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INFORMATIONAL
Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)                     T. Chown, Ed.Request for Comments: 7368                     University of SouthamptonCategory: Informational                                         J. ArkkoISSN: 2070-1721                                                 Ericsson                                                               A. Brandt                                                           Sigma Designs                                                                O. Troan                                                     Cisco Systems, Inc.                                                                 J. Weil                                                       Time Warner Cable                                                            October 2014IPv6 Home Networking Architecture PrinciplesAbstract   This text describes evolving networking technology within residential   home networks with increasing numbers of devices and a trend towards   increased internal routing.  The goal of this document is to define a   general architecture for IPv6-based home networking, describing the   associated principles, considerations, and requirements.  The text   briefly highlights specific implications of the introduction of IPv6   for home networking, discusses the elements of the architecture, and   suggests how standard IPv6 mechanisms and addressing can be employed   in home networking.  The architecture describes the need for specific   protocol extensions for certain additional functionality.  It is   assumed that the IPv6 home network is not actively managed and runs   as an IPv6-only or dual-stack network.  There are no recommendations   in this text for the IPv4 part of the network.Status of This Memo   This document is not an Internet Standards Track specification; it is   published for informational purposes.   This document is a product of the Internet Engineering Task Force   (IETF).  It represents the consensus of the IETF community.  It has   received public review and has been approved for publication by the   Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG).  Not all documents   approved by the IESG are a candidate for any level of Internet   Standard; seeSection 2 of RFC 5741.   Information about the current status of this document, any errata,   and how to provide feedback on it may be obtained athttp://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7368.Chown, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 1]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014Copyright Notice   Copyright (c) 2014 IETF Trust and the persons identified as the   document authors.  All rights reserved.   This document is subject toBCP 78 and the IETF Trust's Legal   Provisions Relating to IETF Documents   (http://trustee.ietf.org/license-info) in effect on the date of   publication of this document.  Please review these documents   carefully, as they describe your rights and restrictions with respect   to this document.  Code Components extracted from this document must   include Simplified BSD License text as described in Section 4.e of   the Trust Legal Provisions and are provided without warranty as   described in the Simplified BSD License.Table of Contents1.  Introduction  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .41.1.  Terminology and Abbreviations . . . . . . . . . . . . . .52.  Effects of IPv6 on Home Networking  . . . . . . . . . . . . .62.1.  Multiple Subnets and Routers  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .72.2.  Global Addressability and Elimination of NAT  . . . . . .82.3.  Multi-Addressing of Devices . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .82.4.  Unique Local Addresses (ULAs) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .92.5.  Avoiding Manual Configuration of IP Addresses . . . . . .102.6.  IPv6-Only Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .113.  Homenet Architecture Principles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .113.1.  General Principles  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .123.1.1.  Reuse Existing Protocols  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .123.1.2.  Minimise Changes to Hosts and Routers . . . . . . . .133.2.  Homenet Topology  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .133.2.1.  Supporting Arbitrary Topologies . . . . . . . . . . .133.2.2.  Network Topology Models . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .143.2.3.  Dual-Stack Topologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .183.2.4.  Multihoming . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .193.2.5.  Mobility Support  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .203.3.  A Self-Organising Network . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .213.3.1.  Differentiating Neighbouring Homenets . . . . . . . .213.3.2.  Largest Practical Subnets . . . . . . . . . . . . . .213.3.3.  Handling Varying Link Technologies  . . . . . . . . .223.3.4.  Homenet Realms and Borders  . . . . . . . . . . . . .223.3.5.  Configuration Information from the ISP  . . . . . . .233.4.  Homenet Addressing  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .243.4.1.  Use of ISP-Delegated IPv6 Prefixes  . . . . . . . . .243.4.2.  Stable Internal IP Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . .263.4.3.  Internal Prefix Delegation  . . . . . . . . . . . . .273.4.4.  Coordination of Configuration Information . . . . . .283.4.5.  Privacy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28Chown, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 2]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 20143.5.  Routing Functionality . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .283.5.1.  Unicast Routing within the Homenet  . . . . . . . . .303.5.2.  Unicast Routing at the Homenet Border . . . . . . . .313.5.3.  Multicast Support . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .313.6.  Security  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .323.6.1.  Addressability vs. Reachability . . . . . . . . . . .323.6.2.  Filtering at Borders  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .333.6.3.  Partial Effectiveness of NAT and Firewalls  . . . . .343.6.4.  Exfiltration Concerns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .343.6.5.  Device Capabilities . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .343.6.6.  ULAs as a Hint of Connection Origin . . . . . . . . .353.7.  Naming and Service Discovery  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .353.7.1.  Discovering Services  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .353.7.2.  Assigning Names to Devices  . . . . . . . . . . . . .363.7.3.  The Homenet Name Service  . . . . . . . . . . . . . .373.7.4.  Name Spaces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .383.7.5.  Independent Operation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .403.7.6.  Considerations for LLNs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .403.7.7.  DNS Resolver Discovery  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .413.7.8.  Devices Roaming to/from the Homenet . . . . . . . . .413.8.  Other Considerations  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .413.8.1.  Quality of Service  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .413.8.2.  Operations and Management . . . . . . . . . . . . . .423.9.  Implementing the Architecture on IPv6 . . . . . . . . . .434.  Conclusions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .445.  Security Considerations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .446.  References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .446.1.  Normative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .446.2.  Informative References  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .44   Acknowledgments . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .48   Authors' Addresses  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .49Chown, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 3]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 20141.  Introduction   This document focuses on evolving networking technology within   residential home networks with increasing numbers of devices and a   trend towards increased internal routing, as well as the associated   challenges with their deployment and operation.  There is a growing   trend in home networking for the proliferation of networking   technology through an increasingly broad range of devices and media.   This evolution in scale and diversity sets requirements on IETF   protocols.  Some of these requirements relate to the introduction of   IPv6, while others relate to the introduction of specialised networks   for home automation and sensors.   While at the time of writing some complex home network topologies   exist, most are relatively simple single subnet networks and   ostensibly operate using just IPv4.  While there may be IPv6 traffic   within the network, e.g., for service discovery, the homenet is   provisioned by the ISP as an IPv4 network.  Such networks also   typically employ solutions that should be avoided, such as private   [RFC1918] addressing with (cascaded) Network Address Translation   (NAT) [RFC3022], or they may require expert assistance to set up.   In contrast, emerging IPv6-capable home networks are very likely to   have multiple internal subnets, e.g., to facilitate private and guest   networks, heterogeneous link layers, and smart grid components, and   have enough address space available to allow every device to have a   globally unique address.  This implies that internal routing   functionality is required, and that the homenet's ISP delegates a   large enough address block, to allow assignment of a prefix to each   subnet in the home network.   It is not practical to expect home users to configure their networks.   Thus, the assumption of this document is that the homenet is as far   as possible self-organising and self-configuring, i.e., it should   function without proactive management by the residential user.   The architectural constructs in this document are focused on the   problems to be solved when introducing IPv6, with an eye towards a   better result than what we have today with IPv4, as well as aiming   for a more consistent solution that addresses as many of the   identified requirements as possible.  This document aims to provide   the basis and guiding principles for how standard IPv6 mechanisms and   addressing [RFC2460] [RFC4291] can be employed in home networking,   while coexisting with existing IPv4 mechanisms.  In emerging dual-   stack home networks, it is vital that introducing IPv6 does not   adversely affect IPv4 operation.  We assume that the IPv4 network   architecture in home networks is what it is and cannot be modified by   new recommendations.  This document does not discuss how IPv4 homeChown, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 4]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   networks provision or deliver support for multiple subnets.  It   should not be assumed that any future new functionality created with   IPv6 in mind will be backward compatible to include IPv4 support.   Further, future deployments, or specific subnets within an otherwise   dual-stack home network, may be IPv6-only, in which case   considerations for IPv4 impact would not apply.   This document proposes a baseline homenet architecture, using   protocols and implementations that are as far as possible proven and   robust.  The scope of the document is primarily the network-layer   technologies that provide the basic functionality to enable   addressing, connectivity, routing, naming, and service discovery.   While it may, for example, state that homenet components must be   simple to deploy and use, it does not discuss specific user   interfaces, nor does it discuss specific physical, wireless, or data-   link-layer considerations.  Likewise, we also do not specify the   whole design of a homenet router from top to bottom; rather, we focus   on the Layer 3 aspects.  This means that Layer 2 is largely out of   scope, we're assuming a data-link layer that supports IPv6 is   present, and we react accordingly.  Any IPv6-over-Foo definitions   occur elsewhere.   [RFC7084], which has obsoleted [RFC6204], defines basic requirements   for Customer Edge (CE) routers.  The update includes the definition   of requirements for specific transition tools on the CE router,   specifically Dual-Stack Lite (DS-Lite) [RFC6333] and IPv6 Rapid   Deployment on IPv4 Infrastructures (6rd) [RFC5969].  Such detailed   specification of CE router devices is considered out of scope of this   architecture document, and we assume that any required update of the   CE router device specification as a result of adopting this   architecture will be handled as separate and specific updates to   these existing documents.  Further, the scope of this text is the   internal homenet, and thus specific features on the WAN side of the   CE router are out of scope for this text.1.1.  Terminology and Abbreviations   In this section, we define terminology and abbreviations used   throughout the text.   o  Border: A point, typically resident on a router, between two      networks, e.g., between the main internal homenet and a guest      network.  This defines a point(s) at which filtering and      forwarding policies for different types of traffic may be applied.   o  CE router: Customer Edge router.  A border router intended for use      in a homenet.  A CE router connects the homenet to a service      provider network.Chown, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 5]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   o  FQDN: Fully Qualified Domain Name.  A globally unique name.   o  Guest network: A part of the home network intended for use by      visitors or guests to the home(net).  Devices on the guest network      may typically not see or be able to use all services in the      home(net).   o  Homenet: A home network, comprising host and router equipment,      with one or more CE routers providing connectivity to a service      provider network(s).   o  ISP: Internet Service Provider.  An entity that provides access to      the Internet.  In this document, a service provider specifically      offers Internet access using IPv6 and may also offer IPv4 Internet      access.  The service provider can provide such access over a      variety of different transport methods such as DSL, cable,      wireless, and others.   o  LLN: Low-power and Lossy Network.   o  LQDN: Locally Qualified Domain Name.  A name local to the homenet.   o  NAT: Network Address Translation.  Typically referring to IPv4      Network Address Port Translation (NAPT) [RFC3022].   o  NPTv6: IPv6-to-IPv6 Network Prefix Translation [RFC6296].   o  PCP: Port Control Protocol [RFC6887].   o  Realm: A network delimited by a defined border.  A guest network      within a homenet may form one realm.   o  'Simple Security': Defined in [RFC4864] and expanded further in      [RFC6092]; describes recommended perimeter security capabilities      for IPv6 networks.   o  ULA: IPv6 Unique Local Address [RFC4193].   o  VM: Virtual Machine.2.  Effects of IPv6 on Home Networking   While IPv6 resembles IPv4 in many ways, there are some notable   differences in the way it may typically be deployed.  It changes   address allocation principles, making multi-addressing the norm, and   through the vastly increased address space, it allows globally unique   IP addresses to be used for all devices in a home network.  This   section presents an overview of some of the key implications of theChown, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 6]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   introduction of IPv6 for home networking that are simultaneously both   promising and problematic.2.1.  Multiple Subnets and Routers   While simple Layer 3 topologies involving as few subnets as possible   are preferred in home networks, the incorporation of dedicated   (routed) subnets remains necessary for a variety of reasons.  For   instance, an increasingly common feature in modern home routers is   the ability to support both guest and private network subnets.   Likewise, there may be a need to separate home automation or   corporate extension LANs (whereby a home worker can have their   corporate network extended into the home using a virtual private   network, commonly presented as one port on an Ethernet device) from   the main Internet access network, or different subnets may in general   be associated with parts of the homenet that have different routing   and security policies.  Further, link-layer networking technology is   poised to become more heterogeneous as networks begin to employ both   traditional Ethernet technology and link layers designed for Low-   power and Lossy Networks (LLNs), such as those used for certain types   of sensor devices.  Constraining the flow of certain traffic from   Ethernet links to links of much lower capacity thus becomes an   important topic.   The introduction of IPv6 for home networking makes it possible for   every home network to be delegated enough address space from its ISP   to provision globally unique prefixes for each such subnet in the   home.  While the number of addresses in a standard /64 IPv6 prefix is   practically unlimited, the number of prefixes available for   assignment to the home network is not.  As a result, the growth   inhibitor for the home network shifts from the number of addresses to   the number of prefixes offered by the provider; this topic is   discussed inBCP 157 [RFC6177], which recommends that "end sites   always be able to obtain a reasonable amount of address space for   their actual and planned usage."   The addition of routing between subnets raises a number of issues.   One is a method by which prefixes can be efficiently allocated to   each subnet, without user intervention.  Another issue is how to   extend mechanisms such as zero-configuration service discovery that   currently only operate within a single subnet using link-local   traffic.  In a typical IPv4 home network, there is only one subnet,   so such mechanisms would normally operate as expected.  For multi-   subnet IPv6 home networks, there are two broad choices to enable such   protocols to work across the scope of the entire homenet: extend   existing protocols to work across that scope or introduce proxies for   existing link-layer protocols.  This topic is discussed inSection 3.7.Chown, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 7]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 20142.2.  Global Addressability and Elimination of NAT   The possibility for direct end-to-end communication on the Internet   to be restored by the introduction of IPv6 is, on the one hand, an   incredible opportunity for innovation and simpler network operation,   but on the other hand, it is also a concern as it potentially exposes   nodes in the internal networks to receipt of unwanted and possibly   malicious traffic from the Internet.   With devices and applications able to talk directly to each other   when they have globally unique addresses, there may be an expectation   of improved host security to compensate for this.  It should be noted   that many devices may (for example) ship with default settings that   make them readily vulnerable to compromise by external attackers if   globally accessible, or they may simply not be robust by design   because it was assumed that either such devices would only be used on   private networks or the devices don't have the computing power to   apply the necessary security methods.  In addition, the upgrade cycle   for devices (or their firmware) may be slow and/or lack auto-update   mechanisms.   It is thus important to distinguish between addressability and   reachability.  While IPv6 offers global addressability through the   use of globally unique addresses in the home, whether devices are   globally reachable or not would depend on any firewall or filtering   configuration, and not, as is commonly the case with IPv4, the   presence or use of NAT.  In this respect, IPv6 networks may or may   not have filters applied at their borders to control such traffic,   i.e., at the homenet CE router.  [RFC4864] and [RFC6092] discuss such   filtering and the merits of 'default allow' against 'default deny'   policies for external traffic initiated into a homenet.  This topic   is discussed further inSection 3.6.1.2.3.  Multi-Addressing of Devices   In an IPv6 network, devices will often acquire multiple addresses,   typically at least a link-local address and one or more globally   unique addresses (GUAs).  Where a homenet is multihomed, a device   would typically receive a GUA from within the delegated prefix from   each upstream ISP.  Devices may also have an IPv4 address if the   network is dual stack, an IPv6 Unique Local Address (ULA) [RFC4193]   (see below), and one or more IPv6 privacy addresses [RFC4941].   It should thus be considered the norm for devices on IPv6 home   networks to be multi-addressed and to need to make appropriate   address selection decisions for the candidate source and destination   address pairs for any given connection.  In multihoming scenarios,   nodes will be configured with one address from each upstream ISPChown, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 8]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   prefix.  In such cases, the presence of upstream ingress filtering as   described inBCP 38 [RFC2827] requires such multi-addressed nodes to   select the correct source address to be used for the corresponding   uplink.  Default address selection for IPv6 [RFC6724] provides a   solution for this, but a challenge here is that the node may not have   the information it needs to make that decision based on addresses   alone.  We discuss this challenge inSection 3.2.4.2.4.  Unique Local Addresses (ULAs)   [RFC4193] defines ULAs for IPv6 that may be used to address devices   within the scope of a single site.  Support for ULAs for IPv6 CE   routers is described in [RFC7084].  A home network running IPv6   should deploy ULAs alongside its globally unique prefix(es) to allow   stable communication between devices (on different subnets) within   the homenet where that externally allocated globally unique prefix   may change over time, e.g., due to renumbering within the   subscriber's ISP, or where external connectivity may be temporarily   unavailable.  A homenet using provider-assigned global addresses is   exposed to its ISP renumbering the network to a much larger degree   than before whereas, for IPv4, NAT isolated the user against ISP   renumbering to some extent.   While setting up a network, there may be a period where it has no   external connectivity, in which case ULAs would be required for   inter-subnet communication.  In the case where home automation   networks are being set up in a new home/deployment (as early as   during construction of the home), such networks will likely need to   use their own /48 ULA prefix.  Depending upon circumstances beyond   the control of the owner of the homenet, it may be impossible to   renumber the ULA used by the home automation network so routing   between ULA /48s may be required.  Also, some devices, particularly   constrained devices, may have only a ULA (in addition to a link-   local), while others may have both a GUA and a ULA.   Note that unlike private IPv4 space as described inRFC 1918, the use   of ULAs does not imply use of an IPv6 equivalent of a traditional   IPv4 NAT [RFC3022] or of NPTv6 prefix-based NAT [RFC6296].  When an   IPv6 node in a homenet has both a ULA and a globally unique IPv6   address, it should only use its ULA address internally and use its   additional globally unique IPv6 address as a source address for   external communications.  This should be the natural behaviour given   support for default address selection for IPv6 [RFC6724].  By using   such globally unique addresses between hosts and devices in remote   networks, the architectural cost and complexity, particularly to   applications, of NAT or NPTv6 translation are avoided.  As such,   neither IPv6 NAT nor NPTv6 is recommended for use in the homenet   architecture.  Further, the homenet border router(s) should filterChown, et al.                 Informational                     [Page 9]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   packets with ULA source/destination addresses as discussed inSection 3.4.2.   Devices in a homenet may be given only a ULA as a means to restrict   reachability from outside the homenet.  ULAs can be used by default   for devices that, without additional configuration (e.g., via a web   interface), would only offer services to the internal network.  For   example, a printer might only accept incoming connections on a ULA   until configured to be globally reachable, at which point it acquires   a global IPv6 address and may be advertised via a global name space.   Where both a ULA and a global prefix are in use, the ULA source   address is used to communicate with ULA destination addresses when   appropriate, i.e., when the ULA source and destination lie within the   /48 ULA prefix(es) known to be used within the same homenet.  In   cases where multiple /48 ULA prefixes are in use within a single   homenet (perhaps because multiple homenet routers each independently   auto-generate a /48 ULA prefix and then share prefix/routing   information), utilising a ULA source address and a ULA destination   address from two disjoint internal ULA prefixes is preferable to   using GUAs.   While a homenet should operate correctly with two or more /48 ULAs   enabled, a mechanism for the creation and use of a single /48 ULA   prefix is desirable for addressing consistency and policy   enforcement.   A counter argument to using ULAs is that it is undesirable to   aggressively deprecate global prefixes for temporary loss of   connectivity, so for a host to lose its global address, there would   have to be a connection breakage longer than the lease period, and   even then, deprecating prefixes when there is no connectivity may not   be advisable.  However, it is assumed in this architecture that   homenets should support and use ULAs.2.5.  Avoiding Manual Configuration of IP Addresses   Some IPv4 home networking devices expose IPv4 addresses to users,   e.g., the IPv4 address of a home IPv4 CE router that may be   configured via a web interface.  In potentially complex future IPv6   homenets, users should not be expected to enter IPv6 literal   addresses in devices or applications, given their much greater length   and the apparent randomness of such addresses to a typical home user.   Thus, even for the simplest of functions, simple naming and the   associated (minimal, and ideally zero configuration) discovery of   services are imperative for the easy deployment and use of homenet   devices and applications.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 10]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 20142.6.  IPv6-Only Operation   It is likely that IPv6-only networking will be deployed first in new   home network deployments, often referred to as 'greenfield'   scenarios, where there is no existing IPv4 capability, or perhaps as   one element of an otherwise dual-stack network.  Running IPv6-only   adds additional requirements, e.g., for devices to get configuration   information via IPv6 transport (not relying on an IPv4 protocol such   as IPv4 DHCP) and for devices to be able to initiate communications   to external devices that are IPv4-only.   Some specific transition technologies that may be deployed by the   homenet's ISP are discussed in [RFC7084].  In addition, certain other   functions may be desirable on the CE router, e.g., to access content   in the IPv4 Internet, NAT64 [RFC6144] and DNS64 [RFC6145] may be   applicable.   The widespread availability of robust solutions to these types of   requirements will help accelerate the uptake of IPv6-only homenets.   The specifics of these are, however, beyond the scope of this   document, especially those functions that reside on the CE router.3.  Homenet Architecture Principles   The aim of this text is to outline how to construct advanced IPv6-   based home networks involving multiple routers and subnets using   standard IPv6 addressing and protocols [RFC2460] [RFC4291] as the   basis.  As described inSection 3.1, solutions should as far as   possible reuse existing protocols and minimise changes to hosts and   routers, but some new protocols or extensions are likely to be   required.  In this section, we present the elements of the proposed   home networking architecture with discussion of the associated design   principles.   In general, home network equipment needs to be able to operate in   networks with a range of different properties and topologies, where   home users may plug components together in arbitrary ways and expect   the resulting network to operate.  Significant manual configuration   is rarely, if at all, possible or even desirable given the knowledge   level of typical home users.  Thus, the network should, as far as   possible, be self-configuring, though configuration by advanced users   should not be precluded.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 11]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   The homenet needs to be able to handle or provision at least the   following:   o  Routing   o  Prefix configuration for routers   o  Name resolution   o  Service discovery   o  Network security   The remainder of this document describes the principles by which the   homenet architecture may deliver these properties.3.1.  General Principles   There is little that the Internet standards community can do about   the physical topologies or the need for some networks to be separated   at the network layer for policy or link-layer compatibility reasons.   However, there is a lot of flexibility in using IP addressing and   internetworking mechanisms.  This text discusses how such flexibility   should be used to provide the best user experience and ensure that   the network can evolve with new applications in the future.  The   principles described in this text should be followed when designing   homenet protocol solutions.3.1.1.  Reuse Existing Protocols   Existing protocols will be used to meet the requirements of home   networks.  Where necessary, extensions will be made to those   protocols.  When no existing protocol is found to be suitable, a new   or emerging protocol may be used.  Therefore, it is important that no   design or architectural decisions be made that would preclude the use   of new or emerging protocols.   A generally conservative approach, giving weight to running (and   available) code, is preferable.  Where new protocols are required,   evidence of commitment to implementation by appropriate vendors or   development communities is highly desirable.  Protocols used should   be backward compatible and forward compatible where changes are made.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 12]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 20143.1.2.  Minimise Changes to Hosts and Routers   In order to maximise the deployability of new homenets, any   requirement for changes to hosts and routers should be minimised   where possible; however, solutions that, for example, incrementally   improve capability via host or router changes may be acceptable.   There may be cases where changes are unavoidable, e.g., to allow a   given homenet routing protocol to be self-configuring or to support   routing based on source addresses in addition to destination   addresses (to improve multihoming support, as discussed inSection 3.2.4).3.2.  Homenet Topology   This section considers homenet topologies and the principles that may   be applied in designing an architecture to support as wide a range of   such topologies as possible.3.2.1.  Supporting Arbitrary Topologies   There should ideally be no built-in assumptions about the topology in   home networks, as users are capable of connecting their devices in   'ingenious' ways.  Thus, arbitrary topologies and arbitrary routing   will need to be supported, or at least the failure mode for when the   user makes a mistake should be as robust as possible, e.g.,   deactivating a certain part of the infrastructure to allow the rest   to operate.  In such cases, the user should ideally have some useful   indication of the failure mode encountered.   There should be no topology scenarios that cause a loss of   connectivity, except when the user creates a physical island within   the topology.  Some potentially pathological cases that can be   created include bridging ports of a router together; however, this   case can be detected and dealt with by the router.  Loops within a   routed topology are in a sense good in that they offer redundancy.   Topologies that include potential bridging loops can be dangerous but   are also detectable when a switch learns the Media Access Control   (MAC) address of one of its interfaces on another or runs a spanning   tree or link-state protocol.  It is only topologies with such   potential loops using simple repeaters that are truly pathological.   The topology of the homenet may change over time, due to the addition   or removal of equipment but also due to temporary failures or   connectivity problems.  In some cases, this may lead to, for example,   a multihomed homenet being split into two isolated homenets or, after   such a fault is remedied, two isolated parts reconfiguring back to a   single network.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 13]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 20143.2.2.  Network Topology Models   As hinted above, while the architecture may focus on likely common   topologies, it should not preclude any arbitrary topology from being   constructed.   At the time of writing, most IPv4 home network models tend to be   relatively simple, typically a single NAT router to the ISP and a   single internal subnet but, as discussed earlier, evolution in   network architectures is driving more complex topologies, such as the   separation of guest and private networks.  There may also be some   cascaded IPv4 NAT scenarios, which we mention in the next section.   For IPv6 homenets, the network architectures described in [RFC7084]   should, as a minimum, be supported.   There are a number of properties or attributes of a home network that   we can use to describe its topology and operation.  The following   properties apply to any IPv6 home network:   o  Presence of internal routers.  The homenet may have one or more      internal routers or may only provide subnetting from interfaces on      the CE router.   o  Presence of isolated internal subnets.  There may be isolated      internal subnets, with no direct connectivity between them within      the homenet (with each having its own external connectivity).      Isolation may be physical or implemented via IEEE 802.1q VLANs.      The latter is, however, not something a typical user would be      expected to configure.   o  Demarcation of the CE router.  The CE router(s) may or may not be      managed by the ISP.  If the demarcation point is such that the      customer can provide or manage the CE router, its configuration      must be simple.  Both models must be supported.   Various forms of multihoming are likely to become more prevalent with   IPv6 home networks, where the homenet may have two or more external   ISP connections, as discussed further below.  Thus, the following   properties should also be considered for such networks:   o  Number of upstream providers.  The majority of home networks today      consist of a single upstream ISP, but it may become more common in      the future for there to be multiple ISPs, whether for resilience      or provision of additional services.  Each would offer its own      prefix.  Some may or may not provide a default route to the public      Internet.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 14]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   o  Number of CE routers.  The homenet may have a single CE router,      which might be used for one or more providers, or multiple CE      routers.  The presence of multiple CE routers adds additional      complexity for multihoming scenarios and protocols like PCP that      may need to manage connection-oriented state mappings on the same      CE router as used for subsequent traffic flows.   In the following sections, we give some examples of the types of   homenet topologies we may see in the future.  This is not intended to   be an exhaustive or complete list but rather an indicative one to   facilitate the discussion in this text.3.2.2.1.  A: Single ISP, Single CE Router, and Internal Routers   Figure 1 shows a home network with multiple local area networks.   These may be needed for reasons relating to different link-layer   technologies in use or for policy reasons, e.g., classic Ethernet in   one subnet and an LLN link-layer technology in another.  In this   example, there is no single router that a priori understands the   entire topology.  The topology itself may also be complex, and it may   not be possible to assume a pure tree form, for instance (because   home users may plug routers together to form arbitrary topologies,   including those with potential loops in them).Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 15]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014                     +-------+-------+                     \                     |   Service     |                      \                     |   Provider    |                       | Service                     |    Router     |                       | Provider                     +-------+-------+                       | Network                             |                              /                             | Customer                    /                             | Internet Connection                             |                      +------+--------+                    \                      |     IPv6      |                     \                      | Customer Edge |                      \                      |    Router     |                      |                      +----+-+---+----+                      |          Network A        | |   |      Network B(E)         |    ----+-------------+----+ |   +---+-------------+------+  |        |             |      |       |             |      |  |   +----+-----+ +-----+----+ |  +----+-----+ +-----+----+ |  |   |IPv6 Host | |IPv6 Host | |  | IPv6 Host| |IPv6 Host | |  |   |    H1    | |    H2    | |  |    H3    | |    H4    | |  |   +----------+ +----------+ |  +----------+ +----------+ |  |                             |        |             |     |  |                      Link F |     ---+------+------+-----+  |                             |               | Network E(B)  |                      +------+--------+      |               | End-User                      |     IPv6      |      |               | Networks                      |   Interior    +------+               |                      |    Router     |                      |                      +---+-------+-+-+                      |          Network C       |       |   Network D              |    ----+-------------+---+       +---+-------------+---     |        |             |               |             |        |   +----+-----+ +-----+----+     +----+-----+ +-----+----+   |   |IPv6 Host | |IPv6 Host |     | IPv6 Host| |IPv6 Host |   |   |   H5     | |   H6     |     |    H7    | |    H8    |   /   +----------+ +----------+     +----------+ +----------+  /                                 Figure 1   In this diagram, there is one CE router.  It has a single uplink   interface.  It has three additional interfaces connected to Network   A, Link F, and Network B.  The IPv6 Internal Router (IR) has four   interfaces connected to Link F, Network C, Network D, and Network E.   Network B and Network E have been bridged, likely inadvertently.   This could be as a result of connecting a wire between a switch for   Network B and a switch for Network E.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 16]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   Any of logical Networks A through F might be wired or wireless.   Where multiple hosts are shown, this might be through one or more   physical ports on the CE router or IPv6 (IR), wireless networks, or   through one or more Ethernet switches that are Layer 2 only.3.2.2.2.  B: Two ISPs, Two CE Routers, and Shared Subnet           +-------+-------+     +-------+-------+         \           |   Service     |     |   Service     |          \           |  Provider A   |     |  Provider B   |           | Service           |    Router     |     |    Router     |           | Provider           +------+--------+     +-------+-------+           | Network                  |                      |                   /                  |      Customer        |                  /                  | Internet Connections |                 /                  |                      |           +------+--------+     +-------+-------+         \           |     IPv6      |     |    IPv6       |          \           | Customer Edge |     | Customer Edge |           \           |   Router 1    |     |   Router 2    |           /           +------+--------+     +-------+-------+          /                  |                      |                 /                  |                      |                | End-User     ---+---------+---+---------------+--+----------+---  | Network(s)        |             |               |             |      \   +----+-----+ +-----+----+     +----+-----+ +-----+----+  \   |IPv6 Host | |IPv6 Host |     | IPv6 Host| |IPv6 Host |  /   |   H1     | |   H2     |     |    H3    | |    H4    | /   +----------+ +----------+     +----------+ +----------+                                 Figure 2   Figure 2 illustrates a multihomed homenet model, where the customer   has connectivity via CE router 1 to ISP A and via CE router 2 to ISP   B.  This example shows one shared subnet where IPv6 nodes would   potentially be multihomed and receive multiple IPv6 global prefixes,   one per ISP.  This model may also be combined with that shown in   Figure 1 to create a more complex scenario with multiple internal   routers.  Or, the above shared subnet may be split in two, such that   each CE router serves a separate isolated subnet, which is a scenario   seen with some IPv4 networks today.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 17]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 20143.2.2.3.  C: Two ISPs, One CE Router, and Shared Subnet           +-------+-------+    +-------+-------+          \           |   Service     |    |   Service     |           \           |  Provider A   |    |  Provider B   |            | Service           |    Router     |    |    Router     |            | Provider           +-------+-------+    +------+--------+            | Network                   |                   |                     /                   |     Customer      |                    /                   |     Internet      |                   /                   |    Connections    |                 +-----------+-----------+                 \                 |         IPv6          |                  \                 |     Customer Edge     |                   \                 |        Router         |                   /                 +-----------+-----------+                  /                             |                             /                             |                            | End-User     ---+------------+-------+--------+-------------+---  | Network(s)        |            |                |             |      \   +----+-----+ +----+-----+     +----+-----+ +-----+----+  \   |IPv6 Host | |IPv6 Host |     | IPv6 Host| |IPv6 Host |  /   |   H1     | |   H2     |     |    H3    | |   H4     | /   +----------+ +----------+     +----------+ +----------+                                 Figure 3   Figure 3 illustrates a model where a home network may have multiple   connections to multiple providers or multiple logical connections to   the same provider, with shared internal subnets.3.2.3.  Dual-Stack Topologies   For the immediate future, it is expected that most homenet   deployments will be dual-stack IPv4/IPv6.  In such networks, it is   important not to introduce new IPv6 capabilities that would cause a   failure if used alongside IPv4+NAT, given that such dual-stack   homenets will be commonplace for some time.  That said, it is   desirable that IPv6 works better than IPv4 in as many scenarios as   possible.  Further, the homenet architecture must operate in the   absence of IPv4.   A general recommendation is to follow the same topology for IPv6 as   is used for IPv4 but not to use NAT.  Thus, there should be routed   IPv6 where an IPv4 NAT is used, and where there is no NAT, routing or   bridging may be used.  Routing may have advantages when compared to   bridging together high- and lower-speed shared media, and inChown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 18]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   addition, bridging may not be suitable for some networks, such as ad   hoc mobile networks.   In some cases, IPv4 home networks may feature cascaded NATs.  End   users are frequently unaware that they have created such networks, as   'home routers' and 'home switches' are frequently confused.  In   addition, there are cases where NAT routers are included within   Virtual Machine Hypervisors or where Internet connection-sharing   services have been enabled.  This document applies equally to such   hidden NAT 'routers'.  IPv6-routed versions of such cases will be   required.  We should thus also note that routers in the homenet may   not be separate physical devices; they may be embedded within other   devices.3.2.4.  Multihoming   A homenet may be multihomed to multiple providers, as the network   models above illustrate.  This may take a form where there are either   multiple isolated networks within the home or a more integrated   network where the connectivity selection needs to be dynamic.   Current practice is typically of the former kind, but the latter is   expected to become more commonplace.   In the general homenet architecture, multihomed hosts should be   multi-addressed with a global IPv6 address from the global prefix   delegated from each ISP they communicate with or through.  When such   multi-addressing is in use, hosts need some way to pick source and   destination address pairs for connections.  A host may choose a   source address to use by various methods, most commonly [RFC6724].   Applications may of course do different things, and this should not   be precluded.   For the single CE Router Network Model C illustrated above,   multihoming may be offered by source-based routing at the CE router.   With multiple exit routers, as in CE Router Network Model B, the   complexity rises.  Given a packet with a source address on the home   network, the packet must be routed to the proper egress to avoid   ingress filtering as described inBCP 38 if exiting through the wrong   ISP.  It is highly desirable that the packet is routed in the most   efficient manner to the correct exit, though as a minimum requirement   the packet should not be dropped.   The homenet architecture should support both the above models, i.e.,   one or more CE routers.  However, the general multihoming problem is   broad, and solutions suggested to date within the IETF have included   complex architectures for monitoring connectivity, traffic   engineering, identifier-locator separation, connection survivability   across multihoming events, and so on.  It is thus important that theChown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 19]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   homenet architecture should as far as possible minimise the   complexity of any multihoming support.   An example of such a 'simpler' approach has been documented in   [RFC7157].  Alternatively, a flooding/routing protocol could   potentially be used to pass information through the homenet, such   that internal routers and ultimately end hosts could learn per-prefix   configuration information, allowing better address selection   decisions to be made.  However, this would imply router and, most   likely, host changes.  Another avenue is to introduce support   throughout the homenet for routing that is based on the source as   well as the destination address of each packet.  While greatly   improving the 'intelligence' of routing decisions within the homenet,   such an approach would require relatively significant router changes   but avoid host changes.   As explained previously, while NPTv6 has been proposed for providing   multihoming support in networks, its use is not recommended in the   homenet architecture.   It should be noted that some multihoming scenarios may see one   upstream being a "walled garden" and thus only appropriate for   connectivity to the services of that provider; an example may be a   VPN service that only routes back to the enterprise business network   of a user in the homenet.  As perSection 4.2.1 of [RFC3002], we do   not specifically target walled-garden multihoming as a goal of this   document.   The homenet architecture should also not preclude use of host or   application-oriented tools, e.g., Shim6 [RFC5533], Multipath TCP   (MPTCP) [RFC6824], or Happy Eyeballs [RFC6555].  In general, any   incremental improvements obtained by host changes should give benefit   for the hosts introducing them but should not be required.3.2.5.  Mobility Support   Devices may be mobile within the homenet.  While resident on the same   subnet, their address will remain persistent, but should devices move   to a different (wireless) subnet, they will acquire a new address in   that subnet.  It is desirable that the homenet supports internal   device mobility.  To do so, the homenet may either extend the reach   of specific wireless subnets to enable wireless roaming across the   home (availability of a specific subnet across the home) or support   mobility protocols to facilitate such roaming where multiple subnets   are used.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 20]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 20143.3.  A Self-Organising Network   The home network infrastructure should be naturally self-organising   and self-configuring under different circumstances relating to the   connectivity status to the Internet, number of devices, and physical   topology.  At the same time, it should be possible for advanced users   to manually adjust (override) the current configuration.   While a goal of the homenet architecture is for the network to be as   self-organising as possible, there may be instances where some manual   configuration is required, e.g., the entry of a cryptographic key to   apply wireless security or to configure a shared routing secret.  The   latter may be relevant when considering how to bootstrap a routing   configuration.  It is highly desirable that the number of such   configurations is minimised.3.3.1.  Differentiating Neighbouring Homenets   It is important that self-configuration with 'unintended' devices be   avoided.  There should be a way for a user to administratively assert   in a simple way whether or not a device belongs to a given homenet.   The goal is to allow the establishment of borders, particularly   between two adjacent homenets, and to avoid unauthorised devices from   participating in the homenet.  Such an authorisation capability may   need to operate through multiple hops in the homenet.   The homenet should thus support a way for a homenet owner to claim   ownership of their devices in a reasonably secure way.  This could be   achieved by a pairing mechanism by, for example, pressing buttons   simultaneously on an authenticated and a new homenet device or by an   enrollment process as part of an autonomic networking environment.   While there may be scenarios where one homenet may wish to   intentionally gain access through another, e.g., to share external   connectivity costs, such scenarios are not discussed in this   document.3.3.2.  Largest Practical Subnets   Today's IPv4 home networks generally have a single subnet, and early   dual-stack deployments have a single congruent IPv6 subnet, possibly   with some bridging functionality.  More recently, some vendors have   started to introduce 'home' and 'guest' functions, which in IPv6   would be implemented as two subnets.   Future home networks are highly likely to have one or more internal   routers and thus need multiple subnets for the reasons described   earlier.  As part of the self-organisation of the network, theChown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 21]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   homenet should subdivide itself into the largest practical subnets   that can be constructed within the constraints of link-layer   mechanisms, bridging, physical connectivity, and policy, and where   applicable, performance or other criteria.  In such subdivisions, the   logical topology may not necessarily match the physical topology.   This text does not, however, make recommendations on how such   subdivision should occur.  It is expected that subsequent documents   will address this problem.   While it may be desirable to maximise the chance of link-local   protocols operating across a homenet by maximising the size of a   subnet, multi-subnet home networks are inevitable, so their support   must be included.3.3.3.  Handling Varying Link Technologies   Homenets tend to grow organically over many years, and a homenet will   typically be built over link-layer technologies from different   generations.  Current homenets typically use links ranging from 1   Mbit/s up to 1 Gbit/s -- a throughput discrepancy of three orders of   magnitude.  We expect this discrepancy to widen further as both high-   speed and low-power technologies are deployed.   Homenet protocols should be designed to deal well with   interconnecting links of very different throughputs.  In particular,   flows local to a link should not be flooded throughout the homenet,   even when sent over multicast, and, whenever possible, the homenet   protocols should be able to choose the faster links and avoid the   slower ones.   Links (particularly wireless links) may also have limited numbers of   transmit opportunities (txops), and there is a clear trend driven by   both power and downward compatibility constraints toward aggregation   of packets into these limited txops while increasing throughput.   Transmit opportunities may be a system's scarcest resource and,   therefore, also strongly limit actual throughput available.3.3.4.  Homenet Realms and Borders   The homenet will need to be aware of the extent of its own 'site',   which will, for example, define the borders for ULA and site scope   multicast traffic and may require specific security policies to be   applied.  The homenet will have one or more such borders with   external connectivity providers.   A homenet will most likely also have internal borders between   internal realms, e.g., a guest realm or a corporate network extension   realm.  It is desirable that appropriate borders can be configured toChown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 22]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   determine, for example, the scope of where network prefixes, routing   information, network traffic, service discovery, and naming may be   shared.  The default mode internally should be to share everything.   It is expected that a realm would span at least an entire subnet, and   thus the borders lie at routers that receive delegated prefixes   within the homenet.  It is also desirable, for a richer security   model, that hosts are able to make communication decisions based on   available realm and associated prefix information in the same way   that routers at realm borders can.   A simple homenet model may just consider three types of realms and   the borders between them, namely the internal homenet, the ISP, and a   guest network.  In this case, the borders will include the border   from the homenet to the ISP, the border from the guest network to the   ISP, and the border from the homenet to the guest network.   Regardless, it should be possible for additional types of realms and   borders to be defined, e.g., for some specific LLN-based network,   such as Smart Grid, and for these to be detected automatically and   for an appropriate default policy to be applied as to what type of   traffic/data can flow across such borders.   It is desirable to classify the external border of the home network   as a unique logical interface separating the home network from a   service provider network(s).  This border interface may be a single   physical interface to a single service provider, multiple Layer 2   sub-interfaces to a single service provider, or multiple connections   to a single or multiple providers.  This border makes it possible to   describe edge operations and interface requirements across multiple   functional areas including security, routing, service discovery, and   router discovery.   It should be possible for the homenet user to override any   automatically determined borders and the default policies applied   between them, the exception being that it may not be possible to   override policies defined by the ISP at the external border.3.3.5.  Configuration Information from the ISP   In certain cases, it may be useful for the homenet to get certain   configuration information from its ISP.  For example, the homenet   DHCP server may request and forward some options that it gets from   its upstream DHCP server, though the specifics of the options may   vary across deployments.  There is potential complexity here, of   course, should the homenet be multihomed.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 23]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 20143.4.  Homenet Addressing   The IPv6 addressing scheme used within a homenet must conform to the   IPv6 addressing architecture [RFC4291].  In this section, we discuss   how the homenet needs to adapt to the prefixes made available to it   by its upstream ISP, such that internal subnets, hosts, and devices   can obtain and configure the necessary addressing information to   operate.3.4.1.  Use of ISP-Delegated IPv6 Prefixes   Discussion of IPv6 prefix allocation policies is included in   [RFC6177].  In practice, a homenet may receive an arbitrary length   IPv6 prefix from its provider, e.g., /60, /56, or /48.  The offered   prefix may be stable or change from time to time; it is generally   expected that ISPs will offer relatively stable prefixes to their   residential customers.  Regardless, the home network needs to be   adaptable as far as possible to ISP prefix allocation policies and   assume nothing about the stability of the prefix received from an ISP   or the length of the prefix that may be offered.   However, if, for example, only a /64 is offered by the ISP, the   homenet may be severely constrained or even unable to function.BCP157 [RFC6177] states the following:      A key principle for address management is that end sites always be      able to obtain a reasonable amount of address space for their      actual and planned usage, and over time ranges specified in years      rather than just months.  In practice, that means at least one      /64, and in most cases significantly more.  One particular      situation that must be avoided is having an end site feel      compelled to use IPv6-to-IPv6 Network Address Translation or other      burdensome address conservation techniques because it could not      get sufficient address space.   This architecture document assumes that the guidance in the quoted   text is being followed by ISPs.   There are many problems that would arise from a homenet not being   offered a sufficient prefix size for its needs.  Rather than attempt   to contrive a method for a homenet to operate in a constrained manner   when faced with insufficient prefixes, such as the use of subnet   prefixes longer than /64 (which would break stateless address   autoconfiguration [RFC4862]), the use of NPTv6, or falling back to   bridging across potentially very different media, it is recommended   that the receiving router instead enters an error state and issues   appropriate warnings.  Some consideration may need to be given to howChown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 24]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   such a warning or error state should best be presented to a typical   home user.   Thus, a homenet CE router should request, for example, via DHCP   Prefix Delegation (DHCP PD) [RFC3633], that it would like a /48   prefix from its ISP, i.e., it asks the ISP for the maximum size   prefix it might expect to be offered, even if in practice it may only   be offered a /56 or /60.  For a typical IPv6 homenet, it is not   recommended that an ISP offers less than a /60 prefix, and it is   highly preferable that the ISP offers at least a /56.  It is expected   that the allocated prefix to the homenet from any single ISP is a   contiguous, aggregated one.  While it may be possible for a homenet   CE router to issue multiple prefix requests to attempt to obtain   multiple delegations, such behaviour is out of scope of this   document.   The norm for residential customers of large ISPs may be similar to   their single IPv4 address provision; by default it is likely to   remain persistent for some time, but changes in the ISP's own   provisioning systems may lead to the customer's IP (and in the IPv6   case their prefix pool) changing.  It is not expected that ISPs will   generally support Provider Independent (PI) addressing for   residential homenets.   When an ISP does need to restructure, and in doing so renumber its   customer homenets, 'flash' renumbering is likely to be imposed.  This   implies a need for the homenet to be able to handle a sudden   renumbering event that, unlike the process described in [RFC4192],   would be a 'flag day' event, which means that a graceful renumbering   process moving through a state with two active prefixes in use would   not be possible.  While renumbering can be viewed as an extended   version of an initial numbering process, the difference between flash   renumbering and an initial 'cold start' is the need to provide   service continuity.   There may be cases where local law means some ISPs are required to   change IPv6 prefixes (current IPv4 addresses) for privacy reasons for   their customers.  In such cases, it may be possible to avoid an   instant 'flash' renumbering and plan a non-flag day renumbering as   perRFC 4192.  Similarly, if an ISP has a planned renumbering   process, it may be able to adjust lease timers, etc., appropriately.   The customer may of course also choose to move to a new ISP and thus   begin using a new prefix.  In such cases, the customer should expect   a discontinuity, and not only may the prefix change, but potentially   also the prefix length if the new ISP offers a different default size   prefix.  The homenet may also be forced to renumber itself if   significant internal 'replumbing' is undertaken by the user.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 25]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   Regardless, it's desirable that homenet protocols support rapid   renumbering and that operational processes don't add unnecessary   complexity for the renumbering process.  Further, the introduction of   any new homenet protocols should not make any form of renumbering any   more complex than it already is.   Finally, the internal operation of the home network should also not   depend on the availability of the ISP network at any given time,   other than, of course, for connectivity to services or systems off   the home network.  This reinforces the use of ULAs for stable   internal communication and the need for a naming and service   discovery mechanism that can operate independently within the   homenet.3.4.2.  Stable Internal IP Addresses   The network should by default attempt to provide IP-layer   connectivity between all internal parts of the homenet as well as to   and from the external Internet, subject to the filtering policies or   other policy constraints discussed later in the security section.   ULAs should be used within the scope of a homenet to support stable   routing and connectivity between subnets and hosts regardless of   whether a globally unique ISP-provided prefix is available.  In the   case of a prolonged external connectivity outage, ULAs allow internal   operations across routed subnets to continue.  ULA addresses also   allow constrained devices to create permanent relationships between   IPv6 addresses, e.g., from a wall controller to a lamp, where   symbolic host names would require additional non-volatile memory, and   updating global prefixes in sleeping devices might also be   problematic.   As discussed previously, it would be expected that ULAs would   normally be used alongside one or more global prefixes in a homenet,   such that hosts become multi-addressed with both globally unique and   ULA prefixes.  ULAs should be used for all devices, not just those   intended to only have internal connectivity.  Default address   selection would then enable ULAs to be preferred for internal   communications between devices that are using ULA prefixes generated   within the same homenet.   In cases where ULA prefixes are in use within a homenet but there is   no external IPv6 connectivity (and thus no GUAs in use),   recommendations ULA-5, L-3, and L-4 inRFC 7084 should be followed to   ensure correct operation, in particular where the homenet may be dual   stack with IPv4 external connectivity.  The use of the Route   Information Option described in [RFC4191] provides a mechanism to   advertise such more-specific ULA routes.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 26]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   The use of ULAs should be restricted to the homenet scope through   filtering at the border(s) of the homenet, as mandated byRFC 7084   requirement S-2.   Note that in some cases, it is possible that multiple /48 ULA   prefixes may be in use within the same homenet, e.g., when the   network is being deployed, perhaps also without external   connectivity.  In cases where multiple ULA /48s are in use, hosts   need to know that each /48 is local to the homenet, e.g., by   inclusion in their local address selection policy table.3.4.3.  Internal Prefix Delegation   As mentioned above, there are various sources of prefixes.  From the   homenet perspective, a single global prefix from each ISP should be   received on the border CE router [RFC3633].  Where multiple CE   routers exist with multiple ISP prefix pools, it is expected that   routers within the homenet would assign themselves prefixes from each   ISP they communicate with/through.  As discussed above, a ULA prefix   should be provisioned for stable internal communications or for use   on constrained/LLN networks.   The delegation or availability of a prefix pool to the homenet should   allow subsequent internal autonomous assignment of prefixes for use   within the homenet.  Such internal assignment should not assume a   flat or hierarchical model, nor should it make an assumption about   whether the assignment of internal prefixes is distributed or   centralised.  The assignment mechanism should provide reasonable   efficiency, so that typical home network prefix allocation sizes can   accommodate all the necessary /64 allocations in most cases, and not   waste prefixes.  Further, duplicate assignment of multiple /64s to   the same network should be avoided, and the network should behave as   gracefully as possible in the event of prefix exhaustion (though the   options in such cases may be limited).   Where the home network has multiple CE routers and these are   delegated prefix pools from their attached ISPs, the internal prefix   assignment would be expected to be served by each CE router for each   prefix associated with it.  Where ULAs are used, it is preferable   that only one /48 ULA covers the whole homenet, from which /64s can   be assigned to the subnets.  In cases where two /48 ULAs are   generated within a homenet, the network should still continue to   function, meaning that hosts will need to determine that each ULA is   local to the homenet.   Prefix assignment within the homenet should result in each link being   assigned a stable prefix that is persistent across reboots, power   outages, and similar short-term outages.  The availability ofChown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 27]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   persistent prefixes should not depend on the router boot order.  The   addition of a new routing device should not affect existing   persistent prefixes, but persistence may not be expected in the face   of significant 'replumbing' of the homenet.  However, assigned ULA   prefixes within the homenet should remain persistent through an ISP-   driven renumbering event.   Provisioning such persistent prefixes may imply the need for stable   storage on routing devices and also a method for a home user to   'reset' the stored prefix should a significant reconfiguration be   required (though ideally the home user should not be involved at   all).   This document makes no specific recommendation towards solutions but   notes that it is very likely that all routing devices participating   in a homenet must use the same internal prefix delegation method.   This implies that only one delegation method should be in use.3.4.4.  Coordination of Configuration Information   The network elements will need to be integrated in a way that takes   account of the various lifetimes on timers that are used on different   elements, e.g., DHCPv6 PD, router, valid prefix, and preferred prefix   timers.3.4.5.  Privacy   If ISPs offer relatively stable IPv6 prefixes to customers, the   network prefix part of addresses associated with the homenet may not   change over a reasonably long period of time.   The exposure of which traffic is sourced from the same homenet is   thus similar to IPv4; the single IPv4 global address seen through use   of IPv4 NAT gives the same hint as the global IPv6 prefix seen for   IPv6 traffic.   While IPv4 NAT may obfuscate to an external observer which internal   devices traffic is sourced from, IPv6, even with use of privacy   addresses [RFC4941], adds additional exposure of which traffic is   sourced from the same internal device through use of the same IPv6   source address for a period of time.3.5.  Routing Functionality   Routing functionality is required when there are multiple routers   deployed within the internal home network.  This functionality could   be as simple as the current 'default route is up' model of IPv4 NAT,Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 28]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   or more likely, it would involve running an appropriate routing   protocol.   A mechanism is required to discover which router(s) in the homenet is   providing the CE router function.  Borders may include but are not   limited to the interface to the upstream ISP, a gateway device to a   separate home network such as an LLN network, or a gateway to a guest   or private corporate extension network.  In some cases, there may be   no border present, which may, for example, occur before an upstream   connection has been established.   The routing environment should be self-configuring, as discussed   previously.  The homenet self-configuration process and the routing   protocol must interact in a predictable manner, especially during   startup and reconvergence.  The border discovery functionality and   other self-configuration functionality may be integrated into the   routing protocol itself but may also be imported via a separate   discovery mechanism.   It is preferable that configuration information is distributed and   synchronised within the homenet by a separate configuration protocol.   The homenet routing protocol should be based on a previously deployed   protocol that has been shown to be reliable and robust.  This does   not preclude the selection of a newer protocol for which a high-   quality open source implementation becomes available.  The resulting   code must support lightweight implementations and be suitable for   incorporation into consumer devices, where both fixed and temporary   storage and processing power are at a premium.   At most, one unicast and one multicast routing protocol should be in   use at a given time in a given homenet.  In some simple topologies,   no routing protocol may be needed.  If more than one routing protocol   is supported by routers in a given homenet, then a mechanism is   required to ensure that all routers in that homenet use the same   protocol.   The homenet architecture is IPv6-only.  In practice, dual-stack   homenets are still likely for the foreseeable future, as described inSection 3.2.3.  Whilst support for IPv4 and other address families   may therefore be beneficial, it is not an explicit requirement to   carry the routing information in the same routing protocol.   Multiple types of physical interfaces must be accounted for in the   homenet routing topology.  Technologies such as Ethernet, Wi-Fi,   Multimedia over Coax Alliance (MoCA), etc., must be capable of   coexisting in the same environment and should be treated as part of   any routed deployment.  The inclusion of physical-layerChown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 29]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   characteristics in path computation should be considered for   optimising communication in the homenet.3.5.1.  Unicast Routing within the Homenet   The role of the unicast routing protocol is to provide good enough   end-to-end connectivity often enough, where good/often enough is   defined by user expectations.   Due to the use of a variety of diverse underlying link technologies,   path selection in a homenet may benefit from being more refined than   minimising hop count.  It may also be beneficial for traffic to use   multiple paths to a given destination within the homenet where   available rather than just a single best path.   Minimising convergence time should be a goal in any routed   environment.  It is reasonable to assume that convergence time should   not be significantly longer than network outages users are accustomed   to should their CE router reboot.   The homenet architecture is agnostic as to the choice of underlying   routing technology, e.g., link state versus Bellman-Ford.   The routing protocol should support the generic use of multiple   customer Internet connections and the concurrent use of multiple   delegated prefixes.  A routing protocol that can make routing   decisions based on source and destination addresses is thus highly   desirable, to avoid problems with upstream ISP ingress filtering as   described inBCP 38.  Multihoming support may also include load   balancing to multiple providers and failover from a primary to a   backup link when available.  The protocol should not require upstream   ISP connectivity to be established to continue routing within the   homenet.   The homenet architecture is agnostic on a minimum hop count that has   to be supported by the routing protocol.  The architecture should,   however, be scalable to other scenarios where homenet technology may   be deployed, which may include small office and small enterprise   sites.  To allow for such cases, it would be desirable that the   architecture is scalable to higher hop counts and to larger numbers   of routers than would be typical in a true home network.   At the time of writing, link-layer networking technology is poised to   become more heterogeneous, as networks begin to employ both   traditional Ethernet technology and link layers designed for LLNs,   such as those used for certain types of sensor devices.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 30]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   Ideally, LLN or other logically separate networks should be able to   exchange routes such that IP traffic may be forwarded among the   networks via gateway routers that interoperate with both the homenet   and any LLNs.  Current home deployments use largely different   mechanisms in sensor and basic Internet connectivity networks.  IPv6   virtual machine (VM) solutions may also add additional routing   requirements.   In this homenet architecture, LLNs and other specialised networks are   considered stub areas of the homenet and are thus not expected to act   as a transit for traffic between more traditional media.3.5.2.  Unicast Routing at the Homenet Border   The current practice defined in [RFC7084] would suggest that routing   between the homenet CE router and the service provider router follow   the WAN-side requirements model in[RFC7084], Section 4 (WAN-side   requirements), at least in initial deployments.  However,   consideration of whether a routing protocol is used between the   homenet CE router and the service provider router is out of scope of   this document.3.5.3.  Multicast Support   It is desirable that, subject to the capacities of devices on certain   media types, multicast routing is supported across the homenet,   including source-specific multicast (SSM) [RFC4607].   [RFC4291] requires that any boundary of scope 4 or higher (i.e.,   admin-local or higher) be administratively configured.  Thus, the   boundary at the homenet-ISP border must be administratively   configured, though that may be triggered by an administrative   function such as DHCP PD.  Other multicast forwarding policy borders   may also exist within the homenet, e.g., to/from a guest subnet,   whilst the use of certain link media types may also affect where   specific multicast traffic is forwarded or routed.   There may be different drivers for multicast to be supported across   the homenet -- for example,   o  for homenet-wide service discovery, should a multicast service      discovery protocol of scope greater than link-local be defined   o  for multicast-based streaming or file-sharing applications   Where multicast is routed across a homenet, an appropriate multicast   routing protocol is required, one that as per the unicast routing   protocol should be self-configuring.  As hinted above, it must beChown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 31]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   possible to scope or filter multicast traffic to avoid it being   flooded to network media where devices cannot reasonably support it.   A homenet may not only use multicast internally, it may also be a   consumer or provider of external multicast traffic, where the   homenet's ISP supports such multicast operation.  This may be   valuable, for example, where live video applications are being   sourced to/from the homenet.   The multicast environment should support the ability for applications   to pick a unique multicast group to use.3.6.  Security   The security of an IPv6 homenet is an important consideration.  The   most notable difference to the IPv4 operational model is the removal   of NAT, the introduction of global addressability of devices, and   thus a need to consider whether devices should have global   reachability.  Regardless, hosts need to be able to operate securely,   end to end where required, and also be robust against malicious   traffic directed towards them.  However, there are other challenges   introduced, e.g., default filtering policies at the borders between   various homenet realms.3.6.1.  Addressability vs. Reachability   An IPv6-based home network architecture should embrace the   transparent end-to-end communications model as described in   [RFC2775].  Each device should be globally addressable, and those   addresses must not be altered in transit.  However, security   perimeters can be applied to restrict end-to-end communications, and   thus while a host may be globally addressable, it may not be globally   reachable.   [RFC4864] describes a 'Simple Security' model for IPv6 networks,   whereby stateful perimeter filtering can be applied to control the   reachability of devices in a homenet.RFC 4864 states inSection 4.2   that "the use of firewalls...is recommended for those that want   boundary protection in addition to host defences."  It should be   noted that a 'default deny' filtering approach would effectively   replace the need for IPv4 NAT traversal protocols with a need to use   a signalling protocol to request a firewall hole be opened, e.g., a   protocol such as PCP [RFC6887].  In networks with multiple CE   routers, the signalling would need to handle the cases of flows that   may use one or more exit routers.  CE routers would need to be able   to advertise their existence for such protocols.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 32]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   [RFC6092] expands onRFC 4864, giving a more detailed discussion of   IPv6 perimeter security recommendations, without mandating a 'default   deny' approach.  Indeed,RFC 6092 does not enforce a particular mode   of operation, instead stating that CE routers must provide an easily   selected configuration option that permits a 'transparent' mode, thus   ensuring a 'default allow' model is available.   The topic of whether future home networks as described in this   document should have a 'default deny' or 'default allow' position has   been discussed at length in various IETF meetings without any   consensus being reached on which approach is more appropriate.   Further, the choice of which default to apply may be situational, and   thus this text makes no recommendation on the default setting beyond   what is written on this topic inRFC 6092.  We note inSection 3.6.3   below that the implicit firewall function of an IPv4 NAT is   commonplace today, and thus future CE routers targeted at home   networks should continue to support the option of running in 'default   deny mode', whether or not that is the default setting.3.6.2.  Filtering at Borders   It is desirable that there are mechanisms to detect different types   of borders within the homenet, as discussed previously, and further   mechanisms to then apply different types of filtering policies at   those borders, e.g., whether naming and service discovery should pass   a given border.  Any such policies should be able to be easily   applied by typical home users, e.g., to give a user in a guest   network access to media services in the home or access to a printer.   Simple mechanisms to apply policy changes, or associations between   devices, will be required.   There are cases where full internal connectivity may not be   desirable, e.g., in certain utility networking scenarios, or where   filtering is required for policy reasons against a guest network   subnet(s).  As a result, some scenarios/models may involve running an   isolated subnet(s) with their own CE routers.  In such cases,   connectivity would only be expected within each isolated network   (though traffic may potentially pass between them via external   providers).   LLNs provide another example of where there may be secure perimeters   inside the homenet.  Constrained LLN nodes may implement network key   security but may depend on access policies enforced by the LLN border   router.   Considerations for differentiating neighbouring homenets are   discussed inSection 3.3.1.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 33]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 20143.6.3.  Partial Effectiveness of NAT and Firewalls   Security by way of obscurity (address translation) or through   firewalls (filtering) is at best only partially effective.  The very   poor security track record of home computers, home networking, and   business PC computers and networking is testimony to this.  A   security compromise behind the firewall of any device exposes all   others, making an entire network that relies on obscurity or a   firewall as vulnerable as the most insecure device on the private   side of the network.   However, given current evidence of home network products with very   poor default device security, putting a firewall in place does   provide some level of protection.  The use of firewalls today,   whether a good practice or not, is common practice, and the   capability to afford protection via a 'default deny' setting, even if   marginally effective, should not be lost.  Thus, while it is highly   desirable that all hosts in a homenet be adequately protected by   built-in security functions, it should also be assumed that all CE   routers will continue to support appropriate perimeter defence   functions, as per [RFC7084].3.6.4.  Exfiltration Concerns   As homenets become more complex, with more devices, and with service   discovery potentially enabled across the whole home, there are   potential concerns over the leakage of information should devices use   discovery protocols to gather information and report it to equipment   vendors or application service providers.   While it is not clear how such exfiltration could be easily avoided,   the threat should be recognised, be it from a new piece of hardware   or some 'app' installed on a personal device.3.6.5.  Device Capabilities   In terms of the devices, homenet hosts should implement their own   security policies in accordance to their computing capabilities.   They should have the means to request transparent communications that   can be initiated to them through security filters in the homenet, for   either all ports or specific services.  Users should have simple   methods to associate devices to services that they wish to operate   transparently through (CE router) borders.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 34]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 20143.6.6.  ULAs as a Hint of Connection Origin   As noted inSection 3.6, if appropriate filtering is in place on the   CE router(s), as mandated by requirement S-2 inRFC 7084, a ULA   source address may be taken as an indication of locally sourced   traffic.  This indication could then be used with security settings   to designate between which nodes a particular application is allowed   to communicate, provided ULA address space is filtered appropriately   at the boundary of the realm.3.7.  Naming and Service Discovery   The homenet requires devices to be able to determine and use unique   names by which they can be accessed on the network and that are not   used by other devices on the network.  Users and devices will need to   be able to discover devices and services available on the network,   e.g., media servers, printers, displays, or specific home automation   devices.  Thus, naming and service discovery must be supported in the   homenet, and given the nature of typical home network users, the   service(s) providing this function must as far as possible support   unmanaged operation.   The naming system will be required to work internally or externally,   whether the user is within or outside of the homenet, i.e., the user   should be able to refer to devices by name, and potentially connect   to them, wherever they may be.  The most natural way to think about   such naming and service discovery is to enable it to work across the   entire homenet residence (site), disregarding technical borders such   as subnets but respecting policy borders such as those between guest   and other internal network realms.  Remote access may be desired by   the homenet residents while travelling but also potentially by   manufacturers or other 'benevolent' third parties.3.7.1.  Discovering Services   Users will typically perform service discovery through graphical user   interfaces (GUIs) that allow them to browse services on their network   in an appropriate and intuitive way.  Devices may also need to   discover other devices, without any user intervention or choice.   Either way, such interfaces are beyond the scope of this document,   but the interface should have an appropriate application programming   interface (API) for the discovery to be performed.   Such interfaces may also typically hide the local domain name element   from users, especially where only one name space is available.   However, as we discuss below, in some cases the ability to discover   available domains may be useful.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 35]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   We note that current zero-configuration service discovery protocols   are generally aimed at single subnets.  There is thus a choice to   make for multi-subnet homenets as to whether such protocols should be   proxied or extended to operate across a whole homenet.  In this   context, that may mean bridging a link-local method, taking care to   avoid packets entering looping paths, or extending the scope of   multicast traffic used for the purpose.  It may mean that some proxy   or hybrid service is utilised, perhaps co-resident on the CE router.   Or, it may be that a new approach is preferable, e.g., flooding   information around the homenet as attributes within the routing   protocol (which could allow per-prefix configuration).  However, we   should prefer approaches that are backward compatible and allow   current implementations to continue to be used.  Note that this   document does not mandate a particular solution; rather, it expresses   the principles that should be used for a homenet naming and service   discovery environment.   One of the primary challenges facing service discovery today is lack   of interoperability due to the ever increasing number of service   discovery protocols available.  While it is conceivable for consumer   devices to support multiple discovery protocols, this is clearly not   the most efficient use of network and computational resources.  One   goal of the homenet architecture should be a path to service   discovery protocol interoperability through either a standards-based   translation scheme, hooks into current protocols to allow some form   of communication among discovery protocols, extensions to support a   central service repository in the homenet, or simply convergence   towards a unified protocol suite.3.7.2.  Assigning Names to Devices   Given the large number of devices that may be networked in the   future, devices should have a means to generate their own unique   names within a homenet and to detect clashes should they arise, e.g.,   where a second device of the same type/vendor as an existing device   with the same default name is deployed or where a new subnet is added   to the homenet that already has a device of the same name.  It is   expected that a device should have a fixed name while within the   scope of the homenet.   Users will also want simple ways to (re)name devices, again most   likely through an appropriate and intuitive interface that is beyond   the scope of this document.  Note that the name a user assigns to a   device may be a label that is stored on the device as an attribute of   the device, and it may be distinct from the name used in a name   service, e.g., 'Study Laser Printer' as opposed to   printer2.<somedomain>.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 36]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 20143.7.3.  The Homenet Name Service   The homenet name service should support both lookups and discovery.   A lookup would operate via a direct query to a known service, while   discovery may use multicast messages or a service where applications   register in order to be found.   It is highly desirable that the homenet name service must at the very   least coexist with the Internet name service.  There should also be a   bias towards proven, existing solutions.  The strong implication is   thus that the homenet service is DNS based, or DNS compatible.  There   are naming protocols that are designed to be configured and operate   Internet-wide, like unicast-based DNS, but also protocols that are   designed for zero-configuration local environments, like Multicast   DNS (mDNS) [RFC6762].   When DNS is used as the homenet name service, it typically includes   both a resolving service and an authoritative service.  The   authoritative service hosts the homenet-related zone.  One approach   when provisioning such a name service, which is designed to   facilitate name resolution from the global Internet, is to run an   authoritative name service on the CE router and a secondary   authoritative name service provided by the ISP or perhaps an external   third party.   Where zero-configuration name services are used, it is desirable that   these can also coexist with the Internet name service.  In   particular, where the homenet is using a global name space, it is   desirable that devices have the ability, where desired, to add   entries to that name space.  There should also be a mechanism for   such entries to be removed or expired from the global name space.   To protect against attacks such as cache poisoning, where an attacker   is able to insert a bogus DNS entry in the local cache, it is   desirable to support appropriate name service security methods,   including DNS Security Extensions (DNSSEC) [RFC4033], on both the   authoritative server and the resolver sides.  Where DNS is used, the   homenet router or naming service must not prevent DNSSEC from   operating.   While this document does not specify hardware requirements, it is   worth noting briefly here that, e.g., in support of DNSSEC,   appropriate homenet devices should have good random number generation   capability, and future homenet specifications should indicate where   high-quality random number generators, i.e., with decent entropy, are   needed.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 37]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   Finally, the impact of a change in the CE router must be considered.   It would be desirable to retain any relevant state (configuration)   that was held in the old CE router.  This might imply that state   information should be distributed in the homenet, to be recoverable   by/to the new CE router, or to the homenet's ISP or a third-party   externally provided service by some means.3.7.4.  Name Spaces   If access to homenet devices is required remotely from anywhere on   the Internet, then at least one globally unique name space is   required, though the use of multiple name spaces should not be   precluded.  One approach is that the name space(s) used for the   homenet would be served authoritatively by the homenet, most likely   by a server resident on the CE router.  Such name spaces may be   acquired by the user or provided/generated by their ISP or an   alternative externally provided service.  It is likely that the   default case is that a homenet will use a global domain provided by   the ISP, but advanced users wishing to use a name space that is   independent of their provider in the longer term should be able to   acquire and use their own domain name.  For users wanting to use   their own independent domain names, such services are already   available.   Devices may also be assigned different names in different name   spaces, e.g., by third parties who may manage systems or devices in   the homenet on behalf of the resident(s).  Remote management of the   homenet is out of scope of this document.   If, however, a global name space is not available, the homenet will   need to pick and use a local name space, which would only have   meaning within the local homenet (i.e., it would not be used for   remote access to the homenet).  The .local name space currently has a   special meaning for certain existing protocols that have link-local   scope and is thus not appropriate for multi-subnet home networks.  A   different name space is thus required for the homenet.   One approach for picking a local name space is to use an Ambiguous   Local Qualified Domain Name (ALQDN) space, such as .sitelocal (or an   appropriate name reserved for the purpose).  While this is a simple   approach, there is the potential in principle for devices that are   bookmarked somehow by name by an application in one homenet to be   confused with a device with the same name in another homenet.  In   practice, however, the underlying service discovery protocols should   be capable of handling moving to a network where a new device is   using the same name as a device used previously in another homenet.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 38]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   An alternative approach for a local name space would be to use a   Unique Locally Qualified Domain Name (ULQDN) space such as   .<UniqueString>.sitelocal.  The <UniqueString> could be generated in   a variety of ways, one potentially being based on the local /48 ULA   prefix being used across the homenet.  Such a <UniqueString> should   survive a cold restart, i.e., be consistent after a network power-   down, or if a value is not set on startup, the CE router or device   running the name service should generate a default value.  It would   be desirable for the homenet user to be able to override the   <UniqueString> with a value of their choice, but that would increase   the likelihood of a name conflict.  Any generated <UniqueString>   should not be predictable; thus, adding a salt/hash function would be   desirable.   In the (likely) event that the homenet is accessible from outside the   homenet (using the global name space), it is vital that the homenet   name space follow the rules and conventions of the global name space.   In this mode of operation, names in the homenet (including those   automatically generated by devices) must be usable as labels in the   global name space.  [RFC5890] describes considerations for   Internationalizing Domain Names in Applications (IDNA).   Also, with the introduction of new 'dotless' top-level domains, there   is also potential for ambiguity between, for example, a local host   called 'computer' and (if it is registered) a .computer Generic Top   Level Domain (gTLD).  Thus, qualified names should always be used,   whether these are exposed to the user or not.  The IAB has issued a   statement that explains why dotless domains should be considered   harmful [IABdotless].   There may be use cases where different name spaces may be desired for   either different realms in the homenet or segmentation of a single   name space within the homenet.  Thus, hierarchical name space   management is likely to be required.  There should also be nothing to   prevent an individual device(s) from being independently registered   in external name spaces.   It may be the case that if there are two or more CE routers serving   the home network, if each has a name space delegated from a different   ISP, there is the potential for devices in the home to have multiple   fully qualified names under multiple domains.   Where a user is in a remote network wishing to access devices in   their home network, there may be a requirement to consider the domain   search order presented where multiple associated name spaces exist.   This also implies that a domain discovery function is desirable.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 39]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   It may be the case that not all devices in the homenet are made   available by name via an Internet name space, and that a 'split view'   (as described in[RFC6950], Section 4) is preferred for certain   devices, whereby devices inside the homenet see different DNS   responses to those outside.   Finally, this document makes no assumption about the presence or   omission of a reverse lookup service.  There is an argument that it   may be useful for presenting logging information to users with   meaningful device names rather than literal addresses.  There are   also some services, most notably email mail exchangers, where some   operators have chosen to require a valid reverse lookup before   accepting connections.3.7.5.  Independent Operation   Name resolution and service discovery for reachable devices must   continue to function if the local network is disconnected from the   global Internet, e.g., a local media server should still be available   even if the Internet link is down for an extended period.  This   implies that the local network should also be able to perform a   complete restart in the absence of external connectivity and have   local naming and service discovery operate correctly.   As described above, the approach of a local authoritative name   service with a cache would allow local operation for sustained ISP   outages.   Having an independent local trust anchor is desirable, to support   secure exchanges should external connectivity be unavailable.   A change in ISP should not affect local naming and service discovery.   However, if the homenet uses a global name space provided by the ISP,   then this will obviously have an impact if the user changes their   network provider.3.7.6.  Considerations for LLNs   In some parts of the homenet, in particular LLNs or any devices where   battery power is used, devices may be sleeping, in which case a proxy   for such nodes may be required that could respond (for example) to   multicast service discovery requests.  Those same devices or parts of   the network may have less capacity for multicast traffic that may be   flooded from other parts of the network.  In general, message   utilisation should be efficient considering the network technologies   and constrained devices that the service may need to operate over.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 40]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   There are efforts underway to determine naming and discovery   solutions for use by the Constrained Application Protocol (CoAP)   [RFC7252] in LLN networks.  These are outside the scope of this   document.3.7.7.  DNS Resolver Discovery   Automatic discovery of a name service to allow client devices in the   homenet to resolve external domains on the Internet is required, and   such discovery must support clients that may be a number of router   hops away from the name service.  Similarly, it may be desirable to   convey any DNS domain search list that may be in effect for the   homenet.3.7.8.  Devices Roaming to/from the Homenet   It is likely that some devices that have registered names within the   homenet Internet name space and that are mobile will attach to the   Internet at other locations and acquire an IP address at those   locations.  Devices may move between different homenets.  In such   cases, it is desirable that devices may be accessed by the same name   as is used in their home network.   Solutions to this problem are not discussed in this document.  They   may include the use of Mobile IPv6 or Dynamic DNS -- either of which   would put additional requirements on the homenet -- or establishment   of a (VPN) tunnel to a server in the home network.3.8.  Other Considerations   This section discusses two other considerations for home networking   that the architecture should not preclude but that this text is   neutral towards.3.8.1.  Quality of Service   Support for Quality of Service (QoS) in a multi-service homenet may   be a requirement, e.g., for a critical system (perhaps health care   related) or for differentiation between different types of traffic   (file sharing, cloud storage, live streaming, Voice over IP (VoIP),   etc).  Different link media types may have different such properties   or capabilities.   However, homenet scenarios should require no new QoS protocols.  A   Diffserv [RFC2475] approach with a small number of predefined traffic   classes may generally be sufficient, though at present there is   little experience of QoS deployment in home networks.  It is likely   that QoS, or traffic prioritisation, methods will be required at theChown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 41]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   CE router and potentially around boundaries between different link   media types (where, for example, some traffic may simply not be   appropriate for some media and need to be dropped to avoid   overloading the constrained media).   There may also be complementary mechanisms that could be beneficial   to application performance and behaviour in the homenet domain, such   as ensuring proper buffering algorithms are used as described in   [Gettys11].3.8.2.  Operations and Management   In this section, we briefly review some initial considerations for   operations and management in the type of homenet described in this   document.  It is expected that a separate document will define an   appropriate operations and management framework for such homenets.   As described in this document, the homenet should have the general   goal of being self-organising and self-configuring from the network-   layer perspective, e.g., prefixes should be able to be assigned to   router interfaces.  Further, applications running on devices should   be able to use zero-configuration service discovery protocols to   discover services of interest to the home user.  In contrast, a home   user would not be expected, for example, to have to assign prefixes   to links or manage the DNS entries for the home network.  Such expert   operation should not be precluded, but it is not the norm.   The user may still be required to, or wish to, perform some   configuration of the network and the devices on it.  Examples might   include entering a security key to enable access to their wireless   network or choosing to give a 'friendly name' to a device presented   to them through service discovery.  Configuration of link- and   application-layer services is out of scope of this architectural   principles document but is likely to be required in an operational   homenet.   While not being expected to actively configure the networking   elements of their homenet, users may be interested in being able to   view the status of their networks and the devices connected to it, in   which case appropriate network monitoring protocols will be required   to allow them to view their network, and its status, e.g., via a web   interface or equivalent.  While the user may not understand how the   network operates, it is reasonable to assume they are interested in   understanding what faults or problems may exist on it.  Such   monitoring may extend to other devices on the network, e.g., storage   devices or web cameras, but such devices are beyond the scope of this   document.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 42]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   It may also be the case that an ISP, or a third party, might wish to   offer a remote management service for the homenet on behalf of the   user, or to be able to assist the user in the event of some problem   they are experiencing, in which case appropriate management and   monitoring protocols would be required.   Specifying the required protocols to facilitate homenet management   and monitoring is out of scope of this document.  As stated above, it   is expected that a separate document will be produced to describe the   operations and management framework for the types of home networks   presented in this document.   As a final point, we note that it is desirable that all network   management and monitoring functions should be available over IPv6   transport, even where the homenet is dual stack.3.9.  Implementing the Architecture on IPv6   This architecture text encourages reuse of existing protocols.  Thus,   the necessary mechanisms are largely already part of the IPv6   protocol set and common implementations, though there are some   exceptions.   For automatic routing, it is expected that solutions can be found   based on existing protocols.  Some relatively smaller updates are   likely to be required, e.g., a new mechanism may be needed in order   to turn a selected protocol on by default, or a mechanism may be   required to automatically assign prefixes to links within the   homenet.   Some functionality, if required by the architecture, may need more   significant changes or require development of new protocols, e.g.,   support for multihoming with multiple exit routers would likely   require extensions to support source and destination address-based   routing within the homenet.   Some protocol changes are, however, required in the architecture,   e.g., for name resolution and service discovery, extensions to   existing zero-configuration link-local name resolution protocols are   needed to enable them to work across subnets, within the scope of the   home network site.   Some of the hardest problems in developing solutions for home   networking IPv6 architectures include discovering the right borders   where the 'home' domain ends and the service provider domain begins,   deciding whether some of the necessary discovery mechanism extensions   should affect only the network infrastructure or also hosts, and theChown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 43]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   ability to turn on routing, prefix delegation, and other functions in   a backwards-compatible manner.4.  Conclusions   This text defines principles and requirements for a homenet   architecture.  The principles and requirements documented here should   be observed by any future texts describing homenet protocols for   routing, prefix management, security, naming, or service discovery.5.  Security Considerations   Security considerations for the homenet architecture are discussed inSection 3.6 above.6.  References6.1.  Normative References   [RFC2460]  Deering, S. and R. Hinden, "Internet Protocol, Version 6              (IPv6) Specification",RFC 2460, December 1998,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2460>.   [RFC3633]  Troan, O. and R. Droms, "IPv6 Prefix Options for Dynamic              Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP) version 6",RFC 3633,              December 2003, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3633>.   [RFC4193]  Hinden, R. and B. Haberman, "Unique Local IPv6 Unicast              Addresses",RFC 4193, October 2005,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4193>.   [RFC4291]  Hinden, R. and S. Deering, "IP Version 6 Addressing              Architecture",RFC 4291, February 2006,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4291>.6.2.  Informative References   [RFC1918]  Rekhter, Y., Moskowitz, R., Karrenberg, D., Groot, G., and              E. Lear, "Address Allocation for Private Internets",BCP5,RFC 1918, February 1996,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc1918>.   [RFC2475]  Blake, S., Black, D., Carlson, M., Davies, E., Wang, Z.,              and W. Weiss, "An Architecture for Differentiated              Services",RFC 2475, December 1998,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2475>.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 44]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   [RFC2775]  Carpenter, B., "Internet Transparency",RFC 2775, February              2000, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2775>.   [RFC2827]  Ferguson, P. and D. Senie, "Network Ingress Filtering:              Defeating Denial of Service Attacks which employ IP Source              Address Spoofing",BCP 38,RFC 2827, May 2000,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc2827>.   [RFC3002]  Mitzel, D., "Overview of 2000 IAB Wireless Internetworking              Workshop",RFC 3002, December 2000,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3002>.   [RFC3022]  Srisuresh, P. and K. Egevang, "Traditional IP Network              Address Translator (Traditional NAT)",RFC 3022, January              2001, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc3022>.   [RFC4033]  Arends, R., Austein, R., Larson, M., Massey, D., and S.              Rose, "DNS Security Introduction and Requirements",RFC4033, March 2005,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4033>.   [RFC4191]  Draves, R. and D. Thaler, "Default Router Preferences and              More-Specific Routes",RFC 4191, November 2005,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4191>.   [RFC4192]  Baker, F., Lear, E., and R. Droms, "Procedures for              Renumbering an IPv6 Network without a Flag Day",RFC 4192,              September 2005, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4192>.   [RFC4607]  Holbrook, H. and B. Cain, "Source-Specific Multicast for              IP",RFC 4607, August 2006,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4607>.   [RFC4862]  Thomson, S., Narten, T., and T. Jinmei, "IPv6 Stateless              Address Autoconfiguration",RFC 4862, September 2007,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4862>.   [RFC4864]  Van de Velde, G., Hain, T., Droms, R., Carpenter, B., and              E. Klein, "Local Network Protection for IPv6",RFC 4864,              May 2007, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4864>.   [RFC4941]  Narten, T., Draves, R., and S. Krishnan, "Privacy              Extensions for Stateless Address Autoconfiguration in              IPv6",RFC 4941, September 2007,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc4941>.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 45]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   [RFC5533]  Nordmark, E. and M. Bagnulo, "Shim6: Level 3 Multihoming              Shim Protocol for IPv6",RFC 5533, June 2009,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5533>.   [RFC5890]  Klensin, J., "Internationalized Domain Names for              Applications (IDNA): Definitions and Document Framework",RFC 5890, August 2010,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5890>.   [RFC5969]  Townsley, W. and O. Troan, "IPv6 Rapid Deployment on IPv4              Infrastructures (6rd) -- Protocol Specification",RFC5969, August 2010,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc5969>.   [RFC6092]  Woodyatt, J., "Recommended Simple Security Capabilities in              Customer Premises Equipment (CPE) for Providing              Residential IPv6 Internet Service",RFC 6092, January              2011, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6092>.   [RFC6144]  Baker, F., Li, X., Bao, C., and K. Yin, "Framework for              IPv4/IPv6 Translation",RFC 6144, April 2011,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6144>.   [RFC6145]  Li, X., Bao, C., and F. Baker, "IP/ICMP Translation              Algorithm",RFC 6145, April 2011,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6145>.   [RFC6177]  Narten, T., Huston, G., and L. Roberts, "IPv6 Address              Assignment to End Sites",BCP 157,RFC 6177, March 2011,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6177>.   [RFC6204]  Singh, H., Beebee, W., Donley, C., Stark, B., and O.              Troan, "Basic Requirements for IPv6 Customer Edge              Routers",RFC 6204, April 2011,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6204>.   [RFC6296]  Wasserman, M. and F. Baker, "IPv6-to-IPv6 Network Prefix              Translation",RFC 6296, June 2011,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6296>.   [RFC6333]  Durand, A., Droms, R., Woodyatt, J., and Y. Lee, "Dual-              Stack Lite Broadband Deployments Following IPv4              Exhaustion",RFC 6333, August 2011,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6333>.   [RFC6555]  Wing, D. and A. Yourtchenko, "Happy Eyeballs: Success with              Dual-Stack Hosts",RFC 6555, April 2012,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6555>.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 46]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014   [RFC6724]  Thaler, D., Draves, R., Matsumoto, A., and T. Chown,              "Default Address Selection for Internet Protocol Version 6              (IPv6)",RFC 6724, September 2012,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6724>.   [RFC6762]  Cheshire, S. and M. Krochmal, "Multicast DNS",RFC 6762,              February 2013, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6762>.   [RFC6824]  Ford, A., Raiciu, C., Handley, M., and O. Bonaventure,              "TCP Extensions for Multipath Operation with Multiple              Addresses",RFC 6824, January 2013,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6824>.   [RFC6887]  Wing, D., Cheshire, S., Boucadair, M., Penno, R., and P.              Selkirk, "Port Control Protocol (PCP)",RFC 6887, April              2013, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6887>.   [RFC6950]  Peterson, J., Kolkman, O., Tschofenig, H., and B. Aboba,              "Architectural Considerations on Application Features in              the DNS",RFC 6950, October 2013,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc6950>.   [RFC7084]  Singh, H., Beebee, W., Donley, C., and B. Stark, "Basic              Requirements for IPv6 Customer Edge Routers",RFC 7084,              November 2013, <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7084>.   [RFC7157]  Troan, O., Miles, D., Matsushima, S., Okimoto, T., and D.              Wing, "IPv6 Multihoming without Network Address              Translation",RFC 7157, March 2014,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7157>.   [RFC7252]  Shelby, Z., Hartke, K., and C. Bormann, "The Constrained              Application Protocol (CoAP)",RFC 7252, June 2014,              <http://www.rfc-editor.org/info/rfc7252>.   [IABdotless]              IAB, "IAB Statement: Dotless Domains Considered Harmful",              February 2013, <http://www.iab.org/documents/correspondence-reports-documents/2013-2/iab-statement-dotless-domains-considered-harmful>.   [Gettys11]              Gettys, J., "Bufferbloat: Dark Buffers in the Internet",              March 2011,              <http://www.ietf.org/proceedings/80/slides/tsvarea-1.pdf>.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 47]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014Acknowledgments   The authors would like to thank Mikael Abrahamsson, Aamer Akhter,   Mark Andrews, Dmitry Anipko, Ran Atkinson, Fred Baker, Ray Bellis,   Teco Boot, John Brzozowski, Cameron Byrne, Brian Carpenter, Stuart   Cheshire, Julius Chroboczek, Lorenzo Colitti, Robert Cragie, Elwyn   Davies, Ralph Droms, Lars Eggert, Jim Gettys, Olafur Gudmundsson,   Wassim Haddad, Joel M. Halpern, David Harrington, Lee Howard, Ray   Hunter, Joel Jaeggli, Heather Kirksey, Ted Lemon, Acee Lindem, Kerry   Lynn, Daniel Migault, Erik Nordmark, Michael Richardson, Mattia   Rossi, Barbara Stark, Sander Steffann, Markus Stenberg, Don Sturek,   Andrew Sullivan, Dave Taht, Dave Thaler, Michael Thomas, Mark   Townsley, JP Vasseur, Curtis Villamizar, Russ White, Dan Wing, and   James Woodyatt for their comments and contributions within homenet WG   meetings and on the WG mailing list.  An acknowledgment generally   means that a person's text made it into the document or was helpful   in clarifying or reinforcing an aspect of the document.  It does not   imply that each contributor agrees with every point in the document.Chown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 48]

RFC 7368                  IPv6 Home Networking              October 2014Authors' Addresses   Tim Chown (editor)   University of Southampton   Highfield   Southampton, Hampshire  SO17 1BJ   United Kingdom   EMail: tjc@ecs.soton.ac.uk   Jari Arkko   Ericsson   Jorvas  02420   Finland   EMail: jari.arkko@piuha.net   Anders Brandt   Sigma Designs   Emdrupvej 26A, 1   Copenhagen  DK-2100   Denmark   EMail: anders_brandt@sigmadesigns.com   Ole Troan   Cisco Systems, Inc.   Philip Pedersensvei 1   Lysaker,  N-1325   Norway   EMail: ot@cisco.com   Jason Weil   Time Warner Cable   13820 Sunrise Valley Drive   Herndon, VA  20171   United States   EMail: jason.weil@twcable.comChown, et al.                 Informational                    [Page 49]

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