RFC 1063 - IP MTU discovery options

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Network Working Group J. Mogul
Request For Comments: 1063 C. Kent
 DEC
 C. Partridge
 BBN
 K. McCloghrie
 TWG
 July 1988
 IP MTU Discovery Options
STATUS OF THIS MEMO
 A pair of IP options that can be used to learn the minimum MTU of a
 path through an internet is described, along with its possible uses.
 This is a proposal for an Experimental protocol. Distribution of
 this memo is unlimited.
INTRODUCTION
 Although the Internet Protocol allows gateways to fragment packets
 that are too large to forward, fragmentation is not always desirable.
 It can lead to poor performance or even total communication failure
 in circumstances that are surprisingly common. (For a thorough
 discussion of this issue, see [1]).
 A datagram will be fragmented if it is larger than the Maximum
 Transmission Unit (MTU) of some network along the path it follows.
 In order to avoid fragmentation, a host sending an IP datagram must
 ensure that the datagram is no larger than the Minimum MTU (MINMTU)
 over the entire path.
 It has long been recognized that the methods for discovering the
 MINMTU of an IP internetwork path are inadequate. The methods
 currently available fall into two categories: (1) choosing small MTUs
 to avoid fragmentation or (2) using additional probe packets to
 discover when fragmentation will occur. Both methods have problems.
 Choosing MTUs requires a balance between network utilization (which
 requires the use of the largest possible datagram) and fragmentation
 avoidance (which in the absence of knowledge about the network path
 encourages the use of small, and thus too many, datagrams). Any
 choice for the MTU size, without information from the network, is
 likely to either fail to properly utilize the network or fail to
 avoid fragmentation.
 Probe packets have the problem of burdening the network with
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RFC 1063 IP MTU Discovery Options July 1988
 unnecessary packets. And because network paths often change during
 the lifetime of a TCP connection, probe packets will have to be sent
 on a regular basis to detect any changes in the effective MINMTU.
 Implementors sometimes mistake the TCP MSS option as a mechanism for
 learning the network MINMTU. In fact, the MSS option is only a
 mechanism for learning about buffering capabilities at the two TCP
 peers. Separate provisions must be made to learn the IP MINMTU.
 In this memo, we propose two new IP options that, when used in
 conjunction will permit two peers to determine the MINMTU of the
 paths between them. In this scheme, one option is used to determine
 the lowest MTU in a path; the second option is used to convey this
 MTU back to the sender (possibly in the IP datagram containing the
 transport acknowledgement to the datagram which contained the MTU
 discovery option).
OPTION FORMATS
 Probe MTU Option (Number 11)
 Format
 +--------+--------+--------+--------+
 |00001011|00000100| 2 octet value |
 +--------+--------+--------+--------+
 Definition
 This option always contains the lowest MTU of all the networks
 that have been traversed so far by the datagram.
 A host that sends this option must initialize the value field to
 be the MTU of the directly-connected network. If the host is
 multi-homed, this should be for the first-hop network.
 Each gateway that receives a datagram containing this option must
 compare the MTU field with the MTUs of the inbound and outbound
 links for the datagram. If either MTU is lower than the value in
 the MTU field of the option, the option value should be set to the
 lower MTU. (Note that gateways conforming to RFC-1009 may not
 know either the inbound interface or the outbound interface at the
 time that IP options are processed. Accordingly, support for this
 option may require major gateway software changes).
 Any host receiving a datagram containing this option should
 confirm that value of the MTU field of the option is less than or
 equal to that of the inbound link, and if necessary, reduce the
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RFC 1063 IP MTU Discovery Options July 1988
 MTU field value, before processing the option.
 If the receiving host is not able to accept datagrams as large as
 specified by the value of the MTU field of the option, then it
 should reduce the MTU field to the size of the largest datagram it
 can accept.
 Reply MTU Option (Number 12)
 Format
 +--------+--------+--------+--------+
 |00001100|00000100| 2 octet value |
 +--------+--------+--------+--------+
 Definition
 This option is used to return the value learned from a Probe MTU
 option to the sender of the Probe MTU option.
RELATION TO TCP MSS
 Note that there are two superficially similar problems in choosing
 the size of a datagram. First, there is the restriction [2] that a
 host not send a datagram larger than 576 octets unless it has
 assurance that the destination is prepared to accept a larger
 datagram. Second, the sending host should not send a datagram larger
 than MINMTU, in order to avoid fragmentation. The datagram size
 should normally be the minimum of these two lower bounds.
 In the past, the TCP MSS option [3] has been used to avoid sending
 packets larger than the destination can accept. Unfortunately, this
 is not the most general mechanism; it is not available to other
 transport layers, and it cannot determine the MINMTU (because
 gateways do not parse TCP options).
 Because the MINMTU returned by a probe cannot be larger than the
 maximum datagram size that the destination can accept, this IP option
 could, in theory, supplant the use of the TCP MSS option, providing
 an economy of mechanism. (Note however, that some researchers
 believe that the value of the TCP MSS is distinct from the path's
 MINMTU. The MSS is the upper limit of the data size that the peer
 will accept, while the MINMTU represents a statement about the data
 size supported by the path).
 Note that a failure to observe the MINMTU restriction is not normally
 fatal; fragmentation will occur, but this is supposed to work. A
 failure to observe the TCP MSS option, however, could be fatal
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RFC 1063 IP MTU Discovery Options July 1988
 because it might lead to datagrams that can never be accepted by the
 destination. Therefore, unless and until the Probe MTU option is
 universally implemented, at least by hosts, the TCP MSS option must
 be used as well.
IMPLEMENTATION APPROACHES
 Who Sends the Option
 There are at least two ways to implement the MTU discovery scheme.
 One method makes the transport layer responsible for MTU
 discovery; the other method makes the IP layer responsible for MTU
 discovery. A host system should support one of the two schemes.
 Transport Discovery
 In the transport case, the transport layer can include the Probe
 MTU option in an outbound datagram. When a datagram containing
 the Probe MTU option is received, the option must be passed up to
 the receiving transport layer, which should then acknowledge the
 Probe with a Reply MTU option in the next return datagram. Note
 that because the options are placed on unreliable datagrams, the
 original sender will have to resend Probes (possibly once per
 window of data) until it receives a Reply option. Also note that
 the Reply MTU option may be returned on an IP datagram for a
 different transport protocol from which it was sent (e.g., TCP
 generated the probe but the Reply was received on a UDP datagram).
 IP Discovery
 A better scheme is to put MTU discovery into the IP layer, using
 control mechanisms in the routing cache. Whenever an IP datagram
 is sent, the IP layer checks in the routing cache to see if a
 Probe or Reply MTU option needs to be inserted in the datagram.
 Whenever a datagram containing either option is received, the
 information in those options is placed in the routing cache.
 The basic working of the protocol is somewhat complex. We trace
 it here through one round-trip. Implementors should realize that
 there may be cases where both options are contained in one
 datagram. For the purposes of this exposition, the sender of the
 probe is called the Probe-Sender and the receiver, Probe-Receiver.
 When the IP layer is asked to send a Probe MTU option (see the
 section below on when to probe), it makes some record in the
 routing cache that indicates the next IP datagram to Probe-
 Receiver should contain the Probe MTU option.
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RFC 1063 IP MTU Discovery Options July 1988
 When the next IP datagram to Probe-Receiver is sent, the Probe MTU
 option is inserted. The IP layer in Probe-Sender should continue
 to send an occasional Probe MTU in subsequent datagrams until a
 Reply MTU option is received. It is strongly recommended that the
 Probe MTU not be sent in all datagrams but only at such a rate
 that, on average, one Probe MTU will be sent per round-trip
 interval. (Another way of saying this is that we would hope that
 only one datagram in a transport protocol window worth of data has
 the Probe MTU option set). This mechanism might be implemented by
 sending every Nth packet, or, in those implementations where the
 round-trip time estimate to the destination is cached with the
 route, once every estimated RTT.
 When a Probe MTU option is received by Probe-Receiver, the
 receiving IP should place the value of this option in the next
 datagram it sends back to Probe-Sender. The value is then
 discarded. In other words, each Probe MTU option causes the Reply
 MTU option to be placed in one return datagram.
 When Probe-Sender receives the Reply MTU option, it should check
 the value of the option against the current MINMTU estimate in the
 routing cache. If the option value is lower, it becomes the new
 MINMTU estimate. If the option value is higher, Probe-Sender
 should be more conservative about changing the MINMTU estimate.
 If a route is flapping, the MINMTU may change frequently. In such
 situations, keeping the smallest MINMTU of various routes in use
 is preferred. As a result, a higher MINMTU estimate should only
 be accepted after a lower estimate has been permitted to "age" a
 bit. In other words, if the probe value is higher than the
 estimated MINMTU, only update the estimate if the estimate is
 several seconds old or more. Finally, whenever the Probe-Sender
 receives a Reply MTU option, it should stop retransmitting probes
 to Probe-Receiver.
 A few additional issues complicate this discussion.
 One problem is setting the default MINMTU when no Reply MTU
 options have been received. We recommend the use of the minimum
 of the supported IP datagram size (576 octets) and the connected
 network MTU for destinations not on the local connected network,
 and the connected network MTU for hosts on the connected network.
 The MINMTU information, while kept by the Internet layer, is in
 fact, only of interest to the transport and higher layers.
 Accordingly, the Internet layer must keep the transport layer
 informed of the current value of the estimated MINMTU.
 Furthermore, minimal transport protocols, such as UDP, must be
 prepared to pass this information up to the transport protocol
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RFC 1063 IP MTU Discovery Options July 1988
 user.
 It is expected that there will be a transition period during which
 some hosts support this option and some do not. As a result,
 hosts should stop sending Probe MTU options and refuse to send any
 further options if it does not receive either a Probe MTU option
 or Reply MTU option from the remote system after a certain number
 of Probe MTU options have been sent. In short, if Probe-Sender
 has sent several probes but has gotten no indication that Probe-
 Receiver supports MTU probing, then Probe-Sender should assume
 that Probe-Receiver does not support probes. (Obviously, if
 Probe-Sender later receives a probe option from Probe-Receiver, it
 should revise its opinion.)
 Implementations should not assume that routes to the same
 destination that have a different TOS have the same estimated
 MINMTU. We recommend that the MTU be probed separately for each
 TOS.
 Respecting the TCP MSS
 One issue concerning TCP MSS is that it is usually negotiated
 assuming an IP header that contains no options. If the transport
 layer is sending maximum size segments, it may not leave space for
 IP to fit the options into the datagram. Thus, insertion of the
 Probe MTU or Reply MTU option may violate the MSS restriction.
 Because, unlike other IP options, the MTU options can be inserted
 without the knowledge of the transport layer, the implementor must
 carefully consider the implications of adding options to an IP
 datagram.
 One approach is to reserve 4 bytes from the MINMTU reported to the
 transport layer; this will allow the IP layer to insert at least
 one MTU option in every datagram (it can compare the size of the
 outgoing datagram with the MINMTU stored in the route cache to see
 how much room there actually is). This is simple to implement,
 but does waste a little bandwidth in the normal case.
 Another approach is to provide a means for the IP layer to notify
 the transport layer that space must be reserved for sending an
 option; the transport layer would then make a forthcoming segment
 somewhat smaller than usual.
 When a Probe Can Be Sent
 A system that receives a Probe MTU option should always respond
 with a Reply MTU option, unless the probe was sent to an IP or LAN
 broadcast address.
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RFC 1063 IP MTU Discovery Options July 1988
 A Probe MTU option should be sent in any of the following
 situations:
 (1) The MINMTU for the path is not yet known;
 (2) A received datagram suffers a fragmentation re-assembly
 timeout. (This is a strong hint the path has changed;
 send a probe to the datagram's source);
 (3) An ICMP Time Exceeded/Fragmentation Reassembly Timeout is
 received (this is the only message we will get that
 indicates fragmentation occurred along the network path);
 (4) The transport layer requests it.
 Implementations may also wish to periodically probe a path, even
 if there is no indication that fragmentation is occurring. This
 practice is perfectly reasonable; if fragmentation and reassembly
 is working perfectly, the sender may never get any indication that
 the path MINMTU has changed unless a probe is sent. We recommend,
 however, that implementations send such periodic probes sparingly.
 Once every few minutes, or once every few hundred datagrams is
 probably sufficient.
 There are also some scenarios in which the Probe MTU should not be
 sent, even though there may be some indication of an MINMTU
 change:
 (1) Probes should not be sent in response to the receipt of
 a probe option. Although the fact that the remote peer
 is probing indicates that the MINMTU may have changed,
 sending a probe in response to a probe causes a continuous
 exchange of probe options.
 (2) Probes must not be sent in response to fragmented
 datagrams except when the fragmentation reassembly
 of the datagram fails. The problem in this case is
 that the receiver has no mechanism for informing the remote
 peer that fragmentation has occurred, unless fragmentation
 reassembly fails (in which case an ICMP message is sent).
 Thus, a peer may use the wrong MTU for some time before
 discovering a problem. If we probe on fragmented
 datagrams, we may probe, unnecessarily, for some time
 until the remote peer corrects its MTU.
 (3) For compatibility with hosts that do not implement the
 option, no Probe MTU Option should be sent more than
 ten times without receiving a Reply MTU Option or a
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RFC 1063 IP MTU Discovery Options July 1988
 Probe MTU Option from the remote peer. Peers which
 ignore probes and do not send probes must be treated
 as not supporting probes.
 (4) Probes should not be sent to an IP or LAN broadcast
 address.
 (5) We recommend that Probe MTUs not be sent to other hosts
 on the directly-connected network, but that this feature
 be configurable. There are situations (for example, when
 Proxy ARP is in use) where it may be difficult to determine
 which systems are on the directly-connected network. In
 this case, probing may make sense.
SAMPLE IMPLEMENTATION SKETCH
 We present here a somewhat more concrete description of how an IP-
 layer implementation of MTU probing might be designed.
 First, the routing cache entries are enhanced to store seven
 additional values:
 MINMTU: The current MINMTU of the path.
 ProbeRetry: A timestamp indicating when the next probe
 should be sent.
 LastDecreased: A timestamp showing when the MTU was
 last decreased.
 ProbeReply: A bit indicating a Reply MTU option should be
 sent.
 ReplyMTU: The value to go in the Reply MTU option.
 SupportsProbes: A bit indicating that the remote peer
 can deal with probes (always defaults to
 1=true).
 ConsecutiveProbes: The number of probes sent without
 the receipt of a Probe MTU or Reply
 MTU option.
 There are also several configuration parameters; these should be
 configurable by appropriate network management software; the values
 we suggest are "reasonable":
 Default_MINMTU: The default value for the MINMTU field of the
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RFC 1063 IP MTU Discovery Options July 1988
 routing cache entry, to be used when the real
 MINMTU is unknown. Recommended value: 576.
 Max_ConsecutiveProbs: The maximum number of probes to send
 before assuming that the destination does
 not support the probe option.
 Recommended value: 10.
 ProbeRetryTime: The time (in seconds) to wait before retrying
 an unanswered probe. Recommended value:
 60 seconds, or 2*RTT if the the RTT is available
 to the IP layer.
 ReprobeInterval: The time to wait before sending a probe after
 receiving a successful Reply MTU, in order to
 detect increases in the route's MINMTU.
 Recommended value: 5 times the ProbeRetryTime.
 IncreaseInterval: The time to wait before increasing the MINMTU
 after the value has been decreased, to prevent
 flapping. Recommended value: same as
 ProbeRetryTime.
 When a new route is entered into the routing cache, the initial
 values should be set as follows:
 MINMTU = Default_MINMTU
 ProbeRetry = Current Time
 LastDecreased = Current Time - IncreaseInterval
 ProbeReply = false
 SupportsProbes = true
 ConsecutiveProbes = 0
 This initialization is done before attempting to send the first
 packet along this route, so that the first packet will contain a
 Probe MTU option.
 Whenever the IP layer sends a datagram on this route it checks the
 SupportsProbes bit to see if the remote system supports probing. If
 the SupportsProbes bit is set, and the timestamp in ProbeRetry is
 less than or equal to the current time, a Probe option should be sent
 in the datagram, and the ProbeRetry field incremented by
 ProbeRetryTime.
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RFC 1063 IP MTU Discovery Options July 1988
 Whether or not the Probe MTU option is sent in a datagram, if the
 ProbeReply bit is set, then a Reply MTU option with the value of the
 ReplyMTU field is placed in the outbound datagram. The ProbeReply
 bit is then cleared.
 Every time a Probe option is sent, the ConsecutiveProbes value should
 be incremented. If this value reaches Max_ConsecutiveProbes, the
 SupportsProbe bit should be cleared.
 When an IP datagram containing the Probe MTU option is received, the
 receiving IP sets the ReplyMTU to the Probe MTU option value and sets
 the ProbeReply bit in its outbound route to the source of the
 datagram. The SupportsProbe bit is set, and the ConsecutiveProbes
 value is reset to 0.
 If an IP datagram containing the Reply MTU option is received, the IP
 layer must locate the routing cache entry corresponding to the source
 of the Reply MTU option; if no such entry exists, a new one (with
 default values) should be created. The SupportsProbe bit is set, and
 the ConsecutiveProbes value is reset to 0. The ProbeRetry field is
 set to the current time plus ReprobeInterval.
 Four cases are possible when a Reply MTU option is received:
 (1) The Reply MTU option value is less than the current
 MINMTU: the MINMTU field is set to the new value, and
 the LastDecreased field is set to the current time.
 (2) The Reply MTU option value is greater than the
 current MINMTU and the LastDecreased field plus
 IncreaseInterval is less than the current time: set the
 ProbeRetry field to LastDecreased plus IncreaseInterval,
 but do not change MINMTU.
 (3) The Reply MTU option value is greater than the
 current MINMTU and the LastDecreased field plus
 IncreaseInterval is greater than the current time: set
 the MINMTU field to the new value.
 (4) The Reply MTU option value is equal to the current
 MINMTU: do nothing more.
 Whenever the MTU field is changed, the transport layer should be
 notified, either by an upcall or by a change in a shared variable
 (which may be accessed from the transport layer by a downcall).
 If a fragmentation reassembly timeout occurs, if an ICMP Time
 Exceeded/Fragmentation Reassembly Timeout is received, or if the IP
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RFC 1063 IP MTU Discovery Options July 1988
 layer is asked to send a probe by a higher layer, the ProbeRetry
 field for the appropriate routing cache entry is set to the current
 time. This will cause a Probe option to be sent with the next
 datagram (unless the SupportsProbe bit is turned off).
MANAGEMENT PARAMETERS
 We suggest that the following parameters be made available to local
 applications and remote network management systems:
 (1) The number of probe retries to be made before determining
 a system is down. The value of 10 is certain to be wrong
 in some situations.
 (2) The frequency with which probes are sent. Systems may
 find that more or less frequent probing is more cost
 effective.
 (3) The default MINMTU used to initialize routes.
 (4) Applications should have the ability to force a probe
 on a particular route. There are cases where a probe
 needs to be sent but the sender doesn't know it. An
 operator must be able to cause a probe in such situations.
 Furthermore, it may be useful for applications to "ping"
 for the MTU.
REFERENCES
 [1] Kent, C. and J. Mogul, "Fragmentation Considered
 Harmful", Proc. ACM SIGCOMM '87, Stowe, VT, August 1987.
 [2] Postel, J., Ed., "Internet Protocol", RFC-791,
 USC/Information Sciences Institute, Marina del Rey, CA,
 September 1981.
 [3] Postel, J., Ed., "Transmission Control Protocol", RFC-793,
 USC/Information Sciences Institute, Marina del Rey, CA,
 September 1981.
 [4] Postel, J., "The TCP Maximum Segment Size and Related Topics",
 RFC-879, USC/Information Sciences Institute, Marina del Rey,
 CA, November 1983.
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