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Obsoleted by:1812 INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                P. Almquist, AuthorRequest for Comments: 1716                                    ConsultantCategory: Informational                            F. Kastenholz, Editor                                                      FTP Software, Inc.                                                           November 1994Towards Requirements for IP RoutersStatus of this Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  This memo   does not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of   this memo is unlimited.Almquist & Kastenholz                                           [Page i]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994Table of Contents0.  PREFACE .......................................................11.  INTRODUCTION ..................................................21.1  Reading this Document ........................................41.1.1  Organization ...............................................41.1.2  Requirements ...............................................51.1.3  Compliance .................................................61.2  Relationships to Other Standards .............................71.3  General Considerations .......................................81.3.1  Continuing Internet Evolution ..............................81.3.2  Robustness Principle .......................................91.3.3  Error Logging ..............................................91.3.4  Configuration ..............................................101.4  Algorithms ...................................................112.  INTERNET ARCHITECTURE .........................................132.1  Introduction .................................................132.2  Elements of the Architecture .................................142.2.1  Protocol Layering ..........................................142.2.2  Networks ...................................................162.2.3  Routers ....................................................172.2.4  Autonomous Systems .........................................182.2.5  Addresses and Subnets ......................................182.2.6  IP Multicasting ............................................202.2.7  Unnumbered Lines and Networks and Subnets ..................202.2.8  Notable Oddities ...........................................222.2.8.1  Embedded Routers .........................................222.2.8.2  Transparent Routers ......................................232.3  Router Characteristics .......................................242.4  Architectural Assumptions ....................................273.  LINK LAYER ....................................................293.1  INTRODUCTION .................................................293.2  LINK/INTERNET LAYER INTERFACE ................................293.3  SPECIFIC ISSUES ..............................................303.3.1  Trailer Encapsulation ......................................303.3.2  Address Resolution Protocol - ARP ..........................313.3.3  Ethernet and 802.3 Coexistence .............................313.3.4  Maximum Transmission Unit - MTU ............................313.3.5  Point-to-Point Protocol - PPP ..............................323.3.5.1  Introduction .............................................323.3.5.2  Link Control Protocol (LCP) Options ......................333.3.5.3  IP Control Protocol (ICP) Options ........................343.3.6  Interface Testing ..........................................354.  INTERNET LAYER - PROTOCOLS ....................................364.1  INTRODUCTION .................................................364.2  INTERNET PROTOCOL - IP .......................................36Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page ii]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19944.2.1  INTRODUCTION ...............................................364.2.2  PROTOCOL WALK-THROUGH ......................................374.2.2.1  Options:RFC-791 Section 3.2 .............................374.2.2.2  Addresses in Options:RFC-791 Section 3.1 ................404.2.2.3  Unused IP Header Bits:RFC-791 Section 3.1 ...............404.2.2.4  Type of Service:RFC-791 Section 3.1 .....................414.2.2.5  Header Checksum:RFC-791 Section 3.1 .....................414.2.2.6  Unrecognized Header Options:RFC-791 Section 3.1 .........414.2.2.7  Fragmentation:RFC-791 Section 3.2 .......................424.2.2.8  Reassembly:RFC-791 Section 3.2 ..........................434.2.2.9  Time to Live:RFC-791 Section 3.2 ........................434.2.2.10  Multi-subnet Broadcasts:RFC-922 ........................434.2.2.11  Addressing:RFC-791 Section 3.2 .........................434.2.3  SPECIFIC ISSUES ............................................474.2.3.1  IP Broadcast Addresses ...................................474.2.3.2  IP Multicasting ..........................................484.2.3.3  Path MTU Discovery .......................................484.2.3.4  Subnetting ...............................................494.3  INTERNET CONTROL MESSAGE PROTOCOL - ICMP .....................504.3.1  INTRODUCTION ...............................................504.3.2  GENERAL ISSUES .............................................504.3.2.1  Unknown Message Types ....................................504.3.2.2  ICMP Message TTL .........................................514.3.2.3  Original Message Header ..................................514.3.2.4  ICMP Message Source Address ..............................514.3.2.5  TOS and Precedence .......................................514.3.2.6  Source Route .............................................524.3.2.7  When Not to Send ICMP Errors .............................534.3.2.8  Rate Limiting ............................................544.3.3  SPECIFIC ISSUES ............................................554.3.3.1  Destination Unreachable ..................................554.3.3.2  Redirect .................................................554.3.3.3  Source Quench ............................................564.3.3.4  Time Exceeded ............................................564.3.3.5  Parameter Problem ........................................574.3.3.6  Echo Request/Reply .......................................574.3.3.7  Information Request/Reply ................................584.3.3.8  Timestamp and Timestamp Reply ............................584.3.3.9  Address Mask Request/Reply ...............................594.3.3.10  Router Advertisement and Solicitations ..................614.4  INTERNET GROUP MANAGEMENT PROTOCOL - IGMP ....................615.  INTERNET LAYER - FORWARDING ...................................625.1  INTRODUCTION .................................................625.2  FORWARDING WALK-THROUGH ......................................625.2.1  Forwarding Algorithm .......................................625.2.1.1  General ..................................................635.2.1.2  Unicast ..................................................64Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page iii]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19945.2.1.3  Multicast ................................................655.2.2  IP Header Validation .......................................665.2.3  Local Delivery Decision ....................................685.2.4  Determining the Next Hop Address ...........................705.2.4.1  Immediate Destination Address ............................715.2.4.2  Local/Remote Decision ....................................715.2.4.3  Next Hop Address .........................................725.2.4.4  Administrative Preference ................................775.2.4.6  Load Splitting ...........................................785.2.5  Unused IP Header Bits:RFC-791 Section 3.1 .................795.2.6  Fragmentation and Reassembly:RFC-791 Section 3.2 ..........795.2.7  Internet Control Message Protocol - ICMP ...................805.2.7.1  Destination Unreachable ..................................805.2.7.2  Redirect .................................................825.2.7.3  Time Exceeded ............................................845.2.8  INTERNET GROUP MANAGEMENT PROTOCOL - IGMP ..................845.3  SPECIFIC ISSUES ..............................................845.3.1  Time to Live (TTL) .........................................845.3.2  Type of Service (TOS) ......................................855.3.3  IP Precedence ..............................................875.3.3.1  Precedence-Ordered Queue Service .........................885.3.3.2  Lower Layer Precedence Mappings ..........................885.3.3.3  Precedence Handling For All Routers ......................895.3.4  Forwarding of Link Layer Broadcasts ........................925.3.5  Forwarding of Internet Layer Broadcasts ....................925.3.5.1  Limited Broadcasts .......................................945.3.5.2  Net-directed Broadcasts ..................................945.3.5.3  All-subnets-directed Broadcasts ..........................955.3.5.4  Subnet-directed Broadcasts ...............................975.3.6  Congestion Control .........................................975.3.7  Martian Address Filtering ..................................995.3.8  Source Address Validation ..................................995.3.9  Packet Filtering and Access Lists ..........................1005.3.10  Multicast Routing .........................................1015.3.11  Controls on Forwarding ....................................1015.3.12  State Changes .............................................1015.3.12.1  When a Router Ceases Forwarding .........................1025.3.12.2  When a Router Starts Forwarding .........................1025.3.12.3  When an Interface Fails or is Disabled ..................1035.3.12.4  When an Interface is Enabled ............................1035.3.13  IP Options ................................................1035.3.13.1  Unrecognized Options ....................................1035.3.13.2  Security Option .........................................1045.3.13.3  Stream Identifier Option ................................1045.3.13.4  Source Route Options ....................................1045.3.13.5  Record Route Option .....................................1045.3.13.6  Timestamp Option ........................................105Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page iv]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19946.  TRANSPORT LAYER ...............................................1066.1  USER DATAGRAM PROTOCOL - UDP .................................1066.2  TRANSMISSION CONTROL PROTOCOL - TCP ..........................1067.  APPLICATION LAYER - ROUTING PROTOCOLS .........................1097.1  INTRODUCTION .................................................1097.1.1  Routing Security Considerations ............................1097.1.2  Precedence .................................................1107.2  INTERIOR GATEWAY PROTOCOLS ...................................1107.2.1  INTRODUCTION ...............................................1107.2.2  OPEN SHORTEST PATH FIRST - OSPF ............................1117.2.2.1  Introduction .............................................1117.2.2.2  Specific Issues ..........................................1117.2.2.3  New Version of OSPF ......................................1127.2.3  INTERMEDIATE SYSTEM TO INTERMEDIATE SYSTEM -  DUAL  IS-IS     ..............................................................1127.2.4  ROUTING INFORMATION PROTOCOL - RIP .........................1137.2.4.1  Introduction .............................................1137.2.4.2  Protocol Walk-Through ....................................1137.2.4.3  Specific Issues ..........................................1187.2.5  GATEWAY TO GATEWAY PROTOCOL - GGP ..........................1197.3  EXTERIOR GATEWAY PROTOCOLS ...................................1197.3.1  INTRODUCTION ...............................................1197.3.2  BORDER GATEWAY PROTOCOL - BGP ..............................1207.3.2.1  Introduction .............................................1207.3.2.2  Protocol Walk-through ....................................1207.3.3  EXTERIOR GATEWAY PROTOCOL - EGP ............................1217.3.3.1  Introduction .............................................1217.3.3.2  Protocol Walk-through ....................................1227.3.4  INTER-AS ROUTING WITHOUT AN EXTERIOR PROTOCOL ..............1247.4  STATIC ROUTING ...............................................1257.5  FILTERING OF ROUTING INFORMATION .............................1277.5.1  Route Validation ...........................................1277.5.2  Basic Route Filtering ......................................1277.5.3  Advanced Route Filtering ...................................1287.6  INTER-ROUTING-PROTOCOL INFORMATION EXCHANGE ..................1298.  APPLICATION LAYER - NETWORK MANAGEMENT PROTOCOLS ..............1318.1  The Simple Network Management Protocol - SNMP ................1318.1.1  SNMP Protocol Elements .....................................1318.2  Community Table ..............................................1328.3  Standard MIBS ................................................1338.4  Vendor Specific MIBS .........................................1348.5  Saving Changes ...............................................1359.  APPLICATION LAYER - MISCELLANEOUS PROTOCOLS ...................1379.1  BOOTP ........................................................1379.1.1  Introduction ...............................................1379.1.2  BOOTP Relay Agents .........................................13710.  OPERATIONS AND MAINTENANCE ...................................139Almquist & Kastenholz                                           [Page v]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 199410.1  Introduction ................................................13910.2  Router Initialization .......................................14010.2.1  Minimum Router Configuration ..............................14010.2.2  Address and Address Mask Initialization ...................14110.2.3  Network Booting using BOOTP and TFTP ......................14210.3  Operation and Maintenance ...................................14310.3.1  Introduction ..............................................14310.3.2  Out Of Band Access ........................................14410.3.2  Router O&M Functions ......................................14410.3.2.1  Maintenance - Hardware Diagnosis ........................14410.3.2.2  Control - Dumping and Rebooting .........................14510.3.2.3  Control - Configuring the Router ........................14510.3.2.4  Netbooting of System Software ...........................14610.3.2.5  Detecting and responding to misconfiguration ............14610.3.2.6  Minimizing Disruption ...................................14710.3.2.7  Control - Troubleshooting Problems ......................14810.4  Security Considerations .....................................14910.4.1  Auditing and Audit Trails .................................14910.4.2  Configuration Control .....................................15011.  REFERENCES ...................................................152APPENDIX  A. REQUIREMENTS FOR SOURCE-ROUTING HOSTS ................162APPENDIX  B. GLOSSARY .............................................164APPENDIX  C. FUTURE DIRECTIONS ....................................169APPENDIX D.  Multicast Routing Protocols ..........................172D.1  Introduction .................................................172D.2  Distance Vector Multicast Routing Protocol - DVMRP ...........172D.3  Multicast Extensions to OSPF - MOSPF .........................173APPENDIX E  Additional Next-Hop Selection Algorithms ..............174E.1. Some Historical Perspective ..................................174E.2. Additional Pruning Rules .....................................176E.3  Some Route Lookup Algorithms .................................177E.3.1 The Revised Classic Algorithm ...............................178E.3.2 The Variant Router Requirements Algorithm ...................179E.3.3 The OSPF Algorithm ..........................................179E.3.4 The Integrated IS-IS Algorithm ..............................180Security Considerations ...........................................182Acknowledgments ...................................................183Editor's Address ..................................................186Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page vi]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19940.  PREFACEThis document is a snapshot of the work of the Router Requirementsworking group as of November 1991.  At that time, the working group hadessentially finished its task.  There were some final technical mattersto be nailed down, and a great deal of editing needed to be done inorder to get the document ready for publication.  Unfortunately, thesetasks were never completed.At the request of the Internet Area Director, the current editor tookthe last draft of the document and, after consulting the mailing listarchives, meeting minutes, notes, and other members of the workinggroup, edited the document to its current form.  This effort includedthe following tasks: 1) Deleting all the parenthetical material (such aseditor's comments). Useful information was turned into DISCUSSIONsections, the rest was deleted.  2) Completing the tasks listed in thelast draft's To be Done sections. As a part of this task, a new "to bedone" list was developed and included as an appendix to the currentdocument.  3) Rolling Philip Almquist's "Ruminations on the Next Hop"and "Ruminations on Route Leaking" into this document.  These representsignificant work and should be kept.  4) Fulfilling the last intents ofthe working group as determined from the archival material.  The intentof this effort was to get the document into a form suitable forpublication as an Historical RFC so that the significant work which wentinto the creation of this document would be preserved.The content and form of this document are due, in large part, to theworking group's chair, and document's original editor and author: PhilipAlmquist.  Without his efforts, this document would not exist.Almquist & Kastenholz                                           [Page 1]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19941.  INTRODUCTIONThe goal of this work is to replaceRFC-1009, Requirements for InternetGateways ([INTRO:1]) with a new document.This memo is an intermediate step toward that goal. It defines anddiscusses requirements for devices which perform the network layerforwarding function of the Internet protocol suite.  The Internetcommunity usually refers to such devices as IP routers or simplyrouters; The OSI community refers to such devices as intermediatesystems.  Many older Internet documents refer to these devices asgateways, a name which more recently has largely passed out of favor toavoid confusion with application gateways.An IP router can be distinguished from other sorts of packet switchingdevices in that a router examines the IP protocol header as part of theswitching process.  It generally has to modify the IP header and tostrip off and replace the Link Layer framing.The authors of this memo recognize, as should its readers, that manyrouters support multiple protocol suites, and that support for multipleprotocol suites will be required in increasingly large parts of theInternet in the future.  This memo, however, does not attempt to specifyInternet requirements for protocol suites other than TCP/IP.This document enumerates standard protocols that a router connected tothe Internet must use, and it incorporates by reference the RFCs andother documents describing the current specifications for theseprotocols.  It corrects errors in the referenced documents and addsadditional discussion and guidance for an implementor.For each protocol, this final version of this memo also contains anexplicit set of requirements, recommendations, and options.  The readermust understand that the list of requirements in this memo is incompleteby itself; the complete set of requirements for an Internet protocolrouter is primarily defined in the standard protocol specificationdocuments, with the corrections, amendments, and supplements containedin this memo.This memo should be read in conjunction with the Requirements forInternet Hosts RFCs ([INTRO:2] and [INTRO:3]).  Internet hosts androuters must both be capable of originating IP datagrams and receivingIP datagrams destined for them.  The major distinction between Internethosts and routers is that routers are required to implement forwardingalgorithms and Internet hosts do not require forwarding capabilities.Any Internet host acting as a router must adhere to the requirementscontained in the final version of this memo.Almquist & Kastenholz                                           [Page 2]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994The goal of open system interconnection dictates that routers mustfunction correctly as Internet hosts when necessary.  To achieve this,this memo provides guidelines for such instances.  For simplificationand ease of document updates, this memo tries to avoid overlappingdiscussions of host requirements with [INTRO:2] and [INTRO:3] andincorporates the relevant requirements of those documents by reference.In some cases the requirements stated in [INTRO:2] and [INTRO:3] aresuperseded by the final version of this document.A good-faith implementation of the protocols produced after carefulreading of the RFCs, with some interaction with the Internet technicalcommunity, and that follows good communications software engineeringpractices, should differ from the requirements of this memo in onlyminor ways.  Thus, in many cases, the requirements in this document arealready stated or implied in the standard protocol documents, so thattheir inclusion here is, in a sense, redundant.  However, they wereincluded because some past implementation has made the wrong choice,causing problems of interoperability, performance, and/or robustness.This memo includes discussion and explanation of many of therequirements and recommendations.  A simple list of requirements wouldbe dangerous, because:o  Some required features are more important than others, and some   features are optional.o  Some features are critical in some applications of routers but   irrelevant in others.o  There may be valid reasons why particular vendor products that are   designed for restricted contexts might choose to use different   specifications.However, the specifications of this memo must be followed to meet thegeneral goal of arbitrary router interoperation across the diversity andcomplexity of the Internet.  Although most current implementations failto meet these requirements in various ways, some minor and some major,this specification is the ideal towards which we need to move.These requirements are based on the current level of Internetarchitecture.  This memo will be updated as required to provideadditional clarifications or to include additional information in thoseareas in which specifications are still evolving.Almquist & Kastenholz                                           [Page 3]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19941.1  Reading this Document1.1.1  Organization      This memo emulates the layered organization used by [INTRO:2] and      [INTRO:3].  Thus, Chapter 2 describes the layers found in the      Internet architecture.  Chapter 3 covers the Link Layer.  Chapters      4 and 5 are concerned with the Internet Layer protocols and      forwarding algorithms.  Chapter 6 covers the Transport Layer.      Upper layer protocols are divided between Chapter 7, which      discusses the protocols which routers use to exchange routing      information with each other, Chapter 8, which discusses network      management, and Chapter 9, which discusses other upper layer      protocols.  The final chapter covers operations and maintenance      features.  This organization was chosen for simplicity, clarity,      and consistency with the Host Requirements RFCs.  Appendices to      this memo include a bibliography, a glossary, and some conjectures      about future directions of router standards.      In describing the requirements, we assume that an implementation      strictly mirrors the layering of the protocols.  However, strict      layering is an imperfect model, both for the protocol suite and      for recommended implementation approaches.  Protocols in different      layers interact in complex and sometimes subtle ways, and      particular functions often involve multiple layers.  There are      many design choices in an implementation, many of which involve      creative breaking of strict layering.  Every implementor is urged      to read [INTRO:4] and [INTRO:5].      In general, each major section of this memo is organized into the      following subsections:      (1)  Introduction      (2)  Protocol Walk-Through - considers the protocol specification           documents section-by-section, correcting errors, stating           requirements that may be ambiguous or ill-defined, and           providing further clarification or explanation.      (3)  Specific Issues - discusses protocol design and           implementation issues that were not included in the walk-           through.      Under many of the individual topics in this memo, there is      parenthetical material labeled DISCUSSION or IMPLEMENTATION. This      material is intended to give a justification, clarification orAlmquist & Kastenholz                                           [Page 4]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      explanation to the preceding requirements text.  The      implementation material contains suggested approaches that an      implementor may want to consider.  The DISCUSSION and      IMPLEMENTATION sections are not part of the standard.1.1.2  Requirements      In this memo, the words that are used to define the significance      of each particular requirement are capitalized.  These words are:      o  MUST         This word means that the item is an absolute requirement of the         specification.      o  MUST IMPLEMENT         This phrase means that this specification requires that the         item be implemented, but does not require that it be enabled by         default.      o  MUST NOT         This phrase means that the item is an absolute prohibition of         the specification.      o  SHOULD         This word means that there may exist valid reasons in         particular circumstances to ignore this item, but the full         implications should be understood and the case carefully         weighed before choosing a different course.      o  SHOULD IMPLEMENT         This phrase is similar in meaning to SHOULD, but is used when         we recommend that a particular feature be provided but does not         necessarily recommend that it be enabled by default.      o  SHOULD NOT         This phrase means that there may exist valid reasons in         particular circumstances when the described behavior is         acceptable or even useful, but the full implications should be         understood and the case carefully weighed before implementing         any behavior described with this label.      o  MAY         This word means that this item is truly optional.  One vendor         may choose to include the item because a particular marketplace         requires it or because it enhances the product, for example;         another vendor may omit the same item.Almquist & Kastenholz                                           [Page 5]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19941.1.3  Compliance      Some requirements are applicable to all routers.  Other      requirements are applicable only to those which implement      particular features or protocols.  In the following paragraphs,      Relevant refers to the union of the requirements applicable to all      routers and the set of requirements applicable to a particular      router because of the set of features and protocols it has      implemented.      Note that not all Relevant requirements are stated directly in      this memo.  Various parts of this memo incorporate by reference      sections of the Host Requirements specification, [INTRO:2] and      [INTRO:3].  For purposes of determining compliance with this memo,      it does not matter whether a Relevant requirement is stated      directly in this memo or merely incorporated by reference from one      of those documents.      An implementation is said to be conditionally compliant if it      satisfies all of the Relevant MUST, MUST IMPLEMENT, and MUST NOT      requirements.  An implementation is said to be unconditionally      compliant if it is conditionally compliant and also satisfies all      of the Relevant SHOULD, SHOULD IMPLEMENT, and SHOULD NOT      requirements.  An implementation is not compliant if it is not      conditionally compliant (i.e., it fails to satisfy one or more of      the Relevant MUST, MUST IMPLEMENT, or MUST NOT requirements).      For any of the SHOULD and SHOULD NOT requirements, a router may      provide a configuration option that will cause the router to act      other than as specified by the requirement.  Having such a      configuration option does not void a router's claim to      unconditional compliance as long as the option has a default      setting, and that leaving the option at its default setting causes      the router to operate in a manner which conforms to the      requirement.      Likewise, routers may provide, except where explicitly prohibited      by this memo, options which cause them to violate MUST or MUST NOT      requirements.  A router which provides such options is compliant      (either fully or conditionally) if and only if each such option      has a default setting which causes the router to conform to the      requirements of this memo.  Please note that the authors of this      memo, although aware of market realities, strongly recommend      against provision of such options.  Requirements are labeled MUST      or MUST NOT because experts in the field have judged them to be      particularly important to interoperability or proper functioning      in the Internet.  Vendors should weigh carefully the customerAlmquist & Kastenholz                                           [Page 6]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      support costs of providing options which violate those rules.      Of course, this memo is not a complete specification of an IP      router, but rather is closer to what in the OSI world is called a      profile.  For example, this memo requires that a number of      protocols be implemented.  Although most of the contents of their      protocol specifications are not repeated in this memo,      implementors are nonetheless required to implement the protocols      according to those specifications.1.2  Relationships to Other Standards   There are several reference documents of interest in checking the   current status of protocol specifications and standardization:     o  INTERNET OFFICIAL PROTOCOL STANDARDS        This document describes the Internet standards process and lists        the standards status of the protocols.  As of this writing, the        current version of this document is STD 1,RFC 1610, [ARCH:7].        This document is periodically re-issued.  You should always        consult an RFC repository and use the latest version of this        document.     o  Assigned Numbers        This document lists the assigned values of the parameters used        in the various protocols.  For example, IP protocol codes, TCP        port numbers, Telnet Option Codes, ARP hardware types, and        Terminal Type names.  As of this writing, the current version of        this document is STD 2,RFC 1700, [INTRO:7].  This document is        periodically re-issued.  You should always consult an RFC        repository and use the latest version of this document.     o  Host Requirements        This pair of documents reviews the specifications that apply to        hosts and supplies guidance and clarification for any        ambiguities.  Note that these requirements also apply to        routers, except where otherwise specified in this memo.  As of        this writing (December, 1993) the current versions of these        documents areRFC 1122 andRFC 1123, (STD 3) [INTRO:2], and        [INTRO:3] respectively.     o  Router Requirements (formerly Gateway Requirements)        This memo.     Note that these documents are revised and updated at different     times; in case of differences between these documents, the most     recent must prevail.Almquist & Kastenholz                                           [Page 7]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994     These and other Internet protocol documents may be obtained from     the:     The InterNIC     DS.INTERNIC.NET     InterNIC Directory and Database Service     +1 (800) 444-4345 or +1 (619) 445-4600     info@internic.net1.3  General Considerations   There are several important lessons that vendors of Internet software   have learned and which a new vendor should consider seriously.1.3.1  Continuing Internet Evolution      The enormous growth of the Internet has revealed problems of      management and scaling in a large datagram-based packet      communication system.  These problems are being addressed, and as      a result there will be continuing evolution of the specifications      described in this memo.  New routing protocols, algorithms, and      architectures are constantly being developed.  New and additional      internet-layer protocols are also constantly being devised.      Because routers play such a crucial role in the Internet, and      because the number of routers deployed in the Internet is much      smaller than the number of hosts, vendors should expect that      router standards will continue to evolve much more quickly than      host standards.  These changes will be carefully planned and      controlled since there is extensive participation in this planning      by the vendors and by the organizations responsible for operation      of the networks.      Development, evolution, and revision are characteristic of      computer network protocols today, and this situation will persist      for some years.  A vendor who develops computer communications      software for the Internet protocol suite (or any other protocol      suite!) and then fails to maintain and update that software for      changing specifications is going to leave a trail of unhappy      customers.  The Internet is a large communication network, and the      users are in constant contact through it.  Experience has shown      that knowledge of deficiencies in vendor software propagates      quickly through the Internet technical community.Almquist & Kastenholz                                           [Page 8]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19941.3.2  Robustness Principle      At every layer of the protocols, there is a general rule (from      [TRANS:2] by Jon Postel) whose application can lead to enormous      benefits in robustness and interoperability:                       Be conservative in what you do,                  be liberal in what you accept from others.      Software should be written to deal with every conceivable error,      no matter how unlikely; sooner or later a packet will come in with      that particular combination of errors and attributes, and unless      the software is prepared, chaos can ensue.  In general, it is best      to assume that the network is filled with malevolent entities that      will send packets designed to have the worst possible effect.      This assumption will lead to suitably protective design.  The most      serious problems in the Internet have been caused by unforeseen      mechanisms triggered by low probability events; mere human malice      would never have taken so devious a course!      Adaptability to change must be designed into all levels of router      software.  As a simple example, consider a protocol specification      that contains an enumeration of values for a particular header      field - e.g., a type field, a port number, or an error code; this      enumeration must be assumed to be incomplete.  If the protocol      specification defines four possible error codes, the software must      not break when a fifth code shows up.  An undefined code might be      logged, but it must not cause a failure.      The second part of the principle is almost as important: software      on hosts or other routers may contain deficiencies that make it      unwise to exploit legal but obscure protocol features.  It is      unwise to stray far from the obvious and simple, lest untoward      effects result elsewhere.  A corollary of this is watch out for      misbehaving hosts; router software should be prepared to survive      in the presence of misbehaving hosts.  An important function of      routers in the Internet is to limit the amount of disruption such      hosts can inflict on the shared communication facility.1.3.3  Error Logging      The Internet includes a great variety of systems, each      implementing many protocols and protocol layers, and some of these      contain bugs and misfeatures in their Internet protocol software.      As a result of complexity, diversity, and distribution of      function, the diagnosis of problems is often very difficult.Almquist & Kastenholz                                           [Page 9]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      Problem diagnosis will be aided if routers include a carefully      designed facility for logging erroneous or strange events.  It is      important to include as much diagnostic information as possible      when an error is logged.  In particular, it is often useful to      record the header(s) of a packet that caused an error.  However,      care must be taken to ensure that error logging does not consume      prohibitive amounts of resources or otherwise interfere with the      operation of the router.      There is a tendency for abnormal but harmless protocol events to      overflow error logging files; this can be avoided by using a      circular log, or by enabling logging only while diagnosing a known      failure.  It may be useful to filter and count duplicate      successive messages.  One strategy that seems to work well is to      both:      o  Always count abnormalities and make such counts accessible         through the management protocol (see Chapter 8); and      o  Allow the logging of a great variety of events to be         selectively enabled.  For example, it might useful to be able         to log everything or to log everything for host X.      This topic is further discussed in [MGT:5].1.3.4  Configuration      In an ideal world, routers would be easy to configure, and perhaps      even entirely self-configuring.  However, practical experience in      the real world suggests that this is an impossible goal, and that      in fact many attempts by vendors to make configuration easy      actually cause customers more grief than they prevent.  As an      extreme example, a router designed to come up and start routing      packets without requiring any configuration information at all      would almost certainly choose some incorrect parameter, possibly      causing serious problems on any networks unfortunate enough to be      connected to it.      Often this memo requires that a parameter be a configurable      option.  There are several reasons for this.  In a few cases there      currently is some uncertainty or disagreement about the best value      and it may be necessary to update the recommended value in the      future.  In other cases, the value really depends on external      factors - e.g., the distribution of its communication load, or the      speeds and topology of nearby networks - and self-tuning      algorithms are unavailable and may be insufficient.  In some      cases, configurability is needed because of administrative      requirements.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 10]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      Finally, some configuration options are required to communicate      with obsolete or incorrect implementations of the protocols,      distributed without sources, that persist in many parts of the      Internet.  To make correct systems coexist with these faulty      systems, administrators must occasionally misconfigure the correct      systems.  This problem will correct itself gradually as the faulty      systems are retired, but cannot be ignored by vendors.      When we say that a parameter must be configurable, we do not      intend to require that its value be explicitly read from a      configuration file at every boot time.  For many parameters, there      is one value that is appropriate for all but the most unusual      situations.  In such cases, it is quite reasonable that the      parameter default to that value if not explicitly set.      This memo requires a particular value for such defaults in some      cases.  The choice of default is a sensitive issue when the      configuration item controls accommodation of existing, faulty,      systems.  If the Internet is to converge successfully to complete      interoperability, the default values built into implementations      must implement the official protocol, not misconfigurations to      accommodate faulty implementations.  Although marketing      considerations have led some vendors to choose misconfiguration      defaults, we urge vendors to choose defaults that will conform to      the standard.      Finally, we note that a vendor needs to provide adequate      documentation on all configuration parameters, their limits and      effects.1.4  Algorithms   In several places in this memo, specific algorithms that a router   ought to follow are specified.  These algorithms are not, per se,   required of the router.  A router need not implement each algorithm   as it is written in this document.  Rather, an implementation must   present a behavior to the external world that is the same as a   strict, literal, implementation of the specified algorithm.   Algorithms are described in a manner that differs from the way a good   implementor would implement them.  For expository purposes, a style   that emphasizes conciseness, clarity, and independence from   implementation details has been chosen.  A good implementor will   choose algorithms and implementation methods which produce the same   results as these algorithms, but may be more efficient or less   general.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 11]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994   We note that the art of efficient router implementation is outside of   the scope of this memo.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 12]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19942.  INTERNET ARCHITECTUREThis chapter does not contain any requirements.  However, it doescontain useful background information on the general architecture of theInternet and of routers.General background and discussion on the Internet architecture andsupporting protocol suite can be found in the DDN Protocol Handbook[ARCH:1]; for background see for example [ARCH:2], [ARCH:3], and[ARCH:4].  The Internet architecture and protocols are also covered inan ever-growing number of textbooks, such as [ARCH:5] and [ARCH:6].2.1  Introduction   The Internet system consists of a number of interconnected packet   networks supporting communication among host computers using the   Internet protocols.  These protocols include the Internet Protocol   (IP), the Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP), the Internet   Group Management Protocol (IGMP), and a variety transport and   application protocols that depend upon them.  As was described in   Section [1.2], the Internet Engineering Steering Group periodically   releases an Official Protocols memo listing all of the Internet   protocols.   All Internet protocols use IP as the basic data transport mechanism.   IP is a datagram, or connectionless, internetwork service and   includes provision for addressing, type-of-service specification,   fragmentation and reassembly, and security.  ICMP and IGMP are   considered integral parts of IP, although they are architecturally   layered upon IP.  ICMP provides error reporting, flow control,   first-hop router redirection, and other maintenance and control   functions.  IGMP provides the mechanisms by which hosts and routers   can join and leave IP multicast groups.   Reliable data delivery is provided in the Internet protocol suite by   Transport Layer protocols such as the Transmission Control Protocol   (TCP), which provides end-end retransmission, resequencing and   connection control.  Transport Layer connectionless service is   provided by the User Datagram Protocol (UDP).Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 13]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19942.2  Elements of the Architecture2.2.1  Protocol Layering      To communicate using the Internet system, a host must implement      the layered set of protocols comprising the Internet protocol      suite.  A host typically must implement at least one protocol from      each layer.      The protocol layers used in the Internet architecture are as      follows [ARCH:7]:      o  Application Layer         The Application Layer is the top layer of the Internet protocol         suite.  The Internet suite does not further subdivide the         Application Layer, although some application layer protocols do         contain some internal sub-layering.  The application layer of         the Internet suite essentially combines the functions of the         top two layers - Presentation and Application - of the OSI         Reference Model [ARCH:8].  The Application Layer in the         Internet protocol suite also includes some of the function         relegated to the Session Layer in the OSI Reference Model.         We distinguish two categories of application layer protocols:         user protocols that provide service directly to users, and         support protocols that provide common system functions.  The         most common Internet user protocols are:         - Telnet (remote login)         - FTP (file transfer)         - SMTP (electronic mail delivery)         There are a number of other standardized user protocols and         many private user protocols.         Support protocols, used for host name mapping, booting, and         management, include SNMP, BOOTP, TFTP, the Domain Name System         (DNS) protocol, and a variety of routing protocols.         Application Layer protocols relevant to routers are discussed         in chapters 7, 8, and 9 of this memo.      o  Transport Layer         The Transport Layer provides end-to-end communication services.         This layer is roughly equivalent to the Transport Layer in the         OSI Reference Model, except that it also incorporates some of         OSI's Session Layer establishment and destruction functions.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 14]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         There are two primary Transport Layer protocols at present:         - Transmission Control Protocol (TCP)         - User Datagram Protocol (UDP)         TCP is a reliable connection-oriented transport service that         provides end-to-end reliability, resequencing, and flow         control.  UDP is a connectionless (datagram) transport service.         Other transport protocols have been developed by the research         community, and the set of official Internet transport protocols         may be expanded in the future.         Transport Layer protocols relevant to routers are discussed in         Chapter 6.      o  Internet Layer         All Internet transport protocols use the Internet Protocol (IP)         to carry data from source host to destination host.  IP is a         connectionless or datagram internetwork service, providing no         end-to-end delivery guarantees. IP datagrams may arrive at the         destination host damaged, duplicated, out of order, or not at         all.  The layers above IP are responsible for reliable delivery         service when it is required.  The IP protocol includes         provision for addressing, type-of-service specification,         fragmentation and reassembly, and security.         The datagram or connectionless nature of IP is a fundamental         and characteristic feature of the Internet architecture.         The Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP) is a control         protocol that is considered to be an integral part of IP,         although it is architecturally layered upon IP, i.e., it uses         IP to carry its data end-to-end.  ICMP provides error         reporting, congestion reporting, and first-hop router         redirection.         The Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP) is an Internet         layer protocol used for establishing dynamic host groups for IP         multicasting.         The Internet layer protocols IP, ICMP, and IGMP are discussed         in chapter 4.      o  Link Layer         To communicate on its directly-connected network, a host must         implement the communication protocol used to interface to that         network.  We call this a Link Layer layer protocol.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 15]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         Some older Internet documents refer to this layer as the         Network Layer, but it is not the same as the Network Layer in         the OSI Reference Model.         This layer contains everything below the Internet Layer.         Protocols in this Layer are generally outside the scope of         Internet standardization; the Internet (intentionally) uses         existing standards whenever possible.  Thus, Internet Link         Layer standards usually address only address resolution and         rules for transmitting IP packets over specific Link Layer         protocols.  Internet Link Layer standards are discussed in         chapter 3.2.2.2  Networks      The constituent networks of the Internet system are required to      provide only packet (connectionless) transport.  According to the      IP service specification, datagrams can be delivered out of order,      be lost or duplicated, and/or contain errors.      For reasonable performance of the protocols that use IP (e.g.,      TCP), the loss rate of the network should be very low.  In      networks providing connection-oriented service, the extra      reliability provided by virtual circuits enhances the end-end      robustness of the system, but is not necessary for Internet      operation.      Constituent networks may generally be divided into two classes:        o  Local-Area Networks (LANs)           LANs may have a variety of designs.  In general, a LAN will           cover a small geographical area (e.g., a single building or           plant site) and provide high bandwidth with low delays.  LANs           may be passive (similar to Ethernet) or they may be active           (such as ATM).        o  Wide-Area Networks (WANs)           Geographically-dispersed hosts and LANs are interconnected by           wide-area networks, also called long-haul networks.  These           networks may have a complex internal structure of lines and           packet-switches, or they may be as simple as point-to-point           lines.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 16]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19942.2.3  Routers      In the Internet model, constituent networks are connected together      by IP datagram forwarders which are called routers or IP routers.      In this document, every use of the term router is equivalent to IP      router.  Many older Internet documents refer to routers as      gateways.      Historically, routers have been realized with packet-switching      software executing on a general-purpose CPU.  However, as custom      hardware development becomes cheaper and as higher throughput is      required, but special-purpose hardware is becoming increasingly      common.  This specification applies to routers regardless of how      they are implemented.      A router is connected to two or more networks, appearing to each      of these networks as a connected host.  Thus, it has (at least)      one physical interface and (at least) one IP address on each of      the connected networks (this ignores the concept of un-numbered      links, which is discussed in section [2.2.7]).  Forwarding an IP      datagram generally requires the router to choose the address of      the next-hop router or (for the final hop) the destination host.      This choice, called routing, depends upon a routing database      within the router.  The routing database is also sometimes known      as a routing table or forwarding table.      The routing database should be maintained dynamically to reflect      the current topology of the Internet system.  A router normally      accomplishes this by participating in distributed routing and      reachability algorithms with other routers.      Routers provide datagram transport only, and they seek to minimize      the state information necessary to sustain this service in the      interest of routing flexibility and robustness.      Packet switching devices may also operate at the Link Layer; such      devices are usually called bridges. Network segments which are      connected by bridges share the same IP network number, i.e., they      logically form a single IP network.  These other devices are      outside of the scope of this document.      Another variation on the simple model of networks connected with      routers sometimes occurs: a set of routers may be interconnected      with only serial lines, to form a network in which the packet      switching is performed at the Internetwork (IP) Layer rather than      the Link Layer.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 17]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19942.2.4  Autonomous Systems      For technical, managerial, and sometimes political reasons, the      routers of the Internet system are grouped into collections called      autonomous systems.  The routers included in a single autonomous      system (AS) are expected to:      o  Be under the control of a single operations and maintenance         (O&M) organization;      o  Employ common routing protocols among themselves, to         dynamically maintain their routing databases.      A number of different dynamic routing protocols have been      developed (see Section [7.2]); the routing protocol within a      single AS is generically called an interior gateway protocol or      IGP.      An IP datagram may have to traverse the routers of two or more ASs      to reach its destination, and the ASs must provide each other with      topology information to allow such forwarding.  An exterior      gateway protocol (generally BGP or EGP) is used for this purpose.2.2.5  Addresses and Subnets      An IP datagram carries 32-bit source and destination addresses,      each of which is partitioned into two parts - a constituent      network number and a host number on that network.  Symbolically:         IP-address  ::=  { <Network-number>, <Host-number> }      To finally deliver the datagram, the last router in its path must      map the Host-number (or rest) part of an IP address into the      physical address of a host connection to the constituent network.      This simple notion has been extended by the concept of subnets,      which were introduced in order to allow arbitrary complexity of      interconnected LAN structures within an organization, while      insulating the Internet system against explosive growth in network      numbers and routing complexity.  Subnets essentially provide a      multi-level hierarchical routing structure for the Internet      system.  The subnet extension, described in [INTERNET:2], is now a      required part of the Internet architecture.  The basic idea is to      partition the <Host-number> field into two parts: a subnet number,      and a true host number on that subnet:         IP-address  ::=Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 18]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994           { <Network-number>, <Subnet-number>, <Host-number> }      The interconnected physical networks within an organization will      be given the same network number but different subnet numbers.      The distinction between the subnets of such a subnetted network is      normally not visible outside of that network.  Thus, routing in      the rest of the Internet will be based only upon the <Network-      number> part of the IP destination address; routers outside the      network will combine <Subnet-number> and <Host-number> together to      form an uninterpreted rest part of the 32-bit IP address.  Within      the subnetted network, the routers must route on the basis of an      extended network number:         { <Network-number>, <Subnet-number> }      Under certain circumstances, it may be desirable to support      subnets of a particular network being interconnected only via a      path which is not part of the subnetted network.  Even though many      IGP's and no EGP's currently support this configuration      effectively, routers need to be able to support this configuration      of subnetting (see Section [4.2.3.4]).  In general, routers should      not make assumptions about what are subnets and what are not, but      simply ignore the concept of Class in networks, and treat each      route as a { network, mask }-tuple.      DISCUSSION:         It is becoming clear that as the Internet grows larger and         larger, the traditional uses of Class A, B, and C networks will         be modified in order to achieve better use of IP's 32-bit         address space.  Classless Interdomain Routing (CIDR)         [INTERNET:15] is a method currently being deployed in the         Internet backbones to achieve this added efficiency.  CIDR         depends on the ability of assigning and routing to networks         that are not based on Class A, B, or C networks.  Thus, routers         should always treat a route as a network with a mask.      Furthermore, for similar reasons, a subnetted network need not      have a consistent subnet mask through all parts of the network.      For example, one subnet may use an 8 bit subnet mask, another 10      bit, and another 6 bit.  Routers need to be able to support this      type of configuration (see Section [4.2.3.4]).      The bit positions containing this extended network number are      indicated by a 32-bit mask called the subnet mask; it is      recommended but not required that the <Subnet-number> bits be      contiguous and fall between the <Network-number> and the <Host-      number> fields.  No subnet should be assigned the value zero or -1Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 19]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      (all one bits).      Although the inventors of the subnet mechanism probably expected      that each piece of an organization's network would have only a      single subnet number, in practice it has often proven necessary or      useful to have several subnets share a single physical cable.      There are special considerations for the router when a connected      network provides a broadcast or multicast capability; these will      be discussed later.2.2.6  IP Multicasting      IP multicasting is an extension of Link Layer multicast to IP      internets.  Using IP multicasts, a single datagram can be      addressed to multiple hosts. This collection of hosts is called a      multicast group.  Each multicast group is represented as a Class D      IP address.  An IP datagram sent to the group is to be delivered      to each group member with the same best-effort delivery as that      provided for unicast IP traffic.  The sender of the datagram does      not itself need to be a member of the destination group.      The semantics of IP multicast group membership are defined in      [INTERNET:4].  That document describes how hosts and routers join      and leave multicast groups.  It also defines a protocol, the      Internet Group Management Protocol (IGMP), that monitors IP      multicast group membership.      Forwarding of IP multicast datagrams is accomplished either      through static routing information or via a multicast routing      protocol.  Devices that forward IP multicast datagrams are called      multicast routers. They may or may not also forward IP unicasts.      In general, multicast datagrams are forwarded on the basis of both      their source and destination addresses.  Forwarding of IP      multicast packets is described in more detail in Section [5.2.1].Appendix D discusses multicast routing protocols.2.2.7  Unnumbered Lines and Networks and Subnets      Traditionally, each network interface on an IP host or router has      its own IP address.  Over the years, people have observed that      this can cause inefficient use of the scarce IP address space,      since it forces allocation of an IP network number, or at least a      subnet number, to every point-to-point link.      To solve this problem, a number of people have proposed and      implemented the concept of unnumbered serial lines.  An unnumberedAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 20]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      serial line does not have any IP network or subnet number      associated with it.  As a consequence, the network interfaces      connected to an unnumbered serial line do not have IP addresses.      Because the IP architecture has traditionally assumed that all      interfaces had IP addresses, these unnumbered interfaces cause      some interesting dilemmas.  For example, some IP options (e.g.      Record Route) specify that a router must insert the interface      address into the option, but an unnumbered interface has no IP      address.  Even more fundamental (as we shall see in chapter 5) is      that routes contain the IP address of the next hop router.  A      router expects that that IP address will be on an IP (sub)net that      the router is connected to.  That assumption is of course violated      if the only connection is an unnumbered serial line.      To get around these difficulties, two schemes have been invented.      The first scheme says that two routers connected by an unnumbered      serial line aren't really two routers at all, but rather two      half-routers which together make up a single (virtual) router.      The unnumbered serial line is essentially considered to be an      internal bus in the virtual router.  The two halves of the virtual      router must coordinate their activities in such a way that they      act exactly like a single router.      This scheme fits in well with the IP architecture, but suffers      from two important drawbacks.  The first is that, although it      handles the common case of a single unnumbered serial line, it is      not readily extensible to handle the case of a mesh of routers and      unnumbered serial lines.  The second drawback is that the      interactions between the half routers are necessarily complex and      are not standardized, effectively precluding the connection of      equipment from different vendors using unnumbered serial lines.      Because of these drawbacks, this memo has adopted an alternative      scheme, which has been invented multiple times but which is      probably originally attributable to Phil Karn.  In this scheme, a      router which has unnumbered serial lines also has a special IP      address, called a router-id in this memo.  The router-id is one of      the router's IP addresses (a router is required to have at least      one IP address).  This router-id is used as if it is the IP      address of all unnumbered interfaces.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 21]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19942.2.8  Notable Oddities2.2.8.1  Embedded Routers         A router may be a stand-alone computer system, dedicated to its         IP router functions.  Alternatively, it is possible to embed         router functions within a host operating system which supports         connections to two or more networks.  The best-known example of         an operating system with embedded router code is the Berkeley         BSD system.  The embedded router feature seems to make         internetting easy, but it has a number of hidden pitfalls:         (1)  If a host has only a single constituent-network interface,              it should not act as a router.              For example, hosts with embedded router code that              gratuitously forward broadcast packets or datagrams on the              same net often cause packet avalanches.         (2)  If a (multihomed) host acts as a router, it must implement              ALL the relevant router requirements contained in this              document.              For example, the routing protocol issues and the router              control and monitoring problems are as hard and important              for embedded routers as for stand-alone routers.              Since Internet router requirements and specifications may              change independently of operating system changes, an              administration that operates an embedded router in the              Internet is strongly advised to have the ability to              maintain and update the router code (e.g., this might              require router code source).         (3)  Once a host runs embedded router code, it becomes part of              the Internet system.  Thus, errors in software or              configuration can hinder communication between other              hosts.  As a consequence, the host administrator must lose              some autonomy.              In many circumstances, a host administrator will need to              disable router code embedded in the operating system, and              any embedded router code must be organized so that it can              be easily disabled.         (4)  If a host running embedded router code is concurrentlyAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 22]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994              used for other services, the O&M (Operation and              Maintenance) requirements for the two modes of use may be              in serious conflict.              For example, router O&M will in many cases be performed              remotely by an operations center; this may require              privileged system access which the host administrator              would not normally want to distribute.2.2.8.2  Transparent Routers         There are two basic models for interconnecting local-area         networks and wide-area (or long-haul) networks in the Internet.         In the first, the local-area network is assigned a network         number and all routers in the Internet must know how to route         to that network.  In the second, the local-area network shares         (a small part of) the address space of the wide-area network.         Routers that support this second model are called address         sharing routers or transparent routers.  The focus of this memo         is on routers that support the first model, but this is not         intended to exclude the use of transparent routers.         The basic idea of a transparent router is that the hosts on the         local-area network behind such a router share the address space         of the wide-area network in front of the router.  In certain         situations this is a very useful approach and the limitations         do not present significant drawbacks.         The words in front and behind indicate one of the limitations         of this approach: this model of interconnection is suitable         only for a geographically (and topologically) limited stub         environment.  It requires that there be some form of logical         addressing in the network level addressing of the wide-area         network.  All of the IP addresses in the local environment map         to a few (usually one) physical address in the wide-area         network.  This mapping occurs in a way consistent with the { IP         address <-> network address } mapping used throughout the         wide-area network.         Multihoming is possible on one wide-area network, but may         present routing problems if the interfaces are geographically         or topologically separated.  Multihoming on two (or more)         wide-area networks is a problem due to the confusion of         addresses.         The behavior that hosts see from other hosts in what is         apparently the same network may differ if the transparentAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 23]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         router cannot fully emulate the normal wide-area network         service.  For example, the ARPANET used a Link Layer protocol         that provided a Destination Dead indication in response to an         attempt to send to a host which was powered off.  However, if         there were a transparent router between the ARPANET and an         Ethernet, a host on the ARPANET would not receive a Destination         Dead indication if it sent a datagram to a host that was         powered off and was connected to the ARPANET via the         transparent router instead of directly.2.3  Router Characteristics   An Internet router performs the following functions:   (1)  Conforms to specific Internet protocols specified in this        document, including the Internet Protocol (IP), Internet Control        Message Protocol (ICMP), and others as necessary.   (2)  Interfaces to two or more packet networks.  For each connected        network the router must implement the functions required by that        network.  These functions typically include:        o  Encapsulating and decapsulating the IP datagrams with the           connected network framing (e.g., an Ethernet header and           checksum),        o  Sending and receiving IP datagrams up to the maximum size           supported by that network, this size is the network's Maximum           Transmission Unit or MTU,        o  Translating the IP destination address into an appropriate           network-level address for the connected network (e.g., an           Ethernet hardware address), if needed, and        o  Responding to the network flow control and error indication,           if any.        See chapter 3 (Link Layer).   (3)  Receives and forwards Internet datagrams.  Important issues in        this process are buffer management, congestion control, and        fairness.        o  Recognizes various error conditions and generates ICMP error           and information messages as required.        o  Drops datagrams whose time-to-live fields have reached zero.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 24]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994        o  Fragments datagrams when necessary to fit into the MTU of the           next network.        See chapter 4 (Internet Layer - Protocols) and chapter 5        (Internet Layer - Forwarding) for more information.   (4)  Chooses a next-hop destination for each IP datagram, based on        the information in its routing database.  See chapter 5        (Internet Layer - Forwarding) for more information.   (5)  (Usually) supports an interior gateway protocol (IGP) to carry        out distributed routing and reachability algorithms with the        other routers in the same autonomous system.  In addition, some        routers will need to support an exterior gateway protocol (EGP)        to exchange topological information with other autonomous        systems.  See chapter 7 (Application Layer - Routing Protocols)        for more information.   (6)  Provides network management and system support facilities,        including loading, debugging, status reporting, exception        reporting and control.  See chapter 8 (Application Layer -        Network Management Protocols) and chapter 10 (Operation and        Maintenance) for more information.   A router vendor will have many choices on power, complexity, and   features for a particular router product.  It may be helpful to   observe that the Internet system is neither homogeneous nor fully-   connected.  For reasons of technology and geography it is growing   into a global interconnect system plus a fringe of LANs around the   edge. More and more these fringe LANs are becoming richly   interconnected, thus making them less out on the fringe and more   demanding on router requirements.   o  The global interconnect system is comprised of a number of wide-      area networks to which are attached routers of several Autonomous      Systems (AS); there are relatively few hosts connected directly to      the system.   o  Most hosts are connected to LANs.  Many organizations have      clusters of LANs interconnected by local routers.  Each such      cluster is connected by routers at one or more points into the      global interconnect system.  If it is connected at only one point,      a LAN is known as a stub network.   Routers in the global interconnect system generally require:   o  Advanced Routing and Forwarding AlgorithmsAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 25]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      These routers need routing algorithms which are highly dynamic and      also offer type-of-service routing.  Congestion is still not a      completely resolved issue (see Section [5.3.6]).  Improvements in      these areas are expected, as the research community is actively      working on these issues.   o  High Availability      These routers need to be highly reliable, providing 24 hours a      day, 7 days a week service.  Equipment and software faults can      have a wide-spread (sometimes global) effect.  In case of failure,      they must recover quickly.  In any environment, a router must be      highly robust and able to operate, possibly in a degraded state,      under conditions of extreme congestion or failure of network      resources.   o  Advanced O&M Features      Internet routers normally operate in an unattended mode.  They      will typically be operated remotely from a centralized monitoring      center.  They need to provide sophisticated means for monitoring      and measuring traffic and other events and for diagnosing faults.   o  High Performance      Long-haul lines in the Internet today are most frequently 56 Kbps,      DS1 (1.4Mbps), and DS3 (45Mbps) speeds.  LANs are typically      Ethernet (10Mbps) and, to a lesser degree, FDDI (100Mbps).      However, network media technology is constantly advancing and even      higher speeds are likely in the future.  Full-duplex operation is      provided at all of these speeds.   The requirements for routers used in the LAN fringe (e.g., campus   networks) depend greatly on the demands of the local networks.  These   may be high or medium-performance devices, probably competitively   procured from several different vendors and operated by an internal   organization (e.g., a campus computing center).  The design of these   routers should emphasize low average latency and good burst   performance, together with delay and type-of-service sensitive   resource management. In this environment there may be less formal O&M   but it will not be less important.  The need for the routing   mechanism to be highly dynamic will become more important as networks   become more complex and interconnected.  Users will demand more out   of their local connections because of the speed of the global   interconnects.   As networks have grown, and as more networks have become old enoughAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 26]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994   that they are phasing out older equipment, it has become increasingly   imperative that routers interoperate with routers from other vendors.   Even though the Internet system is not fully interconnected, many   parts of the system need to have redundant connectivity.  Rich   connectivity allows reliable service despite failures of   communication lines and routers, and it can also improve service by   shortening Internet paths and by providing additional capacity.   Unfortunately, this richer topology can make it much more difficult   to choose the best path to a particular destination.2.4  Architectural Assumptions   The current Internet architecture is based on a set of assumptions   about the communication system.  The assumptions most relevant to   routers are as follows:   o  The Internet is a network of networks.      Each host is directly connected to some particular network(s); its      connection to the Internet is only conceptual.  Two hosts on the      same network communicate with each other using the same set of      protocols that they would use to communicate with hosts on distant      networks.   o  Routers don't keep connection state information.      To improve the robustness of the communication system, routers are      designed to be stateless, forwarding each IP packet independently      of other packets.  As a result, redundant paths can be exploited      to provide robust service in spite of failures of intervening      routers and networks.      All state information required for end-to-end flow control and      reliability is implemented in the hosts, in the transport layer or      in application programs.  All connection control information is      thus co-located with the end points of the communication, so it      will be lost only if an end point fails.  Routers effect flow      control only indirectly, by dropping packets or increasing network      delay.      Note that future protocol developments may well end up putting      some more state into routers.  This is especially likely for      resource reservation and flows.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 27]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994   o  Routing complexity should be in the routers.      Routing is a complex and difficult problem, and ought to be      performed by the routers, not the hosts.  An important objective      is to insulate host software from changes caused by the inevitable      evolution of the Internet routing architecture.   o  The system must tolerate wide network variation.      A basic objective of the Internet design is to tolerate a wide      range of network characteristics - e.g., bandwidth, delay, packet      loss, packet reordering, and maximum packet size.  Another      objective is robustness against failure of individual networks,      routers, and hosts, using whatever bandwidth is still available.      Finally, the goal is full open system interconnection: an Internet      router must be able to interoperate robustly and effectively with      any other router or Internet host, across diverse Internet paths.      Sometimes implementors have designed for less ambitious goals.      For example, the LAN environment is typically much more benign      than the Internet as a whole; LANs have low packet loss and delay      and do not reorder packets.  Some vendors have fielded      implementations that are adequate for a simple LAN environment,      but work badly for general interoperation.  The vendor justifies      such a product as being economical within the restricted LAN      market.  However, isolated LANs seldom stay isolated for long;      they are soon connected to each other, to organization-wide      internets, and eventually to the global Internet system.  In the      end, neither the customer nor the vendor is served by incomplete      or substandard routers.      The requirements spelled out in this document are designed for a      full-function router.  It is intended that fully compliant routers      will be usable in almost any part of the Internet.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 28]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19943.  LINK LAYERAlthough  [INTRO:1] covers Link Layer standards (IP over foo, ARP,etc.), this document anticipates that Link-Layer material will becovered in a separate Link Layer Requirements document.  A Link-Layerrequirements document would be applicable to both hosts and routers.Thus, this document will not obsolete the parts of [INTRO:1] that dealwith link-layer issues.3.1  INTRODUCTION   Routers have essentially the same Link Layer protocol requirements as   other sorts of Internet systems.  These requirements are given in   chapter 3 of Requirements for Internet Gateways [INTRO:1].  A router   MUST comply with its requirements and SHOULD comply with its   recommendations.  Since some of the material in that document has   become somewhat dated, some additional requirements and explanations   are included below.   DISCUSSION:      It is expected that the Internet community will produce a      Requirements for Internet Link Layer standard which will supersede      both this chapter and chapter 3 of [INTRO:1].3.2  LINK/INTERNET LAYER INTERFACE   Although this document does not attempt to specify the interface   between the Link Layer and the upper layers, it is worth noting here   that other parts of this document, particularly chapter 5, require   various sorts of information to be passed across this layer boundary.   This section uses the following definitions:   o  Source physical address      The source physical address is the Link Layer address of the host      or router from which the packet was received.   o  Destination physical address      The destination physical address is the Link Layer address to      which the packet was sent.   The information that must pass from the Link Layer to the   Internetwork Layer for each received packet is:Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 29]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994   (1)  The IP packet [5.2.2],   (2)  The length of the data portion (i.e., not including the Link-        Layer framing) of the Link Layer frame [5.2.2],   (3)  The identity of the physical interface from which the IP packet        was received [5.2.3], and   (4)  The classification of the packet's destination physical address        as a Link Layer unicast, broadcast, or multicast [4.3.2],        [5.3.4].   In addition, the Link Layer also should provide:   (5)  The source physical address.   The information that must pass from the Internetwork Layer to the   Link Layer for each transmitted packet is:   (1)  The IP packet [5.2.1]   (2)  The length of the IP packet [5.2.1]   (3)  The destination physical interface [5.2.1]   (4)  The next hop IP address [5.2.1]   In addition, the Internetwork Layer also should provide:   (5)  The Link Layer priority value [5.3.3.2]   The Link Layer must also notify the Internetwork Layer if the packet   to be transmitted causes a Link Layer precedence-related error   [5.3.3.3].3.3  SPECIFIC ISSUES3.3.1  Trailer Encapsulation      Routers which can connect to 10Mb Ethernets MAY be able to receive      and forward Ethernet packets encapsulated using the trailer      encapsulation described in [LINK:1].  However, a router SHOULD NOT      originate trailer encapsulated packets.  A router MUST NOT      originate trailer encapsulated packets without first verifying,      using the mechanism described insection 2.3.1 of [INTRO:2], that      the immediate destination of the packet is willing and able toAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 30]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      accept trailer-encapsulated packets.  A router SHOULD NOT agree      (using these same mechanisms) to accept trailer-encapsulated      packets.3.3.2  Address Resolution Protocol - ARP      Routers which implement ARP MUST be compliant and SHOULD be      unconditionally compliant with the requirements insection 2.3.2      of [INTRO:2].      The link layer MUST NOT report a Destination Unreachable error to      IP solely because there is no ARP cache entry for a destination.      A router MUST not believe any ARP reply which claims that the Link      Layer address of another host or router is a broadcast or      multicast address.3.3.3  Ethernet and 802.3 Coexistence      Routers which can connect to 10Mb Ethernets MUST be compliant and      SHOULD be unconditionally compliant with the requirements of      Section [2.3.3] of [INTRO:2].3.3.4  Maximum Transmission Unit - MTU      The MTU of each logical interface MUST be configurable.      Many Link Layer protocols define a maximum frame size that may be      sent.  In such cases, a router MUST NOT allow an MTU to be set      which would allow sending of frames larger than those allowed by      the Link Layer protocol.  However, a router SHOULD be willing to      receive a packet as large as the maximum frame size even if that      is larger than the MTU.      DISCUSSION:         Note that this is a stricter requirement than imposed on hosts         by [INTRO:2], which requires that the MTU of each physical         interface be configurable.         If a network is using an MTU smaller than the maximum frame         size for the Link Layer, a router may receive packets larger         than the MTU from hosts which are in the process of         initializing themselves, or which have been misconfigured.         In general, the Robustness Principle indicates that these         packets should be successfully received, if at all possible.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 31]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19943.3.5  Point-to-Point Protocol - PPP      Contrary to [INTRO:1], the Internet does have a standard serial      line protocol: the Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP), defined in      [LINK:2], [LINK:3], [LINK:4], and [LINK:5].      A serial line interface is any interface which is designed to send      data over a telephone, leased, dedicated or direct line (either 2      or 4 wire) using a standardized modem or bit serial interface      (such as RS-232, RS-449 or V.35), using either synchronous or      asynchronous clocking.      A general purpose serial interface is a serial line interface      which is not solely for use as an access line to a network for      which an alternative IP link layer specification exists (such as      X.25 or Frame Relay).      Routers which contain such general purpose serial interfaces MUST      implement PPP.      PPP MUST be supported on all general purpose serial interfaces on      a router.  The router MAY allow the line to be configured to use      serial line protocols other than PPP, all general purpose serial      interfaces MUST default to using PPP.3.3.5.1  Introduction         This section provides guidelines to router implementors so that         they can ensure interoperability with other routers using PPP         over either synchronous or asynchronous links.         It is critical that an implementor understand the semantics of         the option negotiation mechanism.  Options are a means for a         local device to indicate to a remote peer what the local device         will *accept* from the remote peer, not what it wishes to send.         It is up to the remote peer to decide what is most convenient         to send within the confines of the set of options that the         local device has stated that it can accept.  Therefore it is         perfectly acceptable and normal for a remote peer to ACK all         the options indicated in an LCP Configuration Request (CR) even         if the remote peer does not support any of those options.         Again, the options are simply a mechanism for either device to         indicate to its peer what it will accept, not necessarily what         it will send.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 32]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19943.3.5.2  Link Control Protocol (LCP) Options         The PPP Link Control Protocol (LCP) offers a number of options         that may be negotiated.  These options include (among others)         address and control field compression, protocol field         compression, asynchronous character map, Maximum Receive Unit         (MRU), Link Quality Monitoring (LQM), magic number (for         loopback detection), Password Authentication Protocol (PAP),         Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol (CHAP), and the         32-bit Frame Check Sequence (FCS).         A router MAY do address/control field compression on either         synchronous or asynchronous links.  A router MAY do protocol         field compression on either synchronous or asynchronous links.         A router MAY indicate that it can accept these compressions,         but MUST be able to accept uncompressed PPP header information         even if it has indicated a willingness to receive compressed         PPP headers.         DISCUSSION:            These options control the appearance of the PPP header.            Normally the PPP header consists of the address field (one            byte containing the value 0xff), the control field (one byte            containing the value 0x03), and the two-byte protocol field            that identifies the contents of the data area of the frame.            If a system negotiates address and control field compression            it indicates to its peer that it will accept PPP frames that            have or do not have these fields at the front of the header.            It does not indicate that it will be sending frames with            these fields removed.  The protocol field may also be            compressed from two to one byte in most cases.         IMPLEMENTATION:            Some hardware does not deal well with variable length header            information.  In those cases it makes most sense for the            remote peer to send the full PPP header.  Implementations            may ensure this by not sending the address/control field and            protocol field compression options to the remote peer.  Even            if the remote peer has indicated an ability to receive            compressed headers there is no requirement for the local            router to send compressed headers.         A router MUST negotiate the Async Control Character Map (ACCM)         for asynchronous PPP links, but SHOULD NOT negotiate the ACCM         for synchronous links.  If a router receives an attempt to         negotiate the ACCM over a synchronous link, it MUST ACKnowledgeAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 33]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         the option and then ignore it.         DISCUSSION:            There are implementations that offer both sync and async            modes of operation and may use the same code to implement            the option negotiation.  In this situation it is possible            that one end or the other may send the ACCM option on a            synchronous link.         A router SHOULD properly negotiate the maximum receive unit         (MRU).  Even if a system negotiates an MRU smaller than 1,500         bytes, it MUST be able to receive a 1,500 byte frame.         A router SHOULD negotiate and enable the link quality         monitoring (LQM) option.         DISCUSSION:            This memo does not specify a policy for deciding whether the            link's quality is adequate.  However, it is important (see            Section [3.3.6]) that a router disable failed links.         A router SHOULD implement and negotiate the magic number option         for loopback detection.         A router MAY support the authentication options (PAP - password         authentication protocol, and/or CHAP - challenge handshake         authentication protocol).         A router MUST support 16-bit CRC frame check sequence (FCS) and         MAY support the 32-bit CRC.3.3.5.3  IP Control Protocol (ICP) Options         A router MAY offer to perform IP address negotiation.  A router         MUST accept a refusal (REJect) to perform IP address         negotiation from the peer.         A router SHOULD NOT perform Van Jacobson header compression of         TCP/IP packets if the link speed is in excess of 64 Kbps.         Below that speed the router MAY perform Van Jacobson (VJ)         header compression.  At link speeds of 19,200 bps or less the         router SHOULD perform VJ header compression.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 34]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19943.3.6  Interface Testing      A router MUST have a mechanism to allow routing software to      determine whether a physical interface is available to send      packets or not.  A router SHOULD have a mechanism to allow routing      software to judge the quality of a physical interface.  A router      MUST have a mechanism for informing the routing software when a      physical interface becomes available or unavailable to send      packets because of administrative action.  A router MUST have a      mechanism for informing the routing software when it detects a      Link level interface has become available or unavailable, for any      reason.      DISCUSSION:         It is crucial that routers have workable mechanisms for         determining that their network connections are functioning         properly, since failure to do so (or failure to take the proper         actions when a problem is detected) can lead to black holes.         The mechanisms available for detecting problems with network         connections vary considerably, depending on the Link Layer         protocols in use and also in some cases on the interface         hardware chosen by the router manufacturer.  The intent is to         maximize the capability to detect failures within the Link-         Layer constraints.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 35]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19944.  INTERNET LAYER - PROTOCOLS4.1  INTRODUCTION   This chapter and chapter 5 discuss the protocols used at the Internet   Layer: IP, ICMP, and IGMP.  Since forwarding is obviously a crucial   topic in a document discussing routers, chapter 5 limits itself to   the aspects of the protocols which directly relate to forwarding.   The current chapter contains the remainder of the discussion of the   Internet Layer protocols.4.2  INTERNET PROTOCOL - IP4.2.1  INTRODUCTION      Routers MUST implement the IP protocol, as defined by      [INTERNET:1].  They MUST also implement its mandatory extensions:      subnets (defined in [INTERNET:2]), and IP broadcast (defined in      [INTERNET:3]).      A router  MUST be compliant, and SHOULD be unconditionally      compliant, with the requirements of sections3.2.1 and3.3 of      [INTRO:2], except that:      oSection 3.2.1.1 may be ignored, since it duplicates         requirements found in this memo.      oSection 3.2.1.2 may be ignored, since it duplicates         requirements found in this memo.      oSection 3.2.1.3 should be ignored, since it is superseded by         Section [4.2.2.11] of this memo.      oSection 3.2.1.4 may be ignored, since it duplicates         requirements found in this memo.      oSection 3.2.1.6 should be ignored, since it is superseded by         Section [4.2.2.4] of this memo.      oSection 3.2.1.8 should be ignored, since it is superseded by         Section [4.2.2.1] of this memo.      In the following, the action specified in certain cases is to      silently discard a received datagram.  This means that the      datagram will be discarded without further processing and that theAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 36]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      router will not send any ICMP error message (see Section [4.3]) as      a result.  However, for diagnosis of problems a router SHOULD      provide the capability of logging the error (see Section [1.3.3]),      including the contents of the silently-discarded datagram, and      SHOULD record the event in a statistics counter.4.2.2  PROTOCOL WALK-THROUGHRFC 791 is [INTERNET:1], the specification for the Internet      Protocol.4.2.2.1  Options:RFC-791 Section 3.2         In datagrams received by the router itself, the IP layer MUST         interpret those IP options that it understands and preserve the         rest unchanged for use by higher layer protocols.         Higher layer protocols may require the ability to set IP         options in datagrams they send or examine IP options in         datagrams they receive.  Later sections of this document         discuss specific IP option support required by higher layer         protocols.         DISCUSSION:            Neither this memo nor [INTRO:2] define the order in which a            receiver must process multiple options in the same IP            header.  Hosts and routers originating datagrams containing            multiple options must be aware that this introduces an            ambiguity in the meaning of certain options when combined            with a source-route option.         Here are the requirements for specific IP options:         (a)  Security Option              Some environments require the Security option in every              packet originated or received.  Routers SHOULD IMPLEMENT              the revised security option described in [INTERNET:5].              DISCUSSION:                 Note that the security options described in                 [INTERNET:1] andRFC 1038 ([INTERNET:16]) are obsolete.         (b)  Stream Identifier Option              This option is obsolete; routers SHOULD NOT place this              option in a datagram that the router originates.  ThisAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 37]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994              option MUST be ignored in datagrams received by the              router.         (c)  Source Route Options              A router MUST be able to act as the final destination of a              source route.  If a router receives a packet containing a              completed source route (i.e., the pointer points beyond              the last field and the destination address in the IP              header addresses the router), the packet has reached its              final destination; the option as received (the recorded              route) MUST be passed up to the transport layer (or to              ICMP message processing).              In order to respond correctly to source-routed datagrams              it receives, a router MUST provide a means whereby              transport protocols and applications can reverse the              source route in a received datagram and insert the              reversed source route into datagrams they originate (seeSection 4 of [INTRO:2] for details).              Some applications in the router MAY require that the user              be able to enter a source route.              A router MUST NOT originate a datagram containing multiple              source route options.  What a router should do if asked to              forward a packet containing multiple source route options              is described in Section [5.2.4.1].              When a source route option is created, it MUST be              correctly formed even if it is being created by reversing              a recorded route that erroneously includes the source host              (see case (B) in the discussion below).              DISCUSSION:                 Suppose a source routed datagram is to be routed from                 source S to destination D via routers G1, G2, ... Gn.                 Source S constructs a datagram with G1's IP address as                 its destination address, and a source route option to                 get the datagram the rest of the way to its                 destination.  However, there is an ambiguity in the                 specification over whether the source route option in a                 datagram sent out by S should be (A) or (B):                 (A):  {>>G2, G3, ... Gn, D}     <--- CORRECT                 (B):  {S, >>G2, G3, ... Gn, D}  <---- WRONGAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 38]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994                 (where >> represents the pointer).  If (A) is sent, the                 datagram received at D will contain the option: {G1,                 G2, ... Gn >>}, with S and D as the IP source and                 destination addresses.  If (B) were sent, the datagram                 received at D would again contain S and D as the same                 IP source and destination addresses, but the option                 would be: {S, G1, ...Gn >>}; i.e., the originating host                 would be the first hop in the route.         (d)  Record Route Option              Routers MAY support the Record Route option in datagrams              originated by the router.         (e)  Timestamp Option              Routers MAY support the timestamp option in datagrams              originated by the router.  The following rules apply:              o  When originating a datagram containing a Timestamp                 Option, a router MUST record a timestamp in the option                 if                 - Its Internet address fields are not pre-specified or                 - Its first pre-specified address is the IP address of                    the logical interface over which the datagram is                    being sent (or the router's router-id if the                    datagram is being sent over an unnumbered                    interface).              o  If the router itself receives a datagram containing a                 Timestamp Option, the router MUST insert the current                 timestamp into the Timestamp Option (if there is space                 in the option to do so) before passing the option to                 the transport layer or to ICMP for processing.              o  A timestamp value MUST follow the rules given in                 Section [3.2.2.8] of [INTRO:2].              IMPLEMENTATION:                 To maximize the utility of the timestamps contained in                 the timestamp option, it is suggested that the                 timestamp inserted be, as nearly as practical, the time                 at which the packet arrived at the router.  For                 datagrams originated by the router, the timestamp                 inserted should be, as nearly as practical, the time at                 which the datagram was passed to the Link Layer forAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 39]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994                 transmission.4.2.2.2  Addresses in Options:RFC-791 Section 3.1         When a router inserts its address into a Record Route, Strict         Source and Record Route, Loose Source and Record Route, or         Timestamp, it MUST use the IP address of the logical interface         on which the packet is being sent.  Where this rule cannot be         obeyed because the output interface has no IP address (i.e., is         an unnumbered interface), the router MUST instead insert its         router-id.  The router's router-id is one of the router's IP         addresses.  Which of the router's addresses is used as the         router-id MUST NOT change (even across reboots) unless changed         by the network manager or unless the configuration of the         router is changed such that the IP address used as the router-         id ceases to be one of the router's IP addresses.  Routers with         multiple unnumbered interfaces MAY have multiple router-id's.         Each unnumbered interface MUST be associated with a particular         router-id.  This association MUST NOT change (even across         reboots) without reconfiguration of the router.         DISCUSSION:            This specification does not allow for routers which do not            have at least one IP address.  We do not view this as a            serious limitation, since a router needs an IP address to            meet the manageability requirements of Chapter [8] even if            the router is connected only to point-to-point links.         IMPLEMENTATION:            One possible method of choosing the router-id that fulfills            this requirement is to use the numerically smallest (or            greatest) IP address (treating the address as a 32-bit            integer) that is assigned to the router.4.2.2.3  Unused IP Header Bits:RFC-791 Section 3.1         The IP header contains two reserved bits: one in the Type of         Service byte and the other in the Flags field.  A router MUST         NOT set either of these bits to one in datagrams originated by         the router.  A router MUST NOT drop (refuse to receive or         forward) a packet merely because one or more of these reserved         bits has a non-zero value.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 40]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         DISCUSSION:            Future revisions to the IP protocol may make use of these            unused bits.  These rules are intended to ensure that these            revisions can be deployed without having to simultaneously            upgrade all routers in the Internet.4.2.2.4  Type of Service:RFC-791 Section 3.1         The Type-of-Service byte in the IP header is divided into three         sections:  the Precedence field (high-order 3 bits), a field         that is customarily called Type of Service or TOS (next 4         bits), and a reserved bit (the low order bit).         Rules governing the reserved bit were described in Section         [4.2.2.3].         A more extensive discussion of the TOS field and its use can be         found in [ROUTE:11].         The description of the IP Precedence field is superseded by         Section [5.3.3].RFC-795, Service Mappings, is obsolete and         SHOULD NOT be implemented.4.2.2.5  Header Checksum:RFC-791 Section 3.1         As stated in Section [5.2.2], a router MUST verify the IP         checksum of any packet which is received.  The router MUST NOT         provide a means to disable this checksum verification.         IMPLEMENTATION:            A more extensive description of the IP checksum, including            extensive implementation hints, can be found in [INTERNET:6]            and [INTERNET:7].4.2.2.6  Unrecognized Header Options:RFC-791 Section 3.1         A router MUST ignore IP options which it does not recognize.  A         corollary of this requirement is that a router MUST implement         the End of Option List option and the No Operation option,         since neither contains an explicit length.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 41]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         DISCUSSION:            All future IP options will include an explicit length.4.2.2.7  Fragmentation:RFC-791 Section 3.2         Fragmentation, as described in [INTERNET:1], MUST be supported         by a router.         When a router fragments an IP datagram, it SHOULD minimize the         number of fragments.  When a router fragments an IP datagram,         it MUST send the fragments in order.  A fragmentation method         which may generate one IP fragment which is significantly         smaller than the other MAY cause the first IP fragment to be         the smaller one.         DISCUSSION:            There are several fragmentation techniques in common use in            the Internet.  One involves splitting the IP datagram into            IP fragments with the first being MTU sized, and the others            being approximately the same size, smaller than the MTU.            The reason for this is twofold.  The first IP fragment in            the sequence will be the effective MTU of the current path            between the hosts, and the following IP fragments are sized            to hopefully minimize the further fragmentation of the IP            datagram.  Another technique is to split the IP datagram            into MTU sized IP fragments, with the last fragment being            the only one smaller, as per page 26 of [INTERNET:1].            A common trick used by some implementations of TCP/IP is to            fragment an IP datagram into IP fragments that are no larger            than 576 bytes when the IP datagram is to travel through a            router.  In general, this allows the resulting IP fragments            to pass the rest of the path without further fragmentation.            This would, though, create more of a load on the destination            host, since it would have a larger number of IP fragments to            reassemble into one IP datagram.  It would also not be            efficient on networks where the MTU only changes once, and            stays much larger than 576 bytes (such as an 802.5 network            with a MTU of 2048 or an Ethernet network with an MTU of            1536).            One other fragmentation technique discussed was splitting            the IP datagram into approximately equal sized IP fragments,            with the size being smaller than the next hop network's MTU.            This is intended to minimize the number of fragments that            would result from additional fragmentation further down theAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 42]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994            path.            In most cases, routers should try and create situations that            will generate the lowest number of IP fragments possible.            Work with slow machines leads us to believe that if it is            necessary to send small packets in a fragmentation scheme,            sending the small IP fragment first maximizes the chance of            a host with a slow interface of receiving all the fragments.4.2.2.8  Reassembly:RFC-791 Section 3.2         As specified inSection 3.3.2 of [INTRO:2], a router MUST         support reassembly of datagrams which it delivers to itself.4.2.2.9  Time to Live:RFC-791 Section 3.2         Time to Live (TTL) handling for packets originated or received         by the router is governed by [INTRO:2].  Note in particular         that a router MUST NOT check the TTL of a packet except when         forwarding it.4.2.2.10  Multi-subnet Broadcasts:RFC-922         All-subnets broadcasts (called multi-subnet broadcasts in         [INTERNET:3]) have been deprecated.  See Section [5.3.5.3].4.2.2.11  Addressing:RFC-791 Section 3.2         There are now five classes of IP addresses: Class A through         Class E.  Class D addresses are used for IP multicasting         [INTERNET:4], while Class E addresses are reserved for         experimental use.         A multicast (Class D) address is a 28-bit logical address that         stands for a group of hosts, and may be either permanent or         transient.  Permanent multicast addresses are allocated by the         Internet Assigned Number Authority [INTRO:7], while transient         addresses may be allocated dynamically to transient groups.         Group membership is determined dynamically using IGMP         [INTERNET:4].         We now summarize the important special cases for Unicast (that         is class A, B, and C) IP addresses, using the following         notation for an IP address:Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 43]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994            { <Network-number>, <Host-number> }         or            { <Network-number>, <Subnet-number>, <Host-number> }         and the notation -1 for a field that contains all 1 bits and         the notation 0 for a field that contains all 0 bits.  This         notation is not intended to imply that the 1-bits in a subnet         mask need be contiguous.         (a)  { 0, 0 }              This host on this network.  It MUST NOT be used as a              source address by routers, except the router MAY use this              as a source address as part of an initialization procedure              (e.g., if the router is using BOOTP to load its              configuration information).              Incoming datagrams with a source address of { 0, 0 } which              are received for local delivery (see Section [5.2.3]),              MUST be accepted if the router implements the associated              protocol and that protocol clearly defines appropriate              action to be taken.  Otherwise, a router MUST silently              discard any locally-delivered datagram whose source              address is { 0, 0 }.              DISCUSSION:                 Some protocols define specific actions to take in                 response to a received datagram whose source address is                 { 0, 0 }.  Two examples are BOOTP and ICMP Mask                 Request.  The proper operation of these protocols often                 depends on the ability to receive datagrams whose                 source address is { 0, 0 }.  For most protocols,                 however, it is best to ignore datagrams having a source                 address of { 0, 0 } since they were probably generated                 by a misconfigured host or router.  Thus, if a router                 knows how to deal with a given datagram having a { 0, 0                 } source address, the router MUST accept it.                 Otherwise, the router MUST discard it.              See also Section [4.2.3.1] for a non-standard use of { 0,              0 }.         (b)  { 0, <Host-number> }              Specified host on this network.  It MUST NOT be sent byAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 44]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994              routers except that the router MAY uses this as a source              address as part of an initialization procedure by which              the it learns its own IP address.         (c)  { -1, -1 }              Limited broadcast.  It MUST NOT be used as a source              address.              A datagram with this destination address will be received              by every host and router on the connected physical              network, but will not be forwarded outside that network.         (d)  { <Network-number>, -1 }              Network Directed Broadcast - a broadcast directed to the              specified network.  It MUST NOT be used as a source              address.  A router MAY originate Network Directed              Broadcast packets.  A router MUST receive Network Directed              Broadcast packets; however a router MAY have a              configuration option to prevent reception of these              packets.  Such an option MUST default to allowing              reception.         (e)  { <Network-number>, <Subnet-number>, -1 }              Subnetwork Directed Broadcast - a broadcast sent to the              specified subnet.  It MUST NOT be used as a source              address.  A router MAY originate Network Directed              Broadcast packets.  A router MUST receive Network Directed              Broadcast packets; however a router MAY have a              configuration option to prevent reception of these              packets.  Such an option MUST default to allowing              reception.         (f)  { <Network-number>, -1, -1 }              All Subnets Directed Broadcast - a broadcast sent to all              subnets of the specified subnetted network.  It MUST NOT              be used as a source address.  A router MAY originate              Network Directed Broadcast packets.  A router MUST receive              Network Directed Broadcast packets; however a router MAY              have a configuration option to prevent reception of these              packets.  Such an option MUST default to allowing              reception.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 45]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         (g)  { 127, <any> }              Internal host loopback address.  Addresses of this form              MUST NOT appear outside a host.         The <Network-number> is administratively assigned so that its         value will be unique in the entire world.         IP addresses are not permitted to have the value 0 or -1 for         any of the <Host-number>, <Network-number>, or <Subnet-number>         fields (except in the special cases listed above).  This         implies that each of these fields will be at least two bits         long.         For further discussion of broadcast addresses, see Section         [4.2.3.1].         Since (as described in Section [4.2.1]) a router must support         the subnet extensions to IP, there will be a subnet mask of the         form: { -1, -1, 0 } associated with each of the host's local IP         addresses; see Sections [4.3.3.9], [5.2.4.2], and [10.2.2].         When a router originates any datagram, the IP source address         MUST be one of its own IP addresses (but not a broadcast or         multicast address).  The only exception is during         initialization.         For most purposes, a datagram addressed to a broadcast or         multicast destination is processed as if it had been addressed         to one of the router's IP addresses; that is to say:         o  A router MUST receive and process normally any packets with            a broadcast destination address.         o  A router MUST receive and process normally any packets sent            to a multicast destination address which the router is            interested in.         The term specific-destination address means the equivalent         local IP address of the host.  The specific-destination address         is defined to be the destination address in the IP header         unless the header contains a broadcast or multicast address, in         which case the specific-destination is an IP address assigned         to the physical interface on which the datagram arrived.         A router MUST silently discard any received datagram containing         an IP source address that is invalid by the rules of thisAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 46]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         section.  This validation could be done either by the IP layer         or by each protocol in the transport layer.         DISCUSSION:            A misaddressed datagram might be caused by a Link Layer            broadcast of a unicast datagram or by another router or host            that is confused or misconfigured.4.2.3  SPECIFIC ISSUES4.2.3.1  IP Broadcast Addresses         For historical reasons, there are a number of IP addresses         (some standard and some not) which are used to indicate that an         IP packet is an IP broadcast.  A router         (1)  MUST treat as IP broadcasts packets addressed to              255.255.255.255, { <Network-number>, -1 }, { <Network-              number>, <Subnet-number>, -1 }, and { <Network-number>,              -1, -1 }.         (2)  SHOULD silently discard on receipt (i.e., don't even              deliver to applications in the router) any packet              addressed to 0.0.0.0, { <Network-number>, 0 }, {              <Network-number>, <Subnet-number>, 0 }, or { <Network-              number>, 0, 0 }; if these packets are not silently              discarded, they MUST be treated as IP broadcasts (see              Section [5.3.5]).  There MAY be a configuration option to              allow receipt of these packets.  This option SHOULD              default to discarding them.         (3)  SHOULD (by default) use the limited broadcast address              (255.255.255.255) when originating an IP broadcast              destined for a connected network or subnet (except when              sending an ICMP Address Mask Reply, as discussed in              Section [4.3.3.9]).  A router MUST receive limited              broadcasts.         (4)  SHOULD NOT originate datagrams addressed to 0.0.0.0, {              <Network-number>, 0 }, { <Network-number>, <Subnet-              number>, 0 }, or { <Network-number>, 0, 0 }.  There MAY be              a configuration option to allow generation of these              packets (instead of using the relevant 1s format              broadcast).  This option SHOULD default to not generating              them.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 47]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         DISCUSSION:            In the second bullet, the router obviously cannot recognize            addresses of the form { <Network-number>, <Subnet-number>, 0            } if the router does not know how the particular network is            subnetted.  In that case, the rules of the second bullet do            not apply because, from the point of view of the router, the            packet is not an IP broadcast packet.4.2.3.2  IP Multicasting         An IP router SHOULD satisfy the Host Requirements with respect         to IP multicasting, as specified inSection 3.3.7 of [INTRO:2].         An IP router SHOULD support local IP multicasting on all         connected networks for which a mapping from Class D IP         addresses to link-layer addresses has been specified (see the         various IP-over-xxx specifications), and on all connected         point-to-point links.  Support for local IP multicasting         includes originating multicast datagrams, joining multicast         groups and receiving multicast datagrams, and leaving multicast         groups.  This implies support for all of [INTERNET:4] including         IGMP (see Section [4.4]).         DISCUSSION:            Although [INTERNET:4] is entitled Host Extensions for IP            Multicasting, it applies to all IP systems, both hosts and            routers.  In particular, since routers may join multicast            groups, it is correct for them to perform the host part of            IGMP, reporting their group memberships to any multicast            routers that may be present on their attached networks            (whether or not they themselves are multicast routers).            Some router protocols may specifically require support for            IP multicasting (e.g., OSPF [ROUTE:1]), or may recommend it            (e.g., ICMP Router Discovery [INTERNET:13]).4.2.3.3  Path MTU Discovery         In order to eliminate fragmentation or minimize it, it is         desirable to know what is the path MTU along the path from the         source to destination.  The path MTU is the minimum of the MTUs         of each hop in the path.  [INTERNET:14] describes a technique         for dynamically discovering the maximum transmission unit (MTU)         of an arbitrary internet path.  For a path that passes through         a router that does not support [INTERNET:14], this technique         might not discover the correct Path MTU, but it will alwaysAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 48]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         choose a Path MTU as accurate as, and in many cases more         accurate than, the Path MTU that would be chosen by older         techniques or the current practice.         When a router is originating an IP datagram, it SHOULD use the         scheme described in [INTERNET:14] to limit the datagram's size.         If the router's route to the datagram's destination was learned         from a routing protocol that provides Path MTU information, the         scheme described in [INTERNET:14] is still used, but the Path         MTU information from the routing protocol SHOULD be used as the         initial guess as to the Path MTU and also as an upper bound on         the Path MTU.4.2.3.4  Subnetting         Under certain circumstances, it may be desirable to support         subnets of a particular network being interconnected only via a         path which is not part of the subnetted network.  This is known         as discontiguous subnetwork support.         Routers MUST support discontiguous subnetworks.         IMPLEMENTATION:            In general, a router should not make assumptions about what            are subnets and what are not, but simply ignore the concept            of Class in networks, and treat each route as a { network,            mask }-tuple.         DISCUSSION:            The Internet has been growing at a tremendous rate of late.            This has been placing severe strains on the IP addressing            technology.  A major factor in this strain is the strict IP            Address class boundaries.  These make it difficult to            efficiently size network numbers to their networks and            aggregate several network numbers into a single route            advertisement.  By eliminating the strict class boundaries            of the IP address and treating each route as a {network            number, mask}-tuple these strains may be greatly reduced.            The technology for currently doing this is Classless            Interdomain Routing (CIDR) [INTERNET:15].         Furthermore, for similar reasons, a subnetted network need not         have a consistent subnet mask through all parts of the network.         For example, one subnet may use an 8 bit subnet mask, another         10 bit, and another 6 bit.  This is known as variable subnet-Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 49]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         masks.         Routers MUST support variable subnet-masks.4.3  INTERNET CONTROL MESSAGE PROTOCOL - ICMP4.3.1  INTRODUCTION      ICMP is an auxiliary protocol, which provides routing, diagnostic      and and error functionality for IP. It is described in      [INTERNET:8].  A router MUST support ICMP.      ICMP messages are grouped in two classes which are discussed in      the following sections:      ICMP error messages:      Destination UnreachableSection 4.3.3.1      RedirectSection 4.3.3.2      Source QuenchSection 4.3.3.3      Time ExceededSection 4.3.3.4      Parameter ProblemSection 4.3.3.5      ICMP query messages:      EchoSection 4.3.3.6      InformationSection 4.3.3.7      TimestampSection 4.3.3.8      Address MaskSection 4.3.3.9      Router DiscoverySection 4.3.3.10      General ICMP requirements and discussion are in the next section.4.3.2  GENERAL ISSUES4.3.2.1  Unknown Message Types         If an ICMP message of unknown type is received, it MUST be         passed to the ICMP user interface (if the router has one) or         silently discarded (if the router doesn't have one).Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 50]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19944.3.2.2  ICMP Message TTL         When originating an ICMP message, the router MUST initialize         the TTL.  The TTL for ICMP responses must not be taken from the         packet which triggered the response.4.3.2.3  Original Message Header         Every ICMP error message includes the Internet header and at         least the first 8 data bytes of the datagram that triggered the         error.  More than 8 bytes MAY be sent, but the resulting ICMP         datagram SHOULD have a length of less than or equal to 576         bytes.  The returned IP header (and user data) MUST be         identical to that which was received, except that the router is         not required to undo any modifications to the IP header that         are normally performed in forwarding that were performed before         the error was detected (e.g., decrementing the TTL, updating         options).  Note that the requirements of Section [4.3.3.5]         supersede this requirement in some cases (i.e., for a Parameter         Problem message, if the problem  is in a modified field, the         router must undo the modification).  See Section [4.3.3.5])4.3.2.4  ICMP Message Source Address         Except where this document specifies otherwise, the IP source         address in an ICMP message originated by the router MUST be one         of the IP addresses associated with the physical interface over         which the ICMP message is transmitted.  If the interface has no         IP addresses associated with it, the router's router-id (see         Section [5.2.5]) is used instead.4.3.2.5  TOS and Precedence         ICMP error messages SHOULD have their TOS bits set to the same         value as the TOS bits in the packet which provoked the sending         of the ICMP error message, unless setting them to that value         would cause the ICMP error message to be immediately discarded         because it could not be routed to its destination.  Otherwise,         ICMP error messages MUST be sent with a normal (i.e. zero) TOS.         An ICMP reply message SHOULD have its TOS bits set to the same         value as the TOS bits in the ICMP request that provoked the         reply.         EDITOR'S COMMENTS:            The following paragraph originally read:               ICMP error messages MUST have their IP Precedence fieldAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 51]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994               set to the same value as the IP Precedence field in the               packet which provoked the sending of the ICMP error               message, except that the precedence value MUST be 6               (INTERNETWORK CONTROL) or 7 (NETWORK CONTROL), SHOULD be               7, and MAY be settable for the following types of ICMP               error messages: Unreachable, Redirect, Time Exceeded, and               Parameter Problem.            I believe that the following paragraph is equivalent and            easier for humans to parse (Source Quench is the only other            ICMP Error message).  Other interpretations of the original            are sought.         ICMP Source Quench error messages MUST have their IP Precedence         field set to the same value as the IP Precedence field in the         packet which provoked the sending of the ICMP Source Quench         message.  All other ICMP error messages (Destination         Unreachable, Redirect, Time Exceeded, and Parameter Problem)         MUST have their precedence value set to 6 (INTERNETWORK         CONTROL) or 7 (NETWORK CONTROL), SHOULD be 7.  The IP         Precedence value for these error messages MAY be settable.         An ICMP reply message MUST have its IP Precedence field set to         the same value as the IP Precedence field in the ICMP request         that provoked the reply.4.3.2.6  Source Route         If the packet which provokes the sending of an ICMP error         message contains a source route option, the ICMP error message         SHOULD also contain a source route option of the same type         (strict or loose), created by reversing the portion before the         pointer of the route recorded in the source route option of the         original packet UNLESS the ICMP error message is an ICMP         Parameter Problem complaining about a source route option in         the original packet.         DISCUSSION:            In environments which use the U.S. Department of Defense            security option (defined in [INTERNET:5]), ICMP messages may            need to include a security option.  Detailed information on            this topic should be available from the Defense            Communications Agency.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 52]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19944.3.2.7  When Not to Send ICMP Errors         An ICMP error message MUST NOT be sent as the result of         receiving:         o  An ICMP error message, or         o  A packet which fails the IP header validation tests            described in Section [5.2.2] (except where that section            specifically permits the sending of an ICMP error message),            or         o  A packet destined to an IP broadcast or IP multicast            address, or         o  A packet sent as a Link Layer broadcast or multicast, or         o  A packet whose source address has a network number of zero            or is an invalid source address (as defined in Section            [5.3.7]), or         o  Any fragment of a datagram other then the first fragment            (i.e., a packet for which the fragment offset in the IP            header is nonzero).         Furthermore, an ICMP error message MUST NOT be sent in any case         where this memo states that a packet is to be silently         discarded.         NOTE:  THESE RESTRICTIONS TAKE PRECEDENCE OVER ANY REQUIREMENT         ELSEWHERE IN THIS DOCUMENT FOR SENDING ICMP ERROR MESSAGES.         DISCUSSION:            These rules aim to prevent the broadcast storms that have            resulted from routers or hosts returning ICMP error messages            in response to broadcast packets.  For example, a broadcast            UDP packet to a non-existent port could trigger a flood of            ICMP Destination Unreachable datagrams from all devices that            do not have a client for that destination port.  On a large            Ethernet, the resulting collisions can render the network            useless for a second or more.            Every packet that is broadcast on the connected network            should have a valid IP broadcast address as its IP            destination (see Section [5.3.4] and [INTRO:2]).  However,            some devices violate this rule.  To be certain to detect            broadcast packets, therefore, routers are required to checkAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 53]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994            for a link-layer broadcast as well as an IP-layer address.         IMPLEMENTATION:            This requires that the link layer inform the IP layer when a            link-layer broadcast packet has been received; see Section            [3.1].4.3.2.8  Rate Limiting         A router which sends ICMP Source Quench messages MUST be able         to limit the rate at which the messages can be generated.  A         router SHOULD also be able to limit the rate at which it sends         other sorts of ICMP error messages (Destination Unreachable,         Redirect, Time Exceeded, Parameter Problem).  The rate limit         parameters SHOULD be settable as part of the configuration of         the router.  How the limits are applied (e.g., per router or         per interface) is left to the implementor's discretion.         DISCUSSION:            Two problems for a router sending ICMP error message are:            (1)  The consumption of bandwidth on the reverse path, and            (2)  The use of router resources (e.g., memory, CPU time)            To help solve these problems a router can limit the            frequency with which it generates ICMP error messages.  For            similar reasons, a router may limit the frequency at which            some other sorts of messages, such as ICMP Echo Replies, are            generated.         IMPLEMENTATION:            Various mechanisms have been used or proposed for limiting            the rate at which ICMP messages are sent:            (1)  Count-based - for example, send an ICMP error message                 for every N dropped packets overall or per given source                 host.  This mechanism might be appropriate for ICMP                 Source Quench, but probably not for other types of ICMP                 messages.            (2)  Timer-based - for example, send an ICMP error message                 to a given source host or overall at most once per T                 milliseconds.            (3)  Bandwidth-based - for example, limit the rate at whichAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 54]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994                 ICMP messages are sent over a particular interface to                 some fraction of the attached network's bandwidth.4.3.3  SPECIFIC ISSUES4.3.3.1  Destination Unreachable         If a route can not forward a packet because it has no routes at         all to the destination network specified in the packet then the         router MUST generate a Destination Unreachable, Code 0 (Network         Unreachable) ICMP message.  If the router does have routes to         the destination network specified in the packet but the TOS         specified for the routes is neither the default TOS (0000) nor         the TOS of the packet that the router is attempting to route,         then the router MUST generate a Destination Unreachable, Code         11 (Network Unreachable for TOS) ICMP message.         If a packet is to be forwarded to a host on a network that is         directly connected to the router (i.e., the router is the         last-hop router) and the router has ascertained that there is         no path to the destination host then the router MUST generate a         Destination Unreachable, Code 1 (Host Unreachable) ICMP         message.  If a packet is to be forwarded to a host that is on a         network that is directly connected to the router and the router         cannot forward the packet because because no route to the         destination has a TOS that is either equal to the TOS requested         in the packet or is the default TOS (0000) then the router MUST         generate a Destination Unreachable, Code 12 (Host Unreachable         for TOS) ICMP message.         DISCUSSION:            The intent is that a router generates the "generic"            host/network unreachable if it has no path at all (including            default routes) to the destination.  If the router has one            or more paths to the destination, but none of those paths            have an acceptable TOS, then the router generates the            "unreachable for TOS" message.4.3.3.2  Redirect         The ICMP Redirect message is generated to inform a host on the         same subnet that the router used by the host to route certain         packets should be changed.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 55]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         Contrary tosection 3.2.2.2 of [INTRO:2], a router MAY ignore         ICMP Redirects when choosing a path for a packet originated by         the router if the router is running a routing protocol or if         forwarding is enabled on the router and on the interface over         which the packet is being sent.4.3.3.3  Source Quench         A router SHOULD NOT originate ICMP Source Quench messages.  As         specified in Section [4.3.2], a router which does originate         Source Quench messages MUST be able to limit the rate at which         they are generated.         DISCUSSION:            Research seems to suggest that Source Quench consumes            network bandwidth but is an ineffective (and unfair)            antidote to congestion.  See, for example, [INTERNET:9] and            [INTERNET:10].  Section [5.3.6] discusses the current            thinking on how routers ought to deal with overload and            network congestion.         A router MAY ignore any ICMP Source Quench messages it         receives.         DISCUSSION:            A router itself may receive a Source Quench as the result of            originating a packet sent to another router or host.  Such            datagrams might be, e.g., an EGP update sent to another            router, or a telnet stream sent to a host.  A mechanism has            been proposed ([INTERNET:11], [INTERNET:12]) to make the IP            layer respond directly to Source Quench by controlling the            rate at which packets are sent, however, this proposal is            currently experimental and not currently recommended.4.3.3.4  Time Exceeded         When a router is forwarding a packet and the TTL field of the         packet is reduced to 0, the requirements of section [5.2.3.8]         apply.         When the router is reassembling a packet that is destined for         the router, it MUST fulfill requirements of [INTRO:2], section         [3.3.2] apply.         When the router receives (i.e., is destined for the router) a         Time Exceeded message, it MUST comply withsection 3.2.2.4 ofAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 56]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         [INTRO:2].4.3.3.5  Parameter Problem         A router MUST generate a Parameter Problem message for any         error not specifically covered by another ICMP message.  The IP         header field or IP option including the byte indicated by the         pointer field MUST be included unchanged in the IP header         returned with this ICMP message.  Section [4.3.2] defines an         exception to this requirement.         A new variant of the Parameter Problem message was defined in         [INTRO:2]:              Code 1 = required option is missing.         DISCUSSION:            This variant is currently in use in the military community            for a missing security option.4.3.3.6  Echo Request/Reply         A router MUST implement an ICMP Echo server function that         receives Echo Requests and sends corresponding Echo Replies.  A         router MUST be prepared to receive, reassemble and echo an ICMP         Echo Request datagram at least as large as the maximum of 576         and the MTUs of all the connected networks.         The Echo server function MAY choose not to respond to ICMP echo         requests addressed to IP broadcast or IP multicast addresses.         A router SHOULD have a configuration option which, if enabled,         causes the router to silently ignore all ICMP echo requests; if         provided, this option MUST default to allowing responses.         DISCUSSION:            The neutral provision about responding to broadcast and            multicast Echo Requests results from the conclusions reached            in section [3.2.2.6] of [INTRO:2].         As stated in Section [10.3.3], a router MUST also implement an         user/application-layer interface for sending an Echo Request         and receiving an Echo Reply, for diagnostic purposes.  All ICMP         Echo Reply messages MUST be passed to this interface.         The IP source address in an ICMP Echo Reply MUST be the same as         the specific-destination address of the corresponding ICMP EchoAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 57]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         Request message.         Data received in an ICMP Echo Request MUST be entirely included         in the resulting Echo Reply.         If a Record Route and/or Timestamp option is received in an         ICMP Echo Request, this option (these options) SHOULD be         updated to include the current router and included in the IP         header of the Echo Reply message, without truncation.  Thus,         the recorded route will be for the entire round trip.         If a Source Route option is received in an ICMP Echo Request,         the return route MUST be reversed and used as a Source Route         option for the Echo Reply message.4.3.3.7  Information Request/Reply         A router SHOULD NOT originate or respond to these messages.         DISCUSSION:            The Information Request/Reply pair was intended to support            self-configuring systems such as diskless workstations, to            allow them to discover their IP network numbers at boot            time.  However, these messages are now obsolete.  The RARP            and BOOTP protocols provide better mechanisms for a host to            discover its own IP address.4.3.3.8  Timestamp and Timestamp Reply         A router MAY implement Timestamp and Timestamp Reply.  If they         are implemented then:         o  The ICMP Timestamp server function MUST return a Timestamp            Reply to every Timestamp message that is received.  It            SHOULD be designed for minimum variability in delay.         o  An ICMP Timestamp Request message to an IP broadcast or IP            multicast address MAY be silently discarded.         o  The IP source address in an ICMP Timestamp Reply MUST be the            same as the specific-destination address of the            corresponding Timestamp Request message.         o  If a Source Route option is received in an ICMP Timestamp            Request, the return route MUST be reversed and used as a            Source Route option for the Timestamp Reply message.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 58]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         o  If a Record Route and/or Timestamp option is received in a            Timestamp Request, this (these) option(s) SHOULD be updated            to include the current router and included in the IP header            of the Timestamp Reply message.         o  If the router provides an application-layer interface for            sending Timestamp Request messages then incoming Timestamp            Reply messages MUST be passed up to the ICMP user interface.         The preferred form for a timestamp value (the standard value)         is milliseconds since midnight, Universal Time.  However, it         may be difficult to provide this value with millisecond         resolution. For example, many systems use clocks that update         only at line frequency, 50 or 60 times per second.  Therefore,         some latitude is allowed in a standard value:         (a)  A standard value MUST be updated at least 16 times per              second (i.e., at most the six low-order bits of the value              may be undefined).         (b)  The accuracy of a standard value MUST approximate that of              operator-set CPU clocks, i.e., correct within a few              minutes.         IMPLEMENTATION:            To meet the second condition, a router may need to query            some time server when the router is booted or restarted. It            is recommended that the UDP Time Server Protocol be used for            this purpose. A more advanced implementation would use the            Network Time Protocol (NTP) to achieve nearly millisecond            clock synchronization; however, this is not required.4.3.3.9  Address Mask Request/Reply         A router MUST implement support for receiving ICMP Address Mask         Request messages and responding with ICMP Address Mask Reply         messages.  These messages are defined in [INTERNET:2].         A router SHOULD have a configuration option for each logical         interface specifying whether the router is allowed to answer         Address Mask Requests for that interface; this option MUST         default to allowing responses.  A router MUST NOT respond to an         Address Mask Request before the router knows the correct subnet         mask.         A router MUST NOT respond to an Address Mask Request which hasAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 59]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         a source address of 0.0.0.0 and which arrives on a physical         interface which has associated with it multiple logical         interfaces and the subnet masks for those interfaces are not         all the same.         A router SHOULD examine all ICMP Address Mask Replies which it         receives to determine whether the information it contains         matches the router's knowledge of the subnet mask.  If the ICMP         Address Mask Reply appears to be in error, the router SHOULD         log the subnet mask and the sender's IP address.  A router MUST         NOT use the contents of an ICMP Address Mask Reply to determine         the correct subnet mask.         Because hosts may not be able to learn the subnet mask if a         router is down when the host boots up, a router MAY broadcast a         gratuitous ICMP Address Mask Reply on each of its logical         interfaces after it has configured its own subnet masks.         However, this feature can be dangerous in environments which         use variable length subnet masks.  Therefore, if this feature         is implemented, gratuitous Address Mask Replies MUST NOT be         broadcast over any logical interface(s) which either:         o  Are not configured to send gratuitous Address Mask Replies.            Each logical interface MUST have a configuration parameter            controlling this, and that parameter MUST default to not            sending the gratuitous Address Mask Replies.         o  Share the same IP network number and physical interface but            have different subnet masks.         The { <Network-number>, -1, -1 } form (on subnetted networks)         or the { <Network-number>, -1 } form (on non-subnetted         networks) of the IP broadcast address MUST be used for         broadcast Address Mask Replies.         DISCUSSION:            The ability to disable sending Address Mask Replies by            routers is required at a few sites which intentionally lie            to their hosts about the subnet mask.  The need for this is            expected to go away as more and more hosts become compliant            with the Host Requirements standards.            The reason for both the second bullet above and the            requirement about which IP broadcast address to use is to            prevent problems when multiple IP networks or subnets are in            use on the same physical network.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 60]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19944.3.3.10  Router Advertisement and Solicitations         An IP router MUST support the router part of the ICMP Router         Discovery Protocol [INTERNET:13] on all connected networks on         which the router supports either IP multicast or IP broadcast         addressing.  The implementation MUST include all of the         configuration variables specified for routers, with the         specified defaults.         DISCUSSION:            Routers are not required to implement the host part of the            ICMP Router Discovery Protocol, but might find it useful for            operation while IP forwarding is disabled (i.e., when            operating as a host).         DISCUSSION:            We note that it is quite common for hosts to use RIP as the            router discovery protocol.  Such hosts listen to RIP traffic            and use and use information extracted from that traffic to            discover routers and to make decisions as to which router to            use as a first-hop router for a given destination.  While            this behavior is discouraged, it is still common and            implementors should be aware of it.4.4  INTERNET GROUP MANAGEMENT PROTOCOL - IGMP   IGMP [INTERNET:4] is a protocol used between hosts and multicast   routers on a single physical network to establish hosts' membership   in particular multicast groups.  Multicast routers use this   information, in conjunction with a multicast routing protocol, to   support IP multicast forwarding across the Internet.   A router SHOULD implement the host part of IGMP.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 61]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19945.  INTERNET LAYER - FORWARDING5.1  INTRODUCTION   This section describes the process of forwarding packets.5.2  FORWARDING WALK-THROUGH   There is no separate specification of the forwarding function in IP.   Instead, forwarding is covered by the protocol specifications for the   internet layer protocols ([INTERNET:1], [INTERNET:2], [INTERNET:3],   [INTERNET:8], and [ROUTE:11]).5.2.1  Forwarding Algorithm      Since none of the primary protocol documents describe the      forwarding algorithm in any detail, we present it here.  This is      just a general outline, and omits important details, such as      handling of congestion, that are dealt with in later sections.      It is not required that an implementation follow exactly the      algorithms given in sections [5.2.1.1], [5.2.1.2], and [5.2.1.3].      Much of the challenge of writing router software is to maximize      the rate at which the router can forward packets while still      achieving the same effect of the algorithm.  Details of how to do      that are beyond the scope of this document, in part because they      are heavily dependent on the architecture of the router.  Instead,      we merely point out the order dependencies among the steps:      (1)  A router MUST verify the IP header, as described in section           [5.2.2], before performing any actions based on the contents           of the header.  This allows the router to detect and discard           bad packets before the expenditure of other resources.      (2)  Processing of certain IP options requires that the router           insert its IP address into the option.  As noted in Section           [5.2.4], the address inserted MUST be the address of the           logical interface on which the packet is sent or the router's           router-id if the packet is sent over an unnumbered interface.           Thus, processing of these options cannot be completed until           after the output interface is chosen.      (3)  The router cannot check and decrement the TTL before checking           whether the packet should be delivered to the router itself,           for reasons mentioned in Section [4.2.2.9].Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 62]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      (4)  More generally, when a packet is delivered locally to the           router, its IP header MUST NOT be modified in any way (except           that a router may be required to insert a timestamp into any           Timestamp options in the IP header).  Thus, before the router           determines whether the packet is to be delivered locally to           the router, it cannot update the IP header in any way that it           is not prepared to undo.5.2.1.1  General         This section covers the general forwarding algorithm.  This         algorithm applies to all forms of packets to be forwarded:         unicast, multicast, and broadcast.         (1)  The router receives the IP packet (plus additional              information about it, as described in Section [3.1]) from              the Link Layer.         (2)  The router validates the IP header, as described in              Section [5.2.2].  Note that IP reassembly is not done,              except on IP fragments to be queued for local delivery in              step (4).         (3)  The router performs most of the processing of any IP              options.  As described in Section [5.2.4], some IP options              require additional processing after the routing decision              has been made.         (4)  The router examines the destination IP address of the IP              datagram, as described in Section [5.2.3], to determine              how it should continue to process the IP datagram.  There              are three possibilities:              o  The IP datagram is destined for the router, and should                 be queued for local delivery, doing reassembly if                 needed.              o  The IP datagram is not destined for the router, and                 should be queued for forwarding.              o  The IP datagram should be queued for forwarding, but (a                 copy) must also be queued for local delivery.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 63]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19945.2.1.2  Unicast         Since the local delivery case is well-covered by [INTRO:2], the         following assumes that the IP datagram was queued for         forwarding.  If the destination is an IP unicast address:         (5)  The forwarder determines the next hop IP address for the              packet, usually by looking up the packet's destination in              the router's routing table.  This procedure is described              in more detail in Section [5.2.4].  This procedure also              decides which network interface should be used to send the              packet.         (6)  The forwarder verifies that forwarding the packet is              permitted.  The source and destination addresses should be              valid, as described in Section [5.3.7] and Section [5.3.4]              If the router supports administrative constraints on              forwarding, such as those described in Section [5.3.9],              those constraints must be satisfied.         (7)  The forwarder decrements (by at least one) and checks the              packet's TTL, as described in Section [5.3.1].         (8)  The forwarder performs any IP option processing that could              not be completed in step 3.         (9)  The forwarder performs any necessary IP fragmentation, as              described in Section [4.2.2.7].  Since this step occurs              after outbound interface selection (step 5), all fragments              of the same datagram will be transmitted out the same              interface.         (10) The forwarder determines the Link Layer address of the              packet's next hop.  The mechanisms for doing this are Link              Layer-dependent (see chapter 3).         (11) The forwarder encapsulates the IP datagram (or each of the              fragments thereof) in an appropriate Link Layer frame and              queues it for output on the interface selected in step 5.         (12) The forwarder sends an ICMP redirect if necessary, as              described in Section [4.3.3.2].Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 64]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19945.2.1.3  Multicast         If the destination is an IP multicast, the following steps are         taken.         Note that the main differences between the forwarding of IP         unicasts and the forwarding of IP multicasts are         o  IP multicasts are usually forwarded based on both the            datagram's source and destination IP addresses,         o  IP multicast uses an expanding ring search,         o  IP multicasts are forwarded as Link Level multicasts, and         o  ICMP errors are never sent in response to IP multicast            datagrams.         Note that the forwarding of IP multicasts is still somewhat         experimental. As a result, the algorithm presented below is not         mandatory, and is provided as an example only.         (5a) Based on the IP source and destination addresses found in              the datagram header, the router determines whether the              datagram has been received on the proper interface for              forwarding. If not, the datagram is dropped silently.  The              method for determining the proper receiving interface              depends on the multicast routing algorithm(s) in use. In              one of the simplest algorithms, reverse path forwarding              (RPF), the proper interface is the one that would be used              to forward unicasts back to the datagram source.         (6a) Based on the IP source and destination addresses found in              the datagram header, the router determines the datagram's              outgoing interfaces. In order to implement IP multicast's              expanding ring search (see [INTERNET:4]) a minimum TTL              value is specified for each outgoing interface. A copy of              the multicast datagram is forwarded out each outgoing              interface whose minimum TTL value is less than or equal to              the TTL value in the datagram header, by separately              applying the remaining steps on each such interface.         (7a) The router decrements the packet's TTL by one.         (8a) The forwarder performs any IP option processing that could              not be completed in step (3).Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 65]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         (9a) The forwarder performs any necessary IP fragmentation, as              described in Section [4.2.2.7].         (10a) The forwarder determines the Link Layer address to use in              the Link Level encapsulation. The mechanisms for doing              this are Link Layer-dependent. On LANs a Link Level              multicast or broadcast is selected, as an algorithmic              translation of the datagrams' class D destination address.              See the various IP-over-xxx specifications for more              details.         (11a) The forwarder encapsulates the packet (or each of the              fragments thereof) in an appropriate Link Layer frame and              queues it for output on the appropriate interface.5.2.2  IP Header Validation      Before a router can process any IP packet, it MUST perform a the      following basic validity checks on the packet's IP header to      ensure that the header is meaningful.  If the packet fails any of      the following tests, it MUST be silently discarded, and the error      SHOULD be logged.      (1)  The packet length reported by the Link Layer must be large           enough to hold the minimum length legal IP datagram (20           bytes).      (2)  The IP checksum must be correct.      (3)  The IP version number must be 4.  If the version number is           not 4 then the packet may well be another version of IP, such           as ST-II.      (4)  The IP header length field must be at least 5.      (5)  The IP total length field must be at least 4 * IP header           length field.      A router MUST NOT have a configuration option which allows      disabling any of these tests.      If the packet passes the second and third tests, the IP header      length field is at least 4, and both the IP total length field and      the packet length reported by the Link Layer are at least 16 then,      despite the above rule, the router MAY respond with an ICMP      Parameter Problem message, whose pointer points at the IP header      length field (if it failed the fourth test) or the IP total lengthAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 66]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      field (if it failed the fifth test).  However, it still MUST      discard the packet and still SHOULD log the error.      These rules (and this entire document) apply only to version 4 of      the Internet Protocol.  These rules should not be construed as      prohibiting routers from supporting other versions of IP.      Furthermore, if a router can truly classify a packet as being some      other version of IP then it ought not treat that packet as an      error packet within the context of this memo.      IMPLEMENTATION:         It is desirable for purposes of error reporting, though not         always entirely possible, to determine why a header was         invalid.  There are four possible reasons:         o  The Link Layer truncated the IP header         o  The datagram is using a version of IP other than the            standard one (version 4).         o  The IP header has been corrupted in transit.         o  The sender generated an illegal IP header.         It is probably desirable to perform the checks in the order         listed, since we believe that this ordering is most likely to         correctly categorize the cause of the error.  For purposes of         error reporting, it may also be desirable to check if a packet         which fails these tests has an IP version number equal to 6.         If it does, the packet is probably an ST-II datagram and should         be treated as such.  ST-II is described in [FORWARD:1].      Additionally, the router SHOULD verify that the packet length      reported by the Link Layer is at least as large as the IP total      length recorded in the packet's IP header.  If it appears that the      packet has been truncated, the packet MUST be discarded, the error      SHOULD be logged, and the router SHOULD respond with an ICMP      Parameter Problem message whose pointer points at the IP total      length field.      DISCUSSION:         Because any higher layer protocol which concerns itself with         data corruption will detect truncation of the packet data when         it reaches its final destination, it is not absolutely         necessary for routers to perform the check suggested above in         order to maintain protocol correctness.  However, by making         this check a router can simplify considerably the task ofAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 67]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         determining which hop in the path is truncating the packets.         It will also reduce the expenditure of resources down-stream         from the router in that down-stream systems will not need to         deal with the packet.      Finally, if the destination address in the IP header is not one of      the addresses of the router, the router SHOULD verify that the      packet does not contain a Strict Source and Record Route option.      If a packet fails this test, the router SHOULD log the error and      SHOULD respond with an ICMP Parameter Problem error with the      pointer pointing at the offending packet's IP destination address.      DISCUSSION:         Some people might suggest that the router should respond with a         Bad Source Route message instead of a Parameter Problem         message.  However, when a packet fails this test, it usually         indicates a protocol error by the previous hop router, whereas         Bad Source Route would suggest that the source host had         requested a nonexistent or broken path through the network.5.2.3  Local Delivery Decision      When a router receives an IP packet, it must decide whether the      packet is addressed to the router (and should be delivered      locally) or the packet is addressed to another system (and should      be handled by the forwarder).  There is also a hybrid case, where      certain IP broadcasts and IP multicasts are both delivered locally      and forwarded.  A router MUST determine which of the these three      cases applies using the following rules:      o  An unexpired source route option is one whose pointer value         does not point past the last entry in the source route.  If the         packet contains an unexpired source route option, the pointer         in the option is advanced until either the pointer does point         past the last address in the option or else the next address is         not one of the router's own addresses.  In the latter (normal)         case, the  packet is forwarded (and not delivered locally)         regardless of the rules below.      o  The packet is delivered locally and not considered for         forwarding in the following cases:         - The packet's destination address exactly matches one of the            router's IP addresses,         - The packet's destination address is a limited broadcastAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 68]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994            address ({-1, -1}), and         - The packet's destination is an IP multicast address which is            limited to a single subnet (such as 224.0.0.1 or 224.0.0.2)            and (at least) one of the logical interfaces associated with            the physical interface on which the packet arrived is a            member of the destination multicast group.      o  The packet is passed to the forwarder AND delivered locally in         the following cases:         - The packet's destination address is an IP broadcast address            that addresses at least one of the router's logical            interfaces but does not address any of the logical            interfaces associated with the physical interface on which            the packet arrived         - The packet's destination is an IP multicast address which is            not limited to a single subnetwork (such as 224.0.0.1 and            224.0.0.2 are) and (at least) one of the logical interfaces            associated with the physical interface on which the packet            arrived is a member of the destination multicast group.      o  The packet is delivered locally if the packet's destination         address is an IP broadcast address (other than a limited         broadcast address) that addresses at least one of the logical         interfaces associated with the physical interface on which the         packet arrived.  The packet is ALSO passed to the forwarder         unless the link on which the packet arrived uses an IP         encapsulation that does not encapsulate broadcasts differently         than unicasts (e.g. by using different Link Layer destination         addresses).      o  The packet is passed to the forwarder in all other cases.      DISCUSSION:         The purpose of the requirement in the last sentence of the         fourth bullet is to deal with a directed broadcast to another         net or subnet on the same physical cable.  Normally, this works         as expected: the sender sends the broadcast to the router as a         Link Layer unicast.  The router notes that it arrived as a         unicast, and therefore must be destined for a different logical         net (or subnet) than the sender sent it on.  Therefore, the         router can safely send it as a Link Layer broadcast out the         same (physical) interface over which it arrived.  However, if         the router can't tell whether the packet was received as a Link         Layer unicast, the sentence ensures that the router does theAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 69]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         safe but wrong thing rather than the unsafe but right thing.      IMPLEMENTATION:         As described in Section [5.3.4], packets received as Link Layer         broadcasts are generally not forwarded.  It may be advantageous         to avoid passing to the forwarder packets it would later         discard because of the rules in that section.         Some Link Layers (either because of the hardware or because of         special code in the drivers) can deliver to the router copies         of all Link Layer broadcasts and multicasts it transmits.  Use         of this feature can simplify the implementation of cases where         a packet has to both be passed to the forwarder and delivered         locally, since forwarding the packet will automatically cause         the router to receive a copy of the packet that it can then         deliver locally.  One must use care in these circumstances in         order to prevent treating a received loop-back packet as a         normal packet that was received (and then being subject to the         rules of forwarding, etc etc).         Even in the absence of such a Link Layer, it is of course         hardly necessary to make a copy of an entire packet in order to         queue it both for forwarding and for local delivery, though         care must be taken with fragments, since reassembly is         performed on locally delivered packets but not on forwarded         packets.  One simple scheme is to associate a flag with each         packet on the router's output queue which indicates whether it         should be queued for local delivery after it has been sent.5.2.4  Determining the Next Hop Address      When a router is going to forward a packet, it must determine      whether it can send it directly to its destination, or whether it      needs to pass it through another router.  If the latter, it needs      to determine which router to use.  This section explains how these      determinations are made.      This section makes use of the following definitions:      o  LSRR - IP Loose Source and Record Route option      o  SSRR - IP Strict Source and Record Route option      o  Source Route Option - an LSRR or an SSRR      o  Ultimate Destination Address - where the packet is being sentAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 70]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         to: the last address in the source route of a source-routed         packet, or the destination address in the IP header of a non-         source-routed packet      o  Adjacent - reachable without going through any IP routers      o  Next Hop Address - the IP address of the adjacent host or         router to which the packet should be sent next      o  Immediate Destination Address - the ultimate destination         address, except in source routed packets, where it is the next         address specified in the source route      o  Immediate Destination - the node, system, router, end-system,         or whatever that is addressed by the Immediate Destination         Address.5.2.4.1  Immediate Destination Address         If the destination address in the IP header is one of the         addresses of the router and the packet contains a Source Route         Option, the Immediate Destination Address is the address         pointed at by the pointer in that option if the pointer does         not point past the end of the option.  Otherwise, the Immediate         Destination Address is the same as the IP destination address         in the IP header.         A router MUST use the Immediate Destination Address, not the         Ultimate Destination Address, when determining how to handle a         packet.         It is an error for more than one source route option to appear         in a datagram.  If it receives one, it SHOULD discard the         packet and reply with an ICMP Parameter Problem message whose         pointer points at the beginning of the second source route         option.5.2.4.2  Local/Remote Decision         After it has been determined that the IP packet needs to be         forwarded in accordance with the rules specified in Section         [5.2.3], the following algorithm MUST be used to determine if         the Immediate Destination is directly accessible (see         [INTERNET:2]):         (1)  For each network interface that has not been assigned any              IP address (the unnumbered lines as described in SectionAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 71]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994              [2.2.7]), compare the router-id of the other end of the              line to the Immediate Destination Address.  If they are              exactly equal, the packet can be transmitted through this              interface.              DISCUSSION:                 In other words, the router or host at the remote end of                 the line is the destination of the packet or is the                 next step in the source route of a source routed                 packet.         (2)  If no network interface has been selected in the first              step, for each IP address assigned to the router:              (a)  Apply the subnet mask associated with the address to                   this IP address.                   IMPLEMENTATION:                      The result of this operation will usually have                      been computed and saved during initialization.              (b)  Apply the same subnet mask to the Immediate                   Destination Address of the packet.              (c)  Compare the resulting values. If they are equal to                   each other, the packet can be transmitted through the                   corresponding network interface.         (3)  If an interface has still not been selected, the Immediate              Destination is accessible only through some other router.              The selection of the router and the next hop IP address is              described in Section [5.2.4.3].5.2.4.3  Next Hop Address         EDITOR'S COMMENTS:            Note that this section has been extensively rewritten.  The            original document indicated that Phil Almquist wished to            revise this section to conform to his "Ruminations on the            Next Hop" document.  I am under the assumption that the            working group generally agreed with this goal; there was an            editor's note from Phil that remained in this document to            that effect, and the RoNH document contains a "mandatory            RRWG algorithm".            So, I have taken said algorithm from RoNH and moved it into            here.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 72]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994            Additional useful or interesting information from RoNH has            been extracted and placed into an appendix to this note.         The router applies the algorithm in the previous section to         determine if the Immediate Destination Address is adjacent.  If         so, the next hop address is the same as the Immediate         Destination Address.  Otherwise, the packet must be forwarded         through another router to reach its Immediate Destination.  The         selection of this router is the topic of this section.         If the packet contains an SSRR, the router MUST discard the         packet and reply with an ICMP Bad Source Route error.         Otherwise, the router looks up the Immediate Destination         Address in its routing table to determine an appropriate next         hop address.         DISCUSSION:            Per the IP specification, a Strict Source Route must specify            a sequence of nodes through which the packet must traverse;            the packet must go from one node of the source route to the            next, traversing intermediate networks only.  Thus, if the            router is not adjacent to the next step of the source route,            the source route can not be fulfilled.  Therefore, the ICMP            Bad Source Route error.         The goal of the next-hop selection process is to examine the         entries in the router's Forwarding Information Base (FIB) and         select the best route (if there is one) for the packet from         those available in the FIB.         Conceptually, any route lookup algorithm starts out with a set         of candidate routes which consists of the entire contents of         the FIB.  The algorithm consists of a series of steps which         discard routes from the set.  These steps are referred to as         Pruning Rules.  Normally, when the algorithm terminates there         is exactly one route remaining in the set.  If the set ever         becomes empty, the packet is discarded because the destination         is unreachable.  It is also possible for the algorithm to         terminate when more than one route remains in the set.  In this         case, the router may arbitrarily discard all but one of them,         or may perform "load-splitting" by choosing whichever of the         routes has been least recently used.         With the exception of rule 3 (Weak TOS), a router MUST use the         following Pruning Rules when selecting a next hop for a packet.         If a router does consider TOS when making next-hop decisions,         the Rule 3 must be applied in the order indicated below.  TheseAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 73]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         rules MUST be (conceptually) applied to the FIB in the order         that they are presented.  (For some historical perspective,         additional pruning rules, and other common algorithms in use,         seeAppendix E).         DISCUSSION:            Rule 3 is optional in that Section [5.3.2] says that a            router only SHOULD consider TOS when making forwarding            decisions.         (1)  Basic Match              This rule discards any routes to destinations other than              the Immediate Destination Address of the packet.  For              example, if a packet's Immediate Destination Address is              36.144.2.5, this step would discard a route to net              128.12.0.0 but would retain any routes to net 36.0.0.0,              any routes to subnet 36.144.0.0, and any default routes.              More precisely, we assume that each route has a              destination attribute, called route.dest, and a              corresponding mask, called route.mask, to specify which              bits of route.dest are significant.  The Immediate              Destination Address of the packet being forwarded is              ip.dest.  This rule discards all routes from the set of              candidate routes except those for which (route.dest &              route.mask) = (ip.dest & route.mask).         (2)  Longest Match              Longest Match is a refinement of Basic Match, described              above.  After Basic Match pruning is performed, the              remaining routes are examined to determine the maximum              number of bits set in any of their route.mask attributes.              The step then discards from the set of candidate routes              any routes which have fewer than that maximum number of              bits set in their route.mask attributes.              For example, if a packet's Immediate Destination Address              is 36.144.2.5 and there are  {route.dest, route.mask}              pairs of {36.144.2.0, 255.255.255.0}, {36.144.0.5,              255.255.0.255}, {36.144.0.0, 255.255.0.0}, and {36.0.0.0,              255.0.0.0}, then this rule would keep only the first two              pairs; {36.144.2.0, 255.255.255.0} and {36.144.0.5,              255.255.0.255}.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 74]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         (3)  Weak TOS              Each route has a type of service attribute, called              route.tos, whose possible values are assumed to be              identical to those used in the TOS field of the IP header.              Routing protocols which distribute TOS information fill in              route.tos appropriately in routes they add to the FIB;              routes from other routing protocols are treated as if they              have the default TOS (0000).  The TOS field in the IP              header of the packet being routed is called ip.tos.              The set of candidate routes is examined to determine if it              contains any routes for which route.tos = ip.tos.  If so,              all routes except those for which route.tos = ip.tos are              discarded.  If not, all routes except those for which              route.tos = 0000 are discarded from the set of candidate              routes.              Additional discussion of routing based on Weak TOS may be              found in [ROUTE:11].              DISCUSSION:                 The effect of this rule is to select only those routes                 which have a TOS that matches the TOS requested in the                 packet.  If no such routes exist then routes with the                 default TOS are considered.  Routes with a non-default                 TOS that is not the TOS requested in the packet are                 never used, even if such routes are the only available                 routes that go to the packet's destination.         (4)  Best Metric              Each route has a metric attribute, called route.metric,              and a routing domain identifier, called route.domain.              Each member of the set of candidate routes is compared              with each other member of the set.  If route.domain is              equal for the two routes and route.metric is strictly              inferior for one when compared with the other, then the              one with the inferior metric is discarded from the set.              The determination of inferior is usually by a simple              arithmetic comparison, though some protocols may have              structured metrics requiring more complex comparisons.         (5)  Vendor Policy              Vendor Policy is sort of a catch-all to make up for the              fact that the previously listed rules are often inadequate              to chose from among the possible routes.  Vendor Policy              pruning rules are extremely vendor-specific.  See section              [5.2.4.4].Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 75]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         This algorithm has two distinct disadvantages.  Presumably, a         router implementor might develop techniques to deal with these         disadvantages and make them a part of the Vendor Policy pruning         rule.         (1)  IS-IS and OSPF route classes are not directly handled.         (2)  Path properties other than type of service (e.g. MTU) are              ignored.         It is also worth noting a deficiency in the way that TOS is         supported: routing protocols which support TOS are implicitly         preferred when forwarding packets which have non-zero TOS         values.         The Basic Match and Longest Match pruning rules generalize the         treatment of a number of particular types of routes.  These         routes are selected in the following, decreasing, order of         preference:         (1)  Host Route: This is a route to a specific end system.         (2)  Subnetwork Route: This is a route to a particular subnet              of a network.         (3)  Default Subnetwork Route: This is a route to all subnets              of a particular net for which there are not (explicit)              subnet routes.         (4)  Network Route: This is a route to a particular network.         (5)  Default Network Route (also known as the default route):              This is a route to all networks for which there are no              explicit routes to the net or any of its subnets.         If, after application of the pruning rules, the set of routes         is empty (i.e., no routes were found), the packet MUST be         discarded and an appropriate ICMP error generated (ICMP Bad         Source Route if the Immediate Destination Address came from a         source route option; otherwise, whichever of ICMP Destination         Host Unreachable or Destination Network Unreachable is         appropriate, as described in Section [4.3.3.1]).Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 76]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19945.2.4.4  Administrative Preference         One suggested mechanism for the Vendor Policy Pruning Rule is         to use administrative preference.         Each route has associated with it a preference value, based on         various attributes of the route (specific mechanisms for         assignment of preference values are suggested below).  This         preference value is an integer in the range [0..255], with zero         being the most preferred and 254 being the least preferred.         255 is a special value that means that the route should never         be used.  The first step in the Vendor Policy pruning rule         discards all but the most preferable routes (and always         discards routes whose preference value is 255).         This policy is not safe in that it can easily be misused to         create routing loops.  Since no protocol ensures that the         preferences configured for a router are consistent with the         preferences configured in its neighbors, network managers must         exercise care in configuring preferences.         o  Address Match            It is useful to be able to assign a single preference value            to all routes (learned from the same routing domain) to any            of a specified set of destinations, where the set of            destinations is all destinations that match a specified            address/mask pair.         o  Route Class            For routing protocols which maintain the distinction, it is            useful to be able to assign a single preference value to all            routes (learned from the same routing domain) which have a            particular route class (intra-area, inter-area, external            with internal metrics, or external with external metrics).         o  Interface            It is useful to be able to assign a single preference value            to all routes (learned from a particular routing domain)            that would cause packets to be routed out a particular            logical interface on the router (logical interfaces            generally map one-to-one onto the router's network            interfaces, except that any network interface which has            multiple IP addresses will have multiple logical interfaces            associated with it).         o  Source router            It is useful to be able to assign a single preference valueAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 77]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994            to all routes (learned from the same routing domain) which            were learned from any of a set of routers, where the set of            routers are those whose updates have a source address which            match a specified address/mask pair.         o  Originating AS            For routing protocols which provide the information, it is            useful to be able to assign a single preference value to all            routes (learned from a particular routing domain) which            originated in another particular routing domain.  For BGP            routes, the originating AS is the first AS listed in the            route's AS_PATH attribute.  For OSPF external routes, the            originating AS may be considered to be the low order 16 bits            of the route's external route tag if the tag's Automatic bit            is set and the tag's PathLength is not equal to 3.         o  External route tag            It is useful to be able to assign a single preference value            to all OSPF external routes (learned from the same routing            domain) whose external route tags match any of a list of            specified values.  Because the external route tag may            contain a structured value, it may be useful to provide the            ability to match particular subfields of the tag.         o  AS path            It may be useful to be able to assign a single preference            value to all BGP routes (learned from the same routing            domain) whose AS path "matches" any of a set of specified            values.  It is not yet clear exactly what kinds of matches            are most useful.  A simple option would be to allow matching            of all routes for which a particular AS number appears (or            alternatively, does not appear) anywhere in the route's            AS_PATH attribute.  A more general but somewhat more            difficult alternative would be to allow matching all routes            for which the AS path matches a specified regular            expression.5.2.4.6  Load Splitting         At the end of the Next-hop selection process, multiple routes         may still remain.  A router has several options when this         occurs.  It may arbitrarily discard some of the routes.  It may         reduce the number of candidate routes by comparing metrics of         routes from routing domains which are not considered         equivalent.  It may retain more than one route and employ a         load-splitting mechanism to divide traffic among them.  Perhaps         the only thing that can be said about the relative merits ofAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 78]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         the options is that load-splitting is useful in some situations         but not in others, so a wise implementor who implements load-         splitting will also provide a way for the network manager to         disable it.5.2.5  Unused IP Header Bits:RFC-791 Section 3.1      The IP header contains several reserved bits, in the Type of      Service field and in the Flags field.  Routers MUST NOT drop      packets merely because one or more of these reserved bits has a      non-zero value.      Routers MUST ignore and MUST pass through unchanged the values of      these reserved bits.  If a router fragments a packet, it MUST copy      these bits into each fragment.      DISCUSSION:         Future revisions to the IP protocol may make use of these         unused bits.  These rules are intended to ensure that these         revisions can be deployed without having to simultaneously         upgrade all routers in the Internet.5.2.6  Fragmentation and Reassembly:RFC-791 Section 3.2      As was discussed in Section [4.2.2.7], a router MUST support IP      fragmentation.      A router MUST NOT reassemble any datagram before forwarding it.      DISCUSSION:         A few people have suggested that there might be some topologies         where reassembly of transit datagrams by routers might improve         performance.  In general, however, the fact that fragments may         take different paths to the destination precludes safe use of         such a feature.         Nothing in this section should be construed to control or limit         fragmentation or reassembly performed as a link layer function         by the router.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 79]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19945.2.7  Internet Control Message Protocol - ICMP      General requirements for ICMP were discussed in Section [4.3].      This section discusses ICMP messages which are sent only by      routers.5.2.7.1  Destination Unreachable         The ICMP Destination Unreachable message is sent by a router in         response to a packet which it cannot forward because the         destination (or next hop) is unreachable or a service is         unavailable         A router MUST be able to generate ICMP Destination Unreachable         messages and SHOULD choose a response code that most closely         matches the reason why the message is being generated.         The following codes are defined in [INTERNET:8] and [INTRO:2]:         0 =  Network Unreachable - generated by a router if a              forwarding path (route) to the destination network is not              available;         1 =  Host Unreachable - generated by a router if a forwarding              path (route) to the destination host on a directly              connected network is not available;         2 =  Protocol Unreachable - generated if the transport protocol              designated in a datagram is not supported in the transport              layer of the final destination;         3 =  Port Unreachable -  generated if the designated transport              protocol (e.g. UDP) is unable to demultiplex the datagram              in the transport layer of the final destination but has no              protocol mechanism to inform the sender;         4 =  Fragmentation Needed and DF Set - generated if a router              needs to fragment a datagram but cannot since the DF flag              is set;         5 =  Source Route Failed - generated if a router cannot forward              a packet to the next hop in a source route option;         6 =  Destination Network Unknown - This code SHOULD NOT be              generated since it would imply on the part of the router              that the destination network does not exist (net              unreachable code 0 SHOULD be used in place of code 6);Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 80]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         7 =  Destination Host Unknown - generated only when a router              can determine (from link layer advice) that the              destination host does not exist;         11 = Network Unreachable For Type Of Service - generated by a              router if a forwarding path (route) to the destination              network with the requested or default TOS is not              available;         12 = Host Unreachable For Type Of Service - generated if a              router cannot forward a packet because its route(s) to the              destination do not match either the TOS requested in the              datagram or the default TOS (0).         The following additional codes are hereby defined:         13 = Communication Administratively Prohibited - generated if a              router cannot forward a packet due to administrative              filtering;         14 = Host Precedence Violation.  Sent by the first hop router              to a host to indicate that a requested precedence is not              permitted for the particular combination of              source/destination host or network, upper layer protocol,              and source/destination port;         15 = Precedence cutoff in effect.  The network operators have              imposed a minimum level of precedence required for              operation, the datagram was sent with a precedence below              this level;         NOTE: [INTRO:2] defined Code 8 for source host isolated.         Routers SHOULD NOT generate Code 8; whichever of Codes 0         (Network Unreachable) and 1 (Host Unreachable) is appropriate         SHOULD be used instead.  [INTRO:2] also defined Code 9 for         communication with destination network administratively         prohibited and Code 10 for communication with destination host         administratively prohibited.  These codes were intended for use         by end-to-end encryption devices used by U.S military agencies.         Routers SHOULD use the newly defined Code 13 (Communication         Administratively Prohibited) if they administratively filter         packets.         Routers MAY have a configuration option that causes Code 13         (Communication Administratively Prohibited) messages not to be         generated.  When this option is enabled, no ICMP error message         is sent in response to a packet which is dropped because itsAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 81]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         forwarding is administratively prohibited.         Similarly, routers MAY have a configuration option that causes         Code 14 (Host Precedence Violation) and Code 15 (Precedence         Cutoff in Effect) messages not to be generated.  When this         option is enabled, no ICMP error message is sent in response to         a packet which is dropped  because of a precedence violation.         Routers MUST use Host Unreachable or Destination Host Unknown         codes whenever other hosts on the same destination network         might be reachable; otherwise, the source host may erroneously         conclude that all hosts on the network are unreachable, and         that may not be the case.         [INTERNET:14] describes a slight modification the form of         Destination Unreachable messages containing Code 4         (Fragmentation needed and DF set).  A router MUST use this         modified form when originating Code 4 Destination Unreachable         messages.5.2.7.2  Redirect         The ICMP Redirect message is generated to inform a host on the         same subnet that the router used by the host to route certain         packets should be changed.         Routers MUST NOT generate the Redirect for Network or Redirect         for Network and Type of Service messages (Codes 0 and 2)         specified in [INTERNET:8].  Routers MUST be able to generate         the Redirect for Host message (Code 1) and SHOULD be able to         generate the Redirect for Type of Service and Host message         (Code 3) specified in [INTERNET:8].         DISCUSSION:            If the directly-connected network is not subnetted, a router            can normally generate a network Redirect which applies to            all hosts on a specified remote network.  Using a network            rather than a host Redirect may economize slightly on            network traffic and on host routing table storage.  However,            the savings are not significant, and subnets create an            ambiguity about the subnet mask to be used to interpret a            network Redirect.  In a general subnet environment, it is            difficult to specify precisely the cases in which network            Redirects can be used.  Therefore, routers must send only            host (or host and type of service) Redirects.         A Code 3 (Redirect for Host and Type of Service) message isAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 82]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         generated when the packet provoking the redirect has a         destination for which the path chosen by the router would         depend (in part) on the TOS requested.         Routers which can generate Code 3 redirects (Host and Type of         Service) MUST have a configuration option (which defaults to         on) to enable Code 1 (Host) redirects to be substituted for         Code 3 redirects.  A router MUST send a Code 1 Redirect in         place of a Code 3 Redirect if it has been configured to do so.         If a router is not able to generate Code 3 Redirects then it         MUST generate Code 1 Redirects in situations where a Code 3         Redirect is called for.         Routers MUST NOT generate a Redirect Message unless all of the         following conditions are met:         o  The packet is being forwarded out the same physical            interface that it was received from,         o  The IP source address in the packet is on the same Logical            IP (sub)network as the next-hop IP address, and         o  The packet does not contain an IP source route option.         The source address used in the ICMP Redirect MUST belong to the         same logical (sub)net as the destination address.         A router using a routing protocol (other than static routes)         MUST NOT consider paths learned from ICMP Redirects when         forwarding a packet.  If a router is not using a routing         protocol, a router MAY have a configuration which, if set,         allows the router to consider routes learned via ICMP Redirects         when forwarding packets.         DISCUSSION:            ICMP Redirect is a mechanism for routers to convey routing            information to hosts.  Routers use other mechanisms to learn            routing information, and therefore have no reason to obey            redirects.  Believing a redirect which contradicted the            router's other information would likely create routing            loops.            On the other hand, when a router is not acting as a router,            it MUST comply with the behavior required of a host.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 83]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19945.2.7.3  Time Exceeded         A router MUST generate a Time Exceeded message Code 0 (In         Transit) when it discards a packet due to an expired TTL field.         A router MAY have a per-interface option to disable origination         of these messages on that interface, but that option MUST         default to allowing the messages to be originated.5.2.8  INTERNET GROUP MANAGEMENT PROTOCOL - IGMP      IGMP [INTERNET:4] is a protocol used between hosts and multicast      routers on a single physical network to establish hosts'      membership in particular multicast groups.  Multicast routers use      this information, in conjunction with a multicast routing      protocol, to support IP multicast forwarding across the Internet.      A router SHOULD implement the multicast router part of IGMP.5.3  SPECIFIC ISSUES5.3.1  Time to Live (TTL)      The Time-to-Live (TTL) field of the IP header is defined to be a      timer limiting the lifetime of a datagram.  It is an 8-bit field      and the units are seconds.  Each router (or other module) that      handles a packet MUST decrement the TTL by at least one, even if      the elapsed time was much less than a second.  Since this is very      often the case, the TTL is effectively a hop count limit on how      far a datagram can propagate through the Internet.      When a router forwards a packet, it MUST reduce the TTL by at      least one.  If it holds a packet for more than one second, it MAY      decrement the TTL by one for each second.      If the TTL is reduced to zero (or less), the packet MUST be      discarded, and if the destination is not a multicast address the      router MUST send an ICMP Time Exceeded message, Code 0 (TTL      Exceeded in Transit) message to the source.  Note that a router      MUST NOT discard an IP unicast or broadcast packet with a non-zero      TTL merely because it can predict that another router on the path      to the packet's final destination will decrement the TTL to zero.      However, a router MAY do so for IP multicasts, in order to more      efficiently implement IP multicast's expanding ring search      algorithm (see [INTERNET:4]).Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 84]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      DISCUSSION:         The IP TTL is used, somewhat schizophrenically, as both a hop         count limit and a time limit.  Its hop count function is         critical to ensuring that routing problems can't melt down the         network by causing packets to loop infinitely in the network.         The time limit function is used by transport protocols such as         TCP to ensure reliable data transfer.  Many current         implementations treat TTL as a pure hop count, and in parts of         the Internet community there is a strong sentiment that the         time limit function should instead be performed by the         transport protocols that need it.         In this specification, we have reluctantly decided to follow         the strong belief among the router vendors that the time limit         function should be optional.  They argued that implementation         of the time limit function is difficult enough that it is         currently not generally done.  They further pointed to the lack         of documented cases where this shortcut has caused TCP to         corrupt data (of course, we would expect the problems created         to be rare and difficult to reproduce, so the lack of         documented cases provides little reassurance that there haven't         been a number of undocumented cases).         IP multicast notions such as the expanding ring search may not         work as expected unless the TTL is treated as a pure hop count.         The same thing is somewhat true of traceroute.         ICMP Time Exceeded messages are required because the traceroute         diagnostic tool depends on them.         Thus, the tradeoff is between severely crippling, if not         eliminating, two very useful tools vs. a very rare and         transient data transport problem (which may not occur at all).5.3.2  Type of Service (TOS)      The Type-of-Service byte in the IP header is divided into three      sections:  the Precedence field (high-order 3 bits), a field that      is customarily called Type of Service or "TOS (next 4 bits), and a      reserved bit (the low order bit).  Rules governing the reserved      bit were described in Section [4.2.2.3].  The Precedence field      will be discussed in Section [5.3.3].  A more extensive discussion      of the TOS field and its use can be found in [ROUTE:11].      A router SHOULD consider the TOS field in a packet's IP header      when deciding how to forward it.  The remainder of this sectionAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 85]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      describes the rules that apply to routers that conform to this      requirement.      A router MUST maintain a TOS value for each route in its routing      table.  Routes learned via a routing protocol which does not      support TOS MUST be assigned a TOS of zero (the default TOS).      To choose a route to a destination, a router MUST use an algorithm      equivalent to the following:      (1)  The router locates in its routing table all available routes           to the destination (see Section [5.2.4]).      (2)  If there are none, the router drops the packet because the           destination is unreachable.  See section [5.2.4].      (3)  If one or more of those routes have a TOS that exactly           matches the TOS specified in the packet, the router chooses           the route with the best metric.      (4)  Otherwise, the router repeats the above step, except looking           at routes whose TOS is zero.      (5)  If no route was chosen above, the router drops the packet           because the destination is unreachable.  The router returns           an ICMP Destination Unreachable error specifying the           appropriate code: either Network Unreachable with Type of           Service (code 11) or Host Unreachable with Type of Service           (code 12).      DISCUSSION:         Although TOS has been little used in the past, its use by hosts         is now mandated by the Requirements for Internet Hosts RFCs         ([INTRO:2] and [INTRO:3]).  Support for TOS in routers may         become a MUST in the future, but is a SHOULD for now until we         get more experience with it and can better judge both its         benefits and its costs.         Various people have proposed that TOS should affect other         aspects of the forwarding function.  For example:         (1)  A router could place packets which have the Low Delay bit              set ahead of other packets in its output queues.         (2)  a router is forced to discard packets, it could try to              avoid discarding those which have the High Reliability bit              set.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 86]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         These ideas have been explored in more detail in [INTERNET:17]         but we don't yet have enough experience with such schemes to         make requirements in this area.5.3.3  IP Precedence      This section specifies requirements and guidelines for appropriate      processing of the IP Precedence field in routers.  Precedence is a      scheme for allocating resources in the network based on the      relative importance of different traffic flows.  The IP      specification defines specific values to be used in this field for      various types of traffic.      The basic mechanisms for precedence processing in a router are      preferential resource allocation, including both precedence-      ordered queue service and precedence-based congestion control, and      selection of Link Layer priority features.  The router also      selects the IP precedence for routing, management and control      traffic it originates.  For a more extensive discussion of IP      Precedence and its implementation see [FORWARD:6].      Precedence-ordered queue service, as discussed in this section,      includes but is not limited to the queue for the forwarding      process and queues for outgoing links.  It is intended that a      router supporting precedence should also use the precedence      indication at whatever points in its processing are concerned with      allocation of finite resources, such as packet buffers or Link      Layer connections.  The set of such points is implementation-      dependent.      DISCUSSION:         Although the Precedence field was originally provided for use         in DOD systems where large traffic surges or major damage to         the network are viewed as inherent threats, it has useful         applications for many non-military IP networks.  Although the         traffic handling capacity of networks has grown greatly in         recent years, the traffic generating ability of the users has         also grown, and network overload conditions still occur at         times.  Since IP-based routing and management protocols have         become more critical to the successful operation of the         Internet, overloads present two additional risks to the         network:         (1)  High delays may result in routing protocol packets being              lost.  This may cause the routing protocol to falsely              deduce a topology change and propagate this falseAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 87]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994              information to other routers.  Not only can this cause              routes to oscillate, but an extra processing burden may be              placed on other routers.         (2)  High delays may interfere with the use of network              management tools to analyze and perhaps correct or relieve              the problem in the network that caused the overload              condition to occur.         Implementation and appropriate use of the Precedence mechanism         alleviates both of these problems.5.3.3.1  Precedence-Ordered Queue Service         Routers SHOULD implement precedence-ordered queue service.         Precedence-ordered queue service means that when a packet is         selected for output on a (logical) link, the packet of highest         precedence that has been queued for that link is sent.  Routers         that implement precedence-ordered queue service MUST also have         a configuration option to suppress precedence-ordered queue         service in the Internet Layer.         Any router MAY implement other policy-based throughput         management procedures that result in other than strict         precedence ordering, but it MUST be configurable to suppress         them (i.e., use strict ordering).         As detailed in Section [5.3.6], routers that implement         precedence-ordered queue service discard low precedence packets         before discarding high precedence packets for congestion         control purposes.         Preemption (interruption of processing or transmission of a         packet) is not envisioned as a function of the Internet Layer.         Some protocols at other layers may provide preemption features.5.3.3.2  Lower Layer Precedence Mappings         Routers that implement precedence-ordered queueing MUST         IMPLEMENT, and other routers SHOULD IMPLEMENT, Lower Layer         Precedence Mapping.         A router which implements Lower Layer Precedence Mapping:         o  MUST be able to map IP Precedence to Link Layer priority            mechanisms for link layers that have such a feature defined.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 88]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         o  MUST have a configuration option to select the Link Layer's            default priority treatment for all IP traffic         o  SHOULD be able to configure specific nonstandard mappings of            IP precedence values to Link Layer priority values for each            interface.         DISCUSSION:            Some research questions the workability of the priority            features of some Link Layer protocols, and some networks may            have faulty implementations of the link layer priority            mechanism.  It seems prudent to provide an escape mechanism            in case such problems show up in a network.            On the other hand, there are proposals to use novel queueing            strategies to implement special services such as low-delay            service.  Special services and queueing strategies to            support them need further research and experimentation            before they are put into widespread use in the Internet.            Since these requirements are intended to encourage (but not            force) the use of precedence features in the hope of            providing better Internet service to all users, routers            supporting precedence-ordered queue service should default            to maintaining strict precedence ordering regardless of the            type of service requested.            Implementors may wish to consider that correct link layer            mapping of IP precedence is required by DOD policy for            TCP/IP systems used on DOD networks.5.3.3.3  Precedence Handling For All Routers         A router (whether or not it employs precedence-ordered queue         service):         (1)  MUST accept and process incoming traffic of all precedence              levels normally, unless it has been administratively              configured to do otherwise.         (2)  MAY implement a validation filter to administratively              restrict the use of precedence levels by particular              traffic sources.  If provided, this filter MUST NOT filter              out or cut off the following sorts of ICMP error messages:              Destination Unreachable, Redirect, Time Exceeded, and              Parameter Problem.  If this filter is provided, the              procedures required for packet filtering by addresses areAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 89]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994              required for this filter also.              DISCUSSION:                 Precedence filtering should be applicable to specific                 source/destination IP Address pairs, specific                 protocols, specific ports, and so on.              An ICMP Destination Unreachable message with code 14              SHOULD be sent when a packet is dropped by the validation              filter, unless this has been suppressed by configuration              choice.         (3)  MAY implement a cutoff function which allows the router to              be set to refuse or drop traffic with precedence below a              specified level.  This function may be activated by              management actions or by some implementation dependent              heuristics, but there MUST be a configuration option to              disable any heuristic mechanism that operates without              human intervention.  An ICMP Destination Unreachable              message with code 15 SHOULD be sent when a packet is              dropped by the cutoff function, unless this has been              suppressed by configuration choice.              A router MUST NOT refuse to forward datagrams with IP              precedence of 6 (Internetwork Control) or 7 (Network              Control) solely due to precedence cutoff.  However, other              criteria may be used in conjunction with precedence cutoff              to filter high precedence traffic.              DISCUSSION:                 Unrestricted precedence cutoff could result in an                 unintentional cutoff of routing and control traffic.                 In general, host traffic should be restricted to a                 value of 5 (CRITIC/ECP) or below although this is not a                 requirement and may not be valid in certain systems.         (4)  MUST NOT change precedence settings on packets it did not              originate.         (5)  SHOULD be able to configure distinct precedence values to              be used for each routing or management protocol supported              (except for those protocols, such as OSPF, which specify              which precedence value must be used).         (6)  MAY be able to configure routing or management traffic              precedence values independently for each peer address.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 90]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         (7)  MUST respond appropriately to Link Layer precedence-              related error indications where provided.  An ICMP              Destination Unreachable message with code 15 SHOULD be              sent when a packet is dropped because a link cannot accept              it due to a precedence-related condition, unless this has              been suppressed by configuration choice.              DISCUSSION:                 The precedence cutoff mechanism described in (3) is                 somewhat controversial.  Depending on the topological                 location of the area affected by the cutoff, transit                 traffic may be directed by routing protocols into the                 area of the cutoff, where it will be dropped.  This is                 only a problem if another path which is unaffected by                 the cutoff exists between the communicating points.                 Proposed ways of avoiding this problem include                 providing some minimum bandwidth to all precedence                 levels even under overload conditions, or propagating                 cutoff information in routing protocols.  In the                 absence of a widely accepted (and implemented) solution                 to this problem, great caution is recommended in                 activating cutoff mechanisms in transit networks.                 A transport layer relay could legitimately provide the                 function prohibited by (4) above.  Changing precedence                 levels may cause subtle interactions with TCP and                 perhaps other protocols; a correct design is a non-                 trivial task.                 The intent of (5) and (6) (and the discussion of IP                 Precedence in ICMP messages in Section [4.3.2]) is that                 the IP precedence bits should be appropriately set,                 whether or not this router acts upon those bits in any                 other way.  We expect that in the future specifications                 for routing protocols and network management protocols                 will specify how the IP Precedence should be set for                 messages sent by those protocols.                 The appropriate response for (7) depends on the link                 layer protocol in use.  Typically, the router should                 stop trying to send offensive traffic to that                 destination for some period of time, and should return                 an ICMP Destination Unreachable message with code 15                 (service not available for precedence requested) to the                 traffic source.  It also should not try to reestablish                 a preempted Link Layer connection for some period of                 time.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 91]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19945.3.4  Forwarding of Link Layer Broadcasts      The encapsulation of IP packets in most Link Layer protocols      (except PPP) allows a receiver to distinguish broadcasts and      multicasts from unicasts simply by examining the Link Layer      protocol headers (most commonly, the Link Layer destination      address).  The rules in this section which refer to Link Layer      broadcasts apply only to Link Layer protocols which allow      broadcasts to be distinguished; likewise, the rules which refer to      Link Layer multicasts apply only to Link Layer protocols which      allow multicasts to be distinguished.      A router MUST NOT forward any packet which the router received as      a Link Layer broadcast (even if the IP destination address is also      some form of broadcast address) unless the packet is an all-      subnets-directed broadcast being forwarded as specified in      [INTERNET:3].      DISCUSSION:         As noted in Section [5.3.5.3], forwarding of all-subnets-         directed broadcasts in accordance with [INTERNET:3] is optional         and is not something that routers do by default.      A router MUST NOT forward any packet which the router received as      a Link Layer multicast unless the packet's destination address is      an IP multicast address.      A router SHOULD silently discard a packet that is received via a      Link Layer broadcast but does not specify an IP multicast or IP      broadcast destination address.      When a router sends a packet as a Link Layer broadcast, the IP      destination address MUST be a legal IP broadcast or IP multicast      address.5.3.5  Forwarding of Internet Layer Broadcasts      There are two major types of IP broadcast addresses; limited      broadcast and directed broadcast.  In addition, there are three      subtypes of directed broadcast; a broadcast directed to a      specified network, a broadcast directed to a specified subnetwork,      and a broadcast directed to all subnets of a specified network.      Classification by a router of a broadcast into one of these      categories depends on the broadcast address and on the router's      understanding (if any) of the subnet structure of the destination      network.  The same broadcast will be classified differently by      different routers.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 92]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      A limited IP broadcast address is defined to be all-ones: { -1, -1      } or 255.255.255.255.      A net-directed broadcast is composed of the network portion of the      IP address with a local part of all-ones, { <Network-number>, -1      }.  For example, a Class A net broadcast address is      net.255.255.255, a Class B net broadcast address is      net.net.255.255 and a Class C net broadcast address is      net.net.net.255 where net is a byte of the network address.      An all-subnets-directed broadcast is composed of the network part      of the IP address with a subnet and a host part of all-ones, {      <Network-number>, -1, -1 }.  For example, an all-subnets broadcast      on a subnetted class B network is net.net.255.255.  A network must      be known to be subnetted and the subnet part must be all-ones      before a broadcast can be classified as all-subnets-directed.      A subnet-directed broadcast address is composed of the network and      subnet part of the IP address with a host part of all-ones, {      <Network-number>, <Subnet-number>, -1 }.  For example, a subnet-      directed broadcast to subnet 2 of a class B network might be      net.net.2.255 (if the subnet mask was 255.255.255.0) or      net.net.1.127 (if the subnet mask was 255.255.255.128).  A network      must be known to be subnetted and the net and subnet part must not      be all-ones before an IP broadcast can be classified as subnet-      directed.      As was described in Section [4.2.3.1], a router may encounter      certain non-standard IP broadcast addresses:      o  0.0.0.0 is an obsolete form of the limited broadcast address      o  { broadcast address.      o  { broadcast address.      o  { form of a subnet-directed broadcast address.      As was described in that section, packets addressed to any of      these addresses SHOULD be silently discarded, but if they are not,      they MUST be treated in accordance with the same rules that apply      to packets addressed to the non-obsolete forms of the broadcast      addresses described above.  These rules are described in the next      few sections.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 93]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19945.3.5.1  Limited Broadcasts         Limited broadcasts MUST NOT be forwarded.  Limited broadcasts         MUST NOT be discarded.  Limited broadcasts MAY be sent and         SHOULD be sent instead of directed broadcasts where limited         broadcasts will suffice.         DISCUSSION:            Some routers contain UDP servers which function by resending            the requests (as unicasts or directed broadcasts) to other            servers.  This requirement should not be interpreted as            prohibiting such servers.  Note, however, that such servers            can easily cause packet looping if misconfigured.  Thus,            providers of such servers would probably be well-advised to            document their setup carefully and to consider carefully the            TTL on packets which are sent.5.3.5.2  Net-directed Broadcasts         A router MUST classify as net-directed broadcasts all valid,         directed broadcasts destined for a remote network or an         attached nonsubnetted network.  A router MUST forward net-         directed broadcasts.  Net-directed broadcasts MAY be sent.         A router MAY have an option to disable receiving net-directed         broadcasts on an interface and MUST have an option to disable         forwarding net-directed broadcasts.  These options MUST default         to permit receiving and forwarding net-directed broadcasts.         DISCUSSION:            There has been some debate about forwarding or not            forwarding directed broadcasts.  In this memo we have made            the forwarding decision depend on the router's knowledge of            the subnet mask for the destination network.  Forwarding            decisions for subnetted networks should be made by routers            with an understanding of the subnet structure.  Therefore,            in general, routers must forward directed broadcasts for            networks they are not attached to and for which they do not            understand the subnet structure.  One router may interpret            and handle the same IP broadcast packet differently than            another, depending on its own understanding of the structure            of the destination (sub)network.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 94]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19945.3.5.3  All-subnets-directed Broadcasts         A router MUST classify as all-subnets-directed broadcasts all         valid directed broadcasts destined for a directly attached         subnetted network which have all-ones in the subnet part of the         address.  If the destination network is not subnetted, the         broadcast MUST be treated as a net-directed broadcast.         A router MUST forward an all-subnets-directed broadcast as a         link level broadcast out all physical interfaces connected to         the IP network addressed by the broadcast, except that:         o  A router MUST NOT forward an all-subnet-directed broadcast            that was received by the router as a Link Layer broadcast,            unless the router is forwarding the broadcast in accordance            with [INTERNET:3] (see below).         o  If a router receives an all-subnets-directed broadcast over            a network which does not indicate via Link Layer framing            whether the frame is a broadcast or a unicast, the packet            MUST NOT be forwarded to any network which likewise does not            indicate whether a frame is a broadcast.         o  A router MUST NOT forward an all-subnets-directed broadcast            if the router is configured not to forward such broadcasts.            A router MUST have a configuration option to deny forwarding            of all-subnets-directed broadcasts.  The configuration            option MUST default to permit forwarding of all-subnets-            directed broadcasts.         EDITOR'S COMMENTS:            The algorithm presented here is broken.  The working group            explicitly desired this algorithm, knowing its failures.            The second bullet, above, prevents All Subnets Directed            Broadcasts from traversing more than one PPP (or other            serial) link in a row.  Such a topology is easily conceived.            Suppose that some corporation builds its corporate backbone            out of PPP links, connecting routers at geographically            dispersed locations.  Suppose that this corporation has 3            sites (S1, S2, and S3) and there is a router at each site            (R1, R2, and R3).  At each site there are also several LANs            connected to the local router.  Let there be a PPP link            connecting S1 to S2 and one connecting S2 to S3 (i.e. the            links are R1-R2 and R2-R3).  So, if a host on a LAN at S1            sends a All Subnets Directed Broadcast, R1 will forward the            broadcast over the R1-R2 link to R2.  R2 will forward theAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 95]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994            broadcast to the LAN(s) connected to R2.  Since the PPP does            not differentiate broadcast from non-broadcast frames, R2            will NOT forward the broadcast onto the R2-R3 link.            Therefore, the broadcast will not reach S3.         [INTERNET:3] describes an alternative set of rules for         forwarding of all-subnets-directed broadcasts (called multi-         subnet-broadcasts in that document).  A router MAY IMPLEMENT         that alternative set of rules, but MUST use the set of rules         described above unless explicitly configured to use the         [INTERNET:3] rules.  If routers will do [INTERNET:3]-style         forwarding, then the router MUST have a configuration option         which MUST default to doing the rules presented in this         document.         DISCUSSION:            As far as we know, the rules for multi-subnet broadcasts            described in [INTERNET:3] have never been implemented,            suggesting that either they are too complex or the utility            of multi-subnet broadcasts is low.  The rules described in            this section match current practice.  In the future, we            expect that IP multicast (see [INTERNET:4]) will be used to            better solve the sorts of problems that multi-subnets            broadcasts were intended to address.            We were also concerned that hosts whose system managers            neglected to configure with a subnet mask could            unintentionally send multi-subnet broadcasts.         A router SHOULD NOT originate all-subnets broadcasts, except as         required by Section [4.3.3.9] when sending ICMP Address Mask         Replies on subnetted networks.         DISCUSSION:            The current intention is to decree that (like 0-filled IP            broadcasts) the notion of the all-subnets broadcast is            obsolete.  It should be treated as a directed broadcast to            the first subnet of the net in question that it appears on.            Routers may implement a switch (default off) which if turned            on enables the [INTERNET:3] behavior for all-subnets            broadcasts.            If a router has a configuration option to allow for            forwarding all-subnet broadcasts, it should use a spanning            tree, RPF, or other multicast forwarding algorithm (which            may be computed for other purposes such as bridging or OSPF)Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 96]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994            to distribute the all-subnets broadcast efficiently.  In            general, it is better to use an IP multicast address rather            than an all-subnets broadcast.5.3.5.4  Subnet-directed Broadcasts         A router MUST classify as subnet-directed broadcasts all valid         directed broadcasts destined for a directly attached subnetted         network in which the subnet part is not all-ones.  If the         destination network is not subnetted, the broadcast MUST be         treated as a net-directed broadcast.         A router MUST forward subnet-directed broadcasts.         A router MUST have a configuration option to prohibit         forwarding of subnet-directed broadcasts.  Its default setting         MUST permit forwarding of subnet-directed broadcasts.         A router MAY have a configuration option to prohibit forwarding         of subnet-directed broadcasts from a source on a network on         which the router has an interface.  If such an option is         provided, its default setting MUST permit forwarding of         subnet-directed broadcasts.5.3.6  Congestion Control      Congestion in a network is loosely defined as a condition where      demand for resources (usually bandwidth or CPU time) exceeds      capacity.  Congestion avoidance tries to prevent demand from      exceeding capacity, while congestion recovery tries to restore an      operative state.  It is possible for a router to contribute to      both of these mechanisms.  A great deal of effort has been spent      studying the problem.  The reader is encouraged to read      [FORWARD:2] for a survey of the work.  Important papers on the      subject include [FORWARD:3], [FORWARD:4], [FORWARD:5], and      [INTERNET:10], among others.      The amount of storage that router should have available to handle      peak instantaneous demand when hosts use reasonable congestion      policies, such as described in [FORWARD:5], is a function of the      product of the bandwidth of the link times the path delay of the      flows using the link, and therefore storage should increase as      this Bandwidth*Delay product increases.  The exact function      relating storage capacity to probability of discard is not known.      When a router receives a packet beyond its storage capacity itAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 97]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      must (by definition, not by decree) discard it or some other      packet or packets.  Which packet to discard is the subject of much      study but, unfortunately, little agreement so far.      A router MAY discard the packet it has just received; this is the      simplest but not the best policy.  It is considered better policy      to randomly pick some transit packet on the queue and discard it      (see [FORWARD:2]).  A router MAY use this Random Drop algorithm to      determine which packet to discard.      If a router implements a discard policy (such as Random Drop)      under which it chooses a packet to discard from among a pool of      eligible packets:      o  If precedence-ordered queue service (described in Section         [5.3.3.1]) is implemented and enabled, the router MUST NOT         discard a packet whose IP precedence is higher than that of a         packet which is not discarded.      o  A router MAY protect packets whose IP headers request the         maximize reliability TOS, except where doing so would be in         violation of the previous rule.      o  A router MAY protect fragmented IP packets, on the theory that         dropping a fragment of a datagram may increase congestion by         causing all fragments of the datagram to be retransmitted by         the source.      o  To help prevent routing perturbations or disruption of         management functions, the router MAY protect packets used for         routing control, link control, or network management from being         discarded.  Dedicated routers (i.e.. routers which are not also         general purpose hosts, terminal servers, etc.) can achieve an         approximation of this rule by protecting packets whose source         or destination is the router itself.      Advanced methods of congestion control include a notion of      fairness, so that the 'user' that is penalized by losing a packet      is the one that contributed the most to the congestion.  No matter      what mechanism is implemented to deal with bandwidth congestion      control, it is important that the CPU effort expended be      sufficiently small that the router is not driven into CPU      congestion also.      As described in Section [4.3.3.3], this document recommends that a      router should not send a Source Quench to the sender of the packet      that it is discarding.  ICMP Source Quench is a very weakAlmquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 98]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      mechanism, so it is not necessary for a router to send it, and      host software should not use it exclusively as an indicator of      congestion.5.3.7  Martian Address Filtering      An IP source address is invalid if it is an IP broadcast address      or is not a class A, B, or C address.      An IP destination address is invalid if it is not a class A, B, C,      or D address.      A router SHOULD NOT forward any packet which has an invalid IP      source address or a source address on network 0.  A router SHOULD      NOT forward, except over a loopback interface, any packet which      has a source address on network 127.  A router MAY have a switch      which allows the network manager to disable these checks.  If such      a switch is provided, it MUST default to performing the checks.      A router SHOULD NOT forward any packet which has an invalid IP      destination address or a destination address on network 0.  A      router SHOULD NOT forward, except over a loopback interface, any      packet which has a destination address on network 127.  A router      MAY have a switch which allows the network manager to disable      these checks.  If such a switch is provided, it MUST default to      performing the checks.      If a router discards a packet because of these rules, it SHOULD      log at least the IP source address, the IP destination address,      and, if the problem was with the source address, the physical      interface on which the packet was received and the Link Layer      address of the host or router from which the packet was received.5.3.8  Source Address Validation      A router SHOULD IMPLEMENT the ability to filter traffic based on a      comparison of the source address of a packet and the forwarding      table for a logical interface on which the packet was received.      If this filtering is enabled, the router MUST silently discard a      packet if the interface on which the packet was received is not      the interface on which a packet would be forwarded to reach the      address contained in the source address.  In simpler terms, if a      router wouldn't route a packet containing this address through a      particular interface, it shouldn't believe the address if it      appears as a source address in a packet read from this interface.      If this feature is implemented, it MUST be disabled by default.Almquist & Kastenholz                                          [Page 99]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      DISCUSSION:         This feature can provide useful security improvements in some         situations, but can erroneously discard valid packets in         situations where paths are asymmetric.5.3.9  Packet Filtering and Access Lists      As a means of providing security and/or limiting traffic through      portions of a network a router SHOULD provide the ability to      selectively forward (or filter) packets.  If this capability is      provided, filtering of packets MUST be configurable either to      forward all packets or to selectively forward them based upon the      source and destination addresses.  Each source and destination      address SHOULD allow specification of an arbitrary mask.      If supported, a router MUST be configurable to allow one of an      o  Include list -  specification of a list of address pairs to be         forwarded, or an      o  Exclude list -  specification of a list of address pairs NOT to         be forwarded.      A router MAY provide a configuration switch which allows a choice      between specifying an include or an exclude list.      A value matching any address (e.g. a keyword any or an address      with a mask of all 0's) MUST be allowed as a source and/or      destination address.      In addition to address pairs, the router MAY allow any combination      of transport and/or application protocol and source and      destination ports to be specified.      The router MUST allow packets to be silently discarded (i.e..      discarded without an ICMP error message being sent).      The router SHOULD allow an appropriate ICMP unreachable message to      be sent when a packet is discarded. The ICMP message SHOULD      specify Communication Administratively Prohibited (code 13) as the      reason for the destination being unreachable.      The router SHOULD allow the sending of ICMP destination      unreachable messages (code 13) to be configured for each      combination of address pairs, protocol types, and ports it allows      to be specified.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 100]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      The router SHOULD count and SHOULD allow selective logging of      packets not forwarded.5.3.10  Multicast Routing      An IP router SHOULD support forwarding of IP multicast packets,      based either on static multicast routes or on routes dynamically      determined by a multicast routing protocol (e.g., DVMRP      [ROUTE:9]).  A router that forwards IP multicast packets is called      a multicast router.5.3.11  Controls on Forwarding      For each physical interface, a router SHOULD have a configuration      option which specifies whether forwarding is enabled on that      interface.  When forwarding on an interface is disabled, the      router:      o  MUST silently discard any packets which are received on that         interface but are not addressed to the router      o  MUST NOT send packets out that interface, except for datagrams         originated by the router      o  MUST NOT announce via any routing protocols the availability of         paths through the interface      DISCUSSION:         This feature allows the network manager to essentially turn off         an interface but leaves it accessible for network management.         Ideally, this control would apply to logical rather than         physical interfaces, but cannot because there is no known way         for a router to determine which logical interface a packet         arrived on when there is not a one-to-one correspondence         between logical and physical interfaces.5.3.12  State Changes      During the course of router operation, interfaces may fail or be      manually disabled, or may become available for use by the router.      Similarly, forwarding may be disabled for a particular interface      or for the entire router or may be (re)enabled.  While such      transitions are (usually) uncommon, it is important that routers      handle them correctly.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 101]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19945.3.12.1  When a Router Ceases Forwarding         When a router ceases forwarding it MUST stop advertising all         routes, except for third party routes.  It MAY continue to         receive and use routes from other routers in its routing         domains.  If the forwarding database is retained, the router         MUST NOT cease timing the routes in the forwarding database.         If routes that have been received from other routers are         remembered, the router MUST NOT cease timing the routes which         it has remembered.  It MUST discard any routes whose timers         expire while forwarding is disabled, just as it would do if         forwarding were enabled.         DISCUSSION:            When a router ceases forwarding, it essentially ceases being            a router.  It is still a host, and must follow all of the            requirements of Host Requirements [INTRO: 2].  The router            may still be a passive member of one or more routing            domains, however.  As such, it is allowed to maintain its            forwarding database by listening to other routers in its            routing domain.  It may not, however, advertise any of the            routes in its forwarding database, since it itself is doing            no forwarding.  The only exception to this rule is when the            router is advertising a route which uses only some other            router, but which this router has been asked to advertise.         A router MAY send ICMP destination unreachable (host         unreachable) messages to the senders of packets that it is         unable to forward. It SHOULD NOT send ICMP redirect messages.         DISCUSSION:            Note that sending an ICMP destination unreachable (host            unreachable) is a router action.  This message should not be            sent by hosts.   This exception to the rules for hosts is            allowed so that packets may be rerouted in the shortest            possible time, and so that black holes are avoided.5.3.12.2  When a Router Starts Forwarding         When a router begins forwarding, it SHOULD expedite the sending         of new routing information to all routers with which it         normally exchanges routing information.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 102]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19945.3.12.3  When an Interface Fails or is Disabled         If an interface fails or is disabled a router MUST remove and         stop advertising all routes in its forwarding database which         make use of that interface.  It MUST disable all static routes         which make use of that interface.  If other routes to the same         destination and TOS are learned or remembered by the router,         the router MUST choose the best alternate, and add it to its         forwarding database.  The router SHOULD send ICMP destination         unreachable or ICMP redirect messages, as appropriate, in reply         to all packets which it is unable to forward due to the         interface being unavailable.5.3.12.4  When an Interface is Enabled         If an interface which had not been available becomes available,         a router MUST reenable any static routes which use that         interface.  If routes which would use that interface are         learned by the router,  then these routes MUST be evaluated         along with all of the other learned routes, and the router MUST         make a decision as to which routes should be placed in the         forwarding database.  The implementor is referred to Chapter         [7], Application Layer - Routing Protocols for further         information on how this decision is made.         A router SHOULD expedite the sending of new routing information         to all routers with which it normally exchanges routing         information.5.3.13  IP Options      Several options, such as Record Route and Timestamp, contain slots      into which a router inserts its address when forwarding the      packet.  However, each such option has a finite number of slots,      and therefore a router may find that there is not free slot into      which it can insert its address.  No requirement listed below      should be construed as requiring a router to insert its address      into an option that has no remaining slot to insert it into.      Section [5.2.5] discusses how a router must choose which of its      addresses to insert into an option.5.3.13.1  Unrecognized Options         Unrecognized IP options in forwarded packets MUST be passed         through unchanged.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 103]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19945.3.13.2  Security Option         Some environments require the Security option in every packet;         such a requirement is outside the scope of this document and         the IP standard specification.  Note, however, that the         security options described in [INTERNET:1] and [INTERNET:16]         are obsolete.  Routers SHOULD IMPLEMENT the revised security         option described in [INTERNET:5].5.3.13.3  Stream Identifier Option         This option is obsolete.  If the Stream Identifier option is         present in a packet forwarded by the router, the option MUST be         ignored and passed through unchanged.5.3.13.4  Source Route Options         A router MUST implement support for source route options in         forwarded packets.  A router MAY implement a configuration         option which, when enabled, causes all source-routed packets to         be discarded.  However, such an option MUST NOT be enabled by         default.         DISCUSSION:            The ability to source route datagrams through the Internet            is important to various network diagnostic tools.  However,            in a few rare cases, source routing may be used to bypass            administrative and security controls within a network.            Specifically, those cases where manipulation of routing            tables is used to provide administrative separation in lieu            of other methods such as packet filtering may be vulnerable            through source routed packets.5.3.13.5  Record Route Option         Routers MUST support the Record Route option in forwarded         packets.         A router MAY provide a configuration option which, if enabled,         will cause the router to ignore (i.e. pass through unchanged)         Record Route options in forwarded packets.  If provided, such         an option MUST default to enabling the record-route.  This         option does not affect the processing of Record Route options         in datagrams received by the router itself (in particular,         Record Route options in ICMP echo requests will still be         processed in accordance with Section [4.3.3.6]).Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 104]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         DISCUSSION:            There are some people who believe that Record Route is a            security problem because it discloses information about the            topology of the network.  Thus, this document allows it to            be disabled.5.3.13.6  Timestamp Option         Routers MUST support the timestamp option in forwarded packets.         A timestamp value MUST follow the rules given in Section         [3.2.2.8] of [INTRO:2].         If the flags field = 3 (timestamp and prespecified address),         the router MUST add its timestamp if the next prespecified         address matches any of the router's IP addresses.  It is not         necessary that the prespecified address be either the address         of the interface on which the packet arrived or the address of         the interface over which it will be sent.         IMPLEMENTATION:            To maximize the utility of the timestamps contained in the            timestamp option, it is suggested that the timestamp            inserted be, as nearly as practical, the time at which the            packet arrived at the router.  For datagrams originated by            the router, the timestamp inserted should be, as nearly as            practical, the time at which the datagram was passed to the            network layer for transmission.         A router MAY provide a configuration option which, if enabled,         will cause the router to ignore (i.e. pass through unchanged)         Timestamp options in forwarded datagrams when the flag word is         set to zero (timestamps only) or one (timestamp and registering         IP address).  If provided, such an option MUST default to off         (that is, the router does not ignore the timestamp).  This         option does not affect the processing of Timestamp options in         datagrams received by the router itself (in particular, a         router will insert timestamps into Timestamp options in         datagrams received by the router, and Timestamp options in ICMP         echo requests will still be processed in accordance with         Section [4.3.3.6]).         DISCUSSION:            Like the Record Route option, the Timestamp option can            reveal information about a network's topology.  Some people            consider this to be a security concern.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 105]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19946.  TRANSPORT LAYERA router is not required to implement any Transport Layer protocolsexcept those required to support Application Layer protocols supportedby the router.  In practice, this means that most routers implement boththe Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and the User Datagram Protocol(UDP).6.1  USER DATAGRAM PROTOCOL - UDP   The User Datagram Protocol (UDP) is specified in [TRANS:1].   A router which implements UDP MUST be compliant, and SHOULD be   unconditionally compliant, with the requirements ofsection 4.1.3 of   [INTRO:2], except that:   o  This specification does not specify the interfaces between the      various protocol layers.  Thus, a router need not comply with      sections4.1.3.2,4.1.3.3, and4.1.3.5 of [INTRO:2] (except of      course where compliance is required for proper functioning of      Application Layer protocols supported by the router).   o  Contrary tosection 4.1.3.4 of [INTRO:2], an application MUST NOT      be able to disable to generation of UDP checksums.   DISCUSSION:      Although a particular application protocol may require that UDP      datagrams it receives must contain a UDP checksum, there is no      general requirement that received UDP datagrams contain UDP      checksums.  Of course, if a UDP checksum is present in a received      datagram, the checksum must be verified and the datagram discarded      if the checksum is incorrect.6.2  TRANSMISSION CONTROL PROTOCOL - TCP   The Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) is specified in [TRANS:2].   A router which implements TCP MUST be compliant, and SHOULD be   unconditionally compliant, with the requirements ofsection 4.2 of   [INTRO:2], except that:   o  This specification does not specify the interfaces between the      various protocol layers.  Thus, a router need not comply with the      following requirements of [INTRO:2] (except of course where      compliance is required for proper functioning of Application LayerAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 106]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      protocols supported by the router):Section 4.2.2.2:           Passing a received PSH flag to the application layer is now           OPTIONAL.Section 4.2.2.4:           A TCP MUST inform the application layer asynchronously           whenever it receives an Urgent pointer and there was           previously no pending urgent data, or whenever the Urgent           pointer advances in the data stream.  There MUST be a way for           the application to learn how much urgent data remains to be           read from the connection, or at least to determine whether or           not more urgent data remains to be read.Section 4.2.3.5:           An application MUST be able to set the value for R2 for a           particular connection.  For example, an interactive           application might set R2 to ``infinity,'' giving the user           control over when to disconnect.Section 4.2.3.7:           If an application on a multihomed host does not specify the           local IP address when actively opening a TCP connection, then           the TCP MUST ask the IP layer to select a local IP address           before sending the (first) SYN.  See the function           GET_SRCADDR() inSection 3.4.Section 4.2.3.8:           An application MUST be able to specify a source route when it           actively opens a TCP connection, and this MUST take           precedence over a source route received in a datagram.   o  For similar reasons, a router need not comply with any of the      requirements ofsection 4.2.4 of [INTRO:2].   o  The requirements ofsection 4.2.2.6 of [INTRO:2] are amended as      follows: a router which implements the host portion of MTU      discovery (discussed in Section [4.2.3.3] of this memo) uses 536      as the default value of SendMSS only if the path MTU is unknown;      if the path MTU is known, the default value for SendMSS is the      path MTU - 40.   o  The requirements ofsection 4.2.2.6 of [INTRO:2] are amended as      follows: ICMP Destination Unreachable codes 11 and 12 are      additional soft error conditions.  Therefore, these message MUST      NOT cause TCP to abort a connection.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 107]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994   DISCUSSION:      It should particularly be noted that a TCP implementation in a      router must conform to the following requirements of [INTRO:2]:      o  Providing a configurable TTL. [4.2.2.1]      o  Providing an interface to configure keep-alive behavior, if         keep-alives are used at all. [4.2.3.6]      o  Providing an error reporting mechanism, and the ability to         manage it.  [4.2.4.1]      o  Specifying type of service. [4.2.4.2]      The general paradigm applied is that if a particular interface is      visible outside the router, then all requirements for the      interface must be followed.  For example, if a router provides a      telnet function, then it will be generating traffic, likely to be      routed in the external networks.  Therefore, it must be able to      set the type of service correctly or else the telnet traffic may      not get through.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 108]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19947.  APPLICATION LAYER - ROUTING PROTOCOLS7.1  INTRODUCTION   An Autonomous System (AS) is defined as a set of routers all   belonging under the same authority and all subject to a consistent   set of routing policies.  Interior gateway protocols (IGPs) are used   to distribute routing information inside of an AS (i.e.  intra-AS   routing). Exterior gateway protocols are used to exchange routing   information between ASs (i.e. inter-AS routing).7.1.1  Routing Security Considerations      Routing is one of the few places where the Robustness Principle      (be liberal in what you accept) does not apply.  Routers should be      relatively suspicious in accepting routing data from other routing      systems.      A router SHOULD provide the ability to rank routing information      sources from most trustworthy to least trustworthy and to accept      routing information about any particular destination from the most      trustworthy sources first.  This was implicit in the original      core/stub autonomous system routing model using EGP and various      interior routing protocols.  It is even more important with the      demise of a central, trusted core.      A router SHOULD provide a mechanism to filter out obviously      invalid routes (such as those for net 127).      Routers MUST NOT by default redistribute routing data they do not      themselves use, trust or otherwise consider invalid.  In rare      cases, it may be necessary to redistribute suspicious information,      but this should only happen under direct intercession by some      human agency.      In general, routers must be at least a little paranoid about      accepting routing data from anyone, and must be especially careful      when they distribute routing information provided to them by      another party.  See below for specific guidelines.      Routers SHOULD IMPLEMENT peer-to-peer authentication for those      routing protocols that support them.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 109]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19947.1.2  Precedence      Except where the specification for a particular routing protocol      specifies otherwise, a router SHOULD set the IP Precedence value      for IP datagrams carrying routing traffic it originates to 6      (INTERNETWORK CONTROL).      DISCUSSION:         Routing traffic with VERY FEW exceptions should be the highest         precedence traffic on any network.  If a system's routing         traffic can't get through, chances are nothing else will.7.2  INTERIOR GATEWAY PROTOCOLS7.2.1  INTRODUCTION      An Interior Gateway Protocol (IGP) is used to distribute routing      information between the various routers in a particular AS.      Independent of the algorithm used to implement a particular IGP,      it should perform the following functions:      (1)  Respond quickly to changes in the internal topology of an AS      (2)  Provide a mechanism such that circuit flapping does not cause           continuous routing updates      (3)  Provide quick convergence to loop-free routing      (4)  Utilize minimal bandwidth      (5)  Provide equal cost routes to enable load-splitting      (6)  Provide a means for authentication of routing updates      Current IGPs used in the internet today are characterized as      either being being based on a distance-vector or a link-state      algorithm.      Several IGPs are detailed in this section, including those most      commonly used and some recently developed protocols which may be      widely used in the future.  Numerous other protocols intended for      use in intra-AS routing exist in the Internet community.      A router which implements any routing protocol (other than static      routes) MUST IMPLEMENT OSPF (see Section [7.2.2]) and MUSTAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 110]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      IMPLEMENT RIP (see Section [7.2.4]).  A router MAY implement      additional IGPs.7.2.2  OPEN SHORTEST PATH FIRST - OSPF7.2.2.1  Introduction         Shortest Path First (SPF) based routing protocols are a class         of link-state algorithms which are based on the shortest-path         algorithm of Dijkstra.  Although SPF based algorithms have been         around since the inception of the ARPANet, it is only recently         that they have achieved popularity both inside both the IP and         the OSI communities.  In an SPF based system, each router         obtains an exact replica of the entire topology database via a         process known as flooding.  Flooding insures a reliable         transfer of the information. Each individual router then runs         the SPF algorithm on its database to build the IP routing         table.  The OSPF routing protocol is an implementation of an         SPF algorithm.  The current version, OSPF version 2, is         specified in [ROUTE:1].  Note thatRFC-1131, which describes         OSPF version 1, is obsolete.         Note that to comply with Section [8.3] of this memo, a router         which implements OSPF MUST implement the OSPF MIB [MGT:14].7.2.2.2  Specific Issues         Virtual Links              There is a minor error in the specification that can cause              routing loops when all of the following conditions are              simultaneously true:              (1)  A virtual link is configured through a transit area,              (2)  Two separate paths exist, each having the same                   endpoints, but one utilizing only non-virtual                   backbone links, and the other using links in the                   transit area, and              (3)  The latter path is part of the (underlying physical                   representation of the) configured virtual link,                   routing loops may occur.              To prevent this, an implementation of OSPF SHOULD invokeAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 111]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994              the calculation inSection 16.3 of [ROUTE:1] whenever any              part of the path to the destination is a virtual link (the              specification only says this is necessary when the first              hop is a virtual link).7.2.2.3  New Version of OSPF         As of this writing (4/4/94) there is a new version of the OSPF         specification that is winding its way through the Internet         standardization process.  A prudent implementor will be aware         of this and develop an implementation accordingly.         The new version fixes several errors in the current         specification [ROUTE:1].  For this reason, implementors and         vendors ought to expect to upgrade to the new version         relatively soon.  In particular, the following problems exist         in [ROUTE:1] that the new version fixes:         o  In [ROUTE:1], certain configurations of virtual links can            lead to incorrect routing and/or routing loops. A fix for            this is specified in the new specification.         o  In [ROUTE:1], OSPF external routes to For example, a router            cannot import into an OSPF domain external routes both for            192.2.0.0, 255.255.0.0 and 192.2.0.0, 255.255.255.0.  Routes            such as these may become common with the deployment of CIDR            [INTERNET:15].  This has been addressed in the new OSPF            specification.         o  In [ROUTE:1], OSPF Network-LSAs originated before a router            changes its OSPF Router ID can confuse the Dijkstra            calculation if the router again becomes Designated Router            for the network. This has been fixed.7.2.3  INTERMEDIATE SYSTEM TO INTERMEDIATE SYSTEM - DUAL IS-IS      The American National Standards Institute (ANSI) X3S3.3 committee      has defined an intra-domain routing protocol.  This protocol is      titled Intermediate System to Intermediate System Routeing      Exchange Protocol.      Its application to an IP network has been defined in [ROUTE:2],      and is referred to as Dual IS-IS (or sometimes as Integrated IS-      IS).  IS-IS is based on a link-state (SPF) routing algorithm and      shares all the advantages for this class of protocols.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 112]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19947.2.4  ROUTING INFORMATION PROTOCOL - RIP7.2.4.1  Introduction         RIP is specified in [ROUTE:3].  Although RIP is still quite         important in the Internet, it is being replaced in         sophisticated applications by more modern IGPs such as the ones         described above.         Another common use for RIP is as a router discovery protocol.         Section [4.3.3.10] briefly touches upon this subject.7.2.4.2  Protocol Walk-Through         Dealing with changes in topology: [ROUTE:3], pp. 11              An implementation of RIP MUST provide a means for timing              out routes.  Since messages are occasionally lost,              implementations MUST NOT invalidate a route based on a              single missed update.              Implementations MUST by default wait six times the update              interval before invalidating a route.  A router MAY have              configuration options to alter this value.              DISCUSSION:                 It is important to routing stability that all routers                 in a RIP autonomous system use similar timeout value                 for invalidating routes, and therefore it is important                 that an implementation default to the timeout value                 specified in the RIP specification.  However, that                 timeout value is overly conservative in environments                 where packet loss is reasonably rare.  In such an                 environment, a network manager may wish to be able to                 decrease the timeout period in order to promote faster                 recovery from failures.              IMPLEMENTATION:                 There is a very simple mechanism which a router may use                 to meet the requirement to invalidate routes promptly                 after they time out.  Whenever the router scans the                 routing table to see if any routes have timed out, it                 also notes the age of the least recently updated route                 which has not yet timed out.  Subtracting this age fromAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 113]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994                 the timeout period gives the amount of time until the                 router again needs to scan the table for timed out                 routes.         Split Horizon: [ROUTE:3], pp. 14-15              An implementation of RIP MUST implement split horizon, a              scheme used for avoiding problems caused by including              routes in updates sent to the router from which they were              learned.              An implementation of RIP SHOULD implement Split horizon              with poisoned reverse, a variant of split horizon which              includes routes learned from a router sent to that router,              but sets their metric to infinity.  Because of the routing              overhead which may be incurred by implementing split              horizon with poisoned reverse, implementations MAY include              an option to select whether poisoned reverse is in effect.              An implementation SHOULD limit the period of time in which              it sends reverse routes at an infinite metric.              IMPLEMENTATION:                 Each of the following algorithms can be used to limit                 the period of time for which poisoned reverse is                 applied to a route.  The first algorithm is more                 complex but does a more complete job of limiting                 poisoned reverse to only those cases where it is                 necessary.                 The goal of both algorithms is to ensure that poison                 reverse is done for any destination whose route has                 changed in the last Route Lifetime (typically 180                 seconds), unless it can be sure that the previous route                 used the same output interface.  The Route Lifetime is                 used because that is the amount of time RIP will keep                 around an old route before declaring it stale.                 The time intervals (and derived variables) used in the                 following algorithms are as follows:                 Tu   The Update Timer; the number of seconds between                      RIP updates.  This typically defaults to 30                      seconds.                 Rl   The Route Lifetime, in seconds.  This is the                      amount of time that a route is presumed to beAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 114]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994                      good, without requiring an update.  This typically                      defaults to 180 seconds.                 Ul   The Update Loss; the number of consecutive updates                      that have to be lost or fail to mention a route                      before RIP deletes the route.  Ul is calculated to                      be (Rl/Tu)+1.  The +1 is to account for the fact                      that the first time the ifcounter is decremented                      will be less than Tu seconds after it is                      initialized.  Typically, Ul will be 7: (180/30)+1.                 In   The value to set ifcounter to when a destination                      is newly learned.  This value is Ul-4, where the 4                      is RIP's garbage collection timer/30                 The first algorithm is:                 - Associated with each destination is a counter, called                    the ifcounter below.  Poison reverse is done for any                    route whose destination's ifcounter is greater than                    zero.                 - After a regular (not triggered or in response to a                    request) update is sent, all of the non-zero                    ifcounters are decremented by one.                 - When a route to a destination is created, its                    ifcounter is set as follows:                    - If the new route is superseding a valid route, and                       the old route used a different (logical) output                       interface, then the ifcounter is set to Ul.                    - If the new route is superseding a stale route, and                       the old route used a different (logical) output                       interface, then the ifcounter is set to MAX(0, Ul                       - INT(seconds that the route has been stale/Ut).                    - If there was no previous route to the destination,                       the ifcounter is set to In.                    - Otherwise, the ifcounter is set to zero                 - RIP also maintains a timer, called the resettimer                    below.  Poison reverse is done on all routes                    whenever resettimer has not expired (regardless ofAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 115]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994                    the ifcounter values).                 - When RIP is started, restarted, reset, or otherwise                    has its routing table cleared, it sets the                    resettimer to go off in Rl seconds.                 The second algorithm is identical to the first except                 that:                 - The rules which set the ifcounter to non-zero values                    are changed to always set it to Rl/Tu, and                 - The resettimer is eliminated.            Triggered updates: [ROUTE:3], pp. 15-16; pp. 29                 Triggered updates (also called flash updates) are a                 mechanism for immediately notifying a router's                 neighbors when the router adds or deletes routes or                 changes their metrics.  A router MUST send a triggered                 update when routes are deleted or their metrics are                 increased.  A router MAY send a triggered update when                 routes are added or their metrics decreased.                 Since triggered updates can cause excessive routing                 overhead, implementations MUST use the following                 mechanism to limit the frequency of triggered updates:                 (1)  When a router sends a triggered update, it sets a                      timer to a random time between one and five                      seconds in the future.  The router must not                      generate additional triggered updates before this                      timer expires.                 (2)  If the router would generate a triggered update                      during this interval it sets a flag indicating                      that a triggered update is desired.  The router                      also logs the desired triggered update.                 (3)  When the triggered update timer expires, the                      router checks the triggered update flag. If the                      flag is set then the router sends a single                      triggered update which includes all of the changes                      that were logged.  The router then clears the flag                      and, since a triggered update was sent, restarts                      this algorithm.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 116]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994                 (4)  The flag is also cleared whenever a regular update                      is sent.                 Triggered updates SHOULD include all routes that have                 changed since the most recent regular (non-triggered)                 update.  Triggered updates MUST NOT include routes that                 have not changed since the most recent regular update.                 DISCUSSION:                    Sending all routes, whether they have changed                    recently or not, is unacceptable in triggered                    updates because the tremendous size of many Internet                    routing tables could otherwise result in                    considerable bandwidth being wasted on triggered                    updates.            Use of UDP: [ROUTE:3], pp. 18-19.                 RIP packets sent to an IP broadcast address SHOULD have                 their initial TTL set to one.                 Note that to comply with Section [6.1] of this memo, a                 router MUST use UDP checksums in RIP packets which it                 originates, MUST discard RIP packets received with                 invalid UDP checksums, but MUST not discard received                 RIP packets simply because they do not contain UDP                 checksums.            Addressing Considerations: [ROUTE:3], pp. 22                 A RIP implementation SHOULD support host routes.  If it                 does not, it MUST (as described on page 27 of                 [ROUTE:3]) ignore host routes in received updates.  A                 router MAY log ignored hosts routes.                 The special address 0.0.0.0 is used to describe a                 default route. A default route is used as the route of                 last resort (i.e. when a route to the specific net does                 not exist in the routing table). The router MUST be                 able to create a RIP entry for the address 0.0.0.0.            Input Processing - Response: [ROUTE:3], pp. 26                 When processing an update, the following validity                 checks MUST be performed:                 o  The response MUST be from UDP port 520.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 117]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994                 o  The source address MUST be on a directly connected                    subnet (or on a directly connected, non-subnetted                    network) to be considered valid.                 o  The source address MUST NOT be one of the router's                    addresses.                    DISCUSSION:                       Some networks, media, and interfaces allow a                       sending node to receive packets that it                       broadcasts.  A router must not accept its own                       packets as valid routing updates and process                       them.  The last requirement prevents a router                       from accepting its own routing updates and                       processing them (on the assumption that they were                       sent by some other router on the network).                 An implementation MUST NOT replace an existing route if                 the metric received is equal to the existing metric                 except in accordance with the following heuristic.                 An implementation MAY choose to implement the following                 heuristic to deal with the above situation. Normally,                 it is useless to change the route to a network from one                 router to another if both are advertised at the same                 metric. However, the route being advertised by one of                 the routers may be in the process of timing out.                 Instead of waiting for the route to timeout, the new                 route can be used after a specified amount of time has                 elapsed. If this heuristic is implemented, it MUST wait                 at least halfway to the expiration point before the new                 route is installed.7.2.4.3  Specific Issues         RIP Shutdown              An implementation of RIP SHOULD provide for a graceful              shutdown using the following steps:              (1)  Input processing is terminated,              (2)  Four updates are generated at random intervals of                   between two and four seconds, These updates contain                   all routes that were previously announced, but with                   some metric changes.  Routes that were beingAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 118]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994                   announced at a metric of infinity should continue to                   use this metric.  Routes that had been announced with                   a non-infinite metric should be announced with a                   metric of 15 (infinity - 1).                   DISCUSSION:                      The metric used for the above really ought to be                      16 (infinity); setting it to 15 is a kludge to                      avoid breaking certain old hosts which wiretap the                      RIP protocol.  Such a host will (erroneously)                      abort a TCP connection if it tries to send a                      datagram on the connection while the host has no                      route to the destination (even if the period when                      the host has no route lasts only a few seconds                      while RIP chooses an alternate path to the                      destination).         RIP Split Horizon and Static Routes              Split horizon SHOULD be applied to static routes by              default.  An implementation SHOULD provide a way to              specify, per static route, that split horizon should not              be applied to this route.7.2.5  GATEWAY TO GATEWAY PROTOCOL - GGP      The Gateway to Gateway protocol is considered obsolete and SHOULD      NOT be implemented.7.3  EXTERIOR GATEWAY PROTOCOLS7.3.1  INTRODUCTION      Exterior Gateway Protocols are utilized for inter-Autonomous      System routing to exchange reachability information for a set of      networks internal to a particular autonomous system to a      neighboring autonomous system.      The area of inter-AS routing is a current topic of research inside      the Internet Engineering Task Force.  The Exterior Gateway      Protocol (EGP) described in Section [7.3.3] has traditionally been      the inter-AS protocol of choice.  The Border Gateway Protocol      (BGP) eliminates many of the restrictions and limitations of EGP,      and is therefore growing rapidly in popularity.  A router is not      required to implement any inter-AS routing protocol.  However, if      a router does implement EGP it also MUST IMPLEMENT BGP.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 119]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      Although it was not designed as an exterior gateway protocol, RIP      (described in Section [7.2.4]) is sometimes used for inter-AS      routing.7.3.2  BORDER GATEWAY PROTOCOL - BGP7.3.2.1  Introduction         The Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) is an inter-AS routing         protocol which exchanges network reachability information with         other BGP speakers. The information for a network includes the         complete list of ASs that traffic must transit to reach that         network. This information can then be used to insure loop-free         paths.  This information is sufficient to construct a graph of         AS connectivity from which routing loops may be pruned and some         policy decisions at the AS level may be enforced.         BGP is defined by [ROUTE:4].  [ROUTE:5] specifies the proper         usage of BGP in the Internet, and provides some useful         implementation hints and guidelines.  [ROUTE:12] and [ROUTE:13]         provide additional useful information.         To comply with Section [8.3] of this memo, a router which         implements BGP MUST also implement the BGP MIB [MGT:15].         To characterize the set of policy decisions that can be         enforced using BGP, one must focus on the rule that an AS         advertises to its neighbor ASs only those routes that it itself         uses.  This rule reflects the hop-by-hop routing paradigm         generally used throughout the current Internet.  Note that some         policies cannot be supported by the hop-by-hop routing paradigm         and thus require techniques such as source routing to enforce.         For example, BGP does not enable one AS to send traffic to a         neighbor AS intending that that traffic take a different route         from that taken by traffic originating in the neighbor AS.  On         the other hand, BGP can support any policy conforming to the         hop-by-hop routing paradigm.         Implementors of BGP are strongly encouraged to follow the         recommendations outlined inSection 6 of [ROUTE:5].7.3.2.2  Protocol Walk-through         While BGP provides support for quite complex routing policies         (as an example seeSection 4.2 in [ROUTE:5]), it is not         required for all BGP implementors to support such policies.  AtAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 120]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         a minimum, however, a BGP implementation:         (1)  SHOULD allow an AS to control announcements of the BGP              learned routes to adjacent AS's. Implementations SHOULD              support such control with at least the granularity of a              single network. Implementations SHOULD also support such              control with the granularity of an autonomous system,              where the autonomous system may be either the autonomous              system that originated the route, or the autonomous system              that advertised the route to the local system (adjacent              autonomous system).         (2)  SHOULD allow an AS to prefer a particular path to a              destination (when more than one path is available).  Such              function SHOULD be implemented by allowing system              administrator to assign weights to Autonomous Systems, and              making route selection process to select a route with the              lowest weight (where weight of a route is defined as a sum              of weights of all AS's in the AS_PATH path attribute              associated with that route).         (3)  SHOULD allow an AS to ignore routes with certain AS's in              the AS_PATH path attribute. Such function can be              implemented by using technique outlined in (2), and by              assigning infinity as weights for such AS's. The route              selection process must ignore routes that have weight              equal to infinity.7.3.3  EXTERIOR GATEWAY PROTOCOL - EGP7.3.3.1  Introduction         The Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP) specifies an EGP which is         used to exchange reachability information between routers of         the same or differing autonomous systems. EGP is not considered         a routing protocol since there is no standard interpretation         (i.e. metric) for the distance fields in the EGP update         message, so distances are comparable only among routers of the         same AS.  It is however designed to provide high-quality         reachability information, both about neighbor routers and about         routes to non-neighbor routers.         EGP is defined by [ROUTE:6].  An implementor almost certainly         wants to read [ROUTE:7] and [ROUTE:8] as well, for they contain         useful explanations and background material.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 121]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         DISCUSSION:            The present EGP specification has serious limitations, most            importantly a restriction which limits routers to            advertising only those networks which are reachable from            within the router's autonomous system.  This restriction            against propagating third party EGP information is to            prevent long-lived routing loops.  This effectively limits            EGP to a two-level hierarchy.RFC-975 is not a part of the EGP specification, and should            be ignored.7.3.3.2  Protocol Walk-through         Indirect Neighbors:RFC-888, pp. 26            An implementation of EGP MUST include indirect neighbor            support.         Polling Intervals:RFC-904, pp. 10            The interval between Hello command retransmissions and the            interval between Poll retransmissions SHOULD be configurable            but there MUST be a minimum value defined.            The interval at which an implementation will respond to            Hello commands and Poll commands SHOULD be configurable but            there MUST be a minimum value defined.         Network Reachability:RFC-904, pp. 15            An implementation MUST default to not providing the external            list of routers in other autonomous systems; only the            internal list of routers together with the nets which are            reachable via those routers should be included in an Update            Response/Indication packet.  However, an implementation MAY            elect to provide a configuration option enabling the            external list to be provided.  An implementation MUST NOT            include in the external list routers which were learned via            the external list provided by a router in another autonomous            system. An implementation MUST NOT send a network back to            the autonomous system from which it is learned, i.e. it MUST            do split-horizon on an autonomous system level.            If more than 255 internal or 255 external routers need to beAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 122]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994            specified in a Network Reachability update, the networks            reachable from routers that can not be listed MUST be merged            into the list for one of the listed routers.  Which of the            listed routers is chosen for this purpose SHOULD be user            configurable, but SHOULD default to the source address of            the EGP update being generated.            An EGP update contains a series of blocks of network            numbers, where each block contains a list of network numbers            reachable at a particular distance via a particular router.            If more than 255 networks are reachable at a particular            distance via a particular router, they are split into            multiple blocks (all of which have the same distance).            Similarly, if more than 255 blocks are required to list the            networks reachable via a particular router, the router's            address is listed as many times as necessary to include all            of the blocks in the update.         Unsolicited Updates:RFC-904, pp. 16            If a network is shared with the peer, an implementation MUST            send an unsolicited update upon entry to the Up state            assuming that the source network is the shared network.         Neighbor Reachability:RFC-904, pp. 6, 13-15            The table on page 6 which describes the values of j and k            (the neighbor up and down thresholds) is incorrect.  It is            reproduced correctly here:               Name    Active  Passive Description               -----------------------------------------------                j         3       1    neighbor-up threshold                k         1       0    neighbor-down threshold            The value for k in passive mode also specified incorrectly            inRFC-904, pp. 14 The values in parenthesis should read:               (j = 1, k = 0, and T3/T1 = 4)            As an optimization, an implementation can refrain from            sending a Hello command when a Poll is due.  If an            implementation does so, it SHOULD provide a user            configurable option to disable this optimization.         Abort timer:RFC-904, pp. 6, 12, 13Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 123]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994            An EGP implementation MUST include support for the abort            timer (as documented insection 4.1.4 of RFC-904).  An            implementation SHOULD use the abort timer in the Idle state            to automatically issue a Start event to restart the protocol            machine.  Recommended values are P4 for a critical error            (Administratively prohibited, Protocol Violation and            Parameter Problem) and P5 for all others.  The abort timer            SHOULD NOT be started when a Stop event was manually            initiated (such as via a network management protocol).         Cease command received in Idle state:RFC-904, pp. 13            When the EGP state machine is in the Idle state, it MUST            reply to Cease commands with a Cease-ack response.         Hello Polling Mode:RFC-904, pp. 11            An EGP implementation MUST include support for both active            and passive polling modes.         Neighbor Acquisition Messages:RFC-904, pp. 18            As noted the Hello and Poll Intervals should only be present            in Request and Confirm messages.  Therefore the length of an            EGP Neighbor Acquisition Message is 14 bytes for a Request            or Confirm message and 10 bytes for a Refuse, Cease or            Cease-ack message.  Implementations MUST NOT send 14 bytes            for Refuse, Cease or Cease-ack messages but MUST allow for            implementations that send 14 bytes for these messages.         Sequence Numbers:RFC-904, pp. 10            Response or indication packets received with a sequence            number not equal to S MUST be discarded.  The send sequence            number S MUST be incremented just before the time a Poll            command is sent and at no other times.7.3.4  INTER-AS ROUTING WITHOUT AN EXTERIOR PROTOCOL      It is possible to exchange routing information between two      autonomous systems or routing domains without using a standard      exterior routing protocol between two separate, standard interior      routing protocols.  The most common way of doing this is to run      both interior protocols independently in one of the border routers      with an exchange of route information between the two processes.      As with the exchange of information from an EGP to an IGP, withoutAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 124]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      appropriate controls these exchanges of routing information      between two IGPs in a single router are subject to creation of      routing loops.7.4  STATIC ROUTING   Static routing provides a means of explicitly defining the next hop   from a router for a particular destination.  A router SHOULD provide   a means for defining a static route to a destination, where the   destination is defined by an address and an address mask.  The   mechanism SHOULD also allow for a metric to be specified for each   static route.   A router which supports a dynamic routing protocol MUST allow static   routes to be defined with any metric valid for the routing protocol   used.  The router MUST provide the ability for the user to specify a   list of static routes which may or may not be propagated via the   routing protocol.  In addition, a router SHOULD support the following   additional information if it supports a routing protocol that could   make use of the information. They are:   o  TOS,   o  Subnet mask, or   o  A metric specific to a given routing protocol that can import the      route.   DISCUSSION:      We intend that one needs to support only the things useful to the      given routing protocol.  The need for TOS should not require the      vendor to implement the other parts if they are not used.   Whether a router prefers a static route over a dynamic route (or vice   versa) or whether the associated metrics are used to choose between   conflicting static and dynamic routes SHOULD be configurable for each   static route.   A router MUST allow a metric to be assigned to a static route for   each routing domain that it supports.  Each such metric MUST be   explicitly assigned to a specific routing domain.  For example:        route 36.0.0.0 255.0.0.0 via 192.19.200.3 rip metric 3        route 36.21.0.0 255.255.0.0 via 192.19.200.4 ospf inter-area        metric 27Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 125]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994        route 36.22.0.0 255.255.0.0 via 192.19.200.5 egp 123 metric 99        route 36.23.0.0 255.255.0.0 via 192.19.200.6 igrp 47 metric 1 2        3 4 5   DISCUSSION:      It has been suggested that, ideally, static routes should have      preference values rather than metrics (since metrics can only be      compared with metrics of other routes in the same routing domain,      the metric of a static route could only be compared with metrics      of other static routes).  This is contrary to some current      implementations, where static routes really do have metrics, and      those metrics are used to determine whether a particular dynamic      route overrides the static route to the same destination.  Thus,      this document uses the term metric rather than preference.      This technique essentially makes the static route into a RIP      route, or an OSPF route (or whatever, depending on the domain of      the metric).  Thus, the route lookup algorithm of that domain      applies.  However, this is NOT route leaking, in that coercing a      static route into a dynamic routing domain does not authorize the      router to redistribute the route into the dynamic routing domain.      For static routes not put into a specific routing domain, the      route lookup algorithm is:      (1)  Basic match      (2)  Longest match      (3)  Weak TOS (if TOS supported)      (4)  Best metric (where metric are implementation-defined)      The last step may not be necessary, but it's useful in the case      where you want to have a primary static route over one interface      and a secondary static route over an alternate interface, with      failover to the alternate path if the interface for the primary      route fails.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 126]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19947.5  FILTERING OF ROUTING INFORMATION   Each router within a network makes forwarding decisions based upon   information contained within its forwarding database.  In a simple   network the contents of the database may be statically configured.   As the network grows more complex, the need for dynamic updating of   the forwarding database becomes critical to the efficient operation   of the network.   If the data flow through a network is to be as efficient as possible,   it is necessary to provide a mechanism for controlling the   propagation of the information a router uses to build its forwarding   database.  This control takes the form of choosing which sources of   routing information should be trusted and selecting which pieces of   the information to believe.  The resulting forwarding database is a   filtered version of the available routing information.   In addition to efficiency, controlling the propagation of routing   information can reduce instability by preventing the spread of   incorrect or bad routing information.   In some cases local policy may require that complete routing   information not be widely propagated.   These filtering requirements apply only to non-SPF-based protocols   (and therefore not at all to routers which don't implement any   distance vector protocols).7.5.1  Route Validation      A router SHOULD log as an error any routing update advertising a      route to network zero, subnet zero, or subnet -1, unless the      routing protocol from which the update was received uses those      values to encode special routes (such as default routes).7.5.2  Basic Route Filtering      Filtering of routing information allows control of paths used by a      router to forward packets it receives.  A router should be      selective in which sources of routing information it listens to      and what routes it believes.  Therefore, a router MUST provide the      ability to specify:      o  On which logical interfaces routing information will be         accepted and which routes will be accepted from each logical         interface.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 127]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      o  Whether all routes or only a default route is advertised on a         logical interface.      Some routing protocols do not recognize logical interfaces as a      source of routing information.  In such cases the router MUST      provide the ability to specify      o  from which other routers routing information will be accepted.      For example, assume a router connecting one or more leaf networks      to the main portion or backbone of a larger network.  Since each      of the leaf networks has only one path in and out, the router can      simply send a default route to them.  It advertises the leaf      networks to the main network.7.5.3  Advanced Route Filtering      As the topology of a network grows more complex, the need for more      complex route filtering arises.  Therefore, a router SHOULD      provide the ability to specify independently for each routing      protocol:      o  Which logical interfaces or routers routing information         (routes) will be accepted from and which routes will be         believed from each other router or logical interface,      o  Which routes will be sent via which logical interface(s), and      o  Which routers routing information will be sent to, if this is         supported by the routing protocol in use.      In many situations it is desirable to assign a reliability      ordering to routing information received from another router      instead of the simple believe or don't believe choice listed in      the first bullet above.  A router MAY provide the ability to      specify:      o  A reliability or preference to be assigned to each route         received.  A route with higher reliability will be chosen over         one with lower reliability regardless of the routing metric         associated with each route.      If a router supports assignment of preferences, the router MUST      NOT propagate any routes it does not prefer as first party      information.  If the routing protocol being used to propagate the      routes does not support distinguishing between first and third      party information, the router MUST NOT propagate any routes itAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 128]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      does not prefer.      DISCUSSION:         For example, assume a router receives a route to network C from         router R and a route to the same network from router S.  If         router R is considered more reliable than router S traffic         destined for network C will be forwarded to router R regardless         of the route received from router S.      Routing information for routes which the router does not use      (router S in the above example) MUST NOT be passed to any other      router.7.6  INTER-ROUTING-PROTOCOL INFORMATION EXCHANGE   Routers MUST be able to exchange routing information between separate   IP interior routing protocols, if independent IP routing processes   can run in the same router.  Routers MUST provide some mechanism for   avoiding routing loops when routers are configured for bi-directional   exchange of routing information between two separate interior routing   processes.  Routers MUST provide some priority mechanism for choosing   routes from among independent routing processes.  Routers SHOULD   provide administrative control of IGP-IGP exchange when used across   administrative boundaries.   Routers SHOULD provide some mechanism for translating or transforming   metrics on a per network basis.  Routers (or routing protocols) MAY   allow for global preference of exterior routes imported into an IGP.   DISCUSSION:      Different IGPs use different metrics, requiring some translation      technique when introducing information from one protocol into      another protocol with a different form of metric.  Some IGPs can      run multiple instances within the same router or set of routers.      In this case metric information can be preserved exactly or      translated.      There are at least two techniques for translation between      different routing processes.  The static (or reachability)      approach uses the existence of a route advertisement in one IGP to      generate a route advertisement in the other IGP with a given      metric.  The translation or tabular approach uses the metric in      one IGP to create a metric in the other IGP through use of either      a function (such as adding a constant) or a table lookup.      Bi-directional exchange of routing information is dangerous      without control mechanisms to limit feedback.  This is the sameAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 129]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      problem that distance vector routing protocols must address with      the split horizon technique and that EGP addresses with the      third-party rule.  Routing loops can be avoided explicitly through      use of tables or lists of permitted/denied routes or implicitly      through use of a split horizon rule, a no-third-party rule, or a      route tagging mechanism.  Vendors are encouraged to use implicit      techniques where possible to make administration easier for      network operators.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 130]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19948.  APPLICATION LAYER - NETWORK MANAGEMENT PROTOCOLSNote that this chapter supersedes any requirements stated insection 6.3of [INTRO:3].8.1  The Simple Network Management Protocol - SNMP8.1.1  SNMP Protocol Elements      Routers MUST be manageable by SNMP [MGT:3].  The SNMP MUST operate      using UDP/IP as its transport and network protocols.  Others MAY      be supported (e.g., see [MGT:25, MGT:26, MGT:27, and MGT:28]).      SNMP management operations MUST operate as if the SNMP was      implemented on the router itself. Specifically, management      operations MUST be effected by sending SNMP management requests to      any of the IP addresses assigned to any of the router's      interfaces. The actual management operation may be performed      either by the router or by a proxy for the router.      DISCUSSION:         This wording is intended to allow management either by proxy,         where the proxy device responds to SNMP packets which have one         of the router's IP addresses in the packets destination address         field, or the SNMP is implemented directly in the router itself         and receives packets and responds to them in the proper manner.         It is important that management operations can be sent to one         of the router's IP Addresses.  In diagnosing network problems         the only thing identifying the router that is available may be         one of the router's IP address; obtained perhaps by looking         through another router's routing table.      All SNMP operations (get, get-next, get-response, set, and trap)      MUST be implemented.      Routers MUST provide a mechanism for rate-limiting the generation      of SNMP trap messages.  Routers MAY provide this mechanism via the      algorithms for asynchronous alert management described in [MGT:5].      DISCUSSION:         Although there is general agreement about the need to rate-         limit traps, there is not yet consensus on how this is best         achieved.  The reference cited is considered experimental.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 131]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19948.2  Community Table   For the purposes of this specification, we assume that there is an   abstract `community table' in the router.  This table contains   several entries, each entry for a specific community and containing   the parameters necessary to completely define the attributes of that   community.  The actual implementation method of the abstract   community table is, of course, implementation specific.   A router's community table MUST allow for at least one entry and   SHOULD allow for at least two entries.   DISCUSSION:      A community table with zero capacity is useless.  It means that      the router will not recognize any communities and, therefore, all      SNMP operations will be rejected.      Therefore, one entry is the minimal useful size of the table.      Having two entries allows one entry to be limited to read-only      access while the other would have write capabilities.   Routers MUST allow the user to manually (i.e., without using SNMP)   examine, add, delete and change entries in the SNMP community table.   The user MUST be able to set the community name.  The user MUST be   able to configure communities as read-only (i.e., they do not allow   SETs) or read-write (i.e., they do allow SETs).   The user MUST be able to define at least one IP address to which   traps are sent for each community.  These addresses MUST be definable   on a per-community basis.  Traps MUST be enablable or disablable on a   per-community basis.   A router SHOULD provide the ability to specify a list of valid   network managers for any particular community.  If enabled, a router   MUST validate the source address of the SNMP datagram against the   list and MUST discard the datagram if its address does not appear.   If the datagram is discarded the router MUST take all actions   appropriate to an SNMP authentication failure.   DISCUSSION:      This is a rather limited authentication system, but coupled with      various forms of packet filtering may provide some small measure      of increased security.   The community table MUST be saved in non-volatile storage.   The initial state of the community table SHOULD contain one entry,Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 132]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994   with the community name string public and read-only access.  The   default state of this entry MUST NOT send traps.  If it is   implemented, then this entry MUST remain in the community table until   the administrator changes it or deletes it.   DISCUSSION:      By default, traps are not sent to this community.  Trap PDUs are      sent to unicast IP addresses. This address must be configured into      the router in some manner. Before the configuration occurs, there      is no such address, so to whom should the trap be sent? Therefore      trap sending to the public community defaults to be disabled. This      can, of course, be changed by an administrative operation once the      router is operational.8.3  Standard MIBS   All MIBS relevant to a router's configuration are to be implemented.   To wit:   o  The System, Interface, IP, ICMP, and UDP groups of MIB-II [MGT:2]      MUST be implemented.   o  The Interface Extensions MIB [MGT:18] MUST be implemented.   o  The IP Forwarding Table MIB [MGT:20] MUST be implemented.   o  If the router implements TCP (e.g. for Telnet) then the TCP group      of MIB-II [MGT:2] MUST be implemented.   o  If the router implements EGP then the EGP group of MIB-II [MGT:2]      MUST be implemented.   o  If the router supports OSPF then the OSPF MIB [MGT:14] MUST be      implemented.   o  If the router supports BGP then the BGP MIB [MGT:15] MUST be      implemented.   o  If the router has Ethernet, 802.3, or StarLan interfaces then the      Ethernet-Like MIB [MGT:6] MUST be implemented.   o  If the router has 802.4 interfaces then the 802.4 MIB [MGT:7] MAY      be implemented.   o  If the router has 802.5 interfaces then the 802.5 MIB [MGT:8] MUST      be implemented.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 133]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994   o  If the router has FDDI interfaces that implement ANSI SMT 7.3 then      the FDDI MIB [MGT:9] MUST be implemented.   o  If the router has FDDI interfaces that implement ANSI SMT 6.2 then      the FDDI MIB [MGT:29] MUST be implemented.   o  If the router has RS-232 interfaces then the RS-232 [MGT:10] MIB      MUST be implemented.   o  If the router has T1/DS1 interfaces then the T1/DS1 MIB [MGT:16]      MUST be implemented.   o  If the router has T3/DS3 interfaces then the T3/DS3 MIB [MGT:17]      MUST be implemented.   o  If the router has SMDS interfaces then the SMDS Interface Protocol      MIB [MGT:19] MUST be implemented.   o  If the router supports PPP over any of its interfaces then the PPP      MIBs [MGT:11], [MGT:12], and [MGT:13] MUST be implemented.   o  If the router supports RIP Version 2 then the RIP Version 2 MIB      [MGT:21] MUST be implemented.   o  If the router supports X.25 over any of its interfaces then the      X.25 MIBs [MGT:22, MGT:23 and MGT:24] MUST be implemented.8.4  Vendor Specific MIBS   The Internet Standard and Experimental MIBs do not cover the entire   range of statistical, state, configuration and control information   that may be available in a network element. This information is,   never the less, extremely useful. Vendors of routers (and other   network devices) generally have developed MIB extensions that cover   this information. These MIB extensions are called Vendor Specific   MIBs.   The Vendor Specific MIB for the router MUST provide access to all   statistical, state, configuration, and control information that is   not available through the Standard and Experimental MIBs that have   been implemented.  This information MUST be available for both   monitoring and control operations.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 134]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994   DISCUSSION:      The intent of this requirement is to provide the ability to do      anything on the router via SNMP that can be done via a console.  A      certain minimal amount of configuration is necessary before SNMP      can operate (e.g., the router must have an IP address). This      initial configuration can not be done via SNMP. However, once the      initial configuration is done, full capabilities ought to be      available via network management.   The vendor SHOULD make available the specifications for all Vendor   Specific MIB variables. These specifications MUST conform to the SMI   [MGT:1] and the descriptions MUST be in the form specified in   [MGT:4].   DISCUSSION:      Making the Vendor Specific MIB available to the user is necessary.      Without this information the users would not be able to configure      their network management systems to be able to access the Vendor      Specific parameters.  These parameters would then be useless.      The format of the MIB specification is also specified.  Parsers      which read MIB specifications and generate the needed tables for      the network management station are available.  These parsers      generally understand only the standard MIB specification format.8.5  Saving Changes   Parameters altered by SNMP MAY be saved to non-volatile storage.   DISCUSSION:      Reasons why this requirement is a MAY:      o  The exact physical nature of non-volatile storage is not         specified in this document.  Hence, parameters may be saved in         NVRAM/EEPROM, local floppy or hard disk, or in some TFTP file         server or BOOTP server, etc. Suppose that that this information         is in a file that is retrieved via TFTP. In that case, a change         made to a configuration parameter on the router would need to         be propagated back to the file server holding the configuration         file.  Alternatively, the SNMP operation would need to be         directed to the file server, and then the change somehow         propagated to the router.  The answer to this problem does not         seem obvious.         This also places more requirements on the host holding the         configuration information than just having an available tftpAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 135]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         server, so much more that its probably unsafe for a vendor to         assume that any potential customer will have a suitable host         available.      o  The timing of committing changed parameters to non-volatile         storage is still an issue for debate. Some prefer to commit all         changes immediately. Others prefer to commit changes to non-         volatile storage only upon an explicit command.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 136]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 19949.  APPLICATION LAYER - MISCELLANEOUS PROTOCOLSFor all additional application protocols that a router implements, therouter MUST be compliant and SHOULD be unconditionally compliant withthe relevant requirements of [INTRO:3].9.1  BOOTP9.1.1  Introduction      The Bootstrap Protocol (BOOTP) is a UDP/IP-based protocol which      allows a booting host to configure itself dynamically and without      user supervision.  BOOTP provides a means to notify a host of its      assigned IP address, the IP address of a boot server host, and the      name of a file to be loaded into memory and executed ([APPL:1]).      Other configuration information such as the local subnet mask, the      local time offset, the addresses of default routers, and the      addresses of various Internet servers can also be communicated to      a host using BOOTP ([APPL:2]).9.1.2  BOOTP Relay Agents      In many cases, BOOTP clients and their associated BOOTP server(s)      do not reside on the same IP network or subnet.  In such cases, a      third-party agent is required to transfer BOOTP messages between      clients and servers.  Such an agent was originally referred to as      a BOOTP forwarding agent.  However, in order to avoid confusion      with the IP forwarding function of a router, the name BOOTP relay      agent has been adopted instead.      DISCUSSION:         A BOOTP relay agent performs a task which is distinct from a         router's normal IP forwarding function.  While a router         normally switches IP datagrams between networks more-or-less         transparently, a BOOTP relay agent may more properly be thought         to receive BOOTP messages as a final destination and then         generate new BOOTP messages as a result.  One should resist the         notion of simply forwarding a BOOTP message straight through         like a regular packet.      This relay-agent functionality is most conveniently located in the      routers which interconnect the clients and servers (although it      may alternatively be located in a host which is directly connected      to the client subnet).      A router MAY provide BOOTP relay-agent capability.  If it does, itAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 137]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      MUST conform to the specifications in [APPL:3].      Section [5.2.3] discussed the circumstances under which a packet      is delivered locally (to the router).  All locally delivered UDP      messages whose UDP destination port number is BOOTPS (67) are      considered for special processing by the router's logical BOOTP      relay agent.      Sections [4.2.2.11] and [5.3.7] discussed invalid IP source      addresses.  According to these rules, a router must not forward      any received datagram whose IP source address is 0.0.0.0.      However, routers which support a BOOTP relay agent MUST accept for      local delivery to the relay agent BOOTREQUEST messages whose IP      source address is 0.0.0.0.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 138]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 199410.  OPERATIONS AND MAINTENANCEThis chapter supersedes any requirements stated insection 6.2 of[INTRO:3].Facilities to support operation and maintenance (O&M) activities form anessential part of any router implementation.  Although these functionsdo not seem to relate directly to interoperability, they are essentialto the network manager who must make the router interoperate and musttrack down problems when it doesn't.  This chapter also includes somediscussion of router initialization and of facilities to assist networkmanagers in securing and accounting for their networks.10.1  Introduction   The following kinds of activities are included under router O&M:   o  Diagnosing hardware problems in the router's processor, in its      network interfaces, or in its connected networks, modems, or      communication lines.   o  Installing new hardware   o  Installing new software.   o  Restarting or rebooting the router after a crash.   o  Configuring (or reconfiguring) the router.   o  Detecting and diagnosing Internet problems such as congestion,      routing loops, bad IP addresses, black holes, packet avalanches,      and misbehaved hosts.   o  Changing network topology, either temporarily (e.g., to bypass a      communication line problem) or permanently.   o  Monitoring the status and performance of the routers and the      connected networks.   o  Collecting traffic statistics for use in (Inter-)network planning.   o  Coordinating the above activities with appropriate vendors and      telecommunications specialists.   Routers and their connected communication lines are often operated as   a system by a centralized O&M organization.  This organization may   maintain a (Inter-)network operation center, or NOC, to carry out itsAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 139]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994   O&M functions.  It is essential that routers support remote control   and monitoring from such a NOC through an Internet path, since   routers might not be connected to the same network as their NOC.   Since a network failure may temporarily preclude network access, many   NOCs insist that routers be accessible for network management via an   alternative means, often dialup modems attached to console ports on   the routers.   Since an IP packet traversing an internet will often use routers   under the control of more than one NOC, Internet problem diagnosis   will often involve cooperation of personnel of more than one NOC.  In   some cases, the same router may need to be monitored by more than one   NOC, but only if necessary, because excessive monitoring could impact   a router's performance.   The tools available for monitoring at a NOC may cover a wide range of   sophistication. Current implementations include multi-window, dynamic   displays of the entire router system. The use of AI techniques for   automatic problem diagnosis is proposed for the future.   Router O&M facilities discussed here are only a part of the large and   difficult problem of Internet management.  These problems encompass   not only multiple management organizations, but also multiple   protocol layers.  For example, at the current stage of evolution of   the Internet architecture, there is a strong coupling between host   TCP implementations and eventual IP-level congestion in the router   system [OPER:1].  Therefore, diagnosis of congestion problems will   sometimes require the monitoring of TCP statistics in hosts.  There   are currently a number of R&D efforts in progress in the area of   Internet management and more specifically router O&M. These R&D   efforts have already produced standards for router O&M. This is also   an area in which vendor creativity can make a significant   contribution.10.2  Router Initialization10.2.1  Minimum Router Configuration      There exists a minimum set of conditions that must be satisfied      before a router may forward packets.  A router MUST NOT enable      forwarding on any physical interface unless either:      (1)  The router knows the IP address and associated subnet mask of           at least one logical interface associated with that physical           interface, orAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 140]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      (2)  The router knows that the interface is an unnumbered           interface and also knows its router-id.      These parameters MUST be explicitly configured:      o  A router MUST NOT use factory-configured default values for its         IP addresses, subnet masks, or router-id, and      o  A router MUST NOT assume that an unconfigured interface is an         unnumbered interface.      DISCUSSION:         There have been instances in which routers have been shipped         with vendor-installed default addresses for interfaces.  In a         few cases, this has resulted in routers advertising these         default addresses into active networks.10.2.2  Address and Address Mask Initialization      A router MUST allow its IP addresses and their subnet masks to be      statically configured and saved in permanent storage.      A router MAY obtain its IP addresses and their corresponding      subnet masks dynamically as a side effect of the system      initialization process (seeSection 10.2.3]);      If the dynamic method is provided, the choice of method to be used      in a particular router MUST be configurable.      As was described in Section [4.2.2.11], IP addresses are not      permitted to have the value 0 or -1 for any of the <Host-number>,      <Network-number>, or <Subnet-number> fields.  Therefore, a router      SHOULD NOT allow an IP address or subnet mask to be set to a value      which would make any of the the three fields above have the value      zero or -1.      DISCUSSION:         It is possible using variable length subnet masks to create         situations in which routing is ambiguous (i.e., two routes with         different but equally-specific subnet masks match a particular         destination address).  We suspect that a router could, when         setting a subnet mask, check whether the mask would cause         routing to be ambiguous, and that implementors might be able to         decrease their customer support costs by having routers         prohibit or log such erroneous configurations.  However, at         this time we do not require routers to make such checks becauseAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 141]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         we know of no published method for accurately making this         check.      A router SHOULD make the following checks on any subnet mask it      installs:      o  The mask is not all 1-bits.      o  The bits which correspond to the network number part of the         address are all set to 1.      DISCUSSION:         The masks associated with routes are also sometimes called         subnet masks, this test should not be applied to them.10.2.3  Network Booting using BOOTP and TFTP      There has been a lot of discussion on how routers can and should      be booted from the network.  In general, these discussions have      centered around BOOTP and TFTP.  Currently, there are routers that      boot with TFTP from the network.  There is no reason that BOOTP      could not be used for locating the server that the boot image      should be loaded from.      In general, BOOTP is a protocol used to boot end systems, and      requires some stretching to accommodate its use with routers.  If      a router is using BOOTP to locate the current boot host, it should      send a BOOTP Request with its hardware address for its first      interface, or, if it has been previously configured otherwise,      with either another interface's hardware address, or another      number to put in the hardware address field of the BOOTP packet.      This is to allow routers without hardware addresses (like sync      line only routers) to use BOOTP for bootload discovery.  TFTP can      then be used to retrieve the image found in the BOOTP Reply.  If      there are no configured interfaces or numbers to use, a router MAY      cycle through the interface hardware addresses it has until a      match is found by the BOOTP server.      A router SHOULD IMPLEMENT the ability to store parameters learned      via BOOTP into local stable storage.  A router MAY implement the      ability to store a system image loaded over the network into local      stable storage.      A router MAY have a facility to allow a remote user to request      that the router get a new boot image.  Differentiation should beAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 142]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      made between getting the new boot image from one of three      locations: the one included in the request, from the last boot      image server, and using BOOTP to locate a server.10.3  Operation and Maintenance10.3.1  Introduction      There is a range of possible models for performing O&M functions      on a router.  At one extreme is the local-only model, under which      the O&M functions can only be executed locally (e.g., from a      terminal plugged into the router machine).  At the other extreme,      the fully-remote model allows only an absolute minimum of      functions to be performed locally (e.g., forcing a boot), with      most O&M being done remotely from the NOC.  There are intermediate      models, such as one in which NOC personnel can log into the router      as a host, using the Telnet protocol, to perform functions which      can also be invoked locally.  The local-only model may be adequate      in a few router installations, but in general remote operation      from a NOC will be required, and therefore remote O&M provisions      are required for most routers.      Remote O&M functions may be exercised through a control agent      (program).  In the direct approach, the router would support      remote O&M functions directly from the NOC using standard Internet      protocols (e.g., SNMP, UDP or TCP); in the indirect approach, the      control agent would support these protocols and control the router      itself using proprietary protocols.  The direct approach is      preferred, although either approach is acceptable.  The use of      specialized host hardware and/or software requiring significant      additional investment is discouraged; nevertheless, some vendors      may elect to provide the control agent as an integrated part of      the network in which the routers are a part.  If this is the case,      it is required that a means be available to operate the control      agent from a remote site using Internet protocols and paths and      with equivalent functionality with respect to a local agent      terminal.      It is desirable that a control agent and any other NOC software      tools which a vendor provides operate as user programs in a      standard operating system.  The use of the standard Internet      protocols UDP and TCP for communicating with the routers should      facilitate this.      Remote router monitoring and (especially) remote router control      present important access control problems which must be addressed.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 143]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      Care must also be taken to ensure control of the use of router      resources for these functions.  It is not desirable to let router      monitoring take more than some limited fraction of the router CPU      time, for example.  On the other hand, O&M functions must receive      priority so they can be exercised when the router is congested,      since often that is when O&M is most needed.10.3.2  Out Of Band Access      Routers MUST support Out-Of-Band (OOB) access.  OOB access SHOULD      provide the same functionality as in-band access.      DISCUSSION:         This Out-Of-Band access will allow the NOC a way to access         isolated routers during times when network access is not         available.         Out-Of-Band access is an important management tool for the         network administrator.  It allows the access of equipment         independent of the network connections.  There are many ways to         achieve this access.  Whichever one is used it is important         that the access is independent of the network connections.  An         example of Out-Of-Band access would be a serial port connected         to a modem that provides dial up access to the router.         It is important that the OOB access provides the same         functionality as in-band access.  In-band access, or accessing         equipment through the existing network connection, is limiting,         because most of the time, administrators need to reach         equipment to figure out why it is unreachable.  In band access         is still very important for configuring a router, and for         troubleshooting more subtle problems.10.3.2  Router O&M Functions10.3.2.1  Maintenance - Hardware Diagnosis         Each router SHOULD operate as a stand-alone device for the         purposes of local hardware maintenance.  Means SHOULD be         available to run diagnostic programs at the router site using         only on-site tools.  A router SHOULD be able to run diagnostics         in case of a fault.  For suggested hardware and software         diagnostics see Section [10.3.3].Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 144]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 199410.3.2.2  Control - Dumping and Rebooting         A router MUST include both in-band and out-of-band mechanisms         to allow the network manager to reload, stop, and restart the         router.  A router SHOULD also contain a mechanism (such as a         watchdog timer) which will reboot the router automatically if         it hangs due to a software or hardware fault.         A router SHOULD IMPLEMENT a mechanism for dumping the contents         of a router's memory (and/or other state useful for vendor         debugging after a crash), and either saving them on a stable         storage device local to the router or saving them on another         host via an up-line dump mechanism such as TFTP (see [OPER:2],         [INTRO:3]).10.3.2.3  Control - Configuring the Router         Every router has configuration parameters which may need to be         set.  It SHOULD be possible to update the parameters without         rebooting the router; at worst, a restart MAY be required.         There may be cases when it is not possible to change parameters         without rebooting the router (for instance, changing the IP         address of an interface).  In these cases, care should be taken         to minimize disruption to the router and the surrounding         network.         There SHOULD be a way to configure the router over the network         either manually or automatically.  A router SHOULD be able to         upload or download its parameters from a host or another         router, and these parameters SHOULD be convertible into some         sort of text format for making changes and then back to the         form the router can read.  A router SHOULD have some sort of         stable storage for its configuration. A router SHOULD NOT         believe protocols such as RARP, ICMP Address Mask Reply, and         MAY not believe BOOTP.         DISCUSSION:            It is necessary to note here that in the future RARP, ICMP            Address Mask Reply, BOOTP and other mechanisms may be needed            to allow a router to auto-configure.  Although routers may            in the future be able to configure automatically, the intent            here is to discourage this practice in a production            environment until such time as auto-configuration has been            tested more thoroughly. The intent is NOT to discourage            auto-configuration all together.  In cases where a router is            expected to get its configuration automatically it may be            wise to allow the router to believe these things as it comesAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 145]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994            up and then ignore them after it has gotten its            configuration.10.3.2.4  Netbooting of System Software         A router SHOULD keep its system image in local non-volatile         storage such as PROM, NVRAM, or disk. It MAY also be able to         load its system software over the network from a host or         another router.         A router which can keep its system image in local non-volatile         storage MAY be configurable to boot its system image over the         network.  A router which offers this option SHOULD be         configurable to boot the system image in its non-volatile local         storage if it is unable to boot its system image over the         network.         DISCUSSION:            It is important that the router be able to come up and run            on its own.  NVRAM may be a particular solution for routers            used in large networks, since changing PROMs can be quite            time consuming for a network manager responsible for            numerous or geographically dispersed routers.  It is            important to be able to netboot the system image because            there should be an easy way for a router to get a bug fix or            new feature more quickly than getting PROMS installed.  Also            if the router has NVRAM instead of PROMs, it will netboot            the image and then put it in NVRAM.         A router MAY also be able to distinguish between different         configurations based on which software it is running. If         configuration commands change from one software version to         another, it would be helpful if the router could use the         configuration that was compatible with the software.10.3.2.5  Detecting and responding to misconfiguration         There MUST be mechanisms for detecting and responding to         misconfigurations.  If a command is executed incorrectly, the         router SHOULD give an error message.  The router SHOULD NOT         accept a poorly formed command as if it were correct.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 146]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         DISCUSSION:            There are cases where it is not possible to detect errors:            the command is correctly formed, but incorrect with respect            to the network.  This may be detected by the router, but may            not be possible.         Another form of misconfiguration is misconfiguration of the         network to which the router is attached.  A router MAY detect         misconfigurations in the network.  The router MAY log these         findings to a file, either on the router or a host, so that the         network manager will see that there are possible problems on         the network.         DISCUSSION:            Examples of such misconfigurations might be another router            with the same address as the one in question or a router            with the wrong subnet mask.  If a router detects such            problems it is probably not the best idea for the router to            try to fix the situation.  That could cause more harm than            good.10.3.2.6  Minimizing Disruption         Changing the configuration of a router SHOULD have minimal         affect on the network.   Routing tables SHOULD NOT be         unnecessarily flushed when a simple change is made to the         router.  If a router is running several routing protocols,         stopping one routing protocol SHOULD NOT disrupt other routing         protocols, except in the case where one network is learned by         more than one routing protocol.         DISCUSSION:            It is the goal of a network manager to run a network so that            users of the network get the best connectivity possible.            Reloading a router for simple configuration changes can            cause disruptions in routing and ultimately cause            disruptions to the network and its users.  If routing tables            are unnecessarily flushed, for instance, the default route            will be lost as well as specific routes to sites within the            network.  This sort of disruption will cause significant            downtime for the users. It is the purpose of this section to            point out that whenever possible, these disruptions should            be avoided.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 147]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 199410.3.2.7  Control - Troubleshooting Problems         (1)  A router MUST provide in-band network access, but (except              as required by Section [8.2]) for security considerations              this access SHOULD be disabled by default.  Vendors MUST              document the default state of any in-band access.              DISCUSSION:                 In-band access primarily refers to access via the                 normal network protocols which may or may not affect                 the permanent operational state of the router.  This                 includes, but is not limited to Telnet/RLOGIN console                 access and SNMP operations.                 This was a point of contention between the operational                 out of the box and secure out of the box contingents.                 Any automagic access to the router may introduce                 insecurities, but it may be more important for the                 customer to have a router which is accessible over the                 network as soon as it is plugged in.  At least one                 vendor supplies routers without any external console                 access and depends on being able to access the router                 via the network to complete its configuration.                 Basically, it is the vendors call whether or not in-                 band access is enabled by default; but it is also the                 vendors responsibility to make its customers aware of                 possible insecurities.         (2)  A router MUST provide the ability to initiate an ICMP              echo.  The following options SHOULD be implemented:              o  Choice of data patterns              o  Choice of packet size              o  Record route              and the following additional options MAY be implemented:              o  Loose source route              o  Strict source route              o  TimestampsAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 148]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994         (3)  A router SHOULD provide the ability to initiate a              traceroute.  If traceroute is provided, then the 3rd party              traceroute SHOULD be implemented.         Each of the above three facilities (if implemented) SHOULD have         access restrictions placed on it to prevent its abuse by         unauthorized persons.10.4  Security Considerations10.4.1  Auditing and Audit Trails      Auditing and billing are the bane of the network operator, but are      the two features most requested by those in charge of network      security and those who are responsible for paying the bills.  In      the context of security, auditing is desirable if it helps you      keep your network working and protects your resources from abuse,      without costing you more than those resources are worth.      (1)  Configuration Changes           Router SHOULD provide a method for auditing a configuration           change of a router, even if it's something as simple as           recording the operator's initials and time of change.           DISCUSSION:              Having the ability to track who made changes and when is              highly desirable, especially if your packets suddenly              start getting routed through Alaska on their way across              town.      (2)  Packet Accounting           Vendors should strongly consider providing a system for           tracking traffic levels between pairs of hosts or networks.           A mechanism for limiting the collection of this information           to specific pairs of hosts or networks is also strongly           encouraged.           DISCUSSION:              A host traffic matrix as described above can give the              network operator a glimpse of traffic trends not apparent              from other statistics.  It can also identify hosts or              networks which are probing the structure of the attached              networks - e.g., a single external host which tries to              send packets to every IP address in the network addressAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 149]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994              range for a connected network.      (3)  Security Auditing           Routers MUST provide a method for auditing security related           failures or violations to include:           o  Authorization Failures:  bad passwords, invalid SNMP              communities, invalid authorization tokens,           o  Violations of Policy Controls:  Prohibited Source Routes,              Filtered Destinations, and           o  Authorization Approvals:  good passwords - Telnet in-band              access, console access.           Routers MUST provide a method of limiting or disabling such           auditing but auditing SHOULD be on by default.  Possible           methods for auditing include listing violations to a console           if present, logging or counting them internally, or logging           them to a remote security server via the SNMP trap mechanism           or the Unix logging mechanism as appropriate.  A router MUST           implement at least one of these reporting mechanisms - it MAY           implement more than one.10.4.2  Configuration Control      A vendor has a responsibility to use good configuration control      practices in the creation of the software/firmware loads for their      routers.  In particular, if a vendor makes updates and loads      available for retrieval over the Internet, the vendor should also      provide a way for the customer to confirm the load is a valid one,      perhaps by the verification of a checksum over the load.      DISCUSSION:         Many vendors currently provide short notice updates of their         software products via the Internet.  This a good trend and         should be encouraged, but provides a point of vulnerability in         the configuration control process.      If a vendor provides the ability for the customer to change the      configuration parameters of a router remotely, for example via a      Telnet session, the ability to do so SHOULD be configurable and      SHOULD default to off.  The router SHOULD require a password or      other valid authentication before permitting remote      reconfiguration.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 150]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      DISCUSSION:         Allowing your properly identified network operator to twiddle         with your routers is necessary; allowing anyone else to do so         is foolhardy.      A router MUST NOT have undocumented back door access and master      passwords.  A vendor MUST ensure any such access added for      purposes of debugging or product development are deleted before      the product is distributed to its customers.      DISCUSSION:         A vendor has a responsibility to its customers to ensure they         are aware of the vulnerabilities present in its code by         intention - e.g.  in-band access.  Trap doors, back doors and         master passwords intentional or unintentional can turn a         relatively secure router into a major problem on an operational         network.  The supposed operational benefits are not matched by         the potential problems.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 151]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 199411.  REFERENCESImplementors should be aware that Internet protocol standards areoccasionally updated.  These references are current as of this writing,but a cautious implementor will always check a recent version of the RFCindex to ensure that an RFC has not been updated or superseded byanother, more recent RFC.  Reference [INTRO:6] explains various ways toobtain a current RFC index.APPL:1.     B. Croft and J. Gilmore, Bootstrap Protocol (BOOTP), Request For     Comments (RFC)951, Stanford and SUN Microsystems, September 1985.APPL:2.     S. Alexander and R. Droms, DHCP Options and BOOTP Vendor     Extensions, Request For Comments (RFC)1533, Lachman Technology,     Inc., Bucknell University, October 1993.APPL:3.     W. Wimer, Clarifications and Extensions for the Bootstrap Protocol,     Request For Comments (RFC)1542, Carnegie Mellon University,     October 1993.ARCH:1.     DDN Protocol Handbook, NIC-50004, NIC-50005, NIC-50006 (three     volumes), DDN Network Information Center, SRI International, Menlo     Park, California, USA, December 1985.ARCH:2.     V. Cerf and R. Kahn, A Protocol for Packet Network     Intercommunication," IEEE Transactions on Communication, May 1974.     Also included in [ARCH:1].ARCH:3.     J. Postel, C. Sunshine, and D. Cohen, The ARPA Internet Protocol,"     Computer Networks, vol. 5, no. 4, July 1981.  Also included in     [ARCH:1].ARCH:4.     B. Leiner, J. Postel, R. Cole, and D. Mills, The DARPA Internet     Protocol Suite, Proceedings of INFOCOM '85, IEEE, Washington, DC,     March 1985.  Also in: IEEE Communications Magazine, March 1985.     Also available from the Information Sciences Institute, University     of Southern California as Technical Report ISI-RS-85-153.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 152]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994ARCH:5.     D. Comer, Internetworking With TCP/IP Volume 1: Principles,     Protocols, and Architecture, Prentice Hall, Englewood Cliffs, NJ,     1991.ARCH:6.     W. Stallings, Handbook of Computer-Communications Standards Volume     3: The TCP/IP Protocol Suite, Macmillan, New York, NY, 1990.ARCH:7.     J. Postel, Internet Official Protocol Standards, Request For     Comments (RFC)1610, STD 1, USC/Information Sciences Institute,     July 1994.ARCH:8.     Information processing systems - Open Systems Interconnection -     Basic Reference Model, ISO 7489, International Standards     Organization, 1984.FORWARD:1.     IETF CIP Working Group (C. Topolcic, Editor), Experimental Internet     Stream Protocol, Version 2 (ST-II), Request For Comments (RFC)1190, CIP Working Group, October 1990.FORWARD:2.     A. Mankin and K. Ramakrishnan, Editors, Gateway Congestion Control     Survey, Request For Comments (RFC)1254, MITRE, Digital Equipment     Corporation, August 1991.FORWARD:3.     J. Nagle, On Packet Switches with Infinite Storage, IEEE     Transactions on Communications, vol. COM-35, no. 4, April 1987.FORWARD:4.     R. Jain, K. Ramakrishnan, and D. Chiu, Congestion Avoidance in     Computer Networks With a Connectionless Network Layer, Technical     Report DEC-TR-506, Digital Equipment Corporation.FORWARD:5.     V. Jacobson, Congestion Avoidance and Control, Proceedings of     SIGCOMM '88, Association for Computing Machinery, August 1988.FORWARD:6.     W. Barns, Precedence and Priority Access Implementation for     Department of Defense Data Networks, Technical Report MTR-91W00029,     The Mitre Corporation, McLean, Virginia, USA, July 1991.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 153]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994INTERNET:1.     J. Postel, Internet Protocol, Request For Comments (RFC)791, STD     5, USC/Information Sciences Institute, September 1981.INTERNET:2.     J. Mogul and J. Postel, Internet Standard Subnetting Procedure,     Request For Comments (RFC)950, STD 5, USC/Information Sciences     Institute, August 1985.INTERNET:3.     J. Mogul, Broadcasting Internet Datagrams in the Presence of     Subnets, Request For Comments (RFC)922, STD 5, Stanford, October     1984.INTERNET:4.     S. Deering, Host Extensions for IP Multicasting, Request For     Comments (RFC)1112, STD 5, Stanford University, August 1989.INTERNET:5.     S. Kent, U.S. Department of Defense Security Options for the     Internet Protocol, Request for Comments (RFC)1108, BBN     Communications, November 1991.INTERNET:6.     R. Braden, D. Borman, and C. Partridge, Computing the Internet     Checksum, Request For Comments (RFC)1071, USC/Information Sciences     Institute, Cray Researc, BBN, September 1988.INTERNET:7.     T. Mallory and A. Kullberg, Incremental Updating of the Internet     Checksum, Request For Comments (RFC)1141, BBN, January 1990.INTERNET:8.     J. Postel, Internet Control Message Protocol, Request For Comments     (RFC)792, STD 5, USC/Information Sciences Institute, September     1981.INTERNET:9.     A. Mankin, G. Hollingsworth, G. Reichlen, K. Thompson, R.  Wilder,     and R. Zahavi, Evaluation of Internet Performance - FY89, Technical     Report MTR-89W00216, MITRE Corporation, February, 1990.INTERNET:10.     G. Finn, A Connectionless Congestion Control Algorithm, Computer     Communications Review, vol. 19, no. 5, Association for Computing     Machinery, October 1989.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 154]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994INTERNET:11.     W. Prue, J. Postel, The Source Quench Introduced Delay (SQuID),     Request For Comments (RFC)1016, USC/Information Sciences     Institute, August 1987.INTERNET:12.     A. McKenzie, Some comments on SQuID, Request For Comments (RFC)1018, BBN, August 1987.INTERNET:13.     S. Deering, ICMP Router Discovery Messages, Request For Comments     (RFC)1256, Xerox PARC, September 1991.INTERNET:14.     J. Mogul and S. Deering, Path MTU Discovery, Request For Comments     (RFC)1191, DECWRL, Stanford University, November 1990.INTERNET:15     V. Fuller, T. Li, J. Yi, and K. Varadhan, Classless Inter-Domain     Routing (CIDR): an Address Assignment and Aggregation Strategy     Request For Comments (RFC)1519, BARRNet, cisco, Merit, OARnet,     September 1993.INTERNET:16     M. St. Johns, Draft Revised IP Security Option, Request for     Comments 1038, IETF, January 1988.INTERNET:17     W. Prue and J. Postel, Queuing Algorithm to Provide Type-of-service     For IP Links, Request for Comments 1046, USC/Information Sciences     Institute, February 1988.INTRO:1.     R. Braden and J. Postel, Requirements for Internet Gateways,     Request For Comments (RFC)1009, STD 4, USC/Information Sciences     Institute, June 1987.INTRO:2.     Internet Engineering Task Force (R. Braden, Editor), Requirements     for Internet Hosts - Communication Layers, Request For Comments     (RFC)1122, STD 3, USC/Information Sciences Institute, October     1989.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 155]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994INTRO:3.     Internet Engineering Task Force (R. Braden, Editor), Requirements     for Internet Hosts - Application and Support, Request For Comments     (RFC)1123, STD 3, USC/Information Sciences Institute, October     1989.INTRO:4.     D. Clark, Modularity and Efficiency in Protocol Implementations,     Request For Comments (RFC)817, MIT, July 1982.INTRO:5.     D. Clark, The Structuring of Systems Using Upcalls, Proceedings of     10th ACM SOSP, December 1985.INTRO:6.     O. Jacobsen and J. Postel, Protocol Document Order Information,     Request For Comments (RFC)980, SRI, USC/Information Sciences     Institute, March 1986.INTRO:7.     J. Reynolds and J. Postel, Assigned Numbers, Request For Comments     (RFC)1700, STD 2, USC/Information Sciences Institute, October     1994.  This document is periodically updated and reissued with a     new number.  It is wise to verify occasionally that the version you     have is still current.INTRO:8.     DoD Trusted Computer System Evaluation Criteria, DoD publication     5200.28-STD, U.S. Department of Defense, December 1985.INTRO:9     G. Malkin and T. LaQuey Parker, Internet Users' Glossary, Request     for Comments (RFC)1392 (also FYI 0018), Xylogics, Inc., UTexas,     January 1993.LINK:1.     S. Leffler and M. Karels, Trailer Encapsulations, Request For     Comments (RFC)893, U. C. Berkeley, April 1984.LINK:2     W. Simpson, The Point-to-Point Protocol (PPP) for the Transmission     of Multi-protocol Datagrams over Point-to-Point Links, Daydreamer,     Request For Comments (RFC)1331, May 1992.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 156]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994LINK:3     G. McGregor, The PPP Internet Protocol Control Protocol (IPCP),     Request For Comments (RFC)1332, Merit, May 1992.LINK:4     B. Lloyd, W. Simpson, PPP Authentication Protocols, Request For     Comments (RFC)1334, Daydreamer, May 1992.LINK:5     W. Simpson, PPP Link Quality Monitoring, Daydreamer, Request For     Comments (RFC)1333, May 1992.MGT:1.     M. Rose and K. McCloghrie, Structure and Identification of     Management Information of TCP/IP-based Internets, Request For     Comments (RFC)1155, STD 16, Performance Systems International,     Hughes LAN Systems, May 1990.MGT:2.     K. McCloghrie and M. Rose (Editors), Management Information Base of     TCP/IP-Based Internets: MIB-II, Request For Comments (RFC)1213,     STD 16, Hughes LAN Systems, Performance Systems International,     March 1991.MGT:3.     J. Case, M. Fedor, M. Schoffstall, and J. Davin, Simple Network     Management Protocol, Request For Comments (RFC)1157, STD 15, SNMP     Research, Performance Systems International, MIT Laboratory for     Computer Science, May 1990.MGT:4.     M. Rose and K. McCloghrie (Editors), Towards Concise MIB     Definitions, Request For Comments (RFC)1212, STD 16, Performance     Systems International, Hughes LAN Systems, March 1991.MGT:5.     L. Steinberg, Techniques for Managing Asynchronously Generated     Alerts, Request for Comments (RFC)1224, IBM, May 1991.MGT:6.     F. Kastenholz, Definitions of Managed Objects for the Ethernet-like     Interface Types, Request for Comments (RFC)1398, FTP Software     January 1993.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 157]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994MGT:7.     R. Fox and K. McCloghrie, IEEE 802.4 Token Bus MIB, Request for     Comments (RFC)1230, Hughes LAN Systems, Synoptics, Inc., May 1991.MGT:8.     K. McCloghrie, R. Fox and E. Decker, IEEE 802.5 Token Ring MIB,     Request for Comments (RFC)1231, Hughes LAN Systems, Synoptics,     Inc., cisco Systems, Inc., February 1993.MGT:9.     J. Case and A. Rijsinghani, FDDI Management Information Base,     Request for Comments (RFC)1512, SNMP Research, Digital Equipment     Corporation, September 1993.MGT:10.     B. Stewart, Definitions of Managed Objects for RS-232-like Hardware     Devices, Request for Comments (RFC)1317, Xyplex, Inc., April 1992.MGT:11.     F. Kastenholz, Definitions of Managed Objects for the Link Control     Protocol of the Point-to-Point Protocol, Request For Comments (RFC)1471, FTP Software, June 1992.MGT:12.     F. Kastenholz, The Definitions of Managed Objects for the Security     Protocols of the Point-to-Point Protocol, Request For Comments     (RFC)1472, FTP Software, June 1992.MGT:13.     F. Kastenholz, The Definitions of Managed Objects for the IP     Network Control Protocol of the Point-to-Point Protocol, Request     For Comments (RFC)1473, FTP Software, June 1992.MGT:14.     F. Baker and R. Coltun, OSPF Version 2 Management Information Base,     Request For Comments (RFC)1253, ACC, Computer Science Center,     August 1991.MGT:15.     S. Willis and J. Burruss, Definitions of Managed Objects for the     Border Gateway Protocol (Version 3), Request For Comments (RFC)1269, Wellfleet Communications Inc., October 1991.MGT:16.     F. Baker, J. Watt, Definitions of Managed Objects for the DS1 and     E1 Interface Types, Request For Comments (RFC)1406, Advanced     Computer Communications, Newbridge Networks Corporation, JanuaryAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 158]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994     1993.MGT:17.     T. Cox and K. Tesink, Definitions of Managed Objects for the DS3/E3     Interface Types, Request For Comments (RFC)1407, Bell     Communications Research, January 1993.MGT:18.     K. McCloghrie, Extensions to the Generic-Interface MIB, Request For     Comments (RFC)1229,  Hughes LAN Systems, August 1992.MGT:19.     T. Cox and K. Tesink, Definitions of Managed Objects for the SIP     Interface Type, Request For Comments (RFC)1304, Bell     Communications Research, February 1992.MGT:20     F. Baker, IP Forwarding Table MIB, Request For Comments (RFC)1354,     ACC, July 1992.MGT:21.     G. Malkin and F. Baker, RIP Version 2 MIB Extension, Request For     Comments (RFC)1389, Xylogics, Inc., Advanced Computer     Communications, January 1993.MGT:22.     D. Throop, SNMP MIB Extension for the X.25 Packet Layer, Request     For Comments (RFC)1382, Data General Corporation, November 1992.MGT:23.     D. Throop and F. Baker, SNMP MIB Extension for X.25 LAPB, Request     For Comments (RFC)1381, Data General Corporation, Advanced     Computer Communications, November 1992.MGT:24.     D. Throop and F. Baker, SNMP MIB Extension for MultiProtocol     Interconnect over X.25, Request For Comments (RFC)1461, Data     General Corporation, May 1993.MGT:25.     M. Rose, SNMP over OSI, Request For Comments (RFC)1418, Dover     Beach Consulting, Inc., March 1993.MGT:26.     G. Minshall and M. Ritter, SNMP over AppleTalk, Request For     Comments (RFC)1419, Novell, Inc., Apple Computer, Inc., March     1993.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 159]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994MGT:27.     S. Bostock, SNMP over IPX, Request For Comments (RFC)1420, Novell,     Inc., March 1993.MGT:28.     M. Schoffstall, C. Davin, M. Fedor, J. Case, SNMP over Ethernet,     Request For Comments (RFC)1089, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute,     MIT Laboratory for Computer Science, NYSERNet, Inc., University of     Tennessee at Knoxville, February 1989.MGT:29.     J. Case, FDDI Management Information Base, Request For Comments     (RFC)1285, SNMP Research, Incorporated, January 1992.OPER:1.     J. Nagle, Congestion Control in IP/TCP Internetworks, Request For     Comments (RFC)896, FACC, January 1984.OPER:2.     K.R. Sollins, TFTP Protocol (revision 2), Request For Comments     (RFC)1350, MIT, July 1992.ROUTE:1.     J. Moy, OSPF Version 2, Request For Comments (RFC)1247, Proteon,     July 1991.ROUTE:2.     R. Callon, Use of OSI IS-IS for Routing in TCP/IP and Dual     Environments, Request For Comments (RFC)1195, DEC, December 1990.ROUTE:3.     C. L. Hedrick, Routing Information Protocol, Request For Comments     (RFC)1058, Rutgers University, June 1988.ROUTE:4.     K. Lougheed and Y. Rekhter, A Border Gateway Protocol 3 (BGP-3),     Request For Comments (RFC)1267, cisco, T.J. Watson Research     Center, IBM Corp., October 1991.ROUTE:5.     Y. Rekhter and P. Gross Application of the Border Gateway Protocol     in the Internet, Request For Comments (RFC)1268, T.J. Watson     Research Center, IBM Corp., ANS, October 1991.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 160]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994ROUTE:6.     D. Mills, Exterior Gateway Protocol Formal Specification, Request     For Comments (RFC)904, UDEL, April 1984.ROUTE:7.     E. Rosen, Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP), Request For Comments     (RFC)827, BBN, October 1982.ROUTE:8.     L. Seamonson and E. Rosen, "STUB" Exterior Gateway Protocol,     Request For Comments (RFC)888, BBN, January 1984.ROUTE:9.     D. Waitzman, C. Partridge, and S. Deering, Distance Vector     Multicast Routing Protocol, Request For Comments (RFC)1075, BBN,     Stanford, November 1988.ROUTE:10.     S. Deering, Multicast Routing in Internetworks and Extended LANs,     Proceedings of SIGCOMM '88, Association for Computing Machinery,     August 1988.ROUTE:11.     P. Almquist, Type of Service in the Internet Protocol Suite,     Request for Comments (RFC)1349, Consultant, July 1992.ROUTE:12.     Y. Rekhter, Experience with the BGP Protocol, Request For Comments     (RFC)1266, T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM Corp., October 1991.ROUTE:13.     Y. Rekhter, BGP Protocol Analysis, Request For Comments (RFC)1265,     T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM Corp., October 1991.TRANS:1.     J. Postel, User Datagram Protocol, Request For Comments (RFC)768,     STD 6, USC/Information Sciences Institute, August 1980.TRANS:2.     J. Postel, Transmission Control Protocol, Request For Comments     (RFC)793, STD 7, T.J. Watson Research Center, IBM Corp., September     1981.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 161]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994APPENDIX  A. REQUIREMENTS FOR SOURCE-ROUTING HOSTSSubject to restrictions given below, a host MAY be able to act as anintermediate hop in a source route, forwarding a source-routed datagramto the next specified hop.However, in performing this router-like function, the host MUST obey allthe relevant rules for a router forwarding source-routed datagrams[INTRO:2].  This includes the following specific provisions:(A)  TTL     The TTL field MUST be decremented and the datagram perhaps     discarded as specified for a router in [INTRO:2].(B)  ICMP Destination Unreachable     A host MUST be able to generate Destination Unreachable messages     with the following codes:     4 (Fragmentation Required but DF Set) when a source-routed datagram       cannot be fragmented to fit into the target network;     5 (Source Route Failed) when a source-routed datagram cannot be       forwarded, e.g., because of a routing problem or because the next       hop of a strict source route is not on a connected network.(C)  IP Source Address     A source-routed datagram being forwarded MAY (and normally will)     have a source address that is not one of the IP addresses of the     forwarding host.(D)  Record Route Option     A host that is forwarding a source-routed datagram containing a     Record Route option MUST update that option, if it has room.(E)  Timestamp Option     A host that is forwarding a source-routed datagram containing a     Timestamp Option MUST add the current timestamp to that option,     according to the rules for this option.To define the rules restricting host forwarding of source-routeddatagrams, we use the term local source-routing if the next hop will bethrough the same physical interface through which the datagram arrived;otherwise, it is non-local source-routing.A host is permitted to perform local source-routing without restriction.A host that supports non-local source-routing MUST have a configurableswitch to disable forwarding, and this switch MUST default to disabled.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 162]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994The host MUST satisfy all router requirements for configurable policyfilters [INTRO:2] restricting non-local forwarding.If a host receives a datagram with an incomplete source route but doesnot forward it for some reason, the host SHOULD return an ICMPDestination Unreachable (code 5, Source Route Failed) message, unlessthe datagram was itself an ICMP error message.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 163]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994APPENDIX  B. GLOSSARYThis Appendix defines specific terms used in this memo.  It also definessome general purpose terms that may be of interest.  See also [INTRO:9]for a more general set of definitions.AS     Autonomous System A collection of routers under a single     administrative authority using a common Interior Gateway Protocol     for routing packets.Connected Network     A network to which a router is interfaced is often known as the     local network or the subnetwork relative to that router. However,     these terms can cause confusion, and therefore we use the term     Connected Network in this memo.Connected (Sub)Network     A Connected (Sub)Network is an IP subnetwork to which a router is     interfaced, or a connected network if the connected network is not     subnetted.  See also Connected Network.Datagram     The unit transmitted between a pair of internet modules.  data,     called datagrams, from sources to destinations.  The Internet     Protocol does not provide a reliable communication facility.  There     are no acknowledgments either end-to-end or hop-by-hop.  There is     no error no retransmissions.  There is no flow control.  See IP.Default Route     A routing table entry which is used to direct any data addressed to     any network numbers not explicitly listed in the routing table.EGP     Exterior Gateway Protocol A protocol which distributes routing     information to the gateways (routers) which connect autonomous     systems.  See IGP.EGP-2     Exterior Gateway Protocol version 2 This is an EGP routing protocol     developed to handle traffic between AS's in the Internet.Forwarder     The logical entity within a router that is responsible for     switching packets among the router's interfaces.  The Forwarder     also makes the decisions to queue a packet for local delivery, toAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 164]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994     queue a packet for transmission out another interface, or both.Forwarding     Forwarding is the process a router goes through for each packet     received by the router.  The packet may be consumed by the router,     it may be output on one or more interfaces of the router, or both.     Forwarding includes the process of deciding what to do with the     packet as well as queuing it up for (possible) output or internal     consumption.Fragment     An IP datagram which represents a portion of a higher layer's     packet which was too large to be sent in its entirety over the     output network.IGP     Interior Gateway Protocol A protocol which distributes routing     information with an Autonomous System (AS).  See EGP.Interface IP Address     The IP Address and subnet mask that is assigned to a specific     interface of a router.Internet Address     An assigned number which identifies a host in an internet.  It has     two or three parts: network number, optional subnet number, and     host number.IP     Internet Protocol The network layer protocol for the Internet.  It     is a packet switching, datagram protocol defined inRFC 791.  IP     does not provide a reliable communications facility; that is, there     are no end-to-end of hop-by-hop acknowledgments.IP Datagram     An IP Datagram is the unit of end-to-end transmission in the     Internet Protocol.  An IP Datagram consists of an IP header     followed by all of higher-layer data (such as TCP, UDP, ICMP, and     the like).  An IP Datagram is an IP header followed by a message.     An IP Datagram is a complete IP end-to-end transmission unit.  An     IP Datagram is composed of one or more IP Fragments.     In this memo, the unqualified term Datagram should be understood to     refer to an IP Datagram.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 165]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994IP Fragment     An IP Fragment is a component of an IP Datagram.  An IP Fragment     consists of an IP header followed by all or part of the higher-     layer of the original IP Datagram.     One or more IP Fragments comprises a single IP Datagram.     In this memo, the unqualified term Fragment should be understood to     refer to an IP Fragment.IP Packet     An IP Datagram or an IP Fragment.     In this memo, the unqualified term Packet should generally be     understood to refer to an IP Packet.Logical [network] interface     We define a logical [network] interface to be a logical path,     distinguished by a unique IP address, to a connected network.Martian Filtering     A packet which contains an invalid source or destination address is     considered to be martian and discarded.MTU (Maximum Transmission Unit)     The size of the largest packet that can be transmitted or received     through a logical interface.  This size includes the IP header but     does not include the size of any Link Layer headers or framing.Multicast     A packet which is destined for multiple hosts.  See broadcast.Multicast Address     A special type of address which is recognized by multiple hosts.     A Multicast Address is sometimes known as a Functional Address or a     Group Address.Originate     Packets can be transmitted by a router for one of two reasons: 1)     the packet was received and is being forwarded or 2) the router     itself created the packet for transmission (such as route     advertisements).  Packets that the router creates for transmission     are said to originate at the router.Packet     A packet is the unit of data passed across the interface betweenAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 166]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994     the Internet Layer and the Link Layer.  It includes an IP header     and data.  A packet may be a complete IP datagram or a fragment of     an IP datagram.Path     The sequence of routers and (sub-)networks which a packet traverses     from a particular router to a particular destination host.  Note     that a path is uni-directional; it is not unusual to have different     paths in the two directions between a given host pair.Physical Network     A Physical Network is a network (or a piece of an internet) which     is contiguous at the Link Layer.  Its internal structure (if any)     is transparent to the Internet Layer.     In this memo, several media components that are connected together     via devices such as bridges or repeaters are considered to be a     single Physical Network since such devices are transparent to the     IP.Physical Network Interface     This is a physical interface to a Connected Network and has a     (possibly unique) Link-Layer address.  Multiple Physical Network     Interfaces on a single router may share the same Link-Layer     address, but the address must be unique for different routers on     the same Physical Network.router     A special-purpose dedicated computer that attaches several networks     together.  Routers switch packets between these networks in a     process known as forwarding.  This process may be repeated several     times on a single packet by multiple routers until the packet can     be delivered to the final destination - switching the packet from     router to router to router... until the packet gets to its     destination.RPF     Reverse Path Forwarding A method used to deduce the next hops for     broadcast and multicast packets.serial line     A physical medium which we cannot define, but we recognize one when     we see one.  See the U.S. Supreme Court's definitions on     pornography.Silently Discard     This memo specifies several cases where a router is to SilentlyAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 167]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994     Discard a received packet (or datagram).  This means that the     router should discard the packet without further processing, and     that the router will not send any ICMP error message (see Section     [4.3.2]) as a result.  However, for diagnosis of problems, the     router should provide the capability of logging the error (see     Section [1.3.3]), including the contents of the silently-discarded     packet, and should record the event in a statistics counter.Silently Ignore     A router is said to Silently Ignore an error or condition if it     takes no action other than possibly generating an error report in     an error log or via some network management protocol, and     discarding, or ignoring, the source of the error.  In particular,     the router does NOT generate an ICMP error message.Specific-destination address     This is defined to be the destination address in the IP header     unless the header contains an IP broadcast or IP multicast address,     in which case the specific-destination is an IP address assigned to     the physical interface on which the packet arrived.subnet     A portion of a network, which may be a physically independent     network, which shares a network address with other portions of the     network and is distinguished by a subnet number.  A subnet is to a     network what a network is to an internet.subnet number     A part of the internet address which designates a subnet.  It is     ignored for the purposes internet routing, but is used for intranet     routing.TOS     Type Of Service A field in the IP header which represents the     degree of reliability expected from the network layer by the     transport layer or application.TTL     Time To Live A field in the IP header which represents how long a     packet is considered valid.  It is a combination hop count and     timer value.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 168]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994APPENDIX  C. FUTURE DIRECTIONSThis appendix lists work that future revisions of this document may wishto address.In the preparation of Router Requirements, we stumbled across severalother architectural issues.  Each of these is dealt with somewhat in thedocument, but still ought to be classified as an open issue in the IParchitecture.Most of the he topics presented here generally indicate areas where thetechnology is still relatively new and it is not appropriate to developspecific requirements since the community is still gaining operationalexperience.Other topics represent areas of ongoing research and indicate areas thatthe prudent developer would closely monitor.(1)  SNMP Version 2(2)  Additional SNMP MIBs(3)  IDPR(4)  CIPSO(5)  IP Next Generation research(6)  More detailed requirements for next-hop selection(7)  More detailed requirements for leaking routes between routing     protocols(8)  Router system security(9)  Routing protocol security(10) Internetwork Protocol layer security.  There has been extensive     work refining the security of IP since the original work writing     this document.  This security work should be included in here.(11) Route caching(12) Load Splitting(13) Sending fragments along different pathsAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 169]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994(14) Variable width subnet masks (i.e., not all subnets of a particular     net use the same subnet mask).  Routers are required (MUST) support     them, but are not required to detect ambiguous configurations.(15) Multiple logical (sub)nets on the same wire.  Router Requirements     does not require support for this.  We made some attempt to     identify pieces of the architecture (e.g. forwarding of directed     broadcasts and issuing of Redirects) where the wording of the rules     has to be done carefully to make the right thing happen, and tried     to clearly distinguish logical interfaces from physical interfaces.     However, we did not study this issue in detail, and we are not at     all confident that all of the rules in the document are correct in     the presence of multiple logical (sub)nets on the same wire.(15) Congestion control and resource management.  On the advice of the     IETF's experts (Mankin and Ramakrishnan) we deprecated (SHOULD NOT)     Source Quench and said little else concrete (Section 5.3.6).(16) Developing a Link-Layer requirements document that would be common     for both routers and hosts.(17) Developing a common PPP LQM algorithm.(18) Investigate of other information (above and beyond section [3.2])     that passes between the layers, such as physical network MTU,     mappings of IP precedence to Link Layer priority values, etc.(19) Should the Link Layer notify IP if address resolution failed (just     like it notifies IP when there is a Link Layer priority value     problem)?(20) Should all routers be required to implement a DNS resolver?(21) Should a human user be able to use a host name anywhere you can use     an IP address when configuring the router? Even in ping and     traceroute?(22) Almquist's draft ruminations on the next hop and ruminations on     route leaking need to be reviewed, brought up to date, and     published.(23) Investigation is needed to determine if a redirect message for     precedence is needed or not. If not, are the type-of-service     redirects acceptable?(24) RIPv2 and RIP+CIDR and variable length subnet masks.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 170]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994(25) BGP-4 CIDR is going to be important, and everyone is betting on     BGP-4. We can't avoid mentioning it.  Probably need to describe the     differences between BGP-3 and BGP-4, and explore upgrade issues...(26) Loose Source Route Mobile IP and some multicasting may require     this.  Perhaps it should be elevated to a SHOULD (per Fred Baker's     Suggestion).Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 171]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994APPENDIX D.  Multicast Routing ProtocolsMulticasting is a relatively new technology within the Internet Protocolfamily.  It is not widely deployed or commonly in use yet.  Itsimportance, however, is expected to grow over the coming years.This Appendix describes some of the technologies being investigated forrouting multicasts through the Internet.A diligent implementor will keep abreast of developments in this area inorder to properly develop multicast facilities.This Appendix does not specify any standards or requirements.D.1  Introduction   Multicast routing protocols enable the forwarding of IP multicast   datagrams throughout a TCP/IP internet. Generally these algorithms   forward the datagram based on its source and destination addresses.   Additionally, the datagram may need to be forwarded to several   multicast group members, at times requiring the datagram to be   replicated and sent out multiple interfaces.   The state of multicast routing protocols is less developed than the   protocols available for the forwarding of IP unicasts.  Two multicast   routing protocols have been documented for TCP/IP; both are currently   considered to be experimental.  Both also use the IGMP protocol   (discussed in Section [4.4]) to monitor multicast group membership.D.2  Distance Vector Multicast Routing Protocol - DVMRP   DVMRP, documented in [ROUTE:9], is based on Distance Vector or   Bellman-Ford technology. It routes multicast datagrams only, and does   so within a single Autonomous System. DVMRP is an implementation of   the Truncated Reverse Path Broadcasting algorithm described in   [ROUTE:10].  In addition, it specifies the tunneling of IP multicasts   through non-multicast-routing-capable IP domains.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 172]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994D.3  Multicast Extensions to OSPF - MOSPF   MOSPF, currently under development, is a backward-compatible addition   to OSPF that allows the forwarding of both IP multicasts and unicasts   within an Autonomous System. MOSPF routers can be mixed with OSPF   routers within a routing domain, and they will interoperate in the   forwarding of unicasts. OSPF is a link-state or SPF-based protocol.   By adding link state advertisements that pinpoint group membership,   MOSPF routers can calculate the path of a multicast datagram as a   tree rooted at the datagram source. Those branches that do not   contain group members can then be discarded, eliminating unnecessary   datagram forwarding hops.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 173]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994APPENDIX E  Additional Next-Hop Selection AlgorithmsSection [5.2.4.3] specifies an algorithm that routers ought to use whenselecting a next-hop for a packet.This appendix provides historical perspective for the next-hop selectionproblem.  It also presents several additional pruning rules and next-hopselection algorithms that might be found in the Internet.This appendix presents material drawn from an earlier, unpublished, workby Philip Almquist; Ruminations on the Next Hop.This Appendix does not specify any standards or requirements.E.1. Some Historical Perspective   It is useful to briefly review the history of the topic, beginning   with what is sometimes called the "classic model" of how a router   makes routing decisions.  This model predates IP.  In this model, a   router speaks some single routing protocol such as RIP.  The protocol   completely determines the contents of the router's FIB.  The route   lookup algorithm is trivial: the router looks in the FIB for a route   whose destination attribute exactly matches the network number   portion of the destination address in the packet.  If one is found,   it is used; if none is found, the destination is unreachable.   Because the routing protocol keeps at most one route to each   destination, the problem of what to do when there are multiple routes   which match the same destination cannot arise.   Over the years, this classic model has been augmented in small ways.   With the advent of default routes, subnets, and host routes, it   became possible to have more than one routing table entry which in   some sense matched the destination.  This was easily resolved by a   consensus that there was a hierarchy of routes: host routes should be   preferred over subnet routes, subnet routes over net routes, and net   routes over default routes.   With the advent of variable length subnet masks, the general approach   remained the same although its description became a little more   complicated. We now say that each route has a bit mask associated   with it.  If a particular bit in a route's bit mask is set, the   corresponding bit in the route's destination attribute is   significant. A route cannot be used to route a packet unless each   significant bit in the route's destination attribute matches the   corresponding bit in the packet's destination address, and routes   with more bits set in their masks are preferred over routes which   have fewer bits set in their masks. This is simply a generalizationAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 174]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994   of the hierarchy of routes described above, and will be referred to   for the rest of this memo as choosing a route by preferring longest   match.   Another way the classic model has been augmented is through a small   amount of relaxation of the notion that a routing protocol has   complete control over the contents of the routing table.  First,   static routes were introduced.  For the first time, it was possible   to simultaneously have two routes (one dynamic and one static) to the   same destination.  When this happened, a router had to have a policy   (in some cases configurable, and in other cases chosen by the author   of the router's software) which determined whether the static route   or the dynamic route was preferred. However, this policy was only   used as a tie-breaker when longest match didn't uniquely determine   which route to use. Thus, for example, a static default route would   never be preferred over a dynamic net route even if the policy   preferred static routes over dynamic routes.   The classic model had to be further augmented when inter-domain   routing protocols were invented. Traditional routing protocols came   to be called "interior gateway protocols" (IGPs), and at each   Internet site there was a strange new beast called an "exterior   gateway", a router which spoke EGP to several "BBN Core Gateways"   (the routers which made up the Internet backbone at the time) at the   same time as it spoke its IGP to the other routers at its site. Both   protocols wanted to determine the contents of the router's routing   table. Theoretically, this could result in a router having three   routes (EGP, IGP, and static) to the same destination.  Because of   the Internet topology at the time, it was resolved with little debate   that routers would be best served by a policy of preferring IGP   routes over EGP routes.  However, the sanctity of longest match   remained unquestioned: a default route learned from the IGP would   never be preferred over a net route from learned EGP.   Although the Internet topology, and consequently routing in the   Internet, have evolved considerably since then, this slightly   augmented version of the classic model has survived pretty much   intact to this day in the Internet (except that BGP has replaced   EGP).  Conceptually (and often in implementation) each router has a   routing table and one or more routing protocol processes.  Each of   these processes can add any entry that it pleases, and can delete or   modify any entry that it has created. When routing a packet, the   router picks the best route using longest match, augmented with a   policy mechanism to break ties. Although this augmented classic model   has served us well, it has a number of shortcomings:   o  It ignores (although it could be augmented to consider) pathAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 175]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      characteristics such as quality of service and MTU.   o  It doesn't support routing protocols (such as OSPF and Integrated      IS-IS) that require route lookup algorithms different than pure      longest match.   o  There has not been a firm consensus on what the tie-breaking      mechanism ought to be. Tie-breaking mechanisms have often been      found to be difficult if not impossible to configure in such a way      that the router will always pick what the network manger considers      to be the "correct" route.E.2. Additional Pruning Rules   Section [5.2.4.3] defined several pruning rules to use to select   routes from the FIB.  There are other rules that could also be used.   o  OSPF Route Class      Routing protocols which have areas or make a distinction between      internal and external routes divide their routes into classes,      where classes are rank-ordered in terms of preference. A route is      always chosen from the most preferred class unless none is      available, in which case one is chosen from the second most      preferred class, and so on. In OSPF, the classes (in order from      most preferred to least preferred) are intra-area, inter-area,      type 1 external (external routes with internal metrics), and type      2 external. As an additional wrinkle, a router is configured to      know what addresses ought to be accessible via intra-area routes,      and will not use inter- area or external routes to reach these      destinations even when no intra-area route is available.      More precisely, we assume that each route has a class attribute,      called route.class, which is assigned by the routing protocol.      The set of candidate routes is examined to determine if it      contains any for which route.class = intra-area.  If so, all      routes except those for which route.class = intra-area are      discarded.  Otherwise, router checks whether the packet's      destination falls within the address ranges configured for the      local area.  If so, the entire set of candidate routes is deleted.      Otherwise, the set of candidate routes is examined to determine if      it contains any for which route.class = inter-area.  If so, all      routes except those for which route.class = inter-area are      discarded.  Otherwise, the set of candidate routes is examined to      determine if it contains any for which route.class = type 1      external.  If so, all routes except those for which route.class =      type 1 external are discarded.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 176]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994   o  IS-IS Route Class      IS-IS route classes work identically to OSPF's. However, the set      of classes defined by Integrated IS-IS is different, such that      there isn't a one-to-one mapping between IS-IS route classes and      OSPF route classes. The route classes used by Integrated IS-IS are      (in order from most preferred to least preferred) intra-area,      inter-area, and external.      The Integrated IS-IS internal class is equivalent to the OSPF      internal class. Likewise, the Integrated IS-IS external class is      equivalent to OSPF's type 2 external class. However, Integrated      IS-IS does not make a distinction between inter-area routes and      external routes with internal metrics - both are considered to be      inter-area routes. Thus, OSPF prefers true inter-area routes over      external routes with internal metrics, whereas Integrated IS-IS      gives the two types of routes equal preference.   o  IDPR Policy      A specific case of Policy. The IETF's Inter-domain Policy Routing      Working Group is devising a routing protocol called Inter-Domain      Policy Routing (IDPR) to support true policy-based routing in the      Internet. Packets with certain combinations of header attributes      (such as specific combinations of source and destination addresses      or special IDPR source route options) are required to use routes      provided by the IDPR protocol. Thus, unlike other Policy pruning      rules, IDPR Policy would have to be applied before any other      pruning rules except Basic Match.      Specifically, IDPR Policy examines the packet being forwarded to      ascertain if its attributes require that it be forwarded using      policy-based routes. If so, IDPR Policy deletes all routes not      provided by the IDPR protocol.E.3  Some Route Lookup Algorithms   This section examines several route lookup algorithms that are in use   or have been proposed.  Each is described by giving the sequence of   pruning rules it uses.  The strengths and weaknesses of each   algorithm are presentedAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 177]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994E.3.1 The Revised Classic Algorithm      The Revised Classic Algorithm is the form of the traditional      algorithm which was discussed in Section [E.1].  The steps of this      algorithm are:      1.  Basic match      2.  Longest match      3.  Best metric      4.  Policy      Some implementations omit the Policy step, since it is needed only      when routes may have metrics that are not comparable (because they      were learned from different routing domains).      The advantages of this algorithm are:      (1)  It is widely implemented.      (2)  Except for the Policy step (which an implementor can choose           to make arbitrarily complex) the algorithm is simple both to           understand and to implement.      Its disadvantages are:      (1)  It does not handle IS-IS or OSPF route classes, and therefore           cannot be used for Integrated IS-IS or OSPF.      (2)  It does not handle TOS or other path attributes.      (3)  The policy mechanisms are not standardized in any way, and           are therefore are often implementation-specific.  This causes           extra work for implementors (who must invent appropriate           policy mechanisms) and for users (who must learn how to use           the mechanisms.  This lack of a standardized mechanism also           makes it difficult to build consistent configurations for           routers from different vendors.  This presents a significant           practical deterrent to multi-vendor interoperability.      (4)  The proprietary policy mechanisms currently provided by           vendors are often inadequate in complex parts of the           Internet.      (5)  The algorithm has not been written down in any generally           available document or standard.  It is, in effect, a part of           the Internet Folklore.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 178]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994E.3.2 The Variant Router Requirements Algorithm      Some Router Requirements Working Group members have proposed a      slight variant of the algorithm described in the Section      [5.2.4.3].  In this variant, matching the type of service      requested is considered to be more important, rather than less      important, than matching as much of the destination address as      possible.  For example, this algorithm would prefer a default      route which had the correct type of service over a network route      which had the default type of service, whereas the algorithm in      [5.2.4.3] would make the opposite choice.      The steps of the algorithm are:      1.  Basic match      2.  Weak TOS      3.  Longest match      4.  Best metric      5.  Policy      Debate between the proponents of this algorithm and the regular      Router Requirements Algorithm suggests that each side can show      cases where its algorithm leads to simpler, more intuitive routing      than the other's algorithm does.  In general, this variant has the      same set of advantages and disadvantages that the algorithm      specified in [5.2.4.3] does, except that pruning on Weak TOS      before pruning on Longest Match makes this algorithm less      compatible with OSPF and Integrated IS-IS than the standard Router      Requirements Algorithm.E.3.3 The OSPF Algorithm      OSPF uses an algorithm which is virtually identical to the Router      Requirements Algorithm except for one crucial difference: OSPF      considers OSPF route classes.      The algorithm is:      1.  Basic match      2.  OSPF route class      3.  Longest match      4.  Weak TOS      5.  Best metric      6.  Policy      Type of service support is not always present.  If it is not      present then, of course, the fourth step would be omitted      This algorithm has some advantages over the Revised ClassicAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 179]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      Algorithm:      (1)  It supports type of service routing.      (2)  Its rules are written down, rather than merely being a part           of the Internet folklore.      (3)  It (obviously) works with OSPF.      However, this algorithm also retains some of the disadvantages of      the Revised Classic Algorithm:      (1)  Path properties other than type of service (e.g. MTU) are           ignored.      (2)  As in the Revised Classic Algorithm, the details (or even the           existence) of the Policy step are left to the discretion of           the implementor.      The OSPF Algorithm also has a further disadvantage (which is not      shared by the Revised Classic Algorithm).  OSPF internal (intra-      area or inter-area) routes are always considered to be superior to      routes learned from other routing protocols, even in cases where      the OSPF route matches fewer bits of the destination address.      This is a policy decision that is inappropriate in some networks.      Finally, it is worth noting that the OSPF Algorithm's TOS support      suffers from a deficiency in that routing protocols which support      TOS are implicitly preferred when forwarding packets which have      non-zero TOS values.  This may not be appropriate in some cases.E.3.4 The Integrated IS-IS Algorithm      Integrated IS-IS uses an algorithm which is similar to but not      quite identical to the OSPF Algorithm.  Integrated IS-IS uses a      different set of route classes, and also differs slightly in its      handling of type of service.  The algorithm is:      1. Basic Match      2. IS-IS Route Classes      3. Longest Match      4. Weak TOS      5. Best Metric      6. Policy      Although Integrated IS-IS uses Weak TOS, the protocol is only      capable of carrying routes for a small specific subset of the      possible values for the TOS field in the IP header.  PacketsAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 180]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994      containing other values in the TOS field are routed using the      default TOS.      Type of service support is optional; if disabled, the fourth step      would be omitted.  As in OSPF, the specification does not include      the Policy step.      This algorithm has some advantages over the Revised Classic      Algorithm:      (1)  It supports type of service routing.      (2)  Its rules are written down, rather than merely being a part           of the Internet folklore.      (3)  It (obviously) works with Integrated IS-IS.      However, this algorithm also retains some of the disadvantages of      the Revised Classic Algorithm:      (1)  Path properties other than type of service (e.g. MTU) are           ignored.      (2)  As in the Revised Classic Algorithm, the details (or even the           existence) of the Policy step are left to the discretion of           the implementor.      (3)  It doesn't work with OSPF because of the differences between           IS-IS route classes and OSPF route classes.  Also, because           IS-IS supports only a subset of the possible TOS values, some           obvious implementations of the Integrated IS-IS algorithm           would not support OSPF's interpretation of TOS.      The Integrated IS-IS Algorithm also has a further disadvantage      (which is not shared by the Revised Classic Algorithm): IS-IS      internal (intra-area or inter-area) routes are always considered      to be superior to routes learned from other routing protocols,      even in cases where the IS-IS route matches fewer bits of the      destination address and doesn't provide the requested type of      service.  This is a policy decision that may not be appropriate in      all cases.      Finally, it is worth noting that the Integrated IS-IS Algorithm's      TOS support suffers from the same deficiency noted for the OSPF      Algorithm.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 181]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994Security ConsiderationsAlthough the focus of this document is interoperability rather thansecurity, there are obviously many sections of this document which havesome ramifications on network security.Security means different things to different people.  Security from arouter's point of view is anything that helps to keep its own networksoperational and in addition helps to keep the Internet as a wholehealthy.  For the purposes of this document, the security services weare concerned with are denial of service, integrity, and authenticationas it applies to the first two.  Privacy as a security service isimportant, but only peripherally a concern of a router - at least as ofthe date of this document.In several places in this document there are sections entitled ...Security Considerations. These sections discuss specific considerationsthat apply to the general topic under discussion.Rarely does this document say do this and your router/network will besecure.  More likely, it says this is a good idea and if you do it, it*may* improve the security of the Internet and your local system ingeneral.Unfortunately, this is the state-of-the-art AT THIS TIME.  Few if any ofthe network protocols a router is concerned with have reasonable,built-in security features.  Industry and the protocol designers havebeen and are continuing to struggle with these issues.  There isprogress, but only small baby steps such as the peer-to-peerauthentication available in the BGP and OSPF routing protocols.In particular, this document notes the current research into developingand enhancing network security.  Specific areas of research,development, and engineering that are underway as of this writing(December 1993) are in IP Security, SNMP Security, and commonauthentication technologies.Notwithstanding all of the above, there are things both vendors andusers can do to improve the security of their router.  Vendors shouldget a copy of Trusted Computer System Interpretation [INTRO:8].  Even ifa vendor decides not to submit their device for formal verificationunder these guidelines, the publication provides excellent guidance ongeneral security design and practices for computing devices.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 182]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994AcknowledgmentsO that we now had hereBut one ten thousand of those men in EnglandThat do no work to-day!What's he that wishes so?My cousin Westmoreland? No, my fair cousin:If we are mark'd to die, we are enowTo do our country loss; and if to live,The fewer men, the greater share of honour.God's will! I pray thee, wish not one man more.By Jove, I am not covetous for gold,Nor care I who doth feed upon my cost;It yearns me not if men my garments wear;Such outward things dwell not in my desires:But if it be a sin to covet honour,I am the most offending soul alive.No, faith, my coz, wish not a man from England:God's peace! I would not lose so great an honourAs one man more, methinks, would share from meFor the best hope I have. O, do not wish one more!Rather proclaim it, Westmoreland, through my host,That he which hath no stomach to this fight,Let him depart; his passport shall be madeAnd crowns for convoy put into his purse:We would not die in that man's companyThat fears his fellowship to die with us.This day is called the feast of Crispian:He that outlives this day, and comes safe home,Will stand a tip-toe when the day is named,And rouse him at the name of Crispian.He that shall live this day, and see old age,Will yearly on the vigil feast his neighbours,And say 'To-morrow is Saint Crispian:'Then will he strip his sleeve and show his scars.And say 'These wounds I had on Crispin's day.'Old men forget: yet all shall be forgot,But he'll remember with advantagesWhat feats he did that day: then shall our names.Familiar in his mouth as household wordsHarry the king, Bedford and Exeter,Warwick and Talbot, Salisbury and Gloucester,Be in their flowing cups freshly remember'd.This story shall the good man teach his son;And Crispin Crispian shall ne'er go by,Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 183]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994From this day to the ending of the world,But we in it shall be remember'd;We few, we happy few, we band of brothers;For he to-day that sheds his blood with meShall be my brother; be he ne'er so vile,This day shall gentle his condition:And gentlemen in England now a-bedShall think themselves accursed they were not here,And hold their manhoods cheap whiles any speaksThat fought with us upon Saint Crispin's day.This memo is a product of the IETF's Router Requirements Working Group.A memo such as this one is of necessity the work of many more peoplethan could be listed here.  A wide variety of vendors, network managers,and other experts from the Internet community graciously contributedtheir time and wisdom to improve the quality of this memo.  The editorwishes to extend sincere thanks to all of them.The current editor also wishes to single out and extend his heartfeltgratitude and appreciation to the original editor of this document;Philip Almquist.  Without Philip's work, both as the original editor andas the Chair of the working group, this document would not have beenproduced.Philip Almquist, Jeffrey Burgan, Frank Kastenholz, and Cathy Wittbrodteach wrote major chapters of this memo.  Others who made majorcontributions to the document included Bill Barns, Steve Deering, KentEngland, Jim Forster, Martin Gross, Jeff Honig, Steve Knowles, YoniMalachi, Michael Reilly, and Walt Wimer.Additional text came from Art Berggreen, John Cavanaugh, Ross Callon,John Lekashman, Brian Lloyd, Gary Malkin, Milo Medin, John Moy, CraigPartridge, Stephanie Price, Yakov Rekhter, Steve Senum, Richard Smith,Frank Solensky, Rich Woundy, and others who have been inadvertentlyoverlooked.Some of the text in this memo has been (shamelessly) plagiarized fromearlier documents, most notablyRFC-1122 by Bob Braden and the HostRequirements Working Group, andRFC-1009 by Bob Braden and Jon Postel.The work of these earlier authors is gratefully acknowledged.Jim Forster was a co-chair of the Router Requirements Working Groupduring its early meetings, and was instrumental in getting the group offto a good start.  Jon Postel, Bob Braden, and Walt Prue also contributedto the success by providing a wealth of good advice prior to the group'sfirst meeting.  Later on, Phill Gross, Vint Cerf, and Noel Chiappa allprovided valuable advice and support.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 184]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994Mike St. Johns coordinated the Working Group's interactions with thesecurity community, and Frank Kastenholz coordinated the Working Group'sinteractions with the network management area.  Allison Mankin and K.K.Ramakrishnan provided expertise on the issues of congestion control andresource allocation.Many more people than could possibly be listed or credited hereparticipated in the deliberations of the Router Requirements WorkingGroup, either through electronic mail or by attending meetings.However, the efforts of Ross Callon and Vince Fuller in sorting out thedifficult issues of route choice and route leaking are especiallyacknowledged.The previous editor, Philip Almquist, wishes to extend his thanks andappreciation to his former employers, Stanford University and BARRNet,for allowing him to spend a large fraction (probably far more than theyever imagined when he started on this) of his time working on thisproject.The current editor wishes to thank his employer, FTP Software, forallowing him to spend the time necessary to finish this document.Almquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 185]

RFC 1716          Towards Requirements for IP Routers      November 1994Editor's AddressThe address of the current editor of this document is   Frank J. Kastenholz   FTP Software   2 High Street   North Andover, MA, 01845-2620   USA   Phone: +1 508-685-4000   EMail: kasten@ftp.comAlmquist & Kastenholz                                         [Page 186]

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