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Network Working Group                                       G. FairhurstRequest for Comments: 4326                        University of AberdeenCategory: Standards Track                              B. Collini-Nocker                                                  University of Salzburg                                                           December 2005Unidirectional Lightweight Encapsulation (ULE) forTransmission of IP Datagrams over an MPEG-2 Transport Stream (TS)Status of This Memo   This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the   Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet   Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state   and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).Abstract   The MPEG-2 Transport Stream (TS) has been widely accepted not only   for providing digital TV services, but also as a subnetwork   technology for building IP networks.   This document describes a Unidirectional Lightweight Encapsulation   (ULE) mechanism for the transport of IPv4 and IPv6 Datagrams and   other network protocol packets directly over the ISO MPEG-2 Transport   Stream as TS Private Data.  ULE specifies a base encapsulation format   and supports an extension format that allows it to carry additional   header information to assist in network/Receiver processing.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................32. Conventions Used in This Document ...............................43. Description of the Method .......................................84. SNDU Format .....................................................94.1. Destination Address Absent (D) Field ......................104.2. Length Field ..............................................104.3. End Indicator .............................................104.4. Type Field ................................................104.4.1. Type 1: Next-Header Type Fields ....................114.4.2. Type 2: EtherType Compatible Type Fields ...........114.5. SNDU Destination Address Field ............................124.6. SNDU Trailer CRC ..........................................124.7. Description of SNDU Formats ...............................134.7.1. End Indicator ......................................144.7.2. IPv4 SNDU Encapsulation ............................144.7.3. IPv6 SNDU Encapsulation ............................155. Extension Headers ..............................................165.1. Test SNDU .................................................185.2. Bridged Frame SNDU Encapsulation ..........................185.3. Extension-Padding Optional Extension Header ...............216. Processing at the Encapsulator .................................226.1. SNDU Encapsulation ........................................226.2. Procedure for Padding and Packing .........................247. Receiver Processing ............................................257.1. Idle State ................................................267.1.1. Idle State Payload Pointer Checking ................267.2. Processing of a Received SNDU .............................267.2.1. Reassembly Payload Pointer Checking ................287.3. Other Error Conditions ....................................288. Summary ........................................................299. Acknowledgements ...............................................2910. Security Considerations .......................................2911. IANA Considerations ...........................................3011.1. IANA Guidelines ..........................................3012. References ....................................................3112.1. Normative References .....................................3112.2. Informative References ...................................32Appendix A. SNDU Packing Examples .................................35Appendix B. SNDU Encapsulation ....................................40Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 20051.  Introduction   This document describes an encapsulation for the transport of IP   datagrams, or other network-layer packets, over ISO MPEG-2 Transport   Streams [ISO-MPEG2,RFC4259].  The encapsulation satisfies the   requirement for a lightweight encapsulation defined insection 4 of   [RFC4259].  The basic header provides the required set of protocol   fields.  Extension headers may also be defined.  This header   structure is significantly simpler to parse and process [SOOR05] than   current alternative methods (e.g., MPE [ETSI-DAT], which builds upon   the DSM-CC Table Section syntax [ISO-DSMCC]).   The encapsulation is suited to services based on MPEG-2; for example,   the Digital Video Broadcast (DVB) architecture, the Advanced   Television Systems Committee (ATSC) system [ATSC,ATSC-G], and other   similar MPEG-2-based transmission systems.  Such systems provide   unidirectional (simplex) physical and link-layer standards.  Support   has been defined for a wide range of physical media (e.g.,   Terrestrial TV [ETSI-DVBT,ATSC-PSIP-TC], Satellite TV [ETSI-DVBS,   ATSC-S], and Cable Transmission [ETSI-DVBC,ATSC-PSIP-TC]).   Bi-directional (duplex) links may also be established using these   standards (e.g., DVB defines a range of return channel technologies,   including the use of two-way satellite links [ETSI-RCS]) and dial-up   modem links [RFC3077].   Protocol Data Units (PDUs), such as Ethernet Frames, IP datagrams, or   other network-layer packets, used for transmission over an MPEG-2   Transport Multiplex are passed to an Encapsulator.  This formats each   PDU into a SubNetwork Data Unit (SNDU) by adding an encapsulation   header and an integrity check trailer.  The SNDU is fragmented into a   series of one or more MPEG-2 Transport Stream (TS) Packets that are   sent over a single TS Logical Channel.   The MPEG-2 specification [ISO-MPEG2] requires that conformant TS   Multiplexes provide Program Specific Information (PSI) for each   stream in the TS Multiplex.  Other MPEG-2-based transmission   standards may also define Service Information (SI).   A format_identifier value has been registered for ULE [ULE1].  This   32 bit number has a hexadecimal value of 0x554C4531.  Transport   Streams that utilise the Programme Map Table (PMT) defined in ISO   13818-1 [ISO-MPEG2] and that use the ULE format defined in this   document, SHOULD insert a descriptor with this value in the PMT   ES_info descriptor loop.  ULE Streams may also be identified by the   stream_type value of 0x91 [ATSC-REG] in a SI/PSI Table [ISO_MPEG2].   This information may allow Receivers and Re-multiplexors [RFC4259] to   locate a specific ULE Stream (i.e., the PID value of the TS LogicalFairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   Channel that carries a ULE Stream).  The conditions under which this   information is required and the format in which it is to be provided   are beyond the scope of this document.  Addressing and mapping issues   for ULE over MPEG-2 are also described in [IPDVB-AR].2.  Conventions Used in This Document   The capitalized key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL",   "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and   "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in   [RFC2119].   Other terms used in this document are defined below:   Adaptation Field: An optional variable-length extension field of the   fixed-length TS Packet header, intended to convey clock references   and timing and synchronization information as well as stuffing over   an MPEG-2 Multiplex [ISO-MPEG2].   AFC: Adaptation Field Control [ISO-MPEG2].  A pair of bits carried in   the TS Packet header that signal the presence of the Adaptation Field   and/or TS Packet payload.   ATSC: Advanced Television Systems Committee [ATSC].  A framework and   a set of associated standards for the transmission of video, audio,   and data using the ISO MPEG-2 standard.   b: bit.  For example, one byte consists of 8b.   B: Byte.  Groups of bytes are represented in Internet byte order.   DSM-CC: Digital Storage Media Command and Control [ISO-DSMCC].  A   format for transmission of data and control information in an MPEG-2   Private Section, defined by the ISO MPEG-2 standard.   DVB: Digital Video Broadcast.  A framework and set of associated   standards published by the European Telecommunications Standards   Institute (ETSI) (e.g., [ETSI-DVBC,ETSI-DVBS,ETSI-DVBT]) for the   transmission of video, audio, and data using the ISO MPEG-2 Standard   [ISO-MPEG2].   Encapsulator: A network device that receives PDUs and formats these   into Payload Units (known here as SNDUs) for output as a stream of TS   Packets.   End Indicator: A value that indicates to the Receiver that there are   no further SNDUs present within the current TS Packet.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   LLC: Logical Link Control [ISO-8802-2,IEEE-802.2].  A link-layer   protocol defined by the IEEE 802 standard, which follows the Ethernet   MAC Header.   MAC: Medium Access Control [IEEE-802.3].  A link-layer protocol   defined by the IEEE 802.3 standard (or by Ethernet v2 [DIX]).   MAC Header: The link-layer header of the IEEE 802.3 standard   [IEEE-802.3] or Ethernet v2 [DIX].  It consists of a 6B destination   address, 6B source address, and 2B Type field (see also NPA, LLC).   MPE: Multiprotocol Encapsulation [ETSI-DAT,ATSC-DAT,ATSC-DATG].  A   scheme that encapsulates PDUs, forming a DSM-CC Table Section.  Each   Section is sent in a series of TS Packets using a single TS Logical   Channel.   MPEG-2: A set of standards specified by the Motion Picture Experts   Group (MPEG) and standardized by the International Standards   Organisation (ISO/IEC 13818-1) [ISO-MPEG2], and ITU-T (in H.222   [ITU-H222]).   Next-Header: A Type value indicating an Extension Header.   NPA: Network Point of Attachment.  In this document, refers to a   6-byte destination address (resembling an IEEE MAC address) within   the MPEG-2 transmission network that is used to identify individual   Receivers or groups of Receivers.   Packing Threshold: A period of time an Encapsulator is willing to   defer transmission of a partially filled TS-Packet to accumulate more   SNDUs, rather than use Padding.  After the Packet Threshold period,   the Encapsulator uses Padding to send the partially filled TS-Packet.   Padding: A method that fills the remaining unused bytes in a TS   Packet payload using the specific pattern of 0xFF.   Payload Unit, PU.  A sequence of bytes sent using a TS.  Examples of   Payload Units include: an MPEG-2 Table Section or a ULE SNDU.   PDU: Protocol Data Unit.  Examples of a PDU include Ethernet frames,   IPv4 or IPv6 datagrams, and other network packets.   PES: Packetized Elementary Steam [ISO-MPEG2].  A format of MPEG-2 TS   packet payload usually used for video or audio information.   PID: Packet Identifier  [ISO-MPEG2].  A 13-bit field carried in the   header of TS Packets.  This is used to identify the TS Logical   Channel to which a TS Packet belongs [ISO-MPEG2].  The TS PacketsFairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   forming the parts of a Table Section, PES, or other Payload Unit must   all carry the same PID value.  The all-zeros PID 0x0000 as well as   other PID values are reserved for specific PSI/SI Tables [ISO-MPEG2].   The all-ones PID value 0x1FFF indicates a Null TS Packet introduced   to maintain a constant bit rate of a TS Multiplex.  There is no   required relationship between the PID values used for TS Logical   Channels transmitted using different TS Multiplexes.   PP: Payload Pointer [ISO-MPEG2].  An optional one-byte pointer that   directly follows the 4-byte TS Packet header.  It contains the number   of bytes that follow the Payload Pointer, up to the start of the   first Payload Unit (counted from the first byte of the TS Packet   payload field, and excluding the PP field itself).  The presence of   the Payload Pointer is indicated by the value of the PUSI bit in the   TS Packet header.  The Payload Pointer is present in DSM-CC, Table   Sections, and ULE.  It is not present in TS Logical Channels that use   the PES-format.   Private Section: A syntactic structure constructed in accordance with   Table 2-30 of [ISO-MPEG2].  The structure may be used to identify   private information (i.e., not defined by [ISO-MPEG2]) relating to   one or more elementary streams, or a specific MPEG-2 program, or the   entire Transport Stream.  Other Standards bodies, e.g., ETSI, ATSC,   have defined sets of table structures using the private_section   structure.  A Private Section is transmitted as a sequence of TS   Packets using a TS Logical Channel.  A TS Logical Channel may carry   sections from more than one set of tables.   PSI: Program Specific Information [ISO-MPEG2].  Tables used to convey   information about the service carried in a TS Multiplex.  The   information is carried in one of four specifically identified Table   Sections defined by MPEG-2 [ISO-MPEG2].  See also SI Table.   PU: Payload Unit.   PUSI: Payload_Unit_Start_Indicator [ISO-MPEG2].  A single-bit flag   carried in the TS Packet header.  A PUSI value of zero indicates that   the TS Packet does not carry the start of a new Payload Unit.  A PUSI   value of one indicates that the TS Packet does carry the start of a   new Payload Unit.  In ULE, a PUSI bit set to 1 also indicates the   presence of a one-byte Payload Pointer (PP).   Receiver: Equipment that processes the signal from a TS Multiplex and   performs filtering and forwarding of encapsulated PDUs to the   network-layer service (or bridging module when operating at the link   layer).Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   SI Table: Service Information Table [ISO-MPEG2].  In this document,   this term describes a table that is defined by another standards body   to convey information about the services carried in a TS Multiplex.   A Table may consist of one or more Table Sections; however, all   sections of a particular SI Table must be carried over a single TS   Logical Channel [ISO-MPEG2].   SNDU: SubNetwork Data Unit.  An encapsulated PDU sent as an MPEG-2   Payload Unit.   Table Section: A Payload Unit carrying all or part of an SI or PSI   Table [ISO-MPEG2].   TS: Transport Stream [ISO-MPEG2], a method of transmission at the   MPEG-2 level using TS Packets; it represents layer 2 of the ISO/OSI   reference model.  See also TS Logical Channel and TS Multiplex.   TS Header: The 4-byte header of a TS Packet [ISO-MPEG2].  Each 188B   TS Packet incorporates a 4B header with the following fields (those   referenced within this document are marked with *):        Field Length            Name/Purpose         (in bits)         8b             Synchronisation pattern equal to 0x47        *1b             Transport Error Indicator        *1b             Payload Unit Start Indicator (PUSI)         1b             Transport Priority        *13b            Packet IDentifier (PID)         2b             Transport Scrambling Control        *2b             Adaptation Field Control (AFC)        *4b             Continuity Counter (CC)   If the PUSI bit is set to a value of 1, there is one   additional field following the TS packet header:        *8b             Payload Pointer (PP)   TS Logical Channel: Transport Stream Logical Channel.  In this   document, this term identifies a channel at the MPEG-2 level   [ISO-MPEG2].  It exists at level 2 of the ISO/OSI reference model.   All packets sent over a TS Logical Channel carry the same PID value   (this value is unique within a specific TS Multiplex).  The term   "Stream" is defined in MPEG-2 [ISO-MPEG2] to describe the content   carried by a specific TS Logical Channel (see ULE Stream).  Some PID   values are reserved (by MPEG-2) for specific signalling.  Other   standards (e.g., ATSC, DVB) also reserve specific PID values.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   TS Multiplex: In this document, this term defines a set of MPEG-2 TS   Logical Channels sent over a single lower-layer connection.  This may   be a common physical link (i.e., a transmission at a specified symbol   rate, FEC setting, and transmission frequency) or an encapsulation   provided by another protocol layer (e.g., Ethernet, or RTP over IP).   The same TS Logical Channel may be repeated over more than one TS   Multiplex (possibly associated with a different PID value) [RFC4259];   for example, to redistribute the same multicast content to two   terrestrial TV transmission cells.   TS Packet: A fixed-length 188B unit of data sent over a TS Multiplex   [ISO-MPEG2].  Each TS Packet carries a 4B header, plus optional   overhead including an Adaptation Field, encryption details, and time   stamp information to synchronise a set of related TS Logical   Channels.   ULE Stream: An MPEG-2 TS Logical Channel that carries only ULE   encapsulated PDUs.  ULE Streams may be identified by definition of a   stream_type in SI/PSI [ISO-MPEG2].3.  Description of the Method   PDUs (IP packets, Ethernet frames or packets from other network   protocols) are encapsulated to form a Subnetwork Data Unit (SNDU).   The SNDU is transmitted over an MPEG-2 transmission network either by   being placed in the payload of a single TS Packet, or, if required,   by being fragmented into a series of TS Packets.  Where there is   sufficient space, the method permits a single TS Packet to carry more   than one SNDU (or part thereof), a practice sometimes known as   Packing.  All TS Packets comprising an SNDU MUST be assigned the same   PID, and therefore form a part of the same TS Logical Channel.   The ULE encapsulation is limited to TS private streams only.  The   header of each TS Packet carries a one-bit Payload Unit Start   Indicator (PUSI) field.  A PUSI field with a value of 1 indicates the   start of at least one Payload Unit (SNDU) within the TS Packet   payload.  The semantics of the PUSI bit are defined for PES and PSI   packets [ISO-MPEG2]; for private data, its use is not defined in the   MPEG-2 Standard.  Although ULE uses private data, the operation   follows that of PSI packets.  Hence, the following PUSI values are   defined:        0: The TS Packet does NOT contain the start of an SNDU, but        contains the continuation, or end, of an SNDU;        1: The TS Packet contains the start of an SNDU, and a one byte        Payload Pointer follows the last byte of the TS Packet header.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   If a Payload Unit (SNDU) finishes before the end of a TS Packet   payload, but it is not intended to start another Payload Unit, a   stuffing procedure (known as Padding) fills the remainder of the TS   Packet payload with bytes with a value 0xFF [ISO-MPEG2].   A Receiver processing MPEG-2 Table Sections that receives a value of   0xFF in the first byte of a Table Section (table_Id) interprets this   as Padding/Stuffing and silently discards the remainder of the TS   Packet payload.  The payload of the next TS Packet for the same TS   Logical Channel will begin with a Payload Pointer of value 0x00,   indicating that the next Payload Unit immediately follows the TS   Packet header.  The ULE protocol resembles this, but differs in the   exact procedure (see the following sections).   The TS Packet Header also carries a two-bit Adaptation Field Control   (AFC) value.  This adaptation field may extend the TS Packet Header   to carry timing and synchronisation information and may also be used   to include stuffing bytes before a TS Packet payload.  Adaptation   Field stuffing is NOT used in this encapsulation method, and TS   Packets from a ULE Encapsulator MUST be sent with an AFC value of   '01'.  For TS Logical Channels supporting ULE, Receivers MUST discard   TS Packets that carry other AFC values.4.  SNDU Format   PDUs are encapsulated using ULE to form an SNDU.  (Each SNDU is an   MPEG-2 Payload Unit.) The encapsulation format to be used for PDUs is   illustrated below:   < ----------------------------- SNDU ----------------------------- >   +-+-------------------------------------------------------+--------+   |D| Length | Type | Dest Address* |           PDU         | CRC-32 |   +-+-------------------------------------------------------+--------+       Figure 1: SNDU Encapsulation (* optional Destination Address)   All multi-byte values in ULE (including the Length/End Indicator   (4.2,4.3), Type (4.4), Destination Address (4.5), and Extension   Headers (5)) are transmitted in network byte order (most significant   byte first).  The most significant bit of each byte is placed in the   left-most position of the 8-bit field.Appendix A provides   informative examples of usage.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 20054.1.  Destination Address Absent (D) Field   The most significant bit of the Length field carries the value of the   Destination Address Absent Field, the D-bit.  A value of 0 indicates   the presence of the Destination Address Field (seesection 4.5).  A   value of 1 indicates that a Destination Address Field is not present.   An End Indicator (4.3) MUST be sent with a D-bit value of 1.  Other   SNDUs MAY be sent with a D-bit value of 0 or 1.  The default method   SHOULD use a D-bit value of 0 (seesection 4.5).4.2.  Length Field   A 15-bit value that indicates the length, in bytes, of the SNDU   counted from the byte following the Type field of the SNDU base   header (figure 9) up to and including the CRC.  This Length includes   the size of any extension headers that may be present (section 5).   Note the special case described insection 4.3.4.3.  End Indicator   When the first two bytes following an SNDU have the value 0xFFFF,   this denotes an End Indicator (i.e., all ones length combined with a   D-bit value of 1).  This indicates to the Receiver that there are no   further SNDUs present within the current TS Packet (seesection 6),   and that no Destination Address Field is present.  The value 0xFF has   specific semantics in MPEG-2 framing, where it is used to indicate   the presence of Padding.  This use resembles [ISO-DSMCC].4.4.  Type Field   The 16-bit Type field indicates the type of payload carried in an   SNDU, or the presence of a Next-Header.  The set of values that may   be assigned to this field is divided into two parts, similar to the   allocations for Ethernet.   EtherTypes were originally specified by Xerox under the Ethernet v2   Specification  [DIX].  After specification of IEEE 802.3 [IEEE-802.3,   ISO-8802-2], the set of EtherTypes less than 1536 (0x0600) assumed   the role of a length indicator.  Ethernet receivers use this feature   to discriminate LLC format frames.  Hence, any IEEE EtherType < 1536   indicates an LLC frame, and the actual value indicates the length of   the LLC frame.   There is a potential ambiguous case when a Receiver receives a PDU   with two Length fields:  The Receiver would need to validate the   actual length and the Length field and ensure that inconsistent   values are not propagated by the network.  Specification of twoFairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   independent Length fields is therefore undesirable.  In the ULE   header, this is avoided in the SNDU header by including only one   length value, but bridging of LLC frames re-introduces this   consideration (section 5.2).   The Ethernet LLC mode of identification is not required in ULE, since   the SNDU format always carries an explicit Length field, and   therefore the procedure in ULE is modified, as below:   The first set of ULE Type field values comprise the set of values   less than 1536 in decimal.  These Type field values are IANA assigned   (seesection 4.4.1) and indicate the Next-Header.   The second set of ULE Type field values comprise the set of values   greater than or equal to 1536 in decimal.  In ULE, this value is   identical to the corresponding type codes specified by the IEEE/DIX   type assignments for Ethernet and recorded in the IANA EtherType   registry.4.4.1.  Type 1: Next-Header Type Fields   The first part of the Type space corresponds to the values 0 to 1535   decimal.  These values may be used to identify link-specific   protocols and/or to indicate the presence of Extension Headers that   carry additional optional protocol fields (e.g., a bridging   encapsulation).  Use of these values is co-ordinated by an IANA   registry.  The following types are defined in this document:           0x0000: Test SNDU (seesection 5.1)           0x0001: Bridged Frame (seesection 5.2)           0x0100: Extension-Padding (seesection 5.3)   The remaining values within the first part of the Type space are   reserved for Next-Header values allocated by the IANA.4.4.2.  Type 2: EtherType Compatible Type Fields   The second part of the Type space corresponds to the values between   0x600 (1536 decimal) and 0xFFFF.  This set of type assignments   follows DIX/IEEE assignments (but excludes use of this field as a   frame length indicator).  All assignments in this space MUST use the   values defined for IANA EtherType.  The following two Type values are   used as examples (taken from the IANA EtherTypes registry):           0x0800: IPv4 Payload (seesection 4.7.2)           0x86DD: IPv6 Payload (seesection 4.7.3)Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 20054.5.  SNDU Destination Address Field   The SNDU Destination Address Field is optional (seesection 4.1).   This field MUST be carried (i.e., D=0) for IP unicast packets   destined to routers that are sent using shared links (i.e., where the   same link connects multiple Receivers).  A sender MAY omit this field   (D=1) for an IP unicast packet and/or multicast packets delivered to   Receivers that are able to utilise a discriminator field (e.g., the   IPv4/IPv6 destination address, or a bridged MAC destination address),   which, in combination with the PID value, could be interpreted as a   Link-Level address.   When the SNDU header indicates the presence of an SNDU Destination   Address field (i.e., D=0), a Network Point of Attachment (NPA) field   directly follows the fourth byte of the SNDU header.  NPA destination   addresses are 6 Byte numbers, normally expressed in hexadecimal, used   to identify the Receiver(s) in a MPEG-2 transmission network that   should process a received SNDU.  The value 0x00:00:00:00:00:00 MUST   NOT be used as a destination address in an SNDU.  The least   significant bit of the first byte of the address is set to 1 for   multicast frames, and the remaining bytes specify the link-layer   multicast address.  The specific value 0xFF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF is the   link broadcast address, indicating that this SNDU is to be delivered   to all Receivers.   IPv4 packets carrying an IPv4 subnetwork broadcast address need to be   delivered to all systems with the same network prefix.  When a SNDU   Destination Address is present (D=0), the value MUST be set to the   NPA link broadcast address (0xFF:FF:FF:FF:FF:FF).   When the PDU is an IP multicast packet and an SNDU Destination   Address is present (D=0), the IP group destination address of the   multicast packet MUST be mapped to the multicast SNDU Destination   Address (following the method used to generate a destination MAC   address in Ethernet).  The method for mapping IPv4 multicast   addresses is specified in [RFC1112].  The method for mapping IPv6   multicast addresses is specified in [RFC2464].4.6.  SNDU Trailer CRC   Each SNDU MUST carry a 32-bit CRC field in the last four bytes of the   SNDU.  This position eases CRC computation by hardware.  The CRC-32   polynomial is to be used.  Examples where this polynomial is also   employed include Ethernet, DSM-CC section syntax [ISO-DSMCC], and   AAL5 [ITU-3563].  This is a 32-bit value calculated according to the   generator polynomial represented 0x104C11DB7 in hexadecimal:   x^32+x^26+x^23+x^22+x^16+x^12+x^11+x^10+x^8+x^7+x^5+x^4+x^2+x^1+x^0.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   The Encapsulator initialises the CRC-32 accumulator register to the   value 0xFFFF FFFF.  It then accumulates a transmit value for the   CRC32 that includes all bytes from the start of the SNDU header to   the end of the SNDU (excluding the 32-bit trailer holding the   CRC-32), and places this in the CRC Field.  In ULE, the bytes are   processed in order of increasing position within the SNDU; the order   of processing bits is NOT reversed.  This use resembles, but is   different from that in SCTP [RFC3309].   The Receiver performs an integrity check by independently calculating   the same CRC value and comparing this with the transmitted value in   the SNDU trailer.  SNDUs that do not have a valid CRC are discarded,   causing the Receiver to enter the Idle State.   This description may be suited for hardware implementation, but this   document does not imply any specific implementation.  Software-based   table-lookup or hardware-assisted software-based implementations are   also possible.Appendix B provides an example of an Encapsulated PDU   that includes the computed CRC-32 value.   The primary purpose of this CRC is to protect the SNDU (header and   payload) from undetected reassembly errors and errors introduced by   unexpected software/hardware operation while the SNDU is in transit   across the MPEG-2 subnetwork and during processing at the   Encapsulator and/or the Receiver.  It may also detect the presence of   uncorrected errors from the physical link (however, these may also be   detected by other means, e.g.,section 7.3).4.7.  Description of SNDU Formats   The format of an SNDU is determined by the combination of the   Destination Address Absent bit (D) and the SNDU Type field.  The   simplest encapsulation places a PDU directly into an SNDU payload.   Some Type 1 encapsulations may require additional header fields.   These are inserted in the SNDU following the NPA destination address   and directly preceding the PDU.   The following SNDU Formats are defined here:   End Indicator: The Receiver should enter the Idle State (4.7.1).   IPv4 SNDU: The payload is a complete IPv4 datagram (4.7.2).   IPv6 SNDU: The payload is a complete IPv6 datagram (4.7.3).   Test SNDU: The payload will be discarded by the Receiver (5.1).   Bridged SNDU: The payload carries a bridged MAC frame (5.2).   Other formats may be defined through relevant assignments in the IEEE   and IANA registries.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 20054.7.1.  End Indicator   The format of the End Indicator is shown in figure 2.  This format   MUST carry a D-bit value of 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      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |1|            0x7FFF           |                               |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               +      |                                                               |      =   A sequence of zero or more bytes with a value 0xFF filling  =      |           the remainder of the TS Packet Payload              |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Figure 2: Format for a ULE End Indicator4.7.2.  IPv4 SNDU Encapsulation   IPv4 datagrams are directly transported using one of the two standard   SNDU structures, in which the PDU is placed directly in the SNDU   payload.  The two encapsulations are shown in Figures 3 and 4.  (Note   that in this, and the following figures, the IP datagram payload is   of variable size and is directly followed by the CRC-32).       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      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |0|        Length  (15b)        |         Type = 0x0800         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |            Receiver Destination NPA Address  (6B)             |      +                               +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                               |                               |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               +      |                                                               |      =                           IPv4 datagram                       =      |                                                               |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                             (CRC-32)                          |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Figure 3: SNDU Format for an IPv4 Datagram using L2 filtering (D=0)Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005       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|        Length  (15b)        |         Type = 0x0800         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                                                               |      =                           IPv4 datagram                       =      |                                                               |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                             (CRC-32)                          |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Figure 4: SNDU Format for an IPv4 Datagram using L3 filtering (D=1)4.7.3.  IPv6 SNDU Encapsulation   IPv6 datagrams are directly transported using one of the two standard   SNDU structures, in which the PDU is placed directly in the SNDU   payload.  The two encapsulations are shown in Figures 5 and 6.       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      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |0|        Length  (15b)        |         Type = 0x86DD         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |            Receiver Destination NPA Address  (6B)             |      +                               +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                               |                               |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               +      |                                                               |      =                           IPv6 datagram                       =      |                                                               |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                             (CRC-32)                          |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Figure 5: SNDU Format for an IPv6 Datagram using L2 filtering (D=0)Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005       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|        Length  (15b)        |         Type = 0x86DD         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                                                               |      =                           IPv6 datagram                       =      |                                                               |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                             (CRC-32)                          |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Figure 6: SNDU Format for an IPv6 Datagram using L3 filtering (D=1)5.  Extension Headers   This section describes an extension format for the ULE encapsulation.   In ULE, a Type field value less than 1536 decimal indicates an   Extension Header.  These values are assigned from a separate IANA   registry defined for ULE.   The use of a single Type/Next-Header field simplifies processing and   eliminates the need to maintain multiple IANA registries.  The cost   is that each Extension Header requires at least 2 bytes.  This is   justified, on the basis of simplified processing and maintaining a   simple lightweight header for the common case when no extensions are   present.   A ULE Extension Header is identified by a 16-bit value in the Type   field.  This field is organised as a 5-bit zero prefix, a 3-bit H-LEN   field, and an 8-bit H-Type field, as follows:           0                   1           0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5          +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+          |0 0 0 0 0|H-LEN|    H-Type     |          +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Figure 7: Structure of ULE Next-Header Field   The H-LEN Assignment is described below:   0    Indicates a Mandatory Extension Header   1    Indicates an Optional Extension Header of length 2B (Type only)   2    Indicates an Optional Extension Header of length 4B (Type + 2B)   3    Indicates an Optional Extension Header of length 6B (Type + 4B)   4    Indicates an Optional Extension Header of length 8B (Type + 6B)   5    Indicates an Optional Extension Header of length 10B (Type + 8B)Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   >=6  The combined H-LEN and H-TYPE values indicate the EtherType        of a PDU that directly follows this Type field.   The H-LEN value indicates the total number of bytes in an Optional   Extension Header (including the 2B Type field).   An H-LEN value of zero indicates a Mandatory Extension Header.  Each   Mandatory Extension Header has a pre-defined length that is not   communicated in the H-LEN field.  No additional limit is placed on   the maximum length of a Mandatory Extension Header.  A Mandatory   Extension Header MAY modify the format or encoding of the enclosed   PDU (e.g., to perform encryption and/or compression).   The H-Type is a one-byte field that is either one of 256 Mandatory   Header Extensions or one of 256 Optional Header Extensions.  The set   of currently permitted values for both types of Extension Headers are   defined by an IANA Registry (section 15).  Registry values for   Optional Extensions are specified in the form H=1 (i.e., a decimal   number in the range 256-511), but may be used with an H-Length value   in the range 1-5 (see example insection 5.3).   Two examples of Extension Headers are the Test SNDU and the use of   Extension-Padding.  The Test SNDU Mandatory Extension Header results   in the entire PDU's being discarded.  The Extension-Padding Optional   Extension Header results in the following (if any) option header   being ignored (i.e., a total of H-LEN 16-bit words).   The general format for an SNDU with Extension Headers is:   < --------------------------   SNDU   ------------------------- >   +---+--------------------------------------------------+--------+   |D=0| Length | T1 | NPA Address | H1 | T2 |    PDU     | CRC-32 |   +---+--------------------------------------------------+--------+   < ULE base header >             <  ext 1  >   Figure 8: SNDU Encapsulation with one Extension Header (for D=0)   Where:   D  is the ULE D_bit (in this example D=0; however, NPA addresses may      also be omitted when using Extension Headers).   T1 is the base header Type field.  In this case, specifying a      Next-Header value.   H1 is a set of fields defined for header type T1.  There may be 0      or more bytes of information for a specific ULE Extension Header.   T2 is the Type field of the next header, or an EtherType > 1535 B      indicating the type of the PDU being carried.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   < --------------------------   SNDU   ------------------------- >   +---+---------------------------------------------------+--------+   |D=1| Length | T1 | H1 | T2 | H2 | T3 |       PDU       | CRC-32 |   +---+---------------------------------------------------+--------+   < ULE base header >< ext 1  >< ext 2  >   Figure 9: SNDU Encapsulation with two Extension Headers (D=1)   Using this method, several Extension Headers MAY be chained in   series.  Figure 12 shows an SNDU including two Extension Headers.  In   the example, the values of T1 and T2 are both less than 1536 decimal.   Each indicates the presence of an Extension Header, rather than a   directly following PDU.  T3 has a value > 1535 indicating the   EtherType of the PDU being carried.  Although an SNDU may contain an   arbitrary number of consecutive Extension Headers, it is not expected   that SNDUs will generally carry a large number of extensions.5.1.  Test SNDU   A Test SNDU (Figure 10) is a Mandatory Extension Header of Type 1.   This header must be the final (or only) extension header specified in   the header chain of an SNDU.  The structure of the Data portion of   this SNDU is not defined by this document.  Receivers MAY record   reception in a log file, but MUST then discard any Test SNDUs.  The   D-bit MAY be set in a TEST SNDU.       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      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |D|        Length  (15b)        |         Type = 0x0000         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                                                               |      =               Data (not forwarded by a Receiver)              =      |                                                               |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                             (CRC-32)                          |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Figure 10: SNDU Format for a Test SNDU5.2.  Bridged Frame SNDU Encapsulation   A bridged SNDU is a Mandatory Extension Header of Type 1.  It MUST be   the final (or only) extension header specified in the header chain of   an SNDU.  The payload includes MAC address and EtherType [DIX] or LLC   Length [ISO-8802-2] fields together with the contents of a bridged   MAC frame.  The SNDU has the format shown in Figures 11 and 12.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   When an NPA address is specified (D=0), Receivers MUST discard all   SNDUs that carry an NPA destination address that does NOT match their   own NPA address (or a broadcast/multicast address); the payload of   the remaining SNDUs are processed by the bridging rules that follow.   An SNDU without an NPA address (D=1) results in a Receiver performing   bridging processing on the payload of all received SNDUs.   An Encapsulator MAY also use this encapsulation format to directly   communicate network protocol packets that require the LLC   encapsulation [IEEE-802.2,ISO-8802-2].  To do this, it constructs an   SNDU with a Bridge Extension Header containing the intended   destination MAC address, the MAC source address of the Encapsulator,   and the LLC-Length.  The PDU comprises an LLC header followed by the   required payload.  The Encapsulator MAY choose to suppress the NPA   address (see 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      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |0|        Length  (15b)        |         Type = 0x0001         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |            Receiver Destination NPA Address  (6B)             |      +                               +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                               |                               |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               +      |                MAC Destination Address  (6B)                  |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                    MAC Source Address  (6B)                   |      +                               +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                               |   EtherType/LLC-Length (2B)   |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                                                               |      =                 (Contents of bridged MAC frame)               =      |                                                               |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                             (CRC-32)                          |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Figure 11: SNDU Format for a Bridged Payload (D=0)Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005       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|        Length  (15b)        |         Type = 0x0001         |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                   MAC Destination Address  (6B)               |      +                               +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                               |                               |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               +      |                     MAC Source Address  (6B)                  |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |   EtherType/LLC-Length (2B)   |                               |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+                               +      |                                                               |      =                 (Contents of bridged MAC frame)               =      |                                                               |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+      |                             (CRC-32)                          |      +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+   Figure 12: SNDU Format for a Bridged Payload (D=1)   The EtherType/LLC-Length field of a frame is defined according to   IEEE 802.3 [IEEE-802.2] (seesection 5).   In this special case, the Mandatory Extension Header format may be   interpreted as either an EtherType [DIX] or an LLC Length field,   specified by IEEE 802 [IEEE-802.3] rather than as a value assigned in   the ULE Next-Header Registry maintained by the IANA.   The MAC addresses in the frame being bridged SHOULD be assigned   according to the rules specified by the IEEE and denote unknown,   unicast, broadcast, and multicast link addresses.  These MAC   addresses denote the intended recipient in the destination LAN, and   therefore have a different function from the NPA addresses carried in   the SNDU header.   A frame Type < 1536 for a bridged frame introduces a LLC Length   field.  The Receiver MUST check this length and discard any frame   with a length greater than permitted by the SNDU payload size.   In normal operation, it is expected that any padding appended to the   Ethernet frame SHOULD be removed prior to forwarding.  This requires   the sender to be aware of such Ethernet padding (e.g., [DIX,   IEEE-802.3]).   Ethernet frames received at the Encapsulator for onward transmission   over ULE carry a Local Area Network Frame Check sequence (LAN FCS)Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   field (e.g., CRC-32 for Ethernet [DIX,IEEE-802.3]).  The   Encapsulator MUST check the LAN-FCS value of all frames received,   prior to further processing.  Frames received with an invalid LAN FCS   MUST be discarded.  After checking, the LAN FCS is then removed   (i.e., it is NOT forwarded in the bridged SNDU).  As in other ULE   frames, the Encapsulator appends a CRC-32 to the transmitted SNDU.   At the Receiver, an appropriate LAN-FCS field will be appended to the   bridged frame prior to onward transmission on the Ethernet interface.   This design is readily implemented using existing network interface   cards and does not introduce an efficiency cost by   calculating/verifying two integrity check fields for bridged frames.   However, it also introduces the possibility that a frame corrupted   within the processing performed at an Encapsulator and/or Receiver   may not be detected by the final recipient(s) (i.e., such corruption   would not normally result in an invalid LAN FCS).5.3.  Extension-Padding Optional Extension Header   The Extension-Padding Optional Extension Header is specified by an   IANA-assigned H-Type value of 0x100.  As in other Optional   Extensions, the total length of the extension is indicated by the   H-LEN field (specified in 16-bit words).  The extension field is   formed of a group of one to five 16-bit fields.   For this specific option, only the last 16-bit word has an assigned   value; the sender SHOULD set the remaining values to 0x0000.  The   last 16-bit field forms the Next-Header Type field.  A Receiver MUST   interpret the Type field, but MUST ignore any other fields of this   Extension Header.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 20056.  Processing at the Encapsulator   The Encapsulator forms the PDUs queued for transmission into SNDUs by   adding a header and trailer to each PDU (section 4).  It then   segments the SNDU into a series of TS Packet payloads (Figure 13).   These are transmitted using a single TS Logical Channel over a TS   Multiplex.  The TS Multiplex may be processed by a number of MPEG-2   (re)multiplexors before it is finally delivered to a Receiver   [RFC4259].                +------+--------------------------------+------+                | ULE  |        Protocol Data Unit      | ULE  |                |Header|                                |CRC-32|                +------+--------------------------------+------+               /         /                             \       \              /         /                               \       \             /         /                                 \       \   +--------+---------+   +--------+---------+   +--------+---------+   |MPEG-2TS| MPEG-2  |...|MPEG-2TS| MPEG-2  |...|MPEG-2TS| MPEG-2  |   | Header | Payload |   | Header | Payload |   | Header | Payload |   +--------+---------+   +--------+---------+   +--------+---------+   Figure 13: Encapsulation of an SNDU into a series of TS Packets6.1.  SNDU Encapsulation   When an Encapsulator has not previously sent a TS Packet for a   specific TS Logical Channel, or after an Idle period, it starts to   send an SNDU in the first available TS Packet.  This first TS Packet   generated MUST carry a PUSI value of 1.  It MUST also carry a Payload   Pointer value of zero, indicating that the SNDU starts immediately   after the Payload Pointer in the TS Packet payload.   The Encapsulation MUST ensure that all TS Packets set the MPEG-2   Continuity Counter carried in the TS Packet header, according to   [ISO-MPEG2].  This value MUST be incremented by one (modulo 16) for   each successive TS Packet containing a fragment/complete SNDU sent   using the same TS Logical Channel.   An Encapsulator MAY decide not to send another SNDU immediately, even   if space is available in a partially filled TS Packet.  This   procedure is known as Padding (Figure 14).  The End Indicator informs   the Receiver that there are no more SNDUs in this TS Packet payload.   The End Indicator is followed by zero or more unused bytes until the   end of the TS Packet payload.  All unused bytes MUST be set to the   value of 0xFF, following current practice in MPEG-2 [ISO-DSMCC].  The   Padding procedure trades decreased efficiency against improved   latency.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005                 +-/------------+                 |  SubNetwork  |                 |     DU 1     |                 +-/------------+                        \        \                         \        \                          \        \                 +--------+--------+--------+----------+                 |MPEG-2TS| End of | 0xFFFF |  Unused  |                 | Header | SNDU 1 |        |  Bytes   |                 +--------+--------+--------+----------+                   PUSI=0            ULE                                     End                                     Indicator   Figure 14: A TS Packet carrying the end of SNDU 1, followed by an              End Indicator   Alternatively, when more packets are waiting at an Encapsulator, and   a TS Packet has sufficient space remaining in the payload, the   Encapsulator can follow a previously encapsulated SNDU with another   SNDU using the next available byte of the TS Packet payload (see   6.2).  This is called Packing (Figure 15).              +-/----------------+       +----------------/-+              |   Subnetwork     |       |   Subnetwork     |              |      DU 2        |       |      DU 3        |              +-/----------------+       +----------------/-+                         \        \     /          /\                          \        \   /          /  \                           \        \ /          /    \. . .          +--------+--------+--------+----------+          |MPEG-2TS| Payload| end of | start of |          | Header | Pointer| SNDU 2 | SNDU 3   |          +--------+--------+--------+----------+            PUSI=1     |              ^                       |              |                       +--------------+   Figure 15: A TS Packet with the end of SNDU 2, followed by SNDU 3Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 20056.2.  Procedure for Padding and Packing   Five possible actions may occur when an Encapsulator has completed   encapsulation of an SNDU:   (i) If the TS Packet has no remaining space, the Encapsulator   transmits this TS Packet.  It starts transmission of the next SNDU in   a new TS Packet.  (The standard rules [ISO-MPEG2] require that the   header of this new TS Packet carry a PUSI value of 1 followed by a   Payload Pointer value of 0x00.)   (ii) If the TS Packet carrying the final part of an SNDU has one byte   of unused payload, the Encapsulator MUST place the value 0xFF in this   final byte and transmit the TS Packet.  This rule provides a simple   mechanism to resolve the complex behaviour that may arise when the TS   Packet has no PUSI set.  To send another SNDU in the current TS   Packet would otherwise require the addition of a Payload Pointer that   would consume the last remaining byte of TS Packet payload.  The   behaviour follows similar practice for other MPEG-2 payload types   [ISO-DSMCC].  The Encapsulator MUST start transmission of the next   SNDU in a new TS Packet.  (The standard rules require the header of   this new TS Packet to carry a PUSI value of 1 followed by a Payload   Pointer value of 0x00.)   (iii) If the TS Packet carrying the final part of an SNDU has exactly   two bytes of unused payload, and the PUSI was NOT already set, the   Encapsulator MUST place the value 0xFFFF in these final two bytes,   providing an End Indicator (section 4.3), and transmit the TS Packet.   This rule prevents fragmentation of the SNDU Length field over two TS   Packets.  The Encapsulator MUST start transmission of the next SNDU   in a new TS Packet.  (The standard rules require the header of this   new TS Packet to carry a PUSI value of 1 followed by a Payload   Pointer value of 0x00.)   (iv) If the TS Packet has more than two bytes of unused payload, the   Encapsulator MAY transmit this partially full TS Packet but MUST   first place the value 0xFF in all remaining unused bytes (i.e.,   setting an End Indicator followed by Padding).  The Encapsulator MUST   then start transmission of the next SNDU in a new TS Packet.  (The   standard rules [ISO-MPEG2] require that the header of this new TS   Packet carry a PUSI value of 1 and a Payload Pointer value of 0x00.)   (v) If at least two bytes are available for SNDU data in the TS   Packet payload (i.e., three bytes if the PUSI was NOT previously set,   and two bytes if it was previously set), the Encapsulator MAY   encapsulate further queued PDUs, by starting the next SNDU in the   next available byte of the current TS Packet payload.  When the   Encapsulator packs further SNDUs into a TS Packet where the PUSI hasFairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   NOT already been set, the PUSI MUST be updated (set to 1), and an   8-bit Payload Pointer MUST be inserted in the first byte directly   following the TS Packet header.  (This reduces the size of the TS   Packet payload field that is available for data by one byte.)  The   value of the Payload Pointer MUST be set to the position of the byte   following the end of the first SNDU in the TS Packet payload.  If no   further PDUs are available, an Encapsulator MAY wait for additional   PDUs to fill the incomplete TS Packet.  The maximum period of time an   Encapsulator can wait, known as the Packing Threshold, MUST be   bounded and SHOULD be configurable in the Encapsulator.  If   sufficient additional PDUs are NOT received to complete the TS Packet   within the Packing Threshold, the Encapsulator MUST insert an End   Indicator (using rule iv).   Use of the Packing method (v) by an Encapsulator is optional and may   be determined on a per-session, per-packet, or per-SNDU basis.   When an SNDU is less than the size of a TS Packet payload, a TS   Packet may be formed that carries a PUSI value of one and also an End   Indicator (using rule iv).7.  Receiver Processing   A Receiver tunes to a specific TS Multiplex carrying a ULE Stream and   sets a receive filter to accept all TS Packets with a specific PID.   These TS Packets are associated with a specific TS Logical Channel   and are reassembled to form a stream of SNDUs.  A single Receiver may   be able to receive multiple TS Logical Channels, possibly using a   range of TS Multiplexes.  In each case, reassembly MUST be performed   independently for each TS Logical Channel.  To perform this   reassembly, the Receiver may use a buffer to hold the partially   assembled SNDU, referred to here as the Current SNDU buffer.  Other   implementations may choose to use other data structures, but MUST   provide equivalent operations.   Receipt of a TS Packet with a PUSI value of 1 indicates that the TS   Packet contains the start of a new SNDU.  It also indicates the   presence of the Payload Pointer (indicating the number of bytes to   the start of the first SNDU in the TS-Packet currently being   reassembled).  It is illegal to receive a Payload Pointer value   greater than 181, and this MUST cause the SNDU reassembly to be   aborted and the Receiver to enter the Idle State.  This event SHOULD   be recorded as a payload pointer error.   A Receiver MUST support the use of both the Packing and Padding   method for any received SNDU and MUST support reception of SNDUs with   or without a Destination Address Field (i.e., D=0 and D=1).Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 20057.1.  Idle State   After initialisation or errors, or on receipt of an End Indicator,   the Receiver enters the Idle State.  In this state, the Receiver   discards all TS Packets until it discovers the start of a new SNDU,   upon which it then enters the Reassembly State.  Figure 16 outlines   these state transitions:                                +-------+                                | START |                                +---+---+                                    |                                   \/                               +----------+                              \|   Idle   |/                      +-------/|   State  |\-------+         Insufficient |        +----+-----+        |         unused space |             | PUSI set     | MPEG-2 TS Error         or           |            \/              | or         End Indicator|        +----------+        | SNDU Error                      |        |Reassembly|        |                      +--------|  State   |--------+                               +----------+   Figure 16: Receiver state transitions7.1.1.  Idle State Payload Pointer Checking   A Receiver in the Idle State MUST check the PUSI value in the header   of all received TS Packets.  A PUSI value of 1 indicates the presence   of a Payload Pointer.  Following a loss of synchronisation, values   between 0 and 181 are permitted, in which case the Receiver MUST   discard the number of bytes indicated by the Payload Pointer (counted   from the first byte of the TS Packet payload field, and excluding the   PP field itself), before leaving the Idle State.  It then enters the   Reassembly State, and starts reassembly of a new SNDU at this point.7.2. Processing of a Received SNDU   When in the Reassembly State, the Receiver reads a 2-byte SNDU Length   field from the TS Packet payload.  If the value is less than or equal   to 4, or equal to 0xFFFF, the Receiver discards the Current SNDU and   the remaining TS Packet payload and returns to the Idle State.   Receipt of an invalid Length field is an error event and SHOULD be   recorded as an SNDU length error.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   If the Length of the Current SNDU is greater than 4, the Receiver   accepts bytes from the TS Packet payload to the Current SNDU buffer   until either Length bytes in total are received, or the end of the TS   Packet is reached (see also 7.2.1).  When the Current SNDU length   equals the value of the Length field, the Receiver MUST calculate and   verify the CRC value (see 4.6).  SNDUs that contain an invalid CRC   value MUST be discarded.  Mismatch of the CRC is an error event and   SHOULD be recorded as a CRC error.  The underlying physical-layer   processing (e.g., forward error correction coding) often results in   patterns of errors, rather than single bit errors, so the Receiver   needs to be robust to arbitrary patterns of corruption to the TS   Packet and payload, including potential corruption of the PUSI, PP,   and SNDU Length fields.  Therefore, a Receiver SHOULD discard the   remaining TS Packet payload (if any) following a CRC mismatch and   return to the Idle State.   When the Destination Address is present (D=0), the Receiver accepts   SNDUs that match one of a set of addresses specified by the Receiver   (this includes the NPA address of the Receiver, the NPA broadcast   address, and any required multicast NPA addresses).  The Receiver   MUST silently discard an SNDU with an unmatched address.   After receiving a valid SNDU, the Receiver MUST check the Type field   (and process any Type 1 Extension Headers).  The SNDU payload is then   passed to the next protocol layer specified.  An SNDU with an unknown   Type value < 1536 MUST be discarded.  This error event SHOULD be   recorded as an SNDU type error.   The Receiver then starts reassembly of the next SNDU.  This MAY   directly follow the previously reassembled SNDU within the TS Packet   payload.   (i) If the Current SNDU finishes at the end of a TS Packet payload,   the Receiver MUST enter the Idle State.   (ii) If only one byte remains unprocessed in the TS Packet payload   after completion of the Current SNDU, the Receiver MUST discard this   final byte of TS Packet payload.  It then enters the Idle State.  It   MUST NOT record an error when the value of the remaining byte is   identical to 0xFF.   (iii) If two or more bytes of TS Packet payload data remain after   completion of the Current SNDU, the Receiver accepts the next 2 bytes   and examines whether this is an End Indicator.  When an End Indicator   is received, a Receiver MUST silently discard the remainder of the TS   Packet payload and transition to the Idle State.  Otherwise, this is   the start of the next Packed SNDU, and the Receiver continues by   processing this SNDU.  (This is provided that the TS Packet has aFairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   PUSI value of 1, see 7.2.1; otherwise, the Receiver has detected a   delimiting error and MUST discard all remaining bytes in the TS   Packet payload and transitions to the Idle State.)7.2.1.  Reassembly Payload Pointer Checking   A Receiver that has partially received an SNDU (in the Current SNDU   buffer) MUST check the PUSI value in the header of all subsequent TS   Packets with the same PID (i.e., same TS Logical Channel).  If it   receives a TS Packet with a PUSI value of 1, it MUST then verify the   Payload Pointer.  If the Payload Pointer does NOT equal the number of   bytes remaining to complete the Current SNDU (i.e., the difference   between the SNDU Length field and the number of reassembled bytes),   the Receiver has detected a delimiting error.   Following a delimiting error, the Receiver MUST discard the partially   assembled SNDU (in the Current SNDU buffer) and SHOULD record a   reassembly error.  It MUST then re-enter the Idle State.7.3.  Other Error Conditions   The Receiver SHOULD check the MPEG-2 Transport Error Indicator   carried in the TS Packet header [ISO-MPEG2].  This flag indicates a   transmission error for a TS Logical Channel.  If the flag is set to a   value of one, a transmission error event SHOULD be recorded.  Any   partially received SNDU MUST be discarded.  The Receiver then enters   the Idle State.   The Receiver MUST check the MPEG-2 Continuity Counter carried in the   TS Packet header [ISO-MPEG2].  If two (or more) successive TS Packets   within the same TS Logical Channel carry the same Continuity Counter   value, the duplicate TS Packets MUST be silently discarded.  If the   received value is NOT identical to that in the previous TS Packet,   and it does NOT increment by one for successive TS Packets (modulo   16), the Receiver has detected a continuity error.  Any partially   received SNDU MUST be discarded.  A continuity counter error event   SHOULD be recorded.  The Receiver then enters the Idle State.   Note that an MPEG2-2 Transmission network is permitted to carry   duplicate TS Packets [ISO-MPEG2], which are normally detected by the   MPEG-2 Continuity Counter.  A Receiver that does not perform the   above Continuity Counter check would accept duplicate copies of TS   Packets to the reassembly procedure.  In most cases, the SNDU CRC-32   integrity check will result in discard of these SNDUs, leading to   unexpected PDU loss; however, in some cases, duplicate PDUs (fitting   into one TS Packet) could pass undetected to the next layer protocol.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 20058.  Summary   This document defines a Unidirectional Lightweight Encapsulation   (ULE) that performs efficient and flexible support for IPv4 and IPv6   network services over networks built upon the MPEG-2 Transport Stream   (TS).  The encapsulation is also suited to transport of other   protocol packets and bridged Ethernet frames.   ULE also provides an Extension Header format and defines an   associated IANA registry for efficient and flexible support of both   mandatory and optional SNDU headers.  This allows for future   extension of the protocol, while providing backwards compatibility   with existing implementations.  In particular, Optional Extension   Headers may safely be ignored by Receivers that do not implement   them, or choose not to process them.9.  Acknowledgements   This document is based on a previous document authored by: Horst D.   Clausen, Bernhard Collini-Nocker, Hilmar Linder, and Gorry Fairhurst.   The authors wish to thank the members of the ip-dvb mailing list for   their input; in particular, the many comments received from Art   Allison, Carstsen Borman, Patrick Cipiere, Wolgang Fritsche, Hilmar   Linder, Alain Ritoux, and William Stanislaus.  Alain also provided   the original examples of usage.10.  Security Considerations   The security considerations for ULE resemble those that arise when   the existing Multi-Protocol Encapsulation (MPE) is used.  ULE does   not add specific new threats that will impact the security of the   general Internet.   There is a known security issue with un-initialised stuffing bytes.   In ULE, these bytes are set to 0xFF (normal practice in MPEG-2).   There are known integrity issues with the removal of the LAN FCS in a   bridged networking environment.  The removal for bridged frames   exposes the traffic to potentially undetected corruption while being   processed by the Encapsulator and/or Receiver.   There is a potential security issue when a Receiver receives a PDU   with two Length fields:  The Receiver would need to validate the   actual length and the Length field and ensure that inconsistent   values are not propagated by the network.  In direct encapsulation of   IPv4/IPv6 in ULE, this is avoided by including only one SNDU LengthFairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   Field.  However, this issue still arises in bridged LLC frames, and   frames with a LLC Length greater than the SNDU payload size MUST be   discarded, and an SNDU payload length error SHOULD be recorded.   In the future, a ULE Mandatory Extension Header may be used to define   a method to perform link encryption of the SNDU payload.  This is as   an additional security mechanism to IP-, transport-, or application-   layer security, not a replacement [RFC4259].  The approach is generic   and decouples the encapsulation from future security extensions.  The   operation provides functions that resemble those currently used with   the MPE encapsulation.   Additional security control fields may be provided as part of this   link encryption Extension Header, e.g., to associate an SNDU with one   of a set of Security Association (SA) parameters.  As a part of the   encryption process, it may also be desirable to authenticate some or   all of the SNDU headers.  The method of encryption and the way in   which keys are exchanged is beyond the scope of this specification,   as are the definition of the SA format and that of the related   encryption keys.11.  IANA Considerations   The IANA has created the ULE Next-Header Type field registry as   defined in this document.   ULE Next-Header registry      This registry allocates Next-Header values within the range 0-511      (decimal).  For each allocated value, it also specifies the set of      allowed H-LEN values (seesection 5).  In combination, these      define a set of allowed values in the range 0-1535 for the first      part of the ULE Type space (seesection 4.4.1).11.1.  IANA Guidelines   The following contains the IANA guidelines for management of the ULE   Next-Header registry.  This registry allocates values 0-511 decimal   (0x0000-0x01FF, hexadecimal).  It MUST NOT allocate values greater   than 0x01FF (decimal).   It subdivides the Next-Header registry in the following way:   1) 0-255 (decimal) IANA-assigned values, indicating Mandatory      Extension Headers (or link-dependent Type fields) for ULE,      requiring expert review leading to prior issue of an IETF RFC.      This specification MUST define the value and the name associated      with the Extension Header, together with the procedure forFairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005      processing the Extension Header.  It MUST also define the need for      the Mandatory Extension and the intended use.  The size of the      Extension Header MUST be specified.      Assignments have been made in this document, and registered by      IANA:      Type      Name                             Reference      0:       Test-SNDUSection 5.1      1:       Bridged-SNDUSection 5.2   2) 256-511 (decimal) IANA-assigned values, indicating Optional      Extension Headers for ULE, requiring expert review leading to      prior issue of an IETF RFC.  This specification MUST define the      value and the name associated with the Extension Header, together      with the procedure for processing the Extension Header.  The entry      MUST specify the range of allowable H-LEN values that are      permitted (in the range 1-5).  It MUST also define the need for      the Optional Extension and the intended use.      Assignments have been made in this document, and registered by      IANA:      Type      Name                    H-LEN   Reference      256:      Extension-Padding       1-5Section 5.312. References12.1.  Normative References   [ISO-MPEG2]    IS 13818-1, "Information technology -- Generic coding                  of moving pictures and associated audio information --                  Part 1: Systems", International Standards Organisation                  (ISO), 2000.   [RFC2119]      Bradner, S., "Key Words for Use in RFCs to Indicate                  Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, 1997.   [RFC1112]      Deering, S., "Host extensions for IP multicasting",                  STD 5,RFC 1112, August 1989.   [RFC2464]      Crawford, M., "Transmission of IPv6 Packets over                  Ethernet Networks",RFC 2464, December 1998.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   [ULE1]         Registration for format_identifier ULE1, SMPTE                  Registration Authority, LLC,http://www.smpte-ra.org/ule1.html.12.2.  Informative References   [IPDVB-AR]     Fairhurst, G. and M-J. Montpetit, "Address Resolution                  for IP datagrams over MPEG-2 Networks", Work in                  Progress, September 2005.   [ATSC]         A/53, "ATSC Digital Television Standard", Advanced                  Television Systems Committee (ATSC), Doc. A/53 Rev.C,                  2004   [ATSC-DAT]     A/90, "ATSC Data Broadcast Standard", Advanced                  Television Systems Committee (ATSC), Doc. A/090, 2000.   [ATSC-DATG]    A/91, "Recommended Practice: Implementation Guidelines                  for the ATSC Data Broadcast Standard", Advanced                  Television Systems Committee (ATSC), Doc. A/91, 2001.   [ATSC-G]       A/54, "Guide to the use of the ATSC Digital Television                  Standard", Advanced Television Systems Committee                  (ATSC), Doc. A/54, 1995.   [ATSC-PSIP-TC] A/65B, "Program and System Information Protocol for                  Terrestrial Broadcast and Cable", Advanced Television                  Systems Committee (ATSC), Doc. A/65B, 2003.   [ATSC-REG]     ATSC "Code Point Registry"                  www.atsc.org/standards/Code_Point_Registry.pdf.   [ATSC-S]       A/80, "Modulation and Coding Requirements for Digital                  TV (DTV) Applications over Satellite", Advanced                  Television Systems Committee (ATSC), Doc. A/80, 1999.   [DIX]          Digital Equipment Corp, Intel Corp, Xerox Corp,                  "Ethernet Local Area Network Specification" Version                  2.0, November 1982.   [ETSI-DAT]     EN 301 192, "Specifications for Data Broadcasting",                  European Telecommunications Standards Institute                  (ETSI), 2004.   [ETSI-DVBC]    EN 300 800, "Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB); DVB                  interaction channel for Cable TV distribution systems                  (CATV)", European Telecommunications Standards                  Institute (ETSI), 1998.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   [ETSI-DVBS]    EN 300 421, "Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB);                  Modulation and Coding for DBS satellite systems at                  11/12 GHz", European Telecommunications Standards                  Institute (ETSI), 1997.   [ETSI-DVBT]    EN 300 744, "Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB); Framing                  structure, channel coding and modulation for digital                  terrestrial television (DVB-T)", European                  Telecommunications Standards Institute (ETSI), 2004.   [ETSI-RCS]     ETSI 301 790, "Digital Video Broadcasting (DVB);                  Interaction Channel for Satellite Distribution                  Systems", European Telecommunications Standards                  Institute (ETSI), 2005.   [IEEE-802.2]   IEEE 802.2, "Local and metropolitan area networks-                  Specific requirements Part 2: Logical Link Control",                  IEEE Computer Society, (also ISO/IEC 8802-2), 1998.   [IEEE-802.3]   IEEE 802.3, "Local and metropolitan area networks-                  Specific requirements Part 3: Carrier sense multiple                  access with collision detection (CSMA/CD) access                  method and physical layer specifications", IEEE                  Computer Society, (also ISO/IEC 8802-3), 2002.   [ISO-DSMCC]    IS 13818-6, "Information technology -- Generic coding                  of moving pictures and associated audio information --                  Part 6: Extensions for DSM-CC", International                  Standards Organisation (ISO), 1998.   [ITU-H222]     H.222.0, "Information technology - Generic coding of                  moving pictures and associated audio information:                  Systems", International Telecommunication Union,                  (ITU-T), 1995.   [ITU-3563]     I.363.5, "B-ISDN ATM Adaptation Layer specification:                  Type 5 AAL", International Telecommunication Union,                  (ITU-T), 1996.   [ISO-8802-2]   ISO/IEC 8802.2, "Logical Link Control", International                  Standards Organisation (ISO), 1998.   [RFC3077]      Duros, E., Dabbous, W., Izumiyama, H., Fujii, N., and                  Y. Zhang, "A Link-Layer Tunneling Mechanism for                  Unidirectional Links",RFC 3077, March 2001.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 33]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   [RFC3309]      Stone, J., Stewart, R., and D. Otis, "Stream Control                  Transmission Protocol (SCTP) Checksum Change",RFC3309, September 2002.   [RFC4259]      Montpetit, M.-J., Fairhurst, G., Clausen, H.,                  Collini-Nocker, B., and H. Linder, "A Framework for                  Transmission of IP Datagrams over MPEG-2 Networks",RFC 4259, November 2005.   [SOOR05]       M. Sooriyabandara, G. Fairhurst, A. Ang, B. Collini-                  Nocker, H. Linder, W. Stering  "A Lightweight                  Encapsulation Protocol for IP over MPEG-2 Networks:                  Design, Implementation and Analysis", Computer                  Networks 48 p5-19, 2005.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 34]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005Appendix A: SNDU Packing Examples   This appendix provides some examples of use.  The appendix is   informative.  It does not provide a description of the protocol.  The   examples provide the complete TS Packet sequence for some sample   encapsulated IP packets.   The specification of the TS Packet header operation and field values   is provided in [ISO-MPEG2].  The specification of ULE is provided in   the body of this document.   The key below is provided for the following examples.   HDR    4B TS Packet Header   PUSI   Payload Unit Start Indicator   PP     Payload Pointer   ***    TS Packet Payload Pointer (PP)   Example A.1: Two 186B PDUs.     SNDU A is 200 bytes (including the ULE destination NPA address)     SNDU B is 200 bytes (including the ULE destination NPA address)   The sequence comprises 3 TS Packets:                      SNDU           PP=0      Length   +-----+------+------+------+-   -+------+   | HDR | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0xC4 | ... | A182 |   +-----+----*-+-*----+------+-   -+------+   PUSI=1     *   *              *****                                          SNDU           PP=17           CRC for A     Length   +-----+------+------+-   -+--- --+------+------+-   -+------+   | HDR | 0x11 | A183 | ... | A199 | 0x00 | 0xC4 | ... | B165 |   +-----+----*-+------+-   -+------+-*----+------+-   -+------+   PUSI=1     *                       *              *************************                                 End     Stuffing                    CRC for A Indicator   Bytes   +-----+------+-   -+------+----+----+-   -+----+   | HDR | B166 | ... | B199 |0xFF|0xFF| ... |0xFF|   +-----+------+-   -+------+----+----+-   -+----+   PUSI=0Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 35]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   Example A.2: Usage of last byte in a TS-Packet     SNDU A is 183 bytes     SNDU B is 182 bytes     SNDU C is 181 bytes     SNDU D is 185 bytes   The sequence comprises 4 TS Packets:                       SNDU            PP=0      Length     CRC for A    +-----+------+------+------+-   -+------+    | HDR | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0xB3 | ... | A182 |    +-----+----*-+-*----+------+-   -+------+    PUSI=1     *   *               *****                       SNDU                  Unused            PP=0      Length       CRC for B  byte    +-----+------+------+------+-   -+------+------+    | HDR | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0xB2 | ... | B181 | 0xFF |    +-----+---*--+-*----+------+-   -+------+------+    PUSI=1    *    *              ******                       SNDU                       SNDU            PP=0      Length      CRC for C      Length    +-----+------+------+------+-   -+------+------+------+    | HDR | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0xB1 | ... | C180 | 0x00 | 0x65 |    +-----+---*--+-*----+------+-   -+------+------+------+    PUSI=1    *    *              ******           Unused                                byte    +-----+------+-   -+------+------+    | HDR | D002 | ... | D184 | 0xFF |    +-----+------+-   -+------+------+     PUSI=0   Example A.3: Large SNDUs   SNDU A is 732 bytes   SNDU B is 284 bytes   The sequence comprises 6 TS Packets:Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 36]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005                       SNDU            PP=0      Length    +-----+------+------+------+-   -+------+    | HDR | 0x00 | 0x02 | 0xD8 | ... | A182 |    +-----+---*--+-*----+------+-   -+------+    PUSI=1    *    *              ******    +-----+------+-   -+------+    | HDR | A183 | ... | A366 |    +-----+------+-   -+------+    PUSI=0    +-----+------+-   -+------+    | HDR | A367 | ... | A550 |    +-----+------+-   -+------+    PUSI=0                                           SNDU            PP=181         CRC for A      Length    +-----+------+------+-   -+------+------+------+    | HDR | 0xB5 | A551 | ... | A731 | 0x01 | 0x18 |    +-----+---*--+------+-   -+------+*-----+------+    PUSI=1    *                       *              *************************    +-----+------+-   -+------+    | HDR | B002 | ... | B185 |    +-----+------+-   -+------+    PUSI=0                                    End          Stuffing                                 Indicator        Bytes    +-----+------+-   -+------+------+------+-   -+------+    | HDR | B186 | ... | B283 | 0xFF | 0xFF | ... | 0xFF |    +-----+------+-   -+------+------+------+-   -+------+    PUSI=0Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 37]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   Example A.4: Illustration of SNDU Length field     SNDU A is 200 bytes     SNDU B is 60 bytes     SNDU C is 60 bytes   The sequence comprises two TS Packets:                       SNDU            PP=0      Length    +-----+------+------+------+-   -+------+    | HDR | 0x00 | 0x00 | 0xC4 | ... | A182 |    +-----+----*-+-*----+------+-   -+------+    PUSI=1     *   *  +      +               *****  ++++++++                       +                       +++++++++++++++++                                       +   SNDU            PP=17           CRC for A  +  Length    +-----+------+------+-   -+------+-+----+------+-    | HDR | 0x11 | A183 | ... | A199 | 0x00 | 0x38 | ...    +-----+----*-+------+-   -+------+*-----+------+-    PUSI=1     *                      *  +       +               ************************  +++++++++                                          +    +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++    +    +                  SNDU                       End      Stuffing    +                 Length                   Indicator     bytes    +    -+------+------+------+  -+------+------+------+- -+------+    + ... | B59  | 0x00 | 0x38 |...| C59  | 0xFF | 0xFF |...| 0xFF |    +    -+------+-+----+------+  -+------+-+----+------+- -+------+    +              +  +      +              +    +              +  ++++++++              +    +              +   +                    +    ++++++++++++++++   ++++++++++++++++++++++   *** TS Packet Payload Pointer (PP)   +++ ULE Length IndicatorFairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 38]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005   Example A.5: Three 44B PDUs.     SNDU A is 52 bytes (no ULE destination NPA address) SNDU B is 52     bytes (no ULE destination NPA address) SNDU C is 52 bytes (no ULE     destination NPA address)   The sequence comprises 1 TS Packet:                      SNDU           PP=0      Length   +-----+------+------+------+-   -+-----+------+------+-   -+-----+-   | HDR | 0x00 | 0x80 | 0x30 | ... | A51 | 0x80 | 0x30 | ... | B51 | ..   +-----+----*-+-*----+------+-   -+-----+------+------+-   -+-----+-   PUSI=1     *   *              *****                                           End        Stuffing                                         Indicator     bytes                -----+------+-   -+-----+---------+- -+------+            ... 0x80 | 0x30 | ... | C51 |0xFF|0xFF|   | 0xFF |                -----+------+-   -+-----+---------+- -+------+Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 39]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005Appendix B: SNDU Encapsulation   An example of ULE encapsulation carrying an ICMPv6 packet generated   by ping6.   ULE SNDU Length  :            63 decimal   D-bit value  :                0 (NPA destination address present)   ULE Protocol Type :           0x86dd (IPv6)   Destination ULE NPA Address : 00:01:02:03:04:05   ULE CRC32 :                   0x7c171763   Source IPv6 :                 2001:DB8:3008:1965::1   Destination IPv6 :            2001:DB8:2509:1962::2   SNDU contents (including CRC-32):   0000: 00 3f 86 dd 00 01 02 03 04 05 60 00 00 00 00 0d   0016: 3a 40 20 01 0d b8 30 08 19 65 00 00 00 00 00 00   0032: 00 01 20 01 0d b8 25 09 19 62 00 00 00 00 00 00   0048: 00 02 80 00 9d 8c 06 38 00 04 00 00 00 00 00 7c   0064: 17 17 63Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 40]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005Authors' Addresses   Godred Fairhurst   Department of Engineering   University of Aberdeen   Aberdeen, AB24 3UE   UK   EMail: gorry@erg.abdn.ac.uk   Web:http://www.erg.abdn.ac.uk/users/Gorry   Bernhard Collini-Nocker   Department of Scientific Computing   University of Salzburg   Jakob Haringer Str. 2   5020 Salzburg   Austria   EMail: bnocker@cosy.sbg.ac.at   Web:http://www.scicomp.sbg.ac.at/Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 41]

RFC 4326              ULE for IP over MPEG-2/DVB           December 2005Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2005).   This document is subject to the rights, licenses and restrictions   contained inBCP 78, and except as set forth therein, the authors   retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET   ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,   INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE   INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at ietf-   ipr@ietf.org.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Fairhurst & Collini-Nocker  Standards Track                    [Page 42]

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