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BEST CURRENT PRACTICE
Updated by:8704
Network Working Group                                           F. BakerRequest for Comments: 3704                                 Cisco SystemsUpdates:2827                                                  P. SavolaBCP: 84                                                        CSC/FUNETCategory: Best Current Practice                               March 2004Ingress Filtering for Multihomed NetworksStatus of this Memo   This document specifies an Internet Best Current Practices for the   Internet Community, and requests discussion and suggestions for   improvements.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.Copyright Notice   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).  All Rights Reserved.AbstractBCP 38,RFC 2827, is designed to limit the impact of distributed   denial of service attacks, by denying traffic with spoofed addresses   access to the network, and to help ensure that traffic is traceable   to its correct source network.  As a side effect of protecting the   Internet against such attacks, the network implementing the solution   also protects itself from this and other attacks, such as spoofed   management access to networking equipment.  There are cases when this   may create problems, e.g., with multihoming.  This document describes   the current ingress filtering operational mechanisms, examines   generic issues related to ingress filtering, and delves into the   effects on multihoming in particular.  This memo updatesRFC 2827.Baker & Savola           Best Current Practice                  [Page 1]

RFC 3704       Ingress Filtering for Multihomed Networks      March 2004Table of Contents1.  Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32.  Different Ways to Implement Ingress Filtering  . . . . . . . .42.1 Ingress Access Lists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .42.2 Strict Reverse Path Forwarding . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52.3 Feasible Path Reverse Path Forwarding  . . . . . . . . . .62.4 Loose Reverse Path Forwarding  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .62.5 Loose Reverse Path Forwarding Ignoring Default Routes  . .73.  Clarifying the Applicability of Ingress Filtering  . . . . . .83.1 Ingress Filtering at Multiple Levels . . . . . . . . . . .83.2 Ingress Filtering to Protect Your Own Infrastructure . . .83.3 Ingress Filtering on Peering Links . . . . . . . . . . . .94.  Solutions to Ingress Filtering with Multihoming  . . . . . . .94.1 Use Loose RPF When Appropriate . . . . . . . . . . . . . .104.2 Ensure That Each ISP's Ingress Filter Is Complete  . . . .11       4.3 Send Traffic Using a Provider Prefix Only to That Provider 115.  Security Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .126.  Conclusions and Future Work  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .137.  Acknowledgements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .148.  References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .148.1.  Normative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .148.2.  Informative References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .149.  Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .1510. Full Copyright Statement . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .16Baker & Savola           Best Current Practice                  [Page 2]

RFC 3704       Ingress Filtering for Multihomed Networks      March 20041.  IntroductionBCP 38,RFC 2827 [1], is designed to limit the impact of distributed   denial of service attacks, by denying traffic with spoofed addresses   access to the network, and to help ensure that traffic is traceable   to its correct source network.  As a side effect of protecting the   Internet against such attacks, the network implementing the solution   also protects itself from this and other attacks, such as spoofed   management access to networking equipment.  There are cases when this   may create problems, e.g., with multihoming.  This document describes   the current ingress filtering operational mechanisms, examines   generic issues related to ingress filtering and delves into the   effects on multihoming in particular.RFC 2827 recommends that ISPs police their customers' traffic by   dropping traffic entering their networks that is coming from a source   address not legitimately in use by the customer network.  The   filtering includes but is in no way limited to the traffic whose   source address is a so-called "Martian Address" - an address that is   reserved [3], including any address within 0.0.0.0/8, 10.0.0.0/8,   127.0.0.0/8, 172.16.0.0/12, 192.168.0.0/16, 224.0.0.0/4, or   240.0.0.0/4.   The reasoning behind the ingress filtering procedure is that   Distributed Denial of Service Attacks frequently spoof other systems'   source addresses, placing a random number in the field.  In some   attacks, this random number is deterministically within the target   network, simultaneously attacking one or more machines and causing   those machines to attack others with ICMP messages or other traffic;   in this case, the attacked sites can protect themselves by proper   filtering, by verifying that their prefixes are not used in the   source addresses in packets received from the Internet.  In other   attacks, the source address is literally a random 32 bit number,   resulting in the source of the attack being difficult to trace.  If   the traffic leaving an edge network and entering an ISP can be   limited to traffic it is legitimately sending, attacks can be   somewhat mitigated: traffic with random or improper source addresses   can be suppressed before it does significant damage, and attacks can   be readily traced back to at least their source networks.   This document is aimed at ISP and edge network operators who 1) would   like to learn more of ingress filtering methods in general, or 2) are   already using ingress filtering to some degree but who would like to   expand its use and want to avoid the pitfalls of ingress filtering in   the multihomed/asymmetric scenarios.Baker & Savola           Best Current Practice                  [Page 3]

RFC 3704       Ingress Filtering for Multihomed Networks      March 2004   Insection 2, several different ways to implement ingress filtering   are described and examined in the generic context.  Insection 3,   some clarifications on the applicability of ingress filtering methods   are made.  Insection 4, ingress filtering is analyzed in detail from   the multihoming perspective.  Insection 5, conclusions and potential   future work items are identified.2.  Different Ways to Implement Ingress Filtering   This section serves as an introduction to different operational   techniques used to implement ingress filtering as of writing this   memo.  The mechanisms are described and analyzed in general terms,   and multihoming-specific issues are described inSection 4.   There are at least five ways one can implementRFC 2827, with varying   impacts.  These include (the names are in relatively common usage):   o  Ingress Access Lists   o  Strict Reverse Path Forwarding   o  Feasible Path Reverse Path Forwarding   o  Loose Reverse Path Forwarding   o  Loose Reverse Path Forwarding ignoring default routes   Other mechanisms are also possible, and indeed, there are a number of   techniques that might profit from further study, specification,   implementation, and/or deployment; seeSection 6.  However, these are   out of scope.2.1.  Ingress Access Lists   An Ingress Access List is a filter that checks the source address of   every message received on a network interface against a list of   acceptable prefixes, dropping any packet that does not match the   filter.  While this is by no means the only way to implement an   ingress filter, it is the one proposed byRFC 2827 [1], and in some   sense the most deterministic one.   However, Ingress Access Lists are typically maintained manually; for   example, forgetting to have the list updated at the ISPs if the set   of prefixes changes (e.g., as a result of multihoming) might lead to   discarding the packets if they do not pass the ingress filter.Baker & Savola           Best Current Practice                  [Page 4]

RFC 3704       Ingress Filtering for Multihomed Networks      March 2004   Naturally, this problem is not limited to Ingress Access Lists -- it   is inherent to Ingress Filtering when the ingress filter is not   complete.  However, usually Ingress Access Lists are more difficult   to maintain than the other mechanisms, and having an outdated list   can prevent legitimate access.2.2.  Strict Reverse Path Forwarding   Strict Reverse Path Forwarding (Strict RPF) is a simple way to   implement an ingress filter.  It is conceptually identical to using   access lists for ingress filtering, with the exception that the   access list is dynamic.  This may also be used to avoid duplicate   configuration (e.g., maintaining both static routes or BGP prefix-   list filters and interface access-lists).  The procedure is that the   source address is looked up in the Forwarding Information Base (FIB)   - and if the packet is received on the interface which would be used   to forward the traffic to the source of the packet, it passes the   check.   Strict Reverse Path Forwarding is a very reasonable approach in front   of any kind of edge network; in particular, it is far superior to   Ingress Access Lists when the network edge is advertising multiple   prefixes using BGP.  It makes for a simple, cheap, fast, and dynamic   filter.   But Strict Reverse Path Forwarding has some problems of its own.   First, the test is only applicable in places where routing is   symmetrical - where IP datagrams in one direction and responses from   the other deterministically follow the same path.  While this is   common at edge network interfaces to their ISP, it is in no sense   common between ISPs, which normally use asymmetrical "hot potato"   routing.  Also, if BGP is carrying prefixes and some legitimate   prefixes are not being advertised or not being accepted by the ISP   under its policy, the effect is the same as ingress filtering using   an incomplete access list: some legitimate traffic is filtered for   lack of a route in the filtering router's Forwarding Information   Base.   There are operational techniques, especially with BGP but somewhat   applicable to other routing protocols as well, to make strict RPF   work better in the case of asymmetric or multihomed traffic.  The ISP   assigns a better metric which is not propagated outside of the   router, either a vendor-specific "weight" or a protocol distance to   prefer the directly received routes.  With BGP and sufficient   machinery in place, setting the preferences could even be automated,   using BGP Communities [2].  That way, the route will always be the   best one in the FIB, even in the scenarios where only the primary   connectivity would be used and typically no packets would passBaker & Savola           Best Current Practice                  [Page 5]

RFC 3704       Ingress Filtering for Multihomed Networks      March 2004   through the interface.  This method assumes that there is no strict   RPF filtering between the primary and secondary edge routers; in   particular, when applied to multihoming to different ISPs, this   assumption may fail.2.3.  Feasible Path Reverse Path Forwarding   Feasible Path Reverse Path Forwarding (Feasible RPF) is an extension   of Strict RPF.  The source address is still looked up in the FIB (or   an equivalent, RPF-specific table) but instead of just inserting one   best route there, the alternative paths (if any) have been added as   well, and are valid for consideration.  The list is populated using   routing-protocol specific methods, for example by including all or N   (where N is less than all) feasible BGP paths in the Routing   Information Base (RIB).  Sometimes this method has been implemented   as part of a Strict RPF implementation.   In the case of asymmetric routing and/or multihoming at the edge of   the network, this approach provides a way to relatively easily   address the biggest problems of Strict RPF.   It is critical to understand the context in which Feasible RPF   operates.  The mechanism relies on consistent route advertisements   (i.e., the same prefix(es), through all the paths) propagating to all   the routers performing Feasible RPF checking.  For example, this may   not hold e.g., in the case where a secondary ISP does not propagate   the BGP advertisement to the primary ISP e.g., due to route-maps or   other routing policies not being up-to-date.  The failure modes are   typically similar to "operationally enhanced Strict RPF", as   described above.   As a general guideline, if an advertisement is filtered, the packets   will be filtered as well.   In consequence, properly defined, Feasible RPF is a very powerful   tool in certain kinds of asymmetric routing scenarios, but it is   important to understand its operational role and applicability   better.2.4.  Loose Reverse Path Forwarding   Loose Reverse Path Forwarding (Loose RPF) is algorithmically similar   to strict RPF, but differs in that it checks only for the existence   of a route (even a default route, if applicable), not where the route   points to.  Practically, this could be considered as a "route   presence check" ("loose RPF is a misnomer in a sense because there is   no "reverse path" check in the first place).Baker & Savola           Best Current Practice                  [Page 6]

RFC 3704       Ingress Filtering for Multihomed Networks      March 2004   The questionable benefit of Loose RPF is found in asymmetric routing   situations: a packet is dropped if there is no route at all, such as   to "Martian addresses" or addresses that are not currently routed,   but is not dropped if a route exists.   Loose Reverse Path Forwarding has problems, however.  Since it   sacrifices directionality, it loses the ability to limit an edge   network's traffic to traffic legitimately sourced from that network,   in most cases, rendering the mechanism useless as an ingress   filtering mechanism.   Also, many ISPs use default routes for various purposes such as   collecting illegitimate traffic at so-called "Honey Pot" systems or   discarding any traffic they do not have a "real" route to, and   smaller ISPs may well purchase transit capabilities and use a default   route from a larger provider.  At least some implementations of Loose   RPF check where the default route points to.  If the route points to   the interface where Loose RPF is enabled, any packet is allowed from   that interface; if it points nowhere or to some other interface, the   packets with bogus source addresses will be discarded at the Loose   RPF interface even in the presence of a default route.  If such   fine-grained checking is not implemented, presence of a default route   nullifies the effect of Loose RPF completely.   One case where Loose RPF might fit well could be an ISP filtering   packets from its upstream providers, to get rid of packets with   "Martian" or other non-routed addresses.   If other approaches are unsuitable, loose RPF could be used as a form   of contract verification: the other network is presumably certifying   that it has provided appropriate ingress filtering rules, so the   network doing the filtering need only verify the fact and react if   any packets which would show a breach in the contract are detected.   Of course, this mechanism would only show if the source addresses   used are "martian" or other unrouted addresses -- not if they are   from someone else's address space.2.5.  Loose Reverse Path Forwarding Ignoring Default Routes   The fifth implementation technique may be characterized as Loose RPF   ignoring default routes, i.e., an "explicit route presence check".   In this approach, the router looks up the source address in the route   table, and preserves the packet if a route is found.  However, in the   lookup, default routes are excluded.  Therefore, the technique is   mostly usable in scenarios where default routes are used only to   catch traffic with bogus source addresses, with an extensive (or even   full) list of explicit routes to cover legitimate traffic.Baker & Savola           Best Current Practice                  [Page 7]

RFC 3704       Ingress Filtering for Multihomed Networks      March 2004   Like Loose RPF, this is useful in places where asymmetric routing is   found, such as on inter-ISP links.  However, like Loose RPF, since it   sacrifices directionality, it loses the ability to limit an edge   network's traffic to traffic legitimately sourced from that network.3.  Clarifying the Applicability of Ingress Filtering   What may not be readily apparent is that ingress filtering is not   applied only at the "last-mile" interface between the ISP and the end   user.  It's perfectly fine, and recommended, to also perform ingress   filtering at the edges of ISPs where appropriate, at the routers   connecting LANs to an enterprise network, etc. -- this increases the   defense in depth.3.1.  Ingress Filtering at Multiple Levels   Because of wider deployment of ingress filtering, the issue is   recursive.  Ingress filtering has to work everywhere where it's used,   not just between the first two parties.  That is, if a user   negotiates a special ingress filtering arrangement with his ISP, he   should also ensure (or make sure the ISP ensures) that the same   arrangements also apply to the ISP's upstream and peering links, if   ingress filtering is being used there -- or will get used, at some   point in the future; similarly with the upstream ISPs and peers.   In consequence, manual models which do not automatically propagate   the information to every party where the packets would go and where   ingress filtering might be applied have only limited generic   usefulness.3.2.  Ingress Filtering to Protect Your Own Infrastructure   Another feature stemming from wider deployment of ingress filtering   may not be readily apparent.  The routers and other ISP   infrastructure are vulnerable to several kinds of attacks.  The   threat is typically mitigated by restricting who can access these   systems.   However, unless ingress filtering (or at least, a limited subset of   it) has been deployed at every border (towards the customers, peers   and upstreams) -- blocking the use of your own addresses as source   addresses -- the attackers may be able to circumvent the protections   of the infrastructure gear.   Therefore, by deploying ingress filtering, one does not just help the   Internet as a whole, but protects against several classes of threats   to your own infrastructure as well.Baker & Savola           Best Current Practice                  [Page 8]

RFC 3704       Ingress Filtering for Multihomed Networks      March 20043.3.  Ingress Filtering on Peering Links   Ingress filtering on peering links, whether by ISPs or by end-sites,   is not really that much different from the more typical "downstream"   or "upstream" ingress filtering.   However, it's important to note that with mixed upstream/downstream   and peering links, the different links may have different properties   (e.g., relating to contracts, trust, viability of the ingress   filtering mechanisms, etc.).  In the most typical case, just using an   ingress filtering mechanism towards a peer (e.g., Strict RPF) works   just fine as long as the routing between the peers is kept reasonably   symmetric.  It might even be considered useful to be able to filter   out source addresses coming from an upstream link which should have   come over a peering link (implying something like Strict RPF is used   towards the upstream) -- but this is a more complex topic and   considered out of scope; seeSection 6.4.  Solutions to Ingress Filtering with Multihoming   First, one must ask why a site multihomes; for example, the edge   network might:   o  use two ISPs for backing up the Internet connectivity to ensure      robustness,   o  use whichever ISP is offering the fastest TCP service at the      moment,   o  need several points of access to the Internet in places where no      one ISP offers service, or   o  be changing ISPs (and therefore multihoming only temporarily).   One can imagine a number of approaches to working around the   limitations of ingress filters for multihomed networks.  Options   include:   1.  Do not multihome.   2.  Do not use ingress filters.   3.  Accept that service will be incomplete.   4.  On some interfaces, weaken ingress filtering by using an       appropriate form of loose RPF check, as described inSection 4.1.Baker & Savola           Best Current Practice                  [Page 9]

RFC 3704       Ingress Filtering for Multihomed Networks      March 2004   5.  Ensure, by BGP or by contract, that each ISP's ingress filter is       complete, as described inSection 4.2.   6.  Ensure that edge networks only deliver traffic to their ISPs that       will in fact pass the ingress filter, as described inSection4.3.   The first three of these are obviously mentioned for completeness;   they are not and cannot be viable positions; the final three are   considered below.   The fourth and the fifth must be ensured in the upstream ISPs as   well, as described inSection 3.1.   Next, we now look at the viable ways for dealing with the side-   effects of ingress filters.4.1.  Use Loose RPF When Appropriate   Where asymmetric routing is preferred or is unavoidable, ingress   filtering may be difficult to deploy using a mechanism such as strict   RPF which requires the paths to be symmetrical.  In many cases, using   operational methods or feasible RPF may ensure the ingress filter is   complete, like described below.  Failing that, the only real options   are to not perform ingress filtering, use a manual access-list   (possibly in addition to some other mechanisms), or to using some   form of Loose RPF check.   Failing to provide any ingress filter at all essentially trusts the   downstream network to behave itself, which is not the wisest course   of action.  However, especially in the case of very large networks of   even hundreds or thousands of prefixes, maintaining manual access-   lists may be too much to ask.   The use of Loose RPF does not seem like a good choice between the   edge network and the ISP, since it loses the directionality of the   test.  This argues in favor of either using a complete filter in the   upstream network or ensuring in the downstream network that packets   the upstream network will reject will never reach it.   Therefore, the use of Loose RPF cannot be recommended, except as a   way to measure whether "martian" or other unrouted addresses are   being used.Baker & Savola           Best Current Practice                 [Page 10]

RFC 3704       Ingress Filtering for Multihomed Networks      March 20044.2.  Ensure That Each ISP's Ingress Filter Is Complete   For the edge network, if multihoming is being used for robustness or   to change routing from time to time depending on measured ISP   behavior, the simplest approach will be to ensure that its ISPs in   fact carry its addresses in routing.  This will often require the   edge network to use provider-independent prefixes and exchange routes   with its ISPs with BGP, to ensure that its prefix is carried upstream   to the major transit ISPs.  Of necessity, this implies that the edge   network will be of a size and technical competence to qualify for a   separate address assignment and an autonomous system number from its   RIR.   There are a number of techniques which make it easier to ensure the   ISP's ingress filter is complete.  Feasible RPF and Strict RPF with   operational techniques both work quite well for multihomed or   asymmetric scenarios between the ISP and an edge network.   When a routing protocol is not being used, but rather the customer   information is generated from databases such as Radius, TACACS, or   Diameter, the ingress filtering can be the most easily ensured and   kept up-to-date with Strict RPF or Ingress Access Lists generated   automatically from such databases.4.3.  Send Traffic Using a Provider Prefix Only to That Provider   For smaller edge networks that use provider-based addressing and   whose ISPs implement ingress filters (which they should do), the   third option is to route traffic being sourced from a given   provider's address space to that provider.   This is not a complicated procedure, but requires careful planning   and configuration.  For robustness, the edge network may choose to   connect to each of its ISPs through two or more different Points of   Presence (POPs), so that if one POP or line experiences an outage,   another link to the same ISP can be used.  Alternatively, a set of   tunnels could be configured instead of multiple connections to the   same ISP [4][5].  This way the edge routers are configured to first   inspect the source address of a packet destined to an ISP and shunt   it into the appropriate tunnel or interface toward the ISP.   If such a scenario is applied exhaustively, so that an exit router is   chosen in the edge network for every prefix the network uses, traffic   originating from any other prefix can be summarily discarded instead   of sending it to an ISP.Baker & Savola           Best Current Practice                 [Page 11]

RFC 3704       Ingress Filtering for Multihomed Networks      March 20045.  Security Considerations   Ingress filtering is typically performed to ensure that traffic   arriving on one network interface legitimately comes from a computer   residing on a network reachable through that interface.   The closer to the actual source ingress filtering is performed, the   more effective it is.  One could wish that the first hop router would   ensure that traffic being sourced from its neighboring end system was   correctly addressed; a router further away can only ensure that it is   possible that there is such a system within the indicated prefix.   Therefore, ingress filtering should be done at multiple levels, with   different level of granularity.   It bears to keep in mind that while one goal of ingress filtering is   to make attacks traceable, it is impossible to know whether the   particular attacker "somewhere in the Internet" is being ingress   filtered or not.  Therefore, one can only guess whether the source   addresses have been spoofed or not: in any case, getting a possible   lead -- e.g., to contact a potential source to ask whether they're   observing an attack or not -- is still valuable, and more so when the   ingress filtering gets more and more widely deployed.   In consequence, every administrative domain should try to ensure a   sufficient level of ingress filtering on its borders.   Security properties and applicability of different ingress filtering   types differ a lot.   o  Ingress Access Lists require typically manual maintenance, but are      the most bulletproof when done properly; typically, ingress access      lists are best fit between the edge and the ISP when the      configuration is not too dynamic if strict RPF is not an option,      between ISPs if the number of used prefixes is low, or as an      additional layer of protection.   o  Strict RPF check is a very easy and sure way to implement ingress      filtering.  It is typically fit between the edge network and the      ISP.  In many cases, a simple strict RPF can be augmented by      operational procedures in the case of asymmetric traffic patterns,      or the feasible RPF technique to also account for other      alternative paths.   o  Feasible Path RPF check is an extension of Strict RPF.  It is      suitable in all the scenarios where Strict RPF is, but multihomed      or asymmetric scenarios in particular.  However, one must remember      that Feasible RPF assumes the consistent origination andBaker & Savola           Best Current Practice                 [Page 12]

RFC 3704       Ingress Filtering for Multihomed Networks      March 2004      propagation of routing information to work; the implications of      this must be understood especially if a prefix advertisement      passes through third parties.   o  Loose RPF primarily filters out unrouted prefixes such as Martian      addresses.  It can be applied in the upstream interfaces to reduce      the size of DoS attacks with unrouted source addresses.  In the      downstream interfaces it can only be used as a contract      verification, that the other network has performed at least some      ingress filtering.   When weighing the tradeoffs of different ingress filtering   mechanisms, the security properties of a more relaxed approach should   be carefully considered before applying it.  Especially when applied   by an ISP towards an edge network, there don't seem to be many   reasons why a stricter form of ingress filtering would not be   appropriate.6.  Conclusions and Future Work   This memo describes ingress filtering techniques in general and the   options for multihomed networks in particular.   It is important for ISPs to implement ingress filtering to prevent   spoofed addresses being used, both to curtail DoS attacks and to make   them more traceable, and to protect their own infrastructure.  This   memo describes mechanisms that could be used to achieve that effect,   and the tradeoffs of those mechanisms.   To summarize:   o  Ingress filtering should always be done between the ISP and a      single-homed edge network.   o  Ingress filtering with Feasible RPF or similar Strict RPF      techniques could almost always be applied between the ISP and      multi-homed edge networks as well.   o  Both the ISPs and edge networks should verify that their own      addresses are not being used in source addresses in the packets      coming from outside their network.   o  Some form of ingress filtering is also reasonable between ISPs,      especially if the number of prefixes is low.Baker & Savola           Best Current Practice                 [Page 13]

RFC 3704       Ingress Filtering for Multihomed Networks      March 2004   This memo will lower the bar for the adoption of ingress filtering   especially in the scenarios like asymmetric/multihomed networks where   the general belief has been that ingress filtering is difficult to   implement.   One can identify multiple areas where additional work would be   useful:   o  Specify the mechanisms in more detail: there is some variance      between implementations e.g., on whether traffic to multicast      destination addresses will always pass the Strict RPF filter or      not.  By formally specifying the mechanisms the implementations      might get harmonized.   o  Study and specify Routing Information Base (RIB) -based RPF      mechanisms, e.g., Feasible Path RPF, in more detail.  In      particular, consider under which assumptions these mechanisms work      as intended and where they don't.   o  Write a more generic note on the ingress filtering mechanisms than      this memo, after the taxonomy and the details or the mechanisms      (points above) have been fleshed out.   o  Consider the more complex case where a network has connectivity      with different properties (e.g., peers and upstreams), and wants      to ensure that traffic sourced with a peer's address should not be      accepted from the upstream.7.  Acknowledgements   Rob Austein, Barry Greene, Christoph Reichert, Daniel Senie, Pedro   Roque, and Iljitsch van Beijnum reviewed this document and helped in   improving it.  Thomas Narten, Ted Hardie, and Russ Housley provided   good feedback which boosted the document in its final stages.8.  References8.1.  Normative References   [1]  Ferguson, P. and D. Senie, "Network Ingress Filtering: Defeating        Denial of Service Attacks which employ IP Source Address        Spoofing",BCP 38,RFC 2827, May 2000.8.2.  Informative References   [2]  Chandrasekeran, R., Traina, P. and T. Li, "BGP Communities        Attribute",RFC 1997, August 1996.Baker & Savola           Best Current Practice                 [Page 14]

RFC 3704       Ingress Filtering for Multihomed Networks      March 2004   [3]  IANA, "Special-Use IPv4 Addresses",RFC 3330, September 2002.   [4]  Bates, T. and Y. Rekhter, "Scalable Support for Multi-homed        Multi-provider Connectivity",RFC 2260, January 1998.   [5]  Hagino, J. and H. Snyder, "IPv6 Multihoming Support at Site Exit        Routers",RFC 3178, October 2001.9.  Authors' Addresses   Fred Baker   Cisco Systems   Santa Barbara, CA  93117   US   EMail: fred@cisco.com   Pekka Savola   CSC/FUNET   Espoo   Finland   EMail: psavola@funet.fiBaker & Savola           Best Current Practice                 [Page 15]

RFC 3704       Ingress Filtering for Multihomed Networks      March 200410.  Full Copyright Statement   Copyright (C) The Internet Society (2004).  This document is subject   to the rights, licenses and restrictions contained inBCP 78 and   except as set forth therein, the authors retain all their rights.   This document and the information contained herein are provided on an   "AS IS" basis and THE CONTRIBUTOR, THE ORGANIZATION HE/SHE REPRESENTS   OR IS SPONSORED BY (IF ANY), THE INTERNET SOCIETY AND THE INTERNET   ENGINEERING TASK FORCE DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,   INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO ANY WARRANTY THAT THE USE OF THE   INFORMATION HEREIN WILL NOT INFRINGE ANY RIGHTS OR ANY IMPLIED   WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.Intellectual Property   The IETF takes no position regarding the validity or scope of any   Intellectual Property Rights or other rights that might be claimed to   pertain to the implementation or use of the technology described in   this document or the extent to which any license under such rights   might or might not be available; nor does it represent that it has   made any independent effort to identify any such rights.  Information   on the procedures with respect to rights in RFC documents can be   found inBCP 78 andBCP 79.   Copies of IPR disclosures made to the IETF Secretariat and any   assurances of licenses to be made available, or the result of an   attempt made to obtain a general license or permission for the use of   such proprietary rights by implementers or users of this   specification can be obtained from the IETF on-line IPR repository athttp://www.ietf.org/ipr.   The IETF invites any interested party to bring to its attention any   copyrights, patents or patent applications, or other proprietary   rights that may cover technology that may be required to implement   this standard.  Please address the information to the IETF at ietf-   ipr@ietf.org.Acknowledgement   Funding for the RFC Editor function is currently provided by the   Internet Society.Baker & Savola           Best Current Practice                 [Page 16]

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