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Network Working Group                                      Jeffrey MogulRequest for Comments: 917                    Computer Science Department                                                     Stanford University                                                            October 1984INTERNET SUBNETSStatus Of This Memo   This RFC suggests a proposed protocol for the ARPA-Internet   community, and requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.   Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Overview   We discuss the utility of "subnets" of Internet networks, which are   logically visible sub-sections of a single Internet network.  For   administrative or technical reasons, many organizations have chosen   to divide one Internet network into several subnets, instead of   acquiring a set of Internet network numbers.   We propose procedures for the use of subnets, and discuss approaches   to solving the problems that arise, particularly that of routing.Acknowledgment   This proposal is the result of discussion with several other people.   J. Noel Chiappa, Chris Kent, and Tim Mann, in particular, provided   important suggestions.1. Introduction   The original view of the Internet universe was a two-level hierarchy:   the top level the catenet as a whole, and the level below it a   collection of "Internet Networks", each with its own Network Number.   (We do not mean that the Internet has a hierarchical topology, but   that the interpretation of addresses is hierarchical.)   While this view has proved simple and powerful, a number of   organizations have found it inadequate and have added a third level   to the interpretation of Internet addresses.  In this view, a given   Internet Network might (or might not) be divided into a collection of   subnets.   The original, two-level, view carries a strong presumption that, to a   host on an Internet network, that network may be viewed as a single   edge; to put it another way, the network may be treated as a "black   box" to which a set of hosts is connected.  This is true of theMogul                                                           [Page 1]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets   ARPANET, because the IMPs mask the use of specific links in that   network.  It is also true of most local area network (LAN)   technologies, such as Ethernet or ring networks.   However, this presumption fails in many practical cases, because in   moderately large organizations (e.g., Universities or companies with   more than one building) it is often necessary to use more than one   LAN cable to cover a "local area".  For example, at this writing   there are eighteen such cables in use at Stanford University, with   more planned.   There are several reasons why an organization might use more than one   cable to cover a campus:      - Different technologies: Especially in a research environment,        there may be more than one kind of LAN in use; e.g., an        organization may have some equipment that supports Ethernet, and        some that supports a ring network.      - Limits of technologies: Most LAN technologies impose limits,        based electrical parameters, on the number of hosts connected,        and on the total length of the cable.  It is easy to exceed        these limits, especially those on cable length.      - Network congestion: It is possible for a small subset of the        hosts on a LAN to monopolize most of the bandwidth.  A common        solution to this problem is to divide the hosts into cliques of        high mutual communication, and put these cliques on separate        cables.      - Point-to-Point links: Sometimes a "local area", such as a        university campus, is split into two locations too far apart to        connect using the preferred LAN technology.  In this case,        high-speed point-to-point links might connect several LANs.   An organization that has been forced to use more than one LAN has   three choices for assigning Internet addresses:      1. Acquire a distinct Internet network number for each cable.      2. Use a single network number for the entire organization, but         assign host numbers without regard to which LAN a host is on.         (We will call this choice "transparent subnets".)      3. Use a single network number, and partition the host address         space by assigning subnet numbers to the LANs. ("Explicit         subnets".)Mogul                                                           [Page 2]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets   Each of these approaches has disadvantages.  The first, although not   requiring any new or modified protocols, does result in an explosion   in the size of Internet routing tables.  Information about the   internal details of local connectivity is propagated everywhere,   although it is of little or no use outside the local organization.   Especially as some current gateway implementations do not have much   space for routing tables, it would be nice to avoid this problem.   The second approach requires some convention or protocol that makes   the collection of LANs appear to be a single Internet network.  For   example, this can be done on LANs where each Internet address is   translated to a hardware address using an Address Resolution Protocol   (ARP), by having the bridges between the LANs intercept ARP requests   for non-local targets.  However, it is not possible to do this for   all LAN technologies, especially those where ARP protocols are not   currently used, or if the LAN does not support broadcasts.  A more   fundamental problem is that bridges must discover which LAN a host is   on, perhaps by using a broadcast algorithm.  As the number of LANs   grows, the cost of broadcasting grows as well; also, the size of   translation caches required in the bridges grows with the total   number of hosts in the network.   The third approach addresses the key problem: existing standards   assume that all hosts on an Internet local network are on a single   cable.  The solution is to explicitly support subnets.  This does   have a disadvantage, in that it is a modification of the Internet   Protocol, and thus requires changes to IP implementations already in   use (if these implementations are to be used on a subnetted network.)   However, we believe that these changes are relatively minor, and once   made, yield a simple and efficient solution to the problem.  Also,   the approach we take in this document is to avoid any changes that   would be incompatible with existing hosts on non-subnetted networks.   Further, when appropriate design choices are made, it is possible for   hosts which believe they are on a non-subnetted network to be used on   a subnetted one, as will be explained later.  This is useful when it   is not possible to modify some of the hosts to support subnets   explicitly, or when a gradual transition is preferred.  Because of   this, there seems little reason to use the second approach listed   above.   The rest of this document describes approaches to subnets of Internet   Networks.Mogul                                                           [Page 3]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets   1.1. Terminology      To avoid either ambiguity or prolixity, we will define a few      terms, which will be used in the following sections:      Catenet         The collection of connected Internet Networks      Network         A single Internet network (that may or may not be divided into         subnets.)      Subnet         A subnet of an Internet network.      Network Number         As in [8].      Local Address         The bits in an Internet address not used for the network         number; also known as "rest field".      Subnet Number         A number identifying a subnet within a network.      Subnet Field         The bit field in an Internet address used for the subnet         number.      Host Field         The bit field in an Internet address used for denoting a         specific host.      Gateway         A node connected to two or more administratively distinct         networks and/or subnets, to which hosts send datagrams to be         forwarded.Mogul                                                           [Page 4]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets      Bridge         A node connected to two or more administratively         indistinguishable but physically distinct subnets, that         automatically forwards datagrams when necessary, but whose         existence is not know to other hosts.  Also called a "software         repeater".2. Standards for Subnet Addressing   Following the division presented in [2], we observe that subnets are   fundamentally an issue of addressing.  In this section, we first   describe a proposal for interpretation of Internet Addressing to   support subnets.  We then discuss the interaction between this   address format and broadcasting; finally, we present a protocol for   discovering what address interpretation is in use on a given network.   2.1. Interpretation of Internet Addresses      Suppose that an organization has been assigned an Internet network      number, has further divided that network into a set of subnets,      and wants to assign host addresses: how should this be done?      Since there are minimal restrictions on the assignment of the      "local address" part of the Internet address, several approaches      have been proposed for representing the subnet number:         1. Variable-width field: Any number of the bits of the local            address part are used for the subnet number; the size of            this field, although constant for a given network, varies            from network to network.  If the field width is zero, then            subnets are not in use.         2. Fixed-width field: A specific number of bits (e.g., eight)            is used for the subnet number, if subnets are in use.         3. Self-encoding variable-width field: Just as the width (i.e.,            class) of the network number field is encoded by its            high-order bits, the width of the subnet field is similarly            encoded.         4. Self-encoding fixed-width field: A specific number of bits            is is used for the subnet number.  Subnets are in use if the            high-order bit of this field is one; otherwise, the entire            local address part is used for host number.      Since there seems to be no advantage in doing otherwise, all these      schemes place the subnet field as the most significant field inMogul                                                           [Page 5]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets      the local address part.  Also, since the local address part of a      Class C address is so small, there is little reason to support      subnets of other than Class A and Class B networks.      What criteria can we use to choose one of these four schemes?      First, do we want to use a self-encoding scheme; that is, should      it be possible to tell from examining an Internet address if it      refers to a subnetted network, without reference to any other      information?      One advantage to self-encoding is that it allows one to determine      if a non-local network has been divided into subnets.  It is not      clear that this would be of any use.  The principle advantage,      however, is that no additional information is needed for an      implementation to determine if two addresses are on the same      subnet.  However, this can also be viewed as a disadvantage: it      may cause problems for non-subnetted networks which have existing      host numbers that use arbitrary bits in the local address part      <1>.  In other words, it is useful to be able control whether a      network is subnetted independently from the assignment of host      addresses.  Another disadvantage of any self-encoding scheme is      that it reduces the local address space by at least a factor of      two.      If a self-encoding scheme is not used, it is clear that a      variable-width subnet field is appropriate.  Since there must in      any case be some per-network "flag" to indicate if subnets are in      use, the additional cost of using an integer (the subnet field      width) instead of a boolean is negligible.  The advantage of using      a variable-width subnet field is that it allows each organization      to choose the best way to allocate relatively scarce bits of local      address to subnet and host numbers.      Our proposal, therefore, is that the Internet address be      interpreted as:         <network-number><subnet-number><host-number>      where the <network-number> field is as in [8], the <host-number>      field is at least one bit wide, and the width of the      <subnet-number> field is constant for a given network. No further      structure is required for the <subnet-number> or <host-number>      fields.  If the width of the <subnet-number> field is zero, then      the network is not subnetted (i.e., the interpretation of [8] is      used.)Mogul                                                           [Page 6]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets      For example, on a Class A network with an eight bit wide subnet      field, an address is broken down like this:                           1                   2                   3       0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |0|    NETWORK    |     SUBNET    |         Host number         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      We expect that, for reasons of simplicity and efficient      implementation, that most organizations will choose a subnet field      width that is a multiple of eight bits.  However, an      implementation must be prepared to handle other possible widths.      We reject the use of "recursive subnets", the division of the host      field into "sub-subnet" and host parts, because:         - There is no obvious need for a four-level hierarchy.         - The number of bits available in an IP address is not large           enough to make this useful in general.         - The extra mechanism required is complex.   2.2. Changes to Host Software to Support Subnets      In most implementations of IP, there is  code in the module that      handles outgoing packet that does something like:         IF ip_net_number(packet.ip_dest) = ip_net_number(my_ip_addr)             THEN                 send_packet_locally(packet, packet.ip_dest)             ELSE                 send_packet_locally(packet,                    gateway_to(ip_net_number(packet.ip_dest)))      (If the code supports multiple connected networks, it will be more      complicated, but this is irrelevant to the current discussion.)      To support subnets, it is necessary to store one more 32-bit      quantity, called my_ip_mask.  This is a bit-mask with bits set in      the fields corresponding to the IP network number, and additional      bits set corresponding to the subnet number field.  For example,      on a Class A network using an eight-bit wide subnet field, the      mask would be 255.255.0.0.      The code then becomes:Mogul                                                           [Page 7]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets         IF bitwise_and(packet.ip_dest, my_ip_mask)                          = bitwise_and(my_ip_addr, my_ip_mask)             THEN                 send_packet_locally(packet, packet.ip_dest)             ELSE                 send_packet_locally(packet,                    gateway_to(bitwise_and(packet.ip_dest, my_ip_mask)))      Of course, part of the expression in the conditionally can be      pre-computed.      It may or may not be necessary to modify the "gateway_to"      function, so that it performs comparisons in the same way.      To support multiply-connected hosts, the code can be changed to      keep  the "my_ip_addr" and "my_ip_mask" quantities on a      per-interface basis; the expression in the conditional must then      be evaluated for each interface.   2.3. Subnets and Broadcasting      In the absence of subnets, there are only two kinds of broadcast      possible within the Internet Protocol <2>: broadcast to all hosts      on a specific network, or broadcast to all hosts on "this      network"; the latter is useful when a host does not know what      network it is on.      When subnets are used, the situation becomes slightly more      complicated.  First, the possibility now exists of broadcasting to      a specific subnet.  Second, broadcasting to all the hosts on a      subnetted network requires additional mechanism; in [6] the use of      "Reverse Path Forwarding" [3] is proposed.  Finally, the      interpretation of a broadcast to "this network" is that it should      not be forwarded outside of the original subnet.      Implementations must therefore recognize three kinds of broadcast      addresses, in addition to their own host addresses:      This physical network         A destination address of all ones (255.255.255.255) causes the         a datagram to be sent as a broadcast on the local physical         network; it must not be forwarded by any gateway.Mogul                                                           [Page 8]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets      Specific network         The destination address contains a valid network number; the         local address part is all ones (e.g., 36.255.255.255).      Specific subnet         The destination address contains a valid network number and a         valid subnet number; the host field is all ones (e.g.,         36.40.255.255).      For further discussion of Internet broadcasting, see [6].      One factor that may aid in deciding whether to use subnets is that      it is possible to broadcast to all hosts of a subnetted network      with a single operation at the originating host.  It is not      possible to broadcast, in one step, to the same set of hosts if      they are on distinct networks.   2.4. Determining the Width of the Subnet Field      How can a host (or gateway) determine what subnet field width is      in use on a network to which it is connected?  The problem is      analogous to several other "bootstrapping" problems for Internet      hosts: how a host determines its own address, and how it locates a      gateway on its local network.  In all three cases, there are two      basic solutions: "hardwired" information, and broadcast-based      protocols.      "Hardwired" information is that available to a host in isolation      from a network.  It may be compiled-in, or (preferably) stored in      a disk file.  However, for the increasingly common case of a      diskless workstation that is bootloaded over a LAN, neither      hard-wired solution is satisfactory.  Instead, since most LAN      technology supports broadcasting, a better method is for the      newly-booted host to broadcast a request for the necessary      information.  For example, for the purpose of determining its      Internet address, a host may use the "Reverse Address Resolution      Protocol" [4].      We propose to extend the ICMP protocol [9] by adding a new pair of      ICMP message types, "Address Format Request" and "Address Format      Reply", analogous to the "Information Request" and "Information      Reply" ICMP messages.  These are described in detail inAppendix I.      The intended use of these new ICMPs is that a host, when booting,Mogul                                                           [Page 9]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets      broadcast an "Address Format Request" message <3>.  A gateway (or      a host acting in lieu of a gateway) that receives this message      responds with an "Address Format Reply".  If there is no      indication in the request which host sent it (i.e., the IP Source      Address is zero), the reply is broadcast as well.  The requesting      host will hear the response, and from it determine the width of      the subnet field.      Since there is only one possible value that can be sent in an      "Address Format Reply" on any given LAN, there is no need for the      requesting host to match the responses it hears against the      request it sent; similarly, there is no problem if more than one      gateway responds.  We assume that hosts reboot infrequently, so      the broadcast load on a network from use of this protocol should      be small.      If a host is connected to more than one LAN, it must use this      protocol on each, unless it can determine (from a response on one      of the LANs) that several of the LANs are part of the same      network, and thus must have the same subnet field width.      One potential problem is what a host should do if it receives no      response to its "Address Format Request", even after a reasonable      number of tries.  Three interpretations can be placed on the      situation:         1. The local net exists in (permanent) isolation from all other            nets.         2. Subnets are not in use, and no host supports this ICMP            request.         3. All gateways on the local net are (temporarily) down.      The first and second situations imply that the subnet field width      is zero.  In the third situation, there is no way to determine      what the proper value is; the safest choice is thus zero.      Although this might later turn out to be wrong, it will not      prevent transmissions that would otherwise succeed.  It is      possible for a host to recover from a wrong choice: when a gateway      comes up, it should broadcast an "Address Format Reply"; when a      host receives such a message that disagrees with its guess, it      should adjust its data structures to conform to the received      value.  No host or gateway should send an "Address Format Reply"      based on a "guessed" value.Mogul                                                          [Page 10]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets      Finally, note that no host is required to use this ICMP protocol      to discover the subnet field width; it is perfectly reasonable for      a host with non-volatile storage to use stored information.3. Subnet Routing Methods   One problem that faces all Internet hosts is how to determine a route   to another host.  In the presence of subnets, this problem is only   slightly modified.   The use of subnets means that there are two levels to the routing   process, instead of one.  If the destination host is on the same   network as the source host, the routing decision involves only the   subnet gateways between the hosts.  If the destination is on a   different network, then the routing decision requires the choice both   of a gateway out of the source host's network, and of a route within   the network to that gateway.   Fortunately, many hosts can ignore this distinction (and, in fact,   ignore all routing choices) by using a "default" gateway as the   initial route to all destinations, and relying on ICMP Host Redirect   messages to define more appropriate routes.  However, this is not an   efficient method for a gateway or for a multi-homed host, since a   redirect may not make up for a poor initial choice of route.  Such   hosts should use a routing information exchange protocol, but that is   beyond the scope of this document; in any case, the problem arises   even when subnets are not used.   The problem for a singly-connected host is thus to find at least one   neighbor gateway.  Again, there are basic two solutions to this: use   hard-wired information, or use broadcasts.  We believe that the   neighbor-gateway acquisition problem is the same with or without   subnets, and thus the choice of solution is not affected by the use   of subnets.   However, one problem remains: a source host must determine if   datagram to a given destination address must be sent via a gateway,   or sent directly to the destination host.  In other words, is the   destination host on the same physical network as the source?  This   particular phase of the routing process is the only one that requires   an implementation to be explicitly aware of subnets; in fact, if   broadcasts are not used, it is the only place where an Internet   implementation must be modified to support subnets.   Because of this, it is possible to use some existing implementations   without modification in the presence of subnets <4>.  For this to   work, such implementations must:Mogul                                                          [Page 11]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets      - Be used only on singly-homed hosts, and not as a gateway.      - Be used on a broadcast LAN.      - Use an Address Resolution Protocol (ARP), such [7].      - Not be required to maintain connections in the case of gateway        crashes.   In this case, one can modify the ARP server module in a subnet   gateway so that when it receives an ARP request, it checks the target   Internet address to see if it is along the best route to the target.   If it is, it sends to the requesting host an ARP response indicating   its own hardware address.  The requesting host thus believes that it   knows the hardware address of the destination host, and sends packets   to that address.  In fact, the packets are received by the gateway,   and forwarded to the destination host by the usual means.   This method requires some blurring of the layers in the gateways,   since the ARP server and the Internet routing table would normally   not have any contact.  In this respect, it is somewhat   unsatisfactory.  Still, it is fairly easy to implement, and does not   have significant performance costs.  One problem is that if the   original gateway crashes, there is no way for the source host to   choose an alternate route even if one exists; thus, a connection that   might otherwise have been maintained will be broken.   One should not confuse this method of "ARP-based subnetting" with the   superficially similar use of ARP-based bridges.  ARP-based subnetting   is based on the ability of a gateway to examine an IP address and   deduce a route to the destination, based on explicit subnet topology.   In other words, a small part of the routing decision has been moved   from the source host into the gateway.  An ARP-based bridge, in   contrast, must somehow locate each host without any assistance from a   mapping between host address and topology.  Systems built out of   ARP-based bridges should not be referred to as "subnetted".   N.B.: the use of ARP-based subnetting is complicated by the use of   broadcasts.  An ARP server [7] should never respond to a request   whose target is a broadcast address.  Such a request can only come   from a host that does not recognize the broadcast address as such,   and so honoring it would almost certainly lead to a forwarding loop.   If there are N such hosts on the physical network that do not   recognize this address as a broadcast, then a packet sent with a   Time-To-Live of T could potentially give rise to T**N spurious   re-broadcasts.Mogul                                                          [Page 12]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets4. Case Studies   In this section, we briefly sketch how subnets have been used by   several organizations.   4.1. Stanford University      At Stanford, subnets were introduced initially for historical      reasons.  Stanford had been using the Pup protocols [1] on a      collection of several Experimental Ethernets [5] since 1979,      several years before Internet protocols came into use.  There were      a number of Pup gateways in service, and all hosts and gateways      acquired and exchanged routing table information using a simple      broadcast protocol.      When the Internet Protocol was introduced, the decision was made      to use an eight-bit wide subnet number; Internet subnet numbers      were chosen to match the Pup network number of a given Ethernet,      and the Pup host numbers (also eight bits) were used as the host      field of the Internet address.      The Pup-only gateways were then modified to forward Internet      datagrams according to their Pup routing tables; they otherwise      had no understanding of Internet packets and in fact did not      adjust the Time-to-live field in the Internet header.  This seems      to be acceptable, since bugs that caused forwarding loops have not      appeared.  The Internet hosts that are multi-homed and thus can      serve as gateways do adjust the Time-to-live field; since all of      the currently also serve as Pup gateways, no additional routing      information exchange protocol was needed.      Internet host implementations were modified to understand subnets      (in several different ways, but with identical effects).  Since      all already had Pup implementations, the Internet routing tables      were maintained by the same process that maintained the Pup      routing tables, simply translating the Pup network numbers into      Internet subnet numbers.      When 10Mbit Ethernets were added, the gateways were modified to      use the ARP-based scheme described in an earlier section; this      allowed unmodified hosts to be used on the 10Mbit Ethernets.      IP subnets have been in use since early 1982; currently, there are      about 330 hosts, 18 subnets, and a similar number of subnet      gateways in service.  Once the Pup-only gateways are converted to      be true Internet gateways, an Internet-based routing exchange      protocol will be introduced, and Pup will be phased out.Mogul                                                          [Page 13]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets   4.2. MIT      MIT was the first IP site to accumulate a large collection of      local network links.  Since this happened before network numbers      were divided into classes, to have assigned each link at MIT its      own IP network number would have used up a good portion of the      available address space.  MIT decided to use one IP network      number, and to manage the 24-bit "rest" field itself, by dividing      it into three 8-bit fields; "subnet", "reserved, must be zero",      and "host".   Since the CHAOS protocol already in use at MIT used      an 8-bit subnet number field, it was possible to assign each link      the same subnet number in both protocols.  The IP host field was      set to 8 bits since most available local net hardware at that      point used 8 bit addresses, as did the CHAOS protocol; it was felt      that reserving some bits for the future was wise.      The initial plan was to use a dynamic routing protocol between the      IP subnet gateways; several such protocols have been mooted but      nobody has bothered to implement one; static routing tables are      still used.  It is likely that this change will finally be made      soon.      To solve the problem that imported IP software always needed      modification to work in the subnetted environment, MIT searched      for a model of operation that led to the least change in host IP      software.  This led to a model where IP gateways send ICMP Host      Redirects rather than Network Redirects.  All internal MIT IP      gateways now do so.  With hosts that can maintain IP routing      tables for non-local communication on a per host basis, this hides      most of the subnet structure.  The "minimum adjustment" for host      software to work correctly in both subnetted and non-subnetted      environments is the bit-mask algorithm mentioned earlier.      MIT has no immediate plans to move toward a single "approved"      protocol; this is due partly to the degree of local autonomy and      the amount of installed software, and partly to the lack of a      single prominent industry standard.  Rather, the approach taken      has been to provide a single set of physical links and packet      switches, and to layer several "virtual" protocol nets atop the      single set of links.  MIT has had some bad experiences with trying      to exchange routing information between protocols and wrap one      protocol in another; the general approach is to keep the protocols      strictly separated except for sharing the basic hardware.  Using      ARP to hide the subnet structure is not much in favor; it is felt      that this overloads the address resolution operation.  In a      complicated system (i.e. one with loops, and variant link speeds),Mogul                                                          [Page 14]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets      a more sophisticated information interchange will be needed      between gateways; making this an explicit mechanism (but one      insulated from the hosts) was felt to be best.   4.3. Carnegie-Mellon University      CMU uses a Class B network currently divided into 11 physical      subnets (two 3Mbit Experimental Ethernets, seven 10Mbit Ethernets,      and two ProNet rings.) Although host numbers are assigned so that      all addresses with a given third octet will be on the same subnet      (but not necessarily vice versa), this is essentially an      administrative convenience.  No software currently knows the      specifics of this allocation mechanism or depends on it to route      between cables.      Instead, an ARP-based bridge scheme is used.  When a host      broadcasts an ARP request, all bridges which receive it cache the      original protocol address mapping and then forward the request      (after the appropriate adjustments) as an ARP broadcast request      onto each of their other connected cables.  When a bridge receives      a non-broadcast ARP reply with a target protocol address not its      own, it consults its ARP cache to determine the cable onto which      the reply should be forwarded.  The bridges thus attempt to      transparently extend the ARP protocol into a heterogenous      multi-cable environment.  They are therefore required to turn ARP      broadcasts on a single cable into ARP broadcasts on all other      connected cables even when they "know better".  This algorithm      works only in the absence of cycles in the network connectivity      graph (which is currently the case).  Work is underway to replace      this simple-minded algorithm with a protocol implemented among the      bridges, in support of redundant paths and to reduce the      collective broadcast load.  The intent is to retain the ARP base      and host transparency, if possible.      Implementations supporting the 3Mbit Ethernet and 10Mb proNET ring      at CMU useRFC-826 ARP (instead of some wired-in mapping such as      simply using the 8-bit hardware address as the the fourth octet of      the IP address).      Since there are currently no redundant paths between cables, the      issue of maintaining connections across bridge crashes is moot.      With about 150 IP-capable hosts on the net, the bridge caches are      still of reasonable size, and little bandwidth is devoted to ARP      broadcast forwarding.      CMU's network is likely to grow from its relatively small,      singly-connected configuration centered within their CS/RIMogul                                                          [Page 15]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets      facility to a campus-wide intra-departmental configuration with      5000-10000 hosts and redundant connections between cables.  It is      possible that the ARP-based bridge scheme will not scale to this      size, and a system of explicit subnets may be required.  The      medium-term goal, however, is an environment into which unmodified      extant (especially 10Mb ethernet based) IP implementations can be      imported; the intent is to stay with a host-transparent (thus      ARP-based) routing mechanism as long as possible.  CMU is      concerned that even if subnets become part of the IP standard they      will not be widely implemented; this is the major obstacle to      their use at CMU.Mogul                                                          [Page 16]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet SubnetsI. Address Format ICMP   Address Format Request or Address Format Reply       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      |      Code     |          Checksum             |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |           Identifier          |       Sequence Number         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      IP Fields:         Addresses            The address of the source in an address format request            message will be the destination of the address format reply            message.  To form an address format reply message, the            source address of the request becomes the destination            address of the reply, the source address of the reply is set            to the replier's address, the type code changed to A2, the            subnet field width inserted into the Code field, and the            checksum recomputed.  However, if the source address in the            request message is zero, then the destination address for            the reply message should denote a broadcast.      ICMP Fields:         Type            A1 for address format request message            A2 for address format reply message         Code            0 for address format request message            Width of subnet field, in bits, for address format reply            message         Checksum            The checksum is the 16-bit one's complement of the one'sMogul                                                          [Page 17]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets            complement sum of the ICMP message starting with the ICMP            Type.  For computing the checksum, the checksum field should            be zero.  This checksum may be replaced in the future.         Identifier            An identifier to aid in matching request and replies, may be            zero.         Sequence Number            A sequence number to aid in matching request and replies,            may be zero.      Description         A gateway receiving an address format request should return it         with the Code field set to the number of bits of Subnet number         in IP addresses for the network to which the datagram was         addressed.  If the request was broadcast, the destination         network is "this network".  The Subnet field width may be from         0 to (31 - N), where N is the width in bits of the IP net         number field (i.e., 8, 16, or 24).         If the requesting host does not know its own IP address, it may         leave the source field zero; the reply should then be         broadcast.  Since there is only one possible address format for         a network, there is no need to match requests with replies.         However, this approach should be avoided if at all possible,         since it increases the superfluous broadcast load on the         network.            Type A1 may be received from a gateway or a host.            Type A2 may be received from a gateway, or a host acting in            lieu of a gateway.Mogul                                                          [Page 18]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet SubnetsII. Examples   For these examples, we assume that the requesting host has  address   36.40.0.123, that there is a gateway at 36.40.0.62, and that on   network 36.0.0.0, an 8-bit wide subnet field is in use.   First, suppose that broadcasting is allowed, and that 36.40.0.123   knows  its own address.  It sends the following datagram:      Source address:          36.40.0.123      Destination address:     36.255.255.255      Protocol:                ICMP = 1      Type:                    Address Format Request = A1      Code:                    0   36.40.0.62 will hear the datagram, and should respond with this   datagram:      Source address:          36.40.0.62      Destination address:     36.40.0.123      Protocol:                ICMP = 1      Type:                    Address Format Reply = A2      Code:                    8   For the following examples, assume that address 255.255.255.255   denotes "broadcast to this physical network", as described in [6].   The previous example is inefficient, because it potentially   broadcasts  the request on many subnets.  The most efficient method,   and the one we recommend, is for a host to first discover its own   address (perhaps  using the "Reverse ARP" protocol described in [4]),   and then to send  the ICMP request to 255.255.255.255:      Source address:          36.40.0.123      Destination address:     255.255.255.255      Protocol:                ICMP = 1      Type:                    Address Format Request = A1      Code:                    0   The gateway can then respond directly to the requesting host.   Suppose that 36.40.0.123 is a diskless workstation, and does not know   even its own host number.  It could send the following datagram:Mogul                                                          [Page 19]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet Subnets      Source address:          0.0.0.0      Destination address:     255.255.255.255      Protocol:                ICMP = 1      Type:                    Address Format Request = A1      Code:                    0   36.40.0.62 will hear the datagram, and should respond with this   datagram:      Source address:          36.40.0.62      Destination address:     36.40.255.255      Protocol:                ICMP = 1      Type:                    Address Format Reply = A2      Code:                    8   Note that the gateway uses the narrowest possible broadcast to reply   (i.e., sending the reply to 36.255.255.255 would mean that it is   transmitted on many subnets, not just the one on which it is needed.)   Even so, the overuse of broadcasts presents an unnecessary load to   all hosts on the subnet, and so we recommend that use of the   "anonymous" (0.0.0.0) source address be kept to a minimum.   If  broadcasting is not allowed, we assume that hosts have wired-in   information about neighbor gateways; thus, 36.40.0.123 might send   this datagram:      Source address:          36.40.0.123      Destination address:     36.40.0.62      Protocol:                ICMP = 1      Type:                    Address Format Request = A1      Code:                    0   36.40.0.62 should respond exactly as in the previous case.Mogul                                                          [Page 20]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet SubnetsNotes   <1>  For example, some host have addresses assigned by concatenating        their Class A network number with the low-order 24 bits of a        48-bit Ethernet hardware address.   <2>  Our discussion of Internet broadcasting is based on [6].   <3>  If broadcasting is not supported, them presumably a host "knows"        the address of a neighbor gateway, and should send the ICMP to        that gateway.   <4>  This is what was referred to earlier as the coexistence of        transparent and explicit subnets on a single network.Mogul                                                          [Page 21]

RFC 917                                                     October 1984Internet SubnetsReferences   1.  D.R. Boggs, J.F. Shoch, E.A. Taft, and R.M. Metcalfe. "Pup: An       Internetwork Architecture."  IEEE Transactions on Communications       COM-28, 4, pp612-624, April 1980.   2.  David D. Clark.  Names, Addresses, Ports, and Routes.RFC-814,       MIT-LCS, July 1982.   3.  Yogan K. Dalal and Robert M. Metcalfe. "Reverse Path Forwarding       of Broadcast Packets."  Comm. ACM 21, 12, pp1040-1048, December       1978.   4.  Ross Finlayson, Timothy Mann, Jeffrey Mogul, Marvin Theimer. A       Reverse Address Resolution Protocol.RFC-903, Stanford       University, June 1984.   5.  R.M. Metcalfe and D.R. Boggs. "Ethernet: Distributed Packet       Switching for Local Computer Networks."  Comm. ACM 19, 7,       pp395-404, July 1976.  Also CSL-75-7, Xerox Palo Alto Research       Center, reprinted in CSL-80-2.   6.  Jeffrey Mogul. Broadcasting Internet Datagrams.RFC-919, Stanford       University, October 1984.   7.  David Plummer. An Ethernet Address Resolution Protocol.RFC-826,       Symbolics, September 1982.   8.  Jon Postel. Internet Protocol.RFC-791, USC-ISI, September 1981.   9.  Jon Postel. Internet Control Message Protocol.RFC-792, USC-ISI,       September 1981.Mogul                                                          [Page 22]

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