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INFORMATIONAL
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                         P. SavolaRequest for Comments: 6308                                     CSC/FUNETObsoletes:2908                                                June 2011Category: InformationalISSN: 2070-1721Overview of the Internet Multicast Addressing ArchitectureAbstract   The lack of up-to-date documentation on IP multicast address   allocation and assignment procedures has caused a great deal of   confusion.  To clarify the situation, this memo describes the   allocation and assignment techniques and mechanisms currently (as of   this writing) in use.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for informational purposes.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents   approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet   Standard; seeSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6308.Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2011 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Savola                        Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 6308              Multicast Address Allocation             June 2011Table of Contents1. Introduction ....................................................21.1. Terminology: Allocation or Assignment ......................32. Multicast Address Allocation ....................................32.1. Derived Allocation .........................................32.1.1. GLOP Allocation .....................................42.1.2. Unicast-Prefix-Based Allocation .....................42.2. Administratively Scoped Allocation .........................52.3. Static IANA Allocation .....................................62.4. Dynamic Allocation .........................................63. Multicast Address Assignment ....................................63.1. Derived Assignment .........................................63.2. SSM Assignment inside the Node .............................73.3. Manually Configured Assignment .............................73.4. Static IANA Assignment .....................................73.4.1. Global IANA Assignment ..............................73.4.2. Scope-Relative IANA Assignment ......................83.5. Dynamic Assignments ........................................84. Summary and Future Directions ...................................94.1. Prefix Allocation ..........................................94.2. Address Assignment ........................................104.3. Future Actions ............................................115. Acknowledgements ...............................................116. IANA Considerations ............................................117. Security Considerations ........................................118. References .....................................................128.1. Normative References ......................................128.2. Informative References ....................................131.  Introduction   Good, up-to-date documentation of IP multicast is close to   non-existent.  Particularly, this is an issue with multicast address   allocations (to networks and sites) and assignments (to hosts and   applications).  This problem is stressed by the fact that there   exists confusing or misleading documentation on the subject   [RFC2908].  The consequence is that those who wish to learn about IP   multicast and how the addressing works do not get a clear view of the   current situation.   The aim of this document is to provide a brief overview of multicast   addressing and allocation techniques.  The term "addressing   architecture" refers to the set of addressing mechanisms and methods   in an informal manner.Savola                        Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 6308              Multicast Address Allocation             June 2011   It is important to note that Source-Specific Multicast (SSM)   [RFC4607] does not have these addressing problems because SSM group   addresses have only local significance; hence, this document focuses   on the Any Source Multicast (ASM) model.   This memo obsoletes and re-classifiesRFC 2908 to Historic, and   re-classifies RFCs 2776 and 2909 to Historic.1.1.  Terminology: Allocation or Assignment   Almost all multicast documents and many other RFCs (such as DHCPv4   [RFC2131] and DHCPv6 [RFC3315]) have used the terms "address   allocation" and "address assignment" interchangeably.  However, the   operator and address management communities use these terms for two   conceptually different processes.   In unicast operations, address allocations refer to leasing a large   block of addresses from the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority   (IANA) to a Regional Internet Registry (RIR), or from an RIR to a   Local Internet Registry (LIR), possibly through a National Internet   Registry (NIR).  Address assignments, on the other hand, are the   leases of smaller address blocks or even single addresses to the end-   user sites or end-users themselves.   Therefore, in this memo, we will separate the two different   functions: "allocation" describes how larger blocks of addresses are   obtained by the network operators, and "assignment" describes how   applications, nodes, or sets of nodes obtain a multicast address for   their use.2.  Multicast Address Allocation   Multicast address allocation, i.e., how a network operator might be   able to obtain a larger block of addresses, can be handled in a   number of ways, as described below.   Note that these are all only pertinent to ASM -- SSM requires no   address block allocation because the group address has only local   significance (however, we discuss the address assignment inside the   node inSection 3.2).2.1.  Derived Allocation   Derived allocations take the unicast prefix or some other properties   of the network (e.g., an autonomous system (AS) number) to determine   unique multicast address allocations.Savola                        Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 6308              Multicast Address Allocation             June 20112.1.1.  GLOP Allocation   GLOP address allocation [RFC3180] inserts the 16-bit public AS number   in the middle of the IPv4 multicast prefix 233.0.0.0/8, so that each   AS number can get a /24 worth of multicast addresses.  While this is   sufficient for multicast testing or small-scale use, it might not be   sufficient in all cases for extensive multicast use.   A minor operational debugging issue with GLOP addresses is that the   connection between the AS and the prefix is not apparent from the   prefix when the AS number is greater than 255, but has to be   calculated (e.g., as described in [RFC3180], AS 5662 maps to   233.22.30.0/24).  A usage issue is that GLOP addresses are not tied   to any prefix but to routing domains, so they cannot be used or   calculated automatically.   GLOP mapping is not available with 4-byte AS numbers [RFC4893].   Unicast-prefix-based allocation or an IANA allocation from "AD-HOC   Block III" (the previous so-called "EGLOP" (Extended GLOP) block)   could be used instead, as needed.   The GLOP allocation algorithm has not been defined for IPv6 multicast   because the unicast-prefix-based allocation (described below)   addresses the same need in a simpler fashion.2.1.2.  Unicast-Prefix-Based AllocationRFC 3306 [RFC3306] describes a mechanism that embeds up to 64 high-   order bits of an IPv6 unicast address in the prefix part of the IPv6   multicast address, leaving at least 32 bits of group-id space   available after the prefix mapping.   A similar IPv4 mapping is described in [RFC6034], but it provides a   limited number of addresses (e.g., 1 per IPv4 /24 block).   The IPv6 unicast-prefix-based allocations are an extremely useful way   to allow each network operator, even each subnet, to obtain multicast   addresses easily, through an easy computation.  Further, as the IPv6   multicast header also includes the scope value [RFC4291], multicast   groups of smaller scope can also be used with the same mapping.   The IPv6 Embedded Rendezvous Point (RP) technique [RFC3956], used   with Protocol Independent Multicast - Sparse Mode (PIM-SM), further   leverages the unicast-prefix-based allocations, by embedding the   unicast prefix and interface identifier of the PIM-SM RP in the   prefix.  This provides all the necessary information needed to the   routing systems to run the group in either inter- or intra-domain   operation.  A difference fromRFC 3306 is, however, that the hostsSavola                        Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 6308              Multicast Address Allocation             June 2011   cannot calculate their "multicast prefix" automatically (as the   prefix depends on the decisions of the operator setting up the RP),   but instead require an assignment method.   All the IPv6 unicast-prefix-based allocation techniques provide a   sufficient amount of multicast address space for network operators.2.2.  Administratively Scoped Allocation   Administratively scoped multicast address allocation [RFC2365] is   provided by two different means: under 239.0.0.0/8 in IPv4 or by   4-bit encoding in the IPv6 multicast address prefix [RFC4291].   Since IPv6 administratively scoped allocations can be handled with   unicast-prefix-based multicast addressing as described inSection 2.1.2, we'll only discuss IPv4 in this section.   The IPv4 administratively scoped prefix 239.0.0.0/8 is further   divided into Local Scope (239.255.0.0/16) and Organization Local   Scope (239.192.0.0/14); other parts of the administrative scopes are   either reserved for expansion or undefined [RFC2365].  However,RFC 2365 is ambiguous as to whether the enterprises or the IETF are   allowed to expand the space.   Topologies that act under a single administration can easily use the   scoped multicast addresses for their internal groups.  Groups that   need to be shared between multiple routing domains (even if not   propagated through the Internet) are more problematic and typically   need an assignment of a global multicast address because their scope   is undefined.   There are a large number of multicast applications (such as "Norton   Ghost") that are restricted either to a link or a site, and it is   extremely undesirable to propagate them further (beyond the link or   the site).  Typically, many such applications have been given or have   hijacked a static IANA address assignment.  Given the fact that   assignments to typically locally used applications come from the same   range as global applications, implementing proper propagation   limiting is challenging.  Filtering would be easier if a separate,   identifiable range would be used for such assignments in the future;   this is an area of further future work.   There has also been work on a protocol to automatically discover   multicast scope zones [RFC2776], but it has never been widely   implemented or deployed.Savola                        Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 6308              Multicast Address Allocation             June 20112.3.  Static IANA Allocation   In some rare cases, organizations may have been able to obtain static   multicast address allocations (of up to 256 addresses) directly from   IANA.  Typically, these have been meant as a block of static   assignments to multicast applications, as described inSection 3.4.1.   If another means of obtaining addresses is available, that approach   is preferable.   Especially for those operators that only have a 32-bit AS number and   need IPv4 addresses, an IANA allocation from "AD-HOC Block III" (the   previous so-called "EGLOP" block) is an option [RFC5771].2.4.  Dynamic AllocationRFC 2908 [RFC2908] proposed three different layers of multicast   address allocation and assignment, where layer 3 (inter-domain   allocation) and layer 2 (intra-domain allocation) could be applicable   here.  The Multicast Address-Set Claim Protocol (MASC) [RFC2909] is   an example of the former, and the Multicast Address Allocation   Protocol (AAP) [MALLOC-AAP] (abandoned in 2000 due to lack of   interest and technical problems) is an example of the latter.   Both of the proposed allocation protocols were quite complex, and   have never been deployed or seriously implemented.   It can be concluded that dynamic multicast address allocation   protocols provide no benefit beyond GLOP/unicast-prefix-based   mechanisms and have been abandoned.3.  Multicast Address Assignment   There are a number of possible ways for an application, node, or set   of nodes to learn a multicast address, as described below.   Any IPv6 address assignment method should be aware of the guidelines   for the assignment of group-IDs for IPv6 multicast addresses   [RFC3307].3.1.  Derived Assignment   There are significantly fewer options for derived address assignment   compared to derived allocation.  Derived multicast assignment has   only been specified for IPv6 link-scoped multicast [RFC4489], where   the EUI64 is embedded in the multicast address, providing a node with   unique multicast addresses for link-local ASM communications.Savola                        Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 6308              Multicast Address Allocation             June 20113.2.  SSM Assignment inside the Node   While SSM multicast addresses have only local (to the node)   significance, there is still a minor issue on how to assign the   addresses between the applications running on the same IP address.   This assignment is not considered to be a problem, because typically   the addresses for these applications are selected manually or   statically, but if done using an Application Programming Interface   (API), the API could check that the addresses do not conflict prior   to assigning one.3.3.  Manually Configured Assignment   With manually configured assignment, a network operator who has a   multicast address prefix assigns the multicast group addresses to the   requesting nodes using a manual process.   Typically, the user or administrator that wants to use a multicast   address for a particular application requests an address from the   network operator using phone, email, or similar means, and the   network operator provides the user with a multicast address.  Then   the user/administrator of the node or application manually configures   the application to use the assigned multicast address.   This is a relatively simple process; it has been sufficient for   certain applications that require manual configuration in any case,   or that cannot or do not want to justify a static IANA assignment.   The manual assignment works when the number of participants in a   group is small, as each participant has to be manually configured.   This is the most commonly used technique when the multicast   application does not have a static IANA assignment.3.4.  Static IANA Assignment   In contrast to manually configured assignment, as described above,   static IANA assignment refers to getting an assignment for the   particular application directly from IANA.  There are two main forms   of IANA assignment: global and scope-relative.  Guidelines for IANA   are described in [RFC5771].3.4.1.  Global IANA Assignment   Globally unique address assignment is seen as lucrative because it's   the simplest approach for application developers, since they can then   hard-code the multicast address.  Hard-coding requires no lease of   the usable multicast address, and likewise the client applications doSavola                        Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 6308              Multicast Address Allocation             June 2011   not need to perform any kind of service discovery (but depend on   hard-coded addresses).  However, there is an architectural scaling   problem with this approach, as it encourages a "land-grab" of the   limited multicast address space.3.4.2.  Scope-Relative IANA Assignment   IANA also assigns numbers as an integer offset from the highest   address in each IPv4 administrative scope, as described in [RFC2365].   For example, the SLPv2 discovery scope-relative offset is "2", so the   SLPv2 discovery address within IPv4 Local-Scope (239.255.0.0/16) is   "239.255.255.253"; within the IPv4 Organization Local-Scope   (239.192.0.0/14), it is "239.195.255.253"; and so on.   Similar scope-relative assignments also exist with IPv6 [RFC2375].   As IPv6 multicast addresses have much more flexible scoping, scope-   relative assignments are also applicable to global scopes.  The   assignment policies are described in [RFC3307].3.5.  Dynamic Assignments   Layer 1 as defined inRFC 2908 [RFC2908] described dynamic assignment   from Multicast Address Allocation Servers (MAAS) to applications and   nodes, with the Multicast Address Dynamic Client Allocation Protocol   (MADCAP) [RFC2730] as an example.  Since then, other mechanisms have   also been proposed (e.g., DHCPv6 assignment   [MCAST-DHCPv6]), but these have not gained traction.   It would be rather straightforward to deploy a dynamic assignment   protocol that would lease group addresses based on a multicast prefix   to applications wishing to use multicast.  However, only few have   implemented MADCAP (i.e., it is not significantly deployed).  It is   not clear if the sparse deployment is due to a lack of need for the   protocol.  Moreover, it is not clear how widely, for example, the   APIs for communication between the multicast application and the   MADCAP client operating at the host have been implemented [RFC2771].   An entirely different approach is the Session Announcement Protocol   (SAP) [RFC2974].  In addition to advertising global multicast   sessions, the protocol also has associated ranges of addresses for   both IPv4 and IPv6 that can be used by SAP-aware applications to   create new groups and new group addresses.  Creating a session (and   obtaining an address) is a rather tedious process, which is why it   isn't done all that often.  It is also worth noting that the IPv6 SAP   address is unroutable in the inter-domain multicast.Savola                        Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 6308              Multicast Address Allocation             June 2011   Conclusions about dynamic assignment protocols are that:   1.  multicast is not significantly attractive in the first place,   2.  most applications have a static IANA assignment and thus require       no dynamic or manual assignment,   3.  those applications that cannot be easily satisfied with IANA or       manual assignment (i.e., where dynamic assignment would be       desirable) are rather marginal, or   4.  there are other reasons why dynamic assignments are not seen as a       useful approach (for example, issues related to service       discovery/rendezvous).   In consequence, more work on rendezvous/service discovery would be   needed to make dynamic assignments more useful.4.  Summary and Future Directions   This section summarizes the mechanisms and analysis discussed in this   memo, and presents some potential future directions.4.1.  Prefix Allocation   A summary of prefix allocation methods for ASM is shown in Figure 1.       +-------+--------------------------------+--------+--------+       | Sect. | Prefix allocation method       | IPv4   | IPv6   |       +-------+--------------------------------+--------+--------+       | 2.1.1 | Derived: GLOP                  |  Yes   | NoNeed*|       | 2.1.2 | Derived: Unicast-prefix-based  |   No   |  Yes   |       |  2.2  | Administratively scoped        |  Yes   | NoNeed*|       |  2.3  | Static IANA allocation         |  Yes** |   No   |       |  2.4  | Dynamic allocation protocols   |   No   |   No   |       +-------+--------------------------------+--------+--------+       *  = the need satisfied by IPv6 unicast-prefix-based allocation       ** = mainly using the AD-HOC block III (formerly called "EGLOP")                                 Figure 1Savola                        Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 6308              Multicast Address Allocation             June 2011   o  Only ASM is affected by the assignment/allocation issues.   o  With IPv4, GLOP allocations provide a sufficient IPv4 multicast      allocation mechanism for those that have a 16-bit AS number.  IPv4      unicast-prefix-based allocation offers some addresses.  IANA is      also allocating from the AD-HOC block III (formerly called      "EGLOP"), especially with 32-bit AS number holders in mind.      Administratively scoped allocations provide the opportunity for      internal IPv4 allocations.   o  With IPv6, unicast-prefix-based addresses and the derivatives      provide a good allocation strategy, and this also works for scoped      multicast addresses.   o  Dynamic allocations are too complex and unnecessary a mechanism.4.2.  Address Assignment   A summary of address assignment methods is shown in Figure 2.      +--------+--------------------------------+----------+----------+      | Sect.  | Address assignment method      | IPv4     | IPv6     |      +--------+--------------------------------+----------+----------+      |  3.1   | Derived: link-scope addresses  |  No      |   Yes    |      |  3.2   | SSM (inside the node)          |  Yes     |   Yes    |      |  3.3   | Manual assignment              |  Yes     |   Yes    |      |  3.4.1 | Global IANA/RIR assignment     |LastResort|LastResort|      |  3.4.2 | Scope-relative IANA assignment |  Yes     |   Yes    |      |  3.5   | Dynamic assignment protocols   |  Yes     |   Yes    |      +--------+--------------------------------+----------+----------+                                 Figure 2   o  Manually configured assignment is typical today, and works to a      sufficient degree in smaller scale.   o  Global IANA assignment has been done extensively in the past.      Scope-relative IANA assignment is acceptable, but the size of the      pool is not very high.  Inter-domain routing of IPv6 IANA-assigned      prefixes is likely going to be challenging, and as a result that      approach is not very appealing.   o  Dynamic assignment, e.g., MADCAP, has been implemented, but there      is no wide deployment.  Therefore, either there are other gaps in      the multicast architecture, or there is no sufficient demand for      it in the first place when manual and static IANA assignments are      available.  Assignments using SAP also exist but are not common;      global SAP assignment is infeasible with IPv6.Savola                        Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 6308              Multicast Address Allocation             June 2011   o  Derived assignments are only applicable in a fringe case of link-      scoped multicast.4.3.  Future Actions   o  Multicast address discovery/"rendezvous" needs to be analyzed at      more length, and an adequate solution provided.  See      [ADDRDISC-PROB] and [MSA-REQ] for more information.   o  The IETF should consider whether to specify more ranges of the      IPv4 administratively scoped address space for static allocation      for applications that should not be routed over the Internet (such      as backup software, etc. -- so that these wouldn't need to use      global addresses, which should never leak in any case).   o  The IETF should consider its static IANA allocations policy, e.g.,      "locking it down" to a stricter policy (like "IETF Consensus") and      looking at developing the discovery/rendezvous functions, if      necessary.5.  Acknowledgements   Tutoring a couple of multicast-related papers, the latest by Kaarle   Ritvanen [RITVANEN], convinced the author that updated multicast   address assignment/allocation documentation is needed.   Multicast address allocations/assignments were discussed at the   MBONED WG session at IETF 59 [MBONED-IETF59].   Dave Thaler, James Lingard, and Beau Williamson provided useful   feedback for the preliminary version of this memo.  Myung-Ki Shin,   Jerome Durand, John Kristoff, Dave Price, Spencer Dawkins, and Alfred   Hoenes also suggested improvements.6.  IANA Considerations   IANA considerations in Sections4.1.1 and4.1.2 of obsoleted and now   Historic [RFC2908] were never implemented in the IANA registry.7.  Security Considerations   This memo only describes different approaches to allocating and   assigning multicast addresses, and this has no security   considerations; the security analysis of the mentioned protocols is   out of scope of this memo.Savola                        Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 6308              Multicast Address Allocation             June 2011   Obviously, the dynamic assignment protocols in particular are   inherently vulnerable to resource exhaustion attacks, as discussed,   e.g., in [RFC2730].8.  References8.1.  Normative References   [RFC2365]   Meyer, D., "Administratively Scoped IP Multicast",BCP 23,RFC 2365, July 1998.   [RFC3180]   Meyer, D. and P. Lothberg, "GLOP Addressing in 233/8",BCP 53,RFC 3180, September 2001.   [RFC3306]   Haberman, B. and D. Thaler, "Unicast-Prefix-based IPv6               Multicast Addresses",RFC 3306, August 2002.   [RFC3307]   Haberman, B., "Allocation Guidelines for IPv6 Multicast               Addresses",RFC 3307, August 2002.   [RFC3956]   Savola, P. and B. Haberman, "Embedding the Rendezvous               Point (RP) Address in an IPv6 Multicast Address",RFC 3956, November 2004.   [RFC4291]   Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing               Architecture",RFC 4291, February 2006.   [RFC4489]   Park, J-S., Shin, M-K., and H-J. Kim, "A Method for               Generating Link-Scoped IPv6 Multicast Addresses",RFC 4489, April 2006.   [RFC4607]   Holbrook, H. and B. Cain, "Source-Specific Multicast for               IP",RFC 4607, August 2006.   [RFC5771]   Cotton, M., Vegoda, L., and D. Meyer, "IANA Guidelines               for IPv4 Multicast Address Assignments",BCP 51,RFC 5771, March 2010.   [RFC6034]   Thaler, D., "Unicast-Prefix-Based IPv4 Multicast               Addresses",RFC 6034, October 2010.Savola                        Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 6308              Multicast Address Allocation             June 20118.2.  Informative References   [ADDRDISC-PROB]               Savola, P., "Lightweight Multicast Address Discovery               Problem Space", Work in Progress, March 2006.   [MALLOC-AAP]               Handley, M. and S. Hanna, "Multicast Address Allocation               Protocol (AAP)", Work in Progress, June 2000.   [MBONED-IETF59]               "MBONED WG session at IETF59",               <http://www.ietf.org/proceedings/04mar/172.htm>.   [MCAST-DHCPv6]               Durand, J., "IPv6 multicast address assignment with               DHCPv6", Work in Progress, February 2005.   [MSA-REQ]   Asaeda, H. and V. Roca, "Requirements for IP Multicast               Session Announcement", Work in Progress, March 2010.   [RFC2131]   Droms, R., "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol",RFC 2131, March 1997.   [RFC2375]   Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IPv6 Multicast Address               Assignments",RFC 2375, July 1998.   [RFC2730]   Hanna, S., Patel, B., and M. Shah, "Multicast Address               Dynamic Client Allocation Protocol (MADCAP)",RFC 2730,               December 1999.   [RFC2771]   Finlayson, R., "An Abstract API for Multicast Address               Allocation",RFC 2771, February 2000.   [RFC2776]   Handley, M., Thaler, D., and R. Kermode, "Multicast-Scope               Zone Announcement Protocol (MZAP)",RFC 2776, February               2000.   [RFC2908]   Thaler, D., Handley, M., and D. Estrin, "The Internet               Multicast Address Allocation Architecture",RFC 2908,               September 2000.   [RFC2909]   Radoslavov, P., Estrin, D., Govindan, R., Handley, M.,               Kumar, S., and D. Thaler, "The Multicast Address-Set               Claim (MASC) Protocol",RFC 2909, September 2000.   [RFC2974]   Handley, M., Perkins, C., and E. Whelan, "Session               Announcement Protocol",RFC 2974, October 2000.Savola                        Informational                    [Page 13]

RFC 6308              Multicast Address Allocation             June 2011   [RFC3315]   Droms, R., Ed., Bound, J., Volz, B., Lemon, T., Perkins,               C., and M. Carney, "Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol               for IPv6 (DHCPv6)",RFC 3315, July 2003.   [RFC4893]   Vohra, Q. and E. Chen, "BGP Support for Four-octet AS               Number Space",RFC 4893, May 2007.   [RITVANEN]  Ritvanen, K., "Multicast Routing and Addressing", HUT               Report, Seminar on Internetworking, May 2004,               <http://www.tml.hut.fi/Studies/T-110.551/2004/papers/>.Author's Address   Pekka Savola   CSC - Scientific Computing Ltd.   Espoo   Finland   EMail: psavola@funet.fiSavola                        Informational                    [Page 14]

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