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INFORMATIONAL
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                          A. MoiseRequest for Comments: 6142                                    J. BrodkinCategory: Informational                              Future DOS R&D Inc.ISSN: 2070-1721                                               March 2011ANSI C12.22, IEEE 1703, and MC12.22 Transport Over IPAbstract   This RFC provides a framework for transporting ANSI C12.22/IEEE   1703/MC12.22 Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI) Application Layer   Messages on an IP network.   This document is not an official submission on behalf of the ANSI   C12.19 and C12.22 working groups.  It was created by participants in   those groups, building on knowledge of several proprietary C12.22-   over-IP implementations.  The content of this document is an   expression of a consensus aggregation of those implementations.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for informational purposes.   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).  Not all documents   approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet   Standard; seeSection 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/rfc6142.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2011 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 inSection 4.e ofMoise & Brodkin               Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................32. Terminology .....................................................33. Definitions .....................................................34. The C12.22 IP Network Segment ...................................64.1. Composition of a C12.22 IP Network Segment .................64.2. Native IP Address ..........................................74.3. Encoding of Native IP Addresses ............................74.4. Standardized Port Numbers ..................................94.5. Use of UDP Source Port 0 ...................................94.6. IP Multicast ..............................................104.7. IP Broadcast ..............................................124.8. Encoding of Multicast and Broadcast Addresses .............125. IP Message Transport ...........................................145.1. C12.22 Connection Types and TCP/UDP Transport Modes .......145.2. IP Message Transport Details ..............................155.2.1. TCP and UDP Port Use ...............................155.2.2. Active-OPEN UDP Mode (CL=1, CL Accept=0) ...........165.2.3. Passive-OPEN UDP Mode (CL=1, CL Accept=1) ..........175.2.4. Active-OPEN TCP Mode (CO=1, CO Accept=0) ...........175.2.5. Passive-OPEN TCP Mode (CO=1, CO Accept=1) ..........185.2.6. TCP and C12.22 Message Directionality ..............185.3. Using IP Broadcast/Multicast ..............................195.4. Transport Protocol Decisions ..............................205.4.1. Unicast Versus Multicast Versus Broadcast ..........205.4.2. Sending Large C12.22 APDUs Using UDP ...............205.4.3. Choice of Protocol for C12.22 Response APDUs .......205.5. Quality of Service ........................................205.6. Congestion Control ........................................216. Security Considerations ........................................217. IANA Considerations ............................................238. Acknowledgments ................................................239. References .....................................................239.1. Normative References ......................................239.2. Informative References ....................................25Moise & Brodkin               Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 20111.  Introduction   The ANSI C12.22 standard [1] provides a set of application layer   messaging services that are applicable for the enterprise and End   Device components of an Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI) for   the Smart Grid.  The messaging services are tailored for, but not   limited to, the exchange of the Data Table Elements defined and   co-published in ANSI C12.19 [2], IEEE P1377 [3], and MC12.19 [23].   These standards were developed jointly by ANSI (ANSI C12.22 and ANSI   C12.19), IEEE (IEEE 1377 and IEEE 1703), and Measurement Canada   (MC12.19 and MC12.22).   ANSI C12.22, which is an application level messaging protocol, may be   transported over any underlying transport network.  This RFC defines   the requirements governing the transmission of ANSI C12.22 Messages   via the TCP and UDP transports in IP networks (whereby the OSI   Session, Presentation, and Application Layers of ANSI C12.22 are   collapsed into a single Application Layer).   Specifically, this RFC applies to the operational details ofSection 5, "C12.22 Node to C12.22 Network Segment Details", of ANSI   C12.22, and covers the mapping, encoding, and interpreting of ANSI   C12.19 Device Network Table Elements and Native Addresses for use on   IP networks.2.  Terminology   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 [4].   Throughout this document, we use terms like "ANSI C12.22" or "ANSI   C12.19", as in "C12.22 Relay" or "ANSI C12.19 Device".  These terms   are interchangeable with the terms "IEEE 1703 Relay" and "IEEE 1377   Device", respectively.  However, the recent versions of the Utility   End Device communication standards were developed under the auspices   of ANSI C12 SC17 WG1 and ANSI C12 SC17 WG2.  For that reason, the   terminology used in this document expands on the ANSI C12.22-2008 [1]   and ANSI C12.19-2008 [2] definitions as revised by IEEE 1703-2010 [5]   and IEEE 1377-2010 [3].3.  Definitions   This specification uses a number of terms to refer to the roles   played by participants (actors) in, and objects of, the ANSI C12.22   [1], IEEE 1703 [5], and MC12.22 [24] protocol.  Any terms prefixed by   "C12.22" or "C12.19" that are not defined in this document can be   resolved in [1], [5], [24] or in [2], [3], [23].Moise & Brodkin               Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   ACSE      Association Control Service Element.  In the context of this      specification and of [1], ACSEs are encoded per ISO/IEC 10035-1      [6] using the ASN.1 Basic Encoding Rules (BER) [7].   Active-OPEN UDP      Active-OPEN UDP is a state used by a local C12.22 IP Node to      expect and receive incoming C12.22 Messages that it solicited from      a foreign C12.22 IP Node using UDP.  The local C12.22 IP Node MAY      exit the Active-OPEN UDP state when it has received all of the      expected C12.22 Messages or a C12.22 Message timeout has occurred.      The local C12.22 IP Node receives all C12.22 Response Messages      solicited from the foreign C12.22 IP Node that arrive at the local      port number that matches the source port number used to solicit      the C12.22 Messages from the foreign C12.22 IP Node.   Active-OPEN TCP      Active-OPEN TCP is a state used by a local C12.22 IP Node to      establish a TCP connection with a fully specified foreign C12.22      IP Node using TCP and the foreign C12.22 IP Node's registered      Native IP Address.  The Active-OPEN TCP state is identical to a      local "Active-OPEN" as defined in [9].   APDU      Application Protocol Data Unit.  In the context of the ANSI C12.22      Application, it is an ACSE C12.22 Message.   ACSE APDU      ACSE Application Protocol Data Unit; same as APDU.   ApTitle      An ANSI C12.22 Application-process Title.  An ApTitle is a name      for a system-independent application activity that exposes      application services to the application agent, e.g., a set of      application service elements that together perform all or part of      the communication aspects of an application process.  An ApTitle      is encoded as a unique registered (as per [1]) object identifier.   C12.22 IP Node      A C12.22 Node that is located on a C12.22 IP Network Segment and      communicates using the Internet Protocol.Moise & Brodkin               Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   C12.22 IP Network Segment      A collection of all C12.22 IP Nodes that implement the IP-based      protocols, as defined in this specification, and can communicate      with each other using IP routers, switches, and bridges and      without the use of a C12.22 Relay.   C12.22 IP Relay      A C12.22 IP Node that performs the functions of a C12.22 Relay.      A C12.22 IP Relay acts as a bridge between a C12.22 IP Network      Segment and an adjacent, C12.22 Network Segment.   C12.22 Message      An ACSE APDU that is fully assembled, or a segment of a C12.22      Request Message, or a segment of a C12.22 Response Message.  The      C12.22 Message described in this specification MUST be encoded      using [7].   C12.22 Request Message      A fully assembled C12.22 APDU that contains an ACSE user-      information element, which includes one or more EPSEM Service      Requests.   C12.22 Response Message      A fully assembled C12.22 APDU that contains an ACSE user-      information element, which includes one or more EPSEM service      responses.   Connection      A logical and physical binding between two or more users of a      service [1].   EPSEM      Extended Protocol Specification for Electronic Metering.  EPSEM      defines structures and services used to encode multiple requests      and responses for use by devices such as gas, water, electricity,      and related electronic modules or appliances.   Initiating C12.22 IP Node      A role of a C12.22 IP Node in which it initiates the transmission      of a C12.22 Request Message.Moise & Brodkin               Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   Native Address      The term "Native Address" refers to the transport address that may      be used to reach a C12.22 Node on its C12.22 Network Segment [1].      In this specification, the Native Address refers to the Native IP      Address.   Passive-OPEN UDP      Passive-OPEN UDP is a state used by a local C12.22 IP Node to      expect and receive incoming C12.22 Messages from any foreign      C12.22 IP Node using UDP.  When the Passive-OPEN UDP state is      active, the local C12.22 IP Node accepts all C12.22 Messages that      arrive at the local port number that was registered by the local      C12.22 IP Node.   Passive-OPEN TCP      Passive-OPEN TCP is a state used by a local C12.22 IP Node that      wants to establish a TCP connection with an unspecified foreign      C12.22 IP Node using TCP.  In this case, any foreign C12.22 IP      Node MAY connect to the local C12.22 IP Node as long as the local      port matches the port used by the foreign C12.22 IP Node.  The      Passive-OPEN TCP state is identical to "local passive OPEN"      defined in [9].   Responding C12.22 IP Node      A role of a C12.22 IP Node in which it responds to the reception      of a C12.22 Request Message.   Target C12.22 IP Node      The C12.22 IP Node that is the destination for a C12.22 Message.4.  The C12.22 IP Network Segment   This section defines the characteristics of the C12.22 IP Network   Segment.4.1.  Composition of a C12.22 IP Network Segment   A C12.22 Network Segment is a collection of C12.22 Nodes that can   communicate with each other directly -- without having to forward   C12.22 Messages through a C12.22 Relay.   A C12.22 IP Network Segment comprises C12.22 IP Nodes and the network   infrastructure that enables any one node to reach all other nodes onMoise & Brodkin               Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   the same segment.  All C12.22 IP Nodes on the C12.22 IP Network   Segment employ the same IP address encoding scheme (per Figures 1   and 2) and the same network and transport protocols in accordance   with this specification.   There is no restriction on the size of a C12.22 IP Network Segment.   It MAY be as small as a single LAN or subnet, or it MAY include   numerous, heterogeneous LANs and WANs connected by routers, bridges,   and switches.  The C12.22 IP Network Segment MAY be completely   private, or include communication across the global Internet.4.2.  Native IP Address   The term "Native IP Address" denotes a Native Address that MAY be   used to reach a C12.22 Node on its C12.22 IP Network Segment.  The   Native IP Address includes the binary IP address, and an OPTIONAL   port number that MAY be followed by an OPTIONAL protocol identifier.   The Native IP Address SHALL be encoded as described below inSection 4.3, "Encoding of Native IP Addresses".   The IP address of the C12.22 IP Node MUST be configured before the   C12.22 IP Node attempts to send or receive any C12.22 Message on its   C12.22 IP Network Segment.  If the port number is not explicitly   configured by the controlling application, it SHALL be set to the   default port number, 1153 (seeSection 4.4, "Standardized Port   Numbers", below).   It is beyond the scope of this specification to define the method of   configuration, the configuration parameters, or any administrative   controls that the system administrator may wish to implement to   assign an IP address.4.3.  Encoding of Native IP Addresses   ANSI C12.22 defines binary fields for encoding a C12.22 Native   Address for transport within C12.22 Messages and for storage in   C12.19 Device Tables.  In this RFC, the fields SHALL contain an IPv4   or an IPv6 binary native IP address that is followed by an OPTIONAL   two-byte TCP or UDP port number.  The TCP or UDP port number, when   present, MAY be followed by an OPTIONAL one-byte transport protocol   identifier ("Protocol" for IPv4 or "Next Header" for IPv6).  The   transport protocol identifier SHALL be set to 17 (0x11) for UDP   transport, or to 6 (0x06) for TCP transport, or not set (absent) for   both UDP and TCP transports.  The transport protocol values SHALL be   consistent with the C12.22 Node's registered attributes (see   Connectionless (CL) and Connection-Oriented (CO) flags inSection 5.1, "C12.22 Connection Types and TCP/UDP Transport Modes",   below).Moise & Brodkin               Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   ANSI C12.22 allows the Native Address fields to be conveyed in select   ANSI C12.22 EPSEM service elements (e.g., ANSI C12.22 Registration   Service <native-address>, ANSI C12.22 Resolve Service response   <local-address>, and ANSI C12.19 INTERFACE_CTRL_TBL Element   NATIVE_ADDRESS).  The length of the C12.22 Native Address is   qualified by an ANSI C12.22 address length field (e.g., ANSI C12.22   Registration Service <address-length>, ANSI C12.22 Resolve Service   response <local-address-length>, and ANSI C12.19 ACT_NETWORK_TBL   Element NATIVE_ADDRESS_LEN).   The ANSI C12.22 Registration Service permits only one Native Address   to be recorded with each registered ApTitle.  For this reason, a   C12.22 IP Node that wishes to register different port numbers for UDP   and TCP MUST register twice using different ApTitles.   The binary Native IP Address fields SHALL be encoded in network byte   order, as shown in Figure 1.                             IP Address (ADDR), Port (P), Transport (T)                  Address                   Length                        Octet                               0                   1                               0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8                              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       IPv4          4        | ADDR4 |                              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       IPv4+Port     6        | ADDR4 | P |                              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       IPv4+Port     7        | ADDR4 | P |T|       +Transport             +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       IPv6         16        |             ADDR6             |                              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       IPv6+Port    18        |             ADDR6             | P |                              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       IPv6+Port    19        |             ADDR6             | P |T|       +Transport             +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       Figure 1: Encoding of the Native IP Addresses for ANSI C12.22Moise & Brodkin               Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   When an ANSI C12.22 Native Address is encoded in the ANSI C12.19   Tables' BINARY data Elements, the size of the Native Address Element   is defined by ACT_NETWORK_TBL.NATIVE_ADDRESS_LEN (see Table 121 of   [1], and [2]).  This is the actual number of octets that are placed   inside the C12.19 BINARY Element.  This value is common to all of the   C12.22 Node's interfaces, including those that are not IP based (thus   not conforming to this specification).  For this reason, the   ACT_NETWORK_TBL.NATIVE_ADDRESS_LEN MAY be greater than, and SHALL NOT   be smaller than, the actual length needed to encode a Native IP   Address per Figure 1.  When this is the case, the C12.22 Native IP   Address SHALL be padded with zero (0) to fill the Table's BINARY data   Element.   In instances where the Native IP Address length does not exactly   match any of the Address Lengths listed in Figure 1, the actual   Address Length SHALL be determined by stripping all trailing binary   zeros (0x00) and then adjusting the Address Length upwards to the   next largest value shown in Figure 1.4.4.  Standardized Port Numbers   IANA (Internet Assigned Numbers Authority) has assigned port 1153 for   UDP [8] and TCP [9] C12.22 IP Messages.   By default, C12.22 IP Nodes SHALL send all C12.22 Application   association initiation message requests with 1153 set as the   destination port number.   To ensure interoperability among C12.22 IP Nodes, all C12.22 IP   Relays and Master Relays SHALL monitor and accept UDP and TCP   messages destined to port 1153.   Any IP firewalls or Access Control Lists (ACLs) shielding C12.22   Nodes and the IP network MUST be configured to forward UDP and TCP   traffic destined to port 1153 and other ports that are assigned and   registered by the network administrator, in order to maintain the   continuity of the C12.22 IP Network Segment.4.5.  Use of UDP Source Port 0   AlthoughRFC 768 [8] allows for a source port number of zero (0),   C12.22 IP Nodes SHALL NOT send datagrams on UDP with the source port   set to zero.  A C12.22 IP Node SHALL ignore and SHALL NOT respond to   any C12.22 Message that it receives from source port 0.   Further details of the C12.22 IP Node's use of UDP, and of TCP, are   given inSection 5, "IP Message Transport", below.Moise & Brodkin               Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 20114.6.  IP Multicast   In addition to unicast, the ANSI C12.22 protocol requires the support   of a multicast message delivery service from the network.  In cases   where C12.22 IP Nodes MUST perform Native IP Address discovery (e.g.,   the discovery of the Native IP Address of C12.22 IP Relays that   provide a route out of the C12.22 IP Network Segment, or the   discovery of the Native IP Address of a C12.22 IP Master Relay on the   C12.22 IP Network), the C12.22 IP Nodes use IP multicast to send a   C12.22 Message that contains an EPSEM Resolve Service Request on the   IP LAN.   IP multicast is also desirable, for example, when a C12.22 Host needs   to read a multitude of C12.22 Nodes (e.g., meters) that are   configured with a common C12.22 multicast group ApTitle.  Using IP   multicast, the C12.22 Host MAY send a C12.22 Message containing an   EPSEM Read Service Request that reaches all C12.22 Nodes on the   C12.22 IP Network Segment.   For these reasons, all C12.22 IP Relays and Master Relays SHALL   support IP multicast, and it is RECOMMENDED that all C12.22 Nodes   support IP multicast.  Any IPv4 C12.22 IP Node that supports IP   multicast SHALL use the Internet Group Management Protocol version 1   (IGMPv1) [10] as a minimum, to report (i.e., request) membership in   the C12.22 multicast group to its local router(s).  It is RECOMMENDED   that C12.22 IP Nodes implement IGMPv3 [11].   Any IPv6 C12.22 IP Node that supports IP multicast SHALL use   Multicast Listener Discovery version 2 (MLDv2) (RFC 3810 [12]),   possibly within ICMPv6 (RFC 4443 [13]), to report membership.   Routers that interconnect C12.22 IP Nodes on the C12.22 IP Network   Segment MUST support Protocol Independent Multicast - Sparse Mode   (PIM-SM) (RFC 4601 [14]) along with IGMPv1 (RFC 1112 [10]) as a   minimum for IPv4, or MLDv2 for IPv6 (RFC 3810 [12]).  It is   RECOMMENDED that they implement IGMPv3 [11].  It is beyond the scope   of this specification to define the mechanism for selecting an   initial Rendezvous Point (RP) for the C12.22 multicast group, the use   of shared versus source trees, or the mechanism for inter-domain   multicast routing.   IANA has registered the "All C1222 Nodes" multicast group, and has   assigned the IPv4 multicast address of 224.0.2.4 and the IPv6   multicast address of FF0X::204, where X represents the Scope field as   defined inRFC 4291, "IP Version 6 Addressing Architecture" [15].Moise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   For IPv6, all C12.22 IP Relays, C12.22 IP Master Relays, and all   C12.22 IP Nodes configured to support broadcast and multicast (seeSection 5.3, "Using IP Broadcast/Multicast", below) SHALL join the   global-scope multicast address, FF0E::204, as well as all of the   assigned, reduced-scope, multicast addresses:                    link-local         -- FF02::204;                    admin-local        -- FF04::204;                    site-local         -- FF05::204; and                    organization-local -- FF08::204.   IPv6 C12.22 IP Nodes SHOULD use the minimum scope needed, when   initiating IP multicast messages to reach another C12.22 IP Node on   the C12.22 Network.  This practice allows the sender to limit   unnecessary propagation of C12.22 IP Multicast Messages.   To determine the minimum scope required to reach the closest C12.22   IP Relay on the C12.22 Node's IP Network Segment, this specification   RECOMMENDS the following simple steps:   1.  Starting with the smallest (local-most) scope (i.e., link-local       scope or another pre-configured scope), send the C12.22 EPSEM       Resolve Service Request for the purpose of C12.22 IP Relay       discovery.   2.  Listen for a response from a C12.22 IP Relay; then:       A.  If no response is received, assign the next wider scope           level, then repeat steps (1) and (2) at the newly assigned           scope.       B.  If a response is received, then record the scope level as the           minimum scope to use on the node's C12.22 IP Network Segment.   A C12.22 IPv6 Node that initiates any EPSEM Service Request SHOULD   use the minimum scope necessary to reach its Target C12.22 IP Nodes.   A C12.22 IPv6 Relay SHALL use the global scope for any C12.22 Message   destined for the global Internet.   This specification does not preclude the use of the unassigned scope   values defined in [15]; those scope values MAY be used on a private   basis, or through mutual operating agreements.   For IPv4, all C12.22 IP Relays, C12.22 IP Master Relays, and all   C12.22 IP Nodes configured to support broadcast/multicast SHALL join   the assigned multicast address of 224.0.2.4.  This global address   does not provide for the type of scoping discussed above for IPv6,   nor is it compatible with the administratively scoped IP multicastMoise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   specification inRFC 2365 [16].  Therefore, a different technique to   limit the propagation of C12.22 IP Multicast Messages is needed.  One   available technique to control IPv4 multicast scope is through the   use of the Time-to-Live (TTL) attribute in the IP packet header.   This attribute is not managed by the C12.22 protocol.   In the implementation of this technique, an administrative domain   MUST include at least one C12.22 IP Relay, and all C12.22 IP Nodes in   the administrative domain SHOULD be configured with a TTL   sufficiently large to reach that C12.22 IP Relay.   A C12.22 IPv4 Node that initiates any C12.22 Request Message SHOULD   use the minimum TTL needed to reach its Target C12.22 IP Nodes.4.7.  IP Broadcast   IP broadcast is not generally suitable as a replacement for, or an   alternative to, multicast in a C12.22 IP Network Segment.  IP   broadcast is not supported in IPv6, and it suffers from limited scope   in IPv4.  This specification, however, does not preclude the use of   IP network directed or limited/local scope (address 255.255.255.255)   broadcast within a controlled management domain (as perRFC 2644   [17]).4.8.  Encoding of Multicast and Broadcast Addresses   ANSI C12.22 Tables provide BINARY Elements for encoding a broadcast   or multicast Native IP Address for transport within a C12.22 Message.   The encoding of these Table Elements is identical to that defined inSection 4.3, "Encoding of Native IP Addresses".  These fields SHALL   be used as shown in Figure 2.Moise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011                             IP Address (ADDR), Port (P), Transport (T)                   Address                    Length                       Octet                               0                   1                               0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8       IPv4                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       Broadcast      4       |BADDR4 |                              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       IPv4                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       Broadcast      6       |BADDR4 | P |       +Port                  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       IPv4                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       Broadcast      7       |BADDR4 | P |T|       +Port+Transport        +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       IPv4                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       Multicast      4       |MADDR4 |                              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       IPv4                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       Multicast      6       |MADDR4 | P |       +Port                  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       IPv4                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       Multicast      7       |MADDR4 | P |T|       +Port+Transport        +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       IPv6                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       Multicast     16       |            MADDR6             |                              +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       IPv6                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       Multicast     18       |            MADDR6             | P |       +Port                  +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       IPv6                   +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       Multicast     19       |            MADDR6             | P |T|       +Port+Transport        +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       Figure 2: Encoding of Broadcast/Multicast Native IP Addresses   The IPv4 and IPv6 multicast addresses -- MADDR4 and MADDR6,   respectively -- are those assigned by IANA for use by ANSI C12.22.Moise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 13]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   When a broadcast/multicast Native IP Address is encoded in the ANSI   C12.19 Tables' BINARY data Elements, the size of the Native Address   Element transmitted is defined by ACT_NETWORK_TBL.NATIVE_ADDRESS_LEN   (see Table 121 of [1], and [2]).  This is the actual number of octets   that are placed inside the C12.19 BINARY Element.  This value is   common to all of the C12.22 Node's interfaces, including those that   are not IP based (thus not conforming to this specification).  For   this reason, the ACT_NETWORK_TBL.NATIVE_ADDRESS_LEN MAY be greater   than, and SHALL NOT be smaller than, the actual length needed to   encode a broadcast/multicast Native IP Address per Figure 2.  When   this is the case, the C12.22 Native IP Address SHALL be padded with   zero (0) to fill the Table's BINARY data Element.   The IPv4 network directed broadcast address can be computed by   performing a bitwise OR between the bit complement of the subnet mask   of the target IP subnet and the IP address of any host on that IP   subnet.5.  IP Message Transport   This section defines a C12.22 Node's usage of the Connection-Oriented   (CO) and Connectionless (CL) transport layer protocols -- TCP and   UDP, respectively.5.1.  C12.22 Connection Types and TCP/UDP Transport Modes   A C12.22 IP Node's use of TCP and UDP is based on its registered   capabilities as defined in its configuration parameters (flags) and   as expressed in the Node's accepted registration attributes [1]:         CL Flag = <connection-type>.CONNECTIONLESS_MODE_SUPPORTED;         CL Accept Flag = <connection-type>.ACCEPT_CONNECTIONLESS;         CO Flag = <connection-type>.CONNECTION_MODE_SUPPORTED; and         CO Accept Flag = <connection-type>.ACCEPT_CONNECTIONS.   The mapping of the connection-type parameters to the IP-based   transport variants that a C12.22 Node MAY support is defined in   Table 1.Moise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 14]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   +------+------+----------+----------+-------------------------------+   |  CL  |  CO  |    CL    |    CO    | IP Transport Mode Supported   |   | Flag | Flag |  Accept  |  Accept  |                               |   |      |      |   Flag   |   Flag   |                               |   +------+------+----------+----------+-------------------------------+   |   0  |   0  |     x    |     x    | Invalid                       |   |   0  |   1  |     0    |     0    | TCP, Active-OPEN              |   |   0  |   1  |     0    |     1    | TCP, Passive- and Active-OPEN |   |   0  |   1  |     1    |     0    | Invalid                       |   |   0  |   1  |     1    |     1    | Invalid                       |   |   1  |   0  |     0    |     0    | UDP, Active-OPEN              |   |   1  |   0  |     0    |     1    | Invalid                       |   |   1  |   0  |     1    |     0    | UDP, Passive- and Active-OPEN |   |   1  |   0  |     1    |     1    | Invalid                       |   |   1  |   1  |     0    |     0    | UDP, Active-OPEN; TCP         |   |      |      |          |          | Active-OPEN                   |   |   1  |   1  |     0    |     1    | UDP, Active-OPEN; TCP,        |   |      |      |          |          | Passive- and Active-OPEN      |   |   1  |   1  |     1    |     0    | UDP, Passive- and             |   |      |      |          |          | Active-OPEN; TCP, Active-OPEN |   |   1  |   1  |     1    |     1    | UDP, Passive- and             |   |      |      |          |          | Active-OPEN; TCP, Passive-    |   |      |      |          |          | and Active-OPEN               |   +------+------+----------+----------+-------------------------------+          Table 1: C12.22 Node Parameters to IP Transport Mapping   Every C12.22 IP Node MUST support at least one of the unicast CO or   CL operating capabilities (as advertised in Decade 12, "Node Network   Control Tables" [1], where available, and as registered using the   C12.22 Registration Service [1]).5.2.  IP Message Transport Details5.2.1.  TCP and UDP Port Use   General rules:   1.  A C12.22 IP Node that implements [CL Accept=1] SHALL receive       incoming UDP C12.22 Messages on its registered Native IP Address       (IP address and port number).   2.  A C12.22 IP Node that implements [CO Accept=1] SHALL receive       incoming TCP connections on its registered Native IP Address (IP       address and port number).Moise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 15]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   3.  A C12.22 IP Relay that forwards a UDP C12.22 Message to a C12.22       IP Node on the C12.22 IP Network Segment SHALL send the C12.22       Message to the C12.22 IP Node's registered Native IP Address (IP       address and port number).   4.  A C12.22 IP Relay that forwards a TCP C12.22 Message to a C12.22       IP Node on the C12.22 IP Network Segment MAY use an established       TCP connection to that C12.22 IP Node, or it SHALL establish a       new TCP connection to the C12.22 IP Node's registered Native IP       Address (IP address and port number).   5.  A C12.22 IP Node that implements [CL=1] SHOULD set the source       port number in outbound UDP C12.22 Messages to its registered       port number.  When the target UDP C12.22 IP Node is reachable       using direct messaging (as defined in [1]), the C12.22 IP Node       MAY set the source port number to a UDP port number that is       different than its registered port number.   6.  When the registered Native IP Address of a C12.22 IP Node does       not include the OPTIONAL port number, then port 1153 SHALL be       assumed and used as the registered port number.   7.  All C12.22 IP Nodes SHOULD use port 1153 in their Native IP       Address when registering.5.2.2.  Active-OPEN UDP Mode (CL=1, CL Accept=0)   A C12.22 IP Node that supports this mode SHALL NOT monitor for   unsolicited incoming C12.22 Messages via UDP.  As a result, the   C12.22 IP Node is incapable of receiving unsolicited C12.22 Messages   using UDP.   The C12.22 IP Node MAY enter the Active-OPEN UDP state by initiating   an unsolicited UDP transmission to a Target C12.22 IP Node, which is   expected to implement the Passive-OPEN UDP mode.   C12.22 IP Nodes SHOULD use their registered UDP port number, or if   not yet registered, then they SHOULD use port 1153 as the source port   number for all UDP C12.22 IP Messages.Moise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 16]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 20115.2.3.  Passive-OPEN UDP Mode (CL=1, CL Accept=1)   A C12.22 IP Node that operates in this mode SHALL be capable of   receiving solicited and unsolicited C12.22 Messages from other C12.22   IP Nodes.  The C12.22 Node MAY change the port number that it   monitors by using the <native-address> parameter of the ANSI C12.22   Registration Service.  The C12.22 IP Node MAY initiate unsolicited   Active-OPEN UDP transmissions to other C12.22 IP Nodes that implement   the Passive-OPEN UDP mode.   When operating in this mode, the C12.22 IP Nodes SHALL use their   registered UDP port number as the source port number for all UDP   C12.22 IP Messages.   All C12.22 IP Relays SHALL support the Passive-OPEN UDP mode.  C12.22   Authentication Hosts and C12.22 Notification Hosts that implement UDP   SHALL support the Passive-OPEN UDP mode.  For all other C12.22 IP   Nodes, the Passive-OPEN UDP mode is the RECOMMENDED mode when   implementing UDP.5.2.4.  Active-OPEN TCP Mode (CO=1, CO Accept=0)   A C12.22 IP Node that supports this mode SHALL NOT monitor for   inbound TCP connections.  As a result, the node is incapable of   accepting incoming connections via TCP.  The C12.22 IP Node MAY   initiate TCP connections to Target C12.22 IP Nodes, which are   expected to implement the Passive-OPEN TCP mode.   In this mode, C12.22 Messages exchanged by a pair of associated   C12.22 IP Nodes can only be communicated through any of the TCP   connections that were initiated by the C12.22 IP Node that implements   this mode.  The loss or closure of a connection SHALL NOT   automatically result in the termination of the C12.22 associations   between the peer nodes.  In order to continue exchanging C12.22   Messages without loss of association, the initiating C12.22 IP Node   MAY re-establish new TCP connections with the peer node, or use   existing connections to the peer node.  The termination of the C12.22   Application associations is dependent upon C12.22 Application timeout   attributes and C12.22 link management services (such as Procedure 25,   "Network Interface Control" [1]).Moise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 17]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 20115.2.5.  Passive-OPEN TCP Mode (CO=1, CO Accept=1)   A C12.22 IP Node that operates in this mode SHALL monitor and accept   incoming TCP connections.  The C12.22 Node MAY change the port number   that it monitors by using the <native-address> parameter of the ANSI   C12.22 Registration Service.  The C12.22 IP Node MAY initiate Active-   OPEN TCP connections to other C12.22 IP Nodes that implement the   Passive-OPEN TCP mode.   In this mode, C12.22 Messages exchanged by a pair of associated   C12.22 IP Nodes can arrive through any of the TCP connections that   were established by either node.  The loss or closure of a connection   SHALL NOT automatically result in the termination of the C12.22   associations between the peer nodes.  In order to continue exchanging   C12.22 Messages without loss of association, either C12.22 IP Node   MAY re-establish new TCP connections with the peer node, or use   existing connections to the peer node.  The termination of the C12.22   Application associations is dependent upon C12.22 Application timeout   attributes and C12.22 link management services (such as Procedure 25,   "Network Interface Control" [1]).   All C12.22 IP Relays SHALL support the Passive-OPEN TCP mode.  C12.22   Authentication Hosts and C12.22 Notification Hosts that implement TCP   SHALL support Passive-OPEN TCP mode.  For all other C12.22 IP Nodes,   Passive-OPEN TCP mode is the RECOMMENDED mode when implementing TCP.5.2.6.  TCP and C12.22 Message Directionality   C12.22 IP Nodes MAY use TCP in one of two ways: bi-directional   traffic flow or uni-directional traffic flow.   When TCP connections are used, any new or established TCP connection   between the two C12.22 IP Nodes MAY be used equivalently by the   C12.22 IP Nodes to send and to receive C12.22 Messages.  This is the   RECOMMENDED and default mode of operation because ANSI C12.22   requires the transport network to be reliable and connectionless (per   connectionless-mode ACSE).  For this reason, ANSI C12.22 defines   peer-to-peer application associations and not peer-to-peer   connections.   It is known that some C12.22 implementations have been deployed in   which TCP is used for uni-directional traffic flow.  For these types   of implementations, an established TCP connection SHALL be used by   the initiator of that connection to send C12.22 Messages and by theMoise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 18]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   target node (that accepted the connection) to receive C12.22   Messages.  If a C12.22 IP Node wishes to send a C12.22 Message to a   peer C12.22 IP Node, it MUST establish and use a new TCP connection,   or use an existing TCP connection that it had previously initiated,   for its outbound uni-directional traffic flow.   For increased interoperability, the initiator of the connection   SHOULD accept incoming C12.22 Messages on that connection in case the   target node attempts to use the connection for bi-directional traffic   flow.   Uni-directional use of TCP is a special mode of operation; it is NOT   RECOMMENDED because multiple one-way channel communication is not   described by ANSI C12.22, and it utilizes one-half of the TCP   connection capability.  As a result, it doubles the number of TCP   connections used to communicate C12.22 Messages and thus could become   a burden when a large number of connections are required.5.3.  Using IP Broadcast/Multicast   A C12.22 IP Node's use of broadcast/multicast is based on its   capabilities as defined in its configuration parameters (flags) and   as expressed in the Node's accepted registration attributes [1]   (<connection-type>.BROADCAST_AND_MULTICAST_SUPPORTED).  The mapping   of the C12.22 IP Node's Broadcast/Multicast parameter (flag) to IP   broadcast/multicast usage is defined in Table 2.    C12.22 Broadcast and  IP Broadcast/Multicast Supported     Multicast Supported            Flag   ---------------------- ----------------------------------------------              0           The C12.22 IP Node does not accept IP                          broadcast, and it does not accept IP multicast                          messages.              1           The C12.22 IP Node accepts both IP broadcast                          (IPv4 only) and IP multicast messages (IPv4                          and IPv6).             Table 2: C12.22 to IP Broadcast/Multicast Mapping   If a C12.22 IP Node is configured to accept IP broadcast and   multicast messages, it SHALL join the "All C1222 Nodes" multicast   group (seeSection 4.6, "IP Multicast", above), and SHALL use the   default port 1153.  In addition, it SHALL accept IP network directed   or limited (local scope) broadcast messages sent to port 1153.  Note   that successful communication using network directed broadcast   requires configuration of network routers, which by default SHALL NOT   forward directed broadcasts as perRFC 2644 [17].Moise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 19]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 20115.4.  Transport Protocol Decisions5.4.1.  Unicast Versus Multicast Versus Broadcast   An initiating C12.22 IP Node MAY send any C12.22 Message using UDP or   TCP.  However, in accordance withSection 5.3.2.4.12, "Resolve   Service", of ANSI C12.22, it is RECOMMENDED that the C12.22 Resolve   Request Message be transported using UDP/IP multicast when the Native   IP Address of the Target C12.22 Node is not known.  The use of UDP/IP   multicast is preferred over the use of IP network directed or limited   broadcast; therefore, when UDP/IP multicast is supported, its use is   RECOMMENDED over network broadcast.5.4.2.  Sending Large C12.22 APDUs Using UDP   When sending via UDP a large C12.22 Message that exceeds the path   MTU, the sender SHALL segment the ACSE APDU in accordance with the   ANSI C12.22 Datagram Segmentation and Reassembly algorithm, such that   the size of the resulting IP datagram does not exceed the path MTU   and thus avoids UDP packet fragmentation.  The fundamental issue with   fragmentation exists for both IPv4 and IPv6.Section 3.2 of RFC 5405   [18] provides additional guidelines for determining the appropriate   UDP message size.  When the path MTU is not known, the sender SHALL   follow the guidelines stipulated inSection 3.2 of RFC 5405 [18]: for   IPv4, use the smaller of 576 bytes and the first-hop MTU [19], and   for IPv6, use 1280 bytes [20].  Sending large APDUs via UDP may lead   to network congestion.  For more information on avoiding network   congestion seeSection 5.6, "Congestion Control".5.4.3.   Choice of Protocol for C12.22 Response APDUs   When a Target C12.22 IP Node receives a C12.22 Request Message from   an initiating C12.22 IP Node, it SHALL send a C12.22 Response Message   using the same transport protocol (i.e., TCP to TCP, UDP to UDP).   In the case of UDP, the target SHALL send the C12.22 Response Message   to the source IP address and port number.5.5.  Quality of Service   The ANSI C12.22 standard provides a configuration parameter in the   APDU's <calling-AE-qualifier>.URGENT attribute to mark a message as   urgent.  There are numerous IP-based technologies that enable   enhanced levels of message delivery and quality of service.  This   specification does not define the technology to be used to send   urgent messages over IP.Moise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 20]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 20115.6.  Congestion Control   Designers of unicast applications that implement the upper layers of   C12.22 messaging over UDP SHOULD follow the congestion control   guidelines inSection 3.1 of RFC 5405 [18].   For the transmission of C12.22 Messages that are greater than what   the TCP initial window would be over a given Internet path, TCP   SHOULD be used rather than UDP as the transport protocol.  TCP's   initial window depends on the maximum segment size (MSS), which in   turn depends on the path MTU, and is computed according to formula   (1) inRFC 3390 [21].  For unknown path MTUs, the smallest allowable   MSS MUST be used, and the C12.22 Application SHOULD assume the   maximum C12.22 Message size to be 2048 bytes.  By using TCP, the   C12.22 Application benefits from the built-in TCP congestion control   mechanism.   When UDP is the preferred transport mechanism, or when UDP multicast   or broadcast are the preferred modes of communication, then the   C12.22 Application SHOULD use C12.22 acknowledged Messages that are   smaller than TCP's initial window over the return path, as computed   by formula (1) in [21] and described above.  The size of the C12.22   Message MAY be managed through the use of ANSI C12.22 EPSEM Partial   Table Read/Write Service Requests and Responses.6.  Security Considerations   The ANSI C12.22 Application Layer Security is defined inSection 5.3.4.13, "C12.22 Security Mechanism", of the ANSI C12.22   standard.  The security mechanisms include provisions for message   privacy and authentication, playback rejection, and message   acceptance windows, as well as ANSI C12.19 [2] role-based data access   and secured register mechanisms.  The ANSI C12.22 Application Layer   default security mechanism provides three options to choose from when   sending C12.22 Messages:   1.  Sending cleartext messages over the C12.22 Network [1], [5],       which MAY result in altered C12.22 Messages and exposure to       password sniffing attacks, as described inRFC 3552 [22].   2.  Sending of authenticated plaintext messages over the C12.22       Network [1], [5], which MAY result in password sniffing attacks       as described inRFC 3552 [22].   3.  Sending of authenticated ciphertext over the C12.22 Network,       providing for message and peer node authentication and privacy.Moise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 21]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   When option 1 is used, then it is RECOMMENDED that the network or   transport layer provide authentication and confidentiality service.   When option 2 is used, then it is RECOMMENDED that the network or   transport layer provide confidentiality services.  When option 3 is   used, then no additional network or transport layer security services   are necessary.   Additional transport or network layer security protocols are not   required by ANSI C12.22, but they MAY be provided transparently by   C12.22 IP Network Segment integrators (e.g., in C12.22 IP Relays) in   order to improve on the security provisions cited above.  However,   any added transport security (e.g., Transport Layer Security (TLS),RFC 5246 [27]) or IP security (e.g., IPsec,RFC 4302 [25],RFC 4303   [26],RFC 5996 [28]) features SHALL act only to enhance (i.e., not be   a substitute for, or an alteration of) the interoperable ANSI C12.22   and ANSI C12.19 security provisions, and SHALL NOT corrupt and SHALL   NOT alter the C12.22 Message as presented by the C12.22 Application   Layer.   The ANSI C12.22 [1] and ANSI C12.19 [2] standards provide for the   transmission of keys and their storage in C12.19 End Devices (e.g.,   meters and head-end systems).  The key management protocol (when and   how keys are exchanged) is not described in the ANSI C12.22 [1] and   ANSI C12.19 [2] standards, except to state that keys MAY not be   readable from a C12.19 End Device (in response to a Read Service   Request).  It is RECOMMENDED that all C12.22 Nodes encrypt user   information element key fields and passwords.  It is also RECOMMENDED   that all C12.22 Nodes mask user information element key fields and   password fields of EPSEM Read Service Responses (e.g., by replacing   all key and password bytes with zeros (0x00) or spaces (0x20)).   Legacy deployments exist that are not connected to the Internet, so   there are some implementations that do not include security.  It is   likely that multi-homed C12.22 Nodes with interfaces to the Internet   will exist in future deployments, so security mechanisms MUST be used   by those C12.22 Nodes to ensure C12.22 Message authentication and   confidentiality.Moise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 22]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 20117.  IANA Considerations   UDP and TCP port 1153, which is used for C12.22 communication over   IP, is registered with IANA.Section 4.6, "IP Multicast", defines the use of multicast.  The   following multicast addresses have been registered by IANA for use by   the ANSI C12.22 standard:      IPv4 -- "All C1222 Nodes" address 224.0.2.4      IPv6 -- "All C1222 Nodes" address FF0X::2048.  Acknowledgments   The authors wish to recognize Alexander Shulgin for providing   valuable comments and for conducting feasibility testing in support   of this work.   The following people have improved this document through thoughtful   comments and suggestions: Fred Baker, Ralph Droms, Vijay Gurbani,   Michael Stuber, Spencer Dawkins, Alfred Hoenes, Russ Housley, Paul   Hoffman, Lars Eggert, and Sean Turner.9.  References9.1.  Normative References   [1]   ANSI, "Protocol Specification for Interfacing to Data         Communication Networks", ANSI C12.22-2008, January 2009.   [2]   ANSI, "Utility Industry End Device Data Tables", ANSI C12.19-         2008, February 2009.   [3]   IEEE, "Draft Standard for Utility Industry Metering         Communication Protocol Application Layer (End Device Data         Tables)", IEEE P1377-2010, October 2010.   [4]   Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement         Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [5]   IEEE, "Standard for Local Area Network/Wide Area Network (LAN/         WAN) Node Communication Protocol to Complement the Utility         Industry End Device Data Tables", IEEE P1703-2010,         October 2010.Moise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 23]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   [6]   ISO/IEC, "Information Technology-Open Systems Interconnection-         Connectionless Protocol for the Association Control Service         Element: Protocol Specification", ISO/IEC 10035-1, 1995.   [7]   ISO/IEC, "Information Technology-ASN.1 Encoding Rules:         Specification of Basic Encoding Rules (BER), Canonical Encoding         Rules (CER) and Distinguished Encoding Rules (DER)", ISO/         IEC 8825-1, 2002.   [8]   Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol", STD 6,RFC 768,         August 1980.   [9]   Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", STD 7,RFC 793,         September 1981.   [10]  Deering, S., "Host extensions for IP multicasting", STD 5,RFC 1112, August 1989.   [11]  Cain, B., Deering, S., Kouvelas, I., Fenner, B., and A.         Thyagarajan, "Internet Group Management Protocol, Version 3",RFC 3376, October 2002.   [12]  Vida, R., Ed., and L. Costa, Ed., "Multicast Listener Discovery         Version 2 (MLDv2) for IPv6",RFC 3810, June 2004.   [13]  Conta, A., Deering, S., and M. Gupta, Ed., "Internet Control         Message Protocol (ICMPv6) for the Internet Protocol Version 6         (IPv6) Specification",RFC 4443, March 2006.   [14]  Fenner, B., Handley, M., Holbrook, H., and I. Kouvelas,         "Protocol Independent Multicast - Sparse Mode (PIM-SM):         Protocol Specification (Revised)",RFC 4601, August 2006.   [15]  Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing         Architecture",RFC 4291, February 2006.   [16]  Meyer, D., "Administratively Scoped IP Multicast",BCP 23,RFC 2365, July 1998.   [17]  Senie, D., "Changing the Default for Directed Broadcasts in         Routers",BCP 34,RFC 2644, August 1999.   [18]  Eggert, L. and G. Fairhurst, "Unicast UDP Usage Guidelines for         Application Designers",BCP 145,RFC 5405, November 2008.   [19]  Braden, R., Ed., "Requirements for Internet Hosts -         Communication Layers", STD 3,RFC 1122, October 1989.Moise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 24]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011   [20]  Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6)         Specification",RFC 2460, December 1998.   [21]  Allman, M., Floyd, S., and C. Partridge, "Increasing TCP's         Initial Window",RFC 3390, October 2002.   [22]  Rescorla, E. and B. Korver, "Guidelines for Writing RFC Text on         Security Considerations",BCP 72,RFC 3552, July 2003.9.2.  Informative References   [23]  Measurement Canada, "Specification for Utility Industry         Metering Communication Protocol Application Layer (End Device         Data Tables)", Draft MC12.19, 2011.   [24]  Measurement Canada, "Specification for Local Area Network/Wide         Area Network (LAN/WAN) Node Communication Protocol to         Complement the Utility Industry End Device Data Tables",         Draft MC12.22, 2011.   [25]  Kent, S., "IP Authentication Header",RFC 4302, December 2005.   [26]  Kent, S., "IP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)",RFC 4303,         December 2005.   [27]  Dierks, T. and E. Rescorla, "The Transport Layer Security (TLS)         Protocol Version 1.2",RFC 5246, August 2008.   [28]  Kaufman, C., Hoffman, P., Nir, Y., and P. Eronen, "Internet Key         Exchange Protocol Version 2 (IKEv2)",RFC 5996, September 2010.Moise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 25]

RFC 6142          ANSI C12.22/IEEE 1703/MC12.22 Over IP       March 2011Authors' Addresses   Avygdor Moise   Future DOS R&D Inc.   #303 - 6707 Elbow Drive SW   Calgary, Alberta  T2V 0E5   Canada   EMail: avy@fdos.ca   URI:http://www.fdos.ca   Jonathan Brodkin   Future DOS R&D Inc.   #303 - 6707 Elbow Drive SW   Calgary, Alberta  T2V 0E5   Canada   EMail: jonathan.brodkin@fdos.ca   URI:http://www.fdos.caMoise & Brodkin               Informational                    [Page 26]

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