RFC 1190 - Experimental Internet Stream Protocol: Version 2 (ST-II)

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Network Working Group CIP Working Group
Request for Comments: 1190 C. Topolcic, Editor
Obsoletes: IEN-119 October 1990
 Experimental Internet Stream Protocol, Version 2 (ST-II)
Status of this Memo
 This memo defines a revised version of the Internet Stream Protocol,
 originally defined in IEN-119 [8], based on results from experiments
 with the original version, and subsequent requests, discussion, and
 suggestions for improvements. This is a Limited-Use Experimental
 Protocol. Please refer to the current edition of the "IAB Official
 Protocol Standards" for the standardization state and status of this
 protocol. Distribution of this memo is unlimited.
1. Abstract
 This memo defines the Internet Stream Protocol, Version 2 (ST-II), an
 IP-layer protocol that provides end-to-end guaranteed service across
 an internet. This specification obsoletes IEN 119 "ST - A Proposed
 Internet Stream Protocol" written by Jim Forgie in 1979, the previous
 specification of ST. ST-II is not compatible with Version 1 of the
 protocol, but maintains much of the architecture and philosophy of
 that version. It is intended to fill in some of the areas left
 unaddressed, to make it easier to implement, and to support a wider
 range of applications.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 1.1. Table of Contents
 Status of this Memo . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
 1. Abstract . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
 1.1. Table of Contents . . . . . . . . . . . 2
 1.2. List of Figures . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
 2. Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
 2.1. Major Differences Between ST and ST-II . . . . 8
 2.2. Concepts and Terminology . . . . . . . . . 9
 2.3. Relationship Between Applications and ST . . . . 11
 2.4. ST Control Message Protocol . . . . . . . . 12
 2.5. Flow Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . 14
 3. ST Control Message Protocol Functional Description . 17
 3.1. Stream Setup . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18
 3.1.1. Initial Setup at the Origin . . . . . . . 18
 3.1.2. Invoking the Routing Function . . . . . . 19
 3.1.3. Reserving Resources . . . . . . . . . . 19
 3.1.4. Sending CONNECT Messages . . . . . . . . 20
 3.1.5. CONNECT Processing by an Intermediate Agent . . 22
 3.1.6. Setup at the Targets . . . . . . . . . 23
 3.1.7. ACCEPT Processing by an Intermediate Agent . . 24
 3.1.8. ACCEPT Processing by the Origin . . . . . . 26
 3.1.9. Processing a REFUSE Message . . . . . . . 27
 3.2. Data Transfer . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
 3.3. Modifying an Existing Stream . . . . . . . . 31
 3.3.1. Adding a Target . . . . . . . . . . . 31
 3.3.2. The Origin Removing a Target . . . . . . . 33
 3.3.3. A Target Deleting Itself . . . . . . . . 35
 3.3.4. Changing the FlowSpec . . . . . . . . . 36
 3.4. Stream Tear Down . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
 3.5. Exceptional Cases . . . . . . . . . . . 37
 3.5.1. Setup Failure due to CONNECT Timeout . . . . 37
 3.5.2. Problems due to Routing Inconsistency . . . . 38
 3.5.3. Setup Failure due to a Routing Failure . . . 39
 3.5.4. Problems in Reserving Resources . . . . . . 41
 3.5.5. Setup Failure due to ACCEPT Timeout . . . . 41
 3.5.6. Problems Caused by CHANGE Messages . . . . . 42
 3.5.7. Notification of Changes Forced by Failures . . 42
 3.6. Options . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
 3.6.1. HID Field Option . . . . . . . . . . . 44
 3.6.2. PTP Option . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
 3.6.3. FDx Option . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
 3.6.4. NoRecovery Option . . . . . . . . . . 46
 3.6.5. RevChrg Option . . . . . . . . . . . 46
 3.6.6. Source Route Option . . . . . . . . . . 46
 3.7. Ancillary Functions . . . . . . . . . . . 48
 3.7.1. Failure Detection . . . . . . . . . . 48
 3.7.1.1. Network Failures . . . . . . . . . . 48
 3.7.1.2. Detecting ST Stream Failures . . . . . . 49
 3.7.1.3. Subset . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 3.7.2. Failure Recovery . . . . . . . . . . . 51
 3.7.2.1. Subset . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
 3.7.3. A Group of Streams . . . . . . . . . . 56
 3.7.3.1. Group Name Generator . . . . . . . . 57
 3.7.3.2. Subset . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
 3.7.4. HID Negotiation . . . . . . . . . . . 58
 3.7.4.1. Subset . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
 3.7.5. IP Encapsulation of ST . . . . . . . . . 64
 3.7.5.1. IP Multicasting . . . . . . . . . . 65
 3.7.6. Retransmission . . . . . . . . . . . 66
 3.7.7. Routing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
 3.7.8. Security . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
 3.8. ST Service Interfaces . . . . . . . . . . 68
 3.8.1. Access to Routing Information . . . . . . 69
 3.8.2. Access to Network Layer Resource Reservation . 70
 3.8.3. Network Layer Services Utilized . . . . . . 71
 3.8.4. IP Services Utilized . . . . . . . . . 71
 3.8.5. ST Layer Services Provided . . . . . . . 72
 4. ST Protocol Data Unit Descriptions . . . . . . . 75
 4.1. Data Packets . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
 4.2. ST Control Message Protocol Descriptions . . . . 77
 4.2.1. ST Control Messages . . . . . . . . . . 79
 4.2.2. Common SCMP Elements . . . . . . . . . 80
 4.2.2.1. DetectorIPAddress . . . . . . . . . 80
 4.2.2.2. ErroredPDU . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
 4.2.2.3. FlowSpec & RFlowSpec . . . . . . . . 81
 4.2.2.4. FreeHIDs . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
 4.2.2.5. Group & RGroup . . . . . . . . . . 85
 4.2.2.6. HID & RHID . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
 4.2.2.7. MulticastAddress . . . . . . . . . . 86
 4.2.2.8. Name & RName . . . . . . . . . . . 87
 4.2.2.9. NextHopIPAddress . . . . . . . . . . 88
 4.2.2.10. Origin . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
 4.2.2.11. OriginTimestamp . . . . . . . . . . 89
 4.2.2.12. ReasonCode . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
 4.2.2.13. RecordRoute . . . . . . . . . . . 94
 4.2.2.14. SrcRoute . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
 4.2.2.15. Target and TargetList . . . . . . . . 96
 4.2.2.16. UserData . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
 4.2.3. ST Control Message PDUs . . . . . . . . 99
 4.2.3.1. ACCEPT . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100
 4.2.3.2. ACK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102
 4.2.3.3. CHANGE-REQUEST . . . . . . . . . . 103
 4.2.3.4. CHANGE . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104
 4.2.3.5. CONNECT . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105
 4.2.3.6. DISCONNECT . . . . . . . . . . . . 110
 4.2.3.7. ERROR-IN-REQUEST . . . . . . . . . . 111
 4.2.3.8. ERROR-IN-RESPONSE . . . . . . . . . 112
 4.2.3.9. HELLO . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113
 4.2.3.10. HID-APPROVE . . . . . . . . . . . 114
 4.2.3.11. HID-CHANGE-REQUEST . . . . . . . . . 115
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.12. HID-CHANGE . . . . . . . . . . . . 116
 4.2.3.13. HID-REJECT . . . . . . . . . . . . 118
 4.2.3.14. NOTIFY . . . . . . . . . . . . . 120
 4.2.3.15. REFUSE . . . . . . . . . . . . . 122
 4.2.3.16. STATUS . . . . . . . . . . . . . 124
 4.2.3.17. STATUS-RESPONSE . . . . . . . . . . 126
 4.3. Suggested Protocol Constants . . . . . . . . 127
 5. Areas Not Addressed . . . . . . . . . . . . 131
 6. Glossary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 135
 7. References . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 143
 8. Security Considerations. . . . . . . . . . . 144
 9. Authors' Addresses . . . . . . . . . . . . 145
 Appendix 1. Data Notations . . . . . . . . . . 147
 1.2. List of Figures
 Figure 1. Protocol Relationships . . . . . . . . . 6
 Figure 2. Topology Used in Protocol Exchange Diagrams . . 16
 Figure 3. Virtual Link Identifiers for SCMP Messages . . 16
 Figure 4. HIDs Assigned for ST User Packets . . . . . 18
 Figure 5. Origin Sending CONNECT Message . . . . . . 21
 Figure 6. CONNECT Processing by an Intermediate Agent . . 22
 Figure 7. CONNECT Processing by the Target . . . . . . 24
 Figure 8. ACCEPT Processing by an Intermediate Agent . . 25
 Figure 9. ACCEPT Processing by the Origin . . . . . . 26
 Figure 10. Sending REFUSE Message . . . . . . . . . 28
 Figure 11. Routing Around a Failure . . . . . . . . 29
 Figure 12. Addition of Another Target . . . . . . . . 32
 Figure 13. Origin Removing a Target . . . . . . . . 34
 Figure 14. Target Deleting Itself . . . . . . . . . 35
 Figure 15. CONNECT Retransmission after a Timeout . . . . 38
 Figure 16. Processing NOTIFY Messages . . . . . . . . 43
 Figure 17. Source Routing Option . . . . . . . . . 47
 Figure 18. Typical HID Negotiation (No Multicasting) . . . 60
 Figure 19. Multicast HID Negotiation . . . . . . . . 61
 Figure 20. Multicast HID Re-Negotiation . . . . 62
 Figure 21. ST Header . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
 Figure 22. ST Control Message Format . . . . . . . . 77
 Figure 23. ErroredPDU . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
 Figure 24. FlowSpec & RFlowSpec . . . . . . . . . . 81
 Figure 25. FreeHIDs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
 Figure 26. Group & RGroup . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
 Figure 27. HID & RHID . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
 Figure 28. MulticastAddress . . . . . . . . . . . 86
 Figure 29. Name & RName . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
 Figure 30. NextHopIPAddress . . . . . . . . . . . 88
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 Figure 31. Origin . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
 Figure 32. OriginTimestamp . . . . . . . . . . . 89
 Figure 33. ReasonCode . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
 Figure 34. RecordRoute . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94
 Figure 35. SrcRoute . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95
 Figure 36. Target . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
 Figure 37. TargetList . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97
 Figure 38. UserData . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 98
 Figure 39. ACCEPT Control Message . . . . . . . . . 101
 Figure 40. ACK Control Message . . . . . . . . . . 102
 Figure 41. CHANGE-REQUEST Control Message . . . . . . 103
 Figure 42. CHANGE Control Message . . . . . . . . . 105
 Figure 43. CONNECT Control Message . . . . . . . . . 109
 Figure 44. DISCONNECT Control Message . . . . . . . . 110
 Figure 45. ERROR-IN-REQUEST Control Message . . . . . . 111
 Figure 46. ERROR-IN-RESPONSE Control Message . . . . . 112
 Figure 47. HELLO Control Message . . . . . . . . . 113
 Figure 48. HID-APPROVE Control Message . . . . . . . 114
 Figure 49. HID-CHANGE-REQUEST Control Message . . . . . 115
 Figure 50. HID-CHANGE Control Message . . . . . . . . 117
 Figure 51. HID-REJECT Control Message . . . . . . . . 119
 Figure 52. NOTIFY Control Message . . . . . . . . . 121
 Figure 53. REFUSE Control Message . . . . . . . . . 123
 Figure 54. STATUS Control Message . . . . . . . . . 125
 Figure 55. STATUS-RESPONSE Control Message . . . . . . 126
 Figure 56. Transmission Order of Bytes . . . . . . . 147
 Figure 57. Significance of Bits . . . . . . . . . . 147
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 +--------------------+
 | Conference Control |
 +--------------------+
 |
+-------+ +-------+ |
| Video | | Voice | | +-----+ +------+ +-----+ +-----+ Application
| Appl | | Appl | | | SNMP| |Telnet| | FTP | ... | | Layer
+-------+ +-------+ | +-----+ +------+ +-----+ +-----+
 | | | | | | |
 V V | | | | | ------------
 +-----+ +-----+ | | | | |
 | PVP | | NVP | | | | | |
 +-----+ +-----+ + | | | |
 | \ | \ \ | | | |
 | +-----|--+-----+ | | | |
 | Appl.|control V V V V V
 | ST data | +-----+ +-------+ +-----+
 | & control| | UDP | | TCP | ... | | Transport
 | | +-----+ +-------+ +-----+ Layer
 | /| / | \ / / | / /|
 |\ / | +------+--|--\-----+-/--|--- ... -+ / |
 | \ / | | | \ / | / |
 | \ / | | | \ +----|--- ... -+ | -----------
 | \ / | | | \ / | |
 | V | | | V | |
 | +------+ | | | +------+ | +------+ |
 | | SCMP | | | | | ICMP | | | IGMP | | Internet
 | +------+ | | | +------+ | +------+ | Layer
 | | | | | | | | |
 V V V V V V V V V
+-----------------+ +-----------------------------------+
| STream protocol |->| Internet Protocol |
+-----------------+ +-----------------------------------+
 | \ / |
 | \ / |
 | X | ------------
 | / \ |
 | / \ |
 VV VV
+----------------+ +----------------+
| (Sub-) Network |...| (Sub-) Network | (Sub-)Network
| Protocol | | Protocol | Layer
+----------------+ +----------------+
 Figure 1. Protocol Relationships
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
2. Introduction
 ST has been developed to support efficient delivery of streams of
 packets to either single or multiple destinations in applications
 requiring guaranteed data rates and controlled delay characteristics.
 The motivation for the original protocol was that IP [2] [15] did not
 provide the delay and data rate characteristics necessary to support
 voice applications.
 ST is an internet protocol at the same layer as IP, see Figure 1. ST
 differs from IP in that IP, as originally envisioned, did not require
 routers (or intermediate systems) to maintain state information
 describing the streams of packets flowing through them. ST
 incorporates the concept of streams across an internet. Every
 intervening ST entity maintains state information for each stream
 that passes through it. The stream state includes forwarding
 information, including multicast support for efficiency, and resource
 information, which allows network or link bandwidth and queues to be
 assigned to a specific stream. This pre-allocation of resources
 allows data packets to be forwarded with low delay, low overhead, and
 a low probability of loss due to congestion. The characteristics of
 a stream, such as the number and location of the endpoints, and the
 bandwidth required, may be modified during the lifetime of the
 stream. This allows ST to give a real time application the
 guaranteed and predictable communication characteristics it requires,
 and is a good vehicle to support an application whose communications
 requirements are relatively predictable.
 ST proved quite useful in several early experiments that involved
 voice conferences in the Internet. Since that time, ST has also been
 used to support point-to-point streams that include both video and
 voice. Recently, multimedia conferencing applications have been
 developed that need to exchange real-time voice, video, and pointer
 data in a multi-site conferencing environment. Multimedia
 conferencing across an internet is an application for which ST
 provides ideal support. Simulation and wargaming applications [14]
 also place similar requirements on the communication system. Other
 applications may include scientific visualization between a number of
 workstations and one or more remote supercomputers, and the
 collection and distribution of real-time sensor data from remote
 sensor platforms. ST may also be useful to support activities that
 are currently supported by IP, such as bulk file transfer using TCP.
 Transport protocols above ST include the Packet Video Protocol (PVP)
 [5] and the Network Voice Protocol (NVP) [4], which are end-to-end
 protocols used directly by applications. Other transport layer
 protocols that may be used over ST include TCP [16], VMTP [3], etc.
 They provide the user interface, flow control, and packet ordering.
 This specification does not describe these higher layer protocols.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 2.1. Major Differences Between ST and ST-II
 ST-II supports a wider variety of applications than did the
 original ST. The differences between ST and ST-II are fairly
 straight forward yet provide great improvements. Four of the more
 notable differences are:
 1 ST-II is decoupled from the Access Controller (AC). The
 AC, as well as providing a rudimentary access control
 function, also served as a centralized repository and
 distributor of the conference information. If an AC is
 necessary, it should be an entity in a higher layer
 protocol. A large variety of applications such as
 conferencing, distributed simulations, and wargaming can
 be run without an explicit AC.
 2 The basic stream construct of ST-II is a directed tree
 carrying traffic away from a source to all the
 destinations, rather than the original ST's omniplex
 structure. For example, a conference is composed of a
 number of such trees, one for traffic from each
 participant. Although there are more (simplex) streams in
 ST-II, each is much simpler to manage, so the aggregate is
 much simpler. This change has a minimal impact on the
 application.
 3 ST-II defines a number of the robustness and recovery
 mechanisms that were left undefined in the original ST
 specification. In case of a network or ST Agent failure,
 a stream may optionally be repaired automatically (i.e.,
 without intervention from the user or the application)
 using a pruned depth first search starting at the ST Agent
 immediately preceding the failure.
 4 ST-II does not make an inherent distinction between
 streams connecting only two communicants and streams among
 an arbitrary number of communicants.
 This memo is the specification for the ST-II Protocol. Since
 there should be no ambiguity between the original ST specification
 and the specification herein, the protocol is simply called ST
 hereafter.
 ST is the protocol used by ST entities to exchange information.
 The same protocol is used for communication among all ST entities,
 whether they communicate with a higher layer protocol or forward
 ST packets between attached networks.
 The remainder of this section gives a brief overview of the ST
 Protocol. Section 3 (page 17) provides a detailed description of
 the operations required by the protocol. Section 4 (page 75)
 provides descriptions of the ST Protocol Data Units exchanged
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 between ST entities. Issues that have not yet been fully
 addressed are presented in Section 5 (page 131). A glossary and
 list of references are in Sections 6 (page 135) and 7 (page 143),
 respectively.
 This memo also defines "subsets" of ST that can be implemented. A
 subsetted implementation does not have full ST functionality, but
 it can interoperate with other similarly subsetted
 implementations, or with a full implementation, in a predictable
 and consistent manner. This approach allows an implementation to
 be built and provide service with minimum effort, and gives it an
 immediate and well defined growth path.
 2.2. Concepts and Terminology
 The ST packet header is not constrained to be compatible with the
 IP packet header, except for the IP Version Number (the first four
 bits) that is used to distinguish ST packets (IP Version 5) from
 IP packets (IP Version 4). The ST packets, or protocol data units
 (PDUs), can be encapsulated in IP either to provide connectivity
 (possibly with degraded service) across portions of an internet
 that do not provide support for ST, or to allow access to services
 such as security that are not provided directly by ST.
 An internet entity that implements the ST Protocol is called an
 "ST Agent". We refer to two kinds of ST agents: "host ST
 agents", also called "host agents" and "intermediate ST agents",
 also called "intermediate agents". The ST agents functioning as
 hosts are sourcing or sinking data to a higher layer protocol or
 application, while ST agents functioning as intermediate agents
 are forwarding data between directly attached networks. This
 distinction is not part of the protocol, but is used for
 conceptual purposes only. Indeed, a given ST agent may be
 simultaneously performing both host and intermediate roles. Every
 ST agent should be capable of delivering packets to a higher layer
 protocol. Every ST agent can replicate ST data packets as
 necessary for multi-destination delivery, and is able to send
 packets whether received from a network interface or a higher
 layer protocol. There are no other kinds of ST agents.
 ST provides applications with an end-to-end flow oriented service
 across an internet. This service is implemented using objects
 called "streams". ST data packets are not considered to be
 totally independent as are IP data packets. They are transmitted
 only as part of a point-to-point or point-to-multi- point stream.
 ST creates a stream during a setup phase before data is
 transmitted. During the setup phase, routes are selected and
 internetwork resources are reserved. Except for explicit changes
 to the stream, the routes remain in effect until the stream is
 explicitly torn down.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 An ST stream is:
 o the set of paths that data generated by an application
 entity traverses on its way to its peer application
 entity(s) that receive it,
 o the resources allocated to support that transmission of
 data, and
 o the state information that is maintained describing that
 transmission of data.
 Each stream is identified by a globally unique "Name"; see
 Section 4.2.2.8 (page 87). The Name is specified in ST control
 operations, but is not used in ST data packets. A set of streams
 may be related as members of a larger aggregate called a "group".
 A group is identified by a "Group Name"; see Section 3.7.3 (page
 56).
 The end-users of a stream are called the "participants" in the
 stream. Data travels in a single direction through any given
 stream. The host agent that transmits the data into the stream is
 called the "origin", and the host agents that receive the data are
 called the "targets". Thus, for any stream one participant is the
 origin and the others are the targets.
 A stream is "multi-destination simplex" since data travels across
 it in only one direction: from the origin to the targets. A
 stream can be viewed as a directed tree in which the origin is the
 root, all the branches are directed away from the root toward the
 targets, which are the leaves. A "hop" is an edge of that tree.
 The ST agent that is on the end of an edge in the direction toward
 the origin is called the "previous-hop ST agent", or the
 "previous-hop". The ST agents that are one hop away from a
 previous-hop ST agent in the direction toward the targets are
 called the "next-hop ST agents", or the "next-hops". It is
 possible that multiple edges between a previous-hop and several
 next-hops are actually implemented by a network level multicast
 group.
 Packets travel across a hop for one of two purposes: data or
 control. For ST data packet handling, hops are marked by "Hop
 IDentifiers" (HIDs) used for efficient forwarding instead of the
 stream's Name. A HID is negotiated among several agents so that
 data forwarding can be done efficiently on both a point-to-point
 and multicast basis. All control message exchange is done on a
 point-to-point basis between a pair of agents. For control
 message handling, Virtual Link Identifiers are used to quickly
 dispatch the control messages to the proper stream's state
 machine.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 ST requires routing decisions to be made at several points in the
 stream setup and management process. ST assumes that an
 appropriate routing algorithm exists to which ST has access; see
 Section 3.8.1 (page 69). However, routing is considered to be a
 separate issue. Thus neither the routing algorithm nor its
 implementation is specified here. A routing algorithm may attempt
 to minimize the number of hops to the target(s), or it may be more
 intelligent and attempt to minimize the total internet resources
 consumed. ST operates equally well with any reasonable routing
 algorithm. The availability of a source routing option does not
 eliminate the need for an appropriate routing algorithm in ST
 agents.
 2.3. Relationship Between Applications and ST
 It is the responsibility of an ST application entity to exchange
 information among its peers, usually via IP, as necessary to
 determine the structure of the communication before establishing
 the ST stream. This includes:
 o identifying the participants,
 o determining which are targets for which origins,
 o selecting the characteristics of the data flow between any
 origin and its target(s),
 o specifying the protocol that resides above ST,
 o identifying the Service Access Point (SAP), port, or
 socket relevant to that protocol at every participant, and
 o ensuring security, if necessary.
 The protocol layer above ST must pass such information down to the
 ST protocol layer when creating a stream.
 ST uses a flow specification, abbreviated herein as "FlowSpec", to
 describe the required characteristics of a stream. Included are
 bandwidth, delay, and reliability parameters. Additional
 parameters may be included in the future in an extensible manner.
 The FlowSpec describes both the desired values and their minimal
 allowable values. The ST agents thus have some freedom in
 allocating their resources. The ST agents accumulate information
 that describes the characteristics of the chosen path and pass
 that information to the origin and the targets of the stream.
 ST stream setup control messages carry some information that is
 not specifically relevant to ST, but is passed through the
 interface to the protocol that resides above ST. The "next
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 protocol identifier" ("NextPcol") allows ST to demultiplex streams
 to a number of possible higher layer protocols. The SAP
 associated with each participant allows the higher layer protocol
 to further demultiplex to a specific application entity. A
 UserData parameter is provided; see Section 4.2.2.16 (page 98).
 2.4. ST Control Message Protocol
 ST agents create and manage a stream using the ST Control Message
 Protocol (SCMP). Conceptually, SCMP resides immediately above ST
 (as does ICMP above IP) but is an integral part of ST. Control
 messages are used to:
 o create streams,
 o refuse creation of a stream,
 o delete a stream in whole or in part,
 o negotiate or change a stream's parameters,
 o tear down parts of streams as a result of router or
 network failures, or transient routing inconsistencies,
 and
 o reroute around network or component failures.
 SCMP follows a request-response model. SCMP reliability is
 ensured through use of retransmission after timeout; see Section
 3.7.6 (page 66).
 An ST application that will transmit data requests its local ST
 agent, the origin, to create a stream. While only the origin
 requests creation of a stream, all the ST agents from the origin
 to the targets participate in its creation and management. Since
 a stream is simplex, each participant that wishes to transmit data
 must request that a stream be created.
 An ST agent that receives an indication that a stream is being
 created must:
 1 negotiate a HID with the previous-hop identifying the
 stream,
 2 map the list of targets onto a set of next-hop ST agents
 through the routing function,
 3 reserve the local and network resources required to
 support the stream,
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4 update the FlowSpec, and
 5 propagate the setup information and partitioned target
 list to the next-hop ST agents.
 When a target receives the setup message, it must inquire from the
 specified application process whether or not it is willing to
 accept the stream, and inform the origin accordingly.
 Once a stream is established, the origin can safely send data. ST
 and its implementations are optimized to allow fast and efficient
 forwarding of data packets by the ST agents using the HIDs, even
 at the cost of adding overhead to stream creation and management.
 Specifically, the forwarding decisions, that is, determining the
 set of next-hop ST agents to which a data packet belonging to a
 particular stream will be sent, are made during the stream setup
 phase. The shorthand HIDs are negotiated at that time, not only
 to reduce the data packet header size, but to access efficiently
 the stream's forwarding information. When possible, network-layer
 multicast is used to forward a data packet to multiple next-hop ST
 agents across a network. Note that when network-layer multicast
 is used, all members of the multicast group must participate in
 the negotiation of a common HID.
 An established stream can be modified by adding or deleting
 targets, or by changing the network resources allocated to it. A
 stream may be torn down by either the origin or the targets. A
 target can remove itself from a stream leaving the others
 unaffected. The origin can similarly remove any subset of the
 targets from its stream leaving the remainder unaffected. An
 origin can also remove all the targets from the stream and
 eliminate the stream in its entirety.
 A stream is monitored by the involved ST agents. If they detect a
 failure, they can attempt recovery. In general, this involves
 tearing down part of the stream and rebuilding it to bypass the
 failed component(s). The rebuilding always occurs from the origin
 side of the failure. The origin can optionally specify whether
 recovery is to be attempted automatically by intermediate ST
 agents or whether a failure should immediately be reported to the
 origin. If automatic recovery is selected but an intermediate
 agent determines it cannot effect the repair, it propagates the
 failure information backward until it reaches an agent that can
 effect repair. If the failure information propagates back to the
 origin, then the application can decide if it should abort or
 reattempt the recovery operation.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 Although ST supports an arbitrary connection structure, we
 recognize that certain stream topologies will be common and
 justify special features, or options, which allow for optimized
 support. These include:
 o streams with only a single target (see Section 3.6.2 (page
 44)), and
 o pairs of streams to support full duplex communication
 between two points (see Section 3.6.3 (page 45)).
 These features allow the most frequently occurring topologies to
 be supported with less setup delay, with fewer control messages,
 and with less overhead than the more general situations.
 2.5. Flow Specifications
 Real time data, such as voice and video, have predictable
 characteristics and make specific demands of the networks that
 must transfer it. Specifically, the data may be transmitted in
 packets of a constant size that are produced at a constant rate.
 Alternatively, the bandwidth may vary, due either to variable
 packet size or rate, with a predefined maximum, and perhaps a
 non-zero minimum. The variation may also be predictable based on
 some model of how the data is generated. Depending on the
 equipment used to generate the data, the packet size and rate may
 be negotiable. Certain applications, such as voice, produce
 packets at the given rate only some of the time. The networks
 that support real time data must add minimal delay and delay
 variance, but it is expected that they will be non-zero.
 The FlowSpec is used for three purposes. First, it is used in the
 setup message to specify the desired and minimal packet size and
 rate required by the origin. This information is used by ST
 agents when they attempt to reserve the resources in the
 intervening networks. Second, when the setup message reaches the
 target, the FlowSpec contains the packet size and rate that was
 actually obtained along the path from the origin, and the accrued
 mean delay and delay variance expected for data packets along that
 path. This information is used by the target to determine if it
 wishes to accept the connection. The target may reduce reserved
 resources if it wishes to do so and if the possibility is still
 available. Third, if the target accepts the connection, it
 returns the updated FlowSpec to the origin, so that the origin can
 decide if it still wishes to participate in the stream with the
 characteristics that were actually obtained.
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 When the data transmitted by stream users is generated at varying
 rates, including bursts of varying rate and duration, there is an
 opportunity to provide service to more subscribers by providing
 guaranteed service for the average data rate of each stream, and
 reserving additional network capacity, shared among all streams,
 to service the bursts. This concept has been recognized by analog
 voice network providers leading to the principle of time assigned
 speech interpolation (TASI) in which only the talkspurts of a
 speech conversation are transmitted, and, during silence periods,
 the circuit can be used to send the talkspurts of other
 conversations. The FlowSpec is intended to assist algorithms that
 perform similar kinds of functions. We do not propose such
 algorithms here, but rather expect that this will be an area for
 experimentation. To allow for experiments, and a range of ways
 that application traffic might be characterized, a "DutyFactor" is
 included in the FlowSpec and we expect that a "burst descriptor"
 will also be needed.
 The FlowSpec will need to be revised as experience is gained with
 connections involving numerous participants using multiple media
 across heterogeneous internetworks. We feel a change of the
 FlowSpec does not necessarily require a new version of ST, it only
 requires the FlowSpec version number be updated and software to
 manage the new FlowSpec to be distributed. We further suggest
 that if the change to the FlowSpec involves additional information
 for improved operation, such as a burst descriptor, that it be
 added to the end of the FlowSpec and that the current parameters
 be maintained so that obsolete software can be used to process the
 current parameters with minimum modifications.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 **** ****
 * * ST Agent 1 * * +---+
 * *------- o ---------* *-------+ B |
 * * * * +---+
 * * ****
 +---+ * * |
 | | * * |
 | A +---------* * o ST Agent 3
 | | * * |
 +---+ * * |
 * * ***
 * * * * +---+
 * * ST Agent 2 * *-------+ C |
 * *------- o --------* * +---+
 * * * *
 **** * *
 * *
 +---+ * * +---+
 | E +--------* *-------+ D |
 +---+ * * +---+
 ***
 Figure 2. Topology Used in Protocol Exchange Diagrams
 **** ST Agent 1 ****
 * +--+---14--- o -----15--+----+--44---+---+
 * | +-+--11--- -----16--+-+ * | B |
 * | | * * |+-+--45---+---+
 * | | * *++*
 +---+ * | | * 34 ||32
 | +----4----+--+ | * ||
 | A +----6----+----+ * o ST Agent 3
 | +----5----+---+ * |
 +---+ * | * | 33
 * | * ST *+*
 * | * Agent * | *
 * | * 2 -----24-+--+ * +---+
 * +--+--23--- o -----25-+-----+--54---+ C |
 * * -----26-+---+ * +---+
 **** -----27-+-+ | *
 * | | *
 +---+ * | | * +---+
 | E +---74---+-+ +-+--64---+ D |
 +---+ * * +---+
 ***
 Figure 3. Virtual Link Identifiers for SCMP Messages
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3. ST Control Message Protocol Functional Description
 This section contains a functional description of the ST Control
 Message Protocol (SCMP); Section 4 (page 75) specifies the formats of
 the control message PDUs. We begin with a description of stream
 setup. Mechanisms used to deal with the exceptional cases are then
 presented. Complications due to options that an application or a ST
 agent may select are then detailed. Once a stream has been
 established, the data transfer phase is entered; it is described.
 Once the data transfer phase has been completed, the stream must be
 torn down and resources released; the control messages used to
 perform this function are presented. The resources or participants
 of a stream may be changed during the lifetime of the stream; the
 procedures to make changes are described. Finally, the section
 concludes with a description of some ancillary functions, such as
 failure detection and recovery, HID negotiation, routing, security,
 etc.
 To help clarify the SCMP exchanges used to setup and maintain ST
 streams, we have included a series of figures in this section. The
 protocol interactions in the figures assume the topology shown in
 Figure 2. The figures, taken together,
 o Create a stream from an application at A to three peers at B,
 C and D,
 o Add a peer at E,
 o Disconnect peers B and C, and
 o D drops out of the stream.
 Other figures illustrate exchanges related to failure recovery.
 In order to make the dispatch function within SCMP more uniform and
 efficient, each end of a hop is assigned, by the agent at that end, a
 Virtual Link Identifier that uniquely (within that agent) identifies
 the hop and associates it with a particular stream's state
 machine(s). The identifier at the end of a link that is sending a
 message is called the Sender Virtual Link Identifier (SVLId); that
 at the receiving end is called the Receiver Virtual Link Identifier
 (RVLId). Whenever one agent sends a control message for the other to
 receive, the sender will place the receiver's identifier into the
 RVLId field of the message and its own identifier in the SVLId field.
 When a reply to the message is sent, the values in SVLId and RVLId
 fields will be reversed, reflecting the fact the sender and receiver
 roles are reversed. VLIds with values zero through three are
 received and should not be assigned in response to CONNECT messages.
 Figure 3 shows the hops that will be used in the examples and
 summarizes the VLIds that will be assigned to them.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 Similarly, Figure 4 summarizes the HIDs that will eventually be
 negotiated as the stream is created.
 **** ST Agent 1 ****
 * +>+--1200-> o -------->+--->+-3600->+---+
 * ^ * * * | B |
 * | * * +->+-6000->+---+
 * | * *+**
 +---+ * | * ^
 | +-------->+-->+ * |
 | A | * * o St Agent 3
 | +-------->+-->+ * ^
 +---+ * | * | 4801
 * | * *+*
 * V * ST Agent 2 * ^ * +---+
 * +>+--2400-> o ------->+->+->+-4800->+ C |
 **** * | * 4801 +---+
 * | *
 +---+ * V * +---+
 | E +<-4800--+<-+->+-4800->+ D |
 +---+ * * 4801 +---+
 ***
 Figure 4. HIDs Assigned for ST User Packets
 Some of the diagrams that follow form a progression. For example,
 the steps required initially to establish a connection are spread
 across five figures. Within a progression, the actions on the first
 diagram are numbered 1.1, 1.2, etc.; within the second diagram they
 are numbered 2.1, 2.2, etc. Points where control leaves one diagram
 to enter another are identified with a continuation arrow "-->>", and
 are continued with "[a.b] >>-->" in the other diagram. The number in
 brackets shows the label where control left the earlier diagram. The
 reception of simple acknowledgments, e.g., ACKs, in one figure from
 another is omitted for clarity.
 3.1. Stream Setup
 This section presents a description of stream setup assuming that
 everything succeeds -- HIDs are approved, any required resources
 are available, and the routing is correct.
 3.1.1. Initial Setup at the Origin
 As described in Section 2.3 (page 11), the application has
 collected the information necessary to determine the
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 participants in the communication before passing it to the host
 ST agent at the origin. The host ST agent will take this
 information, allocate a Name for the stream (see Section
 4.2.2.8 (page 87)), and create a stream.
 3.1.2. Invoking the Routing Function
 An ST agent that is setting up a stream invokes a routing
 function to find a path to reach each of the targets specified
 in the TargetList. This is similar to the routing decision in
 IP. However, in this case the route is to a multitude of
 targets rather than to a single destination.
 The set of next-hops that an ST agent would select is not
 necessarily the same as the set of next hops that IP would
 select given a number of independent IP datagrams to the same
 destinations. The routing algorithm may attempt to optimize
 parameters other than the number of hops that the packets will
 take, such as delay, local network bandwidth consumption, or
 total internet bandwidth consumption.
 The result of the routing function is a set of next-hop ST
 agents and the parameters of the intervening network(s). The
 latter permit the ST agent to determine whether the selected
 network has the resources necessary to support the level of
 service requested in the FlowSpec.
 3.1.3. Reserving Resources
 The intent of ST is to provide a guaranteed level of service by
 reserving internet resources for a stream during a setup phase
 rather than on a per packet basis. The relevant resources are
 not only the forwarding information maintained by the ST
 agents, but also packet switch processor bandwidth and buffer
 space, and network bandwidth and multicast group identifiers.
 Reservation of these resources can help to increase the
 reliability and decrease the delay and delay variance with
 which data packets are delivered. The FlowSpec contains all
 the information needed by the ST agent to allocate the
 necessary resources. When and how these resources are
 allocated depends on the details of the networks involved, and
 is not specified here.
 If an ST agent must send data across a network to a single
 next-hop ST agent, then only the point-to-point bandwidth needs
 to be reserved. If the agent must send data to multiple next-
 hop agents across one network and network layer multicasting is
 not available, then bandwidth must be reserved for all of them.
 This will allow the ST agent to
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 use replication to send a copy of the data packets to each
 next-hop agent.
 If multicast is supported, its use will decrease the effort
 that the ST agent must expend when forwarding packets and also
 reduces the bandwidth required since one copy can be received
 by all next-hop agents. However, the setup phase is more
 complicated. A network multicast address must be allocated
 that contains all those next-hop agents, the sender must have
 access to that address, the next-hop agents must be informed of
 the address so they can join the multicast group identified by
 it (see Section 4.2.2.7 (page 86)), and a common HID must be
 negotiated.
 The network should consider the bandwidth and multicast
 requirements to determine the amount of packet switch
 processing bandwidth and buffer space to reserve for the
 stream. In addition, the membership of a stream in a Group may
 affect the resources that have to be allocated; see Section
 3.7.3 (page 56).
 Few networks in the Internet currently offer resource
 reservation, and none that we know of offer reservation of all
 the resources specified here. Only the Terrestrial Wideband
 Network (TWBNet) [7] and the Atlantic Satellite Network
 (SATNET) [9] offer(ed) bandwidth reservation. Multicasting is
 more widely supported. No network provides for the reservation
 of packet switch processing bandwidth or buffer space. We hope
 that future networks will be designed to better support
 protocols like ST.
 Effects similar to reservation of the necessary resources may
 be obtained even when the network cannot provide direct support
 for the reservation. Certainly if total reservations are a
 small fraction of the overall resources, such as packet switch
 processing bandwidth, buffer space, or network bandwidth, then
 the desired performance can be honored if the degree of
 confidence is consistent with the requirements as stated in the
 FlowSpec. Other solutions can be designed for specific
 networks.
 3.1.4. Sending CONNECT Messages
 A VLId and a proposed HID must be selected for each next-hop
 agent. The control packets for the next-hop must carry the
 VLId in the SVLId field. The data packets transmitted in the
 stream to the next-hop must carry the HID in the ST Header.
 The ST agent sends a CONNECT message to each of the ST agents
 identified by the routing function. Each CONNECT message
 contains the VLId, the proposed HID (the HID Field option bit
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 must be set, see Section 3.6.1 (page 44)), an updated FlowSpec,
 and a TargetList. In general, the HID, FlowSpec, and
 TargetList will depend on both the next-hop and the intervening
 network. Each TargetList is a subset of the received (or
 original) TargetList, identifying the targets that are to be
 reached through the next-hop to which the CONNECT message is
 being sent. Note that a CONNECT message to a single next-hop
 might have to be fragmented into multiple CONNECTs if the
 single CONNECT is too large for the intervening network's MTU;
 fragmentation is performed by further dividing the TargetList.
 If multiple next-hops are to be reached through a network that
 supports network level multicast, a different CONNECT message
 must nevertheless be sent to each next-hop since each will have
 a different TargetList; see Section 4.2.3.5 (page 105).
 However, since an identical copy of each ensuing data packet
 will reach each member of the multicast group, all the CONNECT
 messages must propose the same HID. See Section 3.7.4 (page
 58) for a detailed discussion on HID selection.
 In the example of Figure 2, the routing function might return
 that B is reachable via Agent 1 and C and D are reachable via
 Agent 2. Thus A would create two CONNECT messages, one each
 for Agents 1 and 2, as illustrated in Figure 5. Assuming that
 the proposed HIDs are available in the receiving agents, they
 would each send a responding HID-APPROVE back to Agent A.
 Application Agent A Agent 1 Agent 2
 1.1. (open B,C,D)
 V
 1.2. +-> (routing to B,C,D)
 V
 1.3. +->(reserve resources from A to Agent 1)
 | V
 1.4. | +-> CONNECT B --------->>
 | <RVLId=0><SVLId=4>
 | <Ref=10><HID=1200>
 V
 1.5. +->(reserve resources from A to Agent 2)
 V
 1.6. +-> CONNECT C,D ------------------>>
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=5>
 <Ref=15><HID=2400>
 Figure 5. Origin Sending CONNECT Message
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 3.1.5. CONNECT Processing by an Intermediate Agent
 An ST agent receiving a CONNECT message should, assuming no
 errors, quickly select a VLId and respond to the previous-hop
 with either an ACK, a HID-REJECT, or a HID-APPROVE message, as
 is appropriate. This message must identify the CONNECT to
 which it corresponds by including the CONNECT's Reference
 number in its Reference field. Note that the VLId that this
 agent selects is placed in the SVLId of the response, and the
 previous-hop's VLId (which is contained in the SVLId of the
 CONNECT) is copied into the RVLId of the response. If the
 agent is not a target, it must then invoke the routing
 function, reserve resources, and send a CONNECT message(s) to
 its next-hop(s), as described in Sections 3.1.2-4 (pages 19-
 20).
 Agent A Agent 1 Agent B
 [1.4] >>-> CONNECT B -------->+--+
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=4> | V
2.1. <Ref=10><HID=1200> | (routing to B)
 | V
2.2. V +->(reserve resources from 1 to B)
2.3. +<- HID-APPROVE <------+  V
2.4. <RVLId=4><SVLId=14>  +-> CONNECT B ---------->>
 <Ref=10><HID=1200> <RVLId=0><SVLId=15>
 <Ref=110><HID=3600>
 Agent A Agent 2 Agent C
 [1.6] >>-> CONNECT C,D ------>+-+
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=5> | V
2.5. <Ref=15><HID=2400> | (routing to C,D)
 | V
2.6. V +-->(reserve resources from 2 to C)
2.7. +<- HID-APPROVE <------+ |  V
2.8. <RVLId=5><SVLId=23> | +-> CONNECT C ---------->>
 <Ref=15><HID=2400> | <RVLId=0><SVLId=25>
 | <Ref=210><HID=4800>
 |
 | Agent D
 V
2.9. +->(reserve resources from 2 to D)
 V
2.10. +-> CONNECT D ---------->>
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=26>
 <Ref=215><HID=4800>
 Figure 6. CONNECT Processing by an Intermediate Agent
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 The resources listed as Desired in a received FlowSpec may not
 correspond to those actually reserved in either the ST agent
 itself or in the network(s) used to reach the next-hop
 agent(s). As long as the reserved resources are sufficient to
 meet the specified Limits, the copy of the FlowSpec sent to a
 next-hop must have the Desired resources updated to reflect the
 resources that were actually obtained. For example, the
 Desired bandwidth might be reduced because the network to the
 next-hop could not provide all of the desired bandwidth. Also,
 the delay and delay variance are appropriately increased, and
 the link MTU may require that the DesPDUBytes field be reduced.
 (The minimum requirements that the origin had entered into the
 FlowSpec Limits fields cannot be altered by the intermediate or
 target agents.)
 3.1.6. Setup at the Targets
 An ST agent that is the target of a CONNECT, whether from an
 intermediate ST agent, or directly from the origin host ST
 agent, must respond first (assuming no errors) with either a
 HID-REJECT or HID-APPROVE. After inquiring from the specified
 application process whether or not it is willing to accept the
 connection, the agent must also respond with either an ACCEPT
 or a REFUSE.
 In particular, the application must be presented with
 parameters from the CONNECT, such as the Name, FlowSpec,
 Options, and Group, to be used as a basis for its decision.
 The application is identified by a combination of the NextPcol
 field and the SAP field in the (usually) single remaining
 Target of the TargetList. The contents of the SAP field may
 specify the "port" or other local identifier for use by the
 protocol layer above the host ST layer. Subsequently received
 data packets will carry a short hand identifier (the HID) that
 can be mapped into this information and be used for their
 delivery.
 The responses to the CONNECT message are sent to the previous-
 hop from which the CONNECT was received. An ACCEPT contains
 the Name of the stream and the updated FlowSpec. Note that the
 application might have reduced the desired level of service in
 the received FlowSpec before accepting it. The target must not
 send the ACCEPT until HID negotiation has been successfully
 completed.
 Since the ACCEPT or REFUSE message must be acknowledged by the
 previous-hop, it is assigned a new Reference number that will
 be returned in the ACK. The CONNECT to which the ACCEPT or
 REFUSE is a reply is identified by placing the CONNECT's
 Reference number in the LnkReference field of the ACCEPT or
 REFUSE.
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 Agent 1 Agent B Application B
 3.1. (proc B listening)
 [2.4] >>-> CONNECT B ---------->+------------------+
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=15> | |
 3.2. <Ref=110><HID=3600> V (proc B accepts)
 3.3. +<- HID-APPROVE <--------+ |
 <RVLId=15><SVLId=44> |
 <Ref=110><HID=3600> V
 3.4. (wait until HID negotiated) <---+
 V
 3.5. <<--+<- ACCEPT B <-----------+
 <RVLId=15><SVLId=44>
 <Ref=410><LnkRef=110>
 Agent 2 Agent C Application C
 3.6. (proc C listening)
 [2.8] >>-> CONNECT C ---------->+------------------+
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=25> | |
 3.7. <Ref=210><HID=4800> V (proc C accepts)
 3.8. +<- HID-APPROVE <--------+ |
 <RVLId=25><SVLId=54> |
 <Ref=210><HID=4800> V
 3.9. (wait until HID negotiated) <---+
 V
 3.10. <<--+<- ACCEPT C <-----------+
 <RVLId=25><SVLId=54>
 <Ref=510><LnkRef=210>
 Agent 2 Agent D Application D
 3.11. (proc D listening)
 [2.10] >>-> CONNECT D ---------->+------------------+
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=26> | |
 3.12. <Ref=215><HID=4800> V (proc D accepts)
 3.13. +<- HID-APPROVE <--------+ |
 <RVLId=26><SVLId=64> |
 <Ref=215><HID=4800> V
 3.14. (wait until HID negotiated) <---+
 V
 3.15. <<--+<- ACCEPT D <-----------+
 <RVLId=26><SVLId=64>
 <Ref=610><LnkRef=215>
 Figure 7. CONNECT Processing by the Target
 3.1.7. ACCEPT Processing by an Intermediate Agent
 When an intermediate ST agent receives an ACCEPT, it first
 verifies that the message is a response to an earlier CONNECT.
 If not, it responds to the next-hop ST agent with an ERROR-IN-
 REPLY (LnkRefUnknown) message. Otherwise, it responds to the
 next-hop ST agent with an ACK, and propagates
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 the ACCEPT message to the previous-hop along the same path
 traced by the CONNECT but in the reverse direction toward the
 origin. The ACCEPT should not be propagated until all HID
 negotiations with the next-hop agent(s) have been successfully
 completed.
 The FlowSpec is included in the ACCEPT message so that the
 origin and intermediate ST agents can gain access to the
 information that was accumulated as the CONNECT traversed the
 internet. Note that the resources, as specified in the
 FlowSpec in the ACCEPT message, may differ from the resources
 that were reserved by the agent when the CONNECT was
 Agent A Agent 1 Agent B
 +<-+<- ACCEPT B <-------<< [3.5]
 V | <RVLId=15><SVLId=44>
4.1. (wait for ACCEPTS) V  <Ref=410><LnkRef=110>
4.2. V +-> ACK --------------->+
4.3. (wait until HID negotiated)<-+  <RVLId=44><SVLId=15>
 V <Ref=410>
4.4. <<--+<-- ACCEPT B <---------+
 <RVLId=4><SVLId=14>
 <Ref=115><LnkRef=10>
 Agent A Agent 2 Agent C
 +<-+<- ACCEPT C <------<< [3.10]
 | | <RVLId=25><SVLId=54>
 | V <Ref=510><LnkRef=210>
4.5. | +-> ACK --------------->+
 | <Ref=510>
 | <RVLId=54><SVLId=25>
 |
 | Agent D
 V
 +<-+<- ACCEPT D <------<< [3.15]
 V | <RVLId=26><SVLId=64>
4.6. (wait for ACCEPTS) V  <Ref=610><LnkRef=215>
4.7. V +-> ACK --------------->+
4.8. (wait until HID negotiated)<-+  <RVLId=64><SVLId=26>
 V <Ref=610>
4.9. <<--+<- ACCEPT C <----------+
 <RVLId=5><SVLId=23> |
 <Ref=220><LnkRef=15>|
 V
4.10. <<--+<- ACCEPT D <----------+
 <RVLId=5><SVLId=23>
 <Ref=225><LnkRef=15>
 Figure 8. ACCEPT Processing by an Intermediate Agent
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 originally processed. However, the agent does not adjust the
 reservation in response to the ACCEPT. It is expected that any
 excess resource allocation will be released for use by other
 stream or datagram traffic through an explicit CHANGE message
 initiated by the application at the origin if it does not wish
 to be charged for any excess resource allocations.
 3.1.8. ACCEPT Processing by the Origin
 The origin will eventually receive an ACCEPT (or REFUSE or
 ERROR-IN-REQUEST) message from each of the targets. As each
 ACCEPT is received, the application should be notified of the
 target and the resources that were successfully allocated along
 the path to it, as specified in the FlowSpec contained in the
 ACCEPT message. The application may then use the information
 to either adopt or terminate the portion of the stream to each
 target. When ACCEPTs (or failures) from all targets have been
 received at the origin, the application is notified that stream
 setup is complete, and that data may be sent.
 Application A Agent A Agent 1 Agent 2
 +<-- ACCEPT B <--------<< [4.4]
 | <RVLId=4><SVLId=14>
 V <Ref=115><LnkRef=10>
 5.1. +--> ACK ----------------->+
 | <RVLId=14><SVLId=4>
 V <Ref=115>
 5.2. +<-- (inform A of B's FlowSpec)
 | +<-- ACCEPT C <----------------<< [4.9]
 | | <RVLId=5><SVLId=23>
 | V <Ref=220><LnkRef=15>
 5.3. | +--> ACK ------------------------->+
 | | <RVLId=23><SVLId=5>
 | V <Ref=220>
 5.4. +<-- (inform A of C's FlowSpec)
 | +<-- ACCEPT D <----------------<< [4.10]
 | | <RVLId=5><SVLId=23>
 | V <Ref=225><LnkRef=15>
 5.5. | +--> ACK ------------------------->+
 | | <RVLId=23><SVLId=5>
 | V <Ref=225>
 5.6. +<-- (inform A of D's FlowSpec)
 V
 5.7. (wait until HIDs negotiated)
 V
 5.8. (inform A open to B,C,D)
 Figure 9. ACCEPT Processing by the Origin
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 There are several pieces of information contained in the
 FlowSpec that the application must combine before sending data
 through the stream. The PDU size should be computed from the
 minimum value of the DesPDUBytes field from all ACCEPTs and the
 protocol layers above ST should be informed of the limit. It
 is expected that the next higher protocol layer above ST will
 segment its PDUs accordingly. Note, however, that the MTU may
 decrease over the life of the stream if new targets are
 subsequently added. Whether the MTU should be increased as
 targets are dropped from a stream is left for further study.
 The available bandwidth and packet rate limits must also be
 combined. In this case, however, it may not be possible to
 select a pair of values that may be used for all paths, e.g.,
 one path may have selected a low rate of large packets while
 another selected a high rate of small packets. The application
 may remedy the situation by either tearing down the stream,
 dropping some participants, or creating a second stream.
 After any differences have been resolved (or some targets have
 been deleted by the application to permit resolution), the
 application at the origin should send a CHANGE message to
 release any excess resources along paths to those targets that
 exceed the resolved parameters for the stream, thereby reducing
 the costs that will be incurred by the stream.
 3.1.9. Processing a REFUSE Message
 REFUSE messages are used to indicate a failure to reach an
 application at a target; they are propagated toward the origin
 of a stream. They are used in three situations:
 1 during stream setup or expansion to indicate that there
 is no satisfactory path from an ST agent to a target,
 2 when the application at the target either does not
 exist does not wish to be a participant, or wants to
 cease being a participant, and
 3 when a failure has been detected and the agents are
 trying to find a suitable path around the failure.
 The cases are distinguished by the ReasonCode field and an
 agent receiving a REFUSE message must examine that field in
 order to determine the proper action to be taken. In
 particular, if the ReasonCode indicates that the CONNECT
 message reached the target then the REFUSE should be propagated
 back to the origin, releasing resources as appropriate along
 the way. If the ReasonCode indicates that
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 the CONNECT message did not reach the target then the
 intermediate (origin) ST agent(s) should check for alternate
 routes to the target before propagating the REFUSE back another
 hop toward the origin. This implies that an agent must keep
 track of the next-hops that it has tried, on a target by target
 basis, in order not to get caught in a loop.
 An ST agent that receives a REFUSE message must acknowledge it
 by sending an ACK to the next-hop. The REFUSE must also be
 propagated back to the previous-hop ST agent. Note that the ST
 agent may not have any information about the target in
 Appl. Agent A Agent 2 Agent E
 (proc E NOT listening)
1. (add E)
2. +----->+-> CONNECT E ---------->+->+
 <RVLId=23><SVLId=5> | |
 <Ref=65> V |
3. +<-- ACK <---------------+ |
 <RVLId=5><SVLId=23> V
4. <Ref=65>  (routing to E)
 V
5. (reserve resources 2 to E)
 V
6. +--> CONNECT E --------->+
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=27> |
 <Ref=115><HID=4600> |
 V
7. +<-+<- REFUSE B <-----------+
 | | <RVLId=27><SVLId=74>
 | | <Ref=705><LnkRef=115>
 | V <RC=SAPUnknown>
8. | +-> ACK ---------------->+
 | | <RVLId=74><SVLId=27> |
 | V <Ref=705> |
9. | (free link 27) V
10. V  (free link 74)
11. +<- REFUSE B <-----------+
 | <RVLId=5><SVLId=23> |
 | <Ref=550><LnkRef=65> V
12. |  <RC=SAPUnknown> (free resources 2 to E)
 V
13. +-> ACK --------------->+
 | <RVLId=23><SVLId=5> |
 | <Ref=550> V
14. V  (keep link 23 for C,D)
15. (keep link 5 for C,D)
 V
16. (inform application failed SAPUnknown)
 Figure 10. Sending REFUSE Message
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 the TargetList. This may result from interacting DISCONNECT
 and REFUSE messages and should be logged and silently ignored.
 If, after deleting the specified target, the next-hop has no
 remaining targets, then those resources associated with that
 next-hop agent may be released. Note that network resources
 may not actually be released if network multicasting is being
 Appl. Agent A Agent 2 Agent 1 Agent 3 Agent B
1. (network from 1 to B fails)
2. (add B)
3. +-> CONNECT B ----------------->+
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=6> |
 <Ref=35><HID=100> |
3. +<- HID-APPROVE <---------------+
 <RVLId=6><SVLId=11> |
 <Ref=35><HID=100> V
4. (routing to B: no route)
 V
5. +<-+-- REFUSE B ----------------+
 | | <RVLId=6><SVLId=11>
 | | <Ref=155><LnkRef=35>
 | V <RC=NoRouteToDest>
6. | +-> ACK -------------------->+
 | | <RVLId=11><SVLId=6> V
7. | V <Ref=155> (drop link 6)
8. V (drop link 11)
9. (find alternative route: via agent 2)
10. (resources from A to 2 already allocated:
 V reuse control link & HID, no additional resources required)
11. +-> CONNECT B -------->+->+
 <RVLId=23><SVLId=5>| |
 <Ref=40> V |
12. +<- ACK <--------------+ |
 <RVLId=5><SVLId=23> V
13. <Ref=40>  (routing to B: via agent 3)
 V
14. +-> CONNECT B -->+
15. <RVLId=0><SVLId=24> +-> CONNECT B --------->+
 <Ref=245><HID=4801> V <RVLId=0><SVLId=32> |
16. +<- HID-APPROVE -+  <Ref=310><HID=6000> |
 <RVLId=24><SVLId=33> |
 <Ref=245><HID=4801> V
17. +<- HID-APPROVE --------+
 <RVLId=32><SVLId=45>|
 <Ref=310><HID=6000> V
18. (ACCEPT handling follows normally to complete stream setup)
 Figure 11. Routing Around a Failure
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 used since they may still be required for traffic to other
 next-hops in the multicast group.
 When the REFUSE reaches a origin, the origin sends an ACK and
 notifies the application via the next higher layer protocol
 that the target listed in the TargetList is no longer part of
 the stream and also if the stream has no remaining targets. If
 there are no remaining targets, the application may wish to
 terminate the stream.
 Figure 10 illustrates the protocol exchanges for processing a
 REFUSE generated at the target, either because the target
 application is not running or that the target application
 rejects membership in the stream. Figure 11 illustrates the
 case of rerouting around a failure by an intermediate agent
 that detects a failure or receives a refuse. The protocol
 exchanges used by an application at the target to delete itself
 from the stream is discussed in Section 3.3.3 (page 35).
 3.2. Data Transfer
 At the end of the connection setup phase, the origin, each target,
 and each intermediate ST agent has a database entry that allows it
 to forward the data packets from the origin to the targets and to
 recover from failures of the intermediate agents or networks. The
 database should be optimized to make the packet forwarding task
 most efficient. The time critical operation is an intermediate
 agent receiving a packet from the previous-hop agent and
 forwarding it to the next-hop agent(s). The database entry must
 also contain the FlowSpec, utilization information, the address of
 the origin and previous-hop, and the addresses of the targets and
 next-hops, so it can perform enforcement and recover from
 failures.
 An ST agent receives data packets encapsulated by an ST header. A
 data packet received by an ST agent contains the non-zero HID
 assigned to the stream for the branch from the previous-hop to
 itself. This HID was selected so that it is unique at the
 receiving ST agent and thus can be used, e.g., as an index into
 the database, to obtain quickly the necessary replication and
 forwarding information.
 The forwarding information will be network and implementation
 specific, but must identify the next-hop agent or agents and their
 respective HIDs. It is suggested that the cached information for
 a next-hop agent include the local network address of the next-
 hop. If the data packet must be forwarded to multiple next-hops
 across a single network that supports multicast, the database may
 specify a single HID and may identify the next-hops by a (local
 network) multicast address.
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 If the network does not support multicast, or the next-hops are on
 different networks, then the database must indicate multiple
 (next-hop, HID) tuples. When multiple copies of the data packet
 must be sent, it may be necessary to invoke a packet replicator.
 Data packets should not require fragmentation as the next higher
 protocol layer at the origin was informed of the minimum MTU over
 all paths in the stream and is expected to segment its PDUs
 accordingly. However, it may be the case that a data packet that
 is being rerouted around a failed network component may be too
 large for the MTU of an intervening network. This should be a
 transient condition that will be corrected as soon as the new
 minimum MTU has been propagated back to the origin. Disposition
 by a mechanism other than dropping of the too large PDUs is left
 for further study.
 3.3. Modifying an Existing Stream
 Some applications may wish to change the parameters of a stream
 after it has been created. Possible changes include adding or
 deleting targets and changing the FlowSpec. These are described
 below.
 3.3.1. Adding a Target
 It is possible for an application to add a new target to an
 existing stream any time after ST has incorporated information
 about the stream into its database. At a high level, the
 application entities exchanges whatever information is
 necessary. Although the mechanism or protocol used to
 accomplish this is not specified here, it is necessary for the
 higher layer protocol to inform the host ST agent at the origin
 of this event. The host ST agent at the target must also be
 informed unless this had previously been done. Generally, the
 transfer of a target list from an ST agent to another, or from
 a higher layer protocol to a host ST agent, will occur
 atomically when the CONNECT is received. Any information
 concerning a new target received after this point can be viewed
 as a stream expansion by the receiving ST agent. However, it
 may be possible that an ST agent can utilize such information
 if it is received before it makes the relevant routing
 decisions. These implementation details are not specified
 here, but implementations must be prepared to receive CONNECT
 messages that represent expansions of streams that are still in
 the process of being setup.
 To expand an existing stream, the origin issues one or more
 CONNECT messages that contain the Name, the VLId, the FlowSpec,
 and the TargetList specifying the new target or targets. The
 origin issues multiple CONNECT messages if
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 either the targets are to be reached through different next-hop
 agents, or a single CONNECT message is too large for the
 network MTU. The HID Field option is not set since the HID has
 already been (or is being) negotiated for the hop;
 consequently, the CONNECT is acknowledged with an ACK instead
 of a HID-REJECT or HID-APPROVE.
Application Agent A Agent 2 Agent E
1. (open E)
2. V  (proc E listening)
3. +->(routing to E)
 V
4. +-> (check resources from A to Agent 2: already allocated,
 V reuse control link & HID, no additional resources needed)
5. +-> CONNECT E --------->+->+
 <RVLId=23><SVLId=5> | V
6. <Ref=20>  V (routing to E)
7. +<- ACK <---------------+ V
 <RVLId=5><SVLId=23> +->(reserve resources 2 to E)
 <Ref=20> V
8. +-> CONNECT E --------->+
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=27> |
 <Ref=230><HID=4800> |
9. +<- HID-APPROVE <-------+
 <RVLId=27><SVLId=74>|
 <Ref=230><HID=4800> V
10. (proc E accepts)
11. (wait until HID negotiated)
 V
12. +<-+<- ACCEPT E <----------+
 V | <RVLId=27><SVLId=74>
13. (wait for ACCEPTS) V <Ref=710><LnkRef=230>
14. V +-> ACK --------------->+
15. (wait until HID negotiated)<-+  <RVLId=74><SVLId=27>
 V <Ref=710>
16. +<- ACCEPT E <-------+
 | <RVLId=5><SVLId=23>
 V <Ref=235><LnkRef=20>
17. +-> ACK ------------>+
 | <RVLId=23><SVLId=5>
 V <Ref=235>
18. +<-(inform A of E's FlowSpec)
 V
19. +<-(wait for ACCEPTS)
 V
20. +<-(wait until HID negotiated)
 V
21. (inform A open to E)
 Figure 12. Addition of Another Target
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 An ST agent that is already a node in the stream recognizes the
 RVLId and verifies that the Name of the stream is the same. It
 then checks if the intersection of the TargetList and the
 targets of the established stream is empty. If this is not the
 case, then the receiver responds with an ERROR-IN-REQUEST with
 the appropriate reason code (RouteLoop) that contains a
 TargetList of those targets that were duplicates; see Section
 4.2.3.5 (page 106).
 For each new target in the TargetList, processing is much the
 same as for the original CONNECT; see Sections 3.1.2-4 (pages
 19-20). The CONNECT must be acknowledged, propagated, and
 network resources must be reserved. However, it may be
 possible to route to the new targets using previously allocated
 paths or an existing multicast group. In that case, additional
 resources do not need to be reserved but more next-hop(s) might
 have to be added to an existing multicast group.
 Nevertheless, the origin, or any intermediate ST agent that
 receives a CONNECT for an existing stream, can make a routing
 decision that is independent of any it may have made
 previously. Depending on the routing algorithm that is used,
 the ST agent may decide to reach the new target by way of an
 established branch, or it may decide to create a new branch.
 The fact that a new target is being added to an existing stream
 may result in a suboptimal overall routing for certain routing
 algorithms. We take this problem to be unavoidable since it is
 unlikely that the stream routing can be made optimal in
 general, and the only way to avoid this loss of optimality is
 to redefine the routing of potentially the entire stream, which
 would be too expensive and time consuming.
 3.3.2. The Origin Removing a Target
 The application at the origin specifies a set of targets that
 are to be removed from the stream and an appropriate reason
 code (ApplDisconnect). The targets are partitioned into
 multiple DISCONNECT messages based on the next-hop to the
 individual targets. As with CONNECT messages, an ST agent that
 is sending a DISCONNECT must make sure that the message fits
 into the MTU for the intervening network. If the message is
 too large, the TargetList must be further partitioned into
 multiple DISCONNECT messages.
 An ST agent that receives a DISCONNECT message must acknowledge
 it by sending an ACK back to the previous-hop. The DISCONNECT
 must also be propagated to the relevant next-hop ST agents.
 Before propagating the message, however, the TargetList should
 be partitioned based on next-hop ST
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 agent and MTU, as described above. Note that there may be
 targets in the TargetList for which the ST agent has no
 information. This may result from interacting DISCONNECT and
 REFUSE messages and should be logged and silently ignored.
 If, after deleting the specified targets, any next-hop has no
 remaining targets, then those resources associated with that
 next-hop agent may be released. Note that network resources
 may not actually be released if network multicasting is being
 used since they may still be required for traffic to other
 next-hops in the multicast group.
 Application Application
 Agent A Agent 1 Agent 2 Agent B C
 1. (close B,C ApplDisconnect)
 V
 2. +->+-+-> DISCONNECT B ----->+
 3. | | <RVLId=14><SVLId=4>+-+-> DISCONNECT B ------>+
 | | <Ref=25> | | <RVLId=44><SVLId=15>|
 | V <RC=ApplDisconnect>| | <Ref=120> |
 4. | (free A to 1 resrc.) | V <RC=ApplDisconnect> |
 5. | V (free 1 to B resrc.) |
 6. | +<- ACK <--------------+ V
 7. | | <RVLId=4><SVLId=14>| +<- ACK <---------------+
 | V <Ref=25> | | <RVLId=15><SVLId=44>|
 8. | (free link 4) V | <Ref=120> |
 9. | (free link 14) V |
 10. | (free link 15) V
 11. | (inform B that stream closed ApplDisconnect)
 12. | (free link 44)
 V
 13. +<-+-+-> DISCONNECT C ---------->+
 14. | | <RVLId=23><SVLId=5> +-+-> DISCONNECT C ------>+
 | | <Ref=30> | | <RVLId=54><SVLId=25>|
 | V <RC=ApplDisconnect> | | <Ref=240> |
 15. | (keep A to 2 resrc for | V <RC=ApplDisconnect> |
 16. | data going to D,E) | (free 2 to C resrc.) |
 | V |
 17. | +<- ACK <-------------------+ V
 18. | | <RVLId=5><SVLId=23> | +<- ACK <---------------+
 | V <Ref=30> | | <RVLId=25><SVLId=54>|
 19. | (keep link 5 for D,E) V | <Ref=240> |
 20. | (keep link 23 for D,E) V |
 21. | (free link 25) V
 22. | (inform C that stream closed ApplDisconnect>)
 23. V (free link 54)
 24. (inform A closed to B,C ApplDisconnect)
 Figure 13. Origin Removing a Target
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 When the DISCONNECT reaches a target, the target sends an ACK
 and notifies the application that it is no longer part of the
 stream and the reason. The application should then inform ST
 to terminate the stream, and ST should delete the stream from
 its database after performing any necessary management and
 accounting functions.
 3.3.3. A Target Deleting Itself
 The application at the target may inform ST that it wants to be
 removed from the stream and the appropriate reason code
 (ApplDisconnect). The agent then forms a REFUSE message with
 itself as the only entry in the TargetList. The REFUSE is sent
 back to the origin via the previous-hop. If a stream has
 multiple targets and one target leaves the stream using this
 REFUSE mechanism, the stream to the other targets is not
 affected; the stream continues to exist.
 An ST agent that receives such a REFUSE message must
 acknowledge it by sending an ACK to the next-hop. The target
 is deleted and, if the next-hop has no remaining targets, then
 the those resources associated with that next-hop agent may be
 released. Note that network resources may not actually be
 released if network multicasting is being used since they may
 still be required for traffic to other next-hops in the
 multicast group. The REFUSE must also be propagated back to
 the previous-hop ST agent.
 Agent A Agent 2 Agent E
 1. (close E ApplDisconnect)
 V
 2. +<- REFUSE E --+
 | <RVLId=27><SVLId=74>
 | <Ref=720>
 V <RC=ApplDisconnect>
 3. +<-+-> ACK ------>+
 | | <RVLId=74><SVLId=27>
 4. V V <Ref=720>
 5. +<-+<- REFUSE E --+ (prune allocations)
 | | <RVLId=5><SVLId=23>
 | | <Ref=245>
 | V <RC=ApplDisconnect>
 6. | +-> ACK ------>+
 | | <RVLId=23><SVLId=5>
 | V <Ref=245>
 7. V (prune allocations)
 8. (inform application closed E ApplDisconnect)
 Figure 14. Target Deleting Itself
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 When the REFUSE reaches the origin, the origin sends an ACK and
 notifies the application that the target listed in the
 TargetList is no longer part of the stream. If the stream has
 no remaining targets, the application may choose to terminate
 the stream.
 3.3.4. Changing the FlowSpec
 An application may wish to change the FlowSpec of an
 established stream. To do so, it informs ST of the new
 FlowSpec and the list of targets that are to be changed. The
 origin ST agent then issues one or more CHANGE messages with
 the new FlowSpec and sends them to the relevant next-hop
 agents. CHANGE messages are structured and processed similarly
 to CONNECT messages. A next-hop agent that is an intermediate
 agent and receives a CHANGE message similarly determines if it
 can implement the new FlowSpec along the hop to each of its
 next-hop agents, and if so, it propagates the CHANGE messages
 along the established paths. If this process succeeds, the
 CHANGE messages will eventually reach the targets, which will
 each respond with an ACCEPT message that is propagated back to
 the origin.
 Note that since a CHANGE may be sent containing a FlowSpec with
 a range of permissible values for bandwidth, delay, and/or
 error rate, and the actual values returned in the ACCEPTs may
 differ, then another CHANGE may be required to release excess
 resources along some of the paths.
 3.4. Stream Tear Down
 A stream is usually terminated by the origin when it has no
 further data to send, but may also be partially torn down by the
 individual targets. These cases will not be further discussed
 since they have already been described in Sections 3.3.2-3 (pages
 33-35).
 A stream is also torn down if the application should terminate
 abnormally. Processing in this case is identical to the previous
 descriptions except that the appropriate reason code is different
 (ApplAbort).
 When all targets have left a stream, the origin notifies the
 application of that fact, and the application then is responsible
 for terminating the stream. Note, however, that the application
 may decide to add a target(s) to the stream instead of terminating
 it.
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 3.5. Exceptional Cases
 The previous descriptions covered the simple cases where
 everything worked. We now discuss what happens when things do not
 succeed. Included are situations where messages are lost, the
 requested resources are not available, the routing fails or is
 inconsistent.
 In order for the ST Control Message Protocol to be reliable over
 an unreliable internetwork, the problems of corruption,
 duplication, loss, and ordering must be addressed. Corruption is
 handled through use of checksumming, as described in Section 4
 (page 76). Duplication of control messages is detected by
 assigning a transaction number (Reference) to each control
 message; duplicates are discarded. Loss is detected using a
 timeout at the sender; messages that are not acknowledged before
 the timeout expires are retransmitted; see Section 3.7.6 (page
 66). If a message is not acknowledged after a few retransmissions
 a fault is reported. The protocol does not have significant
 ordering constraints. However, minor sequencing of control
 messages for a stream is facilitated by the requirement that the
 Reference numbers be monotonically increasing; see Section 4.2
 (page 78).
 3.5.1. Setup Failure due to CONNECT Timeout
 If a response (an ERROR-IN-REQUEST, an ACK, a HID-REJECT, or a
 HID-APPROVE) has not been received within time ToConnect, the
 ST agent should retransmit the CONNECT message. If no response
 has been received within NConnect retransmissions, then a fault
 occurs and a REFUSE message with the appropriate reason code
 (RetransTimeout) is sent back in the direction of the origin,
 and, in place of the CONNECT, a DISCONNECT is sent to the
 next-hop (in case the response to the CONNECT is the message
 that was lost). The agent will expect an ACK for both the
 REFUSE and the DISCONNECT messages. If it does not receive an
 ACK after retransmission time ToRefuse and ToDisconnect
 respectively, it will resend the REFUSE/DISCONNECT message. If
 it does not receive ACKs after sending NRefuse/ NDisconnect
 consecutive REFUSE/DISCONNECT messages, then it simply gives up
 trying.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 Sending Agent Receiving Agent
 1. ->+----> CONNECT X ------>//// (message lost or garbled)
 | <RVLId=0><SVLId=99>
 V <Ref=1278><HID=1234>
 2. (timeout)
 V
 3. +----> CONNECT X ------------>+
 4. | <RVLId=0><SVLId=99> +----> CONNECT X ----------->+
 | <Ref=1278><HID=1234> V <RVLId=0><SVLId=1010> |
 5. | //<- HID-APPROVE <----------+ <Ref=6666><HID=6666> V
 6. | <RVLId=99><SVLId=88> +<- HID-APPROVE <---------+
 V <Ref=1278><HID=1234> <RVLId=1010><SVLId=1111>
 7. (timeout) <Ref=6666><HID=6666>
 V
 8. +----> CONNECT X ------------>+
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=99> |
 <Ref=1278><HID=1234> V
 9. +<-+<- HID-APPROVE <----------+
 | <RVLId=99><SVLId=88>
 V <Ref=1278><HID=1234>
 (cancel timer)
 Figure 15. CONNECT Retransmission after a Timeout
 3.5.2. Problems due to Routing Inconsistency
 When an intermediate agent receives a CONNECT, it selects the
 next-hop agents based on the TargetList and the networks to
 which it is connected. If the resulting next-hop to any of the
 targets is across the same network from which it received the
 CONNECT (but not the previous-hop itself), there may be a
 routing problem. However, the routing algorithm at the
 previous-hop may be optimizing differently than the local
 algorithm would in the same situation. Since the local ST
 agent cannot distinguish the two cases, it should permit the
 setup but send back to the previous-hop agent an informative
 NOTIFY message with the appropriate reason code (RouteBack),
 pertinent TargetList, and in the NextHopIPAddress element the
 address of the next-hop ST agent returned by its routing
 algorithm.
 The agent that receives such a NOTIFY should ACK it. If the
 agent is using an algorithm that would produce such behavior,
 no further action is taken; if not, the agent should send a
 DISCONNECT to the next-hop agent to correct the problem.
 Alternatively, if the next-hop returned by the routing function
 is in fact the previous-hop, a routing inconsistency has been
 detected. In this case, a REFUSE is sent back to
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 the previous-hop agent containing an appropriate reason code
 (RouteInconsist), pertinent TargetList, and in the
 NextHopIPAddress element the address of the previous-hop. When
 the previous-hop receives the REFUSE, it will recompute the
 next-hop for the affected targets. If there is a difference in
 the routing databases in the two agents, they may exchange
 CONNECT and REFUSE messages again. Since such routing errors
 in the internet are assumed to be temporary, the situation
 should eventually stabilize.
 3.5.3. Setup Failure due to a Routing Failure
 It is possible for an agent to receive a CONNECT message that
 contains a known Name, but from an agent other than the
 previous-hop agent of the stream with that Name. This may be:
 1 that two branches of the tree forming the stream have
 joined back together,
 2 a deliberate source routing loop,
 3 the result of an attempted recovery of a partially
 failed stream, or
 4 an erroneous routing loop.
 The TargetList is used to distinguish the cases 1 and 2 (see
 also Section 4.2.3.5 (page 107)) by comparing each newly
 received target with those of the previously existing stream:
 o if the IP address of the targets differ, it is case 1;
 o if the IP address of the targets match but the source
 route(s) are different, it is case 2;
 o if the target (including any source route) matches a
 target (including any source route) in the existing
 stream, it may be case 3 or 4.
 It is expected that the joining of branches will become more
 common as routing decisions are based on policy issues and not
 just simple connectivity. Unfortunately, there is no good way
 to merge the two parts of the stream back into a single stream.
 They must be treated independently with respect to processing
 in the agent. In particular, a separate state machine is
 required, the Virtual Link Identifiers and HIDs from the
 previous-hops and to the next-hops must be different, and
 duplicate resources must be reserved in both the agent and in
 any next-hop networks. Processing is the same for a deliberate
 source routing loop.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 The remaining cases requiring recovery, a partially failed
 stream and an erroneous routing loop, are not easily
 distinguishable. In attempting recovery of a failed stream, an
 agent may issue new CONNECT messages to the affected targets;
 for a full explanation see also Section 3.7.2 (page 51),
 Failure Recovery. Such a CONNECT may reach an agent downstream
 of the failure before that agent has received a DISCONNECT from
 the neighborhood of the failure. Until that agent receives the
 DISCONNECT, it cannot distinguish between a failure recovery
 and an erroneous routing loop. That agent must therefore
 respond to the CONNECT with a REFUSE message with the affected
 targets specified in the TargetList and an appropriate reason
 code (StreamExists).
 The agent immediately preceding that point, i.e., the latest
 agent to send the CONNECT message, will receive the REFUSE
 message. It must release any resources reserved exclusively
 for traffic to the listed targets. If this agent was not the
 one attempting the stream recovery, then it cannot distinguish
 between a failure recovery and an erroneous routing loop. It
 should repeat the CONNECT after a ToConnect timeout. If after
 NConnect retransmissions it continues to receive REFUSE
 messages, it should propagate the REFUSE message toward the
 origin, with the TargetList that specifies the affected
 targets, but with a different error code (RouteLoop).
 The REFUSE message with this error code (RouteLoop) is
 propagated by each ST agent without retransmitting any CONNECT
 messages. At each agent, it causes any resources reserved
 exclusively for the listed targets to be released. The REFUSE
 will be propagated to the origin in the case of an erroneous
 routing loop. In the case of stream recovery, it will be
 propagated to the ST agent that is attempting the recovery,
 which may be an intermediate agent or the origin itself. In
 the case of a stream recovery, the agent attempting the
 recovery may issue new CONNECT messages to the same or to
 different next-hops.
 If an agent receives both a REFUSE message and a DISCONNECT
 message with a target in common then it can release the
 relevant resources and propagate neither the REFUSE nor the
 DISCONNECT (however, we feel that it is unlikely that most
 implementations will be able to detect this situation).
 If the origin receives such a REFUSE message, it should attempt
 to send a new CONNECT to all the affected targets. Since
 routing errors in an internet are assumed to be temporary, the
 new CONNECTs will eventually find acceptable routes to the
 targets, if one exists. If no further routes exist after
 NRetryRoute tries, the application should be
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 informed so that it may take whatever action it deems
 necessary.
 3.5.4. Problems in Reserving Resources
 If the network or ST agent resources are not available, an ST
 agent may preempt one or more streams that have lower
 precedence than the one being created. When it breaks a lower
 precedence stream, it must issue REFUSE and DISCONNECT messages
 as described in Sections 4.2.3.15 (page 122) and 4.2.3.6 (page
 110). If there are no streams of lower precedence, or if
 preempting them would not provide sufficient resources, then
 the stream cannot be accepted by the ST agent.
 If an intermediate agent detects that it cannot allocate the
 necessary resources, then it sends a REFUSE that contains an
 appropriate reason code (CantGetResrc) and the pertinent
 TargetList to the previous-hop ST agent. For further study are
 issues of reporting what resources are available, whether the
 resource shortage is permanent or transitory, and in the latter
 case, an estimate of how long before the requested resources
 might be available.
 3.5.5. Setup Failure due to ACCEPT Timeout
 An ST agent that propagates an ACCEPT message backward toward
 the origin expects an ACK from the previous-hop. If it does
 not receive an ACK within a timeout, called ToAccept, it will
 retransmit the ACCEPT. If it does not receive an ACK after
 sending a number, called NAccept, of ACCEPT messages, then it
 will replace the ACCEPT with a REFUSE, and will send a
 DISCONNECT in the direction toward the target. Both the REFUSE
 and DISCONNECT will identify the affected target(s) and specify
 an appropriate reason code (AcceptTimeout). Both are also
 retransmitted until ACKed with timeout ToRefuse/ ToDisconnect
 and retransmit count NRefuse/NDisconnect. If they are not
 ACKed, the agent simply gives up, letting the failure detection
 mechanism described in Section 3.7.1 (page 48) take care of any
 cleanup.
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 3.5.6. Problems Caused by CHANGE Messages
 An application must exercise care when changing a FlowSpec to
 prevent a failure. A CHANGE might fail for two reasons. The
 request may be for a larger amount of network resources when
 those resources are not available; this failure may be
 prevented by requiring that the current level of service be
 contained within the ranges of the FlowSpec in the CHANGE.
 Alternatively, the local network might require all the former
 resources to be released before the new ones are requested and,
 due to unlucky timing, an unrelated request for network
 resources might be processed between the time the resources are
 released and the time the new resources are requested, so that
 the former resources are no longer available. There is not
 much that an application or ST can do to prevent such failures.
 If the attempt to change the FlowSpec fails then the ST agent
 where the failure occurs must intentionally break the stream
 and invoke the stream recovery mechanism using REFUSE and
 DISCONNECT messages; see Section 3.7.2 (page 51). Note that
 the reserved resources after the failure of a CHANGE may not be
 the same as before, i.e., the CHANGE may have been partially
 completed. The application is responsible for any cleanup
 (another CHANGE).
 3.5.7. Notification of Changes Forced by Failures
 NOTIFY is issued by a an ST Agent to inform upsteam agents and
 the origin that resource allocation changes have occurred after
 a stream was established. These changes occur when network
 components fail and when competing streams preempt resources
 previously reserved by a lower precedence stream. We also
 anticipate that NOTIFY can be used in the future when
 additional resources become available, as is the case when
 network components recover or when higher precedence streams
 are deleted.
 NOTIFY is also used to inform upstream agents that a routing
 anomaly has occurred. Such an example was cited in Section
 3.5.2 (page 38), where an agent notices that the next-hop agent
 is on the same network as the previous-hop agent; the anomaly
 is that the previous-hop should have connected directly to the
 next-hop without using an intermediate agent. Delays in
 propagating host status and routing information can cause such
 anomalies to occur. NOTIFY allows ST to correct automatically
 such mistakes.
 NOTIFY reports a FlowSpec that reflects that revised guarantee
 that can be promised to the stream. NOTIFY also
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 identifies those targets affected by the change. In this way,
 NOTIFY is similar to ACCEPT. NOTIFY includes a ReasonCode to
 identify the event that triggered the notification. It also
 includes a TargetList, rather than a single Target, since a
 single event can affect a branch leading to several targets.
 NOTIFY is relayed by the ST agents back toward the origin,
 along the path established by the CONNECT but in the reverse
 direction. NOTIFY must be acknowledged with an ACK at each
 hop. If intermediate agent corrects the situation without
 causing any disruption to the data flow or guarantees, it can
 choose to drop the notification message before it reaches the
 origin. If the originating agent receives a NOTIFY, it is then
 expected to adjust its own processing and data rates, and to
 submit any required CHANGE requests. As with ACCEPT, the
 FlowSpec is not modified on this trip from the target back to
 the origin. It is up to the origin to decide whether a CHANGE
 should be submitted. (However, even though the FlowSpec has
 not been modified, the situation reported in the
 Application Agent A Agent 1 Agent B
 1. (high precedence request preempts 10K of
 the stream's original 30Kb bandwidth
 allocated to the hop from 1 to B)
 |
 V
 2. +<------+-- NOTIFY -------------+
 | | <RVLId=4><SVLId=14>
 | | <Ref=150>
 | V <FlowSpec=20Kb,...><TargList=B>
 3. | +-> ACK --------------->+
 | <RVLId=14><SVLId=4>
 V <Ref=150>
 4. (inform application)
 ....
 5. change(FlowSpec=20Kb,...)
 V
 6. +---------> CHANGE B ---------->+
 7. <RVLId=14><SVLId=4> +--> CHANGE B ------------>+->+
 <Ref=60> | <RVLId=44><SVLId=15> | |
 <FlowSpec=20Kb,...> V <Ref=160> | |
 8. +<- ACK ----------------+ <FlowSpec=20Kb,...> | |
 <RVLId=4><SVLId=14> V |
 9. <Ref=60> +--- ACK ------------------+ |
 <RVLId=15><SVLId=44> |
 <Ref=160> V
 ... perform normal ACCEPT processing ... <-----+
 Figure 16. Processing NOTIFY Messages
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 notify may have prevented the ST agents from meeting the
 original guarantees.)
 3.6. Options
 Several options are defined in the CONNECT message. The special
 processing required to support each will be described in the
 following sections. The options are independent, i.e., can be set
 to one (1, TRUE) or zero (0, FALSE) in any combination. However,
 the effect and implementation of the options is NOT necessarily
 independent, and not all combinations are supported.
 3.6.1. HID Field Option
 The sender of a CONNECT message may or not specify an HID in
 the HID field. If the HID Field option of the CONNECT message
 is not set (the H bit is 0), then the HID field does not
 contain relevant information and should be ignored.
 If this option is set (the H bit is 1), then the HID field
 contains a relevant value. If this option is set and the HID
 field of the CONNECT contains a non-zero value, that value
 represents a proposed HID that initiates the HID negotiation.
 If the HID Field option is set but the HID field of the CONNECT
 message contains a zero, this means that the sender of that
 CONNECT message has chosen to defer selection of the HID to the
 next-hop agent (the receiver of a CONNECT message). This
 choice can allow a more efficient mechanism for selecting HIDs
 and possibly a more efficient mechanism for forwarding data
 packets in the case when the previous-hop does not need to
 select the HID; see also Section 4.2.3.5 (page 105).
 Upon receipt of a CONNECT message with the HID Field option set
 and the HID field set to zero, a next-hop agent selects the HID
 for the hop, enters it into its appropriate data structure, and
 returns it in the HID field of the HID-APPROVE message. The
 previous-hop takes the HID from the HID-APPROVE message and
 enters it into its appropriate data structure.
 3.6.2. PTP Option
 The PTP option (Point-to-Point) is used to indicate that the
 stream will never have more than a single target. It
 consequently implies that the stream will never need to support
 any form of multicasting. Use of the PTP option may thus allow
 efficiencies in the way the stream is built or is
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 managed. Specifically, the ST agents do not need to request
 that the intervening networks allocate multicast groups to
 support this stream.
 The PTP option can only be set to one (1) by the origin, and
 must be the same for the entire stream (i.e., propagated by ST
 agents). The details of what this option does are
 implementation specific, and do not affect the protocol very
 much.
 If the application attempts to add a new target to an existing
 stream that was created with the PTP option set to one (1), the
 application should be informed of the error with an ERROR-IN-
 REQUEST message with the appropriate reason code. If a CONNECT
 is received whose TargetList contains more than a single entry,
 an ERROR-IN-REQUEST message with the appropriate reason code
 (PTPError) should be returned to the previous-hop agent (note
 that such a CONNECT should never be received if the origin both
 implements the PTP option and is functioning properly).
 As implied in the last paragraph, a subsetted implementation
 might choose not to implement the PTP option.
 3.6.3. FDx Option
 The FDx option is used to indicate that a second stream in the
 reverse direction, from the target to the origin, should
 automatically be created. This option is most likely to be
 used when the TargetList has only a single entry. If used when
 the TargetList has multiple entries, the resulting streams
 would allow bi-directional communication between the origin and
 the various targets, but not among the targets. The FDx option
 can only be invoked by the origin, and must be propagated by
 intermediate agents.
 This option is specified by inclusion of both an RFlowSpec and
 an RHID parameter in the CONNECT message (possibly with an
 optional RGroup parameter).
 Any ST agent that receives a CONNECT message with both an
 RFlowSpec and an RHID parameter will create database entries
 for streams in both directions and will allocate resources in
 both directions for them. By this we mean that an ST agent
 will reserve resources to the next-hop agent for the normal
 stream and resources back to the previous-hop agent for the
 reverse stream. This is necessary since it is expected that
 network reservation interfaces will require the destination
 address(es) in order to make reservations, and because all ST
 agents must use the same reservation model.
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 The target agent will select a Name for the reverse stream and
 return it (in the RName parameter) and the resulting FlowSpec
 (in the RFlowSpec parameter) of the ACCEPT message. Each agent
 that processes the ACCEPT will update its partial stream
 database entry for the reverse stream with the Name contained
 in the RName parameter. We assume that the next higher
 protocol layer will use the same SAP for both streams.
 3.6.4. NoRecovery Option
 The NoRecovery option is used to indicate that ST agents should
 not attempt recovery in case of network or component failure.
 If a failure occurs, the origin will be notified via a REFUSE
 message and the target(s) via a DISCONNECT, with an appropriate
 reason code of "failure" (i.e., one of DropFailAgt,
 DropFailHst, DropFailIfc, DropFailNet, IntfcFailure,
 NetworkFailure, STAgentFailure, FailureRecovery). They can
 then decide whether to wait for the failed component to be
 fixed, or drop the target via DISCONNECT/REFUSE messages. The
 NoRecovery option can only be set to one (1) by the origin, and
 must be the same for the entire stream.
 3.6.5. RevChrg Option
 The RevChrg option bit in the FlowSpec is set to one (1) by the
 origin to request that the target(s) pay any charges associated
 with the stream (to the target(s)); see Section 4.2.2.3 (page
 83). If the target is not willing to accept charges, the bit
 should be set to zero (0) by the target before returning the
 FlowSpec to the origin in an ACCEPT message.
 If the FDx option is also specified, the target pays charges
 for both streams.
 3.6.6. Source Route Option
 The Source Route Option may be used both for diagnostic
 purposes, and, in those hopefully infrequent cases where the
 standard routing mechanisms do not produce paths that satisfy
 some policy constraint, to allow the origin to prespecify the
 ST agents along the path to the target(s). The idea is that
 the origin can explicitly specify the path to a target, either
 strictly hop-by-hop or more loosely by specification of one or
 more agents through which the path must pass.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 The option is specified by including source routing information
 in the Target structure. A target may contain zero or more
 SrcRoute options; when multiple options are present, they are
 processed in the order in which they occur. The parameter code
 indicates whether the portion of the path contained in the
 parameter is of the strict or loose variety.
 Since portions of a path may pass through portions of an
 internet that does not support ST agents, there are also forms
 of the SrcRoute option that are converted into the
Application Agent A Agent 2 Agent 3 Agent B
1. (open B<SR=2,3>)
2. V  (proc B listening)
3. (source routed to 2)
 V
4. (check resources from A to Agent 2: already allocated,
 V reuse control link & HID, no additional resources needed)
5. +-> CONNECT B<SR=2,3>->-+-+
 <RVLId=23><SVLId=5> | |
6. <Ref=50>  V |
7. +<- ACK ----------------+ |
 <RVLId=5><SVLId=23> |
 <Ref=50> V
8. (source routed to 3)
 V
9. (reserve resources 2 to 3)
 V
10. +-> CONNECT B<SR=3> ---->+
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=24> |
 <Ref=280><HID=4801> V
11. +<- HID-APPROVE <--------+
 <RVLId=24><SVLId=33> |
 <Ref=280><HID=4801> |
 V
 (routing to B)
 V
 (reserve resources from 3 to B)
 V
12. +-> CONNECT B ---------->+
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=32> |
 <Ref=330><HID=6000> V
13. +<- HID-APPROVE <--------+
 <RVLId=32><SVLId=45> |
 <Ref=330><HID=6000> V
14. (proc B accepts)
 V
 ... perform normal ACCEPT processing ... <-----+
 Figure 17. Source Routing Option
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 corresponding IP Source Routing options by the ST agent that
 performs the encapsulation.
 The SrcRoute option is usually selected by the origin, but may
 be used by intermediate agents if specified as a result of the
 routing function.
 For example, in the topology of Figure 2, if A wants to add B
 back into the stream, its routing function might decide that
 the best path is via Agent 3. Since the data is already being
 multicast across the network connected to C, D, and E, the
 route via Agent 3 might cost less than having A replicate the
 data packets and send them across A's network a second time.
 3.7. Ancillary Functions
 There are several functions and procedures that are required by
 the ST Protocol. They are described in subsequent sections.
 3.7.1. Failure Detection
 The ST failure detection mechanism is based on two assumptions:
 1 If a neighbor of an ST agent is up, and has been up
 without a disruption, and has not notified the ST agent
 of a problem with streams that pass through both, then
 the ST agent can assume that there has not been any
 problem with those streams.
 2 A network through which an ST agent has routed a stream
 will notify the ST agent if there is a problem that
 affects the stream data packets but does not affect the
 control packets.
 The purpose of the robustness protocol defined here is for ST
 agents to determine that the streams through a neighbor have
 been broken by the failure of the neighbor or the intervening
 network. This protocol should detect the overwhelming majority
 of failures that can occur. Once a failure is detected,
 recovery procedures are initiated.
 3.7.1.1. Network Failures
 In this memo, a network is defined to be the protocol
 layer(s) below ST. This function can be implemented in a
 hardware module separate from the ST agent, or as software
 modules within the ST agent itself, or as a combination of
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 both. This specification and the robustness protocol do not
 differentiate between these alternatives.
 An ST agent can detect network failures by two mechanisms;
 the network can report a failure, or the ST agent can
 discover a failure by itself. They differ in the amount of
 information that ST agent has available to it in order to
 make a recovery decision. For example, a network may be
 able to report that reserved bandwidth has been lost and the
 reason for the loss and may also report that connectivity to
 the neighboring ST agent remains intact. In this case, the
 ST agent may request the network to allocate bandwidth anew.
 On the other hand, an ST agent may discover that
 communication with a neighboring ST agent has ceased because
 it has not received any traffic from that neighbor in some
 time period. If an ST agent detects a failure, it may not
 be able to determine if the failure was in the network while
 the neighbor remains available, or the neighbor has failed
 while the network remains intact.
 3.7.1.2. Detecting ST Stream Failures
 Each ST agent periodically sends each neighbor with which it
 shares a stream a HELLO message. A HELLO message is ACKed
 if the Reference field is non-zero. This message exchange
 is between ST agents, not entities representing streams or
 applications (there is no Name field in a HELLO message).
 That is, an ST agent need only send a single HELLO message
 to a neighbor regardless of the number of streams that flow
 between them. All ST agents (host as well as intermediate)
 must participate in this exchange. However, only agents
 that share active streams need to participate in this
 exchange.
 To facilitate processing of HELLO messages, an
 implementation may either create a separate Virtual Link
 Identifier for each neighbor having an active stream, or may
 use the reserved identifier of one (1) for the SVLId field
 in all its HELLO messages.
 An implementation that wishes to send its HELLO messages via
 a data path instead of the control path may setup a separate
 stream to its neighbor agent for that purpose. The HELLO
 message would contain a HID of zero, indicating a control
 message, but would be identified to the next lower protocol
 layer as being part of the separate stream.
 As well as identifying the sender, the HELLO message has two
 fields; a HelloTimer field that is in units of milliseconds
 modulo the maximum for the field size, and a
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 Restarted bit specifying that the ST agent has been
 restarted recently. The HelloTimer must appear to be
 incremented every millisecond whether a HELLO message is
 sent or not, but it is allowable for an ST agent to create a
 new HelloTimer only when it sends a HELLO message. The
 HelloTimer wraps around to zero after reaching the maximum
 value. Whenever an ST agent suffers a catastrophic event
 that may result in it losing ST state information, it must
 reset its HelloTimer to zero and must set the Restarted bit
 for the following HelloTimerHoldDown seconds.
 An ST agent must send HELLO messages to its neighbor with a
 period shorter than the smallest RecoveryTimeout parameter
 of the FlowSpecs of all the active streams that pass between
 the two agents, regardless of direction. This period must
 be smaller by a factor, called HelloLossFactor, which is at
 least as large as the greatest number of consecutive HELLO
 messages that could credibly be lost while the communication
 between the two ST agents is still viable.
 An ST agent may send simultaneous HELLO messages to all its
 neighbors at the rate necessary to support the smallest
 RecoveryTimeout of any active stream. Alternately, it may
 send HELLO messages to different neighbors independently at
 different rates corresponding to RecoveryTimeouts of
 individual streams.
 The agent that receives a HELLO message expects to receive
 at least one new HELLO message from a neighbor during the
 RecoveryTimeout of every active stream through that
 neighbor. It can detect duplicate or delayed HELLO messages
 by saving the HelloTimer field of the most recent valid
 HELLO message from that neighbor and comparing it with the
 HelloTimer field of incoming HELLO messages. It will only
 accept an incoming HELLO message from that neighbor if it
 has a HelloTimer field that is greater than the most recent
 valid HELLO message by the time elapsed since that message
 was received plus twice the maximum likely delay variance
 from that neighbor. If the ST agent does not receive a
 valid HELLO message within the RecoveryTimeout of a stream,
 it must assume that the neighboring ST agent or the
 communication link between the two has failed and it must
 initiate stream recovery activity.
 Furthermore, if an ST agent receives a HELLO message that
 contains the Restarted bit set, it must assume that the
 sending ST agent has lost its ST state. If it shares
 streams with that neighbor, it must initiate stream recovery
 activity. If it does not share streams with that neighbor,
 it should not attempt to create one until that
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 bit is no longer set. If an ST agent receives a CONNECT
 message from a neighbor whose Restarted bit is still set, it
 must respond with ERROR-IN-REQUEST with the appropriate
 reason code (RemoteRestart). If it receives a CONNECT
 message while its own Restarted bit is set, it must respond
 with ERROR-IN-REQUEST with the appropriate reason code
 (RestartLocal).
 3.7.1.3. Subset
 This failure detection mechanism subsets by reducing the
 complexity of the timing and decisions. A subsetted ST
 agent sends HELLO messages to all its ST neighbors
 regardless of whether there is an active ST stream between
 them or not. The RecoveryTimeout parameter of the FlowSpec
 is ignored and is assumed to be the DefaultRecoveryTimeout.
 Note that this implies that a REFUSE should be sent for all
 CONNECT or CHANGE messages whose RecoveryTimeout is less
 than DefaultRecoveryTimeout. An ST agent will accept an
 incoming HELLO message if it has a HelloTimer field that is
 greater than the most recent valid HELLO message by
 DefaultHelloFactor times the time elapsed since that message
 was received.
 3.7.2. Failure Recovery
 Streams can fail from various causes; an ST agent can break, a
 network can break, or an ST agent can intentionally break a
 stream in order to give the stream's resources to a higher
 precedence stream. We can envision several approaches to
 recovery of broken streams, and we consider the one described
 here the simplest and therefore the most likely to be
 implemented and work.
 If an intermediate agent fails or a network or part of a
 network fails, the previous-hop agent and the various next-hop
 agents will discover the fact by the failure detection
 mechanism described in Section 3.7.1 (page 48). An ST agent
 that intentionally breaks a stream obviously knows of the
 event.
 The recovery of an ST stream is a relatively complex and time
 consuming effort because it is designed in a general manner to
 operate across a large number of networks with diverse
 characteristics. Therefore, it may require information to be
 distributed widely, and may require relatively long timers. On
 the other hand, since a network is a homogeneous system,
 failure recovery in the network may be a relatively faster and
 simpler operation. Therefore an ST agent that detects a
 failure should attempt to fix the network failure before
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 attempting recovery of the ST stream. If the stream that
 existed between two ST agents before the failure cannot be
 reconstructed by network recovery mechanisms alone, then the ST
 stream recovery mechanism must be invoked.
 If stream recovery is necessary, the different ST agents may
 need to perform different functions, depending on their
 relation to the failure.
 An intermediate agent that breaks the stream intentionally
 sends DISCONNECT messages with the appropriate reason code
 (StreamPreempted) toward the affected targets. If the
 NoRecovery option is selected, it sends a REFUSE message with
 the appropriate reason code(StreamPreempted) toward the origin.
 If the NoRecovery option is not selected, then this agent
 attempts recovery of the stream, as described below.
 A host agent that is a target of the broken stream or is itself
 the next-hop of the failed component should release resources
 that are allocated to the stream, but should maintain the
 internal state information describing the stream. It should
 inform any next higher protocol of the failure. It is
 appropriate for that protocol to expect that the stream will be
 fixed shortly by some alternate path and so maintain, for some
 time period, whatever information in the ST layer, the next
 higher layer, and the application is necessary to reactivate
 quickly entries for the stream as the alternate path develops.
 The agent should use a timeout to delete all the stream
 information in case the stream cannot be fixed in a reasonable
 time.
 An intermediate agent that is a next-hop of a failure that was
 not due to a preemption should first verify that there was a
 failure. It can do this using STATUS messages to query its
 upstream neighbor. If it cannot communicate with that
 neighbor, then it should first send a REFUSE message with the
 appropriate reason code of "failure" to the neighbor to speed
 up the failure recovery in case the hop is unidirectional,
 i.e., the neighbor can hear the agent but the agent cannot hear
 the neighbor. The ST agent detecting the failure must then
 send DISCONNECT messages with the same reason code toward the
 targets. The intermediate agents process this DISCONNECT
 message just like the DISCONNECT that tears down the stream.
 However, a target ST agent that receives a DISCONNECT message
 with the appropriate reason code (StreamPreempted, or
 "failure") will maintain the stream state and notify the next
 higher protocol of the failure. In effect, these DISCONNECT
 messages tear down the stream from the point of the failure to
 the targets, but inform the targets that the stream may be
 fixed shortly.
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 An ST agent that is the previous-hop before the failed
 component first verifies that there was a failure by querying
 the downstream neighbor using STATUS messages. If the neighbor
 has lost its state but is available, then the ST agent may
 reconstruct the stream if the NoRecovery option is not
 selected, as described below. If it cannot communicate with
 the next-hop, then the agent detecting the failure releases any
 resources that are dedicated exclusively to sending data on the
 broken branch and sends a DISCONNECT message with the
 appropriate reason code ("failure") toward the affected
 targets. It does so to speed up failure recovery in case the
 communication may be unidirectional and this message might be
 delivered successfully.
 If the NoRecovery option is selected, then the ST agent that
 detects the failure sends a REFUSE message with the appropriate
 reason code ("failure") to the previous-hop. If it is breaking
 the stream intentionally, it sends a REFUSE message with the
 appropriate reason code (StreamPreempted) to the previous-hop.
 The TargetList in these messages contains all the targets that
 were reached through the broken branch. Multiple REFUSE
 messages may be required if the PDU is too long for the MTU of
 the intervening network. The REFUSE message is propagated all
 the way to the origin, which can attempt recovery of the stream
 by sending a new CONNECT to the affected targets. The new
 CONNECT will be treated by intermediate ST agents as an
 addition of new targets into the established stream.
 If the NoRecovery option is not selected, the ST agent that
 breaks the stream intentionally or is the previous-hop before
 the failed component can attempt recovery of the stream. It
 does so by issuing a new CONNECT message to the affected
 targets. If the ST agent cannot find new routes to some
 targets, or if the only route to some targets is through the
 previous-hop, then it sends one or more REFUSE messages to the
 previous-hop with the appropriate reason code ("failure" or
 StreamPreempted) specifying the affected targets in the
 TargetList. The previous-hop can then attempt recovery of the
 stream by issuing a CONNECT to those targets. If it cannot
 find an appropriate route, it will propagate the REFUSE message
 toward the origin.
 Regardless of which agent attempts recovery of a damaged
 stream, it will issue one or more CONNECT messages to the
 affected targets. These CONNECT messages are treated by
 intermediate ST agents as additions of new targets into the
 established stream. The FlowSpecs of the new CONNECT messages
 should be the same as the ones contained in the most recent
 CONNECT or CHANGE messages that the ST agent had sent toward
 the affected targets when the stream was operational.
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 The reconstruction of a broken stream may not proceed smoothly.
 Since there may be some delay while the information concerning
 the failure is propagated throughout an internet, routing
 errors may occur for some time after a failure. As a result,
 the ST agent attempting the recovery may receive REFUSE or
 ERROR-IN-REQUEST messages for the new CONNECTs that are caused
 by internet routing errors. The ST agent attempting the
 recovery should be prepared to resend CONNECTs before it
 succeeds in reconstructing the stream. If the failure
 partitions the internet and a new set of routes cannot be found
 to the targets, the REFUSE messages will eventually be
 propagated to the origin, which can then inform the application
 so it can decide whether to terminate or to continue to attempt
 recovery of the stream.
 The new CONNECT may at some point reach an ST agent downstream
 of the failure before the DISCONNECT does. In this case, the
 agent that receives the CONNECT is not yet aware that the
 stream has suffered a failure, and will interpret the new
 CONNECT as resulting from a routing failure. It will respond
 with an ERROR-IN-REQUEST message with the appropriate reason
 code (StreamExists). Since the timeout that the ST agents
 immediately preceding the failure and immediately following the
 failure are approximately the same, it is very likely that the
 remnants of the broken stream will soon be torn down by a
 DISCONNECT message with the appropriate reason code
 ("failure"). Therefore, the ST agent that receives the ERROR-
 IN-REQUEST message with reason code (StreamExists) should
 retransmit the CONNECT message after the ToConnect timeout
 expires. If this fails again, the request will be retried for
 NConnect times. Only if it still fails will the ST agent send
 a REFUSE message with the appropriate reason code (RouteLoop)
 to its previous-hop. This message will be propagated back to
 the ST agent that is attempting recovery of the damaged stream.
 That ST agent can issue a new CONNECT message if it so chooses.
 The REFUSE is matched to a CONNECT message created by a
 recovery operation through the LnkReference field in the
 CONNECT.
 ST agents that have propagated a CONNECT message and have
 received a REFUSE message should maintain this information for
 some period of time. If an agent receives a second CONNECT
 message for a target that recently resulted in a REFUSE, that
 agent may respond with a REFUSE immediately rather than
 attempting to propagate the CONNECT. This has the effect of
 pruning the tree that is formed by the propagation of CONNECT
 messages to a target that is not reachable by the routes that
 are selected first. The tree will pass through any given ST
 agent only once, and the stream setup phase will be completed
 faster.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 The time period for which the failure information is maintained
 must be consistent with the expected lifetime of that
 information. Failures due to lack of reachability will remain
 relevant for time periods large enough to allow for network
 reconfigurations or repairs. Failures due to routing loops
 will be valid only until the relevant routing information has
 propagated, which can be a short time period. Lack of
 bandwidth resulting from over-allocation will remain valid
 until streams are terminated, which is an unpredictable time,
 so the time that such information is maintained should also be
 short.
 If a CONNECT message reaches a target, the target should as
 efficiently as possible use the state that it has saved from
 before the stream failed during recovery of the stream. It
 will then issue an ACCEPT message toward the origin. The
 ACCEPT message will be intercepted by the ST agent that is
 attempting recovery of the damaged stream, if not the origin.
 If the FlowSpec contained in the ACCEPT specifies the same
 selection of parameters as were in effect before the failure,
 then the ST agent that is attempting recovery will not
 propagate the ACCEPT. If the selections of the parameters are
 different, then the agent that is attempting recovery will send
 the origin a NOTIFY message with the appropriate reason code
 (FailureRecovery) that contains a FlowSpec that specifies the
 new parameter values. The origin may then have to change its
 data generation characteristics and the stream's parameters
 with a CHANGE message to use the newly recovered subtree.
 3.7.2.1. Subset
 Subsets of this mechanism may reduce the functionality in
 the following ways. A host agent might not retain state
 describing a stream that fails with a DISCONNECT message
 with the appropriate reason code ("failure" or
 StreamPreempted).
 An agent might force the NoRecovery option always to be set.
 In this case, it will allow the option to be propagated in
 the CONNECT message, but will propagate the REFUSE message
 with the appropriate reason code ("failure" or
 StreamPreempted) without attempting recovery of the damaged
 stream.
 If an ST agent allows stream recovery and attempts recovery
 of a stream, it might choose a FlowSpec to specify exactly
 the current values of the parameters, with no ranges or
 options.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 3.7.3. A Group of Streams
 There may be a need to associate related streams. The Group
 mechanism is simply an association technique that allows ST
 agents to identify the different streams that are to be
 associated. Streams are in the same Group if they have the
 same Group Name in the GroupName field of the (R)Group
 parameter. At this time there are no ST control messages that
 modify Groups. Group Names have the same format as stream
 Names, and can share the same name space. A stream that is a
 member of a Group can specify one or more (Subgroup Identifier,
 Relation) tuples. The Relation specifies how the members of
 the Subgroup of the Group are related. The Subgroups
 Identifiers need only be unique within the Group.
 Streams can be associated into Groups to support activities
 that deal with a number of streams simultaneously. The
 operation of Groups of streams is a matter for further study,
 and this mechanism is provided to support that study. This
 mechanism allows streams to be identified as belonging to a
 given Group and Subgroup, but in order to have any effect, the
 behavior that is expected of the Relation must be implemented
 in the ST agents. Possible applications for this mechanism
 include the following:
 o Associating streams that are part of a floor-controlled
 conference. In this case, only one origin can send data
 through its stream at any given time. Therefore, at any
 point where more than one stream passes through a branch
 or network, only enough bandwidth for one stream needs
 to be allocated.
 o Associating streams that cannot exist independently. An
 example of this may be the various streams that carry
 the audio, video, and data components of a conference,
 or the various streams that carry data from the
 different participants in a conference. In this case,
 if some ST agent must preempt more than a single stream,
 and it has selected any one of the streams so
 associated, then it should also preempt the rest of the
 members of that Subgroup rather than preempting any
 other streams.
 o Associating streams that must not be completed
 independently. This example is similar to the preceding
 one, but relates to the stream setup phase. In this
 example, any single member of a Subgroup of streams need
 not be completed unless the rest are also completed.
 Therefore, if one stream becomes blocked, all the others
 will also be blocked. In this case, if there are not
 enough resources to support all the conferences that are
 attempted, some number of the conferences will complete
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 and other will be blocked, rather than all conferences
 be partially completed and partially blocked.
 This document assumes that the creation and membership of the
 Group will be managed by the next protocol above ST, with the
 assistance of ST. For example, the next higher protocol
 would request ST to create a unique Group Name and a set of
 Subgroups with specified characteristics. The next higher
 protocol would distribute this information to the other
 participants that were to be members of the Group. Each
 would transfer the Group Name, Subgroups, and Relations to
 the ST layer, which would simply include them in the stream
 state.
 3.7.3.1. Group Name Generator
 This facility is provided so that an application or higher
 layer protocol can obtain a unique Group Name from the ST
 layer. This is a mechanism for the application to request
 the allocation of a Group Name that is independent of the
 request to create a stream. The Group Name is used by the
 application or higher layer protocol when creating the
 streams that are to be part of a group. All that is
 required is a function of the form:
 AllocateGroupName()
 -> result, GroupName
 A corresponding function to release a Group Name is also
 desirable; its form is:
 ReleaseGroupName( GroupName )
 -> result
 3.7.3.2. Subset
 Since Groups are currently intended to support
 experimentation, and it is not clear how best to use them,
 it is appropriate for an implementation not to support
 Groups. At this time, a subsetted ST agent may ignore the
 Group parameter. It is expected that in the future, when
 Groups transition from being an experimental concept to an
 operational one, it may be the case that such subsetting
 will no longer be acceptable. At that time, a new
 subsetting option may be defined.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 3.7.4. HID Negotiation
 Each data packet must carry a value to identify the stream to
 which it belongs, so that forwarding can be performed.
 Conceptually, this value could be the Name of the stream. A
 shorthand identifier is desirable for two reasons. First,
 since each data packet must carry this identifier, network
 bandwidth efficiency suggests that it be as small as
 possible. This is particularly important for applications
 that use small data packets, and that use low bandwidth
 networks, such as voice across packet radio networks.
 Second, the operation of mapping this identifier into a data
 object that contains the forwarding information must be
 performed at each intermediate ST agent in the stream. To
 minimize delay and processing overhead, this operation should
 be as efficient as possible. Most likely, this identifier
 will be used to index into an internal table. To meet these
 goals, ST has chosen to use a 16-bit hop-by-hop identifier
 (HID). It is large enough to handle the foreseen number of
 streams during the expected life of the protocol while small
 enough not to preclude its use as a forwarding table index.
 Note, however, that HID 0 is reserved for control messages,
 and that HIDs 1-3 are also reserved for future use.
 When ST makes use of multicast ability in networks that
 provide it, a data packet multicast by an ST agent will be
 received identically by several next-hop ST agents. In a
 multicast environment, the HID must be selected either by
 some network-wide mechanism that selects unique identifiers,
 or it must be selected by the sender of the CONNECT message.
 Since we feel any network-wide mechanism is outside the scope
 of this protocol, we propose that the previous-hop agent
 select the HID and send it in the CONNECT message (with the
 HID Field option set, see Section 3.6.1 (page 44)) subject to
 the approval of the next-hop agents. We call this "HID
 negotiation".
 As an origin ST agent is creating a stream or as an
 intermediate agent is propagating a CONNECT message, it must
 make a routing decision to determine which targets will be
 reached through which next-hop ST agents. In some cases,
 several next-hops can be reached through a network that
 supports multicast delivery. If so, those next-hops will be
 made members of a multicast group and data packets will be
 sent to the group. Different CONNECT messages are sent to
 the several next-hops even if the data packets will be sent
 to the multicast group, because the CONNECT messages contain
 different TargetLists and are acknowledged and accepted
 separately. However, the HID contained by the different
 CONNECT message must be identical. The ST agent selects a
 16-bit quantity to be the HID and inserts it into each
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 CONNECT message that is then sent to the appropriate
 next-hop.
 The next-hop agents that receive the CONNECT messages must
 propagate the CONNECT messages toward the targets, but must
 also look at the HID and decide whether they can approve it.
 An ST agent can only receive data packets with a given HID if
 they belong to a single stream. If the ST agent already has
 an established stream that uses the proposed HID, this is a
 HID collision, and the agent cannot approve the HID for the
 new stream. Otherwise the agent can approve the HID. If it
 can approve the HID, then it must make note of that HID and
 it must respond with a HID-APPROVE message (unless it can
 immediately respond with an ERROR-IN-REQUEST or a REFUSE).
 If it cannot approve the HID then it must respond with a
 HID-REJECT message.
 An agent that sends a CONNECT message with the H bit set
 awaits its acknowledgment message (which could be a
 HID-ACCEPT, HID-REJECT, or an ERROR-IN-REQUEST) from the
 next-hops independently of receiving ACCEPT messages. If it
 does not receive an acknowledgment within timeout ToConnect,
 it will resend the CONNECT. If each next-hop agent responds
 with a HID-ACCEPT, this implies that they have each approved
 of the HID, so it can be used for all subsequent data
 packets. If one or more next-hops respond with an
 HID-REJECT, then the agent that selected the HID must select
 another HID and send it to each next-hop in a set of
 HID-CHANGE messages. The next-hop agents must respond to
 (and thus acknowledge) these HID-CHANGE messages with either
 a HID-ACCEPT or a HID-REJECT (or, in the case of an error, an
 ERROR-IN-REQUEST, or a REFUSE if the next-hop agent wants to
 abort the HID negotiation process after rejecting NHIDAbort
 proposed HIDs). If the agent does not receive such a
 response within timeout ToHIDChange, it will resend the
 HID-CHANGE up to NHIDChange times. If any next-hop agents
 respond with a REFUSE message that specifies all the targets
 that were included in the corresponding CONNECT, then that
 next-hop is removed from the negotiation. The overall
 negotiation is complete only when the agent receives a
 HID-ACCEPT to the same proposed HID from all the next-hops
 that do not respond with an ERROR-IN-REQUEST or a REFUSE.
 This negotiation may continue an indeterminate length of
 time. In fact, the CONNECT messages could propagate to the
 targets and their ACCEPT messages may potentially propagate
 back to the origin before the negotiation is complete. If
 this were permitted, the origin would not be aware of the
 incomplete negotiation and could begin to send data packets.
 Then the agent that is attempting to select a HID would have
 to discard any data rather than sending it to the next-hops
 since it might not have a valid HID to send with the data.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 To prevent this situation, an ACCEPT should not be propagated
 back to the previous-hop until the HID negotiation with the
 next-hops has been completed.
 Although it is possible that the negotiation extends for an
 arbitrary length of time, we consider this to be very
 unlikely. Since the HID is only relevant across a single
 hop, we can estimate the probability that a randomly selected
 HID will conflict with the HID of an established stream.
 Consider a stream in which the hop from an ST agent to ten
 next-hop agents is through the multicast facility of a given
 network. Assume also that each of the next-hop agents
 participates in 1000 other streams, and that each has been
 created with a different HID. A randomly selected 16-bit HID
 will have a probability of greater than 85.9% of succeeding
 on the first try, 98.1% of succeeding on the second, and
 99.8% of succeeding on the third. We therefore suggest that
 a 16-bit HID space is sufficiently large to support ST until
 better multicast HID selection procedures, e.g., HID servers,
 can be deployed.
 An obvious way to select the HID is for the ST agents to use
 a random number generator as suggested above. An alternate
 mechanism is for the intermediate agents to use the HID
 contained in the incoming CONNECT message for all the
 outgoing CONNECT messages, and generate a random number only
 as a second choice. In this case, the origin ST agent would
 Agent 3 Agent B
 1. +-> CONNECT B -------------->+
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=32> |
 <Ref=315><HID=5990> V
 2. (Check HID Table, 5990 busy, 6000-11 unused)
 V
 3. +<- HID-REJECT --------------+
 | <RVLId=32><SVLId=45>
 | <Ref=315><HID=5990>
 V <FreeHIDs=5990:0000FFF0>
 4. +-> HID-CHANGE ------------>+
 <RVLId=45><SVLId=32> |
 <Ref=320><HID=6000> V
 5. (Check HID Table, 6000 (still) available)
 V
 6. +<- HID-APPROVE -------------+
 <RVLId=32><SVLId=45>
 <Ref=320><HID=6000>
 7. (Both parties have now agreed to use HID 6000)
 Figure 18. Typical HID Negotiation (No Multicasting)
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 be responsible for generating the HID, and the same HID could
 be propagated for the entire stream. This approach has the
 marginal advantage that the HID could be created by a higher
 layer protocol that might have global knowledge and could
 select small, globally unique HIDs for all the streams. While
 this is possible, we leave it for further study.
 Agent 2 Agent C Agent D
 1. +->+-> CONNECT ---------------------------------->+
 | <RVLId=0><SVLId=26> |
 | <Ref=250><HID=4824> |
 V <Mcast=224.1.18.216,01:00:5E:01:12:d8> |
 2. +-> CONNECT --------------------+ |
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=25> | |
 <Ref=252><HID=4824> | V
 3. <Mcast=224.1.18.216, V (Check HID Table)
 4. 01:00:5E:01:12:d8> (Check HID Table) (4824 ok)
 (4824 busy) (4800-4809 ok)
 (4800-4820 ok) |
 V |
 5. +<- HID-REJECT -----------------+ |
 | <RVLId=25><SVLId=54> |
 | <Ref=252><HID=4824> |
 V <FreeHIDs=4824:FFFFF800> V
 6. +<-+<- HID-APPROVE -------------------------------+
 | <RVLId=26><SVLId=64>
 | <Ref=250><HID=4824>
 V <FreeHIDs=4824:FFC00080>
 (find common HID 4800)
 V
 7. +->+-> HID-CHANGE ------------------------------->+
 | <RVLId=64><SVLId=26> |
 V <Ref=253><HID=4800> |
 8. +-> HID-CHANGE ---------------->+ |
 <RVLId=54><SVLId=25> | V
 9. <Ref=254><HID=4800> V (Check HID Table)
 10. (Check HID Table) (4800 ok)
 (4800-4820 ok) (4800-4809 ok)
 V |
 11. +<- HID-APPROVE ----------------+ |
 | <RVLId=25><SVLId=54> |
 | <Ref=254><HID=4800> |
 V <FreeHIDs=4800:7FFFF800> V
 12. +<-+<- HID-APPROVE -------------------------------+
 | <RVLId=26><SVLId=64>
 | <Ref=253><HID=4800>
 V <FreeHIDs=4800:7FC00080>
 13. (all parties have now agreed to use HID 4800)
 Figure 19. Multicast HID Negotiation
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 Agent 2 Agent C Agent D Agent 3
 1. +----> CONNECT B ------------------------------------>+
 <RVLId=0><SVLId=24> V
 2. <Ref=260><HID=4800> (Check HID Table)
 <Mcast=224.1.18.216, (4800 busy, 4801-4810 ok)
 01:00:5E:01:12:d8> V
 3. +<---- HID-REJECT <-----------------------------------+
 | <RVLId=24><SVLId=33>
 | <Ref=260><HID=4824>
 V <FreeHIDs=4824:7FE00000>
 4. (find common HID 4810)
 V
 5. +->+-> HID-CHANGE ----------------------------------->+
 | <RVLId=33><SVLId=24> |
 V <Ref=262><HID=4810> |
 6. +-> HID-CHANGE-ADD ------------------->+ |
 | <RVLId=64><SVLId=26> | V
 7. V <Ref=263><HID=4810> | (Check HID Table)
 8. +-> HID-CHANGE-ADD ---->+ | (4801-4815 ok)
 <RVLId=54><SVLId=25>| V |
 9. <Ref=265><HID=4810> V (Check HID Table) |
 10. (Check HID Table) (4810 busy) |
 (4801-4812 ok) (4801-4807 ok) |
 V | |
 11. +<- HID-APPROVE <-------+ | |
 | <RVLId=25><SVLId=54> | |
 | <Ref=265><HID=4810> | |
 V <FreeHIDs=4810:7FD8000> V |
 12. +<- HID-REJECT <-----------------------+ |
 | <RVLId=26><SVLId=64> |
 | <Ref=263><HID=4810> |
 V <FreeHIDs=4810:7F000000> V
 13. +<-+<- HID-APPROVE <----------------------------------+
 | <RVLId=24><SVLId=33>
 | <Ref=262><HID=4810>
 V <FreeHIDs=4810:7FDF0000>
 14. +->+-> HID-CHANGE-DELETE ---------------------------->+
 | | <RVLId=33><SVLId=24> |
 | V <Ref=266><HID=4810> |
 15. | +-> HID-CHANGE-DELETE ->+ |
 | <RVLId=54><SVLId=25>| |
 | <Ref=268><HID=4810> V |
 16. | +<- HID-APPROVE --------+ |
 | <RVLId=25><SVLId=54> |
 | <Ref=268><HID=0> V
 17. | +<- HID-APPROVE -----------------------------------+
 | <RVLId=24><SVLId=33>
 V <Ref=266><HID=0>
 18. (find common HID 4801)
 Figure 20. Multicast HID Re-Negotiation (part 1)
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 Agent 2 Agent C Agent D Agent 3
 18. (find common HID 4801)
 V
 19. +->+-> HID-CHANGE ----------------------------------->+
 | <RVLId=33><SVLId=24> |
 V <Ref=270><HID=4801> |
 20. +-> HID-CHANGE-ADD ------------------->+ |
 | <RVLId=64><SVLId=26> | V
 21. V <Ref=273><HID=4801> | (Check HID Table)
 22. +-> HID-CHANGE-ADD ---->+ | (4801-4815 ok)
 <RVLId=54><SVLId=25>| V |
 23. <Ref=274><HID=4801> V (Check HID Table) |
 24. (Check HID Table)(4801-4807 ok) |
 (4801-4812 ok) | |
 V | |
 25. +<- HID-APPROVE <-------+ | |
 | <RVLId=25><SVLId=54> | |
 | <Ref=274><HID=4801> | |
 V <FreeHIDs=4801:3FF80000> V |
 26. +<- HID-APPROVE <----------------------+ |
 | <RVLId=26><SVLId=64> |
 | <Ref=273><HID=4801> |
 V <FreeHIDs=4801:3F000000> V
 27. +<-+<- HID-APPROVE <----------------------------------+
 | <RVLId=24><SVLId=33>
 | <Ref=270><HID=4801>
 V <FreeHIDs=4801:3FFF0000>
 28. (switch data stream to HID 4801, drop 4800)
 V
 29. +->+-> HID-CHANGE-DELETE ---------------->+
 | <RVLId=64><SVLId=26> |
 V <Ref=275><HID=4800> |
 30. +-> HID-CHANGE-DELETE ->+ |
 <RVLId=54><SVLId=25>| |
 <Ref=277><HID=4800> V |
 31. +<-+<- HID-APPROVE --------+ |
 | <RVLId=25><SVLId=54> |
 V <Ref=277><HID=0> V
 32. +<-+<- HID-APPROVE -----------------------+
 | <RVLId=26><SVLId=64>
 V <Ref=275><HID=0>
 (all parties have now agreed to use HID 4801)
 Figure 20. Multicast HID Re-Negotiation (part 2)
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 3.7.4.1. Subset
 The above mechanism can operate exactly as described even if
 the ST agents do not all use the entire 16 bits of the HID.
 A low capacity ST agent that cannot support a large number
 of simultaneous streams may use only some of the bits in the
 HID, say for example the low order byte. This may allow
 this disadvantaged agent to use smaller internal data
 structures at the expense of causing HID collisions to occur
 more often. However, neither the disadvantaged agent's
 previous-hop nor its next-hops need be aware of its
 limitations. In the HID negotiation, the negotiators still
 exchange a 16-bit quantity.
 3.7.5. IP Encapsulation of ST
 ST packets may be encapsulated in IP to allow them to pass
 through routers that don't support the ST Protocol. Of course,
 ST resource management is precluded over such a path, and
 packet overhead is increased by encapsulation, but if the
 performance is reasonably predictable this may be better than
 not communicating at all. IP encapsulation may also be
 required either for enhanced security (see Section 3.7.8 (page
 67)) or for user-space implementations of ST in hosts that
 don't allow demultiplexing on the IP Version Number field (see
 Section 4 (page 75)), but do allow access to raw IP packets.
 IP-encapsulated ST packets begin with a normal IP header. Most
 fields of the IP header should be filled in according to the
 same rules that apply to any other IP packet. Three fields of
 special interest are:
 o Protocol is 5 to indicate an ST packet is enclosed, as
 opposed to TCP or UDP, for example. The assignment of
 protocol 5 to ST is an arranged coincidence with the
 assignment of IP Version 5 to ST [18].
 o Destination Address is that of the next-hop ST agent.
 This may or may not be the target of the ST stream.
 There may be an intermediate ST agent to which the
 packet should be routed to take advantage of service
 guarantees on the path past that agent. Such an
 intermediate agent would not be on a directly-connected
 network (or else IP encapsulation wouldn't be needed),
 so it would probably not be listed in the normal routing
 table. Additional routing mechanisms, not defined here,
 will be required to learn about such agents.
 o Type-of-Service may be set to an appropriate value for
 the service being requested (usually low delay, high
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 throughput, normal reliability). This feature is not
 implemented uniformly in the Internet, so its use can't be
 precisely defined here.
 Since there can be no guarantees made about performance across
 a normal IP network, the ST agent that will encapsulate should
 modify the Desired FlowSpec parameters when the stream is being
 established to indicate that performance is not guaranteed. In
 particular, Reliability should be set to the minimum value
 (1/256), and suitably large values should be added to the
 Accumulated Mean Delay and Accumulated Delay Variance to
 reflect the possibility that packets may be delayed up to the
 point of discard when there is network congestion. A suitably
 large value is 255 seconds, the maximum packet lifetime as
 defined by the IP Time-to-Live field.
 IP encapsulation adds little difficulty for the ST agent that
 receives the packet. The IP header is simply removed, then the
 ST header is processed as usual.
 The more difficult part is during setup, when the ST agent must
 decide whether or not to encapsulate. If the next-hop ST agent
 is on a remote network and the route to that network is through
 a router that supports IP but not ST, then encapsulation is
 required. As mentioned in Section 3.8.1 (page 69), routing
 table entries must be expanded to indicate whether the router
 supports ST.
 On forwarding, the (mostly constant) IP Header must be inserted
 and the IP checksum appropriately updated.
 On a directly connected network, though, one might want to
 encapsulate only when sending to a particular destination host
 that does not allow demultiplexing on the IP Version Number
 field. This requires the routing table to include host-route
 as well as network-route entries. Host-route entries might
 require static definition if the hosts do not participate in
 the routing protocols. If packet size is not a critical
 performance factor, one solution is always to encapsulate on
 the directly connected network whenever some hosts require
 encapsulation. Those that don't require the encapsulation
 should be able to remove it upon reception.
 3.7.5.1. IP Multicasting
 If an ST agent must use IP encapsulation to reach multiple
 next-hops toward different targets, then either the packet
 must be replicated for transmission to each next-hop, or IP
 multicasting [6] may be used if it is implemented in the
 next-hop ST agents and in the intervening IP routers.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 This is analogous to using network-level service to
 multicast to several next-hop agents on a directly connected
 network.
 When the stream is established, the collection of next-hop
 ST agents must be set up as an IP multicast group. It may
 be necessary for the ST agent that wishes to send the IP
 multicast to allocate a transient multicast group address
 and then tell the next-hop agents to join the group. Use of
 the MulticastAddress parameter (see Section 4.2.2.7 (page
 86)) provides one way that the information may be
 communicated, but other techniques are possible. The
 multicast group address in inserted in the Destination
 Address field of the IP encapsulation when data packets are
 transmitted.
 A block of transient IP multicast addresses, 224.1.0.0 -
 224.1.255.255, has been allocated for this purpose. There
 are 2^16 addresses in this block, allowing a direct mapping
 with 16-bit HIDs, if appropriate. The mechanisms for
 allocating these addresses are not defined here.
 In addition, two permanent IP multicast addresses have been
 assigned to facilitate experimentation with exchange of
 routing or other information among ST agents. Those
 addresses are:
 224.0.0.7 All ST routers
 224.0.0.8 All ST hosts
 An ST router is an ST agent that can pass traffic between
 attached networks; an ST host is an ST agent that is
 connected to a single network or is not permitted to pass
 traffic between attached networks. Note that the range of
 these multicasts is normally just the attached local
 network, limited by setting the IP time-to-live field to 1
 (see [6]).
 3.7.6. Retransmission
 The ST Control Message Protocol is made reliable through use of
 retransmission when an expected acknowledgment is not received
 in a timely manner. The problem of when to send a
 retransmission has been studied for protocols such as TCP [2]
 [10] [11]. The problem should be simpler for ST since control
 messages usually only have to travel a single hop and they do
 not contain very much data. However, the algorithms developed
 for TCP are sufficiently simple that their use is recommended
 for ST as well; see [2]. An implementor might, for example,
 choose to keep statistics separately for each
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 neighboring ST agent, or combined into a single statistic for
 an attached network.
 Estimating the packet round-trip time (RTT) is a key function
 in reliable transport protocols such as TCP. Estimation must
 be dynamic, since congestion and resource contention result in
 varying delays. If RTT estimates are too low, packets will be
 retransmitted too frequently, wasting network capacity. If RTT
 estimates are too high, retransmissions will be delayed
 reducing network throughput when transmission errors occur.
 Article [11] identifies problems that arise when RTT estimates
 are poor, outlines how RTT is used and how retransmission
 timeouts (RTO) are estimated, and surveys several ways that RTT
 and RTO estimates can be improved.
 Note the HELLO/ACK mechanism described in Section 3.7.1.2 (page
 49) can give an estimate of the RTT and its variance. These
 estimates are also important for use with the delay and delay
 variance entries in the FlowSpec.
 3.7.7. Routing
 ST requires access to routing information in order to select a
 path from an origin to the destination(s). However, routing is
 considered to be a separate issue and neither the routing
 algorithm nor its implementation is specified here. ST should
 operate equally well with any reasonable routing algorithm.
 While ST may be capable of using several types of information
 that are not currently available, the minimal information
 required is that provided by IP, namely the ability to find an
 interface and next hop router for a specified IP destination
 address and Type of Service. Methods to make more information
 available and to use it are left for further study. For
 initial ST implementations, any routing information that is
 required but not automatically provided will be assumed to be
 manually configured into the ST agents.
 3.7.8. Security
 The ST Protocol by itself does not provide security services.
 It is more vulnerable to misdelivery and denial of service than
 IP since the ST Header only carries a 16-bit HID for
 identification purposes. Any information, such as source and
 destination addresses, which a higher-layer protocol might use
 to detect misdelivery are the responsibility of either the
 application or higher-layer protocol.
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 ST is less prone to traffic analysis than IP since the only
 identifying information contained in the ST Header is a hop-
 by-hop identifier (HID). However, the use of a HID is also
 what makes ST more vulnerable to denial of service since an ST
 agent has no reliable way to detect when bogus traffic is
 injected into, and thus consumes bandwidth from, a user's
 stream. Detection can be enhanced through use of per-interface
 forwarding tables and verification of local network source and
 destination addresses.
 We envision that applications that require security services
 will use facilities, such as the Secure Digital Networking
 System (SDNS) layer 3 Security Protocol (SP3/D) [19] [20]. In
 such an environment, ST PDUs would first be encapsulated in an
 IP Header, using IP Protocol 5 (ST) as described in Section
 3.7.5 (page 64). These IP datagrams would then be secured
 using SP3/D, which results in another IP Protocol 5 PDU that
 can be passed between ST agents.
 This memo does not specify how an application invokes security
 services.
 3.8. ST Service Interfaces
 ST has several interfaces to other modules in a communication
 system. ST provides its services to applications or transport-
 level protocols through its "upper" interface (or SAP). ST in
 turn uses the services provided by network layers, management
 functions (e.g., address translation and routing), and IP. The
 interfaces to these modules are described in this section in the
 form of subroutine calls. Note that this does not mean that an
 implementation must actually be implemented as subroutines, but is
 instead intended to identify the information to be passed between
 the modules.
 In this style of outlining the module interfaces, the information
 passed into a module is shown as arguments to the subroutine call.
 Return information and/or success/failure indications are listed
 after the arrow ("->") that follows the subroutine call. In
 several cases, a list of values must either be passed to or
 returned from a module interface. Examples include a set of
 target addresses, or the mappings from a target list to a set of
 next hop addresses that span the route to the originally listed
 targets. When such a list is appropriate, the values repeated for
 each list element are bracketed and an asterisk is added to
 indicate that zero, one, or many list elements can be passed
 across the interface (e.g., "<target>*" means zero, one, or more
 targets).
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 3.8.1. Access to Routing Information
 The design of routing functions that can support a variety of
 resource management algorithms is difficult. In this section
 we suggest a set of preliminary interfaces suitable for use in
 initial experiments. We expect that these interfaces will
 change as we gain more insight into how routing, resource
 allocation, and decision making elements are best divided.
 Routing functions are required to identify the set of potential
 routes to each destination site. The routing functions should
 make some effort to identify routes that are currently
 available and that meet the resource requirements. However,
 these properties need not be confirmed until the actual
 resource allocation and connection setup propagation are
 performed.
 The minimum capability required of the interface to routing is
 to identify the network interface and next hop toward a given
 target. We expect that the traditional routing table will need
 to be extended to include information that ST requires such as
 whether or not a next hop supports ST, and, if so, whether or
 not IP encapsulation (see Section 3.7.5 (page 64)) is required
 to communicate with it. In particular, host entries will be
 required for hosts that can only support ST through
 encapsulation because the IP software either is not capable of
 demultiplexing datagrams based on the IP Version Number field,
 or the application interface only supports access to raw IP
 datagrams. This interface is illustrated by the function:
 FindNextHop( destination, TOS )
 -> result, < interface, next hop, ST-capable,
 MustEncapsulate >*
 However, the resource management functions can best tradeoff
 among alternative routes when presented with a matrix of all
 potential routes. The matrix entry corresponding to a
 destination and a next hop would contain the estimated
 characteristics of the corresponding pathway. Using this
 representation, the resource management functions can quickly
 determine the next hop sets that cover the entire destination
 list, and compare the various parameters of the tradeoff
 between the guarantees that can be promised by each set. An
 interface that returns a compressed matrix, listing the
 suitable routes by next hop and the destinations reachable
 through each, is illustrated by the function:
 FindNextHops( < destination >*, TOS )
 -> result, < destination, < interface, next hop,
 ST-capable, MustEncapsulate >* >*
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 We hope that routing protocols will be available that propagate
 additional metrics of bandwidth, delay, bit/burst error rate,
 and whether a router has ST capability. However, propagating
 this information in a timely fashion is still a key research
 issue.
 3.8.2. Access to Network Layer Resource Reservation
 The resources required to reach the next-hops associated with
 the chosen routes must be allocated. These allocations will
 generally be requested and released incrementally. As the
 next-hop elements for the routes are chosen, the network
 resources between the current node and the next-hops must be
 allocated. Since the resources are not guaranteed to be
 available -- a network or node further down the path might have
 failed or needed resources might have been allocated since the
 routing decisions where made -- some of these allocations may
 have to be released, another route selected, and a new
 allocation requested.
 There are four basic interface functions needed for the network
 resource allocator. The first checks to see if the required
 resources are available, returning the likelihood that an
 ensuing resource allocation will succeed. A probability of 0%
 indicates the resources are not available or cannot promise to
 meet the required guarantees. Low probabilities indicate that
 most of the resource has been allocated or that there is a lot
 of contention for using the resource. This call does not
 actually reserve the resources:
 ResourceProbe( requirements )
 -> likelihood
 Another call reserves the resources:
 ResourceReserve( requirements )
 -> result, reservation_id
 The third call adjusts the resource guarantees:
 ResourceAdjust( reservation_id, new requirements )
 -> result
 The final call allows the resources to be released:
 ResourceRelease( reservation_id )
 -> result
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 3.8.3. Network Layer Services Utilized
 ST requires access to the usual network layer functions to send
 and receive packets and to be informed of network status
 information. In addition, it requires functions to enable and
 disable reception of multicast packets. Such functions might
 be defined as:
 JoinLocalGroup( network level group-address )
 -> result, multicast_id
 LeaveLocalGroup( network level group-address )
 -> result
 RecvNet( SAP )
 -> result, src, dst, len, BufPTR )
 SendNet( src, dst, SAP, len, BufPTR )
 -> result
 GetNotification( SAP )
 -> result, infop
 3.8.4. IP Services Utilized
 Since ST packets might be sent or received using IP
 encapsulation, IP level routines to join and leave multicast
 groups are required in addition to the usual services defined
 in the IP specification (see the IP specification [2] [15] and
 the IP multicast specification [6] for details).
 JoinHostGroup( IP level group-address, interface )
 -> result, multicast_id
 LeaveHostGroup( IP level group-address, interface )
 -> result
 GET_SRCADDR( remote IP addr, TOS )
 -> local IP address
 SEND( src, dst, prot, TOS, TTL, BufPTR, len, Id, DF,
 opt )
 -> result
 RECV( BufPTR, prot )
 -> result, src, dst, SpecDest, TOS, len, opt
 GET_MAXSIZES( local, remote, TOS )
 -> MMS_R, MMS_S
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 ADVISE_DELIVPROB( problem, local, remote, TOS )
 -> result
 SEND_ICMP( src, dst, TOS, TTL, BufPTR, len, Id, DF, opt )
 -> result
 RECV_ICMP( BufPTR )
 -> result, src, dst, len, opt
 3.8.5. ST Layer Services Provided
 Interface to the ST layer services may be modeled using a set
 of subroutine calls (but need not be implemented as such).
 When the protocol is implemented as part of an operating
 system, these subroutines may be used directly by a higher
 level protocol processing layer.
 These subroutines might also be provided through system service
 calls to provide a raw interface for use by an application.
 Often, this will require further adaptation to conform with the
 idiom of the particular operating system. For example, 4.3 BSD
 UNIX (TM) provides sockets, ioctls and signals for network
 programming.
 open( connect/listen, SAPBytes, local SAP, local host,
 account, authentication info, < foreign host,
 SAPBytes, foreign SAP, options >*, flow spec,
 precedence, group name, optional parameters )
 -> result, id, stream name, < foreign host,
 foreign SAPBytes, foreign SAP, result, flow spec,
 rname, optional parameters >*
 Note that an open by a target in "listen mode" may cause ST to
 create a state block for the stream to facilitate rendezvous.
 add( id, SAPBytes, local SAP, local host, < foreign host,
 SAPBytes, foreign SAP, options >*, flow spec,
 precedence, group name, optional parameters )
 -> result, < foreign host, foreign SAPBytes,
 foreign SAP, result,
 flow spec, rname, optional parameters >*
 send( id, buffer address, byte count, priority )
 -> result, next send time, burst send time
 recv( id, buffer address, max byte count )
 -> result, byte count
 recvsignal( id )
 -> result, signal, info
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 receivecontrol( id )
 -> result, id, stream name, < foreign host,
 foreign SAPBytes, foreign SAP, result, flow spec,
 rname, optional parameters >*
 sendcontrol( id, flow spec, precedence, options,
 < foreign host, SAPBytes, foreign SAP, options >*)
 -> result, < foreign host, foreign SAPBytes,
 foreign SAP, result, flow spec, rname,
 optional parameters >*
 change( id, flow spec, precedence, options,
 < foreign host, SAPBytes, foreign SAP, options >*)
 -> result, < foreign host, foreign SAPBytes,
 foreign SAP, result, flow spec, rname,
 optional parameters >*
 close( id, < foreign host, SAPBytes, foreign SAP >*,
 optional parameters )
 -> result
 status( id/stream name/group name )
 -> result, account, group name, protocol,
 < stream name, < foreign host, SAPbytes,
 foreign SAP, state, options, flow spec,
 routing info, rname >*, precedence, options >*
 creategroup( members* )
 -> result, group name
 deletegroup( group name, members* )
 -> result
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
4. ST Protocol Data Unit Descriptions
 The ST PDUs sent between ST agents consist of an ST Header
 ncapsulating either a higher layer PDU or an ST Control Message.
 Since ST operates as an extension of IP, the packet arrives at the
 same network service access point that IP uses to receive IP
 datagrams, e.g., ST would use the same ethertype (0x800) as does IP.
 The two types of packets are distinguished by the IP Version Number
 field (the first four bits of the packet); IP currently uses a value
 of 4, while ST has been assigned the value 5 [18]. There is no
 requirement for compatibility between IP and ST packet headers beyond
 the first four bits.
 The ST Header also includes an ST Version Number, a total length
 field, a header checksum, and a HID, as shown in Figure 21. See
 Appendix 1 (page 147) for an explanation of the notation.
 ST is the IP Version Number assigned to identify ST packets. The
 value for ST is 5.
 Ver is the ST Version Number. This document defines ST Version 2.
 Pri is the priority of the packet. It is used in data packets to
 indicate those packets to drop if a stream is exceeding its
 allocation. Zero is the lowest priority and 7 the highest.
 T (bit 11) is used to indicate that a Timestamp is present
 following the ST Header but before any next higher layer protocol
 data. The Timestamp is not permitted on ST Control Messages
 (which may use the OriginTimestamp option).
 Bits 12 through 15 are spares and should be set to 0.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | ST=5 | Ver=2 | Pri |T| Bits | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | HID | HeaderChecksum |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | |
 +- Timestamp -+
 | |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 21. ST Header
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 TotalBytes is the length, in bytes, of the entire ST packet, it
 includes the ST Header and optional Timestamp but does not include
 any local network headers or trailers. In general, all length
 fields in the ST Protocol are in units of bytes.
 HID is the 16-bit hop-by-hop stream identifier. It is an
 abbreviation for the Name of the stream and is used both to reduce
 the packet header length and, by the receiver of the data packet,
 to make the forwarding function more efficient. Control Messages
 have a HID value of zero. HIDs are negotiated by the next-hop and
 previous-hop agents to make the abbreviation unique. It is used
 here in the ST Header and in various Control Messages. HID values
 1-3 are reserved for future use.
 HeaderChecksum covers only the ST Header and Timestamp, if
 present. The ST Protocol uses 16-bit checksums here in the ST
 Header and in each Control Message. The standard Internet
 checksum algorithm is used: "The checksum field is the 16-bit
 one's complement of the one's complement sum of all 16-bit words
 in the header. For purposes of computing the checksum, the value
 of the checksum field is zero." See [1] [12] [15] for suggestions
 for efficient checksum algorithms.
 Timestamp is an optional timestamp inserted into data packets by
 the origin. It is only present when the T bit, described above,
 is set (1). Its use is negotiated at connection setup time; see
 Sections 4.2.3.5 (page 108) and 4.2.3.1 (page 100). The Timestamp
 has the NTP format; see [13].
 4.1. Data Packets
 ST packets whose HID is not zero to three are user data packets.
 Their interpretation is a matter for the higher layer protocols
 and consequently is not specified here. The data packets are not
 protected by an ST checksum and will be delivered to the higher
 layer protocol even with errors.
 ST agents will not pass data packets over a new hop whose setup is
 not complete, i.e., a HID must have been negotiated and either an
 ACCEPT or REFUSE has been received for all targets specified in
 the CONNECT.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2. ST Control Message Protocol Descriptions
 ST Control Messages are between a previous-hop agent and its
 next-hop agent(s) using a HID of zero. The control protocol
 follows a request-response model with all requests expecting
 responses. Retransmission after timeout (see Section 3.7.6 (page
 66)) is used to allow for lost or ignored messages. Control
 messages do not extend across packet boundaries; if a control
 message is too large for the MTU of a hop, its information
 (usually a TargetList) is partitioned and a control message per
 partition is sent. All control messages have the following
 format:
 OpCode identifies the type of control message. Each is
 described in detail in following sections.
 Options is used to convey OpCode-specific variations for a
 control message.
 TotalBytes is the length of the control message, in bytes,
 including all OpCode specific fields and optional parameters.
 The value is always divisible by four.
 RVLId is used to convey the Virtual Link Identifier of the
 receiver of the control message, when known, or zero in the
 case of an initial CONNECT or diagnostic message. The RVLId is
 intended to permit efficient dispatch to the portion of a
 stream's state machine containing information about a specific
 operation in progress over the link. RVLId values 1-3 are
 reserved; see Sections 3 (page 17) and 3.7.1.2 (page 49).
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode | Options | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId | SVLId |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- -+
 : OpCode Specific Data :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 22. ST Control Message Format
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 SVLId is used to convey the Virtual Link Identifier of the
 sender of the control message. Except for ERROR-IN-REQUEST and
 diagnostic messages, it must never be zero. SVLId values 1-3
 are reserved; see Sections 3 (page 17) and 3.7.1.2 (page 49).
 Reference is a transaction number. Each sender of a request
 control message assigns a Reference number to the message that
 is unique with respect to the stream. The Reference number is
 used by the receiver to detect and discard duplicates. Each
 acknowledgment carries the Reference number of the request
 being acknowledged. Reference zero is never used, and
 Reference numbers are assumed to be monotonically increasing
 with wraparound so that the older-than and more-recent-than
 relations are well defined.
 LnkReference contains the Reference field of the request
 control message that caused this request control message to be
 created. It is used in situations where a single request leads
 to multiple "responses". Examples are CONNECT and CHANGE
 messages that must be acknowledged hop-by-hop and will also
 lead to an ACCEPT or REFUSE from each target in the TargetList.
 SenderIPAddress is the 32-bit IP address of the network
 interface that the ST agent used to send the control message.
 This value changes each time the packet is forwarded by an ST
 agent (hop-by-hop).
 Checksum is the checksum of the control message. Because the
 control messages are sent in packets that may be delivered with
 bits in error, each control message must be checked before it
 is acted upon; see Section 4 (page 76).
 OpCode Specific Data contains any additional information that
 is associated with the control message. It depends on the
 specific control message and is explained further below. In
 some response control messages, fields of zero are included to
 allow the format to match that of the corresponding request
 message. The OpCode Specific Data may also contain any of the
 optional Parameters defined in Section 4.2.2 (page 80).
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.1. ST Control Messages
 The CONNECT and CHANGE messages are used to establish or modify
 branches in the stream. They propagate in the direction from
 the origin toward the targets. They are end-to-end messages
 created by the origin. They propagate all the way to the
 targets, and require ERROR-IN-REQUEST, ACK, HID-REJECT, HID-
 APPROVE, ACCEPT, or REFUSE messages in response. The CONNECT
 message is the stream setup message. The CHANGE message is
 used to change the characteristics of an established stream.
 The CONNECT message is also used to add one or more targets to
 an existing stream and during recovery of a broken stream.
 Both messages have a TargetList parameter and are processed
 similarly.
 The DISCONNECT message is used to tear down streams or parts of
 streams. It propagates in the direction from the origin toward
 the targets. It is either used as an end-to-end message
 generated by the origin that is used to completely tear down a
 stream, or is generated by an intermediate ST agent that
 preempts a stream or detects the failure of its previous-hop
 agent or network in the stream. In the latter case, it is used
 to tear down the part of the stream from the failure to the
 targets, thus the message propagates all the way to the
 targets.
 The REFUSE message is sent by a target to refuse to join or
 remove itself from a stream; in these cases, it is an end-to-
 end message. An intermediate ST agent issues a REFUSE if it
 cannot find a route to a target, can only find a route to a
 target through the previous-hop, preempts a stream, or detects
 a failure in a next-hop ST agent or network. In all cases a
 REFUSE propagates in the direction toward the origin.
 The ACCEPT message is an end-to-end message generated by a
 target and is used to signify the successful completion of the
 setup of a stream or part of a stream, or the change of the
 FlowSpec. There are no other messages that are similar to it.
 The following sections contain descriptions of common fields
 and parameters, followed by descriptions of the individual
 control messages, both listed in alphabetical order. A brief
 description of the use of the control message is given. The
 packet format is shown graphically.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.2. Common SCMP Elements
 Several fields and parameters (referred to generically as
 "elements") are common to two or more PDUs. They are described
 in detail here instead of repeating their description several
 times. In many cases, the presence of a parameter is optional.
 To permit the parameters to be easily defined and parsed, each
 is identified with a PCode byte that is followed by a PBytes
 byte indicating the length of the parameter in bytes (including
 the PCode, PByte, and any padding bytes). If the length of the
 information is not a multiple of 4 bytes, the parameter is
 padded with one to three zero (0) bytes. PBytes is thus always
 a multiple of four. Parameters can be present in any order.
 4.2.2.1. DetectorIPAddress
 Several control messages contain the DetectorIPAddress
 field. It is used to identify the agent that caused the
 first instance of the message to be generated, i.e., before
 it was propagated. It is copied from the received message
 into the copy of the message that is to be propagated to a
 previous-hop or next-hop. It use is primarily diagnostic.
 4.2.2.2. ErroredPDU
 The ErroredPDU parameter (PCode = 1) is used for diagnostic
 purposes to encapsulate a received ST PDU that contained an
 error. It may be included in the ERROR-IN-REQUEST, ERROR-
 IN-RESPONSE, or REFUSE messages. It use is primarily
 diagnostic.
 PDUBytes indicates how many bytes of the PDUInError are
 actually present.
 ErrorOffset contains the number of bytes into the errored
 PDU to the field containing the error. At least as much
 of the PDU in error must be included to
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | PCode = 1 | PBytes | PDUBytes | ErrorOffset |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : PDUInError : Padding |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 23. ErroredPDU
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 include the field or parameter identified by ErrorOffset;
 an ErrorOffset of zero would imply a problem with the IP
 Version Number or ST Version Number fields.
 PDUInError is the PDU in error, beginning with the ST
 Header.
 4.2.2.3. FlowSpec & RFlowSpec
 The FlowSpec is used to convey stream service requirements
 end-to-end. We expect that other versions of FlowSpec will
 be needed in the future, which may or may not be subsets or
 supersets of the version described here. PBytes will allow
 new constraints to be added to the end without having to
 simultaneously update all implementations in the field.
 Implementations are expected to be able to process in a
 graceful manner a Version 4 (or higher) structure that has
 more elements than shown here.
 The FlowSpec parameter (PCode = 2) is used in several
 messages to convey the FlowSpec.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | PCode | PBytes | Version = 3 | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | DutyFactor | ErrorRate | Precedence | Reliability |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Tradeoffs | RecoveryTimeout |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | LimitOnCost | LimitOnDelay |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | LimitOnPDUBytes | LimitOnPDURate |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | MinBytesXRate |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | AccdMeanDelay |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | AccdDelayVariance |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | DesPDUBytes | DesPDURate |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 24. FlowSpec & RFlowSpec
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 The RFlowSpec parameter (PCode = 12) is used in conjunction
 with the FDx option to convey the FlowSpec that is to be
 used in the reverse direction.
 Version identifies the version of the FlowSpec. Version
 3 is defined here.
 DutyFactor is the estimated proportion of the time that
 the requested bandwidth will actually be in use. Zero is
 taken to represent 256 and signify a duty factor of 1.
 Other values are to be divided by 256 to yield the duty
 factor.
 ErrorRate expresses the error rate as the negative
 exponent of 10 in the error rate. One (1) represents a
 bit error rate of 0.1 and 10 represents 0.0000000001.
 Precedence is the precedence of the connection being
 established. Zero represents the lowest precedence.
 Note that non-zero values of this parameter should be
 subject to authentication and authorization checks, which
 are not specified here. In general, the distinction
 between precedence and priority is that precedence
 specifies streams that are permitted to take previously
 committed resources from another stream, while priority
 identifies those PDUs that a stream is most willing to
 have dropped when the stream exceeds its guaranteed
 limits.
 Reliability is modified by each intervening ST agent as a
 measure of the probability that a given offered data
 packet will be forwarded and not dropped. Zero is taken
 to represent 256 and signify a probability of 1. Other
 values are to be divided by 256 to yield the probability.
 Tradeoffs is incompletely defined at this time. Bits
 currently specified are as follows:
 The most significant bit in the field, bit 0 in the
 Figure 24, when one (1) means that each ST agent must
 "implement" all constraints in the FlowSpec even if
 they are not shown in the figure, e.g., when the
 FlowSpec has been extended. When zero (0), unknown
 constraints may be ignored.
 The second most significant bit in the field, bit 1,
 when one (1) means that one or more constraints are
 unknown and have been ignored. When zero (0), all
 constraints are known and have been processed.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 The third most significant bit in the field, bit 2, is
 used for RevChrg; see Section 3.6.5 (page 46).
 Other bits are currently unspecified, and should be
 set to zero (0) by the origin ST agent and not changed
 by other agents unless those agents know their
 meaning.
 RecoveryTimeout specifies the nominal number of
 milliseconds that the application is willing to wait for
 a failed system component to be detected and any
 corrective action to be taken.
 LimitOnCost specifies the maximum cost that the origin is
 willing to expend. A value of zero indicates that the
 application is not willing to incur any direct charges
 for the resources used by the stream. The meaning of
 non-zero values is left for further study.
 LimitOnDelay specifies the maximum end-to-end delay, in
 milliseconds, that can be tolerated by the origin.
 LimitOnPDUBytes is the smallest packet size, in terms of
 ST-user data bytes, that can be tolerated by the origin.
 LimitOnPDURate is the lowest packet rate that can be
 tolerated by the origin, expressed as tenths of a packet
 per second.
 MinBytesXRate is the minimum bandwidth that can be
 tolerated by the origin, expressed as a product of bytes
 and tenths of a packet per second.
 AccdMeanDelay is modified by each intervening ST agent.
 This provides a means of reporting the total expected
 delay, in milliseconds, for a data packet. Note that it
 is implicitly assumed that the requested mean delay is
 zero and there is no limit on the mean delay, so there
 are no parameters to specify these explicitly.
 AccdDelayVariance is also modified by each intervening ST
 agent as a measure, in milliseconds squared, of the
 packet dispersion. This quantity can be used by the
 target or origin in determining whether the resulting
 stream has an adequate quality of service to support the
 application. Note that it is implicitly assumed that the
 requested delay variance is zero and there is no limit on
 the delay variance, so there are no parameters to specify
 these explicitly.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 DesPDUBytes is the desired PDU size in bytes. This is
 not necessarily the same as the minimum necessary PDU
 size. This value may be made smaller by intervening ST
 agents so long as it is not made smaller than
 LimitOnPDUBytes. The *PDUBytes limits measure the size
 of the PDUs of next-higher protocol layer, i.e., the user
 information contained in a data packet. An ST agent must
 account for both the ST Header (including possible IP
 encapsulation) and any local network headers and trailers
 when comparing a network's MTU with *PDUBytes. In an
 ACCEPT message, the value of this field will be no larger
 than the MTU of the path to the specified target.
 DesPDURate is the requested PDU rate, expressed as tenths
 of a packet per second. This value may be made smaller
 by intervening ST agents so long as it is not made
 smaller than LimitOnPDURate.
 It is expected that the next parameter to be added to the
 FlowSpec will be a Burst Descriptor. This parameter will
 describe the burstiness of the offered traffic. For
 example, this may include the simple average rate, peak
 rate and variance values, or more complete descriptions
 that characterize the distribution of expected burst
 rates and their expected duration. The nature of the
 algorithms that deal with the traffic's burstiness and
 the information that needs to be described by this
 parameter will be subjects of further experimentation.
 It is expected that a new FlowSpec with Version = 4 will
 be defined that looks like Version 3 but has a Burst
 Descriptor parameter appended to the end.
 4.2.2.4. FreeHIDs
 The FreeHIDs parameter (PCode = 3) is used to communicate to
 the previous-hop suggestions for a HID. It consists of
 BaseHID and FreeHIDBitMask fields. Experiments will
 determine how long the mask should be for practical use of
 this parameter. The parameter (if implemented) should be
 included in all HID-REJECTs, and in HID-APPROVEs that are
 linked to a multicast CONNECT, e.g., one containing the
 MulticastAddress parameter.
 BaseHID was the suggested value in a HID-CHANGE or
 CONNECT. BaseHID is chosen to be the suggested HID value
 to insure that the masks from multiple FreeHIDs
 parameters will overlap.
 FreeHIDBitMask identifies available HID values as
 follows. Bit 0 in the FreeHIDBitMask corresponds to a
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 HID with a value equal to BaseHID with the 5 least
 significant bits set to zero, bit 1 corresponds to that
 value + 1, etc. This alignment of the mask on a 32-bit
 boundary is used so that masks from several FreeHIDs
 parameters might more easily be combined using a bit-wise
 AND function to find a free HID.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | PCode = 3 | 4+4*N | BaseHID |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : FreeHIDBitMask :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 25. FreeHIDs
 4.2.2.5. Group & RGroup
 The Group parameter (PCode = 4) is an optional argument
 used only for the creation of a stream. This parameter
 contains a GroupName; the GroupName may be the same as the
 Name of one of the group's streams. In addition, there
 may be some number of <SubGroupId, Relation> tuples that
 describe the meaning of the grouping and the relation
 between the members of the group. The forms of grouping
 are for further study.
 The RGroup parameter (PCode = 13) is an optional argument
 used only for the creation of a stream in the reverse
 direction that is a member of a Group; see the FDx
 option, Section 3.6.3 (page 45). This parameter has the
 same format as the Group parameter.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | PCode | 12+4*N | !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- -+
 ! GroupName !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SubGroupId | Relation |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : ... : ... :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SubGroupId | Relation |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 26. Group & RGroup
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 A GroupName has the same format as a Name; see Figure 29.
 4.2.2.6. HID & RHID
 The HID parameter (PCode = 5) is used in the NOTIFY message
 when the notification is related to a HID, and possibly in
 the STATUS-RESPONSE message to convey additional HIDs that
 are valid for a stream when there are more than one. It
 consists of the PCode and PBytes bytes prepended to a HID;
 HIDs were described in Section 4 (page 76).
 The RHID parameter (PCode = 14) is used in conjunction with
 the FDx option to convey the HID that is to be used in the
 reverse direction. It consists of the PCode and PBytes
 bytes prepended to a HID.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | PCode | 4 | HID |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 27. HID & RHID
 4.2.2.7. MulticastAddress
 The MulticastAddress parameter (PCode = 6) is an optional
 parameter that is used, when setting up a network level
 multicast group, to communicate an IP and/or local network
 multicast address to the next-hop agents that should become
 members of the group.
 LocalNetBytes is the length of the Local Net Multicast
 Address.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | PCode = 6 | PBytes | LocalNetBytes | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | IP Multicast Address |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : Local Net Multicast Address : Padding |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 28. MulticastAddress
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 IP Multicast Address is described in [6]. This field is
 zero (0) if no IP multicast address is known or is
 applicable. The block of addresses 224.1.0.0 -
 224.1.255.255 has been allocated for use by ST.
 Local Net Multicast Address is the multicast address to
 be used on the local network. It corresponds to the IP
 Multicast Address when the latter is non-zero.
 4.2.2.8. Name & RName
 Each stream is uniquely (i.e., globally) identified by a
 Name. A Name is created by the origin host ST agent and is
 composed of 1) a 16-bit number chosen to make the Name
 unique within the agent, 2) the IP address of the origin ST
 agent, and 3) a 32-bit timestamp. If the origin has
 multiple IP addresses, then any that can be used to reach
 target may be used in the Name. The intent is that the
 <Unique ID, IP Address> tuple be unique for the lifetime of
 the stream. It is suggested that to increase robustness a
 Unique ID value not be reused for a period of time on the
 order of 5 minutes.
 The Timestamp is included both to make the Name unique over
 long intervals (e.g., forever) for purposes of network
 management and accounting/billing, and to protect against
 failure of an ST agent that causes knowledge of active
 Unique IDs to be lost. The assumption is that all ST agents
 have access to some "clock". If this is not the case, the
 agent should have access to some form of non-volatile memory
 in which it can store some number that at least gets
 incremented per restart.
 The Name parameter (PCode = 7) is used in most control
 messages to identify a stream.
 The RName parameter (PCode = 15) is used in conjunction with
 the FDx option to convey the Name of the reverse stream in
 an ACCEPT message.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | PCode | 12 | Unique ID |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | IP Address |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Timestamp |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 29. Name & RName
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.2.9. NextHopIPAddress
 The NextHopIPAddress parameter (PCode = 8) is an optional
 parameter of NOTIFY (RouteBack) or REFUSE (RouteInconsist or
 RouteLoop) and contains the IP address of a suggested next-
 hop ST agent.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | PCode = 8 | 8 | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | next-hop IP address |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 30. NextHopIPAddress
 4.2.2.10. Origin
 The Origin parameter (PCode = 9) is used to identify the
 origin of the stream, the next higher protocol, and the SAP
 being used in conjunction with that protocol.
 NextPcol is an 8-bit field used in demultiplexing
 operations to identify the protocol to be used above ST.
 The values of NextPcol are in the same number space as
 the IP Header's Protocol field and are consequently
 defined in the Assigned Numbers RFC [18].
 OriginSAPBytes specifies the length of the OriginSAP,
 exclusive of any padding required to maintain 32-bit
 alignment.
 OriginIPAddress is (one of) the IP address of the origin.
 OriginSAP identifies the origin's SAP associated with the
 NextPcol protocol.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | PCode = 9 | PBytes | NextPcol |OriginSAPBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OriginIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : OriginSAP : Padding |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 31. Origin
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.2.11. OriginTimestamp
 The OriginTimestamp parameter (PCode = 10) is used to
 indicate the time at which the control message was sent.
 The units and format of the timestamp is that defined in the
 NTP protocol specification [13]. Note that discontinuities
 over leap seconds are expected.
 Note that the time synchronization implied by the use of
 such a parameter is the subject of systems management
 functions not described in this memo, e.g., NTP.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | PCode = 10 | 12 | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | |
 +- Timestamp -+
 | |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 32. OriginTimestamp
 4.2.2.12. ReasonCode
 Several errors may occur during protocol processing. All ST
 error codes are taken from a single number space. The
 currently defined values and their meaning is presented in
 the list below. Note that new error codes may be defined
 from time to time. All implementations are expected to
 handle new codes in a graceful manner. If an unknown
 ReasonCode is encountered, it should be assumed to be fatal.
 0 1
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | ReasonCode |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 33. ReasonCode
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 Name Value Meaning
 ---------------- ----- ---------------------------------------
 AcceptTimeout 2 An Accept has not been
 acknowledged.
 AccessDenied 3 Access denied.
 AckUnexpected 4 An unexpected ACK was received.
 ApplAbort 5 The application aborted the stream
 abnormally.
 ApplDisconnect 6 The application closed the stream
 normally.
 AuthentFailed 7 The authentication function
 failed.
 CantGetResrc 8 Unable to acquire (additional)
 resources.
 CantRelResrc 9 Unable to release excess
 resources.
 CksumBadCtl 10 A received control PDU has a bad
 message checksum.
 CksumBadST 11 A received PDU has a bad ST Header
 checksum.
 DropExcdDly 12 A received PDU was dropped because
 it could not be processed within
 the delay specification.
 DropExcdMTU 13 A received PDU was dropped because
 its size exceeds the MTU.
 DropFailAgt 14 A received PDU was dropped because
 of a failed ST agent.
 DropFailHst 15 A received PDU was dropped because
 of a host failure.
 DropFailIfc 16 A received PDU was dropped because
 of a broken interface.
 DropFailNet 17 A received PDU was dropped because
 of a network failure.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 Name Value Meaning
 ---------------- ----- ---------------------------------------
 DropLimits 18 A received PDU was dropped because
 it exceeds the resource limits for
 its stream.
 DropNoResrc 19 A received PDU was dropped due to
 no available resources (including
 precedence).
 DropNoRoute 20 A received PDU was dropped because
 of no available route.
 DropPriLow 21 A received PDU was dropped because
 it has a priority too low to be
 processed.
 DuplicateIgn 22 A received control PDU is a
 duplicate and is being
 acknowledged.
 DuplicateTarget 23 A received control PDU contains a
 duplicate target, or an attempt to
 add an existing target.
 ErrorUnknown 1 An error not contained in this
 list has been detected.
 failure N/A An abbreviation used in the text
 for any of the more specific
 errors: DropFailAgt, DropFailHst,
 DropFailIfc, DropFailNet,
 IntfcFailure, NetworkFailure,
 STAgentFailure, FailureRecovery.
 FailureRecovery 24 A notification that recovery is
 being attempted.
 FlowVerBad 25 A received control PDU has a
 FlowSpec Version Number that is
 not supported.
 GroupUnknown 26 A received control PDU contains an
 unknown Group Name.
 HIDNegFails 28 HID negotiation failed.
 HIDUnknown 29 A received control PDU contains an
 unknown HID.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 Name Value Meaning
 ---------------- ----- ---------------------------------------
 InconsistHID 30 An inconsistency has been detected
 with a stream Name and
 corresponding HID.
 InconsistGroup 31 An inconsistency has been detected
 with the streams forming a group.
 IntfcFailure 32 A network interface failure has
 been detected.
 InvalidHID 33 A received ST PDU contains an
 invalid HID.
 InvalidSender 34 A received control PDU has an
 invalid SenderIPAddress field.
 InvalidTotByt 35 A received control PDU has an
 invalid TotalBytes field.
 LnkRefUnknown 36 A received control PDU contains an
 unknown LnkReference.
 NameUnknown 37 A received control PDU contains an
 unknown stream Name.
 NetworkFailure 38 A network failure has been
 detected.
 NoError 0 No error has occurred.
 NoRouteToAgent 39 Cannot find a route to an ST
 agent.
 NoRouteToDest 40 Cannot find a route to the
 destination.
 NoRouteToHost 41 Cannot find a route to a host.
 NoRouteToNet 42 Cannot find a route to a network.
 OpCodeUnknown 43 A received control PDU has an
 invalid OpCode field.
 PCodeUnknown 44 A received control PDU has a
 parameter with an invalid PCode.
 ParmValueBad 45 A received control PDU contains an
 invalid parameter value.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 Name Value Meaning
 ---------------- ----- ---------------------------------------
 PcolIdUnknown 46 A received control PDU contains an
 unknown next-higher layer protocol
 identifier.
 ProtocolError 47 A protocol error was detected.
 PTPError 48 Multiple targets were specified
 for a stream created with the PTP
 option.
 RefUnknown 49 A received control PDU contains an
 unknown Reference.
 RestartLocal 50 The local ST agent has recently
 restarted.
 RemoteRestart 51 The remote ST agent has recently
 restarted.
 RetransTimeout 52 An acknowledgment to a control
 message has not been received
 after several retransmissions.
 RouteBack 53 The routing function indicates
 that the route to the next-hop is
 through the same interface as the
 previous-hop and is not the
 previous-hop.
 RouteInconsist 54 A routing inconsistency has been
 detected, e.g., a route loop.
 RouteLoop 55 A CONNECT was received that
 specified an existing target.
 SAPUnknown 56 A received control PDU contains an
 unknown next-higher layer SAP
 (port).
 STAgentFailure 57 An ST agent failure has been
 detected.
 StreamExists 58 A stream with the given Name or
 HID already exists.
 StreamPreempted 59 The stream has been preempted by
 one with a higher precedence.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 Name Value Meaning
 ---------------- ----- ---------------------------------------
 STVerBad 60 A received PDU is not ST Version
 2.
 TooManyHIDs 61 Attempt to add more HIDs to a
 stream than the implementation
 supports.
 TruncatedCtl 62 A received control PDU is shorter
 than expected.
 TruncatedPDU 63 A received ST PDU is shorter than
 the ST Header indicates.
 UserDataSize 64 The UserData parameter is too
 large to permit a control message
 to fit into a network's MTU.
 4.2.2.13. RecordRoute
 The RecordRoute parameter (PCode = 11) may be used to
 request that the route between the origin and a target be
 recorded and returned to the agent specified in the
 DetectorIPAddress field.
 FreeOffset is the offset to the position where the next
 next-hop IP address should be inserted. It is initialized
 to four (4) and incremented by four each time an agent
 inserts its IP address.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | PCode = 11 | PBytes | 0 | FreeOffset |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | next-hop IP address |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : ... :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | next-hop IP address |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 34. RecordRoute
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.2.14. SrcRoute
 The SrcRoute parameter is used, in the Target structure
 shown in Figure 36, to specify the IP addresses of the ST
 agents through which the stream to the target should pass.
 There are two forms of the option, distinguished by the
 PCode.
 With loose source route (PCode = 18) each ST agent first
 examines the first next-hop IP address in the option. If
 the address is (one of) the address of the current ST agent,
 that entry is removed, and the PBytes field reduced by four
 (4). If the resulting PBytes field contains 4 (i.e., there
 are no more next-hop IP addresses) the parameter is removed
 from the Target. In either case, the Target's TargetBytes
 field and the TargetList's PBytes field must be reduced
 accordingly. The ST agent then routes toward the first
 next-hop IP address in the option, if one exists, or toward
 the target otherwise. Note that the target's IP address is
 not included as the last entry in the list.
 With a strict source route (PCode = 19) each ST agent first
 examines the first next-hop IP address in the option. If
 the address is not (one of) the address of the current ST
 agent, a routing error has occurred and should be reported
 with the appropriate reason code. Otherwise that entry is
 removed, and the PBytes field reduced by four (4). If the
 resulting PBytes field contains 4 (i.e., there are no more
 next-hop IP addresses) the parameter is removed from the
 Target. In either case, the Target's TargetBytes field and
 the TargetList's PBytes field must be reduced accordingly.
 The ST agent then routes toward the first next-hop IP
 address in the option, if one exists, or toward the target
 otherwise. Note that the target's IP address is not
 included as the last entry in the list.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | PCode | 4+4*N | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | next-hop IP address |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : ... :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | next-hop IP address |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 35. SrcRoute
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 Since it is possible that a single hop between ST agents is
 actually composed of multiple IP hops using IP
 encapsulation, it might be necessary to also specify an IP
 source routing option. Two additional PCodes are used in
 this case. See [15] for a description of IP routing
 options.
 An IP Loose Source Route (PCode = 16) indicates that PDUs
 for the next-hop ST agent should be encapsulated in IP and
 that the IP datagram should contain an IP Loose Source Route
 constructed from the list of IP router addresses contained
 in this option.
 An IP Strict Source Route (PCode = 17) is similarly used
 when the corresponding IP Strict Source Route option should
 be constructed.
 Consequently, the "routing parameter" may consist of a
 sequence of one or more separate parameters with PCodes 16,
 17, 18, or 19.
 4.2.2.15. Target and TargetList
 Several control messages use a parameter called TargetList
 (PCode = 20), which contains information about the targets
 to which the message pertains. For each Target in the
 TargetList, the information includes the IP addresses of the
 target, the SAP applicable to the next higher layer
 protocol, the length of the SAP (SAPBytes), and zero or more
 optional SrcRoute parameters; see Section 4.2.2.14 (page
 95). Consequently, a Target structure can be of variable
 length. Each entry has the format shown in Figure 36.
 The optional SrcRoute parameter is only meaningful in a
 CONNECT messages; if present in other messages, they are
 ignored. Note that the presence of SrcRoute parameter(s)
 reduces the number of Targets that can be contained in a
 TargetList since the maximum size of a TargetList is 256
 bytes. Consequently an implementation should be prepared to
 accept multiple TargetLists in a single message.
 TargetIPAddress is the IP Address of the Target.
 TargetBytes is the length of the Target structure,
 beginning with the TargetIPAddress and including any
 SrcRoute Parameter(s).
 SAPBytes is the length of the SAP, excluding any padding
 required to maintain 32-bit alignment. I.e.,
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 there would be no padding required for SAPs with lengths
 of 2, 6, etc., bytes.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | TargetIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | TargetBytes | SAPBytes | :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+- -+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : SAP : Padding |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : SrcRoute Parameter(s) :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 36. Target
 We assume that the ST agents must know the maximum packet
 size of the networks to which they are connected (the MTU),
 and those maximum sizes will restrict the number of targets
 that can be specified in control messages. We feel that
 this is not a serious drawback. High bandwidth networks
 such as the Ethernet or the Terrestrial Wideband network
 support packet sizes large enough to allow well over one
 hundred targets to be specified, and we feel that
 conferences with a larger number of participants will not
 occur for quite some time. Furthermore, we expect that
 future higher bandwidth networks will allow even larger
 packet sizes. It may be desirable to send ST voice data
 packets in individual B-ISDN ATM cells, which are small, but
 network services on ATM will provide "adaptation layers" to
 implement network-level fragmentation that may be used to
 carry larger ST control messages.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | PCode = 20 | PBytes | TargetCount = N |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : Target 1 :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : ... :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : Target N :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 37. TargetList
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 If a message must pass across a network whose maximum packet
 size is too small, the message must be broken up into
 multiple messages, each of which carries part of the
 TargetList. The function of the message can still be
 performed even if the message is so partitioned. The effect
 in this partitioning is to compromise the performance, but
 still allows proper operation. For example, if a CONNECT
 message were partitioned, the first CONNECT would establish
 the stream, and the rest of the CONNECTs would be processed
 as additions to the first. The routing decisions might
 suffer, however, since they would be made on partial
 information. Nevertheless, the stream would be created.
 4.2.2.16. UserData
 The UserData parameter (PCode = 21) is an optional parameter
 that may be used by the next higher protocol or an
 application to convey arbitrary information to its peers.
 Note that since the size of control messages is limited by
 the smallest MTU in the path to the target(s), the maximum
 size of this parameter cannot be specified a priori. If the
 parameter is too large for some network's MTU, a
 UserDataSize error will occur. The parameter must be padded
 to a multiple of 32 bits.
 UserBytes specifies the number of valid UserInformation
 bytes.
 UserInformation is arbitrary data meaningful to the next
 higher protocol layer or application.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | PCode = 21 | PBytes | UserBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : UserInformation : Padding |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 38. UserData
CIP Working Group [Page 98]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
4.2.3. ST Control Message PDUs
 Each control message is described in a following section. See
 Appendix 1 (page 147) for an explanation of the notation.
CIP Working Group [Page 99]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.1. ACCEPT
 ACCEPT (OpCode = 1) is issued by a target as a positive
 response to a CONNECT message. It implies that the target
 is prepared to accept data from the origin along the stream
 that was established by the CONNECT. The ACCEPT includes
 the FlowSpec that contains the cumulative information that
 was calculated by the intervening ST agents as the CONNECT
 made its way from the origin to the target, as well as any
 modifications made by the application at the target. The
 ACCEPT is relayed by the ST agents from the target to the
 origin along the path established by the CONNECT but in the
 reverse direction. The ACCEPT must be acknowledged with an
 ACK at each hop.
 The FlowSpec is not modified on this trip from the target
 back to the origin. Since the cumulative FlowSpec
 information can be different for different targets, no
 attempt is made to combine the ACCEPTs from the various
 targets. The TargetList included in each ACCEPT contains
 the IP address of only the target that issued the ACCEPT.
 Any SrcRoute parameters in the TargetList are ignored.
 Since an ACCEPT might be the first response from a next-hop
 on a control link (due to network reordering), the SVLId
 field may be the first source of the Virtual Link Identifier
 to be used in the RVLId field of subsequent control messages
 sent to that next-hop.
 When the FDx option has been selected to setup a second
 stream in the reverse direction, the ACCEPT will contain
 both RFlowSpec and RName parameters. Each agent should
 update the state tables for the reverse stream with this
 information.
 TSR (bits 14 and 15) specifies the target's response for
 the use of data packet timestamps; see Section 4 (page
 76). Its values and semantics are:
 00 Not implemented.
 01 No timestamps are permitted.
 10 Timestamps must always be present.
 11 Timestamps may optionally be present.
 Reference contains a number assigned by the agent sending
 the ACCEPT for use in the acknowledging ACK.
 LnkReference is the Reference number from the
 corresponding CONNECT or CHANGE.
CIP Working Group [Page 100]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 1 | 0 |TSR| TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId | SVLId |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | DetectorIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : FlowSpec Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : TargetList Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : RecordRoute Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : RFlowSpec Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! RName Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : UserData Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 39. ACCEPT Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 101]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.2. ACK
 ACK (OpCode = 2) is used to acknowledge a request. The
 Reference in the header is the Reference number of the
 control message being acknowledged.
 Since a ACK might be the first response from a next-hop on a
 control link, the SVLId field may be the first source of the
 Virtual Link Identifier to be used in the RVLId field of
 subsequent control messages sent to that next-hop.
 ReasonCode is usually NoError, but other possibilities
 exist, e.g., DuplicateIgn.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 2 | 0 | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId | SVLId |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | ReasonCode |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 40. ACK Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 102]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.3. CHANGE-REQUEST
 CHANGE-REQUEST (OpCode = 4) is used by an intermediate or
 target agent to request that the origin change the FlowSpec
 of an established stream. The CHANGE-REQUEST message is
 propagated hop-by-hop to the origin, with an ACK at each
 hop.
 Any SrcRoute parameters in the targets of the TargetList are
 ignored.
 G (bit 8) is used to request a global, stream-wide
 change; the TargetList parameter may be omitted when the
 G bit is specified.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 4 |G| 0 | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId | SVLId |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | DetectorIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : FlowSpec Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : TargetList Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : UserData Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 41. CHANGE-REQUEST Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 103]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.4. CHANGE
 CHANGE (OpCode = 3) is used to change the FlowSpec of an
 established stream. Parameters are the same as for CONNECT
 but the TargetList is not required. The CHANGE message is
 processed similarly to the CONNECT message, except that it
 travels along the path of an established stream.
 If the change to the FlowSpec is in a direction that makes
 fewer demands of the involved networks, then the change has
 a high probability of success along the path of the
 established stream. Each ST agent receiving the CHANGE
 message makes the necessary requested changes to the network
 resource allocations, and if successful, propagates the
 CHANGE message along the established paths. If the change
 cannot be made then the ST agent must recover using
 DISCONNECT and REFUSE messages as in the case of a network
 failure. Note that a failure to change the resources
 requested for a specific target(s) should not cause other
 targets in the stream to be deleted. The CHANGE must be
 ACKed.
 If the CHANGE is a result of a CHANGE-REQUEST the
 LnkReference field of the CHANGE will contain the value from
 the Reference field of the CHANGE-REQUEST.
 It is recommended that the origin only have one outstanding
 CHANGE per target; if the application requests more that
 one to be outstanding at a time, it is the application's
 responsibility to deal with any sequencing problems that may
 arise.
 Any SrcRoute parameters in the targets of the
 TargetListParameter are ignored.
 G (bit 8) is used to request a global, stream-wide
 change; the TargetList parameter may be omitted when the
 G bit is specified.
CIP Working Group [Page 104]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 3 |G| 0 | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId | SVLId |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | DetectorIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : FlowSpec Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : TargetList Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : UserData Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 42. CHANGE Control Message
 4.2.3.5. CONNECT
 CONNECT (OpCode = 5) requests the setup of a new stream or
 an addition to or recovery of an existing stream. Only the
 origin can issue the initial set of CONNECTs to setup a
 stream, and the first CONNECT to each next-hop is used to
 convey the initial suggestion for a HID. If the stream's
 data packets will be sent to some set of next-hop ST agents
 by multicast then the CONNECTs to that set must suggest the
 same HID. Otherwise, the HIDs in the various CONNECTs can
 be different.
 The CONNECT message must fit within the maximum allowable
 packet size (MTU) for the intervening network. If a CONNECT
 message is too large, it must be fragmented into multiple
 CONNECT messages by partitioning the TargetList; see Section
 4.2 (page 77). Any UserData parameter will be replicated in
 each fragment for delivery to all targets.
CIP Working Group [Page 105]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 The next-hop can initially respond with any of the following
 five responses:
 1 ERROR-IN-REQUEST, which implies that the CONNECT was
 not valid and has been ignored,
 2 ACK, which implies that the CONNECT with the H bit not
 set was valid and is being processed,
 3 HID-APPROVE, which implies that the CONNECT with the
 H bit set was valid, and the suggested HID can be
 used or was deferred,
 4 HID-REJECT, which implies that the CONNECT with the H
 bit set was valid but the suggested HID cannot be
 used and another must be suggested in a subsequent
 HID-CHANGE message, or
 5 REFUSE, which implies that the CONNECT was valid but
 the included list of targets in the REFUSE cannot be
 processed for the stated reason.
 The next-hop will later relay back either an ACCEPT or
 REFUSE from each target not already specified in the REFUSE
 of case 5 above (note multiple targets may be included in a
 single REFUSE message).
 An intermediate ST agent that receives a CONNECT selects the
 next-hop ST agents, partitions the TargetList accordingly,
 reserves network resources in the direction toward the
 next-hop, updating the FlowSpec accordingly (see Section
 4.2.2.3 (page 81)), selects a proposed HID for each next-
 hop, and sends the resulting CONNECTs.
 If the intermediate ST agent that is processing a CONNECT
 fails to find a route to a target, then it responds with a
 REFUSE with the appropriate reason code. If the next-hop to
 a target is by way of the network from which it received the
 CONNECT, then it sends a NOTIFY with the appropriate reason
 code (RouteBack). In either case, the TargetList specifies
 the affected targets. The intermediate ST agent will only
 route to and propagate a CONNECT to the targets for which it
 does not issue either an ERROR-IN-REQUEST or a REFUSE.
CIP Working Group [Page 106]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 The processing of a received CONNECT message requires care
 to avoid routing loops that could result from delays in
 propagating routing information among ST agents. If a
 received CONNECT contains a new Name, a new stream should be
 created (unless the Virtual Link Identifier matches a known
 link in which case an ERROR-IN-REQUEST should be sent). If
 the Name is known, there are four cases:
 1 the Virtual Link Identifier matches and the Target
 matches a current Target -- the duplicate target
 should be ignored.
 2 the Virtual Link Identifier matches but the Target is
 new -- the stream should be expanded to include the
 new target.
 3 the Virtual Link Identifier differs and the Target
 matches a current Target -- an ERROR-IN-REQUEST
 message should be sent specifying that the target is
 involved in a routing loop. If a reroute, the old
 path will eventually timeout and send a DISCONNECT;
 a subsequent retransmission of the rerouted CONNECT
 will then be processed under case 2 above.
 4 the Virtual Link Identifier differs but the Target is
 new -- a new (instance of the) stream should be
 created for the target that is deliberately part of
 a loop using a SrcRoute parameter.
 Note that the test for a known or matching Target includes
 comparing any SrcRoute parameter that might be present.
 Option bits are specified by either the origin's service
 user or by an intermediate agent, depending on the specific
 option. Bits not specified below are currently unspecified,
 and should be set to zero (0) by the origin agent and not
 changed by other agents unless those agents know their
 meaning.
 H (bit 8) is used for the HID Field option; see Section
 3.6.1 (page 44). It is set to one (1) only if the HID
 field contains either zero (when the HID selection is
 being deferred), or the proposed HID. This bit is zero
 (0) if the HID field does not contain valid data and
 should be ignored.
 P (bit 9) is used for the PTP option; see Section 3.6.2
 (page 44).
 S (bit 10) is used for the NoRecovery option; see Section
 3.6.4 (page 46).
CIP Working Group [Page 107]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 TSP (bits 14 and 15) specifies the origin's proposal for
 the use of data packet timestamps; see Section 4 (page
 76). Its values and semantics are:
 00 No proposal.
 01 Cannot insert timestamps.
 10 Must always insert timestamps.
 11 Can insert timestamps if requested.
 RVLId, the receiver's Virtual Link Identifier, is set to
 zero in all CONNECT messages until its value arrives in
 the SVLId field of an acknowledgment to the CONNECT.
 SVLId, the sender's Virtual Link Identifier, is set to a
 value chosen by each hop to facilitate efficient
 dispatching of subsequent control messages.
 HID is the identifier that will be used with data packets
 moving through the stream in the direction from the
 origin to the targets. It is a hop-by-hop shorthand
 identifier for the stream's Name, and is chosen by each
 agent for the branch to the next-hop agents. The
 contents of the HID field are only valid, and a HID-
 REJECT or HID-APPROVE reply may only be sent, when the
 HID Field option (H bit) is set (1). If the HID Field
 option is specified and the proposed HID is zero, the
 selection of the HID is deferred to the receiving next-
 hop agent. If the HID Field option is not set (H bit is
 0), then the HID field does not contain valid data and
 should be ignored; see Section 3.6.1 (page 44).
 TargetList is the list of IP addresses of the target
 processes. It is of arbitrary size up to the maximum
 allowed for packets traveling across the specific
 network.
CIP Working Group [Page 108]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 5 |H|P|S| 0 |TSP| TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId/0 | SVLId |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | HID/0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | DetectorIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Origin Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : FlowSpec Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : TargetList Parameter(s) :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : Group Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : MulticastAddress Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : RecordRoute Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : RFlowSpec Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : RGroup Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! RHID Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : UserData Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 43. CONNECT Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 109]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.6. DISCONNECT
 DISCONNECT (OpCode = 6) is used by an origin to tear down an
 established stream or part of a stream, or by an
 intermediate agent that detects a failure between itself and
 its previous-hop, as distinguished by the ReasonCode. The
 DISCONNECT message specifies the list of targets that are to
 be disconnected. An ACK is required in response to a
 DISCONNECT message. The DISCONNECT message is propagated
 all the way to the specified targets. The targets are
 expected to terminate their participation in the stream.
 Note that in the case of a failure it may be advantageous to
 retain state information as the stream should be repaired
 shortly; see Section 3.7.2 (page 52).
 G (bit 8) is used to request a DISCONNECT of all the
 stream's targets; the TargetList parameter may be omitted
 when the G bit is set (1).
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 6 |G| 0 | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId | SVLId |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | ReasonCode |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | DetectorIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : TargetList Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : UserData Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 44. DISCONNECT Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 110]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.7. ERROR-IN-REQUEST
 ERROR-IN-REQUEST (OpCode = 7) is sent in acknowledgment to a
 request in which an error is detected. No action is taken
 on the erroneous request and no state information for the
 stream is retained. Consequently it is appropriate for the
 SVLId to be zero (0). No ACK is expected.
 An ERROR-IN-REQUEST is never sent in response to either an
 ERROR-IN-REQUEST or an ERROR-IN-RESPONSE; however, the
 event should be logged for diagnostic purposes. The
 receiver of an ERROR-IN-REQUEST is encouraged to try again
 without waiting for a retransmission timeout.
 Reference is the Reference number of the erroneous
 request.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 7 | 0 | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId | SVLId/0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | ReasonCode |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | DetectorIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : ErroredPDU :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : TargetList Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 45. ERROR-IN-REQUEST Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 111]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.8. ERROR-IN-RESPONSE
 ERROR-IN-RESPONSE (OpCode = 8) is sent in acknowledgment to
 a response in which an error is detected. No ACK is
 expected. Action taken by the requester and responder will
 vary with the nature of the request.
 An ERROR-IN-REQUEST is never sent in response to either an
 ERROR-IN-REQUEST or an ERROR-IN-RESPONSE; however, the
 event should be logged for diagnostic purposes. The
 receiver of an ERROR-IN-RESPONSE is encouraged to try again
 without waiting for a retransmission timeout.
 Reference identifies the erroneous response.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 8 | 0 | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId | SVLId |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | ReasonCode |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | DetectorIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : ErroredPDU :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : TargetList Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 46. ERROR-IN-RESPONSE Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 112]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.9. HELLO
 HELLO (OpCode = 9) is used as part of the ST failure
 detection mechanism; see Section 3.7.1.2 (page 49).
 R (bit 8) is used for the Restarted bit.
 Reference is non-zero to inform the receiver that an ACK
 should be promptly sent so that the sender can update its
 round-trip time estimates. If the Reference is zero, no
 ACK should be sent.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 9 |R| 0 | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId/0 | SVLId |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference/0 | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | HelloTimer |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! OriginTimestamp !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 47. HELLO Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 113]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.10. HID-APPROVE
 HID-APPROVE (OpCode = 10) is used by the agent that is
 responding to either a CONNECT or HID-CHANGE to agree to
 either use the proposed HID or to the addition or deletion
 of the specified HID. In all cases but deletion, the newly
 approved HID is returned in the HID field; for deletion,
 the HID field must be set to zero. The HID-APPROVE is the
 acknowledgment of a CONNECT or HID-CHANGE.
 The optional FreeHIDs parameter provides the previous-hop
 agent with hints about what other HIDs are acceptable in
 case a multicast HID is being negotiated; see Section
 4.2.2.4 (page 84).
 Since a HID-APPROVE might be the first response from a
 next-hop on a control link, the SVLId field may be the first
 source of the Virtual Link Identifier to be used in the
 RVLId field of subsequent control messages sent to that
 next-hop.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 10 | 0 | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId | SVLId |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | HID |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : FreeHIDs Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 48. HID-APPROVE Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 114]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.11. HID-CHANGE-REQUEST
 HID-CHANGE-REQUEST (OpCode = 12) is used by a next-hop agent
 that would like, for administrative reasons, to change the
 HID that is in use. The receiving previous-hop agent
 acknowledges the request by either an ERROR-IN-REQUEST if it
 is unwilling to make the requested change, or with a HID-
 CHANGE if it can accommodate the request.
 A (bit 8) is used to indicate that the specified HID
 should be included in the set of HIDs for the specified
 Name. When a HID is added, the acknowledging HID-APPROVE
 should contain a HID field whose contents is the HID just
 added.
 D (bit 9) is used to indicate that the specified HID
 should be removed in the set of HIDs for the specified
 Name. When a HID is deleted, the acknowledging HID-
 APPROVE should contain a HID field whose contents is
 zero. Note that the Reference field may be used to
 determine the HID that has been deleted.
 If neither bit is set, the specified HID should replace
 that currently in use with the specified Name.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 12 |A|D| 0 | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId | SVLId |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | HID |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 49. HID-CHANGE-REQUEST Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 115]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.12. HID-CHANGE
 HID-CHANGE (OpCode = 11) is used by the agent that issued a
 CONNECT and received a HID-REJECT to attempt to negotiate a
 suitable HID. The HID in the HID-CHANGE message must be
 different from that in the CONNECT, or any previous HID-
 CHANGE messages for the given Name. The agent receiving the
 HID-CHANGE must respond with a HID-APPROVE if the new HID is
 suitable, or a HID-REJECT if it is not. In case of an
 error, either an ERROR-IN-REQUEST or a REFUSE may be
 returned as an acknowledgment.
 Since an agent may send CONNECT messages with the same HID
 to several next-hops in order to use multicast data
 transfer, any HID-CHANGE must also be sent to the same set
 of next-hops. Therefore, a next-hop agent must be prepared
 to receive a HID-CHANGE before or after it has sent a HID-
 APPROVE response to the CONNECT or a previous HID-CHANGE.
 Only the last HID-CHANGE is relevant. The previous-hop
 agent will ignore HID-APPROVE or HID-REJECT messages to
 previous CONNECT or HID-CHANGE messages.
 A DISCONNECT can be sent instead of a HID-CHANGE, or a
 REFUSE can be sent instead of a HID-APPROVE or HID-REJECT,
 to terminate fatally the HID negotiation and the agent's
 knowledge of the stream.
 The A and D bits are used to change a HID, e.g., when adding
 a new next-hop to a multicast group, in such a way that data
 packets that are flowing through the network will not be
 mishandled due to a race condition in processing the HID-
 CHANGE messages between the previous-hop and its next-hops.
 An implementation may choose to limit the number of
 simultaneous HIDs associated with a stream, but must allow
 at least two.
 A (bit 8) is used to indicate that the specified HID
 should be included in the set of HIDs for the specified
 Name. When a HID is added, the acknowledging HID-APPROVE
 should contain a HID field whose contents is the HID just
 added.
 D (bit 9) is used to indicate that the specified HID
 should be removed from the set of HIDs for the specified
 Name. When a HID is deleted, the acknowledging HID-
 APPROVE should contain a HID field whose contents is
 zero. Note that the Reference field may be used to
 determine the HID that has been deleted.
 If neither bit is set, the specified HID should replace
 that currently in use for the specified Name.
CIP Working Group [Page 116]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 11 |A|D| 0 | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId | SVLId |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | HID |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 50. HID-CHANGE Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 117]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.13. HID-REJECT
 HID-REJECT (OpCode = 13) is used as an acknowledgment that a
 CONNECT or HID-CHANGE was received and is being processed,
 but means that the HID contained in the CONNECT or HID-
 CHANGE is not acceptable. Upon receipt of this message the
 agent that issued the CONNECT or HID-CHANGE must now issue a
 HID-CHANGE to attempt to find a suitable HID. The HID-
 CHANGE can cause another HID-REJECT but eventually the HID-
 CHANGE must be acknowledged with a HID-APPROVE to end
 successfully the HID negotiation. The agent that issued the
 HID-REJECT may not issue an ACCEPT before it has found an
 acceptable HID.
 Since a HID-REJECT might be the first response from a next-
 hop on a control link, the SVLId field may be the first
 source of the Virtual Link Identifier to be used in the
 RVLId field of subsequent control messages sent to that
 next-hop.
 Either agent may terminate the negotiation by issuing either
 a DISCONNECT or a REROUTE. The agent that issued the HID-
 REJECT may issue a REFUSE, or REROUTE at any time after the
 HID-REJECT. In this case, the stream cannot be created, the
 HID negotiation need not proceed, and the previous-hop need
 not transmit any further messages; any further messages
 that are received should be ignored.
 The optional FreeHIDs parameter provides the previous-hop
 agent with hints about what HIDs would have been acceptable;
 see Section 4.2.2.4 (page 84).
CIP Working Group [Page 118]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 13 | 0 | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId | SVLId |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | RejectedHID |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : FreeHIDs Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 51. HID-REJECT Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 119]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.14. NOTIFY
 NOTIFY (OpCode = 14) is issued by a an agent to inform other
 agents, the origin, or target(s) of events that may be
 significant. The action taken by the receiver of a NOTIFY
 depends on the ReasonCode. Possible events are suspected
 routing problems or resource allocation changes that occur
 after a stream has been established. These changes occur
 when network components fail and when competing streams
 preempt resources previously reserved by a lower precedence
 stream. We also anticipate that NOTIFY can be used in the
 future when additional resources become available, as is the
 case when network components recover or when higher
 precedence streams are deleted.
 NOTIFY may contain a FlowSpec that reflects that revised
 guarantee that can be promised to the stream. NOTIFY may
 also identify those targets that are affected by the change.
 In this way, NOTIFY is similar to ACCEPT.
 NOTIFY may be relayed by the ST agents back to the origin,
 along the path established by the CONNECT but in the reverse
 direction. It is up to the origin to decide whether a
 CHANGE should be submitted.
 When NOTIFY is received at the origin, the application
 should be notified of the target and the change in resources
 allocated along the path to it, as specified in the FlowSpec
 contained in the NOTIFY message. The application may then
 use the information to either adjust or terminate the
 portion of the stream to each affected target.
 The NOTIFY may be propagated beyond the previous-hop or
 next-hop agent; it must be acknowledged with an ACK.
 Reference contains a number assigned by the agent sending
 the NOTIFY for use in the acknowledging ACK.
 ReasonCode identifies the reason for the notification.
 LnkReference, when non-zero, is the Reference number from
 a command that is the subject of the notification.
 HID is present when the notification is related to a HID.
 Name is present when the notification is related to a
 stream.
CIP Working Group [Page 120]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 NextHopIPAddress is an optional parameter and contains
 the IP address of a suggested next-hop ST agent.
 TargetList is present when the notification is related to
 one or more targets.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 14 | 0 | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId | SVLId |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | ReasonCode |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | DetectorIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : ErroredPDU :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : FlowSpec Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! HID Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! NextHopIPAddress Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : RecordRoute Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : TargetList Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 52. NOTIFY Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 121]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.15. REFUSE
 REFUSE (OpCode = 15) is issued by a target that either does
 not wish to accept a CONNECT message or wishes to remove
 itself from an established stream. It might also be issued
 by an intermediate agent in response to a CONNECT or CHANGE
 either to terminate fatally a failing HID negotiation, to
 terminate a routing loop, or when a satisfactory next-hop to
 a target cannot be found. It may also be a separate command
 when an existing stream has been preempted by a higher
 precedence stream or an agent detects the failure of a
 previous-hop, next-hop, or the network between them. In all
 cases, the TargetList specifies the targets that are
 affected by the condition. Each REFUSE must be acknowledged
 by an ACK.
 The REFUSE is relayed by the agents from the originating
 agent to the origin (or intermediate agent that created the
 CONNECT or CHANGE) along the path traced by the CONNECT.
 The agent receiving the REFUSE will process it differently
 depending on the condition that caused it, as specified in
 the ReasonCode field. In some cases, such as if a next-hop
 cannot obtain resources, the agent can release any resources
 reserved exclusively for transmissions in the stream in
 question to the target specified in the TargetList, and the
 previous-hop can attempt to find an alternate route. In
 some cases, such as a routing failure, the previous-hop
 cannot determine where the failure occurred, and must
 propagate the REFUSE back to the origin, which can attempt
 recovery of the stream by issuing a new CONNECT.
 No special effort is made to combine multiple REFUSE
 messages since it is considered most unlikely that separate
 REFUSEs will happen to both pass through an agent at the
 same time and be easily combined, e.g., have identical
 ReasonCodes and parameters.
 Since a REFUSE might be the first response from a next-hop
 on a control link, the SVLId field may be the first source
 of the Virtual Link Identifier to be used in the RVLId field
 of subsequent control messages sent to that next-hop.
 Reference contains a number assigned by the agent sending
 the REFUSE for use in the acknowledging ACK.
 LnkReference is either the Reference number from the
 corresponding CONNECT or CHANGE, if it is the result of
 such a message, or zero when the REFUSE was originated as
 a separate command.
CIP Working Group [Page 122]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 15 | 0 | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId | SVLId |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | ReasonCode |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | DetectorIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : TargetList Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : ErroredPDU :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : RecordRoute Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : UserData Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 53. REFUSE Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 123]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.16. STATUS
 STATUS (OpCode = 16) is used to inquire about the existence
 of a particular stream identified by either a HID (H bit
 set) or Name (Name Parameter present).
 When a stream has been identified, a STATUS-RESPONSE is
 returned that will contain the specified HID and/or Name but
 no other parameters if the specified stream is unknown, or
 will otherwise contain the current HID(s), Name, FlowSpec,
 TargetList, and possibly Group(s) of the stream. Note that
 if a stream has no current HID, the HID field in the
 STATUS-RESPONSE will contain zero; it will contain the
 first, or only, HID if a valid HID exists; additional valid
 HIDs will be returned in HID parameters.
 Use of STATUS is intended for diagnostic purposes and to
 assist in stream cleanup operations. Note that if both a
 HID and Name are specified, but they do not correspond to
 the same stream, an ERROR-IN-REQUEST with the appropriate
 reason code (InconsistHID) would be returned.
 It is possible in cases of multiple failures or network
 partitioning for an ST agent to have information about a
 stream after the stream has either ceased to exist or has
 been rerouted around the agent. When an agent concludes
 that a stream has not been used for a period of time and
 might no longer be valid, it can probe the stream's
 previous-hop or next-hop(s) to see if they believe that the
 stream still exists through the interrogating agent. If
 not, those hops would reply with a STATUS-RESPONSE that
 contains the HID and/or Name but no other parameters;
 otherwise, if the stream is still valid, the hops would
 reply with the parameters of the stream.
 H (bit 8) is used to indicate whether (when 1) or not
 (when 0) a HID is present in the HID field.
 Q (bit 9) is set to one (1) for remote diagnostic
 purposes when the receiving agent should return a
 stream's parameters, whether or not the source of the
 message is believed to be a previous-hop or next-hop in
 the specified stream. Note that this use has potential
 for disclosure of sensitive information.
 RVLId and SVLId may either or both be zero when STATUS is
 used for diagnostic purposes.
CIP Working Group [Page 124]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 16 |H|Q| 0 | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId/0 | SVLId/0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | HID/0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 54. STATUS Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 125]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.2.3.17. STATUS-RESPONSE
 STATUS-RESPONSE (OpCode = 17) is the reply to a STATUS
 message. If the stream specified in the STATUS message is
 not known, the STATUS-RESPONSE will contain the specified
 HID and/or Name but no other parameters. It will otherwise
 contain the current HID(s), Name, FlowSpec, TargetList, and
 possibly Group of the stream. Note that if a stream has no
 current HID, the H bit in the STATUS-RESPONSE will be zero.
 The HID field will contain the first, or only, HID if a
 valid HID exists; additional valid HIDs will be returned in
 HID parameters.
 H (bit 8) is used to indicate whether (when 1) or not
 (when 0) a HID is present in the HID field.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | OpCode = 17 |H|Q| 0 | TotalBytes |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | RVLId/0 | SVLId/0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Reference | LnkReference |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | SenderIPAddress |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | Checksum | HID/0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | 0 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! Name Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : FlowSpec Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : Group Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 ! HID Parameter !
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 : TargetList Parameter :
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 55. STATUS-RESPONSE Control Message
CIP Working Group [Page 126]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 4.3. Suggested Protocol Constants
 The ST Protocol uses several fields that must have specific values
 for the protocol to work, and also several values that an
 implementation must select. This section specifies the required
 values and suggests initial values for others. It is recommended
 that the latter be implemented as variables so that they may be
 easily changed when experience indicates better values.
 Eventually, they should be managed via the normal network
 management facilities.
 ST uses IP Version Number 5.
 When encapsulated in IP, ST uses IP Protocol Number 5.
 Value ST Command Message Name Value ST Element Name
 ------- ----------------------- ------- ---------------------
 1 ACCEPT 1 ErroredPDU
 2 ACK 2 FlowSpec
 3 CHANGE 3 FreeHIDs
 4 CHANGE-REQUEST 4 Group
 5 CONNECT 5 HID
 6 DISCONNECT 6 MulticastAddress
 7 ERROR-IN-REQUEST 7 Name
 8 ERROR-IN-RESPONSE 8 NextHopIPAddress
 9 HELLO 9 Origin
 10 HID-APPROVE 10 OriginTimestamp
 11 HID-CHANGE 11 RecordRoute
 12 HID-CHANGE-REQUEST 12 RFlowSpec
 13 HID-REJECT 13 RGroup
 14 NOTIFY 14 RHID
 15 REFUSE 15 RName
 16 STATUS 16 SrcRoute, IP Loose
 17 STATUS-RESPONSE 17 SrcRoute, IP Strict
 18 SrcRoute, ST Loose
 19 SrcRoute, ST Strict
 20 TargetList
 21 UserData
 A good choice for the minimum number of bits in the FreeHIDBitMask
 element of the FreeHIDs parameter is not yet known. We suggest a
 minimum of 64 bits, i.e., N in Figure 25 has a value of two (2).
 HID value zero (0) is reserved for ST Control Messages. HID
 values 1-3 are reserved for future use.
CIP Working Group [Page 127]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 VLId value zero (0) may only be used in the RVLId field of an ST
 Control Message when the appropriate value has not yet been
 received from the other end of the virtual link;' except for an
 ERROR-IN-REQUEST or diagnostic message, the SVLId field may never
 contain a value of zero except in a diagnostic message. VLId
 value 1 is reserved for use with HELLO messages by those agents
 whose implementation wishes to have all HELLOs so identified.
 VLId values 2-3 are reserved for future use.
 The following permanent IP multicast addresses have been assigned
 to ST:
 224.0.0.7 All ST routers
 224.0.0.8 All ST hosts
 In addition, a block of transient IP multicast addresses,
 224.1.0.0 - 224.1.255.255, has been allocated for ST multicast
 groups. Note that in the case of Ethernet, an ST Multicast
 address of 224.1.cc.dd maps to an Ethernet Multicast address of
 01:00:5E:01:cc:dd (see [6]).
 SCMP uses retransmission to effect reliability and thus has
 several "retransmission timers". Each "timer" is modeled by an
 initial time interval (ToXxx), which gets updated dynamically
 through measurement of control traffic, and a number of times
 (NXxx) to retransmit a message before declaring a failure. All
 time intervals are in units of milliseconds.
 Value Timeout Name Meaning
 ------- ---------------------- ----------------------------------
 1000 ToAccept Initial hop-by-hop timeout for
 acknowledgment of ACCEPT
 3 NAccept ACCEPT retries before failure
 1000 ToConnect Initial hop-by-hop timeout for
 acknowledgment of CONNECT
 5 NConnect CONNECT retries before failure
 1000 ToDisconnect Initial hop-by-hop timeout for
 acknowledgment of DISCONNECT
 3 NDisconnect DISCONNECT retries before
 failure
CIP Working Group [Page 128]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 Value Timeout Name Meaning
 ------- ---------------------- ----------------------------------
 1000 ToHIDAck Initial hop-by-hop timeout for
 acknowledgment of
 HID-CHANGE-REQUEST
 3 NHIDAck HID-CHANGE-REQUEST retries
 before failure
 1000 ToHIDChange Initial hop-by-hop timeout for
 acknowledgment of HID-CHANGE
 3 NHIDChange HID-CHANGE retries before
 failure
 1000 ToNotify Initial hop-by-hop timeout for
 acknowledgment of NOTIFY
 3 NNotify NOTIFY retries before failure
 1000 ToRefuse Initial hop-by-hop timeout for
 acknowledgment of REFUSE
 3 NRefuse REFUSE retries before failure
 1000 ToReroute Timeout for receipt of ACCEPT or
 REFUSE from targets during
 failure recovery
 5 NReroute CONNECT retries before failure
 5000 ToEnd2End End-to-End timeout for receipt
 of ACCEPT or REFUSE from targets
 by origin
 0 NEnd2End CONNECT retries before failure
CIP Working Group [Page 129]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 Value Parameter Name Meaning
 ------- ---------------------- ----------------------------------
 10 NHIDAbort Number of rejected HID proposals
 before aborting the HID
 negotiation process
 10000 HelloTimerHoldDown Interval that Restarted bit must
 be set after ST restart
 5 HelloLossFactor Number of consecutively missed
 HELLO messages before declaring
 link failure
 2000 DefaultRecoveryTimeout Interval between successive
 HELLOs to/from active neighbors
 2 DefaultHelloFactor HELLO filtering function factor
CIP Working Group [Page 130]

RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
5. Areas Not Addressed
 There are a number of issues that will need to be addressed in the
 long run but are not addressed here. Some issues are network or
 implementation specific. For example, the management of multicast
 groups depends on the interface that a network provides to the ST
 agent, and an UP/DOWN protocol based on ST HELLO messages depends on
 the details of the ST agents. Both these examples may impact the ST
 implementations, but we feel it is inappropriate to specify them
 here.
 In other cases we feel that appropriate solutions are not clear at
 this time. The following are examples of such issues:
 This document does not include a routing mechanism. We do not feel
 that a routing strategy based on minimizing the number of hops from
 the source to the destination is necessarily appropriate. An
 alternative strategy is to minimize the consumption of internet
 resources within some delay constraints. Furthermore, it would be
 preferable if the routing function were to provide routes that
 incorporated bandwidth, delay, reliability, and perhaps other
 characteristics, not just connectivity. This would increase the
 likelihood that a selected route would succeed. This requirement
 would probably cause the ST agents to exchange more routing
 information than currently implemented. We feel that further
 research and experimentation will be required before an appropriate
 routing strategy is well enough defined to be incorporated into the
 ST specification.
 Once the bandwidth for a stream has been agreed upon, it is not
 sufficient to rely on the origin to transmit traffic at that rate.
 The internet should not rely on the origin to operate properly.
 Furthermore, even if the origin sources traffic at the agreed rate,
 the packets may become aggregated unintentionally and cause local
 congestion. There are several approaches to addressing this problem,
 such as metering the traffic in each stream as it passes through each
 agent. Experimentation is necessary before such a mechanism is
 selected.
 The interface between the agent and the network is very limited. A
 mechanism is provided by which the ST layer can query the network to
 determine the likelihood that a stream can be supported. However,
 this facility will require practical experience before its
 appropriate use is defined.
 The simplex tree model of a stream does not easily allow for using
 multiple paths to support a greater bandwidth. That is, at any given
 point in a stream, the entire incoming bandwidth must be transmitted
 to the same next-hop in order to get to some target. If the
 bandwidth isn't available along any single path, the stream cannot be
 built to that target. It may be the case that the bandwidth is not
 available along a single path, but if the data
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 flow is split along multiple paths, and so multiple next-hops,
 sufficient bandwidth would be available. As currently specified, the
 ST agent at the point where the multiple flows converge will refuse
 the second connection because it can only be interpreted as a routing
 failure. A mechanism that allows multiple paths in a stream and can
 protect against routing failures has not been defined.
 If sufficient bandwidth is not available, both preemption and
 rerouting are possible. However, it is not clear when to use one or
 the other. As currently specified, an ST agent that cannot obtain
 sufficient bandwidth will attempt to preempt lower precedence streams
 before attempting to reroute around the bottleneck. This may lead to
 an undesirably high number of preemptions. It may be that a higher
 precedence stream can be rerouted around lower precedence streams and
 still meet its performance requirements, whereas the preempted lower
 precedence streams cannot be reconstructed and still meet their
 performance requirements. A simple and effective algorithm to allow
 a better decision has not been identified.
 In case a stream cannot be completed, ST does not report to the
 application the nature of the trouble in any great detail.
 Specifically, the application cannot determine where the bottleneck
 is, whether the problem is permanent or transitory, or the likely
 time before the trouble may be resolved. The application can only
 attempt to build the stream at some later time hoping that the
 trouble has been resolved. Schemes can be envisioned by which
 information is relayed back to the application. However, only
 practical experience can evaluate the kind of trouble that is most
 likely encountered and the nature of information that would be most
 useful to the application.
 A mechanism is also not defined for cases where a stream cannot be
 completed not because of lack of resources but because of an
 unexpected failure that results in an ERROR-IN-REQUEST message. An
 ERROR-IN-REQUEST message is returned in cases when an ST agent issues
 a malformed control message to a neighbor. Such an occurrence is
 unexpected and may be caused by a bad or incomplete ST
 implementation. In some cases a message, such as a NOTIFY should be
 sent to the origin. Such a mechanism is not defined because it is
 not clear what information can be extracted and what the origin
 should do.
 No special action is taken when a target is removed from a stream.
 Removing a target may also remove a bottleneck either in bandwidth,
 packet rate or packet size, but advantage of this opportunity is not
 taken automatically. The application may initiate a change to the
 stream's characteristics, but it is not in the best position to do
 this because the application may not know the nature of the
 bottleneck. The ST layer may have the best information, but a
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 mechanism to do this may be very complex. As a result, this concept
 requires further thought.
 An agent simply discards a stream's data packets if it cannot forward
 them. The reason may be that the packets are too large or are
 arriving at too high a rate. Alternative actions may include an
 attempt to do something with the packets, such as fragmenting them,
 or to notify the origin of the trouble. Corrective measures may be
 too complex, so it may be preferable simply to notify the origin with
 a NOTIFY message. However, if the incoming packet rate is causing
 congestion, then the NOTIFY messages themselves may cause more
 trouble. The nature of the communication has yet to be defined.
 The FlowSpec includes a cost field, but its implementation has not
 been identified. The units of cost can probably be defined
 relatively easily. Cost of bandwidth can probably also be assigned.
 It is not clear how cost is assigned to other functions, such as high
 precedence or low delay, or how cost of the components of the stream
 are combined together. It is clear that the cost to provide services
 will become more important in the near future, but it is not clear at
 this time how that cost is determined.
 A number of parameters of the FlowSpec are intended to be used as
 ranges, but some may be useful as discrete values. For example, the
 FlowSpec may specify that bandwidth for a stream carrying voice
 should be reserved in a range from 16Kbps to 64Kbps because the voice
 codec has a variable coding rate. However, the voice codec may be
 varied only among certain discrete values, such as 16Kbps, 32Kbps and
 64Kbps. A stream that has 48Kbps of bandwidth is no better than one
 with 32Kbps. The parameters of the FlowSpec where this may be
 relevant should optionally specify discrete values. This is being
 considered.
 Groups are defined as a way to associate different streams, but the
 nature of the association is left for further study. An example of
 such an association is to allow streams whose traffic is inherently
 not simultaneous to share the same allocated resources. This may
 happen for example in a conference that has an explicit floor, such
 that only one site can generate video or audio traffic at any given
 time. The grouping facility can be implemented based on this
 specification, but the implementation of the possible uses of groups
 will require new functionality to be added to the ST agents. The
 uses for groups and the implementation to support them will be
 carried out as experience is gained and the need arises.
 We hope that the ST we here propose will act as a vehicle to study
 the use and performance of stream oriented services across packet
 switched networks.
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6. Glossary
 appropriate reason code
 This phrase refers to one or perhaps a set of reason codes that
 indicate why a particular action is being taken. Typically,
 these result from detection of errors or anomalous conditions.
 It can also indicate that an application component or agent has
 presented invalid parameters.
 DefaultRecoveryTimeout
 The DefaultRecoveryTimeout is maintained by each ST agent. It
 indicates the default time interval to use for sending HELLO
 messages.
 downstream
 The direction in a stream from an origin toward its targets.
 element
 The fields and parameters of the ST control messages are
 collectively called elements.
 FlowSpec
 The Flow Specification, abbreviated "FlowSpec" is used by an
 application to specify required and desired characteristics of
 the stream. The FlowSpec specifies bandwidth, delay, and
 reliability parameters. Both minimal requirements and desired
 characteristics are included. This information is then used to
 guide route selection and resource allocation decisions. The
 desired vs. required characteristics are used to guide tradeoff
 decisions among competing stream requests.
 group
 A set of related streams can be associated as a group. This is
 done by generating a Group Name and assigning it to each of the
 related streams. The grouping information can then be used by
 the ST agents in making resource management and other control
 decisions. For example, when preemption is necessary to
 establish a high precedence stream, we can exploit the group
 information to minimize the number of stream groups that are
 preempted.
 Group Name
 The Group Name is used to indicate that a collection of streams
 are related. A Group Name is structured to ensure that it is
 unique across all hosts: it includes the address of the host
 where it was generated combined with a unique number generated
 by that host. A timestamp is added to ensure that the overall
 name is unique over all time. (A Group Name has the same format
 as a stream Name.)
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 HelloLossFactor
 The HelloLossFactor is a parameter maintained by each ST agent.
 It identifies the expected number of consecutive HELLO messages
 typically lost due to transient factors. Thus, an agent will be
 assumed to be down after we miss more than HelloLossFactor
 messages.
 HelloTimer
 The HelloTimer is a millisecond timer maintained by each ST
 agent. It is included in each HELLO message. It represents the
 time since the agent was restarted, modulo the precision of the
 field. It is used to detect variations in the delay between the
 two agents, by comparing the arrival interval of two HELLO
 messages to the difference between their HelloTimer fields.
 HelloTimerHoldDown
 The HelloTimerHoldDown value is maintained by each ST agent.
 When an ST agent is restarted, it will set the "Restarted" bit
 in all HELLO messages it sends for HelloTimerHoldDown seconds.
 HID
 The Hop IDentifier, abbreviated as HID, is a numeric key stored
 in the header of each ST packet. It is used by an ST agent to
 associate the packet with one of the incoming hops managed by
 the agent. It can be used by receiving agent to map to
 the set of outgoing next-hops to which the message should be
 forwarded. The HID field of an ST packet will generally need to
 be changed as it passes through each ST agent since there may be
 many HIDs associated with a single stream.
 hop
 A "hop" refers to the portion of a stream's path between two
 neighbor ST agents. It is usually represented by a physical
 network. However, a multicast hop can connect a single ST agent
 to several next-hop ST agents.
 host agents
 Synonym for host ST agents.
 host ST agents
 Host ST agents are ST agents that provide services to higher
 layer protocols and applications. The services include methods
 for sourcing data from and sinking data to the higher layer or
 application, and methods for requesting and modifying streams.
 intermediate agents
 Synonym for intermediate ST agents.
 intermediate ST agents
 Intermediate ST agents are ST agents that can forward ST
 packets between the networks to which they are attached.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 MTU
 The abbreviation for Maximum Transmission Unit, which is the
 maximum packet size in bytes that can be accepted by a given
 network for transmission. ST agents determine the maximum
 packet size for a stream so that data written to the stream can
 be forwarded through the networks without fragmentation.
 multi-destination simplex
 The topology and data flow of ST streams are described as being
 multi-destination simplex: all data flowing on the stream
 originates from a single origin and is passed to one or more
 destination targets. Only control information, invisible to the
 application program, ever passes in the upstream direction.
 NAccept
 NAccept is an integer parameter maintained by each ST agent. It
 is used to control retransmission of an ACCEPT message. Since
 an ACCEPT request is relayed by agents back toward the origin,
 it must be acknowledged by each previous-hop agent. If this ACK
 is not received within the appropriate timeout interval, the
 request will be resent up to NAccept times before giving up.
 Name
 Generally refers to the name of a stream. A stream Name is
 structured to ensure that it is unique across all hosts: it
 includes the address of the host where it was generated combined
 with a unique number generated at that host. A timestamp is
 added to ensure that the overall Name is unique over all time.
 (A stream Name has the same format as a Group Name.)
 NConnect
 NConnect is an integer parameter maintained by each ST agent.
 It is used to control retransmission of a CONNECT message. A
 CONNECT request must be acknowledged by each next-hop agent as
 it is propagated toward the targets. If a HID-ACCEPT,
 HID-REJECT, or ACK is not received for the CONNECT between any
 two agents within the appropriate timeout interval, the request
 will be resent up to NConnect times before giving up.
 NDisconnect
 NDisconnect is an integer parameter maintained by each ST
 agent. It is used to control retransmission of a DISCONNECT
 message. A DISCONNECT request must be acknowledged by each
 next-hop agent as it is propagated toward the targets. If this
 ACK is not received for the DISCONNECT between any two agents
 within the appropriate timeout interval, the request will be
 resent up to NDisconnect times before giving up.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 next protocol identifier
 The next protocol identifier is used by a target ST agent to
 identify to which of several higher layer protocols it should
 pass data packets it receives the network. Examples of higher
 layer protocols include the Network Voice Protocol and the
 Packet Video Protocol. These higher layer protocols will
 typically perform further demultiplexing among multiple
 application processes as part of their protocol processing
 activities.
 next-hop
 Synonym for next-hop ST agent.
 next-hop ST agent
 For each origin or intermediate ST agent managing a stream
 there are a set of next-hop ST agents. The intermediate agent
 forwards each data packet it receives to all the next-hop ST
 agents, which in turn forward the data toward the target host
 agent (if the particular next-hop agent is another intermediate
 agent) or to the next higher protocol layer at the target (if
 the particular next-hop agent is a host agent).
 NextPcol
 NextPcol is a field in each Target of the CONNECT message used
 to convey the next protocol identifier. See definition of next
 protocol identifier above for more details.
 NHIDAbort
 NHIDAbort is an integer parameter maintained by each ST agent.
 It is the number of unacceptable HID proposals before an ST
 agent aborts the HID negotiation process.
 NHIDAck
 NHIDAck is an integer parameter maintained by each ST agent.
 It is used to control retransmission of HID-CHANGE-REQUEST
 messages. HID-CHANGE-REQUEST is sent by an ST agent to the
 previous-hop ST agent to request that the HID in use between
 those agents be changed. The previous-hop acknowledges the
 HID-CHANGE-REQUEST message by sending a HID-CHANGE message. If
 the HID-CHANGE is not received within the appropriate timeout
 interval, the request will be resent up to NHIDAck times before
 giving up.
 NHIDChange
 NHIDChange is an integer parameter maintained by each ST agent.
 It is used to control retransmission of the HID-CHANGE message.
 A HID-CHANGE message must be acknowledged by the next-hop agent.
 If this ACK is not received within the appropriate timeout
 interval, the request will be resent up to NHIDChange times
 before giving up.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 NRefuse
 NRefuse is an integer parameter maintained by each ST agent.
 It is used to control retransmission of a REFUSE message. As a
 REFUSE request is relayed by agents back toward the origin, it
 must be acknowledged by each previous-hop agent. If this ACK is
 not received within the appropriate timeout interval, the
 request will be resent up to NRefuse times before giving up.
 NRetryRoute
 NRetryRoute is an integer parameter maintained by each ST
 agent. It is used to control route exploration. When an agent
 receives a REFUSE message whose ReasonCode indicates that the
 originally selected route is not acceptable, the agent should
 attempt to find an alternate route to the target. If the agent
 has not found a viable route after a maximum of NRetryRoute
 choices, it should give up and notify the previous-hop or
 application that it cannot find an acceptable path to the
 target.
 origin
 The origin of a stream is the host agent where an application
 or higher level protocol originally requested that the stream be
 created. The origin specifies the data to be sent through the
 stream.
 parameter
 Parameters are additional values that may be included in
 control messages. Parameters are often optional. They are
 distinguished from fields, which are always present.
 participants
 Participants are the end-users of a stream.
 PDU
 Abbreviation for Protocol Data Unit, defined below.
 peer
 The term peer is used to refer to entities at the same protocol
 layer. It is used here to identify instances of an application
 or protocol layer above ST. For example, data is passed through
 a stream from an originating peer process to its target peers.
 previous-hop
 Synonym for previous-hop ST agent.
 previous-hop ST agent
 The origin or intermediate agent from which an ST agent receives
 its data.
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 protocol data unit
 A protocol data unit (PDU) is the unit of data passed to a
 protocol layer by the next higher layer protocol or user. It
 consists of control information and possibly user data.
 RecoveryTimeout
 RecoveryTimeout is specified in the FlowSpec of each stream.
 The minimum of these values over all streams between a pair of
 adjacent agents determines how often those agents must send
 HELLO messages to each other in order to ensure that failure of
 one of the agents will be detected quickly enough to meet the
 guarantee implied by the FlowSpec.
 Restarted bit
 The Restarted bit is part of the HELLO message. When set, it
 indicates that the sending agent was restarted recently (within
 the last HelloTimerHoldDown seconds).
 round-trip time
 The round-trip-time is the time it takes a message to be sent,
 delivered, processed, and the acknowledgment received. It
 includes both network and processing delays.
 RTT
 Abbreviation for round-trip-time.
 RVLId
 Abbreviation for Receiver's Virtual Link Identifier. It
 uniquely identifies to the receiver the virtual link, and this
 stream, used to send it a message. See definition for Virtual
 Link Identifier below.
 SAP
 Abbreviation for Service Access Point.
 SCMP
 Abbreviation for ST Control Message Protocol, defined below.
 Service Access Point
 A point where a protocol service provider makes available the
 services it offers to a next higher layer protocol or user.
 setup phase
 Before data can be transmitted through a stream, the ST agents
 must distribute state information about the stream to all agents
 along the path(s) to the target(s). This is the setup phase.
 The setup phase ends when all the ACCEPT and REFUSE messages
 sent by the targets have been delivered to the origin. At this
 point, the data transfer phase begins and data can be sent.
 Requests to modify the stream can be issued after the setup
 phase has ended, i.e., during the data transfer phase without
 disrupting the flow of data.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 ST agent
 An ST agent is an entity that implements the ST Protocol.
 ST Control Message Protocol
 The ST Control Message Protocol is the subset of the overall ST
 Protocol responsible for creation, modification, maintenance,
 and tear down of a stream. It also includes support for event
 notification and status monitoring.
 stream
 A stream is the basic object managed by the ST Protocol for
 transmission of data. A stream has one origin where data are
 generated and one or more targets where the data are received
 for processing. A flow specification, provided by the origin
 and negotiated among the origin, intermediate, and target ST
 agents, identifies the requirements of the application and the
 guarantees that can be assured by the ST agents.
 subsets
 Subsets of the ST Protocol are permitted, as defined in various
 sections of this specification. Subsets are defined to allow
 simplified implementations that can still effectively
 interoperate with more complete implementations without causing
 disruption.
 SVLId
 Abbreviation for Sender's Virtual Link Identifier. It uniquely
 identifies to the receiver the virtual link identifier that
 should be placed into the RVLId field of all replies sent over
 the virtual link for a given stream. See definition for Virtual
 Link Identifier below.
 target
 An ST target is the destination where data supplied by the
 origin will be delivered for higher layer protocol or
 application processing.
 tear down
 The tear down phase of a stream begins when the origin indicates
 that it has no further data to send and the ST agents through
 which the stream passes should dismantle the stream and release
 its resources.
 ToAccept
 ToAccept is a timeout in seconds maintained by each ST agent.
 It sets the retransmission interval for ACCEPT messages.
 ToConnect
 ToConnect is a timeout in seconds maintained by each ST agent.
 It sets the retransmission interval a CONNECT messages.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 ToDisconnect
 ToDisconnect is a timeout in seconds maintained by each ST
 agent. It sets the retransmission interval for DISCONNECT
 messages.
 ToHIDAck
 ToHIDAck is a timeout in seconds maintained by each ST agent.
 It sets the retransmission interval for HID-CHANGE-REQUEST
 messages.
 ToHIDChange
 ToHIDChange is a timeout in seconds maintained by each ST agent.
 It sets the retransmission interval for HID-CHANGE messages.
 ToRefuse
 ToRefuse is a timeout in seconds maintained by each ST agent.
 It sets the retransmission interval for REFUSE messages.
 upstream
 The direction in a stream from a target toward the origin.
 Virtual Link
 A virtual link is one edge of the tree describing the path of
 data flow through a stream. A separate virtual link is assigned
 to each pair of neighbor ST agents, even when multiple next-hops
 are be reached through a single network level multicast group.
 The virtual link allows efficient demultiplexing of ST Control
 Message PDUs received from a single physical link or network.
 Virtual Link Identifier
 For each ST Control Message sent, the sender provides its own
 virtual link identifier and that of the receiver (if known).
 Either of these identifiers, combined with the address of the
 corresponding host, can be used to identify uniquely the virtual
 control link to the agent. However, virtual link identifiers
 are chosen by the associated agent so that the agent may
 precisely identify the stream, state machine, and other protocol
 processing data elements managed by that agent, without regard
 to the source of the control message. Virtual link identifiers
 are not negotiated, and do not change during the lifetime of a
 stream. They are discarded when the stream is torn down.
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7. References
 [1] Braden, B., Borman, D., and C. Partridge, "Computing the
 Internet Checksum", RFC 1071, USC/Information Sciences
 Institute, Cray Research, BBN Laboratories, September
 1988.
 [2] Braden, R. (ed.), "Requirements for Internet Hosts --
 Communication Layers", RFC 1122, USC/Information Sciences
 Institute, October 1989.
 [3] Cheriton, D., "VMTP: Versatile Message Transaction Protocol
 Specification", RFC 1045, Stanford University, February 1988.
 [4] Cohen, D., "A Network Voice Protocol NVP-II", USC/Information
 Sciences Institute, April 1981.
 [5] Cole, E., "PVP - A Packet Video Protocol", W-Note 28,
 USC/Information Sciences Institute, August 1981.
 [6] Deering, S., "Host Extensions for IP Multicasting", RFC 1112,
 Stanford University, August 1989.
 [7] Edmond W., Seo K., Leib M., and C. Topolcic, "The DARPA
 Wideband Network Dual Bus Protocol", accepted for presentation
 at ACM SIGCOMM '90, September 24-27, 1990.
 [8] Forgie, J., "ST - A Proposed Internet Stream Protocol",
 IEN 119, M. I. T. Lincoln Laboratory, 7 September 1979.
 [9] Jacobs I., Binder R., and E. Hoversten E., "General Purpose
 Packet Satellite Network", Proc. IEEE, vol 66, pp 1448-1467,
 November 1978.
 [10] Jacobson, V., "Congestion Avoidance and Control", ACM
 SIGCOMM-88, August 1988.
 [11] Karn, P. and C. Partridge, "Round Trip Time Estimation",
 ACM SIGCOMM-87, August 1987.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
 [12] Mallory, T., and A. Kullberg, "Incremental Updating of the
 Internet Checksum", RFC 1141, BBN Communications
 Corporation, January 1990.
 [13] Mills, D., "Network Time Protocol (Version 2) Specification
 and Implementation", RFC 1119, University of Delaware,
 September 1989 (Revised February 1990).
 [14] Pope, A., "The SIMNET Network and Protocols", BBN
 Report No. 7102, BBN Systems and Technologies, July 1989.
 [15] Postel, J., ed., "Internet Protocol - DARPA Internet Program
 Protocol Specification", RFC 791, DARPA, September 1981.
 [16] Postel, J., ed., "Transmission Control Protocol - DARPA
 Internet Program Protocol Specification", RFC 793, DARPA,
 September 1981.
 [17] Postel, J., "User Datagram Protocol", RFC 768,
 USC/Information Sciences Institute, August 1980.
 [18] Reynolds, J., Postel, J., "Assigned Numbers", RFC 1060,
 USC/Information Sciences Institute, March 1990.
 [19] SDNS Protocol and Signaling Working Group, SP3 Sub-Group,
 SDNS Secure Data Network System, Security Protocol 3 (SP3),
 SDN.301, Rev. 1.5, 1989年05月15日.
 [20] SDNS Protocol and Signaling Working Group, SP3 Sub-Group,
 SDNS Secure Data Network System, Security Protocol 3 (SP3)
 Addendum 1, Cooperating Families, SDN.301.1, Rev. 1.2,
 1988年07月12日.
8. Security Considerations
 See section 3.7.8.
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RFC 1190 Internet Stream Protocol October 1990
9. Authors' Addresses
 Stephen Casner
 USC/Information Sciences Institute
 4676 Admiralty Way
 Marina del Rey, CA 90292-6695
 Phone: (213) 822-1511 x153
 EMail: Casner@ISI.Edu
 Charles Lynn, Jr.
 BBN Systems and Technologies,
 a division of Bolt Beranek and Newman Inc.
 10 Moulton Street
 Cambridge, MA 02138
 Phone: (617) 873-3367
 EMail: CLynn@BBN.Com
 Philippe Park
 BBN Systems and Technologies,
 a division of Bolt Beranek and Newman Inc.
 10 Moulton Street
 Cambridge, MA 02138
 Phone: (617) 873-2892
 EMail: ppark@BBN.COM
 Kenneth Schroder
 BBN Systems and Technologies,
 a division of Bolt Beranek and Newman Inc.
 10 Moulton Street
 Cambridge, MA 02138
 Phone: (617) 873-3167
 EMail: Schroder@BBN.Com
 Claudio Topolcic
 BBN Systems and Technologies,
 a division of Bolt Beranek and Newman Inc.
 10 Moulton Street
 Cambridge, MA 02138
 Phone: (617) 873-3874
 EMail: Topolcic@BBN.Com
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Appendix 1. Data Notations
 The convention in the documentation of Internet Protocols is to
 express numbers in decimal and to picture data with the most
 significant octet on the left and the least significant octet on the
 right.
 The order of transmission of the header and data described in this
 document is resolved to the octet level. Whenever a diagram shows a
 group of octets, the order of transmission of those octets is the
 normal order in which they are read in English. For example, in the
 following diagram the octets are transmitted in the order they are
 numbered.
 0 1 2 3
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 1
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 56. Transmission Order of Bytes
 Whenever an octet represents a numeric quantity the left most bit in
 the diagram is the high order or most significant bit. That is, the
 bit labeled 0 is the most significant bit. For example, the
 following diagram represents the value 170 (decimal).
 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 |1 0 1 0 1 0 1 0|
 +-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
 Figure 57. Significance of Bits
 Similarly, whenever a multi-octet field represents a numeric quantity
 the left most bit of the whole field is the most significant bit.
 When a multi-octet quantity is transmitted the most significant octet
 is transmitted first.
 Fields whose length is fixed and fully illustrated are shown with a
 vertical bar (|) at the end; fixed fields whose contents are
 abbreviated are shown with an exclamation point (!); variable fields
 are shown with colons (:).
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 Optional parameters are separated from control messages with a blank
 line. The order of any optional parameters is not meaningful.
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