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INFORMATIONAL
Network Working Group                                           T. HainRequest for Comments: 2993                                    MicrosoftCategory: Informational                                   November 2000Architectural Implications of NATStatus of this Memo   This memo provides information for the Internet community.  It does   not specify an Internet standard of any kind.  Distribution of this   memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.Abstract   In light of the growing interest in, and deployment of network   address translation (NAT)RFC-1631, this paper will discuss some of   the architectural implications and guidelines for implementations. It   is assumed the reader is familiar with the address translation   concepts presented inRFC-1631.Table of Contents1.  Introduction...................................................22.  Terminology....................................................43.  Scope..........................................................64.  End-to-End Model...............................................75.  Advantages of NATs.............................................86.  Problems with NATs............................................107.  Illustrations.................................................137.1 Single point of failure......................................137.2.  ALG complexity.............................................147.3. TCP state violations........................................157.4.  Symmetric state management.................................16    7.5.  Need for a globally unique FQDN when advertising public          services...................................................187.6.  L2TP tunnels increase frequency of address collisions......197.7.  Centralized data collection system report correlation......208.  IPv6..........................................................219.  Security Considerations.......................................2210.  Deployment Guidelines........................................2311.  Summary......................................................2412.  References...................................................27Hain                         Informational                      [Page 1]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 200013.  Acknowledgments..............................................2814.  Author's Address.............................................2815.  Full Copyright Statement.....................................291.  Introduction   Published in May 1994, written by K. Egevang and P. Francis,RFC-1631   [2] defined NAT as one means to ease the growth rate of IPv4 address   use.  But the authors were worried about the impact of this   technology.  Several places in the document they pointed out the need   to experiment and see what applications may be adversely affected by   NAT's header manipulations, even before there was any significant   operational experience.  This is further evidenced in a quote from   the conclusions: 'NAT has several negative characteristics that make   it inappropriate as a long term solution, and may make it   inappropriate even as a short term solution.'   Now, six years later and in spite of the prediction, the use of NATs   is becoming widespread in the Internet.  Some people are proclaiming   NAT as both the short and long term solution to some of the   Internet's address availability issues and questioning the need to   continue the development of IPv6.  The claim is sometimes made that   NAT 'just works' with no serious effects except on a few legacy   applications.  At the same time others see a myriad of difficulties   caused by the increasing use of NAT.   The arguments pro & con frequently take on religious tones, with each   side passionate about its position.   -  Proponents bring enthusiasm and frequently cite the most popular      applications of Mail & Web services as shining examples of NAT      transparency.  They will also point out that NAT is the feature      that finally breaks the semantic overload of the IP address as      both a locator and the global endpoint identifier (EID).   -  An opposing view of NAT is that of a malicious technology, a weed      which is destined to choke out continued Internet development.      While recognizing there are perceived address shortages, the      opponents of NAT view it as operationally inadequate at best,      bordering on a sham as an Internet access solution. Reality lies      somewhere in between these extreme viewpoints.   In any case it is clear NAT affects the transparency of end-to-end   connectivity for transports relying on consistency of the IP header,   and for protocols which carry that address information in places   other than the IP header.  Using a patchwork of consistently   configured application specific gateways (ALG's), endpoints can work   around some of the operational challenges of NAT.  These operational   challenges vary based on a number of factors including network andHain                         Informational                      [Page 2]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   application topologies and the specific applications in use.  It can   be relatively easy to deal with the simplest case, with traffic   between two endpoints running over an intervening network with no   parallel redundant NAT devices.  But things can quickly get quite   complicated when there are parallel redundant NAT devices, or where   there are more distributed and multi-point applications like multi-   party document sharing.  The complexity of coordinating the updates   necessary to work around NAT grows geometrically with the number of   endpoints.  In a large environment, this may require concerted effort   to simultaneously update all endpoints of a given application or   service.   The architectural intent of NAT is to divide the Internet into   independent address administrations, (also see "address realms",RFC-2663 [3]) specifically facilitating casual use of private address   assignmentsRFC-1918 [4].  As noted by Carpenter, et alRFC-2101 [5],   once private use addresses were deployed in the network, addresses   were guaranteed to be ambiguous.  For example, when simple NATs are   inserted into the network, the process of resolving names to or from   addresses becomes dependent on where the question was asked.  The   result of this division is to enforce a client/server architecture   (vs. peer/peer) where the servers need to exist in the public address   realm.   A significant factor in the success of the Internet is the   flexibility derived from a few basic tenets.  Foremost is the End-   to-End principle (discussed further below), which notes that certain   functions can only be performed in the endpoints, thus they are in   control of the communication, and the network should be a simple   datagram service that moves bits between these points.  Restated, the   endpoint applications are often the only place capable of correctly   managing the data stream.  Removing this concern from the lower layer   packet-forwarding devices streamlines the forwarding process,   contributing to system-wide efficiency.   Another advantage is that the network does not maintain per   connection state information.  This allows fast rerouting around   failures through alternate paths and to better scaling of the overall   network.  Lack of state also removes any requirement for the network   nodes to notify each other as endpoint connections are formed or   dropped.  Furthermore, the endpoints are not, and need not be, aware   of any network components other than the destination, first hop   router(s), and an optional name resolution service.  Packet integrity   is preserved through the network, and transport checksums and any   address-dependent security functions are valid end-to-end.Hain                         Informational                      [Page 3]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   NAT devices (particularly the NAPT variety) undermine most of these,   basic advantages of the end-to-end model, reducing overall   flexibility, while often increasing operational complexity and   impeding diagnostic capabilities.  NAT variants such as RSIP [6] have   recently been proposed to address some of the end-to-end concerns.   While these proposals may be effective at providing the private node   with a public address (if ports are available), they do not eliminate   several issues like network state management, upper layer constraints   like TCP_TIME_WAIT state, or well-known-port sharing. Their port   multiplexing variants also have the same DNS limitations as NAPT, and   each host requires significant stack modifications to enable the   technology (see below).   It must be noted that firewalls also break the end-to-end model and   raise several of the same issues that NAT devises do, while adding a   few of their own.  But one operational advantage with firewalls is   that they are generally installed into networks with the explicit   intent to interfere with traffic flow, so the issues are more likely   to be understood or at least looked at if mysterious problems arise.   The same issues with NAT devices can sometimes be overlooked since   NAT devices are frequently presented as transparent to applications.   One thing that should be clearly stated up front is, that attempts to   use a variant of NAT as a simple router replacement may create   several significant issues that should be addressed before   deployment.  The goal of this document is to discuss these with the   intent to raise awareness.2.  Terminology   Recognizing that many of these terms are defined in detail inRFC2663 [3], the following are summaries as used in this document.   NAT - Network Address Translation in simple form is a method by which   IP addresses are mapped from one address administration to another.   The NAT function is unaware of the applications traversing it, as it   only looks at the IP headers.   ALG - Application Layer Gateway: inserted between application peers   to simulate a direct connection when some intervening protocol or   device prevents direct access.  It terminates the transport protocol,   and may modify the data stream before forwarding.   NAT/ALG - combines ALG functions with simple NAT.  Generally more   useful than pure NAT, because it embeds components for specific   applications that would not work through a pure NAT.Hain                         Informational                      [Page 4]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   DNS/ALG -  a special case of the NAT/ALG, where an ALG for the DNS   service interacts with the NAT component to modify the contents of a   DNS response.   Firewall - access control point that may be a special case of an ALG,   or packet filter.   Proxy - A relay service designed into a protocol, rather than   arbitrarily inserted.  Unlike an ALG, the application on at least one   end must be aware of the proxy.   Static NAT - provides stable one-to-one mapping between address   spaces.   Dynamic NAT - provides dynamic mapping between address spaces   normally used with a relatively large number of addresses on one side   (private space) to a few addresses on the other (public space).   NAPT - Network Address Port Translation accomplishes translation by   multiplexing transport level identifiers of multiple addresses from   one side, simultaneously into the transport identifiers of a single   address on the other.  See 4.1.2 ofRFC-2663.  This permits multiple   endpoints to share and appear as a single IP address.   RSIP - Realm Specific IP allows endpoints to acquire and use the   public address and port number at the source.  It includes mechanisms   for the private node to request multiple resources at once.  RSIP   clients must be aware of the address administration boundaries, which   specific administrative area its peer resides in for each   application, and the topology for reaching the peer.  To complete a   connection, the private node client requests one or more addresses   and/or ports from the appropriate RSIP server, then initiates a   connection via that RSIP server using the acquired public resources.   Hosts must be updated with specific RSIP software to support the   tunneling functions.   VPN - For purposes of this document, Virtual Private Networks   technically treat an IP infrastructure as a multiplexing substrate,   allowing the endpoints to build virtual transit pathways, over which   they run another instance of IP.  Frequently the 2nd instance of IP   uses a different set of IP addresses.   AH - IP Authentication Header,RFC-2401 [7], which provides data   integrity, data origin authentication, and an optional anti-replay   service.Hain                         Informational                      [Page 5]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   ESP - Encapsulating Security Payload protocol,RFC 2401, may provide   data confidentiality (encryption), and limited traffic flow   confidentiality.  It also may provide data integrity, data origin   authentication, and an anti-replay service.   Address administration - coordinator of an address pool assigned to a   collection of routers and end systems.   Addressing realm -  a collection of routers and end systems   exchanging locally unique location knowledge.  (Further defined inRFC-2663 NAT Terminology.)  NAT is used a means to distribute address   allocation authority and provide a mechanism to map addresses from   one address administration into those of another administration.3.  Scope   In discussing the architectural impact of NATs on the Internet, the   first task is defining the scope of the Internet.  The most basic   definition is; a concatenation of networks built using IETF defined   technologies.  This simple description does not distinguish between   the public network known as the Internet, and the private networks   built using the same technologies (including those connected via   NAT).  Rekhter, et al inRFC-1918 defined hosts as public when they   need network layer access outside the enterprise, using a globally   unambiguous address.  Those that need limited or no access are   defined as private.  Another way to view this is in terms of the   transparency of the connection between any given node and the rest of   the Internet.   The ultimate resolution of public or private is found in the intent   of the network in question.  Generally, networks that do not intend   to be part of the greater Internet will use some screening technology   to insert a barrier.  Historically barrier devices between the public   and private networks were known as Firewalls or Application Gateways,   and were managed to allow approved traffic while blocking everything   else.  Increasingly, part of the screening technology is a NAT, which   manages the network locator between the public and private-use   address spaces, and then, using ALGs adds support for protocols that   are incompatible with NAT.  (Use of NAT within a private network is   possible, and is only addressed here in the context that some   component of the private network is used as a common transit service   between the NAT attached stubs.)RFC-1631 limited the scope of NAT discussions to stub appendages of a   public Internet, that is, networks with a single connection to the   rest of the Internet.  The use of NAT in situations in which a   network has multiple connections to the rest of the Internet is   significantly more complex than when there is only a singleHain                         Informational                      [Page 6]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   connection since the NATs have to be coordinated to ensure that they   have a consistent understanding of address mapping for each   individual device.4.  End-to-End Model   The concept of the End-to-End model is reviewed by Carpenter in   Internet Transparency [8].  One of the key points is "state should be   maintained only in the endpoints, in such a way that the state can   only be destroyed when the endpoint itself breaks"; this is termed   "fate-sharing".  The goal behind fate-sharing is to ensure   robustness.  As networks grow in size, likelihood of component   failures affecting a connection becomes increasingly frequent. If   failures lead to loss of communication, because key state is lost,   then the network becomes increasingly brittle, and its utility   degrades.  However, if an endpoint itself fails, then there is no   hope of subsequent communication anyway.  Therefore the End-to-End   model argues that as much as possible, only the endpoints should hold   critical state.   For NATs, this aspect of the End-to-End model translates into the NAT   becoming a critical infrastructure element:  if it fails, all   communication through it fails, and, unless great care is taken to   assure consistent, stable storage of its state, even when it recovers   the communication that was passing through it will still fail   (because the NAT no longer translates it using the same mappings).   Note that this latter type of failure is more severe than the failure   of a router; when a router recovers, any communication that it had   been forwarding previous can continue to be successfully forwarded   through it.   There are other important facets to the End-to-End model:   -  when state is held in the interior of the network, then traffic      dependent on that state cannot be routed around failures unless      somehow the state is replicated to the fail-over points, which can      be very difficult to do in a consistent yet efficient and timely      fashion.   -  a key principle for scaling networks to large size is to push      state-holding out to the edges of the network.  If state is held      by elements in the core of the network, then as the network grows      the amount of state the elements must holds likewise grows.  The      capacities of the elements can become severe chokepoints and the      number of connections affected by a failure also grows.   -  if security state must be held inside the network (see the      discussion below), then the possible trust models the network can      support become restricted.Hain                         Informational                      [Page 7]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   A network for which endpoints need not trust network service   providers has a great deal more security flexibility than one which   does.  (Picture, for example, a business traveler connecting from   their hotel room back to their home office: should they have to trust   the hotel's networking staff with their security keys?, or the staff   of the ISP that supplies the hotel with its networking service?  How   about when the traveler connects over a wireless connection at an   airport?)   Related to this,RFC-2101 notes:     Since IP Security authentication headers assume that the addresses     in the network header are preserved end-to-end, it is not clear     how one could support IP Security-based authentication between a     pair of hosts communicating through either an ALG or a NAT.   In addition, there are distributed applications that assume that IP   addresses are globally scoped, globally routable, and all hosts and   applications have the same view of those addresses.  Indeed, a   standard technique for such applications to manage their additional   control and data connections is for one host to send to another the   address and port that the second host should connect to.  NATs break   these applications.  Similarly, there are other applications that   assume that all upper layer ports from a given IP address map to the   same endpoint, and port multiplexing technologies like NAPT and RSIP   break these.  For example, a web server may desire to associate a   connection to port 80 with one to port 443, but due to the possible   presence of a NATPT, the same IP address no longer ensures the same   host.   Limiting such applications is not a minor issue: much of the success   of the Internet today is due to the ease with which new applications   can run on endpoints without first requiring upgrades to   infrastructure elements.  If new applications must have the NATs   upgraded in order to achieve widespread deployment, then rapid   deployment is hindered, and the pace of innovation slowed.5.  Advantages of NATs   A quick look at the popularity of NAT as a technology shows that it   tackles several real world problems when used at the border of a stub   domain.   -  By masking the address changes that take place, from either dial-      access or provider changes, minimizes impact on the local network      by avoiding renumbering.   -  Globally routable addresses can be reused for intermittent access      customers.  This pushes the demand for addresses towards the      number of active nodes rather than the total number of nodes.Hain                         Informational                      [Page 8]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   -  There is a potential that ISP provided and managed NATs would      lower support burden since there could be a consistent, simple      device with a known configuration at the customer end of an access      interface.   -  Breaking the Internet into a collection of address authorities      limits the need for continual justification of allocations allows      network managers to avoid the use of more advanced routing      techniques such as variable length subnets.   -  Changes in the hosts may not be necessary for applications that      don't rely on the integrity of the packet header, or carry IP      addresses in the payload.   -  Like packet filtering Firewalls, NAPT, & RSIP block inbound      connections to all ports until they are administratively mapped.   Taken together these explain some of the strong motivations for   moving quickly with NAT deployment.  Traditional NAT [2] provides a   relatively simple function that is easily understood.   Removing hosts that are not currently active lowers address demands   on the public Internet.  In cases where providers would otherwise end   up with address allocations that could not be aggregated, this   improves the load on the routing system as well as lengthens the   lifetime of the IPv4 address space.  While reclaiming idle addresses   is a natural byproduct of the existing dynamic allocation, dial-   access devices, in the dedicated connection case this service could   be provided through a NAT.  In the case of a NAPT, the aggregation   potential is even greater as multiple end systems share a single   public address.   By reducing the potential customer connection options and minimizing   the support matrix, it is possible that ISP provided NATs would lower   support costs.   Part of the motivation for NAT is to avoid the high cost of   renumbering inherent in the current IPv4 Internet.  Guidelines for   the assignment of IPv4 addressesRFC-2050 [9] mean that ISP customers   are currently required to renumber their networks if they want to   switch to a new ISP.  Using a NAT (or a firewall with NAT functions)   means that only the Internet facing IP addresses must be changed and   internal network nodes do not need to be reconfigured. Localizing   address administration to the NAT minimizes renumbering costs, and   simultaneously provides for a much larger local pool of addresses   than is available under current allocation guidelines. (The registry   guidelines are intended to prolong the lifetime of the IPv4 address   space and manage routing table growth, until IPv6 is ready or new   routing technology reduces the pressure on the routing table.  This   is accomplished by managing allocations to match actual demand and to   enforce hierarchical addressing.  An unfortunate byproduct of theHain                         Informational                      [Page 9]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   current guidelines is that they may end up hampering growth in areas   where it is difficult to sort out real need from potential hoarding.)   NAT is effective at masking provider switching or other requirements   to change addresses, thus mitigates some of the growth issues.   NAT deployments have been raising the awareness of protocol designers   who are interested in ensuring that their protocols work end-to-end.   Breaking the semantic overload of the IP address will force   applications to find a more appropriate mechanism for endpoint   identification and discourage carrying the locator in the data   stream.  Since this will not work for legacy applications,RFC-1631   discusses how to look into the packet and make NAT transparent to the   application (i.e.: create an application gateway).  This may not be   possible for all applications (such as IP based authentication in   SNMP), and even with application gateways in the path it may be   necessary to modify each end host to be aware when there are   intermediaries modifying the data.   Another popular practice is hiding a collection of hosts that provide   a combined service behind a single IP address (i.e.: web host load   sharing).  In many implementations this is architecturally a NAT,   since the addresses are mapped to the real destination on the fly.   When packet header integrity is not an issue, this type of virtual   host requires no modifications to the remote applications since the   end client is unaware of the mapping activity.  While the virtual   host has the CPU performance characteristics of the total set of   machines, the processing and I/O capabilities of the NAT/ALG device   bound the overall performance as it funnels the packets back and   forth.6.  Problems with NATs   -  NATs break the flexible end-to-end model of the Internet.   -  NATs create a single point where fates are shared, in the device      maintaining connection state and dynamic mapping information.   -  NATs complicate the use of multi-homing by a site in order to      increase the reliability of their Internet connectivity. (While      single routers are a point of fate sharing, the lack of state in a      router makes creating redundancy trivial.  Indeed, this is on of      the reasons why the Internet protocol suite developed using a      connectionless datagram service as its network layer.)   -  NATs inhibit implementation of security at the IP level.   -  NATs enable casual use of private addresses.  These uncoordinated      addresses are subject to collisions when companies using these      addresses merge or want to directly interconnect using VPNs.   -  NATs facilitate concatenating existing private name spaces with      the public DNS.Hain                         Informational                     [Page 10]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   -  Port versions (NAPT and RSIP) increase operational complexity when      publicly published services reside on the private side.   -  NATs complicated or may even invalidate the authentication      mechanism of SNMPv3.   -  Products may embed a NAT function without identifying it as such.   By design, NATs impose limitations on flexibility.  As such, extended   thought about the introduced complications is called for.  This is   especially true for products where the NAT function is a hidden   service, such as load balancing routers that re-write the IP address   to other public addresses.  Since the addresses may be all in   publicly administered space these are rarely recognized as NATs, but   they break the integrity of the end-to-end model just the same.   NATs place constraints on the deployment of applications that carry   IP addresses (or address derivatives) in the data stream, and they   operate on the assumption that each session is independent. However,   there are applications such as FTP and H.323 that use one or more   control sessions to set the characteristics of the follow-on sessions   in their control session payload.  Other examples include SNMP MIBs   for configuration, and COPS policy messages.  Applications or   protocols like these assume end-to-end integrity of addresses and   will fail when traversing a NAT.  (TCP was specifically designed to   take advantage of, and reuse, the IP address in combination with its   ports for use as a transport address.) To fix how NATs break such   applications, an Application Level Gateway needs to exist within or   alongside each NAT.  An additional gateway service is necessary for   each application that may imbed an address in the data stream.  The   NAT may also need to assemble fragmented datagrams to enable   translation of the application stream, and then adjust TCP sequence   numbers, prior to forwarding.   As noted earlier, NATs break the basic tenet of the Internet that the   endpoints are in control of the communication.  The original design   put state control in the endpoints so there would be no other   inherent points of failure.  Moving the state from the endpoints to   specific nodes in the network reduces flexibility, while it increases   the impact of a single point failure.  See further discussion in   Illustration 1 below.   In addition, NATs are not transparent to all applications, and   managing simultaneous updates to a large array of ALGs may exceed the   cost of acquiring additional globally routable addresses.  See   further discussion in Illustration 2 below.   While RSIP addresses the transparency and ALG issues, for the   specific case of an individual private host needing public access,   there is still a node with state required to maintain the connection.Hain                         Informational                     [Page 11]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   Dynamic NAT and RSIP will eventually violate higher layer assumptions   about address/port number reuse as defined inRFC-793 [10]RFC-1323   [11].  The TCP state, TCP_TIME_WAIT, is specifically designed to   prevent replay of packets between the 4-tuple of IP and port for a   given IP address pair.  Since the TCP state machine of a node is   unaware of any previous use of RSIP, its attempt to connect to the   same remote service that its neighbor just released (which is still   in TCP_TIME_WAIT) may fail, or with a larger sequence number may open   the prior connection directly from TCP_TIME_WAIT state, at the loss   of the protection afforded by the TCP_TIME_WAIT state (further   discussion in 2.6 ofRFC-2663 [3]).   For address translators (which do not translate ports) to comply with   the TCP_TIME_WAIT requirements, they must refrain from assigning the   same address to a different host until a period of 2*MSL has elapsed   since the last use of the address, where MSL is the Maximum Segment   Lifetime defined inRFC-793 as two minutes.  For address-and-port   translators to comply with this requirement, they similarly must   refrain from assigning the same host/port pair until 2*MSL has   elapsed since the end of its first use.  While these requirements are   simple to state, they can place a great deal of pressure on the NAT,   because they temporarily reduce the pool of available addresses and   ports.  Consequently, it will be tempting or NAT implementers to   ignore or shorten the TCP_TIME_WAIT requirements, at the cost of some   of TCP's strong reliability.  Note that in the case where the strong   reliability is in fact compromised by the appearance of an old   packet, the failure can manifest itself as the receiver accepting   incorrect data.  See further discussion in Illustration 3 below.   It is sometimes argued that NATs simply function to facilitate   "routing realms", where each domain is responsible for finding   addresses within its boundaries.  Such a viewpoint clouds the   limitations created by NAT with the better-understood need for   routing management.  Compartmentalization of routing information is   correctly a function of routing protocols and their scope of   application.  NAT is simply a means to distribute address allocation   authority and provide a mechanism to map addresses from one address   realm into those of another realm.   In particular, it is sometimes erroneously believed that NATs serve   to provide routing isolation.  In fact, if someone were to define an   OSPF ALG it would actually be possible to route across a NAT   boundary.  Rather than NAT providing the boundary, it is the   experienced operators who know how to limit network topology that   serve to avoid leaking addresses across a NAT.  This is an   operational necessity given the potential for leaked addresses to   introduce inconsistencies into the public infrastructure.Hain                         Informational                     [Page 12]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   One of the greatest concerns from the explosion of NATs is the impact   on the fledgling efforts at deploying network layer end-to-end IP   security.  One fundamental issue for IPSec is that with both AH and   ESP, the authentication check covers the TCP/UDP checksum (which in   turn covers the IP address).  When a NAT changes the IP address, the   checksum calculation will fail, and therefore authentication is   guaranteed to fail.  Attempting to use the NAT as a security boundary   fails when requirement is end-to-end network layer encryption, since   only the endpoints have access to the keys.  See further discussion   in Illustration 4 below.   Finally, while the port multiplexing variants of NAT (popular because   they allow Internet access through a single address) work modestly   well for connecting private hosts to public services, they create   management problems for applications connecting from public toward   private.  The concept of a well-known port is undermined because only   one private side system can be mapped through the single public-side   port number.  This will affect home networks, when applications like   multi-player Internet games can only be played on one system at a   time.  It will also affect small businesses when only one system at a   time can be operated on the standard port to provide web services.   These may sound like only medium-grade restrictions for the present,   but as a basic property of the Internet, not to change years into the   future, it is highly undesirable.  The issue is that the public   toward private usage requires administrative mapping for each target   prior to connection.  If the ISP chooses to provide a standardized   version of these to lower configuration options, they may find the   support costs of managing the ALGs will exceed the cost of additional   address space.  See further discussion in Illustration 6 below.7.  Illustrations 7.1 Single point of failure   A characteristic of stateful devices like NATs is the creation of a   single point of failure.  Attempts to avoid this by establishing   redundant NATs, creates a new set of problems related to timely   communication of the state, and routing related failures.  This   encompasses several issues such as update frequency, performance   impact of frequent updates, reliability of the state update   transaction, a-priori knowledge of all nodes needing this state   information, and notification to end nodes of alternatives.  (This   notification could be accomplished with a routing protocol, which   might require modifications to the hosts so they will listen.)Hain                         Informational                     [Page 13]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000                        --------       --------                       | Host A |-----| Host B |                        --------   |   --------                           -----------------                             |            |                          ------        ------                         | AD 1 |      | AD 2 |                          ------        ------                              \         /                                --------                               /Internet\                               ----------                                --------                             Illustration 1   In the traditional case where Access Device (AD) 1 & 2 are routers,   the single point of failure is the end Host, and the only effort   needed to maintain the connections through a router or link failure   is a simple routing update from the surviving router.  In the case   where the ADs are a NAT variant there will be connection state   maintained in the active path that would need to be shared with   alternative NATs.  When the Hosts have open connections through   either NAT, and it fails, the application connections will drop   unless the state had been previously moved to the surviving NAT. The   hosts will still need to acquire a routing redirect.  In the case of   RSIP, the public side address pool would also need to be shared   between the ADs to allow movement.  This sharing creates another   real-time operational complexity to prevent conflicting assignments   at connection setup.  NAT as a technology creates a point fate   sharing outside the endpoints, in direct contradiction to the   original Internet design goals. 7.2.  ALG complexity   In the following example of a proposed corporate network, each   NAT/ALG was to be one or more devices at each physical location, and   there were to be multiple physical locations per diagramed   connection.  The logistics of simply updating software on this scale   is cumbersome, even when all the devices are the same manufacturer   and model.  While this would also be true with routers, it would be   unnecessary for all devices to run a consistent version for an   application to work across an arbitrary path.Hain                         Informational                     [Page 14]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000                ----------------------------------------               |           Corporate Network            |               | Asia |------| Americas |------| Europe |                ------        ----------        --------                   |                |                |               --------         --------         --------              |NAT/ALGs|       |NAT/ALGs|       |NAT/ALGs|               --------         --------         --------                   |                |                |              --------------------------------------------               |                Internet                |              --------------------------------------------                   |                |                |               --------         --------         --------              |NAT/ALGs|       |NAT/ALGs|       |NAT/ALGs|               --------         --------         --------                   |                |                |       ------------------     --------------     ----------------       Home Telecommuters     Branch Offices     Partner Networks       ------------------     --------------     ----------------                                --------                             Illustration 2 7.3. TCP state violations   The full range of upper layer architectural assumptions that are   broken by NAT technologies may not be well understood without a very   large-scale deployment, because it sometimes requires the diversity   that comes with large-scale use to uncover unusual failure modes. The   following example illustrates an instance of the problem discussed   above insection 6.Hain                         Informational                     [Page 15]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000                        --------       --------                       | Host A |-----| Host B |                        --------   |   --------                                --------                               |NAT/RSIP|                                --------                                   |                                --------                               |Internet|                                --------                                   |                               ---------                              |   Web   |                              |  Server |                               ---------                                --------                             Illustration 3   Host A completes its transaction and closes the web service on TCP   port 80, and the RSIP releases the public side address used for Host   A.  Host B attempts to open a connection to the same web service, and   the NAT assigns then next free public side address which is the same   one A just released.  The source port selection rules on Host B   happen to lead it to the same choice that A used.  The connect   request from Host B is rejected because the web server, conforming to   the TCP specifications, has that 4-tuple in TIME WAIT for 4 minutes.   By the time a call from Host B gets through to the helpdesk   complaining about no access, the requested retry will work, so the   issue is marked as resolved, when it in fact is an on-going, but   intermittent, problem. 7.4.  Symmetric state management   Operational management of networks incorporating stateful packet   modifying device is considerably easier if inbound and outbound   packets traverse the same path.  (Otherwise it's a headache to keep   state for the two directions synchronized.)  While easy to say, even   with careful planning it can be difficult to manage using a   connectionless protocol like IP.  The problem of creating redundant   connections is ensuring that routes advertised to the private side   reach the end nodes and map to the same device as the public side   route advertisements.  This state needs to persist throughout the   lifetime of sessions traversing the NAT, in spite of frequent or   simultaneous internal and external topology churn.  Consider the   following case where the -X- links are broken, or flapping.Hain                         Informational                     [Page 16]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000                          --------       --------                         | Host A |     | Host B |                         |   Foo  |     |   Bar  |                          --------       --------                              |             |                            ----          ----                           |Rtr1|---X1---|Rtr2|                            ----          ----                              |            |                             ----         ----                            |NAT1|       |NAT2|                             ----         ----                               |          |                              --------------                             |Rtr         Rtr|                             | /  Internet \ |     ---                             |Rtr----X2---Rtr|----|DNS|                              --------------       ---                               |          |                               |          |                          --------       --------                         | Host C |     | Host D |                          --------       --------                                --------                             Illustration 4   To preserve a consistent view of routing, the best path to the   Internet for Routers 1 & 2 is via NAT1, while the Internet is told   the path to the address pool managed by the NATs is best found   through NAT1.  When the path X1 breaks, Router 2 would attempt to   switch to NAT2, but the external return path would still be through   NAT1.  This is because the NAT1 device is advertising availability of   a pool of addresses.  Directly connected routers in this same   situation would advertise the specific routes that existed after the   loss.  In this case, redundancy was useless.   Consider the case that the path between Router 1 & 2 is up, and some   remote link in the network X2 is down.  It is also assumed that DNS   returns addresses for both NATs when queried for Hosts A or B.  When   Host D tries to contact Host B, the request goes through NAT2, but   due to the internal routing, the reply is through NAT1.  Since the   state information for this connection is in NAT2, NAT1 will provide a   new mapping.  Even if the remote path is restored, the connection   will not be made because the requests are to the public IP of NAT2,   while the replies are from the public IP of NAT1.Hain                         Informational                     [Page 17]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   In a third case, both Host A & B want to contact Host D, when the   remote link X2 in the Internet breaks.  As long as the path X1 is   down, Host B is able to connect, but Host A is cut off.  Without a   thorough understanding of the remote topology (unlikely since   Internet providers tend to consider that sensitive proprietary   information), the administrator of Hosts A & B would have no clue why   one worked and the other didn't.  As far as he can tell the redundant   paths through the NATs are up but only one connection works.  Again,   this is due to lack of visibility to the topology that is inherent   when a stateful device is advertising availability to a pool rather   than the actual connected networks.   In any network topology, individual router or link failures may   present problems with insufficient redundancy, but the state   maintenance requirements of NAT present an additional burden that is   not as easily understood or resolved. 7.5.  Need for a globally unique FQDN when advertising public services   The primary feature of NATs is the 'simple' ability to connect   private networks to the public Internet.  When the private network   exists prior to installing the NAT, it is unlikely and unnecessary   that its name resolver would use a registered domain.  As noted inRFC 1123 [12] DNS queries may be resolved via local multicast.   Connecting the NAT device, and reconfiguring it's resolver to proxy   for all external requests allows access to the public network by   hosts on the private network.  Configuring the public DNS for the set   of private hosts that need inbound connections would require a   registered domain (either private, or from the connecting ISP) and a   unique name.  At this point the partitioned name space is   concatenated and hosts would have different names based on inside vs.   outside queries.Hain                         Informational                     [Page 18]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000                          --------       --------                         | Host A |     | Host B |                         |   Foo  |-----|   Bar  |                          --------   |   --------   ---                                     |-------------|DNS|                                    ---             ---                                   |NAT|                                    ---                                     |                                 --------      ---                                |Internet|----|DNS|                                 --------      ---                                     |                                    ---                                   |NAT|                                    ---             ---                                     |-------------|DNS|                          --------   |   --------   ---                         | Host C |-----| Host D |                         |   Foo  |     |   Bar  |                          --------       --------                                --------                             Illustration 5   Everything in this simple example will work until an application   embeds a name.  For example, a Web service running on Host D might   present embedded URL's of the formhttp://D/bar.html, which would   work from Host C, but would thoroughly confuse Host A.  If the   embedded name resolved to the public address, Host A would be happy,   but Host C would be looking for some remote machine.  Using the   public FQDN resolution to establishing a connection from Host C to D,   the NAT would have to look at the destination rather than simply   forwarding the packet out to the router.  (Normal operating mode for   a NAT is translate & forward out the other interface, while routers   do not send packets back on the same interface they came from.)  The   NAT did not create the name space fragmentation, but it facilitates   attempts to merge networks with independent name administrations. 7.6.  L2TP tunnels increase frequency of address collisions   The recent mass growth of the Internet has been driven by support of   low cost publication via the web.  The next big push appears to be   support of Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) frequently accomplished   using L2TP.  Technically VPN tunnels treat an IP infrastructure as a   multiplexing substrate allowing the endpoints to build what appear to   be clear pathways from end-to-end.  These tunnels redefine network   visibility and increase the likelihood of address collision whenHain                         Informational                     [Page 19]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   traversing multiple NATs.  Address management in the private space   behind NATs will become a significant burden, as there is no central   body capable of, or willing to do it.  The lower burden for the ISP   is actually a transfer of burden to the local level, because   administration of addresses and names becomes both distributed and   more complicated.   As noted inRFC-1918, the merging of private address spaces can cause   an overlap in address use, creating a problem.  L2TP tunnels will   increase the likelihood and frequency of that merging through the   simplicity of their establishment.  There are several configurations   of address overlap which will cause failure, but in the simple   example shown below the private use address of Host B matches the   private use address of the VPN pool used by Host A for inbound   connections.  When Host B tries to establish the VPN interface, Host   A will assign it an address from its pool for inbound connections,   and identify the gateway for Host B to use.  In the example, Host B   will not be able to distinguish the remote VPN gateway address of   Host A from its own private address on the physical interface, thus   the connection will fail.  Since private use addresses are by   definition not publicly coordinated, as the complexity of the VPN   mesh increases so does the likelihood that there will be a collision   that cannot be resolved.              ---------------                     ----------------             |  10.10.10.10  |--------L2TP-------| Assigned by A  |             |    Host A     |   ---       ---   |    Host B      |             |    10.1.1.1   |--|NAT|-----|NAT|--|  10.10.10.10   |              ---------------    ---       ---    ----------------                                --------                             Illustration 6 7.7.  Centralized data collection system report correlation   It has been reported that NAT introduces additional challenges when   intrusion detection systems attempt to correlate reports between   sensors inside and outside the NAT.  While the details of individual   systems are beyond the scope of this document, it is clear that a   centralized system with monitoring agents on both sides of the NAT   would also need access to the current NAT mappings to get this right.   It would also be critical that the resulting data be indexed properly   if there were agents behind multiple NATs using the same address   range for the private side.   This also applies to management data collected via SNMP.  Any time   the data stream carries an IP address; the central collector or ALG   will need to manipulate the data based on the current mappings in theHain                         Informational                     [Page 20]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   NAT.8.  IPv6   It has been argued that IPv6 is no longer necessary because NATs   relieve the address space constraints and allow the Internet to   continue growing.  The reality is they point out the need for IPv6   more clearly than ever.  People are trying to connect multiple   machines through a single access line to their ISP and have been   willing to give up some functionality to get that at minimum cost.   Frequently the reason for cost increases is the perceived scarcity   (therefore increased value) of IPv4 addresses, which would be   eliminated through deployment of IPv6.  This crisis mentality is   creating a market for a solution to a problem already solved with   greater flexibility by IPv6.   If NAT had never been defined, the motivation to resolve the   dwindling IPv4 address space would be a much greater.  Given that   NATs are enabling untold new hosts to attach to the Internet daily,   it is difficult to ascertain the actual impact to the lifetime of   IPv4, but NAT has certainly extended it.  It is also difficult to   determine the extent of delay NAT is causing for IPv6, both by   relieving the pressure, and by redirecting the intellectual cycles   away from the longer-term solution.   But at the same time NAT functionality may be a critical facilitator   in the deployment of IPv6.  There are already 100 million or more   computers running IPv4 on data networks.  Some of these networks are   connected to and thus part of the Internet and some are on private   isolated networks.  It is inconceivable that we could have a "flag   day" and convert all of the existing IPv4 nodes to IPv6 at the same   time.  There will be a very long period of coexistence while both   IPv4 and IPv6 are being used in the Internet and in private networks.   The original IPv6 transition plan relied heavily on having new IPv6   nodes also be able to run IPv4 - a "dual stack" approach. When the   dual stack node looks up another node in the DNS it will get back a   IPv4 or an IPv6 address in response.  If the response is an IPv4   address then the node uses IPv4 to contact the other node. And if the   response is an IPv6 address then IPv6 can be used to make the   contact.  Turning the NAT into a 6to4 [13]router enables widespread   deployment of IPv6 while providing an IPv4 path if IPv6 is   unavailable.  While this maintains the current set of issues for IPv4   connections, it reestablishes the end-to-end principle for IPv6   connections.Hain                         Informational                     [Page 21]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   An alternative methodology would be to translate the packets between   IPv6 and IPv4 at the boarders between IPv4 supporting networks and   IPv6 supporting networks.  The need for this functionality was   recognized in [RFC 1752], the document that recommended to the IETF   that IPv6 be developed and recommended that a set of working groups   be established to work on a number of specific problems.  Header   translation (i.e, NAT) was one of those problems.   Of course, NATs in an IPv6 to IPv4 translation environment encounter   all of the same problems that NATs encounter in a pure IPv4 and the   environment and cautions in this document apply to both situations.9.  Security Considerations   NAT (particularly NAPT) actually has the potential to lower overall   security because it creates the illusion of a security barrier, but   does so without the managed intent of a firewall.  Appropriate   security mechanisms are implemented in the end host, without reliance   on assumptions about routing hacks, firewall filters, or missing NAT   translations, which may change over time to enable a service to a   neighboring host.  In general, defined security barriers assume that   any threats are external, leading to practices that make internal   breaches much easier.   IPsecRFC-2401 [7] defines a set of mechanisms to support packet-   level authentication and encryption for use in IP networks.  While   this may be less efficient than application-level security but in the   words ofRFC-1752 [14] "support for basic packet-level authentication   will provide for the adoption of a much needed, widespread, security   infrastructure throughout the Internet."   NATs break IPsec's authentication and encryption technologies because   these technologies depend on an end-to-end consistency of the IP   addresses in the IP headers, and therefore may stall further   deployment of enhanced security across the Internet.  NATs raise a   number of specific issues with IPsec.  For example;   - Use of AH is not possible via NAT as the hash protects the IP     address in the header.   - Authenticated certificates may contain the IP address as part of     the subject name for authentication purposes.   - Encrypted Quick Mode structures may contain IP addresses and ports     for policy verifications.   - The Revised Mode of public key encryption includes the peer     identity in the encrypted payload.Hain                         Informational                     [Page 22]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   It may be possible to engineer and work around NATs for IPsec on a   case-by-case basis, but at the cost of restricting the trust model,   as discussed insection 4 above.  With all of the restrictions placed   on deployment flexibility, NATs present a significant obstacle to   security integration being deployed in the Internet today.   As noted in theRFC-2694 [15], the DNS/ALG cannot support secure DNS   name servers in the private domain.  Zone transfers between DNSsec   servers will be rejected when necessary modifications are attempted.   It is also the case that DNS/ALG will break any modified, signed   responses.  This would be the case for all public side queries of   private nodes, when the DNS server is on the private side.  It would   also be true for any private side queries for private nodes, when the   DNS server is on the public side.  Digitally signed records could be   modified by the DNS/ALG if it had access to the source authentication   key.  DNSsec has been specifically designed to avoid distribution of   this key, to maintain source authenticity.  So NATs that use DNS/ALG   to repair the namespace resolutions will either; break the security   when modifying the record, or will require access to all source keys   to requested resolutions.   Security mechanisms that do not protect or rely on IP addresses as   identifiers, such as TLS [16], SSL [17], or SSH [18] may operate in   environments containing NATs.  For applications that can establish   and make use of this type of transport connection, NATs do not create   any additional complications.  These technologies may not provide   sufficient protection for all applications as the header is exposed,   allowing subversive acts like TCP resets.RFC-2385 [19] discusses   the issues in more detail.   Arguments that NATs may operate in a secure mode preclude true End-   to-End security, as the NAT becomes the security endpoint.   Operationally the NAT must be managed as part of the security domain,   and in this mode the packets on the unsecured side of the NAT are   fully exposed.10.  Deployment Guidelines   Given that NAT devices are being deployed at a fairly rapid pace,   some guidelines are in order.  Most of these cautionary in nature and   are designed to make sure that the reader fully understands the   implications of the use of NATs in their environment.   - Determine the mechanism for name resolution, and ensure the     appropriate answer is given for each address administration.     Embedding the DNS server, or a DNS ALG in the NAT device will     likely be more manageable than trying to synchronize independent     DNS systems across administrations.Hain                         Informational                     [Page 23]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   - Is the NAT configured for static one to one mappings, or will it     dynamically manage them? If dynamic, make sure the TTL of the DNS     responses is set to 0, and that the clients pay attention to the     don't cache notification.   - Will there be a single NAT device, or parallel with multiple paths?     If single, consider the impact of a device failure.  If multiple,     consider how routing on both sides will insure the packets flow     through the same box over the connection lifetime of the     applications.   - Examine the applications that will need to traverse the NAT and     verify their immunity to address changes.  If necessary provide an     appropriate ALG or establish a VPN to isolate the application from     the NAT.   - Determine need for public toward private connections, variability     of destinations on the private side, and potential for simultaneous     use of public side port numbers.  NAPTs increase administration if     these apply.   - Determine if the applications traversing the NAPT or RSIP expect     all ports from the public IP address to be the same endpoint.     Administrative controls to prevent simultaneous access from     multiple private hosts will be required if this is the case.   - If there are encrypted payloads, the contents cannot be modified     unless the NAT is a security endpoint, acting as a gateway between     security realms.  This precludes end-to-end confidentiality, as the     path between the NAT and endpoint is exposed.   - Determine the path for name resolutions.  If hosts on the private     side of a NAPT or RSIP server need visibility to each other, a     private side DNS server may be required.   - If the environment uses secure DNS records, the DNS/ALG will     require access to the source authentication keys for all records to     be translated.   - When using VPNs over NATs, identify a clearinghouse for the private     side addresses to avoid collisions.   - Assure that applications used both internally and externally avoid     embedding names, or use globally unique ones.   - When using RSIP, recognize the scope is limited to individual     private network connecting to the public Internet.  If other NATs     are in the path (including web-server load-balancing devices), the     advantage of RSIP (end-to-end address/port pair use) is lost.   - For RSIP, determine the probability of TCP_Time_Wait collisions     when subsequent private side hosts attempt to contact a recently     disconnected public side service.Hain                         Informational                     [Page 24]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 200011.  Summary   Over the 6-year period sinceRFC-1631, the experience base has grown,   further exposing concerns raised by the original authors.  NAT breaks   a fundamental assumption of the Internet design; the endpoints are in   control.  Another design principle, 'keep-it-simple' is being   overlooked as more features are added to the network to work around   the complications created by NATs.  In the end, overall flexibility   and manageability are lowered, and support costs go up to deal with   the problems introduced.   Evangelists, for and against the technology, present their cases as   righteous while downplaying any rebuttals.   - NATs are a 'fact of life', and will proliferate as an enhancement     that sustains the existing IPv4 infrastructure.   - NATs are a 'necessary evil' and create an administrative burden     that is not easily resolved.  More significantly, they inhibit the     roll out of IPsec, which will in turn slow growth of applications     that require a secure infrastructure.   In either case, NATs require strong applicability statements, clearly   declaring what works and what does not.   An overview of the pluses and minuses:   NAT advantages                      NAT disadvantages   --------------------------------    --------------------------------   Masks global address changes        Breaks end-to-end model   Eases renumbering when providers    Facilitates concatenation of   change                              multiple name spaces                                       Breaks IPsec                                       Stateful points of failure   Address administrations avoid       Requires source specific DNS reply   justifications to registries        or DNS/ALG                                       DNS/ALG breaks DNSsec replies   Lowers address utilization          Enables end-to-end address                                       conflicts   Lowers ISP support burden           Increases local support burden and                                       complexity   Transparent to end systems in some  Unique development for each app   cases   Load sharing as virtual host        Performance limitations with scale   Delays need for IPv4 replacement    May complicate integration of IPv6Hain                         Informational                     [Page 25]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   There have been many discussions lately about the value of continuing   with IPv6 development when the market place is widely deploying IPv4   NATs.  A shortsighted view would miss the point that both have a   role, because NATs address some real-world issues today, while IPv6   is targeted at solving fundamental problems, as well as moving   forward.  It should be recognized that there will be a long co-   existence as applications and services develop for IPv6, while the   lifetime of the existing IPv4 systems will likely be measured in   decades.  NATs are a diversion from forward motion, but they do   enable wider participation at the present state.  They also break a   class of applications, which creates the need for complex work-around   scenarios.   Efforts to enhance general security in the Internet include IPsec and   DNSsec.  These technologies provide a variety of services to both   authenticate and protect information during transit.  By breaking   these technologies, NAT and the DNS/ALG work-around, hinder   deployment of enhanced security throughout the Internet.   There have also been many questions about the probability of VPNs   being established that might raise some of the listed concerns. While   it is hard to predict the future, one way to avoid ALGs for each   application is to establish a L2TP over the NATs. This restricts the   NAT visibility to the headers of the tunnel packets, and removes its   effects from all applications. While this solves the ALG issues, it   raises the likelihood that there will be address collisions as   arbitrary connections are established between uncoordinated address   spaces. It also creates a side concern about how an application   establishes the necessary tunnel.   The original IP architecture is powerful because it provides a   general mechanism on which other things (yet unimagined) may be   built. While it is possible to build a house of cards, time and   experience have lead to building standards with more structural   integrity. IPv6 is the long-term solution that retains end-to-end   transparency as a principle. NAT is a technological diversion to   sustain the lifetime of IPv4.Hain                         Informational                     [Page 26]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 200012.  References   1   Bradner, S., " The Internet Standards Process -- Revision 3",BCP9,RFC 2026, October 1996.   2   Egevang, K. and P. Francis, "The IP Network Address Translator",RFC 1631, May 1994.   3   Srisuresh, P. and M. Holdrege, "NAT Terminology and       Considerations",RFC 2663, August 1999.   4   Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, B., Karrenberg, D., de Groot, G. and E.       Lear, "Address Allocation for Private Internets",BCP 5,RFC1918, February 1996.   5   Carpenter, B., Crowcroft, J. and Y. Rekhter, "IPv4 Address       Behavior Today",RFC 2101, February 1997.   6   M. Borella, D. Grabelsky, J., K. Tuniguchi, "Realm Specific IP:       Protocol Specification", Work in Progress, March 2000.   7   Kent, S. and R. Atkinson, "Security Architecture for IP",RFC2401, November 1998.   8   Carpenter, B., "Internet Transparency",RFC 2775, February 2000.   9   Hubbard, K., Kosters, M., Conrad, D., Karrenberg, D. and J.       Postel, "Internet Registry IP Allocation Guidelines",BCP 12,RFC2050, November 1996.   10  Postel, J., "Transmission Control Protocol", STD 7,RFC 793,       September 1981.   11  Jacobson, V., Braden, R. and L. Zhang, "TCP Extension for High-       Speed Paths",RFC 1185, October 1990.   12  Braden, R., "Requirements for Internet Hosts", STD 3,RFC 1123,       October 1989.   13  Carpenter, B. and K. Moore, "Connection of IPv6 Domains via IPv4       Clouds without Explicit Tunnels", Work in Progress.   14  Bradner, S. and A. Mankin, "Recommendation for IPng",RFC 1752,       January 1995.   15  Srisuresh, P., Tsirtsis, G., Akkiraju, P. and A. Heffernan, "DNS       extensions to NAT",RFC 2694, September 1999.Hain                         Informational                     [Page 27]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000   16  Dierks, T. and C. Allen, "The TLS Protocol",RFC 2246, January       1999.   17http://home.netscape.com/eng/ssl3/ssl-toc.html, March 1996.   18  T. Ylonen, et al., "SSH Protocol Architecture", Work in Progress,       August 1998.   19  Heffernan, A., "Protection of BGP Sessions via the TCP MD5       Signature Option",RFC 2385, August 1998.13.  Acknowledgments   Valuable contributions to this document came from the IAB, Vern   Paxson (lbl), Scott Bradner (harvard), Keith Moore (utk), Thomas   Narten (ibm), Yakov Rekhter (cisco), Pyda Srisuresh, Matt Holdrege   (lucent), and Eliot Lear (cisco).14.  Author's Address   Tony Hain   Microsoft   One Microsoft Way   Redmond, Wa. USA   Phone:  1-425-703-6619   EMail:  tonyhain@microsoft.comHain                         Informational                     [Page 28]

RFC 2993           Architectural Implications of NAT       November 2000Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2000).  All Rights Reserved.   This document and translations of it may be copied and furnished to   others, and derivative works that comment on or otherwise explain it   or assist in its implementation may be prepared, copied, published   and distributed, in whole or in part, without restriction of any   kind, provided that the above copyright notice and this paragraph are   included on all such copies and derivative works.  However, this   document itself may not be modified in any way, such as by removing   the copyright notice or references to the Internet Society or other   Internet organizations, except as needed for the purpose of   developing Internet standards in which case the procedures for   copyrights defined in the Internet Standards process must be   followed, or as required to translate it into languages other than   English.   The limited permissions granted above are perpetual and will not be   revoked by the Internet Society or its successors or assigns.   This document and the information contained herein is provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET ENGINEERING   TASK FORCE DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING   BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE INFORMATION   HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF   MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Hain                         Informational                     [Page 29]

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