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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                            C. VogtRequest for Comments: 4651                   Universitaet Karlsruhe (TH)Category: Informational                                         J. Arkko                                            Ericsson Research NomadicLab                                                           February 2007A Taxonomy and Analysis of Enhancements toMobile IPv6 Route OptimizationStatus of This Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).IESG Note:   This RFC is a product of the Internet Research Task Force and is not   a candidate for any level of Internet Standard.  The IRTF publishes   the results of Internet-related research and development activities.   These results might not be suitable for deployment.Abstract   This document describes and evaluates strategies to enhance Mobile   IPv6 Route Optimization, on the basis of existing proposals, in order   to motivate and guide further research in this context.  This   document is a product of the IP Mobility Optimizations (MobOpts)   Research Group.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................31.1. A Note on Public-Key Infrastructures .......................41.2. A Note on Source Address Filtering .........................52. Objectives for Route Optimization Enhancement ...................72.1. Latency Optimizations ......................................82.2. Security Enhancements ......................................82.3. Signaling Optimizations ....................................92.4. Robustness Enhancements ....................................93. Enhancements Toolbox ............................................93.1. IP Address Tests ..........................................103.2. Protected Tunnels .........................................103.3. Optimistic Behavior .......................................113.4. Proactive IP Address Tests ................................113.5. Concurrent Care-of Address Tests ..........................123.6. Diverted Routing ..........................................133.7. Credit-Based Authorization ................................143.8. Heuristic Monitoring ......................................173.9. Crypto-Based Identifiers ..................................183.10. Pre-Configuration ........................................193.11. Semi-Permanent Security Associations .....................203.12. Delegation ...............................................213.13. Mobile Networks ..........................................213.14. Location Privacy .........................................224. Discussion .....................................................224.1. Cross-Layer Interactions ..................................234.2. Experimentation and Measurements ..........................234.3. Future Research ...........................................245. Security Considerations ........................................246. Conclusions ....................................................257. Acknowledgments ................................................258. References .....................................................268.1. Normative References ......................................268.2. Informative References ....................................26Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 20071.  Introduction   Mobility support for IPv6, or Mobile IPv6, enables mobile nodes to   migrate active transport connections and application sessions from   one IPv6 address to another.  The Mobile IPv6 specification,RFC 3775   [1], introduces a "home agent", which proxies a mobile node at a   permanent "home address".  A roaming mobile node connects to the home   agent through a bidirectional tunnel and can so communicate, from its   local "care-of address", as if it was present at the home address.   The mobile node keeps the home agent updated on its current care-of   address via IPsec-protected signaling messages [40].   In case the correspondent node lacks appropriate mobility support, it   communicates with the mobile node's home address, and thus all data   packets are routed via the home agent.  This mode, Bidirectional   Tunneling, increases packet-propagation delays.RFC 3775 hence   defines an additional mode for Route Optimization, which allows peers   to communicate on the direct path.  It requires that the   correspondent node can cache a binding between the mobile node's home   address and current care-of address.  The challenge with Route   Optimization is that an administrative relationship between the   mobile node and the correspondent node can generally not be   presupposed.  So how can the two authenticate and authorize the   signaling messages that they exchange?   Mobile IPv6 solves this problem by verifying a routing property of   the mobile node.  Specifically, the mobile node is checked to be   reachable at its home address and current care-of address in that it   must prove the reception of a home and care-of keygen token,   respectively.  This is called the "return-routability procedure".  It   takes place right before a mobile node registers a new care-of   address with a correspondent node and is periodically repeated in   case the mobile node does not move for a while.   The advantage of the return-routability procedure is that it is   lightweight and does not require pre-shared authentication material.   It also requires no state at the correspondent node.  On the other   hand, the two reachability tests can lead to a handoff delay   unacceptable for many real-time or interactive applications such as   Voice over IP (VoIP) and video conferencing.  Also, the security that   the return-routability procedure guarantees might not be sufficient   for security-sensitive applications.  And finally, periodically   refreshing a registration at a correspondent node implies a hidden   signaling overhead that may prevent mobile nodes from hibernation   during times of inactivity.   Manifold enhancements for Route Optimizations have hence been   suggested.  This document describes and evaluates various strategiesVogt & Arkko                 Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   on the basis of existing proposals.  It is meant to provide a   conceptual framework for further work, which was found to be   inevitable in the context of Route Optimization.  Many scientists   volunteered to review this document.  Their names are duly recorded   inSection 7.Section 2 analyzes the strengths and weaknesses of   Route Optimization and identifies potential objectives for   enhancement.  Different enhancement strategies are discussed, based   on existing proposals, inSection 3.Section 4 discusses the   different approaches and identifies opportunities for further   research.Section 5 andSection 6 conclude the document.   This document represents the consensus of the MobOpts Research Group.   It has been reviewed by the Research Group members active in the   specific area of work.  At the request of their chairs, this document   has been comprehensively reviewed by multiple active contributors to   the IETF MIP6 Working Group.  At the time of this writing, some of   the ideas presented in this document have been adopted by the   Mobility for IP: Performance, Signaling and Handoff Optimization   (mipshop) Working Group in the IETF.1.1.  A Note on Public-Key Infrastructures   Mobile IPv6 Route Optimization verifies a mobile node's authenticity   through a routing property.  An alternative is cryptographic   authentication, which requires a binding between a node's identity   and some sort of secret information.  Although some proposals suggest   installing shared secrets into end nodes when possible (seeSection3.10), pre-configuration is not an option for general Internet use   for scalability reasons.  Authentication based on a Public-Key   Infrastructure (PKI) does not require pair-wise pre-configuration.   Here, the secret information is the private component of a   public/private-key pair, and the binding between a node's identity   and private key exists indirectly through the cryptographic   properties of public/private-key pairs and a binding between the   identity and the public key.  An authority trusted by both end nodes   issues a certificate that effects this latter binding.   Large-scale use of a PKI, however, was considered unsuitable for   mobility management due to the following reasons.   o  There are differing opinions on whether a PKI could scale up to      hundreds of millions of mobile nodes.  Some people argue they do,      as there are already examples of certification authorities      responsible for millions of certificates.  But more important than      the expected increase in the number of certificates would be a      shift in application patterns.  Nowadays, public-key cryptography      is used only for those applications that require strong,      cryptographic authentication.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007      If it was used for mobility management as well, certificate checks      would become mandatory for any type of application, leading to      more checks per user.  Busy servers with mobility support might be      unwilling to spent the processing resources required for this      depending on the service they provide.   o  Revoked certificates are identified on Certificate Revocation      Lists (CRLs), which correspondent nodes with mobility support      would have to acquire from certification authorities.  CRLs must      be kept up to date, requiring periodic downloads.  This and the      act of checking a certificate against a CRL create overhead that      some correspondent nodes might be unwilling to spend.   o  Certificate verification may take some time and hence interrupt      ongoing applications.  This can be disturbing from the user's      perspective, especially when Route Optimization starts in the      middle of a session, or the session is very short-term anyway.   o  The bigger a PKI grows, the more attractive it becomes as an      attack target, endangering the Internet as a whole.   o  There is little experience with using home addresses as      identifiers in certificates.  Although the home address could      theoretically be placed into a certificate's Subject Alternate      Name field, the entities responsible for IP-address assignment and      certification are usually not the same, and it may not be easy to      coordinate the two.   For these reasons, this document does not consider direct   authentication of mobile nodes based on a PKI.  Nevertheless, it does   evaluate certificate-based techniques that make the problems   identified above more tractable (seeSection 3.12).1.2.  A Note on Source Address FilteringRFC 3775 uses care-of-address tests to probe a mobile node's presence   at its claimed location.  Alternatively, verification of care-of   addresses may be based on infrastructure in the mobile node's local   access network.  For instance, the infrastructure can verify that the   IP source addresses of all packets leaving the network are correct.   "Ingress filtering" [38][43] provides this feature to the extent that   it inspects the prefix of IP source addresses and ensures topological   correctness.  Network-access providers that use ingress filtering   normally deploy the technique in their first-hop and site-exit   routers.  Similarly, ISPs may filter packets originating from a   downstream network.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   Ingress filtering may eventually provide a way to replace care-of-   address tests.  But there are still a number of uncertainties today:   o  By definition, ingress filtering can prevent source-address      spoofing only from those networks that do deploy the technique.      As a consequence, ingress filtering needs to be widely, preferably      universally, deployed in order to constitute Internet-wide      protection.  As long as an attacker can get network access without      filters, all Internet nodes remain vulnerable.   o  There is little incentive for ISPs to deploy ingress filtering      other than conscientiousness.  Legal or regulatory prescription as      well as financial motivation does not exist.  A corrupt ISP might      even have a financial incentive not to deploy the technique, if      redirection-based denial-of-service (DoS) attacks using Route      Optimization ever become possible and are exploited for financial      gain.  A similar issue was observed with, for example, email spam.   o  Ingress filtering is most effective, and easiest to configure, at      the first-hop router.  However, since only prefixes are checked,      the filters inevitably get less precise the further upstream they      are enforced.  This issue is inherent in the technique, so the      best solution is checking packets as close to the originating      nodes as possible, preferably in the first-hop routers themselves.   o  A popular implementation of ingress filtering is "Reverse Path      Forwarding" (RPF).  This technique relies on routes to be      symmetric, which is oftentimes the case between edge networks and      ISPs, but far less often between peering ISPs.  Alternatives to      RPF are either manually configured access lists or dynamic      approaches that are more relaxed, and thereby less secure, than      RPF [43].   o  Another problem with ingress filtering is multi-homing.  When a      router attempts to forward to one ISP a packet with a source-      address prefix from another ISP, filters at the second ISP would      block the packet.  The IETF seeks to find a way around this [39].      For instance, one could tunnel the packet to the topologically      correct ISP, or one could allow source-address changes by means of      a locator-identifier split [45].   o  Finally,RFC 3775 defines an Alternative Care-of Address option      that mobile nodes can use to carry a care-of address within a      Binding Update message outside of the IPv6 header.  Such an      address is not subject to inspection by ingress filtering and      would have to be verified through other means [14].Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   Although these problems are expected to get solved eventually, there   is currently little knowledge on how applicable and deployable, as a   candidate for care-of-address verification, ingress filtering will   be.  High investments or administrative hurdles could prevent a   large, preferably universal deployment of ingress filtering, which   would hinder Internet-wide protection, as mentioned in the first   bullet.  For these reasons, this document does not consider ingress   filtering as a viable alternative to care-of-address tests, although   things may be different in the future.2.  Objectives for Route Optimization Enhancement   Wireless environments with frequently moving nodes feature a number   of salient properties that distinguish them from environments with   stationary nodes or nodes that move only occasionally.  One important   aspect is the efficiency of mobility management.  Nodes may not   bother about a few round-trip times of handoff latency if they do not   change their point of IP attachment often.  But the negative impact   that a mobility protocol can have on application performance   increases with the level of mobility.  Therefore, in order to   maximize user satisfaction, it is important to reduce the handoff   latency that the mobility protocol adds to existing delays in other   places of the network stack.  A related issue is the robustness of   the mobility protocol, given that temporary outage of mobility   support can render mobile nodes incapable of continuing to   communicate.   Furthermore, the wireless nature of data transmissions makes it   potentially easier for an attacker to eavesdrop on other nodes' data   or send data on behalf of other nodes.  While applications can   usually authenticate and encrypt their payload if need be, similar   security measures may not be feasible for signaling packets of a   mobility protocol, in particular if communicating end nodes have no   pre-existing relationship.   Given the typically limited bandwidth in a wireless medium, resources   ought to be spent in an economic matter.  This is especially   important for the amount of signaling that a mobility protocol   requires.   Endeavors to enhanceRFC 3775 Route Optimization generally strive for   reduced handoff latency, higher security, lower signaling overhead,   or increased protocol robustness.  These objectives are herein   discussed from a requirements perspective; the technical means to   reach the objectives is not considered, nor is the feasibility of   achieving them.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 20072.1.  Latency Optimizations   One important objective for improving Route Optimization is to reduce   handoff latencies.  Assuming that the home-address test dominates the   care-of-address test in terms of latency, a Mobile IPv6 handoff takes   one round-trip time between the mobile node and the home agent for   the home registration, a round-trip time between the mobile node and   the home agent plus a round-trip time between the home agent and the   correspondent node for the home-address test, and a one-way time from   the mobile node to the correspondent node for the propagation of the   Binding Update message.  The first packet sent to the new care-of   address requires an additional one-way time to propagate from the   correspondent node to the mobile node.  The mobile node can resume   communications right after it has dispatched the Binding Update   message.  But if it requests a Binding Acknowledgment message from   the correspondent node, communications are usually delayed until this   is received.   These delays are additive and are not subsumed by other delays at the   IP layer or link layer.  They can cause perceptible quality   degradations for interactive and real-time applications.  TCP bulk-   data transfers are likewise affected since long handoff latencies may   lead to successive retransmission timeouts and degraded throughput.2.2.  Security Enhancements   The return-routability procedure was designed with the objective to   provide a level of security that compares to that of today's non-   mobile Internet [46].  As such, it protects against impersonation,   denial of service, and redirection-based flooding attacks that would   not be possible without Route Optimization.  This approach is based   on an assumption that a mobile Internet cannot become any safer than   the non-mobile Internet.   Applications that require a security level higher than what the   return-routability procedure can provide are generally advised to use   end-to-end protection such as IPsec or Transport Layer Security   (TLS).  But even then they are vulnerable to denial of service.  This   motivates research for stronger Route Optimization security.   Security enhancements may also become necessary if future   technological improvements mitigate some of the existing mobility-   unrelated vulnerabilities.   One particular issue with Route Optimization is location privacy   because route-optimized packets carry both home and care-of addresses   in plaintext.  A standard workaround is to fall back to Bidirectional   Tunneling when location privacy is needed.  Packets with the care-of   address are then transferred only between the mobile node and theVogt & Arkko                 Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   home agent, where they can be encrypted through IPsec Encapsulating   Security Payload (ESP) [42].  But even Bidirectional Tunneling   requires the mobile node to periodically re-establish IPsec security   associations with the home agent so as to become untraceable through   Security Parameter Indexes (SPIs).2.3.  Signaling Optimizations   Route Optimization requires periodic signaling even when the mobile   node does not move.  The signaling overhead amounts to 7.16 bits per   second if the mobile node communicates with a stationary node [6].   It doubles if both peers are mobile.  This overhead may be negligible   when the nodes communicate, but it can be an issue for mobile nodes   that are inactive and stay at the same location for a while.  These   nodes typically prefer to go to standby mode to conserve battery   power.  Also, the periodic refreshes consume a fraction of the   wireless bandwidth that one could use more efficiently.   Optimizations for reduced signaling overhead could mitigate these   issues.2.4.  Robustness Enhancements   Route Optimization could conceptually enable continued communications   during periods of temporary home-agent unavailability.  The protocol   defined inRFC 3775 does not achieve this independence, however, as   the home agent plays an active role in the return-routability   procedure.  Appropriate enhancements could increase the independence   from the home agent and thus enable robust Route Optimization even in   the absence of the home agent.3.  Enhancements Toolbox   A large body of effort has recently gone into improving Mobile IPv6   Route Optimization.  Some of the proposed techniques are   modifications to the return-routability procedure, while others   replace the procedure by alternative mechanisms.  Some of them   operate end-to-end; others introduce network-side mobility support.   In most cases, it is the combination of a set of techniques that is   required to gain a complete -- that is, efficient and secure --   route-optimization mechanism.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 20073.1.  IP Address TestsRFC 3775 uses IP-address tests to ensure that a mobile node is live   and on the path to a specific destination address:  The home-address   test provides evidence that the mobile node is the legitimate owner   of its home address; the care-of-address test detects spoofed care-of   addresses and prevents redirection-based flooding attacks.  Both   tests can be performed in parallel.   A home-address test should be initiated by the mobile node so that   the correspondent node can delay state creation until the mobile node   has authenticated.  The care-of-address test can conceptually be   initiated by either side.  It originates with the mobile node inRFC3775, but with the correspondent node in [16] and [22].  The   correspondent-node-driven approach suggests itself when   authentication is done through other means than a home-address test.   Important advantages of IP-address tests are zero-configurability and   the independence of ancillary infrastructure.  As a disadvantage,   IP-address tests can only guarantee that a node is on the path to the   probed address, not that the node truly owns this address.  This does   not lead to new security threats, however, because the types of   attacks that an on-path attacker can do with Route Optimization are   already possible in the non-mobile Internet [46].3.2.  Protected TunnelsRFC 3775 protects certain signaling messages, exchanged between a   mobile node and its home agent, through an authenticated and   encrypted tunnel.  This prevents unauthorized nodes on that path,   including eavesdroppers in the mobile node's wireless access network,   from listening in on these messages.   Given that a pre-existing end-to-end security relationship between   the mobile node and the correspondent node cannot generally be   assumed, this protection exists only for the mobile node's side.  If   the correspondent node is immobile, the path between the home agent   and the correspondent node remains unprotected.  This is a path   between two stationary nodes, so all types of attacks that a villain   could wage on this path are already possible in the non-mobile   Internet.  In case the correspondent node is mobile, it has its own   home agent, and only the path between the two (stationary) home   agents remains unprotected.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 20073.3.  Optimistic Behavior   Many Mobile IPv6 implementations [29][31] defer a correspondent   registration until the associated home registration has been   completed successfully.  In contrast to such "conservative" behavior,   a more "optimistic" approach is to begin the return-routability   procedure in parallel with the home registration [52].  Conservative   behavior avoids a useless return-routability procedure in case the   home registration fails.  This comes at the cost of additional   handoff delay when the home registration is successful.  Optimistic   behavior saves this delay, but the return-routability procedure will   be in vain should the corresponding home registration be   unsuccessful.   While a parallelization of the home registration and the return-   routability procedure is feasible within the bounds ofRFC 3775, the   specification does not permit mobile nodes to continue with the   correspondent registration, by sending a Binding Update message to   the correspondent node, until a Binding Acknowledgment message   indicating successful home registration has been received.  This is   usually not a problem because the return-routability procedure is   likely to take longer than the home registration anyway.  However,   some optimizations (seeSection 3.4) reduce the delay caused by the   return-routability procedure.  A useful improvement is then to allow   Binding Update messages to be sent to correspondent nodes even before   the home registration has been acknowledged.   The drawback of optimistic behavior is that a lost, reordered, or   rejected Binding Update message can cause data packets to be   discarded.  Nevertheless, packet loss would have similar negative   impacts on conservative approaches, so the mobile node needs to be   prepared for the possible loss of these packets in any case.3.4.  Proactive IP Address Tests   The critical handoff phase, during which the mobile node and the   correspondent node cannot fully communicate, spans the home   registration and the correspondent registration, including the   return-routability procedure.  One technique to shorten this phase is   to accomplish part of the signaling proactively before the handoff.   In particular, the home-address test can be done in advance without   violating the specifications ofRFC 3775 [52][51].   In order to have a fresh home keygen token ready for a future   handoff, the mobile node should initiate a proactive home-address   test at least once per token lifetime, that is, every 3.5 minutes.   This does at most double the signaling overhead spent on home-address   tests given that correspondent registrations must be refreshed everyVogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   7 minutes even when the mobile node does not move for a while.  An   optimization is possible where the mobile node's local link layer can   anticipate handoffs and trigger the home-address test in such a case.   [6] or [54] reduce the frequency of home-address tests even further.   Proactive care-of-address tests are possible only if the mobile node   is capable of attaching to two networks simultaneously.  Dual   attachment is possible if the link-layer technology enables it with a   single interface [10], or if the mobile node is endowed with multiple   interfaces [7].3.5.  Concurrent Care-of Address Tests   Without the assumption that a mobile node can simultaneously attach   to multiple networks, proactive care-of-address tests, executed prior   to handoff, are not an option.  A correspondent node may instead   authorize a mobile node to defer the care-of-address test until an   early, tentative binding has been registered [52][51].  This in   combination with a technique to eliminate the handoff delay of home-   address tests (seeSection 3.4 andSection 3.9) facilitates early   resumption of bidirectional communications subsequent to handoff.   The care-of address is called "unverified" during the concurrent   care-of-address test, and it is said to be "verified" once the   correspondent node has obtained evidence that the mobile node is   present at the address.  A tentative binding's lifetime can be   limited to a few seconds.   Home-address tests must not be accomplished concurrently, however,   given that they serve the purpose of authentication.  They guarantee   that only the legitimate mobile node can create or update a binding   pertaining to a particular home address.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   mobile node              home agent          correspondent node        |                       |                       |        |                       |                       |        |--Home Test Init------>|---------------------->|        |                       |                       |        |                       |                       |        |<----------------------|<-----------Home Test--|        |                       |                       |        |                                               |      ~~+~~ handoff                                     |        |                                               |        |--Early Binding Update------------------------>| -+-        |--Care-of Test Init -------------------------->|  |        |                                               |  |        |                                               |  | care-of        |<----------------Early Binding Acknowledgment--|  | address        |<-------------------------------Care-of Test---|  | unverified        |                                               |  |        |                                               |  |        |--Binding Update------------------------------>| -+-        |                                               |        |                                               |        |<----------------------Binding Acknowledgment--|        |                                               |            Figure 1: Concurrent Care-of Address Tests   Figure 1 illustrates how concurrent care-of-address tests are used in   [52][51]:  As soon as the mobile node has configured a new care-of   address after a handoff, it sends to the correspondent node an Early   Binding Update message.  Only a home keygen token, obtained from a   proactive home-address test, is required to sign this message.  The   correspondent node creates a tentative binding for the new,   unverified care-of address when it receives the Early Binding Update   message.  This address can be used immediately.  The mobile node   finally sends a (standard) Binding Update message to the   correspondent node when the concurrent care-of-address test is   complete.  Credit-Based Authorization (seeSection 3.7) prevents   misuse of care-of addresses while they are unverified.3.6.  Diverted Routing   Given that a home registration is faster than a correspondent   registration in the absence of additional optimizations, the mobile   node may request its traffic to be routed through the home address   until a new binding has been set up at the correspondent node   [52][51].  The performance of such diverted routing depends on the   propagation properties of the involved routes, however.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   For packets to be diverted via the home address, signaling is   necessary with both the home agent and the correspondent node.  The   home agent must be informed about the new care-of address so that it   can correctly forward packets intercepted at the home address.  The   correspondent node continues to send packets to the old care-of   address until it receives a Binding Update message indicating that   the current binding is no longer valid and ought to be removed.  This   request requires authentication through a home-address test in order   to prevent denial of service by unauthorized nodes.  The test can be   accomplished in a proactive way (seeSection 3.4).   The mobile node may send packets via the home address as soon as it   has dispatched the Binding Update message to the home agent.  It may   send outgoing packets along the direct path once a Binding Update   message for the new care-of address has been sent to the   correspondent node.   It depends on the propagation latency on the end-to-end path via the   home agent relative to the latency on the direct path for how long   the correspondent node should continue to send packets to the home   address.  If the former path is slow, it may be better to queue some   of the packets until the correspondent registration is complete and   packets can be sent along the direct route.3.7.  Credit-Based Authorization   Concurrent care-of-address tests (seeSection 3.5) require protection   against spoofed unverified care-of addresses and redirection-based   flooding attacks.  Credit-Based Authorization [50] is a technique   that provides such protection based on the following three   hypotheses:   1.  A flooding attacker typically seeks to somehow multiply the       packets it assembles for the purpose of the attack because       bandwidth is an ample resource for many attractive victims.   2.  An attacker can always cause unamplified flooding by generating       bogus packets itself and sending them to its victim directly.   3.  Consequently, the additional effort required to set up a       redirection-based flooding attack pays off for the attacker only       if amplification can be obtained this way.   On this basis, rather than eliminating malicious packet redirection   in the first place, Credit-Based Authorization prevents any   amplification that can be reached through it.  This is accomplished   by limiting the data a correspondent node can send to an unverified   care-of address of a mobile node by the data that the correspondentVogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   node has recently received from that mobile node.  (SeeSection 3.5   for a definition on when a care-of address is verified and when it is   unverified.)  A redirection-based flooding attack is thus no more   attractive than pure direct flooding, where the attacker itself sends   bogus packets to the victim.  It is actually less attractive given   that the attacker must keep Mobile IPv6 state to coordinate the   redirection.         mobile node           correspondent node              |                        |              |                        |      address |--data----------------->| credit += size(data)     verified |                        |              |--data----------------->| credit += size(data)              |<-----------------data--| don't change credit              |                        |      address + address change         |   unverified |<-----------------data--| credit -= size(data)              |--data----------------->| credit += size(data)              |<-----------------data--| credit -= size(data)              |                        |              |<-----------------data--| credit -= size(data)              |                        X credit < size(data)              |                        |     ==> Do not send!      address |                        |     verified |<-----------------data--| don't change credit              |                        |         Figure 2: Credit-Based Authorization   Figure 2 illustrates Credit-Based Authorization for an exemplifying   exchange of data packets:  The correspondent node measures the bytes   received from the mobile node.  When the mobile node registers a new   care-of address, the correspondent node labels this address   "unverified" and sends packets there as long as the sum of the packet   sizes does not exceed the measured, received data volume.  A   concurrent care-of-address test is meanwhile performed.  Once the   care-of address has been verified, the correspondent node relabels   the address from "unverified" to "verified".  Packets can then be   sent to the new care-of address without restrictions.  When   insufficient credit is left while the care-of address is still   "unverified", the correspondent node stops sending further packets to   the address until the verification completes.  The correspondent node   may drop these packets, direct them to the mobile node's home   address, or buffer them for later transmission when the care-of   address is verified.  Figure 2 does not show Mobile IPv6 signaling   packets.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   The correspondent node ensures that the mobile node's acquired credit   gradually decreases over time.  This "aging" prevents the mobile node   from building up credit over a long time.  A malicious node with a   slow Internet connection could otherwise provision for a burst of   redirected packets that does not relate to its own upstream capacity.   Allocating the mobile node's credit based on the packets that the   mobile node sends and reducing the credit based on packets that the   mobile node receives is defined as "Inbound Mode".  (The   correspondent node is in control of credit allocation, and it   computes the credit based on inbound packets received from the mobile   node.)  A nice property of Inbound Mode is that it does not require   support from the mobile node.  The mobile node neither needs to   understand that Credit-Based Authorization is effective at the   correspondent node, nor does it have to have an idea of how much   credit it has at a particular point in time.   Inbound Mode works fine with applications that send comparable data   volumes into both directions.  On the other hand, the mode may   prevent the mobile node from collecting the amount of credit it needs   for a handoff when applications with asymmetric traffic patterns are   in use.  For instance, file transfers and media streaming are   characterized by high throughput towards the client, typically the   mobile node, and comparably little throughput towards the serving   correspondent node.   An additional "Outbound Mode" was designed to better accommodate   applications with asymmetric traffic patterns.  In Outbound Mode,   packets that the correspondent node sends to the mobile node   determine both, how much the credit increases while the current   care-of address is verified, and how much the credit shrinks while   the care-of address is unverified.  This resolves the issue with   asymmetric traffic patterns.   The security of Outbound Mode is based on the further hypothesis that   the mobile node invests comparable effort for packet reception and   transmission in terms of bandwidth, memory, and processing capacity.   This justifies why credit, allocated for packets received by the   mobile node, can be turned into packets that the correspondent node   sends.  The question is, though, how the correspondent node can   determine how many of the packets sent to a mobile node are actually   received and processed by that mobile node.  Relying on transport-   layer acknowledgments is not an option as such messages can easily be   faked.  Outbound Mode hence defines its own feedback mechanism,   Care-of Address Spot Checks, which is robust to spoofing.  The   correspondent node periodically tags packets that it sends to the   mobile node with a random, unguessable number, a so-called Spot Check   Token.  When the mobile node receives a packet with an attached SpotVogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   Check Token, it buffers the token until it sends the next packet to   the correspondent node.  The Spot Check Token is then included in   this packet.  Upon reception, the correspondent node verifies whether   the returned Spot Check Token matches a token recently sent to the   mobile node.  New credit is allocated in proportion to the ratio   between the number of successfully returned Spot Check Tokens and the   total number of tokens sent.  This implies that new credit is   approximately proportional to the fraction of packets that have made   their way at least up to the mobile node's IP stack.  The preciseness   of Care-of Address Spot Checks can be traded with overhead through   the frequency with which packets are tagged with Spot Check Tokens.   An interesting question is whether Outbound Mode could be misused by   an attacker with asymmetric Internet connection.  Widespread digital   subscriber lines (DSL), for example, typically have a much higher   download rate than upload rate.  The limited upload rate would render   most denial-of-service attempts through direct flooding meaningless.   But the attacker could leverage the strong download rate to build up   credit at one or multiple correspondent nodes.  It could then   illegitimately spend the credit on a stronger, redirection-based   flooding attack.  The reason why this has so far not been considered   an issue is that, in order to accumulate enough credit at the remote   end, the attacker would first have to expose itself to the same   packet flood that it could then redirect towards the victim.3.8.  Heuristic Monitoring   Heuristic approaches to prevent misuse of unverified care-of   addresses (seeSection 3.5) are conceivable as well.  A heuristic,   implemented at the correspondent node and possibly supplemented by a   restrictive lifetime limit for tentative bindings, can prevent, or at   least effectually discourage such misuse.  The challenge here seems   to be a feasible heuristic:  On one hand, the heuristic must be   sufficiently rigid to quickly respond to malicious intents at the   other side.  On the other hand, it should not have a negative impact   on a fair-minded mobile node's communications.   Another problem with heuristics is that they are usually reactive.   The correspondent node can only respond to misbehavior after it   appeared.  If sanctions are imposed quickly, attacks may simply not   be worthwhile.  Yet premature measures should be avoided.  One must   also bear in mind that an attacker may be able to use different home   addresses, and it is in general impossible for the correspondent node   to see that the set of home addresses belongs to the same node.  The   attacker may furthermore exploit multiple correspondent nodes for its   attack in an attempt to amplify the result.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 20073.9.  Crypto-Based Identifiers   A Crypto-Based Identifier (CBID) is an identifier with a strong   cryptographic binding to the public component of its owner's   public/private-key pair [33].  This allows the owner to prove its   claim on the CBID:  It signs a piece of data with its private key and   sends this to the verifier along with its public key and the   parameters necessary to recompute the CBID.  The verifier recomputes   the CBID and checks the owner's knowledge of the corresponding   private key.   CBIDs offer three main advantages:  First, spoofing attacks against a   CBID are much harder than attacks against a non-cryptographic   identifier like a domain name or a Mobile IPv6 home address.  Though   an attacker can always create its own CBID, it is unlikely to find a   public/private-key pair that produces someone else's.  Second, a CBID   does not depend on a PKI given its inherent binding to the owner's   public key.  Third, a CBID can be used to bind a public key to an IP   address, in which case it is called a Cryptographically Generated   Address (CGA) [44][34][47].  A CGA is syntactically just an ordinary   IPv6 address.  It has a standard routing prefix and an interface   identifier generated from a hash on the CGA owner's public key and   additional parameters.   Many applications are conceivable where CGAs are advantageous.  In   Mobile IPv6, CGAs can bind a mobile node's home address to its public   key [35][5] and so avoid the home-address test in most correspondent   registrations.  This accelerates the registration process and allows   the peers to communicate independently of home-agent availability.   Since only the interface identifier of a CGA is cryptographically   protected, its network prefix can be spoofed, and flooding attacks   against networks are still an issue.  An initial home-address test is   hence required to validate the network prefix even when the home   address is a CGA.  For the same reason, CGAs are rarely used as   care-of addresses.   One limitation of CGAs compared to other types of CBIDs is that the   cryptographically protected portion is only at most 62 bits long.   The rest of the address is occupied by a 64-bit network prefix as   well as the universal/local and individual/group bits.  (The   specification in [44] further hard-codes a 3-bit security parameter   into the address, reducing the cryptographically protected portion to   59 bits.)  A brute-force attack might thus reveal a public/private   key public/private-key pair that produces a certain CGA.  This   vulnerability can be contained by including the network prefix in the   hash computation for the interface identifier so that an attacker, inVogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   case it did find the right public/private key public/private-key   pair, could not form CGAs for multiple networks from it.   To resolve collisions in generating CGAs, a collision count is part   of the input to the hash function.  Changing this produces a   different CGA.  Unfortunately, the collision count also reduces the   complexity of a brute-force attack against a CGA because it allows   the same private/public-key pair to be used to generate multiple   CGAs.  The collision count is therefore limited to a few values only.   Higher security can be achieved through longer CBIDs.  For example, a   node's primary identifier in the Host Identity Protocol [21] is a   128-bit hash on the node's public key.  It is used as an IP-address   replacement at stack layers above IP.  This CBID is not routable, so   there needs to be some external localization mechanism if a node   wants to contact a peer of which it only knows the identifier.3.10.  Pre-Configuration   Where mobile and correspondent nodes can be pre-configured with a   shared key, bound to the mobile node's home address, authentication   through a home-address test can be replaced by a cryptographic   mechanism.  This has three advantages.  First, cryptography allows   for stronger authentication than address tests.  Second, strong   authentication facilitates binding lifetimes longer than the 7-   minute limit thatRFC 3775 defines for correspondent registrations.   Third, handoff delays are usually shorter with cryptographic   approaches because the round-trips of the home-address test can be   spared.  The disadvantage of pre-configuration is its limited   applicability.   Two proposals for pre-configuration are currently under discussion   within the IETF.  [25] endows mobile nodes with the information they   need to compute home and care-of keygen tokens themselves rather than   having to obtain them through the return-routability procedure. [15]   uses the Internet Key Exchange protocol to establish an IPsec   security association between the peers.   From a technical standpoint, pre-configuration can only replace a   home-address test.  A test of the care-of address is still necessary   to verify the mobile node's presence at that address.  The problem is   circumvented in [25] by postulating that the correspondent node has   sufficient trust in the mobile node to believe that the care-of   address is correct.  This assumption discourages the use of pre-   configuration in scenarios where such trust is unavailable, however.   For example, a mobile-phone operator may be able to configure   subscribers with secret keys for authorization to a particular   service, but it may not be able to vouch that all subscribers useVogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   this service in a responsible manner.  And even if users are   trustworthy, their mobile nodes may become infected with malware and   start behaving unreliably.   Another way to avoid care-of-address verification is to rely on   access networks to filter out packets with incorrect IP source   addresses [38][43].  This approach is taken in [15].  The problem   with local filtering is that it can only protect a network from   becoming the source of an attack, not from falling victim to an   attack.  The technique is hence potentially unreliable unless   deployed in access networks worldwide (seeSection 1.2).   Care-of-address tests facilitate the use of pre-configuration in   spite of lacking trust relationships or the existence of access   networks without local filtering techniques.  For increased   performance, concurrent care-of-address tests can be used in   combination with Credit-Based Authorization or heuristic monitoring.3.11.  Semi-Permanent Security Associations   A compromise between the return-routability procedure and pre-   configuration are semi-permanent security associations.  A semi-   permanent security association is established between a mobile node   and a correspondent node upon first contact, and it is used to   authenticate the mobile node during subsequent correspondent   registrations.  Semi-permanent security associations eliminate the   need for periodic home-address tests and permit correspondent   registrations with lifetimes longer than the 7-minute limit specified   inRFC 3775.   It is important to verify a mobile node's home address before a   security association is bound to it.  An impersonator could otherwise   create a security association for a victim's IP address and then   redirect the victim's traffic at will until the security association   expires.  An initial home-address test mitigates this vulnerability   because it requires the attacker to be on the path between the victim   and the victim's peer at least while the security association is   being established.  Stronger security can be obtained through   cryptographically generated home addresses (seeSection 3.9).   Semi-permanent security associations alone provide no verification of   care-of addresses and must therefore be supplemented by care-of-   address tests.  These may be performed concurrently for reduced   handoff delays.  Semi-permanent security associations were first   developed in [8] where they were called "purpose-built keys".Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 20073.12.  DelegationSection 1.1 lists numerous problems of PKIs with respect to   authentication of mobile nodes.  These problems become more   tractable, however, if correspondent nodes authenticate home agents   rather than mobile nodes, and the home agents vouch for the   authenticity and trustworthiness of the mobile nodes [37].  Such   delegation of responsibilities solves the scalability issue with PKIs   given that home agents can be expected to be much less numerous than   mobile nodes.  Certificate revocation becomes less delicate as well   because home agents are commonly administrated by a mobility provider   and should as such be more accountable than mobile nodes.   Another advantage of delegation is that it avoids public-key   computations at mobile nodes.  On the other hand, the processing   overhead at correspondent nodes increases.  This may or may not be an   issue depending on resources available at the correspondent node   relative to the services that the correspondent node provides.  The   correspondent node may also be mobile itself, in which case   cryptographic operations would be problematic.  Furthermore, the   increased overhead implies a higher risk to resource-exhaustion   attacks.3.13.  Mobile Networks   Mobile nodes may move as a group and attach to the Internet via a   "mobile router" that stays with the group.  This happens, for   example, in trains or aircraft where passengers communicate via a   local wireless network that is globally interconnected through a   satellite link.   It is straightforward to support such network mobility [41] with a   single home agent and a tunnel between the mobile router and this   home agent.  The mobile nodes themselves then do not have to be   mobility-aware.  However, Route Optimization for moving networks   [36][26][27][55] is more complicated.  One possibility is to have the   mobile router handle Route Optimization on behalf of the mobile   nodes.  This requires the mobile router to modify incoming and   outgoing packets such that they can be routed on the direct path   between the end nodes.  The mobile router would also have to perform   Mobile IPv6 signaling on behalf of the mobile nodes.  Similarly, a   network of correspondent nodes can communicate with mobile nodes,   through a "correspondent router", in a route-optimized way without   providing mobility support themselves.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 20073.14.  Location PrivacyRFC 3775 fails to conceal a mobile node's current position as route-   optimized packets always carry both home and care-of addresses.  Both   the correspondent node and a third party can therefore track the   mobile node's whereabouts.  A workaround is to fall back to   bidirectional tunneling where location privacy is needed.  Packets   carrying the mobile node's care-of address are thus only transferred   between the mobile node and the home agent, where they can be   encrypted through IPsec ESP [42].  But even then should the mobile   node periodically re-establish its IPsec security associations so as   to become untraceable through its SPIs.  Early efforts on location   privacy in Route Optimization include [17][13][24][30].4.  Discussion   Common to the proposals discussed inSection 3 is that all of them   affect a trade-off between effectiveness, on one hand, and economical   deployability, administrative overhead, and wide applicability, on   the other.  Effectiveness may be equated with low latency, strong   security, reduced signaling, or increased robustness.  Economy   implies no, or only moderate requirements in terms of hardware   upgrades and software modifications.  Administrative overhead relates   to the amount of manual configuration and intervention that a   technique needs.   The standard return-routability procedure avoids costly pre-   configuration or new network entities.  This minimizes both   deployment investments as well as administrative expenses.  Variants   with optimistic behavior and proactive or concurrent IP-address tests   have these advantages as well.  CBIDs allow for public-key   authentication without a PKI.  They constitute a more secure   alternative to home-address tests and are as such most effective when   combined with concurrent reachability verification.  CBID-based   authentication may require nodes to be programmed with a mapping   between human-readable identifiers and the corresponding CBIDs.   Pre-configuration is another approach to avoid home-address tests.   It does without computationally expensive public-key algorithms, but   requires pair-wise credentials and, therefore, administrative   maintenance.  Where suitable infrastructure is available, end nodes   may delegate authentication and encryption tasks to trusted network   entities which, in turn, vouch for the end nodes.  Delegation could   resurrect the use of certificates for the purpose of mobility   support.  But it introduces a dependency on the delegatees, adds the   provisioning costs for new network entities, and is likely to be   limited to communities of authorized nodes.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 22]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 20074.1.  Cross-Layer Interactions   The performance of Route Optimization, as evaluated in this document,   should be put into perspective of handoff-related activities in other   parts of the network stack.  These include link-layer attachment   procedures; link-layer security mechanisms such as negotiation,   authentication, and key agreement; as well as IPv6 router discovery,   address configuration, and movement detection.  A complete network   attachment in a typical IEEE 802.11 commercial deployment requires   over twenty link- and IP-layer messages.  Current protocol stacks   also have a number of limitations in addition to long attachment   delays, such as denial-of-service vulnerabilities, difficulties in   trusting a set of access nodes distributed to physically insecure   locations, or the inability to retrieve sufficient information for   making a handoff decision [2].   A number of proposals have been put forth to improve handoff   performance on different parts of the network stack, mostly focusing   on handoff performance.  These include link-layer parameter tuning   [49] and network-access authentication [18][2][32], as well as IPv6   router discovery [11][12], address configuration [23], and movement   detection [19][20].  It is uncertain how far this optimization can be   taken by only looking at the different parts individually.  An   integrated approach may eventually become necessary [4][53].4.2.  Experimentation and Measurements   The number and diversity of mobility-related activities within a   typical network stack oftentimes render theoretical analyses   insufficient and call for additional, extensive experimentation or   simulation.  The following is a non-exhaustive list of areas where   practical experience is likely to yield valuable insight.   o  Conception of a set of standard scenarios that can be used as a      reference for comparable measurements and experimentation.      Ideally, such standard scenarios ought to be derived from real-      world environments, and they should include all features that      would likely be needed in a commercial deployment.  These features      include link-layer access control, for instance.   o  Measurements of the performance impacts that existing enhancement      proposals have on the different parts of the stack.   o  Comparisons of different implementations that are based on the      same specification.  For instance, it would be valuable to know      how much implementations differ with regards to the use of      parallelism thatRFC 3775 allows in home and correspondent      registrations.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 23]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   o  Measurements of the impact that network conditions such as packet      loss can have on existing and new optimizations.   o  Statistical data collection on the behavior of mobile nodes in      different networks.  Several Route Optimization techniques behave      differently depending on the degree of mobility.   o  Measurements of the performance that Route Optimization schemes      show under different application scenarios, such as the use of      applications with symmetric vs. asymmetric traffic patterns.4.3.  Future Research   Future research that goes beyond the techniques discussed in this   document may consider the following items.   o  Local mobility support or local route-repair mechanisms that do      not require expensive configuration.  This includes      infrastructure-based Route Optimization like [48].   o  Care-of-address verification mechanisms that are based on Secure      Neighbor Discovery.   o  The introduction of optimizations developed in the context of      Mobile IPv6 to other mobility protocols, such as the Host Identity      Protocol, the Stream Control Transmission Protocol, the Datagram      Congestion Control Protocol, or link-layer mobility solutions.   o  The extension of the developed mobility techniques to full multi-      addressing, including multi-homing.   o  Further strategies that are based on "asymmetric cost wars" [3],      such as Credit-Based Authorization.   o  Integrated techniques taking into account both link- and IP-layer      mobility tasks.5.  Security Considerations   Standard Route Optimization enables mobile nodes to redirect IP   packets at a remote peer from one IP address to another IP address.   This ability introduces new security issues, which are explained and   discussed in depth in [46].  The alternative Route Optimization   techniques described in this document may introduce new security   threats that go beyond those identified in [46].  Where such new   threats exist, they are discussed and analyzed along with the   description of the respective technique inSection 3.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 24]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 20076.  Conclusions   Mobile IPv6 Route Optimization reduces packet-propagation latencies   so as to facilitate interactive and real-time applications in mobile   environments.  Unfortunately, the end-to-end protocol's high handoff   latencies hinder exactly these applications.  A large body of effort   has therefore recently been dedicated to Route Optimization   improvements.  Some of the proposed techniques operate on an end-to-   end basis, others require new or extended infrastructure in the   network; some need pre-configuration, others are zero-configurable.   This document has compared and evaluated the different strategies   based on a selected set of enhancement proposals.  It stands out that   all proposals make a trade-off between effectiveness, on one hand --   be it in terms of reduced handoff latency, increased security, or   lower signaling overhead -- and pre-configuration costs or requisite   network upgrades, on the other.  An optimization's investment   requirements, in turn, are in relation to its suitability for   widespread deployment.   However, the real-life performance of end-to-end mobility does not   only depend on enhancements of Route Optimization, but ultimately on   all parts of the protocol stack [2].  Related optimization endeavors   are in fact gaining momentum, and a comprehensive approach towards   Route Optimization must incorporate the most suitable solutions   amongst them [4].  Whichever proposals will eventually reach a   maturity level sufficient for standardization, any effort should be   expended to arrive at that point within the foreseeable future.   Route Optimization requires support from both peers and depends on a   solid basis of installed implementations in correspondent nodes.   This should hence be included in emerging IPv6 stacks early on.   Although IPv6 deployment is yet far away from becoming widespread,   the sooner efficient Route Optimization will be available, the more   likely that it will in the end be ubiquitously supported.7.  Acknowledgments   This document was thoroughly reviewed, in alphabetical order, by   Samita Chakrabarti, Francis Dupont, Thierry Ernst, Gerardo Giaretta,   James Kempf, Rajeev Koodli, Gabriel Montenegro, Vidya Narayanan, and   Fan Zhao.  The authors wish to thank these folks for their valuable   comments and suggestions.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 25]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 20078.  References8.1.  Normative References   [1]   Johnson, D., Perkins, C., and J. Arkko, "Mobility Support in         IPv6",RFC 3775, June 2004.8.2.  Informative References   [2]   Alimian, A. and B. Aboba, "Analysis of Roaming Techniques",         IEEE Contribution 802.11-04/0377r1, March 2004.   [3]   Arkko, J. and P. Nikander, "Weak Authentication: How to         Authenticate Unknown Principals without Trusted Parties",         Proceedings of Security Protocols Workshop 2002, Cambridge, UK,         April 2002.   [4]   Arkko, J., Eronen, P., Nikander, P., and V. Torvinen, "Secure         and Efficient Network Access", Proceedings of the DIMACS         Workshop on Mobile and Wireless Security, November 2004.   [5]   Arkko, J., Vogt, C., and W. Haddad, "Enhanced Route         Optimization for Mobile IPv6", Work in Progress, August 2006.   [6]   Arkko, J. and C. Vogt, "Credit-Based Authorization for Binding         Lifetime Extension", Work in Progress, May 2004.   [7]   Bahl, P., Adya, A., Padhye, J., and A. Walman, "Reconsidering         Wireless Systems With Multiple Radios", ACM SIGCOMM Computer         Communication Review, ACM Press, Vol. 34, No. 5, October 2004.   [8]   Bradner, S., Mankin, A., and J. Schiller, "A Framework for         Purpose-Built Keys (PBK)", Work in Progress, June 2003.   [9]   Castellucia, C., Montenegro, G., Laganier, J., and C. Neumann,         "Hindering Eavesdropping via IPv6 Opportunistic Encryption",         Proceedings of the European Symposium on Research in Computer         Security, Lecture Notes in Computer Science, Springer-Verlag,         September 2004.   [10]  Chandra, R., Bahl, P., and P. Bahl, "MultiNet: Connecting to         Multiple IEEE 802.11 Networks Using a Single Wireless Card",         Proceedings of the IEEE INFOCOM, Vol. 2, August 2004.   [11]  Daley, G., Pentland, B., and R. Nelson, "Effects of Fast         Routers Advertisement on Mobile IPv6 Handovers", Proceedings of         the IEEE International Symposium on Computers and         Communication, Vol. 1, June 2003.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 26]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   [12]  Daley, G., Pentland, B., and R. Nelson, "Movement Detection         Optimizations in Mobile IPv6", Proceedings of the IEEE         International Conference on Networks, September 2003.   [13]  Daley, G.,"Location Privacy and Mobile IPv6", Work in         Progress, January 2004.   [14]  Dupont, F.,"A Note about 3rd Party Bombing in Mobile IPv6",         Work in Progress, July 2006.   [15]  Dupont, F. and J. Combes, "Using IPsec between Mobile and         Correspondent IPv6 Nodes", Work in Progress, August 2004.   [16]  Dupont, F. and J. Combes, "Care-of Address Test for MIPv6 using         a State Cookie", Work in Progress, July 2006.   [17]  Haddad, W., Nordmark, E., Dupont, F., Bagnulo, M., and B.         Patil, "Privacy for Mobile and Multi-homed Nodes: MoMiPriv         Problem Statement", Work in Progress, June 2006.   [18]  "IEEE Standard for Local and Metropolitan Area Networks: Port-         Based Network Access Control", IEEE Standard 802.1X, December         2004.   [19]  Choi, J. and E. Nordmark, "DNA with Unmodified Routers: Prefix         List Based Approach", Work in Progress, January 2006.   [20]  Narayanan, S., Ed., "Detecting Network Attachment in IPv6         Networks (DNAv6)", Work in Progress, October 2006.   [21]  Moskowitz, R., Nikander, P., Jokela, Ed., P., and T. Henderson,         "Host Identity Protocol", Work in Progress, June 2006.   [22]  Henderson, T., Ed., "End-Host Mobility and Multihoming with the         Host Identity Protocol", Work in Progress, June 2006.   [23]  Moore, N., "Optimistic Duplicate Address Detection (DAD) for         IPv6",RFC 4429, April 2006.   [24]  Koodli, R., "IP Address Location Privacy and Mobile IPv6:         Problem Statement", Work in Progress, October 2006.   [25]  Perkins, C., "Securing Mobile IPv6 Route Optimization Using a         Static Shared Key",RFC 4449, June 2006.   [26]  Ng, C., Thubert, P., Watari, M., and F. Zhao, "Network Mobility         Route Optimization Problem Statement", Work in Progress,         September 2006.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 27]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   [27]  Ng, C., Zhao, F., Watari, M., and P. Thubert, "Network Mobility         Route Optimization Solution Space Analysis", Work in Progress,         September 2006.   [28]  Arbaugh, W. and B. Aboba,"Handoff Extension to RADIUS", Work         in Progress, October 2003.   [29]  "Kame-Shisa", Mobile IPv6 for FreeBSD.   [30]  Koodli, R., Devarapalli, V., Flinck, H., and C. Perkins,         "Solutions for IP Address Location Privacy in the Presence of         IP Mobility", Work in Progress, February 2005.   [31]  Nuorvala, V., Petander, H., and A. Tuominen, "Mobile IPv6 for         Linux (MIPL)".   [32]  Mishra, A., Shin, M., Petroni Jr., N., Clancy, C., and W.         Arbaugh, "Proactive Key Distribution Using Neighbor Graphs",         IEEE Wireless Communications, Vol. 11, No. 1, February 2004.   [33]  Montenegro, G. and Claude. Castelluccia, "Crypto-Based         Identifiers (CBIDs): Concepts and Applications", ACM         Transactions on Information and System Security Vol.7, No. 1,         February 2004.   [34]  Nikander, P., "Denial-of-Service, Address Ownership, and Early         Authentication in the IPv6 World", Revised papers from the         International Workshop on Security Protocols, Springer-Verlag,         April 2002.   [35]  O'Shea, G. and M. Roe, "Child-proof Authentication for MIPv6",         ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review, April 2001.   [36]  Perera, E., Sivaraman, V., and A. Seneviratne, "Survey on         Network Mobility Support", ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication         Review, Vol. 8, No. 2, ACM Press, April 2004.    [37]  Bao, F., Deng, R., Qiu, Y., and J. Zhou, "Certificate-         basedBinding Update Protocol (CBU)", Work in Progress, March         2005.   [38]  Ferguson, P. and D. Senie, "Network Ingress Filtering:         Defeating Denial of Service Attacks which employ IP Source         Address Spoofing",BCP 38,RFC 2827, May 2000.   [39]  Abley, J., Black, B., and V. Gill, "Goals for IPv6 Site-         Multihoming Architectures",RFC 3582, August 2003.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 28]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   [40]  Arkko, J., Devarapalli, V., and F. Dupont, "Using IPsec to         Protect Mobile IPv6 Signaling Between Mobile Nodes and Home         Agents",RFC 3776, June 2004.   [41]  Devarapalli, V., Wakikawa, R., Petrescu, A., and P. Thubert,         "Network Mobility (NEMO) Basic Support Protocol",RFC 3963,         January 2005.   [42]  Kent, S., "IP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)",RFC 4303,         December 2005.   [43]  Baker, F. and P. Savola, "Ingress Filtering for Multihomed         Networks",BCP 84,RFC 3704, March 2004.   [44]  Aura, T., "Cryptographically Generated Addresses (CGA)",RFC3972, March 2005.   [45]  Huston, G., "Architectural Approaches to Multi-homing for         IPv6",RFC 4177, September 2005.   [46]  Nikander, P., Arkko, J., Aura, T., Montenegro, G., and E.         Nordmark, "Mobile IP Version 6 Route Optimization Security         Design Background",RFC 4225, December 2005.   [47]  Roe, M., Aura, T., O'Shea, G., and J. Arkko, "Authentication of         Mobile IPv6 Binding Updates and Acknowledgments", Work in         Progress, February 2002.   [48]  Vadali, R., Li, J., Wu, Y., and G. Cao, "Agent-Based Route         Optimization for Mobile IP", Proceedings of the IEEE Vehicular         Technology Conference, October 2001.   [49]  Velayos, H. and G. Karlsson, "Techniques to Reduce IEEE 802.11b         MAC Layer Handoff Time", Laboratory for Communication Networks,         KTH, Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden, TRITA-         IMIT-LCN R 03:02, April 2003.   [50]  Vogt, C., "Credit-Based Authorization for Concurrent IP-Address         Tests", Proceedings of the IST Mobile and Wireless         Communications Summit, June 2005.   [51]  Vogt, C., Bless, R., Doll, M., and T. Kuefner, "Early Binding         Updates for Mobile IPv6", Proceedings of the IEEE Wireless         Communications and Networking Conference, IEEE, Vol. 3, March         2005.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 29]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007   [52]  Vogt, C. and M. Doll, "Efficient End-to-End Mobility Support in         IPv6", Proceedings of the IEEE Wireless Communications and         Networking Conference, April 2006.   [53]  Vogt, C., "A Comprehensive Delay Analysis for Reactive and         Proactive Handoffs with Mobile IPv6 Route Optimization",         Institute of Telematics, Universitaet Karlsruhe (TH),         Karlsruhe, Germany, TM-2006-1, January 2006.   [54]  Zhao, F., Wu, F., and S. Jung, "Extensions to Return         Routability Test in MIP6", Work in Progress, February 2005.   [55]  Calderon, M., Bernardos, C., Bagnulo, M., Soto, I., and A. de         la Oliva, "Design and Experimental Evaluation of a Route         Optimisation Solution for NEMO", IEEE Journal on Selected Areas         in Communications, Vol. 24, No. 9, September 2006.Authors' Addresses   Christian Vogt   Institute of Telematics   Universitaet Karlsruhe (TH)   P.O. Box 6980   76128 Karlsruhe   Germany   EMail: chvogt@tm.uka.de   Jari Arkko   Ericsson Research NomadicLab   FI-02420 Jorvas   Finland   EMail: jari.arkko@ericsson.comVogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 30]

RFC 4651          MIP6 Route Optimization Enhancements     February 2007Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The IETF Trust (2007).   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, THE IETF TRUST 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.Vogt & Arkko                 Informational                     [Page 31]

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