mobile node is attached will identify the mobile node   and will initiate the Proxy Mobile IPv6 signaling with the mobile   node's local mobility anchor.  The mobile access gateway will follow   the signaling considerations specified inSection 3.2 for requesting   IPv4 home address mobility support.  Upon the completion of the   signaling, the local mobility anchor and the mobile access gateway   will establish the required routing states for allowing the mobile   node to use its IPv4 home address from its current point of   attachment.   The mobile node on the access link using any of the standard IPv4   address configuration mechanisms supported on that access link, such   as IPCP [RFC1332], IKEv2 [RFC4306], or DHCP [RFC2131], will be able   to obtain an IPv4 home address (IPv4-MN-HoA) for its attached   interface.  Although the address configuration mechanisms for   delivering the address configuration to the mobile node is   independent of the Proxy Mobile IPv6 protocol operation, there needs   to be some interaction between these two protocol flows.Section 3.4   identifies these interactions for supporting DHCP-based address   configuration.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   The support for IPv4 home address mobility is not dependent on the   IPv6 home address mobility support.  It is not required that the IPv6   home address mobility support needs to be enabled for providing IPv4   home address mobility support.  A mobile node will be able to obtain   IPv4-only, IPv6-only, or dual IPv4/IPv6 address configuration for its   attached interface.  The mobile node's policy profile will determine   if the mobile node is entitled to both the protocol versions or a   single protocol version.  Based on the policy, only those protocols   will be enabled on the access link.  Furthermore, if the mobile node,   after obtaining the address configuration on its interface, performs   a handoff, either by changing its point of attachment over the same   interface or to a different interface, the network will ensure the   mobile node will be able to use the same IPv4 address configuration   after the handoff.   Additionally, if the mobile node connects to the Proxy Mobile IPv6   domain, through multiple interfaces and simultaneously through   different access networks, each of the connected interfaces will   obtain a unique IPv4 home address.  In such a scenario, there will be   multiple Binding Cache entries for the mobile node on the local   mobility anchor.  All the addresses (IPv4/IPv6) assigned to a given   interface will be managed as part of one mobility session, as   specified inSection 5.4 of [RFC5213].3.1.  Local Mobility Anchor Considerations3.1.1.  Extensions to Binding Cache Entry   To support this feature, the conceptual Binding Cache entry data   structure maintained by the local mobility anchor needs to include   the following parameters.   o  The IPv4 home address assigned to the mobile node's interface and      registered by the mobile access gateway.  The IPv4 home address      entry also includes the corresponding subnet mask.  It is to be      noted that this parameter is defined in [RFC5555] and is presented      here for completeness.   o  The IPv4 default router address assigned to the mobile node.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 20103.1.2.  Signaling Considerations3.1.2.1.  Processing Proxy Binding Updates   The processing rules specified inSection 5.3 of [RFC5213] are   applied for processing the received Proxy Binding Update message.   However, if the received Proxy Binding Update message has an IPv4   Home Address Request option, the following considerations MUST be   applied additionally.   o  If there is an IPv4 Home Address Request option (Section 3.3.1)      present in the received Proxy Binding Update message, but no Home      Network Prefix option [RFC5213] present in the received Proxy      Binding Update message, the local mobility anchor MUST NOT reject      the request as specified inSection 5.3.1 of [RFC5213].  At least      one instance of either of these two options, either the IPv4 Home      Address Request option or the Home Network Prefix option, MUST be      present.  If there is not a single instance of either of these two      options present in the request, the local mobility anchor MUST      reject the request and send a Proxy Binding Acknowledgement      message with the Status field set to      MISSING_HOME_NETWORK_PREFIX_OPTION (missing the mobile node's home      network prefix option) [RFC5213].   o  If there is at least one instance of the Home Network Prefix      option [RFC5213] present in the received Proxy Binding Update      message, but it is known from the mobile node's policy profile      that the mobile node is not authorized for IPv6 service, or IPv6      routing in not enabled in the home network, the local mobility      anchor MUST reject the request and send a Proxy Binding      Acknowledgement message with the Status field set to      NOT_AUTHORIZED_FOR_IPV6_MOBILITY_SERVICE (mobile node not      authorized for IPv6 mobility service; seeSection 3.3.5).   o  If there is an IPv4 Home Address Request option present in the      received Proxy Binding Update message, but it is known from the      mobile node's policy profile that the mobile node is not      authorized for IPv4 service, or if IPv4 routing is not enabled in      the home network, the local mobility anchor MUST reject the      request and send a Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message with the      Status field set to NOT_AUTHORIZED_FOR_IPV4_MOBILITY_SERVICE      (mobile node not authorized for IPv4 mobility service; seeSection 3.3.5).   o  If there is more than one instance of the IPv4 Home Address      Request option present in the request, then the local mobility      anchor MUST reject the request and send a Proxy BindingWakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010      Acknowledgement message with the Status field set to      MULTIPLE_IPV4_HOME_ADDRESS_ASSIGNMENT_NOT_SUPPORTED (multiple IPv4      home address assignments not supported; seeSection 3.3.5).   o  For associating the received Proxy Binding Update message to an      existing mobility session, the local mobility anchor MUST perform      the Binding Cache entry existence test by applying the following      considerations.      *  If there is at least one instance of the Home Network Prefix         option [RFC5213] with a NON_ZERO prefix value, or, if there is         an IPv4 Home Address Request option with the IPv4 address in         the option set to ALL_ZERO, considerations fromSection 5.4.1         of [RFC5213] MUST be applied.      *  If there is an IPv4 Home Address Request option present in the         request with the IPv4 address value in the option set to a         NON_ZERO value, considerations fromSection 3.1.2.7 MUST be         applied.   o  If there is no existing Binding Cache entry that can be associated      with the request, the local mobility anchor MUST consider this      request as an initial binding registration request, and      considerations fromSection 3.1.2.2 MUST be applied.      Additionally, if there are one or more Home Network Prefix options      [RFC5213] present in the request, considerations fromSection5.3.2 of [RFC5213] MUST also be applied.   o  If there exists a Binding Cache entry that can be associated with      the request, the local mobility anchor MUST apply considerations      fromSection 5.3.1 of [RFC5213], (point 13), to determine if the      request is a re-registration or a de-registration request.  If the      request is a re-registration request, considerations fromSection 3.1.2.3 MUST be applied, and if it is a de-registration      request, considerations fromSection 3.1.2.5 MUST be applied.   o  If there exists a Binding Cache entry that can be associated with      the request and if it is determined that the request is a re-      registration request for extending an IPv4 home address mobility      support to the existing IPv6-only mobility session, considerations      fromSection 3.1.2.2 MUST be applied with respect to IPv4 support.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 20103.1.2.2.  Initial Binding Registration (New Mobility Session)   o  If there is an IPv4 Home Address Request option present in the      Proxy Binding Update message with the IPv4 address value in the      option set to ALL_ZERO, the local mobility anchor MUST allocate an      IPv4 home address to the mobile node and associate it with the new      mobility session created for that mobile node.   o  If there is an IPv4 Home Address Request option with the IPv4      address in the option set to a NON_ZERO value, the local mobility      anchor, before accepting the request, MUST ensure that the address      is topologically anchored on the local mobility anchor and      furthermore that the mobile node is authorized to use that      address.  If the mobile node is not authorized for that specific      address, the local mobility anchor MUST reject the request and      send a Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message with the Status field      set to NOT_AUTHORIZED_FOR_IPV4_HOME_ADDRESS (mobile node not      authorized for the requesting IPv4 address; seeSection 3.3.5).      It MUST also include the IPv4 Home Address Reply option      (Section 3.3.2). in the reply with the Status field value in the      option set to 129 (Administratively prohibited).   o  If the local mobility anchor is unable to allocate an IPv4 address      due to lack of resources, it MUST reject the request and send a      Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message with Status field set to 130      (Insufficient resources).  It MUST also include the IPv4 Home      Address Reply option in the reply with the Status field value in      the option set to 128 (Failure, reason unspecified).   o  Upon accepting the request, the local mobility anchor MUST create      a Binding Cache entry for this mobility session.  However, if the      request also contains one or more Home Network Prefix options      [RFC5213], there should still be only one Binding Cache entry that      should be created for this mobility session.  The created Binding      Cache entry MUST be used for managing both IPv4 and IPv6 home      address bindings.  The fields in the Binding Cache entry MUST be      updated with the accepted values for that session.   o  The local mobility anchor MUST establish a bidirectional tunnel to      the mobile access gateway with the encapsulation mode set to the      negotiated mode for carrying the IPv4 payload traffic.  When using      IPv6 transport, the encapsulation mode is IPv4-or-IPv6-over-IPv6      (IPv4 or IPv6 packet carried as a payload of an IPv6 packet).      When using IPv4 transport, the encapsulation mode is as specified      inSection 4.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   o  The local mobility anchor MUST create an IPv4 host route (or a      platform-specific equivalent function that sets up the forwarding)      for tunneling the packets received for the mobile node's home      address associated with this mobility session.   o  The local mobility anchor MUST send the Proxy Binding      Acknowledgement message with the Status field set to 0 (Proxy      Binding Update accepted).  The message MUST be constructed as      specified inSection 3.1.2.6.3.1.2.3.  Binding Lifetime Extension (No Handoff)   All the considerations fromSection 5.3.3 of [RFC5213] MUST be   applied.3.1.2.4.  Binding Lifetime Extension (after Handoff)   o  If there is no Home Network Prefix option [RFC5213] present in the      request, but if the Binding Cache entry associated with this      request has IPv6 home network prefix(es), the local mobility      anchor MUST consider this as a request to extend lifetime only for      the IPv4 home address and not for the IPv6 home network      prefix(es).  Hence, the local mobility anchor SHOULD release all      the IPv6 home network prefix(es) assigned to that mobile node and      for that specific attached interface.  Similar considerations      apply for the case where there is no IPv4 Home Address Request      option present in the request, but if the Binding Cache entry      associated with that request has both IPv4 home address and IPv6      home network prefix(es).   o  The local mobility anchor MUST remove the previously created IPv4      host route (or the forwarding state) and the dynamically created      bidirectional tunnel for carrying the IPv4 payload traffic (if      there are no other mobile nodes for which the tunnel is being      used).  This will remove the routing state towards the mobile      access gateway where the mobile node was anchored prior to the      handoff.   o  The local mobility anchor MUST create a bidirectional tunnel to      the mobile access gateway that sent the request (if there is no      existing bidirectional tunnel) and with the encapsulation mode set      to the negotiated mode for carrying the IPv4 payload traffic.  An      IPv4 host route for tunneling the packets received for the mobile      node's IPv4 home address MUST also be added.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   o  The required forwarding state identified inSection 5.3.6 of      [RFC5213] is for IPv6 payload traffic.  Those considerations apply      for IPv4 payload traffic as well.  However, if IPv4 transport is      in use, considerations fromSection 4 MUST be applied.3.1.2.5.  Binding De-Registration   All the considerations fromSection 5.3.5 of [RFC5213] MUST be   applied.  Additionally, to remove the IPv4 state as part of the   Binding Cache entry deletion, the IPv4 host route and the dynamically   created bidirectional tunnel for carrying the IPv4 payload traffic   (if there are no other mobile nodes for which the tunnel is being   used) MUST be removed.  However, if the request is for a selective   de-registration (IPv4 home address only, or all the IPv6 home network   prefixes), the Binding Cache entry MUST NOT be deleted, only the   respective states related to those addresses MUST be deleted.3.1.2.6.  Constructing the Proxy Binding Acknowledgement Message   When sending the Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message to the mobile   access gateway, the local mobility anchor MUST construct the message   as specified inSection 5.3.6 of [RFC5213].  Additionally, the   following considerations MUST be applied.   oSection 5.3.6 of [RFC5213] requires the local mobility anchor to      include at least one instance of the Home Network Prefix option      [RFC5213] in the Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message that it      sends to the mobile access gateway.  However, if the received      Proxy Binding Update message has only the IPv4 Home Address      Request option and does not contain the Home Network Prefix      option(s), then the local mobility anchor MUST NOT include any      Home Network Prefix option(s) in the reply.  However, there MUST      be at least one instance of either the Home Network Prefix option      [RFC5213] or the IPv4 Home Address Reply option present in the      Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message.   o  The IPv4 Home Address Reply option MUST be present in the Proxy      Binding Acknowledgement message.      1.  If the Status field is set to a value greater than or equal to          128, i.e., if the Proxy Binding Update is rejected, then there          MUST be an IPv4 Home Address Reply option corresponding to the          IPv4 Home Address Request option present in the request and          with the IPv4 address value and the prefix length fields in          the option set to the corresponding values in the request.          The Status field value in the option must be set to the          specific error code.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010      2.  For all other cases, there MUST be an IPv4 Home Address Reply          option to carry the IPv4 home address assigned for that          mobility session and with the value in the option set to the          allocated IPv4 address.  The prefix length in the option MUST          be set to the prefix length of the mobile node's IPv4 home          network.  The Status field value in the option must be set to          0 (Success).   o  The IPv4 Default-Router Address option (Section 3.3.3) MUST be      present, if the Status field value in the Proxy Binding      Acknowledgement message is set to 0 (Proxy Binding Update      accepted) [RFC5213].  Otherwise, the option MUST NOT be present.      If the option is present, the default router address in the option      MUST be set to the mobile node's default router address.3.1.2.7.  Binding Cache Entry Lookup Considerations   The Binding Cache entry lookup considerations specified inSection5.4.1.1 of [RFC5213] uses the Home Network Prefix option [RFC5213] as   the key parameter for identifying the Binding Cache entry.  However,   when there is not a single Home Network Prefix option with a NON_ZERO   value present in the request, but there is an IPv4 Home Address   option with a NON_ZERO value present in the request, then the   following considerations MUST be applied.   o  The search rules specified inSection 5.4.1.1 of [RFC5213], which      primarily uses IPv6 home network prefix set as the search key, are      equally valid when using a single IPv4 home address as the key.      When applying those considerations, instead of the IPv6 home      network prefix(es), the IPv4 home address from the IPv4 Home      Address option present in the request MUST be used as the search      key.   o  The rules specified inSection 5.4.1.1 of [RFC5213] assume the      presence of one or more IPv6 home network prefixes in the received      request and also in the Binding Cache entry.  But, when using the      IPv4 home address as the search key, these considerations MUST      always assume just one single IPv4 home address, both in the      request and also in the Binding Cache entry.3.1.3.  Routing Considerations for the Local Mobility Anchor   Intercepting Packets Sent to the Mobile Node's IPv4 Home Address:   o  When the local mobility anchor is serving a mobile node, it MUST      advertise a connected route into the Routing Infrastructure for      the mobile node's IPv4 home address or for its home subnet, in      order to receive packets that are sent to the mobile node's IPv4Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010      home address.  This essentially enables IPv4 routers in that      network to detect the local mobility anchor as the last-hop router      for that subnet.   Forwarding Packets to the Mobile Node:   o  On receiving a packet from a corresponding node with the      destination address matching the mobile node's IPv4 home address,      the local mobility anchor MUST forward the packet through the      bidirectional tunnel setup for that mobile node.   o  The format of the tunneled packet when payload protection is not      enabled:        IPv6 header (src= LMAA, dst= Proxy-CoA       /* Tunnel Header */           IPv4 header (src= CN, dst= IPv4-MN-HOA )  /* Packet Header */              Upper-layer protocols                  /* Packet Content*/      Figure 2: Tunneled Packets from the Local Mobility Anchor (LMA) to                       the Mobile Access Gateway (MAG)   Forwarding Packets Sent by the Mobile Node:   o  All the reverse tunneled packets that the local mobility anchor      receives from the mobile access gateway, after removing the tunnel      header, MUST be routed to the destination specified in the inner      IPv4 packet header.  These routed packets will have the Source      Address field set to the mobile node's IPv4 home address.3.1.4.  ECN and Payload Fragmentation Considerations   The Explicit Congestion Notification (ECN) considerations specified   inSection 5.6.3 of [RFC5213] apply for the IPv4 payload packets as   well.  The mobility agents at the tunnel entry and exit points MUST   handle ECN information as specified in that document.   The mobility agents at the tunnel entry and exit points MUST apply   the IP packet fragmentation considerations as specified inSection 7   of [RFC2473]; additionally, they MUST apply the considerations   related to tunnel error processing and reporting as specified inSection 8 of [RFC2473].Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 20103.2.  Mobile Access Gateway Considerations3.2.1.  Extensions to Binding Update List Entry   To support the IPv4 home address mobility feature, the conceptual   Binding Update List entry data structure needs to be extended with   the following additional fields.   o  The IPv4 home address assigned to the mobile node's attached      interface.  This IPv4 home address may have been statically      configured in the mobile node's policy profile, or, may have been      dynamically allocated by the local mobility anchor.  The IPv4 home      address entry also includes the corresponding subnet mask.   o  The IPv4 default router address of the mobile node.  This is      acquired from the mobile node's local mobility anchor through the      received Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message.3.2.2.  Extensions to Mobile Node's Policy Profile   To support the IPv4 home address mobility support feature, the mobile   node's policy profile, specified inSection 6.2 of [RFC5213], MUST be   extended with the following additional fields.   Extensions to the mandatory section of the policy profile:   o  This field identifies all the IP versions for which the home      address mobility support needs to be extended to the mobile node.      The supported modes are IPv4-only, IPv6-only, and dual IPv4/IPv6.   Extensions to the optional section of the policy profile:   o  The IPv4 home address assigned to the mobile node's attached      interface.  The specific details on how the network maintains the      association between the address and the attached interface is      outside the scope of this document.  This address field also      includes the corresponding subnet mask.3.2.3.  Signaling Considerations3.2.3.1.  Mobile Node Attachment and Initial Binding Registration   After detecting a new mobile node on its access link, the mobile   access gateway on the access link MUST determine if IPv4 home address   mobility support needs to be enabled for that mobile node.  The   mobile node's policy profile identifies the supported modes (IPv4-   only, IPv6-only, or dual IPv4/IPv6) for that mobile node for whichWakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   the mobile service needs to be enabled.  Based on those policy   considerations and from other triggers such as from the network, if   it is determined that IPv4 home address mobility support needs to be   enabled for the mobile node, considerations fromSection 6.9.1.1 of   [RFC5213] MUST be applied with the following exceptions.   o  The IPv4 Home Address Request option MUST be present in the Proxy      Binding Update message.      *  If the mobile access gateway learns the mobile node's IPv4 home         address either from its policy profile or from other means, the         mobile access gateway MAY ask the local mobility anchor to         allocate that specific address by including exactly one         instance of the IPv4 Home Address Request option with the IPv4         home address and the prefix length fields in the option set to         that specific IPv4 address and the prefix length of the         corresponding home network.      *  The mobile access gateway MAY also ask the local mobility         anchor for dynamic IPv4 home address allocation.  It can         include exactly one instance of the IPv4 Home Address option         with the IPv4 home address and the prefix length fields in the         option set to the ALL_ZERO value.  Furthermore, the (P) flag in         the option MUST be set to 0.  This serves as a request to the         local mobility anchor for the IPv4 home address allocation.   o  The Proxy Binding Update message MUST be constructed as specified      inSection 6.9.1.5 of [RFC5213].  However, the Home Network Prefix      option(s) [RFC5213] MUST be present in the Proxy Binding Update      only if IPv6 home address mobility support also needs to be      enabled for the mobile node.  Otherwise, the Home Network Prefix      option(s) MUST NOT be present.   o  When using IPv4 transport to carry the signaling messages, the      related considerations fromSection 4 MUST be applied      additionally.3.2.3.2.  Receiving Proxy Binding Acknowledgement   All the considerations fromSection 6.9.1.2 of [RFC5213] MUST be   applied with the following exceptions.   o  If the received Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message has the      Status field value set to NOT_AUTHORIZED_FOR_IPV4_MOBILITY_SERVICE      (The mobile node is not authorized for IPv4 mobility service), the      mobile access gateway SHOULD NOT send a Proxy Binding Update      message including a IPv4 Home Address Request option until an      administrative action is taken.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   o  If the received Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message has the      Status field value set to NOT_AUTHORIZED_FOR_IPV4_HOME_ADDRESS      (The mobile node is not authorized for the requesting IPv4 home      address), the mobile access gateway SHOULD NOT request the same      IPv4 address again, but MAY request the local mobility anchor to      perform the address assignment by including exactly one instance      of the IPv4 Home Address Request option with the IPv4 home address      and the prefix length fields in the option set to the ALL_ZERO      value.   o  If the received Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message has the      Status field value set to NOT_AUTHORIZED_FOR_IPV6_MOBILITY_SERVICE      (The mobile node is not authorized for IPv6 mobility service), the      mobile access gateway SHOULD NOT send a Proxy Binding Update      message including any Home Network Prefix option(s) until an      administrative action is taken.   o  If there is no IPv4 Home Address Reply option present in the      received Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message, the mobile access      gateway MUST NOT enable IPv4 support for the mobile node and the      rest of the considerations from this section can be skipped.   o  If the received Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message has the      Status field value in the IPv4 Home Address Reply option set to a      value that indicates that the request was rejected by the local      mobility anchor, the mobile access gateway MUST NOT enable IPv4      mobility support.   o  If the received Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message has the      Status field value set to 0 (Proxy Binding Update accepted), the      mobile access gateway MUST update a Binding Update List entry for      that mobile node.  The entry MUST be updated with the assigned      IPv4 home address and other accepted registration values.   o  If the received Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message has the      Status field value set to 0 (Proxy Binding Update accepted) and      has the IPv4 Home Address Reply option set to a value that      indicates that the request was accepted by the local mobility      anchor, the mobile access gateway MUST establish a bidirectional      tunnel to the local mobility anchor (if there is no existing      bidirectional tunnel to that local mobility anchor) and with the      encapsulation mode set to IPv4-or-IPv6-over-IPv6 (an IPv4 or IPv6      packet carried as a payload of an IPv6 packet).  Considerations      fromSection 5.6.1 of [RFC5213] MUST be applied for managing the      dynamically created bidirectional tunnel.  However, when using      IPv4 transport, the encapsulation mode MUST be set to the      negotiated encapsulation mode, as specified inSection 4 of this      document.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   o  The mobile access gateway MUST set up the route for forwarding the      IPv4 packets received from the mobile node (using its IPv4 home      address) through the bidirectional tunnel set up for that mobile      node.   o  The default router address MUST be obtained from the IPv4 Default-      Router Address option present in the received Proxy Binding      Acknowledgement message.  The mobile access gateway SHOULD      configure this address on its interface and respond to any Address      Resolution Protocol (ARP) requests sent by the mobile node to      resolve the hardware address of the default router.  However,      since the link between the mobile access gateway and the mobile      node is a point-to-point link, implementations will be able      receive any packets sent to the default router address without      having to explicitly configure the default router address on its      interface.  The mobile access gateway MAY also use the default      router address as the source address for any datagrams sent to the      mobile node and originated by the mobile access gateway itself.      It MUST also use this address in the DHCP Router option [RFC2132]      in the DHCP messages.   o  If there is an IPv4 DHCP Support Mode option (Section 3.3.4)      present in the received Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message and      if the (S) flag in the option is set to a value of (1), then the      mobile access gateway MUST function as a DHCP server for the      mobile node.  If either the (S) flag in the option is set to a      value of (0), or if the option is not present in the request, then      the mobile access gateway MUST function as a DHCP Relay for the      mobile node.3.2.3.3.  Binding Re-Registration and De-Registrations   When sending a Proxy Binding Update either to extend the lifetime of   a mobility session or to de-register the mobility session, the   respective considerations from [RFC5213] MUST be applied.   Furthermore, the following additional considerations MUST also be   applied.   o  If there is an IPv4 home address assigned to the mobility session,      then there MUST be exactly one instance of the IPv4 Home Address      Request option present in the Proxy Binding Update message.  The      IPv4 home address and the prefix length fields in the option MUST      be set to that specific address and its corresponding subnet-mask      length.   o  If there was no IPv4 home address requested in the initial Proxy      Binding Update message, but it is determined that the IPv4 home      address MUST be requested subsequently, then there MUST be exactlyWakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010      one instance of the IPv4 Home Address Request option present in      the Proxy Binding Update message.  The IPv4 home address in the      option MUST be set to either ALL_ZERO or to a specific address      that is being requested.   o  For performing selective de-registration of IPv4 home address but      still retaining the mobility session with all the IPv6 home      network prefixes, the Proxy Binding Update message with the      lifetime value of (0) MUST NOT include any IPv6 Home Network      Prefix options [RFC5213].  It MUST include exactly one instance of      the IPv4 Home Address Request option with the IPv4 home address      and the prefix length fields in the option set to the IPv4 home      address that is being de-registered.  Similarly, for selective de-      registration of all the IPv6 home network prefixes, the Proxy      Binding Update message MUST NOT include the IPv4 Home address      option, it MUST include a Home Network Prefix option for each of      the assigned home network prefixes assigned for that mobility      session and with the prefix value in the option set to that      respective prefix value.   o  The Home Network Prefix option(s) [RFC5213] MUST NOT be present if      the same option(s) was not present in the initial Proxy Binding      Update message.  Otherwise, considerations from [RFC5213] with      respect to this option MUST be applied.   o  If at any point the mobile access gateway fails to extend the      binding lifetime with the local mobility anchor for the mobile      node's IPv4 address, it MUST remove any forwarding state set up      for the mobile node's IPv4 home address.3.2.4.  Routing Considerations for the Mobile Access Gateway   o  On receiving a packet from the bidirectional tunnel established      with the mobile node's local mobility anchor, the mobile access      gateway MUST remove the outer header before forwarding the packet      to the mobile node.   o  On receiving a packet from a mobile node connected to its access      link, the packet MUST be forwarded to the local mobility anchor      through the bidirectional tunnel established with the local      mobility anchor.  However, when the EnableMAGLocalRouting flag is      set, considerations fromSection 6.10.3 of [RFC5213] MUST be      applied with respect to local routing.   o  When forwarding the packet through the bidirectional tunnel, the      encapsulation considerations as specified inSection 3.1.3 MUST be      applied (except that the source and destination addresses fields      in the outer encapsulation header are reversed).  However, beforeWakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010      forwarding the packet, the mobile access gateway MUST ensure the      source address in the received packet is the address allocated for      that mobile node and that there is an active binding on the local      mobility anchor for that mobile node.   o  The mobile access gateway SHOULD use the Proxy ARP [RFC0925] to      reply to ARP Requests that it receives from the mobile node      seeking address resolutions for the destinations on the mobile      node's home subnet.  When receiving an ARP Request, the mobile      access gateway SHOULD examine the target IP address of the      Request, and if this IP address matches the mobile node's IPv4      home subnet, it SHOULD transmit a Proxy ARP Reply.  However, on      certain types of links, the mobile node does not use ARP for      address resolutions, instead it forwards all the packets to the      mobile access gateway.  On such types of links, the mobile access      gateway is not required to support the Proxy ARP function.  At the      same time, implementations not supporting the Proxy ARP function      on links where the mobile node uses ARP for seeking address      resolutions for the destinations on the mobile node's home subnet      will result in communication failure.3.3.  Mobility Options and Status Codes   To support the IPv4 home address mobility feature, this specification   defines the following new options and status codes.3.3.1.  IPv4 Home Address Request Option   A new option, the IPv4 Home Address Request option, is defined for   use with the Proxy Binding Update message sent by the mobile access   gateway to the local mobility anchor.  This option is used to request   IPv4 home address assignment for the mobile node.   The IPv4 Home Address Request option has an alignment requirement of   4n.  Its format is as follows:       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      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |     Type      |   Length      |Prefix-len |      Reserved     |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                     IPv4 home address                         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                Figure 3: IPv4 Home Address Request OptionWakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010      Type         36      Length         An 8-bit unsigned integer indicating the length of the option         in octets, excluding the Type and Length fields.  This field         MUST be set to (6).      Prefix-len         This 6-bit unsigned integer indicating the prefix length of the         mobile node's IPv4 home network corresponding to the IPv4 home         address contained in the option.      Reserved         This 10-bit field is unused for now.  The value MUST be         initialized to (0) by the sender and MUST be ignored by the         receiver.      IPv4 home address         This 4-byte field containing the IPv4 home address that is         being requested.  The value of 0.0.0.0 is used to request that         the local mobility anchor perform the address allocation.3.3.2.  IPv4 Home Address Reply Option   A new option, the IPv4 Home Address Reply option, is defined for use   in the Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message sent by the local   mobility anchor to the mobile access gateway.  This option can be   used to send the assigned mobile node's IPv4 home address.   The IPv4 Home Address Reply option has an alignment requirement of   4n.  Its format is as follows:       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      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |     Type      |    Length     |   Status      |Pref-len   |Res|      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                      IPv4 home address                        |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                 Figure 4: IPv4 Home Address Reply OptionWakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010      Type         37      Length         An 8-bit unsigned integer indicating the length of the option         in octets, excluding the Type and Length fields.  This field         MUST be set to (6).      Status         Indicates success or failure for the IPv4 home address         assignment.  Values from 0 to 127 indicate success.  Higher         values (128 to 255) indicate failure.  The following Status         values are currently allocated by this document:            0 Success            128 Failure, reason unspecified            129 Administratively prohibited            130 Incorrect IPv4 home address            131 Invalid IPv4 address            132 Dynamic IPv4 home address assignment not available      Prefix-len         This 6-bit unsigned integer is used to carry the prefix length         of the mobile node's IPv4 home network corresponding to the         IPv4 home address contained in the option.      Reserved (Res)         This 2-bit field is unused for now.  The value MUST be         initialized to (0) by the sender and MUST be ignored by the         receiver.      IPv4 home address         This 4-byte field is used to carry the IPv4 home address         assigned to the mobile node.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 20103.3.3.  IPv4 Default-Router Address Option   A new option, the IPv4 Default-Router Address option, is defined for   use in the Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message sent by the local   mobility anchor to the mobile access gateway.  This option can be   used to send the mobile node's IPv4 default router address.   The IPv4 Default-Router Address option has an alignment requirement   of 4n.  Its format is as follows:       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      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |      Type     |   Length      |         Reserved (R)          |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                  IPv4 Default-Router Address                  |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+               Figure 5: IPv4 Default-Router Address Option      Type         38      Length         An 8-bit unsigned integer indicating the length of the option         in octets, excluding the Type and Length fields.  This field         MUST be set to (6).      Reserved (R)         This 16-bit field is unused for now.  The value MUST be         initialized to (0) by the sender and MUST be ignored by the         receiver.      IPv4 Default-Router Address         A 4-byte field containing the mobile node's default router         address.3.3.4.  IPv4 DHCP Support Mode Option   A new option, the IPv4 DHCP Support Mode option, is defined for use   in the Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message sent by the local   mobility anchor to the mobile access gateway.  This option can beWakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   used to notify the mobile access gateway as to whether it should   function as a DHCP Server or a DHCP Relay for the attached mobile   node.   The IPv4 DHCP Support Mode option has no alignment requirement.  Its   format is as follows:       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      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |      Type     |   Length      |    Reserved (R)             |S|      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                  Figure 6: IPv4 DHCP Support Mode Option      Type         39      Length         An 8-bit unsigned integer indicating the length of the option         in octets, excluding the Type and Length fields.  This field         MUST be set to 2.      Reserved (R)         This 15-bit field is unused for now.  The value MUST be         initialized to (0) by the sender and MUST be ignored by the         receiver.      DHCP Support Mode (S)         A 1-bit field that specifies the DHCP support mode.  This flag         indicates whether the mobile access gateway should function as         a DHCP Server or a DHCP Relay for the attached mobile node.         The flag value of (0) indicates the mobile access gateway         should act as a DHCP Relay, and the flag value of (1) indicates         it should act as a DHCP Server.3.3.5.  Status Codes   This document defines the following new Status values for use in the   Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message.  These values are to be   allocated from the same numbering space, as defined inSection 6.1.8   of [RFC3775].Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   NOT_AUTHORIZED_FOR_IPV4_MOBILITY_SERVICE: 170      Mobile node not authorized for IPv4 mobility service.   NOT_AUTHORIZED_FOR_IPV4_HOME_ADDRESS: 171      Mobile node not authorized for the requesting IPv4 home address.   NOT_AUTHORIZED_FOR_IPV6_MOBILITY_SERVICE: 172      Mobile node not authorized for IPv6 mobility service.   MULTIPLE_IPV4_HOME_ADDRESS_ASSIGNMENT_NOT_SUPPORTED: 173      Multiple IPv4 home address assignments not supported.3.4.  Supporting DHCP-Based Address Configuration   This section explains how DHCP-based address configuration support   can be enabled for a mobile node in a Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain.  It   explains the protocol operation, supported DHCP server deployment   configurations, and the protocol interactions between DHCP agents and   mobility entities in each of the supported configurations.   This specification supports the following two DHCP deployment   configurations.   o  DHCP relay agent co-located with the mobile access gateway.   o  DHCP server co-located in the mobile access gateway.   The following are the configuration requirements:   o  The DHCP server or the DHCP relay agent configured on the mobile      access gateway is required to have an IPv4 address for exchanging      the DHCP messages with the mobile node.  This address is the      mobile node's default router address provided by the local      mobility anchor.  Optionally, all the DHCP servers co-located with      the mobile access gateways in the Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain can be      configured with a fixed IPv4 address.  This fixed address can be      an IPv4 private address [RFC1918] that can be used for the DHCP      protocol communication on any of the access links.  This address      will be used as the server identifier in the DHCP messages.   o  A DHCP server identifies a DHCP interface from the contents of the      DHCP "Client-identifier" option [RFC2132], if present, or from the      client hardware address (chaddr), as specified in [RFC2131].  Note      that the name "Client-identifier" is a misnomer as it actuallyWakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010      identifies an interface and not the client.  The DHCP server uses      this identity to identify the interface for which the address is      assigned.  A mobile node in a Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain, can attach      to the network through multiple interfaces and can obtain address      configuration for each of its interfaces.  Additionally, it may      perform handoffs between its interfaces.  The following are the      related considerations with respect to the identification      presented to the DHCP server.      *  If the mobile node attaches to the Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain         through multiple physical interfaces, the DHCP server will         uniquely identify each of those interfaces and will perform         address assignment.  The DHCP server will identify the         interface as specified inRFC 2131.  The mobile node SHOULD         generate and use the "Client-identifier" for each physical         interface according to [RFC4361].  Any time the mobile node         performs a handoff of a physical interface to a different         mobile access gateway, using the same interface, the DHCP         server will always be able to identify the binding using the         presented identifier.  The presented identifier (either the         "Client-identifier" or the hardware address) will remain as the         primary key for each binding, just as how they are unique in a         Binding Cache entry.      *  If the mobile node is capable of performing a handoff between         interfaces, as per [RFC5213], a "Client-identifier" value MUST         be used for the attachment point that is not tied to any of the         physical interfaces.  The identifier MUST be generated         according to [RFC4361], which guarantees that the identifier is         stable and unique across all "Client-identifier" values in use         in the Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain.   o  All the DHCP servers co-located with the mobile access gateways in      a Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain can be configured with the same set of      DHCP option values (e.g., DNS Server, SIP Server, etc.) to ensure      the mobile node receives the same configuration values on any of      the access links in that Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain.3.4.1.  DHCP Server Co-Located with the Mobile Access Gateway   This section explains the operational sequence of home address   assignment operation when the DHCP server is co-located with the   mobile access gateway.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010     MN   MAG(DHCP-S)  LMA      |------>|        |    1. DHCPDISCOVER      |       |------->|    2. Proxy Binding Update      |       |<-------|    3. Proxy Binding Acknowledgement (IPv4 HoA)      |       |========|    4. Tunnel/Route Setup      |<------|        |    5. DHCPOFFER  (IPv4 HoA)      |------>|        |    6. DHCPREQUEST (IPv4 HoA)      |<------|        |    7. DHCPACK      |       |        |    Figure 7: Overview of DHCP Server Located at Mobile Access Gateway   o  It is possible that the mobile access gateway may have already      completed the Proxy Mobile IPv6 signaling with the local mobility      anchor to request both IPv6 home network prefix(es) and IPv4 home      address assignment prior to Step 1.  In such an event, the Proxy      Mobile IPv6 signaling steps (Steps 2 to 4) above are not relevant.   o  It is possible the mobile access gateway may have initially      completed the Proxy Mobile IPv6 signaling prior to Step 1, but      only for requesting IPv6 home network prefix(es), and it may later      request IPv4 home address assignment after detecting the DHCP      triggers from the mobile node as shown above.   o  The mobile access gateway may choose to ignore the DHCPDISCOVER      messages until the Proxy Mobile IPv6 signaling is successfully      completed, or it may choose to send a delayed response for      reducing the additional delay waiting for a new DHCPDISCOVER      message from the mobile node.   Initial IPv4 Home Address Assignment:   o  To acquire the mobile node's IPv4 home address from the local      mobility anchor, the mobile access gateway will initiate Proxy      Mobile IPv6 signaling with the local mobility anchor.   o  After the successful completion of the Proxy Mobile IPv6 signaling      and upon acquiring the mobile node's IPv4 home address from the      local mobility anchor, the DHCP server on the mobile access      gateway will send a DHCPOFFER message [RFC2131] to the mobile      node.  The offered address will be the mobile node's IPv4 home      address, assigned by the local mobility anchor.  The DHCPOFFER      message will also have the Subnet Mask option [RFC2132] and Router      option [RFC2132], with the values in those options set to the      mobile node's IPv4 home subnet mask and default router address,      respectively.  Additionally, the Server Identifier option will be      included and with the value in the option set to the default      router address.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 29]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   o  If the mobile node sends the DHCPREQUEST message, the DHCP server      will send DHCPACK message, as per [RFC2131].   IPv4 Home Address Renewal with the DHCP Server (No Handoff):   o  Any time the mobile node goes into the DHCP RENEWING state      [RFC2131], it simply unicasts the DHCPREQUEST message including      the assigned IPv4 home address in the 'Requested IP Address'      option.  The DHCPREQUEST is sent to the address specified in the      Server Identifier option of the previously received DHCPOFFER and      DHCPACK messages.   o  The DHCP server will send a DHCPACK to the mobile node to      acknowledge the assignment of the committed IPv4 address.   IPv4 Home Address Renewal with the DHCP Server (after Handoff):   When the mobile node goes into the DHCP RENEWING state [RFC2131], it   directly unicasts the DHCPREQUEST message to the DHCP server that   currently provided the DHCP lease.  However, if the mobile node   changed its point of attachment and is attached to a new mobile   access gateway, it is required that the mobile node update the DHCP   server address and use the address of the DHCP server that is co-   located with the new mobile access gateway.  The following approach   can be adopted to ensure the mobile node uses the DHCP server on the   attached link.     MN   oMAG(DHCP-S) nMAG(DHCP-S)      |       :        |    RENEW------------->|    1. DHCPREQUEST (IPv4 HoA)    BOUND<-------------|    2. DHCPACK (IPv4 HoA) or DHCPNACK      |       :        |    *  The use of a fixed DHCP server address on all DHCP servers              Figure 8: Address Renewal with the DHCP Server   o  The use of a stable address, either the IPv4 default router      address of the mobile node or a fixed IPv4 address common in that      Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain, as the DHCP Server Identifier will      ensure the DHCPREQUEST message sent by the mobile node to renew      the address will be received by the new mobile access gateway on      the attached link.   o  The mobile access gateway after completing the Proxy Mobile IPv6      signaling and upon acquiring the IPv4 home address of the mobile      node will return the address in the DHCPACK message.  However, if      the mobile access gateway is unable to complete the Proxy MobileWakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 30]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010      IPv6 signaling or is unable to acquire the same IPv4 address as      requested by the mobile node, it will send a DHCPNACK message      [RFC2131] to the mobile node, as shown in Figure 8.3.4.2.  DHCP Relay Agent Co-Located with the Mobile Access Gateway   A DHCP relay agent is co-located with each mobile access gateway.  A   DHCP server is located somewhere in the Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain   (e.g., is co-located with the local mobility anchor).  Figure 9 shows   the sequence of IPv4 home address assignment using DHCP Relay.  MN   MAG(DHCP-R) LMA   DHCP-S   |       |------->|      | 1. Proxy Binding Update *   |       |<-------|      | 2. Proxy Binding Acknowledgement (IPv4 HoA)   |       |========|      | 3. Tunnel/Route Setup*   |------>|-------------->| 4. DHCPDISCOVER (IPv4 HoA) via DHCP-R   |<------|<--------------| 5. DHCPOFFER (IPv4 HoA) via DHCP-R   |------>|-------------->| 6. DHCPREQUEST (IPv4 HoA) via DHCP-R   |<------|<--------------| 7. DHCPACK (IPv4 HoA) via DHCP-R   |       |               |   Figure 9: Overview of the DHCP Relay Located at Mobile Access Gateway   o  The Proxy Mobile IPv6 signaling (starting at Step 1) and the DHCP      address configuration (starting at Step 4) may start in any order.      However, the DHCPOFFER (Step 5) and the immediate steps following      it will occur in the specified order and only after the Tunnel/      Route Setup (Step 3).   o  It is possible the mobile access gateway may have initially      completed the Proxy Mobile IPv6 signaling with the local mobility      anchor only to request IPv6 home network prefix(es) and may later      request IPv4 home address assignment after detecting the DHCP      triggers from the mobile node (after Step 4).   o  The mobile access gateway may choose to ignore the DHCPDISCOVER      messages until the Proxy Mobile IPv6 signaling is successfully      completed, or it may choose to send a delayed response for      reducing the additional delay waiting for a new DHCPDISCOVER      message from the mobile node.   Initial IPv4 Home Address Assignment:   o  To acquire the mobile node's IPv4 home address from the local      mobility anchor, the mobile access gateway will initiate Proxy      Mobile IPv6 signaling with the local mobility anchor.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 31]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   o  After the successful completion of the Proxy Mobile IPv6 signaling      and upon acquiring the mobile node's IPv4 home address from the      local mobility anchor, the mobile access gateway will enable      forwarding for all the DHCP messages between the mobile node and      the DHCP server.   o  The DHCP relay agent on the mobile access gateway will add the      DHCP Relay Agent Information option [RFC3046] to the DHCPDISCOVER      message.  The assigned IPv4 home address will be included in the      Agent Remote ID Sub-option of the DHCP Relay Agent Information      option.  This sub-option is used as a hint for requesting the DHCP      server to allocate that specific IPv4 address.   o  On receiving a DHCPOFFER message from the DHCP server, the mobile      access gateway will ensure the assigned address is currently      assigned by the local mobility anchor to that mobile node.  If      this address is different from what is assigned to the mobile      node, then the mobile access gateway will drop the DHCPOFFER      message and an administrative error message will be logged.   o  When the DHCP messages are sent over administrative boundaries,      the operators need to ensure these messages are secured.  All the      DHCP messages relayed by the mobile access gateway can be tunneled      to the local mobility anchor if needed.  Alternatively, if the      network in the Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain is secure enough, the      mobile access gateway can just relay the DHCP messages to the      server.  To achieve this, all the mobile access gateways need to      have a route towards the DHCP server.   IPv4 Home Address Renewal to the same DHCP Server: (No Handoff)   o  When the DHCP client goes into the DHCP RENEW STATE [RFC2131], it      directly unicasts DHCPREQUEST messages to the DHCP server.  The      DHCP relay agent may not detect any changes in the DHCP state.      For example, if the mobile node releases the IPv4 address, the      relay agent would not be aware of it.  The following describes      additional mechanisms for the mobile access gateway to detect any      changes in the DHCP state.      *  The DHCP relay agent can intercept all IPv4 DHCP packets         destined to the set of addresses used within the Proxy Mobile         IPv6 domain as DHCP addresses.  Since the link between a mobile         node and a mobile access gateway is the point-to-point link,         the mobile access gateway will be in path for all the messages.      *  The DHCP relay agent can use the DHCP Server Identifier         Override Sub-option [RFC5107] to be in path for all the DHCP         message flows.  The DHCP client uses the DHCP server addressWakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 32]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010         that is overridden by the DHCP relay agent address as a         destination address of DHCPREQUEST.  The DHCP Server Identifier         Override Sub-option is recommended only when the fixed DHCP         relay address is configured on all the mobile access gateways.         Otherwise, the DHCP relay agent address is changed when the         mobile node changes the attached mobile access gateway.   o  However, if the DHCP server is co-located with the local mobility      anchor, then the DHCP relay agent is not required to intercept the      unicast DHCP messages between the mobile node and the DHCP server.      This is because the local mobility anchor will ensure that the      DHCP state is consistent with the Proxy Mobile IPv6 binding that      exists for the IPv4 address.   o  Once the mobile access gateway intercepts the DHCP message from      the mobile node to the DHCP server, it can verify if the mobile      node is negotiating the same IPv4 address that the local mobility      anchor allocated for that mobile node.  If the address in the      DHCPREQUEST message does not match with the IPv4 address allocated      for the mobile node, then the mobile access gateway SHOULD drop      the DHCP message and an administrative error message can be      logged.   o  Any time the mobile access gateway detects that the mobile node      has released its IPv4 address, it can send a Proxy Binding Update      to the local mobility anchor and de-register the IPv4 mobility      session.3.4.3.  Common DHCP Considerations   The following DHCP-related considerations are common to both the   supported configuration modes, specified in Sections3.4.1 and3.4.2.   o  When a mobile node sends a DHCPDISCOVER message [RFC2131], the      DHCP server or the relay agent co-located with the mobile access      gateway will trigger the mobile access gateway to complete the      Proxy Mobile IPv6 signaling.  This is the required interaction      between these two protocols.  The mobile access gateway, on      receiving this trigger, will check if there is already an assigned      IPv4 home address for the mobile node, from the local mobility      anchor.  If there is no assigned IPv4 home address assigned for      that mobile node, the mobile access gateway will complete the      Proxy Mobile IPv6 signaling with the local mobility anchor by      sending a Proxy Binding Update message.   o  The mobile node needs to be identified by the MN-Identifier, as      specified inSection 6.6 of [RFC5213].  This identity should be      associated to the DHCP messages sent by the mobile node.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 33]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   o  The mobile access gateway will drop all the DHCPDISCOVER messages      until it completes the Proxy Mobile IPv6 signaling.  If the mobile      access gateway is unable to complete the Proxy Mobile IPv6      signaling, or, if the local mobility anchor does not assign an      IPv4 address for the mobile node, the mobile access gateway MUST      NOT enable IPv4 home address mobility support for the mobile node      on that access link.   o  The trigger for initiating Proxy Mobile IPv6 signaling can also be      delivered to the mobile access gateway as part of a context      transfer from the previous mobile access gateway, or delivered      from the other network elements in the radio network, the details      of which are outside the scope of this document.   o  The DHCPOFFER message [RFC2131] sent to the mobile node MUST      include the Subnet Mask option [RFC2132] and the Router option      [RFC2132].  The values in the Subnet Mask option and Router option      MUST be set to the mobile node's IPv4 home subnet mask and its      default router address, respectively.   o  The DHCPOFFER message [RFC2131] sent to the mobile node MUST      include the Interface MTU option [RFC2132].  The DHCP servers in      the Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain MUST be configured to include the      Interface MTU option.  The MTU value SHOULD reflect the tunnel MTU      for the bidirectional tunnel between the mobile access gateway and      the local mobility anchor.   o  The DHCP lease length allocated to the mobile node's IPv4 home      address may be different from the binding lifetime at the local      mobility anchor for that mobile node's session.  It is not      possible to keep these lifetimes synchronized, and so its not      required that the configured lifetimes should be kept same in both      DHCP and Proxy Mobile IPv6.   o  When the mobile node performs a handoff from one mobile access      gateway to another, the mobile access gateway on the new link will      initiate the Proxy Mobile IPv6 signaling with the local mobility      anchor.  On completing the Proxy Mobile IPv6 signaling, the mobile      access gateway has the proper IPv4 address state that the local      mobility anchor has allocated for the mobile node and that can be      used for supporting DHCP based address configuration on that link.   o  Any time the mobile node detects a link change event due to      handoff, or due to other reasons such as re-establishment of the      link-layer, the following are the mobile node's considerations      with respect to the DHCP protocol.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 34]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010      *  If the mobile node is DNAv4-capable (Detecting Network         Attachment version 4) [RFC4436] and if it performs DNAv4         procedures after receiving a link change event, it would always         detect the same default router on any of the access links in         that Proxy Mobile IPv6 domain, as the mobile access gateway         configures a fixed link-layer address on all the access links,         as per the base Proxy Mobile IPv6 specification [RFC5213].  The         mobile node will not perform any DHCP operation specifically         due to this event.      *  If the mobile node is not DNAv4-capable [RFC4436], after         receiving the link change event it will enter INIT-REBOOT state         [RFC2131] and will send a DHCPREQUEST message as specified inSection 3.7 of [RFC2131].  The mobile node will obtain the same         address configuration as before, as the link change does not         result in any change at the network layer.   o  The mobile node may release its IPv4 home address at any time by      sending the DHCPRELEASE message [RFC2131].  When the mobile access      gateway detects the DHCPRELEASE message sent by the mobile node,      it should consider this as a trigger for de-registering the mobile      node's IPv4 home address.  It will apply the considerations      specified inSection 3.2.3.3 for performing the de-registration      procedure.  However, this operation MUST NOT release any IPv6 home      network prefix(es) assigned to the mobile node.4.  IPv4 Transport Support   The Proxy Mobile IPv6 specification [RFC5213] requires the signaling   messages exchanged between the local mobility anchor and the mobile   access gateway to be over an IPv6 transport.  However, in some cases,   the local mobility anchor and the mobile access gateway are separated   by an IPv4 network.   The normal Proxy Mobile IPv6 specification [RFC5213] can be run over   an IPv4 transport without any modifications by using a transition   technology that allows IPv6 hosts to communicate over IPv4 networks.   For example, the mobile access gateway and the local mobility anchor   could have a simple configured IPv6-over-IPv4 tunnel.  Instead of   configured tunnels, various mechanisms for automatic tunneling could   be used, too.  To these tunnels, Proxy Mobile IPv6 would look just   like any other application traffic running over IPv6.   However, treating Proxy Mobile IPv6 just like any other IPv6 traffic   would mean an extra layer of encapsulation for the mobile node's   tunneled data traffic, adding 40 octets of overhead for each packet.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 35]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   The extensions defined in this section allow the mobile access   gateway and the local mobility anchor to communicate over an IPv4   network without this overhead.            IPv4-Proxy-CoA                      IPv4-LMAA                   |         + - - - - - - +        |   +--+          +---+      /               \     +---+          +--+   |MN|----------|MAG|=====   IPv4  Network  =====|LMA|----------|CN|   +--+          +---+      \               /     +---+          +--+                             + - - - - - - +                     Figure 10: IPv4 Transport Network   When the local mobility anchor and the mobile access gateway are   configured and reachable using only IPv4 addresses, the mobile access   gateway serving a mobile node can potentially send the signaling   messages over IPv4 transport and register its IPv4 address as the   care-of address in the mobile node's Binding Cache entry.  An IPv4   tunnel (with any of the supported encapsulation modes) can be used   for tunneling the mobile node's data traffic.  The following are the   key aspects of this feature.   o  The local mobility anchor and the mobile access gateway are both      configured and reachable using an IPv4 address of the same scope.   o  The IPv4 addresses used can be private IPv4 addresses, but it is      assumed that there is no NAT between the local mobility anchor and      the mobile access gateway.  However, it is possible to use UDP      encapsulation if other types of middleboxes are present.   o  The Mobility Header [RFC3775] is carried inside an IPv4 packet      with UDP header (IPv4-UDP-MH), using a UDP port number for Proxy      Mobile IPv6 signaling over IPv4.   o  The mobile node can be an IPv6, IPv4, or a dual IPv4/IPv6 node and      the IPv4 transport support specified in this section is agnostic      to the type of address mobility enabled for that mobile node.   o  The mobile node's data traffic will be tunneled between the local      mobility anchor and the mobile access gateway.  There are several      encapsulation modes available:      *  IPv4 (IPv4 or IPv6 payload packet carried in an IPv4 packet).         If payload protection using IPsec is enabled for the tunneled         traffic, the Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP) header         follows the outer tunnel header.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 36]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010      *  IPv4-UDP (payload packet carried in an IPv4 packet with UDP         header, using a UDP port number for Proxy Mobile IPv6 data;         this is different port than is used for signaling).  If payload         protection using IPsec is enabled, the ESP header follows the         outer IPv4 header, as explained inSection 4.3.      *  IPv4-UDP-TLV (payload packet carried in an IPv4 packet with UDP         and TLV header) and IPv4-GRE (Payload packet carried in an IPv4         packet with GRE header).  Refer to [GREKEY].  If payload         protection using IPsec is enabled, the ESP header follows the         outer IPv4 header, as explained inSection 4.3.4.1.  Local Mobility Anchor Considerations4.1.1.  Extensions to Binding Cache Entry   To support this feature, the conceptual Binding Cache entry data   structure maintained by the local mobility anchor [RFC5213] MUST be   extended with the following additional parameters.  It is to be noted   that all of these parameters are specified in [RFC5555] and also   required here in the present usage context, and are presented here   only for completeness.   o  The IPv4 Proxy Care-of Address configured on the mobile access      gateway that sent the Proxy Binding Update message.  The address      MUST be the same as the source address of the received IPv4 packet      that contains the Proxy Binding Update message.  However, if the      received Proxy Binding Update message is not sent as an IPv4      packet, i.e., when using IPv6 transport, this field in the Binding      Cache entry MUST be set to the ALL_ZERO value.4.1.2.  Extensions to Mobile Node's Policy Profile   To support the IPv4 Transport Support feature, the mobile node's   policy profile, specified inSection 6.2 of [RFC5213], MUST be   extended with the following additional fields.  These are mandatory   fields of the policy profile required for supporting this feature.   o  The IPv4 address of the local mobility anchor (IPv4-LMAA).4.1.3.  Signaling Considerations   This section provides the rules for processing the Proxy Mobile IPv6   signaling messages received over IPv4 transport.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 37]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 20104.1.3.1.  Processing Proxy Binding Updates   o  If the Proxy Binding Update message is protected with IPsec ESP,      IPsec processing happens before the packet is passed to Proxy      Mobile IPv6.   o  All the considerations fromSection 5.3.1 of [RFC5213] except Step      1 (about IPsec) MUST be applied on the encapsulated Proxy Binding      Update message.  Note that the Checksum field in Mobility Header      MUST be ignored.   o  Upon accepting the request, the local mobility anchor MUST set up      an IPv4 bidirectional tunnel to the mobile access gateway.  The      tunnel endpoint addresses are IPv4-LMAA and the IPv4-Proxy-CoA.      The encapsulation mode MUST be determined by applying the      following considerations:      *  If the (F) flag in the received Proxy Binding Update message is         set to the value of (1), but if the configuration flag,         AcceptForcedIPv4UDPEncapsulationRequest, is set to a value of         (0), then the local mobility anchor MUST reject the request         with the Status field value set to 129 (Administratively         prohibited).      *  If the (T) flag is set to (1), or GRE Key option is included,         see [GREKEY].      *  If the (F) flag in the received Proxy Binding Update message is         set to the value of (1), then the encapsulation mode MUST be         set to IPv4-UDP.  Otherwise, the encapsulation mode MUST be set         to IPv4.   o  The local mobility anchor MUST send the Proxy Binding      Acknowledgement message with the Status field value set to (0)      (Proxy Binding Update accepted).  The message MUST be constructed      as specified inSection 4.1.3.2.4.1.3.2.  Constructing the Proxy Binding Acknowledgement Message   The local mobility anchor when sending the Proxy Binding   Acknowledgement message to the mobile access gateway MUST construct   the message as specified inSection 5.3.6 of [RFC5213].  However, if   the Proxy Binding Update message was received over IPv4, the   following additional considerations MUST be applied.   o  The IPv6 Header is removed, and the Mobility Header containing the      Proxy Binding Acknowledgement is encapsulated in UDP (with source      port set to 5436 and destination port set to the source port ofWakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 38]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010      the received Proxy Binding Update message).  The Mobility Header      Checksum field MUST be set to zero (and the UDP checksum MUST be      used instead).   o  The source address in the IPv4 header of the message MUST be set      to the destination IPv4 address of the received request.   o  If IPsec ESP is used to protect signaling, the packet is processed      using transport mode ESP as described inSection 4.3.   o  Figure 11 shows the format of the Proxy Binding Acknowledgement      message sent over IPv4 and protected using ESP.     IPv4 header (src=IPv4-LMAA, dst=pbu_src_address)       ESP header (in transport mode)         UDP header (sport=5436, dport=5436)           Mobility Header (PBA)       Figure 11: Proxy Binding Acknowledgement (PBA) Message Sent over                                     IPv44.1.4.  Routing Considerations4.1.4.1.  Forwarding Considerations   Forwarding Packets to the Mobile Node:   o  On receiving an IPv4 or an IPv6 packet from a correspondent node      with the destination address matching any of the mobile node's      IPv4 or IPv6 home addresses, the local mobility anchor MUST      forward the packet through the bidirectional tunnel set up for      that mobile node.   o  The format of the tunneled packet is shown below.  The IPv4-UDP-      TLV and IPv4-GRE encapsulation modes are described in [GREKEY].  IPv4 Header (src=IPv4-LMAA, dst=IPv4-Proxy-CoA)] /* Tunnel Header */    [UDP Header (src port=5437, dst port=5437]   /* If UDP encap nego */      /* IPv6 or IPv4 Payload Packet */      IPv6 header (src=CN, dst=MN-HOA)        OR      IPv4 header (src=CN, dst=IPv4-MN-HoA)      Figure 12: Tunneled IPv4 Packet from LMA to MAG (IPv4 or IPv4-UDP                             Encapsulation Mode)Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 39]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   o  Forwarding Packets Sent by the Mobile Node:      *  All the reverse tunneled packets (IPv4 and IPv6) that the local         mobility anchor receives from the mobile access gateway, after         removing the tunnel header (i.e., the outer IPv4 header along         with the UDP and TLV header, if negotiated) MUST be routed to         the destination specified in the inner packet header.  These         routed packets will have the source address field set to the         mobile node's home address.4.1.4.2.  ECN and Payload Fragmentation Considerations   The ECN considerations specified inSection 5.6.3 of [RFC5213] apply   for the IPv4 transport tunnels as well.  The mobility agents at the   tunnel entry and exit points MUST handle ECN information as specified   in that document.   The mobility agents at the tunnel entry and exit points MUST apply   the IP packet fragmentation considerations as specified in [RFC4213].   Additionally, they MUST also apply the considerations related to   tunnel error processing and reporting as specified in the same   specification.4.1.4.3.  Bidirectional Tunnel Management   The Tunnel Management considerations specified inSection 5.6.1 of   [RFC5213] apply for the IPv4 transport tunnels as well, with just one   difference that the encapsulation mode is different.4.2.  Mobile Access Gateway Considerations4.2.1.  Extensions to Binding Update List Entry   To support the IPv4 Transport Support feature, the conceptual Binding   Update List entry data structure maintained by the mobile access   gateway [RFC5213] MUST be extended with the following additional   parameters.   o  The IPv4 address of the local mobility anchor.  This address can      be obtained from the mobile node's policy profile.4.2.2.  Signaling Considerations   The mobile access gateway, when sending a Proxy Binding Update   message to the local mobility anchor, MUST construct the message as   specified inSection 6.9.1.5 of [RFC5213].  However, if the mobile   access gateway is in an IPv4-only access network, the following   additional considerations MUST be applied.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 40]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   o  The Proxy Binding Update message MUST be sent over IPv4 as      described inSection 4.2.2.1.   o  Just as specified in [RFC5213], when sending a Proxy Binding      Update message for extending the lifetime of a currently existing      mobility session or to de-register the mobility session, the Proxy      Binding Update message MUST be constructed just as the initial      request.   Receiving Proxy Binding Acknowledgement:   o  If the received Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message is protected      with IPsec ESP, IPsec processing happens before the packet is      passed to Proxy Mobile IPv6.  Considerations fromSection 4 of      [RFC5213] MUST be applied to authenticate and authorize the      message.   o  All the considerations fromSection 6.9.1.2 of [RFC5213] MUST be      applied on the encapsulated Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message.      Note that the Checksum field in Mobility Header MUST be ignored.   o  If the Status field indicates Success, the mobile access gateway      MUST set up a bidirectional tunnel to the local mobility anchor.   o  Upon accepting the request, the mobile access gateway MUST set up      an IPv4 bidirectional tunnel to the local mobility anchor.  The      tunnel endpoint addresses are the IPv4-Proxy-CoA and the IPv4-      LMAA.  The encapsulation mode MUST be determined from the below      considerations:      *  If the (T) flag is set to (1), or the GRE Key option is         included, see [GREKEY].      *  If there is a NAT Detection option [RFC5555] in the received         Proxy Binding Acknowledgement message, and the (F) flag is set         to value of (1), the encapsulation mode for the tunnel MUST be         set to IPv4-UDP.  Otherwise, the encapsulation mode MUST be set         to IPv4.4.2.2.1.  Constructing the Proxy Binding Update Message   o  The IPv6 Header is removed, and the Mobility Header containing the      Proxy Binding Update message is encapsulated in UDP (with the      destination port set to 5436).  The Mobility Header Checksum field      MUST be set to zero (and UDP checksum MUST be used instead).Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 41]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   o  The source address in the IPv4 header MUST be set to IPv4-Proxy-      CoA of the mobile access gateway and the destination address MUST      be set to the local mobility anchor's IPv4-LMAA.   o  If the configuration variable ForceIPv4UDPEncapsulationSupport is      set to value of (1), then the (F) flag in the Proxy Binding Update      message MUST be set to value of (1).   o  If IPsec ESP is used to protect signaling, the packet is processed      using transport mode ESP as described inSection 4.3.   o  Figure 13 shows the format of the Proxy Binding Update message      sent over IPv4 and protected using ESP.     IPv4 header (src=IPv4-Proxy-CoA, dst=IPv4-LMAA)       ESP header (in transport mode)         UDP header (sport=5436, dport=5436)           Mobility Header (PBU)         Figure 13: Proxy Binding Update (PBU) Message Sent over IPv44.2.2.2.  Forwarding Considerations   Forwarding Packets Sent by the Mobile Node:   o  On receiving an IPv4 or an IPv6 packet from the mobile node to any      destination, the mobile access gateway MUST tunnel the packet to      the local mobility anchor.  The format of the tunneled packet is      shown below.  The IPv4-UDP-TLV and IPv4-GRE encapsulation modes      are described in [GREKEY].  However, considerations fromSection6.10.3 of [RFC5213] MUST be applied with respect the local routing      and on the use of EnableMAGLocalRouting flag. IPv4 Header (src=IPv4-Proxy-CoA, dst=IPv4-LMAA)] /* Tunnel Header */    [UDP Header (src port=5437, dst port=5437]   /* If UDP encap nego */      /* IPv6 or IPv4 Payload Packet */      IPv6 header (src=MN-HOA, dst=CN)        OR      IPv4 header (src=IPv4-MN-HOA, dst=CN)      Figure 14: Tunneled IPv4 Packet from MAG to LMA (IPv4 or IPv4-UDP                             Encapsulation Mode)Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 42]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   Forwarding Packets Received from the Bidirectional Tunnel:   o  On receiving a packet from the bidirectional tunnel established      with the mobile node's local mobility anchor, the mobile access      gateway MUST remove the outer header before forwarding the packet      to the mobile node.4.3.  IPsec Considerations4.3.1.  PBU and PBA   The following section describes how IPsec is used to protect the   signaling messages and data packets between the local mobility anchor   and mobile access gateway when using IPv4 transport.   The following are the Security Policy Database (SPD) example entries   to protect PBU and PBA on the local mobility anchor and mobile access   gateway.           MAG SPD-S:             - IF local_address = IPv4-Proxy-CoA_1 &                  remote_address = IPv4-LMAA_1 & proto = UDP &                  remote_port = 5436               Then use SA ESP transport mode           LMA SPD-S:             - IF local_address = IPv4-LMAA_1 &                  remote_address = IPv4-Proxy-CoA_1 & proto = UDP &                  local_port = 5436               Then use SA ESP transport mode4.3.2.  Payload Packet   The following are the SPD example entries to protect payload packets   on the local mobility anchor and mobile access gateway.  Note that   the example SPDs protect all payload packets sent to and from mobile   nodes.  If an operator needs to apply a different security mechanism   per mobile node, they need to create a SPD and a SA entry per mobile   node.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 43]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010           MAG SPD-S:             - IF interface = tunnel to LMAA_1 &                  local_address != Proxy-CoA_1 &                  remote_address != LMAA_1 & proto=any               Then use SA ESP tunnel mode           LMA SPD-S:             - IF interface = tunnel to Proxy-CoA_1 &                  local_address != LMAA_1 &                  remote_address != Proxy-CoA_1 & proto=any               Then use SA ESP tunnel mode   When payload packets are protected by IPsec, payload packets matching   the SPDs are passed to the IPsec module and encapsulated using the   tunnel mode ESP.  The tunnel mode ESP encapsulated payload packets   are then directly sent to the peer mobile access gateway or local   mobility anchor.  If IPsec is not applied to payload packets, then   they are encapsulated as shown in Figures 12 and 14.5.  Protocol Configuration Variables5.1.  Local Mobility Anchor - Configuration Variables   The local mobility anchor MUST allow the following variables to be   configured by the system management.  The configured values for these   protocol variables MUST survive server reboots and service restarts.   AcceptForcedIPv4UDPEncapsulationRequest      This flag indicates whether or not the local mobility anchor      should accept IPv4 UDP encapsulation request for the mobile node's      data traffic.  The default value for this flag is set to (0),      indicating that plain IPv4 encapsulation (without UDP) is used for      data traffic.5.2.  Mobile Access Gateway - Configuration Variables   The mobile access gateway MUST allow the following variables to be   configured by the system management.  The configured values for these   protocol variables MUST survive server reboots and service restarts.   ForceIPv4UDPEncapsulationSupport      This flag indicates whether or not the mobile access gateway      should request the mobile node's local mobility anchor to use      IPv4-UDP encapsulation mode for the mobile node's data traffic.      The default value for this flag is set to (0), indicating that      plain IPv4 encapsulation (without UDP) is used for data traffic.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 44]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 20106.  IANA Considerations   This document defines four new Mobility Header options: the IPv4 Home   Address Request option, IPv4 Home Address Reply option, IPv4 Default   Router Address option, and IPv4 DHCP Support Mode option.  These   options are described in Sections3.3.1,3.3.2,3.3.3, and3.3.4,   respectively.  The Type value for these options has been assigned   from the same number space as allocated for the other mobility   options, as defined in [RFC3775].   The IPv4 Home Address Reply option, described inSection 3.3.2 of   this document, introduces a new number space, IPv4 Home Address Reply   status codes.  This document currently reserves the following values.   Approval of any new status code values are to be made through IANA   Expert Review.   o  0 Success   o  128 Failure, Reason Unspecified   o  129 Administratively prohibited   o  130 Incorrect IPv4 home address   o  131 Invalid IPv4 address   o  132 Dynamic IPv4 home address assignment not available   The IPv4 DHCP Support Mode option, described inSection 3.3.4 of this   document, introduces a new number space, IPv4 DHCP Support Mode   Flags.  This document reserves the value 0x1 for the (S) flag.   Approval of flag values are to be made through IANA Expert Review.   At this point in time, there are no thoughts on what the new flag   allocations can be, and hence this document leaves this to the   discretion of the Expert Review.   This document also defines new Status values, used in Proxy Binding   Acknowledgement message, as described inSection 3.3.5.  These values   have been assigned from the same number space as allocated for other   status codes [RFC3775].  Each of these allocated values is greater   than 128.      NOT_AUTHORIZED_FOR_IPV4_MOBILITY_SERVICE: 170         Mobile node not authorized for IPv4 mobility service.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 45]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010      NOT_AUTHORIZED_FOR_IPV4_HOME_ADDRESS: 171         Mobile node not authorized for the requesting IPv4 home         address.      NOT_AUTHORIZED_FOR_IPV6_MOBILITY_SERVICE: 172         Mobile node not authorized for IPv6 mobility service.      MULTIPLE_IPV4_HOME_ADDRESS_ASSIGNMENT_NOT_SUPPORTED: 173         Multiple IPv4 home address assignment not supported.   IANA has assigned two UDP port numbers, 5436 and 5437, for "pmip6-   cntl" and "pmip6-data", respectively.7.  Security Considerations   All the security considerations from the base Proxy Mobile IPv6   [RFC5213], Mobile IPv6 [RFC3775], and Dual-Stack Mobile IPv6   [RFC5555] specifications apply when using the extensions defined in   this document.  Additionally, the following security considerations   need to be applied.   This document defines new mobility options for supporting the IPv4   Home Address assignment and IPv4 Transport Support features.  These   options are to be carried in Proxy Binding Update and Proxy Binding   Acknowledgement messages.  The required security mechanisms specified   in the base Proxy Mobile IPv6 protocol for protecting these signaling   messages are sufficient when carrying these mobility options.   This specification describes the use of IPv4 transport for exchanging   signaling messages between the local mobility anchor and the mobile   access gateway.  These can be protected using IPsec as described inSection 4.3.8.  Contributors   This document reflects discussions and contributions from several   people (in alphabetical order):   Kuntal Chowdhury      kchowdhury@starentnetworks.com   Vijay Devarapalli      vijay.devarapalli@azairenet.comWakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 46]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   Pasi Eronen      Pasi.Eronen@nokia.com   Sangjin Jeong      sjjeong@etri.re.kr   Basavaraj Patil      basavaraj.patil@nokia.com   Myungki Shin      myungki.shin@gmail.com9.  Acknowledgements   The IPv4 support for Proxy Mobile IPv6 was initially covered in   "Proxy Mobile IPv6" (March 2007).  We would like to thank all the   authors of the document and acknowledge that initial work.   Thanks to Alper Yegin, Behcet Sarikaya, Bernard Aboba, Charles   Perkins, Damic Damjan, Jari Arkko, Joel Hortelius, Jonne Soinnen,   Julien Laganier, Mohana Jeyatharan, Niklas Nuemann, Pasi Eronen,   Premec Domagoj, Ralph Droms, Sammy Touati, Vidya Narayanan, Yingzhe   Wu, and Zu Qiang for their helpful review of this document.   Also, we would like to thank Spencer Dawkins, Tim Polk, Menachem   Dodge, Adrian Farrel, and Pekka Savola for their reviews of this   document as part of the IESG review process.  Finally, special thanks   to Jouni Korohonen for his support in addressing the IPsec issues.10.  References10.1.  Normative References   [RFC2119]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate              Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC2131]  Droms, R., "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol",RFC 2131, March 1997.   [RFC2132]  Alexander, S. and R. Droms, "DHCP Options and BOOTP Vendor              Extensions",RFC 2132, March 1997.   [RFC2473]  Conta, A. and S. Deering, "Generic Packet Tunneling in              IPv6 Specification",RFC 2473, December 1998.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 47]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   [RFC3046]  Patrick, M., "DHCP Relay Agent Information Option",RFC 3046, January 2001.   [RFC3775]  Johnson, D., Perkins, C., and J. Arkko, "Mobility Support              in IPv6",RFC 3775, June 2004.   [RFC4213]  Nordmark, E. and R. Gilligan, "Basic Transition Mechanisms              for IPv6 Hosts and Routers",RFC 4213, October 2005.   [RFC4361]  Lemon, T. and B. Sommerfeld, "Node-specific Client              Identifiers for Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol              Version Four (DHCPv4)",RFC 4361, February 2006.   [RFC5107]  Johnson, R., Kumarasamy, J., Kinnear, K., and M. Stapp,              "DHCP Server Identifier Override Suboption",RFC 5107,              February 2008.   [RFC5213]  Gundavelli, S., Leung, K., Devarapalli, V., Chowdhury, K.,              and B. Patil, "Proxy Mobile IPv6",RFC 5213, August 2008.   [RFC5555]  Soliman, H., "Mobile IPv6 Support for Dual Stack Hosts and              Routers",RFC 5555, June 2009.10.2.  Informative References   [RFC0925]  Postel, J., "Multi-LAN address resolution",RFC 925,              October 1984.   [RFC1332]  McGregor, G., "The PPP Internet Protocol Control Protocol              (IPCP)",RFC 1332, May 1992.   [RFC1918]  Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, R., Karrenberg, D., Groot, G., and              E. Lear, "Address Allocation for Private Internets",BCP 5,RFC 1918, February 1996.   [RFC3022]  Srisuresh, P. and K. Egevang, "Traditional IP Network              Address Translator (Traditional NAT)",RFC 3022,              January 2001.   [RFC4306]  Kaufman, C., "Internet Key Exchange (IKEv2) Protocol",RFC 4306, December 2005.   [RFC4436]  Aboba, B., Carlson, J., and S. Cheshire, "Detecting              Network Attachment in IPv4 (DNAv4)",RFC 4436, March 2006.   [RFC4977]  Tsirtsis, G. and H. Soliman, "Problem Statement: Dual              Stack Mobility",RFC 4977, August 2007.Wakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 48]

RFC 5844           IPv4 Support for Proxy Mobile IPv6           May 2010   [GREKEY]   Muhanna, A., Khalil, M., Gundavelli, S., and K. Leung,              "GRE Key Option for Proxy Mobile IPv6", Work in Progress,              May 2009.Authors' Addresses   Ryuji Wakikawa   TOYOTA InfoTechnology Center, U.S.A., Inc.   465 Bernardo Avenue   Mountain View, CA  94043   USA   EMail: ryuji@us.toyota-itc.com   Sri Gundavelli   Cisco   170 West Tasman Drive   San Jose, CA  95134   USA   EMail: sgundave@cisco.comWakikawa & Gundavelli        Standards Track                   [Page 49]

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