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Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                      G. FairhurstRequest for Comments: 6936                        University of AberdeenCategory: Standards Track                                  M. WesterlundISSN: 2070-1721                                                 Ericsson                                                              April 2013Applicability Statement for the Use of IPv6 UDP Datagramswith Zero ChecksumsAbstract   This document provides an applicability statement for the use of UDP   transport checksums with IPv6.  It defines recommendations and   requirements for the use of IPv6 UDP datagrams with a zero UDP   checksum.  It describes the issues and design principles that need to   be considered when UDP is used with IPv6 to support tunnel   encapsulations, and it examines the role of the IPv6 UDP transport   checksum.  The document also identifies issues and constraints for   deployment on network paths that include middleboxes.  An appendix   presents a summary of the trade-offs that were considered in   evaluating the safety of the update toRFC 2460 that changes the use   of the UDP checksum with IPv6.Status of This Memo   This is an Internet Standards Track document.   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).  Further information on   Internet Standards is available inSection 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/rfc6936.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                    [Page 1]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2013 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.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                    [Page 2]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013Table of Contents1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41.1.  Document Structure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51.2.  Terminology  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .51.3.  Use of UDP Tunnels . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61.3.1.  Motivation for New Approaches  . . . . . . . . . . . .61.3.2.  Reducing Forwarding Costs  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .61.3.3.  Need to Inspect the Entire Packet  . . . . . . . . . .71.3.4.  Interactions with Middleboxes  . . . . . . . . . . . .71.3.5.  Support for Load Balancing . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82.  Standards-Track Transports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92.1.  UDP with Standard Checksum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92.2.  UDP-Lite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92.2.1.  Using UDP-Lite as a Tunnel Encapsulation . . . . . . .102.3.  General Tunnel Encapsulations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .10     2.4.  Relationship of Zero UDP Checksum to UDP-Lite and UDP           with Checksum  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .113.  Issues Requiring Consideration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .123.1.  Effect of Packet Modification in the Network . . . . . . .133.1.1.  Corruption of the Destination IP Address Field . . . .143.1.2.  Corruption of the Source IP Address Field  . . . . . .153.1.3.  Corruption of Port Information . . . . . . . . . . . .163.1.4.  Delivery to an Unexpected Port . . . . . . . . . . . .163.1.5.  Corruption of Fragmentation Information  . . . . . . .183.2.  Where Packet Corruption Occurs . . . . . . . . . . . . . .203.3.  Validating the Network Path  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .203.4.  Applicability of the Zero UDP Checksum Method  . . . . . .213.5.  Impact on Non-Supporting Devices or Applications . . . . .22   4.  Constraints on Implementation of IPv6 Nodes Supporting       Zero Checksum  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .235.  Requirements on Usage of the Zero UDP Checksum . . . . . . . .246.  Summary  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .277.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .288.  Acknowledgments  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .299.  References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .309.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .309.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .30Appendix A.  Evaluation of Proposal to UpdateRFC 2460 to                Support Zero Checksum . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33A.1.  Alternatives to the Standard Checksum  . . . . . . . . . .33A.2.  Comparison of Alternative Methods  . . . . . . . . . . . .34A.2.1.  Middlebox Traversal  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34A.2.2.  Load Balancing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35A.2.3.  Ingress and Egress Performance Implications  . . . . .36A.2.4.  Deployability  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36A.2.5.  Corruption Detection Strength  . . . . . . . . . . . .37A.2.6.  Comparison Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .37Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                    [Page 3]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 20131.  Introduction   The User Datagram Protocol (UDP) [RFC0768] transport is defined for   IPv4 [RFC0791], and it is defined in "Internet Protocol, Version 6   (IPv6)" [RFC2460] for IPv6 hosts and routers.  The UDP transport   protocol has a minimal set of features.  This limited set has enabled   a wide range of applications to use UDP, but these applications do   need to provide many important transport functions on top of UDP.   The UDP usage guidelines [RFC5405] provide overall guidance for   application designers, including the use of UDP to support tunneling.   The key difference between UDP usage with IPv4 and IPv6 is thatRFC2460 mandates use of a calculated UDP checksum, i.e., a non-zero   value, due to the lack of an IPv6 header checksum.  The inclusion of   the pseudo-header in the checksum computation provides a statistical   check that datagrams have been delivered to the intended IPv6   destination node.  Algorithms for checksum computation are described   in [RFC1071].   The inability to use an IPv6 datagram with a zero UDP checksum has   been found to be a real problem for certain classes of application,   primarily tunnel applications.  This class of application has been   deployed with a zero UDP checksum using IPv4.  The design of IPv6   raises different issues when considering the safety of using a UDP   checksum with IPv6.  These issues can significantly affect   applications, whether an endpoint is the intended user or an innocent   bystander (i.e., when a packet is received by a different endpoint to   that intended).   This document identifies a set of issues that must be considered and   mitigated to enable safe deployment of IPv6 applications that use a   zero UDP checksum.  The appendix compares the strengths and   weaknesses of a number of proposed solutions.  The comparison of   methods provided in this document is also expected to be useful when   considering applications that have different goals from the ones   whose needs led to the writing of this document, especially   applications that can use existing standardized transport protocols.   The analysis concludes that using a zero UDP checksum is the best   method of the proposed alternatives to meet the goals of certain   tunnel applications.   This document defines recommendations and requirements for use of   IPv6 datagrams with a zero UDP checksum.  This usage is expected to   have initial deployment issues related to middleboxes, limiting the   usability more than desired in the currently deployed Internet.   However, this limitation will be largest initially and will decrease   as updates are provided in middleboxes that support the zero UDPFairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                    [Page 4]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   checksum for IPv6.  Therefore, in this document, we derive a set of   constraints required to ensure safe deployment of a zero UDP   checksum.   Finally, the document identifies some issues that require future   consideration and possibly additional research.1.1.  Document StructureSection 1 provides a background to key issues and introduces the use   of UDP as a tunnel transport protocol.Section 2 describes a set of standards-track datagram transport   protocols that may be used to support tunnels.Section 3 discusses issues with a zero UDP checksum for IPv6.  It   considers the impact of corruption, the need for validation of the   path, and when it is suitable to use a zero UDP checksum.Section 4 is an applicability statement that defines requirements and   recommendations on the implementation of IPv6 nodes that support the   use of a zero UDP checksum.Section 5 provides an applicability statement that defines   requirements and recommendations for protocols and tunnel   encapsulations that are transported over an IPv6 transport that does   not perform a UDP checksum calculation to verify the integrity at the   transport endpoints.Section 6 provides the recommendations for standardization of zero   UDP checksum, with a summary of the findings, and notes the remaining   issues that need future work.Appendix A evaluates the set of proposals to update the UDP transport   behavior and other alternatives intended to improve support for   tunnel protocols.  It concludes by assessing the trade-offs of the   various methods and by identifying advantages and disadvantages for   each method.1.2.  Terminology   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 in [RFC2119].Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                    [Page 5]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 20131.3.  Use of UDP Tunnels   One increasingly popular use of UDP is as a tunneling protocol, where   a tunnel endpoint encapsulates the packets of another protocol inside   UDP datagrams and transmits them to another tunnel endpoint.  Using   UDP as a tunneling protocol is attractive when the payload protocol   is not supported by the middleboxes that may exist along the path,   because many middleboxes support transmission using UDP.  In this   use, the receiving endpoint decapsulates the UDP datagrams and   forwards the original packets contained in the payload [RFC5405].   Tunnels establish virtual links that appear to directly connect   locations that are distant in the physical Internet topology, and   they can be used to create virtual (private) networks.1.3.1.  Motivation for New Approaches   A number of tunnel encapsulations deployed over IPv4 have used the   UDP transport with a zero checksum.  Users of these protocols expect   a similar solution for IPv6.   A number of tunnel protocols are also currently being defined (e.g.,   Automated Multicast Tunnels [AMT] and Locator/Identifier Separation   Protocol (LISP) [RFC6830]).  These protocols provided several   motivations to update IPv6 UDP checksum processing so that it would   benefit from simpler checksum processing, including:   o  Reducing forwarding costs, motivated by redundancy present in the      encapsulated packet header, because in tunnel encapsulations,      payload integrity and length verification may be provided by      higher-layer encapsulations (often using the IPv4, UDP, UDP-Lite      [RFC3828], or TCP checksums [RFC0793]).   o  Eliminating the need to access the entire packet when a tunnel      endpoint forwards the packet.   o  Enhancing the ability to traverse and function with middleboxes.   o  A desire to use the port number space to enable load sharing.1.3.2.  Reducing Forwarding Costs   It is a common requirement to terminate a large number of tunnels on   a single router or host.  The processing cost per tunnel includes   both state (memory requirements) and per-packet processing at the   tunnel ingress and egress.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                    [Page 6]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   Automatic IP Multicast Tunneling, known as AMT [AMT], currently   specifies UDP as the transport protocol for packets carrying tunneled   IP multicast packets.  The current specification for AMT states that   the UDP checksum in the outer packet header should be zero (see   Section 6.6 of [AMT]).  That section argues that the computation of   an additional checksum is an unwarranted burden on nodes implementing   lightweight tunneling protocols when an inner packet is already   adequately protected.  The AMT protocol needs to replicate a   multicast packet to each gateway tunnel.  In this case, the outer IP   addresses are different for each tunnel; therefore, a different   pseudo-header must be built to form the header for each tunnel egress   that receives replicated multicast packets.   The argument concerning redundant processing costs is valid regarding   the integrity of a tunneled packet.  In some architectures (e.g., PC-   based routers), other mechanisms may also significantly reduce   checksum processing costs.  For example, there are implementations   that have optimized checksum processing algorithms, including the use   of checksum offloading.  This processing is readily available for   IPv4 packets at high line rates.  Such processing may be anticipated   for IPv6 endpoints, allowing receivers to reject corrupted packets   without further processing.  However, for certain classes of tunnel   endpoints, this off-loading is not available and is unlikely to   become available in the near future.1.3.3.  Need to Inspect the Entire Packet   The currently deployed hardware in many routers uses a fast-path   processing that provides only the first n bytes of a packet to the   forwarding engine, where typically n <= 128.   When this design is used to support a tunnel ingress and egress, it   prevents fast processing of a transport checksum over an entire   (large) packet.  Hence, the currently defined IPv6 UDP checksum is   poorly suited for use within a router that is unable to access the   entire packet and does not provide checksum off-loading.  Thus,   enabling checksum calculation over the complete packet can impact   router design, performance, energy consumption, and cost.1.3.4.  Interactions with Middleboxes   Many paths in the Internet include one or more middleboxes of various   types.  Large classes of middleboxes will handle zero UDP checksum   packets, but do not support UDP-Lite or the other investigated   proposals.  These middleboxes include load balancers (seeSection 1.3.5) including equal-cost multipath (ECMP) routing, traffic   classifiers, and other functions that reads some fields in the UDP   headers but does not validate the UDP checksum.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                    [Page 7]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   There are also middleboxes that either validate or modify the UDP   checksum.  The two most common classes are firewalls and NATs.  In   IPv4, UDP encapsulation may be desirable for NAT traversal, because   UDP support is commonly provided.  It is also necessary due to the   almost ubiquitous deployment of IPv4 NATs.  There has also been   discussion of NAT for IPv6, although not for the same reason as in   IPv4.  If IPv6 NAT becomes a reality, it hopefully will not present   the same protocol issues as for IPv4.  If NAT is defined for IPv6, it   should take into consideration the use of a zero UDP checksum.   The requirements for IPv6 firewall traversal are likely be to be   similar to those for IPv4.  In addition, it can be reasonably   expected that a firewall conforming toRFC 2460 will not regard   datagrams with a zero UDP checksum as valid.  Use of a zero UDP   checksum with IPv6 requires firewalls to be updated before the full   utility of the change becomes available.   It can be expected that datagrams with zero UDP checksum will   initially not have the same middlebox traversal characteristics as   regular UDP (RFC 2460).  However, when implementations follow the   requirements specified in this document, we expect the traversal   capabilities to improve over time.  We also note that deployment of   IPv6-capable middleboxes is still in its initial phases.  Thus, it   might be that the number of non-updated boxes quickly becomes a very   small percentage of the deployed middleboxes.1.3.5.  Support for Load Balancing   The UDP port number fields have been used as a basis to design load-   balancing solutions for IPv4.  This approach has also been leveraged   for IPv6.  An alternate method would be to utilize the IPv6 flow   label [RFC6437] as a basis for entropy for load balancing.  This   would have the desirable effect of freeing IPv6 load-balancing   devices from the need to assume semantics for the use of the   transport port field, and also, it works for all types of transport   protocols.   This use of the Flow Label for load balancing is consistent with the   intended use, although further clarity was needed to ensure the field   can be consistently used for this purpose.  Therefore, an updated   IPv6 flow label [RFC6437] and ECMP routing [RFC6438] usage were   specified.  Router vendors could be encouraged to start using the   IPv6 Flow Label as a part of the flow hash, providing support for   ECMP without requiring use of UDP.   However, the method for populating the outer IPv6 header with a value   for the flow label is not trivial.  If the inner packet uses IPv6,   the flow label value could be copied to the outer packet header.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                    [Page 8]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   However, many current endpoints set the flow label to a zero value   (thus, no entropy).  The ingress of a tunnel seeking to provide good   entropy in the flow label field would therefore need to create a   random flow label value and keep corresponding state so that all   packets that were associated with a flow would be consistently given   the same flow label.  Although possible, this complexity may not be   desirable in a tunnel ingress.   The end-to-end use of flow labels for load balancing is a long-term   solution.  Even if the usage of the flow label has been clarified,   there will be a transition time before a significant proportion of   endpoints start to assign a good quality flow label to the flows that   they originate.  The use of load balancing using the transport header   fields would continue until any widespread deployment is finally   achieved.2.  Standards-Track Transports   The IETF has defined a set of transport protocols that may be   applicable for tunnels with IPv6.  There is also a set of network-   layer encapsulation tunnels, such as IP-in-IP and Generic Routing   Encapsulation (GRE).  These solutions, which are already   standardized, are discussed first, before discussing the issues,   because they provide background for the description of the issues and   allow some comparison with existing issues.2.1.  UDP with Standard Checksum   UDP [RFC0768] with standard checksum behavior, as defined inRFC2460, has already been discussed.  UDP usage guidelines are provided   in [RFC5405].2.2.  UDP-Lite   UDP-Lite [RFC3828] offers an alternate transport to UDP and is   specified as a proposed standard,RFC 3828.  A MIB is defined in   [RFC5097], and unicast usage guidelines are defined in [RFC5405].   There has been at least one open-source implementation of UDP-Lite as   a part of the Linux kernel since version 2.6.20.   UDP-Lite provides a checksum with an option for partial coverage.   When using this option, a datagram is divided into a sensitive part   (covered by the checksum) and an insensitive part (not covered by the   checksum).  When the checksum covers the entire packet, UDP-Lite is   fully equivalent with UDP, with the exception that it uses a   different value in the Next Header field in the IPv6 header.  Errors   or corruption in the insensitive part will not cause the datagram to   be discarded by the transport layer at the receiving endpoint.  AFairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                    [Page 9]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   minor side effect of using UDP-Lite is that it was specified for   damage-tolerant payloads, and some link layers may employ different   link encapsulations when forwarding UDP-Lite segments (e.g., radio   access bearers).  Most link layers will cover the insensitive part   with the same strong Layer 2 frame Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) that   covers the sensitive part.2.2.1.  Using UDP-Lite as a Tunnel Encapsulation   Tunnel encapsulations, such as Control And Provisioning of Wireless   Access Points (CAPWAP) [RFC5415], can use UDP-Lite, because it   provides a transport-layer checksum, including an IP pseudo-header   checksum, in IPv6, without the need for a router/middlebox to   traverse the entire packet payload.  This provides most of the   verification required for delivery and still keeps a low complexity   for the checksumming operation.  UDP-Lite may set the length of   checksum coverage on a per-packet basis.  This feature could be used   if a tunnel protocol is designed to verify only delivery of the   tunneled payload and uses a calculated checksum for control   information.   Currently, support for middlebox traversal using UDP-Lite is poor,   because UDP-Lite uses a different IPv6 network-layer Next Header   value than that used for UDP; therefore, few middleboxes are able to   interpret UDP-Lite and take appropriate actions when forwarding the   packet.  This makes UDP-Lite less suited to protocols needing general   Internet support, until such time as UDP-Lite has achieved better   support in middleboxes and endpoints.2.3.  General Tunnel Encapsulations   The IETF has defined a set of tunneling protocols or network-layer   encapsulations, e.g., IP-in-IP and GRE.  These either do not include   a checksum or use a checksum that is optional, because tunnel   encapsulations are typically layered directly over the Internet layer   (identified by the upper layer type in the IPv6 Next Header field)   and because they are not used as endpoint transport protocols.  There   is little chance of confusing a tunnel-encapsulated packet with other   application data.  Such confusion could result in corruption of   application state or data.   From an end-to-end perspective, the principal difference between an   endpoint transport and a tunnel encapsulation is the value of the   network-layer Next Header field.  In the former, it identifies a   transport protocol that supports endpoint applications.  In the   latter, it identifies a tunnel protocol egress.  This separation of   function reduces the probability that corruption of a tunneled packet   could result in the packet being erroneously delivered to anFairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 10]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   application.  Specifically, packets are delivered only to protocol   modules that process a specific Next Header value.  The Next Header   field therefore provides a first-level check of correct   demultiplexing.  In contrast, the UDP port space is shared by many   diverse applications, and therefore, UDP demultiplexing relies solely   on the port numbers.2.4.  Relationship of Zero UDP Checksum to UDP-Lite and UDP with      Checksum   The operation of IPv6 with UDP with a zero checksum is not the same   as IPv4 with UDP with a zero checksum.  Protocol designers should not   be fooled into thinking that the two are the same.  The requirements   below list a set of additional considerations for IPv6.   Where possible, existing general tunnel encapsulations, such as GRE   and IP-in-IP, should be used.  This section assumes that such   existing tunnel encapsulations do not offer the functionally required   to satisfy the protocol designer's goals.  This section considers the   standardized alternative solutions rather than the full set of ideas   evaluated inAppendix A.  The alternatives to UDP with a zero   checksum are UDP with a (calculated) checksum and UDP-Lite.   UDP with a checksum has the advantage of close to universal support   in both endpoints and middleboxes.  It also provides statistical   verification of delivery to the intended destination (address and   port).  However, some classes of device have limited support for   calculation of a checksum that covers a full datagram.  For these   devices, this limited support can incur significant processing costs   (e.g., requiring processing in the router's slow path) and hence can   reduce capacity or fail to function.   UDP-Lite has the advantage of using a checksum that can be calculated   only over the pseudo-header and the UDP header.  This provides a   statistical verification of delivery to the intended destination   (address and port).  The checksum can be calculated without access to   the datagram payload, requiring access only to the part that is to be   protected.  A drawback is that UDP-Lite currently has limited support   in both endpoints (i.e., is not supported on all operating system   platforms) and middleboxes (which must support the UDP-Lite header   type).  Therefore, using a path verification method is recommended.   IPv6 and UDP with a zero checksum can also be used by nodes that do   not permit calculation of a payload checksum.  Many existing classes   of middleboxes do not verify or change the transport checksum.  For   these middleboxes, IPv6 with a zero UDP checksum is expected to   function where UDP-Lite would not.  However, support for the zero UDP   checksum in middleboxes that do change or verify the checksum isFairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 11]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   currently limited, and this may result in datagrams with a zero UDP   checksum being discarded.  Therefore, using a path verification   method is recommended.   For some sets of constraints, no solution exists.  For example, a   protocol designer who needs to originate or receive datagrams on a   device that cannot efficiently calculate a checksum over a full   datagram and also needs these packets to pass through a middlebox   that verifies or changes a UDP checksum, but that does not support a   zero UDP checksum, cannot use the zero UDP checksum method.   Similarly, a protocol designer who needs to originate datagrams on a   device with UDP-Lite support, but needs the packets to pass through a   middlebox that does not support UDP-Lite, cannot use UDP-Lite.  For   such cases, there is no optimal solution.  The current recommendation   is to use or fall back to using UDP with full checksum coverage.3.  Issues Requiring Consideration   This informative section evaluates issues about the proposal to   update IPv6 [RFC2460] to enable the UDP transport checksum to be set   to zero.  Some of the identified issues are common to other protocols   already in use.  This section also provides background to help in   understanding the requirements and recommendations that follow.   The decision inRFC 2460 to omit an integrity check at the network   level meant that the IPv6 transport checksum was overloaded with many   functions, including validating:   o  That the endpoint address was not corrupted within a router, i.e.,      a packet was intended to be received by this destination, and that      the packet does not consist of a wrong header spliced to a      different payload.   o  That extension header processing is correctly delimited, i.e., the      start of data has not been corrupted.  In this case, reception of      a valid Next Header value provides some protection.   o  Reassembly processing, when used.   o  The length of the payload.   o  The port values, i.e., the correct application receives the      payload.  (Applications should also check the expected use of      source ports/addresses.)   o  The payload integrity.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 12]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   In IPv4, the first four of these checks are performed using the IPv4   header checksum.   In IPv6, these checks occur within the endpoint stack using the UDP   checksum information.  An IPv6 node also relies on the header   information to determine whether to send an ICMPv6 error message   [RFC4443] and to determine the node to which this is sent.  Corrupted   information may lead to misdelivery to an unintended application   socket on an unexpected host.3.1.  Effect of Packet Modification in the Network   IP packets may be corrupted as they traverse an Internet path.  Older   evidence presented in "When the CRC and TCP Checksum Disagree"   [Sigcomm2000] shows that this was an issue with IPv4 routers in the   year 2000 and that occasional corruption could result from bad   internal router processing in routers or hosts.  These errors are not   detected by the strong frame checksums employed at the link layer   [RFC3819].  During the development of this document in 2009, a number   of individuals provided reports of observed rates for received UDP   datagrams using IPv4 where the UDP checksum had been detected as   corrupt.  These rates were as high as 1.39E-4 for some paths, but   close to zero for other paths.   There is extensive experience with deployments using tunnel protocols   in well-managed networks (e.g., corporate networks and service   provider core networks).  This has shown the robustness of methods   such as Pseudowire Emulation Edge-to-Edge (PWE3) and MPLS that do not   employ a transport protocol checksum and that have not specified   mechanisms to protect from corruption of the unprotected headers   (such as the VPN Identifier in MPLS).  Reasons for the robustness may   include:   o  A reduced probability of corruption on paths through well-managed      networks.   o  IP forms the majority of the inner traffic carried by these      tunnels.  Hence, from a transport perspective, endpoint      verification is already being performed when a received IPv4      packet is processed or by the transport pseudo-header for an IPv6      packet.  This update to UDP does not change this behavior.   o  In certain cases, a combination of additional filtering (e.g.,      filtering a MAC destination address in a Layer 2 tunnel)      significantly reduces the probability of final misdelivery to the      IP stack.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 13]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   o  The tunnel protocols did not use a UDP transport header.      Therefore, any corruption is unlikely to result in misdelivery to      another UDP-based application.  This concern is specific to UDP      with IPv6.   While this experience can guide the present recommendations, any   update to UDP must preserve operation in the general Internet, which   is heterogeneous and can include links and systems of widely varying   characteristics.  Transport protocols used by hosts need to be   designed with this in mind, especially when there is need to traverse   edge networks, where middlebox deployments are common.   Currently, for the general Internet, there is no evidence that   corruption is rare, nor is there evidence that corruption in IPv6 is   rare.  Therefore, it seems prudent not to relax checks on   misdelivery.  The emergence of low-end IPv6 routers and the proposed   use of NAT with IPv6 provide further motivation to protect from   misdelivery.   Corruption in the network may result in:   o  A datagram being misdelivered to the wrong host/router or the      wrong transport entity within an endpoint.  Such a datagram needs      to be discarded.   o  A datagram payload being corrupted, but still delivered to the      intended host/router transport entity.  Such a datagram needs to      be either discarded or correctly processed by an application that      provides its own integrity checks.   o  A datagram payload being truncated by corruption of the length      field.  Such a datagram needs to be discarded.   Using a checksum significantly reduces the impact of errors, reducing   the probability of undetected corruption of state (and data) on both   the host stack and the applications using the transport service.   The following sections examine the effect of modifications to the   destination and source IP address fields, the port fields, and the   fragmentation information.3.1.1.  Corruption of the Destination IP Address Field   An IPv6 endpoint destination address could be modified in the   network; for example, it could be corrupted by an error.  This is not   a concern for IPv4, because the IP header checksum will result in   this packet being discarded by the receiving IP stack.  When using   IPv6, however, such modification in the network cannot be detected atFairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 14]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   the network layer.  Detection of this corruption by a UDP receiver   relies on the IPv6 pseudo-header that is incorporated in the   transport checksum.   There are two possible outcomes:   o  Delivery to a destination address that is not in use.  The packet      will not be delivered, but an error report could be generated.   o  Delivery to a different destination address.  This modification      will normally be detected by the transport checksum, resulting in      a silent discard.  Without a computed checksum, the packet would      be passed to the endpoint port demultiplexing function.  If an      application is bound to the associated ports, the packet payload      will be passed to the application.  (SeeSection 3.1.4 on port      processing.)3.1.2.  Corruption of the Source IP Address Field   This section examines what happens when the source IP address is   corrupted in transit.  This is not a concern in IPv4, because the IP   header checksum will normally result in this packet being discarded   by the receiving IP stack.  Detection of this corruption by a UDP   receiver relies on the IPv6 pseudo-header that is incorporated in the   transport checksum.   Corruption of an IPv6 source address does not result in the IP packet   being delivered to a different endpoint protocol or destination   address.  If only the source address is corrupted, the datagram will   likely be processed in the intended context, although with erroneous   origin information.  When using unicast reverse path forwarding   [RFC2827], a change in address may result in the router discarding   the packet when the route to the modified source address is different   from that of the source address of the original packet.   The result will depend on the application or protocol that processes   the packet.  Some examples are:   o  An application that requires a pre-established context may      disregard the datagram as invalid or could map it to another      context (if a context for the modified source address were already      activated).   o  A stateless application will process the datagram outside of any      context.  A simple example is the ECHO server, which will respond      with a datagram directed to the modified source address.  This      would create unwanted additional processing load and generate      traffic to the modified endpoint address.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 15]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   o  Some datagram applications build state using the information from      packet headers.  A previously unused source address would result      in receiver processing and the creation of unnecessary transport-      layer state at the receiver.  For example, Real-time Protocol      (RTP) [RFC3550] sessions commonly employ a source-independent      receiver port.  State is created for each received flow.      Therefore, reception of a datagram with a corrupted source address      will result in the accumulation of unnecessary state in the RTP      state machine, including collision detection and response (since      the same synchronization source (SSRC) value will appear to arrive      from multiple source IP addresses).   o  ICMP messages relating to a corrupted packet can be misdirected to      the wrong source node.   In general, the effect of corrupting the source address will depend   upon the protocol that processes the packet and its robustness to   this error.  For the case where the packet is received by a tunnel   endpoint, the tunnel application is expected to correctly handle a   corrupted source address.   The impact of source address modification is more difficult to   quantify when the receiving application is not the one originally   intended and several fields have been modified in transit.3.1.3.  Corruption of Port Information   This section describes what happens if one or both of the UDP port   values are corrupted in transit.  This can also happen when IPv4 is   used with a zero UDP checksum, but not when UDP checksums are   calculated or when UDP-Lite is used.  If the ports carried in the   transport header of an IPv6 packet are corrupted in transit, packets   may be delivered to the wrong application process (on the intended   machine), responses or errors may be sent to the wrong application   process (on the intended machine), or both may occur.3.1.4.  Delivery to an Unexpected Port   If one combines the corruption effects, such as a corrupted   destination address and corrupted ports, there are a number of   potential outcomes when traffic arrives at an unexpected port.  The   following are the possibilities and their outcomes for a packet that   does not use UDP checksum validation:   o  The packet could be delivered to a port that is not in use.  The      packet is discarded, but could generate an ICMPv6 message (e.g.,      port unreachable).Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 16]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   o  The packet could be delivered to a different node that implements      the same application, so the packet may be accepted, but side      effects could occur or accumulated state could be generated.   o  The packet could be delivered to an application that does not      implement the tunnel protocol, so the packet may be incorrectly      parsed and may be misinterpreted, causing side effects or      generating accumulated state.   The probability of each outcome depends on the statistical   probability that the address or the port information for the source   or destination becomes corrupted in the datagram such that they match   those of an existing flow or server port.  Unfortunately, such a   match may be more likely for UDP than for connection-oriented   transports, because:   1.  There is no handshake prior to communication and no sequence       numbers (as in TCP, Datagram Congestion Control Protocol (DCCP),       and Stream Control Transmission Protocol (SCTP)).  This makes it       hard to verify that an application process is given only the       application data associated with a specific transport session.   2.  Applications writers often bind to wildcard values in endpoint       identifiers and do not always validate the correctness of       datagrams they receive.  (Guidance on this topic is provided in       [RFC5405].)   While these rules could, in principle, be revised to declare naive   applications as "historic", this remedy is not realistic.  The   transport owes it to the stack to do its best to reject bogus   datagrams.   If checksum coverage is suppressed, the application needs to provide   a method to detect and discard the unwanted data.  A tunnel protocol   would need to perform its own integrity checks on any control   information if it is transported in datagrams with a zero UDP   checksum.  If the tunnel payload is another IP packet, the packets   requiring checksums can be assumed to have their own checksums,   provided that the rate of corrupted packets is not significantly   larger due to the tunnel encapsulation.  If a tunnel transports other   inner payloads that do not use IP, the assumptions of corruption   detection for that particular protocol must be fulfilled.  This may   require an additional checksum/CRC and/or integrity protection of the   payload and tunnel headers.   A protocol that uses a zero UDP checksum cannot assume that it is the   only protocol using a zero UDP checksum.  Therefore, it needs to   handle misdelivery gracefully.  It must be robust when malformedFairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 17]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   packets are received on a listening port, and it must expect that   these packets may contain corrupted data or data associated with a   completely different protocol.3.1.5.  Corruption of Fragmentation Information   The fragmentation information in IPv6 employs a 32-bit identity field   (compared to only a 16-bit field in IPv4), a 13-bit fragment offset,   and a 1-bit flag indicating whether there are more fragments.   Corruption of any of these fields may result in one of two outcomes:   o  Reassembly failure: An error in the "More Fragments" field for the      last fragment will, for example, result in the packet never being      considered complete, so it will eventually be timed out and      discarded.  A corruption in the ID field will result in the      fragment not being delivered to the intended context, thus leaving      the rest of the packet incomplete, unless that packet has been      duplicated before the corruption.  The incomplete packet will      eventually be timed out and discarded.   o  Erroneous reassembly: The reassembled packet did not match the      original packet.  This can occur when the ID field of a fragment      is corrupted, resulting in a fragment becoming associated with      another packet and taking the place of another fragment.      Corruption in the offset information can cause the fragment to be      misaligned in the reassembly buffer, resulting in incorrect      reassembly.  Corruption can cause the packet to become shorter or      longer; however, completing the reassembly is much less probable,      because this would require consistent corruption of the IPv6      header's payload length and offset fields.  To prevent erroneous      assembly, the reassembling stack must provide strong checks that      detect overlap and missing data.  Note, however, that this is not      guaranteed and has been clarified in "Handling of Overlapping IPv6      Fragments" [RFC5722].   The erroneous reassembly of packets is a general concern, and such   packets should be discarded instead of being passed to higher-layer   processes.  The primary detector of packet length changes is the IP   payload length field, with a secondary check provided by the   transport checksum.  The Upper-Layer Packet length field included in   the pseudo-header assists in verifying correct reassembly, because   the Internet checksum has a low probability of detecting insertion of   data or overlap errors (due to misplacement of data).  The checksum   is also incapable of detecting insertion or removal of data that is   all-zero in a chunk that is a multiple of 16 bits.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 18]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   The most significant risk of corruption results following mis-   association of a fragment with a different packet.  This risk can be   significant, because the size of fragments is often the same (e.g.,   fragments that form when the path MTU results in fragmentation of a   larger packet, which is common when addition of a tunnel   encapsulation header increases the size of a packet).  Detection of   this type of error requires a checksum or other integrity check of   the headers and the payload.  While such protection is desirable for   tunnel encapsulations using IPv4, because the small fragmentation ID   can easily result in wraparound [RFC4963], this is especially   desirable for tunnels that perform flow aggregation [TUNNELS].   Tunnel fragmentation behavior matters.  There can be outer or inner   fragmentation tunnels in the Internet Architecture [TUNNELS].  If   there is inner fragmentation by the tunnel, the outer headers will   never be fragmented, and thus, a zero UDP checksum in the outer   header will not affect the reassembly process.  When a tunnel   performs outer header fragmentation, the tunnel egress needs to   perform reassembly of the outer fragments into an inner packet.  The   inner packet is either a complete packet or a fragment.  If it is a   fragment, the destination endpoint of the fragment will perform   reassembly of the received fragments.  The complete packet or the   reassembled fragments will then be processed according to the packet   Next Header field.  The receiver may detect reassembly anomalies only   when it uses a protocol with a checksum.  The larger the number of   reassembly processes to which a packet has been subjected, the   greater the probability of an error.  The following list describes   some tunnel fragmentation behaviors:   o  An IP-in-IP tunnel that performs inner fragmentation has similar      properties to a UDP tunnel with a zero UDP checksum that also      performs inner fragmentation.   o  An IP-in-IP tunnel that performs outer fragmentation has similar      properties to a UDP tunnel with a zero UDP checksum that performs      outer fragmentation.   o  A tunnel that performs outer fragmentation can result in a higher      level of corruption due to both inner and outer fragmentation,      enabling more chances for reassembly errors to occur.   o  Recursive tunneling can result in fragmentation at more than one      header level, even for fragmentation of the encapsulated packet,      unless the fragmentation is performed on the innermost IP header.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 19]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   o  Unless there is verification at each reassembly, the probability      of undetected errors will increase with the number of times      fragmentation is recursively applied, making both IP-in-IP and UDP      with zero UDP checksum vulnerable to undetected errors.   In conclusion, fragmentation of datagrams with a zero UDP checksum   does not worsen the performance compared to some other commonly used   tunnel encapsulations.  However, caution is needed for recursive   tunneling that offers no additional verification at the different   tunnel layers.3.2.  Where Packet Corruption Occurs   Corruption of IP packets can occur at any point along a network path:   during packet generation, during transmission over the link, in the   process of routing and switching, etc.  Some transmission steps   include a checksum or CRC that reduces the probability for corrupted   packets being forwarded, but there still exists a probability that   errors may propagate undetected.   Unfortunately, the Internet community lacks reliable information to   identify the most common functions or equipment that results in   packet corruption.  However, there are indications that the place   where corruption occurs can vary significantly from one path to   another.  However, there is a risk in taking evidence from one usage   domain and using it to infer characteristics for another.  Methods   intended for general Internet usage must therefore assume that   corruption can occur, and mechanisms must be deployed to mitigate the   effects of corruption and any resulting misdelivery.3.3.  Validating the Network Path   IP transports designed for use in the general Internet should not   assume specific path characteristics.  Network protocols may reroute   packets, thus changing the set of routers and middleboxes along a   path.  Therefore, transports such as TCP, SCTP, and DCCP have been   designed to negotiate protocol parameters, adapt to different network   path characteristics, and receive feedback to verify that the current   path is suited to the intended application.  Applications using UDP   and UDP-Lite need to provide their own mechanisms to confirm the   validity of the current network path.   A zero value in the UDP checksum field is explicitly disallowed inRFC 2460.  Thus, it may be expected that any device on the path that   has a reason to look beyond the IP header, for example, to validate   the UDP checksum, will consider such a packet as erroneous or illegal   and may discard it, unless the device is updated to support the new   behavior.  Any middlebox that modifies the UDP checksum, for example,Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 20]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   a NAT that changes the values of the IP and UDP header in such a way   that the checksum over the pseudo-header changes value, will need to   be updated to support this behavior.  Until then, a zero UDP checksum   packet is likely to be discarded, either directly in the middlebox or   at the destination, when a zero UDP checksum has been modified to be   non-zero by an incremental update.   A pair of endpoints intending to use the new behavior will therefore   need not only to ensure support at each endpoint, but also to ensure   that the path between them will deliver packets with the new   behavior.  This may require using negotiation or an explicit mandate   to use the new behavior by all nodes that support the new protocol.   Enabling the use of a zero checksum places new requirements on   equipment deployed within the network, such as middleboxes.  A   middlebox (e.g., a firewall or NAT) may enable zero checksum usage   for a particular range of ports.  Note that checksum off-loading and   operating system design may result in all IPv6 UDP traffic being sent   with a calculated checksum.  This requires middleboxes that are   configured to enable a zero UDP checksum to continue to work with   bidirectional UDP flows that use a zero UDP checksum in only one   direction, and therefore, they must not maintain separate state for a   UDP flow based on its checksum usage.   Support along the path between endpoints can be guaranteed in limited   deployments by appropriate configuration.  In general, it can be   expected to take time for deployment of any updated behavior to   become ubiquitous.   A sender will need to probe the path to verify the expected behavior.   Path characteristics may change, and usage therefore should be robust   and able to detect a failure of the path under normal usage, and   should be able to renegotiate.  Note that a bidirectional path does   not necessarily support the same checksum usage in both the forward   and return directions.  Receipt of a datagram with a zero UDP   checksum does not imply that the remote endpoint can also receive a   datagram with a zero UDP checksum.  This behavior will require   periodic validation of the path, adding complexity to any solution   using the new behavior.3.4.  Applicability of the Zero UDP Checksum Method   The update to the IPv6 specification defined in [RFC6935] modifies   only IPv6 nodes that implement specific protocols designed to permit   omission of a UDP checksum.  This document provides an applicability   statement for the updated method, indicating when the mechanism can   (and cannot) be used.  Enabling a zero UDP checksum, and ensuringFairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 21]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   correct interactions with the stack, implies much more than simply   disabling the checksum algorithm for specific packets at the   transport interface.   When the zero UDP checksum method is widely available, we expect that   it will be used by applications that perceive to gain benefit from   it.  Any solution that uses an end-to-end transport protocol rather   than an IP-in-IP encapsulation needs to minimize the possibility that   application processes could confuse a corrupted or wrongly delivered   UDP datagram with that of data addressed to the application running   on their endpoint.   A protocol or application that uses the zero UDP checksum method must   ensure that the lack of checksum does not affect the protocol   operation.  This includes being robust to receiving an unintended   packet from another protocol or context following corruption of a   destination or source address and/or port value.  It also includes   considering the need for additional implicit protection mechanisms   required when using the payload of a UDP packet received with a zero   checksum.3.5.  Impact on Non-Supporting Devices or Applications   It is important to consider the potential impact of using a zero UDP   checksum on endpoint devices and applications that are not modified   to support the new behavior or, by default or preference, do not use   the regular behavior.  These applications must not be significantly   impacted by the update.   To illustrate why this necessary, consider the implications of a node   that enables use of a zero UDP checksum at the interface level.  This   would result in all applications that listen to a UDP socket   receiving datagrams where the checksum was not verified.  This could   have a significant impact on an application that was not designed   with the additional robustness needed to handle received packets with   corruption, creating state or destroying existing state in the   application.   Therefore, a zero UDP checksum needs to be enabled only for   individual ports using an explicit request by the application.  In   this case, applications using other ports would maintain the current   IPv6 behavior, discarding incoming datagrams with a zero UDP   checksum.  These other applications would not be affected by this   changed behavior.  An application that allows the changed behavior   should be aware of the risk of corruption and the increased level of   misdirected traffic, and can be designed robustly to handle this   risk.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 22]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 20134.  Constraints on Implementation of IPv6 Nodes Supporting Zero Checksum   This section is an applicability statement that defines requirements   and recommendations for the implementation of IPv6 nodes that support   the use of a zero value in the checksum field of a UDP datagram.   All implementations that support the zero UDP checksum method MUST   conform to the requirements defined below:   1.   An IPv6 sending node MAY use a calculatedRFC 2460 checksum for        all datagrams that it sends.  This explicitly permits an        interface that supports checksum off-loading to insert an        updated UDP checksum value in all UDP datagrams that it        forwards.  Note, however, that sending a calculated checksum        requires the receiver to also perform the checksum calculation.        Checksum off-loading can normally be switched off for a        particular interface to ensure that datagrams are sent with a        zero UDP checksum.   2.   IPv6 nodes SHOULD, by default, NOT allow the zero UDP checksum        method for transmission.   3.   IPv6 nodes MUST provide a way for the application/protocol to        indicate the set of ports that will be enabled to send datagrams        with a zero UDP checksum.  This may be implemented by enabling a        transport mode using a socket API call when the socket is        established, or by a similar mechanism.  It may also be        implemented by enabling the method for a pre-assigned static        port used by a specific tunnel protocol.   4.   IPv6 nodes MUST provide a method to allow an application/        protocol to indicate that a particular UDP datagram is required        to be sent with a UDP checksum.  This needs to be allowed by the        operating system at any time (e.g., to send keepalive        datagrams), not just when a socket is established in zero        checksum mode.   5.   The default IPv6 node receiver behavior MUST be to discard all        IPv6 packets carrying datagrams with a zero UDP checksum.   6.   IPv6 nodes MUST provide a way for the application/protocol to        indicate the set of ports that will be enabled to receive        datagrams with a zero UDP checksum.  This may be implemented via        a socket API call or by a similar mechanism.  It may also be        implemented by enabling the method for a pre-assigned static        port used by a specific tunnel protocol.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 23]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   7.   IPv6 nodes supporting usage of zero UDP checksums MUST also        allow reception using a calculated UDP checksum on all ports        configured to allow zero UDP checksum usage.  (The sending        endpoint, e.g., the encapsulating ingress, may choose to compute        the UDP checksum or may calculate it by default.)  The receiving        endpoint MUST use the reception method specified inRFC2460 when        the checksum field is not zero.   8.RFC 2460 specifies that IPv6 nodes SHOULD log received datagrams        with a zero UDP checksum.  This remains the case for any        datagram received on a port that does not explicitly enable        processing of a zero UDP checksum.  A port for which the zero        UDP checksum has been enabled MUST NOT log the datagram solely        because the checksum value is zero.   9.   IPv6 nodes MAY separately identify received UDP datagrams that        are discarded with a zero UDP checksum.  They SHOULD NOT add        these to the standard log, because the endpoint has not been        verified.  This may be used to support other functions (such as        a security policy).   10.  IPv6 nodes that receive ICMPv6 messages that refer to packets        with a zero UDP checksum MUST provide appropriate checks        concerning the consistency of the reported packet to verify that        the reported packet actually originated from the node, before        acting upon the information (e.g., validating the address and        port numbers in the ICMPv6 message body).5.  Requirements on Usage of the Zero UDP Checksum   This section is an applicability statement that identifies   requirements and recommendations for protocols and tunnel   encapsulations that are transported over an IPv6 transport flow   (e.g., a tunnel) that does not perform a UDP checksum calculation to   verify the integrity at the transport endpoints.  Before deciding to   use the zero UDP checksum and lose the integrity verification   provided by non-zero checksumming, a protocol developer should   seriously consider if they can use checksummed UDP packets or UDP-   Lite [RFC3828], because IPv6 with a zero UDP checksum is not   equivalent in behavior to IPv4 with zero UDP checksum.   The requirements and recommendations for protocols and tunnel   encapsulations using an IPv6 transport flow that does not perform a   UDP checksum calculation to verify the integrity at the transport   endpoints are:Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 24]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   1.   Transported protocols that enable the use of zero UDP checksum        MUST enable this only for a specific port or port range.  This        needs to be enabled at the sending and receiving endpoints for a        UDP flow.   2.   An integrity mechanism is always RECOMMENDED at the transported        protocol layer to ensure that corruption rates of the delivered        payload are not increased (e.g., at the innermost packet of a        UDP tunnel).  A mechanism that isolates the causes of corruption        (e.g., identifying misdelivery, IPv6 header corruption, or        tunnel header corruption) is also expected to provide additional        information about the status of the tunnel (e.g., to suggest a        security attack).   3.   A transported protocol that encapsulates Internet Protocol (IPv4        or IPv6) packets MAY rely on the inner packet integrity checks,        provided that the tunnel protocol will not significantly        increase the rate of corruption of the inner IP packet.  If a        significantly increased corruption rate can occur, the tunnel        protocol MUST provide an additional integrity verification        mechanism.  Early detection is desirable to avoid wasting        unnecessary computation, transmission capacity, or storage for        packets that will subsequently be discarded.   4.   A transported protocol that supports the use of a zero UDP        checksum MUST be designed so that corruption of any header        information does not result in accumulation of incorrect state        for the protocol.   5.   A transported protocol with a non-tunnel payload or one that        encapsulates non-IP packets MUST have a CRC or other mechanism        for checking packet integrity, unless the non-IP packet is        specifically designed for transmission over a lower layer that        does not provide a packet integrity guarantee.   6.   A transported protocol with control feedback SHOULD be robust to        changes in the network path, because the set of middleboxes on a        path may vary during the life of an association.  The UDP        endpoints need to discover paths with middleboxes that drop        packets with a zero UDP checksum.  Therefore, transported        protocols SHOULD send keepalive messages with a zero UDP        checksum.  An endpoint that discovers an appreciable loss rate        for keepalive packets MAY terminate the UDP flow (e.g., a        tunnel).Section 3.1.3 of RFC 5405 describes requirements for        congestion control when using a UDP-based transport.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 25]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   7.   A protocol with control feedback that can fall back to using UDP        with a calculatedRFC 2460 checksum is expected to be more        robust to changes in the network path.  Therefore, keepalive        messages SHOULD include both UDP datagrams with a checksum and        datagrams with a zero UDP checksum.  This will enable the remote        endpoint to distinguish between a path failure and the dropping        of datagrams with a zero UDP checksum.   8.   A middlebox implementation MUST allow forwarding of an IPv6 UDP        datagram with both a zero and a standard UDP checksum using the        same UDP port.   9.   A middlebox MAY configure a restricted set of specific port        ranges that forward UDP datagrams with a zero UDP checksum.  The        middlebox MAY drop IPv6 datagrams with a zero UDP checksum that        are outside a configured range.   10.  When a middlebox forwards an IPv6 UDP flow containing datagrams        with both a zero and a standard UDP checksum, the middlebox MUST        NOT maintain separate state for flows, depending on the value of        their UDP checksum field.  (This requirement is necessary to        enable a sender that always calculates a checksum to communicate        via a middlebox with a remote endpoint that uses a zero UDP        checksum.)   Special considerations are required when designing a UDP tunnel   protocol where the tunnel ingress or egress may be a router that may   not have access to the packet payload.  When the node is acting as a   host (i.e., sending or receiving a packet addressed to itself), the   checksum processing is similar to other hosts.  However, when the   node (e.g., a router) is acting as a tunnel ingress or egress that   forwards a packet to or from a UDP tunnel, there may be restricted   access to the packet payload.  This prevents calculating (or   verifying) a UDP checksum.  In this case, the tunnel protocol may use   a zero UDP checksum and must:   o  Ensure that tunnel ingress and tunnel egress router are both      configured to use a zero UDP checksum.  For example, this may      include ensuring that hardware checksum off-loading is disabled.   o  The tunnel operator must ensure that middleboxes on the network      path are updated to support use of a zero UDP checksum.   o  A tunnel egress should implement appropriate security techniques      to protect from overload, including source address filtering to      prevent traffic injection by an attacker and rate-limiting of any      packets that incur additional processing, such as UDP datagrams      used for control functions that require verification of aFairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 26]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013      calculated checksum to verify the network path.  Usage of common      control traffic for multiple tunnels between a pair of nodes can      assist in reducing the number of packets to be processed.6.  Summary   This document provides an applicability statement for the use of UDP   transport checksums with IPv6.   It examines the role of the UDP transport checksum when used with   IPv6 and presents a summary of the trade-offs in evaluating the   safety of updatingRFC 2460 to permit an IPv6 endpoint to use a zero   UDP checksum field to indicate that no checksum is present.   Application designers should first examine whether their transport   goals may be met using standard UDP (with a calculated checksum) or   UDP-Lite.  The use of UDP with a zero UDP checksum has merits for   some applications, such as tunnel encapsulation, and is widely used   in IPv4.  However, there are different dangers for IPv6.  There is an   increased risk of corruption and misdelivery when using zero UDP   checksum in IPv6 compared to using IPv4 due to the lack of an IPv6   header checksum.  Thus, application designers need to evaluate the   risks of enabling use of a zero UDP checksum and consider a solution   that at least provides the same delivery protection as for IPv4, for   example, by utilizing UDP-Lite or by enabling the UDP checksum.  The   use of checksum off-loading may help alleviate the cost of checksum   processing and permit use of a checksum using method defined inRFC2460.   Tunnel applications using UDP for encapsulation can, in many cases,   use a zero UDP checksum without significant impact on the corruption   rate.  A well-designed tunnel application should include consistency   checks to validate the header information encapsulated with a   received packet.  In most cases, tunnels encapsulating IP packets can   rely on the integrity protection provided by the transported protocol   (or tunneled inner packet).  When correctly implemented, such an   endpoint will not be negatively impacted by the omission of the   transport-layer checksum.  Recursive tunneling and fragmentation are   potential issues that can raise corruption rates significantly, and   they require careful consideration.   Other UDP applications at the intended destination node or another   node can be impacted if the nodes are allowed to receive datagrams   that have a zero UDP checksum.  It is important that already deployed   applications are not impacted by a change at the transport layer.  If   these applications execute on nodes that implementRFC 2460, they   will discard (and log) all datagrams with a zero UDP checksum.  This   is not an issue.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 27]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   In general, UDP-based applications need to employ a mechanism that   allows a large percentage of the corrupted packets to be removed   before they reach an application, to protect both the data stream of   the application and the control plane of higher layer protocols.   These checks are currently performed by the UDP checksum for IPv6 or   by the reduced checksum for UDP-Lite when used with IPv6.   The transport of recursive tunneling and the use of fragmentation   pose difficult issues that need to be considered in the design of   tunnel protocols.  There is an increased risk of an error in the   innermost packet when fragmentation occurs across several layers of   tunneling and several different reassembly processes are run without   verification of correctness.  This requires extra thought and careful   consideration in the design of transported tunnels.   Any use of the updated method must consider the implications for   firewalls, NATs, and other middleboxes.  It is not expected that IPv6   NATs will handle IPv6 UDP datagrams in the same way that they handle   IPv4 UDP datagrams.  In many deployed cases, an update to support an   IPv6 zero UDP checksum will be required.  Firewalls are intended to   be configured, and therefore, they may need to be explicitly updated   to allow new services or protocols.  Deployment of IPv6 middleboxes   is not yet as prolific as it is in IPv4, and therefore, new devices   are expected to follow the methods specified in this document.   Each application should consider the implications of choosing an IPv6   transport that uses a zero UDP checksum and should consider whether   other standard methods may be more appropriate and may simplify   application design.7.  Security Considerations   Transport checksums provide the first stage of protection for the   stack, although they cannot be considered authentication mechanisms.   These checks are also desirable to ensure that packet counters   correctly log actual activity, and they can be used to detect unusual   behaviors.   Depending on the hardware design, the processing requirements may   differ for tunnels that have a zero UDP checksum and those that   calculate a checksum.  This processing overhead may need to be   considered when deciding whether to enable a tunnel and to determine   an acceptable rate for transmission.  This can become a security risk   for designs that can handle a significantly larger number of packets   with zero UDP checksums compared to datagrams with a non-zero   checksum, such as a tunnel egress.  An attacker could attempt to   inject non-zero checksummed UDP packets into a tunnel that is   forwarding zero checksum UDP packets and cause overload in theFairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 28]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   processing of the non-zero checksums, e.g., if it happens in a   router's slow path.  Protection mechanisms should therefore be   employed when this threat exists.  Protection may include source-   address filtering to prevent an attacker from injecting traffic, as   well as throttling the amount of non-zero checksum traffic.  The   latter may impact the functioning of the tunnel protocol.   Transmission of IPv6 packets with a zero UDP checksum could reveal   additional information to help an on-path attacker identify the   operating system or configuration of a sending node.  There is a need   to probe the network path to determine whether the current path   supports the use of IPv6 packets with a zero UDP checksum.  The   details of the probing mechanism may differ for different tunnel   encapsulations, and if they are visible in the network (e.g., if not   using IPsec in encryption mode), they could reveal additional   information to help an on-path attacker identify the type of tunnel   being used.   IP-in-IP or GRE tunnels offer good traversal of middleboxes that have   not been designed for security, e.g., firewalls.  However, firewalls   may be expected to be configured to block general tunnels, because   they present a large attack surface.  This applicability statement   therefore permits this method to be enabled only for specific port   ranges.   When the zero UDP checksum mode is enabled for a range of ports,   nodes and middleboxes must forward received UDP datagrams that have   either a calculated checksum or a zero checksum.8.  Acknowledgments   We would like to thank Brian Haberman, Brian Carpenter, Margaret   Wasserman, Lars Eggert, and others in the TSV directorate.  Barry   Leiba, Ronald Bonica, Pete Resnick, and Stewart Bryant helped to make   this document one with greater applicability.  Thanks to P.F.   Chimento for careful review and editorial corrections.   Thanks also to Remi Denis-Courmont, Pekka Savola, Glen Turner, and   many others who contributed comments and ideas via the 6man, behave,   lisp, and mboned lists.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 29]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 20139.  References9.1.  Normative References   [RFC0768]     Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol", STD 6,RFC 768,                 August 1980.   [RFC0791]     Postel, J., "Internet Protocol", STD 5,RFC 791,                 September 1981.   [RFC2119]     Bradner, S., "Key words for use in RFCs to Indicate                 Requirement Levels",BCP 14,RFC 2119, March 1997.   [RFC2460]     Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version                 6 (IPv6) Specification",RFC 2460, December 1998.   [RFC6935]     Eubanks, M., Chimento, P., and M. Westerlund, "IPv6 and                 UDP Checksums for Tunneled Packets",RFC 6935,                 April 2013.9.2.  Informative References   [AMT]         Bumgardner, G.,"Automatic Multicast Tunneling", Work                 in Progress, June 2012.   [RFC0793]     Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", STD 7,RFC 793, September 1981.   [RFC1071]     Braden, R., Borman, D., Partridge, C., and W. Plummer,                 "Computing the Internet checksum",RFC 1071,                 September 1988.   [RFC1141]     Mallory, T. and A. Kullberg, "Incremental updating of                 the Internet checksum",RFC 1141, January 1990.   [RFC1624]     Rijsinghani, A., "Computation of the Internet Checksum                 via Incremental Update",RFC 1624, May 1994.   [RFC2827]     Ferguson, P. and D. Senie, "Network Ingress Filtering:                 Defeating Denial of Service Attacks which employ IP                 Source Address Spoofing",BCP 38,RFC 2827, May 2000.   [RFC3550]     Schulzrinne, H., Casner, S., Frederick, R., and V.                 Jacobson, "RTP: A Transport Protocol for Real-Time                 Applications", STD 64,RFC 3550, July 2003.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 30]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   [RFC3819]     Karn, P., Bormann, C., Fairhurst, G., Grossman, D.,                 Ludwig, R., Mahdavi, J., Montenegro, G., Touch, J., and                 L. Wood, "Advice for Internet Subnetwork Designers",BCP 89,RFC 3819, July 2004.   [RFC3828]     Larzon, L-A., Degermark, M., Pink, S., Jonsson, L-E.,                 and G. Fairhurst, "The Lightweight User Datagram                 Protocol (UDP-Lite)",RFC 3828, July 2004.   [RFC4443]     Conta, A., Deering, S., and M. Gupta, "Internet Control                 Message Protocol (ICMPv6) for the Internet Protocol                 Version 6 (IPv6) Specification",RFC 4443, March 2006.   [RFC4963]     Heffner, J., Mathis, M., and B. Chandler, "IPv4                 Reassembly Errors at High Data Rates",RFC 4963,                 July 2007.   [RFC5097]     Renker, G. and G. Fairhurst, "MIB for the UDP-Lite                 protocol",RFC 5097, January 2008.   [RFC5405]     Eggert, L. and G. Fairhurst, "Unicast UDP Usage                 Guidelines for Application Designers",BCP 145,RFC 5405, November 2008.   [RFC5415]     Calhoun, P., Montemurro, M., and D. Stanley, "Control                 And Provisioning of Wireless Access Points (CAPWAP)                 Protocol Specification",RFC 5415, March 2009.   [RFC5722]     Krishnan, S., "Handling of Overlapping IPv6 Fragments",RFC 5722, December 2009.   [RFC6437]     Amante, S., Carpenter, B., Jiang, S., and J.                 Rajahalme, "IPv6 Flow Label Specification",RFC 6437,                 November 2011.   [RFC6438]     Carpenter, B. and S. Amante, "Using the IPv6 Flow Label                 for Equal Cost Multipath Routing and Link Aggregation                 in Tunnels",RFC 6438, November 2011.   [RFC6830]     Farinacci, D., Fuller, V., Meyer, D., and D. Lewis,                 "The Locator/ID Separation Protocol (LISP)",RFC 6830,                 January 2013.   [Sigcomm2000] Stone, J. and C. Partridge, "When the CRC and TCP                 Checksum Disagree", 2000,                 <http://conferences.sigcomm.org/sigcomm/2000/conf/abstract/9-1.htm>.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 31]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   [TUNNELS]     Touch, J. and M. Townsley, "Tunnels in the Internet                 Architecture", Work in Progress, March 2010.   [UDPTT]       Fairhurst, G.,"The UDP Tunnel Transport mode", Work in                 Progress, February 2010.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 32]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013Appendix A.  Evaluation of Proposal to UpdateRFC 2460 to Support Zero             Checksum   This informative appendix documents the evaluation of the proposal to   update IPv6 [RFC2460] such that it provides the option that some   nodes may suppress generation and checking of the UDP transport   checksum.  It also compares this proposal with other alternatives,   and notes that for a particular application, some standard methods   may be more appropriate than using IPv6 with a zero UDP checksum.A.1.  Alternatives to the Standard Checksum   There are several alternatives to the normal method for calculating   the UDP checksum [RFC1071] that do not require a tunnel endpoint to   inspect the entire packet when computing a checksum.  These include:   o  IP-in-IP tunneling.  Because this method completely dispenses with      a transport protocol in the outer layer, it has reduced overhead      and complexity, but also reduced functionality.  There is no outer      checksum over the packet, and also there are no ports to perform      demultiplexing among different tunnel types.  This reduces the      available information upon which a load balancer may act.   o  UDP-Lite with the checksum coverage set to only the header portion      of a packet.  This requires a pseudo-header checksum calculation      only on the encapsulating packet header.  The computed checksum      value may be cached (before adding the Length field) for each      flow/destination and subsequently combined with the Length of each      packet to minimize per-packet processing.  This value is combined      with the UDP payload length for the pseudo-header.  However, this      length is expected to be known when performing packet forwarding.   o  Delta computation of the checksum from an encapsulated checksum      field.  Because the checksum is a cumulative sum [RFC1624], an      encapsulating header checksum can be derived from the new pseudo-      header, the inner checksum, and the sum of the other network-layer      fields not included in the pseudo-header of the encapsulated      packet, in a manner resembling incremental checksum update      [RFC1141].  This would not require access to the whole packet, but      does require fields to be collected across the header and      arithmetic operations to be performed on each packet.  The method      would work only for packets that contain a 2's complement      transport checksum (i.e., it would not be appropriate for SCTP or      when IP fragmentation is used).Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 33]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   o  UDP has been modified to disable checksum processing (Zero UDP      Checksum) [RFC6935].  This eliminates the need for a checksum      calculation, but would require constraints on appropriate usage      and updates to endpoints and middleboxes.   o  The proposed UDP Tunnel Transport [UDPTT] protocol suggested a      method where UDP would be modified to derive the checksum only      from the encapsulating packet protocol header.  This value does      not change between packets in a single flow.  The value may be      cached per flow/destination to minimize per-packet processing.   o  A method has been proposed that uses a new (to-be-defined) IPv6      Destination Options Header to provide an end-to-end validation      check at the network layer.  This would allow an endpoint to      verify delivery to an appropriate endpoint, but would also require      IPv6 nodes to correctly handle the additional header and would      require changes to middlebox behavior (e.g., when used with a NAT      that always adjusts the checksum value).   o  There has been a proposal to simply ignore the UDP checksum value      on reception at the tunnel egress, allowing a tunnel ingress to      insert any value, correct or false.  For tunnel usage, a non-      standard checksum value may be used, forcing anRFC 2460 receiver      to drop the packet.  The main downside is that it would be      impossible to identify a UDP datagram (in the network or an      endpoint) that is treated in this way compared to a packet that      has actually been corrupted.   These options are compared and discussed further in the following   sections.A.2.  Comparison of Alternative Methods   This section compares the methods listed above to support datagram   tunneling.  It includes proposals for updating the behavior of UDP.   While this comparison focuses on applications that are expected to   execute on routers, the distinction between a router and a host is   not always clear, especially at the transport level.  Systems (such   as UNIX-based operating systems) routinely provide both functions.   From a received packet, there is no way to identify the role of the   receiving node.A.2.1.  Middlebox Traversal   Regular UDP with a standard checksum or the delta-encoded   optimization for creating correct checksums has the best possibility   for successful traversal of a middlebox.  No new support is required.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 34]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   A method that ignores the UDP checksum on reception is expected to   have a good probability of traversal, because most middleboxes   perform an incremental checksum update.  UDPTT would also be able to   traverse a middlebox with this behavior.  However, a middlebox on the   path that attempts to verify a standard checksum will not forward   packets using either of these methods, thus preventing traversal.  A   method that ignores the checksum has the additional downside that it   prevents improvement of middlebox traversal, because there is no way   to identify UDP datagrams that use the modified checksum behavior.   IP-in-IP or GRE tunnels offer good traversal of middleboxes that have   not been designed for security, e.g., firewalls.  However, firewalls   may be expected to be configured to block general tunnels, because   they present a large attack surface.   A new IPv6 Destination Options header will suffer traversal issues   with middleboxes, especially firewalls and NATs, and will likely   require them to be updated before the extension header is passed.   Datagrams with a zero UDP checksum will not be passed by any   middlebox that validates the checksum usingRFC 2460 or updates the   checksum field, such as NAT or firewalls.  This would require an   update to correctly handle a datagram with a zero UDP checksum.   UDP-Lite will require an update of almost all types of middleboxes,   because it requires support for a separate network-layer protocol   number.  Once enabled, the method to support incremental checksum   updates would be identical to that for UDP, but different for   checksum validation.A.2.2.  Load Balancing   The usefulness of solutions for load balancers depends on the   difference in entropy in the headers for different flows that can be   included in a hash function.  All the proposals that use the UDP   protocol number have equal behavior.  UDP-Lite has the potential for   behavior that is equally as good as UDP.  However, UDP-Lite is   currently unlikely to be supported by deployed hashing mechanisms,   which could cause a load balancer not to use the transport header in   the computed hash.  A load balancer that uses only the IP header will   have low entropy, but this could be improved by including the IPv6   the flow label, provided that the tunnel ingress ensures that   different flow labels are assigned to different flows.  However, a   transition to the common use of good quality flow labels is likely to   take time to deploy.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 35]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013A.2.3.  Ingress and Egress Performance Implications   IP-in-IP tunnels are often considered efficient, because they   introduce very little processing and have low data overhead.  The   other proposals introduce a UDP-like header, which incurs an   associated data overhead.  Processing is minimized for the method   that uses a zero UDP checksum and for the method that ignores the UDP   checksum on reception, and processing is only slightly higher for   UDPTT, the extension header, and UDP-Lite.  The delta calculation   scheme operates on a few more fields, but also introduces serious   failure modes that can result in a need to calculate a checksum over   the complete datagram.  Regular UDP is clearly the most costly to   process, always requiring checksum calculation over the entire   datagram.   It is important to note that the zero UDP checksum method, ignoring   checksum on reception, the Option Header, UDPTT, and UDP-Lite will   likely incur additional complexities in the application to   incorporate a negotiation and validation mechanism.A.2.4.  Deployability   The major factors influencing deployability of these solutions are a   need to update both endpoints, a need for negotiation, and the need   to update middleboxes.  These are summarized below:   o  The solution with the best deployability is regular UDP.  This      requires no changes and has good middlebox traversal      characteristics.   o  The next easiest to deploy is the delta checksum solution.  This      does not modify the protocol on the wire and needs changes only in      the tunnel ingress.   o  IP-in-IP tunnels should not require changes to the endpoints, but      they raise issues regarding the traversal of firewalls and other      security devices, which are expected to require updates.   o  Ignoring the checksum on reception will require changes at both      endpoints.  The never-ceasing risk of path failure requires      additional checks to ensure that this solution is robust, and it      will require changes or additions to the tunnel control protocol      to negotiate support and validate the path.   o  The remaining solutions (including the zero UDP checksum method)      offer similar deployability.  UDP-Lite requires support at both      endpoints and in middleboxes.  UDPTT and the zero UDP checksum      method, with or without an extension header, require support atFairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 36]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013      both endpoints and in middleboxes.  UDP-Lite, UDPTT, and the zero      UDP checksum method and the use of extension headers may also      require changes or additions to the tunnel control protocol to      negotiate support and path validation.A.2.5.  Corruption Detection Strength   The standard UDP checksum and the delta checksum can both provide   some verification at the tunnel egress.  This can significantly   reduce the probability that a corrupted inner packet is forwarded.   UDP-Lite, UDPTT, and the extension header all provide some   verification against corruption, but they do not verify the inner   packet.  They provide only a strong indication that the delivered   packet was intended for the tunnel egress and was correctly   delimited.   The methods using a zero UDP checksum, ignoring the UDP checksum on   reception, and IP-and-IP encapsulation all provide no verification   that a received datagram was intended to be processed by a specific   tunnel egress or that the inner encapsulated packet was correct.Section 3.1 discusses experience using specific protocols in well-   managed networks.A.2.6.  Comparison Summary   The comparisons above may be summarized as, "there is no silver   bullet that will slay all the issues".  One has to select which   downsides can best be lived with.  Focusing on the existing   solutions, they can be summarized as:   Regular UDP:  The method defined inRFC 2460 has good middlebox      traversal and load balancing and multiplexing, and requires a      checksum in the outer headers to cover the whole packet.   IP-in-IP:  A low-complexity encapsulation that has limited middlebox      traversal, no multiplexing support, and poor load-balancing      support that could improve over time.   UDP-Lite:  A medium-complexity encapsulation that has good      multiplexing support, limited middlebox traversal that may      possibly improve over time, and poor load-balancing support that      could improve over time, and that, in most cases, requires      application-level negotiation to select the protocol and      validation to confirm that the path forwards UDP-Lite.   Delta computation of a tunnel checksum:  The delta checksum is an      optimization in the processing of UDP, and, as such, it exhibits      some of the drawbacks of using regular UDP.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 37]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   The remaining proposals may be described in similar terms:   Zero Checksum:  A low-complexity encapsulation that has good      multiplexing support, limited middlebox traversal that could      improve over time, and good load-balancing support, and that, in      most cases, requires application-level negotiation and validation      to confirm that the path forwards a zero UDP checksum.   UDPTT:  A medium-complexity encapsulation that has good multiplexing      support, limited middlebox traversal that may possibly improve      over time, and good load-balancing support, and that, in most      cases, requires application-level negotiation to select the      transport and validation to confirm the path forwards UDPTT      datagrams.   IPv6 Destination Option IP-in-IP Tunneling:  A medium-complexity      encapsulation that has no multiplexing support, limited middlebox      traversal, and poor load-balancing support that could improve over      time, and that, in most cases, requires negotiation to confirm      that the option is supported and validation to confirm the path      forwards the option.   IPv6 Destination Option Combined with Zero UDP Checksum:  A medium-      complexity encapsulation that has good multiplexing support,      limited load-balancing support that could improve over time, and      that, in most cases, requires negotiation to confirm the option is      supported and validation to confirm the path forwards the option.   Ignore the Checksum on Reception:  A low-complexity encapsulation      that has good multiplexing support, medium middlebox traversal      that can never improve, and good load-balancing support, and that,      in most cases, requires negotiation to confirm that the option is      supported by the remote endpoint and validation to confirm the      path forwards a zero UDP checksum.   There is no clear single optimum solution.  If the most important   need is to traverse middleboxes, the best choice is to stay with   regular UDP and consider the optimizations that may be required to   perform the checksumming.  If one can live with limited middlebox   traversal, if low complexity is necessary, and one does not require   load balancing, IP-in-IP tunneling is the simplest.  If one wants   strengthened error detection, but with the currently limited   middlebox traversal and load balancing, UDP-Lite is appropriate.   Zero UDP checksum addresses another set of constraints: low   complexity and a need for load balancing from the current Internet,   provided that the usage can accept the currently limited support for   middlebox traversal.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 38]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013   Techniques for load balancing and middlebox traversal do continue to   evolve.  Over a long time, developments in load balancing have good   potential to improve.  This time horizon is long, because it requires   both load balancer and endpoint updates to get full benefit.  The   challenges of middlebox traversal are also expected to change with   time as device capabilities evolve.  Middleboxes are very prolific,   with a larger proportion of end user ownership, and therefore may be   expected to take a long time to evolve.   However, we note that the deployment of IPv6-capable middleboxes is   still in its initial phase, and if a new method becomes standardized   quickly, fewer boxes will be non-compliant.   Thus, the question of whether to permit use of datagrams with a zero   UDP checksum for IPv6 under reasonable constraints is best viewed as   a trade-off among a number of more subjective questions:   o  Is there sufficient interest in using a zero UDP checksum with the      given constraints (summarized below)?   o  Are there other avenues of change that will resolve the issue in a      better way and sufficiently quickly ?   o  Do we accept the complexity cost of having one more solution in      the future?   The analysis concludes that the IETF should carefully consider   constraints on sanctioning the use of any new transport mode.  The   6man working group of the IETF has determined that the answers to the   above questions are sufficient to update IPv6 to standardize use of a   zero UDP checksum for use by tunnel encapsulations for specific   applications.   Each application should consider the implications of choosing an IPv6   transport that uses a zero UDP checksum.  In many cases, standard   methods may be more appropriate and may simplify application design.   The use of checksum off-loading may help alleviate the checksum   processing cost and permit use of a checksum using the method defined   inRFC 2460.Fairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 39]

RFC 6936      Applicability of Zero UDP Checksum with IPv6    April 2013Authors' Addresses   Godred Fairhurst   University of Aberdeen   School of Engineering   Aberdeen, AB24 3UE   Scotland, UK   EMail: gorry@erg.abdn.ac.uk   URI:http://www.erg.abdn.ac.uk/users/gorry   Magnus Westerlund   Ericsson   Farogatan 6   Stockholm,  SE-164 80   Sweden   Phone: +46 8 719 0000   EMail: magnus.westerlund@ericsson.comFairhurst & Westerlund       Standards Track                   [Page 40]

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