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PROPOSED STANDARD
Network Working Group                                       L-E. JonssonRequest for Comments: 4815                                   K. SandlundUpdates:3095,3241,3843,4019,4362                       G. PelletierCategory: Standards Track                                      P. Kremer                                                           February 2007RObust Header Compression (ROHC):Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095Status 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 IETF Trust (2007).AbstractRFC 3095 defines the RObust Header Compression (ROHC) framework and   profiles for IP (Internet Protocol), UDP (User Datagram Protocol),   RTP (Real-Time Transport Protocol), and ESP (Encapsulating Security   Payload).  Some parts of the specification are unclear or contain   errors that may lead to misinterpretations that may impair   interoperability between different implementations.  This document   provides corrections, additions, and clarifications toRFC 3095; this   document thus updatesRFC 3095.  In addition, other clarifications   related toRFC 3241 (ROHC over PPP),RFC 3843 (ROHC IP profile) andRFC 4109 (ROHC UDP-Lite profiles) are also provided.Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 1]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007Table of Contents1. Introduction and Terminology ....................................32. CRC Calculation and Coverage ....................................42.1. CRC Calculation ............................................42.2. Padding Octet and CRC Calculations .........................42.3. CRC Coverage in CRC Feedback Options .......................52.4. CRC Coverage of the ESP NULL Header ........................53. Mode Transition .................................................53.1. Feedback During Mode Transition to U- and O-Mode ...........5           3.1.1. Mode Transition Procedures Allowing Sparse Feedback .63.1.2. Transition from Reliable to Optimistic Mode .........73.1.3. Transition to Unidirectional Mode ...................83.2. Feedback During Mode Transition ............................83.3. Packet Decoding During Mode Transition .....................94. Timestamp Encoding ..............................................94.1. Encoding Used for Compressed TS Bits .......................94.2. (De)compression of TS without Transmitted TS Bits .........104.3. Interpretation Intervals for TS Encoding ..................114.4. Scaled RTP Timestamp Encoding .............................114.4.1. TS_STRIDE for Scaled Timestamp Encoding ............114.4.2. TS Wraparound with Scaled Timestamp Encoding .......124.4.3. Algorithm for Scaled Timestamp Encoding ............124.5. Recalculating TS_OFFSET ...................................144.6. TS_STRIDE and the Tsc Flag in Extension 3 .................144.7. Using Timer-Based Compression .............................155. List Compression ...............................................155.1. CSRC List Items in RTP Dynamic Chain ......................155.2. Multiple Occurrences of the CC Field ......................155.3. Bit Masks in List Compression .............................165.4. Headers Compressed with List Compression ..................165.5. ESP NULL Header List Compression ..........................175.6. Translation Tables and Indexes for IP Extension Headers ...175.7. Reference List ............................................175.8. Compression of AH and GRE Sequence Numbers ................186. Updating Properties ............................................196.1. Implicit Updates ..........................................196.2. Updating Properties of UO-1* ..............................206.3. Context Updating Properties for IR Packets ................206.4. RTP Padding Field (R-P) in Extension 3 ....................206.5. RTP eXtension bit (X) in dynamic part .....................217. Context management and CID/context Reuse .......................217.1. Persistence of Decompressor Contexts ......................217.2. CID/Context Reuse .........................................217.2.1. Reusing a CID/Context with the Same Profile ........227.2.2. Reusing a CID/Context with a Different Profile .....238. Other Protocol Clarifications ..................................238.1. Meaning of NBO ............................................23Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 2]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 20078.2. IP-ID .....................................................238.3. Extension-3 in UOR-2* Packets .............................248.4. Multiple Occurrences of the M Bit .........................248.5. Multiple SN options in one feedback packet ................248.6. Multiple CRC Options in One Feedback Packet ...............258.7. Responding to Lost Feedback Links .........................258.8. UOR-2 in Profile 0x0002 (UDP) and Profile 0x0003 (ESP) ....258.9. Sequence Number LSB's in IP Extension Headers .............258.10. Expecting UOR-2 ACKs in O-Mode ...........................268.11. Context Repairs, TS_STRIDE and TIME_STRIDE ...............269. ROHC Negotiation ...............................................2710. PROFILES Sub-option in ROHC-over-PPP ..........................2711. Constant IP-ID Encoding in IP-only and UPD-Lite Profiles ......2712. Security Considerations .......................................2813. Acknowledgments ...............................................2814. References ....................................................2814.1. Normative References .....................................2814.2. Informative References ...................................29Appendix A. Sample CRC Algorithm ..................................301.  Introduction and TerminologyRFC 3095 [1] defines the RObust Header Compression (ROHC) framework   and profiles for IP (Internet Protocol) [8][9], UDP (User Datagram   Protocol) [10], RTP (Real-Time Transport Protocol) [11], and ESP   (Encapsulating Security Payload) [12].  During implementation and   interoperability testing ofRFC 3095, some ambiguities and common   misinterpretations have been identified, as well as a few errors.   This document summarizes identified issues and provides corrections   needed for implementations ofRFC 3095 to interoperate, i.e., it   constitutes an update toRFC 3095.  This document also provides other   clarifications related to common misinterpretations of the   specification.  References toRFC 3095 should, therefore, also   include this document.   In addition, some clarifications and corrections are also provided   forRFC 3241 (ROHC over PPP) [2],RFC 3843 (ROHC IP-only profile)   [4], andRFC 4019 (ROHC UDP-Lite profiles) [5], which are thus also   updated by this document.  Furthermore,RFC 4362 (ROHC Link-Layer   Assisted Profile) [7] is implicitly updated by this document, sinceRFC 4362 is also based onRFC 3095.   The 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 inRFC 2119 [6].Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 3]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007   When a section of this document makes formal corrections, additions   or invalidations to text inRFC 3095, this is clearly summarized.   The text fromRFC 3095 that is being addressed is given and labeled   "INCOMPLETE", "INCORRECT", or "INCORRECT AND INVALIDATED", followed   by the correct text labeled "CORRECTED", where applicable.  When text   is added that does not simply correct text in previous   specifications, it is given with the label "FORMAL ADDITION".   In this document, a reference to a section inRFC 3095 [1] is written   asRFC 3095-Section <number>.2.  CRC Calculation and Coverage2.1.  CRC CalculationRFC 3095-Section 5.9 defines polynomials for 3-, 7-, and 8-bit Cyclic   Redundancy Checks (CRCs), but it does not specify what algorithm is   used.  The 3-, 7- and 8-bit CRCs are calculated using the CRC   algorithm defined in [3].   A Perl implementation of the algorithm can be found inAppendix A of   this document.2.2.  Padding Octet and CRC CalculationsRFC 3095-Section 5.9.1 is incomplete, as it does not mention how to   handle the padding octet in CRC calculations for IR and IR-DYN   packets.  Padding isn't meant to be a meaningful part of a packet and   is not included in the CRC calculation.  As a result, the CRC does   not cover the Add-CID octet for CID 0, either.   INCOMPLETERFC 3095 TEXT (RFC 3095-Section 5.9.1):      "The CRC in the IR and IR-DYN packet is calculated over the entire       IR or IR-DYN packet, excluding Payload and including CID or any       Add-CID octet."   CORRECTED TEXT:      "The CRC in the IR and IR-DYN packet is calculated over the entire       IR or IR-DYN packet, excluding Payload, Padding and including CID       or any Add-CID octet, except for the add-CID octet for CID 0."Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 4]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 20072.3.  CRC Coverage in CRC Feedback OptionsRFC 3095-Section 5.7.6.3 is incomplete, as it does not mention how   the "size" field is handled when calculating the 8-bit CRC used in   the CRC feedback option.  Since the "size" field is an extension of   the "code" field, it must be treated in the same way.   INCOMPLETERFC 3095 TEXT (RFC 3095-Section 5.7.6.3):      "The CRC option contains an 8-bit CRC computed over the entire       feedback payload, without the packet type and code octet, but       including any CID fields, using the polynomial ofsection 5.9.1."   CORRECTED TEXT:      "The CRC option contains an 8-bit CRC computed over the entire       feedback payload including any CID fields but excluding the       packet type, the 'Size' field and the 'Code' octet, using the       polynomial ofSection 5.9.1."2.4.  CRC Coverage of the ESP NULL HeaderRFC 3095-Section 5.8.7 gives the CRC coverage of the ESP NULL [13]   header as "Entire ESP header".  This must be interpreted as including   only the initial part of the header (i.e., Security Parameter Index   (SPI) and sequence number), and not the trailer part at the end of   the payload.  Therefore, the ESP NULL header has the same CRC   coverage as the ESP header used in the ESP profile (RFC 3095-Section5.7.7.7).3.  Mode Transition3.1.  Feedback During Mode Transition to U- and O-ModeRFC 3095-Section 5.6.1 states that during mode transitions, while the   D_TRANS parameter is I, the decompressor sends feedback for each   received packet.  This restrictive behavior prevents the decompressor   from using a sparse feedback algorithm during mode transitions.   To reduce transmission overhead and computational complexity   (including CRC calculation) associated with feedback packets sent for   each decompressed packet during mode transition, a decompressor MAY   be implemented with slightly modified mode transition procedures   compared to those defined in [1], as described in this section.   These enhanced procedures should be considered only as a possible   improvement to a decompressor implementation, since interoperability   is not affected in any way.  A decompressor implemented according toJonsson, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 5]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007   the optimized procedures will interoperate with anRFC 3095   compressor, as well as a decompressor implemented according to the   procedures described inRFC 3095.3.1.1.  Mode Transition Procedures Allowing Sparse Feedback   The purpose of these enhanced transition procedures is to allow the   decompressor to sparsely send feedback for packets decompressed   during the second half of the transition procedure, i.e., after an   appropriate IR/IR-DYN/UOR-2 packet has been received from the   compressor.  This is achieved by allowing the decompressor transition   parameter (D_TRANS) to be set to P (Pending) at that stage, as shown   in the transition diagrams of Sections3.1.2 and3.1.3 below.   This enhanced transition, where feedback need not be sent for every   decompressed packet, does however introduce some considerations in   case feedback messages would be lost.  Specifically, there is a risk   for a deadlock situation when a transition from R-mode is performed;   if no feedback message successfully reaches the compressor, the   transition is never completed.  For transition between U-mode and   O-mode, there is also a small risk for reduced compression   efficiency.   To avoid this, the decompressor MUST continue to send feedback at   least periodically, as well as when in a Pending transition state.   This is equivalent to enhancing the definition of the D_TRANS   parameter inRFC 3095-Section 5.6.1, to include the definition of a   Pending state:   -  D_TRANS:      Possible values for the D_TRANS parameter are (I)NITIATED,      (P)ENDING, and (D)ONE.  D_TRANS MUST be initialized to D, and a      mode transition can be initiated only when D_TRANS is D.  While      D_TRANS is I, the decompressor sends a NACK or ACK carrying a CRC      option for each packet received.  When D_TRANS is set to P, the      decompressor does not have to send a NACK or ACK for each packet      received, but it MUST continue to send feedback with some      periodicity, and all feedback packets sent MUST include the CRC      option.  This ensures that all mode transitions will be completed      also in case of feedback losses.   The modifications affect transitions to Optimistic and Unidirectional   modes of operation (i.e., the transitions described inRFC 3095-Section 5.6.5 andRFC 3095-Section 5.6.6) and make those transition   diagrams more consistent with the diagram describing the transition   to R-mode.Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 6]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 20073.1.2.  Transition from Reliable to Optimistic Mode   The enhanced procedure for transition from Reliable to Optimistic   mode is shown below:             Compressor                     Decompressor            ----------------------------------------------                  |                               |                  |        ACK(O)/NACK(O) +-<-<-<-| D_TRANS = I                  |       +-<-<-<-<-<-<-<-+       |      C_TRANS = P |-<-<-<-+                       |      C_MODE = O  |                               |                  |->->->-+ IR/IR-DYN/UOR-2(SN,O) |                  |       +->->->->->->->-+       |                  |->-..                  +->->->-| D_TRANS = P                  |->-..                          | D_MODE = O                  |           ACK(SN,O)   +-<-<-<-|                  |       +-<-<-<-<-<-<-<-+       |      C_TRANS = D |-<-<-<-+                       |                  |                               |                  |->->->-+  UO-0, UO-1*          |                  |       +->->->->->->->-+       |                  |                       +->->->-| D_TRANS = D                  |                               |Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 7]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 20073.1.3.  Transition to Unidirectional Mode   The enhanced procedure for transition to Unidirectional mode is shown   on the following figure:                 Compressor                     Decompressor                ----------------------------------------------                  |                               |                  |        ACK(U)/NACK(U) +-<-<-<-| D_TRANS = I                  |       +-<-<-<-<-<-<-<-+       |      C_TRANS = P |-<-<-<-+                       |      C_MODE = U  |                               |                  |->->->-+ IR/IR-DYN/UOR-2(SN,U) |                  |       +->->->->->->->-+       |                  |->-..                  +->->->-| D_TRANS = P                  |->-..                          |                  |           ACK(SN,U)   +-<-<-<-|                  |       +-<-<-<-<-<-<-<-+       |      C_TRANS = D |-<-<-<-+                       |                  |                               |                  |->->->-+  UO-0, UO-1*          |                  |       +->->->->->->->-+       |                  |                       +->->->-| D_TRANS = D                  |                               | D_MODE= U3.2.  Feedback During Mode TransitionRFC 3095-Section 5.6.1 states that feedback is always used during   mode transitions.  However, the text then continues by making   concrete applications of the rule in an inconsistent way, making it   unclear when CRCs are used.  Further, the text does not define how   the compressor should act during mode transitions based on feedback   not protected by CRCs, i.e., whether or not to carry out mode   transition actions.  The proper behavior from the compressor is to   perform any action related to mode transitions only when the feedback   is protected by the CRC option.   INCOMPLETERFC 3095 TEXT (RFC 3095-Section 5.6.1):      "As a safeguard against residual errors, all feedback sent during       a mode transition MUST be protected by a CRC, i.e., the CRC       option MUST be used."   CORRECTED TEXT:       "As a safeguard against residual errors, all feedback sent by the       decompressor during a mode transition MUST be protected by a CRC,       i.e., the CRC option MUST be used.  The compressor MUST ignoreJonsson, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 8]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007       feedback information related to mode transition if the feedback       is not protected by the CRC option."   One more related issue that requires clarifications comes from the   following text at the end ofRFC 3095-Section 5.6.1:      "While D_TRANS is I, the decompressor sends a NACK or ACK carrying       a CRC option for each received packet."   However,RFC 3095-Section 5.5.2.2 already stated that for R-mode,   feedback is never sent for packets that do not update the context,   i.e., for packets that do not carry a CRC, such as R-0 and R-1*.   This means that when D_TRANS=I during mode transition, a decompressor   operating in R-mode sends an acknowledgement for each packet it   receives and MUST use the sequence number that corresponds to the   packet that last updated the context, i.e., the decompressor MUST NOT   use the sequence number of the R-0 or the R-1* packet.3.3.  Packet Decoding During Mode Transition   The purpose of a mode transition is to ensure that the compressor and   the decompressor coherently move from one mode of operation to   another using a three-way handshake.  At one point during the mode   transition, the decompressor acknowledges the reception of one (or   more) IR, IR-DYN or UOR-2 packet(s) that have mode bits set to the   new mode.  Packets of type 0 or type 1 that are received up to this   point are decompressed using the old mode, while afterwards they are   decompressed using the new mode.  If the enhanced transition   procedures described inSection 3.1 are used, the setting of the   D_TRANS parameter to P represents this breakpoint.  The successful   decompression of a packet of type 0 or type 1 completes the mode   transition.4.  Timestamp Encoding4.1.  Encoding Used for Compressed TS Bits   RTP Timestamp (TS) values are always encoded using W-LSB encoding,   both when sent scaled and unscaled.  When no TS bits are transmitted   in a compressed packet, TS is always scaled.  If a compressed packet   carries an Extension 3 and field(Tsc)=0, the compressed packet must   thus always carry unscaled TS bits.  For TS values sent in Extension   3, W-LSB encoded values are sent using the self-describing variable-   length format (RFC 3095-Section 4.5.6), and this applies to both   scaled and unscaled values.Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                     [Page 9]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 20074.2.  (De)compression of TS without Transmitted TS Bits   When ROHC RTP operates using its most efficient packet types, apart   from packet type identification and the error detection CRC, only RTP   sequence number (SN) bits are transmitted in RTP compressed headers.   All other fields are then omitted either because they are unchanged   or because they can be reconstructed through a function from the SN   (i.e., by combining the transmitted SN bits with state information   from the context).  Fields that can be inferred from the SN are the   IP Identification (IP-ID) and the RTP Timestamp (TS).   IP-ID compression and decompression, both with and without   transmitted IP-ID bits in the compressed header, are well defined inRFC 3095-Section 4.5.5 (seeSection 8.2).  For the TS field, however,RFC 3095 only defines how to decompress based on actual TS bits in   the compressed header, either scaled or unscaled, but not how to   infer the TS from the SN when there are no TS bits present in the   compressed header.   When no TS bits are received in the compressed header, the scaled TS   value is reconstructed assuming a linear extrapolation from the SN,   i.e., delta_TS = delta_SN * default-slope, where delta_SN and   delta_TS are both signed integers.RFC 3095-Section 5.7 defines the   potential values for default-slope.   INCOMPLETERFC 3095 TEXT (RFC 3095-Section 5.7):      "If value(Tsc) = 1, Scaled RTP Timestamp encoding is used before       compression (seesection 4.5.3), and default-slope(TS) = 1.       If value(Tsc) = 0, the Timestamp value is compressed as-is, and       default-slope(TS) = value(TS_STRIDE)."   CORRECTED TEXT:      "When a compressed header with no TS bits is received, the scaled       TS value is reconstructed assuming a linear extrapolation from       the SN, i.e., delta_TS = delta_SN * default-slope(TS).       If value(Tsc) = 1, Scaled RTP Timestamp encoding is used before       compression (seeSection 4.5.3), and default-slope(TS) = 1.       If value(Tsc) = 0, the Timestamp value is compressed as-is, and       default-slope(TS) = value(TS_STRIDE).  If a packet with no TS       bits is received with Tsc = 0, the decompressor MUST discard the       packet."Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 10]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007   INCORRECT AND INVALIDATEDRFC 3095 TEXT (SectionRFC 3095-5.5.1.2):       "For example, in a typical case where the string pattern has the       form of non-SN-field = SN * slope + offset, one ACK is enough if       the slope has been previously established by the decompressor       (i.e., only the new offset needs to be synchronized).  Otherwise,       two ACKs are required since the decompressor needs two headers to       learn both the new slope and the new offset."   Consequently, there is no other slope value than the default-slope,   as defined inRFC 3095-Section 5.7.4.3.  Interpretation Intervals for TS EncodingRFC 3095-Section 4.5.4 defines the interpretation interval, p, for   timer-based compression of the RTP timestamp.  However,RFC 3095-Section 5.7 defines a different interpretation interval, which is   defined as the interpretation interval to use for all TS values.  It   is thus unclear which p-value to use, at least for timer-based   compression.   The way this should be interpreted is that the p-value differs   depending on whether or not timer-based compression is enabled.   For timer-based compression (TIME_STRIDE set to a non-zero value),   the interpretation interval is:      p = 2^(k-1) - 1 (as perRFC 3095-Section 4.5.4)   Otherwise, the interpretation interval is:      p = 2^(k-2) - 1 (as perRFC 3095-Section 5.7)4.4.  Scaled RTP Timestamp Encoding   This section redefines the algorithm for scaled RTP timestamp   encoding, defined as a 5-step procedure inRFC 3095-Section 4.5.3.   Two formal errors have been corrected, as described in sub-sections   4.4.1 and 4.4.2 below, and the whole algorithm has been reworked to   be more concise and to use well-defined terminology.  The resulting   text can be found in 4.4.3 below.4.4.1.  TS_STRIDE for Scaled Timestamp EncodingRFC 3095 defines the timestamp stride (TS_STRIDE) as the expected   increase in the timestamp value between two RTP packets with   consecutive sequence numbers.  TS_STRIDE is set by the compressor andJonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 11]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007   explicitly communicated to the decompressor, and it is used as the   scaling factor for scaled TS encoding.   The relation between TS and TS_SCALED, given by the following   equality inRFC 3095-Section 4.5.3, defines the mathematical meaning   of TS_STRIDE:      TS = TS_SCALED * TS_STRIDE + TS_OFFSET   TS_SCALED is incompletely written as TS / TS_STRIDE in the   compression step following the above core equality.  This formula is   incorrect both because it excludes TS_OFFSET and because it would   prevent a TS_STRIDE value of 0, which is an alternative not excluded   by the definition or by the core equality above.  If "/" were a   generally unambiguously defined operation meaning "the integral part   of the result from dividing X by Y", the absence of TS_OFFSET could   be explained, but the formula would still lack a proper output for   TS_STRIDE equal to 0.  The formula of "2. Compression" is thus valid   only with the following requirements:     a) "/" means "the integral part of the result from dividing X by Y"     b) TS_STRIDE>0 (TS is never sent scaled when TS_STRIDE=0)4.4.2.  TS Wraparound with Scaled Timestamp EncodingRFC 3095-Section 4.5.3 states in points 4 and 5 that the compressor   is not required to initialize TS_OFFSET at wraparound, but that it is   required to increase the number of bits sent for the scaled TS value   when there is a TS wraparound.  The decompressor is also required to   detect and cope with TS wraparound, including updating TS_OFFSET.   This method is not interoperable and not robust.  The gain is also   insignificant, as TS wraparound happens very seldomly.  Therefore,   the compressor should reinitialize TS_OFFSET upon TS wraparound, by   sending an unscaled TS.4.4.3.  Algorithm for Scaled Timestamp Encoding   INCORRECTRFC 3095 TEXT (RFC 3095-Section 4.5.3):     "1. Initialization: The compressor sends to the decompressor the         value of TS_STRIDE and the absolute value of one or several TS         fields.  The latter are used by the decompressor to initialize         TS_OFFSET to (absolute value) modulo TS_STRIDE.  Note that         TS_OFFSET is the same regardless of which absolute value is         used, as long as the unscaled TS value does not wrap around;         see 4) below.Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 12]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007      2. Compression: After initialization, the compressor no longer         compresses the original TS values.  Instead, it compresses the         downscaled values: TS_SCALED = TS / TS_STRIDE.  The compression         method could be either W-LSB encoding or the timer-based         encoding described in the next section.      3. Decompression: When receiving the compressed value of         TS_SCALED, the decompressor first derives the value of the         original TS_SCALED.  The original RTP TS is then calculated as         TS = TS_SCALED * TS_STRIDE + TS_OFFSET.      4. Offset at wraparound: Wraparound of the unscaled 32-bit TS will         invalidate the current value of TS_OFFSET used in the equation         above.  For example, let us assume TS_STRIDE = 160 = 0xA0 and         the current TS = 0xFFFFFFF0.  TS_OFFSET is then 0x50 = 80.         Then if the next RTP TS = 0x00000130 (i.e., the increment is         160 * 2 = 320), the new TS_OFFSET should be 0x00000130 modulo         0xA0 = 0x90 = 144.  The compressor is not required to re-         initialize TS_OFFSET at wraparound.  Instead, the decompressor         MUST detect wraparound of the unscaled TS (which is trivial)         and update TS_OFFSET to TS_OFFSET = (Wrapped around unscaled         TS) modulo TS_STRIDE"   CORRECTED TEXT:     "1. Initialization and updating of RTP TS scaling function:  The         compressor sends to the decompressor the value of TS_STRIDE         along with an unscaled TS.  These are both needed by the         decompressor to initialize TS_OFFSET as hdr(TS) modulo         field(TS_STRIDE).  Note that TS_OFFSET is the same for any TS         as long as TS_STRIDE does not change and as long as the         unscaled TS value does not wrap around; see 4) below.      2. Compression: After initialization, the compressor no longer         compresses the unscaled TS values.  Instead, it compresses the         scaled values.  The compression method can be either W-LSB         encoding or timer-based encoding.      3. Decompression: When receiving a (compressed) TS_SCALED, the         field is first decompressed, and the unscaled RTP TS is then         calculated as TS = TS_SCALED * TS_STRIDE + TS_OFFSET.      4. Offset at wraparound: If the value of TS_STRIDE is not equal to         a power of two, wraparound of the unscaled 32-bit TS will         change the value of TS_OFFSET.  When this happens, the         compressor SHOULD reinitialize TS_OFFSET by sending unscaled         TS, as in 1 above."Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 13]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007   INCORRECT AND INVALIDATEDRFC 3095 TEXT (RFC 3095-Section 4.5.3):      The entire point 5, i.e. the entire text starting from "5.      Interpretation interval at wraparound ...", down to and including      the block of text that starts with "Let a be the number of LSBs"      and that ends with "...interpretation interval is b." is incorrect      and is thus invalid.4.5.  Recalculating TS_OFFSET   TS can be sent unscaled if the TS value change does not match the   established TS_STRIDE, but the TS_STRIDE might still stay unchanged.   To ensure correct decompression of subsequent packets, the   decompressor MUST therefore always recalculate TS_OFFSET (RTP TS   modulo TS_STRIDE) when a packet with an unscaled TS value is   received.4.6.  TS_STRIDE and the Tsc Flag in Extension 3   The Tsc flag in Extension 3 indicates whether or not TS is scaled.   The value of the Tsc flag thus applies to all TS bits, as well as if   there are no TS bits in the extension itself.  When TS is scaled, it   is always scaled using context(TS_STRIDE).  The legend for Extension   3 inRFC 3095-Section 5.7.5 incorrectly states that value(TS_STRIDE)   is used for scaled TS.   If TS_STRIDE is present in Extension 3, as indicated by the Tss flag   being set, the compressed header SHOULD carry unscaled TS bits; i.e.,   the Tsc flag SHOULD NOT be set when Tss is set since an unscaled TS   is needed together with TS_STRIDE to recalculate the TS_OFFSET.  If   TS_STRIDE is included in a compressed header with scaled TS, the   decompressor must ignore and discard field(TS_STRIDE).   INCORRECTRFC 3095 TEXT (RFC 3095-Section 5.7.5):      "Tsc: Tsc = 0 indicates that TS is not scaled;            Tsc = 1 indicates that TS is scaled according tosection4.5.3, using value(TS_STRIDE).             Context(Tsc) is always 1.  If scaling is not desired, the             compressor will establish TS_STRIDE = 1."   CORRECTED TEXT:      "Tsc: Tsc = 0 indicates that TS is not scaled;            Tsc = 1 indicates that TS is scaled according toSection4.5.3, using context(TS_STRIDE).Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 14]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007            Context(Tsc) is always 1.  If scaling is not desired, the            compressor will establish TS_STRIDE = 1.            If field(Tsc) = 1, and if TSS = 1 (meaning that TS_STRIDE is            present in the extension), field(TS_STRIDE) MUST be ignored            and discarded."   When the compressor re-establishes a new value for TS_STRIDE using   Extension 3, it should send unscaled TS bits together with TS_STRIDE.4.7.  Using Timer-Based Compression   Timer-based compression of the RTP timestamp, as described inRFC3095-Section 4.5.4, may be used to reduce the number of transmitted   timestamp bits (bytes) needed when the timestamp cannot be inferred   from the SN.  Timer-based compression is only used for decompression   of compressed headers that contains a TS field; otherwise, when no   timestamp bits are present, the timestamp is linearly inferred from   the SN (seeSection 4.2 of this document).   Whether or not to use timer-based compression is controlled by the   TIME_STRIDE control field, which can be set by either an IR, an IR-   DYN, or a compressed packet with Extension 3.  Before timer-based   compression can be used, the decompressor has to inform the   compressor (on a per-channel basis) about its clock resolution by   sending a CLOCK feedback option for any CID on the channel.  The   compressor can then initiate timer-based compression by sending (on a   per-context basis) a non-zero TIME_STRIDE to the decompressor.  When   the compressor is confident that the decompressor has received the   TIME_STRIDE value, it can switch to timer-based compression.5.  List Compression5.1.  CSRC List Items in RTP Dynamic ChainRFC 3095-Section 5.7.7.6 defines the static and dynamic parts of the   RTP header.  This section indicates a 'Generic CSRC list' field in   the dynamic chain, which has a variable length (seeRFC 3095-Section5.8.6).  This field is always at least one octet in size, even if the   list is empty (as opposed to the CSRC list in the uncompressed RTP   header, which is not present when the RTP CC field is set to 0).5.2.  Multiple Occurrences of the CC Field   The static and the dynamic parts of the RTP header are defined inRFC3095-Section 5.7.7.6.  In the dynamic part, a CC field indicates the   number of CSRC items present in the 'Generic CSRC list'.  Another CC   field also appears within the 'Generic CSRC list' (RFC 3095-SectionJonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 15]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007   5.8.6.1), because Encoding Type 0 is always used in the dynamic   chain.  Both CC fields have the same meaning: the value of the CC   field determines the number of XI items in the CSRC list for Encoding   Type 0, and it is not used otherwise.  Therefore, the following   applies:   FORMAL ADDITION TORFC 3095:      "The first octet in the dynamic part of the RTP header contains a       CC field, as defined inSection 5.7.7.6.  A second occurrence       appears in the 'Generic CSRC list', which is also in the dynamic       part of the RTP header, where Encoding Type 0 is used according       to the format defined inRFC 3095-5.8.6.1.       The compressor MUST set both occurrences of the CC field to the       same value.       The decompressor MUST use the value of the CC field from the       Encoding Type 0 within the Generic CRSC list, and it MUST thus       ignore the first occurrence of the CC field."5.3.  Bit Masks in List Compression   The insertion and/or removal schemes, described inRFC 3095-Sections   5.8.6.2 - 5.8.6.4, use bit masks to indicates insertion or removal   positions within the reference list.  The size of the bit mask can be   7 bits or 15 bits.   The compressor MAY use a 7-bit mask, even if the reference list has   more than seven items, provided that changes to the list are only   applied to items within the first seven items of the reference list,   leaving items with an index not covered by the 7-bit mask unchanged.   The decompressor MUST NOT modify items with an index not covered by   the 7-bit mask, when a 7-bit mask is received for a reference list   that contains more than seven items.5.4.  Headers Compressed with List Compression   InRFC 3095-Section 5.8, it states that headers that can be part of   extension header chains "include" AH [14], ESP NULL [13], minimal   encapsulation (MINE) [15], GRE [16][17], and IPv6 [9] extensions.   This list of headers that can be compressed is correct, but the word   "include" should not be there, since only the header types listed can   actually be handled.  It should further be noted that for the Minimal   Encapsulation (MINE) header, there is no explicit discussion of how   to compress it, as the header is sent either uncompressed or fully   compressed away.Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 16]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 20075.5.  ESP NULL Header List Compression   Due to the offset of the fields in the trailer part of the ESP   header, a compressor MUST NOT compress packets containing more than   one NULL ESP [13] header, unless the second-outermost header is   treated as a regular ESP [12] header and the packets are compressed   using profile 0x0003.5.6.  Translation Tables and Indexes for IP Extension HeadersRFC 3095-Section 5.8.4 describes how list indexes are associated to   list items and how table lists are built for IP extension headers.   The text incorrectly states that one index per type is used, since   the same type can appear several times with different content in one   single chain.   In IP extension header list compression, an index is associated with   each individual extension header of an extension header chain.  When   there are multiple non-identical occurrences of the same extension   type (Protocol Number) within a header chain, each MUST be given its   own index.   In the case where there are multiple identical occurrences of the   same extension type, the compressor can associate them to the same   index.  When the value of an item whose index occurs more than once   in the list is updated, the compressor MUST send the value for each   occurrence of that index in the list.   When content of extension headers changes, an implementation can   choose to either use a different index or update the existing one.   Some extensions can be compressed away even when some fields change,   as those changes can be conveyed to the decompressor implicitly (e.g.   sequence numbers in extension headers that can be inferred from the   RTP SN) or explicitly (e.g., as part of the 'IP extension header(s)'   field in Extension 3).   When there is more than one IP header, there is more than one list of   extension headers, and a translation table is maintained for each   list independently of one another.5.7.  Reference List   A list compressed using encoding type 1 (insertion), type 2   (removal), or type 3 (removal/insertion) uses a coding scheme that is   based on the use of a reference list in the context (identified as   ref_id).Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 17]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007   While it could seem to be a fair choice to send a type 1 list when   ref_id is an empty list, there is nothing gained in doing so with   respect to using a type 0 list.  Sending a type 2 list when ref_id is   an empty list would lead to a failure, while sending a type 3 list   has very little meaning.  All these alternatives could be seen as   possible, based on how list compression is specified inRFC 3095.   If these alternatives were allowed, a decompressor would become   required to maintain a sliding window of ref_id lists in R-mode, even   for the case where no items are sent in the compressed list, and this   is not a desirable requirement.  Using list encoding type 1, type 2,   and type 3 is therefore only allowed for non-empty reference lists.   FORMAL ADDITION TORFC 3095:      "Regardless of the operating mode, for list encoding of type 1,       type 2, and type 3 lists, ref_id MUST refer to a non-empty list."5.8.  Compression of AH and GRE Sequence NumbersRFC 3095-Section 5.8.4.2 andRFC 3095-Section 5.8.4.4 describe how to   compress the Authentication Header (AH) [14] and the Generic Routing   Encapsulation (GRE) [16][17] header.  Both these sections present a   possibility to omit the AH/GRE sequence number in the compressed   header, under certain circumstances.  However, the specific   conditions for omitting the AH/GRE sequence number, as well as the   concrete compression and decompression procedures to apply, are not   clearly defined to guarantee robustness and facilitate interoperable   implementation.   Proper rules are provided for the ESP case, i.e.,:      "Sequence Number: Not sent when the offset from the sequence       number of the compressed header is constant, when the compressor       has confidence that the decompressor has established the correct       offset.  When the offset is not constant, the sequence number may       be compressed by sending LSBs"   The same logic applies to the AH/GRE sequence numbers.   INCORRECTRFC 3095 TEXT (RFC 3095-Section 5.8.4.2):      "If the sequence number in the AH linearly increases as the RTP       Sequence Number increases, and the compressor is confident that       the decompressor has obtained the pattern, the sequence number in       AH need not be sent.  The decompressor applies linear       extrapolation to reconstruct the sequence number in the AH."Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 18]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007   CORRECTED TEXT:      "The AH sequence number can be omitted from the compressed header       when the offset from the sequence number (SN) of the compressed       header is constant, when the compressor has confidence that the       decompressor has established the correct offset."   INCORRECTRFC 3095 TEXT (RFC 3095-Section 5.8.4.4):      "If the sequence number in the GRE header linearly increases as       the RTP Sequence Number increases and the compressor is confident       that the decompressor has received the pattern, the sequence       number in GRE need not be sent.  The decompressor applies linear       extrapolation to reconstruct the sequence number in the GRE       header."   CORRECTED TEXT:      "The GRE sequence number can be omitted from the compressed header       when the offset from the sequence number (SN) of the compressed       header is constant, when the compressor has confidence that the       decompressor has established the correct offset."6.  Updating Properties6.1.  Implicit Updates   A context updating packet that contains compressed sequence number   information may also carry information about other fields; in such   cases, these fields are updated according to the content of the   packet.  The updating packet also implicitly updates inferred fields   (e.g., RTP Timestamp) according to the current mode and the   appropriate mapping function of the updated and inferred fields.   An updating packet thus updates the reference values of all header   fields, either explicitly or implicitly, except for the UO-1-ID   packet (seeSection 6.2 of this document).  In UO-mode, all packets   are updating packets, while in R-mode, all packets with a CRC are   updating packets.   For example, a UO-0 packet contains the compressed RTP sequence   number (SN).  Such a packet also implicitly updates RTP timestamp,   IPv4 ID, and sequence numbers of IP extension headers.Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 19]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 20076.2.  Updating Properties of UO-1*RFC 3095-Section 5.7.3 states that the values provided in extensions   carried by a UO-1-ID packet do not update the context, except for SN,   TS, or IP-ID fields.  However,RFC 3095-Section 5.8.1 correctly   states that the translation table in the context is updated whenever   an (Index, item) pair is received, something that is contradicted by   the statement inRFC 3095-5.7.3 because the UO-1-ID packet can carry   Extension 3 with (Index, item) pair items within the 'Compressed CSRC   list' field.  In addition to this contradiction, the text does not   mention what to do with the other sequence numbers inferred from the   SN, which are also to be implicitly updated.  The updating properties   of UO-1* as stated byRFC 3095-Section 5.7.3 are thus incomplete.   INCOMPLETERFC 3095 TEXT (RFC 3095-Section 5.7.3):      "Values provided in extensions, except those in other SN, TS, or       IP-ID fields, do not update the context."   CORRECTED TEXT:      "UO-1-ID packets only updates TS, SN, IP-ID, and sequence numbers       of IP extension headers.  Other values provided in extensions do       not update the context.       The decompressor MUST update its translation table whenever an       (Index, item) pair is received, as perRFC 3095-Section 5.8.1,       and this rule applies also to UO-1-ID packets."6.3.  Context Updating Properties for IR Packets   IR packets do not clear the whole context, but update all fields   carried in the IR header.  Similarly, an IR without a dynamic chain   simply updates the static part of the context, while the rest of the   context is left unchanged.   A consequence of this is that fields that are not updated by the IR   packet, e.g., the translation tables for list compression, MUST NOT   be invalidated by the decompressor when it assumes context damage.6.4.  RTP Padding Field (R-P) in Extension 3RFC 3095-Section 5.7.5 defines the properties of RTP header flags and   fields in Extension 3.  These get updated when the rtp flag of the   Extension 3 is set, i.e., when rtp = 1; otherwise, they are not   updated.  However, it is unclear how Extension 3 updates the R-P bit   in the context.Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 20]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007   INCOMPLETERFC 3095 TEXT (RFC 3095-Section 5.7.5):      "R-P: RTP Padding bit, absolute value (presumed zero if absent)."   CORRECTED TEXT:      "R-P: RTP Padding bit.  If R-PT = 1, R-P is the absolute value of            the RTP padding bit and this value updates context(R-P).  If            R-PT = 0, context(R-P) is updated to zero."6.5.  RTP eXtension bit (X) in dynamic partRFC 3095-Section 5.7.7.6 defines the properties of the RTP header   flags and fields in the RTP part of the dynamic chain of IR and IR-   DYN packets.  However, it is unclear how the X bit is updated in the   context.   INCOMPLETERFC 3095 TEXT (RFC 3095-Section 5.7.7.6):      "X: Copy of X bit from RTP header (presumed 0 if RX = 0)"   CORRECTED TEXT:      "X: X bit from RTP header.  If RX = 1, X is the X bit from the RTP          header and this value updates context(X).  If RX = 0,          context(X) is updated to zero."7.  Context management and CID/context Reuse7.1.  Persistence of Decompressor Contexts   As part of the negotiated channel parameters, compressor and   decompressor have, through the MAX_CID parameter, agreed on the   highest context identification (CID) number to be used.  By agreeing   on MAX_CID, the decompressor also agrees to provide memory resources   to host at least MAX_CID+1 contexts, and an established context with   a CID within this negotiated space MUST be kept by the decompressor   until either the CID gets reused, or the channel is taken down or   renegotiated.7.2.  CID/Context Reuse   As part of the channel negotiation, the maximal number of active   contexts supported is negotiated between the compressor and the   decompressor through the MAX_CID parameter.  The value of MAX_CID can   differ significantly from one link application to another, as well as   the load in terms of the number of packet streams to compress.  The   lifetime of a ROHC channel can also vary, from almost permanent toJonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 21]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007   rather short-lived.  However, in general, it is not expected that   resources will be allocated for more contexts than what can   reasonably be expected to be active concurrently over the link.  As a   consequence hereof, context identifiers (CIDs) and context memory are   resources that will have to be reused by the compressor as part of   what can be considered normal operation.   How context resources are reused is left unspecified inRFC 3095 [1]   and subsequent 3095-based ROHC specifications.  This document does   not intend to change that, i.e., ROHC resource management is still   considered an implementation detail.  However, reusing a CID and its   allocated memory is not always as simple as initiating a context with   a previously unused CID.  Because some profiles can be operating in   various modes where packet formats vary depending on current mode,   care has to be taken to ensure that the old context data will be   completely and safely overwritten, eliminating the risk of undesired   side effects from interactions between old and new context data.   This document therefore points out some important core aspects to   consider when implementing resource management in ROHC compressors   and decompressors.   On a high level, CID/context reuse can be of two kinds, either reuse   for a new context based on the same profile as the old context, or   for a new context based on a different profile.  These cases are   discussed separately in the following two sub-sections.7.2.1.  Reusing a CID/Context with the Same Profile   For multi-mode profiles, such as those defined inRFC 3095 [1], mode   transitions are performed using a decompressor-initiated handshake   procedure, as defined inRFC 3095-Section 5.6.  When a CID/context is   reused for a new context based on the same profile as the old   context, the current mode of operation SHOULD be inherited from the   old to the new context.  Specifically, the compressor SHOULD continue   to operate using the mode of operation of the old context also with   the new context.  The reason for this is that there is no reliable   way for the compressor to inform the decompressor that a CID/context   reuse is happening.  The decompressor can thus not be expected to   clear the context memory for the CID (seeSection 6.3), and there is   no way to trigger a safe mode switching (which requires the   decompressor-initiated handshake procedure).   The rule of mode inheritance applies also when the   CONTEXT_REINITIALIZATION signal (RFC 3095-Section 6.3.1) is used to   reinitiate an entire context.Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 22]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 20077.2.2.  Reusing a CID/Context with a Different Profile   When a CID is reused for a new context based on a different profile   than the old context, both the compressor and the decompressor MUST   start operation with that context in the initial mode of the profile   (if it is a multi-mode profile).  This applies both to IR-initiated   new contexts and profile downgrades with IR-DYN (e.g., the profile   0x0001 -> profile 0x0002 downgrade inRFC 3095-Section 5.11.1).   Type 0 and type 1 packets have different formats in U/O- and R-mode,   and these R-mode packets have no CRC.  When initiating a new context   on a reused R-mode CID, there is a risk that the decompressor will   misinterpret compressed packets if the initiating IR packets are   lost.   A CID for a context currently operating in R-mode SHOULD therefore   not be reused for a new context based on a different profile than the   old context.  A compressor doing otherwise should minimize the risk   for misinterpretation of R-0/R-1 by, e.g., not using packets of types   beginning with 00 or 10 before it is highly confident that the new   context has successfully been initiated at the decompressor.8.  Other Protocol Clarifications8.1.  Meaning of NBO   In IPv4 dynamic part (RFC 3095-Section 5.7.7.4), if the 'NBO' bit is   set, it means that network byte order is used.8.2.  IP-ID   According toRFC 3095-Section 5.7, IP-ID means the compressed value   of the IPv4 header's 'Identification' field.  Compressed packets   contain this compressed value (IP-ID), while IR packets with dynamic   chain and IR-DYN packets transmit the original, uncompressed   Identification field value.  The IP-ID field always represents the   Identification value of the innermost IPv4 header whose corresponding   RND flag is not 1.   If RND or RND2 is set to 1, the corresponding IP-ID(s) is (are) sent   as 16-bit uncompressed Identification value(s) at the end of the   compressed base header, according to the IP-ID description (see the   beginning ofRFC 3095-Section 5.7).  When there is no compressed IP-   ID, i.e., for IPv6 or when all IP Identification information is sent   as is (as indicated by RND/RND2 being set to 1), the decompressor   ignores IP-ID bits sent within compressed base headers.Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 23]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007   When RND=RND2=0, IP-ID is compressed, i.e., expressed as an SN offset   and byte-swapped if NBO=0.  This is the case also when 16 bits of   IP-ID is sent in Extension 3.   When RND=0 but no IP-ID bits are sent in the compressed header, the   SN offset for IP-ID stays unchanged, meaning that Offset_m equals   Offset_ref, as described inSection 4.5.5.  This is further expressed   in a slightly different way (with the same meaning) inSection 5.7,   where it is said that "default-slope(IP-ID offset) = 0", meaning, if   no bits are sent for IP-ID, its SN offset slope defaults to 0.8.3.  Extension-3 in UOR-2* Packets   Some flags of the IP header in the extension (e.g., NBO or RND) may   change the interpretation of fields in UOR-2* packets.  In such   cases, when a flag changes in Extension 3, a decompressor MUST re-   parse the UOR-2* packet.8.4.  Multiple Occurrences of the M Bit   The RTP header part of Extension 3, as defined byRFC 3095-Section5.7.5, includes a one-bit field for the RTP Marker bit.  This field   is also present in all compressed base header formats except for UO-   1-ID; meaning, there may be two occurrences of the field within one   single compressed header.  In such cases, the two M fields must have   the same value.   FORMAL ADDITION TORFC 3095:      "When there are two occurrences of the M field in a compressed       header (both in the compressed base header and in the RTP part of       Extension 3), the compressor MUST set both these occurrences of       the M field to the same value.       At the decompressor, if the two M field values of such a packet       are not identical, the packet MUST be discarded."8.5.  Multiple SN options in one feedback packet   The length of the sequence number field in the original ESP [12]   header is 32 bits.  The format of the SN feedback option (RFC 3095-Section 5.7.6.6) allows for 8 additional SN bits to the 12 SN bits of   the FEEDBACK-2 format (RFC 3095-Section 5.7.6.1).  One single SN   feedback option is thus not enough for the decompressor to send back   all the 32 bits of the ESP sequence number in a feedback packet,   unless it uses multiple SN options in one feedback packet.Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 24]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007RFC 3095-Section 5.7.6.1 declares that a FEEDBACK-2 packet can   contain a variable number of feedback options, and the options can   appear in any order.   When processing multiple SN options in one feedback packet, the SN   would be given by concatenating the fields.8.6.  Multiple CRC Options in One Feedback Packet   Although it is not useful to have more than one single CRC option in   a feedback packet, having multiple CRC options is still allowed.  If   multiple CRC options are included, all such CRC options MUST be   identical, as they will be calculated over the same header; the   compressor MUST otherwise discard the feedback packet.8.7.  Responding to Lost Feedback Links   Although this is neither desirable or expected, it may happen that a   link used to carry feedback between two associated instances becomes   unavailable.  If the compressor can be notified of such an event, the   compressor SHOULD restart compression for each flow that is operating   in R-mode.  When restarting compression, the compressor SHOULD use a   different CID for each flow being restarted; this is useful to avoid   the possibility of misinterpreting the type of the compressed header   for the packet type identifiers that are common to both U/O-mode and   R-mode, when the flow is restarted in U-mode (see alsoSection 7.2).   Generally, feedback links are not expected to disappear once present,   but it should be noted that this might be the case for certain link   technologies.8.8.  UOR-2 in Profile 0x0002 (UDP) and Profile 0x0003 (ESP)   One single new format is defined for UOR-2 in profile 0x0002 and   profile 0x0003, which replaces all three (UOR-2, UOR-2-ID, UOR-2-TS)   formats from profile 0x0001.  The same UOR-2 format is thus used   independent of whether or not there are IP headers with a   corresponding RND=1.  This also applies to the IP profile [4] and the   IP/UDP-Lite profile [5].8.9.  Sequence Number LSB's in IP Extension Headers   InRFC 3095-Section 5.8.5, formats are defined for compression of IP   extension header fields.  These include compressed sequence number   fields, and these fields contain the "LSB of sequence number".  These   sequence numbers are not "LSB-encoded" as, e.g., the RTP sequence   number, but are the LSB's of the uncompressed fields.Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 25]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 20078.10.  Expecting UOR-2 ACKs in O-Mode   Usage of UOR-2 ACKs in O-mode, as discussed inRFC 3095-Section5.4.1.1.2, is optional.  A decompressor can also send ACKs for   purposes other than to acknowledge the UOR-2, without having to   continue sending ACKs for all UOR-2.  Similarly, a compressor   implementation can ignore UOR-2s ACKs for the purpose of adapting the   optimistic approach strategies.   It is thus NOT RECOMMENDED to use the optional ACK mechanism in O-   mode, either in compressor or in decompressor implementations.   Using an incorrect expectation on UOR-2 ACKs as a basis for   compressor behavior will significantly degrade the compression   performance.  This is because UOR-2 ACKs can be sent from a   decompressor for other purposes than to acknowledge the UOR-2 packet,   e.g., to send feedback such as clock resolution, or to initiate a   mode transition.  If an implementation does use the optional   acknowledgment algorithm described inSection 5.4.1.1.2, it must make   sure to set the k_3 and n_3 parameters to much larger values than 1   to ensure that the compressor performance is not degraded due to the   problem described above.8.11.  Context Repairs, TS_STRIDE and TIME_STRIDE   The 7-bit CRC used to verify the outcome of the decompression attempt   covers the original uncompressed header.  The CRC verification thus   excludes TS_STRIDE and TIME_STRIDE, as these fields are not part of   the original uncompressed header.   The UOR-2 packet type can be used to update the value of the   TS_STRIDE and/or the TIME_STRIDE, with the Extension 3.  However,   these fields are not used for decompression of the RTP TS field for   this packet type and their respective value is thus not verified,   either implicitly or explicitly.   When the compressor receives a negative acknowledgement, it thus   cannot determine whether the failure may be caused by an unsuccessful   update to the TS_STRIDE and/or the TIME_STRIDE field(s), for which a   previous header that last attempted to update their value had   previously been acknowledged.   FORMAL ADDITION TORFC 3095:      "When the compressor receives a NACK and uses the UOR-2 header       type to repair the decompressor context, it SHOULD include fields       that update the value of both the TS_STRIDE and the TIME_STRIDE       whose value it has updated at least once since the establishmentJonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 26]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007       of that context, i.e., since the CID was first associated with       its current profile.       When the compressor receives a static-NACK, it MUST include in       the IR header fields for both the TS_STRIDE and the TIME_STRIDE       whose value it has updated at least once since the establishment       of that context, i.e., since the CID was first associated with       its current profile."9.  ROHC NegotiationRFC 3095-Section 4.1 states that the link layer must provide means to   negotiate, e.g., the channel parameters listed inRFC 3095-Section5.1.1.  One of these parameters is the PROFILES parameter, which is a   set of non-negative integers where each integer indicates a profile   supported by the decompressor.   Each profile is identified by a 16-bit value, where the 8 LSB bits   indicate the actual profile, and the 8 MSB bits indicate the variant   of that profile (seeRFC 3095-Section 8).  In the ROHC headers sent   over the link, the profile used is identified only with the 8 LSB   bits, which means that the compressor and decompressor must have   agreed on which variant to use for each profile.   The negotiation protocol must thus be able to communicate to the   compressor the set of profiles supported by the decompressor.  When   multiple variants of the same profile are available, the negotiation   protocol must provide the means for the decompressor to know which   variant will be used by the compressor.  This basically means that   the PROFILES set after negotiation MUST NOT include more than one   variant of a profile.10.  PROFILES Sub-option in ROHC-over-PPP   The logical union of sub-options for IPCP and IPV6CP negotiations, as   specified by ROHC over PPP [2], cannot be used for the PROFILES   suboption, as the whole union would then have to be considered within   each of the two IPCP negotiations to avoid getting an ambiguous   profile set.  An implementation ofRFC 3241 MUST therefore ensure   that the same profile set is negotiated for both IPv4 and IPv6   (IPCP/IPV6CP).11.  Constant IP-ID Encoding in IP-only and UPD-Lite Profiles   In the ROHC IP-only profile,Section 3.3 of RFC 3843 [4], a mechanism   for encoding of a constant Identification value in IPv4 (constant   IP-ID) is defined.  This mechanism is also used by the ROHC UDP-Lite   profiles,RFC 4019 [5].Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 27]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007   The "Constant IP-ID" mechanism applies to both the inner and outer IP   header, when present, meaning that there will be both a SID and a   SID2 context value.12.  Security Considerations   This document provides a number of corrections and clarifications to   [1], but it does not make any changes with regard to the security   aspects of the protocol.  As a consequence, the security   considerations of [1] apply without additions.13.  Acknowledgments   The authors would like to thank Vicknesan Ayadurai, Carsten Bormann,   Mikael Degermark, Zhigang Liu, Abigail Surtees, Mark West, Tommy   Lundemo, Alan Kennington, Remi Pelland, Lajos Zaccomer, Endre Szalai,   Mark Kalmanczhelyi, and Arpad Szakacs for their contributions and   comments.  Thanks also to the committed document reviewers, Carl   Knutsson and Biplab Sarkar, who reviewed the document during working   group last-call.14.  References14.1.  Normative References   [1]  Bormann, C., Burmeister, C., Degermark, M., Fukushima, H.,        Hannu, H., Jonsson, L-E., Hakenberg, R., Koren, T., Le, K., Liu,        Z., Martensson, A., Miyazaki, A., Svanbro, K., Wiebke, T.,        Yoshimura, T., and H. Zheng, "RObust Header Compression (ROHC):        Framework and four profiles: RTP, UDP, ESP, and uncompressed",RFC 3095, July 2001.   [2]  Bormann, C., "Robust Header Compression (ROHC) over PPP",RFC3241, April 2002.   [3]  Simpson, W., "PPP in HDLC-like Framing", STD 51,RFC 1662, July        1994.   [4]  Jonsson, L-E. and G. Pelletier, "RObust Header Compression        (ROHC): A Compression Profile for IP",RFC 3843, June 2004.   [5]  Pelletier, G., "RObust Header Compression (ROHC): Profiles for        User Datagram Protocol (UDP) Lite",RFC 4019, April 2005.   [6]  Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate Requirement        Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 28]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 200714.2.  Informative References   [7]  Jonsson, L-E., Pelletier, G., and K. Sandlund, "RObust Header        Compression (ROHC): A Link-Layer Assisted Profile for        IP/UDP/RTP",RFC 4362, January 2006.   [8]  Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5,RFC 791, September 1981.   [9]  Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6 (IPv6)        Specification",RFC 2460, December 1998.   [10] Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol", STD 6,RFC 768, August        1980.   [11] Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V. Jacobson,        "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time Applications", STD 64,RFC 3550, July 2003.   [12] Kent, S., "IP Encapsulating Security Payload (ESP)",RFC 4303,        December 2005.   [13] Glenn, R. and S. Kent, "The NULL Encryption Algorithm and Its        Use With IPsec",RFC 2410, November 1998.   [14] Kent, S., "IP Authentication Header",RFC 4302, December 2005.   [15] Perkins, C., "Minimal Encapsulation within IP",RFC 2004,        October 1996.   [16] Farinacci, D., Li, T., Hanks, S., Meyer, D., and P. Traina,        "Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE)",RFC 2784, March 2000.   [17] Dommety, G., "Key and Sequence Number Extensions to GRE",RFC2890, September 2000.Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 29]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007Appendix A.  Sample CRC Algorithm   #!/usr/bin/perl -w   use strict;   #=================================   #   # ROHC CRC demo - Carsten Bormann cabo@tzi.org 2001-08-02   #   # This little demo shows the four types of CRCs in use inRFC 3095,   # the specification for robust header compression. Type your data in   # hexadecimal form and then press Control+D.   #   #---------------------------------   #   # utility   #   sub dump_bytes($) {       my $x = shift;       my $i;       for ($i = 0; $i < length($x); ) {     printf("%02x ", ord(substr($x, $i, 1)));     printf("\n") if (++$i % 16 == 0);       }       printf("\n") if ($i % 16 != 0);   }   #---------------------------------   #   # The CRC calculation algorithm.   #   sub do_crc($$$) {       my $nbits = shift;       my $poly = shift;       my $string = shift;       my $crc = ($nbits == 32 ? 0xffffffff : (1 << $nbits) - 1);       for (my $i = 0; $i < length($string); ++$i) {         my $byte = ord(substr($string, $i, 1));         for( my $b = 0; $b < 8; $b++ ) {           if (($crc & 1) ^ ($byte & 1)) {             $crc >>= 1;             $crc ^= $poly;           } else {           $crc >>= 1;           }           $byte >>= 1;         }       }Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 30]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007       printf "%2d bits, ", $nbits;       printf "CRC: %02x\n", $crc;   }   #---------------------------------   #   # Test harness   #   $/ = undef;   $_ = <>;         # read until EOF   my $string = ""; # extract all that looks hex:   s/([0-9a-fA-F][0-9a-fA-F])/$string .= chr(hex($1)), ""/eg;   dump_bytes($string);   #---------------------------------   #   # 32-bit segmentation CRC   # Note that the text implies that this is complemented like for PPP   # (this differs from 8-, 7-, and 3-bit CRCs)   #   #      C(x) = x^0 + x^1 + x^2 + x^4 + x^5 + x^7 + x^8 + x^10 +   #             x^11 + x^12 + x^16 + x^22 + x^23 + x^26 + x^32   #   do_crc(32, 0xedb88320, $string);   #---------------------------------   #   # 8-bit IR/IR-DYN CRC   #   #      C(x) = x^0 + x^1 + x^2 + x^8   #   do_crc(8, 0xe0, $string);   #---------------------------------   #   # 7-bit FO/SO CRC   #   #      C(x) = x^0 + x^1 + x^2 + x^3 + x^6 + x^7   #   do_crc(7, 0x79, $string);   #---------------------------------   #   # 3-bit FO/SO CRC   #   #      C(x) = x^0 + x^1 + x^3   #   do_crc(3, 0x6, $string);Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 31]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  February 2007Authors' Addresses   Lars-Erik Jonsson   Optand 737   SE-831 92 Ostersund, Sweden   Phone: +46 70 365 20 58   EMail: lars-erik@lejonsson.com   Kristofer Sandlund   Ericsson AB   Box 920   SE-971 28 Lulea, Sweden   Phone: +46 8 404 41 58   EMail: kristofer.sandlund@ericsson.com   Ghyslain Pelletier   Ericsson AB   Box 920   SE-971 28 Lulea, Sweden   Phone: +46 8 404 29 43   EMail: ghyslain.pelletier@ericsson.com   Peter Kremer   Conformance and Software Test Laboratory   Ericsson Hungary   H-1300 Bp. 3., P.O. Box 107, HUNGARY   Phone: +36 1 437 7033   EMail: peter.kremer@ericsson.comJonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 32]

RFC 4815       Corrections and Clarifications toRFC 3095  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.Jonsson, et al.             Standards Track                    [Page 33]

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