RFC 985 - Requirements for Internet gateways - draft

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Network Working Group Network Technical Advisory Group
Request for Comments: 985 NSF
 May 1986
 Requirements for Internet Gateways -- Draft
Status of this Memo
 This RFC summarizes the requirements for gateways to be used on
 networks supporting the DARPA Internet protocols. While it applies
 specifically to National Science Foundation research programs, the
 requirements are stated in a general context and are believed
 applicable throughout the Internet community. This document was
 prepared by the Gateway Requirements Subcommittee of the NSF Network
 Technical Advisory Group in cooperation with the Internet Activities
 Board, Internet Architecture Task Force and Internet Engineering Task
 Force. It requests discussion and suggestions for improvements.
 Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
 The purpose of this document is to present guidance for vendors
 offering products that might be used or adapted for use in an
 Internet application. It enumerates the protocols required and gives
 references to RFCs and other documents describing the current
 specifications. In a number of cases the specifications are evolving
 and may contain ambiguous or incomplete information. In these cases
 further discussion giving specific guidance is included in this
 document. Specific policy issues relevant to the NSF scientific
 networking community are summarized in an Appendix.
 *********************************************************************
 This is a DRAFT edition of this statement of gateway requirements.
 Comments are sought on this document for consideration and
 possibly incorporated in the final edition. Comments are
 especially sought from those actually developing gateways,
 particular vendors and potential vendors of gateways. The period
 for comments is 90 days ending 15-Aug-86, at which time revised
 edition will be issued with a new RFC number.
 *********************************************************************
 Suggestions and comments on this document can be sent to the
 subcommittee chairman Dave Mills (mills@usc-isid.arpa), or NTAG
 committee chairman Dave Farber (farber@huey.udel.edu). The
 subcommittee members, present affiliations and Internet mailboxes are
 as follows:
 Hank Dardy, NRL dardy@nrl.arpa
 Dave Farber, U Delaware farber@huey.udel.edu
 Dennis Jennings, JVNC jennings%pucc.bitnet@wiscvm.wisc.edu
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 Larry Landweber, U Wisconsin landweber@rsch.wisc.edu
 Tony Lauck, DEC rhea!bergil!lauck@decwrl.arpa
 Dave Mills (Chairman), Linkabit mills@usc-isid.arpa
 Dennis Perry, DARPA/IPTO perry@ipto.arpa
 The subcommittee wishes to thank the following additional
 contributors and invited referees:
 Len Bosack, Stanford U/CISCO bosack@su-score.arpa
 Bob Braden, ISI braden@isi-braden.arpa
 Hans-Werner Braun, U Michigan hwb@gw.umich.edu
 Noel Chiappa, MIT/Proteon jnc@proteon.arpa
 Doug Comer, Purdue U dec@cs.purdue.edu
 Ira Fuchs, Princeton U fuchs%pucc.bitnet@wiscvm.wisc.edu
 Ed Krol, U Illinois krol%uiucvmd.bitnet@wiscvm.wisc.edu
 Barry Leiner, RIACS leiner@riacs.arpa
 Mike Muuss, BRL mike@brl.arpa
 Ron Natalie, BRL ron@brl.arpa
 Harvey Newman, CIT newman@cit-hex.arpa
 Jon Postel, ISI postel@usc-isib.arpa
 Marshall Rose, NRTC mrose@nrtc-gremlin.northrop.com
 Jeff Schiller, MIT jis@bitsy.mit.edu
 Lixia Zhang, MIT lixia@xx.lcs.mit.edu
1. Introduction
 The following sections are intended as an introduction and background
 for those unfamiliar with the DARPA Internet architecture and the
 Internet gateway model. General background and discussion on the
 Internet architecture and supporting protocol suite can be found in
 the DDN Protocol Handbook [25] and ARPANET Information Brochure [26],
 both available from the Network Information Center, SRI
 International, Menlo Park, CA 94025. Readers familiar with these
 concepts can proceed directly to Section 2.
 1.1. The DARPA Internet Architecture
 The DARPA Internet system consists of a number of gateways and
 networks that collectively provide packet transport for hosts
 subscribing to the DARPA Internet protocol architecture. These
 protocols include the Internet Protocol (IP), Internet Control
 Message Protocol (ICMP), Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and
 application protocols depending upon them. All protocols use IP
 as the basic packet-transport mechanism. IP is a datagram, or
 connectionless, service and includes provision for service
 specification, fragmentation/reassembly and security information.
 ICMP is considered an integral part of IP, although it is
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 architecturally layered upon it. ICMP provides error reporting,
 flow control and first-hop gateway redirection. Reliable data
 delivery is provided in the protocol suite by TCP, which provides
 end-end retransmission, resequencing and connection control.
 Connectionless service is provided by the User Datagram Protocol
 (UDP).
 The Internet community presently includes several thousand hosts
 connected to over 400 networks with about 120 gateways. There are
 now well over 2400 hosts registered in the ARPA domain alone and
 an unknown number registered in other domains, with the total
 increasing at about ten percent each month. Many of the hosts,
 gateways and networks in the Internet community are administered
 by civil organizations, including universities, research
 laboratories and equipment manufacturers. Most of the remainder
 are administered by the US DoD and considered part of the DDN
 Internet, which presently consists of three sets of networks: the
 experimental segment, or ARPANET, the unclassified segment, or
 MILNET, and the classified segment, which does not yet have a
 collective name.
 The Internet model includes constituent networks, called local
 networks to distinguish them from the Internet system as a whole,
 which are required only to provide datagram (connectionless)
 transport. This requires only best-effort delivery of individual
 packets, or datagrams. Each datagram carries 32-bit source and
 destination addresses, which are encoded in three formats
 providing a two-part address, one of which is the local-network
 number and the other the host number on that local net. According
 to the Internet service specification, datagrams can be delivered
 out of order, be lost or duplicated and/or contain errors. In
 those networks providing connection-oriented service the extra
 reliability provided by virtual circuits enhances the end-end
 robustness of the system, but is not strictly necessary.
 Local networks are connected together in the Internet model by
 means of Internet gateways. These gateways provide datagram
 transport only and normally seek to minimize the state information
 necessary to sustain this service in the interest of routing
 flexibility and robustness. In the conventional model the gateway
 has a physical interface and address on each of the local nets
 between which it provides forwarding services. The gateway also
 participates in one or more distributed routing or reachability
 algorithm such as the Gateway-Gateway Protocol (GGP) or Exterior
 Gateway Protocol (EGP) in order to maintain its routing tables.
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 1.2. The Internet Gateway Model
 An Internet gateway is a self-contained, stand-alone packet switch
 that performs the following functions:
 1. Interfaces to two or more packet-switching networks,
 including encapsulation, address transformation and flow
 control.
 2. Conforms to specific DARPA Internet protocols specified in
 this document, including the Internet Protocol (IP),
 Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP), Exterior Gateway
 Protocol (EGP) and others as necessary.
 3. Supports an interior gateway protocol (IGP) reachability or
 routing algorithm in cases of multiple gateways operating
 as a system. Supports the EGP reachability algorithm to
 exchange routes between systems, in particular the DARPA
 "core" system operated by BBN.
 4. Receives and forwards Internet datagrams consistent with
 good engineering practice in the management of resources,
 congestion control and fairness. Recognizes various error
 conditions and generates ICMP error and information
 messages as required.
 5. Provides system support facilities, including loading,
 debugging, status reporting, exception reporting and
 control.
 In some configurations gateways may be connected to
 packet-switching local nets that provide generic local-net
 routing, error-control and resource-management functions. In
 others gateways may be directly connected via serial lines, so
 that these functions must be provided by the gateways themselves.
 There are three typical scenarios that should be addressed by
 gateway vendors:
 1. National or regional network. Gateways of this class
 should be capable of switching multiple continuous flows in
 the 1.5-Mbps range at rates to several thousand packets per
 second. They will be high-performance, possibly redundant,
 multiple-processor devices, probably procured as a system
 and operated remotely from a regional or national
 monitoring center. The design of these gateways should
 emphasize high aggregate throughput, throughput-sensitive
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 resource management and very high reliability. The typical
 application would be an NSF backbone net or one of the
 consortium or regional nets.
 2. Campus network. Gateways of this class should be capable
 of switching some burst flows at 10-Mbps (Ethernets, etc.),
 together with some flows in the 64-Kbps range or lower, at
 rates to perhaps several thousand packets per second. They
 will be medium-performance devices, probably competitively
 procured from different vendors for each campus and
 operated from a campus computing center. The design of
 these gateways should emphasize low average delay and good
 burst performance, together with delay and type-of-service
 sensitive resource management. Their chief function might
 be to interconnect various LANs and campus computing
 resources, including a high-speed interconnect to a
 national or regional net. An important factor will be a
 very flexible routing mechanism, since these gateways may
 have to select among several backbone nets based on
 cost/performance considerations.
 3. Department network. Gateways of this class should be
 capable of switching a small number of burst flows at
 10-Mbps (Ethernets, etc.), together with a small number of
 flows in the range 64-Kbps or lower, at rates of a few
 hundred packets per second. They will be
 medium-performance devices procured from a variety of
 vendors and used for protocol-matching, LAN repeaters and
 as general utility packet switches. They will probably be
 locally maintained by the various users and not be used as
 transit switches.
 It is important to realize that Internet gateways normally operate
 in an unattended mode, but that equipment and software faults can
 affect the entire Internet. While some of the above scenarios
 involve positive control of some gateways from a monitoring
 center, usually via a path involving other networks and Internet
 gateways, others may involve much less formal control procedures.
 Thus the gateways must be highly robust and be expected to
 operate, possibly in a degraded state, under conditions of extreme
 congestion or failure of network resources.
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2. Protocols Required
 The Internet architecture uses datagram gateways to interconnect
 networks and subnetworks. These gateways function as intermediate
 systems (IS) with respect to the ISO connectionless network model and
 incorporate defined packet formats, routing algorithms and related
 procedures. In the following it is assumed the protocol
 implementation supports the full protocol, including all required
 options, with exceptions only as noted.
 2.1. Internet Protocol (IP)
 This is the basic datagram protocol used in the Internet system.
 It is described in RFC-791 [1] and also MIL-STD-1777 [5], both of
 which are intended to describe the same standard, but in quite
 different words.
 With respect to current gateway requirements the following can be
 ignored, although they may be required in future: Type of Service
 field, Security option, Stream ID option and Timestamp option.
 However, if recognized, the interpretation of these quantities
 must conform to the standard specification.
 Note that the Internet gateway model does not require that the
 gateway reassemble IP datagrams with destination address other
 than the gateway itself. However, in the case of those protocols
 in which the gateway directly participates as a peer, including
 routing and monitor/control protocols, the gateway may have to
 reassemble datagrams addressed to it. This consideration is most
 pertinent to EGP.
 Note that, of the five classes of IP addresses. Class-A through
 Class-E, Class-D and Class-E addresses are reserved for
 experimental use. A gateway which is not participating in these
 experiments should ignore all packets with a Class-D or Class-E
 destination IP address. No ICMP Destination Unreachable or ICMP
 Redirect messages should result from receiving such packets.
 2.2. Internet Control Message Protocol (ICMP)
 This is an auxiliary protocol used to convey advice and error
 messages and is described in RFC-792 [2].
 The distinction between subnets of a subnetted network, which
 depends on an arbitrary mask as described in RFC-950 [21], is in
 general not visible outside that network. This distinction is
 important in the case of certain ICMP messages, including the ICMP
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 Destination Unreachable and ICMP Redirect messages. The ICMP
 Destination Unreachable message is sent by a gateway in response
 to a datagram which cannot be forwarded because the destination is
 unreachable or down. A choice of several types of these messages
 is available, including one designating the destination network
 and another the destination host. However, the span of addresses
 implied by the former is ill-defined unless the subnet mask is
 known to the sender, which is in general not the case. It is
 recommended that use of the ICMP Destination Network Unreachable
 messages be avoided. Instead, an ICMP Destination Host
 Unreachable message should be sent for each distinct unreachable
 IP address.
 The ICMP Redirect message is sent by a gateway to a host in order
 to change the address used by the host for a designated host or
 net. A choice of four types of messages is available, depending
 on whether it applies to a particular host, network or service.
 As in the previous case, these distinctions may depend upon the
 subnet mask. As in the above case, it is recommended that the use
 of ICMP messages implying a span of addresses (e.g. net
 unreachable, net redirect) be avoided in favor of those implying
 specific addresses (e.g. host unreachable, host redirect).
 The ICMP Source Quench message has been the subject of much
 controversy. It is not considered realistic at this time to
 specify in detail the conditions under which this message is to be
 generated or interpreted by a host or gateway.
 New host and gateway implementations are expected to support the
 ICMP Address Mask messages described in RFC-950. It is highly
 desirable, although not required, to provide correct data for ICMP
 Timestamp messages, which have been found useful in network
 debugging and maintenance.
 2.3. Exterior Gateway Protocol (EGP)
 This is the basic protocol used to exchange information between
 gateway systems of the Internet and is described in RFC-904 [11].
 However, EGP as presently specified is an asymmetric protocol with
 only the "non-core" procedures defined in RFC-904. There are at
 present no "core" procedures specified, which would be necessary
 for a stand-alone Internet. RFC-975 [27] suggests certain
 modifications leading to a symmetric model; however, this is not
 an official specification.
 In principle, a stand-alone Internet can be built with non-core
 EGP gateways using the EGP distance field to convey some metric
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 such as hop count. However, the use of EGP in this way as a
 routing algorithm is discouraged, since typical implementations
 adapt very slowly to changing topology and have no loop-protection
 features.
 The EGP model requires each gateway belong to an autonomous system
 of gateways. If a routing algorithm is operated in one or more
 gateways of an autonomous system, its data base must be coupled to
 the EGP implementation in such a way that, when a net is declared
 down by the routing algorithm, the net is also declared down via
 EGP to other autonomous systems. This requirement is designed to
 minimize spurious traffic to "black holes" and insure fair
 utilization of the resources on other systems.
 There are no peer-discovery or authentication procedures defined
 in the present EGP specification and no defined interpretation of
 the distance fields in the update messages, although such
 procedures may be defined in future (see RFC-975). There is
 currently no guidance on the selection of polling parameters and
 no specific recovery procedures in case of certain error messages
 (e.g. "administratively prohibited"). It is recommended that EGP
 implementations include provisions to initialize these parameters
 as part of the monitoring and control procedures and that changing
 these procedures not require recompilation or rebooting the
 gateway.
 2.4. Address Resolution Protocol (ARP)
 This is an auxiliary protocol used to manage the
 address-translation function between hardware addresses in a
 local-net environment and Internet addresses and described in
 RFC-826 [4]. However, there are a number of unresolved issues
 having to do with subnets and response to addresses not in the
 same subnet or net. These issues, which are intertwined with ICMP
 and various gateway models, are discussed in Appendix A.
3. Subnets
 The concept of subnets was introduced in order to allow arbitrary
 complexity of interconnected LAN structures within an organization,
 while insulating the Internet system against explosive growth in
 network numbers and routing complexity. The subnet architecture,
 described in RFC-950 [21], is intended to specify a standard approach
 that does not require reconfiguration for host implementations,
 regardless of subnetting scheme. The document also specifies a new
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 ICMP Address Mask message, which a gateway can use to specify certain
 details of the subnetting scheme to hosts and is required in new host
 and gateway implementations.
 The current subnet specification RFC-950 does not describe the
 specific procedures to be used by the gateway, except by implication.
 It is recommended that a (sub)net address and address mask be
 provided for each network interface and that these values be
 established as part of the gateway configuration procedure. It is
 not usually necessary to change these values during operation of any
 particular gateway; however, it should be possible to add new
 gateways and/or (sub)nets and make other configuration changes to a
 gateway without taking the entire network down.
4. Local Network Interface
 The packet format used for transmission of datagrams on the various
 subnetworks is described in a number of documents summarized below.
 4.1. Public data networks via X.25
 The formats specified for public data networks via X.25 access are
 described in RFC-877 [8]. Datagrams are transmitted over standard
 level-3 virtual circuits as complete packet sequences. Virtual
 circuits are usually established dynamically as required and time
 out after a period of no traffic. Retransmission, resequencing
 and flow control are performed by the network for each virtual
 circuit and by the LAPB link-level protocol. Multiple parallel
 virtual circuits are often used in order to improve the
 utilization of the subscriber access line, which can result in
 random resequencing. The correspondence between Internet and
 X.121 addresses is usually established by table-lookup. It is
 expected that this will be replaced by some sort of directory
 procedure in future.
 4.2. ARPANET via 1822 Local Host, Distant Host or HDLC Distant Host
 The formats specified for ARPANET networks via 1822 access are
 described in BBN Report 1822 [3], which includes the procedures
 for several subscriber access methods. The Local Host (LH) and
 Very Distant Host (VDH) methods are not recommended for new
 implementations. The Distant Host (DH) method is used when the
 host and IMP are separated by not more than about 2000 feet of
 cable, while the HDLC Distant Host is used for greater distances
 where a modem is required. Retransmission, resequencing and flow
 control are performed by the network and by the HDLC link-level
 protocol, when used. While the ARPANET 1822 protocols are widely
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 used at present, they are expected to be eventually overtaken by
 the DDN Standard X.25 protocol (see below) and the new PSN
 End-to-End Protocol described in RFC-979 [29].
 While the cited report gives details of the various ARPANET
 subscriber access methods, it specifies neither the IP packet
 encapsulation format nor address mappings. While these are
 generally straightforward and easy to implement, the details
 involve considerations beyond the scope of readily accessable
 documentation. Potential vendors are encouraged to contact one of
 the individuals listed at the beginning of this document for
 further information.
 Gateways connected to ARPANET/MILNET IMPs must incorporate
 features to avoid host-port blocking (RFNM counting) and to detect
 and report (as ICMP Unreachable messages) the failure of
 destination hosts or gateways.
 4.3. ARPANET via DDN Standard X.25
 The formats specified for ARPANET networks via X.25 are described
 in the Defense Data Network X.25 Host Interface Specification [6].
 This document describes two sets of procedures, the DDN Basic X.25
 and the DDN Standard X.25, but only the latter is suitable for use
 in the Internet system. The DDN Standard X.25 procedures are
 similar to the public data subnetwork X.25 procedures, except in
 the address mappings. Retransmission, resequencing and flow
 control are performed by the network and by the LAPB link-level
 protocol.
 4.4. Ethernets
 The formats specified for Ethernet networks are described in
 RFC-894 [10]. Datagrams are encapsulated as Ethernet packets with
 48-bit source and destination address fields and a 16-bit type
 field. Address translation between Ethernet addresses and Internet
 addresses is managed by the Address Resolution Protocol, which is
 required in all Ethernet implementations. There is no explicit
 retransmission, resequencing or flow control. although most
 hardware interfaces will retransmit automatically in case of
 collisions on the cable.
 It is expected that amendments will be made to this specification
 as the result of IEEE 802.3 evolution. See RFC-948 [20] for
 further discussion and recommendations in this area. Note also
 that the IP broadcast address, which has primary application to
 Ethernets and similar technologies that support an inherent
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 broadcast function, has an all-ones value in the host field of the
 IP address. Some early implementations chose the all-zeros value
 for this purpose, which is presently not in conformance with the
 definitive specification RFC-950 [21].
 See Appendix A for further considerations.
 4.5. Serial-Line Protocols
 Gateways may be used as packet switches in order to build
 networks. In some configurations gateways may be interconnected
 with each other and some hosts by means of serial asynchronous or
 synchronous lines, with or without modems. When justified by the
 expected error rate and other factors, a link-level protocol may
 be required on the serial line. While there is no requirement that
 a particular standard protocol be used for this, it is recommended
 that standard hardware and protocols be used, unless a convincing
 reason to the contrary exists. In order to support the greatest
 variety of configurations, it is recommended that some variation
 on full X.25 (i.e. "symmetric mode") be used where resources
 permit; however, X.25 LAPB would also be acceptable where
 requirements permit. In the case of asynchronous lines no clear
 choice is apparent.
5. Interoperability
 In order to assure interoperability between gateways procured from
 different vendors, it is necessary to specify points of protocol
 demarcation. With respect to interoperability of the routing
 function, this is specified as EGP. All gateway systems must include
 one or more gateways which support EGP with a core gateway, as
 described in RFC-904 [11]. It is desirable that these gateways be
 able to operate in a mode that does not require a core gateway or
 system. Additional discussion on these issues can be found in
 RFC-975 [27].
 With respect to the interoperability at the network layer and below,
 two points of protocol demarcation are specified, one for Ethernets
 and the other for serial lines. In the case of Ethernets the
 protocols are as specified in Section 4.4 and Appendix A of this
 document. For serial lines between gateways of different vendors,
 the protocols are specified in Section 4.5 of this document.
 Exceptions to these requirements may be appropriate in some cases.
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6. Subnetwork Architecture
 It is recognized that gateways may also function as general packet
 switches to build networks of modest size. This requires additional
 functionality in order to manage network routing, control and
 configuration. While it is beyond the scope of this document to
 specify the details of the mechanisms used in any particular, perhaps
 proprietary, architecture, there are a number of basic requirements
 which must be provided by any acceptable architecture.
 6.1. Reachability Procedures
 The architecture must provide a robust mechanism to establish the
 operational status of each link and node in the network, including
 the gateways, the links connecting them and, where appropriate,
 the hosts as well. Ordinarily, this requires at least a
 link-level reachability protocol involving a periodic exchange of
 hello messages across each link. This function might be intrinsic
 to the link-level protocols used (e.g. LAPB, DDCMP). However, it
 is in general ill-advised to assume a host or gateway is operating
 correctly if its link-level reachability protocol is operating
 correctly. Additional confirmation is required in the form of an
 operating routing algorithm or peer-level reachability protocol,
 such as used in EGP.
 Failure and restoration of a link and/or gateway are considered
 network events and must be reported to the control center. It is
 desirable, although not required, that reporting paths not require
 correct functioning of the routing algorithm itself.
 6.2. Routing Algorithm
 It has been the repeated experience of the Internet community
 participants that the routing mechanism, whether static or
 dynamic, is the single most important engineering issue in network
 design. In all but trivial network topologies it is necessary
 that some degree of routing dynamics is vital to successful
 operation, whether it be affected by manual or automatic means or
 some combination of both. In particular, if routing changes are
 made manually, the changes must be possible without taking down
 the gateways for reconfiguration and, preferably, be possible from
 a remote site such as a control center.
 It is not likely that all nets can be maintained from a
 full-service control center, so that automatic-fallback or
 rerouting features may be required. This must be considered the
 normal case, so that systems of gateways operating as the only
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 packet switches in a network would normally be expected to have a
 routing algorithm with the capability of reacting to link and
 other gateway failures and changing the routing automatically.
 Following is a list of features considered necessary:
 1. The algorithm must sense the failure or restoration of a
 link or other gateway and switch to appropriate paths
 within an interval less than the typical TCP user timeout
 (one minute is a safe assumption).
 2. The algorithm must never form routing loops between
 neighbor gateways and must contain provisions to avoid and
 suppress routing loops that may form between non-neighbor
 gateways. In no case should a loop persist for longer than
 an interval greater than the typical TCP user timeout.
 3. The control traffic necessary to operate the routing
 algorithm must not significantly degrade or disrupt normal
 network operation. Changes in state which might momentarily
 disrupt normal operation in a local area must not cause
 disruption in remote areas of the network.
 4. As the size of the network increases, the demand on
 resources must be controlled in an efficient way. Table
 lookups should be hashed, for example, and data-base
 updates handled piecemeal, with only the changes broadcast
 over a wide area. Reachability and delay metrics, if used,
 must not depend on direct connectivity to all other
 gateways or the use of network-specific broadcast
 mechanisms. Polling procedures (e.g. for consistency
 checking) should be used only sparingly and in no case
 introduce an overhead exceeding a constant independent of
 network topology times the longest non-looping path.
 5. The use of a default gateway as a means to reduce the size
 of the routing data base is strongly discouraged in view of
 the many problems with multiple paths, loops and
 mis-configuration vulnerabilities. If used at all, it
 should be limited to a discovery function, with operational
 routes cached from external or internal data bases via
 either the routing algorithm or EGP.
 6. This document places no restriction on the type of routing
 algorithm, such as node-based, link-based or any other
 algorithm, or metric, such as delay or hop-count. However,
 the size of the routing data base must not be allowed to
 exceed a constant independent of network topology times the
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 number of nodes times the mean connectivity (average number
 of incident links). An advanced design would not require
 that the entire routing data base be kept in any particular
 gateway, so that discovery and caching techniques would be
 necessary.
7. Operation and Maintenance
 Gateways and packets switches are often operated as a system by some
 organization who agrees to operate and maintain the gateways, as well
 as to resolve link problems with the respective common carriers. It
 is important to note that the network control site may not be
 physically attached to the network being monitored. In general, the
 following requirements apply:
 1. Each gateway must operate as a stand-alone device for the
 purposes of local hardware maintenance. Means must be
 available to run diagnostic programs at the gateway site using
 only on-site tools, which might be only a diskette or tape and
 local terminal. It is desirable, although not required, to
 run diagnostics via the network and to automatically reboot
 and dump the gateway via the net in case of fault. In
 general, this requires special hardware.
 The use of full-blown transport services such as TCP is in
 general ill-advised if required just to reboot and dump the
 gateway. Consideration should be given simple
 retransmission-overlay protocols based on UDP or specific
 monitoring protocols such as HMP described in RFC-869 [7].
 2. It must be possible to reboot and dump the gateway manually
 from the control site. Every gateway must include a watchdog
 timer that either initiates a reboot or signals a remote
 control site if not reset periodically by the software. It is
 desirable that the data involved reside at the control site
 and be transmitted via the net; however, the use of local
 devices at the gateway site is acceptable. Nevertheless, the
 operation of initiating reboot or dump must be possible via
 the net, assuming a path is available and the connecting links
 are operating.
 3. A mechanism must be provided to accumulate traffic statistics
 including, but not limited to, packet tallies, error-message
 tallies and so forth. The preferred method of retrieving
 these data is by explicit, periodic request from the control
 site using a standard datagram protocol based on UDP or HMP.
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 The use of full-blown transport services such as TCP is in
 general ill-advised if required just to collect statistics
 from the gateway. Consideration should be given simple
 retransmission-overlay protocols based on UDP or HMP.
 4. Exception reports ("traps") occuring as the result of hardware
 or software malfunctions should be transmitted immediately
 (batched to reduce packet overheads when possible) to the
 control site using a standard datagram protocol based on UDP
 or HMP.
 5. A mechanism must be provided to display link and node status
 on a continuous basis at the control site. While it is
 desirable that a complete map of all links and nodes be
 available, it is acceptable that only those components in use
 by the routing algorithm be displayed. This information is
 usually available locally at the control site, assuming that
 site is a participant in the routing algorithm.
 The above functions require in general the participation of a control
 site or agent. The preferred way to provide this is as a user
 program suitable for operation in a standard software environment
 such as Unix. The program would use standard IP protocols such as
 TCP, UDP, and HMP to control and monitor the gateways. The use of
 specialized host hardware and software requiring significant
 additional investment is strongly discouraged; nevertheless, some
 vendors may elect to provide the control agent as an integrated part
 of the network in which the gateways are a part. If this is the
 case, it is required that a means be available to operate the control
 agent from a remote site using Internet protocols and paths and with
 equivalent functionality with respect to a local agent terminal.
 Remote control of a gateway via Internet paths can involve either a
 direct approach, in which the gateway supports TCP and/or UDP
 directly, or an indirect approach, in which the control agent
 supports these protocols and controls the gateway itself using
 proprietary protocols. The former approach is preferred, although
 either approach is acceptable.
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Requirements for Internet Gateways -- DRAFT
8. References and Bibliography
 [1] Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, "Internet Protocol",
 DARPA Network Working Group Report RFC-791, USC Information
 Sciences Institute, September 1981.
 [2] Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency, "Internet Control
 Message Protocol", DARPA Network Working Group Report RFC-792,
 USC Information Sciences Institute, September 1981.
 [3] Advanced Research Projects Agency, "Interface Message Processor
 - Specifications for the Interconnection of a Host and an IMP",
 BBN Report 1822, Bolt Beranek and Newman, December 1981.
 [4] Plummer, D., "An Ethernet Address Resolution Protocol", DARPA
 Network Working Group Report RFC-826, Symbolics, September 1982.
 [5] United States Department of Defense, "Military Standard Internet
 Protocol", Military Standard MIL-STD-1777, August 1983.
 [6] Defense Communications Agency, "Defense Data Network X.25 Host
 Interface Specification", BBN Communications, December 1983.
 [7] Hinden, R., "A Host Monitoring Protocol", DARPA Network Working
 Group Report RFC-869, BBN Communications, December 1983.
 [8] Korb, J.T., "A Standard for the Transmission of IP Datagrams
 over Public Data Networks", DARPA Network Working Group Report
 RFC-877, Purdue University, September 1983.
 [9] Nagle, J., "Congestion Control in IP/TCP Internetworks", DARPA
 Network Working Group Report RFC-896, Ford Aerospace,
 January 1984.
 [10] Hornig, C., "A Standard for the Transmission of IP Datagrams
 over Ethernet Networks", DARPA Network Working Group Report
 RFC-894, Symbolics, April 1984.
 [11] Mills, D.L., "Exterior Gateway formal Specification", DARPA
 Network Working Group Report RFC-904, M/A-COM Linkabit,
 April 1984.
 [12] Postel, J., and J. Reynolds., "ARPA-Internet Protocol Policy",
 DARPA Network Working Group Report RFC-902, USC Information
 Sciences Institute, July 1984.
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Requirements for Internet Gateways -- DRAFT
 [13] Kirton, P., "EGP Gateway under Berkeley UNIX 4.2", DARPA Network
 Working Group Report RFC-911, USC Information Sciences
 Institute, August 1984.
 [14] Postel, J., "Multi-LAN Address Resolution", DARPA Network
 Working Group Report RFC-925, USC Information Sciences
 Institute, October 1984.
 [15] International Standards Organization, "Protocol for Providing
 the Connectionless-Mode Network Services", DARPA Network Working
 Group Report RFC-926, International Standards Organization,
 December 1984.
 [16] National Research Council, "Transport Protocols for Department
 of Defense Data Networks", DARPA Network Working Group Report
 RFC-942, National Research Council, March 1985.
 [17] Postel, J., "DOD Statement on NRC Report", DARPA Network Working
 Group Report RFC-945, USC Information Sciences Institute,
 April 1985.
 [18] International Standards Organization, "Addendum to the Network
 Service Definition Covering Network Layer Addressing", DARPA
 Network Working Group Report RFC-941, International Standards
 Organization, April 1985.
 [19] Leiner, B., J. Postel, R. Cole and D. Mills, "The DARPA Internet
 Protocol Suite", Proceedings INFOCOM 85, Washington DC,
 March 1985] Also in: IEEE Communications Magazine, March 1985.
 [20] Winston, I., "Two Methods for the Transmission of IP Datagrams
 over IEEE 802.3 Networks", DARPA Network Working Group Report
 RFC-948, University of Pennsylvania, June 1985.
 [21] Mogul, J., and J. Postel, "Internet Standard Subnetting
 Procedure", DARPA Network Working Group Report RFC-950, Stanford
 University, August 1985.
 [22] Reynolds, J., and J. Postel, "Official ARPA-Internet Protocols",
 DARPA Network Working Group Report RFC-961, USC Information
 Sciences Institute, October 1985.
 [23] Reynolds, J., and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers", DARPA Network
 Working Group Report RFC-960, USC Information Sciences
 Institute, December 1985.
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Requirements for Internet Gateways -- DRAFT
 [24] Nagle, J., "On Packet Switches with Infinite Storage", DARPA
 Network Working Group Report RFC-970, Ford Aerospace,
 December 1985.
 [25] Defense Communications Agency, "DDN Protocol Handbook",
 NIC-50004, NIC-50005, NIC-50006, (three volumes), SRI
 International, December 1985.
 [26] Defense Communications Agency, "ARPANET Information Brochure",
 NIC-50003, SRI International, December 1985.
 [27] Mills, D.L., "Autonomous Confederations", DARPA Network Working
 Group Report RFC-975, M/A-COM Linkabit, February 1986.
 [28] Jacobsen, O., and J. Postel, "Protocol Document Order
 Information", DARPA Network Working Group Report RFC-980, SRI
 International, March 1986.
 [29] Malis, A.G., "PSN End-to-End Functional Specification", DARPA
 Network Working Group Report RFC-979, BBN Communications,
 March 1986.
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Appendix A. Ethernet Management
 Following is a summary of procedures specified for use by hosts and
 gateways on an Ethernet.
 A.1. Hardware
 A packet is accepted from the cable only if its destination
 Ethernet address matches either the assigned interface address or
 a broadcast/multicast address. Presumably, this filtering is done
 by the interface hardware; however, the software driver is
 expected to do this if the hardware does not. Some hosts
 incorporate an optional feature that associates an assigned
 multicast address with a specific subnet in order to restrict
 access for testing, etc. When this feature is activated, the
 assigned multicast address replaces the broadcast address.
 A.2. IP datagram
 In case of broadcast/multicast (as determined from the destination
 Ethernet address) an IP datagram is discarded if the source IP
 address is not in the same subnet, as determined by the assigned
 host IP address and subnet mask. It is desirable that this test
 be overridden by a configuration parameter, in order to support
 the infrequent cases where more than one subnet may coexist on the
 same cable.
 A.3. ARP datagram
 An ARP reply is discarded if the destination IP address does not
 match the local host address. An ARP request is discarded if the
 source IP address is not in the same subnet. It is desirable that
 this test be overridden by a configuration parameter, in order to
 support the infrequent cases where more than one subnet may
 coexist on the same cable (see RFC-925 for examples). An ARP
 reply is generated only if the destination protocol IP address is
 reachable from the local host (as determined by the routing
 algorithm) and the next hop is not via the same interface. If the
 local host functions as a gateway, this may result in ARP replies
 for destinations not in the same subnet.
 A.4. ICMP redirect
 An ICMP redirect is discarded if the destination IP address does
 not match the local host address or the new target address is not
 on the same subnet. An accepted redirect updates the routing data
 base for the old target address. If there is no route or
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Requirements for Internet Gateways -- DRAFT
 associated with the old target address, the redirect is ignored.
 If the old route is associated with a default gateway, a new route
 associated with the new target address is inserted in the data
 base. Note that it is not possible to send a gratuitous redirect
 unless the sender is possessed of considerable imagination.
 When subnets are in use there is some ambiguity as to the scope of
 a redirect, unless all hosts and gateways involved have prior
 knowledge of the subnet masks. It is recommended that the use of
 ICMP network-redirect messages be avoided in favor of ICMP
 host-redirect messages instead. This requires the original sender
 (i.e. redirect recipient) to support a general IP
 address-translation cache, rather than the usual network table.
 However, this is normally done anyway in the case of ARP.
 An ICMP redirect is generated only if the destination IP address
 is reachable from the local host (as determined by the routing
 algorithm) and the next hop is via the same interface and the
 target address is defined in the routing data base. Redirects
 should never be sent in response to an IP net or subnet broadcast
 address or in response to a Class-D or Class-E IP address.
 ICMP redirects are never forwarded, regardless of destination
 address. The source IP address of the ICMP redirect itself is not
 checked, since the sending gateway may use one of its addresses
 not on the common net. The source IP address of the encapsulated
 IP datagram is not checked on the assumption the host or gateway
 sending the original IP datagram knows what it is doing.
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Appendix B. Policy Issues
 The following sections discuss certain issues of special concern to
 the NSF scientific networking community. These issues have primary
 relevance in the policy area, but also have ramifications in the
 technical area.
 B.1. Interconnection Technology
 Currently the most important common interconnection technology
 between Internet systems of different vendors is Ethernet. Among
 the reasons for this are the following:
 1. Ethernet specifications are well-understood and mature.
 2. Ethernet technology is in almost all aspects vendor
 independent.
 3. Ethernet-compatible systems are common and becoming more
 so.
 These advantages combined favor the use of Ethernet technology as
 the common point of demarcation between NSF network systems
 supplied by different vendors, regardless of technology. It is a
 requirement of NSF gateways that, regardless of the possibly
 proprietary switching technology used to implement a given
 vendor-supplied network, its gateways must support an Ethernet
 attachment to gateways of other vendors.
 It is expected that future NSF gateway requirements will specify
 other interconnection technologies. The most likely candidates
 are those based on X.25 or IEEE 802, but other technologies
 including broadband cable, fiber-optic or other protocols such as
 DDCMP may also be considered.
 B.2. Proprietary and Extensible Issues
 Internet technology is a growing, adaptable technology. Although
 hosts, gateways and networks supporting this technology have been
 in continuous operation for several years, vendors users and
 operators should understand that not all networking issues are
 fully understood. As a result, when new needs or better solutions
 are developed for use in the NSF networking community, it may be
 necessary to field new protocols. Normally, these new protocols
 will be designed to interoperate in all practical respects with
 existing protocols; however, occasionally it may happen that
 existing systems must be upgraded to support these protocols.
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 NSF systems vendors should understand that they also undertake a
 commitment to remain aware of current Internet technology and be
 prepared to upgrade their products from time to time as
 appropriate. As a result, these vendors are strongly urged to
 consider extensibility and periodic upgrades as fundamental
 characteristics of their products. One of the most productive and
 rewarding ways to do this on a long-term basis is to participate
 in ongoing Internet research and development programs in
 partnership with the academic community.
 B.3. Multi-Protocol Gateways
 Although the present requirements for an NSF gateway specify only
 the Internet protocol suite, it is highly desirable that gateway
 designs allow future extensions to support additional suites and
 allow simultaneous operation with more than a single one.
 Clearly, the ISO protocol suite is a prime candidate for one of
 these suites. Other candidates include XNS and DECnet.
 Future requirements for NSF gateways may include provisions for
 other protocol suites in addition to Internet, as well as models
 and specifications to interwork between them, should that be
 appropriate. For instance, it is expected that the ISO suite will
 eventually become the dominant one; however, it is also expected
 that requirements to support other suites will continue, perhaps
 indefinitely.
 Present NSF gateway requirements do not include protocols above
 the network layer, such as TCP, unless necessary for network
 monitoring or control. Vendors should recognize that future
 requirements to interwork between Internet and ISO applications,
 for example, may result in an opportunity to market gateways
 supporting multiple protocols at all levels through the
 application level. It is expected that the network-level NSF
 gateway requirements summarized in this document will be
 incorporated in the requirements document for these
 application-level gateways.
 B.4. Access Control and Accounting
 There are no requirements for NSF gateways at this time to
 incorporate specific access-control and accounting mechanisms in
 the design; however, these important issues are currently under
 study and will be incorporated into a redraft of this document at
 an early date. Vendors are encouraged to plan for the early
 introduction of these mechanisms in their products. While at this
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 time no definitive common model for access control and accounting
 has emerged, it is possible to outline some general features such
 a model is likely to have, among them the following:
 1. The primary access control and accounting executive
 mechanisms will be in the service hosts themselves, not the
 gateways, packet switches or workstations.
 2. Agents acting on behalf of access control and accounting
 executive mechanisms may be necessary in the gateways,
 packet switches or workstations. These may be used to
 collect data, enforce password protection or mitigate
 resource priority and fairness. However, the architecture
 and protocols used by these agents may be a local matter
 and not possible to specify in advance.
 3. NSF gateways may be required to incorporate access control
 and accounting mechanisms based on packet
 source/destination address, as well as other fields in the
 IP header, internal priority and fairness. However, it is
 extremely unlikely that these mechanisms would involve a
 user-level login to the gateway itself.
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