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Network Working Group                                  ST2 Working GroupRequest for Comments: 1819           L. Delgrossi and L. Berger, EditorsObsoletes:1190, IEN 119                                     August 1995Category: ExperimentalInternet Stream Protocol Version 2 (ST2)Protocol Specification - Version ST2+Status of this Memo   This memo defines an Experimental Protocol for the Internet   community.  This memo does not specify an Internet standard of any   kind.  Discussion and suggestions for improvement are requested.   Distribution of this memo is unlimited.IESG NOTE   This document is a revision ofRFC1190. The charter of this effort   was clarifying, simplifying and removing errors fromRFC1190 to   ensure interoperability of implementations.   NOTE WELL: Neither the version of the protocol described in this   document nor the previous version is an Internet Standard or under   consideration for that status.   Since the publication of the original version of the protocol, there   have been significant developments in the state of the art.  Readers   should note that standards and technology addressing alternative   approaches to the resource reservation problem are currently under   development within the IETF.Abstract   This memo contains a revised specification of the Internet STream   Protocol Version 2 (ST2). ST2 is an experimental resource reservation   protocol intended to provide end-to-end real-time guarantees over an   internet. It allows applications to build multi-destination simplex   data streams with a desired quality of service. The revised version   of ST2 specified in this memo is called ST2+.   This specification is a product of the STream Protocol Working Group   of the Internet Engineering Task Force.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                      [Page 1]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995Table of Contents     1  Introduction                                                   6             1.1  What is ST2?                                         6             1.2  ST2 and IP                                           8             1.3  Protocol History                                     8             1.3.1RFC1190 ST and ST2+ Major Differences              9             1.4  Supporting Modules for ST2                          10             1.4.1  Data Transfer Protocol                            11             1.4.2  Setup Protocol                                    11             1.4.3  Flow Specification                                11             1.4.4  Routing Function                                  12             1.4.5  Local Resource Manager                            12             1.5  ST2 Basic Concepts                                  15             1.5.1  Streams                                           16             1.5.2  Data Transmission                                 16             1.5.3  Flow Specification                                17             1.6  Outline of This Document                            19     2  ST2 User Service Description                                  19             2.1  Stream Operations and Primitive Functions           19             2.2  State Diagrams                                      21             2.3  State Transition Tables                             25     3  The ST2 Data Transfer Protocol                                26             3.1  Data Transfer with ST                               26             3.2  ST Protocol Functions                               27             3.2.1  Stream Identification                             27             3.2.2  Packet Discarding based on Data Priority          27     4  SCMP Functional Description                                   28             4.1  Types of Streams                                    29             4.1.1  Stream Building                                   30             4.1.2  Knowledge of Receivers                            30             4.2  Control PDUs                                        31             4.3  SCMP Reliability                                    32             4.4  Stream Options                                      33             4.4.1  No Recovery                                       33             4.4.2  Join Authorization Level                          34             4.4.3  Record Route                                      34             4.4.4  User Data                                         35             4.5  Stream Setup                                        35             4.5.1  Information from the Application                  35             4.5.2  Initial Setup at the Origin                       35             4.5.2.1  Invoking the Routing Function                   36             4.5.2.2  Reserving Resources                             36             4.5.3  Sending CONNECT Messages                          37             4.5.3.1  Empty Target List                               37Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                      [Page 2]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995             4.5.4  CONNECT Processing by an Intermediate ST agent    37             4.5.5  CONNECT Processing at the Targets                 38             4.5.6  ACCEPT Processing by an Intermediate ST agent     38             4.5.7  ACCEPT Processing by the Origin                   39             4.5.8  REFUSE Processing by the Intermediate ST agent    39             4.5.9  REFUSE Processing by the Origin                   39             4.5.10  Other Functions during Stream Setup              40             4.6  Modifying an Existing Stream                        40             4.6.1  The Origin Adding New Targets                     41             4.6.2  The Origin Removing a Target                      41             4.6.3  A Target Joining a Stream                         42             4.6.3.1  Intermediate Agent (Router) as Origin           43             4.6.4  A Target Deleting Itself                          43             4.6.5  Changing a Stream's FlowSpec                      44             4.7  Stream Tear Down                                    45     5  Exceptional Cases                                             45             5.1  Long ST Messages                                    45             5.1.1  Handling of Long Data Packets                     45             5.1.2  Handling of Long Control Packets                  46             5.2  Timeout Failures                                    47             5.2.1  Failure due to ACCEPT Acknowledgment Timeout      47             5.2.2  Failure due to CHANGE Acknowledgment Timeout      47             5.2.3  Failure due to CHANGE Response Timeout            48             5.2.4  Failure due to CONNECT Acknowledgment Timeout     48             5.2.5  Failure due to CONNECT Response Timeout           48             5.2.6  Failure due to DISCONNECT Acknowledgment Timeout  48             5.2.7  Failure due to JOIN Acknowledgment Timeout        48             5.2.8  Failure due to JOIN Response Timeout              49             5.2.9  Failure due to JOIN-REJECT Acknowledgment Timeout 49             5.2.10  Failure due to NOTIFY Acknowledgment Timeout     49             5.2.11  Failure due to REFUSE Acknowledgment Timeout     49             5.2.12  Failure due to STATUS Response Timeout           49             5.3  Setup Failures due to Routing Failures              50             5.3.1  Path Convergence                                  50             5.3.2  Other Cases                                       51             5.4  Problems due to Routing Inconsistency               52             5.5  Problems in Reserving Resources                     53             5.5.1  Mismatched FlowSpecs                              53             5.5.2  Unknown FlowSpec Version                          53             5.5.3  LRM Unable to Process FlowSpec                    53             5.5.4  Insufficient Resources                            53             5.6  Problems Caused by CHANGE Messages                  54             5.7  Unknown Targets in DISCONNECT and CHANGE            55Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                      [Page 3]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995     6  Failure Detection and Recovery                                55             6.1  Failure Detection                                   55             6.1.1  Network Failures                                  56             6.1.2  Detecting ST Agents Failures                      56             6.2  Failure Recovery                                    58             6.2.1  Problems in Stream Recovery                       60             6.3  Stream Preemption                                   62     7  A Group of Streams                                            63             7.1  Basic Group Relationships                           63             7.1.1  Bandwidth Sharing                                 63             7.1.2  Fate Sharing                                      64             7.1.3  Route Sharing                                     65             7.1.4  Subnet Resources Sharing                          65             7.2  Relationships Orthogonality                         65     8  Ancillary Functions                                           66             8.1  Stream ID Generation                                66             8.2  Group Name Generator                                66             8.3  Checksum Computation                                67             8.4  Neighbor ST Agent Identification and                     Information Collection                           67             8.5  Round Trip Time Estimation                          68             8.6  Network MTU Discovery                               68             8.7  IP Encapsulation of ST                              69             8.8  IP Multicasting                                     70     9  The ST2+ Flow Specification                                   71             9.1  FlowSpec Version #0 - (Null FlowSpec)               72             9.2  FlowSpec Version #7 - ST2+ FlowSpec                 72             9.2.1  QoS Classes                                       73             9.2.2  Precedence                                        74             9.2.3  Maximum Data Size                                 74             9.2.4  Message Rate                                      74             9.2.5  Delay and Delay Jitter                            74             9.2.6  ST2+ FlowSpec Format                              75     10  ST2 Protocol Data Units Specification                        77             10.1  Data PDU                                           77             10.1.1  ST Data Packets                                  78             10.2  Control PDUs                                       78             10.3  Common SCMP Elements                               80             10.3.1  FlowSpec                                         80             10.3.2  Group                                            81             10.3.3  MulticastAddress                                 82             10.3.4  Origin                                           82             10.3.5  RecordRoute                                      83             10.3.6  Target and TargetList                            84Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                      [Page 4]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995             10.3.7  UserData                                         85             10.3.8  Handling of Undefined Parameters                 86             10.4  ST Control Message PDUs                            86             10.4.1  ACCEPT                                           86             10.4.2  ACK                                              88             10.4.3  CHANGE                                           89             10.4.4  CONNECT                                          89             10.4.5  DISCONNECT                                       92             10.4.6  ERROR                                            93             10.4.7  HELLO                                            94             10.4.8  JOIN                                             95             10.4.9  JOIN-REJECT                                      96             10.4.10  NOTIFY                                          97             10.4.11  REFUSE                                          98             10.4.12  STATUS                                         100             10.4.13  STATUS-RESPONSE                                100             10.5  Suggested Protocol Constants                      101             10.5.1  SCMP Messages                                   102             10.5.2  SCMP Parameters                                 102             10.5.3  ReasonCode                                      102             10.5.4  Timeouts and Other Constants                    104             10.6  Data Notations                                    105     11  References                                                  106     12  Security Considerations                                     108     13  Acknowledgments and Authors' Addresses                      108Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                      [Page 5]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19951.  Introduction1.1  What is ST2?   The Internet Stream Protocol, Version 2 (ST2) is an experimental   connection-oriented internetworking protocol that operates at the   same layer as connectionless IP. It has been developed to support the   efficient delivery of data streams to single or multiple destinations   in applications that require guaranteed quality of service. ST2 is   part of the IP protocol family and serves as an adjunct to, not a   replacement for, IP. The main application areas of the protocol are   the real-time transport of multimedia data, e.g., digital audio and   video packet streams, and distributed simulation/gaming, across   internets.   ST2 can be used to reserve bandwidth for real-time streams across   network routes. This reservation, together with appropriate network   access and packet scheduling mechanisms in all nodes running the   protocol, guarantees a well-defined Quality of Service (QoS) to ST2   applications. It ensures that real-time packets are delivered within   their deadlines, that is, at the time where they need to be   presented.  This facilitates a smooth delivery of data that is   essential for time- critical applications, but can typically not be   provided by best- effort IP communication.                      DATA PATH                         CONTROL PATH                      =========                         ============       Upper     +------------------+                     +---------+       Layer     | Application data |                     | Control |                 +------------------+                     +---------+                          |                                    |                          |                                    V                          |                     +-------------------+       SCMP               |                     |   SCMP  |         |                          |                     +-------------------+                          |                             |                          V                             V            +-----------------------+      +------------------------+       ST   | ST |                  |      | ST |         |         |            +-----------------------+      +------------------------+            D-bit=1                       D-bit=0                   Figure 1: ST2 Data and Control Path   Just like IP, ST2 actually consists of two protocols: ST for the data   transport and SCMP, the Stream Control Message Protocol, for all   control functions. ST is simple and contains only a single PDU format   that is designed for fast and efficient data forwarding in order toDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                      [Page 6]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   achieve low communication delays. SCMP, however, is more complex than   IP's ICMP. As with ICMP and IP, SCMP packets are transferred within   ST packets as shown in Figure 1.    +--------------------+    | Conference Control |    +--------------------+   +-------+ +-------+ |   | Video | | Voice | | +-----+ +------+ +-----+     +-----+ Application   | Appl  | | Appl  | | | SNMP| |Telnet| | FTP | ... |     |    Layer   +-------+ +-------+ | +-----+ +------+ +-----+     +-----+       |        |      |     |        |     |            |       V        V      |     |        |     |            |   ------------    +-----+  +-----+   |     |        |     |            |    | PVP |  | NVP |   |     |        |     |            |    +-----+  +-----+   +     |        |     |            |     |   \      | \     \    |        |     |            |     |    +-----|--+-----+   |        |     |            |     |     Appl.|control  V  V        V     V            V     | ST  data |         +-----+    +-------+        +-----+     | & control|         | UDP |    |  TCP  |    ... | RTP | Transport     |          |         +-----+    +-------+        +-----+   Layer     |         /|          / | \       / / |          / /|     |\       / |  +------+--|--\-----+-/--|--- ... -+ / |     | \     /  |  |         |   \     /   |          /  |     |  \   /   |  |         |    \   +----|--- ... -+   |   -----------     |   \ /    |  |         |     \ /     |             |     |    V     |  |         |      V      |             |     | +------+ |  |         |   +------+  |   +------+  |     | | SCMP | |  |         |   | ICMP |  |   | IGMP |  |    Internet     | +------+ |  |         |   +------+  |   +------+  |     Layer     |    |     |  |         |      |      |      |      |     V    V     V  V         V      V      V      V      V   +-----------------+  +-----------------------------------+   | STream protocol |->|      Internet     Protocol        |   +-----------------+  +-----------------------------------+                  | \   / |                  |  \ /  |                  |   X   |                                  ------------                  |  / \  |                  | /   \ |                  VV     VV   +----------------+   +----------------+   | (Sub-) Network |...| (Sub-) Network |                  (Sub-)Network   |    Protocol    |   |    Protocol    |                     Layer   +----------------+   +----------------+                   Figure 2.  Protocol RelationshipsDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                      [Page 7]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19951.2  ST2 and IP   ST2 is designed to coexist with IP on each node. A typical   distributed multimedia application would use both protocols: IP for   the transfer of traditional data and control information, and ST2 for   the transfer of real-time data. Whereas IP typically will be accessed   from TCP or UDP, ST2 will be accessed via new end-to-end real-time   protocols. The position of ST2 with respect to the other protocols of   the Internet family is represented in Figure 2.   Both ST2 and IP apply the same addressing schemes to identify   different hosts. ST2 and IP packets differ in the first four bits,   which contain the internetwork protocol version number: number 5 is   reserved for ST2 (IP itself has version number 4). As a network layer   protocol, like IP, ST2 operates independently of its underlying   subnets. Existing implementations use ARP for address resolution, and   use the same Layer 2 SAPs as IP.   As a special function, ST2 messages can be encapsulated in IP   packets.  This is represented in Figure 2 as a link between ST2 and   IP. This link allows ST2 messages to pass through routers which do   not run ST2.  Resource management is typically not available for   these IP route segments. IP encapsulation is, therefore, suggested   only for portions of the network which do not constitute a system   bottleneck.   In Figure 2, the RTP protocol is shown as an example of transport   layer on top of ST2. Others include the Packet Video Protocol (PVP)   [Cole81], the Network Voice Protocol (NVP) [Cohe81], and others such   as the Heidelberg Transport Protocol (HeiTP) [DHHS92].1.3  Protocol History   The first version of ST was published in the late 1970's and was used   throughout the 1980's for experimental transmission of voice, video,   and distributed simulation. The experience gained in these   applications led to the development of the revised protocol version   ST2. The revision extends the original protocol to make it more   complete and more applicable to emerging multimedia environments. The   specification of this protocol version is contained in InternetRFC1190 which was published in October 1990 [RFC1190].   With more and more developments of commercial distributed multimedia   applications underway and with a growing dissatisfaction at the   transmission quality for audio and video over IP in the MBONE,   interest in ST2 has grown over the last years. Companies have   products available incorporating the protocol. The BERKOM MMTS   project of the German PTT [DeAl92] uses ST2 as its core protocol forDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                      [Page 8]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   the provision of multimedia teleservices such as conferencing and   mailing. In addition, implementations of ST2 for Digital Equipment,   IBM, NeXT, Macintosh, PC, Silicon Graphics, and Sun platforms are   available.   In 1993, the IETF started a new working group on ST2 as part of   ongoing efforts to develop protocols that address resource   reservation issues.  The group's mission was to clean up the existing   protocol specification to ensure better interoperability between the   existing and emerging implementations. It was also the goal to   produce an updated experimental protocol specification that reflected   the experiences gained with the existing ST2 implementations and   applications. Which led to the specification of the ST2+ protocol   contained in this document.1.3.1RFC1190 ST and ST2+ Major Differences   The protocol changes fromRFC1190 were motivated by protocol   simplification and clarification, and codification of extensions in   existing implementations. This section provides a list of major   differences, and is probably of interest only to those who have   knowledge ofRFC1190. The major differences between the versions are:o   Elimination of "Hop IDentifiers" or HIDs. HIDs added much complexity    to the protocol and was found to be a major impediment to    interoperability. HIDs have been replaced by globally unique    identifiers called "Stream IDentifiers" or SIDs.o   Elimination of a number of stream options. A number of options were    found to not be used by any implementation, or were thought to add    more complexity than value. These options were removed. Removed    options include: point-to-point, full-duplex, reverse charge, and    source route.o   Elimination of the concept of "subset" implementations.RFC1190    permitted subset implementations, to allow for easy implementation    and experimentation. This led to interoperability problems. Agents    implementing the protocol specified in this document, MUST implement    the full protocol. A number of the protocol functions are best-    effort. It is expected that some implementations will make more    effort than others in satisfying particular protocol requests.o   Clarification of the capability of targets to request to join a    steam.RFC1190 can be interpreted to support target requests, but    most implementors did not understand this and did not add support    for this capability. The lack of this capability was found to be a    significant limitation in the ability to scale the number of    participants in a single ST stream. This clarification is based onDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                      [Page 9]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995    work done by IBM Heidelberg.o   Separation of functions between ST and supporting modules. An effort    was made to improve the separation of functions provided by ST and    those provided by other modules. This is reflected in reorganization    of some text and some PDU formats. ST was also made FlowSpec    independent, although it does define a FlowSpec for testing and    interoperability purposes.o   General reorganization and re-write of the specification. This    document has been organized with the goal of improved readability    and clarity. Some sections have been added, and an effort was made    to improve the introduction of concepts.1.4  Supporting Modules for ST2   ST2 is one piece of a larger mosaic. This section presents the   overall communication architecture and clarifies the role of ST2 with   respect to its supporting modules.   ST2 proposes a two-step communication model. In the first step, the   real-time channels for the subsequent data transfer are built. This   is called stream setup. It includes selecting the routes to the   destinations and reserving the correspondent resources. In the second   step, the data is transmitted over the previously established   streams.  This is called data transfer. While stream setup does not   have to be completed in real-time, data transfer has stringent real-   time requirements. The architecture used to describe the ST2   communication model includes:o   a data transfer protocol for the transmission of real-time data    over the established streams,o   a setup protocol to establish real-time streams based on the flow    specification,o   a flow specification to express user real-time requirements,o   a routing function to select routes in the Internet,o   a local resource manager to appropriately handle resources involved    in the communication.   This document defines a data protocol (ST), a setup protocol (SCMP),   and a flow specification (ST2+ FlowSpec). It does not define a   routing function and a local resource manager. However, ST2 assumes   their existence.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 10]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   Alternative architectures are possible, see [RFC1633] for an example   alternative architecture that could be used when implementing ST2.1.4.1  Data Transfer Protocol   The data transfer protocol defines the format of the data packets   belonging to the stream. Data packets are delivered to the targets   along the stream paths previously established by the setup protocol.   Data packets are delivered with the quality of service associated   with the stream.   Data packets contain a globally unique stream identifier that   indicates which stream they belong to. The stream identifier is also   known by the setup protocol, which uses it during stream   establishment. The data transfer protocol for ST2, known simply as   ST, is completely defined by this document.1.4.2  Setup Protocol   The setup protocol is responsible for establishing, maintaining, and   releasing real-time streams. It relies on the routing function to   select the paths from the source to the destinations. At each   host/router on these paths, it presents the flow specification   associated with the stream to the local resource manager. This causes   the resource managers to reserve appropriate resources for the   stream.  The setup protocol for ST2 is called Stream Control Message   Protocol, or SCMP, and is completely defined by this document.1.4.3  Flow Specification   The flow specification is a data structure including the ST2   applications' QoS requirements. At each host/router, it is used by   the local resource manager to appropriately handle resources so that   such requirements are met. Distributing the flow specification to all   resource managers along the communication paths is the task of the   setup protocol. However, the contents of the flow specification are   transparent to the setup protocol, which simply carries the flow   specification. Any operations on the flow specification, including   updating internal fields and comparing flow specifications are   performed by the resource managers.   This document defines a specific flow specification format that   allows for interoperability among ST2 implementations. This flow   specification is intended to support a flow with a single   transmission rate for all destinations in the stream. Implementations   may support more than one flow specification format and the means are   provided to add new formats as they are defined in the future.   However, the flow specification format has to be consistentDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 11]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   throughout the stream, i.e., it is not possible to use different flow   specification formats for different parts of the same stream.1.4.4  Routing Function   The routing function is an external unicast route generation   capability. It provides the setup protocol with the path to reach   each of the desired destinations. The routing function is called on a   hop-by-hop basis and provides next-hop information. Once a route is   selected by the routing function, it persists for the whole stream   lifetime. The routing function may try to optimize based on the   number of targets, the requested resources, or use of local network   multicast or bandwidth capabilities. Alternatively, the routing   function may even be based on simple connectivity information.   The setup protocol is not necessarily aware of the criteria used by   the routing function to select routes. It works with any routing   function algorithm. The algorithm adopted is a local matter at each   host/router and different hosts/routers may use different algorithms.   The interface between setup protocol and routing function is also a   local matter and therefore it is not specified by this document.   This version of ST does not support source routing. It does support   route recording. It does include provisions that allow identification   of ST capable neighbors. Identification of remote ST hosts/routers is   not specifically addressed.1.4.5  Local Resource Manager   At each host/router traversed by a stream, the Local Resource Manager   (LRM) is responsible for handling local resources. The LRM knows   which resources are on the system and what capacity they can provide.   Resources include:o   CPUs on end systems and routers to execute the application and    protocol software,o   main memory space for this software (as in all real-time systems,    code should be pinned in main memory, as swapping it out would have    detrimental effects on system performance),o   buffer space to store the data, e.g., communication packets, passing    through the nodes,o   network adapters, andDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 12]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995o   transmission networks between the nodes. Networks may be as simple    as point-to-point links or as complex as switched networks such as    Frame Relay and ATM networks.   During stream setup and modification, the LRM is presented by the   setup protocol with the flow specification associated to the stream.   For each resource it handles, the LRM is expected to perform the   following functions:o   Stream Admission Control: it checks whether, given the flow    specification, there are sufficient resources left to handle the new    data stream. If the available resources are insufficient, the new    data stream must be rejected.o   QoS Computation: it calculates the best possible performance the    resource can provide for the new data stream under the current    traffic conditions, e.g., throughput and delay values are computed.o   Resource Reservation: it reserves the resource capacities required    to meet the desired QoS.   During data transfer, the LRM is responsible for:o   QoS Enforcement: it enforces the QoS requirements by appropriate    scheduling of resource access. For example, data packets from an    application with a short guaranteed delay must be served prior to    data from an application with a less strict delay bound.   The LRM may also provide the following additional functions:o   Data Regulation: to smooth a stream's data traffic, e.g., as with the    leaky bucket algorithm.o   Policing: to prevent applications exceed their negotiated QoS, e.g.,    to send data at a higher rate than indicated in the flow    specification.o   Stream Preemption: to free up resources for other streams with    higher priority or importance.   The strategies adopted by the LRMs to handle resources are resource-   dependent and may vary at every host/router. However, it is necessary   that all LRMs have the same understanding of the flow specification.   The interface between setup protocol and LRM is a local matter at   every host and therefore it is not specified by this document. An   example of LRM is the Heidelberg Resource Administration Technique   (HeiRAT) [VoHN93].Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 13]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   It is also assumed that the LRM provides functions to compare flow   specifications, i.e., to decide whether a flow specification requires   a greater, equal, or smaller amount of resource capacities to be   reserved.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 14]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19951.5  ST2 Basic Concepts   The following sections present at an introductory level some of the   fundamental ST2 concepts including streams, data transfer, and flow   specification.            Hosts Connections...                :      ...and Streams            ====================                :      ==============        data       Origin                       :          Origin       packets +-----------+                    :          +----+          +----|Application|                    :          |    |          |    |-----------|                    :          +----+          +--->| ST Agent  |                    :           |  |               +-----------+                    :           |  |                     |                          :           |  |                     V                          :           |  |              +-------------+                   :           |  |              |             |                   :           |  |+-------------|  Network A  |                   :   +-------+  +--+|             |             |                   :   |             ||             +-------------+                   :   |     Target 2||                    |     Target 2             :   |     & Router||     Target 1       |    and Router            :   |             ||  +-----------+     |  +-----------+           :   V             V|  |Application|<-+  |  |Application|<-+        : +----+        +----+|  |-----------|  |  |  |-----------|  |        : |    |        |    |+->| ST Agent  |--+  +->| ST Agent  |--+        : +----+        +----+   +-----------+        +-----------+           :Target 1         |  |                              |                 :                 |  |                              V                 :                 |  |                    +-------------+             :                 |  |                    |             |             :                 |  |      +-------------|  Network B  |             :           +-----+  |      |             |             |             :           |        |      |             +-------------+             :           |        |      |    Target 3        |    Target 4        :           |        |      |  +-----------+     |  +-----------+     :           V        V      |  |Application|<-+  |  |Application|<-+  :         +----+ +----+      |  |-----------|  |  |  |-----------|  |  :         |    | |    |      +->| ST Agent  |--+  +->| ST Agent  |--+  :         +----+ +----+         +-----------+        +-----------+     :      Target 3 Target 4                                                :                         Figure 3: The Stream ConceptDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 15]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19951.5.1  Streams   Streams form the core concepts of ST2. They are established between a   sending origin and one or more receiving targets in the form of a   routing tree. Streams are uni-directional from the origin to the   targets. Nodes in the tree represent so-called ST agents, entities   executing the ST2 protocol; links in the tree are called hops. Any   node in the middle of the tree is called an intermediate agent, or   router. An agent may have any combination of origin, target, or   intermediate capabilities.   Figure 3 illustrates a stream from an origin to four targets, where   the ST agent on Target 2 also functions as an intermediate agent. Let   us use this Target 2/Router node to explain some basic ST2   terminology: the direction of the stream from this node to Target 3   and 4 is called downstream, the direction towards the Origin node   upstream. ST agents that are one hop away from a given node are   called previous-hops in the upstream, and next-hops in the downstream   direction.   Streams are maintained using SCMP messages. Typical SCMP messages are   CONNECT and ACCEPT to build a stream, DISCONNECT and REFUSE to close   a stream, CHANGE to modify the quality of service associated with a   stream, and JOIN to request to be added to a stream.   Each ST agent maintains state information describing the streams   flowing through it. It can actively gather and distribute such   information. It can recognize failed neighbor ST agents through the   use of periodic HELLO message exchanges. It can ask other ST agents   about a particular stream via a STATUS message. These ST agents then   send back a STATUS-RESPONSE message. NOTIFY messages can be used to   inform other ST agents of significant events.   ST2 offers a wealth of functionalities for stream management. Streams   can be grouped together to minimize allocated resources or to process   them in the same way in case of failures. During audio conferences,   for example, only a limited set of participants may talk at once.   Using the group mechanism, resources for only a portion of the audio   streams of the group need to be reserved. Using the same concept, an   entire group of related audio and video streams can be dropped if one   of them is preempted.1.5.2  Data Transmission   Data transfer in ST2 is simplex in the downstream direction. Data   transport through streams is very simple. ST2 puts only a small   header in front of the user data. The header contains a protocol   identification that distinguishes ST2 from IP packets, an ST2 versionDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 16]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   number, a priority field (specifying a relative importance of streams   in cases of conflict), a length counter, a stream identification, and   a checksum. These elements form a 12-byte header.   Efficiency is also achieved by avoiding fragmentation and reassembly   on all agents. Stream establishment yields a maximum message size for   data packets on a stream. This maximum message size is communicated   to the upper layers, so that they provide data packets of suitable   size to ST2.   Communication with multiple next-hops can be made even more efficient   using MAC Layer multicast when it is available. If a subnet supports   multicast, a single multicast packet is sufficient to reach all   next-hops connected to this subnet. This leads to a significant   reduction of the bandwidth requirements of a stream. If multicast is   not provided, separate packets need to be sent to each next-hop.   As ST2 relies on reservation, it does not contain error correction   mechanisms features for data exchange such as those found in TCP. It   is assumed that real-time data, such as digital audio and video,   require partially correct delivery only. In many cases, retransmitted   packets would arrive too late to meet their real-time delivery   requirements. Also, depending on the data encoding and the particular   application, a small number of errors in stream data are acceptable.   In any case, reliability can be provided by layers on top of ST2 when   needed.1.5.3  Flow Specification   As part of establishing a connection, SCMP handles the negotiation of   quality-of-service parameters for a stream. In ST2 terminology, these   parameters form a flow specification (FlowSpec) which is associated   with the stream. Different versions of FlowSpecs exist, see   [RFC1190], [DHHS92] and [RFC1363], and can be distinguished by a   version number.  Typically, they contain parameters such as average   and maximum throughput, end-to-end delay, and delay variance of a   stream. SCMP itself only provides the mechanism for relaying the   quality-of-service parameters.   Three kinds of entities participate in the quality-of-service   negotiation: application entities on the origin and target sites as   the service users, ST agents, and local resource managers (LRM). The   origin application supplies the initial FlowSpec requesting a   particular service quality. Each ST agent which obtains the FlowSpec   as part of a connection establishment message, it presents the local   resource manager with it. ST2 does not determine how resource   managers make reservations and how resources are scheduled according   to these reservations; ST2, however, assumes these mechanisms as itsDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 17]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   basis.   An example of the FlowSpec negotiation procedure is illustrated in   Figure 4. Depending on the success of its local reservations, the LRM   updates the FlowSpec fields and returns the FlowSpec to the ST agent,   which passes it downstream as part of the connection message.   Eventually, the FlowSpec is communicated to the application at the   target which may base its accept/reject decision for establishing the   connection on it and may finally also modify the FlowSpec. If a   target accepts the connection, the (possibly modified) FlowSpec is   propagated back to the origin which can then calculate an overall   service quality for all targets. The application entity at the origin   may later request a CHANGE to adjust reservations.                 Origin                 Router               Target 1                +------+      1a       +------+      1b      +------+                |      |-------------->|      |------------->|      |                +------+               +------+              +------+                 ^  | ^                                          |                 |  | |                    2                     |                 |  | +------------------------------------------+                 +  + +-------------+  \  \             +-------------+       +-------------+ |Max Delay: 12|   \  \            |Max Delay: 12|       |Max Delay: 12| |-------------|    \  \           |-------------|       |-------------| |Min Delay:  2|     \  \          |Min Delay:  5|       |Min Delay:  9| |-------------|      \  \         |-------------|       |-------------| |Max Size:4096|       +  +        |Max Size:2048|       |Max Size:2048| +-------------+       |  |        +-------------+       +-------------+    FlowSpec           |  | 1                       |  +---------------+                       |                  |                       |                  V                     2 |               +------+                       +---------------|      |                                       +------+                                       Target 2                                   +-------------+                                   |Max Delay: 12|                                   |-------------|                                   |Min Delay:  4|                                   |-------------|                                   |Max Size:4096|                                   +-------------+        Figure 4:  Quality-of-Service Negotiation with FlowSpecsDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 18]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19951.6  Outline of This Document   This document contains the specification of the ST2+ version of the   ST2 protocol. In the rest of the document, whenever the terms "ST" or   "ST2" are used, they refer to the ST2+ version of ST2.   The document is organized as follows:oSection 2 describes the ST2 user service from an application point    of view.oSection 3 illustrates the ST2 data transfer protocol, ST.oSection 4 throughSection 8 specify the ST2 setup protocol, SCMP.o   the ST2 flow specification is presented inSection 9.o   the formats of protocol elements and PDUs are defined inSection 10.2.  ST2 User Service Description   This section describes the ST user service from the high-level point   of view of an application. It defines the ST stream operations and   primitive functions. It specifies which operations on streams can be   invoked by the applications built on top of ST and when the ST   primitive functions can be legally executed. Note that the presented   ST primitives do not specify an API. They are used here with the only   purpose of illustrating the service model for ST.2.1  Stream Operations and Primitive Functions   An ST application at the origin may create, expand, reduce, change,   send data to, and delete a stream. When a stream is expanded, new   targets are added to the stream; when a stream is reduced, some of   the current targets are dropped from it. When a stream is changed,   the associated quality of service is modified.   An ST application at the target may join, receive data from, and   leave a stream. This translates into the following stream operations:o   OPEN: create new stream [origin], CLOSE: delete stream [origin],o   ADD: expand stream, i.e., add new targets to it [origin],o   DROP: reduce stream, i.e., drop targets from it [origin],o   JOIN: join a stream [target], LEAVE: leave a stream [target],Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 19]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995o   DATA: send data through stream [origin],o   CHG: change a stream's QoS [origin],   Each stream operation may require the execution of several primitive   functions to be completed. For instance, to open a new stream, a   request is first issued by the sender and an indication is generated   at one or more receivers; then, the receivers may each accept or   refuse the request and the correspondent indications are generated at   the sender. A single receiver case is shown in Figure 5 below.                Sender             Network             Receiver                  |                   |                   |     OPEN.req     |                   |                   |                  |-----------------> |                   |                  |                   |-----------------> |                  |                   |                   | OPEN.ind                  |                   |                   | OPEN.accept                  |                   |<----------------- |                  |<----------------- |                   |  OPEN.accept-ind |                   |                   |                  |                   |                   |           Figure 5: Primitives for the OPEN Stream OperationDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 20]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   Table 1 defines the ST service primitive functions associated to each   stream operation. The column labelled "O/T" indicates whether the   primitive is executed at the origin or at the target.           +===================================================+           |Primitive      | Descriptive                   |O/T|           |===================================================|           |OPEN.req       | open a stream                 | O |           |OPEN.ind       | connection request indication | T |           |OPEN.accept    | accept stream                 | T |           |OPEN.refuse    | refuse stream                 | T |           |OPEN.accept-ind| connection accept indication  | O |           |OPEN.refuse-ind| connection refuse indication  | O |           |ADD.req        | add targets to stream         | O |           |ADD.ind        | add request indication        | T |           |ADD.accept     | accept stream                 | T |           |ADD.refuse     | refuse stream                 | T |           |ADD.accept-ind | add accept indication         | O |           |ADD.refuse-ind | add refuse indication         | O |           |JOIN.req       | join a stream                 | T |           |JOIN.ind       | join request indication       | O |           |JOIN.reject    | reject a join                 | O |           |JOIN.reject-ind| join reject indication        | T |           |DATA.req       | send data                     | O |           |DATA.ind       | receive data indication       | T |           |CHG.req        | change stream QoS             | O |           |CHG.ind        | change request indication     | T |           |CHG.accept     | accept change                 | T |           |CHG.refuse     | refuse change                 | T |           |CHG.accept-ind | change accept indication      | O |           |CHG.refuse-ind | change refuse indication      | O |           |DROP.req       | drop targets                  | O |           |DROP.ind       | disconnect indication         | T |           |LEAVE.req      | leave stream                  | T |           |LEAVE.ind      | leave stream indication       | O |           |CLOSE.req      | close stream                  | O |           |CLOSE.ind      | close stream indication       | T |           +---------------------------------------------------+                              Table 1: ST Primitives2.2  State Diagrams   It is not sufficient to define the set of ST stream operations. It is   also necessary to specify when the operations can be legally   executed.  For this reason, a set of states is now introduced and the   transitions from one state to the others are specified. States are   defined with respect to a single stream. The previously definedDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 21]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   stream operations can be legally executed only from an appropriate   state.   An ST agent may, with respect to an ST stream, be in one of the   following states:o   IDLE: the stream has not been created yet.o   PENDING: the stream is in the process of being established.o   ACTIVE: the stream is established and active.o   ADDING: the stream is established. A stream expansion is underway.o   CHGING: the stream is established. A stream change is underway.   Previous experience with ST has lead to limits on stream operations   that can be executed simultaneously. These restrictions are:   1.  A single ADD or CHG operation can be processed at one time. If       an ADD or CHG is already underway, further requests are queued       by the ST agent and handled only after the previous operation       has been completed. This also applies to two subsequent       requests of the same kind, e.g., two ADD or two CHG operations.       The second operation is not executed until the first one has       been completed.   2.  Deleting a stream, leaving a stream, or dropping targets from a       stream is possible only after stream establishment has been       completed. A stream is considered to be established when all       the next-hops of the origin have either accepted or refused the       stream.  Note that stream refuse is automatically forced after       timeout if no reply comes from a next-hop.   3.  An ST agent forwards data only along already established paths       to the targets, see alsoSection 3.1. A path is considered to       be established when the next-hop on the path has explicitly       accepted the stream. This implies that the target and all other       intermediate ST agents are ready to handle the incoming data       packets. In no cases an ST agent will forward data to a       next-hop ST agent that has not explicitly accepted the stream.       To be sure that all targets receive the data, an application       should send the data only after all paths have been       established, i.e., the stream is established.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 22]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   4.  It is allowed to send data from the CHGING and ADDING states.       While sending data from the CHGING state, the quality of       service to the targets affected by the change should be assumed       to be the more restrictive quality of service. When sending       data from the ADDING state, the targets that receive the data       include at least all the targets that were already part of the       stream at the time the ADD operation was invoked.   The rules introduced above require ST agents to queue incoming   requests when the current state does not allow to process them   immediately. In order to preserve the semantics, ST agents have to   maintain the order of the requests, i.e., implement FIFO queuing.   Exceptionally, the CLOSE request at the origin and the LEAVE request   at the target may be immediately processed: in these cases, the queue   is deleted and it is possible that requests in the queue are not   processed.   The following state diagrams define the ST service. Separate diagrams   are presented for the origin and the targets.   The symbol (a/r)* indicates that all targets in the target list have   explicitly accepted or refused the stream, or refuse has been forced   after timeout. If the target list is empty, i.e., it contains no   targets, the (a/r)* condition is immediately satisfied, so the empty   stream is created and state ESTBL is entered.   The separate OPEN and ADD primitives at the target are for conceptual   purposes only. The target is actually unable to distinguish between   an OPEN and an ADD. This is reflected in Figure 7 and Table 3 through   the notation OPEN/ADD.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 23]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995                        +------------+                        |            |<-------------------+            +---------->|    IDLE    |-------------+      |            |           |            |    OPEN.req |      |            |           +------------+             |      | CLOSE.req  |      CLOSE.req ^   ^ CLOSE.req       V      | CLOSE.req            |                |   |            +---------+ |            |                |   |            | PENDING |-|-+ JOIN.reject            |                |   -------------|         |<|-+            |    JOIN.reject |                +---------+ |            |    DROP.req +----------+             |      |            |       +-----|          |             |      |            |       |     |  ESTDL   | OPEN.(a/r)* |      |            |       +---->|          |<------------+      |            |             +----------+                    |            |              |  ^  |  ^                     |            |              |  |  |  |                     |       +----------+ CHG.req|  |  |  | Add.(a/r)*    +----------+       |          |<-------+  |  |  +-------------- |          |       |  CHGING  |           |  |                  |  ADDING  |       |          |-----------+  +----------------->|          |       +----------+ CHG.(a/r)*         JOIN.ind     +----------+           |   ^                         ADD.req        |   ^           |   |                                        |   |           +---+                                        +---+           DROP.req                                    DROP.req           JOIN.reject                                 JOIN.reject                  Figure 6: ST Service at the Origin                 +--------+                 |        |-----------------------+                 |  IDLE  |                       |                 |        |<---+                  | OPEN/ADD.ind                 +--------+    | CLOSE.ind        | JOIN.req                     ^         | OPEN/ADD.refuse  |                     |         | JOIN.refect-ind  |         CLOSE.ind   |         |                  V         DROP.ind    |         |             +---------+         LEAVE.req   |         +-------------|         |                     |                       | PENDING |                 +-------+                   |         |                 |       |                   +---------+                 | ESTBL |    OPEN/ADD.accept     |                 |       |<-----------------------+                 +-------+                     Figure 7: ST Service at the TargetDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 24]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19952.3  State Transition Tables   Table 2 and Table 3 define which primitives can be processed from   which states and the possible state transitions.+======================================================================+|Primitive      |IDLE|    PENDING    |  ESTBL |    CHGING  |    ADDING ||======================================================================||OPEN.req       | ok | -             | -      | -          | -         ||OPEN.accept-ind| -  |if(a,r)*->ESTBL| -      | -          | -         ||OPEN.refuse-ind| -  |if(a,r)*->ESTBL| -      | -          | -         ||ADD.req        | -  | queued        |->ADDING| queued     | queued    ||ADD.accept-ind | -  | -             | -      | -          |if(a,r)*   ||               | -  | -             | -      | -          |->ESTBL    ||ADD.refuse-ind | -  | -             | -      | -          |if(a,r)*   ||               | -  | -             | -      | -          |->ESTBL    ||JOIN.ind       | -  | queued        |->ADDING| queued     |queued     ||JOIN.reject    | -  | OK            | ok     | ok         | ok        ||DATA.req       | -  | -             | ok     | ok         | ok        ||CHG.req        | -  | queued        |->CHGING| queued     |queued     ||CHG.accept-ind | -  | -             | -      |if(a,r)*    | -         ||               | -  | -             | -      |->ESTBL     | -         ||CHG.refuse.ind | -  | -             | -      |if(a,r)*    | -         ||               | -  | -             | -      |->ESTBL     | -         ||DROP.req       | -  | -             | ok     | ok         | ok        ||LEAVE.ind      | -  | OK            | ok     | ok         | ok        ||CLOSE.req      | -  | OK            | ok     | ok         | ok        |+----------------------------------------------------------------------+                Table 2: Primitives and States at the Origin             +======================================================+             | Primitive       |   IDLE    |  PENDING   |   ESTBL   |             |======================================================|             | OPEN/ADD.ind    | ->PENDING | -          | -         |             | OPEN/ADD.accept | -         | ->ESTBL    | -         |             | OPEN/ADD.refuse | -         | ->IDLE     | -         |             | JOIN.req        | ->PENDING | -          | -         |             | JOIN.reject-ind |-          | ->IDLE     | -         |             | DATA.ind        | -         | -          | ok        |             | CHG.ind         | -         | -          | ok        |             | CHG.accept      | -         | -          | ok        |             | DROP.ind        | -         | ok         | ok        |             | LEAVE.req       | -         | ok         | ok        |             | CLOSE.ind       | -         | ok         | ok        |             | CHG.ind         | -         | -          | ok        |             +------------------------------------------------------+                Table 3: Primitives and States at the TargetDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 25]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19953.  The ST2 Data Transfer Protocol   This section presents the ST2 data transfer protocol, ST. First, data   transfer is described inSection 3.1, then, the data transfer   protocol functions are illustrated inSection 3.2.3.1  Data Transfer with ST   Data transmission with ST is unreliable. An application is not   guaranteed that the data reaches its destinations and ST makes no   attempts to recover from packet loss, e.g., due to the underlying   network. However, if the data reaches its destination, it should do   so according to the quality of service associated with the stream.   Additionally, ST may deliver data corrupted in transmission. Many   types of real-time data, such as digital audio and video, require   partially correct delivery only. In many cases, retransmitted packets   would arrive too late to meet their real-time delivery requirements.   On the other hand, depending on the data encoding and the particular   application, a small number of errors in stream data are acceptable.   In any case, reliability can be provided by layers on top of ST2 if   needed.   Also, no data fragmentation is supported during the data transfer   phase. The application is expected to segment its data PDUs according   to the minimum MTU over all paths in the stream. The application   receives information on the MTUs relative to the paths to the targets   as part of the ACCEPT message, seeSection 8.6. The minimum MTU over   all paths can be calculated from the MTUs relative to the single   paths. ST agents silently discard too long data packets, see alsoSection 5.1.1.   An ST agent forwards the data only along already established paths to   targets. A path is considered to be established once the next-hop ST   agent on the path sends an ACCEPT message, seeSection 2.2. This   implies that the target and all other intermediate ST agents on the   path to the target are ready to handle the incoming data packets. In   no cases will an ST agent forward data to a next-hop ST agent that   has not explicitly accepted the stream.   To be reasonably sure that all targets receive the data with the   desired quality of service, an application should send the data only   after the whole stream has been established. Depending on the local   API, an application may not be prevented from sending data before the   completion of stream setup, but it should be aware that the data   could be lost or not reach all intended targets. This behavior may   actually be desirable to applications, such as those application that   have multiple targets which can each process data as soon as it isDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 26]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   available (e.g., a lecture or distributed gaming).   It is desirable for implementations to take advantage of networks   that support multicast. If a network does not support multicast, or   for the case where the next-hops are on different networks, multiple   copies of the data packet must be sent.3.2  ST Protocol Functions   The ST protocol provides two functions:   o   stream identification   o   data priority3.2.1  Stream Identification   ST data packets are encapsulated by an ST header containing the   Stream IDentifier (SID). This SID is selected at the origin so that   it is globally unique over the Internet. The SID must be known by the   setup protocol as well. At stream establishment time, the setup   protocol builds, at each agent traversed by the stream, an entry into   its local database containing stream information. The SID can be used   as a reference into this database, to obtain quickly the necessary   replication and forwarding information.   Stream IDentifiers are intended to be used to make the packet   forwarding task most efficient. The time-critical operation is an   intermediate ST agent receiving a packet from the previous-hop ST   agent and forwarding it to the next-hop ST agents.   The format of data PDUs including the SID is defined inSection 10.1.   Stream IDentifier generation is discussed inSection 8.1.3.2.2  Packet Discarding based on Data Priority   ST provides a well defined quality of service to its applications.   However, there may be cases where the network is temporarily   congested and the ST agents have to discard certain packets to   minimize the overall impact to other streams. The ST protocol   provides a mechanism to discard data packets based on the Priority   field in the data PDU, seeSection 10.1. The application assigns each   data packet with a discard-priority level, carried into the Priority   field. ST agents will attempt to discard lower priority packets first   during periods of network congestion. Applications may choose to send   data at multiple priority levels so that less important data may be   discarded first.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 27]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19954.  SCMP Functional Description   ST agents create and manage streams using the ST Control Message   Protocol (SCMP). Conceptually, SCMP resides immediately above ST (as   does ICMP above IP). SCMP follows a request-response model. SCMP   messages are made reliable through the use of retransmission after   timeout.   This section contains a functional description of stream management   with SCMP. To help clarify the SCMP exchanges used to setup and   maintain ST streams, we include an example of a simple network   topology, represented in Figure 8. Using the SCMP messages described   in this section it will be possible for an ST application to:   o   Create a stream from A to the peers at B, C and D,   o   Add a peer at E,   o   Drop peers B and C, and   o   Let F join the stream   o   Delete the stream.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 28]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995                                               +---------+    +---+                                               |         |----| B |               +---------+      +----------+   |         |    +---+               |         |------| Router 1 |---| Subnet2 |               |         |      +----------+   |         |               |         |                     |         |               |         |                     +---------+               |         |                         |               | Subnet1 |                         |               |         |                     +----------+               |         |                     | Router 3 |       +---+   |         |                     +----------+       | A |---|         |    +----------+           |       +---+   |         |----| Router 2 |           |               |         |    +----------+           |               +---------+         |                 |                                   |                 |                                   |          +----------+    +---+                                   +----------|          |----| C |                                              |          |    +---+                         +---------+          |  Subnet3 |                 +---+   |         |   +---+  |          |    +---+                 | F |---| Subnet4 |---| E |--|          |----| D |                 +---+   |         |   +---+  +----------+    +---+                         +---------+                Figure 8:  Sample Topology for an ST Stream   We first describe the possible types of stream inSection 4.1;Section 4.2 introduces SCMP control message types; SCMP reliability   is discussed inSection 4.3; stream options are covered inSection4.4; stream setup is presented inSection 4.5;Section 4.6   illustrates stream modification including stream expansion,   reduction, changes of the quality of service associated to a stream.   Finally, stream deletion is handled inSection 4.7.4.1  Types of Streams   SCMP allows for the setup and management of different types of   streams. Streams differ in the way they are built and the information   maintained on connected targets.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 29]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19954.1.1  Stream Building   Streams may be built in a sender-oriented fashion, receiver-oriented   fashion, or with a mixed approach:o   in the sender-oriented fashion, the application at the origin    provides the ST agent with the list of receivers for the stream. New    targets, if any, are also added from the origin.o   in the receiver-oriented approach, the application at the origin    creates an empty stream that contains no targets. Each target then    joins the stream autonomously.o   in the mixed approach, the application at the origin creates a    stream that contains some targets and other targets join the stream    autonomously.   ST2 provides stream options to support sender-oriented and mixed   approach steams. Receiver-oriented streams can be emulated through   the use of mixed streams. The fashion by which targets may be added   to a particular stream is controlled via join authorization levels.   Join authorization levels are described inSection 4.4.2.4.1.2  Knowledge of Receivers   When streams are built in the sender-oriented fashion, all ST agents   will have full information on all targets down stream of a particular   agent. In this case, target information is relayed down stream from   agent-to-agent during stream set-up.   When targets add themselves to mixed approach streams, upstream ST   agents may or may not be informed. Propagation of information on   targets that "join" a stream is also controlled via join   authorization levels. As previously mentioned, join authorization   levels are described inSection 4.4.2.   This leads to two types of streams:o   full target information is propagated in a full-state stream. For    such streams, all agents are aware of all downstream targets    connected to the stream. This results in target information being    maintained at the origin and at intermediate agents. Operations on    single targets are always possible, i.e., change a certain target,    or, drop that target from the stream. It is also always possible for    any ST agent to attempt recovery of all downstream targets.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 30]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995o   in light-weight streams, it is possible that the origin and other    upstream agents have no knowledge about some targets. This results    in less maintained state and easier stream management, but it limits    operations on specific targets. Special actions may be required to    support change and drop operations on unknown targets, seeSection5.7. Also, stream recovery may not be possible. Of course, generic    functions such as deleting the whole stream, are still possible. It    is expected that applications that will have a large number of    targets will use light-weight streams in order to limit state in    agents and the number of targets per control message.   Full-state streams serve well applications as video conferencing or   distributed gaming, where it is important to have knowledge on the   connected receivers, e.g., to limit who participates. Light-weight   streams may be exploited by applications such as remote lecturing or   playback applications of radio and TV broadcast where the receivers   do not need to be known by the sender.Section 4.4.2 defines join   authorization levels, which support two types of full-state streams   and one type of light-weight stream.4.2  Control PDUs   SCMP defines the following PDUs (the main purpose of each PDU is also   indicated):1.      ACCEPT        to accept a new stream2.      ACK           to acknowledge an incoming message3.      CHANGE        to change the quality of service associated with                                a stream4.      CONNECT       to establish a new stream or add new targets to                                an existing stream5.      DISCONNECT    to remove some or all of the stream's targets6.      ERROR         to indicate an error contained in an incoming                                message7.      HELLO         to detect failures of neighbor ST agents8.      JOIN          to request stream joining from a target9.      JOIN-REJECT   to reject a stream joining request from a target10.     NOTIFY        to inform an ST agent of a significant event11.     REFUSE        to refuse the establishment of a new stream12.     STATUS        to query an ST agent on a specific stream13.     STATUS-RESPONSE to reply queries on a specific stream   SCMP follows a request-response model with all requests expecting   responses. Retransmission after timeout is used to allow for lost or   ignored messages. Control messages do not extend across packet   boundaries; if a control message is too large for the MTU of a hop,   its information is partitioned and a control message per partition is   sent, as described inSection 5.1.2.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 31]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   CONNECT and CHANGE request messages are answered with ACCEPT messages   which indicate success, and with REFUSE messages which indicate   failure. JOIN messages are answered with either a CONNECT message   indicating success, or with a JOIN-REJECT message indicating failure.   Targets may be removed from a stream by either the origin or the   target via the DISCONNECT and REFUSE messages.   The ACCEPT, CHANGE, CONNECT, DISCONNECT, JOIN, JOIN-REJECT, NOTIFY   and REFUSE messages must always be explicitly acknowledged:o   with an ACK message, if the message was received correctly and it    was possible to parse and correctly extract and interpret its    header, fields and parameters,o   with an ERROR message, if a syntax error was detected in the header,    fields, or parameters included in the message. The errored PDU may    be optionally returned as part of the ERROR message. An ERROR    message indicates a syntax error only. If any other errors are    detected, it is necessary to first acknowledge with ACK and then    take appropriate actions. For instance, suppose a CHANGE message    contains an unknown SID: first, an ACK message has to be sent, then    a REFUSE message with ReasonCode (SIDUnknown) follows.   If no ACK or ERROR message are received before the correspondent   timer expires, a timeout failure occurs. The way an ST agent should   handle timeout failures is described inSection 5.2.   ACK, ERROR, and STATUS-RESPONSE messages are never acknowledged.   HELLO messages are a special case. If they contain a syntax error, an   ERROR message should be generated in response. Otherwise, no   acknowledgment or response should be generated. Use of HELLO messages   is discussed inSection 6.1.2.   STATUS messages containing a syntax error should be answered with an   ERROR message. Otherwise, a STATUS-RESPONSE message should be sent   back in response. Use of STATUS and STATUS-RESPONSE are discussed inSection 8.4.4.3  SCMP Reliability   SCMP is made reliable through the use of retransmission when a   response is not received in a timely manner. The ACCEPT, CHANGE,   CONNECT, DISCONNECT, JOIN, JOIN-REJECT, NOTIFY, and REFUSE messages   all must be answered with an ACK message, seeSection 4.2. In   general, when sending a SCMP message which requires an ACK response,   the sending ST agent needs to set the Toxxxx timer (where xxxx is the   SCMP message type, e.g., ToConnect). If it does not receive an ACKDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 32]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   before the Toxxxx timer expires, the ST agent should retransmit the   SCMP message. If no ACK has been received within Nxxxx   retransmissions, then a SCMP timeout condition occurs and the ST   agent enters its SCMP timeout recovery state. The actions performed   by the ST agent as the result of the SCMP timeout condition differ   for different SCMP messages and are described inSection 5.2.   For some SCMP messages (CONNECT, CHANGE, JOIN, and STATUS) the   sending ST agent also expects a response back (ACCEPT/REFUSE,   CONNECT/JOIN- REJECT) after ACK has been received. For these cases,   the ST agent needs to set the ToxxxxResp timer after it receives the   ACK. (As before, xxxx is the initiating SCMP message type, e.g.,   ToConnectResp).  If it does not receive the appropriate response back   when ToxxxxResp expires, the ST agent updates its state and performs   appropriate recovery action as described inSection 5.2. Suggested   constants are given inSection 10.5.4.   The timeout and retransmission algorithm is implementation dependent   and it is outside the scope of this document. Most existing   algorithms are based on an estimation of the Round Trip Time (RTT)   between two agents. Therefore, SCMP contains a mechanism, seeSection8.5, to estimate this RTT. Note that the timeout related variable   names described above are for reference purposes only, implementors   may choose to combine certain variables.4.4  Stream Options   An application may select among some stream options. The desired   options are indicated to the ST agent at the origin when a new stream   is created. Options apply to single streams and are valid during the   whole stream's lifetime. The options chosen by the application at the   origin are included into the initial CONNECT message, seeSection4.5.3. When a CONNECT message reaches a target, the application at   the target is notified of the stream options that have been selected,   seeSection 4.5.5.4.4.1  No Recovery   When a stream failure is detected, an ST agent would normally attempt   stream recovery, as described inSection 6.2. The NoRecovery option   is used to indicate that ST agents should not attempt recovery for   the stream. The protocol behavior in the case that the NoRecovery   option has been selected is illustrated inSection 6.2. The   NoRecovery option is specified by setting the S-bit in the CONNECT   message, seeSection 10.4.4. The S-bit can be set only by the origin   and it is never modified by intermediate and target ST agents.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 33]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19954.4.2  Join Authorization Level   When a new stream is created, it is necessary to define the join   authorization level associated with the stream. This level determines   the protocol behavior in case of stream joining, seeSection 4.1 andSection 4.6.3. The join authorization level for a stream is defined   by the J-bit and N-bit in the CONNECT message header, seeSection10.4.4.  One of the following authorization levels has to be   selected:   o   Level 0 - Refuse Join (JN = 00): No targets are allowed to join this       stream.   o   Level 1 - OK, Notify Origin (JN = 01): Targets are allowed to join       the stream. The origin is notified that the target has joined.   o   Level 2 - OK (JN = 10): Targets are allowed to join the stream. No       notification is sent to the stream origin.   Some applications may choose to maintain tight control on their   streams and will not permit any connections without the origin's   permission. For such streams, target applications may request to be   added by sending an out-of-band, i.e., via regular IP, request to the   origin. The origin, if it so chooses, can then add the target   following the process described inSection 4.6.1.   The selected authorization level impacts stream handling and the   state that is maintained for the stream, as described inSection 4.1.4.4.3  Record Route   The RecordRoute option can be used to request the route between the   origin and a target be recorded and delivered to the application.   This option may be used while connecting, accepting, changing, or   refusing a stream. The results of a RecordRoute option requested by   the origin, i.e., as part of the CONNECT or CHANGE messages, are   delivered to the target. The results of a RecordRoute option   requested by the target, i.e., as part of the ACCEPT or REFUSE   messages, are delivered to the origin.   The RecordRoute option is specified by adding the RecordRoute   parameter to the mentioned SCMP messages. The format of the   RecordRoute parameter is shown inSection 10.3.5. When adding this   parameter, the ST agent at the origin must determine the number of   entries that may be recorded as explained inSection 10.3.5.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 34]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19954.4.4  User Data   The UserData option can be used by applications to transport   application specific data along with some SCMP control messages. This   option can be included with ACCEPT, CHANGE, CONNECT, DISCONNECT, and   REFUSE messages. The format of the UserData parameter is shown inSection 10.3.7. This option may be included by the origin, or the   target, by adding the UserData parameter to the mentioned SCMP   messages. This option may only be included once per SCMP message.4.5  Stream Setup   This section presents a description of stream setup. For simplicity,   we assume that everything succeeds, e.g., any required resources are   available, messages are properly delivered, and the routing is   correct. Possible failures in the setup phase are handled inSection5.2.4.5.1  Information from the Application   Before stream setup can be started, the application has to collect   the necessary information to determine the characteristics for the   connection. This includes identifying the participants and selecting   the QoS parameters of the data flow. Information passed to the ST   agent by the application includes:o   the list of the stream's targets (Section 10.3.6). The list may be    empty (Section 4.5.3.1),o   the flow specification containing the desired quality of service for    the stream (Section 9),o   information on the groups in which the stream is a member, if any    (Section 7),o   information on the options selected for the stream (Section 4.4).4.5.2  Initial Setup at the Origin   The ST agent at the origin then performs the following operations:o   allocates a stream ID (SID) for the stream (Section 8.1),o   invokes the routing function to determine the set of next-hops for    the stream (Section 4.5.2.1),o   invokes the Local Resource Manager (LRM) to reserve resources    (Section 4.5.2.2),Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 35]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995o   creates local database entries to store information on the new    stream,o   propagates the stream creation request to the next-hops determined    by the routing function (Section 4.5.3).4.5.2.1  Invoking the Routing Function   An ST agent that is setting up a stream invokes the routing function   to find the next-hop to reach each of the targets specified by the   target list provided by the application. This is similar to the   routing decision in IP. However, in this case the route is to a   multitude of targets with QoS requirements rather than to a single   destination.   The result of the routing function is a set of next-hop ST agents.   The set of next-hops selected by the routing function is not   necessarily the same as the set of next-hops that IP would select   given a number of independent IP datagrams to the same destinations.   The routing algorithm may attempt to optimize parameters other than   the number of hops that the packets will take, such as delay, local   network bandwidth consumption, or total internet bandwidth   consumption.  Alternatively, the routing algorithm may use a simple   route lookup for each target.   Once a next-hop is selected by the routing function, it persists for   the whole stream lifetime, unless a network failure occurs.4.5.2.2  Reserving Resources   The ST agent invokes the Local Resource Manager (LRM) to perform the   appropriate reservations. The ST agent presents the LRM with   information including:o   the flow specification with the desired quality of service for the    stream (Section 9),o   the version number associated with the flow specification    (Section 9).o   information on the groups the stream is member in, if any    (Section 7),   The flow specification contains information needed by the LRM to   allocate resources. The LRM updates the flow specification contents   information before returning it to the ST agent.Section 9.2.3   defines the fields of the flow specification to be updated by the   LRM.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 36]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   The membership of a stream in a group may affect the amount of   resources that have to be allocated by the LRM, seeSection 7.4.5.3  Sending CONNECT Messages   The ST agent sends a CONNECT message to each of the next-hop ST   agents identified by the routing function. Each CONNECT message   contains the SID, the selected stream options, the FlowSpec, and a   TargetList. The format of the CONNECT message is defined bySection10.4.4. In general, the FlowSpec and TargetList depend on both the   next-hop and the intervening network. Each TargetList is a subset of   the original TargetList, identifying the targets that are to be   reached through the next-hop to which the CONNECT message is being   sent.   The TargetList may be empty, seeSection 4.5.3.1; if the TargetList   causes a too long CONNECT message to be generated, the CONNECT   message is partitioned as explained inSection 5.1.2. If multiple   next-hops are to be reached through a network that supports network   level multicast, a different CONNECT message must nevertheless be   sent to each next-hop since each will have a different TargetList.4.5.3.1  Empty Target List   An application at the origin may request the local ST agent to create   an empty stream. It does so by passing an empty TargetList to the   local ST agent during the initial stream setup. When the local ST   agent receives a request to create an empty stream, it allocates the   stream ID (SID), updates its local database entries to store   information on the new stream and notifies the application that   stream setup is complete. The local ST agent does not generate any   CONNECT message for streams with an empty TargetList. Targets may be   later added by the origin, seeSection 4.6.1, or they may   autonomously join the stream, seeSection 4.6.3.4.5.4  CONNECT Processing by an Intermediate ST agent   An ST agent receiving a CONNECT message, assuming no errors, responds   to the previous-hop with an ACK. The ACK message must identify the   CONNECT message to which it corresponds by including the reference   number indicated by the Reference field of the CONNECT message. The   intermediate ST agent calls the routing function, invokes the LRM to   reserve resources, and then propagates the CONNECT messages to its   next-hops, as described in the previous sections.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 37]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19954.5.5  CONNECT Processing at the Targets   An ST agent that is the target of a CONNECT message, assuming no   errors, responds to the previous-hop with an ACK. The ST agent   invokes the LRM to reserve local resources and then queries the   specified application process whether or not it is willing to accept   the connection.   The application is presented with parameters from the CONNECT message   including the SID, the selected stream options, Origin, FlowSpec,   TargetList, and Group, if any, to be used as a basis for its   decision.  The application is identified by a combination of the   NextPcol field, from the Origin parameter, and the service access   point, or SAP, field included in the correspondent (usually single   remaining) Target of the TargetList. The contents of the SAP field   may specify the port or other local identifier for use by the   protocol layer above the host ST layer. Subsequently received data   packets will carry the SID, that can be mapped into this information   and be used for their delivery.   Finally, based on the application's decision, the ST agent sends to   the previous-hop from which the CONNECT message was received either   an ACCEPT or REFUSE message. Since the ACCEPT (or REFUSE) message has   to be acknowledged by the previous-hop, it is assigned a new   Reference number that will be returned in the ACK. The CONNECT   message to which ACCEPT (or REFUSE) is a reply is identified by   placing the CONNECT's Reference number in the LnkReference field of   ACCEPT (or REFUSE). The ACCEPT message contains the FlowSpec as   accepted by the application at the target.4.5.6  ACCEPT Processing by an Intermediate ST agent   When an intermediate ST agent receives an ACCEPT, it first verifies   that the message is a response to an earlier CONNECT. If not, it   responds to the next-hop ST agent with an ERROR message, with   ReasonCode (LnkRefUnknown). Otherwise, it responds to the next-hop ST   agent with an ACK, and propagates the individual ACCEPT message to   the previous-hop along the same path traced by the CONNECT but in the   reverse direction toward the origin.   The FlowSpec is included in the ACCEPT message so that the origin and   intermediate ST agents can gain access to the information that was   accumulated as the CONNECT traversed the internet. Note that the   resources, as specified in the FlowSpec in the ACCEPT message, may   differ from the resources that were reserved when the CONNECT was   originally processed. Therefore, the ST agent presents the LRM with   the FlowSpec included in the ACCEPT message. It is expected that each   LRM adjusts local reservations releasing any excess resources. TheDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 38]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   LRM may choose not to adjust local reservations when that adjustment   may result in the loss of needed resources. It may also choose to   wait to adjust allocated resources until all targets in transition   have been accepted or refused.   In the case where the intermediate ST agent is acting as the origin   with respect to this target, seeSection 4.6.3.1, the ACCEPT message   is not propagated upstream.4.5.7  ACCEPT Processing by the Origin   The origin will eventually receive an ACCEPT (or REFUSE) message from   each of the targets. As each ACCEPT is received, the application is   notified of the target and the resources that were successfully   allocated along the path to it, as specified in the FlowSpec   contained in the ACCEPT message. The application may then use the   information to either adopt or terminate the portion of the stream to   each target.   When an ACCEPT is received by the origin, the path to the target is   considered to be established and the ST agent is allowed to forward   the data along this path as explained inSection 2 and inSection3.1.4.5.8  REFUSE Processing by the Intermediate ST agent   If an application at a target does not wish to participate in the   stream, it sends a REFUSE message back to the origin with ReasonCode   (ApplDisconnect). An intermediate ST agent that receives a REFUSE   message with ReasonCode (ApplDisconnect) acknowledges it by sending   an ACK to the next-hop, invokes the LRM to adjusts reservations as   appropriate, deletes the target entry from the internal database, and   propagates the REFUSE message back to the previous-hop ST agent.   In the case where the intermediate ST agent is acting as the origin   with respect to this target, seeSection 4.6.3.1, the REFUSE message   is only propagated upstream when there are no more downstream agents   participating in the stream. In this case, the agent indicates that   the agent is to be removed from the stream propagating the REFUSE   message with the G-bit set (1).4.5.9  REFUSE Processing by the Origin   When the REFUSE message reaches the origin, the ST agent at the   origin sends an ACK and notifies the application that the target is   no longer part of the stream and also if the stream has no remaining   targets. If there are no remaining targets, the application may wish   to terminate the stream, or keep the stream active to allow additionDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 39]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   of targets or stream joining as described inSection 4.6.3.4.5.10  Other Functions during Stream Setup   Some other functions have to be accomplished by an ST agent as   CONNECT messages travel downstream and ACCEPT (or REFUSE) messages   travel upstream during the stream setup phase. They were not   mentioned in the previous sections to keep the discussion as simple   as possible. These functions include:   o   computing the smallest Maximum Transmission Unit size over the path       to the targets, as part of the MTU discovery mechanism presented inSection 8.6. This is done by updating the MaxMsgSize field of the       CONNECT message, seeSection 10.4.4. This value is carried back to       origin in the MaxMsgSize field of the ACCEPT message, seeSection10.4.1.   o   counting the number of IP clouds to be traversed to reach the       targets, if any. IP clouds are traversed when the IP encapsulation       mechanism is used. This mechanism described inSection 8.7.       Encapsulating agents update the IPHops field of the CONNECT message,       seeSection 10.4.4. The resulting value is carried back to origin in       the IPHops field of the ACCEPT message, seeSection 10.4.1.   o   updating the RecoveryTimeout value for the stream based on what can       the agent can support. This is part of the stream recovery       mechanism, inSection 6.2. This is done by updating the       RecoveryTimeout field of the CONNECT message, seeSection 10.4.4.       This value is carried back to origin in the RecoveryTimeout field of       the ACCEPT message, seeSection 10.4.1.4.6  Modifying an Existing Stream   Some applications may wish to modify a stream after it has been   created. Possible changes include expanding a stream, reducing it,   and changing its FlowSpec. The origin may add or remove targets as   described inSection 4.6.1 andSection 4.6.2. Targets may request to   join the stream as described inSection 4.6.3 or, they may decide to   leave a stream as described inSection 4.6.4.Section 4.6.5 explains   how to change a stream's FlowSpec.   As defined bySection 2, an ST agent can handle only one stream   modification at a time. If a stream modification operation is already   underway, further requests are queued and handled when the previous   operation has been completed. This also applies to two subsequent   requests of the same kind, e.g., two subsequent changes to the   FlowSpec.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 40]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19954.6.1  The Origin Adding New Targets   It is possible for an application at the origin to add new targets to   an existing stream any time after the stream has been established.   Before new targets are added, the application has to collect the   necessary information on the new targets. Such information is passed   to the ST agent at the origin.   The ST agent at the origin issues a CONNECT message that contains the   SID, the FlowSpec, and the TargetList specifying the new targets.   This is similar to sending a CONNECT message during stream   establishment, with the following exceptions: the origin checks that   a) the SID is valid, b) the targets are not already members of the   stream, c) that the LRM evaluates the FlowSpec of the new target to   be the same as the FlowSpec of the existing stream, i.e., it requires   an equal or smaller amount of resources to be allocated. If the   FlowSpec of the new target does not match the FlowSpec of the   existing stream, an error is generated with ReasonCode   (FlowSpecMismatch). Functions to compare flow specifications are   provided by the LRM, seeSection 1.4.5.   An intermediate ST agent that is already a participant in the stream   looks at the SID and StreamCreationTime, and verifies that the stream   is the same. It then checks if the intersection of the TargetList and   the targets of the established stream is empty. If this is not the   case, it responds with a REFUSE message with ReasonCode   (TargetExists) that contains a TargetList of those targets that were   duplicates. To indicate that the stream exists, and includes the   listed targets, the ST agent sets to one (1) the E-bit of the REFUSE   message, seeSection 10.4.11.  The agent then proceeds processing   each new target in the TargetList.   For each new target in the TargetList, processing is much the same as   for the original CONNECT. The CONNECT is acknowledged, propagated,   and network resources are reserved. Intermediate or target ST agents   that are not already participants in the stream behave as in the case   of stream setup (seeSection 4.5.4 andSection 4.5.5).4.6.2  The Origin Removing a Target   It is possible for an application at the origin to remove existing   targets of a stream any time after the targets have accepted the   stream. The application at the origin specifies the set of targets   that are to be removed and informs the local ST agent. Based on this   information, the ST agent sends DISCONNECT messages with the   ReasonCode (ApplDisconnect) to the next-hops relative to the targets.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 41]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   An ST agent that receives a DISCONNECT message must acknowledge it by   sending an ACK to the previous-hop. The ST agent updates its state   and notifies the LRM of the target deletion so that the LRM can   modify reservations as appropriate. When the DISCONNECT message   reaches the target, the ST agent also notifies the application that   the target is no longer part of the stream. When there are no   remaining targets that can be reached through a particular next-hop,   the ST agent informs the LRM and it deletes the next-hop from its   next-hops set.   SCMP also provides a flooding mechanism to delete targets that joined   the stream without notifying the origin. The special case of target   deletion via flooding is described inSection 5.7.4.6.3  A Target Joining a Stream   An application may request to join an existing stream. It has to   collect information on the stream including the stream ID (SID) and   the IP address of the stream's origin. This can be done out-of-band,   e.g., via regular IP. The information is then passed to the local ST   agent. The ST agent generates a JOIN message containing the   application's request to join the stream and sends it toward the   stream origin.   An ST agent receiving a JOIN message, assuming no errors, responds   with an ACK. The ACK message must identify the JOIN message to which   it corresponds by including the Reference number indicated by the   Reference field of the JOIN message. If the ST agent is not traversed   by the stream that has to be joined, it propagates the JOIN message   toward the stream's origin. Once a JOIN message has been   acknowledged, ST agents do not retain any state information related   to the JOIN message.   Eventually, an ST agent traversed by the stream or the stream's   origin itself is reached. This agent must respond to a received JOIN   first with an ACK to the ST agent from which the message was   received, then, it issues either a CONNECT or a JOIN-REJECT message   and sends it toward the target. The response to the join request is   based on the join authorization level associated with the stream, seeSection 4.4.2:o   If the stream has authorization level #0 (refuse join):    The ST agent sends a JOIN-REJECT message toward the target with    ReasonCode (JoinAuthFailure).o   If the stream has authorization level #1 (ok, notify origin):    The ST agent sends a CONNECT message toward the target with a    TargetList including the target that requested to join the stream.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 42]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995    This eventually results in adding the target to the stream. When    the ST agent receives the ACCEPT message indicating that the new    target has been added, it does not propagate the ACCEPT message    backwards (Section 4.5.6). Instead, it issues a NOTIFY message    with ReasonCode (TargetJoined) so that upstream agents, including    the origin, may add the new target to maintained state    information. The NOTIFY message includes all target specific    information.o   If the stream has authorization level #2 (ok):    The ST agent sends a CONNECT message toward the target with a    TargetList including the target that requested to join the stream.    This eventually results in adding the target to the stream. When    the ST agent receives the ACCEPT message indicating that the new    target has been added, it does not propagate the ACCEPT message    backwards (Section 4.5.6), nor does it notify the origin. A NOTIFY    message is generated with ReasonCode (TargetJoined) if the target    specific information needs to be propagated back to the origin. An    example of such information is change in MTU, seeSection 8.6.4.6.3.1  Intermediate Agent (Router) as Origin   When a stream has join authorization level #2, seeSection 4.4.2, it   is possible that the stream origin is unaware of some targets   participating in the stream. In this case, the ST intermediate agent   that first sent a CONNECT message to this target has to act as the   stream origin for the given target. This includes:o   if the whole stream is deleted, the intermediate agent must    disconnect the target.o   if the stream FlowSpec is changed, the intermediate agent must    change the FlowSpec for the target as appropriate.o   proper handling of ACCEPT and REFUSE messages, without propagation    to upstream ST agents.o   generation of NOTIFY messages when needed. (As described above.)   The intermediate agent behaves normally for all other targets added   to the stream as a consequence of a CONNECT message issued by the   origin.4.6.4  A Target Deleting Itself   The application at the target may inform the local ST agent that it   wants to be removed from the stream. The ST agent then forms a REFUSE   message with the target itself as the only entry in the TargetListDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 43]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   and with ReasonCode (ApplDisconnect). The REFUSE message is sent back   to the origin via the previous-hop. If a stream has multiple targets   and one target leaves the stream using this REFUSE mechanism, the   stream to the other targets is not affected; the stream continues to   exist.   An ST agent that receives a REFUSE message acknowledges it by sending   an ACK to the next-hop. The target is deleted and the LRM is notified   so that it adjusts reservations as appropriate. The REFUSE message is   also propagated back to the previous-hop ST agent except in the case   where the agent is acting as the origin. In this case a NOTIFY may be   propagated instead, seeSection 4.6.3.   When the REFUSE reaches the origin, the origin sends an ACK and   notifies the application that the target is no longer part of the   stream.4.6.5  Changing a Stream's FlowSpec   The application at the origin may wish to change the FlowSpec of an   established stream. Changing the FlowSpec is a critical operation and   it may even lead in some cases to the deletion of the affected   targets. Possible problems with FlowSpec changes are discussed inSection 5.6.   To change the stream's FlowSpec, the application informs the ST agent   at the origin of the new FlowSpec and of the list of targets relative   to the change. The ST agent at the origin then issues one CHANGE   message per next-hop including the new FlowSpec and sends it to the   relevant next-hop ST agents. If the G-bit field of the CHANGE message   is set (1), the change affects all targets in the stream.   The CHANGE message contains a bit called I-bit, seeSection 10.4.3.   By default, the I-bit is set to zero (0) to indicate that the LRM is   expected to try and perform the requested FlowSpec change without   risking to tear down the stream. Applications that desire a higher   probability of success and are willing to take the risk of breaking   the stream can indicate this by setting the I-bit to one (1).   Applications that require the requested modification in order to   continue operating are expected to set this bit.   An intermediate ST agent that receives a CHANGE message first sends   an ACK to the previous-hop and then provides the FlowSpec to the LRM.   If the LRM can perform the change, the ST agent propagates the CHANGE   messages along the established paths.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 44]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   If the whole process succeeds, the CHANGE messages will eventually   reach the targets. Targets respond with an ACCEPT (or REFUSE) message   that is propagated back to the origin. In processing the ACCEPT   message on the way back to the origin, excess resources may be   released by the LRM as described inSection 4.5.6. The REFUSE message   must have the ReasonCode (ApplRefused).   SCMP also provides a flooding mechanism to change targets that joined   the stream without notifying the origin. The special case of target   change via flooding is described inSection 5.7.4.7  Stream Tear Down   A stream is usually terminated by the origin when it has no further   data to send. A stream is also torn down if the application should   terminate abnormally or if certain network failures are encountered.   Processing in this case is identical to the previous descriptions   except that the ReasonCode (ApplAbort, NetworkFailure, etc.) is   different.   When all targets have left a stream, the origin notifies the   application of that fact, and the application is then responsible for   terminating the stream. Note, however, that the application may   decide to add targets to the stream instead of terminating it, or may   just leave the stream open with no targets in order to permit stream   joins.5.  Exceptional Cases   The previous descriptions covered the simple cases where everything   worked. We now discuss what happens when things do not succeed.   Included are situations where messages exceed a network MTU, are   lost, the requested resources are not available, the routing fails or   is inconsistent.5.1  Long ST Messages   It is possible that an ST agent, or an application, will need to send   a message that exceeds a network's Maximum Transmission Unit (MTU).   This case must be handled but not via generic fragmentation, since   ST2 does not support generic fragmentation of either data or control   messages.5.1.1  Handling of Long Data Packets   ST agents discard data packets that exceed the MTU of the next-hop   network. No error message is generated. Applications should avoid   sending data packets larger than the minimum MTU supported by a givenDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 45]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   stream. The application, both at the origin and targets, can learn   the stream minimum MTU through the MTU discovery mechanism described   inSection 8.6.5.1.2  Handling of Long Control Packets   Each ST agent knows the MTU of the networks to which it is connected,   and those MTUs restrict the size of the SCMP message it can send. An   SCMP message size can exceed the MTU of a given network for a number   of reasons:o   the TargetList parameter (Section 10.3.6) may be too long;o   the RecordRoute parameter (Section 10.3.5) may be too long.o   the UserData parameter (Section 10.3.7) may be too long;o   the PDUInError field of the ERROR message (Section 10.4.6) may be    too long;   An ST agent receiving or generating a too long SCMP message should:o   break the message into multiple messages, each carrying part of the    TargetList. Any RecordRoute and UserData parameters are replicated    in each message for delivery to all targets. Applications that    support a large number of targets may avoid using long TargetList    parameters, and are expected to do so, by exploiting the stream    joining functions, seeSection 4.6.3. One exception to this rule    exists. In the case of a long TargetList parameter to be included in    a STATUS-RESPONSE message, the TargetList parameter is just    truncated to the point where the list can fit in a single message,    seeSection 8.4.o   for down stream agents: if the TargetList parameter contains a    single Target element and the message size is still too long, the ST    agent should issue a REFUSE message with ReasonCode    (RecordRouteSize) if the size of the RecordRoute parameter causes    the SCMP message size to exceed the network MTU, or with ReasonCode    (UserDataSize) if the size of the UserData parameter causes the SCMP    message size to exceed the network MTU. If both RecordRoute and    UserData parameters are present the ReasonCode (UserDataSize) should    be sent. For messages generated at the target: the target ST agent    must check for SCMP messages that may exceed the MTU on the complete    target-to-origin path, and inform the application that a too long    SCMP messages has been generated. The format for the error reporting    is a local implementation issue. The error codes are the same as    previously stated.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 46]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   ST agents generating too long ERROR messages, simply truncate the   PDUInError field to the point where the message is smaller than the   network MTU.5.2  Timeout Failures   As described inSection 4.3, SCMP message delivery is made reliable   through the use of acknowledgments, timeouts, and retransmission. The   ACCEPT, CHANGE, CONNECT, DISCONNECT, JOIN, JOIN-REJECT, NOTIFY, and   REFUSE messages must always be acknowledged, seeSection 4.2. In   addition, for some SCMP messages (CHANGE, CONNECT, JOIN) the sending   ST agent also expects a response back (ACCEPT/REFUSE, CONNECT/JOIN-   REJECT) after an ACK has been received. Also, the STATUS message must   be answered with a STATUS-RESPONSE message.   The following sections describe the handling of each of the possible   failure cases due to timeout situations while waiting for an   acknowledgment or a response. The timeout related variables, and   their names, used in the next sections are for reference purposes   only. They may be implementation specific. Different implementations   are not required to share variable names, or even the mechanism by   which the timeout and retransmission behavior is implemented.5.2.1  Failure due to ACCEPT Acknowledgment Timeout   An ST agent that sends an ACCEPT message upstream expects an ACK from   the previous-hop ST agent. If no ACK is received before the ToAccept   timeout expires, the ST agent should retry and send the ACCEPT   message again. After NAccept unsuccessful retries, the ST agent sends   a REFUSE message toward the origin, and a DISCONNECT message toward   the targets. Both REFUSE and DISCONNECT must identify the affected   targets and specify the ReasonCode (RetransTimeout).5.2.2  Failure due to CHANGE Acknowledgment Timeout   An ST agent that sends a CHANGE message downstream expects an ACK   from the next-hop ST agent. If no ACK is received before the ToChange   timeout expires, the ST agent should retry and send the CHANGE   message again. After NChange unsuccessful retries, the ST agent   aborts the change attempt by sending a REFUSE message toward the   origin, and a DISCONNECT message toward the targets. Both REFUSE and   DISCONNECT must identify the affected targets and specify the   ReasonCode (RetransTimeout).Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 47]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19955.2.3  Failure due to CHANGE Response Timeout   Only the origin ST agent implements this timeout. After correctly   receiving the ACK to a CHANGE message, an ST agent expects to receive   an ACCEPT, or REFUSE message in response. If one of these messages is   not received before the ToChangeResp timer expires, the ST agent at   the origin aborts the change attempt, and behaves as if a REFUSE   message with the E-bit set and with ReasonCode (ResponseTimeout) is   received.5.2.4  Failure due to CONNECT Acknowledgment Timeout   An ST agent that sends a CONNECT message downstream expects an ACK   from the next-hop ST agent. If no ACK is received before the   ToConnect timeout expires, the ST agent should retry and send the   CONNECT message again. After NConnect unsuccessful retries, the ST   agent sends a REFUSE message toward the origin, and a DISCONNECT   message toward the targets. Both REFUSE and DISCONNECT must identify   the affected targets and specify the ReasonCode (RetransTimeout).5.2.5  Failure due to CONNECT Response Timeout   Only the origin ST agent implements this timeout. After correctly   receiving the ACK to a CONNECT message, an ST agent expects to   receive an ACCEPT or REFUSE message in response. If one of these   messages is not received before the ToConnectResp timer expires, the   origin ST agent aborts the connection setup attempt, acts as if a   REFUSE message is received, and it sends a DISCONNECT message toward   the targets.  Both REFUSE and DISCONNECT must identify the affected   targets and specify the ReasonCode (ResponseTimeout).5.2.6  Failure due to DISCONNECT Acknowledgment Timeout   An ST agent that sends a DISCONNECT message downstream expects an ACK   from the next-hop ST agent. If no ACK is received before the   ToDisconnect timeout expires, the ST agent should retry and send the   DISCONNECT message again. After NDisconnect unsuccessful retries, the   ST agent simply gives up and it assumes the next-hop ST agent is not   part in the stream any more.5.2.7  Failure due to JOIN Acknowledgment Timeout   An ST agent that sends a JOIN message toward the origin expects an   ACK from a neighbor ST agent. If no ACK is received before the ToJoin   timeout expires, the ST agent should retry and send the JOIN message   again. After NJoin unsuccessful retries, the ST agent sends a JOIN-   REJECT message back in the direction of the target with ReasonCode   (RetransTimeout).Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 48]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19955.2.8  Failure due to JOIN Response Timeout   Only the target agent implements this timeout. After correctly   receiving the ACK to a JOIN message, the ST agent at the target   expects to receive a CONNECT or JOIN-REJECT message in response. If   one of these message is not received before the ToJoinResp timer   expires, the ST agent aborts the stream join attempt and returns an   error corresponding with ReasonCode (RetransTimeout) to the   application.   Note that, after correctly receiving the ACK to a JOIN message,   intermediate ST agents do not maintain any state on the stream   joining attempt. As a consequence, they do not set the ToJoinResp   timer and do not wait for a CONNECT or JOIN-REJECT message. This is   described inSection 4.6.3.5.2.9  Failure due to JOIN-REJECT Acknowledgment Timeout   An ST agent that sends a JOIN-REJECT message toward the target   expects an ACK from a neighbor ST agent. If no ACK is received before   the ToJoinReject timeout expires, the ST agent should retry and send   the JOIN-REJECT message again. After NJoinReject unsuccessful   retries, the ST agent simply gives up.5.2.10  Failure due to NOTIFY Acknowledgment Timeout   An ST agent that sends a NOTIFY message to a neighbor ST agent   expects an ACK from that neighbor ST agent. If no ACK is received   before the ToNotify timeout expires, the ST agent should retry and   send the NOTIFY message again. After NNotify unsuccessful retries,   the ST agent simply gives up and behaves as if the ACK message was   received.5.2.11  Failure due to REFUSE Acknowledgment Timeout   An ST agent that sends a REFUSE message upstream expects an ACK from   the previous-hop ST agent. If no ACK is received before the ToRefuse   timeout expires, the ST agent should retry and send the REFUSE   message again. After NRefuse unsuccessful retries, the ST agent gives   up and it assumes it is not part in the stream any more.5.2.12  Failure due to STATUS Response Timeout   After sending a STATUS message to a neighbor ST agent, an ST agent   expects to receive a STATUS-RESPONSE message in response. If this   message is not received before the ToStatusResp timer expires, the ST   agent sends the STATUS message again. After NStatus unsuccessful   retries, the ST agent gives up and assumes that the neighbor ST agentDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 49]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   is not active.5.3  Setup Failures due to Routing Failures   It is possible for an ST agent to receive a CONNECT message that   contains a known SID, but from an ST agent other than the previous-   hop ST agent of the stream with that SID. This may be:   1.  that two branches of the tree forming the stream have joined       back together,   2.  the result of an attempted recovery of a partially failed       stream, or   3.  a routing loop.   The TargetList contained in the CONNECT is used to distinguish the   different cases by comparing each newly received target with those of   the previously existing stream:o   if the IP address of the target(s) differ, it is case #1;o   if the target matches a target in the existing stream, it may be    case #2 or #3.   Case #1 is handled inSection 5.3.1, while the other cases are   handled inSection 5.3.2.5.3.1  Path Convergence   It is possible for an ST agent to receive a CONNECT message that   contains a known SID, but from an ST agent other than the previous-   hop ST agent of the stream with that SID. This might be the result of   two branches of the tree forming the stream have joined back   together.  Detection of this case and other possible sources was   discussed inSection 5.2.   SCMP does not allow for streams which have converged paths, i.e.,   streams are always tree-shaped and not graph-like. At the point of   convergence, the ST agent which detects the condition generates a   REFUSE message with ReasonCode (PathConvergence). Also, as a help to   the upstream ST agent, the detecting agent places the IP address of   one of the stream's connected targets in the ValidTargetIPAddress   field of the REFUSE message. This IP address will be used by upstream   ST agents to avoid splitting the stream.   An upstream ST agent that receives the REFUSE with ReasonCode   (PathConvergence) will check to see if the listed IP address is oneDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 50]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   of the known stream targets. If it is not, the REFUSE is propagated   to the previous-hop agent. If the listed IP address is known by the   upstream ST agent, this ST agent is the ST agent that caused the   split in the stream. (This agent may even be the origin.) This agent   then avoids splitting the stream by using the next-hop of that known   target as the next-hop for the refused targets. It sends a CONNECT   with the affected targets to the existing valid next-hop.   The above process will proceed, hop by hop, until the   ValidTargetIPAddress matches the IP address of a known target. The   only case where this process will fail is when the known target is   deleted prior to the REFUSE propagating to the origin. In this case   the origin can just reissue the CONNECT and start the whole process   over again.5.3.2  Other Cases   The remaining cases including a partially failed stream and a routing   loop, are not easily distinguishable. In attempting recovery of a   failed stream, an ST agent may issue new CONNECT messages to the   affected targets. Such a CONNECT may reach an ST agent downstream of   the failure before that ST agent has received a DISCONNECT from the   neighborhood of the failure. Until that ST agent receives the   DISCONNECT, it cannot distinguish between a failure recovery and an   erroneous routing loop. That ST agent must therefore respond to the   CONNECT with a REFUSE message with the affected targets specified in   the TargetList and an appropriate ReasonCode (StreamExists).   The ST agent immediately preceding that point, i.e., the latest ST   agent to send the CONNECT message, will receive the REFUSE message.   It must release any resources reserved exclusively for traffic to the   listed targets. If this ST agent was not the one attempting the   stream recovery, then it cannot distinguish between a failure   recovery and an erroneous routing loop. It should repeat the CONNECT   after a ToConnect timeout, seeSection 5.2.4. If after NConnect   retransmissions it continues to receive REFUSE messages, it should   propagate the REFUSE message toward the origin, with the TargetList   that specifies the affected targets, but with a different ReasonCode   (RouteLoop).   The REFUSE message with this ReasonCode (RouteLoop) is propagated by   each ST agent without retransmitting any CONNECT messages. At each ST   agent, it causes any resources reserved exclusively for the listed   targets to be released. The REFUSE will be propagated to the origin   in the case of an erroneous routing loop. In the case of stream   recovery, it will be propagated to the ST agent that is attempting   the recovery, which may be an intermediate ST agent or the origin   itself. In the case of a stream recovery, the ST agent attempting theDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 51]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   recovery may issue new CONNECT messages to the same or to different   next-hops.   If an ST agent receives both a REFUSE message and a DISCONNECT   message with a target in common then it can, for the each target in   common, release the relevant resources and propagate neither the   REFUSE nor the DISCONNECT.   If the origin receives such a REFUSE message, it should attempt to   send a new CONNECT to all the affected targets. Since routing errors   in an internet are assumed to be temporary, the new CONNECTs will   eventually find acceptable routes to the targets, if one exists. If   no further routes exist after NRetryRoute tries, the application   should be informed so that it may take whatever action it seems   necessary.5.4  Problems due to Routing Inconsistency   When an intermediate ST agent receives a CONNECT, it invokes the   routing algorithm to select the next-hop ST agents based on the   TargetList and the networks to which it is connected. If the   resulting next-hop to any of the targets is across the same network   from which it received the CONNECT (but not the previous-hop itself),   there may be a routing problem. However, the routing algorithm at the   previous- hop may be optimizing differently than the local algorithm   would in the same situation. Since the local ST agent cannot   distinguish the two cases, it should permit the setup but send back   to the previous- hop ST agent an informative NOTIFY message with the   appropriate ReasonCode (RouteBack), pertinent TargetList, and in the   NextHopIPAddress element the address of the next-hop ST agent   returned by its routing algorithm.   The ST agent that receives such a NOTIFY should ACK it. If the ST   agent is using an algorithm that would produce such behavior, no   further action is taken; if not, the ST agent should send a   DISCONNECT to the next-hop ST agent to correct the problem.   Alternatively, if the next-hop returned by the routing function is in   fact the previous-hop, a routing inconsistency has been detected. In   this case, a REFUSE is sent back to the previous-hop ST agent   containing an appropriate ReasonCode (RouteInconsist), pertinent   TargetList, and in the NextHopIPAddress element the address of the   previous-hop. When the previous-hop receives the REFUSE, it will   recompute the next-hop for the affected targets. If there is a   difference in the routing databases in the two ST agents, they may   exchange CONNECT and REFUSE messages again. Since such routing errors   in the internet are assumed to be temporary, the situation should   eventually stabilize.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 52]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19955.5  Problems in Reserving Resources   As mentioned inSection 1.4.5, resource reservation is handled by the   LRM. The LRM may not be able to satisfy a particular request during   stream setup or modification for a number of reasons, including a   mismatched FlowSpec, an unknown FlowSpec version, an error in   processing a FlowSpec, and an inability to allocate the requested   resource. This section discusses these cases and specifies the   ReasonCodes that should be used when these error cases are   encountered.5.5.1  Mismatched FlowSpecs   In some cases the LRM may require a requested FlowSpec to match an   existing FlowSpec, e.g., when adding new targets to an existing   stream, seeSection 4.6.1. In case of FlowSpec mismatch the LRM   notifies the processing ST agent which should respond with ReasonCode   (FlowSpecMismatch).5.5.2  Unknown FlowSpec Version   When the LRM is invoked, it is passed information including the   version of the FlowSpec, seeSection 4.5.2.2. If this version is not   known by the LRM, the LRM notifies the ST agent. The ST agent should   respond with a REFUSE message with ReasonCode (FlowVerUnknown).5.5.3  LRM Unable to Process FlowSpec   The LRM may encounter an LRM or FlowSpec specific error while   attempting to satisfy a request. An example of such an error is given   inSection 9.2.1. These errors are implementation specific and will   not be enumerated with ST ReasonCodes. They are covered by a single,   generic ReasonCode. When an LRM encounters such an error, it should   notify the ST agent which should respond with the generic ReasonCode   (FlowSpecError).5.5.4  Insufficient Resources   If the LRM cannot make the necessary reservations because sufficient   resources are not available, an ST agent may:o   try alternative paths to the targets: the ST agent calls the routing    function to find a different path to the targets. If an alternative    path is found, stream connection setup continues in the usual way,    as described inSection 4.5.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 53]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995o   refuse to establish the stream along this path: the origin ST agent    informs the application of the stream setup failure; intermediate    and target ST agents issue a REFUSE message (as described inSection4.5.8) with ReasonCode (CantGetResrc).   It depends on the local implementations whether an ST agent tries   alternative paths or refuses to establish the stream. In any case, if   enough resources cannot be found over different paths, the ST agent   has to explicitly refuse to establish the stream.5.6  Problems Caused by CHANGE Messages   A CHANGE might fail for several reasons, including:o   insufficient resources: the request may be for a larger amount of    network resources when those resources are not available, ReasonCode    (CantGetResrc);o   a target application not agreeing to the change, ReasonCode    (ApplRefused);   The affected stream can be left in one of two states as a result of   change failures: a) the stream can revert back to the state it was in   prior to the CHANGE message being processed, or b) the stream may be   torn down.   The expected common case of failure will be when the requested change   cannot be satisfied, but the pre-change resources remain allocated   and available for use by the stream. In this case, the ST agent at   the point where the failure occurred must inform upstream ST agents   of the failure. (In the case where this ST agent is the target, there   may not actually be a failure, the application may merely have not   agreed to the change). The ST agent informs upstream ST agents by   sending a REFUSE message with ReasonCode (CantGetResrc or   ApplRefused). To indicate that the pre-change FlowSpec is still   available and that the stream still exists, the ST agent sets the E-   bit of the REFUSE message to one (1), seeSection 10.4.11. Upstream   ST agents receiving the REFUSE message inform the LRM so that it can   attempt to revert back to the pre-change FlowSpec. It is permissible,   but not desirable, for excess resources to remain allocated.   For the case when the attempt to change the stream results in the   loss of previously reserved resources, the stream is torn down. This   can happen, for instance, when the I-bit is set (Section 4.6.5) and   the LRM releases pre-change stream resources before the new ones are   reserved, and neither new nor former resources are available. In this   case, the ST agent where the failure occurs must inform other ST   agents of the break in the affected portion of the stream. This isDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 54]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   done by the ST agent by sending a REFUSE message upstream and a   DISCONNECT message downstream, both with the ReasonCode   (CantGetResrc). To indicate that pre-change stream resources have   been lost, the E-bit of the REFUSE message is set to zero (0).   Note that a failure to change the resources requested for specific   targets should not cause other targets in the stream to be deleted.5.7  Unknown Targets in DISCONNECT and CHANGE   The handling of unknown targets listed in a DISCONNECT or CHANGE   message is dependent on a stream's join authorization level, seeSection 4.4.2. For streams with join authorization levels #0 and #1,   seeSection 4.4.2, all targets must be known. In this case, when   processing a CHANGE message, the agent should generate a REFUSE   message with ReasonCode (TargetUnknown). When processing a DISCONNECT   message, it is possible that the DISCONNECT is a duplicate of an old   request so the agent should respond as if it has successfully   disconnected the target. That is, it should respond with an ACK   message.   For streams with join authorization level #2, it is possible that the   origin is not aware of some targets that participate in the stream.   The origin may delete or change these targets via the following   flooding mechanism.   If no next-hop ST agent can be associated with a target, the CHANGE/   DISCONNECT message including the target is replicated to all known   next-hop ST agents. This has the effect of propagating the CHANGE/   DISCONNECT message to all downstream ST agents. Eventually, the ST   agent that acts as the origin for the target (Section 4.6.3.1) is   reached and the target is deleted.   Target deletion/change via flooding is not expected to be the normal   case. It is included to present the applications with uniform   capabilities for all stream types. Flooding only applies to streams   with join authorization level #2.6.  Failure Detection and Recovery6.1  Failure Detection   The SCMP failure detection mechanism is based on two assumptions:1.  If a neighbor of an ST agent is up, and has been up without a    disruption, and has not notified the ST agent of a problem with    streams that pass through both, then the ST agent can assume that    there has not been any problem with those streams.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 55]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 19952.  A network through which an ST agent has routed a stream will notify    the ST agent if there is a problem that affects the stream data    packets but does not affect the control packets.   The purpose of the robustness protocol defined here is for ST agents   to determine that the streams through a neighbor have been broken by   the failure of the neighbor or the intervening network. This protocol   should detect the overwhelming majority of failures that can occur.   Once a failure is detected, the recovery procedures described inSection 6.2 are initiated by the ST agents.6.1.1  Network Failures   An ST agent can detect network failures by two mechanisms:   o   the network can report a failure, or   o   the ST agent can discover a failure by itself.   They differ in the amount of information that an ST agent has   available to it in order to make a recovery decision. For example, a   network may be able to report that reserved bandwidth has been lost   and the reason for the loss and may also report that connectivity to   the neighboring ST agent remains intact. On the other hand, an ST   agent may discover that communication with a neighboring ST agent has   ceased because it has not received any traffic from that neighbor in   some time period. If an ST agent detects a failure, it may not be   able to determine if the failure was in the network while the   neighbor remains available, or the neighbor has failed while the   network remains intact.6.1.2  Detecting ST Agents Failures   Each ST agent periodically sends each neighbor with which it shares   one or more streams a HELLO message. This message exchange is between   ST agents, not entities representing streams or applications. That   is, an ST agent need only send a single HELLO message to a neighbor   regardless of the number of streams that flow between them. All ST   agents (host as well as intermediate) must participate in this   exchange. However, only ST agents that share active streams can   participate in this exchange and it is an error to send a HELLO   message to a neighbor ST agent with no streams in common, e.g., to   check whether it is active. STATUS messages can be used to poll the   status of neighbor ST agents, seeSection 8.4.   For the purpose of HELLO message exchange, stream existence is   bounded by ACCEPT and DISCONNECT/REFUSE processing and is defined for   both the upstream and downstream case. A stream to a previous-hop isDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 56]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   defined to start once an ACCEPT message has been forwarded upstream.   A stream to a next-hop is defined to start once the received ACCEPT   message has been acknowledged. A stream is defined to terminate once   an acknowledgment is sent for a received DISCONNECT or REFUSE   message, and an acknowledgment for a sent DISCONNECT or REFUSE   message has been received.   The HELLO message has two fields:   o   a HelloTimer field that is in units of milliseconds modulo the       maximum for the field size, and   o   a Restarted-bit specifying that the ST agent has been restarted       recently.   The HelloTimer must appear to be incremented every millisecond   whether a HELLO message is sent or not. The HelloTimer wraps around   to zero after reaching the maximum value. Whenever an ST agent   suffers a catastrophic event that may result in it losing ST state   information, it must reset its HelloTimer to zero and must set the   Restarted-bit in all HELLO messages sent in the following   HelloTimerHoldDown seconds.   If an ST agent receives a HELLO message that contains the Restarted-   bit set, it must assume that the sending ST agent has lost its state.   If it shares streams with that neighbor, it must initiate stream   recovery activity, seeSection 6.2. If it does not share streams with   that neighbor, it should not attempt to create one until that bit is   no longer set. If an ST agent receives a CONNECT message from a   neighbor whose Restarted-bit is still set, the agent must respond   with an ERROR message with the appropriate ReasonCode   (RestartRemote). If an agent receives a CONNECT message while the   agent's own Restarted- bit is set, the agent must respond with an   ERROR message with the appropriate ReasonCode (RestartLocal).   Each ST stream has an associated RecoveryTimeout value. This value is   assigned by the origin and carried in the CONNECT message, seeSection 4.5.10. Each agent checks to see if it can support the   requested value. If it can not, it updates the value to the smallest   timeout interval it can support. The RecoveryTimeout used by a   particular stream is obtained from the ACCEPT message, seeSection4.5.10, and is the smallest value seen across all ACCEPT messages   from participating targets.   An ST agent must send HELLO messages to its neighbor with a period   shorter than the smallest RecoveryTimeout of all the active streams   that pass between the two ST agents, regardless of direction. This   period must be smaller by a factor, called HelloLossFactor, which isDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 57]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   at least as large as the greatest number of consecutive HELLO   messages that could credibly be lost while the communication between   the two ST agents is still viable.   An ST agent may send simultaneous HELLO messages to all its neighbors   at the rate necessary to support the smallest RecoveryTimeout of any   active stream. Alternately, it may send HELLO messages to different   neighbors independently at different rates corresponding to   RecoveryTimeouts of individual streams.   An ST agent must expect to receive at least one new HELLO message   from each neighbor at least as frequently as the smallest   RecoveryTimeout of any active stream in common with that neighbor.   The agent can detect duplicate or delayed HELLO messages by comparing   the HelloTimer field of the most recent valid HELLO message from that   neighbor with the HelloTimer field of an incoming HELLO message.   Valid incoming HELLO messages will have a HelloTimer field that is   greater than the field contained in the previously received valid   HELLO message by the time elapsed since the previous message was   received. Actual evaluation of the elapsed time interval should take   into account the maximum likely delay variance from that neighbor.   If the ST agent does not receive a valid HELLO message within the   RecoveryTimeout period of a stream, it must assume that the   neighboring ST agent or the communication link between the two has   failed and it must initiate stream recovery activity, as described   below inSection 6.2.6.2  Failure Recovery   If an intermediate ST agent fails or a network or part of a network   fails, the previous-hop ST agent and the various next-hop ST agents   will discover the fact by the failure detection mechanism described   inSection 6.1.   The recovery of an ST stream is a relatively complex and time   consuming effort because it is designed in a general manner to   operate across a large number of networks with diverse   characteristics.  Therefore, it may require information to be   distributed widely, and may require relatively long timers. On the   other hand, since a network is typically a homogeneous system,   failure recovery in the network may be a relatively faster and   simpler operation. Therefore an ST agent that detects a failure   should attempt to fix the network failure before attempting recovery   of the ST stream. If the stream that existed between two ST agents   before the failure cannot be reconstructed by network recovery   mechanisms alone, then the ST stream recovery mechanism must be   invoked.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 58]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   If stream recovery is necessary, the different ST agents will need to   perform different functions, depending on their relation to the   failure:o   An ST agent that is a next-hop from a failure should first verify    that there was a failure. It can do this using STATUS messages to    query its upstream neighbor. If it cannot communicate with that    neighbor, then for each active stream from that neighbor it should    first send a REFUSE message upstream with the appropriate ReasonCode    (STAgentFailure). This is done to the neighbor to speed up the    failure recovery in case the hop is unidirectional, i.e., the    neighbor can hear the ST agent but the ST agent cannot hear the    neighbor. The ST agent detecting the failure must then, for each    active stream from that neighbor, send DISCONNECT messages with the    same ReasonCode toward the targets. All downstream ST agents process    this DISCONNECT message just like the DISCONNECT that tears down the    stream. If recovery is successful, targets will receive new CONNECT    messages.o   An ST agent that is the previous-hop before the failed component    first verifies that there was a failure by querying the downstream    neighbor using STATUS messages. If the neighbor has lost its state    but is available, then the ST agent may try and reconstruct    (explained below) the affected streams, for those streams that do    not have the NoRecovery option selected. If it cannot communicate    with the next-hop, then the ST agent detecting the failure sends a    DISCONNECT message, for each affected stream, with the appropriate    ReasonCode (STAgentFailure) toward the affected targets. It does so    to speed up failure recovery in case the communication may be    unidirectional and this message might be delivered successfully.   Based on the NoRecovery option, the ST agent that is the previous-hop   before the failed component takes the following actions:o   If the NoRecovery option is selected, then the ST agent sends, per    affected stream, a REFUSE message with the appropriate ReasonCode    (STAgentFailure) to the previous-hop. The TargetList in these    messages contains all the targets that were reached through the    broken branch. As discussed inSection 5.1.2, multiple REFUSE    messages may be required if the PDU is too long for the MTU of the    intervening network. The REFUSE message is propagated all the way to    the origin. The application at the origin can attempt recovery of    the stream by sending a new CONNECT to the affected targets. For    established streams, the new CONNECT will be treated by intermediate    ST agents as an addition of new targets into the established stream.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 59]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995o   If the NoRecovery option is not selected, the ST agent can attempt    recovery of the affected streams. It does so one a stream by stream    basis by issuing a new CONNECT message to the affected targets. If    the ST agent cannot find new routes to some targets, or if the only    route to some targets is through the previous-hop, then it sends one    or more REFUSE messages to the previous-hop with the appropriate    ReasonCode (CantRecover) specifying the affected targets in the    TargetList. The previous-hop can then attempt recovery of the stream    by issuing a CONNECT to those targets. If it cannot find an    appropriate route, it will propagate the REFUSE message toward the    origin.   Regardless of which ST agent attempts recovery of a damaged stream,   it will issue one or more CONNECT messages to the affected targets.   These CONNECT messages are treated by intermediate ST agents as   additions of new targets into the established stream. The FlowSpecs   of the new CONNECT messages are the same as the ones contained in the   most recent CONNECT or CHANGE messages that the ST agent had sent   toward the affected targets when the stream was operational.   Upon receiving an ACCEPT during the a stream recovery, the agent   reconstructing the stream must ensure that the FlowSpec and other   stream attributes (e.g., MaxMsgSize and RecoveryTimeout) of the re-   established stream are equal to, or are less restrictive, than the   pre-failure stream. If they are more restrictive, the recovery   attempt must be aborted. If they are equal, or are less restrictive,   then the recovery attempt is successful. When the attempt is a   success, failure recovery related ACCEPTs are not forwarded upstream   by the recovering agent.   Any ST agent that decides that enough recovery attempts have been   made, or that recovery attempts have no chance of succeeding, may   indicate that no further attempts at recovery should be made. This is   done by setting the N-bit in the REFUSE message, seeSection 10.4.11.   This bit must be set by agents, including the target, that know that   there is no chance of recovery succeeding. An ST agent that receives   a REFUSE message with the N-bit set (1) will not attempt recovery,   regardless of the NoRecovery option, and it will set the N-bit when   propagating the REFUSE message upstream.6.2.1  Problems in Stream Recovery   The reconstruction of a broken stream may not proceed smoothly. Since   there may be some delay while the information concerning the failure   is propagated throughout an internet, routing errors may occur for   some time after a failure. As a result, the ST agent attempting the   recovery may receive ERROR messages for the new CONNECTs that are   caused by internet routing errors. The ST agent attempting theDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 60]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   recovery should be prepared to resend CONNECTs before it succeeds in   reconstructing the stream. If the failure partitions the internet and   a new set of routes cannot be found to the targets, the REFUSE   messages will eventually be propagated to the origin, which can then   inform the application so it can decide whether to terminate or to   continue to attempt recovery of the stream.   The new CONNECT may at some point reach an ST agent downstream of the   failure before the DISCONNECT does. In this case, the ST agent that   receives the CONNECT is not yet aware that the stream has suffered a   failure, and will interpret the new CONNECT as resulting from a   routing failure. It will respond with an ERROR message with the   appropriate ReasonCode (StreamExists). Since the timeout that the ST   agents immediately preceding the failure and immediately following   the failure are approximately the same, it is very likely that the   remnants of the broken stream will soon be torn down by a DISCONNECT   message. Therefore, the ST agent that receives the ERROR message with   ReasonCode (StreamExists) should retransmit the CONNECT message after   the ToConnect timeout expires. If this fails again, the request will   be retried for NConnect times. Only if it still fails will the ST   agent send a REFUSE message with the appropriate ReasonCode   (RouteLoop) to its previous-hop. This message will be propagated back   to the ST agent that is attempting recovery of the damaged stream.   That ST agent can issue a new CONNECT message if it so chooses. The   REFUSE is matched to a CONNECT message created by a recovery   operation through the LnkReference field in the CONNECT.   ST agents that have propagated a CONNECT message and have received a   REFUSE message should maintain this information for some period of   time. If an ST agent receives a second CONNECT message for a target   that recently resulted in a REFUSE, that ST agent may respond with a   REFUSE immediately rather than attempting to propagate the CONNECT.   This has the effect of pruning the tree that is formed by the   propagation of CONNECT messages to a target that is not reachable by   the routes that are selected first. The tree will pass through any   given ST agent only once, and the stream setup phase will be   completed faster.   If a CONNECT message reaches a target, the target should as   efficiently as possible use the state that it has saved from before   the stream failed during recovery of the stream. It will then issue   an ACCEPT message toward the origin. The ACCEPT message will be   intercepted by the ST agent that is attempting recovery of the   damaged stream, if not the origin. If the FlowSpec contained in the   ACCEPT specifies the same selection of parameters as were in effect   before the failure, then the ST agent that is attempting recovery   will not propagate the ACCEPT. FlowSpec comparison is done by the   LRM. If the selections of the parameters are different, then the STDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 61]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   agent that is attempting recovery will send the origin a NOTIFY   message with the appropriate ReasonCode (FailureRecovery) that   contains a FlowSpec that specifies the new parameter values. The   origin may then have to change its data generation characteristics   and the stream's parameters with a CHANGE message to use the newly   recovered subtree.6.3  Stream Preemption   As mentioned inSection 1.4.5, it is possible that the LRM decides to   break a stream intentionally. This is called stream preemption.   Streams are expected to be preempted in order to free resources for a   new stream which has a higher priority.   If the LRM decides that it is necessary to preempt one or more of the   stream traversing it, the decision on which streams have to be   preempted has to be made. There are two ways for an application to   influence such decision:   1.  based on FlowSpec information. For instance, with the ST2+       FlowSpec, streams can be assigned a precedence value from 0       (least important) to 256 (most important). This value is       carried in the FlowSpec when the stream is setup, seeSection9.2, so that the LRM is informed about it.   2.  with the group mechanism. An application may specify that a set       of streams are related to each other and that they are all       candidate for preemption if one of them gets preempted. It can       be done by using the fate-sharing relationship defined inSection 7.1.2. This helps the LRM making a good choice when       more than one stream have to be preempted, because it leads to       breaking a single application as opposed to as many       applications as the number of preempted streams.   If the LRM preempts a stream, it must notify the local ST agent. The   following actions are performed by the ST agent:o   The ST agent at the host where the stream was preempted sends    DISCONNECT messages with the appropriate ReasonCode    (StreamPreempted) toward the affected targets. It sends a REFUSE    message with the appropriate ReasonCode (StreamPreempted) to the    previous-hop.o   A previous-hop ST agent of the preempted stream acts as in case of    failure recovery, seeSection 6.2.o   A next-hop ST agent of the preempted stream acts as in case of    failure recovery, seeSection 6.2.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 62]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   Note that, as opposite to failure recovery, there is no need to   verify that the failure actually occurred, because this is explicitly   indicated by the ReasonCode (StreamPreempted).7.  A Group of Streams   There may be need to associate related streams. The group mechanism   is simply an association technique that allows ST agents to identify   the different streams that are to be associated.   A group consists of a set of streams and a relationship. The set of   streams may be empty. The relationship applies to all group members.   Each group is identified by a group name. The group name must be   globally unique.   Streams belong to the same group if they have the same GroupName in   the GroupName field of the Group parameter, seeSection 10.3.2. The   relationship is defined by the Relationship field. Group membership   must be specified at stream creation time and persists for the whole   stream lifetime. A single stream may belong to multiple groups.   The ST agent that creates a new group is called group initiator. Any   ST agent can be a group initiator. The initiator allocates the   GroupName and the Relationship among group members. The initiator may   or may not be the origin of a stream belonging to the group.   GroupName generation is described inSection 8.2.7.1  Basic Group Relationships   This version of ST defines four basic group relationships. An ST2+   implementation must support all four basic relationships. Adherence   to specified relationships are usually best effort. The basic   relationships are described in detail below inSection 7.1.1 -Section 7.1.4.7.1.1  Bandwidth Sharing   Streams associated with the same group share the same network   bandwidth. The intent is to support applications such as audio   conferences where, of all participants, only some are allowed to   speak at one time. In such a scenario, global bandwidth utilization   can be lowered by allocating only those resources that can be used at   once, e.g., it is sufficient to reserve bandwidth for a small set of   audio streams.   The basic concept of a shared bandwidth group is that the LRM will   allocate up to some specified multiplier of the most demanding stream   that it knows about in the group. The LRM will allocate resourcesDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 63]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   incrementally, as stream setup requests are received, until the total   group requirements are satisfied. Subsequent setup requests will   share the group's resources and will not need any additional   resources allocated. The procedure will result in standard allocation   where only one stream in a group traverses an agent, and shared   allocations where multiple streams traverse an agent.   To illustrate, let's call the multiplier mentioned above "N", and the   most demanding stream that an agent knows about in a group Bmax. For   an application that intends to allow three participants to speak at   the same time, N has a value of three and each LRM will allocate for   the group an amount of bandwidth up to 3*Bmax even when there are   many more steams in the group. The LRM will reserve resources   incrementally, per stream request, until N*Bmax resources are   allocated. Each agent may be traversed by a different set and number   of streams all belonging to the same group.   An ST agent receiving a stream request presents the LRM with all   necessary group information, seeSection 4.5.2.2. If maximum   bandwidth, N*Bmax, for the group has already been allocated and a new   stream with a bandwidth demand less than Bmax is being established,   the LRM won't allocate any further bandwidth.   If there is less than N*Bmax resources allocated, the LRM will expand   the resources allocated to the group by the amount requested in the   new FlowSpec, up to N*Bmax resources. The LRM will update the   FlowSpec based on what resources are available to the stream, but not   the total resources allocated for the group.   It should be noted that ST agents and LRMs become aware of a group's   requirements only when the streams belonging to the group are   created.  In case of the bandwidth sharing relationship, an   application should attempt to establish the most demanding streams   first to minimize stream setup efforts. If on the contrary the less   demanding streams are built first, it will be always necessary to   allocate additional bandwidth in consecutive steps as the most   demanding streams are built. It is also up to the applications to   coordinate their different FlowSpecs and decide upon an appropriate   value for N.7.1.2  Fate Sharing   Streams belonging to this group share the same fate. If a stream is   deleted, the other members of the group are also deleted. This is   intended to support stream preemption by indicating which streams are   mutually related. If preemption of multiple streams is necessary,   this information can be used by the LRM to delete a set of related   streams, e.g., with impact on a single application, instead of makingDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 64]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   a random choice with the possible effect of interrupting several   different applications. This attribute does not apply to normal   stream shut down, i.e., ReasonCode (ApplDisconnect). On normal   disconnect, other streams belonging to such groups remain active.   This relationship provides a hint on which streams should be   preempted. Still, the LRM responsible for the preemption is not   forced to behave accordingly, and other streams could be preempted   first based on different criteria.7.1.3  Route Sharing   Streams belonging to this group share the same paths as much as is   possible. This can be desirable for several reasons, e.g., to exploit   the same allocated resources or in the attempt to maintain the   transmission order. An ST agent attempts to select the same path   although the way this is implemented depends heavily on the routing   algorithm which is used.   If the routing algorithm is sophisticated enough, an ST agent can   suggest that a stream is routed over an already established path.   Otherwise, it can ask the routing algorithm for a set of legal routes   to the destination and check whether the desired path is included in   those feasible.   Route sharing is a hint to the routing algorithm used by ST. Failing   to route a stream through a shared path should not prevent the   creation of a new stream or result in the deletion of an existing   stream.7.1.4  Subnet Resources Sharing   This relationship provides a hint to the data link layer functions.   Streams belonging to this group may share the same MAC layer   resources. As an example, the same MAC layer multicast address may be   used for all the streams in a given group. This mechanism allows for   a better utilization of MAC layer multicast addresses and it is   especially useful when used with network adapters that offer a very   small number of MAC layer multicast addresses.7.2  Relationships Orthogonality   The four basic relationships, as they have been defined, are   orthogonal. This means, any combinations of the basic relationships   are allowed. For instance, let's consider an application that   requires full-duplex service for a stream with multiple targets.   Also, let's suppose that only N targets are allowed to send data back   to the origin at the same time. In this scenario, all the reverseDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 65]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   streams could belong to the same group. They could be sharing both   the paths and the bandwidth attributes. The Path&Bandwidth sharing   relationship is obtained from the basic set of relationships. This   example is important because it shows how full-duplex service can be   efficiently obtained in ST.8.  Ancillary Functions   Certain functions are required by ST host and intermediate agent   implementations. Such functions are described in this section.8.1  Stream ID Generation   The stream ID, or SID, is composed of 16-bit unique identifier and   the stream origin's 32-bit IP address. Stream IDs must be globally   unique.  The specific definition and format of the 16 -bit field is   left to the implementor. This field is expected to have only local   significance.   An ST implementation has to provide a stream ID generator facility,   so that an application or higher layer protocol can obtain a unique   IDs from the ST layer. This is a mechanism for the application to   request the allocation of stream ID that is independent of the   request to create a stream. The Stream ID is used by the application   or higher layer protocol when creating the streams.   For instance, the following two functions could be made available:   o   AllocateStreamID() -> result, StreamID   o   ReleaseStreamID(StreamID) -> result   An implementation may also provide a StreamID deletion function.8.2  Group Name Generator   GroupName generation is similar to Stream ID generation. The   GroupName includes a 16-bit unique identifier, a 32-bit creation   timestamp, and a 32-bit IP address. Group names are globally unique.   A GroupName includes the creator's IP address, so this reduces a   global uniqueness problem to a simple local problem. The specific   definitions and formats of the 16-bit field and the 32-bit creation   timestamp are left to the implementor. These fields must be locally   unique, and only have local significance.   An ST implementation has to provide a group name generator facility,   so that an application or higher layer protocol can obtain a unique   GroupName from the ST layer. This is a mechanism for the applicationDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 66]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   to request the allocation of a GroupName that is independent of the   request to create a stream. The GroupName is used by the application   or higher layer protocol when creating the streams that are to be   part of the group.   For instance, the following two functions could be made available:   o   AllocateGroupName() -> result, GroupName   o   ReleaseGroupName(GroupName) -> result   An implementation may also provide a GroupName deletion function.8.3  Checksum Computation   The standard Internet checksum algorithm is used for ST: "The   checksum field is the 16-bit one's complement of the one's complement   sum of all 16-bit words in the header. For purposes of computing the   checksum, the value of the checksum field is zero (0)." See   [RFC1071], [RFC1141], and [RFC791] for suggestions for efficient   checksum algorithms.8.4  Neighbor ST Agent Identification and Information Collection   The STATUS message can be used to collect information about neighbor   ST agents, streams the neighbor supports, and specific targets of   streams the neighbor supports. An agent receiving a STATUS message   provides the requested information via a STATUS-RESPONSE message.   The STATUS message can be used to collect different information from   a neighbor. It can be used to:o   identify ST capable neighbors. If an ST agent wishes to check if    a neighbor is ST capable, it should generate a STATUS message with    an SID which has all its fields set to zero. An agent receiving a    STATUS message with such SID should answer with a STATUS-RESPONSE    containing the same SID, and no other stream information. The    receiving ST agent must answer as soon as possible to aid in Round    Trip Time estimation, seeSection 8.5;o   obtain information on a particular stream. If an ST agent wishes to    check a neighbor's general information related to a specific    stream, it should generate a STATUS message containing the stream's    SID. An ST agent receiving such a message, will first check to see    if the stream is known. If not known, the receiving ST agent sends a    STATUS-RESPONSE containing the same SID, and no other stream    information. If the stream is known, the receiving ST agent sends a    STATUS-RESPONSE containing the stream's SID, IPHops, FlowSpec, groupDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 67]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995    membership (if any), and as many targets as can be included in a    single message as limited by MTU, seeSection 5.1.2. Note that all    targets may not be included in a response to a request for general    stream information. If information on a specific target in a stream    is desired, the mechanism described next should be used.o   obtain information on particular targets in a stream. If an ST agent    wishes to check a neighbor's information related to one or more    specific targets of a specific stream, it should generate a STATUS    message containing the stream's SID and a TargetList parameter    listing the relevant targets. An ST agent receiving such a message,    will first check to see if the stream and target are known. If the    stream is not known, the agent follows the process described above.    If both the stream and targets are known, the agent responds with    STATUS-RESPONSE containing the stream's SID, IPHops, FlowSpec, group    membership (if any), and the requested targets that are known. If    the stream is known but the target is not, the agent responds with a    STATUS-RESPONSE containing the stream's SID, IPHops, FlowSpec, group    membership (if any), but no targets.   The specific formats for STATUS and STATUS-RESPONSE messages are   defined inSection 10.4.12 andSection 10.4.13.8.5  Round Trip Time Estimation   SCMP is made reliable through use of retransmission when an expected   acknowledgment is not received in a timely manner. Timeout and   retransmission algorithms are implementation dependent and are   outside the scope of this document. However, it must be reasonable   enough not to cause excessive retransmission of SCMP messages while   maintaining the robustness of the protocol. Algorithms on this   subject are described in [WoHD95], [Jaco88], [KaPa87].   Most existing algorithms are based on an estimation of the Round Trip   Time (RTT) between two hosts. With SCMP, if an ST agent wishes to   have an estimate of the RTT to and from a neighbor, it should   generate a STATUS message with an SID which has all its fields set to   zero. An ST agent receiving a STATUS message with such SID should   answer as rapidly as possible with a STATUS-RESPONSE message   containing the same SID, and no other stream information. The time   interval between the send and receive operations can be used as an   estimate of the RTT to and from the neighbor.8.6  Network MTU Discovery   At connection setup, the application at the origin asks the local ST   agent to create streams with certain QoS requirements. The local ST   agent fills out its network MTU value in the MaxMsgSize parameter inDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 68]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   the CONNECT message and forwards it to the next-hop ST agents. Each   ST agent in the path checks to see if it's network MTU is smaller   than the one specified in the CONNECT message and, if it is, the ST   agent updates the MaxMsgSize in the CONNECT message to it's network   MTU. If the target application decides to accept the stream, the ST   agent at the target copies the MTU value in the CONNECT message to   the MaxMsgSize field in the ACCEPT message and sends it back to the   application at the origin. The MaxMsgSize field in the ACCEPT message   is the minimum MTU of the intervening networks to that target. If the   application has multiple targets then the minimum MTU of the stream   is the smallest MaxMsgSize received from all the ACCEPT messages. It   is the responsibility of the application to segment its PDUs   according to the minimum MaxMsgSize of the stream since no data   fragmentation is supported during the data transfer phase. If a   particular target's MaxMsgSize is unacceptable to an application, it   may disconnect the target from the stream and assume that the target   cannot be supported.  When evaluating a particular target's   MaxMsgSize, the application or the application interface will need to   take into account the size of the ST data header.8.7  IP Encapsulation of ST   ST packets may be encapsulated in IP to allow them to pass through   routers that don't support the ST Protocol. Of course, ST resource   management is precluded over such a path, and packet overhead is   increased by encapsulation, but if the performance is reasonably   predictable this may be better than not communicating at all.   IP-encapsulated ST packets begin with a normal IP header. Most fields   of the IP header should be filled in according to the same rules that   apply to any other IP packet. Three fields of special interest are:o   Protocol is 5, see [RFC1700], to indicate an ST packet is enclosed,    as opposed to TCP or UDP, for example.o   Destination Address is that of the next-hop ST agent. This may or    may not be the target of the ST stream. There may be an intermediate    ST agent to which the packet should be routed to take advantage of    service guarantees on the path past that agent. Such an intermediate    agent would not be on a directly-connected network (or else IP    encapsulation wouldn't be needed), so it would probably not be    listed in the normal routing table. Additional routing mechanisms,    not defined here, will be required to learn about such agents.o   Type-of-Service may be set to an appropriate value for the service    being requested, see [RFC1700]. This feature is not implemented    uniformly in the Internet, so its use can't be precisely defined    here.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 69]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   IP encapsulation adds little difficulty for the ST agent that   receives the packet. However, when IP encapsulation is performed it   must be done in both directions. To process the encapsulated IP   message, the ST agents simply remove the IP header and proceed with   ST header as usual.   The more difficult part is during setup, when the ST agent must   decide whether or not to encapsulate. If the next-hop ST agent is on   a remote network and the route to that network is through a router   that supports IP but not ST, then encapsulation is required. The   routing function provides ST agents with the route and capability   information needed to support encapsulation.   On forwarding, the (mostly constant) IP Header must be inserted and   the IP checksum appropriately updated.   Applications are informed about the number of IP hops traversed on   the path to each target. The IPHops field of the CONNECT message, seeSection 10.4.4, carries the number of traversed IP hops to the target   application. The field is incremented by each ST agent when IP   encapsulation will be used to reach the next-hop ST agent. The number   of IP hops traversed is returned to the origin in the IPHops field of   the ACCEPT message,Section 10.4.1.   When using IP Encapsulation, the MaxMsgSize field will not reflect   the MTU of the IP encapsulated segments. This means that IP   fragmentation and reassembly may be needed in the IP cloud to support   a message of MaxMsgSize. IP fragmentation can only occur when the MTU   of the IP cloud, less IP header length, is the smallest MTU in a   stream's network path.8.8  IP Multicasting   If an ST agent must use IP encapsulation to reach multiple next-hops   toward different targets, then either the packet must be replicated   for transmission to each next-hop, or IP multicasting may be used if   it is implemented in the next-hop ST agents and in the intervening IP   routers.   When the stream is established, the collection of next-hop ST agents   must be set up as an IP multicast group. The ST agent must allocate   an appropriate IP multicast address (seeSection 10.3.3) and fill   that address in the IPMulticastAddress field of the CONNECT message.   The IP multicast address in the CONNECT message is used to inform the   next-hop ST agents that they should join the multicast group to   receive subsequent PDUs. Obviously, the CONNECT message itself must   be sent using unicast. The next-hop ST agents must be able to receive   on the specified multicast address in order to accept the connection.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 70]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   If the next-hop ST agent can not receive on the specified multicast   address, it sends a REFUSE message with ReasonCode (BadMcastAddress).   Upon receiving the REFUSE, the upstream agent can choose to retry   with a different multicast address. Alternatively, it can choose to   lose the efficiency of multicast and use unicast delivery.   The following permanent IP multicast addresses have been assigned to   ST:           224.0.0.7 All ST routers (intermediate agents)           224.0.0.8 All ST hosts (agents)   In addition, a block of transient IP multicast addresses, 224.1.0.0 -   224.1.255.255, has been allocated for ST multicast groups. For   instance, the following two functions could be made available:   o   AllocateMcastAddr() -> result, McastAddr   o   ListenMcastAddr(McastAddr) -> result   o   ReleaseMcastAddr(McastAddr) -> result9.  The ST2+ Flow Specification   This section defines the ST2+ flow specification. The flow   specification contains the user application requirements in terms of   quality of service. Its contents are LRM dependent and are   transparent to the ST2 setup protocol. ST2 carries the flow   specification as part of the FlowSpec parameter, which is described   inSection 10.3.1. The required ST2+ flow specification is included   in the protocol only to support interoperability. ST2+ also defines a   "null" flow specification to be used only to support testing.   ST2 is not dependent on a particular flow specification format and it   is expected that other versions of the flow specification will be   needed in the future. Different flow specification formats are   distinguished by the value of the Version field of the FlowSpec   parameter, seeSection 10.3.1. A single stream is always associated   with a single flow specification format, i.e., the Version field is   consistent throughout the whole stream. The following Version field   values are defined:Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 71]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   0 - Null FlowSpec       /* must be supported */   1 - ST Version 1   2 - ST Version 1.5   3 -RFC 1190 FlowSpec   4 - HeiTS FlowSpec   5 - BerKom FlowSpec   6 -RFC 1363 FlowSpec   7 - ST2+ FlowSpec       /* must be supported */   FlowSpecs version #0 and #7 must be supported by ST2+   implementations.  Version numbers in the range 1-6 indicate flow   specifications are currently used in existing ST2 implementations.   Values in the 128-255 range are reserved for private and experimental   use.   In general, a flow specification may support sophisticated flow   descriptions. For example, a flow specification could represent sub-   flows of a particular stream. This could then be used to by a   cooperating application and LRM to forward designated packets to   specific targets based on the different sub-flows. The reserved bits   in the ST2 Data PDU, seeSection 10.1, may be used with such a flow   specification to designate packets associated with different sub-   flows. The ST2+ FlowSpec is not so sophisticated, and is intended for   use with applications that generate traffic at a single rate for   uniform delivery to all targets.9.1  FlowSpec Version #0 - (Null FlowSpec)   The flow specification identified by a #0 value of the Version field   is called the Null FlowSpec. This flow specification causes no   resources to be allocated. It is ignored by the LRMs. Its contents   are never updated. Stream setup takes place in the usual way leading   to successful stream establishment, but no resources are actually   reserved.   The purpose of the Null FlowSpec is that of facilitating   interoperability tests by allowing streams to be built without   actually allocating the correspondent amount of resources. The Null   FlowSpec may also be used for testing and debugging purposes.   The Null FlowSpec comprises the 4-byte FlowSpec parameter only, seeSection 10.3.1. The third byte (Version field) must be set to 0.9.2  FlowSpec Version #7 - ST2+ FlowSpec   The flow specification identified by a #7 value of the Version field   is the ST2+ FlowSpec, to be used by all ST2+ implementations. It   allows the user applications to express their real-time requirementsDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 72]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   in the form of a QoS class, precedence, and three basic QoS   parameters:   o   message size,   o   message rate,   o   end-to-end delay.   The QoS class indicates what kind of QoS guarantees are expected by   the application, e.g., strict guarantees or predictive, seeSection9.2.1. QoS parameters are expressed via a set of values:o   the "desired" values indicate the QoS desired by the application.    These values are assigned by the application and never modified by    the LRM.o   the "limit" values indicate the lowest QoS the application is    willing to accept. These values are also assigned by the application    and never modified by the LRM.o   the "actual" values indicate the QoS that the system is able to    provide. They are updated by the LRM at each node. The "actual"    values are always bounded by the "limit" and "desired" values.9.2.1  QoS Classes   Two QoS classes are defined:   1 - QOS_PREDICTIVE      /* QoSClass field value = 0x01, must be                              supported*/   2 - QOS_GUARANTEED      /* QoSClass field value = 0x10, optional */o   The QOS_PREDICTIVE class implies that the negotiated QoS may be    violated for short time intervals during the data transfer. An    application has to provide values that take into account the    "normal" case, e.g., the "desired" message rate is the allocated rate    for the transmission. Reservations are done for the "normal" case as    opposite to the peak case required by the QOS_GUARANTEED service    class. This QoS class must be supported by all implementations.o   The QOS_GUARANTEED class implies that the negotiated QoS for the    stream is never violated during the data transfer. An application    has to provide values that take into account the worst possible    case, e.g., the "desired" message rate is the peak rate for the    transmission. As a result, sufficient resources to handle the peak    rate are reserved. This strategy may lead to overbooking of    resources, but it provides strict real-time guarantees. Support ofDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 73]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995    this QoS class is optional.   If a LRM that doesn't support class QOS_GUARANTEED receives a   FlowSpec containing QOS_GUARANTEED class, it informs the local ST   agent. The ST agent may try different paths or delete the   correspondent portion of the stream as described inSection 5.5.3,   i.e., ReasonCode (FlowSpecError).9.2.2  Precedence   Precedence is the importance of the connection being established.   Zero represents the lowest precedence. The lowest level is expected   to be used by default. In general, the distinction between precedence   and priority is that precedence specifies streams that are permitted   to take previously committed resources from another stream, while   priority identifies those PDUs that a stream is most willing to have   dropped.9.2.3  Maximum Data Size   This parameter is expressed in bytes. It represents the maximum   amount of data, excluding ST and other headers, allowed to be sent in   a messages as part of the stream. The LRM first checks whether it is   possible to get the value desired by the application (DesMaxSize). If   not, it updates the actual value (ActMaxSize) with the available size   unless this value is inferior to the minimum allowed by the   application (LimitMaxSize), in which case it informs the local ST   agent that it is not possible to build the stream along this path.9.2.4  Message Rate   This parameter is expressed in messages/second. It represents the   transmission rate for the stream. The LRM first checks whether it is   possible to get the value desired by the application (DesRate). If   not, it updates the actual value (ActRate) with the available rate   unless this value is inferior to the minimum allowed by the   application (LimitRate), in which case it informs the local ST agent   that it is not possible to build the stream along this path.9.2.5  Delay and Delay Jitter   The delay parameter is expressed in milliseconds. It represents the   maximum end-to-end delay for the stream. The LRM first checks whether   it is possible to get the value desired by the application   (DesMaxDelay). If not, it updates the actual value (ActMaxDelay) with   the available delay unless this value is greater than the maximum   delay allowed by the application (LimitMaxDelay), in which case it   informs the local ST agent that it is not possible to build theDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 74]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   stream along this path.   The LRM also updates at each node the MinDelay field by incrementing   it by the minimum possible delay to the next-hop. Information on the   minimum possible delay allows to calculate the maximum end-to-end   delay range, i.e., the time interval in which a data packet can be   received. This interval should not exceed the DesMaxDelayRange value   indicated by the application. The maximum end-to-end delay range is   an upper bound of the delay jitter.9.2.6  ST2+ FlowSpec Format   The ST2+ FlowSpec has the following format:        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |    QosClass   |  Precedence   |            0(unused)          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                             DesRate                           |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                            LimitRate                          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                             ActRate                           |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            DesMaxSize         |           LimitMaxSize        |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            ActMaxSize         |           DesMaxDelay         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            LimitMaxDelay      |           ActMaxDelay         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            DesMaxDelayRange   |           ActMinDelay         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                        Figure 9: The ST2+ FlowSpec.   The LRM modifies only "actual" fields, i.e., those beginning with   "Act". The user application assigns values to all other fields.o   QoSClass indicates which of the two defined classes of service    applies. The two classes are: QOS_PREDICTIVE (QoSClass = 1) and    QOS_GUARANTEED (QoSClass = 2).o   Precedence indicates the stream's precedence. Zero represents the    lowest precedence, and should be the default value.o   DesRate is the desired transmission rate for the stream in messages/    second. This field is set by the origin and is not modified byDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 75]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995    intermediate agents.o   LimitRate is the minimum acceptable transmission rate in messages/    second. This field is set by the origin and is not modified by    intermediate agents.o   ActRate is the actual transmission rate allocated for the stream in    messages/second. Each agent updates this field with the available    rate unless this value is less than LimitRate, in which case a    REFUSE is generated.o   DesMaxSize is the desired maximum data size in bytes that will be    sent in a message in the stream. This field is set by the origin.o   LimitMaxSize is the minimum acceptable data size in bytes. This    field is set by the origino   ActMaxSize is the actual maximum data size that may be sent in a    message in the stream. This field is updated by each agent based on    MTU and available resources. If available maximum size is less than    LimitMaxSize, the connection must be refused with ReasonCode    (CantGetResrc).o   DesMaxDelay is the desired maximum end-to-end delay for the stream    in milliseconds. This field is set by the origin.o   LimitMaxDelay is the upper-bound of acceptable end-to-end delay for    the stream in milliseconds. This field is set by the origin.o   ActMaxDelay is the maximum end-to-end delay that will be seen by    data in the stream. Each ST agent adds to this field the maximum    delay that will be introduced by the agent, including transmission    time to the next-hop ST agent. If the actual maximum exceeds    LimitMaxDelay, then the connection is refused with ReasonCode    (CantGetResrc).o   DesMaxDelayRange is the desired maximum delay range that may be    encountered end-to-end by stream data in milliseconds. This value is    set by the application at the origin.o   ActMinDelay is the actual minimum end-to-end delay that will be    encountered by stream data in milliseconds. Each ST agent adds to    this field the minimum delay that will be introduced by the agent,    including transmission time to the next-hop ST agent. Each agent    must add at least 1 millisecond. The delay range for the stream can    be calculated from the actual maximum and minimum delay fields. It    is expected that the range will be important to some applications.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 76]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 199510.  ST2 Protocol Data Units Specification10.1  Data PDU   IP and ST packets can be distinguished by the IP Version Number   field, i.e., the first four (4) bits of the packet; ST has been   assigned the value 5 (see [RFC1700]). There is no requirement for   compatibility between IP and ST packet headers beyond the first four   bits. (IP uses value 4.)   The ST PDUs sent between ST agents consist of an ST Header   encapsulating either a higher layer PDU or an ST Control Message.   Data packets are distinguished from control messages via the D-bit   (bit 8) in the ST header.   The ST Header also includes an ST Version Number, a total length   field, a header checksum, a unique id, and the stream origin 32-bit   IP address. The unique id and the stream origin 32-bit IP address   form the stream id (SID). This is shown in Figure 10. Please refer toSection 10.6 for an explanation of the notation.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  ST=5 | Ver=3 |D| Pri |   0   |            TotalBytes         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |          HeaderChecksum       |            UniqueID           |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         OriginIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                            Figure 10: ST Headero   ST is the IP Version Number assigned to identify ST packets. The    value for ST is 5.o   Ver is the ST Version Number. The value for the current ST2+ version    is 3.o   D (bit 8) is set to 1 in all ST data packets and to 0 in all SCMP    control messages.o   Pri (bits 9-11) is the packet-drop priority field with zero (0)    being lowest priority and seven the highest. The field is to be used    as described inSection 3.2.2.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 77]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995o   TotalBytes is the length, in bytes, of the entire ST packet, it    includes the ST Header but does not include any local network    headers or trailers. In general, all length fields in the ST    Protocol are in units of bytes.o   HeaderChecksum covers only the ST Header (12 bytes). The ST Protocol    uses 16-bit checksums here in the ST Header and in each Control    Message. For checksum computation, seeSection 8.3.o   UniqueID is the first element of the stream ID (SID). It is locally    unique at the stream origin, seeSection 8.1.o   OriginIPAddress is the second element of the SID. It is the 32-bit    IP address of the stream origin, seeSection 8.1.   Bits 12-15 must be set to zero (0) when using the flow specifications   defined in this document, seeSection 9. They may be set accordingly   when other flow specifications are used, e.g., as described in   [WoHD95].10.1.1  ST Data Packets   ST packets whose D-bit is non-zero are data packets. Their   interpretation is a matter for the higher layer protocols and   consequently is not specified here. The data packets are not   protected by an ST checksum and will be delivered to the higher layer   protocol even with errors. ST agents will not pass data packets over   a new hop whose setup is not complete.10.2  Control PDUs   SCMP control messages are exchanged between neighbor ST agents using   a D-bit of zero (0). The control protocol follows a request-response   model with all requests expecting responses. Retransmission after   timeout (seeSection 4.3) is used to allow for lost or ignored   messages. Control messages do not extend across packet boundaries; if   a control message is too large for the MTU of a hop, its information   is partitioned and a control message per partition is sent (seeSection 5.1.2). All control messages have the following formatDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 78]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  OpCode       |     Options   |           TotalBytes          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |          Reference            |          LnkReference         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         SenderIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            Checksum           |            ReasonCode         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                      OpCodeSpecificData                       :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                    Figure 11: ST Control Message Formato   OpCode identifies the type of control message.o   Options is used to convey OpCode-specific variations for a control    message.o   TotalBytes is the length of the control message, in bytes, including    all OpCode specific fields and optional parameters. The value is    always divisible by four (4).o   Reference is a transaction number. Each sender of a request control    message assigns a Reference number to the message that is unique    with respect to the stream. The Reference number is used by the    receiver to detect and discard duplicates. Each acknowledgment    carries the Reference number of the request being acknowledged.    Reference zero (0) is never used, and Reference numbers are assumed    to be monotonically increasing with wraparound so that the older-    than and more-recent-than relations are well defined.o   LnkReference contains the Reference field of the request control    message that caused this request control message to be created. It    is used in situations where a single request leads to multiple    responses from the same ST agent. Examples are CONNECT and CHANGE    messages that are first acknowledged hop-by-hop and then lead to an    ACCEPT or REFUSE response from each target.o   SenderIPAddress is the 32-bit IP address of the network interface    that the ST agent used to send the control message. This value    changes each time the packet is forwarded by an ST agent (hop-by-    hop).Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 79]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995o   Checksum is the checksum of the control message. Because the control    messages are sent in packets that may be delivered with bits in    error, each control message must be checked to be error free before    it is acted upon.o   ReasonCode is set to zero (0 = NoError) in most SCMP messages.    Otherwise, it can be set to an appropriate value to indicate an    error situation as defined inSection 10.5.3.o   OpCodeSpecificData contains any additional information that is    associated with the control message. It depends on the specific    control message and is explained further below. In some response    control messages, fields of zero (0) are included to allow the    format to match that of the corresponding request message. The    OpCodeSpecificData may also contain optional parameters. The    specifics of OpCodeSpecificData are defined inSection 10.3.10.3  Common SCMP Elements   Several fields and parameters (referred to generically as elements)   are common to two or more PDUs. They are described in detail here   instead of repeating their description several times. In many cases,   the presence of a parameter is optional. To permit the parameters to   be easily defined and parsed, each is identified with a PCode byte   that is followed by a PBytes byte indicating the length of the   parameter in bytes (including the PCode, PByte, and any padding   bytes). If the length of the information is not a multiple of four   (4) bytes, the parameter is padded with one to three zero (0) bytes.   PBytes is thus always a multiple of four (4). Parameters can be   present in any order.10.3.1  FlowSpec   The FlowSpec parameter (PCode = 1) is used in several SCMP messages   to convey the ST2 flow specification. The FlowSpec parameter has the   following format:        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |   PCode = 1   |    PBytes     |   Version     |       0       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                        FlowSpec detail                        :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                       Figure 12: FlowSpec ParameterDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 80]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995o   the Version field contains the FlowSpec version.o   the FlowSpec detail field contains the flow specification and is    transparent to the ST agent. It is the data structure to be passed    to the LRM. It must be 4-byte aligned.   The Null FlowSpec, seeSection 9.1, has no FlowSpec detail field.   PBytes is set to four (4), and Version is set to zero (0). The ST2+   FlowSpec, seeSection 9.2, is a 32-byte data structure. PBytes is set   to 36, and Version is set to seven (7).10.3.2  Group   The Group parameter (PCode = 2) is an optional argument used to   indicate that the stream is a member in the specified group.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  PCode = 2    |   PBytes = 16 |           GroupUniqueID       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                        GroupCreationTime                      |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                     GroupInitiatorIPAddress                   |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            Relationship       |                 N             |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                         Figure 13: Group Parametero   GroupUniqueID, GroupInitiatorIPAddress, and GroupCreationTime    together form the GroupName field. They are allocated by the group    name generator function, seeSection 8.2. GroupUniqueID and    GroupCreationTime are implementation specific and have only local    definitions.o   Relationship has the following format:                                            0                        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5                       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                       |    0 (unused)         |S|P|F|B|                       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                       Figure 14: Relationship FieldDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 81]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   The B, F, P, S bits correspond to Bandwidth, Fate, Path, and Subnet   resources sharing, seeSection 7. A value of 1 indicates that the   relationship exists for this group. All combinations of the four bits   are allowed. Bits 0-11 of the Relationship field are reserved for   future use and must be set to 0.o   N contains a legal value only if the B-bit is set. It is the value    of the N parameter to be used as explained inSection 7.1.1.10.3.3  MulticastAddress   The MulticastAddress parameter (PCode = 3) is an optional parameter   that is used when using IP encapsulation and setting up an IP   multicast group. This parameter is used to communicate the desired IP   multicast address to next-hop ST agents that should become members of   the group, seeSection 8.8.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  PCode = 3    |   PBytes = 8  |                0              |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                        IPMulticastAddress                     |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                        Figure 15:  MulticastAddresso   IPMulticastAddress is the 32-bit IP multicast address to be used to    receive data packets for the stream.10.3.4  Origin   The Origin parameter (PCode = 4) is used to identify the next higher   protocol, and the SAP being used in conjunction with that protocol.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  PCode = 5    |   PBytes      | NextPcol      |OriginSAPBytes |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                OriginSAP                      :     Padding   |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                             Figure 16: OriginDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 82]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995o   NextPcol is an 8-bit field used in demultiplexing operations to    identify the protocol to be used above ST. The values of NextPcol    are in the same number space as the IP header's Protocol field and    are consequently defined in the Assigned Numbers RFC [RFC1700].o   OriginSAPBytes specifies the length of the OriginSAP, exclusive of    any padding required to maintain 32-bit alignment.o   OriginSAP identifies the origin's SAP associated with the NextPcol    protocol.   Note that the 32-bit IP address of the stream origin is not included   in this parameter because it is always available as part of the ST   header.10.3.5  RecordRoute   The RecordRoute parameter (PCode = 5) is used to request that the   route between the origin and a target be recorded and delivered to   the user application. The ST agent at the origin (or target)   including this parameter, has to determine the parameter's length,   indicated by the PBytes field. ST agents processing messages   containing this parameter add their receiving IP address in the   position indicated by the FreeOffset field, space permitting. If no   space is available, the parameter is passed unchanged. When included   by the origin, all agents between the origin and the target add their   IP addresses and this information is made available to the   application at the target. When included by the target, all agents   between the target and the origin, inclusive, add their IP addresses   and this information is made available to the application at the   origin.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |   PCode = 5   |     PBytes    |       0       |  FreeOffset   |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                          IP Address 1                         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                              ...                              :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                          IP Address N                         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                           Figure 17: RecordRouteo   PBytes is the length of the parameter in bytes. Length is determined    by the agent (target or origin) that first introduces the parameter.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 83]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995    Once set, the length of the parameter remains unchanged.o   FreeOffset indicates the offset, relative to the start of the    parameter, for the next IP address to be recorded. When the    FreeOffset is greater than, or equal to, PBytes the RecordRoute    parameter is full.o   IP Address is filled in, space permitting, by each ST agent    processing this parameter.10.3.6  Target and TargetList   Several control messages use a parameter called TargetList (PCode =   6), which contains information about the targets to which the message   pertains. For each Target in the TargetList, the information includes   the 32-bit IP address of the target, the SAP applicable to the next   higher layer protocol, and the length of the SAP (SAPBytes).   Consequently, a Target structure can be of variable length. Each   entry has the format shown in Figure 18.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                        Target IP Address                      |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  TargetBytes  |  SAPBytes     |     SAP       :    Padding    |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                             Figure 18: Targeto   TargetIPAddress is the 32-bit IP Address of the Target.o   TargetBytes is the length of the Target structure, beginning with    the TargetIPAddress.o   SAPBytes is the length of the SAP, excluding any padding required to    maintain 32-bit alignment.o   SAP may be longer than 2 bytes and it includes a padding when    required. There would be no padding required for SAPs with lengths    of 2, 6, 10, etc., bytes.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 84]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  PCode = 6    |   PBytes      |           TargetCount = N     |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                           Target 1                            |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                               :                               :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                           Target N                            |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                           Figure 19: TargetList10.3.7  UserData   The UserData parameter (PCode = 7) is an optional parameter that may   be used by the next higher protocol or an application to convey   arbitrary information to its peers. This parameter is propagated in   some control messages and its contents have no significance to ST   agents. Note that since the size of control messages is limited by   the smallest MTU in the path to the targets, the maximum size of this   parameter cannot be specified a priori. If the size of this parameter   causes a message to exceed the network MTU, an ST agent behaves as   described inSection 5.1.2. The parameter must be padded to a   multiple of 32 bits.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  PCode = 7    |   PBytes      |           UserBytes           |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                      UserInfo                 :   Padding     |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                            Figure 20:  UserDatao   UserBytes specifies the number of valid UserInfo bytes.o   UserInfo is arbitrary data meaningful to the next higher protocol    layer or application.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 85]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 199510.3.8  Handling of Undefined Parameters   An ST agent must be able to handle all parameters listed above. To   support possible future uses, parameters with unknown PCodes must   also be supported. If an agent receives a message containing a   parameter with an unknown Pcode value, the agent should handle the   parameter as if it was a UserData parameter. That is, the contents of   the parameter should be ignored, and the message should be   propagated, as appropriate, along with the related control message.10.4  ST Control Message PDUs   ST Control messages are described in the following section. Please   refer toSection 10.6 for an explanation of the notation.10.4.1  ACCEPT   ACCEPT (OpCode = 1) is issued by a target as a positive response to a   CONNECT message. It implies that the target is prepared to accept   data from the origin along the stream that was established by the   CONNECT.  ACCEPT is also issued as a positive response to a CHANGE   message. It implies that the target accepts the proposed stream   modification.   ACCEPT is relayed by the ST agents from the target to the origin   along the path established by CONNECT (or CHANGE) but in the reverse   direction. ACCEPT must be acknowledged with ACK at each hop.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 86]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  OpCode = 1   |      0        |           TotalBytes          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |      Reference                |         LnkReference          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         SenderIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            Checksum           |          ReasonCode = 0       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |          MaxMsgSize           |          RecoveryTimeout      |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                      StreamCreationTime                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |   IPHops      |                        0                      |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                           FlowSpec                            :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                           TargetList                          :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                           RecordRoute                         :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                           UserData                            :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                     Figure 21: ACCEPT Control Messageo   Reference contains a number assigned by the ST agent sending ACCEPT    for use in the acknowledging ACK.o   LnkReference is the Reference number from the corresponding CONNECT    (or CHANGE)o   MaxMsgSize indicates the smallest MTU along the path traversed by    the stream. This field is only set when responding to a CONNECT    request.o   RecoveryTimeout reflects the nominal number of milliseconds that the    application is willing to wait for a failed system component to be    detected and any corrective action to be taken. This field    represents what can actually be supported by each participating    agent, and is only set when responding to a CONNECT request.o   StreamCreationTime is the 32- bits system dependent timestamp copied    from the corresponding CONNECT request.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 87]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995o   IPHops is the number of IP encapsulated hops traversed by the    stream. This field is set to zero by the origin, and is incremented    at each IP encapsulating agent.10.4.2  ACK   ACK (OpCode = 2) is used to acknowledge a request. The ACK message is   not propagated beyond the previous-hop or next-hop ST agent.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  OpCode = 2   |     0         |           TotalBytes          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |       Reference               |           LnkReference = 0    |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         SenderIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |       Checksum                |           ReasonCode          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                       Figure 22: ACK Control Messageo   Reference is the Reference number of the control message being    acknowledged.o   ReasonCode is usually NoError, but other possibilities exist, e.g.,    DuplicateIgn.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 88]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 199510.4.3  CHANGE   CHANGE (OpCode = 3) is used to change the FlowSpec of an established   stream. The CHANGE message is processed similarly to CONNECT, except   that it travels along the path of an established stream. CHANGE must   be propagated until it reaches the related stream's targets. CHANGE   must be acknowledged with ACK at each hop.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  OpCode = 3   |G|I|     0     |           TotalBytes          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |           Reference           |          LnkReference = 0     |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                        SenderIPAddress                        |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            Checksum           |          ReasonCode = 0       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                            FlowSpec                           :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                           TargetList                          :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                           RecordRoute                         :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                            UserData                           :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                     Figure 23: CHANGE Control Messageo   G (bit 8) is used to request a global, stream-wide change; the    TargetList parameter should be omitted when the G bit is specified.o   I (bit 7) is used to indicate that the LRM is permitted to interrupt    and, if needed, break the stream in the process of trying to satisfy    the requested change.o   Reference contains a number assigned by the ST agent sending CHANGE    for use in the acknowledging ACK.10.4.4  CONNECT   CONNECT (OpCode = 4) requests the setup of a new stream or an   addition to or recovery of an existing stream. Only the origin can   issue the initial set of CONNECTs to setup a stream, and the firstDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 89]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   CONNECT to each next-hop is used to convey the SID.   The next-hop initially responds with an ACK, which implies that the   CONNECT was valid and is being processed. The next-hop will later   relay back either an ACCEPT or REFUSE from each target. An   intermediate ST agent that receives a CONNECT behaves as explained inSection 4.5.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  OpCode = 4   |J N|S|    0    |           TotalBytes          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |           Reference           |          LnkReference = 0     |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         SenderIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |           Checksum            |          ReasonCode = 0       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |           MaxMsgSize          |          RecoveryTimeout      |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                        StreamCreationTime                     |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |   IPHops      |                        0                      |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                             Origin                            :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                           FlowSpec                            :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                          TargetList                           :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                          RecordRoute                          :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                             Group                             :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                        MulticastAddress                       :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                            UserData                           :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                     Figure 24: CONNECT Control MessageDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 90]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995o   JN (bits 8 and 9) indicate the join authorization level for the    stream, seeSection 4.4.2.o   S (bit 10) indicates the NoRecovery option (Section 4.4.1). When the    S-bit is set (1), the NoRecovery option is specified for the stream.o   Reference contains a number assigned by the ST agent sending CONNECT    for use in the acknowledging ACK.o   MaxMsgSize indicates the smallest MTU along the path traversed by    the stream. This field is initially set to the network MTU of the    agent issues the CONNECT.o   RecoveryTimeout is the nominal number of milliseconds that the    application is willing to wait for failed system component to be    detected and any corrective action to be taken.o   StreamCreationTime is the 32- bits system dependent timestamp    generated by the ST agent issuing the CONNECT.o   IPHops is the number of IP encapsulated hops traversed by the    stream. This field is set to zero by the origin, and is incremented    at each IP encapsulating agent.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 91]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 199510.4.5  DISCONNECT   DISCONNECT (OpCode = 5) is used by an origin to tear down an   established stream or part of a stream, or by an intermediate ST   agent that detects a failure between itself and its previous-hop, as   distinguished by the ReasonCode. The DISCONNECT message specifies the   list of targets that are to be disconnected. An ACK is required in   response to a DISCONNECT message. The DISCONNECT message is   propagated all the way to the specified targets. The targets are   expected to terminate their participation in the stream.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  OpCode = 5   |G|    0        |           TotalBytes          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |      Reference                |     LnkReference = 0          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         SenderIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            Checksum           |          ReasonCode           |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                      GeneratorIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                           TargetList                          :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                            UserData                           :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                   Figure 25: DISCONNECT Control Messageo   G (bit 8) is used to request a DISCONNECT of all the stream's    targets. TargetList should be omitted when the G-bit is set (1). If    TargetList is present, it is ignored.o   Reference contains a number assigned by the ST agent sending    DISCONNECT for use in the acknowledging ACK.o   ReasonCode reflects the event that initiated the message.o   GeneratorIPAddress is the 32-bit IP address of the host that first    generated the DISCONNECT message.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 92]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 199510.4.6  ERROR   ERROR (OpCode = 6) is sent in acknowledgment to a request in which an   error is detected. No action is taken on the erroneous request. No   ACK is expected. The ERROR message is not propagated beyond the   previous-hop or next-hop ST agent. An ERROR is never sent in response   to another ERROR. The receiver of an ERROR is encouraged to try again   without waiting for a retransmission timeout.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  OpCode = 6   |       0       |           TotalBytes          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |      Reference                |     LnkReference = 0          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         SenderIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            Checksum           |        ReasonCode             |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                           PDUInError                          :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                      Figure 26: ERROR Control Messageo   Reference is the Reference number of the erroneous request.o   ReasonCode indicates the error that triggered the message.o   PDUInError is the PDU in error, beginning with the ST Header. This    parameter is optional. Its length is limited by network MTU, and may    be truncated when too long.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 93]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 199510.4.7  HELLO   HELLO (OpCode = 7) is used as part of the ST failure detection   mechanism, seeSection 6.1.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  OpCode = 7   |R|    0        |           TotalBytes          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |       Reference = 0           |        LnkReference = 0       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         SenderIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |         Checksum              |          ReasonCode = 0       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                          HelloTimer                           |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                      Figure 27: HELLO Control Messageo   R (bit 8) is used for the Restarted-bit.o   HelloTimer represents the time in millisecond since the agent was    restarted, modulo the precision of the field. It is used to detect    duplicate or delayed HELLO messages.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 94]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 199510.4.8  JOIN   JOIN (OpCode = 8) is used as part of the ST steam joining mechanism,   seeSection 4.6.3.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  OpCode = 8   |      0        |           TotalBytes          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |      Reference                |         LnkReference = 0      |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         SenderIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            Checksum           |          ReasonCode = 0       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                      GeneratorIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                          TargetList                           :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                      Figure 28: JOIN Control Messageo   Reference contains a number assigned by the ST agent sending JOIN    for use in the acknowledging ACK.o   GeneratorIPAddress is the 32-bit IP address of the host that    generated the JOIN message.o   TargetList is the information associated with the target to be added    to the stream.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 95]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 199510.4.9  JOIN-REJECT   JOIN-REJECT (OpCode = 9) is used as part of the ST steam joining   mechanism, seeSection 4.6.3.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  OpCode = 9   |      0        |           TotalBytes          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |      Reference                |          LnkReference         |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         SenderIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            Checksum           |          ReasonCode           |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                      GeneratorIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                   Figure 29: JOIN-REJECT Control Messageo   Reference contains a number assigned by the ST agent sending the    REFUSE for use in the acknowledging ACK.o   LnkReference is the Reference number from the corresponding JOIN    message.o   ReasonCode reflects the reason why the JOIN request was rejected.o   GeneratorIPAddress is the 32-bit IP address of the host that first    generated the JOIN-REJECT message.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 96]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 199510.4.10  NOTIFY   NOTIFY (OpCode = 10) is issued by an ST agent to inform other ST   agents of events that may be significant. NOTIFY may be propagated   beyond the previous-hop or next-hop ST agent depending on the   ReasonCode, seeSection 10.5.3; NOTIFY must be acknowledged with an   ACK.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  OpCode = 10  |      0        |           TotalBytes          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |      Reference                |         LnkReference = 0      |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         SenderIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            Checksum           |          ReasonCode           |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                      DetectorIPAddress                        |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |          MaxMsgSize           |          RecoveryTimeout      |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                           FlowSpec                            :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                           TargetList                          :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                           UserData                            :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                     Figure 30: NOTIFY Control Messageo   Reference contains a number assigned by the ST agent sending the    NOTIFY for use in the acknowledging ACK.o   ReasonCode identifies the reason for the notification.o   DetectorIPAddress is the 32-bit IP address of the ST agent that    detects the event.o   MaxMsgSize is set when the MTU of the listed targets has changed    (e.g., due to recovery), or when the notification is generated after    a successful JOIN. Otherwise it is set to zero (0).Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 97]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995o   RecoveryTimeout is set when the notification is generated after a    successful JOIN. Otherwise it is set to zero (0).o   FlowSpec is present when the notification is generated after a    successful JOIN.o   TargetList is present when the notification is related to one or    more targets, or when MaxMsgSize is seto   UserData is present if the notification is generated after a    successful JOIN and the UserData parameter was set in the ACCEPT    message.10.4.11  REFUSE   REFUSE (OpCode = 11) is issued by a target that either does not wish   to accept a CONNECT message or wishes to remove itself from an   established stream. It might also be issued by an intermediate ST   agent in response to a CONNECT or CHANGE either to terminate a   routing loop, or when a satisfactory next-hop to a target cannot be   found. It may also be a separate command when an existing stream has   been preempted by a higher precedence stream or an ST agent detects   the failure of a previous-hop, next-hop, or the network between them.   In all cases, the TargetList specifies the targets that are affected   by the condition. Each REFUSE must be acknowledged by an ACK.   The REFUSE is relayed back by the ST agents to the origin (or   intermediate ST agent that created the CONNECT or CHANGE) along the   path traced by the CONNECT. The ST agent receiving the REFUSE will   process it differently depending on the condition that caused it, as   specified in the ReasonCode field. No special effort is made to   combine multiple REFUSE messages since it is considered most unlikely   that separate REFUSEs will happen to both pass through an ST agent at   the same time and be easily combined, e.g., have identical   ReasonCodes and parameters.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 98]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  OpCode = 11  |G|E|N|    0    |           TotalBytes          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |      Reference                |         LnkReference          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         SenderIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            Checksum           |          ReasonCode           |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                       DetectorIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                       ValidTargetIPAddress                    |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                          TargetList                           :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                         RecordRoute                           :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                            UserData                           :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                     Figure 31: REFUSE Control Messageo   G (bit 8) is used to indicate that all targets down stream from the    sender are refusing. It is expected that this will be set most    commonly due to network failures. The TargetList parameter is    ignored or not present when this bit is set, and must be included    when not set.o   E (bit 9) is set by an ST agent to indicate that the request failed    and that the pre-change stream attributes, including resources, and    the stream itself still exist.o   N (bit 10) is used to indicate that no further attempts to recover    the stream should be made. This bit must be set when stream recovery    should not be attempted, even in the case where the target    application has shut down normally (ApplDisconnect).o   Reference contains a number assigned by the ST agent sending the    REFUSE for use in the acknowledging ACK.o   LnkReference is either the Reference number from the corresponding    CONNECT or CHANGE, if it is the result of such a message, or zero    when the REFUSE was originated as a separate command.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                     [Page 99]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995o   DetectorIPAddress is the 32-bit IP address of the host that first    generated the REFUSE message.o   ValidTargetIPAddress is the 32-bit IP address of a host that is    properly connected as part of the stream. This parameter is only    used when recovering from stream convergence, otherwise it is set to    zero (0).10.4.12  STATUS   STATUS (OpCode = 12) is used to inquire about the existence of a   particular stream identified by the SID. Use of STATUS is intended   for collecting information from an neighbor ST agent, including   general and specific stream information, and round trip time   estimation. The use of this message type is described inSection 8.4.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       | OpCode = 12   |       0       |           TotalBytes          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |      Reference                |       LnkReference = 0        |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         SenderIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            Checksum           |          ReasonCode = 0       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                          TargetList                           :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                     Figure 32: STATUS Control Messageo   Reference contains a number assigned by the ST agent sending STATUS    for use in the replying STATUS-RESPONSE.o   TargetList is an optional parameter that when present indicates that    only information related to the specific targets should be relayed    in the STATUS-RESPONSE.10.4.13  STATUS-RESPONSE   STATUS-RESPONSE (OpCode = 13) is the reply to a STATUS message. If   the stream specified in the STATUS message is not known, the STATUS-   RESPONSE will contain the specified SID but no other parameters. It   will otherwise contain the current SID, FlowSpec, TargetList, and   possibly Groups of the stream. It the full target list can not fit in   a single message, only those targets that can be included in oneDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                    [Page 100]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   message will be included. As mentioned inSection 10.4.12, it is   possible to request information on a specific target.        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |  OpCode = 13  |    0          |           TotalBytes          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |      Reference                |       LnkReference = 0        |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |                         SenderIPAddress                       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |            Checksum           |       ReasonCode = 0          |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                           FlowSpec                            :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                           Groups                              :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       :                          TargetList                           :       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                 Figure 33: STATUS-RESPONSE Control Messageo   Reference contains a number assigned by the ST agent sending the    STATUS.10.5  Suggested Protocol Constants   The ST Protocol uses several fields that must have specific values   for the protocol to work, and also several values that an   implementation must select. This section specifies the required   values and suggests initial values for others. It is recommended that   the latter be implemented as variables so that they may be easily   changed when experience indicates better values. Eventually, they   should be managed via the normal network management facilities.   ST uses IP Version Number 5.   When encapsulated in IP, ST uses IP Protocol Number 5.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                    [Page 101]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 199510.5.1  SCMP Messages   1)      ACCEPT   2)      ACK   3)      CHANGE   4)      CONNECT   5)      DISCONNECT   6)      ERROR   7)      HELLO   8)      JOIN   9)      JOIN-REJECT   10)     NOTIFY   11)     REFUSE   12)     STATUS   13)     STATUS-RESPONSE10.5.2  SCMP Parameters   1)      FlowSpec   2)      Group   3)      MulticastAddress   4)      Origin   5)      RecordRoute   6)      TargetList   7)      UserData10.5.3  ReasonCode   Several errors may occur during protocol processing. All ST error   codes are taken from a single number space. The currently defined   values and their meaning is presented in the list below. Note that   new error codes may be defined from time to time. All implementations   are expected to handle new codes in a graceful manner. If an unknown   ReasonCode is encountered, it should be assumed to be fatal. The   ReasonCode is an 8-bit field. Following values are defined:1       NoError       No error has occurred.2       ErrorUnknown  An error not contained in this list has been                        detected.3       AccessDenied  Access denied.4       AckUnexpected An unexpected ACK was received.5       ApplAbort     The application aborted the stream abnormally.6       ApplDisconnectThe application closed the stream normally.7       ApplRefused   Applications refused requested connection or                        change.8       AuthentFailed The authentication function failed.9       BadMcastAddress IP Multicast address is unacceptable in CONNECT10      CantGetResrc  Unable to acquire (additional) resources.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                    [Page 102]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 199511      CantRelResrc  Unable to release excess resources.12      CantRecover   Unable to recover failed stream.13      CksumBadCtl   Control PDU has a bad message checksum.14      CksumBadST    PDU has a bad ST Header checksum.15      DuplicateIgn  Control PDU is a duplicate and is being                        acknowledged.16      DuplicateTarget Control PDU contains a duplicate target, or an                        attempt to add an existing target.17      FlowSpecMismatch      FlowSpec in request does not match                                existing FlowSpec.18      FlowSpecError An error occurred while processing the FlowSpec19      FlowVerUnknownControl PDU has a FlowSpec Version Number that                        is not supported.20      GroupUnknown  Control PDU contains an unknown Group Name.21      InconsistGroupAn inconsistency has been detected with the                        streams forming a group.22      IntfcFailure  A network interface failure has been detected.23      InvalidSender Control PDU has an invalid SenderIPAddress                        field.24      InvalidTotByt Control PDU has an invalid TotalBytes field.25      JoinAuthFailure Join failed due to stream authorization level.26      LnkRefUnknown Control PDU contains an unknown LnkReference.27      NetworkFailureA network failure has been detected.28      NoRouteToAgentCannot find a route to an ST agent.29      NoRouteToHost Cannot find a route to a host.30      NoRouteToNet  Cannot find a route to a network.31      OpCodeUnknown Control PDU has an invalid OpCode field.32      PCodeUnknown  Control PDU has a parameter with an invalid                        PCode.33      ParmValueBad  Control PDU contains an invalid parameter value.34      PathConvergence Two branches of the stream join during the                        CONNECT setup.35      ProtocolUnknown Control PDU contains an unknown next-higher                        layer protocol identifier.36      RecordRouteSize RecordRoute parameter is too long to permit                        message to fit a network's MTU.37      RefUnknown    Control PDU contains an unknown Reference.38      ResponseTimeout Control message has been acknowledged but not                        answered by an appropriate control message.39      RestartLocal  The local ST agent has recently restarted.40      RestartRemote The remote ST agent has recently restarted.41      RetransTimeoutAn acknowledgment has not been received after                        several retransmissions.42      RouteBack     Route to next-hop through same interface as                        previous-hop and is not previous-hop.43      RouteInconsistA routing inconsistency has been detected.44      RouteLoop     A routing loop has been detected.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                    [Page 103]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 199545      SAPUnknown    Control PDU contains an unknown next-higher                        layer SAP (port).46      SIDUnknown    Control PDU contains an unknown SID.47      STAgentFailureAn ST agent failure has been detected.48      STVer3Bad     A received PDU is not ST Version 3.49      StreamExists  A stream with the given SID already exists.50      StreamPreempted The stream has been preempted by one with a                        higher precedence.51      TargetExists  A CONNECT was received that specified an                        existing target.52      TargetUnknown A target is not a member of the specified                        stream.53      TargetMissing A target parameter was expected and is not                        included, or is empty.54      TruncatedCtl  Control PDU is shorter than expected.55      TruncatedPDU  A received ST PDU is shorter than the ST Header                        indicates.56      UserDataSize  UserData parameter too large to permit a                        message to fit into a network's MTU.10.5.4  Timeouts and Other Constants   SCMP uses retransmission to effect reliability and thus has several   "retransmission timers". Each "timer" is modeled by an initial time   interval (ToXxx), which may get updated dynamically through   measurement of control traffic, and a number of times (NXxx) to   retransmit a message before declaring a failure. All time intervals   are in units of milliseconds. Note that the variables are described   for reference purposes only, different implementations may not   include the identical variables.Value   Timeout Name    Meaning------------------------------------------------------------------------  500   ToAccept        Initial hop-by-hop timeout for acknowledgment of                        ACCEPT    3   NAccept         ACCEPT retries before failure  500   ToChange        Initial hop-by-hop timeout for acknowledgment of                        CHANGE    3   NChange         CHANGE retries before failure 5000   ToChangeResp    End-to-End CHANGE timeout for receipt of ACCEPT                        or REFUSE  500   ToConnect       Initial hop-by-hop timeout for acknowledgment of                        CONNECT    5   NConnect        CONNECT retries before failure 5000   ToConnectResp   End-to-End CONNECT timeout for receipt of ACCEPT                        or REFUSE from targets by origin  500   ToDisconnect    Initial hop-by-hop timeout for acknowledgment of                        DISCONNECTDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                    [Page 104]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995    3   NDisconnect     DISCONNECT retries before failure  500   ToJoin          Initial hop-by-hop timeout for acknowledgment of                        JOIN    3   NJoin           JOIN retries before failure  500   ToJoinReject    Initial hop-by-hop timeout for acknowledgment of                        JOIN-REJECT    3   NJoinReject     JOIN-REJECT retries before failure 5000   ToJoinResp      Timeout for receipt of CONNECT or JOIN-REJECT                        from origin or intermediate hop  500   ToNotify        Initial hop-by-hop timeout for acknowledgment of                        NOTIFY    3   NNotify         NOTIFY retries before failure  500   ToRefuse        Initial hop-by-hop timeout for acknowledgment of                        REFUSE    3   NRefuse         REFUSE retries before failure  500   ToRetryRoute    Timeout for receipt of ACCEPT or REFUSE from                        targets during failure recovery    5   NRetryRoute     CONNECT retries before failure 1000   ToStatusResp    Timeout for receipt of STATUS-RESPONSE    3   NStatus         STATUS retries before failure10000   HelloTimerHoldDown    Interval that Restarted bit must be set                                after ST restart    5   HelloLossFactor         Number of consecutively missed HELLO                                messages before declaring link failure 2000   DefaultRecoveryTimeout  Interval between successive HELLOs                                to/from active neighbors10.6  Data Notations   The convention in the documentation of Internet Protocols is to   express numbers in decimal and to picture data with the most   significant octet on the left and the least significant octet on the   right.   The order of transmission of the header and data described in this   document is resolved to the octet level. Whenever a diagram shows a   group of octets, the order of transmission of those octets is the   normal order in which they are read in English. For example, in the   following diagram the octets are transmitted in the order they are   numbered.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                    [Page 105]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995        0                   1                   2                   3        0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |       1       |       2       |       3       |       4       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |       5       |       6       |       7       |       8       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+       |       9       |      10       |      11       |      12       |       +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                  Figure 34:  Transmission Order of Bytes   Whenever an octet represents a numeric quantity the left most bit in   the diagram is the high order or most significant bit. That is, the   bit labeled 0 is the most significant bit. For example, the following   diagram represents the value 170 (decimal).                                0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7                               +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               |1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0|                               +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                      Figure 35: Significance of Bits   Similarly, whenever a multi-octet field represents a numeric quantity   the left most bit of the whole field is the most significant bit.   When a multi-octet quantity is transmitted the most significant octet   is transmitted first.   Fields whose length is fixed and fully illustrated are shown with a   vertical bar (|) at the end; fixed fields whose contents are   abbreviated are shown with an exclamation point (!); variable fields   are shown with colons (:). Optional parameters are separated from   control messages with a blank line. The order of parameters is not   meaningful.11.  References[RFC1071]       Braden, R., Borman, D., and C. Partridge,                "Computing the Internet Checksum",RFC 1071,                USC/Information Sciences Institute,                Cray Research, BBN Laboratories, September 1988.[RFC1112]       Deering, S., "Host Extensions for IP Multicasting",                STD 5,RFC 1112, Stanford University, August 1989.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                    [Page 106]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995[WoHD95]        L. Wolf, R. G. Herrtwich, L. Delgrossi: Filtering                Multimedia Data in Reservation-based Networks,                Kommunikation in Verteilten Systemen 1995 (KiVS),                Chemnitz-Zwickau, Germany, February 1995.[RFC1122]       Braden, R., "Requirements for Internet Hosts --                Communication Layers", STD 3,RFC 1122,                USC/Information Sciences Institute, October 1989.[Jaco88]        Jacobson, V.: Congestion Avoidance and Control, ACM                SIGCOMM-88, August 1988.[KaPa87]        Karn, P. and C. Partridge: Round Trip Time Estimation,                ACM SIGCOMM-87, August 1987.[RFC1141]       Mallory, T., and A. Kullberg, "Incremental Updating                of the Internet Checksum",RFC 1141, BBN, January 1990.[RFC1363]       Partridge, C., "A Proposal Flow Specification",RFC 1363, BBN, September 1992.[RFC791]        Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5,RFC 791,                DARPA, September 1981.[RFC1700]       Reynolds, J., and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers",                STD 2,RFC 1700, USC/Information Sciences Institute,                October 1994.[RFC1190]       Topolcic C., "Internet Stream Protocol Version 2                (ST-II)",RFC 1190, CIP Working Group, October 1990.[RFC1633]       Braden, R., Clark, D., and S. Shenker, "Integrated                Services in the Internet Architecture: an Overview",RFC 1633, USC/Information Sciences Institute,                MIT, Xerox PARC, June 1994.[VoHN93]        C. Vogt, R. G. Herrtwich, R. Nagarajan: HeiRAT: the                Heidelberg Resource Administration Technique - Design                Philosophy and Goals, Kommunikation In Verteilten                Systemen, Munich, Informatik Aktuell, Springer-Verlag,                Heidelberg, 1993.[Cohe81]        D. Cohen: A Network Voice Protocol NVP-II, University of                Southern California, Los Angeles, 1981.[Cole81]        R. Cole: PVP - A Packet Video Protocol, University of                Southern California, Los Angeles, 1981.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                    [Page 107]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995[DeAl92]        L. Delgrossi (Ed.) The BERKOM-II Multimedia Transport                System, Version 1, BERKOM Working Document, October,                1992.[DHHS92]        L. Delgrossi, C. Halstrick, R. G. Herrtwich, H.                Stuettgen: HeiTP: a Transport Protocol for ST-II,                GLOBECOM'92, Orlando (Florida), December 1992.[Schu94]        H. Schulzrinne: RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time                Applications. Work in Progress, 1994.12.  Security Considerations   Security issues are not discussed in this memo.13.  Acknowledgments and Authors' Addresses   Many individuals have contributed to the work described in this memo.   We thank the participants in the ST Working Group for their input,   review, and constructive comments. George Mason University C3I Center   for hosting an interim meeting. Murali Rajagopal for his efforts on   ST2+ state machines. Special thanks are due to Steve DeJarnett, who   served as working group co-chair until summer 1993.   We would also like to acknowledge the authors of [RFC1190]. All   authors of [RFC1190] should be considered authors of this document   since this document contains much of their text and ideas.Delgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                    [Page 108]

RFC 1819              ST2+ Protocol Specification            August 1995   Louis Berger   BBN Systems and Technologies   1300 North 17th Street, Suite 1200   Arlington, VA 22209   Phone: 703-284-4651   EMail: lberger@bbn.com   Luca Delgrossi   Andersen Consulting Technology Park   449, Route des Cretes   06902 Sophia Antipolis, France   Phone: +33.92.94.80.92   EMail: luca@andersen.fr   Dat Duong   BBN Systems and Technologies   1300 North 17th Street, Suite 1200   Arlington, VA 22209   Phone: 703-284-4760   EMail: dat@bbn.com   Steve Jackowski   Syzygy Communications Incorporated   269 Mt. Hermon Road   Scotts Valley, CA 95066   Phone: 408-439-6834   EMail: stevej@syzygycomm.com   Sibylle Schaller   IBM ENC   Broadband Multimedia Communications   Vangerowstr. 18   D69020 Heidelberg, Germany   Phone: +49-6221-5944553   EMail: schaller@heidelbg.ibm.comDelgrossi & Berger, Editors   Experimental                    [Page 109]

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