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Network Working Group                                          J. PostelRequest for Comments: 925                                            ISI                                                            October 1984Multi-LAN Address ResolutionSTATUS OF THIS MEMO   This memo is prompted byRFC-917 by Jeffery Mogul on "Internet   Subnets".   In that memo, Mogul makes a case for the use of "explicit   subnets" in a multi-LAN environment.  In this memo, I attempt to make   a case for "transparent subnets".  This RFC suggests a proposed   protocol for the ARPA-Internet community, and requests discussion and   suggestions for improvements.  Distribution of this memo is   unlimited.INTRODUCTION   The problem of treating a set of local area networks (LANs) as one   Internet network has generated some interest and concern.  It is   inappropriate to give each LAN within an site a distinct Internet   network number.  It is desirable to hide the details of the   interconnections between the LANs within an site from people,   gateways, and hosts outside the site.  The question arises on how to   best do this, and even how to do it at all.  One proposal is to use   "explicit subnets" [1].  The explicit subnet scheme is a call to   recursively apply the mechanisms the Internet uses to manage networks   to the problem of managing LANs within one network.  In this note I   urge another approach: the use of "transparent subnets" supported by   a multi-LAN extension of the Address Resolution Protocol [2].OVERVIEW   To quickly review the Address Resolution Protocol (ARP).  Each host   on a broadcast LAN knows both its own physical hardware address (HA)   on the LAN and its own Internet Address (IA).  When Host-A is given   the IA of Host-B and told to send a datagram to it, Host-A must find   the HA that corresponds to Host-B's IA.  To do this Host-A forms an   ARP packet that contains its own HA and IA and the IA of the   destination host (Host-B).  Host-A broadcasts this ARP packet.  The   hosts that receive this ARP packet check to see if they are   destination sought.  If so, they (it should be only Host-B) send a   reply specifically addressed to the originator of the query (Host-A)   and supplying the HA that was needed.  The Host-A now has both the HA   and the IA of the destination (Host-B).  The Host-A adds this   information to a local cache for future use.      Note:  The ARP is actually more general purpose than this brief      sketch indicates.Postel                                                          [Page 1]

RFC 925                                                     October 1984Multi-LAN Address Resolution   The idea in this memo is to extend the ARP to work in an environment   of multiple interconnected LANs.   To see how this could work let us imagine a "magic box" (BOX) that is   connected as if it were an ordinary host to two (or more) LANs.   Hosts continue to behave exactly as they do with the basic ARP.   When an ARP query is broadcast by any host the BOX reads it (as do   all the hosts on that LAN).  In addition to checking whether it is   the host sought (and replying if it is), the BOX checks its cache of   IA:HA address mappings in the cache that it keeps for each LAN it is   attached to.      Case 1: If the mapping for the host is found in the cache for the      LAN that the query came from, the BOX does not respond (letting      the sought host respond for itself).      Case 2: If the mapping for the host is found in the cache for a      different LAN than the query came from, the BOX sends a reply      giving its own HA on the LAN the query came from.  The BOX acts as      an agent for the destination host.      Case 3: If the mapping is not found in any of the caches then, the      BOX must try to find out the the address, and then respond as in      case 1 or 2.      In case 3, the BOX has to do some magic.         The BOX keeps a search list of sought hosts.  Each entry         includes the IA of the host sought, the interface the ARP was         received on, and the source addresses of the original request.         When case 3 occurs, the search list is checked.  If the sought         host is already listed the search is terminated, if not the         search is propagated.         To propagate the search, an entry is first made on the search         list, then the BOX composes and sends an ARP packet on each of         its interfaces except the interface the instigating ARP packet         was received on.  If a reply is received, the information is         entered into the appropriate cache, the entry is deleted from         the search list and a response to the search instigating ARP is         made as in case 1 or 2.  If no reply is received, give up and         do nothing -- no response is sent to the instigating host (the         entry stays on the search list).Postel                                                          [Page 2]

RFC 925                                                     October 1984Multi-LAN Address Resolution         To terminate the search, give up and do nothing -- no response         is sent to the instigating host (the entry stays on the search         list).   The entries in the caches and the search list must time out.   For every ARP request that is received, the BOX must also put the   sending host's IA:HA address mapping into the cache for the LAN it   was received on.THE MULTI-LAN ADDRESS RESOLUTION PROTOCOL   The plan is to use ARP just as it is.  The new element is the "magic   box" ("ARP-based bridge") that relays the ARP request into   neighboring LANs and acts as an agent for relaying datagrams to hosts   on other LANs.   The Details      Hosts continue to behave exactly as they do with the basic ARP.      The LANs are connected together by BOXes (computers that are      attached to two or more LANs exactly as hosts are attached to      LANs).  The BOXes implement the following procedure.      Each BOX keeps a table for each LAN it is connected to (or for      each LAN interface).  Entries in these tables time out, so these      tables are caches of recent information.  The entries in these      caches are the IA:HA address pairs for that LAN.      When an ARP query is broadcast by any host the BOX reads it (as do      all the hosts on that LAN).  In addition to checking to see if it      is the host sought (and replying if it is), the BOX checks its      cache of IA:HA address mappings in the table it keeps for each LAN      it is attached to.         Case 1: If the mapping for the host is found in the cache for         the LAN that the query came from, the BOX does not respond         (letting the sought host respond for itself).  The time out on         this entry is not reinitialized.         Case 2: If the mapping for the host is found in the cache for a         different LAN than the query came from, the BOX sends a reply         giving its own HA on the LAN the query came from.  The time out         on this entry is not reinitialized.            In this case the BOX is indicating that it will act as anPostel                                                          [Page 3]

RFC 925                                                     October 1984Multi-LAN Address Resolution            agent for the destination host.  When an IP datagram arrives            at the BOX, the BOX must attempt to forward it using the            information in its address mapping caches.         Case 3: If the mapping is not found in any of the caches, then         the BOX must try to find out the the address, and then respond         as in case 1 or 2.  In this case, the BOX has to do some magic.            The BOX keeps a search list of sought (but not yet found)            hosts.  Each entry includes the IA of the host sought, the            interface the ARP was received on, and the source addresses            of the original request.            When case 3 occurs, the search list is checked.  If the            sought host is already listed the search is terminated, if            not the search is propagated.            To propagate the search, an entry is first made on the            search list, then the BOX composes and sends an ARP packet            on each of its interfaces.  These ARP requests contain the            IA and HA of the BOX and the IA of the sought host, and            request the HA of the sought host.  If a reply is received            to the ARP request, the information is entered into the            appropriate cache, the entry is deleted from the search list            and a response to the search instigating ARP requests is            made as in case 1 or 2 above.  If no reply is received, give            up and do nothing -- no response is sent to the instigating            host (the entry stays on the search list).               Note that the BOX must make a reasonable effort with its               ARP requests,  if it is normal for ordinary hosts to               retry ARP requests five times, then a BOX must also retry               it's ARP requests five times.            To terminate the search, give up and do nothing -- no            response is sent to the instigating host (the entry stays on            the search list).            There is no negative feedback from an ARP request, so there            is no way to decide that a search was unsuccessful except by            means of a time out.      For every ARP request that is received, the BOX must also put the      sending hosts IA:HA address mapping into the cache for the LAN it      was received on.      The entries in the caches and the search list must time out.Postel                                                          [Page 4]

RFC 925                                                     October 1984Multi-LAN Address Resolution      The search list must be kept and the termination rule followed to      avoid an infinite relaying of an ARP request for a host that does      not respond.  Once a host is listed in the search list, ARP      requests will not be relayed.  If a host that is down (or      otherwise not responding to ARP requests), comes up (or otherwise      begins responding to ARP requests) it will still not become      available to hosts in other LANs until the search list entry times      out.         There are two approaches to this problem: first, to have a         relatively short time out on the search list entries; or         second, to have the BOX periodically send ARPs for each entry         on the search list.      There are several time outs involved in this scheme.         First, the hosts try to get the address resolved using ARP.         They may actually make several attempts before giving up if a         host is not responding.  One must have an good estimate of the         length of time that a host may keep trying.  Call this time T1.         Second, there is the time that an entry stays on the search         list, or the time between BOX generated ARPs to resolve these         addresses.  Call this time T2.            Note that this time (T2) must be greater than the sum of the            T1s for the longest loop of LANs.         Third, there is the time that entries stay in the cache for         each LAN.  Call this time T3.         The relationship must be  T1 < T2 < T3.            One suggestion is that T1 be less than one minute, T2 be ten            minutes, and T3 be one hour.         If the environment is very stable, making T3 longer will result         in fewer searches (less overhead in ARP traffic).  If the         environment is very dynamic making T3 shorter will result in         more rapid adaptation to the changes.         Another possibility is to restart the timer on the cache         entries each time they are referenced, and have a small value         for T3.  This would result in entries that are frequently used         staying in the cache, but infrequently used information being         discarded quickly.  Unfortunately there is no necessary         relationship between frequency of use and correctness.  ThisPostel                                                          [Page 5]

RFC 925                                                     October 1984Multi-LAN Address Resolution         method could result in an out-of-date entry persisting in a         cache for a very long time if ARP requests for that address         mapping were received at just less than the time out period.      When handling regular datagrams, the BOXes must decrement the IP      datagram Time-To-Live field (TTL) and update the IP header check      sum.  If the TTL becomes zero the datagram is discarded (not      forwarded).      ARP, as currently defined, will take the most recent information      as the best and most up-to-date.  In a complicated multi-LAN      environment where there are loops in the connectivity it is likely      that one will get two (or more) responses to an ARP request for a      host on some other LAN.  It is probable that the first response      will be from the BOX that is the most efficient path.      The one change to the host implementation of ARP that is suggested      here is to prevent later responses from replacing the mapping      recorded from the first response.   Potential Problems      Bad Cache Entries         If some wrong information get into a cache entry, it will stay         there for time T3.  The persistence of old information could         prevent communication (for a time) if a host changed its IA:HA         mapping.         One way to replace bad or out-of-date entries in a cache would         be to have the BOXes explicitly interpret a broadcast ARP reply         to require an entry with either this IA or HA to be replaced         with this new IA:HA mapping.  One could have important servers         send a broadcast ARP reply when they come up.      Non-ARP Hosts         It seems unrealistic to expect to use both ARP hosts and         non-ARP hosts on the same LAN and expect them to communicate.         If all the non-ARP hosts are on the same LAN the situation is         considered with under the next heading (Non-Broadcast LANs).         Hosts that do not implement ARP must use some other means of         address mapping.  Either they hold a complete table of all         hosts, or they access some such table in a server via some         protocol; or they expect to make all routing decisions based on         analysis of address fields.Postel                                                          [Page 6]

RFC 925                                                     October 1984Multi-LAN Address Resolution      Non-Broadcast LANs         BOXes that are connected to LANs that do not have broadcast         capability and/or LANs where the hosts do not respond to ARP         may have a static or dynamic table of the IA:HA mappings for         that LAN (or the addresses may be computed from one another).         All the hosts on that LAN must be in the table.         When a BOX must find the address mapping and would otherwise         send an ARP request into a non-broadcast LAN (this can only         happen when the sought host is not the non-broadcast LAN since         all the hosts are in the table), it must instead send an ARP         type request specifically to each of the other BOXes on that         LAN.      Size of Tables         The worst case of the size of the tables in the BOXes is the         number of hosts in the set of LANs for each table.  That is,         the table kept for each LAN interface may (in the worst case)         grow to have an entry for each host in the entire set of LANs.         However, these tables are really caches of the entries needed         for current communication activity and the typical case will be         far from the worst case.  Most hosts will communicate mostly         with other hosts on their own LAN and with a few hosts on other         LANs.  Most communication on LANs is between work station hosts         and server hosts.  It can be expected that there will be         frequent communication involving the main server hosts and that         these server hosts will be entered in the tables of most of the         BOXes most of the time.      Infinite Transmission Loops         The possibility of infinite transmission loops through an         interconnected set of LANs is prevented by keeping search lists         in the BOXes and terminating the search when a request is         received for an address already on the list.         Transmission loops of regular datagrams can not persist because         them the BOXes must decrement the TTL, and discard the datagram         if the TTL is reduced to zero.  For debugging purposes it would         be useful for a BOX to report to the implementer any datagrams         discarded for this reason.Postel                                                          [Page 7]

RFC 925                                                     October 1984Multi-LAN Address Resolution      Broadcast         Note that broadcast does not really have anything to do with         either transparent subnets or explicit subnets.  Since it was         discussed in [1], it will be discussed here, too.  Two of the         three broadcast functions suggested in [1] work just the same         and have the same effects, the third can be supported, too.         It is also argued that the support for a broadcast         interpretation of IAs is a bigger issue that the question of         explicit subnets versus transparent subnets and it should be         decided separately.         It is also suggested that broadcast is not really what is         desired, but rather multicast is the better function.  It may         make sense to understand how to do an Internet multicast before         adopting a broadcast scheme.         This IP Network            If the IA of this network number and an all ones host number            (e.g., 36.255.255.255) is used, an IP level broadcast to all            hosts on this Network (all LANs) is intended.  A BOX must            forward this datagram.  A BOX must examine the datagram for            potential significance to the BOX itself.            To prevent infinite transmission loops each BOX must keep a            list of recent broadcasts.  The entries in this list contain            the source IA and the Identification field from the datagram            header.  If a broadcast is received and matches an entry on            the list it is discarded and not forwarded.  The entries on            this list time out in time T2.         This LAN Only            If the IA of all ones (i.e., 255.255.255.255) is used an IP            level broadcast to all hosts on this LAN only is intended.            A BOX must not forward this datagram.  A BOX must examine            the datagram for potential significance to the BOX itself.         Another LAN Only            Since the LANs are not individually identified in the IA            this can not be supported in the same way. Some have also            argued that this is a silly capability to provide.            One way to provide it is to establish a specific IA for eachPostel                                                          [Page 8]

RFC 925                                                     October 1984Multi-LAN Address Resolution            LAN that means "broadcast on this LAN".  For example,            36.255.255.128 means broadcast on LAN A, and 36.255.255.187            means broadcast on LAN B, etc.  These addresses would be            specially interpreted by the BOXes attached to the specific            LAN where they had the special interpretation, other BOXes            would treat these address as any other IAs.   Where these            addresses are specially interpreted they are converted to            the broadcast on this LAN only address.DISCUSSION   The claim for the extended ARP scheme is that the average host need   not even know it is in a multi-LAN environment.      If a host took the trouble to analyze its local cache of IA:AH      address mappings it might discover that several of the IAs mapped      to the same HA.  And if it took timing measurements it might      discover that some hosts responded with less delay that others.      And further, it might be able to find a correlation between these      discoveries.  But few hosts would take the trouble.   Address Structure      In the explicit subnet scheme, some IA bits are devoted to      identifying the subnet (i.e., the LAN).  The address is broken up      into network, subnet, and host fields.  Generally, when fields are      use the density of the assigned addresses in the address space      goes down.  That is, there is a less efficient use of the address      space.  Significant implementation problems may arise if more      subnets than planned are installed and it becomes necessary to      change the size of the subnet field.  It seems totally impractical      to use the explicit subnet scheme with a class C IA.      In the extended ARP scheme the address is simply the network, and      host fields.  The extended ARP scheme may be used with any class      of IA.   Relocating Hosts      In the explicit subnet scheme when a host is unplugged from one      LAN and plugged into another its IA must change.      In the extended ARP scheme it may keep the same IA.Postel                                                          [Page 9]

RFC 925                                                     October 1984Multi-LAN Address Resolution   One view of the situation suggests that there are really two   problems:      1. How does the host discover if the destination is in this LAN or      some other LAN?         This question assumes that a host should know the difference         and should do something different in the two cases, and further         that once the host knows the answer it also know how to send         the data (e.g., directly to the host, or to the box).            The claim here is that the hosts should not know the            difference and should always do the same thing.      2. How do the BOXes that connect LANs know which BOXes are the      routes to which LANs?         This question assumes that the BOXes need some kind of         topological knowledge, and exchange BOX-to-BOX protocol         information about connectivity.            The claim here is that the BOXes do not need topological            knowledge and do not need to explicitly know about the            existence of other BOXes.   It has been suggested that there are two problems: first, how the   hosts do routing; and second, how the BOXes do routing.  A claim has   been made that the competing strategies each have an approach to each   problems and one could select a solution made up partly from one   approach and partly from another.      For example: use ARP within the LAN and have the BOX send ARP      replies and act as a agent (as in the extended ARP scheme), but      use a BOX-to-BOX protocol to get the "which hosts are where"      information into the BOXes (as in the explicit subnet scheme).   There are two places where code is involved: a large number of hosts,   and a small number of BOXes.  In considering the trade off between   explicit subnet scheme and extended ARP scheme, the work done in the   hosts should weigh a lot more than the work done in the BOXes.      What do hosts do?         Explicit Subnet Scheme            The host must be able to decide if this IA is on this LAN orPostel                                                         [Page 10]

RFC 925                                                     October 1984Multi-LAN Address Resolution            some other LAN.  If on this LAN then use some procedure to            find the HA.  If on some other LAN then use some procedure            to find the HA of a BOX.         Extended ARP Scheme            In every case the host uses ARP to get a IA:HA mapping.      What do the BOXes do?         Explicit Subnet Scheme            The BOX must be able to decide which LAN within the site the            destination host is on.  The BOXes must have some routing            table that tells for each LAN in the site which interface to            send datagrams on.  This routing table must be kept up to            date, probably by a BOX-to-BOX protocol much like the            Internet Gateway-to-Gateway protocol.         Extended ARP Scheme            The BOX must keep caches for each LAN it is attached to of            IA:HA mappings, and it must keep a search list.  It does not            run any BOX-to-BOX protocol, It does not even know if any            other BOXes exist.   Topology and Implementation Complexity      Trees         If the organization of the LANs and the BOXes is tree         structured, the BOXes may be very simple, they don't have to         keep the search lists at all, since there won't be any loops         for the ARP-request to traverse.      Loops         If the organization has loops then the search lists are         essential.  If the topology is kept balanced so that there are         no long loops (all loops are about the same size), and the LANs         are reasonably compatible in delay characteristics, then the         procedure described here will work well.      Complex         If the organization is very complex, topologically unbalanced,Postel                                                         [Page 11]

RFC 925                                                     October 1984Multi-LAN Address Resolution         and/or composed of mix of different types of LANS with vastly         different delay characteristics, then it may be better to use a         BOX-to-BOX routing protocol.SUMMARY   It would be useful if the Internet community could come to some   agreement on a solution to the multi-LAN network problem and could   with a unified voice urge work station manufacturers to provide that   solution built in.   I urge consideration of the extended ARP scheme expounded on here.   I think that most work stations will be connected to LANs that have a   broadcast capability.  I think that most work stations will be used   in situations that do not require explicit subnets, and most will be   used in situations where a class C Internet addresses would be   appropriate (and explicit subnets impossible).  Thus, i think it   would be best to ask manufacturers to include support for ARP in work   stations off the shelf.  I also think we ought to get busy and   create, develop, test, and produce the magic boxes I suggest so that   they too are available off the shelf.   Please note that neither this note nor [1] proposes a specific   routing procedure or BOX-to-BOX protocol.  This is because such a   routing procedure is a very hard problem.  The plan proposed here   will let us get started on using multi-LAN environments in a   reasonable way.  If we later decide on a routing procedure to be used   between the BOXes we can redo the BOXes without having to redo the   hosts.Postel                                                         [Page 12]

RFC 925                                                     October 1984Multi-LAN Address ResolutionGLOSSARY   ARP      Address Resolution Protocol (see [2]).   BOX      Magic Box.  A box (computer) connected to two or more LANs of the      same Network.  Also called an "ARP-based bridge".   Bridge      A node (computer) 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".   Datagram      The unit of communication at the IP level.   Explicit Subnet      A Subnet explicitly identified in the the Internet Address by a      subnet address field, and so visible to others both in side and      out side the Network.   Gateway      A node (computer) connected to two or more administratively      distinct networks and/or subnets, to which hosts send datagrams to      be forwarded.   HA      Hardware Address, the address used in a packet on a LAN.   Host Number      The address of a host within an Network, the low-order part of an      IA.   IA      Internet Address, as defined in IP.Postel                                                         [Page 13]

RFC 925                                                     October 1984Multi-LAN Address Resolution   Internet      The collection of connected Internet Networks (also known as the      Catenet).  A set of interconnected networks using IP.   IP      Internet Protocol (see [3]).   LAN      Local Area Network.   Multi-LAN Network      A set of LANs treated as one Network, i.e., using one Network      Number in common.  The individual LANs may be either Explicit      Subnets or Transparent Subnets.   Network      A single Internet Network (possibly divided into subnets or      composed of multiple LANs), identified by an individual Network      Number.   Network Number      An IP Network Number, the high-order part of an IA.   Packet      The unit of communication at the LAN hardware level.   Subnet      A subnet of Network. A portion of a Network (either logical or      physical).   Transparent Subnet      A Subnet not identified in the Internet Address, and so invisible      to others, (see Multi-LAN Network).   TTL      The IP Time-To-Live field.Postel                                                         [Page 14]

RFC 925                                                     October 1984Multi-LAN Address ResolutionREFERENCES   [1]  J. Mogul, "Internet Subnets",RFC-917, Stanford University,        October 1984.   [2]  D. Plummer, "An Ethernet Address Resolution Protocol or        Converting Network Protocol Addresses to 48-bit Ethernet        Addresses for Transmission on Ethernet Hardware",RFC-826,        Symbolics, November 1982.   [3]  J. Postel, "Internet Protocol",RFC-791, USC-ISI,        September 1981.Postel                                                         [Page 15]

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